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Monitronics International Inc SCTYQ

Monitronics International, Inc. is a security alarm monitoring company. The Company provides residential customers and commercial client accounts with monitored home and business security systems, as well as multiple home automation, life safety and advanced security options in the United States, Canada and Puerto Rico. It offers monitoring services for alarm signals arising from burglaries, fires, medical alerts and other events through security systems at its customers' premises; a comprehensive platform of home automation and life safety services, including, among other things, remote activation and control of security systems, support for video monitoring, flood sensors, automated garage door and door lock capabilities and thermostat integration; hands-free two-way interactive voice communication between its monitoring center and customers; and customer service and technical support related to home monitoring systems and home automation services.


GREY:SCTYQ - Post by User

Post by greendazeon May 09, 2014 4:46pm
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Post# 22545933

Google solar power

Google solar power

Google Invests in Growing Trend of Rooftop Solar Financing

Solar panels from SunPower, a company that’s getting $100 million from Google to help homeowners pay for solar-panel installation (AP Photo/Susan Montoya Bryan)

From driverless cars to biotech to high-tech glasses, the $350 billion company that is Google has sprawled far beyond its core mission of providing a spartan web search page and email, and one of its most active fields of investment outside of computing has been green energy — fromsolar power in South Africa’s Northern Cape province to wind in West Texas. Now, with the announcement late last month that it’s investing $100 million to help finance the purchase of residential rooftop solar systems, Google seems to be doubling down on the sun.

In 2011, the company put $280 million toward a solar panel finance scheme with SolarCity. This is how Google described the venture:

SolarCity works with a customer to design a solar system for their home. Investors like Google purchase the system up front and, in return, receive a portion of lease payments from the homeowner along with SolarCity. This kind of innovative financing removes a major adoption barrier for homeowners — the upfront cash required for systems — and makes solar power accessible to homeowners who would otherwise not consider it.

With the money, Google said, SolarCity was able to offer another 8,000 consumers financing for panels — a not insignificant sum of money for a company that otherwise will or already had rolled out 15,000 rooftop systems.

Rooftop solar systems can easily set homeowners back tens of thousands of dollars, and the cost has led some to decry utility rate structures that cause traditional energy users to subsidize rooftop solar installations as regressive taxes on the poor. Whatever the merits of these arguments, there’s no denying that the price of rooftop solar is often out of reach for those already struggling to make ends meet. No matter how good of a deal installing rooftop solar might be in the long-term, it doesn’t matter if people can’t afford the cost of installation.

Google’s newest investment is with SunPower, which will throw in another $150 million for a grand total of a quarter billion dollars worth of panels, and such a deal isn’t uncommon these days. Rooftop solar finance firms have been cleaning up with investors, snagging investments in the high tens and low hundreds of millions of dollars from venture capitalists and more conservative banks like Credit Suisse.

The latest word of a solar finance investment comes courtesy of Greentech Media, which claims to have heard rumors of even more offerings by SolarCity, the 2011 Google partner:

According to sources close to the firm, SolarCity, the leading residential solar installer and financier, will soon be unveiling a loan product. Word has it that the program will be open to applicants with FICO scores of 650 and higher and offers a 30-year option. Another source noted that the loan program will be tested in a limited market to begin with, in order to better understand and codify the sales process. SolarCity did not have an official comment.

With the median American credit score clocking in at somewhere in the low 700s, a lot of U.S. homeowners should be eligible.

The Works is made possible with the support of the Surdna Foundation.

TAGS: THE WORKS, GOOGLE, SOLAR ENERGY, SOLAR PANELS, SUNPOWER

INFRASTRUCTURE

Siemens Report: How Cities Can Attract Private Money for Public Projects

SPONSORED CONTENT

It’s no secret that the U.S. needs to rethink how it pays for infrastructure. With infrastructure repair needs reaching a crisis point, and government reluctant to raise taxes or increase debt levels, it’s not an easy time to be financing public works. There are all kinds of new tools out there — from infrastructure banks to value capture schemes to low-cost borrowing programs — but what all of these have in common is a reliance on a private partner. Known as PPPs, public-private partnerships are increasingly a go-to option for cities seeking to finance projects large and small.

There’s a lot of political noise around what makes for a good investment climate, and the news is replete with examples of privatization deals gone bad, but a new report, “Investor Ready Cities” from Siemens, PwC, and Berwin Leighton Paisner, takes a more sober and detailed look at these issues. Written from the perspective of private investors, contractors and lawyers, the report reveals several key takeaways for city leaders interested in stretching their public investment dollars further.

The overarching message of “Investor Ready Cities” is that urban infrastructure needs are far too great for traditional funding options to close the gap, so public-private partnerships — once considered a wonky novelty — are now becoming a necessity, both for governments and for private companies. But to get the private investment, cities will need to take inventory of their policies and political institutions and aim to realign them with the needs of investors.

The international investment community described in “Investor Ready Cities” sees plenty of public initiatives that can deliver a positive return on investment (particularly in areas like transportation, energy infrastructure, water delivery, and sanitation). These investors recognize the importance of strong rule-based governance institutions, policy frameworks, and even robust local taxing powers, but worry about the prospect of abrupt policy change and political instability that might compromise a project’s value over the long term.

“To provide investors with confidence that there is long-term commitment to investment plans, cities need to have developed a clear, well-formulated vision for their future development,” the report argues.

The authors explain that investment is about identifying and minimizing risk, which is why strong planning capacity and active political leadership play such a critical role.

The items on the list of “What Investors Want” make clear that a city government’s role is not passive.

Investors want city officials to take a holistic view of how their laws and regulations, procedures and processes, and strategic objectives interface with the feasibility and viability of a project, and adjust the following factors accordingly.

They expect officials to do the legwork on contracting and coordinating project delivery, and the political outreach to build support from stakeholders.

The role of planning in particular is important, they explain, because it ensures that structures that devalue the investment won’t be built next door. And the process of engaging stakeholders in the visioning process helps build durable support among the public, minimizing the risk of backlash and abrupt policy changes that could throw the economics of the deal out of whack.

The authors use the example of road pricing as a politically contentious revenue source for a public-private partnership deal that will require significant public buy-in to work.

Such charges are “often resisted because drivers believe that they have already paid for their road usage through taxes such as vehicle excise duty. This resistance makes it vitally important for cities to explain clearly the reasons for introducing such charging.”

So while investors generally prefer low taxes and looser regulations to high taxes and strict regulations, they see some things differently when they act in partnership with cities. In those instances, strong land use planning, broad local taxing powers and predictable land regulations can be helpful, if not necessary, to “make things happen,” the report argues.

And at the same time, city governments must learn to be better business partners — following through in predictable ways, demonstrating their capacity to deliver results on time and under budget, and creating simple rules that don’t require international investors hoping to do business with the city to acquire a deep knowledge of bespoke local political conventions.

You can download the full “Investor Ready Cities” report here.

TAGS: SIEMENS, INVESTOR READY CITIES


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