January 31, 2018

Printer, Camera helps Canon to Post Outstanding Financial Results for 2017


Canon Inc., the Japanese technology giant, wheeled a growth of 19.9% in net sales to ¥4,080 billion ($36.1 bn) – smashing an increase of 60.6% in net income to ¥241.9 billion ($2.1 bn) for the fiscal year 2017 ended December 31.

Four new businesses incorporated this year – commercial printing, network cameras, industrial equipment, and medical – drove company’s total sales by 24% in 2017. The growth was impressive 20% even excluding medical impact.

Although more than 78% of the company sales came from overseas: Americas (27%), Europe (25%), and Asia and Oceania (26%), nevertheless domestic and Asia and Oceania stroked real tremors of 25% and 30% respectively.

Operating results also include revenues of Toshiba Medical Systems Corporation (TMSC) which was acquired by Canon Inc.in December 2016 and officially is now Canon Medical Systems after corporate name change as of January 4.

More celebrated for making office equipment and cameras – Canon’s acquisition of TMSC is planned to propel the group into a leading healthcare conglomerate – dogging an ambitious revenue plan of ¥5,000 billion ($44bn) by 2020.

In Office business segment, the sale of office multifunction devices (MFDs) including next-generation color models totaled ¥1865.9 billion as demand in emerging countries showed the motions of recovery. Strong sale in hardware and consumables of laser printer also supported the increase.

Smartphones obstructed the growth of interchangeable-digital and compact cameras however strong demand of advanced-amateur-models allowed Canon to maintain top share in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Aided by larger sale in home-use and large format inkjet printers, Imaging Systems division’s sale increased to ¥1,136.2 billion.

The novel ‘Medical System’ business unit, established at the beginning of the second quarter of 2017 posted a sale of ¥436.2 billion which includes radiography, CT, MR, ultrasound, chemical analyzers and ophthalmic equipment.

Aquilion Precision CT Scanner helped to increase the sale of computed tomography (CT) systems in 2017 and to maintain top share in Japanese market. The sale of Aplio i-series ultrasound systems also remained firm.

The sale of semiconductor lithography included in in Industry and Others segment increased as well – as a result of higher demand for memory devices used in data centers. FPD lithography equipment and manufacturing equipment for OLED panels increased significantly due to growing demand of smartphones. The other highlight for the year was the solid sale of network cameras altogether increasing sale by 25.2% to ¥731.7 billion.

In a mix of global economic circumstances, Canon Inc. projects its net sales at ¥4,300 billion – an increase of 5.4% and net income at ¥280 billion – an increase of 15.7% for FY2018.


January 24, 2018

Richest 0.000027% Holds $7.6 trillion; What Wonders This Money Can Do?


By: Azhar Azam

Last year witnessed a record increase in the number of billionaires around the world – one more every two days – as the wealth of the billionaires rose by $762 billion over the period, according to a latest Oxfam report just released.

Eighty two percent (82%) of the entire growth in global wealth went to the richest 1% while no increase in the wealth of bottom 50% of the global population – 3.8 billion – was witnessed for the year. The increase is enough to end extreme poverty worldwide by seven times over.

There are 2,043 billionaires worldwide which are only 0.000027% of the global population whose net worth is estimated at over $7.6 trillion – more than 40% of the world’s largest US gross domestic product and nearly 10% of the world’s total GDP.

The charity organization also noted that the incomes of the ordinary workers increased by an average of 2% a year against about 13% a year or almost six-times faster growth in the wealth of the elite group.

Inheritance is the main and the easiest source of deriving wealth. Approximately one-third of billionaires draw wealth from inheritance.

Over the next 20 years, more than $2.4 trillion will be inherited by 500 richest people of the world to their heirs. This sum exceeds the GDP of world’s second most-populated country, India, with population of 1.3 billion people.

Another highlight of the Oxfam’s report is that one of the CEO from top five international fashion brands earns in just four days what a Bangladeshi garment worker would earn in her lifetime.

