Archive for June, 2009

Yellow expected as a bright spot for 2009

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Enough gloom and doom: There’s a prediction from a leading color source that cheerful and sunny yellow will be the influential color of 2009.

Pantone, which provides color standards to design industries, specifically cites “mimosa,” a vibrant shade of yellow illustrated by the flowers of some mimosa trees as well as the brunch-favorite cocktail, as its top shade of the new year. In general, Pantone expects the public to embrace many tones of optimistic yellow.

“I think it’s just the most wonderful symbolic color of the future,” says Leatrice Eiseman, executive director of the Pantone Color Institute. “It’s invariably connected to warmth, sunshine and cheer — all the good things we’re in dire need of right now.”

In the spring fashion collections previewed earlier in the fall for retailers and editors, pops of yellow brightened the runways of Carolina Herrera, who called her favorite shade marigold, Badgley Mischka, Zac Posen and Michael Kors, among others. Kors even included a retro yellow polka-dot bikini that clearly harkened back to a more upbeat time.

The fashion world first embraced orange a few years ago and that has evolved into yellow, which had already been gaining popularity in the home market, too.

“People know yellow lightens up the atmosphere,” Eiseman says.

Home-goods companies based in Paris and Milan, Italy, have already been heavily influenced by yellow, says Tom Mirabile, vice president of global trends and design at Lifetime Brands, Inc., whose portfolio includes Cuisinart, Farberware and Pfaltzgraff.

It helps that it looks good in florals and has a close association with nature, a driving force in the marketplace right now, and it complements current favorites green and purple. (In 2008, “blue iris,” a purple-tinged blue, was color of the year.)

“I’d say you should get used to seeing yellow in places you’re not used to seeing it,” Eiseman says.

Ukraine, Poland vow to solve problems in co-hosting Euro 2012

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Ukraine and Poland pledged here on Monday to solve their many problems in jointly hosting the 2012 European Championship.

“We will approach 2009 as a single team and will get all cities ready for Euro 2012 in a responsible fashion,” Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Ivan Vasyunik told a news conference after talks with visiting Polish Sports Minister Miroslaw Drzewiecki.

“Our new structure gives us reason to believe that we will forma unified team to tackle all tasks in 2009 and in staging the tournament,” said Vasyunik.

Vasyunik said the main issue weighing down Ukrainian organizers had been resolved: increased financing to renovate the stadium in Kiev, due to host the final, and start building a facility in the western city of Lviv.

He added that work was under way to upgrade Kiev’s international airport.

“We have seen considerable progress in the relations between our two sides to do away with critical problems,” Drzewiecki said.

Preparations in Ukraine have been heavily criticized by UEFA and others. Officials dissolved an agency overseeing preparations and formed instead a 50-member “coordinating bureau” directly responsible to the government.

People-Centered Socio-Economic Development

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Beneath the once tough family planning policy, there have appeared a measure of soft touch. “Private chat room” has become more and more popular among country women. There, they are free to talk with doctors on puberty care, premarital hygiene, wedding night experience, gestation health, contraception, menopause care, and prenatal and postnatal care.
Even traffic police have begun to show some gentilesse in traffic control. Such rude slogans as “Violations shall be punished” have totally disappeared. In their place are such eye- catching banners inscribed with “No haste, just take a break when red light’s on” and “A good measure of care would put your family full at ease” and other slogans to caution drivers.
In remote Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, the regional government has decided earlier this year to allow employees to go and visit their inland family and relatives with pay every three years instead of four formerly.
Even the once banned lottery has occupied a place in the people’s life. Welfare lottery and sports lottery have created quite a number of upstarts with the windfalls while beefing up the welfare undertakings for the handicapped and sports facilities.
The government has worked out a package of incentives to encourage people to spend their money and improve their life instead of urging them to zip up their purses and tighten their belts while the government is going all out to advocate for thrifty government spending.
“A nation full of human interest and sentiments makes people feel happy from the bottom of their hearts,”, said NPC deputy Chi Li,who is a well-known woman novelist. “China is moving rapidly toward this direction.”

