Κυριακή 6 Ιανουαρίου 2013

The Greek island of old age


The inhabitants of a small Greek island live on average 10 years longer than the rest of western Europe. So what's the secret to long life in Ikaria?
It could be the fresh air and the friendly, easy-going, open-door lifestyle. It could be fresh vegetables and goat's milk.
It could be the mountainous terrain. Everywhere on Ikaria is up, or down, so getting around keeps you fit.
It could even be the natural radiation in the granite rocks. But Stamatis Moraitis thinks he knows what it is.
"It's the wine," he says, over a mid-morning glass at his kitchen table. "It's pure, nothing added. The wine they make commercially has preservatives. That's no good. But this wine we make ourselves is pure."
Stamatis celebrated his 98th birthday on New Year's Day. He says he's older, but his documents put his date of birth as 1 January 1915. Outside his whitewashed house are his beloved olive trees, his fruit trees, and his vines. He makes about 700 litres of wine a year, he says.
"Do you drink it all yourself?" I ask. "No!" He's shocked at the suggestion. "I drink it with my friends."





The inhabitants of a small Greek island live on average 10 years longer than the rest of western Europe. So what's the secret to long life in Ikaria?
It could be the fresh air and the friendly, easy-going, open-door lifestyle. It could be fresh vegetables and goat's milk.
It could be the mountainous terrain. Everywhere on Ikaria is up, or down, so getting around keeps you fit.
It could even be the natural radiation in the granite rocks. But Stamatis Moraitis thinks he knows what it is.
"It's the wine," he says, over a mid-morning glass at his kitchen table. "It's pure, nothing added. The wine they make commercially has preservatives. That's no good. But this wine we make ourselves is pure."
Stamatis celebrated his 98th birthday on New Year's Day. He says he's older, but his documents put his date of birth as 1 January 1915. Outside his whitewashed house are his beloved olive trees, his fruit trees, and his vines. He makes about 700 litres of wine a year, he says.

"Do you drink it all yourself?" I ask. "No!" He's shocked at the suggestion. "I drink it with my friends.
 The wine, and convivial days spent with friends and family, helped make Stamatis a poster-boy for the healing effects of Ikaria. Forty-five years ago, living in the US, he was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and given nine months to live.
 At the time it was very expensive to have a funeral there," he remembers. "So I said to my wife 'I'm going home to Ikaria to be buried with my parents.'"
By now he has a twinkle in his eye, and is in full flow. It's a story he has dined out on many times, and he clearly doesn't tire of telling it.
"I found my friends in the village where I was born, and we started drinking. I thought, at least I'll die happy."
"Every day we got together, we drank wine, and I waited. Time passed by and I felt stronger. Nine months came - I felt good. Eleven months came - I felt better. And now, 45 years later, I'm still here!"
"A few years ago I went back to the US and tried to find my doctors. But I couldn't find them. They were all dead."
There are lots of stories like this one on Ikaria. Some may well be just stories, but in recent years scientists and doctors have beaten a path to the island not far off the coast of Turkey to find out the real story.

Four die in shooting in Aurora, Colorado


Four people have been found dead following a shooting incident that triggered a stand-off with police in Aurora, in the US state of Colorado.
Police say they went to a townhouse after shots were heard there overnight.
Officers later entered the home. Following a gunfight they found the suspect dead, along with three people apparently killed earlier, police say.
Aurora, near Denver, was the scene of a mass shooting at a cinema in July, in which a gunman killed 12 people.
He opened fire at random during the premiere of the Batman film The Dark Knight Rises. Suspect James Eagan Holmes is currently being tried on murder charges.
In Saturday's incident, police said they were alerted by a woman who had escaped from the townhouse.
The suspect barricaded himself for five hours, before officers moved in and shot him.
Entering the property, the team found the shooter dead, along with two other men and a woman. Their identities have not been disclosed.

