Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Markets are climbing higher

Markets are climbing higher

ClimbREUTERS/Ina FassbenderParticipants climb over a wall at the
European markets have continued their positive start to the week. 
The benchmark Shanghai Composite has fallen by a further 1.44%, extending its losses since hitting a multi-year peak on June 12 to 41.33%, but economic data wasn't as bad as investors were expecting.
"Overnight Chinese export figures were down 5.5%, however this was better than the expected fall of 6.0% but still confirms what now is obvious to al that the Chinese economy is slowing, although the Eurozone, UK and US would all welcome growth at these levels.," Mic Mills, head of client services at CapitalIndex, said in an e-mail. 
Meanwhile, US stock markets will reopen later today after the Labour Day break. The big question still unanswered is whether the US Federal Reserve will raise rates this month.
Here's the European share market scoreboard:
UK's FTSE: +1.12%
Germany's DAX: +1.33%
France's CAC40: +0.98%
Spain's IBEX: +0.75%
And this is what's happened to the Euro Stoxx 50, which is an index of Europe's biggest publicly listed companies. It opened up 1.05%:
EU Stoxx Sept 8Investing
Meanwhile, Brent crude oil is rallying after several days of declines. It's up over 1%:
Crude Sept 8

Monday, September 7, 2015

The 9 most popular coding languages By Matt Weinberger Aug 21 2015

The 9 most popular coding languages

GitHub is the web’s No. 1 place for developers all over the world to swap and share code.
It has even been called the “Facebook for programmers,” with lots of Silicon Valley firms requiring job applicants to include their GitHub profile right alongside their résumé.
That means GitHub is a great place to gauge which of the world’s many thousands of programming languages are the most popular — especially since a popular programming language is always a good job skill for anybody to have in this age of technological transformation.
Without further ado, here are the top programming languages on GitHub.
No. 9 — C: The original C, invented in 1972, is still incredibly popular. That’s not least because it works on just about any computing platform ever made, and it’s super stable and understood by programmers everywhere. In 1978, the language’s legendary and still widely read manual, the 800-page “The C Programming Language,” saw print for the first time.
No. 8 — C#: Pronounced “C-sharp,” as in musical notation. Another variant on the original C programming language, this one comes straight out of Microsoft and incorporates some of Java’s concepts for what some developers find to be higher performance and code that’s easier to write.
No. 7 — C++: First invented in 1983 as a replacement for the original C programming language, C++ is an incredibly popular choice for developers all over the world. Microsoft Windows, Google Chrome, and the software for fighter jets are all written in C++.
No. 6 — CSS: Short for “Cascading Style Sheets,” CSS is a programming language to design the format and layout of a website. A lot of website menus and mobile-app menus are written with CSS, in conjunction with JavaScript and garden-variety HTML.
No. 5 — Python: This language traces back to 1989, and it is loved by its fans for its highly readable code. Many programmers suggest it’s the easiest language to get started with, right alongside Ruby.
No. 4 — PHP: This language for programming websites is incredibly common; some estimates say it powers one-third of the web. Big sites including WordPress, Facebook, and Yahoo use it. A lot of programmers also hate PHP with a passion — Stack Exchange founder Jeff Atwood once wrote “PHP isn’t so much a language as a random collection of arbitrary stuff, a virtual explosion at the keyword and function factory.”
No. 3 — Ruby: Developers like this 24-year-old language because it’s easy to read and write the code. Also popular is Rails, an add-on framework for Ruby that makes it really easy to use it to build web apps. The language’s official motto is, “A programmer’s best friend.” GitHub is written in Ruby.
No. 2 — Java: Originally invented in 1991 as a programming language for smart televisions, Oracle’s Java is now the most popular language in the world, a position solidified by the fact that Java is crucial to Android app development and lots of business software. It’s also the fastest-growing language, with GitHub saying it was only No. 7 in 2009.
No. 1 — JavaScript: This is a super-popular programming language primarily used in web apps. But it doesn’t have much to do with Java besides the name. JavaScript runs a lot of the modern web, but it also catches a lot of flak for slowing browsers down and sometimes exposing users to security vulnerabilities.
And for good measure, here’s a look at how those rankings have changed over the past seven years:
And for good measure, here's a look at how those rankings have changed over the past seven years:

This article is published in collaboration with Business Insider. Publication does not imply endorsement of views by the World Economic Forum.
To keep up with the Agenda subscribe to our weekly newsletter.
Author: Matt Weinberger is a tech reporter based in San Francisco.
Image: A hand is silhouetted in front of a computer screen in this picture illustration taken in Berlin May 21, 2013. REUTERS/Pawel Kopczynski.

