Tag Archives: japanese

Showa Shell to Build 49-Megawatt Biomass Plant in Japan

By Chisaki Watanabe & Yuji Okada – Aug 7, 2013 Showa Shell (5002) Sekiyu K.K., a Japanese refiner, will build a 49-megawatt biomass power plant south of Tokyo in Kanagawa prefecture as it expands it power generation business. The plant, the first biomass project for the company, will be built on the site of the company’s former refinery and will begin operating in December 2015, Tokyo-based Showa Shell said in a statement today. The company will invest about 16 billion yen ($164 million), Minoru Yagyuda, general manager of Showa Shell’s power business division, said today in a briefing. Woody biomass, mainly from North America , and palm kernel shells from Indonesia and Malaysia will be used to power the plant. The location is convenient for ships to deliver fuel and is close to an area of major power use, according to the statement. Kanagawa is part of greater Tokyo in the southern Kanto region of Japan. Showa Shell wholly owns Solar Frontier K.K., a maker of solar panels. To contact the reporters on this story: Chisaki Watanabe in Tokyo at cwatanabe5@bloomberg.net ; Yuji Okada in Tokyo at yokada6@bloomberg.net To contact the editor responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net Continue reading

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Female Oud star sets out to conquer Japanese hearts

Female Oud star sets out to conquer Japanese hearts Caitlyn Davey / 6 July 2013 Excitement and nervousness are the two emotions Sherine Tohamy is feeling about her overseas tour. The Abu Dhabi-based Arabic Oud professor and performer is jetting to Japan, for a week, to showcase her musical talents on July 9 and 15. Tohamy released the first female Oud solo album and was the first female graduate of Bait Al Oud (House of Oud). The Egyptian, who has lived here for eight years, is now a professor at the Abu Dhabi campus of the music school. She was the first female Arabic Oud player to perform in Malaysia and now is going to Tokyo.  Despite her impressive resume, the high-achiever remains modest about her tour. “I am a little nervous…they may not like me,” she said.  “I am excited to visit Japan because this is the first time for me to see Tokyo and the first time for an Arabic female Oud soloist to visit Japan.” The tour will include a collaborative performance with Japanese singer Karen Tokita and a Brazilian band as well as a performance for Tohamy’s native Egypt’s embassy in Japan and a solo concert for Japanese students of Oud including a workshop. Tohamy said: “It’s a different culture and a different audience to Abu Dhabi, but I think Japanese people are really interested in Arabic music and culture, especially the Oud.” Encouraging everyone to try Oud, Tohamy hopes to inspire other women to have a go. “It’s not just for men, some people think it is; but I hope women will try and see how wonderful it is. We even make smaller-sized Oud for ladies.” news@khaleejtimes.com Continue reading

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Emerging Markets Aren’t The Answer To Investors’ Woes

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e59381b4-d4d8-11e2-9302-00144feab7de.html#ixzz2X2Hjr9g5 By Merryn Somerset Webb Economic growth is no guarantee of returns to investors I’ve talked to a good few interesting people in the past week. But two are of particular interest at the moment. The first is David Stockman, author of The Great Deformation, The Corruption of Capitalism in America – a book that has been at the top of the bestseller lists in the US since it came out in April. The second is Dambisa Moyo, the almost impossibly glamorous author of, among other must-reads, How the West Was Lost: Fifty Years of Economic Folly and The Stark Choices Ahead. Both were – and I guess this is obvious – deeply pessimistic on the future of the US in particular. While their arguments are far from identical, they are both convinced that America, with its insistence on using monetary policy to mismanage interest rates and distort markets, along with its badly structured welfare state and low prioritisation of education, has a sad future ahead of it. Stockman was once director of the Office of Management and Budget in the US (under Ronald Reagan) and Moyo was named as one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine. So it is worth listening to both of them. I also happen to think they are mostly right. Politicians in the west, caught in traps set by their short electoral cycles, have made a nightmare series of bad decisions about public spending, the roles of the state and of course about what we should think of as money and how we should price that money. Then there’s the demographic profiles of western countries, with their growing numbers of older people; economies designed to grow on the back of consumer spending don’t grow much as their populations age and cut back spending. It is hard to see where a return to credit and baby-boomer style economic growth will come from. It is a lot easier to make up a good story about how emerging countries, with their lower debts and younger populations, will see fast economic growth than it is to come up with one about how the US will – although now there is the prospect of energy independence on the horizon, it is clearly getting a tad easier. But it’s a big step from being able to say that one group of countries will grow faster than another in gross domestic product terms to saying that you should expect stock markets in the faster-growing group to outperform the rest. Several studies have shown that this isn’t often true. The opposite very often is. Many explanations have been offered for this, but I suspect it comes down to the way the proceeds of growth are distributed at different stages of growth. When a country is growing fast, wages are most likely to be growing fast too – so more than you might expect goes to labour over capital. Rapid growth also gives companies one-off opportunities to build market share. If they take it, prioritising volume over margins, they won’t make much in the way of profits – possibly for many years. Then there are the many governance issues in emerging markets: state ownership, family-controlled companies, dodgy property rights and so on. These tend to ensure that the majority of the spoils can end up going to the minority of shareholders. If you look at it all like this, surely it would make sense to say that one should pay lower prices for companies based in emerging markets (as is the case in Russia, which I advocated recently), regardless of how fast it looks like those markets might grow. After all, you are taking more risks. There’s likely to be a long wait before the dividends start rolling in, and the longer you have to wait for something the higher the risk that you will never get it. We should pay a premium not for emerging market growth but for the kind of steadily rising profits and dividends we are more likely to get in the west. This is all something to bear in mind as you look at the carnage in emerging markets over the past week. Bonds, equities and currencies have all been clobbered. Investors who bought at high prices to get exposure to economic growth are now finding that there is something worse than paying a premium for the wrong thing. It’s not getting even that thing. So as the cheaper yen makes emerging market exports look less competitive, as China clearly slows down and the debate begins about the end of quantitative easing in the US, they are selling. But here’s one thing to note before you dismiss Asia and Latin America out of hand. One day, all the markets we now think of as emerging will be developed. They’ll turn their minds from all-out economic expansion to profits and at the same time their populations will demand proper governance and the odd dividend. Then their markets will soar. With that in mind, a nice little chart was slipped to me over a pub table by Tim Guinness of Guinness Funds a few months ago. It looks back at Japan’s economic growth and its stock market performance. The latter ran at 10 per cent or so a year from the early 1950s to the 1970s as the country industrialised and invested. In 1955 Japan had 5.2 cars per thousand people. By 1966 that number was 79. In 1970 it was 168. The stock market rose, but not in a particularly spectacular fashion. But around then, the Japanese economy shifted gear down to more like 5 per cent growth as the country entered a later industrial shift to a more consumption-based economy. Look at a chart of the Nikkei and you will see what happened next. It rose steadily throughout the 1970s and went completely nuts in the 1980s. So here’s something to think about. In 2000, China had 4.9 cars per 1,000 people. In 2012 it had 74. By 2016 – or maybe earlier – it should have close to 168. It should also have seen growth fall to 5 per cent or below. A few years before then might be good time to invest. Merryn Somerset Webb is editor in chief of MoneyWeek. The views expressed are personal. Continue reading

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