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Barclays Selects Texas for New Tech Service Center

Barclays Selects Texas for New Tech Service Center

McKinney, TX – London-based Barclays Bank has selected McKinney, Texas, as the site for its newest “innovative technology” center.

The new 40,000-square foot center” will support the bank’s global operations “by providing technology support to the business and develop solutions for all the group’s activities and requirements including personal banking, credit cards, corporate and investment banking and wealth management,” the bank said.

The move by the international financial services provider is a major score for the McKinney Economic Development Corporation (MEDC), which opened talks with Barclays in December 2013, when the UK-based bank expressed interest in siting its new operation in Texas.

The MEDC worked closely with the City of McKinney staff and City Council, the McKinney Community Development Corporation (MCDC), and others “to efficiently work on an expedited time frame. Barclays plans to move into McKinney Corporate Center in the fall of 2014,” the economic development agency said.

McKinney “presented Barclays a competitive opportunity with a high profile location along the Sam Rayburn Tollway, a highly educated and abundant labor pool, and sufficient parking for their employees,” said McKinney Economic Development Corporation Board Chairman, Ernest Lynch. “Our economic development team was able to move quickly to address Barclays’ needs.”

The new tech center will be sited in Craig Ranch, a 2,200-acre business, retail and residential community in McKinney, which is located about 30 miles north of Dallas and is considered one of the fastest-growing cities in the US.

09/03/2014

US Exports to ‘Sub-Saharan’ Africa Surge to $1.7 Billion

Washington, DC – Over the past ten months, the US Export-Import Bank (EXIM) has reportedly authorized a record $1.7 billion in financing to support exports of American-made products to sub-Saharan Africa.

This record-setting surge “has not only empowered U.S. small businesses to sell their products in global markets, but has also supported more than 10,000 American jobs which contribute to strengthening the U.S. economy,” the trade bank said.

The announcement was made as EXIM President and CEO Fred Hochberg participated in the US-Africa Leaders Summit that recently convened in Washington, DC.

EXIM also said it will pledge $3 billion in financing to support US exports to sub-Saharan Africa over the next two fiscal years and that it had recently signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Angola “to strengthen collaboration on the financing of American-made exports” to the central African nation.

Two-thirds of the population of Sub-Saharan Africa lacks electricity and earlier this month, the bank approved a loan guarantee for $17 million to support long-term financing by the West African Development Bank (BOAD) for the Azito Power project in Cote D’Ivoire.

Financing for steam turbines used in the Azito Power project will support 40 manufacturing and engineering jobs in Schenectady, New York, and Bangor, Maine, said EXIM. The project is part of a long-term strategy to strengthen the region’s power capacity and, in turn, help to position economies there for growth, it added.

Three Louisiana small businesses benefit from EXIM’s $43 million financing of a liftboat destined for Nigeria.

The “Bellator” liftboat is a self-propelled vessel, 150-foot long by 118-foot wide, that lifts and suspends equipment and personnel up to the level of an offshore drilling platform.  About 300 employees of C.S. Liftboats, Inc., of Abbeville, Louisiana, together with Gulf Island Fabrications of Houma, Louisiana, will construct the high-tech vessel.

The Nigerian buyer also contracted for prefabricated liftboat-mounted modules for housing workers; these are built by Fiberglass Unlimited Inc. of Raceland, Louisiana.  This is Nigeria’s first purchase of a new, US-made liftboat system.

According to the bank, Pennsylvania employees of GE Transportation “will benefit from the bank-supported export of GE’s locomotives with Pennsylvania-made engines and components to Transnet in South Africa.”  In its recent transaction, EXIM authorized a $563.5 million loan guarantee to support financing for the sale of 293 locomotives being manufactured by GE Transportation.

EXIM “is firmly committed to equipping US exporters to realize the vast economic opportunities emerging throughout sub-Saharan Africa, which is home to seven out of 10 of the world’s fastest-growing markets,” said EXIM’s Hochberg. “Each transaction the Bank supports creates jobs for local US businesses and strengthens our relationship with a region that has a strong prospect for long-term economic growth.”

