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Australian

The Eventual split in fosters.

May 27, 2010 by Reporter 5 Comments

Foster’s Group said Wednesday that it would split its beer and wine businesses,  and sending the company’s stocks leaping. Fosters is popular for its local beer business and international wine operations

Splitting Foster’s Wine and Beer Business

The  Alcohol and spirit  company, which is the largest alcoholic beverage maker in Australia, said in its “demerger proposal” filed to the ASX that it aimed to list the units separately.

“Potential benefits of a demerger include increased transparency allowing investors to more appropriately value each business over time,” the company said, citing the freedom the units’ boards would have to “develop their own corporate strategies.”

The timing of the deal  and structure  was  to be determined, the company said  but its completion is unlikely before the first half of next year. Foster’s shares were up 0.38 Australian cents, or 7.379 percent, at 5.53 dollars, or $4.59, at the close in Sydney.

Beer and Wine brands of fosters group

Foster’s stable of Australian premium beer brands includes key brands Victoria Bitter, Crown Lager, Foster’s LightIce, Carlton Cold, Carlton Draught and of course, Foster’s Lager. Fosters wine rag=nge includes names like high-end brands such as Penfolds Grange, Beringer, Chateau St Jean and St Clement.

Beer

Fosters australia Beer  brands  VB  crowne lager  carlton mid

Foster’s American business unit, Foster’s Wine Estates, sells a range of premium wines including Beringer and St Clement from California’s Napa, Chateau St Jean from nearby Sonoma and Foster’s range of Australian imported wines.

Foster’s, which produces the beer of the same name, has not done as well with the wine unit, which the company has tried to sell before. “Foster’s wine business is showing signs of growth, but continues to be impacted by oversupply in Australia, subdued consumer demand in key international markets and a strong Australian dollar during the 2010 financial year,” said Ian Johnston, chief executive of Foster’s Group.

Marco Gulpers, beverage analyst at ING, said that while he saw little interest for the wine unit coming from European companies like Pernod and Diageo, there were several possibilities for the beer business.

The brand’s strong Australian heritage and sense of ‘fun’ continues to appeal to consumers seeking to savour the unique taste of Australia’s most famous beer

Filed Under: ASIC, ASX, Australian, News Australia, Report, TAX Tagged With: ASX, Australia, Beer, Report, Tax Reform

$94 billion has been wiped from the stock market

May 25, 2010 by Reporter Leave a Comment

$94 billion has still been wiped from  the stock market value over the past week duue to various factors like the greece  problems , australian internal new reform issues and  the wall street market performances.

Billions wiped from Australian  stockmarket

It fell 6.6 per cent for the week on fears that Europe’s debt crisis will hit global markets and affect growth of the world economy. It has been the market’s worst week since the height of the financial crisis in 2008.

 

However, the booming Australian resources industry has come under attack from politicians who are threatening to impose huge new taxes. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has proposed a ’super tax’ on resource profits in order to pay for rising health care costs for an aging population.

Billion  stockmarket billionaire

The tax which, would be equal to 40% of resource gathering firms’ profits, is proposed to begin in July 2012 and would raise an estimated $8 billion a year from 2013-14, which is about 0.7 per cent of national income.

The tax has not become law yet and is strongly opposed by many conservative politicians. The new tax would “eventually choke the goose that’s laid the golden egg for Australia,” said conservative Tony Abbott. “Australia’s future depends on the bulk carriers traveling to Asia.”

ref: http://etfdb.com/2010/will-resource-tax-sink-australia-etf/

Abbott announced that after rescinding the resource rent tax, a future Liberal government would not be able to match Labor’s planned reduction of the corporate tax rate from 30 to 28 percent. The decision indicated the opposition’s determination to win the backing of the mining companies, even at the expense of other sections of big business, which have long demanded corporate tax rate cuts to bolster Australian capitalism’s international competitiveness. The Australian resource sector is currently booming, driven by record commodity prices caused by China’s industrial expansion. Much of the rest of the “two track” economy, however, especially manufacturing, is in recession or near-recession.

Filed Under: Australian, Australian Stockmarket, Business, TAX Tagged With: 2010, Tax Reform

Potash Mining and Australia

May 18, 2010 by Reporter 3 Comments

Is potash the next big mining commodity in Australia ?

Potash is a group of potassium minerals (oxides, chlorides, sulphates, nitrates and carbonates) used for fertilizer production with the most commonly extracted being potassium chloride salts deposited as sedimentary salt beds formed by the evaporation of ancient seas.

BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s largest mining company, said in recent days it agreed to acquire Athabasca Potash Inc. for about C$341 million ($322 million) to add to assets in Canada containing the crop nutrient potash.

Australian potash mining

Potash is far from the most glamorous product of the global mining industry, it is  however, one of the most important commodities mining provides to the world.

Mining  Growth in Australian & Global potash sector

Athabasca has one of the largest potash exploration permit areas in the so-called Saskatchewan basin, covering approximately 6,900 square kilometres (2,664 square miles), BHP said in a separate statement.

 

The Athabasca deal will give BHP access to a total exploration area of more than 14,000 square kilometres in the so-called Saskatchewan potash basin, BHP said. Saskatchewan represents approximately one-third of the world’s potash production capacity and has approximately 53% of global potash reserves. It is big business. Potash Corp of Saskatchewan is worth more than Barrick Gold – the market caps are $US39 billion and $US33 billion respectively.

Potash is the common name for potassium carbonate and various mined and manufactured salts that contain the element potassium in water-soluble form. In some rare cases, potash can be formed with traces of organic materials such as plant remains.

minerals and commodity miningpotaqsh

POTASH TECHNICAL INFO

The main potash mineral of potential economic interest on the Colorado project is sylvite – a high-potassium chloride salt (KCl) containing 63% potassium (K2O) by weight.  Sylvite is water soluble and the most favoured salt mineral for potash solution mining.

The sylvite-bearing rock is called sylvinite and typically contains about 10-50% sylvite mixed with halite, minor shale beds and other salts.  The main saleable product after mining and processing of the sylvinite is muriate of potassium (MOP) a sylvite and halite mix containing greater than 95% sylvite.

 

Potash and mining in australia

Potash is a source of potassium which, in fertilisers, raises yields and disease resistance for plants. The potash price has doubled in the past three years. Potash production rates are related to demand projections whilst salt output is roughly determined by the development required to achieve the potash target.

Potash is a general term covering several types of potassium salts, of which the most important is potassium chloride, the mineral sylvite.

Potash is a nutrient essential for plant growth, and is a cornerstone of modern agricultural fertilizers. Roughly 95 per cent of world potash production goes into fertilizer, while the other five per cent is used in commercial and industrial products – everything from soap to television tubes.

 

It is well-known that Australian soils are low in phosphorus. What is not so well-known is that many of our soils are also low in potassium. As a result, the animal manures that we increasingly use on our gardens in place of chemical fertilizers are also low in potassium. This has led to an increase in the incidence of plant diseases.

Australia now imports all its potash, but Reward is hoping to fill a large part of that demand. There’s just that native title barrier and, of course, further drilling before Reward can cross the production bridge. Although potash could never be described as a fungicide, its correct use can certainly minimize diseases such as blackspot, rust and powdery mildew. These appear most visibly on the leaves and fruit of affected plants, but can affect any part.

In 2005, these three emerging countries (China, India and Brazil ) consumed just 42% of the level of potash scientifically recommended for them. Now these three countries, “require a combined 25-million more potash tons annually to meet scientifically recommended application levels.”  On existing farmland, China should increase its potash consumption by more than 100%, while India should increase its consumption by more than 6-million tons, and Brazil by 5-million tons, annually.

The top producing country is Canada, followed by Russia, Belarus, Germany, and the US, while other important potash producers are Israel, Jordan, Brazil, and China.

mining wa

In fact, there are just 13 global competitors in the sector. They are (from biggest to smallest): Potash Corporation (PotashCorp) of Canada, Belaruskali (Belarus), Mosaic (Canada, US), Silvinit (Russia), Uralkali (Russia), ICL (Israel, Spain, UK), Kali+Salz (Germany), Sinofert (China), APC (Jordan), Agrium (Canada), Intrepid (US), Companhia Vale do Rio Doce (Brazil), and SQM (Chile).

DRILLING FOR POTASH

Solution mining costs are directly related to drilling cost and the quantity of potash produced from each well.  A variety of production well configurations for solution mining are available dependent upon the geology of the deposit.  Most solution mining has involved extracting potash-bearing solutions from flooded underground mines or used well designs which access the potash with vertical drill holes (technique recommended for the Colorado Potash Project).

These extraction techniques are the lowest cost solution mining operations and enable large tonnages to be mined.  With improved controlled drilling methods horizontal well designs are being employed that enable thinner, high-grade beds to be cost effectively extracted but these are generally higher cost, lower tonnage operations compared to the vertical well configurations.

