DirecTV, which Buffett’s Berkshire owns 3.8% with investment cost at $45.9 per share, Overstated Its Brazilian Subscribers by 200,000

DirecTV Overstated Its Brazilian Subscribers by 200,000

DirecTV (DTV), the largest U.S. satellite-TV provider, will take a pretax charge of $25 million after an internal investigation found that it had overstated subscriber numbers in Brazil by hundreds of thousands. The shares fell. Beginning in 2012, some Sky Brasil employees improperly credited customer accounts to reduce or eliminate churn, the El Segundo, California-based company said in a filing. The number of Sky Brasil subscribers on December 31 was about 100,000 lower than previously reported to Brazilian regulators and 200,000 lower than cited on March 31, the company said. DirecTV, which had considered buying Vivendi SA’s Brazilian phone and Internet unit before withdrawing from a bidding war in March, reported a record number of Latin American customers in the first quarter. Gross additions in the region jumped 14 percent to 1.2 million in the first quarter, driven by demand in Brazil, Argentina and Colombia. Sky Brasil’s ongoing churn in Brazil will be higher than previously anticipated, the company said today. The $25 million expense covers capitalized installation costs and subscriber related equipment held by the terminated customers, according to the filing. DTV fell 3.6 percent at $58.90 at 9:39 a.m. New York time, for the biggest intraday decline since Feb. 14. Through yesterday, the shares had advanced 22 percent this year, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 12 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Niamh Ring in New York at nring@bloomberg.net

Square’s website for small businesses takes on e-commerce giants

Square’s website for small businesses takes on e-commerce giants

2:06pm EDT

By Gerry Shih

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Since 2010, Square Inc’s matchbox-sized card readers have steadily supplanted credit card machines in coffee shops and corner stores across the United States.

Now, the company, one of Silicon Valley’s most highly valued private firms, is diving into a market as expansive the internet itself.

Square launched a shopping website this week called Square Market to serve as an online storefront and payment processor for small businesses, a move that pits the closely held company, valued at $3.25 billion, against popular e-commerce destinations such as eBay Inc, Amazon.com Inc and Etsy. Read more of this post

Microsoft Seeks End to Dinosaur-Era Software Upgrade Cycle

Microsoft Seeks End to Dinosaur-Era Software Upgrade Cycle: Tech

Microsoft Corp (MSFT)., which for decades has refreshed its popular Office corporate software just once about every three years, says it will soon switch to weekly updates.

It’s a radical shift as Microsoft overhauls its Internet-based programs, seeking to stay in sync with the fast-changing technology industry.

For much of Microsoft’s 38-year history, infrequent upgrades made sense for businesses seeking predictable improvements. That’s changed as nimbler entrants such as Dropbox Inc., Box Inc., Jive Software Inc (JIVE) (JIVE). and Google Inc. refine features and deliver automatic updates over the Web. That tinkering has helped lure customers and put pressure on margins at Microsoft’s biggest division, which accounted for $24 billion in sales last year, or a third of the total. Read more of this post

CHART OF THE DAY: The Mortgage Rate Surge Is Unlike Anything We’ve Seen In 26 Years

CHART OF THE DAY: The Mortgage Rate Surge Is Unlike Anything We’ve Seen In 26 Years

SAM RO JUN. 27, 2013, 12:11 PM 1,074 2

The Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing (QE) program involves the monthly purchases of $85 billion worth of Treasury and mortgage bonds.  These purchases have helped keep interest rates historically low. But in the last few months, Fed officials have started talking about tapering QE some time in the near future. The bond markets have been going nuts, selling off in anticipation of the taper. And this has been causing interest rates to surge all over the world. One notable rate that’s been going crazy are mortgage interest rates. “The average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose from 3.93 percent last week to 4.46 percent this week; the highest it has been since the week of July 28, 2011,” said the analysts at Freddie Mac. “This represents the largest weekly increase for the 30-year fixed since the week ended April 17, 1987.” Crazy. Fortunately, the markets have been able to absorb them. “Higher mortgage rates may dampen some housing market activity but the effect will be muted by the high level of buyer affordability, and home sales should remain strong,” said Freddie Mac’s Frank Nothaft.  “For instance, existing home sales in May rose to its strongest pace since November 2009 and new home sales were the most seen since July 2008. In addition, the 12-month growth in the S&P/Case-Shiller® 20-city home price index for April of 12.1 percent was the largest since April 2006.”

