Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Obama picks gay men for ambassador posts - Windy City Times 26/06/13 | Cronología del matrimonio homosexual en Estados Unidos - 6/26/2013 - Primera Hora : Noticias

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Obama picks gay men for ambassador posts Windy City Times During this time, he also served as a senior advisor for Development and Security to the U.S. Central Command Assessment Team. From 2007 to .... Ms. Gilbert served on the Board of D..



Chinese businessman behind $40 billion Nicaragua canal denies special ties - Reuters | Central America Investor Alert: Why the Chinese are spending $40bn in Central America


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RT (blog) Chinese businessman behind $40 billion Nicaragua canal denies special ties Reuters Nicaragua's Congress last week granted Wang's Cayman Islands-registered HKND company a 50-year concession to develop the canal, following ..



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Central America Investor Alert: Why the Chinese are spending $40bn in Central ... InvestorIdeas.com (press release) Rice has highlighted Cuba , Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic as potential future markets. CWC can also beef up its ho..

Central America Investor Alert: Why the Chinese are spending $40bn in Central America

By: James McKeigue

Ideas get bigger when you share them...

June 26, 2013 (www.investorideas.com newswire) For centuries the world's leading powers have looked for the best way to transport goods between Central America 's Pacific and Atlantic coasts. Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, was one of the very first to try and initiate a water passage. In 1534, he ordered the Panama regional governor to survey a route to the Pacific. At the time, the governor came back with the opinion that it was simply impossible to accomplish. More or less following the course of the Panama Canal , this proved false information.


Later France (unsuccessfully) and America (successfully) were to follow up with canal attempts of their own. Last month, China signalled its arrival with a $40bn deal to build a rival to the Panama Canal in Nicaragua . In geopolitical terms this is huge. America has used gunboat diplomacy and outright war to defend the Panama Canal, ensuring its control over the most strategically important waterway in the western hemisphere, and Washington won't want a China-backed rival. New World readers should take note too. This is another reminder of why we should be looking for ways to invest in Central America – one of the world's most exciting economic regions.

The challenges facing the Chinese

The task facing the Chinese consortium certainly looks daunting. Building an interoceanic canal of that size is an enormously complex and expensive task. Then, assuming that you do pull it off, you'll have to enter a price war to win business off an established competitor. Not ideal if you're servicing tens of billions of dollars of debt.

Laying a rail track is cheaper of course. And China has proposed several ‘dry canals' – ie, railways – in other countries such as Honduras and Colombia . But the long-term economics are less attractive, as switching heavy shipping containers onto trains and back onto waiting boats is more expensive than just sailing a boat down a canal.

Even if you somehow solve the engineering and financial problems there is one more challenge – politics. Back in 1903, America got its way by supporting Panamanian separatists against Colombia and then signing a very favourable deal with the new state. In other words, they were basically able to ride roughshod over local concerns. Nowadays that's not so simple. To get a massive nationwide infrastructure project like this off the ground you're going to have to negotiate with everyone from corrupt local politicians who want their cut, to concerned environmental NGOs.

Backing from the Nicaragua president

All of the proposed routes for a Nicaraguan canal involve immense engineering challenges, but ones that should be solvable. Nicaraguan press report that the Chinese consortium is backed by China Railway Construction Corp – a huge state-owned enterprise (SOE) with experience in putting together vast infrastructure projects. Anyway, if US engineers were able to build the Panama Canal 100 years ago, it seems churlish to suggest that the Chinese couldn't do it today.

Likewise, China , which recently overtook America as the world's biggest trader, could probably guarantee enough shipping for the new route to prevent the need for a price war. As for the politics, that's more complicated. Nicaragua 's president, Daniel Ortega, is former guerrilla who spent years fighting US-backed forces and is certainly no puppet. Yet so far he clearly thinks the Chinese alliance will help him and he succeeded in rushing through the canal legislation with the minimum of fuss.

