Tuesday, July 29, 2014

A Luxembourg Lady finds what INTELSAT needs to know.



Our daughter Catherine is the Intel of INTELSAT

A Luxembourg Lady finds what INTELSAT needs to know.

Today, is a personal occasion. Like people who carry a bumper sticker "Our daughter is student of the year". Those didn't exist time ago. Here is a late catch-up.


While at College, Catherine went for an internship at René Anselmo’s PanamSat. One month later, she was hired. That’s more than 20 years ago. Today, the company is part of INTELSAT. Her story is of course part of our family’s story, coming to America. Congratulations Catherine.




Monday, July 28, 2014

Vincenzo Nibali wins Le Tour de France 2014



































My Orchids. Vanda "Maillot Jaune". Photo ET

Vincenzo Nibali wins Le Tour de France 2014


Le Tour 2014 certainly produced a great winner. Vincenzo Nibali fought his way to Paris with style, force and panache. He did not shy away from attacking despite the fact that he had already a comfortable lead on his next competitor.

On the podium this year we find two French riders for the first time in years, Jean-Christophe Péraud and Thibaut Pinot. Which is a good thing to keep French fervor for the Tour alive after its 101st version this year!

One of the more perplexing aspects of this year’s Tour is the number of champions eliminated by a fall. Among those were candidates for the final win such as Contador and Froome. The podium might have looked differently with those two remaining in the competition. I actually thought of Contador as the most likely final winner. However Nibali seemed to be untouchable. Accidents are of course a daily danger for any rider in a peloton, and it takes some disciplined tactics to avoid those places in that peloton that are the most prone to accidents. On the other hand, are there ways for the organizers to eliminate known dangers? Is it the number of riders, is it roads such as the pavés du Nord? It is certainly also stupid spectators, some drunk, engaging in stupid behaviors.

We saw way less Luxembourg fans of the Schleck brothers waving the Red Lion version of the Luxembourg flag on the slopes. Of course Andy Schleck was out of the competition after a fall where he injured his knee (again). This is a calamity for him and his career, as he had to come out of this Tour with a good performance to rearrange and redecorate his windows. Now is time to heal the injury, the morale and self-confidence, and get hungry again. The Luxembourg Leopard experience probably took that hunger away: too easy, too rich, too much celebrity vs. hard work.

Luckily there is some good fallout from Brother Frank’s relatively successful Tour, who at age 36 ended the Tour in 12th position. A fine performance with several moments of convincing fighting. This will still shed some good spells on the name Schleck. For both men, keep in mind that the biological clock is ticking. Andy is 29.  



Sunday, July 20, 2014

Andy and Frank Schleck’s future uncertain at Trek



































My Orchids. Oncidium "Yellow Jersey". Photo ET

Cycling weekly reports:



The situation for the Schlecks is well explained in this article. Andy Schleck has very little chance to improve this year’s standing. Frank does, and after his good performance in the Alps, could add some more good results in Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s stages, and maybe end up among the first ten in Paris. Which would save his standing, and by association maybe improve Andy’s luck. The Tour so far has been brutal. The many accidents are a problem. Maybe one should reconsider the number of participants, which increases the danger of mass crashes, and the stages on cobblestones, which is cyclo cross.


Otherwise the father Johny Schleck is right with his conclusions in the article. He is brutally honest, about the worst case scenario. My father, pretty much would have commented in his usual way: “Don’t you think it would be better to just buy you some sausage”. But sausage thing hopefully for the Schlecks is for a later day.




Report: Princeling probe spreads to Deutsche Bank



















My Orchids. Phalaenopsis "Third Eye". Photo: ET


From a Luxembourg point of view, though the information dates back to June, this is very timely information from “The FCPA Blog”. (FCPA is the US anti-corruption law). It shows the irrelevance and futility of some Luxembourg meandering in writing up an ethics code for members of the government, elected officials known in FCPA as PEPs, and civil servants.

That meandering has brought us some black eye in the past, as for instance complying with Financial Action Task Force’s (FATF) recommendations several years ago, where Luxembourg was found in a review to only comply fully with 1 recommendation out of 48 at the time! 


