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November 2007 Research Discussion

BMironov

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Globe and Mail:McGuinty`s crowing about jobs is for the birds (Nov 15, 2007)
http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/st...lumnsBlogs/home

QUOTE Sometimes it`s hard to know which Dalton McGuinty will show up: the pauper, or the gloater?

Ontario`s economy is in a tough spot, what with the high dollar, high taxes and the China factor squeezing the factories until they turn black, blue, aubergine and every other nasty shade you can think of. That`s why Mr. McGuinty thinks he deserves a chunk of the fat federal surplus in which his old political foe, Jim Flaherty, is lolling about like some kind of modern-day Croesus.

But on the other hand: "Let`s not lose perspective," the freshly re-elected Ontario Premier told an audience of 250 academics, bureaucrats and business people at the Ontario Economic Summit. "The economy remains strong ... unemployment is at a five-year low ... 85 per cent of the economy is not manufacturing," and so on. The ranks of the employed have expanded by 165,000 in the past year, not too shabby for a province that derives much of its growth from Michigan and New York - and no doubt, in the Premier`s mind, a result of his amazing leadership.
...
Sometimes it`s hard to know which Dalton McGuinty will show up: the pauper, or the gloater?Ontario`s economy is in a tough spot, what with the high dollar, high taxes and the China factor squeezing the factories until they turn black, blue, aubergine and every other nasty shade you can think of. That`s why Mr. McGuinty thinks he deserves a chunk of the fat federal surplus in which his old political foe, Jim Flaherty, is lolling about like some kind of modern-day Croesus.

But on the other hand: "Let`s not lose perspective," the freshly re-elected Ontario Premier told an audience of 250 academics, bureaucrats and business people at the Ontario Economic Summit. "The economy remains strong ... unemployment is at a five-year low ... 85 per cent of the economy is not manufacturing," and so on. The ranks of the employed have expanded by 165,000 in the past year, not too shabby for a province that derives much of its growth from Michigan and New York - and no doubt, in the Premier`s mind, a result of his amazing leadership.
...
David Wolf, Merrill Lynch`s top economist in Canada, thought something didn`t make sense about the latest employment numbers. He went deeper, and guess what he found? Queen`s Park`s great job-creation machine is ... Queen`s Park! "The majority of the total job gains over the past three months have come from two narrow areas - Ontario education and Ontario public administration," he wrote, which have seen employment rise by 89,000 bodies since July.
...
It`s obvious that the Grits don`t worry much about restraint. Some conservative economists hold the view that governments should limit spending increases to the rate of population growth, plus inflation. That would imply a 13-per-cent rise in provincial spending since 2003-04. But the budget plan for this fiscal year calls for $91-billion in expenses - or 23-per-cent higher than four years ago.
...
Any budget is based on assumptions, and one of the assumptions the government made was that the dollar would be about 86 cents (U.S.). The fine print says that, for every cent it goes up, the province stands to lose between $25-million and $125-million in revenue. So dollar parity implies a revenue loss of $350-million to $1.7-billion.

U.S. growth is also likely to come to well below the government`s estimate, which could cost another billion or two.

None of this is to say that there won`t be offsetting factors or that the province is about to plunge back into deficit.

But if we had to put money on it, we`d bet that by the time this summit rolls around next year, Mr. McGuinty will be less glib and his pauper routine will sound more credible.
 

BMironov

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Canadian Real Estate Association (CREA):Some home buyers will benefit from new tax measures (Oct 30, 2007)
http://www.crea.ca/public/news_stats/pdfs/...cstateoct07.pdf

QUOTE The tax changes outlined in the federal government’s economic statement are one step in helping Canadians buy a new home, but The Canadian Real Estate Association says the government should include other initiatives in the next federal budget, including the outstanding election promise of addressing capital gains taxes.

"The one per cent cut in the GST will provide savings to new home buyers," says CREA CEO Pierre Beauchamp. For example, using the sliding GST scale that applies to the cost of new homes, a buyer of a $375,000 house in British Columbia would save $2, 738.
...
The Association has recommended the federal government increase the personal maximum withdrawal allowed under the Home Buyers’ Plan to $25,000 from the current level of $20,000. The current level has not been adjusted since the plan was launched in 1992. The adjustment, according to CREA, would at least keep the Home Buyers Plan in step with inflation.

