Lokasi On Bank DKI Wilayah Jakarta dan Sekitarnya

Buat Yang Mencari Lokasi Bank DKI untuk Wilayah DKI Jakarta tentunya.. LIST OF OFFICE ADDRESS Kantor Pusat Head Office Jl. Ir. Juanda III No. 7-9 Jakarta Pusat 10120 Telp1 1: (021) 231 4567 (hunting) Faks1 1: (021) 351 7660 Kantor Unit Kerja di luar kantor pusat Head Office Supporting Grup Komersial MNC Tower Lt. 14 Jl. Kebon Sirih No. 17-19 Jakarta 10340 Telp1 1: (021) 3923222 (hunting) Faks 11: (021) 3914222 Grup Konsumer MNC Tower Lt. 14 Jl. Kebon Sirih No. 17-19 Jakarta 10340 Telp1 1: (021) 3923222 (hunting) Faks 11: (021) 3919944 Grup Retail MNC Tower Lt. 14 Jl. Kebon Sirih No. 17-19 Jakarta 10340 Telp 1 1: (021) 3923222 (hunting) Faks 11: (021) 3918844 Grup Syariah MNC Tower Lt. 8 Jl. Kebon Sirih No. 17-19 Jakarta 10340 Telp 1 1: (021) 3190 4007 (hunting), 1 1 3140 544, 3190 4135, 1 1 31903954, Faks1 1: (021) 3927448 Grup Audit Intern Jl. Ir. Juanda III No. 16 C Jakarta Pusat 10120 Telp1 1: (021) 3511559, 3518112, 1 1 3507485, 3518263 Faks1 1: (021) 3518119 Grup Teknologi Informasi Jl. Ir. Juanda III No. 4A Jakarta Pusat 10120 Telp1 1: (021) 3483 0324 Faks1 1: (021) 3521 253 Grup Supervisi Kredit Gedung Bank Cabang Pembantu Panglima Polim Lt. 2-3. Jl. Panglima Polim Raya No. 27 Jakarta Selatan 12160 Telp1 1: (021) 7262421, 7262618, 17262546, 7262476 Faks1 1: (021) 7262547 Grup Pembinaan Cabang Gedung Bank Cabang Pembantu Panglima Polim Lt. 4. Jl. Panglima Polim Raya No. 27 Jakarta Selatan 12160 Telp1 1: (021) 7210467, 91270607, 1 70970017 Faks1 1: (021) 7233672 Grup Manajemen Risiko Gedung Bank DKI Cabang Matraman Jl. Matraman Raya No. 138 Lt. 6 & 8 Jakarta Timur 13150 Telp1 1: (021) 8513950, 8514041, 8513320 Faks1 1: (021) 8511517 Divisi Kepatuhan Gedung Bank DKI matraman Lt.8, Jl. Matraman Raya No. 138 Jakarta Timur 13150 Telp: (021) 8513320 Faks: (021) 8511517
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Rupee down low on Dollar

The Indian rupee has hit a record low against the dollar despite recent efforts to prop-up the currency. According to official data, international investors have withdrawn $11.58bn in shares and debt from India's markets since the beginning of June. Inflation fears India's economy had been growing at a fast clip, reaching annual growth of 9%. There are fears that the RBI (Reserve Bank of India) measures may not help improve the rupee," said Param Sarma, chief executive with NSP Forex. Indian authorities are concerned that the weak rupee is stoking inflation. More News Finance
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Verizon & Vodafone End Venture; Beef over Fast Food

Verizon (VZ) and Vodafone (VOD) are in talks to end their partnership in Verizon Wireless. Word is Verizon would pay Vodafone well over $100-billion for its stake in the joint venture. Breaking news: The Commerce Department's latest estimate of GDP has exceeded expectations. The first estimate came in at 1.7%. Fast food workers are taking a beef to the picket lines. The workers are pushing to get chains like McDonald's (MCD), Wendy's (WEN) and Taco Bell (YUM) to raise their wages to $15 an hour, which is double the national minimum wage. STOCKS TO WATCH Campbell's (CPB) reported earnings this morning. The maker of soup and more posted earnings of 45-cents a share, up 4-cents from a year ago and 3-cents better than estimates. The company has been working to strengthen its core business while also expanding into higher-growth spaces. Guess (GES) has been up more than 18% since yesterday's closing bell. The company shattered estimates with its earnings report, posting profits of 52-cents a share, when analysts were looking for 36-cents. The climb we're seeing on this report, just about mirrors an 18% drop in Guess stock over the past month. The smaller competitor of Whole Foods says same store sales rose 3.4% in the quarter, and revenue rose 13% from a year earlier. Prior to this morning Fresh Market shares were up 13% year-to-date. Krispy Kreme (KKD) reports after the closing bell. Krispy Kreme is expected to post healthy gains over last year: earnings of 16-cents a share, up from 12-cents on revenue that's risen to $111-million. On Fina Fresh Market
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No worms in Apple stock

