onsdag 14 december 2011

The Boiler Room: GOLD CORPORATE MARKETING PARTNER Unilux Advanced Manufacturing

Unilux is the world’s original 5 pass forced draft bent tube boiler wit no room for inaccuracy. With over thirty years of manufacturing and operational experience in just about every industry requiring boilers, Unilux stands alone as the most pristine, highly engineered, ultimate quality boiler in it’s class. While the product speaks volumes, our success is our people; many with over 25 years at Unilux, we take enormous pride in every unit we manufacture. From immediate response to inquiries, performance data, drawings, product description and assistance with proper selection, everyone at Unilux has one important goal in mind…customer satisfaction. Unilux QA/QC boasts a stringent, internal program that emphasizes employee responsibility to safety, product and quality performance.

Richard Fisher of The Boiler Room: Unilux Advanced Manufacturing - Construction for all Unilux boilers starts with the vessel. All vessel material is controlled, ASME compliant material. Generous upper and lower drums are joined with large, external downcomer(s) allowing for maximum internal circulation. Tubes are a minimum 1.5” diameter, SA 178 Grade “A” material. Tube sizes up to 2.5” diameter are used for larger boilers. The Unilux housing is the most rigid available. Individual steel panels are manufactured with 11 gauge steel and reinforced by bending and welded stiffeners throughout. Refractory design is exclusive to Unilux. We utilize a three tier pour of different tolerance refractory for ultimate performance. All Unilux refractory is warranted for 5 years as standard. Finished insulated jacket panels are scratch resistant, polyester impregnated powder coat. Thermal losses from housing and jacket are 0.5 percent. The completed enclosure allows for up to +5” water column gas side pressure. All Unilux boilers are available with fuel burning equipment and control systems as desired.

Safety is paramount at Unilux. Every Unilux boiler has been engineered to be the safest, most efficient product available in its class.
At Unilux Boiler Corp., we engineer and manufacture bent water tube boilers of only the finest quality, built by experienced craftsmen and backed by a service history that is second to none. When others decline custom engineered projects, Unilux embraces the challenge with experienced, thought provoking ideas and the ability to assist engineers, contractors and end users with the most efficient, long lasting solutions to effectively meet their needs.

HeatSponge SIDEKICK Warning, Finally Revealed: Boiler Room Equipment, Inc

Fisher Capital on Boiler Room Equipment, Inc, is very proud to finally unveil the SIDEKICK line of condensing boiler economizers for commercial and industrial hot water boilers. The Sidekick has been in development for nearly two years and represents an evolutionary development of high-efficiency installations in the boiler industry. The SIDEKICK is a warning game changer the likes of which have not been experienced since the introduction of the first condensing boilers. The SIDEKICK offers the ability to integrate condensing boiler efficiencies to conventional boilers on a new or retrofit basis. The SIDEKICK allows a customer with a conventional boiler system the ability to realize condensing efficiency gains that otherwise would require the existing boiler to be demolished and replaced with a new condensing boiler. Conventional, non-condensing boilers can now realize the efficiency benefits of outdoor air temperature reset controls and lower circulating hot water loop temperatures. Sidekicks also allow for duel fuel condensing applications utilizing conventional boilers. The SIDEKICK features all stainless internal construction, stainless tubes and fins, and an insulated outer casing. Inspection and clean out ports make periodic maintenance and cleaning easy.
The efficiency of the SIDEKICK goes far beyond simply energy recovery to the ultra-productive process in which it is selected and designed. Heat recovery for condensing applications introduces a significant number of variables that makes a catalog-approach to equipment selection nearly impossible. Boilerroom Equipment has developed a new method of quantifying heat recovery, the Recovery Rate, and integrated this into the design. The incorporation of the Recovery Rate variable allows a customer to custom tailor the level of heat recovery and cost directly to the requirements of each specific application. We define this new concept in heat recovery design as 3D Modularity, for modular construction in three dimensions. Based on a "Mass-Customization" approach to product development, Bruce will consider all of the application design constraints and will design a SIDEKICK optimized to meet the exact performance requirements at the most competitive price. Bruce has been given the ability to consider all aspects of the heat exchanger design relative to the price of the equipment and generate a fully priced proposal all in real-time; a software and engineering accomplishment that added over one thousand hours of coding and heat transfer modification to Bruce's core program. This means Bruce can handle all inquiries and generate proposals in real time by himself. The near elimination of sales and support overhead and significantly reduced project execution overhead requirements the Bruce software provides allows us to offer a product superior to any before it at pricing and responsiveness levels no conventional competitor could hope to match.
Bruce will go on-line live on Monday December 21st with full public access to the Sidekick software. BEI will display the SIDEKICK in public at the upcoming AHR Exposition in Orlando, booth 3126. We will also have other HeatSponge models on display and based on the popularity in Chicago last year will bring the HeatSponge NASCAR Late Model stock car back for another display appearance.

