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Markets subdued as weak US open weighs on trading

LONDON (AP) ? Markets have started the week on a steady note with any optimism generated by Japanese election results fading away following a downbeat U.S. housing survey and softer-than-anticipated earnings from McDonald's.

The week had got off to a solid start, particularly in Asia, after election results in Japan gave the country's ruling coalition a majority in parliament's upper house and an apparent mandate to push ahead economic reforms.

Preliminary results from Sunday's election showed the coalition led by Shinzo Abe won a majority in the upper house.

Japan's stagnant economy is showing signs of perking up, helped by the aggressive monetary and fiscal stimulus ? two of the so-called Three Arrows that Abe has let loose since he took office in late December. Stocks have surged, business confidence is improving and the weaker yen has eased pressure on exporters.

Long-term growth requires another "arrow" ? measures to boost competitiveness and cope with Japan's rapidly aging population and soaring national debt.

"The win will now allow him to push on with implementing his third and final arrow, in his attempt to revive the Japanese economy which has stagnated for the last two decades," said Craig Erlam, market analyst at Alpari.

As the third-largest economy in the world, that's a potential boon for the region and that helped Asian shares post solid gains ? Tokyo's Nikkei 225 gained 0.5 percent to 14,658.04.

That modest optimism carried through into the European trading session for a while before lackluster trading on Wall Street took root.

In Europe, the FTSE 100 index of leading British shares was down 0.1 percent at 6,623 while Germany's DAX was barely changed on the day, down 0.01 percent to 8,331. The CAC-40 in France was 0.4 percent higher at 3,939.

In the U.S., the Dow Jones industrial average was up 0.06 percent at 15,554 while the broader S&P 500 index was up 0.2 percent to 1,695.

A surprising fall in U.S. existing home sales in June to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.08 million kept investor sentiment on Wall Street in check. A smaller than anticipated 4 percent rise in second-quarter earnings at McDonald's also weighed on trading.

Earnings from a raft of companies around the world will be closely monitored this week. Nearly a third of the S&P report this week and there's also a number of European companies due to announce their results.

Investors are also keeping a watch on developments in Portugal after the country's president accepted a compromise reached by the coalition government that allows it to stay in power, defusing a crisis that had roiled financial markets.

The yield on the country's benchmark 10-year bond ? a gauge of investor sentiment ? fell 0.45 percentage point to 6.28 percent.

Portugal has been relying on a financial bailout from its euro partners and the International Monetary Fund for over two years now and the prospect of the government collapsing over a disagreement over austerity had weighed on recent sentiment.

Earlier in Asia, China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index added 0.6 percent to 2,004.76 despite concerns over the scale of the country's economic slowdown. Hong Kong's Hang Seng rose 0.2 percent to 21,356.03.

In the currency markets, the dollar was under pressure after recent strength that sent it above 100 yen. It was down 1 percent to 99.56 yen while the euro rose 0.4 percent to $1.3196.

Oil prices tracked equities downward through the day, with the benchmark New York rate down 52 cents at $107.35 a barrel.

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/markets-subdued-weak-us-open-weighs-trading-143109389.html

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সোমবার, ৮ এপ্রিল, ২০১৩

Egypt: Clashes outside Copt cathedral leave 1 dead

CAIRO (AP) ? Christians angered by the killing of four Christians in weekend sectarian violence clashed Sunday with a mob throwing rocks and firebombs, killing one and turning Cairo's main Coptic cathedral into a battleground.

The clashes raised tempers in an already tense political atmosphere, as workers shut down the country's trains in a strike over wages and a dispute over the nation's chief prosecutor entered a new phase ? all signs of two years of unending turmoil.

Reacting to Sunday's violence, the Muslim Brotherhood's political party blamed "dubious" attempts by unnamed parties to broaden instability in Egypt by igniting sectarian violence and spreading chaos.

A liberal opposition group, the Popular Current, said the clashes were symptomatic of the failure of the state to protect its citizens, calling on Islamist President Mohammed Morsi and his government to resign.

Morsi said in a statement late Sunday that he spoke to Pope Tawadros II by phone. He gave orders to authorities to guard the cathedral and citizens in the area, adding that protecting the lives of Muslims and Christians was a state responsibility.

"I consider any attack on the cathedral as an attack on me, personally," he said, according to the statement from his office.

The clashes at the St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Cathedral began just after hundreds of angry Christians left the complex to stage an anti-government march following the funeral for the four Christians killed in sectarian clashes Saturday.