Apple (AAPL) has taken a bit of a stumble on Wall Street lately. Now, investors need to figure out whether it's a great buying opportunity or if this is the beginning of the end of Apple's fabulous bull run. Shares of Apple have now fallen 10% from their all-time high of $705.07. The stock dipped slightly Tuesday, making it the fourth consecutive down day for Apple. Apple was roundly criticized for its new Maps app, with many people preferring the previous map from Google (GOOG) that was bundled into Apple's iOS. Related: Comprehensive coverage of iEverything in Fortune's Apple 2.0 blog The days of Apple as the plucky David of Silicon Valley doing battle with the monolithic Wintel Goliath are long gone. Remember the kerfuffle over the iPhone 4 antenna? Nobody should be surprised that Apple shares are taking a breather. I followed that up last month by saying that "as Apple's stock climbs higher and higher, it's harder for new products to immediately move the needle." Apple proved it is fallible. Will the rumored iPad Mini, which may be unveiled this month if the chatter about an imminent invitation for another special Apple event are correct, be the product that restores the sense of magic and wonder usually associated with Apple? Apple will release its next quarterly earnings report on October 25. As a result, Apple's stock is once again looking reasonably priced, trading at 11.8 times fiscal 2013 earnings projections. Apple had been valued at 13.5 earnings estimates for next year at its peak $705 price. Related: Apple's biggest apologies The sense of alarm about Apple's stock slide is even more comical when you consider that this isn't even the first time in the past 12 months Apple has "corrected." There was almost a mini-Apple bear market this spring. After Apple hit a then all-time high of $644 on April 10, the stock then tumbled 19% to $522 by May 18 thanks to concerns about a slowdown in the global economy. (Sound familiar?) And shortly after the iPhone 4s hit stores in mid-October of last year, Apple's stock fell nearly 15% over a seven-week stretch from a then-peak of $420.70 to $363.32. Sure, Apple will eventually top out. But I doubt that the stock has already peaked. See More Market Plan in On Fina
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Florida Sinkholes 2013

It sounded like a thunderstorm as windows broke and the ground shook, but vacationers who were awakened at a resort villa near Orlando, Fla., soon realized the building was starting to collapse — parts of it swallowed by a 100-foot sinkhole that also endangered two neighboring buildings. By early Monday, nearly a third of the structure at Summer Bay Resort had collapsed. All 105 guests staying in the villa were evacuated, as were those in the neighboring buildings. Security guard Richard Shanley had just started his shift, and he heard what sounded like shouting from a building. A guest flagged him down to report that a window had blown out. Shanley reported it to management, and another window popped. The resort's staff decided to evacuate the villa. Shanley said the building seemed to sink by 10 to 20 inches and bannisters began to fall off the building as he ran up and down three floors trying to wake up guests. The first portions of the building to sink were the walkways and the elevator shaft, Gade said. "You could see the ground falling away from the building where the building started leaning," Gade said. Then, as a part of the leaning building crumbled quickly into the ground, dust shot up around the site, amateur video of the collapse shows (http://bit.ly/1cuOc1u). In one of the adjacent buildings, firefighters and police officers knocking on doors woke up Maggie Moreno of San Antonio. "The building was just snapping." Luis Perez also was staying at a nearby building. Over the next five hours, sections of the building sank into the ground. Paul Caldwell, the development's president, said the resort gave all affected guests other rooms. The Red Cross also distributed food, clothing and medicines to vacationers who had lost their belongings in their resort rooms. There were no signs before Sunday that a sinkhole was developing, Caldwell said. Geologist Scott Purcifull told CBS News a sinkhole this size is not that common, but they're difficult to predict. The resort — with condominiums, two-bedroom villas and vacation houses in addition to standard rooms — has about 900 units spread over a large area about 10 miles west of Walt Disney World. Problems with sinkholes are ongoing in Florida. They cause millions of dollars in damage in the state annually. On March 1, a sinkhole underneath a house in Seffner, about 60 miles southwest of the Summer Bay Resort, swallowed a man who was in his bed. Last week, Florida received a $1.08 million federal grant to study the state's vulnerability to sinkholes. Other states sit atop limestone in a similar way, but Florida has additional factors like extreme weather, development, aquifer pumping and construction.
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Payday 2 is now Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3