Consumer confidence continues to slide in Q1

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Inflationary pressure and economic uncertainty further undermined consumer confidence in the first quarter of the year, a widely watched index showed Wednesday.

The National Bureau of Statistics said the consumer confidence index dropped 1.7 percentage points to 94.8 from the fourth quarter of last year, a signal consumers’ willingness to open their wallets is waning. In February, confidence slid to an 18-month low of 94.3 when inflation gained 8.7 percent, a 12-year record high.

An index measuring shoppers’ confidence in the economy also declined slightly to 90.8 from 92.5 in the fourth quarter of last year, when another index measuring consumers’ outlook for the next three months declined to 97.5 from 99.1.

Zhuang Jian, an economist with the Asian Development Bank said: “Concerns about inflation and uncertainty about the economy have cast a cloud over consumer confidence.

“The sluggish stock market also forced consumers to tighten their purse strings because of the depreciated financial investment.”

Consumer inflation has been on the rise since last year, largely due to soaring food prices. Mounting inflationary pressure then caused the government to adopt a slew of austerity measures to dampen investment and cool down the economy.

Combined with the turmoil in the international financial market, the move is now creating concerns the world’s fourth-largest economy might undergo a major slowdown this year.

The uncertain outlook has triggered a slide in the local stock market. Since the beginning of the year, the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index has shed about 40 percent, partly due to concerns about the profitability of listed companies in a weakened economy.

“The drop in consumer confidence is still moderate, and the potential consumption decline in the coming months is unlikely to have a substantial impact on the overall economy,” Zhuang said.

Currently, consumption accounts for less than 50 percent of China’s economic growth, compared to about 70 percent in the United States.

“Once inflationary pressures ease, consumer confidence may pick up again,” Zhuang said.

Sorenstam to play in China at last

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

World No 2 Annika Sorenstam will make her maiden appearance in a professional tournament in China when the Swede competes in the Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open from Oct 30 to Nov 2.

The event, tri-sanctioned by the Ladies Asian Golf Tour (LAGT), Ladies European Tour (LET) and the China Golf Association, will have special significance for the former world No 1 as this will be the final time that she will compete in a professional tournament, having announced that she is stepping away from competitive golf at the end of the season.

The event will offer the prize purse of 200,000 euros ($290,385) and will be held at Suzong Taihu International Golf Club, in Jiangsu province.

“I’m delighted to be coming over to play in the first ever Ladies European Tour event in China. Having started my professional career in Europe, I feel a very strong bond with the Tour and to be able to share this historic moment with my fellow European players is a big thrill,” Sorenstam said.

“It’s great also to see that the Suzhou Taihu Ladies Open 2008 is a true international event with not only competitors from the Ladies European Tour but also a large number from Asia, and particularly from China. China represents the future and I would love to see women’s golf develop strongly there.”

“We’re delighted that the Ladies European Tour is coming to China,” said Zhang Xiaoning, deputy chairman and secretary-general of the China Golf Association. “And we’re particularly proud that one of the all time great players in women’s golf, Annika Sorenstam, will compete. It presents Chinese lady professionals with some really tough competition and will be a great motivation for them to raise their performance to the highest level.”

“It’s our first event ever in China and will be a historic occasion for us,” Alex Armas, executive director of the Ladies European Tour said. “At a time of year when the weather in Europe is turning against us, it’s important to be able to extend the Tour’s season and give our players an opportunity to come here to compete.”

LAGT chief executive Aylwin Tai welcomed the new event and thanked Suzong Taihu International Golf Club for its foresight in sponsoring this event.

“The LAGT events are getting bigger and bigger. We need to elevate the status and prestige of LAGT,” he said. “We have been very successful as a few players on our Tour have already chalked up victories in the US LPGA and Japan LPGA, and also did relatively well in the LET tournaments.”