All in all, this project still has plenty of challenges but it certainly looks the most likely for a long while.

Why this matters to us

The fact that China is willing to spend so much political and financial capital to build this canal shows just how important Central America is becoming. The small isthmus forms a natural land bridge between the northern and southern hemispheres, while the Panama Canal links East with West. This is nothing new, but as South America, Asia and Africa's share of world GDP and trade has raced up in the last ten years, it has made the region's ‘bridge status' more and more valuable.

But this story isn't just about goods passing through Central America . The region has a lot to offer in itself. Central America is made up of Belize , Costa Rica , El Salvador , Guatemala , Honduras , Nicaragua and Panama and is home to around 41 million people. The largest country is Guatemala with 14 million people, the smallest is Belize with just 300,000 people, while the rest have between three million and seven million people each.

Taken on their own, these economies are too small and poor to attract much investor attention, but as a group, they share several positive traits. They all have good demographics with young and growing populations. They're also all starting to open up their economies. The first major free-trade agreement (FTA) was with the US in 2004. That's been followed by one with the EU, which should come into force later this year. These deals are opening up large, new markets for Central America 's niche agricultural exports – from quality rum and cigars to masses of banana and coffee.

More surprising is that the FTAs are also helping the region expand its manufacturing base. Central America is home to lots of light manufacturing, such as textiles and electronics, where its main competitors are other low-cost producers in Asia . By signing up to these FTAs, Central America is gaining cheaper access to the lucrative European and American markets than its Asian rivals.

Longer-term, this growth in manufacturing could be helped by changes in China . Michael Henderson at Capital Economics believes that "as Chinese manufacturers have begun to edge up the value chain, their dominance in sectors such as textiles has started to slip. This is good news for many Central American economies."

Slashing energy imports

Another boost should come from improving infrastructure – especially energy. Because they are so small, Central American countries were typically unable to finance large, efficient coal or gas-fired power stations. Instead, they relied on smaller, less efficient oil-burning plants. That was bearable in the '80s or '90s when oil prices were low, but the massive price increases in the last ten years or so have left these countries with a large and volatile energy bill. The import costs have hit their macroeconomic position, while the lack of reliable electricity has stunted economic development.

But now that's starting to change. Because, while Central America hasn't got much oil or coal, it has plenty of wind and solar energy potential. So, unlike the UK , where renewable is often seen as an expensive, ideological option, in Central America it offers a great way to cut energy imports.

Over the last five years a number of Central American countries have started to wean themselves off oil generators. Around half of Nicaragua 's electricity demand is met by renewable energy, up from 20% just a few years ago. So far, the country is on track to meet its goal of producing 94% of electricity from renewable sources by 2016. The same story can be seen across the region.

Panama, El Salvador and Honduras all generate more than 50% of their electricity from renewable sources while Costa Rica gets almost 100%. As more renewable projects emerge, they will help governments shore up budgets and create a more stable environment for businesses and consumers. History has shown, at the early stages of development at least, that a more abundant, reliable supply of energy normally leads to more economic growth.

The final boost is coming from improved regional integration. I was speaking about this with Luis Velazquez Quiroa, a former Guatemalan economic minister, and he expects it to boost economic growth. He admitted that regional initiatives are nothing new – "the first integration effort was in 1871 and we've made 27 since then, but in the last few years we've seen real progress." This is down to both pride and realism he says. "There has been a realisation that international organisations like the World Bank or IMF don't want to deal with small countries, they'd rather work with a regional association. You also notice that more people are proud of being Central Americans and see themselves in that way."

A great way to play this story

All of the factors above look encouraging, but it's not very easy for a British-based private investor to gain exposure to the story. When I wrote about Central America back in February, I suggested that Copa Holdings (NYSE: CPA), the region's leading carrier, would be a good way to play the story. Since then the share is up 26%, but today, I've got another, slightly riskier, way to invest in Central America – telco Cable & Wireless Communications (CWC).

