Tuesday, 23 December 2014

'I can't discuss it' - Van Gaal won't comment on Bale links

'I can't discuss it' - Van Gaal won't comment on Bale links
The world's most expensive player has been linked with a move to Manchester United in recent weeks, with the manager insisting he would only broach such matters internally
Louis van Gaal refused to entertain questions over Manchester United's rumoured bid for Real Madrid starGareth Bale

The 13-time Premier League champions have been linked with interest in the 25-year-old for some time, with ex-manager David Moyes admitting he made an approach ahead of the winger's move to Real Madrid.

Bale's agent, David Manasseh, has rubbished talk of his client leaving the Santiago Bernabeu recently, but Van Gaal did not rule out a move when questioned by reporters on Tuesday.

"I cannot discus that with you," Van Gaal told reporters. "I discuss that with my CEO and not with anyone of the media."

Bale scored as Real Madrid won the Club World Cup final on Saturday, taking his tally since joining the Liga giants to 33 goals and 24 assists in 66 appearances.

Fabregas: Barcelona are Messi and 10 others

Fabregas: Barcelona are Messi and 10 others

Fabregas: Barcelona are Messi and 10 others

The midfielder admits he would love to see his old team-mate join him at Chelsea but suggests he has never been more important to the Catalans than in 2014-15
Cesc Fabregas has claimed Barcelona have been little more than "Lionel Messi and 10 others" this season.

Messi's future at Barcelona has come under a lot of scrutiny after he suggested last month he could leave the club in the near future.

Barcelona have struggled to reach consistent form this season, with Real Madrid setting the pace in La Liga, while it took a top-class showing from Messi to help the Catalans beat Paris Saint-Germain 3-1 to top their Champions League group.

Fabregas played alongside the Argentine in the Barca youth system and again in the first team when he returned to Spain following his time at Arsenal and, while the Chelsea ace admits he would love to see Messi alongside him at Stamford Bridge, he suggests his importance to Barcelona has never been greater.

"This season Barca are Messi and 10 others," he told Radio Marca. "Messi has saved his team on many occasions."

When asked if he thinks Messi should join him in west London, Fabregas added: "I wish! Why not? I'd love that to happen. I'd be all for it. 

"As a Barca man, I believe that Messi deserves to retire there for all that he has given the club. 

"He is a legend that has changed Barca's history. But, as his team-mate and friend, without doubt I'd love to have Leo by my side."

The World Cup winner was also asked if he felt Jose Mourinho would be a good fit to coach the Camp Nou club.

"I'd say that Barcelona have a style that he has already experienced and understands perfectly," he replied.

"Chelsea play a very similar game: we want to be the protagonists, have possession and look to score. We may have a different system, but the philosophy is similar.

"Mourinho adapts to the players he has. What makes him so great as a coach is that he adapts to any situation and his teams can play in many different ways. It's a very intelligent way of managing."

Tuesday, 2 December 2014

Pak-China Economic Corridor to help all

Pakistani and Chinese leadership have reached an understanding for investment to facilitate road and railway links, said Xinjiang province influential personality Yuan Jianmin STOCK IMAGE
ISLAMABAD: The establishment of the Pak-China Economic Corridor would upgrade the border regions of both countries by connecting Gwadar port to the northwestern region of Xinjiang via highways, railways and pipelines.
This was stated by Yuan Jianmin, an influential personality of the Xinjiang province of China, while speaking on the topic “Pak-China Relations: Pak-China Economic Corridors” at the National University of Modern Languages (NUML).
“The Pak-China Economic Corridor isn’t aimed to undermine the interests of any country,” said Yuan, who holds portfolios of deputy secretary general at the China Council for International Investment Promotion, vice chairman of the Xinjiang International Chamber of Commerce, China among others.
Yuan said that the idea of connecting different countries of the region with one common route was quite old. Different programmes had been proposed at different times. American Foreign Secretary Hillary Clinton, during her visit to India in 2011, floated the idea of an economic zone, Russia president proposed the idea of Euro-Asia silk route, while Japan extended the concept of Asian Silk route for the region, he added.
He reiterated that Pakistani and Chinese leadership held a number of meetings and reached an understanding for the investment of billions of dollars to facilitate road and railway links between the two countries, energy and power provision, development of telecom, trade, livestock, export of sea food to China and many other products between the two countries, he said. 