Six gadget trends to look for at CES

Smartphones inch closer to becoming remote controls for your life at next week's 2013 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The annual event is the largest gadget conference in the world, where major technology companies and scrappy startups can show off their latest innovations.
If the show sets the tone for the year's technology, 2013 will be about watching TV on your 5-inch smartphone while your self-driving car ferries you to work. Companies will continue to try to connect everything to the Internet -- lights, power outlets, cars, cameras, kitchen appliances -- and allow you to control them from a mobile device.
There have been some big changes at this year's conference. Longtime headliner Microsoft has dropped out of CES, and mobile devices are increasingly saving their big announcements for the Mobile World Congress event in February. But hopefully the void is filled by exciting discoveries and gadgets we can't predict.
Television: It's about the content
There will be wide, thin, innovative TVs at CES. They will have glorious high-resolution OLED screens and cost way too much money for the average consumer, when and if they become available. Samsung is teasing a TV that is a possibly a new shape or translucent, and Westinghouse has a 110-inch LED TV with 4K resolution.
But the big television story this year will be the industry's continuing quest to break out of these beautiful boxes and move onto tablets and smartphones.
How people consume content has changed drastically in the past few years. They are cutting cords with the cable companies and signing up for on-demand services such as Hulu and Netflix, or buying shows and movies through Amazon or Apple. Viewers want to watch TV on their smartphones and tablets. They are multitasking, watching the "The Walking Dead" while commenting on Twitter.
In response, television companies will attempt to connect TVs to the Internet and share content between mobile devices, set-top boxes and televisions.
Home automation and the art of connecting everything
There is very little in your home that won't be connected to the Internet if electronics manufacturers have their say. Cheap sensors are making it easy to turn devices you've used without much thought into "smart" devices that do a bit of the thinking for you. Connected devices for the home and your health will be plentiful at CES.
Thanks to impeccable design, the Nest automated thermostat was one of the first commercial hits in this area, though others had tried integrating automation into existing home gadgets before. This year, smartphones will be on a bit of a power trip, getting apps to control home security, unlock doors, conserve energy and tinker with lighting.
Cars get smarter and go online
Auto companies will have a larger presence at CES this year, with Ford, Toyota, Hyundai, Audi and others showing off technology to make cars smarter. There will be self-driving and assisted-driving cars, which use a combination of mounted cameras, sensors and GPS to can take the wheel completely or just help a driver into a tight parking spot.
Vehicles are connecting to the Internet to improve navigation, better monitor a car's performance and alert the driver to maintenance needs. They are also taking a cue from (and synching with) smartphones. Cars will continue to integrate apps, voice control and entertainment into the dash, some even running on the Android operating system.
The hot smartphone size is 5 inches
Mobile device unveilings probably will be at a minimum this year, since the major companies are saving their big announcements for the Mobile World Congress conference in Barcelona next month. There will be a few smartphones making their debut next week, though, and for the most part, they will have nearly identical specs: Android, 5-inch 1080p display, quad-core processor, 13-megapixel camera. A few entries could mix it up, including a rumored 6.1-inch Ascend Mate device from Huawei and the company's first Windows Phone 8 handset, the Ascend W2. Smartphone accessories will flood the floor, with the usual glut of headphones, cases and stands.
Touchscreen computers and cheap tablets
Last year's hot computer was the super-thin ultrabook laptop, but that category has cooled down significantly. This year, the spotlight will be on tablet/laptop hybrids running Windows 8. The new Windows operating system is built for touchscreen computers, and manufacturers seem to be having some fun with the form factor. (Check out the Asus Taichi and Lenovo Yoga.)
Cheap, sub-$100 7-inch Android tablets will still abound, but like smartphones, there won't be much in the way of innovation as companies hold back until February.
Room for smaller, innovative companies
The big players lying low presents a great opportunity for the smaller exhibitors to get noticed and make connections. This year, innovative technology will come from unexpected places as smaller companies such as Pebble, a smart-watch company that got started as a Kickstarter campaign, debut products. Now that it's easier for a small operation to raise money and manufacture a physical product on a budget, the gadget market is ripe for a shakeup.
Some big-name startups will also have a presence. Leap Motion will be on the floor, and its motion-sensing technology will appear in Asus notebooks this year. Razer will return this year after making a splash with its Project Fiona game tablet in 2012.

