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China’s Central Bank Bails Out Unidentified Bank

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China’s Central Bank Bails Out Unidentified Bank While the West is fretting about a few days of declining stock markets, China is rapidly approaching a full-fledged crisis in its banking system. According to industry sources, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) had to bail-out an unnamed bank …

The post China’s Central Bank Bails Out Unidentified Bank appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 2 hours ago.

Rapid Unblocker List Gives YouTube and Facebook to China

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idcloak’s new Rapid unblocker list allows censored web users in China to access blocked sites like Facebook and YouTube for free.

Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) June 20, 2013

China’s 564 million internet user base now has access to banned sites such as YouTube and Facebook courtesy of idcloak Technology’s new Rapid Unblocker List – the most extensive list of live public proxies on the internet.

The database allows users to route their internet to a country of their choice for free. Once connected, the user may then access sites that are normally blocked on their connection. The user may also choose an encrypted proxy so their connection blends in with standard https traffic and ensures their unblocking is safe from observation.

Because the servers in the rapid unblocker list are filtered by speed, they are able to take on even the most bandwidth heavy tasks like YouTube video streaming and Facebook video chat.

“All servers on the list go through constant performance tests,” says idcloak’s tech researcher, Robin Welles, “new proxies of the highest speeds are continuously found to replace the old, which means the list’s population changes every few minutes. Having proxies delivered by a speed value is a major advantage over regular YouTube and Facebook proxy sites, which require the user to try them out individually for speed. IP proxies of course carry the additional benefit of negotiating the compatibility problems that website-based proxies run into.”

idcloak’s site may ultimately face the same issue that plagues Facebook and YouTube itself, however. The firm realizes that at any time the authorities behind the Great Firewall of China, as the Golden Shield project is known, could pull the plug on the idcloak website. “At the moment we are up and running in the People’s Republic of China, but our list has only just gone online. At any time we expect the whole site to be added to a block-list. Then, Chinese netizens will need to use another proxy, perhaps one from the list itself, to access our list. As you can see, it’s with good reason that censorship circumvention is often likened to whack-a-mole. But with our list, we have a whole lot of moles.”

idcloak is a US-based web services firm that helps everyday netizens find freedom, security and anonymity on the net. To learn more, visit http://www.idcloak.com. Reported by PRWeb 4 hours ago.

SEC Charges China-Based Company and CEO in Latest Cross-Border Working Group Case

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*FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2013-115*

Washington, D.C., June 20, 2013 — The Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a China-based company and the CEO with fraudulently misleading investors about its financial condition by touting cash balances that were millions of dollars higher than actual amounts.

--------------------

-Additional Materials-

· SEC Complaint

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The case is the latest from the SEC's Cross-Border Working Group that focuses on companies with substantial foreign operations that are publicly traded in the U.S. The Working Group has enabled the SEC to file fraud cases against more than 65 foreign issuers or executives and deregister the securities of more than 50 companies.

The SEC alleges that China MediaExpress, which purports to operate a television advertising network on inter-city and airport express buses in the People's Republic of China, began falsely reporting significant increases in its business operations, financial condition, and profits almost immediately upon becoming a publicly-traded company through a reverse merger. In addition to grossly overstating its cash balances, China MediaExpress also falsely stated in public filings and press releases that two multi-national corporations were its advertising clients when, in fact, they were not. The company's chairman and CEO Zheng Cheng signed the public filings and attested to their accuracy. After suspicions of fraud were raised by the company's external auditor and an internal investigation ensued, Zheng attempted to pay off a senior accountant assigned to the case.

"Investor confidence in the representations made by publicly-traded companies is critically important to the proper functioning of our financial markets," said Antonia Chion, Associate Director in the SEC's Division of Enforcement. "China MediaExpress and Zheng falsely reported whopping increases in its cash balances and deceptively raised money from stock sales. Today's action demonstrates the Commission's commitment to policing financial fraud in the U.S. markets, regardless of whether it is perpetrated by persons who live here or abroad."

According to the SEC's complaint filed in Washington D.C., China MediaExpress became a publicly-traded company in October 2009 and began materially overstating its cash balances in press releases and SEC filings. For example, its 2009 annual report filed on March 31, 2010, reported $57 million in cash on hand when it actually had a cash balance of merely $141,000. Later that year on November 9, 2010, China MediaExpress issued a press release boasting a cash balance of $170 million at the end of the third quarter of its fiscal year. The actual cash balance was just $10 million.

