Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Why The Market Is Horribly Overvalued Right Now

Why The Market Is Horribly Overvalued Right Now

Three Leg Chair

Image: pgoh13.free.fr/geneva



We stated in the 4th of July holiday comment that we would discuss valuations in the “special report” we wrote last week. As it turned out the “special report” got too bogged down in the discussion of why the private debt in our country would have to be deleveraged before a significant recovery could take place. We encourage you to read it.

This comment will now address why there is so much controversy about valuations in the stock market presently. The bulls are constantly exclaiming in the financial press and financial TV why investors must buy equities due to these “fantastic valuations”. We asked our viewers to prepare for this comment by taking a look at the section on our home page titled “Limbo, Limbo, How Low Can it Go?” There you will find many different metrics that show the historical valuations and where the stock market sold at the peaks and troughs over many years. All these charts were produced by Ned Davis Research, which we consider the best data source available.

We believe after studying the charts mentioned above you will find that none of the most popular metrics will show the stock market to be inexpensive. The only way the main valuation metric P/E Ratios) could show the market to be cheap is to replace the age old “reported earnings” (Generally Accepted Accounting Principles-GAAP) with “operating earnings”.

The pundits are using forward looking “operating earnings” in order to reach for their estimates of 10 to 12 times earnings. “Operating Earnings” which exclude “write-offs”, make no sense whatsoever, and only came into existence in the mid 1980s in order to make the market look undervalued. We advised you to look at the articles written by us and published in Barron’s on our home page (Comstock in the News). The first was in May of 2003 titled “A Simple Calculation”, and the second titled “What’s the Real P/E Ratio?” written in May 2008. We just reread the 2008 article and found some interesting statistics we used back then and until now didn’t recall just how far off the earnings estimates were.

* “ARE YOU KIDDING ME?”
* 6 REASONS FOR A SECOND HALF SLOW-DOWN
* DEEP DEMOGRAPHIC DOO-DOO

This is what we stated in the article back in May 2008, “Look at the numbers. Reported earnings for the S&P 500 for 2007 were just over $66. The operating earnings for 2007 were $84.54. The estimated numbers for 2008 are about $69 for reported earnings and about $90 for operating earnings. By the way, these estimates have just recently been revised downward drastically, due to the slowdown in the U.S. economy.” Imagine what they were before they were revised DOWNWARD DRASTICALLY. The actual numbers came in at $14.88 for reported earnings vs. the estimate of $69, and $49.51 for operating earnings vs. the estimate of $90 (see actual earnings in the attached chart). This means that with just 7 months to go in 2008 the earnings were off the $69 estimate by $54, and off the $90 estimate by $40. This goes to show how absurd it was and still is to use forward earnings-and imagine if we used the estimates before they were revised downward drastically. Numerous articles have been published which show that forward estimated earnings are not reliable.

The earnings estimates for the year 2010 are about $82 for operating and $67.35 for reported earnings. The earnings estimates for 2011 are $95 for operating, and $78 for reported earnings. As bad as it is to use forward earnings, the really insane part of these estimates is that virtually all of “Wall Street” is using Operating earnings that were not even in existence before the mid 1980s. Even more outrageous is the fact that these earnings exclude “write-offs” even if the write-offs are recurring and disregard the GAAP earnings (reported earnings) which were the only earnings ever used before the mid 1980s (and which became more popular each year as it became harder to make stocks look undervalued-especially during the dot.com bubble).

If you break down these earnings estimates by the quarter or half year, you will find that the estimates are higher for the second half of this year than the first and clearly higher by about 15% in 2011. We find this to be curious since it seems to us that the recovery is running out of steam. The main ingredients for virtually any upswing in the economy are dependent upon 1. Employment 2. Consumer Spending 3. Housing 4. Increase in Exports, and 5. Restocking of Inventory. Usually these ingredients need easy money or some form of inflation. Despite low interest rates banks are reluctant to loan money to small businesses and individuals. These ingredients needed to stimulate the economy have all either rolled over or never really got started (Housing-see 6/10/10 “The Dire Outlook for Housing”). Retail sales were just released and were disappointing for the second month in a row after a false start from the stimulus package. Employment continues to disappoint and the rebuilding of inventory has come to a screeching halt. The current account deficit has just recently gotten worse and the dollar is strengthening vs. the Euro.

The worst part of the ingredients that produce an economic rebound is the fact that deflation is permeating the whole system. The Fed was worried about deflation back in 2003 and talked about it constantly. Well now, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, the median Consumer Price Index was virtually unchanged at 0.0% in May while the CPI was down 0.1% in April and down 0.2% in May. The PPI released today was down 0.5% in June vs. down 0.3% in May. In 2003 the median CPI from Cleveland was up about 1.5% and the CPI was up 2.3% during all of the Feds ranting about deflation and how they would make sure it will not occur in this country. Don’t believe them.

It sure doesn’t seem that the economy has much going for it, and if that is the case, it is hard to believe that the earnings will be higher in the second half than the first (which is presently the estimate), and really hard to believe that they will increase by 15% next year (which is also the estimate). If we use the reported earnings estimate of $67.35 (which we don’t believe) you get a P/E of 16.2, if you use the estimate of next year of $77.64 (which we really don’t believe) the P/E works out to just over 14. All of these P/E ratios on reported earnings are above the average for forward earnings and do not reflect an undervalued market.

