Archive for February, 2011

Credit card debt rises for first time since 2008

Friday, February 11th, 2011

More shoppers chose plastic over cash during the holiday season. Credit card debt grew in December for the first time in more than two years.

But, what does this mean for our local economy? Some analysts say it is a sign that people are more confident about the economy and the job market.

But, most shoppers 17 news spoke with disagree. They say more people are using credit cards because cash is tight these days.

The Federal Reserve says credit card debt was up more than 3% in December. Its the first increase since August 2008.

Money is not going very far anymore. We get our checks, but we cant afford to buy groceries at the end of the month so we have to put stuff on credit cards, said Rachel De La Rosa, local shopper.

Tony Russo, Owner of Russos Books in the Marketplace, says he has seen a 5% to 10% increase in people using credit cards.

Credit cards are easier than checks. You dont have to carry cash with you. Plus, a lot of credit card companies give you points, he said.

Mainland Skate and Surf Shop has also seen an increase in shoppers pulling out the plastic.

When we close out the night, instead of seeing cash, we have credit cards, so its like half our days sales, said Breane Brothers, Manager.

Local economists say the boost in credit card debt is critical to Californias economic recovery.

70% of the economy is consumer spending. We see this as a catalyst for growth in hiring and other parts of the market, said Richard Chapman, CEO of Kern Economic Development Corporation.

But, is it a sign that more people are confident in the economy? Most people we talked to say they dont use credit cards andthey believe shoppers are pulling out the plastic because they are strapped for cash.

Why pay interest for something? If you dont have the money, why buy it? wondered Eldo Klingenberg.

We were just paying a lot more in having them so we just decided to have our pennies literally. Every kid has a jar. My husband has a jar. I have a jar, said Cynthia Marquez.

Another reason for the rise in credit card debt, analysts say, is more people are launching businesses using plastic.

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Arbitron Brings in Richard Surratt as Executive Vice President, Finance.

Friday, February 11th, 2011

February 8, 2011 – Arbitron Brings inRichardSurratt asExecutive Vice President, Finance.

Suratt will reportdirectly to William T. Kerr, President and Chief Executive Officer. The Company plans to transition Mr. Surratt into the role of Chief Financial Officer as soon as practicable. Once in that role, he will succeed Sean Creamer.Suratt comes over from Voyager Learning Company,where he wasPresident and Chief Executive Officer.

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Shanghvi E&Y entrepreneur of the year

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

NEW DELHI: Sun Pharmaceutical Industries chairman and managing director Dilip Shanghvi was on Monday named Ernst amp; Young Entrepreneur of the Year 2010. He will represent India at the Ernst Young World Entrepreneur of the Year Award in Monte Carlo this June.

Apart from Shanghvi, Hero Honda chairman Brijmohan Lall Munjal won the lifetime achievement award this year. The jury headed by former Sebi chairman M Damodaran described Munjal as an icon, a distinguished leader and a well respected corporate citizen.

The list of other award winners included Bajaj Auto managing director Rajiv Bajaj (business transformation), Shyam S Bhartia and Hari S Bhartia of Jubilant Life Sciences (life science and consumer products), Rahul Bhatia, MD InterGlobe (services), N K Chaudhary of Jaipur Rugs (start-up), Jindal Steel and Powers Naveen Jindal (energy and infrastructure), Shriram Transport managing director R Sridhar (manager) and Mallika Srinivasan (manufacturing).

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Entrepreneur student designs touch screen bar interface

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

A Virginia Tech student entrepreneur is designing a new touch screen bar technology.

Aaron Bitler, a senior communication major and director of Interactive Systems at Crunchy Logistics, has shown that hard work and dedication can really pay off.

The touch screen bar will interact with patrons by drawing designs around their glasses and allowing them to place orders, play games and eventually access the Internet.

This bar is going to have eight projectors in it, so you can imagine the size of it, Bitler said. Were going have one really awesome computer running all the projectors and all of the software.

Touch screens that Bitler helped to design are already in use in a Hard Rock Hotel amp; Casino in Tampa, and a finished prototype will be on display at a trade show in March.