REALTORS® are asking the federal government to amend the Income Tax Act to provide real property investors with the freedom to change asset classes without the financial penalties they currently face. Under our proposal, this would be achieved by allowing property investors to defer the capital gains tax and the capital cost allowance recovery on the sale of an investment property when the funds are reinvested into another within a specified time period.
 

Thomas Beyer

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we bought across the river, in Detroit, MI for that reason .. a 42 suiter @ $630,000 .. so this may be a better idea than Ontario .. especially with the strong loonie and the new GM auto pact in the US .. this is a test for us .. so yes, Ontario will suffer for a while (years ???) .. or at least certain sectors in Ontario !!!

btw: plenty of jobs out west !!
 

BMironov

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Edmonton Journal:City urged to set up north-side industrial zone (Nov 16, 2007)
http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news...a4-ee80f8902050

QUOTE Edmonton must move quickly to provide land for industry in the city`s northeast if it wants to compete with neighbouring counties, says a new report.The report calls for the establishment of industrial parks in the area so industry related to bitumen upgrading can locate there. As many as eight huge upgraders are being built nearby in Sturgeon and Strathcona counties.

Mayor Stephen Mandel said Thursday getting the northeast plan in place is "very urgent."
...
Eventually, the report says, there will be a "city within a city" there with as many as 200,000 residents. Much of the area has high-grade soil, so parts of it will be preserved for small-scale agriculture, such as market gardens, greenhouses and horse stables.

Coun. Ed Gibbons, who represents the area, said establishing the industrial area first will leave time to make a good plan for the rest of the huge area. He expects to see light-rail transit extended into the northeast and possibly a new hospital located next to Alberta Hospital.

"What we`re designing could be a city the size of Saskatoon," said Gibbons.

The city hopes its northern industrial area will be similar to the Nisku area, attracting industry spinoffs from the upgraders.

A study commissioned by the city has identified 77 potential products that could be made from the processed bitumen from upgraders.
 
R

RussellWestcott

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Thanks for the post Boris. In addition to the previous post... with a bit of digging, I have found the following document, that has some of the background information on this article.

Click here to download the full report

Has some good information included... it will be interesting to see this go forward, especially when you factor in the Edmonton Transportation report, and the effects on Real Estate prices just released.
 

BMironov

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Globe and Mail:Rate cuts expected next month (Nov 17, 2007)
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/sto...PStory/Business

QUOTE More economists now expect interest rate cuts in the months ahead as the strong dollar eats into trade.
...
Opinion started to shift last week, with Merrill Lynch Canada saying the probability of a rate cut at the bank`s Dec. 4 meeting had tilted to greater than 50 per cent.

J.P. Morgan Securities Canada joined in yesterday, saying it now expects cuts in each of the central bank`s next four decision dates through April, which would bring the rate to 3.5 per cent. Exporters are seeing margins squeezed, while "profit declines are expected to cause a sharp slowdown in employment growth," noted chief economist Ted Carmichael.

Royal Bank of Canada sees two cuts in the first quarter of next year.
...
Not everyone has joined the rate cut chorus. CIBC World Markets senior economist Avery Shenfeld said the central bank will likely remain on hold in December and through next year as the loonie, which closed yesterday at $1.0269 (U.S.), simmers down from its $1.10 record high.
 

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Toronto Star:For $25M penthouse, buyer didn`t have to stand in line (Nov 17, 2007)
http://www.thestar.com/News/article/277334

Hong Kong man bids on top floor of Bloor condo

QUOTE A Hong Kong businessman is Canada`s newest King of the Castle – and he didn`t even have to stand in line to buy his $25 million penthouse suite.

The unidentified buyer set a new benchmark for the country`s priciest slice of downtown residential real estate this week when he bought the 7,500-square-foot suite at One Bloor East.
...
Architect Roy Varacalli says the penthouse takes up the entire 80th floor of the $450 million skyscraper, giving its owner an "absolutely spectacular" 360-degree view of the city.
...
If the buyer closes the deal within the prescribed 10 days, he`ll trump Toronto billionaire Alex Shnaider, who revealed in August he plans to keep what he thought was Canada`s priciest condo – valued at $20 million – in the Trump International Hotel & Tower he`s helping finance.