Our favorite means of determining a fair valuation is to smooth the reported earnings over a 9 year period of time by taking the 9 year average and grow the average for 4.5 years (one half the 9 years) at 6% (where earnings have grown historically) to arrive at the $64 of smoothed earnings. Using the smoothed earnings of $64 you arrive at the overvalued level of 17 times. We also believe that this market will not bottom out until it reaches 10 times or lower the smoothed earnings. Although this may sound implausible, we note that the S&P 500 sold at a P/E of 10 or under smoothed earnings in 17 of the past 60 years.

Source

David Cameron launches Tories' 'big society' plan

David Cameron launches Tories' 'big society' plan

David Cameron: "I think we're onto a really big idea, a really exciting future for our country"

David Cameron has launched his "big society" drive to empower communities, describing it as his "great passion".

In a speech in Liverpool, the prime minister said groups should be able to run post offices, libraries, transport services and shape housing projects.

Also announcing plans to use dormant bank accounts to fund projects, Mr Cameron said the concept would be a "big advance for people power".

Voluntary groups and Labour have queried how the schemes will be funded.

The idea was a central theme in the Conservative general election campaign and Mr Cameron denied that he was being forced to re-launch it because of a lack of interest first time around.

Related stories

While reducing the budget deficit was his "duty", he said giving individuals and communities more control over their destinies was what excited him and was something that had underpinned his philosophy since he became Conservative leader in 2005.

"There are the things you do because it's your passion," he said.

"Things that fire you up in the morning, that drive you, that you truly believe will make a real difference to the country you love, and my great passion is building the big society."

'People power'

The prime minister said community projects would be established in four parts of the UK - Liverpool; Eden Valley, Cumbria; Windsor and Maidenhead; and the London borough of Sutton - as part of efforts to "turn government completely on its head".

Each of the project areas - which Mr Cameron said had approached ministers asking to be involved - will be given an expert organiser and dedicated civil servants to ensure "people power" initiatives get off the ground.

Analysis

The 'big society' is David Cameron's Big Idea. His aides say it is about empowering communities, redistributing power and fostering a culture of volunteerism.

Perhaps no wonder then that Tory candidates during the general election found it difficult to sell the idea to voters.

So why is David Cameron returning to this theme ?

In part because he does view it as his answer to Big Government - but there are also more basic political motives.

First, it's about providing a different agenda to the day by day litany of cuts, cuts and more cuts.

Second, it is - as Eric Pickles has acknowledged - about saving money. If people are doing things for free then you don't have to pay public servants to do them for you.

So beneath the grand-sounding philosophy there is hard-nosed, practical politics behind the 'big society' message.

The initiatives being championed include a local buy-out of a rural pub, efforts to recruit volunteers to keep museums open, support to speed up broadband supply, and giving residents more power over council spending.

These schemes and others in the future, he said, would represent "the biggest, most dramatic redistribution of power from elites in Whitehall to the man and woman on the street".

In the past, he said, the talents and initiative of people had been wasted, claiming that over-centralised government had turned public sector workers into the "weary, disillusioned puppets of government targets".

Mr Cameron acknowledged the transformation he was seeking would not happen overnight and stressed it was not a matter of the government stepping aside and letting people fend for themselves.

"Of course there is not one lever you can simply pull to create a big society," he said.

"We should not be naive enough to think that simply if government rolls back and does less, then miraculously society will spring up and do more.

"The truth is we need a government that helps to build a big society."

As well as encouraging greater volunteering and philanthropy, Mr Cameron confirmed plans to use funds stuck in dormant bank and building society accounts to enable "some of the most dynamic" charities, social enterprises and voluntary groups to take over the running of public services.

It is hoped that hundreds of millions of pounds will eventually be available in start-up funding through a Big Society Bank, to be matched by private investment.

'Cut-price alternative'

Mr Cameron rejected suggestions that the plans were "cover" for substantial cuts in public services due next year and that the public were either confused by or uninterested in the proposals.

"I don't accept that people don't understand what this is," he said.

Everyone was aware of the "great work" that volunteers were already doing in communities up and down the country, he said, and it was his ambition to simply expand this.

PROPOSED INITIATIVES

  • Cumbria: relocating community centre, building renewable energy project, community buyout of pub, spreading broadband access
  • Windsor and Maidenhead: public say over local spending decisions including parks budgets, further powers to parish councils
  • Liverpool: increased volunteering at museums, developing neighbourhood media and digital content
  • Sutton: working on sustainable transport services, developing youth projects, creating "green living" champions

"It is incredibly simple idea and one, I think, is catching on," he said.

Shadow Cabinet Office minister Tessa Jowell called Mr Cameron's speech "a brass-necked rebranding of programmes already put in place by a Labour government".

She added: "We welcome the coalition's decision to continue our work in partnership with local communities, but these projects are dependant on funding and resources being put in place.