At first glance it may seem like an odd choice. CWC has its roots in an array of telegraph companies that connected the distant points in the British Empire . Over the last 100 years, mergers, nationalisation, privatisation and a final demerger in 2010 – when it split off from the larger Cable and Wireless Worldwide – has created a strange company with a hodgepodge of international businesses. Since 2010, the firm has done a pretty good job of disappointing investors, but now there are signs that things are changing.

CEO Tony Rice is trying to build a "pan-American" company. It is in the process of selling off about a third of the business – assets in places such as Seychelles and Macau – and planning to reinvest the windfall in expanding its presence in Central America and the Caribbean . At present the firm supplies fixed line, broadband and mobile to nine million people in 16 pan-American markets.

Panama is the biggest single market for the firm, making up 30% of sales and an even higher chunk of earnings. After Panama , the next biggest markets are Jamaica , the Bahamas and Barbados , where business is more subdued. But what's interesting about CWC – and what makes it a bit of a punt – is how it plans to spend its billion-dollar divestment windfall.

Rice has highlighted Cuba , Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic as potential future markets. CWC can also beef up its holdings in existing markets, where it often works in joint ventures with governments. For example, Rice has expressed interest in buying out part of the Panamanian government's stake in the firm's local operations. Rice is also moving the management team to a new headquarters in Florida , so that they'll be closer to customers.

Of course, there is plenty that could go wrong. If CWC ends up overpaying for assets the share price will suffer. But if management pull this off, they'll create a telco with a unique footprint in fast-growing Central American and Pan-American countries. That should result in growing sales, as increasingly affluent Central Americans switch over to data-hungry smartphones. It would also make the firm a useful takeover target for larger Latin American rivals such as America Movil. There's no doubt that this is a risky investment – but one with plenty of potential upside.

This article is taken from The New World, MoneyWeek's FREE regular email of investment ideas and news from Asia and Latin America . Sign up to The New World here. http://moneyweek.com/the-new-world/
original article source: http://moneyweek.com/

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García Padilla: Puerto Ricans do not want to be a U.S. state

via FOX News on 6/26/13
Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla said here Wednesday that "Puerto Ricans don't want to be a U.S. state." "We want to continue being Puerto Ricans, since we've voluntarily decided to have a relationship of citizenship and affection with the U.S., but we're not going to stop being Puerto Ricans and Latin Americans," the governor told Efe prior to taking part in the 12th Santander-Latin America Meeting.

Puerto Ricans don't want to become U.S. state, gov. says





Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2013/06/26/puerto-ricans-dont-want-to-become-us-state-gov-says/#ixzz2XLUuj3Pk


Puerto Rico Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla said here Wednesday that "Puerto Ricans don't want to be a U.S. state."
"We want to continue being Puerto Ricans, since we've voluntarily decided to have a relationship of citizenship and affection with the U.S., but we're not going to stop being Puerto Ricans and Latin Americans," the governor told Efe prior to taking part in the 12th Santander-Latin America Meeting.
Puerto Rico came under Washington's sway in 1898 and island residents were granted U.S. citizenship in 1917, yet they cannot vote in presidential elections, though Puerto Ricans living in the continental United States can.
Since 1952, the island has been a self-governing, unincorporated territory of the United States with broad internal autonomy, but without the right to conduct its own foreign policy.
Garcia Padilla's PPD party advocates preserving the commonwealth relationship with the United States, albeit with greater flexibility.
The main opposition PNP wants the island to become the 51st U.S. state.
Last November, Puerto Ricans voted 54 percent to 46 percent in a non-binding plebiscite to end the island's current commonwealth relationship with the United States.
Of those opposed to the current status, 61.1 percent voted for U.S. statehood.