But Shnaider said at the time his mansion-in-the-sky could be as big as 14,000 square feet, dwarfing the One Bloor East penthouse.

Varacalli said the One Bloor East buyer was sold when he heard the unit will have a 12-foot-by-20-foot indoor infinity or "vanishing edge" pool. The pool`s infinity edge runs right up to a floor-to-ceiling plate glass wall at one side of the building.

"If you open your eyes underwater, you get a view of the city," Varacalli added.
...
It will be One Bloor East`s biggest, but not its only, penthouse.

The top three floors are set aside for top-of-the-heap suites. The two penthouses on the 79th floor have been the subject of $9.5 million offers.

Down on the 78th floor, three penthouses are still on offer for a mere $5.5 million to $6.5 million.
...
When the lineups started two weeks ago, suites were listed on a billboard at prices from $300,000 to $2 million.

By the time the sales office officially opened Wednesday, a new sign showed prices had inflated to $500,000 to $8 million.
 

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Globe and Mail:Bank of Canada will respond to global turbulence: Dodge (Nov 17, 2007)
http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/st...ry/robNews/home

QUOTE The Bank of Canada will adjust its monetary policy in the coming months to reflect the growing risk of a global economic slowdown, central bank Governor David Dodge said Saturday.His comments underscored the growing belief among economists that the Bank of Canada will move to reduce interest rates in the coming months as it copes with a sharply higher loonie and slowing growth in the United States.
...
“Downside risks to world growth have increased since we met a month ago” at the International Monetary Fund in Washington, Mr. Dodge said.
...
Mr. Dodge added that the Bank of Canada would have to respond to those increased economic risks when pursuing its own policies, which include the setting of trendsetting interest rates.
 

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Globe and Mail:WestJet seeks deal with Air France (Nov 19, 2007)http://www.globeinvestor.com/servlet/story...TJET19/GIStory/
QUOTE WestJet Airlines Ltd.
is holding talks with Air France
to forge a strategic partnership that would give new ammunition to the Calgary-based carrier, intensifying the battle against Air Canada in its own Quebec backyard.The negotiations are aimed at reaching an "interline" pact, with Air France and WestJet likely to co-operate on services such as baggage transfer, saving time for passengers on connecting flights, industry sources say.

Details are being ironed out to first clear the way for WestJet to accept inbound Air France electronic tickets by mid-2008. Air France would accept outbound WestJet e-tickets by the end of 2008. The outbound arrangement means Canadian consumers could eventually book a flight to Paris through WestJet, with Air France getting part of the fare revenue after the French carrier flies passengers overseas.

For WestJet, founded in 1996 as a carrier that focused solely on the West, an alliance with Air France will bolster efforts to woo connecting passengers away from Air Canada in its home base in Montreal. WestJet, which added Montreal to its route network in 2003, is gearing up to start service to Quebec City in late 2008 or early 2009, sources say.
...
The Air France-WestJet partnership is expected to mark the start of a series of breakthroughs, as WestJet seeks to sign more co-operation deals with foreign carriers, notably Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd.
and British Airways PLC
.

It is not connected directly to real estate in Canada. But shows that there is a lot of energy in WestJet. After signing such deals more people will use this airline company and therefore alter some transportation patterns in country.
 

BMironov

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If you need to extend a collection of "scary monsters" read on...
Toronto Star:
Job losses may double to 600,000
(Nov 21, 2007)

Union warns worse to come for manufacturers

QUOTE Jobs losses in Canada as a result of the rising loonie – already more than 300,000 – could double over the next few years if the currency stays at par with the United States dollar, says the Canadian Auto Workers union.

The near crisis that is costing jobs across Canada, and particularly in Ontario, is only the beginning, Jim Stanford, the CAW`s chief economist, told the Commons finance committee yesterday.
...
"So we have not yet begun to see the consequences of the (Canadian) dollar`s rise through 90 cents (U.S.) and then the dollar`s rise to and beyond parity.