"It is therefore highly unlikely that civil society will become 'bigger' due to the large public spending cuts that are being put forward by this government."

Voluntary groups broadly welcomed the idea but expressed concerns about how equipped they were to take on more responsibility, given that public funds were likely to be cut as part of the budget squeeze.

"It is going to be very challenging for them to play a bigger role if they have less resources to do it," said Ben Kernighan, from the National Council for Voluntary Organisations.

And union leaders said public services must be based on certainty of provision and not whether there were enough volunteers on any given day.

"Make no mistake, this plan is all about saving money," Dave Prentis, general secretary of Unison, said.

"The government is simply washing its hands of providing decent public services and using volunteers as a cut-price alternative."

Source

India unveils prototype for $35 touch-screen computer

India unveils prototype for $35 touch-screen computer

Indian Minister for Human Resource Development Kapil Sibal unveils the "laptop" device in Delhi on 22 July 2010

The Indian government has unveiled the prototype of an iPad-like touch-screen laptop, with a price tag of $35 (£23), which it hopes to roll out next year.

Aimed at students, the tablet supports web browsing, video conferencing and word processing, say developers.

Human Resource Development Minister Kapil Sibal said a manufacturer was being sought for the gadget, which was developed by India's top IT colleges.

An earlier cheap laptop plan by the same ministry came to nothing.

The device unveiled on Thursday has no hard disk, using a memory card instead, like a mobile phone, and can run on solar power, according to reports.

'Manufacturer interest'

It would cost a fraction of the price of California-based technology giant Apple's hugely popular iPad, which retails from $499.

Start Quote

The solutions for tomorrow will emerge from India”

End Quote Kapil Sibal Human Resource Development Minister

Mr Sibal said the Indian tablet, said to run the Linux operating system, was expected to be introduced to higher education institutions next year.

The plan was to drop the price eventually to $20 and ultimately to $10, he added.

Unveiling the gadget, the human resource development minister told the Economic Times newspaper it was India's answer to the "$100 laptops" developed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the US.

"The solutions for tomorrow will emerge from India," Mr Sibal said, reports news agency AFP.

Last year, one of the ministry's officials announced it was about to unveil a $10 laptop, triggering worldwide media interest.

But there was disappointment after the "Sakshat" turned out to be a prototype of a handheld device, with an unspecified price tag, that never materialised.

To develop its latest gadget, the ministry said it had turned to the elite Indian Institute of Technology, and the Indian Institute of Science, after a lacklustre response from the private sector.

Mamta Varma, a ministry spokeswoman, said the device was feasible because of falling hardware costs.

Several global manufacturers, including at least one from Taiwan, had expressed interest in making the device, she said, although no deals had been agreed, and she declined to name any of the companies.

The project is part of a government initiative which also aims to extend broadband to all of India's 25,000 colleges and 500 universities.

In 2005, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) unveiled the prototype of a $100 laptop for children in the developing world, although it ended up costing about double that price.

In May, Nicholas Negroponte - of the MIT's Media Lab - announced plans to develop a basic tablet computer for $99 through his non-profit association, One Laptop per Child.

Source

Ex-US judge pleads guilty to child prison scam

Ex-US judge pleads guilty to child prison scam

Michael Conahan Conahan received bribes from a for-profit juvenile detention centre after closing a county-run facility

Former Pennsylvania judge Michael Conahan has pleaded guilty to a racketeering conspiracy charge for helping put juvenile defendants behind bars in exchange for bribes.

He is accused along with former judge Mark Ciavarella of taking $2.8m (£1.8m) from a profit-making detention centres. Mr Ciavarella denies wrongdoing.

The two pleaded guilty last year but a federal judge tossed out part of the plea agreement for being too lenient.

Conahan faces up to 20 years in jail.

US District Judge Edwin Kosik rejected the 87-month jail term set out last year in Conahan's agreement. Under that deal, the former judge would have been able to back out if he was dissatisfied with his sentence.

Judge Kosik has accepted Conahan's current plea agreement with prosecutors, which has no such get-out clause.

Cash for kids

Prosecutors in a federal court in Scranton, Pennsylvania, said Conahan had closed a county-owned juvenile detention centre in 2002, just before signing an agreement to use a for-profit centre.

Prosecutors say Mr Ciavarella, a former juvenile court judge, then allegedly worked with Mr Conahan to ensure a constant flow of detainees.

The two men were originally charged in early 2009 with accepting money from the builder and owner of a for-profit detention centre that housed county juveniles in exchange for giving children longer, harsher sentences.

A spokeswoman for the non-profit Juvenile Law Center alleges that Mr Ciavarella gave excessively harsh sentences to 1,000-2,000 juveniles between 2003 and 2006.

Some of the children were shackled, denied lawyers, and pulled from their homes for offences which included stealing change from cars and failure to appear as witnesses.

The indictment was part of a larger probe into corruption in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, which has so far implicated more than 20 others.

Source

'Eternal plane' returns to Earth

'Eternal plane' returns to Earth

Wing-to-tail guide to Zephyr, the 'eternal' plane

The UK-built Zephyr unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) has confirmed its place in aviation history as the first "eternal plane".