Major Equity Markets 2010: Fisher Capital Management Part 2

The euro-zone economy improved much faster than expected in the
second quarter of the year. Growth is estimated to have been around
the 1% level, the fastest quarterly level for three years; and this has
eased the fears about a move into a “double-dip” recession, at least for
the moment. But it is a two-speed recovery, with the German economy
estimated to have grown by 2.2% during the quarter, the Netherlands
economy by 0.9%, and the French economy by 0.6%, but with Spain
and Portugal basically unchanged and the Greek economy falling further
into recession. With domestic demand weak, it is therefore essential
that overseas demand remains buoyant if German exports are going
to continue to drive the overall economy forward; but this is now very
uncertain, and so growth projections for the rest of this year and for
2011 are still fairly cautious.

However the European Central Bank is maintaining its optimistic view
of prospects. Speaking before the latest figures were announced, the
chairman, Jean Claude Trichet, argued that the second quarter outturn
would be better than expected, that there would also be an encouraging
result in the third quarter, and that there was no prospect of a move
into a “double-dip” recession.

He also defended the bank’s actions during the recession, suggested
that the economy has responded well to those actions, and was anxious
to ensure that “perhaps part of the credit could come to the central
bank”.

There is an obvious risk that his comments will prove to be premature.
Since the latest downgrade in Ireland’s credit rating has provided
further evidence that the problems in the European banking system
are far from resolved, and that the threat of sovereign debt defaults
remains. It is not surprising therefore that markets have been unable
to resist the downwards pressure despite the relatively good corporate
results from European companies.

The UK market has also fallen sharply over the past month. The UK
economy is currently performing better than expected, with consumer
spending holding up well so far; and the markets are continuing to
give the latest measures by the new UK government to reduce the fiscal
deficit the benefit of the doubt. But there are fears that those austerity
measures with have a significant effect on growth in the second half
of the year, and into 2011, and that corporate activity will be badly
affected. The mood amongst investors has therefore become much more
cautious.

The latest news on the UK economy has been encouraging. The Office
of National Statistics has recently estimated that retail sales volumes
were 1.1% higher in July than in the previous month, and 1.3% higher
than in July last year, the strongest monthly gain since February;
unemployment remains much lower than might have been expected;
the latest Purchasing Manager’s index for July confirms that
manufacturing activity is continuing to expand; and exports also appear
to strong.

There are weaknesses in the housing sector, and apparently some loss
of momentum in the services sector, and bank lending remains low;
but overall there are hopes that growth in the current quarter will be
at reasonable levels. But there are already indications that the austerity
measures announced by the government are beginning to have an effect
on activity, and so the situation remains very uncertain.

