Can This One Greek Word Improve Your Work And Life? “Opa!” It’s actually more than a word–it’s a philosophy and a way of looking at the world. And it contains incredible implications

CAN THIS ONE GREEK WORD IMPROVE YOUR WORK AND LIFE?

“OPA!” IT’S ACTUALLY MORE THAN A WORD–IT’S A PHILOSOPHY AND A WAY OF LOOKING AT THE WORLD. AND IT CONTAINS INCREDIBLE IMPLICATIONS.

BY: ALEX PATTAKOS & ELAINE DUNDON

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Perhaps it is a “sign of the times” but more and more people have been telling us that they feel stressed, disengaged, disconnected, unfulfilled, fearful, and overwhelmed with too much to do. Sadly, in increasing numbers they’ve revealed to us that they want to feel inspired, and that they want their lives and work to really matter. Much like Sisyphus, the Greek hero who was ordered by the gods to push a big rock uphill only to see it slip out of his hands at the last moment, living the “good life,” a philosophical term originally associated with Aristotle, for many people has become an endless–and joyless–undertaking.

The notion of the “good life” can be viewed as the human quest for meaning, a formidable challenge that involves both making a living and making a life that really matters, that has significance. To be sure, this seems to be easier said than done in light of the overwhelming evidence that points to the opposite: More people than ever before, in spite of obvious advances in our way and quality of life, appear to be experiencing some kind of existential angst or are lost in an empty space that the world-renown psychiatrist, Viktor Frankl, described as an “existential vacuum.” Read more of this post

What’s the biggest barrier to accomplishing great things?

What’s the biggest barrier to accomplishing great things?

by SHANE PARRISH on JUNE 20, 2013

“If you’re myopic and only look at the next moment in time and you base your decisions on ‘what am I going to get out of this in the next nanosecond’ versus ‘what do I have to put into this in the next nanosecond,’ then when you hit a plateau, your natural conclusion is to quit and move to the next thing. If you’re able to think about things in much bigger chunks, you can make good long-term choices and investments of your effort and time.”
— Angela Duckworth

At some point we all give up trying to get better at something. But Why?

Let’s say you want to play piano. In the beginning, it’s quite rewarding. You start to take lessons and notice immediate progress. Your teacher comments on your talent and you see it being actualized into skill on a consistent basis with seemingly little skill. You pick up the elementary aspects in no time. But then the rate of progress diminishes. Improvement becomes harder and harder.

This is where perseverance matters. Read more of this post

Jürgen Geissinger, Schaeffler chief executive, wants to take the German model of engineering global

June 23, 2013 7:14 pm

Jürgen Geissinger, Schaeffler chief executive

By Peter Marsh

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Managing many components: Jürgen Geissinger wants Schaeffler to become a ‘series of hubs’, with regional centres of production all using German-style technical training

Jürgen Geissinger looks a little shamefaced when he is asked about the two big pictures of engineering mechanisms that line the wall behind his desk. “It’s not really art, I know this,” he says of the technical drawings. “I stole them from an [engineering] exhibition. The sales guys pretended to look the other way.” Read more of this post

Cappuccino Billionaire De’Longhi Brews Fortune on Coffee; Europe’s third-largest coffee-machine manufacturer by retail volume has risen more than 250 percent since the end of 2007

Cappuccino Billionaire De’Longhi Brews Fortune on Coffee

De'Longhi

The boutiques and restaurants lining Monmouth Street in central London’s Covent Garden neighborhood stand empty on a recent Wednesday morning, except for the 11-person line that stretches out of the Monmouth Coffee Company cafe.

“In the last few years, I’ve replaced bad coffee with good coffee,” said Holly Woodford, a 35-year-old sports consultant, as she sipped a 2.60 pound ($4) cappuccino at one of the restaurant’s farmhouse-style tables. Read more of this post

Regulatory threat hangs over long-term auditing links

June 24, 2013 12:06 am

Regulatory threat hangs over long-term auditing links

By Alison Smith and Adam Jones

When the accountancy firm that is now KPMG was first appointed as auditor to Cookson, sterling was still on the gold standard and the Empire State Building was being built.

The appointment that began in 1930 – and has survived last year’s demerger of the engineering group so that KPMG audits both the successor companies – is one of the most striking examples of the longstanding relationships that regulators worry makes auditors too cosy with those they are supposed to be vetting. Read more of this post

When the Ben and Beijing party comes to an end

When the Ben and Beijing party comes to an end

12:11am EDT

By Jonathan Spicer

(Reuters) – Through the dark days of the financial crisis, and the grey days of the halting recovery that have followed, investors have always been able to count on backing from two sources – Ben Bernanke and Beijing.