Another example is that Luxembourg law on preventing money laundering got just one critical word smuggled into the European Directive’s text: as a professional, you have to willfully break the law, meaning actively launder or help laundering money,as opposed to being willfully blind to money laundering. If you don’t look, you don’t see, and that is fine!! Recent prosecutions by Luxembourg’s FIU failed based on that blatant obstacle and the launderers walked.


Hence my conclusion that if a Luxembourg code of ethics has no teeth and turns out to be merely a recommendation, foreign law with extraterritorial provisions such as FCPA, or OFAC, and UK Bribery Act will take care of the obvious shortcomings.




Thursday, July 17, 2014

Remarks With Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn Before Their Meeting


















My Orchids. Oncidium "Stars and Stripes". Photo ET

Remarks With Luxembourg Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn Before Their Meeting

  

And after the Meeting, sorry, in French only: 


Communiqué de presse (16.07.2014)

Entrevue de Jean Asselborn avec le secrétaire d’Etat des Etats-Unis, John Kerry, à Washington, D.C., le mercredi 16 juillet 2014 
Sur invitation du secrétaire d’Etat des États-Unis d'Amérique, John Kerry, le ministre des Affaires étrangères et européennes du Luxembourg, Jean Asselborn, s’est rendu à Washington le mercredi 16 juillet 2014 pour une visite de travail.

Le ministre Asselborn a été reçu au State Department par son homologue, John Kerry, pour une entrevue bilatérale. La réunion a permis aux deux hommes de se pencher sur les relations entre le Grand-Duché et les Etats-Unis, sur l’évolution des relations transatlantiques ainsi que sur des dossiers de politique internationale, dont notamment les conflits actuels au Proche- et Moyen-Orient.

Faisant brièvement le point sur les relations bilatérales, les deux ministres se sont félicités de l’excellence de celles-ci, comme en témoignent les fréquentes rencontres et échanges à haut niveau entre représentants des deux Etats ainsi que les intenses relations économiques et commerciales entre les deux pays.

Les deux homologues ont constaté une forte concordance de vues concernant l’orientation multilatérale de leurs politiques étrangères et de leurs priorités respectives dans ce domaine. Reconnaissant que les Etats-Unis et l’Europe sont aujourd’hui confrontés à de nombreux défis communs, ils ont partagé l’avis que les partenaires transatlantiques doivent, plus que jamais, renforcer leur coopération, afin de faire face, aux bouleversements dans le monde en se fondant sur les valeurs communes, notamment au Proche- et Moyen-Orient.

Les ministres se sont félicités de l’excellente coopération au Conseil de sécurité des Nations unies, où les équipes respectives travaillent sans relâche pour le maintien de la paix et la sécurité internationales. Ils ont notamment salué l’adoption ce lundi 14 juillet d’une nouvelle résolution (2165) forte du Conseil de sécurité, sur initiative du Luxembourg avec l’Australie et la Jordanie, afin d’assurer un meilleur accès humanitaire en Syrie.

Ils ont ensuite abordé la situation en Iran, la date du 20 juillet à laquelle il est prévu de parvenir à un accord final entre l'Iran et les cinq membres permanents du Conseil de sécurité et l’Allemagne (P5+1) sur le dossier nucléaire étant imminente. A cet égard ils ont souligné l’importance de déboucher sur un accord clair et équitable, ceci constituant une occasion unique afin de réduire les tensions régionales et d'améliorer nos relations avec l'Iran, un acteur important dans la région.

Quant à la situation à Gaza, les deux interlocuteurs ont insisté sur la nécessité d’une désescalade et de l’établissement d’un cessez-le feu en vue de la reprise aussi rapidement que possible des négociations.

En plus de l’entrevue avec le secrétaire d’Etat, le ministre Asselborn a rencontré le Deputy United States Trade Representative, Michael Punke, la présidente du European Institute, Joëlle Attinger, et des experts en matière du partenariat transatlantique de commerce et d'investissement (PTCI/ TTIP) pour passer en revue l’état des relations transatlantiques, de même que les défis que posent des deux côtés de l’Atlantique les négociations relatives au TTIP.