08/18/2014

BRICs Meet in Brazil, Create Bloc Development Bank

Los Angeles, CA – Leaders of the BRICS group of emerging powers – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – have decided to create their own development bank as a counterweight to what they perceive are “western-dominated” financial organizations like the US-based World Bank and International Monetary Fund.

The move came during the BRICS Summit earlier this week in Fortaleza, Brazil. The summit comes as the five countries, whose economies together represent 18 percent of the world total, are experiencing sharp slowdowns in their once fast-paced rates of growth.

The new development bank will reportedly be based in Shanghai and is expected to be functional within two years. It will be capitalized at $50 billion, a figure that could grow to $100 billion to fund infrastructure projects. The fund would also have $100 billion at its disposal to weather economic hard times.

The new development bank’s first director will reportedly be from India.

“We remain disappointed and seriously concerned with the current non-implementation of the 2010 International Monetary Fund (IMF) reforms, which negatively impacts on the IMF’s legitimacy, credibility and effectiveness,” the group said in a joint press release.

The BRICs leaders are now in the Brazilian capital of Brasilia, meeting with their counterparts from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and several other Latin American nations to discuss future economic and trade cooperation.

BRIC giant China is particularly interested in Latin America. After this week’s discussions, Chinese President Xi Jinping will stay in Brazil to launch a China-Latin America forum with the leaders of several regional countries including Cuba, Argentina, Ecuador, and Venezuela.

China is growing in influence in the region. Last year, the country, two-way trade with the region amounted to more than $261 billion.

07/17/2014

FDI Tax Breaks, Incentives Slammed in New Report

Washington, DC – The use of tax breaks and other incentives by state and local governments and economic development agencies across the country to attract foreign businesses has come under fire in a study just released by The Brookings Institution.

Calling the practice “deeply flawed,” the economic think tank states that “mergers and acquisitions are driving foreign investment in the US, not the opening of new establishments.”

Civic leaders, it said, “would accomplish far more by bolstering industrial amenities to retain overseas companies than by offering rich subsidies designed to attract new ones.”

According to Devashree Saha, a senior policy analyst at Brookings and lead author of the report, “Policies that narrowly focus on new business openings are probably not going to give you a big bang for your buck.”

In 2011, only 26 percent of all jobs at US locations of foreign companies were created by the opening of a new factory, office or store, while nearly a third were generated by foreign takeovers of US companies, he said, adding that over the past 20 years, 84 percent of foreign companies that came to the US did so through an acquisition.

“Federal, state and local governments “should invest more to build strong industry clusters by ensuring an adequate supply of skilled workers, modernizing US infrastructure and increasing investment in research and development, among other initiatives,” the study found.

While the US is still the global leader in attracting FDI, the US share of global foreign direct investment (FDI) shrank from 37 percent in 2002 to 17 percent in 2012 with China and other developing economies grabbing a growing share of foreign business, according to data from the Washington, DC-headquartered Organization for International Investment (OFII).

“Outsize Benefits” Generated

Foreign-owned companies employ about 5.6 million workers in the US, or about 5 percent of private payrolls, according to the Brookings study. Their employment grew steadily from 1991 to 2000, but has stagnated since.

“Yet, the firms generate outsize benefits, accounting for a fifth of US goods exports and 15.4% of all private R&D in 2011,” the study said. “Foreign owners of US operations also pay higher wages than US companies — $77,000 vs. $60,000, on average.”

The report also ranks states and “metro areas” based on their share of jobs at foreign-owned establishments.

In 2011, Delaware led with 8.5 percent of all private-sector jobs at foreign-owned locations, particularly in the pharmaceutical, medicine, manufacturing and insurance sectors, followed by South Carolina with 7.5 percent of its private jobs at foreign-owned companies, largely in the auto industry.

Bridgeport, Connecticut, led among US “metro areas” with foreign firms accounting for 13.6 percent of private payrolls, particularly in the computer systems design and brokerage fields.

Greensboro, North Carolina, ranked second with 9 percent – primarily retail grocery stores, auto manufacturing, and pharmaceuticals). Worcester, Massachusetts tied for second place with most of its foreign-owned employers in the power generation, electrical products and insurance sectors.