They have provided stimulus, mainly by pumping funds into the U.S. and Chinese economies in various ways, when other pillars of support had become unreliable.

That helps to explain why global financial markets took such a beating last week when both signaled that they are getting tired of being leant on so heavily. Read more of this post

Billionaire Daughter Leads Birla Into Microloans

Billionaire Daughter Leads Birla Into Microloans

Ananyashree Birla, the teenage daughter of Indian billionaire Kumar Mangalam Birla, is lending to the poor. Her experience may help her father’s quest for a banking permit.

The 18 year-old Birla scion’s Svatantra Microfin Pvt. is offering credit to women in villages in Maharashtra state to buy sewing machines and start businesses to make papadums, she said in an interview. The company, which charges 20 percent interest on the loans, plans to expand into neighboring Gujarat soon, said Birla, who enters undergraduate college this year. Read more of this post

Campari Blitzes Europe with Aperol Spritz to Boost Stock

Campari Blitzes Europe with Aperol Spritz to Boost Stock

Italy’s Davide-Campari Milano SpA (CPR) is trying to put some fizz back in its shares by getting people like Gillian Cowan to try a glass of bubbly orange tipple.

Cowan, a 30-year-old Londoner who works in retail marketing, had her first Aperol Spritz last month when friends ordered the drink on a night out in Soho, one of the trendy areas Campari has targeted. Despite its cachet, the bitter concoction — a mélange of Campari’s herbal Aperol, sparkling prosecco, and soda — wasn’t to her taste.

“Maybe it’s a drink I would like if I was more sophisticated, or had a yacht on the Amalfi coast,” she said. Read more of this post

Soda sold in glass bottles, a package generally phased out decades ago, is providing a rare spot of growth in a declining soft-drink industry

June 23, 2013, 9:06 p.m. ET

Glass Bottles Lend Pop to Soda Makers

By PAUL ZIOBRO

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The clink of soda in bottles is helping to offset soft drink sales declines in the U.S. Soda sold in glass bottles, a package generally phased out decades ago, is providing a rare spot of growth in a declining soft-drink industry. Over the past two years, sales growth of soda in glass bottles has outpaced that of soda in the much-more-common plastic bottles and aluminum cans, according to Nielsen, whose data include supermarkets, big-box stores and other outlets, but excludes sales from other sources, like Costco Wholesale Corp. and convenience stores.

Read more of this post

Social trading targets savvy retail investors

June 22, 2013 12:15 am

Social trading targets savvy retail investors

By Vanessa Kortekaas

Imagine if Twitter was used only by the world’s most successful stock market and currency traders – and they posted all of their trading ideas for online followers to see.

That, in a few more than 140 characters, is what “social trading” is attempting to achieve: adapting the social media phenomenon to create a connected community of savvier private investors. Read more of this post

Facebook is aiming to become a newspaper for mobile devices

June 23, 2013, 8:26 p.m. ET

Facebook, With a Focus on Mobile, Works on Project for News Via Users

By EVELYN M. RUSLI

Facebook Inc. is aiming to become a newspaper for mobile devices.

The social network has been quietly working on a service, internally called Reader, that displays content from Facebook users and publishers in a new visual format tailored for mobile devices, people with knowledge of the matter said. Read more of this post

Worries about Federal Reserve policy have hit a favorite destination for mom-and-pop investors: closed-end bond funds. Leverage Juiced Returns When Rates Were Moored; Now It Is Magnifying Losses

June 23, 2013, 4:52 p.m. ET

Closed-End Funds Bite Back

Leverage Juiced Returns When Rates Were Moored; Now It Is Magnifying Losses

By TOM LAURICELLA

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Worries about Federal Reserve policy have hit a favorite destination for mom-and-pop investors: closed-end bond funds.

These mutual funds have suffered outsize losses during a rough month for bond funds overall. The average high-yield closed-end bond fund is down 10.7% in the past month through Thursday, according to Morningstar Inc. MORN +0.89% That compares with a 3.4% decline for its open-end counterpart. Read more of this post

Emerging Markets Are on Their Own; Things are looking ugly for countries that have delivered about 75% of global growth over the past decade.

