Tag Archives: Mongolia

Mongolian general probed for North Korean jet deal

Mongolia‘s anti-corruption agency is investigating the recently resigned commander of the Mongolian air force for attempting to sell engines and other parts of old Russian-made jet fighters to North Korea.

Investigators this week confirmed the probe into Brigadier General Tojoon Dashdeleg. The deal to sell salvaged parts from about 20 disused MiG-21s dates from 2011. Investigators say they started looking into it after a North Korean envoy complained to Mongolian officials in November that Pyongyang had paid $1.5 million but never received the parts.

E. Amarbat of the anti-corruption agency says the general and two business partners have returned half the money but they still face harsh punishment.

The disputed deal highlights landlocked, democratic Mongolia‘s role as one of totalitarian, isolated North Korea‘s few conduits to the outside world.

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/lxw9-l4fUHc/

Be Poised to Profit From Copper's Growth

By Selena Maranjian, The Motley Fool

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Exchange-traded funds offer a convenient way to invest in sectors or niches that interest you. If you’d like to add some copper stocks to your portfolio, the Global X Copper Miners ETF could save you a lot of trouble. Instead of trying to figure out which companies will perform best, you can use this ETF to invest in lots of them simultaneously.

The basics
ETFs often sport lower expense ratios than their mutual fund cousins. The Global X ETF‘s expense ratio — its annual fee — is 0.65%. The fund is very small, too, so if you’re thinking of buying, beware of possibly large spreads between its bid and ask prices. Consider using a limit order if you want to buy in.

This ETF is too young to have a sufficient track record to assess. It did lose to the world market over the past year, but as with most investments, of course, we can’t expect outstanding performances in every quarter or year. Investors with conviction need to wait for their holdings to deliver.

Why copper?
Copper is both valuable and of much practical use — necessary in new home construction, for example. As our global economy starts picking up and manufacturing and construction heat up, demand for copper should grow.

More than a handful of copper-related companies had strong performances over the past year. Southern Copper gained 30%, though its long-term debt has also been soaring. Meanwhile, revenue has inched down recently, as have earnings. Still, some like the company’s investments in growth and plans to boost production significantly.

Other companies didn’t do as well last year, but could see their fortunes change in the coming years. Turquoise Hill Resources , majority-owned by U.K.-based mining giant Rio Tinto , sank 62%, in part due to rising mine costs. It focuses primarily on mineral mining in central Asia and Australia, and its Oyu Tolgoi mine in Mongolia is set to become one of the world’s largest copper producers, though government intervention is a concern there. The $7 billion company used to be known as Ivanhoe Mines.

Taseko Mines shed 16%, posting 2012 numbers that were generally considerably lower than 2011 results. Management noted that “2012 was a year of major transformation for Taseko… we advanced our business plan of investing in our mining operations and development assets within defined economic constraints.” It has high hopes for its Gibraltar mine, which it sees as “positioned to be a significant cash flow generator thereby supporting the next phase of our growth strategy.” In addition, “Gibraltar, when it achieves its full operating potential, will be one of the largest open pit copper mines in North America and notably, one of the largest reserve bases.” Growth in demand for steel, meanwhile, would boost Taseko’s molybdenum business.

Another copper company to consider is Rio Tinto itself, which has significant potential. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

It's International Women's Day: How Do We Compare on Fiscal Equality?

By Bruce Watson

Women's pay

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When it comes to best places in the world to be a woman, it’s not surprising that the U.S. falls behind nations like Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark. Scandinavian countries, after all, are famed for their impressive social contracts, with the amazing health care and child care benefits that they provide. But you might be shocked to learn that in at least one key metric, American women are being surpassed by those in Mozambique, Mali, Senegal, Tanzania, and 13 other developing nations.

The World Economic Forum’s 2012 report on the global gender gap ranked the U.S. as the 22nd best country in the world. But when it comes to wage equality, the land of the free and the home of the brave drops to 61st, behind Madagascar, Cambodia and Guyana. Women in America earned 67 percent of what men earned. By comparison, women in Sweden earned 69 percent, women in Canada earned 73 percent, and women in Ireland earned 77 percent.

Dig a little deeper into the numbers and it becomes clear what least part of the problem is. In many countries, unmarried women earn more than unmarried men. In Ireland, for example, the average woman without a child earns 17 percent more than the average man. After having children, however, Irish women make more than 10 percent less, on average, than men. In America, the female-to-male pay gap jumps by almost 15 percentage points after children enter the picture.

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The reasons for this decline in wages aren’t hard to figure out. Women with children are more likely to leave the workforce, work part time, or otherwise adjust their schedules to deal with child care. Added to this, the high cost of raising a child — a cost that inordinately falls on women — further cuts into household budgets.

In some countries, there are programs to mitigate these factors. Ireland, for example, has government-mandated paid maternity leave. Then again, so does every other country in the world, except for Papua New Guinea, Swaziland … and the U.S.

And these aren’t the only areas in which the U.S. falls well behind the pack. In terms of labor force participation based on gender, the U.S. is 43rd in the world, behind Uganda, Mongolia and Benin. Put another way, 68 percent of able-bodied, adult American women are at work, while 80 percent of able-bodied, adult American men are at work.