A mob, described by witnesses as residents of the area, pelted them with rocks and firebombs and fired birdshot, forcing them back inside the complex. Few police were present.

By the time police arrived in larger numbers, the church was the scene of clashes between those locked inside and the mob outside, as the two sides exchanged rocks and firebombs. Police fired tear gas, and gas canisters landing inside church grounds caused a panic among women and children. People outside the church cheered.

Tawadros was not in the cathedral, his headquarters, during the funeral and the violence that followed. In a statement carried by the state news agency, said he was "regretful" of the violence and called for calm.

"There was no security outside the church for such a large funeral," said Emad Thabet, a Coptic Christian who was among those locked up in the church for hours. "There is no such thing as Egyptians in Egypt. There are only Muslims and Christians," he said. Copts have complained for decades that the Christian minority suffers from discrimination.

Coptic Christians make up about 10 percent of Egypt's estimated 90 million people. Attacks against Christians have increased since the ouster two years ago of autocrat Hosni Mubarak.

The clashes took place alongside a development in another of Egypt's many crises ? questions surrounding the legitimacy of the country's top prosecutor. On Sunday, Egypt's highest judicial body urged him to step down less than five months after Morsi appointed him. A few days earlier, a court ruling declared his appointment void.

The statement from the Supreme Judiciary Council urged the chief prosecutor, Talaat Abdullah, "to express a wish" to return to his previous job as a judge for the sake of the unity of the judiciary.

There was no immediate comment from Abdullah. Officials in his office and in the government indicated before that he will appeal the court decision.

Abdullah's appointment in December set off demonstrations and protests by judges and fellow prosecutors. The protests forced him to tender his resignation, but then he withdrew it and stayed in office.

Removing Abdullah has been a key demand of the mostly liberal and secular opposition. Sunday's call by the council of the judiciary appeared aimed at offering him an honorable exit, a step toward ending the long-running crisis within the judiciary over the appointment.

During the past two weeks, Abdullah has issued summons against several media celebrities critical of Morsi, Egypt's first freely elected president. They included popular TV satirist Bassem Youssef, who was accused of insulting Morsi and Islam. The satirist was released on bail.

Alongside the sectarian and legal issues, the overriding economic crisis flared as Egypt's railway services came to a halt Sunday because of a strike by train drivers and conductors demanding better pay. The strike snarled inter-city transit, and thousands of angry passengers crowded train stations.

The most immediate issue was the specter of sectarian violence increasing and spreading to the rest of the country.

Sunday's clashes grew out of Khossous, a town north of Cairo, where five people, including a Muslim, were killed a day earlier. Renewed clashes erupted there later Sunday outside the local church, leaving 12 residents and one police officer injured.

At the cathedral on Sunday, witness Ibrahim Elsherif said the clashes began when angry Coptic protesters tried to stop traffic for an anti-government march. A street brawl turned quickly into an attack by local residents, who pelted the protesters with rocks from the roofs of nearby buildings, throwing firebombs and firing birdshot, he said. Some protesters smashed parked cars.

One Coptic Christian was killed in the violence, and at least 66 people were wounded, the Health Ministry said. Two local journalists were among those injured, one seriously, according to their newspapers.

Video aired live on the private ONTV network showed young men on the roof of a building next to the cathedral firing handguns toward the compound.

Inside the cathedral, several thousand mourners chanted slogans against Morsi, calling on the Egyptian leader to step down. They shouted "Leave!" and "This is our country, we will not leave."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/egypt-clashes-outside-copt-cathedral-leave-1-dead-210343859.html

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সোমবার, ৪ মার্চ, ২০১৩

Commercial Real Estate: North Bay multitenant property owners ...

Jeff Quackenbush, Business Journal Staff ReporterCertification under the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design building rating systems, better known as LEED, developed by the U.S. Green Building Council has been long the domain of single-tenant or owned commercial properties in the North Bay. Tens of thousands of dollars in consultant and staff time to document and verify materials, supplies and operations was an expense that had been difficult to line up with increased demand for multitenant properties. But that?s changed, as Macerich and Seagate Properties have been pursuing LEED certification for hundreds of thousands of square feet of North Bay office and retail buildings.

Santa Monica-based regional-mall investment trust Macerich in late December received Gold-level certification under version 2.0 of the LEED Core and Shell rating system for the redevelopment of the Northgate mall in north San Rafael. That was one of the goals of the 18-month project to remake Marin County?s largest enclosed shopping center into a 723,000-square-foot mall with open-air possibilities via movable glass walls. The mall reopened with dozens of new tenants in November 2009.

