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Woodley said he knows restructuring is necessary, but he hopes the British government will now step in to help GM maintain its Vauxhall business. British Business Secretary Peter Mandelson said the pearl jewelry government would support GM's decision if it is sustainable. He said he wants to discuss GM's plans with the company. GM promised to work with all the European labor unions on a biwa pearl plan for Opel's restructuring. "While strained, the business environment in Europe has improved," said GM President and Chief Executive Fritz Henderson. "At the same time, GM's overall financial health and stability have improved significantly over the past few months, giving us confidence that the akoya pearl European business can be successfully restructured." | ||
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Opel is a German automaker that GM has owned since 1929, except for a period during Germany's Nazi era. The initial plans to sell Opel called for Magna -- along with Russia's Sberbank -- to pearl jewelry take over 55% of Opel. Opel's employees would own another 10%, leaving GM with just 35%. The German government was involved in intense negotiations with GM and had publicly been pressing for the Magna deal. Earlier this year, the German government loaned Opel $2.1 billion to assist with completing the deal with Magna. At the same time, 65% of Opel's stock was transferred into a trust controlled jointly by representatives of GM and the German government. The German government has demanded that the money be returned by Nov. 30. GM's Henderson thanked Germany for its role in biwa pearl negotiating the now-canceled sale. "We are grateful for the hard work of the German and other EU governments in navigating this difficult economic period," he said. "We're also appreciative of the effort put forward by Magna and its partners in Russia in trying to reach an equitable agreement." Opel was always going to be a part of GM's business because, in addition to being a car manufacturer, it has become the main source of engineering for GM's small and mid-sized cars. Models such as the Chevrolet Malibu and the akoya pearl new Buick LaCrosse sedan share much of their engineering with Opel cars, as will several future models GM has planned for sale in the United States and other markets. To top of page | ||
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Merrie Turner Lightner faced that problem recently when her San Francisco-based real estate management company finally resolved a long-running dispute between tenants and their landlord. Getting everyone to sign on the dotted line wasn't easy. Pages kept going missing, and every party left out at least one signature. After a week of faxing, the pearl jewelry Lightner Property Group's nine-person staff found itself overwhelmed. "We were all tearing our hair out," Lightner recalls. "No matter what we did, we just couldn't get it right." That's when Lightner, 53, turned to e-signature software. Since 2000, when Congress passed the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN) to biwa pearl bolster public trust in online commerce, digital signatures have been granted the same legal weight as the old-school ink variety. At first e-signatures were used mostly by large organizations -- usually financial or insurance companies -- that could afford in-house software or expensive electronic pen-and-tablet solutions. But recently vendors such as AlphaTrust, EchoSign and Silanis Technology have akoya pearl started offering online signing technology at mass-market rates. | ||
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Clients log on to a secure site, enter a password and find their names in SIGN HERE boxes. They indicate consent by clicking a box. The document can then be downloaded as a PDF. Lightner looked into services from AlphaTrust and AssureSign but found that both charged hefty startup fees -- as much as $600 -- plus $325 per contract. Then she found DocuSign, a Seattle company that charged no up-front fees and a flat $40 a month for unlimited signatures. Lightner estimates that the pearl jewelry solution saves the company $1,000 on each large contract. The move paid off in productivity too. Today the firm's leasing agents choose from a selection of custom templates; enter a recipient's name, e-mail address and contract details; drag and drop yellow "sticky notes" to indicate where to sign; and click SEND. By using e-signatures, Lightner has been able to reduce the average time needed to execute a contract by 80%, she says. A week of faxing has shrunk to five minutes of e-mailing. Lightner's agents can request that e-mail alerts be sent to them whenever a contract gets signed or forwarded. That allows them to focus on showing apartments to prospective clients. And the firm has been able to save an average of 100 pages of paper per contract -- a boon for the biwa pearl environment and Lightner's bottom line. Concerns: There are drawbacks to digitizing your John Hancock. "You lose the ability to sit down face-to-face," Lightner says. "There's a time saving but also a loss of relationship building." And some legal experts question the validity of e-signature technology -- mostly because digital contracts require signatories to close each page before reviewing the next. That could give them grounds to claim that they weren't able to understand the contract in its entirety -- a loophole through which any good lawyer could drive a Mack truck. "With a written signature, it may be a long contract, but it's all right there in front of you," says Ieuan Mahony, a partner with the law firm Holland & Knight in Boston. "With a digital signature, that connection between the signature and the terms of the contract may be tenuous." Users should also be wary of exceptions written into ESIGN. Cancellation or termination of health insurance, utility shutoffs, product recalls and eviction notices are all specifically excluded in the akoya pearl law; such documents must still be signed on paper. Fail to do your homework and you could wind up with a contract that isn't legally binding. | ||
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The U.S. dollar fell against a basket of currencies on Wednesday, helping to send gold prices to record highs and lifting oil. A weaker dollar makes commodities like oil cheaper for those holding other currencies. U.S. crude for December rose 48 cents to pearl jewelry $80.08 a barrel, after settling up $1.47 on Tuesday. "I think a combination of the weaker dollar and inventories is lifting oil," said Carsten Fritsch, oil analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. "After yesterday's data the market may be anticipating a similar result in today's inventory numbers, which is another reason for oil rising," Fritsch added. Surprise inventory drop. Industry group American Petroleum Institute said late on Tuesday that U.S. commercial crude oil stocks fell 3.3 million barrels as imports dropped in the week to Oct. 30, versus expectations for a 1.4 million-barrel rise. The data lifted optimism that the pace of oil demand recovery was picking up in the biwa pearl world's largest energy user, helping to send oil prices higher. The API did say however that gasoline stocks rose by 501,000 barrels last week against forecasts for a 300,000-barrel increase, while distillate supplies increased by 1.8 million barrels versus predictions for a 1 million-barrel decline. The API numbers came ahead of the more closely watched inventory data from the Energy Information Administration, due to be released later Wednesday. Gold hit a record high above $1,090 per ounce as the akoya pearl dollar weakened and after the International Monetary Fund's 200-tonne sale of gold to India's central bank enhanced sentiment toward the metal. The U.S. Federal Reserve ends its two-day meeting on Wednesday and, while it is expected to keep rates unchanged, there is speculation it might drop or alter its pledge to keep rates low for an "extended period," even as signs of a recovery mount. | ||
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