Part of this, again, is due to child-rearing, as America’s lack of publicly-funded child care makes it harder for women in this country to juggle family and work. And the situation looks like it’s going to get worse before it gets better. As The International Business Times reported earlier this week, the sequester budget cuts will further erode women’s health care programs, Head …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Lake Victoria Announces New Board Member

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Lake Victoria Announces New Board Member

VANCOUVER, British Columbia–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Lake Victoria Mining Company, Inc. (LVCA:OTCBB)(“Lake Victoria” or the “Company”) is pleased to report that Dr. David Ralph Webb has joined the Board Of Directors of the Company.

David Webb is a registered Professional Geologist in the NWT Canada and has spent the past 25 years as president of DRW Geological Consultants Ltd. providing technical and operating services to companies in the mining exploration, development and production industry.

David Kalenuik, President and CEO of Lake Victoria expressed; “Based on the stage of development that the Company is at we will truly benefit with Dr. Webb joining our Board of Directors. Dr Webb‘s experience on the business side of public companies, including intimate technical knowledge of what it takes to bring a gold project into production will be invaluable to the Company as it progresses to successfully putting the first of it’s projects into gold production.”

In this capacity he has served as a director and president to three different mining companies and provided consulting services to dozens of other mid-tier and junior companies, most recently having been a director and president of Tyhee Gold Corp, leading it to the discovery and development of its multi-million ounce Yellowknife Gold Project, currently in permitting.

Prior to that Dr Webb bought, discovered the extension of a high-grade gold zone, and provided all geological services in developing Mon Gold Mine, a privately owned remote underground gold mine north of Yellowknife, NWT. The Mon Gold Mine produced from 1989 to 1997 and was successfully reclaimed.

He also was senior geologist and later president during the construction and operation of the Bumbat Gold Mine in Mongolia.

Dr Webb has co-authored the qualifying report on Fortune Minerals Limited’s Nico Property, recommending acquisition. This gold, cobalt, bismuth property is currently in the permitting stage.

He graduated from the University of Toronto with a B.A.Sc. (engineering), winning scholarships and bursaries for the highest marks in third and fourth year field courses. He has a M.Sc. from Queens University and a Ph.D. from the University of Western Ontario in Geological Sciences. He was a board member for the NWT and Nunavut Chamber of Mines, member of the Education Committee for the Association for Mineral Exploration, B.C., Blockwatch Captain in Surrey, B.C., and member of NAPEGG, CIM, PDAC, AMEBC, SEG.


…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

2013 Forbes Billionaires List: Meet China's Energy Billionaires

By Russell Flannery, Forbes Staff

China’s energy industry is dominated by state-owned companies, among them PetroChina and Cnooc. Yet ambitious private sector entrepreneurs have found openings, and several that have focused much of their business on the industry have made it all the way to the 2013 Forbes Billionaires List. The following list members are among that group. *Wang Yusuo, Chairman, ENN Energy Holdings, $2.4 billion, No.613 Wang Yusuo chairs the ENN Group, one of China’s largest non-government-controlled energy businesses. His flagship company is ENN Energy Holdings, a Hong Kong-listed distributor of natural gas. Among the company’s overseas partners, ENN has over the years worked has together over the years  with Duke Energy. (Click here for details) *Zhang Hongwei, Orient Group, Chairman, $1.85 billion, No.825 Zhang Hongwei leads Hong Kong-listed United Energy Group, one of China’s largest private-sector oil businesses. The company acquired the upstream operations of BP in Pakistan for $775 million in 2011, and has increased production since.  (Click here for details) *Zhu Gongshan, Chairman, GCL Group, $1.8 billion, No.831 In a rough year for solar energy-related business – Chinese businesses such as LDK and Yingli have reported heavy losses, Zhu Gongshan stands out as China’s richest man in the field. Zhu’s GCL-Poly Energy Holdings is one of the world’s largest suppliers of polysilicon and silicon wafers.  (Click here for details) *Sun Weijie, Chairman, Yantai Jereh Oilfield Services Group, $1.25 billion, No.1,161 Sun chairs Shenzhen-listed Yantai Jereh Oilfield Services Group , a provider of oilfield equipment and services for the energy industry. Sun debuts on the 2013 Forbes Billionaires after he ranked at No. 143 with wealth of $870 million on the Forbes China Rich List published last October. During that time, Yantai’s shares rose by more than half. (Click here for details) *Huo Qinghua, Chairman, China Kingho Group, $1.1 billion, No.1268 2013 Forbes China Rich List newcomer Huo Qinghua chairs China Kingho Energy Group, one of China’s largest private mining and energy companies with operations in China, Africa and Mongolia. The company in October signed a memorandum of understanding to work with Australian mining consultancy Runge. (Click here for details) *Wang Yiting, Chairman, Inner Mongolia Taixi Coal Group, Chairman, $1 billion, No.1,342 Wang Yiting leads unlisted Inner Mongolia Taixi Coal Group, one of the largest coal ming companies in China with sales of more than $1 billion in the first nine months of 2012. (Click here for details) *Sit Kwong Lam, Brightoil Petroleum Group, $1 billion, No.1342 Hong Kong-listed Brightoil Petroleum, controlled by billionaire Sit Kwong Lam, is the bunkering business. Although Sit has faced more than more than his share of tumult in the past year, his fortune is still above $1 billion. (Click here for details.) Sit resides in Hong Kong. — with Maggie Chen and Mao Yanjie — Click here for a summary of China‘s performance on this year’s Forbes Billionaires List — Click here for a list of 10 Chinese newcomers on this year’s Forbes Billionaires List — Click here for a list of China auto industry entrepreneurs to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest