Sunday, October 20, 2013

Corporate Japan to hunker down and save gains from tax cut: Reuters poll


By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Izumi Nakagawa


TOKYO (Reuters) - More than 40 percent of Japanese companies surveyed have no plans to spend or invest funds generated by an expected cut in the corporate tax rate, a reflection of the deep-seated risk-aversion in corporate Japan and a challenge to the success of Abenomics.


The result of the Reuters Corporate Survey of 400 companies taken in late September and early October stands in contrast to other recent indicators of a thawing in corporate risk-aversion on signs of continued recovery in Japan's economy.


In the monthly Reuters survey, 30 percent of companies said they would bank any savings from a lower corporate tax rate and build up internal reserves, which now total more than $2 trillion for Japan's corporations taken as a whole.


Another 12 percent of companies responding said they would use any cash generated by a corporate tax cut pledged by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to offset the expected higher costs from a sales tax increase set to take effect in April.


Abe's government is seeking an early end to a corporate tax levy that has funded rebuilding from the 2011 earthquake and tsunami. That step is projected to save companies some 900 billion yen ($9.1 billion) as part of a stimulus package worth more than 5 trillion yen to be compiled in December.


Most companies surveyed by Reuters said a corporate tax cut would be positive for earnings: 54 percent said it would boost profit, while 46 percent said it would have no effect.


But only a minority of companies surveyed said they were ready to use the additional earnings in the areas most crucial to the success of the prime minister's "Abenomics" economic program - investment in plants and equipment and higher wages for Japanese workers.


Only 5 percent of companies responding said they would use the additional savings to raise wages. Another 5 percent said they intended to use the savings from a tax cut to increase hiring.


"Our profit-and-loss conditions are improving, but the situation remains far from assured. We need to stick to internal reserves," said one machinery maker.


About one in five respondents said they would use the savings from the tax cut to offset the cost of updating and replacing ageing equipment and plants.


HOARDING CASH


For years Japanese firms have been hoarding cash, instead of spending on plants and equipment or raising salaries, due in part to the view that Japan would remain mired in deflation. As a result, corporate Japan is sitting on a cash pile of some 220 trillion yen, Bank of Japan data shows.


Abe has also instructed his government and ruling coalition to start considering a permanent cut in the effective corporate tax rate, set at 38 percent for a large Tokyo-based corporation, which is higher than the global average of 24 percent.


Analysts have cautioned that the economic boost from a corporate tax cut could be muted. After two decades of slow growth and deflation, only about 30 percent of companies pay corporate tax. The rest are either unprofitable or they are able to apply tax credits accumulated from losses incurred during the lean years.


The Reuters Corporate Survey was taken between September 30 and October 11 alongside the Reuters Tankan survey of business sentiment.


That indicator showed confidence among manufacturers was steady in October, a sign the positive mood generated by Abe's reflationary policies is continuing.


Other recent indicators have also been positive. Earlier this month, the Bank of Japan offered a slightly more upbeat assessment of capital spending, saying corporate investment was picking up as profits improve.


Abe's government has kept pressure on large companies to raise wages when annual negotiations begin in early 2014. Hiromasa Yonekura, chairman of the business lobby Keidanren, said earlier this month that Japan's business leaders wanted to address government calls for higher compensation as the economy recovers "proactively and in a timely manner."


The Corporate Survey, conducted for Reuters by Nikkei Research, polls upper management at 400 companies capitalised at more than 1 billion yen each. The firms, which are split evenly between manufacturers and non-manufacturers, are not required to answer every question and provide responses on condition of anonymity.


(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and Chris Gallagher)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/corporate-japan-hunker-down-save-gains-tax-cut-010935386--business.html
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Hans Zimmer to Discuss 'Rush' at Billboard-THR Film & TV Music Conference


Composer Hans Zimmer and his colleagues on Rush -- Peter Asher and Lorne Balfe -- will discuss the music in the Ron Howard-directed hit film at the Billboard & Hollywood Reporter Film and TV Music Conference.