"If the Canadian dollar stays anywhere near parity with the U.S. dollar in the medium term, I project another 300,000 manufacturing job losses in the next two to four years," Stanford said.
...
In the discussion with MPs, Stephen Beatty, managing director of Toyota Canada Inc., said it`s not surprising that Canadian consumers think "they aren`t getting a fair deal" when they see the same products being sold cheaper in the U.S. even though the two countries` currencies are equal. He acknowledged that the same Toyota model is being sold for $4,000 less in the U.S. than in Canada.

But Beatty said vehicles are priced higher here because they have more features to conform with Canadian regulatory requirements and other features that have proven popular with buyers in Canada`s more severe winters.
 

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Toronto Star:Machinists` drive targets Toyota plant (Nov 23, 2007)
http://www.wheels.ca/article/33081

QUOTE Another union is trying to organize Toyota`s assembly operations in Cambridge after the pullout of the Canadian Auto Workers.

The International Association of Machinists confirmed yesterday it has started campaigning to gain bargaining representation for 4,000 workers at the Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada plant.
...
The move follows a decision by the CAW to suspend its organizing efforts at the plant after four separate attempts in the past 15 years that cost several million dollars.
...
The CAW represents more than 35,000 workers at GM, Ford and Chrysler in Canada. It also has more than 2,000 members at CAMI Automotive in Ingersoll, Ont., a joint venture between GM and Suzuki of Japan. However, the CAW has been unable to crack the Toyota and Honda assembly plants since their arrival in Ontario more than two decades ago.

The United Auto Workers in the United States represents employees at Nummi Inc., a joint venture between Toyota and General Motors in California. But none of Toyota`s five other assembly operations in North America has a union.
 

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Globe and Mail:Ottawa on course for record tax haul (Nov 23, 2007)
http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/st...ry/robNews/home

QUOTE The federal government is heading for a record tax haul and another huge surplus, revealing Friday it has accumulated a $9.3-billion surplus in the first six months of the fiscal year.The Finance Department said it took in $2.6-billion more in revenues in September than in the same month last year.

Despite increased program spending, that meant Ottawa was able to squirrel away an additional $700-million for the month, compared with a $1.3-billion deficit recorded last September.

Last month, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty called the country`s “economic and fiscal fundamentals as solid as the Canadian Shield,” while introducing $60-billion in tax cuts over five years, including $4.8-billion in tax relief that was either retroactive or slated to begin in January.

John Williamson, federal director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation, said making some of the tax cuts retroactive was a clear signal the government is facing an embarrassment of riches.

“You don`t normally see retroactive tax cuts unless you have a publicly embarrassing problem or unless you are going to an election,” he said.
 

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Habitat of Humanity Toronto:The Grey Cup Build Begins
http://www.torontohabitat.on.ca/web/ShowNews.aspx?NewsID=87

QUOTE With the Grey Cup here in Toronto for the first time in 15 years, Toronto CFL fans have something to really get excited about. But beating out even the most die-hard football fanatic’s excitement will be the sheer exuberance of one single family.

For the first time in the Grey Cup’s 95 year history, Habitat for Humanity will construct a simple, decent home on the Festival grounds. Thanks to a partnership between the 2007 Grey Cup, the Michael “Pinball” Clemons Foundation and the Canadian Auto Workers Union (C.A.W.), one family will see their dream home built right before their very eyes in only three days. The family will also help build the home, and will purchase it from Habitat for Humanity with an interest-free mortgage.
...
The home is being built outside Rogers Centre during the Via Rail Bremner Street Festival over the next three days leading up to the 95th Grey Cup championship. Michael “Pinball” Clemons and his family, players and cheerleaders, members from the Canadian Auto Workers Union, and Habitat for Humanity Toronto partner families will all work side-by-side to complete the home in time for kick-off on Sunday. Fans who wish to participate and build alongside their football heroes may make a donation to Habitat for Humanity Toronto. On November 25 at 1:30 p.m., just hours before the 95[sup]th[/sup] Grey Cup game, the family will “kick-off” a new chapter in their lives as they receive the keys of their Habitat home during a key presentation ceremony. Following the Festival, the house will be dismantled and reconstructed in Oshawa. “I was pleased to convince Oshawa City Council on the merits of donating a surplus building lot in the City`s inventory,” said Councillor Robert Lutczyk. “Habitat is an organization which I believe in greatly because it truly provides a hand up and not just a hand out by creating home owners. I believe that home ownership is the fundamental foundation of success in our society.” Once this home is relocated, one more family will move out of substandard housing, and out of the cycle of poverty.
 

