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LOS ANGELES -- The Washington Post will close its remaining U.S. bureaus in New York, Los Angeles and Chicago at the end of the year to save money and will focus news efforts on covering the nation's capital.

Six correspondents are being offered jobs in Washington, while three news aides will be let go Dec. 31.

In a staff memo Tuesday, Executive Editor Marcus Brauchli told workers that the paper needed to concentrate its "journalistic firepower" on its central mission of covering Washington, D.C.

In the last decade, the paper has closed bureaus in Miami, Denver and Austin, Texas.

The Washington Post Co. ( WPO - news - people )'s earnings increased 69 percent in the third quarter partly due to cost-cutting measures. The company also owns Newsweek magazine, Kaplan education services and television properties.

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Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Gibraltar, where investorseurope is incorporated, is one of the famed Pillars of Hercules, the Portal sailors crossed when travelling from the Old into the New World. In terms of online trading technology, this is exactly what Investors Europe stock broker has been doing since 2001: Setting up a Trading Portal at the Pillars of Hercules to offer a New World of online trading platforms to investors throughout the Globe, so that they can "Trade the World from the Rock".
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offshorebroker

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Where do we go from here with Gold?

Tue Nov 17 14:42:33 2009 in Breaking News - General

By: OilPrice.com

Can precious metals keep on flying?

 

Are you sold on gold? The precious metal outperformed every major equity index in the world in 2008. The question is, can gold—and other precious metals—keep on flying? Or would buying today be buying high and selling low?

 

Precious metals have always been intriguing to investors because they tend to hold their value. In times of geopolitical crisis or currency devaluation, for example, the value of paper money might fluctuate, but a hard asset will always be worth something. As a result, historically, precious metals have been considered  a “safe haven” in times of economic and financial instability.

 

That brings us to why gold is on a tear today. It declined in 2008 and early 2009 as panicked investors rushed into cash in an attempt to weather the financial crisis. But sometime in the middle on 2009, when investors began to move their money from the sidelines, gold started to rally. It returned 32.59% through the third quarter of 2009, vs. 19.26% for stocks.

 

The question is, where can we expect gold to go from here? In order to predict whether gold prices will skyrocket or come crashing down, it’s important to understand the principal factors that affect the price of any commodity: supply and demand.

 

The supply side of the equation is not particularly relevant in regard to gold because gold supplies remain fairly constant. That’s because production has not significantly increased due to a lack of new mining sites. Should supplies increase, however, investors may want to be cautious.

 

The demand side of the equation, then, is the one gold investors must look at. And as we noted above, demand for gold tends to increase when investors have a lack of confidence in the U.S. economy and financial markets.

 

That’s certainly the case today. In fact, we see two factors, that could lead gold to outperform in the near future: inflation and currency devaluation. In response to the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, the Federal Reserve injected massive amounts of liquidity into the money markets. Ultimately, that increase in the money supply could devalue the U.S. dollar and lead to inflation. In fact, the U.S. dollar is already shockingly low. On October 14, 2009, it fell to a 14-month low against the euro, hitting $1.4947, the weakest since August 2008, according to Bloomberg. And while inflation is not yet a problem, economists are on the lookout for it.

 

These conditions led Standard & Poor’s (S&P) to raise its gold price assumption for 2010 from $750 per ounce to $800 per ounce. “Investors seeking a hedge against inflation risks and uncertainty in the financial markets continue to support gold prices,” the S&P analysts write. “The metal's properties as a safe haven, and to a lesser extent the demand for jewelry, also support its longer-term price prospects.”

 

S&P’s estimate, however, may be on the low side. As of November 2009, gold was trading at more than $1,000 per ounce. And since gold exceeded $1,000 per ounce level, the price has been extremely resilient, with no meaningful pullback seen. There have been periods of profit-taking, but increased demand quickly appears on any weakness in price.

 

In sum, then, good old-fashioned gold fever is back—and investors who are looking for a promising trend may want to consider investing in it and other precious metals.

 

But don’t consider gold an investment only for troubled times. One of the greatest advantages of precious metals exists regardless of economic and market conditions. Precious metals tend to perform differently from other assets. As a result, investing in precious metals may be a good diversification strategy for a portfolio comprised mainly of stocks, bonds and real estate—in all environments.