And, it must be noted, PotashCorp holds 32% of SQM, 28% of APC, 22% of Sinofert, and 11% of ICL. All told, PotashCorp controls 22% of global potash capacity. The first ten of the companies listed above jointly hold more than 95% of global capacity

Other potash projects

Caldera Resources In

(Caldera is engaged in diamond exploration in Australia. Three projects are located in the Pilbara region of northern Western Australia, one of which is joint ventured with Mr. Ronald Winston. The Company also has one project located adjacent to the Ellendale Lamproite Field in the Kimberley region of Western Australia. Caldera also has three base metal/gold projects in South Australia.)

 

Potasio Rio Colorado (PRC) potash project in Argentina

AusPotash

Aus Potash is now a wholly owned subsidiary Sirius Exploration Plc. For further information, please go to: www.siriusexploration.com …
www.auspotash.com

Corumbá iron ore mine in Brazil

Passport Metals Inc

Talon Metals Corp

Sainik Coal Mining Pvt. Ltd., an India Company

Asia Pacific Potash Corporation’s Udon Potash Project in north-eastern Thailand

Australian Potash Company Pty Ltd

( Carnarvon Basin Project, an exploration property covering approximately 4,280 square kilometers of prospective potash horizons in an extensive evaporate basin known as the Southern Carnarvon Basin in Western Australia. Previous drilling, consisting of three widely spaced oil and gas wells over a distance of 25 kilometers, has indicated the potential for significant potash and other sodium and magnesium salts)

Boulby Potash Mine, United Kingdom

In the 1960s, with fertiliser demand growing and the UK reliant on imported potash, ICI decided to develop reserves 40km from its Cleveland facilities in north-east England. The 200ha mine site is at Boulby, half-way between the Tees estuary and the port of Whitby. The design capacity is now over 1.0Mt/y of potassium chloride (KCl) product, sufficient to maintain a 55% UK market share and substantial export sales

Fertilizers Related to potash which could see some interest at some stage :
Nitrogen (urea, ammonium nitrate, ammonium sulphate), phosphate fertilizers (superphospahte, dap, map) ,potassium (muriate of potash, sulfate of potash) , compound fertilizers (npk granulated, bulk blended)

Filed Under: Australian, Business, Mining, Small Business, Stock Market Tagged With: Australia, Australian, Mining, Mining Sector

Trader’s million dollar mistake makes Market almost collapse

May 7, 2010 by Reporter Leave a Comment

Both Fox News and CNBC reported that a trading error involving P&G stock could have been responsible for part of a  massive dip that dragged  and shocked the Dow Jones Industrial Average within a hair’s breadth of a 1,000-point drop.

 

The Dow fell 998.5 points, slipping well under 10,000 after a sudden sell-off that saw investors desert stocks .

A trade done by mistake may have been partially to blame for a huge crash in the US markets on Thursday, reports said, as observers questioned why Proctor & Gamble’s stock tumbled precipitously.

CNBC and Business Insider reported that a trader from Citigroup was to blame, though a Citi spokesman cautioned it was too early to tell what had happened. Suspicions that an error, whether mechanical or human, had contributed to the market dive emerged shortly after the Dow leveled off, and it began to climb almost as quickly as it had fallen.

Filed Under: Australian, Billion, Business, Millionaire, Small Business Tagged With: Business, Stock Market, Trader

Get the Henry Tax review Original document files downloads here

May 2, 2010 by Reporter 3 Comments

Henry tax review reform papers was released  2 may 2010

Document download for Henry  tax review Document

The Henry tax review is finally  out  and  everyone can have a look at it in detail. The tax review out on 2nd May 2010 was not  much of a surprise as not many of the recommendations got implemented , but then not many of the henry recommendations also did get rejected, so we can see a slow implementation of many recommendations through the next coming years.

Here are the Henry tax reform Documents ( .doc . pdf ) for download 

Date Released – 2 May 2010  – PDF

Final Report: Part 1 – Overview – 1.0MB

Final Report: Part 2 – Detailed Analysis – Volume 1 –1.9MB

Final Report: Part 2 – Detailed Analysis – Volume 2 – 2.2MB

Treasury Secretary Ken Henry has spent 18-months reviewing Australia’s tax system and  finally the 1000 page report is released.