According to the SEC's complaint, after China Media materially misrepresented its financial condition, its stock price tripled to more than $20 per share. At the same time, China Media received $53 million from a hedge fund pursuant to a sale of the company's preferred and common stock to that fund. Zheng was financially incentivized to misrepresent China MediaExpress' financial condition, as he had agreements to receive stock if the company met certain net income targets. For instance, when China Media met net income targets for fiscal year 2009, Zheng personally received 600,000 shares of China MediaExpress stock that were worth approximately $6 million at the time.

According to the SEC's complaint, China MediaExpress' external auditor resigned in March 2011 due to suspicions about fraudulent bank confirmations and statements. The company's audit committee then retained a law firm to conduct an internal investigation. The law firm hired a Hong Kong forensic accounting firm to assist in obtaining bank statements from China MediaExpress' banks to verify the publicly reported cash balances. The evening before a planned visit to the banks by the accounting firm's team, Zheng called a senior accountant assigned to the team and told him that he had the authorization letters necessary to obtain China MediaExpress' bank statements. He asked the accountant to meet him alone to obtain the authorization letters. During the meeting, Zheng admitted that there would be discrepancies dating back one to two years between China MediaExpress' reported and actual cash balances. Zheng offered the accountant approximately $1.5 million to "assist with the investigation." The accountant refused the offer. Approximately one month later, the bank statements were obtained, and they showed substantial discrepancies between publicly reported and actual cash balances.

The SEC's complaint charges Zheng and China MediaExpress with violations of the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. The complaint charges China MediaExpress with violations of the reporting, books and records, and internal control provisions, and charges Zheng with violating the SEC's rules prohibiting lying to auditors and making false certifications required under the Sarbanes-Oxley Act. The complaint seeks financial penalties, permanent injunctions, disgorgement, and an officer and director bar against Zheng.

The SEC's investigation was conducted by Senior Counsel Kwame Clement and Staff Accountant Kelly Dragelin, and the case was supervised by Assistant Director Ricky Sachar. Assistant Chief Litigation Counsel Kenneth J. Guido will lead the SEC's litigation.

# # # Reported by SEC 3 hours ago.

David W. Kearn: The Regional Implications of China's Rise

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While the June summit between President Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping reportedly covered significant ground on cyber-espionage, North Korea's nuclear program, and free trade, one issue that received little attention was the intensification of territorial disputes between China and its neighbors. In general, for the states living in the shadow of a rapidly rising China, the sheer disparity of capabilities confronting them -- whether in terms of military might, economic power, or diplomatic influence -- would be of great concern. Recently, however, it is China's behavior, particularly concerning disputed territories, that has alarmed its neighbors and heightened tensions in the region.

For much of the past two decades, Beijing's leadership, cognizant of its increasing power, sought to assuage the fears of its neighbors and thus avoid any attempts to "balance" against it and potentially hinder further economic growth and development. This policy of assurance, once famously termed "the Charm Offensive," was also predicated on building relationships in other regions like East and Sub-Saharan Africa to develop access to new sources of energy and raw materials. Only a few years ago, U.S. experts feared that China's growing influence could quietly undermine America's position in the Western Pacific in the long-run.

However, since 2010, China has shifted from its policy of assurance to one of assertiveness. In the South China Sea, which Beijing considers a "core interest" on par with Taiwan and Tibet, it claims an exclusive economic zone, as depicted on new Chinese passports (a nine-dash line), that essentially includes the entire area as sovereign Chinese territory. Several of its smaller neighbors, including Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei also have claims on areas of the South China Sea. Control of potential energy and mineral deposits below the various reefs and shoals, and exclusive fishing rights have been the major points of contention. China has taken action to assert its claims, clashing several times with Vietnam and the Philippines near reefs in the Spratly Island chain since 2011.

Similarly, in the East China Sea, China and Japan have repeatedly clashed over the disputed Senkaku or Diayou Islands. The much publicized incident of a Chinese fishing boat colliding with Japanese coast guard vessels in September 2010 seemed to start a series of highly-charged public clashes between Beijing and Tokyo leading to the official purchase of the islands by the government of Japan in September 2012. Provocative Chinese incursions have precipitated Japanese responses and sparked further nationalist protests in Beijing against Japan. Tensions remain high.

