On money and the concentration of power.I'm sitting at the Oriel Bistro, Sloan Square, London, England with one of my favourite newspapers, The Financial Times. It seems to me, as I sit here at a bistro that is not Starbucks, that I was meant to live in another time as a member of the cafe society café society n. The social group that frequents fashionable spots, such as nightclubs and cafés: "the glittering café society that revolves around the city's elite cultural institutions" contemplating politics and the arts, not at the Holiday Inn on Regent Street
Regent Street is a major shopping street and thoroughfare in London's West End. on Sunday mornings but in Paris, Brussels, London or Amsterdam. The problem is money. One needs to be either rich or poor to spend one's time effectively in such pleasurable pursuits and I am neither. I'm well beyond hostels but not rich enough to clip coupons and write poetry. The bill for the croissants and coffee in pounds sterling will sober me up quickly enough, but for the moment it is a delightful contemplation. Shortly, I shall head to Charing Cross Char·ing Cross A district of London, England, where Edward I erected (c. 1290) the last of a series of crosses in memory of his wife, Eleanor of Castile. to smell antique books. On the subject of money, Martin Wolf writes in the Times about the New Capitalism and how unfettered finance is reshaping the global economy. He talks about the disintegration of the institutional scenery of twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights. 2. ago when national elites proffered stable managerial control over companies with somewhat incestuous in·ces·tu·ous adj. 1. Of, involving, or suggestive of incest. 2. Having committed incest. long-term relationships with financial institutions in their own countries. He says those days are gone. Global has won. The world is awash in capital and is playing Monopoly in ways not seen before. Canada with its smallish banks and ridiculous regulatory environment is nowhere. Toronto, heretofore a significant player in mining finance, is fast losing ground to London. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Need we look any further than Inco, Falconbridge, Algoma Steel, Dofasco, Four Season Hotels, Alcan and Bell Canada and where the money came from. We have hedge funds and private equity markets that bestride be·stride tr.v. be·strode , be·strid·den , be·strid·ing, be·strides 1. To sit or stand on with the legs astride; straddle. 2. the world taking public companies private and doing so with an inordinate amount of debt. It is inevitable there will be huge bankruptcies when the economy turns south. These pools of capital have no interest in local politics, history, habits, needs or traditions. Only national governments can make a difference and ours doesn't know how to play. There is, in all of this, quite apart from the desolation of Canadian enterprise, great risk. There is always an equal and opposite reaction to exuberant markets. This time around we have highly leveraged hedge funds chasing commissions and overpaying for assets in Canada and elsewhere. No doubt the debt will hobble hobble leather straps fastened around the pasterns of horses, mules and donkeys. Placed on all four legs and pulled together by a rope, it provides an effective means of casting the horse. our economy in due course. A week ago I was sitting at a different table having a coffee. It was a NORCAT NORCAT Northern Centre for Advanced Technology Inc. (mineral mining R&D organization) (Northern Centre for Advanced Technology) board meeting in Sudbury and Jim Noble, an ex-banker from Manitoulin Island, was pitching a relationship between NORCAT and his organization called the Northern Ontario Enterprise Gateway. Jim is in the process of bringing together potential angel investors in Northern Ontario to support tech start ups and succession planning. So far, he has about 30 potential investors in Thunder Bay and between five and 10 investors in each of the larger cities in Northeastern Ontario. He admits it is tough going and so far no deal has been completed. The truth is that Northerners like Canadians, are risk averse Risk Averse Describes an investor who, when faced with two investments with a similar expected return (but different risks), will prefer the one with the lower risk. Notes: A risk averse person dislikes risk. . It's hard to get them to take a risk which of course is why our country is at risk. Damned if you do
Damned If You Do is the fifth episode of the first season of House, which premiered on the FOX network on December 14, 2004. and damned if you don't. World capital markets are stripping city states, countries, and regions, of their ability to manage events. We need a capital strategy in Northern Ontario. We need to support start-ups and succession plans for locally owned companies. It is the ticking time bomb in our economy. When a local company is consolidated, with that transaction goes the local profits, decision making, creative thinking and loyalty to the community. If you want to see more about Jim's initiative go to www.noeg.ca If you want to see where the action is come to London. Michael Atkins President Laurentian Media Group Laurentian Media Group is a Canadian newspaper and magazine publishing company. Laurentian currently has several publications in the Greater Sudbury, Ontario area, including the biweekly community newspaper Northern Life, the magazine matkins@itworldcanada.ccom |
|
||||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion