Home : Commodities : Indonesian shares lower in early trade led by commodities after oil price drop
Indonesian shares lower in early trade led by commodities after oil price drop
Obopay and Grameen Solutions have announced what they're calling "a unique, first-of-its-kind alliance to use mobile technology to deliver banking services to a billion of the world’s poorest people by 2018. The Grameen-Obopay Bank A Billion Initiative will provide access to affordable financial services, including cross-border remittances, money transfer, payments, savings and credit accounts. By empowering life and work endeavors with mobile technology that is ubiquitous even in the most impoverished and remote corners of the world, Grameen-Obopay are bringing the full power of banking to those who need it most."
“I was inspired to found Obopay when I was volunteering in Africa and saw that while people in remote corners of the world often lacked access to the most basic financial services, they almost all had mobile phones,” explained Ms. Carol Realini, CEO of Obopay. “We are thrilled to embark on a partnership with Grameen Solutions, and look forward to working with them to bring truly powerful mobile banking services to people everywhere.”
With more than 3 billion connections to GSM mobile communications networks currently active globally and emerging markets responsible for 85 percent of new connections today , mobile technology can effectively deliver financial services to billions of underserved people on every continent. Until now, even the most basic financial services have been unavailable to the world’s poor because they are physically inaccessible and/or far too expensive to be practical. Using mobile technology to deliver banking services overcomes previously limiting restrictions of space and time by using existing infrastructure to give even the most underprivileged to access financial services.
Grameen Solutions’ CEO Mr. Kazi Islam explained, “We carefully evaluated globally available mobile money service providers with a view to identifying a partner that fits with our vision and mission. Obopay is clearly that partner, and we look forward to maximizing the global potential of mobile financial services with them. By using a technology that is already pervasive — the mobile phone — we will clearly be able to have a dramatic impact on global poverty.”
Working initially in Mumbai, India and in Bangladesh, The Grameen-Obopay Bank A Billion Initiative will begin delivering services in October, 2008.
Commenting on the association, Mr. Aditya Menon, Executive Director and CTO, Obopay India, said, “Obopay’s partnership with Grameen Solutions is a clear and powerful validation of Obopay’s ability to have a dramatic and transformational global impact on personal finance.”
Grameen was founded by Professor Muhammad Yunus, the founding father of the microfinance movement and recipient of the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize. Prof. Yunus commented that, “Mobile based financial services will bring more power to poor people. I'm excited about the partnership that Grameen Solutions and Obopay have created.”
http://www.freewebspace.net/forums/foIndonesian shares were lower in early trade on Monday, with another fall in oil prices dampening sentiment in coal miners and palm oil plantation stocks.
The market's decline, however, was capped by gains in index heavyweight Telkom and selected banking stocks.
'Coal and crude palm oil (CPO) prices fell yesterday, prompting a sell-off in those commodities stocks,' BNI Securities analyst Muhammad Alfatih said.
Light, sweet crude fell $4.82 a barrel to settle at $115.20 on the New York Mercantile Exchange on Friday. That brought crude's decline over the past four weeks to more than $30 a barrel.
At 0317 GMT, the composite index was down 22.85 points or 1.0 percent at 2,173.08.
Coal miner Bumi Resources tumbled 7.1 percent to 5,250 rupiah, its peer Bukit Asam declined 2.3 percent to 12,950 rupiah, Adaro Energy fell 2.7 percent to 1,560 rupiah and Indo Tambangraya dropped 1.3 percent to 26,850 rupiah.
Plantation stocks were mostly lower, with Astra Agro falling 2.4 percent to 18,050 rupiah and Bakrie Sumatra losing 4.9 percent to 1,170 rupiah.
Tin miner Timah tumbled 10.1 percent to 2,675 rupiah.
Bucking the trend, Telkom rose 1.3 percent to 7,850 rupiah and Bank Negara Indonesia gained 1.5 percent to 1,360 rupiah.rumdisplay.php?f=32
http://www.forbes.com/afxnewslimited/feeds/afx/2008/08/10/
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