Saturday, 4 January 2014

JESÉ AVERAGES A GOAL EVERY 114 MINUTES

The face of the future

The face of the future
Carlo Ancelotti has on his bench a goal-machine in the making. Jesé Rodríguez has been winning the manager's trust through talent, skill, and above all, goals. The youngster from the Canary Islands puts the ball into the back of the net every 114 minutes - very nearly a goal a game.
JR10 (don't doubt for a second that even though he is presently wearing the nº20 shirt, next season he will be asking for the number he has always worn) has scored seven goals in 800 minutes, shared out among many windows in the 28 games he has played in.
His for now short list of victims includes Barça, Valencia in official games and the likes of Guangzhou, La Galaxy, Al Sadd and PSG in friendlies. Jesé has always been a prolific scorer. He was top marksman in the European U-19 championship in 2012 with five goals and won the Bronze Boot award in the last Turkey U-20 World Cup, again with five goals.
Among his many achievements is being Castilla's all-time maximum goal-scorer for a season in the second division. Last season he racked up 22 goals, nipping past Butragueño's record of 21.
His last two goals against Valencia and PSG, which gave Real victory on both occasions, have earned him a pile kudos to get him a regular place in the team. If it only depended on what he has done for the team, he would play against Celta de Vigo on Monday.
Jesé loves a challenge, and there's one he's dying to accomplish – to score a goal in an official game at the Santiago Bernabéu.

China $3 trillion local government debt stirs alarm

Debt load is in the middle of market forecasts and leaves China with total government debt of around 58 per cent of gross domestic product

China $3 trillion local government debt stirs alarm (© Reuters)
Beijing: Calls for China to accelerate financial reforms grew louder on Monday after figures showed its indebted local governments owe nearly $3 trillion in a debt build-up that some analysts called alarming.
The National Audit Office, China's state auditor, said in a report local governments had total outstanding debt of 17.9 trillion yuan at the end of June, a sum that includes contingent liabilities and debt guarantees.
The debt load is in the middle of market forecasts and leaves China with total government debt of around 58 per cent of gross domestic product.

Analysts said this suggested China is not on a verge of a fiscal crisis - the figure is less than half the debt burdens in Japan and Greece where public finances are strained - but warned the world's second-biggest economy needed to urgently reduce debt if it wanted to safeguard growth and financial stability.
This is especially because the long-awaited report showed some governments were using new loans to repay more than a fifth of their debt, and that authorities still relied heavily on selling land to pay off old loans.
China's mountain of local government debt is among the biggest threats to its economy as investors worry a good part of it cannot be repaid since most of the money borrowed had paid for non-lucrative public infrastructure.

The prospect of defaults have raised fears that they could saddle Chinese banks with a load of bad debt and destabilise China's financial system.
"While China's total government debt remains low by the OECD standards, the pace of the rise is still alarming," ANZ economists Liu Li-Gang and Zhou Hao said in a note.
"This national debt audit result could indicate that China's local government debt almost doubled in about 2-1/2 years."
Beijing acknowledges the risks and have promised to curtail fiscal dangers by revising policies. New policies include letting investors pay for the building of some public works, allowing governments to tap more financing sources, and pegging performances of governments to total debt incurred.
Monday's results are a first step in China's latest efforts to tidy its public finances. Beijing had ordered the audit in August, the first of such since 2011, amid growing public scepticism about the accuracy of official debt data.

