High Performance Search Solutions

January 27, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Featured 

Generally speaking, online searches are delivered via some sophisticated algorithms based on huge, centralized indices and stores of cached content. The search technology is one of the most key factors for different kinds of search engines.
Today, driven by the growing demand for better search solutions, the overall performance of search technology is improving at dramatic pace, both in its utmost flexibility in deployment and customization. There are a great number of highly effective and efficient search tools, such as SearchBlox, on the Internet. Some of them are specially tailored for site search, vertical search, as well as embedding in custom applications.
The search engine implications have been greatly broadened as big search service providers are looking to fold in the first generation of personalization technology. It is becoming increasingly easy for online surfers to find the right information they need as well as some real-time feeds.
Are you looking for the latest search technology in the field? Browse online to learn more from the analysts’ opinions, commentaries and customer reviews. Find the content search solutions of high performance in the field to best suits your own needs. Get unparalleled ease of use in deploying, configuring and maintaining the search solution.

Funds Set to Bolster Theatre Plans

January 26, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: News Briefing 

The Natural Theatre Company will host an evening of entertainment next month to help raise money towards a refurbishment project which will see their rehearsal space in Bath transformed.
A total of £100000 has already been raised towards the development plans at the Widcombe Institute but the group is hoping to raise a further £150000 by April.
The plans will see existing facilities updated and create a large mezzanine studio in the roof to provide opportunities for educational theatre for young people.

SocGen Fall Gives Banks the Jitter

January 25, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Business News 

The banking sector suffered an unexpected blow after Societe Generale warned of a £1.2 billion write-down on toxic debt. France’s second-largest bank blamed contrasted signals from the US residential property market for leaving the bank only just in the black.
It now expects to report only a slight profit for the fourth quarter when it posts earnings next month.
The warning spooked investors and Societe shares fell dramatically in early trading, though picked up slightly later in the day.
But the French bank also warned income from corporate and investment banking would fall in the fourth quarter compared with the third. It blamed lower investor activity in November and less favourable market conditions. Despite this, the bank said it was in a favorable position to go into 2010 with confidence, citing a robust financial structure and new management.

No Time to be Going Negative on Equities

January 24, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Economic Outlook 

The reaction of many institutional and retail investors to the dire performance of equities over the past decade, and the equally unwelcome volatility induced by stock markets’ sickening rollercoaster ride, has been a negative one.
Greenwich Associates spoke last week of “strong indications” that many German institutions will not attempt to rebuild significant equity positions but will instead rely more on fixed income.
A week earlier, a survey of European and North American pension funds by bfinance, a consultancy, identified strikingly negative sentiment towards equities on a three-year view, with a net 21% of schemes planning to cut their exposure, even as they eye larger holdings of a swathe of traditional and alternative assets.
And UK pension funds have already set off in this direction, with the average fund having an equity exposure of 44.2% last summer, compared with 54.9% in 2007, according to the National Association of Pension Funds.
While wariness of the recent woeful risk/return dynamics of stock markets is understandable, are investors missing a trick, cutting their allocations just at the point they should be doing the opposite?
Research by Fidelity International suggests stock markets exhibit mean reversion on a decade-by-decade basis. In other words, fallow decades tend to be followed by bountiful ones that are powerful enough to bring the long-term return from equities back to the historic norm.No Time to be Going Negative on Equities

Big Issues to Resolve to Wrap up Directive

January 23, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Politics 

The Spanish Presidency of the European Union has hit the ground running on Europe’s new package of regulations for hedge and private equity funds.
Both the Council of Ministers and the European Parliament have brought out reports suggesting amendments to the original draft for the alternative investment fund management directive; a document published by the Spanish presidency last week summarizes the key differences still to resolve.

Calls for Norway to Go More Passive

January 22, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Economic Outlook 

The Norwegian Government Pension Fund suffered its worst year in 2008, losing NKr633bn or close to a quarter of its value. Critics likened it to gambling.
About NKr80bn of the losses were directly related to active management, which has prompted calls for a more passive investment strategy. In April, Norway’s finance ministry started a broad review on whether to continue active management of the NKr2500bn fund, the world’s second largest sovereign wealth fund.
A new academic report, commissioned by the government in connection with the review, says the fund has been taking “appropriate” risks. But it recommended one notable change: incorporating systematic risk factors, such as volatility and liquidity, into the fund’s benchmark.

SocGen Fall Gives Banks the Jitters

January 21, 2010 by admin · Leave a Comment
Filed under: Business News 

The banking sector suffered an unexpected blow after Societe Generale warned of a £1.2 billion write-down on toxic debt. France’s second-largest bank blamed contrasted signals from the US residential property market for leaving the bank only just in the black.
It now expects to report only a slight profit for the fourth quarter when it posts earnings next month. The warning spooked investors and Societe shares fell by as much as 6% in early trading, although the price picked up slightly later in the day.
The French bank also warned income from corporate and investment banking would fall in the fourth quarter compared with the third. It blamed lower investor activity in November and less favorable market conditions.
Despite this, the bank said it was in a favorable position to go into 2010 with confidence, citing a robust financial structure and new management.

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