Tuesday September 27, 2005 | ${log.root}/lowem.log Inflation, Investing and Everything |
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Noticed that Google has just turned 7. (2005-09-27 14:24:10 SGT)
[Tech]
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energybulletin.net -> guardian.co.uk : Consider these two statements: 1. "Last year Saudi Aramco made credible claims that as much as 500bn-700bn barrels remain to be discovered in the kingdom." 2. "Saudi Arabia clearly seems to be nearing or at its peak output and cannot materially grow its oil production." The first comes from a report by Energy Intelligence, a consultancy used by the major oil companies. The second comes from a book by Matthew Simmons, an energy investor who advises the Bush administration. Whom should we believe? The only firm conclusion I have reached is that the people sitting on the world's reserves are liars ... In February this year the US Department of Energy released a report called Peaking of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation and Risk Management. The Hirsch report has no truck with those who believe in the magic of the markets. "High prices do not a priori lead to greater production. Geology is ultimately the limiting factor." Hirsch compares the projections of the oil optimists to those of the gas optimists in the late 1990s, who promised "growing supply at reasonable prices for the foreseeable future" in the US and Canada. Today the same people are bemoaning the deficit. "The bottom line," Hirsch says, "is that no one knows with certainty when world oil production will reach a peak, but geologists have no doubt that it will happen." Our hopes of a soft landing rest on just two propositions: that the oil producers' figures are correct, and that governments act before they have to. I hope that reassures you. (2005-09-27 13:10:37 SGT)
[Energy]
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Several retail groups have filed an antitrust lawsuit against Visa USA, MasterCard International and dozens of major U.S. banks, saying they acted together to set excessive credit card fees. These groups collectively represent hundreds of thousands of U.S. stores that accept Visa and MasterCard as a form of payment. The lawsuit, filed Friday with the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, concerns interchange fees, which retail merchants pay to issuing banks to receive payments for transactions involving the banks' cards. Interchange fees make up the largest component of credit card fees and have long been a source of friction between retailers and card companies. In 2003, Visa agreed to pay about $2 billion and MasterCard $1 billion to settle a lawsuit by retailers claiming they were forced to accept higher-cost, signature-verified debit cards. - Now, isn't watching elephants fighting an interesting sight? Having watched films like The Corporation, it's like a battle between immortal entities, right out of the Highlander series. Of course, the prize is money, and at this point it's not quite apparent whether "there can be only one" - like, Omni Consumer Products perhaps? Okay, enough of the Hollywood culture already! :) (2005-09-27 12:53:32 SGT)
[Biz]
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Most popular blog postings on lowem.log : 1. Singapore SIBOR interest rates fall to 1.5%, lowest since Dec 2004 Featured articles on lowem.log : 1. ABC Guide to Beating Inflation in Singapore and Elsewhere |
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