Tag Archives: FD

Newer versions of LTE to make rapid advances, ABI says

Emerging technologies for 4G LTE networks are expected to make rapid advances over the next few years, helping mobile networks keep up with data growth and bringing more users worldwide into the LTE fold.

By 2018, a majority of the world’s LTE subscriptions will be on networks that use either TD (time-division) LTE or features from the emerging LTE-Advanced standard, according to an ABI Research forecast released on Monday.

At the same time that mobile operators are still expanding infrastructure based on FD (frequency-division) LTE, the earliest version of the high-speed mobile system, the two more recent technologies are fast making inroads, according to ABI analyst Nick Marshall. They may dominate networks of large, outdoor “macro” cells by 2015, Marshall said.

TD-LTE uses one band of frequencies to send traffic both downstream and upstream, while FD-LTE uses separate, equal-size bands for the two directions. TD-LTE makes LTE possible in countries that license so-called unpaired spectrum. It also lets operators dedicate more capacity to downstream traffic, such as Web and video content, than to upstream traffic such as photo uploads.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld

The Men Who Run Compass Group

By Tony Reading, The Motley Fool

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LONDON — Management can make all the difference to a company’s success and, thus, its share price.

The best companies are those run by talented and experienced leaders with strong vested interests in the success of the business, held in check by a board with sound financial and business acumen. Some of the worst investments to hold are those run by executives collecting fat rewards as the underlying business goes to pot.

In this series, I’m assessing the boardrooms of companies within the FTSE 100. I hope to separate the management teams that are worth following from those that are not. Today, I am looking at Compass Group , the world’s largest contract caterer.

Here are the key directors:

Director

Position

Sir Roy Gardner

Chairman

Richard Cousins

Chief Executive

Dominic Blakemore

Finance Director

Gary Green

CEO, North America

Andrew Martin

CEO, Europe and Japan

Heavyweight
Sir Roy Gardner has been chairman since 2006. In his executive career, he rose through the finance functions of GEC to succeed Arnold Weinstock as Managing director of GEC-Marconi. He joined British Gas as finance director in 1994 to oversee the demerger of Centrica, subsequently becoming CEO of Centrica.

Regarded as a City heavyweight, his non-executive career has not been without controversy. He became chairman of “fast-growing” property services group Connaught in May 2010, only to go into administration six months later. In the world of football, he became chairman and part-owner of Plymouth Argyle in 2009, resigning the next year shortly before it entered administration.

Sir Roy recently announced he will retire next year.

Low profile
Richard Cousins has also been in post since 2006, but the CEO is a lower-profile character. He began his career in planning roles with Cadbury Schweppes and BTR, joining plasterboard maker BPB in 1990, and rising to become CEO in 2000. He took BPB into the FTSE 100, leaving for Compass when the firm was taken over by Saint-Gobain.

Compass’s shares have tripled during the tenure of the current chairman and CEO.

More accountants
A chartered accountant, Dominic Blakemore has been finance director for just 12 months. He was previously FD of Iglo Foods, which he joined from Cadbury, where he held various posts, including European Finance Director, and Group Financial Controller.

Compass’s two divisional directors are also former finance professionals. Gary Green has been with the company since 1986, initially in finance roles, joining the board in 2007.

Andrew Martin joined as finance director in 2004, having previously been FD of First Choice Holidays. His move to run Europe and Japan was part of a reshuffle on the arrival of Dominic Blakemore, to free the CEO to concentrate on developing Compass’s emerging markets business.

Compass’s senior independent director Sir James Crosby abruptly resigned this week in the wake of criticism over his stewardship of HBOS. The timing is unfortunate, with the chairman having recently announced his retirement, but the company swiftly replaced him with Sir Ian Robinson, a director since 2006, and former chairman of Ladbrokes. However, the team of five non-execs look a little thin.

I analyze

From: http://www.dailyfinance.com/2013/04/11/the-men-who-run-compass-group/

The SEC Wants You to "Friend" Corporate America

By Rich Smith, The Motley Fool

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Life got a little bit harder for investors this week. And believe it or not, the SEC is to blame.

Aiming to accommodate corporate “social networking” efforts, the SEC on Tuesday gave companies permission to announce major corporate news on social-networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter — rather than through online searchable press releases or filings on the SEC‘s own website, as had previously been the typical practice.

But why?

A bit of background
On July 1, 2012, Netflix CEO Reed Hastings went on Facebook to crow over the momentous news that his company had just finished sending out 1 billion viewing hours to Netflix streaming subscribers in June. Five months later, fellow tech entrepreneur Elon Musk — CEO of electric-car company Tesla Motors — followed in Hastings’ footsteps by going on Twitter to announce that for one week in December, his company was cash-flow positive. (A whole week, eh. Congratulations?)

What these two events have in common is that they both seemed to run afoul of Securities and Exchange Commission regulation FD. Reg FD, as it’s commonly called, mandates that whenever a company releases information that’s “material” to its business, it must do so in a manner that’s “broad” and “non-exclusionary.”

This language was drafted to curb the practice of companies revealing useful data only to their favorite investment-banking analysts — a club that’s certainly not broad — and not letting the rest of us investors know what was up until after the favored few had heard it, which is without a doubt “exclusionary.”

Now here’s the problem. Over the dozen years since Reg FD came into effect, companies have followed the law carefully, releasing information in ways and in places where people were likely to find it. Generally speaking, material announcements came out as press releases that showed up promptly in the companies’ ticker feeds on Yahoo! Finance. They were also usually filed as 8-K filings with the SEC.

As a result, anybody who wanted to know what was going on knew how to find out. There were basically just two websites to check: Yahoo’s and the SEC‘s.

Life just got complicated
I tell you this as a preface to explaining why I, for one, am not thrilled with the SEC‘s decision to let companies disclose material information on their Facebook pages.

Why not? Listen — it was bad enough when the SEC gave the greenlight in 2008 to companies like Google who wanted to stop paying publication fees to PRNewswire and start self-publishing their most interesting announcements on their corporate websites. Ever since, more and more companies have been taking the SEC up on its offer, leaving investors with many places to look for corporate news updates, rather than just two.

The road to hell is paved with good intentions
Sure, the SEC says companies still need to take “steps … to alert the market about which forms of communication a company intends to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance