2014年11月10日 星期一

2014-11-11 Uganda Business


NWSC eyes own power plant  Independent
Water pipes at the NWSC complex at Gaba. INDEPENDENT/JIMMY SIYAExpects 7 MW plant cut higher costs on power to fund its expansion programme. Uganda's sole piped water supplier, National Water and Sewerage Cooperation (NWSC), is in the ...


and more »   


Why Taxation Must Go Global  The Independent
We are witnessing profound changes in the way that the world economy works. As a result of the growing pace and intensity of globalisation and digitisation, more and more economic processes have an international dimension. As a consequence, an ...


and more »   


What Pioneer buses show about Ugandans  Independent
What emotion do you get at the sight of a mass of Pioneer buses rotting away in the parking lot of Namboole Stadium? Every time I see the red and yellow heap of them literally rotting away, questions race through my mind. I look away in total mortification.

and more »   


NSSF to the rescue  Independent
NSSF headquarters in Kampala. FILE PHOTOWill Pension Fund's billions save or sink with Uganda Clays? On Oct.31, the Uganda Clays counter on the Uganda Securities Exchange (USE) had neither outstanding bids nor offers, but 50,000 shares were ...


and more »   

  East African Business Week   
NIC Bank puts aside $134m for expansion  East African Business Week
KAMPALA: Gachora said the bank is focused in markets like Uganda where they have created good partnerships. KAMPALA, Uganda - The Group Managing Director of NIC Bank Group, John Gachora, has said the regional financial institution has raised ...


and more »   

  Wall Street Journal   
Too-big-to-fail banks must build up buffer  Herald Scotland
BANKS have been told they may have to slash bonuses and shareholder dividends to pay for proposals designed to stave off more taxpayer rescues. BANKS have been told they may have to slash bonuses and shareholder dividends to pay for proposals ...

Central banks move to stop taxpayer cash bailing out banks in future   Irish Independent
New rules on 'too-big-to-fail' banks proposed   Irish Examiner
The new rule big banks will hate   NEWS.com.au
Wall Street Journal   
Scotsman (blog)   
all 255 news articles »   

  Financial Post   
Mechanical issues force shutdown of Imperial Oil's Kearl mine  The Globe and Mail
Imperial Oil Ltd. said late Monday it shut down operations at its Kearl oil sands mine due to a mechanical issue. Imperial, which is majority owned by Exxon Mobil Corp, said on its web site it shut Kearl as a precautionary ‎measure due to "early detection of a ...

Imperial Oil Suspends Production at Key Oil Sands Mine   Wall Street Journal
Imperial Oil shuts Kearl oil sands mine for 'several weeks'   Reuters Africa
Investments in Alberta oilsands projects to exceed $514 billion by 2038, CERI ...   Calgary Herald
Montreal Gazette   
all 13 news articles »   

  The Australian Financial Review (blog)   
New bank capital rules set 'too big to fail' in stone  The Australian Financial Review (blog)
Policymakers also want to avoid taxpayers having to inject cash into failing banking entities – as they did with AIG, Citigroup, RBS, UBS, Lloyds and others. Christopher Joye. Global panel to propose stricter bank capital rules. Are too-big-to-fail banks a thing of ...


and more »   

  BDlive   
Rebrand is set to add Vitality  Herald Scotland
PRUDENTIAL has sold its remaining 25 per cent stake in the PruHealth and PruProtect insurance brands for £155 million. PRUDENTIAL has sold its remaining 25 per cent stake in the PruHealth and PruProtect insurance brands for £155 million. South African ...

Discovery pays £155m for remaining stake in Prudential's UK subsidiaries   CITY A.M.
Prudential to sell off heath insurance venture in a deal worth around £620million   This is Money

all 53 news articles »   

  euronews   
Russia Cash Squeeze Gets First Test Today in Loan Auction  Bloomberg
Russian policy makers' latest bid to shore up the nation's currency sounds complex but is actually simple: They will take rubles out of the hands of banks. Fewer rubles means bankers will have less cash to buy dollars. That in turn will stem the selloff in the ...

Irish banks increase scrutiny of Russian accounts   Irish Times
Wary Russians buy dollars, stash cash   The Daily Star
Russia plays long game in defence of the rouble   The Times (subscription)
CTV News   
Telegraph.co.uk   
Deutsche Welle   
all 318 news articles »   

沒有留言:

張貼留言