Miscellaneous News

Shadow_Whomel

Junior Member
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❌ US Def Sec Lloyd Austin announces ‘Operation Prosperity Guardian’ to respond to “reckless Houthi attacks” from Yemen in Red Sea.




The group will include the UK, Bahrain, Canada, France, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Seychelles and Spain.

@DDGeopolitics

Notably, Bahrain is the only arab country they managed to pressure into participating. From the Guardian article I posted yesterday :
oof Looks we get the first runner. Spain denies US claims it will help partol Red sea
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Looks like the Pentagon isn't happy either.
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AntiDK

New Member
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Toshiba delisted after 74 years, faces future with new owners​

Toshiba was delisted on Wednesday after 74 years on the Tokyo exchange, following a decade of upheaval and scandal that brought down one of Japan's biggest brands and ushered in a buyout and an uncertain future.

The conglomerate is being taken private by a group of investors led by private equity firm Japan Industrial Partners(JIP) that also includes financial services firm Orix, utility Chubu Electric Power and chipmaker Rohm.

The $14 billion takeover puts Toshiba in domestic hands after protracted battles with overseas activist investors that paralysed the maker of batteries, chips, and nuclear and defence equipment.

Toshiba "will now take a major step toward a new future with a new shareholder," the company said in a statement, adding that it would appreciate continuous understanding and support from its stakeholders.

Toshiba shares ended Tuesday, their last trading day, at 4,590 yen, down 0.1% from the previous day.

Although it is not clear what shape Toshiba will ultimately take under its new owners, Chief Executive Taro Shimada, who is staying in his role following the buyout, is expected to focus on high-margin digital services.

JIP's support for Shimada had derailed its earlier plan to team up with a state-backed fund. Some industry insiders say splitting up Toshiba may be a better option.

"Toshiba's difficulties ultimately were caused by a combination of bad strategic decisions and bad luck," said Damian Thong, head of Japan research at Macquarie Capital Securities.

"I hope that through divestitures, Toshiba's assets and human talent can find new homes where their full potential can be unleashed."

Japan's government will be keeping a close watch. The company employees around 106,000 people and some of its operations are seen as critical to national security.

Four JIP executives will join the board, as well as one each from investors Orix and Chubu Electric. The new management team will be joined by a senior adviser from Toshiba's main lender, Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group.

Toshiba has begun moving already, teaming up with Rohm to invest $2.7 billion in manufacturing facilities to jointly produce power chips.

The company needs to get out of lower-margin businesses and develop stronger commercial strategies for some of its advanced technologies, said Ulrike Schaede, a professor of Japanese business at the University of California, San Diego.

"If management can figure out a way to let those engineers truly engage in breakthrough innovation activities, they can emerge as an important player," Schaede said.

"They're a deep tech company."

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pmc

Major
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Countries in Scandinavia, Austria-Hungary and Germany become wealthy without much empires. German GDP in 1900 not much less than UK. Poland also did well for its population. I will even say that intellectual talent of Central/Eastern Europe was much higher than French/British who had empires. who do you think pushed United States ahead?.
Europe has some of the oldest continuous universities. without that system they would not be able to exploit natural resources in other places. you can blame the universities nothing else.

where Noah is not correct about Ukraine. there is element of resource and this can become the main reason later on depending on latest scientific methods of resource development and estimation.

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The road to Ukraine (7) The struggle for resources and wealth​

 

gelgoog

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
"Toshiba's difficulties ultimately were caused by a combination of bad strategic decisions and bad luck," said Damian Thong, head of Japan research at Macquarie Capital Securities.
It wasn't bad luck. It was pure sabotage. US company Westinghouse was hiding massive debts in a construction company they owned that was building nuclear power plants in the US. Westinghouse "neglected" to report this to Toshiba when it was acquired by them. Toshiba ended up paying an inflated price for Westinghouse, had to foot the bill for those debts that they didn't create, and now Westinghouse is back in US hands again. At the same time US companies like Bain, Western Digital, and Micron, are circling over Toshiba's storage business cash cow like vultures.

Sure, there was an impact from the Fukushima disaster forestalling Japan's planned investment into nuclear power, and their laptop division didn't do as well as expected. But this wasn't enough to make them go bankrupt.

China was much smarter in that they got a non-exclusive license to Westinghouse's AP1000 nuclear reactor without actually having to own any of Westinghouse's massive liabilities.

Toshiba still has a competitive VNAND business, they were the inventors of Flash memory to begin with, and their hard disks are probably the best in the market right now. So they have a viable business in storage. I also expect Japan to go back to building nuclear reactors eventually.
 

henrik

Senior Member
Registered Member
It wasn't bad luck. It was pure sabotage. US company Westinghouse was hiding massive debts in a construction company they owned that was building nuclear power plants in the US. Westinghouse "neglected" to report this to Toshiba when it was acquired by them. Toshiba ended up paying an inflated price for Westinghouse, had to foot the bill for those debts that they didn't create, and now Westinghouse is back in US hands again. At the same time US companies like Bain, Western Digital, and Micron, are circling over Toshiba's storage business cash cow like vultures.

Sure, there was an impact from the Fukushima disaster forestalling Japan's planned investment into nuclear power, and their laptop division didn't do as well as expected. But this wasn't enough to make them go bankrupt.

China was much smarter in that they got a non-exclusive license to Westinghouse's AP1000 nuclear reactor without actually having to own any of Westinghouse's massive liabilities.

Toshiba still has a competitive VNAND business, they were the inventors of Flash memory to begin with, and their hard disks are probably the best in the market right now. So they have a viable business in storage. I also expect Japan to go back to building nuclear reactors eventually.

Is is going to be the same situation with Nippon Steel buying US Steel?
 

gelgoog

Lieutenant General
Registered Member
Is is going to be the same situation with Nippon Steel buying US Steel?
Probably. Russian billionaires also bought US steel mills at one point but it was a money sink. They eventually sold them back to US investors.

If I was a foreign company I wouldn't invest in any strategic business sectors in the US. If it is a good deal, it will be blocked by CFIUS, and if it is a crummy deal you will waste a bundle of money. With luck a best you will cut your losses later without also going bankrupt like happened with Toshiba.
 
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