The solar-powered craft completed two weeks of non-stop flight above a US Army range in Arizona before being commanded to make a landing.

The Qinetiq company which developed Zephyr said the UAV had nothing to prove by staying in the air any longer.

It had already smashed all endurance records for an unpiloted vehicle before it touched down at 1504 BST (0704 local/1404 GMT) on Friday.

"We are just really delighted with the performance," said project manager Jon Saltmarsh.

"It's the culmination of a lot of years of effort from a huge number of really talented scientists and engineers," he told BBC News.

Zephyr took off from the Yuma Proving Ground at 1440 BST (0640 local time) on Friday, 9 July.

After only 31 hours in the air, it had bettered the official world record for a long-duration flight by a drone; but then it kept on going, unencumbered by the need to take on the liquid fuel that sustains traditional aircraft.

The plane taking off - Footage courtesy of QinetiQ

Clear skies at 60,000ft delivered copious amounts of sunshine to its amorphous silicon solar arrays, charging its lithium-sulphur batteries and keeping its two propellers turning.

At night, Zephyr lost some altitude but the energy stored in the batteries was more than sufficient to maintain the plane in the air.

Zephyr is set to be credited with a new world endurance record (336 hours, 24 minutes) for an unmanned, un-refuelled aircraft - provided a representative of the world air sports federation, who was present at Yuma, is satisfied its rules have been followed properly.

Its fortnight in the sky easily beats the 30 hours, 24 minutes, set by Northrop Grumman's RQ-4A Global Hawk in 2001.

Zephyr has also exceeded the mark set for a manned, non-stop, un-refuelled flight, set in 1986 by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, who stayed aloft for nine days (216 hours), three minutes. Their flight in the Voyager craft went around the world.

Profile raising

Jon Saltmarsh said the UAV, which has a 22.5m wingspan, was no longer an experimental plane and was now ready to begin its operational life.

The fact that Zephyr completed its demonstration during the Farnborough International Airshow - which takes place on the doorstep of the Qinetiq company - will have done wonders for the craft's profile.

Solar-powered high-altitude long-endurance (Hale) UAVs are expected to have a wide range of applications.

The military will want to use them as reconnaissance and communications platforms. Civilian and scientific programmes will equip them with small payloads for Earth observation duties.

Their unique selling point is their persistence over a location. Low-Earth orbiting satellites come and go in a swift pass overhead, and the bigger drones now operated by the military still need to return to base at regular intervals for refuelling.

"Qinetiq is now looking to the Ministry of Defence and the DoD (US Department of Defense) to put a system into service," said Mr Saltmarsh.

"We have proved the concept; we have proved we can provide persistence; we have proved we can put useful payloads on to it that will actually do things the MoD has a requirement to do."

The Zephyr flight is the second event of note this year in solar-powered aviation. Earlier this month, Andre Borschberg became the first person to pilot a manned solar plane through the night.

Source

Chum Mey: Tuol Sleng survivor

Chum Mey: Tuol Sleng survivor

Chum Mey poses for photo at his former cell in the Tuol Sleng prison (July 2010) Chum Mey visits his former cell in the Tuol Sleng prison

For more than three decades Chum Mey has carried the physical and emotional scars inflicted on him by agents of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge.

He is one of a only handful of people to have survived Tuol Sleng prison, code-named S-21 - the regime's interrogation centre and site of torture and mass murder.

Last year, from behind bullet-proof glass in a Phnom Penh courtroom, Chum Mey finally told his story to the world.

He was a leading witness in the first trial of a senior Khmer Rouge figure, Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Comrade Duch.

Duch was the head of Tuol Sleng, were as many as 17,000 men, women and children were detained and then killed.

Chum Mey's testimony to the United Nations-backed court could perhaps help bring them a degree of long-delayed justice.

Forced exodus

In 1975, Chum Mey - originally from Prey Veng province - was working in Phnom Penh as a mechanic. He was married with three young children.

Cambodia at that time was in political turmoil, with the leaders of a 1970 military coup locked in civil war against Pol Pot's forces.

Who were the Khmer Rouge?

  • Maoist regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975-1979 - also known as Angkar
  • Founded and led by Saloth Sar, better known as Pol Pot
  • Abolished religion, schools and currency in effort to create agrarian utopia
  • Up to two million people thought to have died of starvation, overwork or were executed
  • Defeated in Vietnamese invasion in 1979
  • Pol Pot fled and remained free until 1997 - he died a year later

On 17 April 1975 the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh.

"When they entered everybody including myself raised a white flag to congratulate them; everybody cheered," Chum Mey told the war crimes tribunal.

Just hours later, Khmer Rouge representatives went door-to-door telling people to evacuate to the countryside. Chum Mey said those who did not co-operate were shot dead.

He gathered his wife and children and joined the exodus. His two-year-old son fell ill and died during the journey. Chum Mey was forced to bury him in a shallow grave and move on.

Later, he was sent back to the capital by the Khmer Rouge to repair sewing machines for a co-operative manufacturing the new revolutionary uniform, black pyjamas.

On 28 October 1978 he and other workers were told they were being sent to fix vehicles for an offensive against Vietnam.