This uncertainty is reflected in the minutes of the latest meeting of the
Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England. They state that the
economy is “on a knife-edge”, with “substantial risks” of a relapse
balanced against signs of “gathering momentum” in the recovery. This
uncertainty persuaded the majority of the members of the committee
that policy should remain unchanged for the present; but the minutes
indicated that “the risks were substantial, and that members stood
ready to respond in either direction as the balance of risks evolved”.
The subsequent Inflation Report from the bank was also a cautious
document, with growth forecasts revised lower, primarily because of
the expected effects of the austerity measures, and with the governor
of the bank, Mervyn King, stressing the need for “continuing monetary
stimulus” in the face of the “choppy recovery”. Interest rates are
therefore likely to remain low for some considerable time, despite the
fact that the inflation rate is well above the bank’s target rate, and so
monetary policy will continue to be supportive. But will this be enough
to justify the present market level? Global growing is slowing, and this
will add to the downward pressures on the economy resulting from
the austerity measures as they are introduced. The odds therefore seem
to favour further UK market weakness in the near-term, even though
we believe that the economic recovery will continue, and eventually
lead to higher equity prices.

The Japanese market has also moved lower over the past month. Recent
figures have shown that economic growth in Japan slowed very sharply
in the second quarter of the year because of weak domestic demand
and falling exports; and as a result China has replaced Japan as the
world’s second largest economy for the first time. Growth is estimated
to have been at a 0.4% annualised rate in the second quarter, after a
4.4% rate in the first three months of the year, and this has increased
the fears that the country may once again be slipping back into recession.
The dependence on exports has been an important adverse factor, as
overseas markets have weakened, and this has encouraged speculation
that the Bank of Japan will be forced to intervene in the currency
markets to prevent further appreciation of the yen; but even this might
not be enough to avoid a recession. In this situation, it is particularly
unfortunate that an impasse exists at the political level that is making
it extremely difficult for the government to take effective action. The
background situation therefore remains very disappointing, and the
weakness in the equity market looks set to continue.

Fisher Capital Management Korea is a leading global financial institution holding extensive relationships with financial institutions, institutional investors and corporations across the world. As a full service company Fisher Capital Management Korea provides a full range of investment banking services including advanced risk management, corporate strategy and structure, plus raising capital through debt and equity markets. With this as our backbone we continue to provide a client service second to none.





onsdag 7 december 2011

Major Equity Markets 2010: Fisher Capital Management Part 1

Sentiment in the equity markets has been steady over the past month.
Markets in Europe have been unable to resist downward pressure. The
Japanese market is also lower; but there has been resistance amongst
the emerging markets in South East Asia that are supported by more
favourable economic conditions.

The Chinese authorities are obviously determined to prevent their
economy from overheating. The global recovery will therefore only
proceed at a very slow pace, and there may well be setbacks along the
way, although a move into a “double-dip” recession still seems unlikely.
There is also an increased danger of a sovereign debt default by Greece,
and possibly even by Ireland. But the swing in sentiment should not go
too far. So long as monetary policy remains supportive, the global
economic recovery is likely to continue, and this will eventually produce
a sustainable improvement in equity prices. Patience will therefore be
the most important requirement amongst investors until some of the
uncertainties have been resolved.

The Fed is in a very difficult position. The statement after its latest OMC
meeting was cautious about economic prospects, conceding that “the
pace of recovery in output and in employment has slowed in recent
months” and was likely to be “more modest” than anticipated in the
near-term. But monetary policy was left basically unchanged at the
meeting, perhaps because of the “unusual uncertainty” about prospects,
and this caused some disappointment. However there is little doubt
that further monetary easing will be introduced if the position continues
to deteriorate, because the bank’s main priority is to try to maintain
some momentum in the economy. And fiscal policy is also likely to
remain supportive, despite the massive size of the existing deficit.
Congress has been reluctant to authorise additional spending
programmes; but there is intense political pressure ahead of the elections
in November, and further programmes seem likely.

The critical question for investors therefore is whether the continued
monetary and fiscal support will be enough. They have been prepared
to adopt a bullish attitude to the situation, and this mood has been
helped by an encouraging flow of corporate earnings results that have
often exceeded expectations, and confirmed that the corporate sector
has been coping well so far with a difficult situation.