The non-governmental organization further states that super-rich individuals and corporations are masking as much as $7.6 trillion in tax havens from tax authorities as revealed in Panama and Paradise Papers – evading $200 billion of taxes every year.

Attributable to the tax havens – the richest 1% are evading $200 billion of taxes every year including $170 billion of lost tax revenues for developing companies from such super-rich billionaires and corporations.

Oxfam also estimates that a global tax of 1.5% on the wealth of the billionaires could pay for every child to go to the school.

What Wonders This Money Can Do!

United Nations estimates that $30.0 billion a year is required to eradicate hunger from the world so the total money held by merely 2,043 should be enough to provide food to 870-million under-nourished people for 256-years.

More than 3-billion people around the world live on less than $2.5 a day of which over 1.3 billion people live in extreme poverty; less than $1.25 a day. What tiny 0.000027% control, can double the earnings of more than 3-billion people living below the poverty line worldwide.

In another estimate by Sachs, $175 billion a year is needed to end extreme poverty throughout the world in 20-years. These 2,043-billionaires can do this alone; still over $4,168 billion will remain at their disposal.

According to Global Partnership for Education, the average cost of educating children from pre-primary through secondary education (13-years) in developing countries is $5,600 so $7.6 trillion can educate up to 1.37 million poor children. Remember there are about 260-million children not in the schools.

The Water Project estimates that 783-million people around the globe do not have access to clean drinking water whilst 1 in 3 people, or 2.4 billion, are living without improved sanitation facilities. 50% of the patients hospitalized are suffering from water-related disease whereas nearly 20% of the children deaths are also correlated with the eat-related diseases.

An assessment in The New York Times in 2000 suggests that brining water and sanitation to entire world would cost $10.0 billion a year. Even if we two-fold the evaluation, billionaires’ money can provide water and sanitation to whole world for a period of more than 383-years.

A panel of top-five economists, including four-Nobel laureates unanimously suggested a few ideas to spend $75 billion (1% of billionaires’ total net worth) to fix the world:

  • $3 billion a year to fight against malnutrition to enable 100-million children to start their lives without stunted growth or malnutrition
  • Only $300 million can prevent 300,000 children’s deaths from Malaria; investments can also be made for tuberculosis treatment, childhood immunization, and an HIV/AIDS vaccination
  • Just $200 million are required to provide low-cost drugs to treat acute heart-attacks in developing countries; preventing 300,000 deaths
  • $2 billion can be spent on research and development to increase agriculture output that will not only reduce hunger by increasing food production and lowering food prices but would also protect biodiversity as higher production would ensure less deforestation 

It is not all about capitalizing wealth; there are many top-billionaires who make regular charitable donations; called philanthropists. These include Bill and Melinda Gates (Gates Foundation), Warren Buffett, George Soros, Mark Zuckerberg, Walton Family, Eli & Edythe Broad, Michael Bloomberg, Paul Allen and many others.

Sulaiman Al-Rajhi, a Saudi philanthropist and Forbes 120th richest person in world for 2011 with net worth of $7.7 billion, is the lead paradigm of a billionaire who choose to live in rags after growing to billions from rags.

“Now I own only my dresses.”

In 2011, Al-Rajhi transferred all his fortune among his children and set aside the rest for endowments to again become a poor man. The founder of the largest world’s Islamic bank, Al-Rajhi Bank, also spoke of his success in convincing chiefs of leading world’s banks including Bank of England that interest is forbidden in both Islam and Christianity.

Although he did not respond to the distribution of his assets to children and endowments but Press Reader reported transfers to endowments valued at $5.5 billion.


January 6, 2018

Where $375 billion of Arms are ‘Tested’ every year?

By: Azhar Azam

There are various estimates to determine the enormous number of human fatalities in several armed conflicts around the world but neither of these could express the number of families suffered, the number of kids victimized and orphaned and the number of widows befallen besides massive destruction of infrastructure, people displacement and indirect deaths resulted from these wars and conflicts.

