New Articles

Hard Rock Developing New Hotel Property in Mexico

Hard Rock Developing New Hotel Property in Mexico

Orlando, FL – Hard Rock International has begun construction on a new hotel in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, that will feature 600-rooms, six restaurants, multiple pool sites, several spas, and 54,000 square feet of meeting and conference space.

The new hotel is the company’s fourth in Mexico and is slated for completion in 2016.

With a total of 186 venues in 57 countries, including 142 cafes, 20 hotels and 9 casinos, Hard Rock International also owns, operates and franchises Cafes in several cities including London, New York, San Francisco, Sydney, and Dubai.

In addition HRI also owns, licenses and/or manages hotel/casino properties worldwide such as its two most successful Hotel and Casino properties in Tampa and Hollywood, Fl., both owned and operated by HRI parent, The Seminole Tribe of Florida, as well as other locations including Bali, Biloxi, Chicago, Cancun, Ibiza, Las Vegas, Palm Springs, San Diego and Singapore.

Upcoming new Hard Rock Cafe locations include Seoul, Vienna, and Marseille, while new hotel projects include Daytona Beach, Abu Dhabi, and Shenzhen and Haikou in China.

07/28/2014

 

US Sugar Groups Oppose Mexico Trade Deal

Los Angeles, CA – Several national industry groups representing candy makers, soda companies, and other food manufacturers are urging Washington to reject pressure to negotiate a trade deal with Mexico to end a months-long dispute over allegations of cheap sweetener imports from south of the border.

In a recent letter to several top US trade officials, several national business groups including the Coalition for Sugar Reform, the American Beverage Association, and the Grocery Manufacturers Association said any move to restrict imports “could incite retaliation from Mexico on other products, undermine free trade across the continent under the North American Free Trade Act, and threaten over $220 billion in US exports to Mexico.”

Such a move by Washington, the letter said, would “jeopardize this robust trading relationship [with Mexico] by providing US sugar producers with even more insulation from market forces.”

The joint letter, addressed to US Agriculture Secretary Thomas Vilsack, Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker and US Trade Representative Michael Froman, cited “troubling rumors” that pressure is being applied on the government to hammer out a deal that would include trade barriers.

The communication is seen as the latest indication of escalating tensions in the US sugar industry between sugar producers that favor restricting imports or implementing dumping duties and end-users who oppose any change to NAFTA that allows Mexico to import sugar duty-free in the otherwise protected American market.

US sugar producers filed a complaint with the International Trade Commission earlier this year charging Mexico with dumping sugar on the US market. Two months later, Vilsack said he would “encourage a negotiated agreement” that “could set a ceiling on Mexican sugar imports, which are currently unrestricted.”

The letter also said an agreement could threaten the completion of negotiations of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the ambitious Pacific trade pact.

07/28/2014

US Beef Exports Up 6 Percent Overall, Says USDA

Washington, DC – US beef exports through May 2014 are up 6 percent from a year earlier, according to the US Department of Agriculture’s Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS).

Exports have strengthened to Hong Kong and Mexico, offsetting weaker shipments to Canada, Japan, and Taiwan.

Although exports to Japan had been running above year-earlier levels through April, they weakened in May. Imported beef stocks in Japan are well above year-earlier levels and consumption is stable.

Exports to Mexico have risen this year with shipments during May 48 percent higher than the previous May. Second-quarter exports were raised by 10 million pounds due to stronger demand from Hong Kong and Mexico, the FAS said.

The forecast for US beef exports in 2014 is 2.518 billion pounds, almost 3 percent lower than 2013.

Despite stronger shipments during the first 5 months of the year, exports are expected to fall during the remaining months.

Production is forecast to fall nearly 5 percent in 2014 and then 1 percent in 2015 due to reduced cattle inventories and higher heifer retention for herd rebuilding.

Prices, which have risen as a result of lower supply, the agency said, are likely to dampen export demand over the forecast period. The forecast for exports during 2015 is 2.425 billion pounds, 4 percent lower than 2014.

07/22/2014

Beechcraft Delivers First King Air 350ER Aircraft to Mexican Navy

Wichita, KS – Beechcraft Corporation has delivered the first of four Beechcraft King Air 350ER aircraft ordered by the Mexican Navy Secretaría de Marina (SEMAR).

In addition to the aircraft, Kansas-headquartered Beechcraft will support SEMAR with on-the-ground service, support and training through its Global Mission Support organization, the company said.

Rear Admiral Jose Marie Macedo, Director General of Naval Aviation Operations, visited company headquarters in Wichita, to accept delivery of the aircraft, which will be stationed at the naval base in Veracruz.

The remaining three aircraft will be delivered by the second quarter of 2015.

The company was a major exhibitor at the recent Farnsborough, UK Airshow, displaying its specially modified Beechcraft King Air 350ER.

The aircraft is operated out of Northern Europe and fitted with a mission package that supports search and rescue, fishery inspection, pollution monitoring and seaway/shipping lane surveillance missions.

The King Air 350ER was selected for these missions due to its high dash speeds, long endurance, high reliability and low operating cost.

07/22/2014

Boeing Completes Mexico Satellite Project


El Segundo, CA – Boeing has finished production of a trio of communication satellites for the Mexican government.

The $1 billion contract for the “Mexsat” project was signed in 2011 calling for Boeing to design and manufacture two 702HP geo-mobile satellites and contract with the Virginia-based Orbital Sciences Corp. to build the third, a GEOStar-2.

The Orbital-built satellite was completed in 2012 and was successfully launched atop an Ariane 5 rocket in December of that year.

The development of two ground stations in Iztapalapa and Hermosillo was included in the contract and will serve to relay space-based signals to the satellites once they are deployed to their full 134-foot length.

Both Boeing 702HP satellites are equipped with five solar panel “wings” and an antenna roughly the size of a basketball court.

The company has already provided Mexico with five satellites dating back to 1985 with the last launched in 1998 and still in service.

Boeing said it will launch the first 702HP in early 2015 on a Russian Proton-M rocket with the second set to be sent aloft aboard an Atlas V by 2016.

07/02/2014