The gloom should not be overdone. So long as monetary policy remains
supportive, we believe that the odds favour the continuation of the
slow recovery, and that this will eventually produce better market
conditions.

Mainland European markets have fallen back sharply over the past
month, after the strong rally. There has been evidence of a further
improvement in the economic background in the euro-zone, and second
quarter corporate results have generally been encouraging; but the
signs of weakness in the US economy and the slowdown in China has
raised doubts about whether the German export performance that has
been providing most of the momentum for the recovery can be
maintained; and there have also been renewed concerns about the
possibility of debt defaults amongst the weaker member countries of
the zone. The markets have therefore been unable to resist downward
pressure.

The euro-zone economy improved much faster than expected in the
second quarter of the year. Growth is estimated to have been around
the 1% level, the fastest quarterly level for three years; and this has
eased the fears about a move into a “double-dip” recession, at least for
the moment. But it is a two-speed recovery, with the German economy
estimated to have grown by 2.2% during the quarter, the Netherlands
economy by 0.9%, and the French economy by 0.6%, but with Spain
and Portugal basically unchanged and the Greek economy falling further
into recession. With domestic demand weak, it is therefore essential
that overseas demand remains buoyant if German exports are going
to continue to drive the overall economy forward; but this is now very
uncertain, and so growth projections for the rest of this year and for
2011 are still fairly cautious.

However the European Central Bank is maintaining its optimistic view
of prospects. Speaking before the latest figures were announced, the
chairman, Jean Claude Trichet, argued that the second quarter outturn
would be better than expected, that there would also be an encouraging
result in the third quarter, and that there was no prospect of a move
into a “double-dip” recession.

Fisher Capital Management Korea is a leading global financial institution holding extensive relationships with financial institutions, institutional investors and corporations across the world. As a full service company Fisher Capital Management Korea provides a full range of investment banking services including advanced risk management, corporate strategy and structure, plus raising capital through debt and equity markets. With this as our backbone we continue to provide a client service second to none.





World Trade 2010: Fisher Capital Management

One of the more encouraging developments has been the rapid recovery
in the level of world trade. The recession in 2009 had a dramatic effect,
and the volume of world exports dropped by around 12%.

But largely because large parts of the global economy, and especially
China and other countries in South East Asia, were relatively unaffected
by the recession, the rebound in trading volumes had been very
impressive. There is already talk of reviving the Doha round of trade
liberalisation talks that collapsed in 2008. However it will be necessary
for relations between the US and China to improve substantially before
any real progress can be made, and present disagreements suggest that
progress will only be possible at a very slow pace, even if the global
economic recovery remains on track.

Major Equity Markets

Sentiment in the equity markets has been steady over the past month.
Markets in Europe have been unable to resist downward pressure. The
Japanese market is also lower; but there has been resistance amongst
the emerging markets in South East Asia that are supported by more
favourable economic conditions.

The Chinese authorities are obviously determined to prevent their
economy from overheating. The global recovery will therefore only
proceed at a very slow pace, and there may well be setbacks along the
way, although a move into a “double-dip” recession still seems unlikely.
There is also an increased danger of a sovereign debt default by Greece,
and possibly even by Ireland. But the swing in sentiment should not go
too far. So long as monetary policy remains supportive, the global
economic recovery is likely to continue, and this will eventually produce
a sustainable improvement in equity prices. Patience will therefore be
the most important requirement amongst investors until some of the
uncertainties have been resolved.

The Fed is in a very difficult position. The statement after its latest OMC
meeting was cautious about economic prospects, conceding that “the
pace of recovery in output and in employment has slowed in recent
months” and was likely to be “more modest” than anticipated in the
near-term. But monetary policy was left basically unchanged at the
meeting, perhaps because of the “unusual uncertainty” about prospects,
and this caused some disappointment. However there is little doubt
that further monetary easing will be introduced if the position continues
to deteriorate, because the bank’s main priority is to try to maintain
some momentum in the economy. And fiscal policy is also likely to
remain supportive, despite the massive size of the existing deficit.
Congress has been reluctant to authorise additional spending
programmes; but there is intense political pressure ahead of the elections
in November, and further programmes seem likely

Fisher Capital Management Korea is a leading global financial institution holding extensive relationships with financial institutions, institutional investors and corporations across the world. As a full service company Fisher Capital Management Korea provides a full range of investment banking services including advanced risk management, corporate strategy and structure, plus raising capital through debt and equity markets. With this as our backbone we continue to provide a client service second to none.