Grab six bags of cash, more if we're feeling confident. That payday better be worth it... Things hardly ever go to plan in Payday 2, the co-op first person shooter that's (mostly) about robberies. In the ten hours that I've played it, and despite criminal planning, I've yet to pull a perfect heist or mission. I suspect that most players will have a similar experience; the game is definitely not easy. Before we get into why that is, let's talk about how the game works. Players use a system called "Crimenet," where they can select a number of different missions—some normal, some more difficult versions of existing missions, and some missions that span multiple days. Once a mission is selected, players are taken to a lobby. From there, players can also select a loadout—there are a variety of different guns, attachments, and masks to equip, along with skills and abilities depending on what you choose to spec for. You can mix and match what type specializations you have, provided you've gained enough skill points from completing missions, although you'll need to invest heavily in specific trees if you'd like to enjoy some of the high-powered abilities. Right now, at level 20, I've unlocked the ability to equip med packs, ammo packs, extra XP gain, amongst other things. Maybe it's a particularly difficult mission, where we're likely to run out of ammo quickly—better take ammo packs! It's your call, although you can't know what a mission will require of you until you've played it a few times and see what's what. Usually, if you've got a good group going, the idea is to pull off a perfect heist...which means spending time before a game starts denoting who does what and when, along with discussing loadouts. This planning stage is when Payday 2 shines: while shoot-outs are a part of the heist fantasy, a good criminal doesn't have to resort to it, right? Thing is, there are a ton of factors that can throw a mission out the window. Bystanders will become suspicious if you run around with a mask on and a gun pulled out, naturally. Shooting is noisy. Most enemies are different types of law enforcement, and all seem like just bodies to shoot down. where enemies react dynamically—having dumb AI seems like a particularly noticeable shortcoming. Setting the game to a harder difficulty will give you bodies with more health to shoot down, sometimes in exasperating, ridiculous numbers (for small-time heists?), and often while you wait for a drill to get through a door. The drilling (or general waiting for something to happen) is not so bad initially (I didn't even notice it) but as you move through more difficult missions, the number of doors you have to drill through/wait for can also feel exasperating. Personally, the shooting felt like punishment that comes from messing up a heist. It helps that there are a ton of great ideas in the game. If you don't kill civilians, the police is more likely to negotiate with you—in practice, what this means is that if any player is downed and then "taken into custody," law enforcement gives you the chance to trade a hostage for that teammate. Beyond that collecting masks—which are collected via random drops, along with money and weapon attachments—feels more logical than collecting hats. Wearing a ridiculous hat or attire while shooting other people? Yes, it's worth playing now to see the neat ideas you can't find in other shooters; it's a great title to pick up to play around with your friends...but I can't help but look forward. Will it have wider variety of missions?
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Tesla Motors, Inc. (TSLA) Stock - NasdaqGS

Tesla Motors, Inc. (Tesla) designs, develops, manufactures and sells electric vehicles and advanced electric vehicle powertrain components. Tesla owns its sales and service network. The Company is engaged in commercially producing a federally-compliant electric vehicle, the Tesla Roadster. addition to developing its Model S and future vehicle manufacturing capabilities at the Tesla Factory, the Company is designing, developing and manufacturing lithium-ion battery packs, electric motors, gearboxes and components both for its vehicles and for its original equipment manufacturer customers. These activities occur at its electric powertrain manufacturing facility in Palo Alto, California and at the Tesla Factory. The Company provides services for the development of electric powertrain components and sells electric powertrain components to other automotive manufacturers. Ashton Kutcher owns one of the more than 13,000 Tesla Model S electric sedans on the road in North America, and he's quite pleased about it. After ditching his Lexus hybrid, Kutcher liked his new ride so much that he bought stock in Tesla. Kutcher has gotten into investing of late, putting about $100 million into companies including Airbnb, Spotify and Foursquare. "EVs get held to a higher standard," he told ClimateWire. Miller Tabak’s Andrew Wilkinson offers another reason: Fed tapering fears. He writes: Some of the poor tone ahead of the start to US trading may be as a result of ongoing taper talk surrounding the Fed’s intentions. With the August non-farm payroll reading due September 6, there remains a sense that two weeks later could still deliver the first announced reduction in the volume of monthly bond purchases. Still, even if that happens it should be taken as an ultimate sign of recovering economic health and not as a detractor from the US economy. google finance tesla stocks yahoo tesla stocks
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Home prices rise agai

Home prices rose in June for the 16th consecutive month nationwide but at a slower pace than in recent months. Market researcher CoreLogic says June home sales prices were up 11.9% year-over-year and up 1.9% from May. But that's a slower month-to-month rise than 2.6% in May from April and the almost 2.8% increase in April from March, revised figures show. The slowdown in asking prices in July could be the "start of the return to normal price gains," says Jed Kolko, Trulia economist. Kolko says rising mortgage interest rates, expanding inventory and declining investor interest in home purchases are contributing to a slowdown in price gains. Higher rates make homes less affordable. In June, Los Angeles-area home prices were up almost 21% year-over-year, CoreLogic says. Phoenix posted a 17% annual gain. Trulia's data show the asking price slow down to be most apparent in the West, where prices have rebounded most strongly. Asking prices are a leading indicator of price trends and will get reflected in sales price indexes this fall.
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Washington Post Reaches the End of the Graham