Oil prices strike five-year lows, weighing on energy stocks

The unabated price plunge comes after the 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries opted Thursday to keep its collective output ceiling at 30 million barrels per day, where it has stood for three years. STOCK IMAGE
Crude oil prices sank to five-year low points on Monday, dragging down the share prices of energy companies, while miners were hit by weak Chinese manufacturing data, traders said.
“Oil sector stocks have driven the FTSE lower,” said market analyst Alastair McCaig from the IG trading group.
Countering the downward trend, shares in German power giant E.ON soared on the company’s plans to spin off its conventional energy operations and focus on renewables.
Oil futures tumbled to their lowest levels for five years, extending last week’s sharp sell-off in response to OPEC’s decision to maintain output despite a supply glut and plunging prices.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for delivery in January hit $63.72 a barrel — the lowest level since July 2009.
Brent crude for January sank to an October 2009 low of $67.53.
“Investors see crude as remaining vulnerable after last week’s OPEC announcement,” said Michael McCarthy, chief strategist at traders CMC Markets in Sydney.
“We have not yet seen any piece of news or development that could trigger a bottoming-out phase in oil prices,” he told AFP.
The unabated price plunge comes after the 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries opted Thursday to keep its collective output ceiling at 30 million barrels per day, where it has stood for three years.
OPEC’s powerful Gulf members, led by kingpin Saudi Arabia, resisted the calls from poorer members, including Venezuela and Ecuador, unless they are guaranteed market share, particularly in the United States where rising production of shale oil has contributed to the global glut.
Sliding oil hurts stocks
London’s benchmark FTSE 100 index shed 0.78 per cent to 6,669.93 points in afternoon trading.
Frankfurt’s DAX 30 lost 0.27 per cent compared with Friday’s close to stand at 9,954.40 points and the CAC 40 index in Paris dropped 0.46 per cent to 4,370.19.
“General profit-taking after a stellar November and reassessment of the time frame of possible further action by the ECB is putting pressure on stocks,” said Markus Huber, senior analyst at broker Peregrine & Black.
“There is also more disappointing news out of China,” he noted.
The slowdown in Chinese growth, and hence oil demand, has also added to downward pressure on oil prices.
Among the biggest fallers were Tullow Oil, which dived 4.7 pe cent to 405.90 pence and miner BHP Billiton, which lost 1.5 per cent to 1,494.50 pence.
Slumping oil prices are adding to worries about slowing eurozone inflation — a situation that is likely to make the European Central Bank increasingly nervous and pave the way for further monetary easing, according to analysts.
Ruble knocked
In foreign exchange on Monday, the euro rose to $1.2485 from $1.2443 late in New York on Friday.
The European single currency fell to 79.29 British pence from 79.54 pence, while the British pound gained to $1.5746 from $1.5641.
The beleaguered ruble meanwhile hit new record lows, dropping by 8.0 per cent during the session at one point, as sliding oil prices increased worries about the economy in Russia, a major producer of crude.
The ruble has now depreciated by some 40 per cent this year, due not only to falling oil prices but also Western sanctions imposed against Russia’s support for a separatist uprising in eastern Ukraine.
On the London Bullion Market, gold slipped to $1,178.75 an ounce from $1,182.75 on Friday.
The metal took a hit after the Swiss on Sunday voted against the idea of their country significantly increasing its gold reserves.
Asian markets mostly fell Monday after China released data pointing to further weakness in its manufacturing sector, but Tokyo hit a seven-year high as the yen slipped against the dollar.
A downgrade of Japan’s credit rating by Moody’s weakened the yen, which helps the country’s exporters, and helped lift Tokyo stocks 0.75 per cent to the exchange’s best finish since July 2007.
Elsewhere the slowing Chinese manufacturing raised concerns about the growth outlook.
Sydney sank 1.98 per cent, Seoul fell 0.79 per cent, Shanghai slipped 0.10 per cent, while Hong Kong tumbled 2.58 per cent lower.
US stocks also opened lower Monday on the disappointing Chinese economic data.
Five minutes into trade, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.28 percent to 17,778.05 points.
The broad-based S&P 500 dropped 0.38 per cent to 2,059.64, while the tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index 0.24 per cent to 4,779.9