Nevertheless, we can at least calculate the huge volumes of military expenditures and arms sale which are incurred to protect the national security, to oppress people, or even to resist against repression. But what has truly given an exceptional surge to these military and arms expenditure is the ‘arguably triggered’ – menace of terrorism.

Setting aside the ‘objectives’ behind sparking the plague of terrorism, arms business – patronized by the ‘imposed’ large military expenditures worldwide – remains the perpetually productive, profitable and flourishing industries of the world today billed by the war on terror in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan and numerous conflicts going on in the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa to topple or reinstate the governments.

Whether it is US-led coalition attack on Iraq or Afghanistan, Syrian civilian carnage, Egypt turmoil, Turkish-Kurdish conflict, Saudi-led assault on Yemen, Libyan catastrophe, Israeli ambush on Philistine, Indian atrocities in Kashmir or Pakistan’s military operations to nip terrorism – irrespective of who win and who losses – the arms manufacturers are always the winners as far as such fracas continue to flare.

According to SIPRI, the worldwide military expenditure had reached to whooping $1.7 trillion ($1,696 billion) in 2016 – now warranting an arms sale of $375 billion (top-100 companies excluding China) for the same year, 1.9% or about $7 billion increase from prior year 2015.

Countries with Largest Military Spending – 2016
In 2016, total US military expenditure of over $611 billion was more than one-third (36.2%) of global world military expenditure and as much as three-times of second-largest military spender, China. The total military spending of these two countries accounted for nearly half of total world spending in 2016.

Total military expenditure by top-5 countries – United States, China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and India combined spending in 2016 was 60.2% or more than $1 trillion of world military expenditure in 2016.

Per capita military spending of Israel ($2,194) and Saudi Arabia ($1,978) were highest in the world for 2016. The leading United States was ranked fourth in the category with a per capita military spending of $1,886 for the year.

Countries with Largest Arms Sale – 2016
In 2016, 38 US-based companies out of SIPRI top-100 arms manufacturing companies from around the world (excluding China) had an arms sale of $217.2 billion – pocketing a blanket market share of 57.9%. Top-5 countries again dominated the arms sale in 2016 – accounting for 83.8 or about $314 billion.

The sale of US and Russian companies grew by 4.0% and 3.8% respectively however the sale of West European arms producing companies remain comparatively flat in a global market growth of 1.9%.

South Korean companies had an impressive 2016 as the companies from the country bolstered a remarkable 20.6% growth to post arms sale of $8.4 billion in 2016.

SIPRI database excludes China due to ‘the methodological difficulties posed by the lack of transparency about China’s arms sales’ however on limited data basis, China sales of arms are estimated about US$268 billion in 2012.

Leading Arms Exporting and Importing Countries – 2016
The total value of global arms transfer is estimated at $91.3 billion in 2015, according to SIPRI. Arms export market is dominated by the United States ($9.9 billion) and Russia (6.4 billion) as of 2016 whereas Saudi Arabia ($3.0 billion), Algeria (2.9 billion), and India ($2.6 billion) were the largest arms importers in 2016.

It is pertinent to note that global arms exports are only a fraction of arms sale worldwide. For example, although the US companies’ arms sale in 2016 was $217.2 billion but US exports were only $9.9 billion in 2016. This is because these arms producing companies sell most weapons to their government customers.

The values of arms agreements and notifications are much higher but when these agreements and notifications are translated into exports, the actual value trims down drastically.

Companies with Largest Arms Sale – 2016
Lockheed Martin is the world’s largest arms manufacturing company with total net sales of $47.2 billion (arms sale $40.8bn) in 2016. It operates under four segments: Aeronautics ($17.8bn); Missiles and Fire Control ($6.6bn); Rotary and Mission Systems ($13.5bn) and Space Systems ($9.4bn).

It manufactures world class combat and air mobility aircrafts and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) including multi-role and stealth fighter jets such as F-35, F-16, and F-22, tactical airlifter C-130 Hercules, air and missile defense systems like PAC-3 and THAAD, and other surveillance and space systems.