In reality, Chum Mey was about to enter the darkest period of his life, as he was taken to Tuol Sleng.

Conspirator

There he was imprisoned in a brick cell about two metres by one metre wide, blind-folded and shackled to the floor.

For 12 days and nights, Chum Mey says he was tortured, as his interrogators tried to make him confess to spying for the US and Russia.

"If you refuse to confess I'll beat you to death. You must tell the truth then I won't kill you. If not I must kill you," he quoted his tormentors as saying.

Start Quote

I cry every night - every time I hear people talk about Khmer Rouge it reminds me of my wife and children”

End Quote Chum Mey Tuol Sleng survivor

He was whipped repeatedly about the body with a switch of bamboo sticks. When he held up his hands to try to shield himself his fingers were broken.

His toenails were pulled out with pliers while his legs were shackled. When he still refused to confess, the nails were twisted and pulled off his other foot.

Finally, Chum Mey said he was subjected to electric shocks several times with a wire from a 220-volt wall socket.

On each occasion he passed out. When he came round, he was asked again to confess. Eventually he said he confessed to anything so that the torture would be over.

In his confession Chum Mey wrote that he was working for the CIA and had recruited dozens of agents in Cambodia.

He gave the names of dozens of acquaintances, innocent men and women who, it is presumed, were later arrested, tortured and murdered.

"People who had been arrested and killed previously had implicated me, and I implicated others. So did other people.

"It was just like rear waves pushing the front waves forward. So people would die one after another, after another, after another," he said in a BBC interview in 2002.

Further tragedy

Chum Mey believes he was allowed to live because he was of use to the regime, fixing sewing machines in the prison workshop.

At night he was chained to a long iron bar with 40 other prisoners. He says they were forced to live in silence.

Chum Mey is seen on television giving evidence at the trial of Comrade Duch Chum Mey hopes the war crimes trial might bring some belated justice for himself and his country

"When I wept I could not make any noise. I wept a lot and I had no more tears to weep, I was only waiting for the day that I would be killed," he later told the war crimes trial.

On 7 January 1979, Vietnamese troops captured Phnom Penh from the Khmer Rouge, and the prison staff fled.

Chum Mey was marched at gunpoint by prison guards into the provinces, where he had a chance meeting with his wife, and held for the first time his fourth child - a boy, just two months old.

For two days they travelled together to an isolated area with a group of other prisoners. They were then ordered to walk into a paddy field, where their captors opened fire on them.

The soldiers shot dead his wife and baby. Chum Mey escaped alone and hid in a forest.

Justice

"I cry every night. Every time I hear people talk about the Khmer Rouge it reminds me of my wife and children," Chum Mey told the public gallery at Duch's trial.

He has said that only the court can help to "wash away" his suffering.

Last year he was elected as the head of the newly-formed Association of Victims of the Khmer Rouge Regime.

Speaking to the BBC just weeks before the verdict, Chum Mey said he hoped Duch would be sentenced to life in prison.

But he said he felt cheated by the court, which he said seemed to place most of the responsibility for crimes committed on those perpetrators already dead, rather than focusing on the accused.

Although the trial has not brought closure for Cambodians, he told the BBC's Guy De Launey he was satisfied that a judicial system was now in place.

Most days Chum Mey can be found at the former prison, which is now a genocide museum, housing the photographs and written confessions of many of the victims.

"I come every day to tell the world the truth about the Tuol Sleng prison... so that none of these crimes are ever repeated anywhere in the world."

Source

Are Africa's commodities an economic blessing?

Are Africa's commodities an economic blessing?

An oil rig platform situated off Angola Angola is one of a number of African oil producers

In terms of natural resources, Africa is the most abundant continent on earth.

But rather than a blessing, most of Africa's commodities have proved a burden; allegedly stoking conflict, funding wars and leading to rampant labour market abuse.

So, what is the history of Africa's biggest commodity crops? And what steps are being taken to improve the management of Africa's most valuable exports in the future?

Africa's Oil Producing Nations

  • Libya
  • Algeria
  • Nigeria
  • Sudan
  • Angola
  • Congo Brazzaville
  • Egypt
  • Gabon
  • Equatorial Guinea
  • Uganda - to come
  • Cameroon - to come
  • Ghana - to come

Oil was first drilled commercially in Africa in Oloibiri in the Niger Delta, in 1956 by the Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell.

There are now ten oil exporting nations in Africa, with another three soon to join that list.

BP has stated that Africa holds 127 billion barrels of untapped oil, almost ten per cent of global reserves.

Africa's largest single oil exporting nation is Nigeria.

While no official figures exist, Standard Bank estimates the country has made $6 trillion in oil revenue over the last 50 years.

The International Energy Agency says Nigeria holds 37 billion barrels of reserve oil, dwarfing that of Norway which has just 6 billion.

Yet 70% of Nigerians live under the poverty line and the country has consistently been ranked among the most corrupt on earth by international observers.

'Bunkering'

Oil related conflict in the Niger Delta remains a threat.

The pressure group Human Rights Watch claims more than 500 oil workers and civilians have been kidnapped in the region.