Wall Street heads to lower open on economy worries

Thursday, June 18th, 2009

Wall Street headed toward a lower open Wednesday, as investors try to assess how bad the global economic slump is and worry about the trend in consumer spending.

The market, which fell for the second-straight session on Tuesday, will get an update from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on the government’s financial rescue package at 10:30 a.m. EST. There are no major economic reports due to be released during the session.

There was fresh evidence that the financial crisis is causing consumers to tighten their purse strings.

Department store operator Macy’s Inc. reported a loss of $44 million for the third quarter as results were weighed down by charges related to a consolidation of several divisions. The consumer electronics chain Best Buy Co. cut 2009 guidance on fears that consumer spending will erode even further.

A big drop in consumer spending is a major concern since it drives more than two-thirds of the U.S. economy. Investors are also awaiting the government’s retail sales figures on Friday and earnings from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. on Thursday.

Battered shares of the top U.S. automakers might again come under pressure. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi wants Congress to support a financial bailout for the troubled U.S. auto industry, which is suffering under the weight of poor sales, tight credit and a sputtering economy.

President-elect Obama, when he met with President Bush at the White House on Monday, urged Bush to support aid for struggling automakers, and Democrats in Congress have begun drafting legislation that would give General Motors, Ford and Chrysler access to $25 billion of the rescue funds.

Dow futures shed 59, or 0.69 percent, to 8,578. Standard & Poor’s 500 futures dropped 4.60, or 0.52 percent, to 888.40. Nasdaq 100 index futures stumbled 10.20, or 0.84 percent, to 1,212.80.

On Tuesday, the Dow fell nearly 180 points as it became clearer to investors that it’s going to be hard to rely on the average consumer to pull the economy out of its downturn. The market also closed lower amid similar concerns on Monday.

Government bond prices, which did not trade Tuesday because of Veterans Day, moved higher as investors looked for safer investments. The three-month Treasury bill’s yield fell to 0.21 percent from 0.22 percent late Monday, and the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 3.74 percent from 3.76 percent late Monday.

Lower yields indicate stronger demand.

Crude slipped below $59 a barrel Wednesday on the growing realization that global economic growth next year will slow more than originally feared, cutting demand for crude products such as gasoline. Light, sweet crude was down 85 cents to $58.48 a barrel, after earlier falling as low as $58.55, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

In corporate news, American Express Co. is said to be seeking about $3.5 billion from the U.S. government to help boost its balance sheet, according to a report in The Wall Street Journal citing people familiar with the situation. AmEx, the No. 4 U.S. credit card issuer, won approval Monday from the Federal Reserve to become a bank holding company.

Prudential Financial Inc. said late Tuesday its 2008 annual dividend will be roughly half of what it paid out to shareholders last year. The insurer said it will pay a dividend of 58 cents per share on Dec. 19 to shareholders of record at the close of business on Nov. 24. Last year, the company paid a dividend of $1.15 per share.

After the closing bell, semiconductor equipment maker Applied Materials Corp. and Computer Sciences Corp., an information technology outsourcing firm, are also set to report.

Overseas, Japan’s Nikkei closed down 1.29 percent and Hong Kong Hang Seng fell 0.73 percent. In European trading, London’s FTSE 100 was up 0.52 percent, Germany’s DAX fell 0.22 percent, and France’s CAC-40 added 0.11 percent.

Jerry Kelly rallies to win Zurich Classic by 1

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

The 42-year-old from Wisconsin rallied on the back-nine for a one-shot victory in the Zurich Classic on Sunday — exactly 200 starts from the last time he picked up the champion’s check.

“It can’t feel much better than to win a golf tournament,” Kelly said as he polished off a tray of charbroiled oysters that his favorite New Orleans restaurant delivered after the win.

Kelly, who combined a week of restaurant hopping with golf, dropped in a 2 1/2-foot putt on 18 to earn $1.1 million, an exemption through 2011, and invitations to the Masters, World Golf Championships and the Mercedes-Benz Championship.