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Ottawa Citizen:Stop pouring money into buses, city urged (Nov 27, 2007)
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/s...622&k=68843

`Broken` system costs too much: O-Train group

QUOTE A light-rail advocacy group implored city councillors yesterday not to pour millions in federal and provincial cash into Ottawa`s "broken" bus transit system that they say is already costing the city more than it is worth.
...
Mr. Beltzner said yesterday that costs related to Ottawa`s bus transit system have been ballooning in the past several years with little to show for it. According to city budget documents, he said, gross transit expenditures have increased by 49 per cent between 2004 and 2008. This includes a 91-per-cent increase in compensation and benefit costs and a 35-per-cent increase in fleet costs even though ridership has increased only nine per cent over the same period of time.
...
Last Thursday, a joint meeting of the city`s transit and transportation committees endorsed a comprehensive $2-billion transit plan that included applying to use the federal and provincial cash for projects the city is ready to start now.

According to transit committee chairman Alex Cullen, the motion in front of council tomorrow will ask it to reallocate that cash to four priority projects: completing the Transitway, construction of a downtown transit tunnel, the Cumberland rapid transit line and rapid transit for the southeast corner of the city.
 

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CIBC World Markets:The Efficiency Paradox (Nov 27, 2007)
http://research.cibcwm.com/economic_public...load/snov07.pdf

QUOTE Much is being banked on the notion that improvements in energy efficiency will be the answer to both oil depletion and greenhouse gas emissions. But is it a realistic economic premise that technological change can reduce energy usage, and by implication, its carbon trail?
...
In the past, the efficiency paradox has been used as an argument against efforts to promote greater energy efficiency and conservation. That is not our intention here. On the contrary, for a world facing the twin challenges of oil depletion and global climate change, there has never been a more urgent need for both. But in order for total efficiency to actually curb total energy usage, as opposed to energy intensity, consumers must be kept from reaping the benefits of those initiatives in ever-greater energy consumption. Otherwise, energy usage will be the beneficiary of our best efforts towards greater energy efficiency.


Globe and Mail:
Dim prospects that `energy efficient` will pay off: CIBC
(Nov 27, 2007)
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/sto...ory/energy/home
 

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Financial Post:Energy companies need US$70 oil for exploration to pay off (Nov 27, 2007)
http://www.financialpost.com/story.html?id=127446

QUOTE Oil and gas explorers around the world need US$70 a barrel oil to make the returns they were making only a couple of years ago, when oil prices were at US$30, according to a new study by international energy research firm Wood Mackenzie.Rising costs for equipment, lack of access to many basins, more challenging plays have pushed up the prices required by companies to earn a return of 15% on exploration, Andrew Latham, vice-president of exploration service, said from Edinburgh.

"What we are seeing is the equivalent of a new price floor for explorers, and the $30 that worked two or three years ago certainly doesn`t work any more," he said.
 

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Edmonton Journal:Pension inequality on the rise -- StatsCan (Nov 27, 2007)
http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/news...18-25f278dc20fb

Unions recommend doubling of CPP

QUOTE Growing inequality in employment earnings is threatening to spill over into retirement and offset the equalizing impact of the Canada and Quebec Pension Plans, a new Statistics Canada report says.

On average, Canadian couples appear to be better prepared for retirement now than two decades ago, but that masks what has been a growing gap in pension coverage between upper- and lower-income couples, the report Monday said.

"Canadian families` contributions toward retirement, which were fairly unequal in the mid-1980s, have become even more unequal over the last two decades," it said.
...
The 20 per cent of prime-aged couples with the highest incomes saw their average earnings rise in inflation-adjusted dollars to $175,1000 in 2004 from $122,700, while their counterparts at the bottom of the income ladder saw virtually no growth in their earnings, which edged up to an average of just $25,000 from $24,600.
 