"Puerto Ricans don't want to be a U.S. state. We're Puerto Ricans, we're a nation, not a province of another (one) and we want to continue being Puerto Ricans," Garcia Padilla said. EFE

García Padilla: Puerto Ricans do not want to be a U.S. state
Santander (Spain), June 26 (EFE). - The governor of Puerto Rico, Alejandro Garcia Padilla, said today in Spain that "Puerto Ricans do not want to be a U.S. state" because they are "a nation and not one province to another. "
"We want to remain Puerto Ricans, who have voluntarily decided to have a relationship with the U.S. Citizenship and affection, but we will not stop being Puerto Rican and Latin American countries," said the president.
The governor of Puerto Rico was expressed well told Efe before participating in the XII Santander-Latin America, and in relation to the possibility that the country is a U.S. state
In this respect, García Padilla explained that both the U.S. and Puerto Rico have rejected that possibility as "the annexation request again lost".
"Puerto Ricans do not want to be a U.S. state We are Puerto Ricans, we are a nation, no other province and Puerto Ricans want to remain," he reiterated.

epa - european pressphoto agency: García Padilla: Los puertorriqueños no quieren ser un estado de EE.UU.

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García Padilla: Los puertorriqueños no quieren ser un estado de EE.UU.
Santander (España), 26 jun (EFE).- El gobernador de Puerto Rico, Alejandro García Padilla, aseguró hoy en España que "los puertorriqueños no quieren ser un estado de EE.UU.", ya que son "una nación y no una provincia de otra".
"Queremos seguir siendo puertorriqueños, que hemos decidido de forma voluntaria tener una relación de ciudadanía y afecto con EE.UU., pero no vamos a dejar de ser puertorriqueños y latinoamericanos", insistió García.
El gobernador del Puerto Rico se expresó así en declaraciones a Efe antes de participar en el XII Encuentro Santander-América Latina, y en relación a la posibilidad de que el país sea un estado más de EE.UU.
Al respecto, García Padilla explicó que tanto EE.UU. como Puerto Rico han rechazado esa posibilidad, ya "que la solicitud de anexión volvió a perder".
"Los puertorriqueños no quieren ser un estado de EE.UU. Somos puertorriqueños, somos una nación, no provincia de otra y queremos seguir siendo puertorriqueños", reiteró.

Analysis: Puerto Rico - a vacation oasis overrun with high debt

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By Tiziana Barghini and Michael Connor
Tue Jun 25, 2013 2:48pm EDT

(Reuters) - Puerto Rico's turquoise Caribbean waters lap white sandy beaches under year-round sun, making the island a safe place to relax.

But beyond its shoreline, U.S. investors see a threatening view, a tropical version of a near-bankrupt industrial city - Detroit, whose stressed finances are run by a state-appointed manager.

"A lot of the same drivers that have been going on in Detroit are at work in Puerto Rico," said Robert Donahue, of Municipal Market Advisors, Inc, pointing to an underfunded government pension system, a shrinking population, heavy borrowing and an eroding tax base.

Credit agencies hold Puerto Rico debt just a step above the junk level with a negative outlook, meaning that another cut is possible. Donahue said receivership may be in the cards adding, "the political system is not solving the problems."

OCEAN OF DEBT

The fourth-largest Caribbean island, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico stands at the crossroads between North and South America and is a U.S. territory that has flirted with becoming the 51st state. Its residents are U.S. citizens but are unable to vote in federal elections; they also do not pay federal income taxes.

After a federal tax exemption for U.S. corporations based in Puerto Rico was phased out, the island'seconomy fell into a deep recession in 2006. There was an uptick for much of 2012, but the commonwealth's economy has been shrinking for six months. Some forecasters see that continuing in 2014.

Meanwhile, it has been financing its budget deficit with debt. As a result the debt has nearly tripled from $24 billion in 2000.

Moody's Investors Service calculates Puerto Rico's net tax-supported debt is $14,053 per capita, nearly 10 times the U.S. state average. By comparison, Illinois, a state with an outsized level of debt and big pension problems, last year had net debt of $2,526 per capita.

