The Business Finance Store Discusses Supply Chain Involvement to Improve Small Business Sales - YAHOO! The Business Finance Store Discusses Supply Chain Involvement to Improve Small Business Sales - YAHOO!

Monday, June 11, 2012

The Business Finance Store Discusses Supply Chain Involvement to Improve Small Business Sales - YAHOO!

The Business Finance Store Discusses Supply Chain Involvement to Improve Small Business Sales - YAHOO!

The Business Finance Store discusses how small businesses can increase sales by integrating themselves into larger supply chains.

Santa Ana, CA (PRWEB) June 11, 2012

Lockheed Martin signed a strategic enterprise agreement with Arrow Electronics, the Sacramento Bee reported. The agreement will cover the procurement of over 22,000 electronic components in missile, satellite, tactical fighter crafts and other products developed by Lockheed Martin. This agreement can serve as a lesson for any small business that sells its product or service to other businesses. Keeping up to date with supply chain development can be beneficial to anyone looking to grow their business. In the recent blog post “Hook Up to a Supply Chain: Strategies for Today's Global Business World,” The Business Finance Store discusses how small businesses can increase sales by integrating themselves into larger supply chains.

For many small businesses that offer core products and services, a winning strategy is to simply become part of a larger corporate supply chain. Think of corporate buyers as huge potential customers. Read more about how to achieve small business success at The Business Finance Store Blog.

The Business Finance Store is a business financing and consulting firm that offers customized Business Financial Solutions. Seasoned professionals offer assistance in a variety of financial solutions to help small businesses succeed such as: Business Financial Solutions, Legal Solutions, and Accounting Solutions.

The staff at The Business Finance Store understands that starting and growing a business is an exciting time. They keep it exciting by taking care of some of the most difficult aspects, by providing legal advice, helping with vital responsibilities like accounting & bookkeeping, and by obtaining business finance. They can quickly and easily guide entrepreneurs through many different complicated processes and put them on the path to success.

For 10 years The Business Finance Store has been helping startups and other small businesses legally structure their companies, find the right franchises, get the funding they need, and achieve the American Dream of owning their own successful business. Since expanding nationwide in 2007, they have helped thousands of companies and have funded over $60 Million in business credit lines, not including SBA loans. The Business Finance Store sees limitless potential in the current climate, and looks forward to many strong years of growth to come. Take some time to review their services, and give them a call.

For more information, or a free, no-obligation analysis of your business needs, visit The Business Finance Store website:http:// http://www.businessfinancestore.com. A member of their professional staff will contact you to discuss your business' short and long-term goals. Whatever you need, The Business Finance Store is there.

Kelly Rye
The Business Finance Store
(949) 777-5959
Email Information




FOREX-Euro gains on relief at Spain aid deal - Reuters UK

Mon Jun 11, 2012 9:33am BST

* Gains seen limited ahead of Greek elections

* Details of bailout deal remain unclear

* China data better than feared, also helps risk assets

By Jessica Mortimer

LONDON, June 11 (Reuters) - The euro rose on Monday after Spain secured aid for its banks, allaying some of the concerns about the country's debt problems, but the currency's gains were seen limited as investors were cautious ahead of elections in Greece at the weekend.

The euro zone agreed to lend its fourth-largest economy up to 100 billion euros to reassure investors and prevent a run on banks.

But traders and analysts said the details of the bailout deal were still unclear and that concerns would remain about Spain's large debt burden given the country's economy remains stagnant.

The euro rose more than 1 percent to hit a three-week high of $1.2672 in Asian trade, pulling away from a near two-year low of $1.2288 hit earlier this month.

However, it ran into selling in the European session and was last up 0.7 percent at $1.2611.

"It is positive that politicians have reacted so quickly and ahead of the Greek elections, and this will hopefully contain the risks within the Spanish banking sector," said Niels Christensen, currency strategist at Nordea in Copenhagen. "But it is not going to boost the Spanish economy so there is still a mountain to climb to control the debt situation.

"The euro will continue to be vulnerable ... poor economic data and low growth or recession is the worst scenario for dealing with a debt crisis".