Le ministre Asselborn a fait valoir auprès de ses interlocuteurs de l’administration américaine l’importance d’un renforcement des relations économiques et commerciales dans l’intérêt mutuel des deux rives de l’Atlantique. Il n’a cependant pas caché que la société civile européenne éprouvait un certain nombre de préoccupations largement dues au caractère confidentiel des négociations. Après que le ministre Asselborn eut exposé les préoccupations du Luxembourg, au demeurant partagées par de nombreux pays de l’UE, comme les questions relatives au mécanisme d’arbitrage, d’OGM ou les normes sociales et environnementales, les deux parties sont tombées d’accord sur la nécessité de renforcer le dialogue avec l’opinion publique et œuvrer pour un maximum de transparence.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker is the Siegermannschaft



































My Orchids. Angraecum "Junckerii". Photo ET

Luxembourg’s Jean-Claude Juncker is the Siegermannschaft

A factual view from the New York Times on the “election” of Jean Claude Juncker to a post he didn’t want to get 10 years ago. Or even last year.




Monday, July 14, 2014

Luc Frieden to join Deutsche Bank as Vice Chairman

















My Orchids. Oncidium "Rotating Doors". Photo ET

A Press release by Deutsche Bank. The fact that a member of Parliament, former Minister of Finance, Governor of the World Bank drops his political tools to join a bank is subject of some controversy in his native Luxembourg. We'll assemble what generally the problem is with this type of Revolving Doors practice.

Luc Frieden to join Deutsche Bank as Vice Chairman

Deutsche Bank announced today that Luc Frieden (50) will join as Vice Chairman effective 15 September 2014. In his new role, Frieden will advise the Management Board and senior management on strategic aspects related to international and European affairs. Frieden will also work with the Bank’s Government & Regulatory Affairs department and other infrastructure functions and business units.

Frieden will be based in London and report to Stephan Leithner, Member of the Management Board, whose functional responsibilities include Europe and Government & Regulatory Affairs.

Leithner said: “We are pleased that Luc Frieden will join Deutsche Bank as Vice Chairman. He brings a wealth of experience in governmental affairs and international finance. His expertise and advice will be of great benefit for the Bank and its clients.”

From 1998 to 2013, Frieden served as a member of the Luxembourg government, including as Minister of Justice, Minister of Treasury and Minister of Finance. In 2005, Frieden chaired the European Council of Ministers of Justice and Home Affairs. For the last five years, he represented Luxembourg at the European Council of Ministers of Finance (ECOFIN and Eurogroup) and participated in the stabilization of the Eurozone and the shaping of the European banking union. He worked with leaders of international organizations and banks. A long time Governor of the World Bank, Frieden served as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the IMF and the World Bank Group in 2013. 

Frieden graduated in law from the University of Paris (Panthéon-Sorbonne), the University of Cambridge and Harvard Law School.  


For further information, please call: 

Deutsche Bank AG    
Press Relations    

Regina Schüller    
Phone: +49 69 910 44032   
E-Mail: regina.schueller@db.com  

Armin Niedermeier
Phone: +49 69 910 33402
E-mail: armin.niedermeier@db.com




Friday, July 11, 2014

Voice of Russia: Crimea is de-facto not part of Ukraine – Luxembourg FM

















My Orchids. Oncidium "The Dance of the Diplomats". Photo ET


Now we know who really pulls those big ropes behind the scenes, and also on the stage of the UN Security Council: Luxembourg is reshaping the world map. In concert of course with the other indispensable nation, Qatar.

So Russia annexes Crimea, but we won’t recognize the annexation. However we proclaim in the strongest terms that Crimea is de facto not part of the Ukraine? Oh, I understand the playbook from 1939: Peace has been saved until 2024. Then we discuss maybe if Crimea as a part of Russia is a part of Russia. From here on we could use the unparalleled negotiation skills of our new-found good friends in Iran to bring the US and Russia together. And by the way, the invasion of Irak and Tony Blair: Bad. The invasion of Crimea: must be good by contrast.