"Case Study: The Music of Rush" will explore Zimmer’s composing methods and recording techniques on the film about Formula 1 race car drivers Niki Lauda and James Hunt. ASCAP is sponsoring the Oct. 29 panel at the W Hotel in Hollywood


Rush is the latest film score from Zimmer, whose music has graced more than 100 movies that have grossed more than $22 billion at the worldwide box office. Honored with the ASCAP Henry Mancini Award for Lifetime Achievement, he has also received an Academy Award, two Golden Globes and four Grammy Awards.


Among his films are The Lion King, Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, Gore Verbinski’s Pirates of the Caribbean series; Christopher Nolan’s three Batman films, Howard’s The Da Vinci Code and Steve McQueen’s 12 Years a Slave.


PHOTOS: 'Rush': Exclusive Photos of Ron Howard, Chris Hemsworth and Daniel Bruhl


Joining Zimmer will be Asher, the film’s music consultant and producer, and Balfe, a composer. Besides Rush, Asher produced the music for Zimmer’s scores to Pirates of the Caribbean 4, Sherlock Holmes 2, Madagascar 3 and Man of Steel.


Asher, one half of the pop duo Peter & Gordon, became head of A&R for Apple Records in 1968 and in 1971, founded Peter Asher Management, representing James Taylor, Linda Ronstadt, Joni Mitchell, Carole King, Randy Newman and others.


A producer as well, in 1977 and 1989 Asher received the Grammy for Producer of the Year and most recently produced Steve Martin and Edie Brickell’s album Love Has Come For You. He also just completed a project for Elton John with current artists singing songs from Goodbye Yellow Brick Road to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the album.


VIDEO: Hans Zimmer Conducts 12 Drummers for the 'Man of Steel' Soundtrack


Balfe, a composer from Inverness, Scotland, most recently scored Shane Salerno’s feature documentary Salinger. Known for his work on video games, his credits include Assassin’s Creed III and Beyond: Two Souls.


This year's Film and TV Music Conference's programming highlights include: Singer-songwriter and composer Randy Newman, who will deliver a keynote Q&A conducted by his son, Amos Newman, the head of music for visual media at William Morris Endeavor; T Bone Burnett, who will be honored with the Maestro Award for his seminal work in film and television music, most recently as executive music producer of the Coen Brothers' Inside Llewyn Davis; a keynote Q&A by music supervisor Alexandra Patsavas, whose credits include Scandal, Carrie Diaries and the upcoming film The Hunger Games: Catching Fire; director David O. Russell and music supervisor Sue Jacobs, who will discuss their work on the highly anticipated film American Hustle and last year’s award-winning Silver Linings Playbook; and the expansion of one-on-one meetings and single-topic roundtables with industry experts.


Please visit www.FilmandTVMusicConference.com for more information.


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/music/~3/fsjMfcax8dY/story01.htm
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Saturday, October 19, 2013

Treasury: credit warning a sign of urgency in debt debate


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury said on Tuesday the threat of a credit rating downgrade is a reminder for U.S. lawmakers that the United States is dangerously close to defaulting on its obligations.


Fitch Ratings warned earlier in the day it could cut the sovereign credit rating of the United States from AAA, citing the political brinkmanship over raising the federal debt ceiling.


"The announcement reflects the urgency with which Congress should act to remove the threat of default hanging over the economy," a Treasury spokesperson said.


(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Sandra Maler)



Source: http://news.yahoo.com/treasury-credit-warning-sign-urgency-debt-debate-211232563--business.html
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Windows 8.1, One-Handed Future Zippers, Cheating at Physics, And More

Windows 8.1, One-Handed Future Zippers, Cheating at Physics, And More

Who'd have thought one of the awesomest things we'd see this week would be a zipper. But that's not all! Join us for a tour of the cave beneath Central Park, at look at Windows 8.1, an explanation of the iPhone 5s acceleromter problems and more.

Read more...


