Blackberry Bold sales halted in Japan a week after launch February 28, 2009
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RIM announced on Feb. 20 that DoCoMo was starting to sell the Blackberry Bold.(Research in Motion)
A smartphone model launched in Japan last week by Research in Motion has been pulled from shelves after customers said the devices were hot ? but not always in a good way.
Waterloo, Ont.-based RIM confirmed in a statement Friday that it and NTT DoCoMo, the Japanese wireless service provider that had been selling the phones, were voluntarily suspending sales of the Blackberry Bold while they investigated reports that some were overheating.
The statement said a “small number” of the phones sold by DoCoMo in Japan since they were launched on Feb. 20 were getting unusually warm during charging but the temperatures “appear to have remained within the safety range of regulatory standards.”
RIM said it has already ruled out a battery problem, but is still investigating the root cause.
The problem does not affect sales of Blackberry Bold devices in other countries, the company said.
“The companies hope to renew sales in Japan soon,” the statement added.
RIM had announced last week that NTT DoCoMo, which has 54 million customers in Japan and bills itself as one of the world’s largest mobile communications operators, would begin making the Blackberry Bold available through all its corporate and retail outlets across Japan. The Japanese version included a specially designed keyboard with support for Japanese text input.
According to RIM’s website, the Blackberry Bold is sold in 29 countries around the world. The phone’s available features include built-in GPS and maps, Wi-Fi support and a video recorder.
Obama unveils $3.55 trillion budget, says ‘hard choices lie ahead’ February 28, 2009
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U.s. President Barack Obama, flanked by Budget Director Peter Orszag, right, and Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, talks about his proposed 2010 federal budget on Thursday in Washington.(Charles Dharapak/Associated Press)
U.S. President Barack Obama unveiled a $3.55 trillion US fiscal plan that will hike taxes on the wealthy, revamp Medicare and saddle the country with a massive deficit.
As part of the effort to pull the United States out of a crippling recession, the administration proposes boosting the deficit by an additional $250 billion US this year. That would enable the $750 billion US in increased spending under the government’s rescue program for banks and other financial institutions. The increased spending more than doubles the $700 billion bank bailout passed by Congress last October.
Obama predicts a whopping $1.75-trillion deficit in the current budget year, a figure 50 times the size of Canada’s deficit.
Obama’s fiscal plan will also ask Congress to raise taxes on the wealthy in 2011 and cut Medicare costs to provide health care for the uninsured. Private insurance plans serving Medicare seniors would take the biggest hit.
Obama said the cuts are needed to kick-start an effort to cover all uninsured Americans.
“We must make it a priority to give every single American quality, affordable health care,” Obama told a press conference ahead of presenting his plan to Congress.
“Having inherited a trillion-dollar deficit that will take a long time for us to close, we need to focus on what we need to move the economy forward, not on what’s nice to have,” he said. “There are some hard choices that lie ahead.”
Obama said Thursday he will slash spending by $2 trillion.
“We have targeted almost $50 billion in savings by cracking down on overpayments of benefits and tax loopholes ? that is money going to businesses and people to which they are simply not entitled,” he said.
“And we’ll save billions of dollars by rolling back tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, while giving a middle-class tax cut to 95 per cent of hard-working families.”
Going into debt in the short term will help restore American business vitality, but Obama said lowering the debt in the longer-term would be the only responsible approach to the country’s fiscal policies.
The blueprint is a 140-page outline, with a fully fleshed out version scheduled for release in April.
But it is only a proposal, which must get approval from Congress, where it is expected to spark fierce debate.
“This budget plan is once again a missed opportunity for American taxpayers,” said Judd Gregg, the top budget committee Republican who was nominated by Obama to join his cabinet as commerce secretary but then withdrew. “It raises taxes on all Americans, implements massive new spending and fails to make any tough choices to control the deficit.”