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Globe and Mail:China`s corruption a crisis in the making (Nov 28, 2007)
http://www.reportonbusiness.com/servlet/st...lumnsBlogs/home

QUOTE Financier Warren Buffett and Prime Minister Stephen Harper make an astute team of investment advisers. Mr. Buffett says people should be wary of investing in China. Mr. Harper says people should be wary of Chinese investment in Canada. Now, in a devastating analysis of China`s systemic corruption, a distinguished academic predicts - "inevitably" - an end to the country`s three decades of rapid economic expansion.
...
Mr. Pei describes China as a number of mafia states run by corrupt officials, from the highest levels down to the lowest, who themselves form the Communist Party of China - which explains why the party will never be able to reform itself, why the party will never adapt either to democratic or to free-market norms.
...
Beijing punishes only a small proportion of its corrupt officials, all of whom are party members. Although as many as 190,000 government officials are cited for corruption every year, 80 per cent of them get only a warning. Only 20 per cent get expelled from the party. Fewer than 6 per cent are prosecuted and only half of these serve jail time.

"The odds that a corrupt official will go to jail are, at most, three out of 100," Mr. Pei says, "making corruption a high-return, low-risk activity."

In the 1980s, Mr. Pei says, few corrupt officials stole more than one million yuan ($135,000). Now, even lowest-level officials routinely steal "tens of millions of yuans."

All in all, Mr. Pei says, corrupt government officials steal 3 per cent of the country`s $10-trillion (U.S.) economy, or $300-billion. These crimes, he says, "represent a large transfer of wealth from the poorer to the richer, to a tiny group of elites."
...
China`s Ministry of Land Resources reported last year that half the property transfers it examined were illegal, that it had documented more than one million cases of criminal transfers. These are the crimes, Mr. Pei says, that spark tens of thousands of riots and violent demonstrations every year, most of which go unreported in the West.
...
Mr. Pei observes that the spillover effects onto Western investors - and, indeed, Western governments - is significant. The corruption "endangers" foreign investors. Criminal conduct by Chinese officials can expose Western firms to huge environmental and financial liabilities - to say nothing of human rights abuses. Corruption makes it difficult for honest businesses to succeed. Corruption jeopardizes Western intellectual property rights.

Just another great commentary article by Neil Reynolds
 

Thomas Beyer

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indeed, severe growth pains .. Europe and US and Canada took 200-300 years to get "things in order" what took China 10-15 years in terms of real estate law, human rights, in-migraton to cities, anti-couption law, court system, free press, democracy .. look at the attrocities in Europe or South America in the 1700`s ... before electricity, internet, steam engine, printing press, gasoline engine, telephony existed ..

The biggest MASS MIGRATION TO CITIES is happening in China right now .. about 25,000,000 to 50,000,000 people PER YEAR are moving to cities .. is there a real estate opportunity perhaps ??

100,000 people PER DAY are being connected to the internet .. is this teh reason for the stock market bubble in China ?? 100,000 people per day being able to place online bets (oops .. investments ..) ??
 

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Globe and Mail:Petrocan chief backs oil sands despite royalties (Nov 29, 2007)
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/sto...PStory/Business

Overall viability won`t be affected, says CEO Brenneman, but company`s conventional oil and gas spending likely to be cut

QUOTE Higher petroleum royalties in Alberta will not hurt the "overall viability" of Petro-Canada
oil sands projects, but some planned investment in conventional oil and gas in the province will be affected, chief executive officer Ron Brenneman said yesterday. "At least at this point [the oil sands] still look like pretty solid projects and I think that`s because for the most part we`re dealing with very high-quality resources. ... They`re the ones that should survive in the new royalty regime," Mr. Brenneman said at the company`s investor day in Edmonton.
...
CNQ did say on Tuesday that it is slowing down its plans to develop the oil sands, declaring the era of "megaprojects" over.

The company said the main cause was the spiralling cost of labour around Fort McMurray and didn`t blame higher royalties.

The level of returns that the first $14-billion phase of Fort Hills might produce if oil prices are low has caused some concern amongst some analysts, and Petrocan itself has described them as "skinny."

Nevertheless, the company has remained staunchly committed to the project, and even acquired an additional 5-per-cent stake in the development from partner UTS Energy Corp. for $375-million after the original royalty review panel report was released in September.

Mr. Brenneman said that while he was happy with Petrocan`s current stake in Fort Hills, the company would consider taking a further increased interest there if one were to become available.
 
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