Fisher Capital Management News: Commodity Markets 2010

The performance of the commodity markets remains very impressive.
Speculative activity is a major factor, and supply shortages, often the
result of adverse weather conditions, are also providing considerable
support; but there is clearly a view amongst both traders and investors
that the general level of prices is too low, and that they will move
higher. Over the longer-term that view is likely to prove to be justified.
Commodity markets have been extremely volatile over the past month,
rising strongly in the early part of the period, but falling back sharply
towards month-end concerns about the effects of the austerity measures
being introduced in Europe, and indications of a continuing slowdown
in China, have combined to increase fears but for most of the past
month traders and investors apparently decided that the gloom was
overdone; and commodity prices also benefited from some “safe haven”
buying by investment funds.

Base metal prices are still ending the month higher overall, but below
recent levels, with the further sharp rise in the tin price as the outstanding
feature; and food prices have also moved higher, with the continuing
surge in wheat prices as the outstanding feature of these markets, to
provide further support for the view that the era of cheap food is
coming to an end. The gold price has also improved, as investors have
sought “safe havens in the present storm”; but oil prices have fallen
back.

Base metal prices are closing higher again over the past month. Zinc
and tin prices still ended sharply higher, but overall improvements
elsewhere were fairly modest.

Chinese demand remains a critical factor in these markets. It is this
demand that has been the main driving force over recent months, and
that has pushed iron ore prices to record levels and enabled other metal
prices to recover from the lows of the recent recession.

Soft commodity markets have provided a mixed performance over the
past month, but prices are generally higher. The exceptions have been
the cocoa price, which has continued to fall as weather conditions in
the Ivory Coast have improved, crop estimates have been pushed higher,
and the effects of the technical squeeze created by the decision by
Armajaro, the London-based hedge fund, to take delivery of around
7% of the world’s annual cocoa bean production last month, have
eased; and soya-bean prices are also basically unchanged over the
month. But elsewhere there has been a sharp rise in Arabica coffee
prices, and a further improvement in the sugar price.

However the main interest over the month has been in the wheat
market, after the massive price gains, and also in other grain markets.
The most significant events during the month were the decision by the
Russian authorities to ban the export of wheat and other grains until
year-end because of the drought that has devastated crops and caused
widespread fires across the country; and to ask other neighbouring
countries to take similar action.

It is not yet clear how they will respond; but the action has already
created widespread concern.

Russia was the world’s third largest wheat exporter last year, sending
18.3 million tons abroad, and so the decision to ban exports for the
rest of the year has had a dramatic effect on prices. Attempts have been
made to limit the price gains, with the US Department of Agriculture
in particular indicating that US stockpiles of wheat are close to 30
million tons and at a 23 year high, and the UN Food and Agriculture
Organisation insisting that global stocks are more than adequate to
cope with the shortfall, even if other neighbouring countries join the
Russian ban.

But these countries were expected to supply around one quarter of
total global wheat exports this year, and so the panic conditions in the
markets have not been significantly eased. Evidence of significant
purchases of US grain by China for the first time in a decade have also
added to the concerns about the availability of global supplies, and
made it even more difficult to assess the full consequences of the Russian
decision; but it seems unlikely that the surge in the prices of wheat and
other grains in over.