Hundreds more have been killed in violence between rival groups, fighting for a greater share of oil revenue and protesting over environmental damage caused by oil extraction.

Start Quote

When these resources dry up and/or the world finds an adequate alternative, we will have to rely on our environment for survival”

End Quote Goodluck Jonathan Nigerian president

Theft from standpipes, known as "bunkering", is estimated to cost Nigeria $5bn a year.

The current president Goodluck Jonathan has attempted to quell conflict in the Delta, offering militants cash payments, jobs and college places in return for laying down weapons.

He's also committed to a clean up of the Ogoni region of the Niger Delta, which has suffered serious environmental degradation.

Writing on his Facebook page, Mr Jonathan has warned Nigerians that oil reserves will not last forever, saying "when these resources dry up and/or the world finds an adequate alternative, we will have to rely on our environment for survival".

Despite its oil wealth, Nigeria has to import 60% of its own fuel because of a lack of domestic refining capacity and power blackouts are common.

Contracts cancelled

In 2007, oil was discovered in the Gulf of Guinea, off the coast of Ghana.

The huge "Jubilee" field is set to come on stream in the second half of 2010.

The International Monetary Fund says Ghana could make $20bn from oil by 2030, potentially transforming its economy and that of the tiny adjacent Atlantic islands of Sao Principe and Tome.

In March 2010, the Ghanaian government blocked a $4bn bid by the international oil giant Exxon Mobil to buy a 23% stake in the field.

The Norwegian oil firm, Aker, which won rights to develop the Jubilee field under the previous administration, has also been told its licence is now invalid.

Instead the government is lobbying to have the contracts awarded to the state-run Ghana National Petroleum Corporation.

President John Atta Mills plans to ring fence the proceeds of the oil trade in what's described as a "stabilisation" fund for the country's future.

He insists the government will account for "every pesewa" of oil money it receives.

'Blood diamonds'

There are 10 major diamond-producing nations in Africa, where the industry is worth $158bn a year - the largest being Botswana, where it generates a third of GDP.

The portability and high value of diamonds have made them a favourite source of funding for rebel groups across the continent.

Africa's Diamond Producing Nations

  • Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Botswana
  • South Africa
  • Angola
  • Namibia
  • Ghana
  • Central African Republic
  • Guinea
  • Sierra Leone
  • Zimbabwe

Angola, Congo and the Cote D'Ivoire have all been subject to the trade in so called "blood diamonds", although the most high profile case has been in the West African state of Sierra Leone.

During the country's brutal 10 year civil war in Sierra Leone, the diamond mines in Kono were controlled by the rebel RUF forces, led by Foday Sankoh.

Diamonds smuggled from the region were allegedly passed on to Charles Taylor, president of neighbouring Liberia, who in turn helped arm the rebel movement.

In 2002 after the end of the war in Sierra Leone, and under pressure from campaign groups, the World Diamond Council devised the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme.

Diamond miners in Zimbabwe It is alleged human rights abuses are connected with some diamond production

It aims to stop gems mined in conflict zones being sold around the world to unsuspecting buyers.

The 45 participating members account for over 99% of global diamond production.

However campaign groups, such as Global Witness, say the scheme still falls short of what's required.

It claims diamonds from blacklisted countries like Zimbabwe are still routinely being traded on the international market, particularly in less well regulated jurisdictions such as Dubai, India and Mauritius.

Diamond production remains a major source of revenue for Africa.

In Sierra Leone, income from the diamond trade rose by a quarter to $35m in the first six months of the 2010.

Mobile phones

Coltan or "colombo-tantalite ore" is a mineral used to make electric capacitors in computers, gaming consoles and mobile phones.

One of the world's largest reserves is in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where more than 5 million people were killed in a decade long civil war, which ended in 2003.

International observers claim that the east of the country, the main coltan mining area, remains at risk of further conflict.

Coltan Producing Countries

  • South Kivu in DRC
  • Uganda
  • Rwanda
  • Burundi

Most of the coltan mines in the DRC are in the remote South Kivu district.

In 2001 a report by the United Nation Security Council claimed that rebel forces, regrouping in the country after the Rwandan genocide, had taken control of the mines and were using coltan to fund their operations, often using forced or child labour.

These groups included the CNDP, a Tutsi rebel force led by General Laurent Nkunda, and the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda (FDLR), a Hutu rebel group responsible for the Rwandan genocide of 1994, which had the backing of the Congolese government under President Mobutu.

The report concluded that the DRC was suffering a "systemic and systematic" looting of natural resources, with the CNDP alone raising $250m over 18 months by selling coltan.

After the report's release, some of the world's biggest mobile phone companies - Nokia, Samsung and Motorola - began monitoring suppliers with a view to eradicating Congolese coltan from their goods.

But a follow up report by the UN in December 2008 claimed the looting of the mineral in the DRC was still rife.

Rwanda is estimated to have made $19m from coltan sales in 2008, a rise of 72% on the previous year, even though no coltan is mined within Rwandan borders.

Experts say the production process, where coltan is cut with various other minerals and converted to tantalum, makes the final product almost impossible to source.

'Difficult problem'

However, protests over the trade in so called "conflict minerals" are growing.