?We know environmental stewardship is important to the Marin County community, and our focus on energy-efficiency and sustainable practices made sense for the environment, for smart energy use and for cost-effective operations at Northgate, now and over the long term,? said Brianna Thornton, mall marketing manager.

More than 70 percent of the materials removed from the existing center were recycled, such as reuse of wood for architectural embellishments, benches and concrete forms. Reduction of energy use was a major focus of the project, partly helped by high-efficiency lighting and climate-control systems and partly via more daylight use from a clerestory. Landscaping was redesigned to have more native Northern California foliage, and a rainwater-runoff filtering system for the more than 40-acre property also was installed.

Northgate is Macerich?s second mall to earn LEED certification, following Gold-level for the new Santa Monica Place last year.

Seagate Properties received Gold-level LEED certification for the two newest buildings at San Rafael Corporate Center.

Seagate Properties received Gold-level LEED certification for the two newest buildings at San Rafael Corporate Center.

In October, the two newest office buildings at 315,000-square-foot San Rafael Corporate Center also received Gold-level LEED certification under the Existing Building Operations and Maintenance rating system, according to General Manager Dale Tate. Joint owner Seagate Properties of San Rafael and LEED consulting firm Kema spent the year documenting the chemicals and practices used by contractors, vendors and suppliers, measuring the balance of and fresh air brought in by the heating and cooling system. The first two buildings in the complex previously earned the rating.

?In a process like this, it is very tedious,? Mr. Tate said. ?You have to look at every aspect of the operation of the office building, from the roof the the foundation.?

The two newest buildings and a parking garage at San Rafael Corporate Center were completed in 2009. Yet substantial occupancy came in September of last year, when BioMarin Pharmaceutical moved and expanded its headquarters offices from its Novato production plant.

Energy Star ratings have been in place for years on on the first two San Rafael Corporate Center buildings. Now that the two newer buildings are occupied, Seagate plans to apply for ratings on those buildings after compile a year?s worth of energy bills, according to Mr. Tate. Cutting energy usage can help lower operating costs, which helps both increase the returns for property owner and lower the tenant occupancy costs.

And Reno, Nev.-based Basin Street Properties, which started in Petaluma, has been upgrading energy efficiency of a number of the 17 Santa Rosa office buildings it acquired from Equity Office in October as part of a companywide move further in that direction, according to Scott Stranzl, Basin Street vice president.

?We ask ourselves, How do we create buildings or make existing buildings have less impact on the environment?? he said. ?The double-edged sword is we want to do green upgrades, but the cost is substantial.?

Part of the upgrades in Santa Rosa are new roofs and upgraded heating, ventilation and air-conditioning systems with energy-management controls that can be monitored and adjusted remotely.

?We implement that across the board,? Mr. Stranzl said.

The company is moving toward Energy Star ratings on all the buildings in the portfolio, located in the Santa Rosa, Petaluma, Sacramento and Reno areas. Two Sacramento-area buildings already have been LEED-certified.

***

Terra Firma Global Partners (800-681-1361, terrafirmaglobalpartners.com), started in 2010 as a residential real estate brokerage by former Pacific Union senior executives Bill Facendini and Heidi Rickerd-Rizzo, officially unveiled a commercial division in January with the completion of a few sales and leases in Santa Rosa and Windsor.

The team consists of Mr. Facendini, Ms. Rickerd-Rizzo, who has brokered a number of multifamily deals and advised clients on income housing property arrangements, together with longtime Santa Rosa?area commercial real estate agent Paul Schwartz.

The latter started with leasing properties in the late 1980s for Simons & Brecht, now Simons & Woodard. He was a top producer in the Santa Rosa office of Orion Partners for nine years before joining team that opened the Santa Rosa office of Colliers International. He worked from the Santa Rosa office of Cassidy Turley for six years then worked with KOR Commercial last year before joining Terra Firma.

?The addition of the Commercial Division, with Paul taking the lead in creating a client oriented team, was a logical expansion of our company service platform,? Mr. Facendini said.

The new commercial team?s first deals were the sale of a medical condominium complex at 990 Sonoma Ave. in Santa Rosa for $4.25 million; a 6,000-square-foot office building at 2360 Professional Dr. for $900,000; two former RPM Optoelectronics buildings on Corby Avenue for a electrician apprentice training center, and a relocation lease of 9,200 square feet in the Windsor Palms strip center to 21st Century Fitness.