Blunders not corruption led to bungled police response

The senior Scotland Yard officer John Yates misled the public when refusing to open a new investigation into phone hacking at the News of the World, the inquiry found.

Lord Justice Leveson decided that the Metropolitan Police was right to limit its original inquiry in 2006 because of a surge in terrorism following the 7/7 bombings on the London transport system the previous year. But he said Mr Yates should not have dismissed the need for a new inquiry in 2009 amid accusations of widespread wrongdoing at News International’s headquarters at Wapping.
In 2009 a story in The Guardian suggested hundreds of people could have been the victim of hacking by the NOTW. Then, Mr Yates, an Assistant Commissioner, dismissed any need for a new investigation after a review lasting just a few hours. He maintained there was no evidence of widespread wrongdoing at Rupert Murdoch’s newspaper. Lord Justice Leveson said: “The error of judgement in deciding on immediate and prompt dismissal of the allegations by press announcement that afternoon should have been apparent at the time.”
By 2009, Mr Yates had been a long-standing friend of the NOTW’s deputy editor, Neil Wallis, which, the Leveson Inquiry said, meant that “he would have been better advised to arrange for a different officer to conduct” the review. Among Mr Yates’s “inaccurate” public statements was the assertion that hacking had only been used against “a far smaller number of individuals” [rather than hundreds] and that there was insufficient evidence of hacking “in the vast majority of cases”.
The Leveson Report said: “Given the discoveries Operation Caryatid [the original hacking inquiry] had made, these statements were wholly inaccurate.” The inquiry said: “Mr Yates ought to have known it was not safe to state that there was nothing to warrant any reconsideration of the investigation.”
Overall, the report said Scotland Yard had mishandled the accusations against the NOTW because of “a defensive mindset” and combination of blunders. However, it said there was no evidence of corruption among senior ranks at Scotland Yard and said a fear of the NOTW was not responsible for the inadequacy of its investigations.
The report acknowledged there was “a concern” that senior police officers had become too close to News International’s executives. However, it concluded: “I am satisfied that I have seen no basis at any stage [to question] the integrity of the police, or that of the senior officers concerned. What is, however, clear is that a series of poor decisions, poorly executed, came together to contribute to the perception that I have recognised.”

Revealed: Hedge funds betting millions against Britain's high street


The secretive financiers have bet millions of pounds that companies including WH Smith, Home Retail Group, Ocado, Sainsbury, Tesco and Dixons will fall in value, according to a list published under new rules by the Financial Services Authority (FSA).
Lansdowne Partners, one of London’s best known hedge funds, has short sold 0.63pc of the value of Tesco - a £163m bet that the supermarket’s shares will fall. The Mayfair-based group has a 2.51pc short position in WM Morrisons, worth £159.8m.
GMT Capital, an American group, has built up a 3.56pc short position in Carpetright - which is worth just £16.3m but is the third biggest position of the list relative to the size of the company.
Barrington Wilshire, another US fund, has a bet against Mothercare worth £8.24m or 3.18pc of the company’s market value. Two hedge funds have revealed big short positions in Marks & Spencer, whose shares rose 1.18pc yesterday despite revealing a 10pc slide in profits.
Jim Chanos, the famed US short-seller who runs Kynikos Associates, has a 2.52pc short position in Asos, the online fashion retailer.
The biggest short position by percentage of market value is Greenlight Capital’s bet against Daily Mail & General Trust. The fund manager David Einhorn has built up a short position of 4.4pc of the company worth £80.7m.
But in terms of monetary value, Glencore has attracted among the biggest bearish bets. Och Ziff has a 0.82pc short stake worth £202m in the mining giant which is trying to merge with Xstrata. Elliot Management has a 0.71pc short stake in Glencore worth £175m.
The list, which is the most comprehensive view of bearish bets ever seen, follows the introduction of European rules that came into force on November 1. Under the regulations, all short positions worth more than 0.2pc of a company’s market capitalisation have to be revealed to the regulator. Positions of more than 0.5pc of the market value have to be published.
Hedge fund managers, who prove their worth by making money in markets that go down as well as up, are concerned that the disclosures could hamper their efforts.
Experts in London, where more than 80pc of Europe’s hedge funds are based, argue that short selling improves efficiencies in the markets. But European politicians have held the opaque trading practises responsible for volatility in the markets.
On Tuesday, fund managers said the rules unfairly penalise independent funds while allowing the big investment houses to keep their short positions secret.
Tim Steer, a fund manager at Artemis, said: “Under the rules, managers have to disclose a net short position so big asset management groups can hide their short positions because somewhere they will have a fund that has long-only positions which cancel them out. Pure hedge funds are being penalised because their short positions could antagonise companies.” Investment houses that have hedge funds as well as long-only funds are absent from the list, including Blackrock, JP Morgan Cazenove and Jupiter Asset Management.