Despite reiterations from Beijing that China's local government debt levels had stabilised in the past three years, Monday's results showed debt incurred by local authorities was up 67 per cent compared to the 2011 audit.
However, the audit is more comprehensive than 2011's because it includes money borrowed by more than 33,000 township governments. In all, the auditor reviewed the finances of nearly 36,300 local governments to compile the latest figures.
Prior to Monday, the most pessimistic market estimates of what local governments owe have been close to $4.1 trillion.
"China's government debt risks are in general under control, but some areas have certain dangers," the state auditor said.
It said risks include fast rising debt levels, with county governments seeing the quickest increase in leverage, heavy debt burdens in some unnamed regions and sectors, and government dependence on land sales to repay loans.
About 37 per cent of debt owed by provincial, city and county governments are backed by land sales revenues, it said. Of all debt directly incurred by China's central and local governments, 5.4 per cent are overdue and have not been repaid.
"Although current overall risks of local government debt are under control, risks would definitely increase sharply if the debt continues to rise so quickly," said Pan Xiangdong, chief economist at Galaxy Securities in Beijing.
"We expect the (central) government to restrict the borrowing behaviours of local governments."
Under China's laws, local governments are barred from borrowing directly from banks or investors to protect the country's fiscal health.
Yet despite not being able to borrow, local authorities are responsible for most of China's public spending but take only half of fiscal income. Local governments in 2010 received 48 per cent of total fiscal income but were responsible for 80 percent of public spending.
The funding shortfall has forced local authorities to set up firms over the years to borrow on their behalf, leading to a rapid rise in government debt outside official balance sheets.
"We expect the government to unveil detailed plans for fiscal reform," said Shen Jianguang, an economist with Mizuho Securities in Hong Kong.
"The key to solving the debt (problem) depends on changing the distribution system for fiscal income between central and local governments, as well as (changing) local governments' over-reliance on land sale revenues." Shen said.
No credit rating agency was immediately available for comment on Monday about whether the figures would have an impact on China's sovereign credit rating.
Fitch, which cut China's long-term local currency credit rating to A-plus from AA-minus in April, estimated then that China's government debt was equivalent to 49 per cent GDP.
At 58 per cent of GDP, China's total debt is a long way from Japan's 240 per cent and Greece's 160 per cent, ANZ data showed.
Still, if Beijing forces local governments to reduce their debt and borrowings in coming months, that may deal another blow to China's already slowing economy, ANZ warned.
As it is, China's $8.5 trillion economy is forecast to grow at its slackest pace in 14 years this year at 7.6 per cent.
To keep its economy on an even keel, Ting Lu from Merrill Lynch-Bank of America said Beijing should aim instead to pick up some of the debt burden from local authorities, and replace short-term borrowings with longer-duration loans.
"To maintain both economic growth and financial stability, China should avoid simplistic deleveraging and debt reduction," Lu said.

No free lunches

Most of India’s biggest and most successful corporates are also among the most indebted, with a combined cumulative debt of Rs 6,31,024.70 crore

No free lunches (© Reuters)
What does this list stand for? Reliance ADA Group, Vedanta Resources, Essar Group, Adani Group, Jaypee Group, JSW Group, GMR Group, Lanco Group, Videocon Group and GVK Group.
A list of India’s biggest, most successful, corporates? Going by the size of their balance-sheets, their market share in the sectors they operate in, the value of their stock in the markets, the kind of access they enjoy in the corridors of power and the clout they wield with the system, this would be a popular guess. This would also be a correct conclusion to reach on all the above factors.
But there is another, less talked about characteristic these companies share — they are also among the most indebted of Indian corporates, with a combined cumulative debt of Rs 6,31,024.70 crore — over $100 billion, according to a widely discussed research report by Credit Suisse.

REDLINING DEBT
The report offers some devastating insights into the kind of problems these companies — India’s biggest and supposedly brightest — face as a result of reckless borrowing.
“Debt levels at these groups have risen by 15 per cent year-on-year, even as profitability continues to be under pressure.
The largest increases have been at groups such as GVK, Lanco and ADA where the gross debt levels are up 24 per cent Y-o-Y. For most of these corporate groups, the debt increase even outpaced capex (capital expenditure)”, the report pointed out.
The Credit Suisse report also brought out some worrying developments. Almost half (23 of 50) of the top 50 companies, by size of their debt, couldn’t pay interest on their loans in seven or more quarters in the past two years. Thirty eight companies reported net losses. And with a handful of exceptions, their current earnings were not enough to meet even interest repayments, leave alone repay the capital. The result has been a dramatic surge in ‘restructuring’ of bad debts by banks, desperate to prevent their star assets from being declared as bad loans.
In the past two years alone, Indian banks — mostly government-owned banks, but also the large private sector banks and multinational banks — have ‘restructured’ over Rs 2 lakh crore of loans, which would have otherwise gone into default category.
While agriculture loans, loans to small and medium enterprises and politically directed loan waivers have been largely blamed for the troubles the banks are facing, the reality is different.
More than 70 per cent of the restructured loans are accounted for by loans to the private sector. And a dominant share of this is accounted for by the biggest players in the business.