Mr. Facendini was senior vice president and chief operating officer of Pacific Union for two years before starting Terra Firma, and before that he managed nearly 300 Coldwell Banker agents in Northern California. Terra Firma opened with a handful of agents and has grown to six offices with 32 agents.

?After working in the corporate commercial brokerage environment where business strategies and decisions are made elsewhere, it is fantastic and refreshing to work with a group of dedicated professionals to achieve common business objectives who put clients first,? Mr. Schwartz said.

?

Send items for this column to 707-521-4256 or jquackenbush@busjrnl.com.

Source: http://www.northbaybusinessjournal.com/68895/commercial-real-estate-column-for-march-4-2013/

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Report: Australian miners fired for 'Harlem Shake'

PERTH, Australia (AP) ? Up to 15 miners were fired from their high-paying jobs in an Australian gold mine after a "Harlem Shake" performance underground was deemed a safety hazard, a newspaper reported on Monday.

A YouTube video shows eight miners wearing safety gear while performing the convulsive dance in the Agnew Gold Mine last week. The West Australian newspaper quoted a sacked worker who wouldn't give his name as saying up to 15 people were fired, including some who watched the performance but did not participate.

Mine owner Barminco considered the stunt a safety issue and a breach of its "core values of safety, integrity and excellence," according to a dismissal letter cited by the paper.

The letter noted that Barminco would not allow the dancing workers "to be subcontracted by Barminco at any site domestically and globally."

It's not clear from the video what safety issues are raised. The dancing miners wear helmets, but five are shirtless. The sacked worker told the newspaper that shirts had been removed to ensure the Barminco name did not appear in the video.

Barminco, which has operations in Africa as well as its native Australia, did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.

Australia is experiencing a mining boom, with thousands of workers attracted by high salaries to remote Outback mines. The West Australian said the miners who lost their jobs had six-figure salaries.

The unnamed worker who spoke to the newspaper said the miners were only "having a bit of fun." A Facebook page set up seeking their reinstatement carried comments supporting the workers as well as people saying safety regulations should be obeyed.

Paddy Gorman, spokesman for the Construction, Forestry, Mining, and Energy Union, said none of the miners at Agnew Gold Mine in resource-rich Western Australia state is a member of the mining union.

Up to 4,000 videos of "Harlem Shake" variations are uploaded on the Internet daily. The song "Harlem Shake," recorded by Brooklyn disc jockey and producer Baauer, is currently No.2 on the Australian singles chart.

Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/4e67281c3f754d0696fbfdee0f3f1469/Article_2013-03-04-Australia-Harlem%20Shake/id-d7b43faa81b74b1badb92b735fae999a

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Suspect arrested in beating death of Miss. mayoral candidate

JACKSON, Miss. (AP) ?

The body of a slain Mississippi mayoral candidate was beaten and burned, a family member said Monday.

Marco McMillian's godfather, Carter Womack, said McMillian's family received the information from the Coahoma County coroner. Coroner Scotty Meredith declined to comment Monday, and a spokesman for the Coahoma County Sheriff's Department had no immediate comment.

But a person with direct knowledge of the investigation confirmed to The Associated Press that McMillian had some bruises and there were burns on at least one area of his body. The person wasn't authorized to publicly comment and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The cause of death has not been released. An autopsy was performed, but toxicology tests are pending, and authorities say it could take two weeks to get those results.

Womack said the coroner told family members that someone dragged McMillian's body under a fence and left it near a Mississippi River levee last week.

McMillian, 34, was a candidate for mayor of Clarksdale in the Mississippi Delta.

"We feel that this was not a random act of violence based on the condition of the body when it was found," said a statement released by his campaign.

The slaying received significant attention, in part, because McMillian's campaign said he was the first openly gay, viable candidate for public office in Mississippi.

Sheriff's deputies last week charged 22-year-old Lawrence Reed with murder in the case.

An investigation began Feb. 26 after McMillian's SUV slammed head-on into another vehicle on U.S. Highway 49 near the Coahoma and Tallahatchie county lines.

Reed was driving the car, but McMillian was not in it, authorities say. McMillian's body was found the next day.

Reed was treated for injuries at the Regional Medical Center in Memphis. The hospital said he was released Saturday. The Shelby County, Tenn., Sherriff's Office website showed Reed in custody Monday.

___

Follow Mohr on Twitter at http://twitter.com/holbrookmohr

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/family-slain-mayoral-candidate-beaten-burned-172219581.html

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