June 23, 2013, 8:28 p.m. ET

Emerging Markets Are on Their Own

By ANDREW PEAPLE

It is high time investors demerged emerging markets.

Protests on the streets of Brazil and Turkey, a cash crunch in China’s financial system, strikes in South Africa: These all indicate rising stress in developing economies. Add in signals the Federal Reserve may soon scale back its bond-purchasing program, and things are looking ugly for countries that have delivered about 75% of global growth over the past decade.

After a decade or so in which emerging markets reliably juiced the global economy, this is a wake-up call for investors. Read more of this post

Europe is ignoring the scale of bank losses

June 23, 2013 2:41 pm

Europe is ignoring the scale of bank losses

By Wolfgang Münchau

Consider the sheer number of crises in which lenders have lost money

It was another of those late-night agreements, which are as legally sophisticated as they are financially innumerate. Eurozone finance ministers agreed last week that the European Stability Mechanism could devote €60bn of its €500bn total lending ceiling to the recapitalisation of eurozone banks. If that is not enough, the rest of the money for the recapitalisation of the eurozone’s banks will have to come from national governments, or through bail-ins of investors and depositors. Read more of this post

The Mortgage Refinancing Gravy Train Just Ended

The Mortgage Refinancing Gravy Train Just Ended

WALTER KURTZSOBER LOOK JUN. 23, 2013, 6:45 AM 3,136 3

US 30yr mortgage rates spiked to a 2-year high on Friday (4.49%). In the near term this spike may actually push some potential buyers who have been on the sidelines into purchasing a home. People are concerned that rates will rise even further, which may have the effect of increasing June/July sales (see this story). The longer term effect however is less clear. While 4.5% is low by historical standards, it certainly takes a portion of the population out of the housing market. Also the speed of the rate spike may have a negative impact on consumer sentiment. Monthly payments on a new mortgage have increased by 10% from just a month ago (roughly $100/month for a median house price). One thing we can be confident of is that the wave of mortgage refinancing is over. Consumers have been putting extra cash into their pockets by refinancing multiple times in recent years. That gravy train just ended.

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Why Mobile Payments Are Poised For Takeoff

Why Mobile Payments Are Poised For Takeoff

JOSH LUGER JUN. 23, 2013, 4:21 PM 8,402 5

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Mobile devices are edging closer to fulfilling their long-delayed promise as digital wallets. Consumers are beginning to see the advantage of channeling offline payments through their mobile devices, rather than carrying around clunky coins and cash — even debit and credit cards. Consumers are primed to go wallet-free and begin paying for goods and services via their mobile devices, and as a result, mobile payments are set to explode.

Read more of this post

Lenovo Playing Games in China to Challenge Samsung Phones

Lenovo Playing Games in China to Challenge Samsung Phones

To offset falling PC sales and reduce its reliance on ThinkPad notebooks, Lenovo Group Ltd. (992) is adding a gaming service that the computer maker says can help it overtake Samsung Electronics Co. in smartphones in China.

Lenovo Game World will include social-networking features, software reviews and gameplay tips when it starts in the third quarter, offering popular titles like “Fruit Ninja” for devices such as the computer maker’s Ideaphone K900 that run Google Inc. (GOOG)’s Android operating system. Read more of this post

Geeks oust miners among Australia’s new rich as boom fades

Published: Monday June 24, 2013 MYT 8:13:00 AM

Geeks oust miners among Australia’s new rich as boom fades

SYDNEY: In a country synonymous with larger-than-life mining tycoons and Outback heroes, the geeks are quietly inheriting the earth.

As coal magnate Nathan Tinkler, the poster boy for Australia’s fading 10-year minerals boom, publicly battles against bankruptcy, software entrepreneurs Mike Cannon-Brookes and Scott Farquhar are riding high.

The former college buddies behind fast-growing software firm Atlassian unceremoniously bumped Tinkler off the top of Australia’s “young rich list”, leading a charge in the country’s blooming technology industries. Read more of this post

As Asia embraces casinos, India hedges it bets

As Asia embraces casinos, India hedges it bets

Sun, Jun 23 2013

By Tony Munroe

PANAJI, India (Reuters) – Like many visitors to the Casino Royale Goa on a rainy Saturday night on India’s western coast, Salim Budhwani said he does not gamble but also had no objection to the betting at the busy tables downstairs.