In November 2015, Lockheed Martin purchased Sikorsky Aircraft Corporation of United Technologies for $9 billion – manufacturer of military and commercial helicopters such as Black Hawk, Seahawk, CH-53K, H-92, S-76, and S-92.

Out of SIPRI top-100, 63 companies are listed in the United States (38) and West Europe (25) which collectively had a market share of 82.4% or $308.8 billion. Of top-10 companies in the table, 7 are listed in the United States and 3 in West Europe.

A total of 10 Russian companies also occupy the top-100 list. SIPRI estimates to include at least 9 or 10 Chinese companies in its top-100 if arms sale data could be available from China.

Where $375 billion of Arms are ‘Tested’ every year?

The list hardly includes a country that is facing a strong terrorism threat or significant armed conflict on its territory but how profoundly the arms manufacturing companies of these countries have grown.

The total arms sale (excluding China) totaled $374.8 billion in 2016 whereas the global arms transfer value, according to various estimates, never exceeded $100 billion. So the other $175 billion of arms are used by these countries to strengthen their forces, fighting terrorism, fall in the hands of the terrorists and to ‘test’ their weapons in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Palestine, Kashmir – unfortunately all Muslim territories – and other conflicted regions.

All of the largest arms producing countries are concocted be civilized, peace makers and law-abiding icons but only within their geographical boundaries. The theories of feeding conflicts, armoring rebels and fashioning chaos sound real on the basis of this terrible disparity between arms sale and arms transfer.


January 3, 2018

Donald Duck to Donald Trump: The Latest Diversity in American Animation History


Akin to the all-time hit cartoon characters – Disney’s Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse – Donald Trump is the latest diversity in the unprecedented American animation history.

Though a bit dissimilar to his system-generated friends who obliterate everything virtually, he instead carts a mission to destroy ‘earth’, the only life-existing object in the universe.

Nevertheless as a consequence of international and domestic influences and interferences, Trump is now controlling a nation that is supposed to marshal the world for decades.

But the weird crank has now taken the United States from leadership role to international pariah within less than a year and he is not going to stop here either.

He is largely infamous around the world for his desperate and erratic views both in public orations and at social media pedestals.

Four of five nuclear powers – China, Iran, North Korea, Pakistan, and Russia – are some of his ‘pet’ means of catharsis for him.

Ironically, he is least fretful of South Korean flagrant nuclear threats, Russian cyber involvement or Chinese economic challenge to the United States and is more stewed about Pakistan that invariably reinforced the American homeland security.

A hawkish but naïve on complex international and regional dynamics, Trump is postulating the world as World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) where he could buy some fake wrestlers like India to earn him some fake wins in a few fake face-offs.

But as a politician, he has successfully needled animosity, sadism, and racism amongst his followers and voters to politically hypnotize them and to nurture his hoax popularity in the public. And the ploy seems to be working very well.


For example, his gratitude tweet to starting good relations with Pakistan has only 14K likes and 69K retweets. But when he airmailed some bitter words on Pakistan for ‘lies & deceit’, he was liked and retweeted by nearly 7x and over 4x more people respectively.

So, generally Trump’s followers and voters do not want to receive something decent from him – a counter-conduct that impetuses Trump to fast-track skepticism.

Trump’s hottest tweet however was that of panning CNN in the most ridiculous way any president of any state would have ever done. Look at this:


Amid all odds, the majority of people from the United States and around the world still are more curved toward a much more prudent mien from POTUS like Obama – shouldn’t expect from the present one though.

What's more, Trump despite all his heroic tweets, could not emerge as one of the leading twitter personality. Instead, ex-POTUS Obama’s tweet negating racism was the most liked (4.6 million) and second most-retweeted (1.7 million) in 2017.


As a matter of fact, Obama’s last tweet about greeting 2018 had 106K retweets and 454K likes – doesn’t matter though as it is not going to make any change to the pseudo-historical Trump.