Technical analysts said further gains could see the euro rise towards $1.2837, its 50 percent retracement of its decline from March peak of $1.3386 to June 1's two-year low. However, many traders were sceptical and said it was unlikely to rise beyond $1.2750.

Against the yen, the single currency rose to 100.90 yen , its highest level in more than two weeks, before retracing to trade up 0.8 percent at 100.25 yen.

"Euro zone leaders rose to the occasion. They had no choice. The Spanish bailout means Europe will not permit 'runs' to sink their banking system," said David Kotok, chairman of Cumberland Advisors.

Better-than-expected data out of China over the weekend also boosted riskier assets, helping the euro.

The data was not as bearish as many traders had feared following Beijing's first interest rate cut since the global financial crisis on Thursday.

GREEK ELECTIONS

Traders warned optimism would be temporary given caution before Greek elections on June 17, where the result could intensify worries about whether Greece could leave the euro. Parties that support and oppose the debt-stricken country's international bailout are neck-and-neck in opinion polls.

With the terms of the Spanish deal still not clear, there were also worries that other countries which have received a bailout -- Greece, Portugal and Ireland -- may protest that Spain was offered better terms than they were.

"If the euro zone will have much looser conditions for Spain, then countries like Ireland will probably call for the same conditions as well. It's not going to be easy to decide on those details," said Seiya Nakajima, chief economist at Itochu Corp in Tokyo.

Underscoring the prevailing bearish sentiment, bets against the euro surged to a record high in the week to June 5, while net long U.S. dollar positions extended gains, according to the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

"I don't think people will take off short euro bets ahead of the weekend and the Greek elections," Nordea's Christensen said.

The higher-yielding and riskier Australian dollar was up 0.6 percent against the U.S. dollar at $0.9968.

The dollar index was down 0.6 percent at 82.022 but above an earlier 2-1/2-week-low of 81.785. (Additional reporting by Antoni Slodkowski in Tokyo; Editing by Toby Chopra)



Debt crisis: Relieved markets soar as eurozone shores up Spain's struggling banks - Daily Telegraph

Simon Denham, head of Capital Spreads, pointed out that uncertainty also remained for investors around how the Spanish deal will work.

"Equity investors are breathing a huge sigh of relief as European indices jump on the open and even higher than our original estimates however there are still lots of unanswered questions about how this particular bailout will work and then of course whether it will prove to be the right solution," he said.

"If history is anything to go by we have seen that bailing out banks doesn’t work in the short term as we only have to see the struggling share prices of our own nationalised banks."

Jeremy Batstone-Carr, chief economist at Charles Stanley, was similarly sceptical. "Stock markets have risen but we fear that investors have yet fully to embrace what the Spanish bailout might mean," he said.

"Where will the money to fund Spain’s banks come from? Certainly not the IMF and unlikely the European Stability Mechanism. The ESM does not formally exist yet and importantly, has yet to be ratified in Germany the country seen by many as Europe’s key underwriter."



Money back if Benzema scores first in France v England - Bettingpro.com

[getrss.in: unable to retrieve full-text content]

Blue Square Mobile have confirmed a money back promotion for the tonight’s Group D showdown between France and England. France and England are the two teams favoured to progress to the last-16 of Euro 2012, after they were drawn alongside Sweden and co ...

Mobile money plan stumbles at start in Haiti - Times-Leader

(AP) Getting money in Haiti can be a harrowing experience: Bank branches are few, most of them are in the capital and a simple transaction can take half a day. Cash machines are scarce as well, and often broken or empty. And then there are the thieves who often wait nearby in hopes of finding a mark.

So aid agencies trying to remake Haiti after a catastrophic earthquake are promoting a new way to bypass banks altogether: easy money transfers by cellphone. The U.S. government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation have pumped millions of dollars into the plan, which lets people save and move money in mobile phone accounts and quickly withdraw it at a network of retail stores around the country.