How will retail do in 2013?


When Philip Clarke presented Tesco’s Christmas trading figures in the second week of 2012, his words went on to define the entire year for the retail industry.
The Tesco chief executive conceded that Christmas sales had been disappointing and was forced to issue the retailer’s first profits warning in more than 20 years. “This isn’t going to kill us,” said a visibly downbeat Clarke. “It’s hard to take on the day, but it will make us stronger.”
Those contrite words from Britain’s biggest retailer, renowned for its bullishness, shocked the industry.
On January 12, 2012 – which would become known among retailers as “Black Thursday” – shares in Tesco collapsed by 16pc, J Sainsbury by 5.4pc, and Wm Morrison by 6pc.
The fact that mighty Tesco could struggle during the vital pre-Christmas period sent alarm bells ringing and, sure enough, 2012 turned out to be a brutal year.
According to Deloitte, 194 retailers collapsed into administration during the year. Not only did this cost tens of thousands of jobs, but the high street lost some of its most famous names, including JJB Sports and Comet.
The legacy of last Christmas, and the difficult months that followed, will still be evident in the trading updates for the key 2012 festive season. Just as Clarke’s words a year ago defined 2012, the comments from retail CEOs over the next few days could set the tone for the next 12 months.
Some of the early signs are promising. Next and John Lewis, the biggest retailers to have reported results so far, have suggested that sales rose compared with last year as consumers protected spending.
In the words of Next chief executive, Lord Wolfson, there was also “less panic discounting”. This was because most retailers, cautious about the challenges of last Christmas, cut the amount of stock they bought.
However, while Next and John Lewis are useful barometers for the high street, they are among its most resilient operators. Their success is unlikely to be replicated across the sector, particularly when, again in the words of Lord Wolfson, “the economy has not changed much”.
This week, a fuller picture will emerge when Morrisons, Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Marks & Spencer and Deben-hams update the stock market on trading.
These are likely to provide the main themes of January 2013:

The struggles of Morrisons

If there is to be a repeat of Tesco’s shock profits warning in 2012, then it could be from Bradford-based Morrisons.
Analysts are forecasting that Britain’s fourth-largest supermarket could post a decline in like-for-like sales of as much as 2.8pc for the six weeks to January 1. Such a decline could lead to Dalton Philips, chief executive, warning that profits for the full-year will be below expectations.
The City is split over Morrisons. One camp believes the company is suffering from not having a presence in the fastest growing online and convenience-store sectors, but is at least on the right path with its focus on fresh food.
The rival camp believes the retailer is alienating its core northern customers by pushing up-market, rather than focusing on price. This criticism is characterised by its “misty vegetables” (chiller cabinets complete with moisture clouds) and cold meats hanging Italian-deli style. “I will never need lemongrass,” one irritated customer was reported as saying about the refurbishment of the stores.
Either way, Morrisons is under pressure and its update will be a marked contrast to last year, when it was one of the best performers at Christmas.
Philip Dorgan, an analyst at Panmure Gordon, said the company should “realign expectations” given the difficult trading it has suffered in the past six months. “While painful, we think that management needs to escape from death by a thousand cuts and take one big hit. Acknowledging that you have a problem is a big step towards solving the problem and it would then allow management to focus on putting things right, rather than fire-fighting to protect an unsustainable level of profit. This, after some delay, was the route that Tesco took,” he said.

