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AMERICAN CONFECTIONERY AND SWEET BAKERY SECTOR BENEFITS FROM USA TAX CUTS
THE SWEEPING overhaul of the United States tax code which took effect this year has offered a boost to American companies of all sectors, with companies that produce and sell confectionery being among those garnering the benefits.
The drop in the US corporate tax rate, from 35% to 21%, along with a provision that allows US companies to repatriate foreign earnings at a one-time cost, net of foreign tax credits, of 15.5%, is expected to shore up corporate cash positions.…
REGULATORY CONVERGENCE OF COSMETICS LEGISLATION WILL HAPPEN – BUT SLOWLY, SAY EXPERTS, COSMETICS EUROPE MEETING HEARS
ACHIEVING regulatory convergence in the USD465 billion global cosmetics industry (Euromonitor 2017 figures) is an important long-term goal, industry experts agreed at European personal care product association Cosmetics Europe’s June 13-14 annual conference 2018 in Brussels. Europe is a key market for this industry – providing EUR77.6 billion’s worth of personal care product sales last year, and supporting more than two million jobs, said Cosmetics Europe president Loïc Armand, also president of L’Oréal France.…
INDIAN CONFECTIONERS AND SWEET BAKERS UPSET OVER PLANNED DRACONIAN HEALTH LABELLING RULES
INDIAN confectionery makers are fearing a slump in sales due to the country’s new ‘traffic light’ food labelling regulation that mandates detailed nutrition information on the front of the pack, along with red dots to denote high sugar, salt or fat content.…
SPAIN’S PERSONAL CARE PRODUCT MARKET CONTINUES TO REBOUND FROM RECESSIONARY PAST
SPAIN’S personal care product market is continuing to grow after years of post-financial crisis weakness. Spain’s skincare, cosmetic and perfume industry continues to mature, and has turned in solid sales figures for 2017, reflecting the optimistic mood of the economy after the ‘lost’ years of the recession.…
OVERSEAS TERRITORIES CONTEST NOTION THAT OPEN BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REGISTERS ARE MOST EFFECTIVE
THE UK parliament has controversially voted to force its overseas territories (OT) to create publicly accessible beneficial ownership registers by December 31, 2020. Critics say the move threatens the financial sectors and will not aid law enforcement. Is that true? Keith Nuthall reports
Listening to the leaders of Britain’s overseas territories, the beneficial ownership amendment to a UK Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Bill is a risk to their survival.…
THE UPCOMING EU LIST OF COUNTERFEIT COSMETICS EMBRACED BY THE LEGITIMATE INDUSTRY
A EUROPEAN Commission plan to identify online and physical marketplaces outside the European Union (EU) where counterfeiting piracy or other forms of intellectual property (IP) abuse are common practices has brought hope to the cosmetics sector. Continuously confronted with counterfeit and black-market goods, the legitimate industry sees the EU’s upcoming ‘Counterfeit and Piracy Watch-List’ as a way to minimise financial losses from pirates and smugglers.…
MARRIOTT FD PAUL SIMMONS PERSONIFIES THE HUMAN SIDE OF FINANCE
Paul Simmons, Chief Financial Officer, Marriott International Middle East and Africa, provides a glimpse into running the finances of the region’s largest international hotel operator.
The Middle East – particularly the countries of the Arabian Gulf – is known for its impressive skyline of luxury hotels.…
UK BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP VOTE ALARMS OVERSEAS TERRITORIES
A VOTE by the UK parliament to insist that Britain’s overseas territories introduce publicly available beneficial ownership registers by December 31, 2020, has sparked anger and dismay within these autonomous, mainly small island, jurisdictions.
An amendment to a UK Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering Bill requires the British government to impose such registers on its OTs by this deadline, if the local administrations have not created their own.…
USA AND CANADIAN AUTO SECTOR TO SIZE UP IMPACT OF METAL DUTIES, WHILE NAFTA PROSPECTS LOOK GLOOMY
THE AMERICAN and Canadian automotive industries will be counting the cost of new tariffs being imposed on steel and aluminum traded between their countries, following the decision yesterday by the Trump administration to start collecting 25% on Canadian steel and 10% on aluminum.…
BHUTAN STRUGGLES TO ENFORCE ITS TOBACCO BAN
THE HIMALAYAN kingdom of Bhutan may have a ban on smoking in public spaces under the Tobacco Control Act of 2010, but it is not hard to find smokers flouting this law. The legislation specified sporting centres as public spaces under the act, but when Tobacco Journal International visited the national stadium in the capital Thimphu to watch the opening game of this season’s Bhutan Pepsi Football League on April 21, it followed young fans walk to washroom at half-time to light up smuggled cigarettes.…