Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Diamond- Product Market Scope

The cut and polished diamonds are exported to United States of America, Japan, Belgium, Hong Kong, Switzerland and Thailand. Of these, USA, Japan and Switzerland are consumer markets and the rest of them are trading countries. It is mostly the same commission agents who supply roughs to the firms on behalf of the sight-holders, who also take the finished product for export. It is the commission agents who bargain on the commercial terms with the units. There are about 2,000 exporting concerns in India, which are registered with the Gem and Jewelry Export Promotion Council (GJEPC), Mumbai. About 95% of the exports are routed through Mumbai based exporters.

The other development has been the move by some companies to manufacture large size and fancy cut diamonds. A country that entered the international diamond industry as a manufacturer of small diamonds only, today, is producing virtually stones of every shape, size and colour. Most companies are now innovating and developing new cuts, some of them being patented internationally.

Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Brisbane Forest Park

Brisbane Forest Park is striking in its diversity of environments and plant communities. Take a journey through open eucalypt woodlands, scribbly gum forests and lush subtropical rainforests. More than 800 species of plants are found in these forests, some of which are rare and threatened.The cool mountain tops and forest flats of Brisbane Forest Park provide a rich and varied habitat for wildlife.

The cooler mountain climate is ideal for plant species such as ferns and mosses. Giant barred frogs (endangered) inhabit the cool mountain streams while yellow-bellied gliders are active in the open forest at night. Owls also live here and catch prey such as possums and snakes. The park provides excellent birdwatching opportunities and bell miners can often be heard throughout the forest.

Thursday, December 18, 2008

Stock Funds

Although a stock fund's value can rise and fall quickly (and dramatically) over the short term, historically stocks have performed better over the long term than other types of investments — including corporate bonds, government bonds, and treasury securities.

Overall "market risk" poses the greatest potential danger for investors in stocks funds. Stock prices can fluctuate for a broad range of reasons — such as the overall strength of the economy or demand for particular products or services.Not all stock funds are the same. For example:

  • Growth funds focus on stocks that may not pay a regular dividend but have the potential for large capital gains.
  • Income funds invest in stocks that pay regular dividends.
  • Index funds aim to achieve the same return as a particular market index, such as the S&P 500 Composite Stock Price Index, by investing in all — or perhaps a representative sample — of the companies included in an index.
  • Sector funds may specialize in a particular industry segment, such as technology or consumer products stocks.

Monday, December 08, 2008

UK automotive opportunities

The world’s top automotive manufacturing brands are established in the UK, making its automotive industry one of the most prominent in the world.

The UK is home to Europe's most diverse and productive vehicle manufacturing base and the vehicle output continues to rise.Major global automotive companies are attracted to the UK by the combination of engineering excellence, workforce skills and the supportive business environment.More than 40 companies manufacture vehicles in the UK with high-profile global investors including Ford, BMW, Toyota, Nissan and Honda.The industry is supported by a strong supply chain including an array of world-class design, precision and high-performance engineering companies.

Friday, December 05, 2008

Italian Painting of the 13th-14th centuries

Early Italian artists adopted the techniques and traditions of Byzantine art: the gold backgrounds and timeless figures that give spiritual force to icons. But increasingly they began to convey a physical as well as a spiritual reality. The Renaissance celebration of freedom of self-determination had a profound effect on the visual arts. Whereas medieval art focused on otherworldly truths, Renaissance art was nurtured on the principles of humanism, which also paid tribute to visible reality. Greek and Latin learning emboldened thinkers to place the human being at the center of their world view. Interest in the classical past did not impede Christian devotion; religious art remained dominant, and secular art forms emerged also.

Tuscany was the cradle for the new humanist concerns. While Duccio's fourteenth-century Maest? altarpiece for Siena Cathedral owes much of its linear and decorative style to his Byzantine predecessors, certain elements in it derive from the painter's direct observation of nature. As religious emphasis shifted to Christ's human experience, closer identification with people's experience was required of art. Artists responded with details familiar in the lives of their viewers.