“This has been a long time coming,” Kelly said.

Kelly went into the final round with a three-stroke lead and offset bogeys on No. 8 and No. 10 with birdies on Nos. 5, 11 and 14 for a 1-under 71. He finished at 14-under 274, ahead of Charles Howell, Rory Sabbatini (67) and Charlie Wi (68).

Howell took advantage of Kelly’s mid-round stumble with one of his six birdies on 11, which gave him a two-stroke lead. But bogeys at the 15th and 17th left him with a 68 on the day.

“It’s frustrating,” said Howell. “I got up to 15, and had every chance to do it. I just couldn’t finish it off.”

Kelly, an admitted leaderboard watcher, said seeing Howell take the lead at No. 11 took some of the pressure off him.

“You know, it wasn’t my tournament to lose anymore,” Kelly said. “It was my tournament to go get. And that’s the mind-set I took after 10.”

Steve Marino, playing with Kelly, stayed within a shot until the 18th. Instead of getting the victory or forcing a playoff, he hit his tee shot into a fairway bunker and then needed two putts. The bogey gave him a round of 70 and a tie for fifth, two strokes back.

“I thought I hit a great third shot in there, and it just came off like half a club short in that bunker,” Marino said. “And that was it.”

Kelly’s first title since claiming the Sony Open and Advil Western Open in 2002 provided his biggest payday ever. The winning purse moved Kelly from No. 97 to No. 14 on the money list with $1.4 million.

It also netted him 500 FedEx Cup points, moving him to 17th in the standings.

David Toms, who won this tournament in 2001, had five birdies for a 68. He tied Marino for fifth, climbed in the FedEx Cup standings and into the Players Championship.

Paris airport to implement new safety regulations

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Airport of Paris announced on Saturday to deploy 500 more staffs, accompanying European new safety regulations which is to be taken into effect on Monday.

“From November 6, the new safety measures decided by the European Commission are to take effect in all the European airport. From this date, for the liquid over 100 ml, it is authorized to take onboard only if bought in the airport’s duty free shops,” Airport of Paris said in a statement.

Under the new regulation, passengers would be able to carry 100 ml containers of liquid on flights in a transparent closed plastic bag.

The new regulation make an exception for medicines and dietary supplements needed during a trip and baby food.

The measures, which are introduced to fight against “new dangers of liquid explosive”, would likely to prolong “the time of baggage check”, said the statement.

The airport would deploy 500 more staffs in all the terminals in Paris.

To avoid “chaos” in the check point, Airport of Paris advises the passengers to get to the airport earlier and to make contacts with their airline company before their arrival to the airport.

Retired couple, pet cats take 2,500-mile taxi ride

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Bob and Betty Matas didn’t want to subject their cats Pretty Face and Cleopatra to the rigors of an airliner cargo hold ride from New York City to their new retirement home near Sedona, Arizona — so they took a taxi.

Neither Bob nor Betty had any regrets about taking the 2,500-mile cab ride to the Sedona area in such an unconventional fashion. But Bob said he has no desire to take another road trip any time soon.

“It was pretty tiring, for my wife especially. … We’re happy where we are. We’re happy and that’s it,” Bob told The Associated Press.

The Matas met cab driver Douglas Guldeniz when they hailed his taxi in Manhattan after a shopping trip three months ago and jokingly invited him to come along on their upcoming move.

The three kept in touch during the ensuing weeks and what began as a joke turned into reality. Bob, Betty, Guldeniz, Pretty Face and Cleopatra departed the couple’s Queens neighborhood April 10. They arrived Monday in Sedona, about 90 miles north of Phoenix.

“It’s quite thrilling to be in the place we want to live and retire, said Bob, 72, a former audio and video engineer for advertising agencies. “There’s beautiful red mountains and weather and friendly people.”

