Tag Archives: Carlos Slim

California Commission Rejects Request To Investigate Group That Opposes Mexican Tycoon Carlos Slim

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor

The California Fair Political Practices Commission (FPPC) has decided not to investigate Two Countries One Voice (TCOV), a self-described  grass- roots Latino movement that has been campaigning against Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim’s alleged “monopolistic practices,” for possible violation of lobbying regulations. The complaint against TCOV was put forward by Slim’s U.S. telephone company, TracFone, which is owned by Slim’s cellular giant, America Movil. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Carlos Slim Joins Bill Gates, Other Billionaires, With $100 Million To Fight Polio

By Kerry A. Dolan, Forbes Staff

At the Global Vaccine Summit in Abu Dhabi late last week, the world’s two richest men made a bit of philanthropic history. Carlos Slim announced his foundation will donate $100 million to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a Bill Gates-backed effort to eliminate polio.  It marks what appears to be the largest collaboration among the two men. It’s also the second time this year the two have announced joint philanthropic efforts.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

A Rivalry Graphed: How Carlos Slim Overtook Bill Gates As Number One Richest In The World

By Kerry A. Dolan, Forbes Staff

For nearly a decade and a half until 2010, Bill Gates ranked as the world’s richest man –save for 2008, when he was overtaken by his pal Warren Buffett. (Gates recaptured the top spot in 2009). Then, thanks to a surge in the value of mobile phone carrier America Movil in early 2010, Gates was knocked off his pedestal by Mexico’s Carlos Slim. The telecom mogul has maintained his title as the world’s richest person every year since then. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

U.S. Government Puts Pressure On Carlos Slim, Mexico's Telecom Sector To Open Up To Competition

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor

In an unusually direct report,  the U.S. government said that “enhancing competition in Mexico’s telecommunications sector continues to be a challenge.” The Office of the U.S. Trade Representative’s new 2013 National Trade Estimate Reports on Foreign Trade Barriers points out that telecom tycoon Carlos Slim’s America Movil (NYSE:AMX), the parent company of wireless carrier Telcel and wireline carrier Telmex, “dominates both the fixed and mobile segments of the Mexican telecommunications market .” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Exclusive Rights To Broadcast Olympic Games Helps Tycoon Carlos Slim Enter Television

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor

On the same day last week that Mexico‘s lower House of Congress approved an anti-monopoly telecom reform bill that, if enacted, will give billionaire tycoon Carlos Slim the ability to enter the television industry, Slim’s America Movil (NYSE: AMX) announced that it had obtained the exclusive broadcast rights to the 2014 winter Olympic games in Sochi, Russia, and the 2016 summer Olympic games in Rio de Janeiro for all of Latin America (with the exception of Brazil). Neither Slim nor the International Olympic Committee revealed the amount that America Movil paid for the exclusive rights in Latin America, but Mexican analysts estimated it at $110 million dollars. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Carlos Slim, Richest Man In The World, In 93 Seconds

By NowThis News, Contributor

Once again, Carlos Slim takes the top spot as the world’s richest man on Forbes 2013 Billionaires list.  NowThis News put together a video explaining a little more about the man whose net worth is larger than the GDP of most Latin American countries (according to ABC News, Slim the country would be the eighth richest of the 21 Latin American countries). …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Carlos Slim Perilously Close To Losing Title Of World's Richest As Fortune Tumbles

By Erin Carlyle, Forbes Staff

An amendment to the Mexican constitution that could wreck havoc on Carlos Slim‘s telecom empire took a step towards passage on Thursday in Mexico. The news pushed ADR shares of his telecom outfit America Movil, his biggest holding by far, down 3.7% on the NYSE and knocked $1.2 billion from his net worth in one day. Yesterday was even worse: the stock tumbled 8%, wiping out $2.5 billion from his total. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Upgrade: Mexico's Government Takes Aim at the Telecom Sector