Now there are many more international problems to tackle. My suggested to-do list (without wanting to start a WW III) for Luxembourg’s Foreign Minister Jean Asselborn:

  • The Falklands are part of Argentina
  • The Malvinas are part of the UK
  • China is part of Tibet
  • Tibet owns the Spratly Islands
  • Kashmir I don’t know, let me check the map, but there is something
  • Cyprus is … let’s ask an Ayatollah
  • Québec is only de facto part of Canada
  • Guatemala, Honduras, Costa Rica, Salvador, and Nicaragua are de facto part of the US
  • Thionville, Arlon, and Bitburg are de facto part of Luxembourg.
  • Let’s talk a bit more about Flanders, Wallonia, Corsica, South Soudan, East Prussia, Macedonia, Gaza, Trieste, and the Pitcairn Island.





Thursday, July 10, 2014

Cargolux: the Italian Sideshow



































My Orchids: Phalaenopsis "Italia Nana". Photo ET

Cargolux: the Italian Sideshow

“The Loadster” reported about a shift of pilots to cheaper Italy:


That happens amidst a general hiring freeze at Cargolux. There needs to be some explaining, as some other labor relations problems are unresolved.

All this is happening on the background of the new partnership with HNCA, limping along, after a spectacular failed start of the first flight to Zhengzhou in April, and the Robert Song episode. As finally those flights have been initiated in June, they are most likely to be losing operations for the foreseeable future, as finding freight to be sent to Zhengzhou is a questionable bet and flights to there will have poor load factors.


This will add to the losses already incurred in the first half of 2014, said to be in the vicinity of $31 million. (A loss of about $14 million was expected). I would call it Melusina’s revenge, for the fault of not retaining the former members of ExCom earlier this year. A company is as good as its management.



Sunday, July 6, 2014

Cargolux in the new morning calm

















My Orchids. Phalaneopsis "Dual Hub". Photo ET

Cargolux in the new morning calm

If Cargolux flights were as silent as Cargolux management nowadays, and indeed the Luxembourg government, there would be no night curfew for CV flights at the Luxembourg airport. The silence must be golden like the Ming Dynasty, as it coincides with coming onboard of a Chinese partner. But it might be only circumstance that silence started cushioning Cargolux since the official date when on April 23rd  Henan Civil Aviation and Investment Co. Ltd (HNCA) took a 35% ownership in Cargolux Airlines.

That silence appears to be more of a Darwinian self-protection evolution: a leadership prone to monumental errors strives to embrace secrecy as a hiding mechanism. After the Qatar Airways fiasco, it repeated its misjudgments with HNCA, basically copy-cutting past errors. The HNCA solution was imposed almost surreptitiously, and against the advice of most of Cargolux’ senior managers. The company (and the Government) made a bad deal, which still has unforeseeable consequences. Fact is that out of protest, the COO Peter van de Pas, SVP Marketing and Sales Robert van de Weg, and the Regional Manager for Asia, Matthew Ma left. Board and government treated their resignations with benign neglect. Both don’t understand that a company is defined by its management team. Managers are not exchangeable at wish in the competitive world. Only in nepotism.

An early sign of the misguided reorganization was the fall-out around Robert Song, bombarded SVP Asia and Pacific as a reward for his contribution to the deal it seems. He fell ill just on the occasion of Chairman Helminger’s visit to Zhengzhou, and of course we learnt without surprise that Robert Song had resigned. That was the end of most communication. In the meantime another negligence had been corrected by finally appointing a new CEO, Dirk Reich. The post had been vacant for way too long. Clients, competitors and observers have watched sometimes in disbelief the ongoing turmoil at Cargolux, a series of self-inflicted wounds.

Cargolux has been for many years a proud Luxembourg achievement, a leader in the industry, a benchmark for the air freight industry. With key management lost, there goes the substance of the company’s culture and reputation. The episode of relying on Mr. Song, then seeing him “resigning” seems to be more of a panicky reaction to forwarders’ displeasure with the changes in management, as reported by Cargofacts.com. It is morning again at Cargolux, though a new beginning that was unnecessary, and that morning was not calm. Only silent.