Despite socially conservative India’s ambivalence about gambling, consultancy firm KPMG estimated that $60 billion was wagered in the country in 2010. Much of the gambling is illegal, but attitudes are slowly changing as more Asian countries embrace gaming as a revenue generator and tourist draw. Read more of this post

Best Emerging-Market Stock Pickers Buy Drugmakers to Retail

Best Emerging-Market Stock Pickers Buy Drugmakers to Retail

The only three emerging-market stock pickers who avoided losing money for clients in the worst first-half rout since 1998 say now’s the time to buy Philippine retailers, Chinese Internet companies and Indian drugmakers.

Lewis Kaufman, whose Thornburg Developing World Fund (THDAX) rose 3.2 percent, the most among U.S.-domiciled emerging-market mutual funds overseeing at least $100 million, says Manila-based Puregold Price Club Inc. (PGOLD) will benefit from 20 percent sales growth. CNI Charter Emerging Markets Fund (RIMIX)’s Anindya Chatterjee boosted his position in Shenzhen, China-based Tencent Holdings Ltd. (700) as first-quarter profit rose 37 percent. David Semple has been buying Indian pharmaceutical shares for the Van Eck Emerging Markets Fund as the rupee’s tumble boosts exports. Read more of this post

Gold Miner Writedowns at $17 Billion After Newcrest Fallout

Gold Miner Writedowns at $17 Billion After Newcrest Fallout

Newcrest Mining Ltd. (NCM)’s decision to write down the value of its mines by as much as A$6 billion ($5.5 billion) will lead to the biggest one-time charge in gold mining history. It also heralds pain for competitors.

Barrick Gold Corp. (ABX), the world’s biggest producer, Newmont Mining Corp. (NEM) and Gold Fields Ltd. (GFI) may be next, according to Jefferies International Ltd. Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics and international business at New York University and known as Dr. Doom for predicting turmoil before the global financial crisis began in 2008, says gold may drop to $1,000 an ounce by 2015, from $1,298.05 now. Read more of this post

World’s top gold producer Barrick Gold will lay off up to a third of its corporate staff at its headquarters in Toronto and other offices

Barrick Gold Corp to lay off up to a third of corporate staff as gold slump bites

Euan Rocha, Reuters | 13/06/24 7:55 AM ET
TORONTO — Barrick Gold Corp will lay off up to a third of its corporate staff at its headquarters in Toronto and other offices, sources said, as the world’s top bullion producer intensifies a downsizing plan amid a slump in the price of gold.

Barrick and miners such as Newmont Mining and Newcrest Mining are shaking up operations and taking measures like shutting down development projects, slashing exploration spending and cutting jobs due to the sliding gold price. Read more of this post

Rio Tinto abandoned plans to sell or list its diamond portfolio after failing to attract investors for a business some analysts estimated could be worth more than $2 billion

Updated June 24, 2013, 3:27 a.m. ET

Rio Tinto Drops Sale of Diamond Business

By ROBB M. STEWART

MELBOURNE—Rio Tinto RIO.LN -1.69% PLC abandoned plans to sell or seek a listing of its diamond portfolio after failing to attract potential new investors for a business some analysts estimated could be worth more than $2 billion.

Major miners like Rio Tinto RIO.AU -2.13% face a challenge as they look to bolster their balance sheets by offloading smaller assets: The prices of many commodities are in the doldrums. Gemstone prices have been held back by sluggish demand for luxury goods in developed markets, although producers hope for stronger sales as disposable incomes rise in populous nations like China and India. Read more of this post

Once worth $34.5 billion, Eike Batista’s holdings are now estimated at $4.8 billion and falling. With Brazil’s streets churning in protest, the markets — and Mr. Batista’s fortune — are on uncertain terrain

June 23, 2013

Brazil, Fortune and Fate Turn on Billionaire

By PETER LATTMAN and SIMON ROMERO

When the Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista appeared on the Charlie Rose show in 2010, he and his country were on a roll.

Brazil’s economy, driven by a worldwide commodity boom, grew a blistering 7.5 percent that year. And Mr. Batista’s prodigious holdings — spanning oil, mining, shipping and real estate — were soaring in value. In the interview, Mr. Batista was asked how rich he would become over the next decade.