Among the highlights of the budget:
Health careTrim health-care spending ? which stands at $2.4 trillion a year ? and divert those resources to create a 10-year, $634-billion reserve fund to expand coverage for 48 million uninsured Americans.About half of the fund’s resources would come from cuts in Medicare ? scaling back payments to private insurance plans that serve older Americans, and charging upper-income beneficiaries a higher premium for Medicare’s prescription drug coverage. To raise the other half of the reserve fund, the budget would reduce the rate by which wealthier people can cut their taxes through deductions for mortgage interest, charitable contributions, local taxes and other expenses to 28 cents on the dollar, rather than the 35 cents they can claim now.TaxesExtend the $400 annual tax cut due to start showing up in workers’ paycheques in April, and extend the tax cuts passed in 2001 and 2003 for couples earning less than $250,000 per year. Those tax cuts were due to expire at the end of 2010.Raise income taxes and curb deductions for couples making more than $250,000 a year beginning in 2011, which would allow their marginal rate to rise from 35 per cent to 39.6 per cent.Raise taxes on wealthy hedge fund managers and corporations.Eliminate tax incentives U.S. companies now have to move jobs overseas.Phase out direct payments to farming operations with revenues above $500,000 a year.MilitaryAn additional $75 billion will cover the costs of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through September, on top of $40 billion already being spent. An extra $130 billion for Iraq and Afghanistan in 2010 and $50 billion annually is budgeted to cover the costs of operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.Climate Change$15 billion a year over 10 years to develop technologies such as wind and solar power, and to build energy efficient cars and trucks.Hundreds of billions of dollars would be raised by auctioning off permits to exceed carbon emission caps, which would be imposed on users of fossil fuels to address global warming. Some revenues from the pollution permits would be used to extend the “Making Work Pay” tax credit of $400 for individuals and $800 for couples beyond 2010.With files from the Associated Press (more…)
Wal-Mart Canada to close Sam’s Club stores February 28, 2009
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Wal-Mart Canada will close its Sam’s Club stores in southern Ontario next month, affecting 1,200 jobs.
The company, which employs 80,000 people across the country, says it plans to focus business operations on its supercentre outlets and discount stores as people become more price conscious in the worsening economy.
Sam’s Club is a members-only, warehouse-style format, similar to Costco. It’s been in operation in Canada for five years.
“Despite our best efforts and the commendable work of our Sam’s Club associates, our six clubs have not met our expectations,” said Wal-Mart Canada president and CEO David Cheesewright.
The Sam’s Club stores slated for closure are in Toronto, surrounding communities of Pickering, Vaughan and Richmond Hill, and in southwestern Ontario cities of London and Cambridge.
There are no other Sam’s Club stores in Canada, but they operate throughout the U.S.
The company said it will try to offer the displaced workers new jobs within the company.
Wal-Mart Canada said it is in discussions with “a major U.S. retailer” to purchase all of the Sam’s Club locations except the one in Cambridge.
The retailer also said it plans to open 26 new Wal-Mart supercentres in Canada this year, including expansions of existing stores, relocations, and new stores.
Wal-Mart supercentres can include a full-service supermarket, pharmacy, optical and photo centres, as well as shops such as hair and nail salons, bank branches and fast food outlets.
Earlier this month, Wal-Mart announced it was cutting up to 800 jobs at its Arkansas headquarters.
Retired Biovail founder seeks more shareholder control over company February 27, 2009
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Biovail founder Eugene Melnyk is badgering the management of Biovail and demanding a shareholder vote on “several resolutions to bolster Biovail’s corporate governance practices.”
Biovail’s three month stock price
Melnyk wants a special meeting of shareholders and wants to nominate two people to Biovail’s board of directors.
Biovail is Canada’s largest publicly traded pharmaceutical company
Melnyk says shareholder approval should be required for significant transactions. He also believes Biovail’s termination payments are excessive and shareholders should closely monitor executive perks such as the use of personal aircraft and travel.
“It is important that this should be closely monitored and controlled in these difficult times,” Melnyk said in a statement.
Melnyk retired as chairman and CEO of Biovail in 2007, but continues to take a deep interest in the pharmaceutical company. He tried but failed to overthrow the Biovail board last year and still faces an Ontario Securities Commission proceeding over activities while he was the drug company’s chief executive officer.
He recently agreed to pay a $1 million fine in a case brought by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over Biovail’s accounting practices, although the agreement includes no admissions or conclusions about culpability.
Sask. to help provincial livestock industry with $71 million February 27, 2009
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The Saskatchewan government moved Thursday to provide cash assistance to the province’s ailing livestock industry.
A straight, per-animal payment program was unveiled by Bob Bjornerud, the province’s minister of agriculture, who said a total of $71 million will go to cattle and hog producers in the province.
“This program will help producers retain their breeding herds and address immediate cash flow needs,” Bjornerud said in a news release.
Producers will get $40 per head for all breeding cows and bred heifers on a farm as of Jan. 1, 2009.
Cheques will also be provided to hog producers for animals they sold between July 1, 2008 and Jan. 31, 2009. The payments will be $20 per animal for market hogs and $10 for weanlings.