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Contributor

Mexico’s new telecom reform should give the country’s business owners something to cheer about. After Mexico’s July 1 2012 election, I watched a mob of spirited protesters march through downtown Mexico City. They shouted their discontent with the country’s newly elected president and condemned Mexico’s broadcast giant Televisa, saying it had unfairly influenced the result of the election. In an article I wrote in September, 2012 I explained “In the end, the controversy did not ruin [Enrique] Peña Nieto’s presidential bid, but it did cause problems for Televisa. The complaints about Televisa’s monopoly power in the television market came at a delicate time, just as Televisa was seeking approval to expand into the country’s telecom sector, an area of the economy that has been dominated by Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim since the 1980s, when he won control of the state-owned telecom monopoly during a PRI-led push for privatization.” …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Media Digest (3/12/2013) Reuters, WSJ, NY Times, FT, Bloomberg

By 24/7 Wall St.

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Yahoo! Inc. (NASDAQ: YHOO) workers worry that overly high standards for job candidates set by CEO Marissa Mayer have hurt rebuilding the workforce. (Reuters)

The MGM board may set an initial public offering. (Reuters)

The Securities and Exchange Commission claims the State of Illinois misled investors about its underfunded pensions. (WSJ)

General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM) will change the ad agency for Cadillac. (WSJ)

LinkedIn Corp. (NYSE: LNKD) will buy newspaper app Pulse. (WSJ)

Carl Icahn signs a confidentiality arrangement with Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) and might push to replace its board. (WSJ)

The White House admonishes China about widespread hacking of U.S. companies. (WSJ)

The Cleveland Clinic sets a partnership with Community Health Systems Inc. (NYSE: CYH) to extend its brand beyond its medical center. (WSJ)

Slow progress on the Keystone XL pipeline prompts U.S. refineries to use trucks to move oil from Canada. (WSJ)

General Electric Co. (NYSE: GE) says CEO Jeff Immelt made $25.8 million last year. (WSJ)

Growth continues to help Costco Wholesale Corp.’s (NASDAQ: COST) gross margins. (WSJ)

The pace of company failures in Italy rises. (NYT)

Regulators in the United Kingdom investigate possible irregularities in the Hewlett-Packard Co. (NYSE: HPQ) takeover of Autonomy. (NYT)

Mexico may establish monopoly laws that would damage the telecom operations of Carlos Slim. (FT)

GE says it plans to double sales in Africa. (FT)

The sale of gold by George Soros shows its long-term bull run may be at an end. (Bloomberg)

Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Press Digest Tagged: COST, CYH, DELL, GE, GM, HPQ, LNKD, YHOO

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Mexican Drug Kingpin El Chapo Out Of Billionaire Ranks

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor

Mexican telecommunications tycoon Carlos Slim,  for the fourth consecutive year, leads the 2013 Forbes world billionaires list. His net wealth increased by $4 billion, reaching a total of $73 billion, well above Bill Gates’ $67 billion and Spanish retailer Amancio Ortega’s $57 billion. Ortega displaced Warren Buffet from the No. 3 slot in this year’s list. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Investing Hints From the Newest Forbes Billionaires

By Bruce Watson

Renzo rosso Credit: Vittorio Zunino Celotto/Getty Images

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When it comes to getting rich, the best textbook may be Forbes’ list of the world’s billionaires. After all, who better to show the right steps to financial freedom than the men (and, increasingly, women) who have already gotten there? And, with a new list fresh off the presses, what better time could there be to reap their wisdom?

Looking at the list, one of the first lessons is that the shortest path to wealth goes through the delivery room. Whether you’re talking about the Waltons or the Kochs, the Bulgari brothers or the Mars mob, it’s clear that things go a lot easier if you can start off with a few million from mom and dad. Heck, even for famed self-made mogul Bill Gates and newcomer fashion maven Tory Burch, it didn’t hurt to come from a rich family.

Those looking for guidance from the Forbes list will quickly realize, however, that it generally shows where the most profitable places in the world were, not where they will be. With the benefit of a few decades of hindsight, it seems obvious that telecom, personal computers and low-cost retailing were smart places to put your money. But when Carlos Slim, Michael Dell and Sam Walton were starting out, their business plans may have seemed insane.