Tesco v Sainsbury’s


If Morrisons is the new Tesco this Christmas, then it could take heart from the recovery beginning at Britain’s biggest retailer. Last year’s profit warning from Tesco forced Philip Clarke to launch a £1bn turnaround plan, involving hiring more staff, relaunching Tesco Value as Everyday Value and revamping stores with a greater focus on food.
The impact of this plan, and the weak comparative data from last year caused by the profits warning, mean that Tesco could outperform Sainsbury’s in terms of like-for-like sales for the first time in three years.
This month, therefore, could spark a new phase in the battle between the giant supermarket rivals.
Clive Black, analyst at Shore Capital, forecast sales growth of between 0.5pc and 1.25pc for both companies, but with Tesco ahead in food sales: “The big change year on year is that Tesco is not shipping out the volumes it was this time last year. Therefore, there was no free lunch for the opposition, something that we feel will have particularly taken the edge off Sainsbury’s performance.”
After 31 consecutive quarters of like-for-like growth for Sainsbury’s and chief executive Justin King, the London-based supermarket could be poised for one of its more disappointing quarters. Sales growth is almost certain to be well below the 1.9pc reported in the previous three months.
When the recession began, analysts predicted that Sainsbury’s would be squeezed by Tesco, Aldi and Lidl on one side, and Waitrose on the other.
King and his team have confounded those expectations, but there were signs that Sainsbury’s was under pressure in the run up to Christmas. For example, from December 27 to January 2 the company offered a 10p discount on a litre of fuel for customers who spent more than £60 in their stores which some said smacked of a last-minute measure to boost sales.
“There is no doubt we are winning a lot of customers out of Sainsbury’s,” said Mark Price, managing director of Waitrose, which enjoyed a 5.4pc rise in like-for-like sales over Christmas.
According to Dave McCarthy, analyst at Investec, after stripping out inflation, new space that is still maturing in terms of adding sales, the internet, extensions and convenience, like-for-like sales in Sainsbury’s core stores could be down more than 4pc.
He added: “Sainsbury is suffering as it transitions sales from highly profitable large stores to less profitable convenience stores and the internet. This is part of the structural problem facing the industry and is one reason why industry returns and profits are falling.”

Marks & Spencer in limbo

As arguably the most famous British name on the high street and the country’s biggest fashion retailer, rumours have been swirling around in the industry about Marks & Spencer’s pre-Christmas performance. Did it buy too much stock? Was it forced into heavily discounting?
In reality, this week’s update is likely to be little different from M&S’s interim results in November. The clothing division is struggling, but food is growing.
The most bearish predictions are from Nomura, whose note on M&S sent shares in the 128-year-old company down 3pc on Friday. Analysts at the Japanese bank forecast that food sales will rise 0.5pc for M&S in its third quarter, but general merchandise sales, including clothing, will be down 3.5pc on a like-for-like basis.
Following a 4.3pc drop in general merchandise sales in the first half, this could increase the pressure on the chief executive, Marc Bolland. But the M&S boss has bought time by clearing out the clothing management team, bringing in the former Debenhams’ boss, Belinda Earl, as style director, and moving John Dixon from head of food to head of general merchandise.
Jean Roche, analyst at Panmure Gordon, is “warming” to M&S in anticipation of im-provements in its womenswear, which Bolland said will not be visible until the autumn. Meanwhile, Roche believes Christmas trading was challenging: “We are very cautious on margins given the broad swathes of discounting activity observed, online in particular, pre-Christmas.”