Bjornerud said he wants the federal government to contribute $100 million to the program.
He said federal assistance during tough economic times should not be limited to only the auto industry of Ontario.
People in the industry welcomed the provincial money.
“Somebody out there realizes how bad it is and cares [about] what’s happening,” Joe Kleinsasser, a past chairperson of the producer agency Sask Pork, told CBC News on Thursday. “It’s a big morale booster.”
Others, like cattle owner Brian Ross, said they hoped federal Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz would take a cue from the provincial program and take action.
“For Mr. Ritz to turn his back on producers in his own native province especially is very frustrating,” Ross said.
Bjornerud said he felt the same way.
“We are tired of the federal government’s excuses for not doing anything meaningful to date,” he said. “With significant support for other areas of the Canadian economy, the federal government needs to recognize the importance of our cattle and hog industries as well.”
Bjornerud says the provincial money should begin flowing to farmers by March.
Only Saskatchewan producers are eligible for the money. Corporations or other operations that have headquarters in the province can also get money through the program. The maximum payment is $2 million per operation.
How the Caisse’s loss stacks up February 26, 2009
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The eye-popping loss reported Wednesday by the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec is the latest by a big Canadian pension fund, reflecting the financial markets’ rough ride in 2008.
Here are the numbers from the Caisse and some other large funds:
Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec
Assets (Dec. 31, 2008) $120.1 billion
Drop in assets (from Dec. 31, 2007) $39.8 billion
Weighted average return on depositors’ funds ?25%
Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System
Assets (Dec. 31, 2008) $43.5 billion
Drop in assets (from Dec. 31, 2007)
$8 billion
Investment return ?15.3%
Canada Pension Plan Fund
Assets (Dec. 31, 2008) $108.9 billion
Drop in assets (from Sept. 30, 2008) $8.5 billion
Investment return ?6.7% (Q3 only)
The Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, another giant investment fund, is due to release its 2008 financial report on April 2.
By way of comparison to the loses suffered by the pension funds, the S&P/TSX composite index lost about 35 per cent in 2008.
Nortel cutting another 3,200 jobs February 26, 2009
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Nortel Networks, currently restructuring in court-ordered creditor protection, said Wednesday it is cutting an additional 3,200 jobs around the world.
The telecommunications company said the cuts are on top of 1,800 remaining staff reductions that were announced earlier and are yet to be completed.
Nortel said the cuts will be made over the next several months.
“There is nothing more difficult than notifying employees, and Nortel is extremely conscious of the personal financial burden this will cause affected employees and their families,” said Mike Zafirovski, Nortel’s president and CEO.
“Nortel is a company driven by people and innovation. But with the unprecedented economic environment and resultant impacts on revenues, significant changes are required to regain our financial footing,” he said in a release.
The company also said it will not pay any bonuses for 2008 under its incentive plan. Nortel is also seeking court approval to terminate its stock compensation plan, including all outstanding stock options. The company said no further equity will be awarded this year.
Nortel has been in creditor protection since Jan. 14. It made the move one day before it was due to make a $107-million US interest payment on its debt. At the time it filed for protection, the company said it had about $2.3 billion in cash on hand, while owed about $4.5 billion in long-term debt.
Nortel said Wednesday it is working on a restructuring plan to get out of creditor protection as a more competitive company.
Agrium launches $3.6B US bid for CF Industries February 26, 2009
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Calgary-based fertilizer company Agrium Inc. on Wednesday launched a $3.6-billion cash-and-stock takeover bid for CF Industries Holdings Inc., a fertilizer firm based in Deerfield, Ill.
Agrium said the offer values CF at $72 US per share, and would include one Agrium share plus $31.70 US in cash for each CF share.
Agrium said the offer represents a premium of 30 per cent over CF’s closing price on Feb. 24, and a premium of 42 per cent over the 30-day volume-weighted average share price of CF.
“Adding CF’s strong North American nitrogen, phosphate and extensive crop nutrient distribution assets to Agrium’s broader global wholesale and retail capabilities would greatly enhance our existing portfolio and enable us to create a premier global franchise across the entire agricultural value chain,” said Agrium president and CEO Mike Wilson in a release.
Wilson said a combined Agrium-CF would have $14 billion US in revenues.
In a letter to CF’s board of directors, Wilson said Agrium’s offer is contingent on CF cancelling its $2.1-billion US takeover bid for Terra Industries Inc., a producer of nitrogen fertilizer based in Sioux City, Iowa.