Obviously we now have a new Cargolux where the known unknowns are unknown. What is known is that the “old” Cargolux managed to have an encouraging though modest turnaround. 2013 will be the benchmark to compare future results. Whereas a loss was predicted, the old Cargolux managed to run a profit of $8.4 million in 2013, up from a loss of$35.1 million in 2012, the year of the Qatar Airways adventure. Revenue for the year was up 14.4% to $1.99 billion, driven by increasing demand. Cargo traffic for the year was up 19.2% to 5.72 billion RTKs, while cargo volume rose 16.7% to 754,000 tons. Despite the encouraging progress, the $8.4 million is a very thin margin that leaves no space for errors. However, now starts an ill-defined, unknown future. And yet facing the unknowns, Cargolux chose to change several variables at the same time, basically an unscientific approach, resulting in massive changes in management, in a confused workforce, in a partnership with questionable revenues and expensive obligations, and worse, questions about the company in the marketplace.

The best known unknown is of course the partnership with HNCA. Luxembourg officials are fascinated by the new vocabulary such as “dual hub”. Which it is not. There is no dual hub that would imply some privileges for Cargolux. That’s the case for the main freight available FROM Zhengzhou, electronics, where Cargolux has no priority as we have seen from various competing arrangements that HNCA or Zhengzhou Airport initiated. Those reach from Hahn to Liège airports, and Cargolux didn’t even know about those arrangements. In the absence of a monopoly, what was the point of entering into the HNCA agreement?

Now Cargolux has learnt already how to dance to the new Chinese music. Its inaugural flight was cancelled because of an unknown “administrative” reason, all the while the Luxembourg Minister of Transportation was waiting in great pomp for the newly baptized “City of Zhengzhou” to touch down at Zhengzhou Airport. 

It was a vivid demonstration of the realities in the new dual hub environment. A known unknown is also what the heck Cargolux is going to carry as cargo on four weekly flights TO Zhengzhou? A dual hub means there is something to do both ways. There doesn’t seem to be much to carry to Zhengzhou. The fact that there is a $15 million budget set up to compensate Cargolux for losses on the route, is only the known official acknowledgement of the unknowns. The first two quarter results will not yet show the full impact of the new partnership, but show a direction. That is if Silence doesn’t prevent us from learning the results.

If I understand the results of a recent effort to survey Cargolux staff, we are going to have open communications again. Indeed the “potential components of the revitalized Cargolux spirit” are clear, according to those who answered the survey. Only about 1 out of 3 answered, the motivated employees I guess. The remaining two have indeed to be revitalized. As for the key components, 2 out of 3 respondents see leadership as a problem: they appear to be distant, biased, and aloof. It is followed by poor communication: no or poor information on strategies, objectives, financial situation. All this is summarized by the most important component coming in third: respect.


For anyone misjudging employees’ preoccupations, please note that they do not care for the environment nor for diversity. Those two components came in last. Though politically they sound nice in conjunction with dual hub. However employees long for a bright future of their company. Who would have guessed!?



Friday, July 4, 2014

Le Tour de France 2014


















My Orchids. Phalaneopsis " Maillot Jaune". Photo ET

Le Tour de France 2014

The Tour is about to start. Not sure if British traffic rules apply, which would put last year's champion Froome at an advantage. Anyway Le Tour starts again from Afar.

My Luxembourg roots would normally have me getting excited about the Schleck brothers. Obviously less than in past years, as the two brothers had their ups and downs. Their team is not really the Schleck team, and their ambitions that they publicly confirmed, are also modest. That being said, it is a long way to Paris and to Tipperary. Anything can happen, and a former talent can possibly be reborn. At which time, if opportunity strikes, one of the Schlecks could graduate from helper to leader. For those who want to wave the Luxembourg Lion in the French Cols, there is a third Luxembourg iron in the fire, young Ben Gastauer.

Who will win the Tour? I bet on Alberto Contador. He is the ideal mountain climber, strong on time trials (see second last stage over 54 km), and for the not too glorious past, he has learned how not to eat doped Spanish beef. He won't make that mistake anymore.

In the US, watch it happen on NBC Sports, or the colorful French TV5.