This is the first prototype I designed for Hard Rock, Bitler said, pointing to wooden box with a touch screen set in it and wires sticking out, and I had a comment that it looked like a science fair project.

Bitler said it wasnt what he wanted, but it was a starting point. And from there, he went to work improving it.

After I got that comment I went back to the drawing board, and designed something much thinner, much classier, and with a built-in computer, Bitler said. Its kinda nice to go from something I made in my shop to something thats on the wall in the Hard Rock Cafe.

I went from the drawings on paper, staying up until 4 in the morning, sitting on my porch thinking of how cool it would be to make these touch screens, Bitler said. And finally I got the courage to take apart my own TV, because I couldnt afford a projector, I couldnt afford hardly anything, so I did it really cheap. Once I built that very first prototype and it worked, I knew this technology, the fundamentals, will work.

Bitler said most people assume he is a business, computer science or engineering major, and are often surprised to find out he studies communications.

I think its a little bit of an advantage, because Im taking something Im not very good at, which is communicating, and Im majoring in that, and its helping me develop my skills better, Bitler said. Computer stuff Im already good at, I already like, so to be able to blend the two together I think is going to work out pretty good.

I basically started my own little business, it wasnt really working out, then Crunchy Logistics hired me for the Hard Rock job, Bitler said. Crunchy Logistics is a small company, but they do a lot and I guess found me valuable and offered me a job when I graduate.

Bitler manages the business aspect of the project as well. He is active in Techs Entrepreneur Club and offers advice to budding entrepreneurs.

The one thing I always tell people when they start their own business is its never going to work out the way you think it is, Bitler said. Whatever you think is going to happen, something different is most likely going to happen, I can guarantee it.

A version of this article appeared in the Feb 9 issue of the Collegiate Times.

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Suspect in attempted credit-union robbery loses prosthetic arm

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Suspect in attempted credit-union robbery loses prosthetic arm

Mondays holdup of the Fairwinds Credit Union was fairly routine until the suspects arm popped off, according to the Orange County Sheriffs…

By Henry Pierson Curtis

The Orlando Sentinel

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Factbox: Plans to overhaul housing finance system

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011
  • Link this
  • (Reuters) – The Obama administration will soon unveil proposals for overhauling the troubled US housing finance system, amid expectations it will seek to reduce the governments role in the mortgage market.

    An industry source said on Tuesday the…

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Digital Film Tools Rolls Out PhotoCopy

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

DMN Newswire–2011-2-2–Digital Film Tools Rolls Out PhotoCopy

Los Angeles, CA – February 2, 2011 – Digital Film Tools , developer of visual effects software, today announced the availability of PhotoCopy. Pho?to?copy (foh-tuh-kop-ee) creates a photographic reproduction of a printed or graphic work made with a process in which a new image is formed by the action of proprietary image analysis, color, texture and light. Whether its still or moving images, the key attributes are copied from one image and applied to another. Digital Film Tools painstakingly analyzed the brightness, color, tone, detail, grain and texture of some of the worlds greatest movies, paintings, photographs and historical photographic processes. The DNA of these masterpieces can now be applied to your very own images with PhotoCopy. The color, tone and brightness of the original work are replicated while the texture, grain and detail are simulated, comments Marco Paolini, Founder and President, Digital Film Tools.

Photocopy makes any picture look interesting — feature highlights include ;



* Pick from 94 Academy Award nominated movies including Apocalypse Now,
Blade Runner, Frankenstein, Gone with the Wind, King Kong and The Lord of the Rings
* Choose from 72 paintings from artists such as Cezanne, Chagall, Greco,
Leonardo, Monet, Rembrandt, Renoir and Van Gogh to name a few
* Select from 40 photographs by various masters of photography including Abbott,
Andreev, Cunningham, Fenton, Nadar, Outerbridge, Stieglitz and Weston
* Try one of 30 historical processes, some of which are Ambrotype, Cyanotype,
Liquid Emulsion, Kallitype, Palladium, Salt Print, Vandyke and Wet Plate
* Copy the key attributes from one image and apply them to another
* Create custom presets from your own images
* Color, tone and brightness replication
* Texture, grain and detail simulation
* Add a vignette to any preset
* Modify images with presets or sliders
* Quickly search for presets

PhotoCopy is available for download or purchase at: http://www.digitalfilmtools.com at the following prices: Adobe After Effects, Apple Final Cut Pro, Avid Editing Systems – $195; Apple Aperture, Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Photoshop Elements, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom – $95.