 

This article was written by OilPrice.com - who offer free information and analysis on Energy and Commodities. The site has sections devoted to Fossil Fuels, Alternative Energy, Metals, Oil prices and Geopolitics. To find out more visit their website at: http://www.oilprice.com
Article originally appeared: 17-11-2009

Filed under: best online trading platforms


The Securities and Exchange Commission is laying down the law with dark pools--or at least starting to. The regulator put out a proposal for comment recently that makes some dark pools look more like exchanges and helps the retail investor.

In this proposal, the SEC has said actionable "indications of interest" (IOI)--or messages between dark pools showing what's in their venues--will be considered quotes unless they are trading blocks of stock worth more than $200,000. Those large orders must only be sent to "those who are reasonably believed to represent current contra-side trading interest of at least $200,000", the proposal says. So if you thought you, as a big fish, could go around hunting for smaller fish without quoting to the market--think again.

Eleven of the 29 dark pools offer glimpses as "indications of interest," according to the SEC's research. To help meet the "reasonable" criteria regarding size, the SEC proposes a size-discovery IOI that would be allowed and only interact against another large order.

Preserving block trading through these large indications helps institutional investors working for mutual funds and 401(k)s trade without moving the market against themselves, says Al Berkeley, chairman of Pipeline Trading Systems. These investors need to be wary of not only trading commissions and exchange fees, which go up as you break a large order into smaller pieces, but also market impact and opportunity costs.

Market impact costs have to do with how much your trade will move the market against you, and opportunity costs relate to what other trades you could have made if there wasn't a delay in your trade. Sometimes, traders with large blocks will wait for another large block to trade against because they would prefer to trade the whole thing at once. Other times, it's better to break up a block and get it done faster.

Though preserving large block trading helps retail investors, some of the logistics may need tweaking, says Tony Barchetto, head of sales and strategy at Liquidnet. The $200,000 threshold would be better if it were share based instead of monetarily based for small-cap stock investors. Also, the idea of this reasonable expectation that you're trading against another block warrants clarification, Barchetto says.

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The SEC's proposal also wants to increase post-trade transparency with venues being designated on the consolidated tape. Currently, dark venues don't have their venue's name associated with their trades.

Tim Mahoney, chief executive officer of BIDS Trading (which has a partnership with NYSE Euronext ( NYX - news - people )), says there could be confusion associated with this post-trade transparency because the proposal recommends that when a trade over $200,000 is done, a venue doesn't have to report where it was done. Since most venues report their volumes monthly, there would be a discrepancy between what could be totaled up from the consolidated tape and what each venue reports.

Mahoney also encourages dark regulation across the board, including not only dark pools but also electronic communications networks and exchanges. Since the exchanges have hidden orders, he hopes future regulations will address those venues as well as fair access to dark pools.

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13 November, 2009 - 09:38 Mobile money set to take off in Europe - Frost & Sullivan The Western European mobile money market is finally set to take off and will be worth up to EUR5 billion by 2013, according to research from Frost & Sullivan.

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Frost & Sullivan says that both wireless operators and banks are turning to mobile transactions in a bid to foster loyalty and drive revenues and that customers are becoming more receptive.

So far the technology has gained most traction in the developing world as a way to provide the unbanked with financial services.

In the developed world, providers are still attempting to get users comfortable by concentrating on services such as balance checks rather than transactions.

Frost & Sullivan says SMS-based services will drive growth in the short term but that once issues surrounding hardware costs and mass market availability are overcome, NFC-based contactless payments could prove the "pot of gold at the end of the rainbow".

Sharifah Amirah, principal analyst, Frost & Sullivan, says: "Growth will be driven by high frequency and low-value transactions supported by widespread, cashless transaction systems that are cost-effective and secure."

Amirah warns that if m-payments are to take off, concerns about security, the lack of regulation on mobile transactions, quality of service, high costs and limited collaboration between different participants still need to be addressed.

However, these hurdles are being tackled and several trials and small-scale deployments are being carried out, particularity in Eastern European markets and collaboration between banks and wireless operators is improving.

Says Amirah: "Once there is trust, security and greater interoperability, only then will there be growth in proximity transactions and m-commerce."

Filed under: best online trading platforms

Filed under: best online trading platforms