The Henry review tax reforms at a glance

    1. 40% Rent resource tax of the mining sector companies
    2. Superannuation reform taxes to help lower income workers(superannuation to go up to 12% from 9%)(The increase in the superannuation guarantee will occur from July 1, 2013, with the first of two 0.25% raises to come on that date, with the second to occur on July 1, 2014. From July 1, 2015-19, the guarantee will be lifted by increments of 0.5%, resulting in the target 12% guarantee by the end of the decade)
    3. Company tax rate cut from 30 % to 25 %
    4. All family tax benefits to be a  single means tested payment
    5. Small businesses will be able to write-off assets worth up to $5,000 in the year of purchase under changes announced by the Federal Government today.

 

Technorati Tags: ken henry tax,review henry,download,review tax reform,henry tax review,submissions henry tax,review report henry,review tax system,henry,county property tax

Filed Under: Australian, Business, Henry Tax Review, News Australia, Report Tagged With: Australia, Finance, Henry Review, News Australia, Tax Reform

Trove the Literary google search of australia – Search engines

April 30, 2010 by Reporter 4 Comments

Trove the search engine  that got resources from combined artistic resources of over 1000 libraries, museums, and other cultural institution from Australia  if proving a big contender for searches in this field  in contrast to other popular search engines. Trove – a National Library of Australia (NLA) initiative whose creators are calling it the Google of cultural heritage institutions have five dedicated software engineers continuously working on it.

About Trove -Trove is a new discovery experience focused on Australia and Australians. It supplements what search engines provide with reliable information from Australia’s memory institutions.

If you are researching in the fields of the social sciences, literature, local or family history, newspaper articles and magazine resources,  or need inspiration for your school assignment, then this is the tool for you.

Three years in the making, Trove is an offshoot of the Australian Newspapers Digitisation Program, a massive effort that has digitised and made available online 17 million historical articles from Australian newspapers between 1831 and 1954 since it began in March 2007. That program is set to catalogue 40 million more articles by next year. In the same way that Google harvest’s Web sites,  Trove set up harvesting across cultural heritage institutions and national resources and libraries

Trove, developed by many of the same staff, manages metadata on over 90 million historically significant items including pictures, unpublished manuscripts, books, oral histories, music, videos, research papers, diaries, letters, maps, archived Web sites and newspapers from 1803 to 1954.  Trove  search engine isn’t archiving the content itself, but manages metadata about indexed content. Thanks to a complex array of back-end connections with participating institutions – as well as with online databases like Amazon, Flicker, Google Books, and the Australian National Bibliographic Database – new content added to those institutions’ collections is automatically referenced in Trove.

For example if researching images relating to Edmund Barton, our first Prime Minister, results will include descriptions such as people, book, manuscript, map and newspaper articles. A researcher searching for information on Nellie Melba will be presented with a range of results including biographies, pictures, music, newspapers, books etc. The service works best in Internet Explorer 7+, Firefox 3+ or Safari 4+, at a screen resolution of 1024×768 or higher.

We did a search  for “Australian Digger” which came up with 42,968 results for newspapers , 1,734 results for picture and photos

and 2,397 results fo books journals and magazine articles.

Trove  search engine australian digger  australian busines times

We also did a search for “bogan” – Check out the results here

bogan search on trove search engine

Libraries and archives have been mapping and digitizing letter, maps, diaries, newspapers and so on for a long time, and we know that public information-seeking happens a lot for literary purposes. Many people just want to see what they can get online  – and Trove provides access to unique Australian resources on the deep Web that you wouldn’t find elsewhere.

So looking for something you cant find  on Google, jump into this treasure trove of information 🙂

Filed Under: Australian, Henry Review, Report, Search Engine, Yarns Tagged With: 2010, Australia, Henry Review, Yarns

Australian Times – Business News and report

February 15, 2010 by Reporter 1 Comment

Australian Business times  – Our First Post

Get ready to get news and updates from Australia , straight from the people to the people. Unbiased news not sponsored by any  commercial entity (Except advertisements  off course).

Its an all you can eat  buffet  of free information , Dig into  finance , business news , stock market tips and information ,  and happening news all over Australia.

And it all cost you zip , nada  100%  free

Thanks

Australian Business portal ( Ausbiz Times)

 

PS :  Our Free Blogs service will launch at a later date

Filed Under: Australian, Business, Entertainment, Finance, News Australia, Real Estate, Report, Times Tagged With: Australian, Business, Finance, Henry Review, News Australia, Property, Real Estate, Report, Stock Market, Times

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