About Digital Film Tools
Digital Film Tools brings together the unbeatable combination of superior software designers, motion picture visual effects veterans, video editors and photographers. Add three Emmy Awards and experience in creating visual effects for hundreds of feature films, commercials and television shows and you have a recipe for success.

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Expand a Proven Finance Solution for All Charter Schools

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

California public schools, including the charter school that I established in Highland Park, are facing a cash-flow crisis created by the states deferral of more than 60 percent of our annual budget.

Backed by the state treasury, school districts have more options than independently-operated charter schools. What is troubling is that even though there are viable options that would level the playing field for charter schools, the states largest school district and the California Charter School Association dont support the best option and, as a result, are undermining our ability to solve our cash crunch.

So at a time when more parents clearly want the individualized benefits charter schools can give their children, its becoming increasingly difficult for charters to make ends meet. And the issues we in California face are being faced today by educators nationwide. Without the same access that school districts have to reliable sources of the capital, the viability of charters will remain threatened.

In California, for instance, school districts can access funds to cover the deferrals through state-backed loans called tax revenue anticipation notes (or TRANs). The districts get funds from investors in exchange for pledging their future state payments. This past July, for example, the Los Angeles Unified School District received a $540 million TRAN.

Charter schools, however, do not qualify for TRAN funding because the state does not guarantee our payments in the event of a default. And to make matters worse, charter schools are generally not creditworthy in the eyes of the banking community because state payments are so unpredictable. Less than 10 percent of charter schools reportedly qualify for bank loans sufficient to solve their cash flow needs. In short, we are on our own.

And our experience in California is not unique. A study of charter school funding in 40 states by the Center for Education Reform in Washington, DC found that on average charter schools receive 21.25 percent less public money than conventional public schools. The study — entitled Solving the Charter School Funding Gap: The seven major causes and what to do about them — concluded that charters lack of access to public debt markets, such as local bond measures, was one of the major causes.

Charter schools generally lack the access to public debt markets, such as local bonds or public debt financing for capital expenditures, the study found. This access would provide much needed liquidity giving charters schools better ability to secure facilities and cover other operational expenses.
 
Among the primary findings of a Fordham Institute study entitled Charter School Funding: Inequitys Next Frontier, which examined charter school funding issues in 16 states and the District of Columbia, were that charter schools are significantly underfunded relative to district schools and that the primary driver of the district-charter gaps is charter schools lack of access to local and capital funding.

The study found that the problem most severe in big urban school districts was that charter schools have been given the short end of the funding stick, with the established public school districts tending to resist, rather than assist the growing charter school movement. Every penny that flows into a charter school, in their view, is a penny lost to public education, the report said.

One solution that has worked for more than 150 charter schools, including mine, is to sell our state receivables to private companies. At Academia Avance, we use Portland-based Charter School Capital (CSC), which has adapted the purchase of receivables model for charter schools. Just like a TRAN, funds are provided based on the delivery of future state payments.

And the best part: Most, if not all, charter schools could qualify for funding using this model. But the primary voice of the charter school movement in California (the California Charter School Association) and the district with the most charter schools (LAUSD) have both tried to undermine the CSC model, instead of helping to expand access to this proven solution.

LAUSD recently sent a letter to charter school administrators warning that selling receivables was highly dangerous and would lead to structural fiscal problems. Such has not been my experience or the experience of Green Dot, PUC Schools and Desert Sands — all highly-successful charter schools with multiple financing options that chose to sell receivables.