In the 20 metro areas analyzed for the Brookings study, FDI made up more than half of all jobs in the largest industries active in Dayton, Ohio; Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Charleston, South Carolina, and San Jose, California.

07/03/2014

 

Canadian Manufacturer to Build Plant in Missouri

Kansas City, MO – Ontario, Canada-based Martinrea International Inc. has said it will develop a 275,560-square-foot auto parts manufacturing plant in the Kansas City suburb of Riverside.

The plant will rest on a 15.2 acre site and create as many as 290 jobs when it opens early next year.

The company will receive as much as $2.6 million through the Missouri Works tax credit program and $640,000 through the Missouri Works training program if it meets job creation and investment criteria.

Martinrea partnered with the Kansas City-based Tutera Group to develop the new plant, which will manufacture automotive assemblies and welded corrosion-resistant engine cradles for the General Motors’ Fairfax Assembly Plant in Kansas City.

The Canadian company chalked-up $3 billion in annual sales last year generated by the labor of 13,000 people at 38 locations on four continents.

The company produces steel and aluminum parts, assemblies and modules, and fluid management systems, largely for the automotive sector.

06/30/2014

Braselton, Georgia Scores Two Major Economic Development Projects

Braselton, GA – Two Japanese companies – Hitachi Power Tools (HPT) and sports equipment maker Mizuno USA – have announced plans to relocate some or all of their North American operations to the northeast Georgia community of Braselton.

HPT said it will relocate its headquarters there later this year “to consolidate warehouses on the east coast, improve workplace efficiency as well as prepare for expected future growth.”

The company will operate out of a new 540,000-square foot facility featuring a state-of-the-art cross dock facility with access to both the north and southbound I-85 Highway and the newly rerouted State Route 124.

HPT, a subsidiary of Tokyo-based Hitachi Ltd., manufactures professional grade power tools and accessories for woodworking, metalworking, drilling and fastening, concrete drilling and cutting, outdoor power equipment products, as well as a complete line of pneumatic nailers, staplers, compressors and collated fasteners.

“This new location is ideal to maximize warehousing efficiency and provide the over 100 current Hitachi employees with a professional work environment in an exciting area of Georgia that is experiencing its own growth and development,” the company said.

By the end of this year, Mizuno USA will relocate all of its distribution and manufacturing operations to a new 520,000 square-foot facility “that will significantly increase the current supply chain footprint to meet emerging and future supply chain needs.”

“Mizuno USA has seen strong growth, tripling sales since 2000,” said Bob Puccini, President of Mizuno USA, Inc. and Director of Mizuno Corporation. “Our growth expectations are even higher for the next five years with award-winning innovations and increased spending in brand marketing initiatives. This investment is a critical next step for our business to be able to service the omni-channel supply needs of our customers and consumers.”

The new facility will merge the company’s two distribution facilities to service all Mizuno USA divisions, including running, golf, and team sports, and relocate its golf manufacturing center from Norcross, Georgia, increasing its custom golf club production capabilities two-fold.

Current Mizuno employees will transition to the new facility later this year following renovations to the new facility.

The distribution center will have 150 full time positions and bring seasonal work opportunities starting in 2015, while the company’s US corporate offices will remain in Norcross.

06/26/2014

 

Portugal’s Frulact to Built Idaho Processing Plant

Rupert, Idaho – Frulact, the Portugal-based international fruit processor, has signed a Development Agreement with the city of Rupert, Idaho, to build a 200,000-sq-ft fruit preparation and processing plant there.

The new plant is slated to open for business in the last quarter of this year with more than 100 employees.

Frulact’s new Rupert facility is the first manufacturing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Idaho and the company’s first entry into the US.

The family-owned company, founded in 1987, currently operates plants in Portugal, France, Morocco, and Algeria, develops custom-made fruit preparations for leading food labels in the dairy, beverages, ice-cream and industrial pastry sectors throughout Europe, Africa and the Middle East.

Frulact is among the Top 5 food processors in Europe and is expected to generate more than $204 million in 2013, the company said.

06/25/2014