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But that doesn’t mean that you can’t pick up some valuable lessons from the list. If you’re looking for places to invest your savings, a good place to start is with the newest members of the billionaires club. After all, these are the people who have most recently latched onto a new economic opportunity, a new business model, or a new market segment. In other words, they’re the ones who have the best ideas at where the market may be heading.

Unless, of course, they’re the Bulgari brothers, in which case, they’re just damned lucky.

At any rate, here are some lessons you can glean from the latest list:

Fashion

There has always been a lot of money in fashion, but in the last year, improved distribution, smart marketing, and increased consolidation have mixed to put some of the biggest names in fashion onto the billionaires list. For example, Renzo Rosso, the creator of Diesel jeans, made the list this year after snapping up a passel of other brands, including Maison Martin Margiela and Viktor & Rolf. Other European brand names that managed to make the list include Paolo and Nicola Bulgari, Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana and French Cosmetics scion Bris Rocher.

A little closer to home, American designer Tory Burch also joined the list, making her America’s second-youngest self-made female billionaire. Spanx inventor Sara Blakely beat her by five years.

Mid-Level Retailers

It’s no secret that bargain retail companies like Walmart, Target and Dollar …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Mexican drug lord dropped from billionaires' list

Top Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman has dropped off Forbes magazine’s billionaires’ list after four years on it.

Guzman is the fugitive leader of the Sinaloa drug cartel. He first made the list in 2009, with a fortune listed at about $1 billion.

Forbes senior wealth editor Luisa Kroll said the decision to drop Guzman was based on suspicions that “an increasing chunk of money is going to protect him and his family.”

Kroll said in a statement Monday that Guzman is “no longer someone we are confident enough to call a billionaire,” and that he could not be reached to verify figures on his wealth.

Mexican telecom magnate Carlos Slim continues to head the list, with a fortune estimated at $73 billion.

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Carlos Slim raises bet on Dutch telecoms group KPN

Mexican businessman Carlos Slim listens during a news conference in Texcoco

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – Carlos Slim, the world's richest man, has backed KPN's plan to raise 4 billion euros ($5.3 billion) and will take two seats on the board as he battles to turn around a heavily loss-making investment in the Dutch telecoms group. However, the Mexican telecoms tycoon, whose America Movil business owns just under 30 percent of KPN, said on Wednesday he would not launch a full takeover of an indebted group struggling with cut-throat competition and high investment costs, sending KPN's shares down over 9 percent to 11-year lows. …

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Yahoo Business

Can Billionaire Carlos Slim Return Acapulco To Its Past Glory?

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor

Mexican tycoon Carlos Slim’s one-year effort to return Acapulco to its past glory has been overshadowed by the surge in drug-related killings, which nearly tripled in 2011 and made this port city in the southern state of Guerrero the second most violent city in the world in 2012.  In recent weeks Acapulco has been in the international news after five masked men broke into a beach hotel and raped six Spanish female tourists at midnight.  U.S. newspapers reported that the rapes have heightened fear and called into question the Mexican government’s ability to control crime and attract foreign visitors. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Wealthy Greek Diplomat Underwrites Mexican Ex-President Calderon At Harvard

By Dolia Estevez, Contributor No,  it’s  not  Carlos Slim,  Ricardo Salinas Pliego, Emilio Azcarraga Jean or any other Mexican billionaire underwriting Mexico‘s former  President Felipe Calderón’s controversial one-year fellowship at the Harvard Kennedy School, but rather wealthy Greek diplomat Gianna Angelopoulos, who in 2012 created the Angelopoulos Global Public Leaders Fellowship program,  “to retain and re-train leaders who have distinguished themselves in service to the public and are now transitioning to another career.”
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

KPN stock plummets as company to issue new shares

Investors in Royal KPN NV, the Netherlands‘ largest telecommunications company, saw the value of their shares drop by more than a fifth Tuesday after it announced plans to issue €4 billion ($5.4 billion) in new shares to cut debt.