    






Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/w5wExctf3NU/windows-8-1-one-handed-future-zippers-cheating-at-phy-1448209741
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Warner Bros.-Owned Producer of 'The Voice UK' Names New CEO


LONDON – U.K. TV production and distribution firm Shed Media Group, which is majority owned by Warner Bros., said Thursday that it has appointed Leanne Klein as CEO of its Wall to Wall unit.



She most recently served as creative director of Wall to Wall, which produces such shows as The Voice UK.


Klein replaces Alex Graham who will help with the handover of responsibilities until the end of the year. Graham will also remain "intimately connected with the company he helped found" by serving as an executive producer on the U.S. version of Wall to Wall hit genealogy format Who Do You Think You Are?, the company said.
 
Wall to Wall was named U.K. production company of the year at the annual Edinburgh Television Festival Awards this summer.
 
Klein has been at Wall to Wall since 1995 when she won an Emmy for directing her first series for the company, Baby It’s You. She has since then creatively overseen such shows as The Voice UK, Long Lost Family, Child Genius and Alfred Hitchcock biopic The Girl.
 
"Leanne is a brilliant creative television executive and she has Wall to Wall running through her veins," said Shed CEO Nick Southgate. "I’m absolutely delighted she’s agreed to take over from Alex. Alex is one of the titans of the independent production sector, but I can’t think of anyone better to fill his large shoes."


Said Klein: "I know I’m biased, but the fact that Wall to Wall makes such fantastic shows across...different genres – including a raft of returning hits – means, for me, there’s no production company in the U.K. that could be more exciting to run."


While she became Wall to Wall's creative director in March 2011, Klein first started working for the company in 1990 and joined it in a permanent role in 1995.


E-mail: Georg.Szalai@THR.com
Twitter: @georgszalai


Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/thr/television/~3/m_qgmuCuG-o/story01.htm
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Girl's Deportation Was Mishandled, But Legal, French Say





Leonarda Dibrani, 15, on Friday in Mitrovica, Kosovo.



Visar Kryeziu /AP


Leonarda Dibrani, 15, on Friday in Mitrovica, Kosovo.


Visar Kryeziu /AP


"An interior ministry investigation into the controversial deportation of a Roma schoolgirl from France has found that her deportation was lawful, but said police could have used better judgment in the case," France 24 is reporting.


As Eleanor Beardsley reported for All Things Considered on Friday, 15-year-old Leonarda Dibrani "is at the center of an emotional debate in France over the country's immigration policies. ... [She] was taken away by police during a field trip with her school class last week and deported along with her parents and five siblings to Kosovo. Many French are outraged at the way she was seized. And whether the deportation was legal or not, many say the action runs contrary to French human rights values."


France 24 writes today that "French law bans the police from approaching students while they are at or near school. The report stated that while the bus was nowhere near Dibrani's school, authorities showed a lack of judgement and recommended that the law be changed to prohibit any future incidents during school hours."


France's RFI radio network adds that Leonarda "says she will not take up President François Hollande's offer to return to France without her family ... declaring that she would not 'abandon' her family."


Eleanor noted that "the case has echoes of the debate in the U.S. over immigration and the status of those who came to the country illegally as children and have little or no connection to the land of their birth. French media are reporting that the Dibrani family came illegally to France from Kosovo about five years ago because they are Roma, sometimes referred to as Gypsies, and faced discrimination and few opportunities there."


RFI reports, though, that Leonarda's father "told the AFP news agency that only he had been born in Kosovo and that his wife and five of his six children, including Leonarda, were born in Italy."


National Geographic has an online "history of the Romani people," who are "more commonly known to outsiders as Gypsies."


Source: http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2013/10/19/237636824/girls-deportation-was-mishandled-but-legal-french-say?ft=1&f=1004
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Debt Ceiling Deal Depends On U.S. Senate


The Senate has been working on a bipartisan deal to reopen the government and raise the debt ceiling. But House conservatives have signaled they might not go along with a Senate deal. Steve Inskeep talks to Republican Senator Saxby Chambliss of Georgia about how he thinks the impasse can be resolved.


Source: http://www.npr.org/2013/10/16/235235700/sen-chambliss-comments-on-government-shutdown?ft=1&f=3
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