As yet, though, few Haitians are buying the idea, which has become one of many post-quake projects to fall short of expectations and a reminder of how hard it is to change a society that has been repeatedly set back by political upheaval and natural disasters.

"I'm not going to invest my money in something I don't see," said James Alexis, a 33-year-old truck driver, as he stood in line at a bank in downtown Port-au-Prince, a wait he expected would take two hours. "It could be a trick."

Backers admit adoption has been slower than expected, though they remain optimistic it will expand, in part because so many Haitians rely on cellphones, often to find jobs. Some 800,000 people initially registered for the service, even if only about 22,000 people regularly use it.

The service "has gone on in the face of political violence, political instability, cholera, gas shortages, you name it, and we're this far," said Greta Greathouse, director of a U.S. Agency for International Development program to improve financial services in Haiti. "Does it mean we're there yet? No. We want it to be sustainable and there's a lot of work that needs to be done."

A spokesman for the Gates Foundation in Seattle, Chris Williams, said by telephone that the project is a "work in progress" but that it's going well.

"It's not a huge surprise to find some disconnect between the number of registered users and currently active users," Williams said. "It takes some time to build up to scale."

The project began months after the January 2010 earthquake when the Gates Foundation announced that it was creating the Haiti Mobile Money Initiative with a $10 million donation. USAID contributed another $5 million for technical assistance.

The idea was to help the 90 percent of Haitians who don't use banks by replicating a mobile money-transfer system that has gained popularity in countries such as Kenya, Uganda and the Philippines.

Two local cellphone companies, Digicel Group Ltd. and Voila, rushed to compete for the money by setting up their own mobile money transfer systems, and so far have been awarded a total of $6.8 million from the foundation.

The system is essentially an account linked to the telephone. Users can transfer up to $250 at a time to another subscriber, who can then withdraw the money from a network of shops ranging from auto-parts stores to internet cafes. As much as $1,500 can be transferred in a month. So far, international transfers are not allowed.

Digicel-Haiti's former CEO, Maarten Boute, said at a Barcelona conference in February that it wasn't easy to explain the system.

"Our main lesson learned is how difficult it is to educate customers," said Boute, who is now a senior adviser to the Jamaica-based company. "When we launched the service we assumed it would be something like selling a mobile phone, where you stick a mobile phone into someone's hand and almost anyone can start using it quite quickly because it's very easy to understand. With a mobile banking service or a mobile money service it's not quite that easy."

The Christian charity World Vision joined the program, seeing it as a simple, cash-free way to pay small rental subsidies to help people move out of the gloomy settlements that sprang up after the earthquake.

But many people didn't understand how to use the technology and were leery of it, said Keith Chibafa, who oversees the project for World Vision. The nonprofit registered 6,000 subscribers for the service, but only 1,000 actually use it.

Confidence was undermined on one occasion when residents of a camp in the city of Croix-des-Bouquets, outside the capital, went to collect their payments and were told there was no money.

"We did have an agent running out of cash," Chibafa said. "It was a problem, a serious problem."

Cab driver Ernst Figaro said he doesn't trust the new service any more than the banks, which are not known for their customer service.

"The electronic system in Haiti is not standing on its feet yet," Figaro said while taking a break from work on a park bench. "I just don't trust putting my money in this system."

Others, such as Wilner Destina, have become converts. The 40-year-old street painter signed up six months ago because he was eager to avoid the frustrating hour-long lines at commercial banks. "It allows us to do (money) transfers with ease," Destina said outside a Digicel store in downtown Port-au-Prince after sending the equivalent of $50 to a friend in Gonaives, a port city 110 kilometers (68 miles) northwest of Haiti's capital.

David Sharpe, Digicel's director of products and services, hopes to find more people like Destina, attracting them with features such as a lottery played on the cellphone and, later, international wire transfers.

More users will arrive through a new government program that will use the service to make transfers to as many as 100,000 mothers who keep their children in school.

With the recent acquisition of Voila, Sharpe joked in an interview that mobile banking will take off in the coming years. "I'll put 10 bucks down that we beat all of your expectations."

Associated Press

No comments:

Post a Comment