LAUSD often speaks of a partnership with charter schools to address the needs of all students. Why then is the LAUSD leadership opposed to charter schools using the same financing solution that they use to create financial stability for our schools?

CCSA is aware of the cash problem facing its members and has tried to solve the problem by creating its own financing products. Its solution, however, hasnt addressed the financing need for all, or even most, member schools, including Academia Avance. Proposed solutions have not been flexible or provided enough money and funds have often come too late to solve our cash flow needs.

CCSA is a great advocate. Its simply miscast as a financing entity. Its actions are making other financial solutions more expensive and less available. CCSA could serve members more effectively by working with private companies like CSC, who have a proven and affordable model that can literally fund most, if not all, charter schools.

If I could run my school without any kind of financing hassle, I would. But that is not the world we live in.

CSC provided the best option that has allowed our school to thrive during this financial crisis. This partnership has allowed us to run our school as if there were no deferrals at a cost less than any loan we have seen. This has kept us focused on teaching our kids. I wish the same could be true for all charter school operators.

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UK Government To Announce New Export Trade Finance Initiatives

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

LONDON (Dow Jones)–The U.K. government will Wednesday announce new export trade finance initiatives aimed at helping small businesses access overseas markets as part of its strategy to boost export growth.

Prime Minister David Cameron, whose coalition government has placed exports and investment at the center of its economic recovery plan since coming into office last May, said strong trade policies and outcomes were of the utmost importance for the U.K.’s economy, and that the government would do all it can to bolster trade.

“We need to ensure business, especially our SMEs [small and medium-sized enterprises], have all the tools they …

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Good Credit and Goals, Part 1

Tuesday, February 8th, 2011

Good credit doesn’t just happen.  Some individuals, who have never had to struggle under the burden of bad credit, might make the illusion of getting good credit look effortless, but that just isn’t the case.

The secret these individuals have learned – perhaps even they are unaware of their secret of how to build good credit for themselves – is that they know how to set and achieve goals.

Effective Goals

Financial goals, like any other goals, are only as effective as they are completed. The number one reason goals remain unattained dreams is due a lack of process, not that the goal itself was somehow faulty or unachievable.

To make certain your money goals are met, you need to qualify them in six different ways:

1. Be specific and realistic.

To be effective, your monetary goals need to be both specific and realistic. The goal to put money in savings is neither of these.  Stating you will save 10% of your salary each month is a much more specific goal, but is it realistic given your circumstances?  Set yourself up for success by being both specific and realistic when creating your goals.

2.  Make it measurable.

How will you know if you are on track if your plan has no built-in measuring quantification?  Knowing you want to pay off your debt does not give you an adequate benchmark for success.  Instead, make a plan that includes deadlines to achieve certain payoff amounts or dollars in savings.

3. Own the goal.

No one ever set or achieved any goal effectively unless it was a reflection of their personal desires and commitment.  Be certain the goals are yours, not your spouse’s, friend’s, or even financial advisor’s.  It is your money and future;  build it to suit you.

4. Set a date.

Nothing is quite as motivating as a deadline. Let’s face it; no one would ever have finished reading To Kill a Mockingbird or Lord of the Flies in middle school if it weren’t for the impending doom of the due date.

Your personal financial goals need to have a deadline for completion as well or they will linger on forever.

5. Get it in writing.

If you had a stranger promising to invest $100 month into a savings plan for you, you’d be a fool not to get it in writing. The same goes for your goals.  An unwritten goal remains a dream.  Write down your goals, and post them for frequent review. This will keep you on target toward getting good credit, learning how to build good credit, and repaying debt or keeping savings needs inline.

6. Rewards are along the way.

You’d think the peace of mind brought on by financial security would be enough of a motivating factor, but let’s face it; going to Tahiti is much more thrilling than looking at account statements.  Be certain to reward yourself as you achieve certain milestones, or you may just burn out.

Perhaps you will start in a different place than your neighbor but once you get started, nothing will stop your well-designed plan for getting good credit by getting out of debt and bad credit repair goals.

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