These incidents at sea often involve fishing vessels and coast guard (or occasionally naval) vessels or aircraft and have thus far been limited in scope, but the potential for escalation remains. Moreover, the South China Sea, in particular, is a vitally important waterway for the transportation of energy and resources around the globe. Dueling claims of exclusivity have created concerns about freedom of navigation and open-access in the future.

Turning to its 4057 km border with India, there are several disputed areas near Tibet and Kashmir. Over the past two years, Chinese troops have made hundreds of small-scale incursions across the disputed Line of Control (a total of 400 in 2012). In May 2013, a Chinese unit crossed into disputed territory and made camp, receiving support and reinforcements for almost three weeks, precipitating a crisis in New Delhi. It was eventually resolved but these provocations, coupled with Beijing's consistent support for Pakistan and its nuclear program, have only fueled fears about China's long-terms intentions, despite the fact it is now India's largest trading partner.

As China's economic and military capabilities have increased over time, most of its neighbors have engaged in what could be termed a "hedging" strategy. They have actively cooperated with China -- on trade, financial interactions, and economic opportunities -- but have also implemented policies to address a potential negative turn in Chinese behavior. Whether this means embarking on their own military modernization programs or seeking out or enhancing existing diplomatic relationships to avoid the prospect of facing a future aggressive China alone, most countries have taken measures to improve their security situations. Most notably, greater cooperation with the United States and a generally positive region-wide response to President Obama's "Pivot" to East Asia has emerged.

It is not clear why Beijing has shifted to a more assertive policy, but the net result has been to undermine its carefully fostered image as a peaceful rising power in a relatively short period of time. This reflects the inherent difficulties associated with rising powers in the international system. Even with the most skillful leadership, growing military and economic capabilities are likely to make neighbors nervous, and any behavior that is viewed as aggressive (even if warranted) is likely exacerbate their fears. Reported by Huffington Post 2 hours ago.

China's cash squeeze raises fears of global economic slowdown

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China’s financial system is in the throes of a cash crunch, with interbank lending rates spiking Thursday and bank-to-bank borrowing nearly stalled, even as growth in the economy displays signs of slowing further. China’s interbank and money market rates have soared over the past two weeks, which has made banks and other financial institutions afraid of lending to one another. Those in need...

 
 
 
  Reported by msnbc.com 2 hours ago.

China's economy is freezing up. How freaked out should we be?

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Thursday was a very bad day for China's economy, the world's second-largest and a crucial pillar of the global economy, with credit markets freezing up in an unnerving parallel to the first days of the U.S. financial collapse. The question of how bad depends on whom you talk to, how much faith you have in Chinese leaders and, unfortunately, several factors that are largely unknowable. But we do know two things. First, Chinese leaders appear to be causing this problem deliberately, likely to try to avert a much worse problem. And, second, if this continues and even it works, it could see China's economy finally cool after years of breakneck growth, with serious repercussions for the rest of us.

Read full article >>

 
 
 
  Reported by Washington Post 2 hours ago.

China's astronauts give school lesson from space

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Astronauts struck floating martial arts poses during lecture designed to popularise space programme among young people

Astronauts struck floating martial arts poses, twirled gyroscopes and manipulated wobbling globes of water during a lecture from China's orbiting space station as part of efforts to popularise the space programme among young people.

Wang Yaping demonstrated principles of weightlessness and took questions live from among the 330 schoolchildren gathered at a Beijing auditorium during the 51-minute lesson from aboard the Tiangong 1 space station. Her fellow crew members Nie Haisheng and Zhang Xiaoguang answered questions about living, working and staying fit in space.

"I want to know how you know which way is up," said one student.

During one playful moment, Nie adopted the mythical cross-legged lotus position familiar to all fans of Chinese martial arts films.

"In space, we're all kung fu masters," Wang remarked.

In a later demonstration resembling a magic show, Wang injected droplets into an increasingly larger suspended ball of water, drawing impressed exclamations and polite applause from the students present, while another 60 million watched the live TV broadcast from their classrooms. The astronauts also spun gyroscopes and swung a ball on its tether to show how weightlessness affects objects in motion.

The lesson was aimed at making space more popular, Zhou Jianping, designer-in-chief of China's manned space programme, told the official Xinhua news agency. "The spirit of science among youth is an important drive for the progress of mankind," Zhou said.

The lectures come as China's human space programme enters its second decade, after going from a simple manned flight, to space lab link-ups, in just 10 years. China launched its first crewed mission in 2003, becoming the third nation after Russia and the US to achieve such a feat.