Puerto Rico 10-year bonds yield more than three percentage points over typical triple-A-rated issues. Illinois, judged the second-riskiest borrower, pays less than half Puerto Rico's premium.

As a result, mainland investors have snapped up Puerto Rico debt, which is exempt from federal, state and local taxes, building a mountain of debt that is 2 percent of the $3.7 trillion U.S. municipal bond market.

These days, there are fewer and fewer people to pay off the debt.

Puerto Rico's population has shrunk more than 3 percent from a peak of 3.8 million in 2000 and its unemployment stood at 13.4 percent in May, higher than any U.S. state.

While Puerto Rico's economy has historically tracked the U.S. economy, economists say that is no longer the case. Now, it is following the Caribbean region, where growth is faltering.

Gustavo Velez, chairman and founder of independent consultancy firm Inteligéncia Económica in Puerto Rico, forecasts the economy will shrink 0.8 percent in the next fiscal year. In the worst-case scenario, he said the economy could shrink up to 1.7 percent compared with the Puerto Rico Planning Board's forecast of 0.2 percent growth.

"The market is ignoring the potential extent of the problem," said Peter Hayes, who helps manage $114 billion of assets as head of municipals at BlackRock and sees debt restructuring as one possible outcome.

PADILLA TO THE RESCUE?

The 2012-elected governor, Alejandro Garcia Padilla, has been praised for his rigorous budget and for a sweeping reform of public pensions. The reform was approved earlier this year, but the $35 billion of pension debt will remain for years.

Padilla and legislative leaders are set to approve later this week an on-time $9.8 billion budget and have agreed to raise taxes by $1.5 billion in the fiscal year starting July 1, a sign of fiscal discipline welcomed by credit agencies.

But Puerto Rico has not been to the municipal bond market in over a year, and financial transparency is clouded because the government has yet to file its consolidated, audited financial report from fiscal year 2012 that ended June 30, 2012. The deadline was May 1, but the audit is now pledged by July 30.

Puerto Rico's government and its financing arm, the Government Development Bank, plan to refinance up to $3.4 billion bonds in 2013 on a bond market dominated by rising interest rates, as the Federal Reserve is seen abandoning years of relaxed monetary policy.

About 60 percent of the Puerto Rico's debt matures in 10 years to 30 years, and it is not under any imminent threat of being placed in receivership.

"A lot of pieces have to fall into place for receivership to happen. It's a little premature to speculate as to when it would happen. The situation has to devolve into a real crisis in which the government is not able to meet its obligations and operating expenses," MMA's Donahue said.

And if there was a crisis, would the federal government ride to the rescue? Unlikely, said Alan Schankel, managing director at Janney Capital Markets.

"In today's contentious (Washington) D.C., there's no way they would," he said. "The federal government would provide some help, but I don't think it would be big and in the form of a bailout. They are letting Detroit go it alone."

INVESTMENT FUNDS HAVE ALREADY SOLD

Investors are already leaving Puerto Rico, partly over fears that bond ratings will be cut to junk status.

Mutual funds, in the year through March 31, reduced their overall exposure to Puerto Rico, according to Lipper. Total Puerto Rico debt holdings among more than 400 funds tracked by Lipper shrank to $11.9 billion at the end of the first quarter of 2013 from just under $13 billion as of March 2012.

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Graphic - Are municipal bond funds leaving Puerto Rico? link.reuters.com/xaf88t

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All three major rating agencies have Puerto Rico on a negative outlook, and the market is bracing for action.

"Even if only one agency were to take them to non-investment grade, we think it could have a tremendous impact," said Lyle Fitterer, Wells Fargo Advantage Municipal Bond fund manager.

