Saturday, March 28, 2015

Top 50 Cities for Global Finance

Source: http://www.longfinance.net/images/GFCI17_23March2015.pdf 


  1.  New York 
  2.  London 
  3.  Hong Kong 
  4.  Singapore 
  5.  Tokyo 
  6.  Zurich 
  7.  Seoul 
  8.  San Francisco 
  9.  Chicago 
  10.  Boston 
  11.  Toronto 
  12.  Washington DC 
  13.  Geneva 
  14.  Riyadh 
  15.  Vancouver 
  16.  Shanghai 
  17.  Luxembourg 
  18.  Montreal 
  19.  Frankfurt 
  20.  Doha 
  21.  Sydney 
  22.  Shenzhen 
  23.  Dubai 
  24.  Busan 
  25.  Taipei 
  26.  Abu Dhabi 
  27.  Tel Aviv 
  28.  Melbourne 
  29.  Beijing 
  30.  Munich 
  31.  Osaka 
  32.  Johannesburg 
  33.  Calgary 
  34.  British Virgin Islands 
  35. Vienna 
  36.  Stockholm 
  37.  Paris Kuala 
  38. Lumpur 
  39.  Cayman Islands 
  40.  Amsterdam 
  41.  Bermuda 
  42.  Casablanca 
  43.  Sao Paulo 
  44.  Istanbul 
  45.  Gibraltar 
  46.  Bahrain 
  47.  Rio de Janeiro 
  48.  Panama 
  49. Almaty 
  50. Bangkok

Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Russian superhighway halfway across the globe

See http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3009708/Plans-proposed-ambitious-12-400-mile-road-Russia-link-Britain-U-S.html

"Britain could be linked with America by road as part of an ambitious project to create the world's longest superhighway spanning half the circumference of the globe. Proposals have been put forward to build the mega route stretching about 12,400 miles from the western edge of Russia to the Bering Strait where the country nudges Alaska. Linking into existing road networks in Europe and Asia, for the first time it would allow travellers a proper highway to drive all way from the UK to the United States. A Trans-Siberian rail link as well as oil and gas pipes would run alongside the highway, and plans have been mooted already for a rail tunnel connecting the far flung Russian region of Chukotka - where football tycoon Roman Abramovich once served as governor - and Alaska. This new scheme is seen as a way of turning Russia into a global transportation hub, a bridge between Europe, Asia and North America, so revitalising the Russian economy and attracting new tourism. Vladimir Fortov, the Head of the Russian Academy of Science, recently put forward the uncosted plan dubbed the Trans-Eurasian Belt Development (TEPR) to President Vladimir Putin. 'The project is very ambitious and expensive, but it will solve many problems in the development of the vast region,' he said, according to The Siberian Times."

Monday, March 23, 2015

Best Airports in the World

Source: http://www.worldairportawards.com/main/2015_airportawards_announced.html

1    Singapore Changi Airport
2    Incheon International Airport
3    Munich Airport
4    Hong Kong International Airport
5    Tokyo International Airport (Haneda)
6    Zurich Airport
7    Central Japan International Airport (Nagoya)
8    London Heathrow Airport
9    Amsterdam Schiphol Airport
10  Beijing Capital International Airport


For the rest of the top 100 see: http://www.worldairportawards.com/Awards/world_airport_rating.html

Underground Tunnels of Chicago

There are six separate tunnel systems under Chicago.

 See http://www.wbez.org/series/curious-city/six-tunnels-hidden-under-chicago%E2%80%99s-loop-107791
http://www.chicagodetours.com/images/chicago-pedway-map-detours.pdf

Friday, March 20, 2015

Seven-year cycle predicts 2015 collapse

1966: Stock market collapse, Vietnam War, protests

1973:  Oil embargo (Oct), Yom Kippur war, Stocks collapse, recession

1980:  Inflation, Iran-Iraq war, Silver panic, Stocks crash, recession

1987:  Black Monday (Oct.), largest single-day crash ever

1994:  Bond collapse, DJIA bear market, war

2001:  Stock market crash, 911 (Sept.), recession

2008:  Stock market collapse 9/29 (Sept.), recession

2015:

In 1966, the Vietnam War was escalating and the US-USSR Space Race was also heating up. The economy and the stock market were in a bull phase and LBJ was president. He inherited a growing economy with low inflation, low unemployment and a stock market that was in a long-term uptrend. Hard to imagine but the national debt was relatively small. Additionally, in 1965 the GDP (4%) was higher than the unemployment rate (3.3%) the reverse of what we've seen in recent years. The FED kept interest rates low (1 to 2.5% range), in the post-WWII years. That fueled both economic and financial market growth through the 1950's and early '60s. Then as 1966 began the FED started tightening the credit reins by raising interest rates. Still, everything looked rosy as the year got underway the DJIA hit a new high. Then it pulled back briefly only to rack up another high in March. But thereafter the Dow collapsed some 22% by yearend.

http://english.pravda.ru/business/finance/20-03-2015/130081-seven_year_cycle_collapse-0/

See also Seven Year Cycle Theory

New Megacity in Saudi Arabia



Saudi Arabia is pushing ahead with plans to complete building work on a new megacity in the desert. The King Abdullah Economic City, or KAEC (pronounced 'cake'), will be slightly larger than Washington DC and home to approximately two million residents. Covering 70 square miles, the metropolis is costing £67 billion ($100 billion) and lies 100km from Jeddah, the commercial hub of the kingdom, near the Red Sea.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-3004044/New-Saudi-Arabia-67-billion-megacity-size-Washington-DC.html

Friday, March 13, 2015

Top 40 Cities in the World

See: http://www.knightfrank.com/resources/wealthreport2015/wealthpdf/04-wealth-report-global-cities-infog-all.pdf


  1. London
  2. New York
  3. Hong Kong
  4. Singapore
  5. Shanghai
  6. Miami
  7. Paris
  8. Dubai
  9. Beijing
  10. Zurich
  11. Tokyo
  12. Toronto
  13. Geneva
  14. Sydney
  15. Taipei
  16. Frankfurt
  17. Moscow
  18. Madrid
  19. San Francisco
  20. Vienna
  21. Milan
  22. Los Angeles
  23. Jakarta
  24. Munich
  25. Amsterdam
  26. Mumbai
  27. Dublin
  28. Johannesburg
  29. Istanbul
  30. Kuala Lumpur
  31. Sao Paolo
  32. Mexico City 
  33. Berlin
  34. Washington DC
  35. Boston
  36. Cape Town
  37. Auckland
  38. Buenos Aires
  39. Rio de Janeiro
  40. Tel Aviv
Runner-Up Cities (number of UHNWI):
Osaka (1471)
Seoul (1356)
Hamburg (862)
Chicago (827)
Houston (805)
Dallas (582)
Riyadh (549)
Montreal (534)
Dusseldorf (531)
Oslo (485)
Stockholm (479)
Bangkok (466)
Melbourne (456)
Barcelona (438)
Shenzhen (409)
Brussels (351)
Guangzhou (327)
Santiago (315)
Edinburgh
Monaco




Monday, March 9, 2015

Quizas, Quizas, Quizas