The current Shenzhou 10 mission is the second crewed trip to the Tiangong 1, launched in 2011 and due to be replaced by the larger, three-module permanent station, Tiangong 2, seven years from now.

The future station will weigh about 60 tons, slightly smaller than Nasa's Skylab of the 1970s and about one-sixth the size of the 16-nation International Space Station. China was barred from participating in the International Space Station, largely on objections from the United States over political differences and the Chinese programme's close links with the military. Reported by guardian.co.uk 2 hours ago.

Commodities crumble on Fed plans, China crunch; gold settles at 33-month low

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Commodities stumbled on Thursday as gold, oil and copper declined on worries the central bank of the world’s largest economy could start to slow the flow of monetary stimulus and as China’s cash crunch worsened.

Gold for August delivery dropped $87.80 an ounce to finish at $1,286.20 in Nymex floor trade, the lowest settlement since September 2010. 

Crude oil for July delivery shed $2.84 to settle at $95.40 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after touching $95.09, the lowest since June 13.

July silver shed $1.80 to close at $19.82 an ounce, while July platinum gave back $60.10 to close at $1,363.80 an ounce, its lowest level since December 2011. 

Copper prices for July delivery trimmed an initial loss to close one cent lower at $3.14 a pound.

September palladium lost $31.30 to settle at $665.10 an ounce. 

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday that the Fed may start tapering bond purchases that have fueled gains in markets globally. The central bank could end the program next year should risks to the economy abate, he said. 

Benchmark money-market rates in China, the world’s biggest user of energy and metals, climbed to records, and a private report showed manufacturing shrank at a faster pace, spurring concern that raw-material demand is slowing.  Reported by Proactive Investors 45 minutes ago.

iProperty Group to Organize Property Expos in China

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The iProperty Group (http://www.iproperty-group.com), owner and operator of Asia’s No.1 network of property portals, today announced that it will be the official partner for the country’s top and most prominent property EXPO’s in China.

(PRWEB) June 21, 2013

Together with SMART EXPO, a company that the iProperty Group (http://www.iproperty-group.com) acquired early this year, the company will be the exclusive overseas partner for the Shanghai LuxProperty 2013 and Beijing International Property & Investment EXPO/Autumn. The events are scheduled to be held on 14th- 15th September in Shanghai and on the 19th – 22nd September in Beijing, China, respectively.

According to iProperty Group’s Chief Executive Officer, Shaun Di Gregorio, “China has over 100 million investor-class citizens with over half a trillion dollars to spend. Data has shown that these investors have spent USD 50 billion purchasing overseas residential property. The demand from these affluent and discerning groups of property buyers and investors is high and we are pleased to be able to cater to these demands by organizing our EXPO’s there.”

He added that high real-estate prices in China are resulting in many mainland Chinese investors snapping up properties in Asia. With such a high demand, property developers across the region are also actively looking for avenues to promote their developments to this group of astute investors.

“We are providing developers around the world, with luxury properties to showcase, the perfect platform to reach thousands of super-affluent Mainland buyers. They will now have the exclusive opportunity to further diversify their portfolio and have a unique platform to tap into this astute group of property buyers and investors in China,” added Di Gregorio.

Property developers that sign up with the iProperty Group will have prominent exposure as they will be able to access the iProperty Group’s database of qualified Mainland Chinese property buyers and investors who are actively looking to invest in property overseas.

“The iProperty.com EXPO is highly established and renowned throughout Asia. Our EXPO’s have made it easier for property buyers and investors to find their dream home. At the same time, it has provided developers an avenue to effectively reach and engage with consumers, while showcasing their developments,” added Di Gregorio.

He added that 63 million people in China have the finances to invest in property overseas. By 2020, the population in China is set to double and by then they would have USD 3.1 trillion to invest and they are looking to invest outside of China.

“With the iProperty Group’s strong brand presence in Malaysia, Indonesia, Hong Kong, Macau and Singapore, generating more than 70 million page views monthly, the company is set to provide property developers across Asia and the world with an avenue to tap into the China market. If developers want to gain access into China, reach a targeted set of property buyers and investors, then join our property EXPOs in China,” urged Di Gregorio.