The rise of online


Online shopping reached new levels of importance for retailers at Christmas thanks to developing mobile phone technology and the widespread launch of click-and-collect.
Next says online now accounts for more than a quarter of its sales, while Kantar data show online fashion sales grew by 18pc in November, compared to 7pc in 2011.
Christine Cross, chief retail and consumer advisor to PricewaterhouseCoopers and a non-executive director at Next, said: “Christmas results are showing a robust performance for retailers with an online presence, but in particular those who could use their stores to leverage this through click and collect. This will be the Christmas defined as one where consumers became truly 'omnichannel’ and the winners responded to this need. Online has been the main non-food battleground.”
However, the rise of online sales is causing structural dilemmas. In non-food, these challenges are well documented, with retailers such as HMV, Argos and Dixons battling to adapt to the new world and survive. But in food, figures for this Christmas could also clearly demonstrate that the internet is sucking sales out of traditional stores, where margins are stronger.
So, while Morrisons may turn out to be the loser this Christmas in terms of sales, this may not necessarily be reflected in terms of profits.
Dave McCarthy at Investec said: “Tesco and Sainsbury’s are likely to report strong internet and convenience growth, but the more these grow, the more sales from large stores fall. We estimate that Tesco and Sainsbury’s have underlying 3pc to 5pc volume declines in core stores – closer to Morrisons than first appears.
“The market may take solace from fewer openings, but the problem of blurred channels and excess capacity growth, including virtual capacity, is growing.”
That is true for all retailers.

Prince Charles: Being a grandfather highlights need for climate change



The Prince, an outspoken campaigner on environmental issues, told ITV's This Morning that he did not want the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's child, due to be born this summer, to ask him why he had not done more to tackle issues like climate change.
In an interview at Clarence House, to be broadcast tomorrow, he said: "I've gone on for years about the importance of thinking about the long-term in relation to the environmental damage, climate change and everything else.
"We don't, in a sensible world, want to hand on an increasingly dysfunctional world to our grandchildren, to leave them with the real problem.
"I don't want to be confronted by my future grandchild and (have) them say: 'Why didn't you do something?' So clearly now that we will have a grandchild, it makes it even more obvious to try and make sure we leave them something that isn't a total poisoned chalice."
The Prince, 64, spoke as he backed This Morning's You Can Be Heroes Week, which aims to capitalise on the success of the 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games and create a new army of volunteers across the UK.

He said in December he was "thrilled" at the prospect of becoming a grandfather, after the Duke and Duchess announced that they were expecting their first child.
Charles has been a strong advocate of taking action to protect the environment for many years.
In 2007 he set up The Prince's Rainforest Group to find a solution to save the world's threatened forests.
He addressed a UN international climate summit in Copenhagen in 2009 and the following year he gave a keynote speech to the Oslo Climate and Forest Conference.
In a wide-ranging interview with the ITV daytime show he also reiterated his worry about Prince Harry, who is currently serving in Afghanistan, something he also did at the "Millies" military awards last month.
"If you are a parent or relation to a loved one and that person is away in these incredibly dangerous and challenging circumstances, I know you worry all the time," he told presenters Phillip Schofield and Holly Willoughby.
"Certainly every night I worry. But he [Prince Harry] loves doing what he's doing and he's brilliant at it."
He added: "I constantly meet the families of those who have lost their sons, husbands, brothers or sisters... and I have some understanding at least of what they go through."
Backing the programme's campaign supporting volunteering he said events like the 2012 Olympics, Paralympics and Diamond Jubilee "bring out the best in people".
An army of much-hailed volunteer "games makers" was created for the Olympics and Paralympics, helping events at the many venues run smoothly in their distinctive uniforms.
"A lot of people don't realise how so many of these people keep the whole show on the road," said.
"There is something remarkable in this country I think, about the volunteering spirit."