Guldeniz drove his canary-colored Ford SUV cab about 10 hours a day for a 3,000 U.S. dollar flat rate plus gas, meals and lodging. The SUV is a hybrid-electric vehicle, which helped lessen the cost of fuel.

Matas said he was “flabbergasted” by the attention surrounding the couple’s trip. Passers-by recognized them when they saw the New York cab, he said.

“Every state that we hit, people would say ‘Are you the ones?’ and we would say ‘Yes, we are the ones,’” Matas said.

The Sedona mayor welcomed the couple at a noontime ceremony Monday and presented them with a bag of Sedona souvenirs. Their real estate agent presented them with the keys to their new home in the Village of Oak Creek, a community just south of Sedona.

The Matas will stay at a hotel for a few days until all their belongings can be moved into their house. A friend followed the cab in a rental truck carrying the couple’s possessions.

Since neither Bob nor Betty, 71, a retired executive administrative assistant, know how to drive, this won’t be their last taxi ride.

“There are taxi services to take us around. We’re only a couple blocks from the Hilton Hotel,” Matas said. “I’m sure we’ll manage. There shouldn’t be any problem. We can always get a golf cart.”

Making a fashion statement helps you save money

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Here is a little fashion tip, and it can help you save some money too.

In case you do not already know, give-away shopping bags, the reusable type, have become quite a fashion statement among the chic in some of the world’s most cosmopolitan cities from New York to Hong Kong.

Not all shopping bags can make the grade, of course. But the best-designed ones are obviously worth fighting for, as the stampede for a limited supply of designer shopping bags a few months ago in Hong Kong showed.

In New York, retailers ranging from upscale department stores, mid-price chains to fashion boutiques are engaged in heated competition to make the most durable, fashionable shopping bags, reported the New York Times. To retailers, the sudden popularity of shopping bags is a marketing opportunity as customers carry them around like walking billboards to the office, the beach, or restaurants.

Indeed, many young women are treating shopping bags as a second handbag. More and more men, too, can be seen using them to carry items that they otherwise would have stuffed into their jacket or trouser pockets.

Nobody is known to have done a serious study to explain the rise of the lowly shopping bag in the world of haute couture. But there are plenty of commentators and knowledgeable bloggers suggesting that the new breed of shopping bags, because of their reusability, have won a place in the hearts of many young, trendy and environmentally conscious city people.

In the past, most shopping bags, whether plastic or paper, were thin and equipped with crude handles. Few shoppers ever thought twice about throwing away these bags as soon as they got home. Toting a shopping bag around with one’s personal belongings inside was definitely not the cool thing to do.

Apparently, the common perception about shopping bags has changed a lot in the past few years along with growing public concern about the environment. As a gesture to preservation, more people began reusing shopping bags for as long as they could last. This change in habit obviously has not gone unnoticed by retailers.

Having bought a pair of shoes at a leading department store in Shanghai, I was pleasantly surprised by the apparent quality and durability of the well-designed shopping bag, emblazoned with the brand’s logo. It is made of a plastic-coated fabric with handles of the same material securely sewn onto both sides. I gave it to a friend who has been using it for grocery shopping for several weeks, and it is showing no signs of wear and tear.

Retailers in the United States have reportedly gone to even greater lengths in creating the ultimate shopping bag. Envisioning the shopping bag as “a work of modern art”, Saks Fifth Avenue, an up-market department store in Manhattan, hired a renowned graphic artist to create it, reported the New York Times.

Another New York retailer is said to have assigned a team of sales executives and designers on a spare no expense basis to redesign its shopping bags. The team took six months to produce the new design that cost more than twice the industrial average to produce.

Despite the higher costs, shopping bags have remained free of charge. All smart retailers can see that penny-pinching on shopping bags is bad business considering the huge benefits from free advertising.

I am sure there will be people willing to spend thousands of yuan for one of those leather trimmed designer tote bags. For most of us, a durable shopping bag will do just fine. Let us hope the popularity of shopping bag is not just another fad. It is a fashion trend we should all embrace.