1.
Putin-Abe Summit Brings Big Japan-Russia Economic Projects
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Dec
16, 2016
Japan
and Russia are stepping up cooperation as Russian President Vladimir
Putin pursues opportunities in fast growing Asian markets for
his country's vast Far East. Many of the dozens of deals finalized during his
visit to Japan this week involve the energy sector, and most are projects
linked to some of both countries' largest corporations.
Here
are details of some expanding areas of Japanese-Russian cooperation:
NUCLEAR ENERGY
The
Japanese government and Rosatom State Nuclear Energy Corp. agreed on
cooperation in helping with the clean-up at from the 2011 disaster at the
Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant, including radioactive waste management
and possible decommissioning. The two sides already have been discussing
working together on uranium exploration and mining; design, construction and
operation of light water reactors; waste processing and management; nuclear
safety including radiation protection and environmental control; research and
application of radioisotopes and radiation; other areas based on additional
written agreements between the parties, Rosatom says.
OIL AND GAS EXPLORATION
Russia
enjoys a trade surplus with Japan thanks to exports of oil and natural gas.
In addition to oil and natural gas projects already underway in Sakhalin and
Eastern Siberia, the two countries agreed on cooperation in exploration and
development and on expanding joint work on wind and coal co-generation
projects. Rosneft said a consortium of Japanese companies including Japan Oil,
Gas and Metals National Corp. has agreed to jointly pursue exploration,
development and production of oil and gas in the Sea of Japan off Russia's coast.
The Kyodo News Service reported major Japanese trading houses also plan to
invest in a $40 billion natural gas field project on the Gydan Peninsula near
the Arctic Ocean, working with Russia's Novatek.
CHEMICALS
Russia's
Rosneft and Japan's Marubeni Corporation and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd.
agreed to study the feasibility of building a gas chemical facility in Russia's
Far East that would be built using advanced Japanese technologies and supported
by Japanese financing.
INVESTMENT
The
Russian Direct Investment Fund and Japan Bank for International Cooperation
agreed to set up a Russia-Japan Investment Fund to identify projects that would
promote economic, trade and investment cooperation. Each side agreed to invest
$500 million in the fund, which is intended to operate independently in joint
projects to be launched beginning next year.
DISPUTED ISLANDS
The
two governments agreed to consider ways to cooperate in jointly developing
islands claimed by both countries in a territorial dispute left over from World
War II that is preventing the two sides from signing a peace treaty.
Possibilities include modernizing the fisheries industry and expanding tourism
in the region, north of Japan's northernmost main island of Hokkaido. But the
dispute itself is an obstacle, and it's unclear if the two sides can find a way
to finesse a disagreement over what laws would prevail in such projects, which
would be on islands long controlled by Russia.
2. What a Fed rate hike means for you (get ready to pay more)
USA TODAY December 16, 2016
The
Federal Reserve’s decision Wednesday to lift its benchmark short-term interest
rate by a quarter percentage point is likely to have a domino effect across the
economy as it gradually pushes up rates for everything from mortgages and
credit card rates to small business loans.
The
Fed forecast slightly faster increases the next few years amid the prospect of
a massive government stimulus, signaling three similar hikes next year.. There
are a couple of wild cards in the mix that could have a bigger effect on
borrowing costs than the Fed.
President-elect
Donald Trump’s plan to cut taxes and spend up to $1 trillion to upgrade
infrastructure, combined with forecasts of rising oil prices, have driven up
inflation expectations and long-term bond yields in recent weeks. Such factors
could play a significant role again next year.
“Fiscal policy may have a
bigger say” than Fed interest rate decisions, says John Canally, chief economic
strategist for LPL Financial. That would mark a shift from prior years, when
Fed action had an outsized effect on a slowly growing economy.