He concluded saying that a total of 210 exhibitors from over 25 countries, USA, UK, Canada, Australia, Germany, France, Cyprus, Spain, Portugal, Latvia, Malta, the Netherlands, Singapore, South Korea, Japan, Malaysia, Thailand, Fiji, amongst others, will be showcasing their luxury developments at the Beijing International Property & Investment EXPO/Autumn. The LuxProperty 2013, an upscale private exhibition tailored for the leading luxury properties worldwide, is also set to attract the super-affluent mainland buyers in China.

About iProperty Group Limited (iproperty-group.com)    

Listed on the Australian Securities Exchange, the iProperty Group (ASX:IPP) owns and operates Asia’s No.1 network of property websites under the iProperty.com umbrella brand.

Headquartered in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the Company is focused on developing and operating leading property portals with other complementary offerings in Asian markets. It currently operates market leading property portals in Malaysia, Hong Kong, Macau, Indonesia and Singapore, and has investments in India and Philippines. With further expansion planned, the iProperty Group is continuously working to capitalise on its market-leading positions and the rapidly growing online property advertising market throughout the region.

Along with 18 property websites across the region, the Group’s portfolio also includes the first comprehensive regional commercial property website, CommercialAsia.com, as well as a regional property exhibition business and monthly property magazines in Malaysia and Indonesia.

iProperty Group Network of websites:


·     Malaysia: iProperty.com.my
·     Indonesia: rumah123.com and rumahdanproperti.com
·     Hong Kong: GoHome.com.hk
·     Macau: vProperty.com
·     Singapore: iProperty.com.sg
·     Commercial: CommercialAsia.com
·     India: in.iProperty.com
·     Philippines: iProperty.com.ph
·     Events: expo.iproperty.com
·     Luxury: iLuxuryasia.com Reported by PRWeb 15 minutes ago.

China Dust-Collecting Equipment Market Reached CNY 33.245 Billion By 2012 End Says New Research Report at ReportsnReports.com

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“China Dust-collecting Equipment Market Report, 2013-2017”is the new market research report added to ReportsnReports.com store.

Dallas, Texas (PRWEB) June 21, 2013

The dust-collecting equipment is mainly used in the following industries with severe dust pollution, such as cement, iron and steel, non-ferrous metals, electric power, machinery, chemical and waste incineration etc. As China’s following industries step into the rapid development stage, such as cement, iron and steel, non-ferrous metals, electric power, chemical etc., the problem of air pollution is more and more outstanding; China begins to pay attention to the implementation of pollution treatment from the source and the emission standards of air pollutants are more and more severe. After years of development, a number of leading enterprises among the dust-collecting industry emerge in China, the technological level and product quality reaching the international advanced level. By the end of 2012, the market scale of dust-collecting equipment in China reached CNY 33.245 billion.

In 2012, there were about more than 500 enterprises engaging in the dust-collecting equipment in China (http://www.reportsnreports.com/reports/255904-china-dust-collecting-equipment-market-report-2013-2017.html), including about 320 related enterprises engaging in the manufacturing of fabric filters and remaining more than 200 enterprises mainly engaging in the manufacturing of electrostatic precipitators. At the end of 2012, the total output value of fabric filters in China reached CNY 19.128 billion, accounting for 52.39% of the dust-collecting equipment’s total output value.

The dust-collecting equipment is widely used in many industries, such as cement, iron and steel, non-ferrous metals, electric power, machinery, chemical and municipals etc.; the demand of downstream industry decides the market demand for fabric filters. The output of cement, iron and steel and coal in China is the world's first, the power generation capacity ranking the world second and most of which are the coal-fueling thermal power plants. The manufacturers of raw materials, energy and heavy chemical etc. consume more resources and energy with severe pollution and produce large quantities of dust and soot.

Inquire for Discount @ http://www.reportsnreports.com/contacts/discount.aspx?name=255904.

Seen from the Chinese domestic demand structure for dust-collecting equipment at present, the thermal power market accounts for more than a half of the overall downstream market, reaching 57.05%, iron & steel metallurgy and cement industry respectively accounting for 18.68% and 12.45% of the industry market, the total application proportion of dust-collecting equipment in the thermal power, iron & steel metallurgy and cement industry accounting for 88.18% of the overall downstream market.

The four guiding documents issued by the Ministry of Environmental Protection, namely Cement Industry Pollution Control Technology Policy, Iron and Steel Industry Pollution Control Technology Policy, Sulfuric Acid Industry Pollution Control Technology Policy and Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) Pollution Control Technology Policy, list the Air Pollution into the key point unanimously, among which, the fabric filter will become the standardized equipment for dust-collecting in various industries with broad market prospect in the future.