After rising sharply in late-July and early-August, oil prices have
subsequently fallen back towards the $70 per barrel level. There have
been warnings from the International Energy Agency that “the short-
term global economic outlook is highly uncertain, presenting significant
downside risks to future oil demand growth”; there has been a cautious
view of future oil demand from OPEC; and also a report from the US
Department of Energy that US stockpiles of crude oil and refined
products have risen to their highest levels since weekly records began
in 1990. Much will depend on future demand in the US and in China;
but the fundamentals do not seem to point to an early and sustained
improvement in prices unless there is a serious deterioration in political
conditions in the Middle East.

The swing in sentiment towards a more cautious view of global economic
prospects, and the renewed concerns about sovereign debt defaults in
Europe, have provided further encouragement for investors to seek
“safe havens” in the present uncertain situation, and this has led to a
significant rally in the gold price over the past month.

The dollar has recovered well from weakness earlier in the month, and
so the fear of dollar weakness has not been a factor pushing the gold
price higher this month. The evidence that the sovereign debt crisis is
far from being resolved, and the indications of increased Chinese
buying of gold, have all helped to push the price higher. The latest
strength may well lead to a further period of profit-taking; but given
the present international situation, it would be unwise to assume that
the improving trend in precious metal prices is over.

Fisher Capital Management Korea is a leading global financial institution holding extensive relationships with financial institutions, institutional investors and corporations across the world. As a full service company Fisher Capital Management Korea provides a full range of investment banking services including advanced risk management, corporate strategy and structure, plus raising capital through debt and equity markets. With this as our backbone we continue to provide a client service second to none.





onsdag 23 november 2011

Fisher Capital Management Report Part 2 - The UK Emergency Budget

Fisher Capital Management Report  Part 2- The UK has had an emergency budget and it could have been much worse. The heavy lifting is being done by a rise in VAT bringing in £13 billion. On the spending side the cuts are achieved by freezing public sector pay, indexing state benefits to the CPI rather than the faster-rising RPI and freezing child benefits. State pensions will be indexed to the higher of wages or the CPI but the pension age will
be raised to 66 fairly soon.

Interest rates are projected to remain low, with inflation absent; and it is possible that Quantitative Easing will need to be resumed but on present prospects this seems unlikely to be necessary. Another concern is with the regulative proposals. There is an antibank mentality developing in this coalition government, which is
most unfortunate; much of it seems to emanate from Vince Cable and the Lib Dems.

Yet a moment’s thought should be enough to convince one that we need bank credit expansion and a return to competition on the bank high street in order to foster recovery and enterprise. Ever tougher bank regulation is what was needed before, at the peak of   expansion, not now in the slough of recession giving way to recovery.
Talk of breaking up banks fails to recognise the natural economics of banks, which favours scale and risk-spreading. Talk of capping mortgage lending at modest percentages of income is also unfortunate when the UK want to see a revival of it’s housing market, now once again back in the doldrums.

A last area of concern is the state of the labour market. The UK do have near ‘full employment’ if one discounts the modest temporary effect of recession. But this only applies to those normally looking for work.

Fisher Capital Management Report Part 2 - The UK Emergency Budget: There is now a large group of people who  are claiming benefits of various sorts in order to stay out of the labour market. Disability benefit is one route;  nother is the having of children in order to get child benefits and related parenting allowances, with tragic consequences for some children.

Tightening up of this has been signalled in the budget but this has happened before, with no proper follow-through.

Another UK labour market problem is the resurgence of union power as Labour loosened the union laws passed before 1997. One key loosening was the 12-week rule, which allows workers to breach  their contracts with impunity when on strike until 12 weeks of strike have occurred. When strikes are designed for short periods for maximum disruption, this 12 week period can take a long time to trigger. During it the employing firm is unable to defend itself by recruiting a different labour force.

Under the pre-1997 legislation firms were able to dismiss workers in breach of contract, provided they did so in a non-discriminatory way. This led to a huge reduction in strikes and a large rise in UK productivity, to the great general benefit.

As we have seen in recent years, certain unions are exploiting this 12-week rule to damage the economy — the classic case has been the BA dispute where UNITE has persisted in attempting to defend well-above market wages for cabin crew.
In sum the budget was a decent start in restoring fiscal sanity. But only a start.