STIMULUS TO BORROW
There is more bad news. With investments falling, and the domestic banking system unable to lend further — because a lot of its money is already locked up in previous bad loans — the demand for ‘stimulus’ packages grew shriller from India Inc.
An obliging government promptly provided this stimulus by way of allowing corporates to borrow yet more money abroad.
Estimates put the share of foreign currency denominated corporate debt at over $225 billion — and more than half of this is unhedged, which means that a depreciating rupee has already added around 12-15 per cent to this when the time comes for repayment.
This, the borrowers are clearly not in a position to do. This would mean that Indian lenders will have to take a haircut of monumental proportions, if the situation is to be prevented from deteriorating into the kind of systemic collapse one saw in some of the smaller Western nations after the 2008 meltdown.
The Government will eventually have to foot the bill for this, by way of further capital infusion into the weakened balance-sheets of the banks it owns. Between 2010-11 and 2013-14 (which still has three months to go), the UPA-II regime has forked out Rs 58,643 crore by way of additional capital infusion into state-owned banks. Add the special funds released during the crisis in 2009-10 and the total tops Rs 60,000 crore.
This is an enormous amount of money, money which could — and should — have been spent on creating tangible infrastructure, productive assets and in improving the quality of life of ordinary citizens. Instead, it is likely to vanish down the black hole of un-repayable corporate debt. That is because every rupee put into a bank’s capital base translates into Rs 10 of additional debt. Debt, which the numbers clearly show, the corporate sector is unlikely to pay back, unless lenders take more punishment.

STRESSED OUT
This is what has set the alarm bells ringing at the Reserve Bank of India, which has to deal with the mess in the case of a banking system collapse. In its Financial Stability Report released this week, it pointed out the reasons to worry.
For starters, the ‘stressed advances’ — bad loans to you and me — have shot up to 10.2 per cent of total loans as of September this year, up from the already high 9.2 per cent at the start of the financial year.
It also says the largest contribution to stressed advances come from public sector banks and that ‘medium and large’ industries contributed more towards this. Just five sectors — steel, textiles, aviation, mining and infrastructure — accounted for more than half the stressed assets of the banking system.
This concentration — and the widespread exposure across banks to various troubled borrowers, given exposure norms (a bank’s exposure to a single borrower can go up to 25 per cent of the bank’s total capital, while its group exposure limit can go up to 55 per cent of the bank’s total capital) — means that the collapse of even one large player could have a devastating impact on the system.
According to scenario analysis done by the RBI, the failure of a single large corporate group can end up wiping out half the capital of the entire banking system, when 60 per cent of the money is not recoverable.
The figure is higher if the loss default ratio is higher. If you think this scenario is unlikely, think Kingfisher or Deccan Chronicle — and then take a close look at the balance-sheets of India’s biggest corporates.
2013 was a great year for India Inc. A combination of slowing economic growth and a floundering and politically beleaguered government desperate to salvage its second stint in power meant that India Inc could occupy the moral high ground, lambasting the government for its ‘governance deficit’ and ‘policy logjam’, while not so discreetly bullying the administration — and by extension, government-owned banks — into extending yet more concessions and ever more loans without a murmur.
India Inc has been strident in its criticism of the Government’s ‘fiscal profligacy’ and panned the government’s social sector hand-outs as being counter-productive.
Turns out it is far more profligate than the government is — and gets far more dole than the poor ever did

Our filmy heroes to the fore

Mahesh Babu read and recorded the Telugu translation of the poem titled Mard, written by Farhan’s father, Javed Akhtar

Our filmy heroes to the fore (© Varinder Chawla)
Farhan Akhtar’s campaign to make men treat with respect and dignity is a laudable effort and deserves our support.

Earlier this month, top Telugu hero Mahesh Babu joined hands with Bollywood actor-director Farhan Akhtar to support his campaign titled MARD. It stands for Men Against Rape and Discrimination (of women).  Mahesh Babu read and recorded the Telugu translation of the poem titled Mard, written by Farhan’s father, Javed Akhtar.