Buy a copy of report @ http://www.reportsnreports.com/purchase.aspx?name=255904.

Companies Mentioned:
1.    Kelin Environmental Protection Equipment, Inc.
2.    Zhejiang Feida Environmental Science & Technology Co., Ltd.
3.    Fujian Longking Co., Ltd.
4.    Anhui Shengyun Machinery Co., Ltd.
5.    Xiamen Savings Environmental Co., Ltd.

Major Table of Contents:
1.    Development Overview for the Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
2.    Development of the World Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
3.    Development Environment of China’s Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
4.    Development Status Quo of China’s Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
5.    Competitive Pattern of Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
6.    Upstream and Downstream of Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
7.    Import and Export Statistics of Dust-collecting Equipment Industry
8.    Investment and Development Forecast of China’s Dust-collecting Equipment Industry

Explore more reports on Environmental Market @ http://www.reportsnreports.com/market-research/environmental/.

About US:
ReportsnReports.com is an online market research reports (http://www.reportsnreports.com/) library of 200,000+ reports and in-depth studies of 5000+ micro markets. Our database includes reports by leading publishers from across the globe. Reported by PRWeb 11 hours ago.

Huawei Ascend W2 Appears In China Mobile Ad

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Huawei Ascend W2 Appears In China Mobile Ad Huawei have been teasing their latest Windows Phone smartphone, the Huawei Ascend W2, and now the device has turned up in an advert for Chinese mobile carrier China Mobile. The Huawie Ascens W2 will feature a 4.3 inch HD

[ Continue reading...]

The post Huawei Ascend W2 Appears In China Mobile Ad appeared first on Geeky Gadgets. Reported by Geeky Gadgets 11 hours ago.

China: Ban urges dialogue on Korean Peninsula

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New York, June 21 : Continuing his visit to China, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon stressed Thursday the importance of creating the adequate conditions to resume dialogue between parties in the Korean Peninsula and rid the region of nuclear weapons. Reported by newKerala.com 11 hours ago.

China Green Agriculture Inc. Announces Ministry of Agriculture Engaged Gufeng as Corporate Participant in the Ministry's Fertilizer Promotion Program

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XI'AN, China, June 21, 2013 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- China Green Agriculture, Inc. (NYSE: CGA; "China Green Agriculture" or the "Company"), a company that mainly produces and distributes humic ac... Reported by FinanzNachrichten.de 11 hours ago.

EU, China poised to resolve solar panel row through talks

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The European Union and China have both signaled interest in bringing about a negotiated solution to their spat over solar panel tariffs. But they warned that a settlement was unlikely to appear overnight. Reported by Deutsche Welle 11 hours ago.

CHINA ORIENTAL GROUP COMPANY LIMITED: (1)THIRD SUPPLEMENTARY LETTER OF INTENT FOR EXTENDING THE EXPIRY DATE OF THE SECOND SUPPLEMENTARY LETTER OF INTENT IN RELATION TO THE INTENDED ACQUISITION OF THE THIRD LOT OF FIXED ASSETS AND (2) UPDATE ON THE STATUS

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Miscellaneous* Asterisks denote mandatory informationName of Announcer *CHINA ORIENTAL GROUP COMPANY LIMITEDCompany Registration No.34170255-000Announcement submitted on behalf ofCHINA ORIENTAL GRO... Reported by FinanzNachrichten.de 11 hours ago.

The Too Safe to Fail Bank Account: A U.S. Idea That China's Importing

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The Too Safe to Fail Bank Account: A U.S. Idea That China's Importing Filed under: Banking, U.S. Government, Checking Accounts, Savings Accounts

*Getty Images*

For 80 years, American depositors have been able to bank on the fact that if their bank ever failed, the U.S. government would have their back.

We've known this ever since President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Banking Act of 1933 into law, establishing "FDIC insurance" for bank deposits of $2,500 or less -- a blanket guarantee that if your bank ever fails, the government will make us whole on what was in our accounts, up to some specified limit. (Currently, it's $250,000.)

But what's true here is not true everywhere.

In Europe, for example, there is no FDIC-like guarantee -- a fact that greatly complicated matters in the recent bank crisis in Cyprus. China's another place that has no depositor guarantee, but that could soon change.