The UK now needs urgent attention to the creation of a proper tax system with low marginal rates but generating a reliable revenue source — the two are perfectly compatible. It needs sense and restraint in regulation. Finally they need to reform their labour market yet again.

Fisher Capital Management - Japan Elects a New Premier Part 1

Fisher Capital Management Eight and a half months after riding the Democratic Party of Japan’s (DPJ) historic lower house victory into office, Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama announced his resignation, having haphazardly frittered away a chest brimming with political capital.

Major newspapers said that Hatoyama was resigning mainly for two reasons: his failure to keep his promise to relocate the functions of US Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, Okinawa, out of Okinawa Prefecture, and a political funding scandal that included his mother’s provision of some ¥1.26 billion to him over years.

Following Hatoyama’s resignation, Minister of Finance Naoto Kan was elected as the new Prime Minister, the fifth in four years. At his inaugural press conference Kan proposed a comprehensive reconstruction of the economy, public finance, and social security as his priority, in addition to reforming public administration, and conducting responsible diplomatic and defence policy.

Fisher Capital Management Report- Japan Elects a New Premier Part 1: The biggest question surrounding the once-popular new government is whether Kan can really turn over a new leaf for the DPJ. In his first policy speech to the Diet as prime minister, Kan sought to set his administration apart from the previous one by vowing to build “a strong economy, strong finances and strong social welfare”.

Kan stressed the need to jolt Japan out of its currently weak state, which he attributed to “anaemic economic growth, ballooning public debt and dwindling public trust in the viability of Japan's social security system”.

Observers and practitioners believe that the government is unlikely to announce any significant new policy initiatives, as Kan was already one of the main architects behind the previous administration’s economic policy, although some changes have just been announced in the DPJ election manifesto for the Upper House
election. For instance it drops the promise of doubling monthly child allowances to ¥26000 next year.

“I hope to carry over the torch of rebuilding Japan passed on to me by Hatoyama”, he observed at a press conference after his election. Alan Feldman, chief economist at Morgan Stanley in Japan, says that “although Kan’s initial speech did include some new elements, the main message was continuity with Hatoyama’s economic policies. Investors are likely to welcome the innovations, but to remain sceptical of the overall philosophy”.

However, economists believe Kan will face a mountain of challenges both at home and abroad in the near future. First, he needs to rebuild that political capital ahead of the upper house elections. Public support for the DPJ has recovered sharply after his appointment suggesting that voters have, for now, forgiven the ruling Democrats for the previous leaders’ policy mistakes. But it remains to be seen whether the initial popularity of the Kan administration will translate into a strong performance, and whether Kan will ultimately be given a strong enough mandate to push through difficult policy decisions.

Major newspaper polls give Prime Minister approval ratings of between 60 and 70 percent; but such ratings can be very fickle. The election will be an uphill battle for the DPJ. The DPJ is without one of its coalition partners, the Social Democratic Party who left the ruling camp over Hatoyama’s failure to remove the US base from Okinawa, as demanded by its leader, Mizuho Fukushima. The two parties that remain, the DPJ and the People’s New Party, hold 122 of the upper house’s 242 seats, the slimmest majority possible. Should the coalition lose that majority in the coming election, it would mean a split Diet — its majority would only remain in the lower house. And that would make passing bills extremely difficult.

Fisher Capital Management Report- Japan Elects a New Premier Part 1: Kan will have plenty on the economic front too. In terms of fiscal policy, as a former Finance minister he has turned into a fiscal conservative, having been a champion of funnelling revenue from higher taxes toward government spending in order to achieve economic growth. “Economic growth, fiscal reconstruction and social welfare reform will be achieved together”, he told reporters. 

Fisher Capital Equipment Update - Machine Components Industry in China Problems

Fisher Capital Equipment Management Update- Machine Components Industry in China Problems and their causes - the machinery, basic parts - construction machinery industry. Avoid online internet scams; get latest updates on Fisher Capital Equipment Management website. As our country on the basis of pieces of machinery in Machinery Industry Awareness of the importance of late, long-term lack of investment, leading the entire industry based on poor, weak economic foundation and strength of the weak. In particular, as the host country rises the level of basic pieces of machinery behind the main bottleneck is becoming more apparent. In recent years, although the introduction of technology, technological innovation, scientific research and development, our country has given some support, but with the current level of market demand and overseas, there remains no small gap, in particular in: less product variety, low level quality of instability, early failure rate, and poor reliability.


 China Machine Components product variety, small size, especially a big gap between high-end products can not meet the growing needs of the host. At present, various types of host based piece of performance indicators is roughly equivalent to the level of foreign 20th century 80s. Quality of instability, early failure rate, reliability is poor, the Achilles heel of basic items. Therefore, many OEMs to enhance the market competitiveness of its host, often choose to import the basis of supporting documents, resulting in domestic basic parts, especially the low-tech products, the domestic market share declined. Although China's exports of basic items has obvious advantages, but mainly labor-intensive products, the number of large, low-value, technology added value.


Present, China Machine Components Industry of the following main issues: First, redundant construction seriously, the low degree of specialization, not form scale, low economic efficiency, Machine Components, compared with the host enterprises to establish an initial financial and technical inputs required relatively few times in the national economic development period, have increased the number of basic parts manufacturer, also appeared along a large number of low-level duplicated construction, multi-point, volume is small, not form economies of scale. Basic pieces of business, while gradually independent of the OE, but most of the enterprise itself is large and, small but complete, low degree of specialization, the level of equipment is not high, the quality of instability, low economic efficiency. If China Bearing Annual output of three large enterprise sector bearing less than the sum of a well-known foreign companies 50%. The past two years, China built nearly one hundred Hydraulic Parts Plant, but the annual output of 300,000 or more only a few, the main product is Agricultural Machinery Matching. The company's annual output of Germany Rexroth hydraulic items 1.3 million, the Japanese oil research (strain) is also an annual output of 600,000 or more. Industrialized countries die of about 150 000 companies per capita output to 20 million, China's only 4 million to 50 thousand yuan. In recent years, with a variety of common development policies, the ownership, basic parts industry is experiencing increasingly focus from scattered to the intensive development process.

Fisher Capital Equipment Management Update- Machine Components Industry in China Problems and their causes - the machinery, basic parts - construction machinery industry Avoid online internet scams, get latest updates on Fisher Capital Equipment Management website.


Second, weak research and development, insufficient capital investment, technological progress is slow. Basic pieces of 70 different industries in the late 20th century, early 80s to early introduction of a number of foreign advanced technologies, but the lack of adequate absorption of the hardware and software investment. According to foreign experience, required for digestion and absorption of imported technology and capital ratio of approximately 1:7, and our understanding of this late, slow digestion and absorption steps. Technical strength of competition in the market is actually a contest. Have attached great importance to overseas, have increased investment, occupy high ground. Various well-known companies for research and development funds account for its Sell Amount of 4% to 5%, 10% in key areas. Although many institutions of higher learning in China at present engaged in research work, a lot of theoretical research, scientific research, patents, and papers have a very high level, but actual production is not tightly integrated, especially into commodities slow.


Third and related raw materials, backward technology, low level of technology and technological equipment the foundation of the development constraints.


Fasteners, chains, springs, bearings, molds and other steel products used by the poor quality specifications less direct impact on the quality of basic items, while the hydraulic pressure and hydraulic pressure castings and quality of products related to electronic control technology backward, but also directly affect the quality and reliability of hydraulic components. Mechanical parts are generally based on batch, mass production, but also more variety, high precision machining products, and therefore require high technology and equipment production, large investment. Foreign multi-use high efficiency and precision of the plane, line or soft line for efficient automated production. However, some basic pieces of our business by financial constraints input small businesses transform themselves poor, less advanced equipment not matching, affect product quality and quality.