The announcement caps a bad year for the company, which posted a fourth-quarter loss of €162 million Tuesday, compared with a net profit of €176 million in the same period last year. Sales fell 3.3 percent to €3.38 billion.

The company’s stock fell by more than 20 percent to € 3.21 as investors absorbed the news.

“It’s regrettable, but you have to expect it when you make the kind of announcement we have today,” said Chief Financial Officer Eric Hageman of the fall in the stock price on a conference call with journalists. “At a certain moment, you have to make a decision about what’s best for the company in the long run.”

The planned share issue of €4 billion is huge relative to KPN‘s size, nearly equal to its market value. In a sign of the importance of the offering’s success to the KPN‘s future, top executives abruptly skipped the company’s annual press conference planned in Amsterdam, preferring instead to travel to London to woo financial analysts.

The share issue will take form of a “rights issue,” in which shareholders are given the first “right” to purchase shares in the new offering. Rights offerings only fail if there is serious doubt about the company’s survival or strategic plans. It is not known what Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim — whose America Movil holds a 27.7 percent stake in KPN — plans to do.

KPN‘s recent round of woes began in 2011, a year in which it still repurchased €1 billion of its own shares and paid a dividend of €0.85 per share. In April of that year, while shares were still trading above €10, the company issued a profit warning, saying customers with smartphones in the Netherlands were ditching KPN‘s text message and voice offerings en masse for cheaper mobile Internet versions such as Skype and WhatsApp. CEO Eelco Blok announced plans, still ongoing, to lay off 5,000 workers, or about one in six.

When KPN tried to charge users extra for using Skype, Dutch consumers rebelled and Parliament quickly moved to make such surcharges illegal, adopting one of the world’s first and strongest “net neutrality” laws.

KPN, Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom responded by hiking prices on their Internet data plans almost simultaneously — leading to an investigation for alleged price-fixing.

At the start of 2012 KPN announced a large write-down on the value of its business and its previous CFO resigned. Halfway through the year, it slashed planned dividends for 2012 from €0.90 per share to €0.35 per share.

Slim’s Movil made an offer of €8 per share for a little more than 25 percent of KPN that summer, succeeding even though KPN management warned investors not to sell, saying it undervalued the company.

In December 2012, KPN paid the Dutch government an unexpectedly high €1.35 billion ($1.8 billion) in a bidding war to obtain frequencies for “4G,” high-speed mobile Internet services through 2030. It slashed dividends further, saying it would now only pay €0.12 for 2012 and €0.03 in 2013.

The situation is reminiscent of KPN‘s near-bankruptcy in the early 2000s, when it overpaid for 3G mobile Internet licenses. It survived then only with the help of a €5 billion rights issue that was backed by the Dutch state. The company’s share price fell from €70 in 2000 to around €2.

KPN‘s Hageman denied the company was in financial difficulties, but added that “if you look at the recent period, we’ve seen that our debt is rising, our results are falling, and credit rating agencies are extremely critical of KPN‘s financial situation.”

The company said Tuesday it will keep the dividend at €0.03 dividend in 2014 before possibly increasing it again “subject to operational performance and financial position.”

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Mexico's Slim to fund online classes in Spanish

Mexican tycoon Carlos Slim says his foundation is funding the translation of thousands of Khan Academy online classes into Spanish.

The telecommunications billionaire says the Carlos Slim Foundation shares the academy’s goal to make “a free world-class education available to everyone.”

Khan Academy offers thousands of free video lectures on YouTube in subjects like mathematics, physics and art history.

More than 500 videos have been translated into Spanish by Mexican professors, so far.

Slim says he will also fund online classes about Mexican history to be added to the website. He says funding for the not-for-profit organization comes from a 4 billion peso ($315 million) investment over the next three years to expand internet connectivity in Mexico.

Slim made the announcement Monday together with Khan Academy‘s founder, Salman Khan.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News