Still,
the Fed’s decision to lift the federal funds rate, which is what banks charge
each other for overnight loans, could have at least some effects on consumers:
Mortgages
Thirty-year
fixed mortgage rates have climbed above 4% since late October, costing the
holder of a $200,000 mortgage about $75 more a month. That’s because 10- year
Treasury bond yields have jumped about a percentage point since September, partly
on Trump’s fiscal stimulus plan and faster inflation forecasts.
The
Fed’s key short-term rate affects mortgages and other long-term rates only
indirectly. Wednesday’s anticipated hike was priced into such mortgage rates,
but three more quarter-point rate bumps next year could lift mortgage rates by
a total of an additional 3/8 of a point, says Greg McBride, chief economist of
Bankrate.com. That would mean an additional $44 a month in payments on that
$200,000 mortgage.
On
the margins, that could discourage a small portion of home purchases, says
Steve Rick, chief economist of CUNA Mutual Group. That effect could be more
than offset by a tight labor market and faster-growing economy pushing up
average wage gains, allowing homebuyers to easily afford the added cost,
Canally says.
10 ways to lower your mortgage rate
Other
factors may loom large. If Congress fails to approve Trump’s fiscal stimulus,
for example, long-term rates could fall regardless of the Fed, while a
faster-growing economy and higher inflation could drive up borrowing costs.
Adjustable-rate
mortgages, by contrast, typically are modified annually and probably would be
affected more significantly by four Fed hikes over the next year (including
Wednesday’s), McBride says. Adjustable rates, he says, could rise about
three-quarters of a percentage point in that period, increasing the monthly
payment of the $200,000 mortgage by $84.
Auto loans
Typical
five-year auto loans will be more directly influenced by a quarter-point
increase in the Fed’s key short-term rate, with a 4.25% car loan rate rising by
a similar quarter-point, or $3 a month, McBride says. Wednesday’s move and
three similar rate increases next year would increase the monthly payment for a
new $25,000 car by a total $12.
“Interest rates are going
to be a non-issue,” he says.
3. Woman has baby using ovary frozen in childhood
BBC
14 December 2016
Media
captionMoaza Al Matrooshi: "It is a miracle that I have my son in my
hand"
A
woman has given birth in London after doctors restored her fertility using
frozen ovarian tissue removed when she was a young child.
The
24-year-old is thought to be the first in the world to have a baby after having
an ovary frozen before the onset of puberty.
Moaza
Al Matrooshi, whose son was delivered at the privately-run Portland Hospital
yesterday, told the BBC: "It's like a miracle.
"We've
been waiting so long for this result - a healthy baby."
Her
doctor, Sara Matthews, a consultant in gynaecology and fertility, said she was
overjoyed for the family - and delighted by the hope it offered to others too.
"This
is a huge step forward. We know that ovarian tissue transplantation works for
older women, but we've never known if we could take tissue from a child, freeze
it and make it work again."
Doctors
say it will give hope to many other girls and young women who risk losing the
chance of motherhood as a result of treatment for cancer, blood or immune
disorders.
Frozen for the future
Moaza
Al Matrooshi, who is from Dubai, was born with beta thalassaemia, an inherited
blood disorder that is fatal if untreated.
She
needed chemotherapy, which damages the ovaries, before receiving a bone marrow
transplant from her brother at Great Ormond Street Hospital in London.
So,
prior to treatment, when she was nine years old, she had her right ovary
removed in an operation in Leeds, where the tissue was frozen.
Fragments
of her ovarian tissue were mixed with cryo-protective agents and slowly reduced
in temperature to minus 196C, before being stored under liquid nitrogen.
Last
year, surgeons in Denmark transplanted five slivers of the ovarian tissue back
into her body - four were stitched on to her failed left ovary and one on to
the side of her uterus.
Moaza
had been going through the menopause. But after the transplant, her hormone
levels began returning to normal, she began ovulating and her fertility was
restored.
In
order to maximise the chances of having a child, Moaza and her husband Ahmed
underwent IVF treatment.