(Reporting by Michael Connor, Tiziana Barghini, Additional reporting by a Reuters correspondent in San Juan; Editing by Peter Henderson and Leslie Gevirtz)
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Somos un gueto ahora bajo el ELA – Vocero de Puerto Rico

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Somos un gueto ahora bajo el ELA

“Los 50 estados se encuentran en mucha mejor condición socioeconómica que nosotros”

EL VOCERO/Archivo
En una entrevista televisiva reciente en CNN en Español, el gobernador Alejandro García Padilla afirmó cándidamente que de Puerto Rico convertirse en un estado de Estados Unidos terminaría por transformarse en un gueto latinoamericano. De no ser que ya nos tiene acostumbrados a sus afirmaciones descabelladas y deshonestas sin fundamento, probablemente este último contrasentido hubiese sorprendido a muchos. Sin embargo, lo que no deja de ser sorprendente es su persistente empeño en tratar de confundir y descaradamente transponer los términos del debate sobre el estatus político subestimando la inteligencia de nuestro pueblo, a pesar de que la evidencia histórica y empírica lo desmiente contundentemente
Me explico. Los indicadores económicos reflejan que hoy, bajo su presente estatus territorial colonial, la Isla exhibe todas las características de un gueto cuando comparamos su desempeño socioeconómico con el promedio nacional y el de dos estados que vienen al caso; Misisipi por constituir el estado más pobre de la Nación y Hawai por ser un archipiélago isleño tropical como nosotros. Semejante a un gueto, Puerto Rico exhibe las tasas de desempleo, pobreza y criminalidad más altas de Estados Unidos. Así como la mediana de ingreso familiar, el salario promedio por hora y la tasa de participación laboral más bajas en toda la Nación.
Ni Misisipi, el estado más pobre, se acerca a nosotros en niveles de pobreza (su tasa de pobreza es menos de la mitad nuestra), marginación social (su mediana de ingreso familiar es el doble de la nuestra) y su nivel relativo de desempleo apenas es poco más que la mitad del nuestro.
En comparación con Hawai, nuestra similitud a un gueto aumenta exponencialmente en todos los renglones; duplicamos su tasa de desempleo, Hawai cuadruplica nuestra mediana de ingreso familiar, casi duplica nuestro salario promedio por hora y su tasa de participación laboral es 62% mayor a la nuestra.
Resulta que los 50 estados se encuentran en mucha mejor condición socioeconómica que nosotros bajo el ELA, pero por alguna extraña razón y por arte de magia si nos incorporamos como estado, es entonces que pasaríamos a ser un gueto. No señor Gobernador, somos un gueto ahora bajo el ELA y al igual que los 37 últimos territorios que se incorporaron como estados de la Unión, Puerto Rico no será la excepción y experimentará una bonanza económica que nos sacará de nuestra actual condición de gueto con reducciones significativas en el desempleo, la pobreza y una mejora significativa en nuestra calidad de vida.
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Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla Travels To Spain, Seeking Investment Opportunities

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San Juan –  Puerto Rican Gov. Alejandro Garcia Padilla departed for Spain on Monday  to seek investment opportunities that would benefit the island's economy, the island's government announced.
Garcia Padilla is scheduled to hold several meetings in Spain with private business and banking and his trip is primarily designed to promote Spanish and European investment in the U.S. commonwealth's pharmaceutical and medical equipment sectors.
The initiative is part of the Puerto Rican government's plan to create jobs, especially in the island's pharmaceutical sector, which is one of the most well-developed in the world.
Puerto Rico's economic development and trade secretary, Alberto Baco, and the head of PRIDCO industrial development company, Antonio Medina, are accompanying the governor.
The bioscience industries sector employs 35,000 people in Puerto Rico, where leading U.S. pharmaceutical firms have been established for decades due to labor cost advantages.
It is calculated that more than 18 percent of the pharmaceutical products sold in the United States are manufactured in Puerto Rico, including the medications Lipitor, Zocor, Prilosec and Norvasc.
Garcia Padilla is scheduled to travel to the cities of Madrid and Santander but no meetings with Spanish government officials are on the agenda for this trip.