Last month saw angry scenes outside the opening of the new Apple store in Washington DC by activists demanding the firm commits to a "clean" minerals policy.

But the firms boss Steve Jobs has said, despite Apple's best efforts, it remains "a very difficult problem".

Intel's Facebook page has also been hit by online campaign groups calling for tough international sanctions to control the trade.

Some of the worlds big hi-tech firms, fearing a consumer backlash, are now refusing to source supplies from anywhere in Central Africa, turning instead to Australia, Canada and Brazil.

Despite the growing international attention, no long-term policy has been introduced by the Congolese authorities to govern the extraction of coltan and manage industry revenues.

Although trials have been held, no proper certification scheme, akin to the Kimberly Process for diamonds, has yet been devised to identify and source coltan.

Unemployment

Sugar is set to become one of Africa's most important future exports, not only as a food product, but because of the part it plays in the production of the biofuel ethanol.

Africa Sugar Producing Nations

  • South Africa
  • Malawi
  • Zambia
  • Swaziland
  • Tanzania
  • Mozambique

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, the President of Brazil, the world's biggest sugar producer, has visited four African countries to advise on ethanol production and creating low-carbon economies.

Mozambique, still rebuilding itself after a 20 year civil war, is pinning its development hopes on sugar.

Although Mozambique's economy has grown by 8% a year in the last decade, more than half its workforce is unemployed. For those that are in work, 80% are farm labourers.

Sugar cube Sugar is a major African export

Mozambique's Centre for Promotion of Agriculture, Cepagri, hopes to benefit from rising sugar prices, which hit a 28-year high last year, by doubling production and increasing exports to five hundred thousand tonnes a year by 2012.

It has set aside 48,000 hectares for sugar production in six districts, with a view to creating 17,000 jobs.

The government has also invested $10m in a new sugar silo at the port in Maputo.

Some 40% of Mozambique's sugar exports go to Europe and the US.

The country has benefited from a preferential trading deal with the EU under the "Everything but Arms" initiative, despite opposition from Europe's powerful farming lobby.

'Good returns'

But anti-poverty groups are becoming increasingly alarmed about speculation in global food markets.

Armajaro Holdings, a Mayfair-based hedge fund, has just completed the biggest single purchase of cocoa beans in 14 years.

It has bought 240,380 tonnes of West African beans, equivalent to 7% of global supply, prompting fears that it intends to stockpile the goods, forcing up prices.

Sacks of cocoa beans The price of cocoa has risen sharply in recent years

The boss of the fund, Anthony Ward, denies this claiming the investment is for the long term, saying: "If you're long, food will give you good returns."

But the World Development Movement wants this kind of trading to be curbed.

It's calling on the EU to cap the amount of money that private investors can pump into the market for so called "soft commodities".

The Fairtrade Foundation adds that deals like Armjaro's leave small farmers, who are unable to hedge against future losses, dangerously exposed to downturns in the market, and ultimately increase the risk of food shortages for Africa's poorest people.

But Mr Ward, the owner of a substantial vineyard at Voor-Paardeberg on the Western Cape, has indicated that he will continue his programme, targeting other African foodstuffs including sugar.

He is not alone.

One of the world's most powerful financiers, billionaire George Soros, is also understood to be buying food production capacity in Africa.

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Starved girl Khyra Ishaq's death 'was preventable'

Starved girl Khyra Ishaq's death 'was preventable'

Khyra Ishaq Khyra Ishaq starved to death in 2008

The death of a seven-year-old girl who starved to death could have been prevented, a report has found.

Khyra Ishaq was mistreated by her mother and her partner at a house in Handsworth, Birmingham, and weighed just 2st 9lb (16.5kg) when found.

The Serious Case Review into her death found there were a catalogue of missed opportunities by professional agencies.

Related stories

It also said better assessments and more effective communication could have stopped her death in 2008.

Birmingham Safeguarding Children Board (BSCB)'s 180 page Serious Case Review is the first of its kind to be published in full.

Some professionals "lost sight" of their responsibilities to protect Khyra, who succumbed to an infection after months of starvation and cruelty, and instead focused on the rights of the girl's mother and her partner, the review found.

It pointed to a severe lack of communication between her school, social workers and other agencies dating back to March 2006.

The review found social workers did not listen to school staff members' concerns about Khyra, and contact by two worried members of the public was not acted on.

Tony Howell, head of children's services, said the report found two fundamental failings that occur through a huge range of services.

"One is the inability on occasion for them to follow their own procedures so they don't complete the task that needs to be done," he said.

The second one is communication between departments and agencies, he said.

"I think one of the issues that we have to be honest about (is that) all the agencies and indeed the safeguarding board's view is that we did fail Khyra in this case," he said.

Head of children's services at Birmingham City Council Tony Howell: "We did fail Khyra in this case"

"We will do everything we can to see our safeguarding procedures are better in future," he added.

Education Secretary Michael Gove said: "It is beyond anyone's comprehension that a child could die under such tragic circumstances.

"Today's serious case review confirms that all the agencies in Birmingham failed to protect this vulnerable child."