Russia and Saudi Arabia are 'sending signals to each other' about what happens next to the oil market

Russia and Saudi Arabia are 'sending signals to each other' about what happens next to the oil market

putin saudisRob Griffith/ReutersPresident of Russia Vladimir Putin, left, and Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, right, of Saudi Arabia talk through their interpreters during a plenary session at the G20 leaders summit in Brisbane, November 15, 2014.
The OPEC oil cartel cannot withstand the pain of low crude prices indefinitely and may be forced to abandon its pugnacious bid for market share within months, Russia's chief energy official has predicted.
Arkady Dvorkovich, the deputy prime minister, said OPEC producers are suffering the ricochet effects of their attempt to flush out rivals by flooding the world with excess output.
"I don't think they really want to live with low oil prices for a long time. At some point it is likely that are going to have to change policy. They can last a few months, to a couple of years," he told The Telegraph.
Saudi Arabia took a fateful decision last November to crank up production to record levels despite a glut of 1-2 million barrels a day (b\d) accumulating in global markets, hoping to halt the advance of US shale and kill off high-cost projects in the Arctic and deep offshore waters.
Riyadh has made it clear that it will not cut output to shore up prices unless non-OPEC producers share of the burden. This essentially means Russia, the world's biggest producer.
Mr Dvorkovich, the head of Russia's economic and energy strategy, said his country was in constant talks with OPEC in order to bring about a "more rational policy" but was coy on whether the Kremlin would break the impasse and strike a deal with the Saudis.
"Our consultations do not imply directly that we are going to see any coordinated action. Perhaps 'yes,' perhaps 'no,' most likely 'no,'" he said, speaking at the Ambrosetti forum of world policymakers on Lake Como. "We are sending signals to each other."
saudi arabia russia putin Reuters/Sergei KarpukhinRussia's President Vladimir Putin, right, toasts with Saudi Arabia's ambassador to Russia, Abdulrahman Al-Rassi, after receiving a diplomatic credential from him during a ceremony at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia.
Russia insists that it cannot switch off output as easily as the Saudis, given the harsh weather in the Siberian fields, a claim dismissed by OPEC as a negotiating ploy.
Nor can the Kremlin order Russian drillers to slash production without undercutting its insistence that these oil groups are genuine companies, answerable to their shareholders. Yet there are subtle ways of achieving the same outcome.
The head of Russia's oil giant Rosneft, Igor Sechin, has been the right-hand man of President Vladimir Putin for more than twenty years. The company is 70% state-owned. "If Putin wants to cut, of course he can do it. Everybody knows that, " said one OPEC veteran.
Mr Dvorkovich hinted that output cuts could be on the way. "We are not going to cut supply artificially. Oil companies will act on their own. They will look at market forces and decide whether to invest more or less," he said.
"If prices stay low it is in the nature of oil companies to stabilize production, or even to cut production. The government will not decide on the behalf of oil companies what to do," he said.
Adnan Shihab-Eldin, the former secretary-general of OPEC, said the oil cartel is in "bad shape" and may have to rethink its current strategy. "Can OPEC really afford to the policy started in November of letting the market determine prices," said at the Ambrosetti forum.
Mr Shihab-Eldin said US shale drillers have proved remarkably resilient, slashing costs from $70 a barrel to near $50 through new technology and a switch to higher-yielding "sweet spots." The rig-count has halved, but production has hardly fallen.
He said OPEC will make a hardheaded decision over how best to extract maximum revenue, ditching its current policy if it does not pay. "Keeping market share at any price is not an ideology for OPEC," he said.
Russia is in deep crisis. The economy has contracted by 4.6% over the last year. The rouble has halved against the dollar since mid-2014, falling pari passu with the price of Brent crude. While this provides a shock absorber of sorts, it makes life much harder for Russian firms struggling to repay $12-$15 billion a quarter in external dollar debt.
Screen Shot 2015 09 06 at 12.48.58 PMTelegraph
These companies are largely shut out of global capital markets by Western sanctions, forcing them to rely heavily on the Russian state for dollar liquidity. Yet the central bank is trying to conserve its foreign reserves. The treasury itself failed to sell all its bonds at an auction last month.
Screen Shot 2015 09 06 at 12.49.46 PMTelegraph
Russia's strategic embrace with China has so far failed to produce much beyond warm words. A $400 billion gas deal signed in May 2014 has run into trouble as the Chinese haggle hard over prices and stall on $55 billion of financing for the construction projects. Hopes for a second pipeline to China from West Siberia have come to little.
An informal "super-OPEC" with Russia would control roughly 45% of the global oil market, roughly equal to OPEC's glory days in the 1970s. Industry experts say the Saudis might consider a deal if Russia offered a gentleman's agreement to trim its 10.7 million b\d output by 500,000.
Eventually, this may happen by default. The main Russian wells in Western Siberia are Soviet vintage and depleting at a rate of 8% to 11% a year. Sanctions have paralyzed new investments in the Arctic and the Bazhenov shale basin.
Saudi Arabia is also in some trouble and lacks Russia's industrial depth and strategic strengths. Riyadh's foreign reserves have fallen to $661 billion from $737 billion over the last 11 months.
Saudi Arabia's OPEC Ali al-NaimiREUTERS/Heinz-Peter BaderSaudi Arabia's oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, talks to journalists before a meeting of OPEC oil ministers in Vienna, Austria, June 5, 2015.
The Saudis still have an ample cushion but are running a budget deficit of 20% of GDP to cover their social-welfare spending and military expansion. They must either drain reserves at a pace of $12 billion a month, or issue debt.
One foreign-policy veteran said it is mystifying what the Saudis really intend to do under the new regime of King Salman. "They have gone from being the most predictable of countries to the most unpredictable," he said.
The Russians and the Saudis have powerful reasons to cooperate on energy policies. Until now they have been on opposing sides in Syria, poisoning everything. This may be changing. King Salman has been invited to visit Moscow as the thaw in relations deepens.
Mr Putin is building up Russia's troop presence in Syria but he has also sent shockwaves through Damascus by backing some form of "power-sharing" in the country, a sign that Bashar al-Assad's days may be numbered.
The contours of a realpolitik entente between Saudi Arabia and Russia are emerging, with major implications for the global oil markets and the world economy.
Mr Dvorkovich said the Kremlin would stand behind its long-standing ally for now. "There are many people who still support Assad, We're not going to put anyone aside, accept the terrorists," he said.


Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/russia-and-saudi-arabia-are-sending-signals-to-each-other-about-what-happens-next-to-the-oil-market-2015-9#ixzz3l79ce5PE

China: Shanghai shares down before China data, Hong Kong rises

China: Shanghai shares down before China data, Hong Kong rises

[HONG KONG] Shanghai stocks sank in opening exchanges Tuesday ahead of the release of Chinese trade data, with expectations of another weak reading that could fuel more market volatility.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index slid 0.84 percent, or 25.98 points, to 3,054.44.
The Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China's second exchange, lost 0.88 per cent, or 14.76 points, to 1,662.57.
However, Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index rose 0.52 per cent, or 106.06 points, to 20,689.58.
AFP

Samsung to cut 10% of headquarters staff, says newspaper

Samsung to cut 10% of headquarters staff, says newspaper

[SEOUL] Samsung Electronics is preparing to cut 10 per cent of workers at its headquarters, according to a Korean newspaper, as the world's biggest smartphone maker loses sales to Apple and Chinese vendors.
Samsung is targeting workers in the human resources, public relations and finance departments, Korea Economic Daily reported on Tuesday (Sept 8), citing people it didn't identify. The company also plans to cut some expenses next year, the report added. Samsung declined to comment in an e-mail.
The moves come after new high-end Galaxy smartphones failed to impress consumers, triggering five straight monthly declines and wiping out more than US$40 billion (S$57.15 billion) in Samsung's market value since April. The company's share of global smartphone shipments fell more than 3 percentage points in the second quarter, and it's no longer the top seller in China, the world's biggest mobile-phone market.
Samsung shares fell 0.4 per cent to 1,108,000 won as of 9:39 am in Seoul, extending their decline this year to 17 per cent.
Samsung tried to attract customers before this week's product launch from Apple by advancing the release of new Galaxy models. Yet that failed to ease market concerns about its second-half earnings, when technology companies typically benefit from the year-end holiday shopping season.
Samsung, which had 206.2 trillion won (S$244.3 billion) in sales last year, is estimated to post about 200.2 trillion won in sales this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
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