*Building a Chinese Wall Against Bank Runs*

Last week, the People's Bank of China -- the nation's central bank -- announced that "the timing is basically right to roll out a deposit-insurance system" in China. And not just in theory. The PBC says it's currently working on a plan, and "will set up a system as soon as possible."

What kind of plan? Good question. Evidently, the PBC is still working that out. But just asking the question gives us an excuse to take another look at the system we have now here in the U.S. -- a system that changed dramatically in response to the 2008 financial crisis, and the bank run it very nearly caused.

*Home Rules: How Your Money's Protected in America*

Here are the basic rules for FDIC insurance, pulled directly from the FDIC's website:

*FDIC Deposit Insurance Coverage Limits
by Account Ownership Category*
*Single Accounts*
owned by one person $250,000 per owner
*Joint Accounts*
owned by two or more persons $250,000 per co-owner
*Certain Retirement Accounts*
includes IRAs $250,000 per owner
*Revocable Trust Accounts* $250,000 per owner per beneficiary up to 5 beneficiaries (more coverage available with 6 or more beneficiaries subject to specific conditions and requirements)
*Corporation, Partnership, and Unincorporated Association Accounts* $250,000 per corporation, partnership or unincorporated association
*Irrevocable Trust Accounts* $250,000 for the non-contingent, ascertainable interest of each beneficiary
*Employee Benefit Plan Accounts* $250,000 for the non-contingent, ascertainable interest of each plan participant
*Government Accounts* $250,000 per official custodian (more coverage available subject to specific conditions)


Right off the bat, you can see that the operative number here is "$250,000." As in, if you've got a bank account, but have less than a quarter of a million dollars piled into it, you're pretty much golden. No worries. If the economy tanks, if your bank fails, the government will happily send you enough money to make you whole.

*2.5 Times Safer Than in 2008*

Probably the best news of all is that depositors today no longer have to live with the uncertainty of this $250,000 limit reverting back to the mere $100,000 per account that the FDIC insured prior to the recent crisis.

Hiking the limit to $250,000 was initially just a temporary measure instituted as part of the fiscal scramble to save the economy back in 2008. But Congress made the new $250,000 limit permanent in July 2010 -- and so far as we know, that's the way it's going to stay until the next time it rises.


Sponsored Links
Now, if you have the "problem" of owning a bank account with "too much" cash in it, first, you have our sympathies. Life's tough. But second -- you still probably don't have to worry much.

If, for example, you're a standard married couple with kids, you can stick $250,000 in the husband's account, $250,000 more in the wife's, and $250,000 more in a joint account.

If you need still more room, you could stash some cash in a retirement account or two, open trust accounts for the kids, or maybe rent a self-storage locker. Or, judging from the news out of China, in a few months you can try opening a bank account in Hong Kong.

We'd remind you to make sure to notify the IRS of that foreign account -- if you don't, they'll probably find out about it anyway.

Motley Fool contributor Rich Smith wonders if the IRS makes up these silly "Put 250k here, put 250k more there" rules just to ensure full employment for ex-IRS tax accountants for when they retire to private practice.

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Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments Reported by DailyFinance 11 hours ago.

China's Cash Squeeze Eases—For Now

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China's cash crunch appeared to ease amid speculation the central bank stepped in, though the situation could deteriorate as banks' quarter-end demand for funds picks up. Reported by Wall Street Journal 10 hours ago.

Purdue's Daniels heads to China to enhance partnerships

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WEST LAFAYETTE - Purdue University President Mitch Daniels plans to travel to China to try to expand the school's economic and educational partnerships. Reported by Journal Gazette 10 hours ago.

‘Youngest Prisoner of Conscience’ Escapes House Arrest in China

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‘Youngest Prisoner of Conscience’ Escapes House Arrest in China After 2 months of house arrest in eastern China’s Anhui Province, Zhang Lin, a well-known Chinese democracy activist, and his young daughter, Anni, escaped in early June and are now in hiding. In a video clip posted on the Internet …

The post ‘Youngest Prisoner of Conscience’ Escapes House Arrest in China appeared first on The Epoch Times. Reported by Epoch Times 10 hours ago.

China's Cash Squeeze Eases---For Now

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China's cash crunch appeared to ease amid speculation the central bank stepped in, though the situation could deteriorate as banks' quarter-end demand for funds picks up. Reported by Wall Street Journal 10 hours ago.
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