The poem, now an anthem for the campaign, begins...
Jiski aankhon mein hai jagmagati hui jaise gehri sharaafat ki ik roshni
Jis ke andaz mein ek tehzeeb hai
Jis ke lehjay mein narmi hai
shabdon mein tameez hai
Jis ke dil mein bhi aur jis ki baton mein bhi
aurat ke vastay poori izzat bhi hai poora aadar bhi hai...
And ends thus...
Sach Toh ye hai
vohi mard hain.
The power of Bollywood to send out a message cannot be underestimated, given that its stars enjoy the status of demi-gods. Farhan Akhtar has done the smart thing by roping in Mahesh Babu to spread the message down South. Kollywood could chip in, too. Perhaps Vijay or Ajith would make a great MARD ambassador, with their sway over the masses.
I am not getting carried away by the touch of filmy glamour the issue of women’s equality has acquired on account of Farhan Akhtar’s intervention. Of course, MARD, which advocates that a real man is one who respects women, will not cause rape rates to fall drastically. But it will make it cool to be respectful to a woman, rather than pass lewd comments when you brush past her on the street. Youngsters, especially, are likely to be influenced positively. Hopefully, the ripple will cause a wave and fewer and fewer men will act like beasts.
Farhan Akhtar wants to take the movement to schools, sensitising young minds to the concept of treating women as equals and human beings. I hope he gets all the support he needs.
Well done, Farhan Akhtar! If even a handful of men are converted and understand the concept of being a real MARD, he would have achieved much. I wish more prominent personalities will join the fight. It cannot be restricted to one candlelight march and one sound byte on TV. The widely worshipped actresses can do their bit, too. But then we have Deepika Padukone selling iced coffee by displaying her admirable abs. But that is a tirade for another day.

India asks US Embassy not to screen movies at American Centre

India had earlier downgraded the immunity of certain category of US diplomats and withdrew the immunity enjoyed by their family members

Piling further pressure, India has asked the US Embassy not to screen any movies at the American Centre without obtaining a licence and gave it a deadline of January 20 to do so. (© Reuters)
Piling further pressure, India has asked the US Embassy not to screen any movies at the American Centre without obtaining a licence and gave it a deadline of January 20 to do so.
The American Centre regularly screens movies for invited audiences apparently without a licence to do so.To stop this "transgression", a notice has been sent by the government.
This is yet another step by India in retaliation for the arrest and humiliation of its Deputy Consul General in New York Devyani Khobragade, a 1999-batch IFS officer. "To relentlessly put a stop to transgressions of US institutions in Delhi, Government has now brought the activities of the American Centre under the scanner," sources said.

In a "tersely-worded communication sent to the American Centre yesterday, a deadline of 20th January, 2013 has been given to the American Centre to comply with Govt of India laws and Delhi Govt regulations and obtain license for screening films", the sources said.
"Failure to comply with the directive would result in the American Centre having to cease screening films from 21 January", they added.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has yesterday termed the arrest of Khobragade as "temporary aberrations" in Indo-US strategic relationship and said diplomacy should be given chance to resolve the issue.
Khobragade, the 39-year-old IFS officer, was arrested in New York on December 12 on charges of making false declarations in a visa application for her maid Sangeeta Richard and subjected to strip and cavity search, which had sparked outrage in India and resulted in government enforcing strict "reciprocity" and withdrawing extra privileges.

US consular officials in four consulates in India are being issued new ID cards specifying the limited immunity which will not protect them from serious offences. This is in line with the restricted immunity given to India's Consular officials in the US.
Families of American consular officials will no longer have diplomatic ID cards, an out of way privilege enjoyed by them in India. Families of Indian consular officials do not have any such privileges.
The US consular staff is now only permitted to import their requirements during the first six months on assuming office as is provided in the Vienna Convention for Consular Relations. Previously, they were allowed to import their requirements over the three year period of tenure.

However, India has stepped up security at the US Embassy and other American institutions here, deploying as many as 150 police personnel during a 24-hour period.
Allaying US concerns about security of their institutions after barricades outside the Embassy here were removed as a fallout of the arrest of senior Indian diplomat, official sources have said that at any given time 50 police personnel are deployed.
"As many 150 police personnel are being deployed during a 24-hour period in shifts at the US Embassy, School and American Centre in New Delhi.... Also, two police vehicles have been permanently stationed along various roads near the Embassy including Nyaya Marg," the sources had said.
Earlier, there were about 120 police personnel during a 24-hour period for the security of these institutions.

All passengers confirmed rescued from icebound Antarctic ship

All passengers confirmed rescued from icebound Antarctic ship (© Reuters)
All 52 passengers were airlifted on Thursday from a Russian research vessel icebound in Antarctica and are safe on board an Australian supply ship, rescuers said. 'Aurora Australis has advised AMSA that the 52 passengers from the Akademik Shokalskiy are now on board,' the Australian Maritime Safety Authority said.
Passengers were flown to the Australian ship in groups of 12 by a helicopter from a Chinese icebreaker. The Akademik Shokalsky has been stuck in ice since December 24 100 nautical miles east of the French base Dumont d'Urville, with several ice-breaking attempts failing to reach it. After a number of false starts a helicopter evacuation of the research vessel's passengers began on Thursday evening, with official confirmation that it was underway reaching AMSA at 6.15pm Australian time (0715 GMT).

