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  Nicole Junkermann on achieving goals How to react to the economic crisis? “The best way to face this situation is by working” tells us the german entrepreneur Nicole Junkermann. “It is also the only way to achieve your goals, with perseverance”. Nicole is a successful woman in a world , tech and business, dominated by men. “Fortunately in my professional life I have met many people who have supported me, both men and women, I feel privileged in this regard. We could talk for hours about the different reasons why the technology industry is currently ruled by men, but the reality is that much progress is being made and there are more and more women in key positions “. The passion that drives her to start and manage business is combined with a method: Nicole’s investment model is based on a rigorous and disciplined analysis of the decision-making process, which never leaves instinct aside. When asked how she perfected this ability, Nicole replies that she owes a lot to the people sh...

China not to loose monetary settings

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China's central bank head said on Tuesday that China is not going to follow other countries in significantly loosening monetary settings , adding that has ample options to help prop up slowing growth. People’s Bank of China governor Yi Gang is therefore maintaining its cautious approach to stimulating the economy. The People's Bank of China will avoid a "massive stimulus," Yi Gang said at a news conference. Despite a slew of growth measures since last year, the world’s second-largest economy has yet to stabilize as the Sino-U.S. trade war shows no sign of ending. Analysts expect growth could cool further this quarter from a near 30-year low of 6.2% hit in April-June. Beijing is trying to shore up cooling economic growth amid a tariff war with Washington but is wary of reviving a rise in debt levels that are so high that rating agencies have cut China's credit rating. "Macro-economic policies have significant room to move , especi...

India in trouble, slowest growth in six years

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The indian economy grew at its slowest annual pace in six years in April-June, 5%. Confidence in the Indian economy is giving way to uncertainty as growth in the labor-intensive manufacturing sector has come to a near standstill, braking to 0.6% in the last quarter from 12.1% in the same period a year earlier. Many economists believe Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s signature economic policies are at least partly to blame. A surprise demonetization in 2018 and the hasty rollout of a goods and services tax were dire blows to manufacturing, especially the auto industry. The fourth largest in the world, it’s a pillar of the Indian economy, contributing 7.5% to the country’s GDP. The industry employs almost 37 million people and is on its way to shedding as many as a million jobs in the months ahead because of declining sales, according to the Auto Component Manufacturers Association of India. Car deliveries in August dropped 41% from a year earlier, truck and bus sales fell 39% an...

Powell: “No recession in sight”

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Fed Chairman Jerome Powell pushed back against perceptions that the U.S. economy was tilting into a recession, while leaving the door open to further interest-rate cuts to keep the country’s record economic expansion on track. Speaking Friday in Zurich, Powell said consumer spending and support from monetary policy should help deliver economic growth between 2% and 2.5% this year. His remarks followed a mixed August jobs report and other readings on the economy that show fallout from President Donald Trump’s trade disputes. “The most likely outlook for our economy remains a favorable one with moderate growth, a strong labor market and inflation moving back up close to our 2% goal,’’ Powell said during a question and answer session. “All that said, there are significant risks and we’ve been monitoring those, including slowing global growth, uncertainty around trade policy, and also persistently low inflation.” The chairman’s remarks sought to counter pessimism building in the fin...

Nicole Junkermann business mentor

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Nicole Junkermann is a London-based investor, entrepreneur and business mentor. Her investment career began in the sports sector. In 1998, she co-founded Winamax, a football gaming portal. From 2002 to 2011, she was a strategic investor and Vice-Chairman of the sports and media company, Infront. In 2007, she founded United in Sports, the world’s first private equity fund focusing on sports. From sports to experimental technology Since 2011, however, she has returned to her roots in digital innovation and experimental technology – areas like robotics, genomics, virtual reality and artificial intelligence – and media rights, generally. Her principal investment vehicle is today NJF Capital Ltd, which currently has over 30 companies in its portfolio. NJF Capital serves as a bridge between traditional business and industry-defining technologies and brings a deep understanding of business strategy , entrepreneurial know-how and a wide network across business and government. In add...

Warren Buffett's philosophy

Warren Buffett has consistently ranked highly on Forbes' list of billionaires. It is not surprising that Warren Buffett's  investment strategy  has reached mythical proportions. Buffet follows several important tenets and an  investment philosophy  that is widely followed around the globe. Buffett follows the  Benjamin Graham  school of  value investing . Value investors look for securities with prices that are unjustifiably low based on their intrinsic worth. There isn't a universally accepted way to determine intrinsic worth, but it's most often estimated by analyzing a company's fundamentals. Like bargain hunters, the value investor searches for stocks that they believe are  undervalued by the market, or stocks that are valuable but not recognized by the majority of other buyers. Buffett takes this value investing approach to another level. Many value investors do not support the  efficient market hypo...

Trump's Fed picks: Waller and Shelton

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After a yearlong assault on the Federal Reserve and its chairman, President Donald Trump has tapped two wildly different economists to the central bank’s board who seemingly have one important thing in common. They’re both likely to support the president’s call for lower interest rates. One, Christopher Waller, is largely a conventional choice. Drawn from within the Fed’s own ranks, he’s been consistent in his calls for a more dovish approach over the years. The other, Judy Shelton, has spent decades outside mainstream economics and recently appears to have completed a  metamorphosis  from proponent of returning to the gold standard -- a concept broadly espoused by those who feel monetary policy is too lax -- to an advocate of the need for more stimulus. “It seems like both are going to be in favor of lower rates, and sooner rather than later,” said Kathleen Bostjancic, an economist at Oxford Economics in New York. “They are much more dovish, and obvious...