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A new Round-Up has been posted at TOD:Canada.
Today's headlines lead with coverage of the on-going crisis in the debt markets, and an explanation of the financial engineering underlying much of the global liquidity bubble. Debt ratings have not been adjusted to reflect current market conditions, meaning that 'asset' valuations are over-stated. No institution wants to force asset sales for fear of revealing just how much real valuations differ from nominal ones, but eventually such a sale will occur - with the potential to cause an abrupt repricing of a wide range of 'assets' (many of which will actualy be revealed to be essentially worthless). Leverage will magnify the losses, leading to a very serious financial crisis. One estimate puts the potential losses, once assets are eventually marked to market, at 20 times the sum involved in the LTCM crisis in 1998 - so far, and getting worse by the day.
The Round-Up is also convering the Canadian energy scene, as well as environmental and international news, in that order. Oil companies leaving Venezuela and aiming for the oil sands are finding that all is not clear sailing, while China is entering the oil sands for the first time. Nunavut seeks control over future oil and gas revenues, NL wants to bypass Quebec in selling electricity to the US, and the slow down in natural gas drilling is hurting frontier communities in Alberta and BC.
There is a LaRouche link in there! Have you no shame? Have you no sense of decency, sir?
We live in times where LaRouche madness is matched by our current administration. Strange days indeed...
Chinese billionaire Li Ka-shing bought a controlling interest in Husky oil years ago. Since then there have been other Chinese interests in the oilsands. The Chinese tried to buy Noranda Mining but was blocked by the Canadian government in 2004. CNOOC of China bought MEG Energy in 2005 for its oilsands holdings. Some multinational oil companies owned oil and gas blocks in China.
Technically, that is, in a jurisdictional sense, Li Ka-shing is not a 'Chinese' billionaire but a Hong Kong SAR billionaire. The legal systems are entirely different. Hong Kong law is pretty much identical to English law, for obvious reasons.
It always galls me when people refer to Li Ka-shing as a 'Chinese' billionaire, unless they mean that designation in a simple ethnic sense. In political and economic terms, Li Ka-shing is a product of Hong Kong, not China.
It is not really right to raise Li Ka-shing and then talk about 'the Chinese'. It's like saying a Singaporean billionaire has bought something up, and then concluding that Beijing is on the march.
Hong Kong is no longer a British colony. It is under Chinese rule, although it retains some financial freedoms.
One factory in China paid a monthly wage of "900-2,500 yuan (US$118-$326)," 6/2007. That is more than the minimum wage. Company owners were able to pool capital and buy businesses abroad, including oilfields.
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/IF06Cb01.html
Husky Oil has Canadian oil sands leases and offshore conventional oil projects.