All passengers confirmed rescued from icebound Antarctic ship (© Reuters)
The Australian agency, which is coordinating the rescue mission, reported all passengers were safey on board the Aurora Australis - an Australian government supply ship - at 10.15pm, some four hours later. Passengers were airlifted from a makeshift landing pad on the ice beside the Russian ship to an ice floe near the Australis. Expedition leader Chris Turney expressed relief that the wait was finally over. 'We've made it to the Aurora Australis safe and sound. A huge thanks to the Chinese and the (government's) Australian Antarctic Division for all their hard work,' Turney tweeted.

Relief at Antarctic rescue turns to fear for Chinese ship

Relief at Antarctic rescue turns to fear for Chinese ship (© Reuters)
Sydney:  The Chinese icebreaker that came to the rescue of a Russian ship stranded in Antarctica, helping evacuate dozens of passengers, has signalled it may now be trapped in heavy ice, Australian authorities said on Friday.

The Xue Long -- or Snow Dragon -- has not moved for several days as it took part in multiple attempts to rescue passengers on a scientific expedition aboard the Russian vessel Akademik Shokalskiy. The Australian Maritime Safety Authority (AMSA) said the Xue Long notified it "at 1pm AEDT (0200 GMT) this afternoon it has concerns about their ability to move through heavy ice in the area".

The Russian ship has been stuck since Christmas Eve in frozen seas, 100 nautical miles east of the French base Dumont d'Urville. On Thursday, a helicopter from the Xue Long used a makeshift landing pad next to the marooned ship to ferry 52 scientists, tourists and journalists to an Australian government supply vessel, the Aurora Australis.

But instead of making for an Australian base, as originally planned, the ship is now waiting to see if the Xue Long itself needs assistance. "The Aurora Australis has been placed on standby by the Australian Maritime Safety Authority's Rescue Coordination Centre Australia to remain in open water in the area as a precautionary measure," AMSA said.

AMSA said the Chinese ship would attempt to manoeuvre through the ice when tidal conditions are most suitable during the early hours Saturday, adding there was no immediate danger to those onboard.

The rescue mission was beset by extreme conditions from the start, with the Xue Long and Aurora Australis both unable to break through the ice to free the stranded Russian ship, despite several attempts. Rain, snow and wind had also delayed plans for the helicopter rescue mission.

"This one was quite difficult to do," said John Young, general manager of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority's emergency response division. "All Antarctic operations are difficult just because of the nature of the place and in this particular case the movement of the ice and the changing of the weather introduced their own complications."

The 52 passengers were shuttled to an ice flow near the Aurora Australis -- the Australian Antarctic Division's supply ship -- over four flights across about 14 nautical miles on Thursday. Expedition leader Chris Turney said the evacuation was carried out "with good grace, humour and professionalism, whilst also bringing food supplies back for the Russians (we only had five day's supply left)".

"The helicopter voyage over some 14 nautical miles of jagged, broken sea ice just reaffirmed to the team how massive the ice breakout must have been that trapped us," he wrote. "Everyone is well and in good humour -- albeit a little relieved."

Turney and his fellow passengers had been following in the footsteps of Australian Sir Douglas Mawson and his 1911-1914 expedition. Stranded for the holidays, they greeted the New Year with cheer, singing an anthem they wrote to ring in 2014.

Giving a rousing rendition from the top deck of the Akademik Shokalskiy in footage posted on YouTube, they sang of "having fun doing science in Antarctica", only to lament in the chorus the "bloody great shame we are still stuck here". The complicated rescue has prompted questions about the cost of the mission and whether ships should be allowed into Commonwealth Bay, where the Russian vessel became trapped.

AMSA said the costs would broadly fall to the ships involved, and it would attempt to hold a briefing with all those involved in the rescue, but that any inquiry into the conduct of the Akademik Shokalskiy would have to be addressed by Russian authorities.

"Lessons learned from those processes may be fed into the International Maritime Organisation, and the guidelines and rules it creates for polar operations which is quite an active subject... at the moment," Young said. AMSA has said the Shokalskiy, which still has 22 crew onboard, would attempt to free herself when circumstances permitted.

"It's not an entirely risk-free environment for the ships as the ice moves," said Young of the Shokalskiy and Xue Long earlier Friday. "And if the ice opens up and there's additional movement that creates its own issues, but both ships are constructed for the situation that they are in and the masters of both ships seem comfortable for the moment.