“We knew we could survive, but we always felt that our ownership should do more than help the paper survive,” Mr. Graham said in an interview Monday evening. Then in July, at Allen’s annual Sun Valley conference, Mr. Graham met with one of them, Jeff Bezos, the founder ofAmazon.com. Mr. Graham liked what he heard. So after 80 years of control and editorial leadership by the Graham family, The Post began to change ownership Monday, when Mr. Bezos agreed to buy it for $250 million. “It is a very big Washington moment,” said David Gergen, who was involved in four presidential administrations. “When Kay Graham had you to her house, it was a command performance,” Mr. Gergen added, referring to Mr. Graham’s mother, the paper’s leader for more than two decades. To many, the Washington that the newspaper once guided from family dinners and select Georgetown salons disappeared long before the sale. The rise of the Web site Politico — built by people trained and nurtured at The Washington Post — and other insurgents foretold a change in the order of things. The days when people snapped open the daily paper to find out the things they should care about were long past, replaced by a cacophony of information sources, many of them far more driven by ideology than The Washington Post. In selling to Mr. Bezos, the Grahams left the Sulzbergers, the owners of The New York Times, as the last family standing in a club that once also included the Chandlers (Los Angeles Times), the Copleys (San Diego Tribune), the Cowles (Minneapolis Star Tribune), and the Bancrofts (Wall Street Journal). The Grahams’ resolve to retain ownership was wilted by an industrial sea change that laid many newspapers low. For a time, the newspaper was propped up by its education division, Kaplan Inc., but when that company encountered regulatory and business turbulence, the losses at the newspaper — revenue dropped 44 percent over the past six years — came into sharp focus. Still, news of the sale and who was buying it was an extraordinary development in the newspaper industry. Perhaps the biggest surprise in the sale is that it happened under the watch of Donald Graham. In the popular imagination, journalism reached its highest and best calling during Watergate, when The Post and its determined owner, Ms. Graham, took on a sitting president. The idea that Mr. Graham would sell the paper, whatever merits the sale might entail, seemed as unlikely as Henry V giving up the crown.
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Global Airline Outage Triggers Delays

Dozens of flights were canceled or delayed worldwide early Tuesday after a major computer software outage forced several airlines to manually check-in and board passengers - with some staff using pen and paper. Carriers using the Texas-based Sabre reservations system - including American Airlines, Alaska Airlines, JetBlue, Virgin and Etihad - lost connection for about four hours, starting at about 9:30 p.m. ET Monday. The scheme was refurbished at about 2.30 a.m. ET Tuesday, but not before dozens of air travel were delayed because airport-based airline employees had to method travellers manually. At least three airlines – Alaska, Virgin Australia and Abu Dhabi-based Etihad – were compelled to issue boarding passes utilising pen and paper. Long lines rapidly increased at U.S. aerodromes, including San Francisco where passengers dispatched images to Twitter. At London Heathrow, there were secondary delays to two Virgin Atlantic departures to the joined States. Virgin Australia, which had to annul at smallest 12 household departures from Sydney, at smallest eight from Melbourne and at smallest four from Perth, urged passengers to address residing at dwelling and traveling another day. “Not much joy for us trying to get back to our families,” said Melbourne-based Twitter client Janet M. “These things happen,” said Twitter user Paul, who posted a picture of his “state of the art” handwritten Virgin Australia boarding pass. Etihad inquired passengers to reach previous than common at aerodromes. Alaska Airlines spokeswoman Bobbie Egan notified the affiliated Press that about 50 of its air travel departing Seattle Monday evening were delayed by up to an hour due to the outage. Nancy Castles, a spokeswoman at Los Angeles worldwide aerodrome, said 17 flights there skilled hold ups of up to 45 minutes. Jet Blue spokeswoman Tamara juvenile said it had endured “some hold ups due to the outages of unidentified length.” “It's our comprehending that other airlines and journey agencies are furthermore impacted by this,” American Airlines representative Matt Miller supplemented. Dallas-Forth Worth-based Sabre, which provides IT support to dozens of international airlines, acknowledged for the disturbance. “Sabre customers were incapable to connect to our scheme for a period of time this evening,” representative Nancy St. Pierre said in a declaration. “This has been refurbished and every person is now adept to attach to Sabre. We acknowledge and lament the inconvenience caused.” She said the scheme had been refurbished at about 2:30 a.m. ET. Most airlines use lightly-customized versions of similar software supplied by Sabre or its major global rival, Amadeus.
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