“A hundred billion dollars,” he said, an amount that would most likely have made him the wealthiest person in the world. Read more of this post

Make or break moment for Myanmar reforms in opaque telecoms sector

Make or break moment for Myanmar reforms in opaque telecoms sector

Sun, Jun 23 2013

By Jared Ferrie

YANGON (Reuters) – Companies awarded telecommunications licenses in Myanmar this week will need to spend billions of dollars rolling out networks across a country that has yet to pass a law to govern the sector and where opaque, state-owned enterprises will remain players.

The process is being watched closely as a test case for reform in Myanmar, although the risks did not stop 90 international firms and groups from joining the initial phase.

Faced with big investments and uncertain returns however, Vodafone Group Plc and China Mobile Ltd dropped their joint bid for a license, saying it did not meet their “internal investment criteria.” The remaining 11 short-listed contenders include Singapore Telecommunications Ltd, KDDI Corp and Telenor ASA. Read more of this post

China’s liquidity crunch, and what it means for everyone; The Chinese central bank has finally broken its silence over the country’s cash crunch, telling banks the onus is on them to better manage their own balance sheets.

China’s liquidity crunch, and what it means for everyone

Kate Mackenzie

| Jun 24 10:43 | 3 comments | Share

Should you panic?

It’s hard to know exactly what degree of control the PBoC has over the events unfolding in China’s interbank markets.

On the one hand, making the smaller banks and shadow finance entities sweat fits with the central bank’s new high-priority goal, introduced late last year, of containing ‘financial risks’, and also with a broader government theme of clamping down on excess. Read more of this post

Big state companies in industries struggling with over-capacity but with easy access to credit are borrowing funds, not to invest in their business but to lend to smaller firms sometimes at several times the official interest rate

Analysis: Another China central bank worry; companies push into lending

Sun, Jun 23 2013

BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Chinese companies are getting more creative in the business of money lending as they struggle to keep profits ticking over in a cooling economy, raising concerns they are adding to the mountain of debt risks building in the world’s No.2 economy.

Big state companies in industries struggling with over-capacity but with easy access to credit are borrowing funds, not to invest in their business but to lend to smaller firms sometimes at several times the official interest rate, part of an informal lending market in China that authorities are taking aim at. Read more of this post

China’s builders have been the world’s worst-performing real-estate bonds this quarter as Premier Li Keqiang allowed a record cash crunch to rebalance the economy away from property investment

World’s Worst Real Estate Bonds Targeted in Crunch

China’s builders have been the world’s worst-performing real-estate bonds this quarter as Premier Li Keqiang allowed a record cash crunch to rebalance the economy away from property investment.

Dollar-denominated notes sold by Chinese developers have lost 4.1 percent this quarter, the most since the three months ended Sept. 30, 2011 and the worst among peers in major economies in Bank of America Corp.’s Global Corporates Real Estate Index. That marks a reversal after the debt topped 2012 rankings with a 22 percent return. Australian builders lost 0.8 percent since March 31, while Japan’s shed 1.7 percent. Read more of this post

Chinese Industrial Subsidies Grow; Chinese publicly traded companies received $13.83 billion in government subsidies last year, up 23% from a year earlier

June 23, 2013, 7:49 p.m. ET

Chinese Industrial Subsidies Grow 23%

By DINNY MCMAHON

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BEIJING—Chinese companies are under growing financial pressure as the country’s economic growth slows. So industries ranging from airlines to steel to consumer appliances increasingly are leaning on the Chinese government.

Companies listed on China’s stock exchanges received 85.68 billion yuan ($13.83 billion) in government subsidies last year, up 23% from a year earlier, while corporate profits rose less than 1%, according to a Chinese data provider. The subsidies were equivalent to more than 4% of the companies’ total profits last year, up from around 3% between 2009 and 2011. Read more of this post

Riot after Chinese teachers try to stop pupils cheating; “We want fairness. There is no fairness if you do not let us cheat.”

Riot after Chinese teachers try to stop pupils cheating

What should have been a hushed scene of 800 Chinese students diligently sitting their university entrance exams erupted into siege warfare after invigilators tried to stop them from cheating.

Riot after Chinese teachers try to stop pupils cheating

By Malcolm Moore, Beijing

3:25PM BST 20 Jun 2013

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The relatively small city of Zhongxiang in Hubei province has always performed suspiciously well in China’s notoriously tough “gaokao” exams, each year winning a disproportionate number of places at the country’s elite universities.

Last year, the city received a slap on the wrist from the province’s Education department after it discovered 99 identical papers in one subject. Forty five examiners were “harshly criticised” for allowing cheats to prosper. Read more of this post

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