The seven-year-old's mother Angela Gordon, 35, and her partner Junaid Abuhamza, 31, were jailed earlier this year after they admitted Khyra's manslaughter.

Khyra and five other children in the couple's care were deprived of food and prevented from entering the fully-stocked kitchen by a bolt on the door.

Khyra was taken out of school by Gordon in December 2007 and concerns were raised about home education in the report.

Mr Gove said local authorities needed to develop "positive relationships" with their home-educating community.

"Clearly lessons need to be learned by the tragic events in this case, and I will consider the letter I expect to receive from Birmingham shortly, to see what changes need to be made to the existing arrangements, and reply in due course."

Angela Gordon, and Junaid Abuhamza, Gordon and Abuhamza are appealing against their sentences

Birmingham City Council confirmed three staff directly involved in the Khyra Ishaq case have been removed from front-line duties and said it had "already acted" on most of the report's recommendations.

Hilary Thompson, BSCB chairwoman, said: "The serious case review concludes that although the scale of the abuse inflicted would have been hard to predict, Khyra's death was preventable.

"The report identifies missed opportunities, highlighting that better assessment and information-sharing by key organisations could have resulted in a different outcome."

It said three incidents in March 2006 were not progressed "either by failures of paperwork to reach the correct departments, failure to follow safeguarding procedures, or to conduct thorough checks prior to case closure".

The report also highlighted a "major safeguarding flaw" within home education legislation in relation to her death.

It said: "The situation is particularly advantageous for parents who may wish to conceal abuse."

Analysis

Alison Holt, BBC Social Affairs Correspondent

The death of Khyra Ishaq was truly shocking.

There had been concerns raised by teachers after her mother pulled her out of school, but despite visits from police and social workers no-one put together the whole picture of what was happening to her.

Today's report reveals there was a major breakdown in communication, with different agencies holding different pieces of information that weren't put together.

It is also the first serious case review that is published in full.

This was a promise made in opposition by the Conservatives and the change was announced soon after the coalition was formed.

Usually only executive summaries are published and there have been complaints that in the past some of these have been carefully sanitised.

A complaint made by Gordon against a social worker who visited their Handsworth home "generated a reluctance" to complete an assessment, the BSCB said.

It continued: "Whilst a number of agencies and individuals sought to deliver effective services to the child... there were others who lost sight of the child and focused instead upon the rights of the adults, the adults' behaviours and the potential impact for themselves as professionals."

School medical staff were criticised for not adequately addressing concerns by school staff.

The report made 18 recommendations for specific action across groups including the city council, the safeguarding board, West Midlands Police and the city's primary care trusts.

A further 53 areas for improvement were identified.

Recommendations included that school height and weight checks should be properly recorded and that social care must review its screening process.

Mr Howell said children's social care had undergone a major review and the management team had been strengthened.

Khyra's father, Ishaq Abuzaire: "I hope that Khyra's death is not in vain"

Les Lawrence, cabinet member for children, young people and families, said the council re-affirmed its commitment to "create a children's social care service that better protects our young people from those who would harm them".

"Let this be Khyra's legacy," he added.

A joint health statement from the city's primary health trusts said they had made good progress at implementing recommendations made by the report.

Meanwhile, West Midlands Police said one of the recommendations directly related to the force and this had been addressed.

"Over the course of the last 12 months a new public protection department has been created," a spokesman said.

Gordon was sentenced to 15 years and Abuhamza was jailed indefinitely for the public's protection, with a minimum term of seven-and-a-half years.

They have been given the go-ahead to appeal against their sentences.

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'Military junta' rules Zimbabwe, says MDC's Bennett

'Military junta' rules Zimbabwe, says MDC's Bennett

Roy Bennett - 9 November 2009 Mr Bennett said Mr Mugabe was being forced to continue as president by his generals

Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe is little more than the front man for a military junta, a leading white politician has told the BBC.

Roy Bennett said Mr Mugabe remained in office thanks only to a clique of generals who are enriching themselves.

Mr Bennett was acquitted in May on charges of plotting to overthrow Mr Mugabe, but prosecutors are appealing.

He has not yet taken up his post as deputy agriculture minister. His MDC party sees the charges as political.

Related stories

Mr Bennett told the BBC's southern Africa correspondent, Karen Allen, that the outcome of the appeal against him depended on what orders the judiciary received from the "military junta ruling the country".

Mr Bennett is a senior member of Morgan Tsvangirai's Movement for Democratic Change (MDC), which is in a unity government with Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF.

The power-sharing deal was reached after an acrimonious 2008 election, and has helped end the hyper-inflation that had wrecked Zimbabwe's economy.

Mr Bennett said Mr Mugabe had accepted that he lost the election but "it was this military junta that forced him to continue".

He said: "I honestly believe that Robert Mugabe, half the things that are going on he has no idea about."

Zimbabwe's generals were enriching themselves through patronage, Mr Bennett said, and would not loosen their grip on power.

"They have created huge wealth illegally. They have the power through the barrel of a gun.

"This junta will not allow power to be released for the sake of hanging onto that power and wealth that they hold now."

Mr Tsvangirai has said Mr Bennett would be sworn into office when the case against him is finally concluded.

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