TimeLine Layout

March, 2017

  • 13 March

    Top Myanmar bank may sell stake to foreign firm

      Bloomberg Myanmar’s largest privately-owned bank by assets says it’s willing to sell a stake to a foreign lender, pending a change in the country’s law, as it gears up to expand its operations in one of Asia’s most under-banked nations. “In any emerging market, capital is important,” said Nang Kham Noung, an executive director of KBZ Bank. “For us, ...

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  • 13 March

    Bank of England to lose rebel voice against Brexit consensus

      Bloomberg One of the Bank of England’s (BOE) most vocal dissenters is moving on, just as Brexit’s surprises make alternative views more valuable. Kristin Forbes is leaving at the end of June to return to MIT, depriving the nine-member Monetary Policy Committee of a voice that’s consistently pushed against consensus. The American, who some say could be a potential ...

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  • 13 March

    Goldman calls for patience to see commodity gains after rout

      Bloomberg Goldman Sachs Group Inc. isn’t letting the biggest commodities rout in eight months shake its confidence in raw materials. The bank is sticking to its view that tightening supplies will lead to higher prices later this year, maintaining its positive outlook on the sector, according to a report dated March 12. Investors should go or stay long on ...

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  • 13 March

    HSBC shares gain after bank names AIA’s Tucker as chairman

      Bloomberg HSBC Holdings Plc named insurance executive Mark Tucker to succeed Douglas Flint as chairman, enlisting an outsider to oversee Europe’s biggest bank as it overhauls management. Tucker, 59, chief executive officer of AIA Group Ltd. and former head of Prudential Plc, will take the post Oct. 1, the bank said in a statement on Monday. AIA Regional CEO ...

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  • 13 March

    Nintendo counts on high praise for Zelda

      Bloomberg Nintendo Co. is earning early accolades for making sure that its new Switch console debuted with a strong gaming title, Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. The big question now is whether that will translate into sales. So far, signs are good. The latest iteration of Zelda has received almost universal praise among critics, becoming the fourth-highest ...

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  • 13 March

    Who and why: Twin mysteries behind leak of CIA cybertools

      WASHINGTON / AP It’s not just who did it, but why. WikiLeaks’ release of nearly 8,000 documents that purportedly reveal secrets about the CIA’s tools for breaking into targeted computers, cellphones and even smart TVs has given rise to multiple theories about who stole the documents and for what reason. Perhaps it was a US spy or contractor who ...

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  • 13 March

    Improved technology saves time for maple syrup producers

      Dubai / Emirates Business Maple syrup doesn’t get that rich flavour and colour in an instant. It’s a long process from tree to bottle. But an improved technology could keep maple sugarers from working late into the night boiling sap into syrup. The new machine can remove more water from sap, leaving a higher sugar content in half the ...

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  • 13 March

    CIA listed BlackBerry’s car software as possible target

      Bloomberg BlackBerry Ltd.’s QNX automotive software, used in more than 60 million cars, was listed as a potential target for the Central Intelligence Agency to hack, according to documents released by WikiLeaks. CIA meeting notes mention QNX as one of several “potential mission areas” for the organization’s Embedded Devices Branch. The same branch also worked with U.K. spy agencies ...

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  • 12 March

    UAE eyes closer trade ties with Asia, Africa

      Dubai / Reuters The United Arab Emirates, one of the Middle East’s largest economies, wants to expand trade ties with faster growing nations in Asia and Africa, a senior official said on Sunday. Gulf Arab states are looking at ways to diversify their economies, including who they trade with, after more than two years of depressed oil prices forced ...

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  • 12 March

    Learning America’s foundation principles

      Encouraging developments are as welcome as they are rare in colleges and universities that cultivate diversity in everything but thought. Fortunately, state legislatures, alumni and philanthropists are planting little academic platoons that will make campuses less intellectually monochrome. One such, just launched, is Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership. A primary mission of institutions ...

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