moneygame-cotd-062713

Why Executive Teams Shouldn’t Write “Culture Decks”; Genuine culture is organic, not imposed

Why Executive Teams Shouldn’t Write “Culture Decks”

by Cheryl Morris  |   8:00 AM June 27, 2013

Boston is teeming with entrepreneurship. The “startup renaissance” that followed the financial crisis of 2009 has led to as many acquisitions as it has public companies.

For the founders and CEOs of many startups, the recent influx of additional tech giants to Boston like AmazoneBay, and Twitter means that hiring—especially when it comes to engineers—will become even more challenging. With far deeper pockets than early- and mid-stage startups, these tech giants will be vying for the same talent our startup ecosystem has been fostering. How can young startups continue to attract and retain great talent? One of the keys may lie in culture. Read more of this post

Behind the Krispy Kreme turnaround; The doughnut chain has slowly repaired its business and built a foundation that it hopes will protect it against future blow-ups

Behind the Krispy Kreme turnaround

June 27, 2013: 12:23 PM ET

The doughnut chain has slowly repaired its business and built a foundation that it hopes will protect it against future blow-ups.

By Beth Kowitt, writer

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FORTUNE — It was only after three years of year-over-year revenue and gross profit growth, 18 consecutive quarters of same-store sales increases, and an eight-year high on the stock that Krispy Kreme Doughnut’s (KKD) executives finally turned to one another and acknowledged that they had turned the company around. The hesitant optimism at the doughnut enterprise, best known for its Original Glazed doughnut, is understandable. Krispy Kreme had been a growth company before — until it imploded in the mid-2000s. Profits tumbled after the company grew too quickly, and an SEC investigation of its accounting practices led to high-level departures. A previous unsuccessful turnaround attempt led to talk of having to sell the chain. “It was just a constant turmoil of, ‘is the company going to make it?'” says CFO Doug Muir. Read more of this post

The Fed Signals a Slowdown; Traders Head for the Exits; As interest rates rise, the values of bonds and popular dividend-paying stocks are falling

June 22, 2013, 8:26 p.m. ET

The Fed Signals a Slowdown; Traders Head for the Exits

TOM LAURICELLA

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The sharp selloff in the bond market is a wake-up call for investors. But in some cases, it’s also an opportunity. Many bond market funds are now showing losses for the year: Yields have jumped sharply, and prices correspondingly have fallen, because the Federal Reserve seems increasingly likely to scale back its efforts to stimulate the economy. But more broadly, sharp selloffs in higher-yielding investments have revealed where investors may have overpaid for those income streams. That was especially the case in high-dividend stocks, such as utilities, which many investors tend to view as havens. Also taking a big hit: yield-rich real-estate investment trusts. This abrupt shift in recent weeks highlights the importance of having at least part of a portfolio positioned for rates making a sustained rise. That could include owning go-anywhere bond funds whose fate isn’t linked to rates staying low. Read more of this post

In India, Gold-Related Shares Melt Down

Jun 27, 2013

In India, Gold-Related Shares Melt Down

By Ashutosh Joshi

Gold-related Indian companies have seen their shares hammered this week, as global gold prices hit a three-year low and the Indian government’s efforts to restrict gold imports hit bottom lines.

Shares of jewelers such as Tribhovandas Bhimji Zaveri Ltd 534369.BY +0.54%PC JewellerLtd. 534809.BY +1.96%, and Gitanjali Gems Ltd. 532715.BY -9.99% have fallen by as much as 40% this week as overseas funds, especially, have dumped holdings. Investors fear that recent efforts by the Indian government to curb gold imports will hurt the jewelers’ profit margins. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart, Others Wary of India’s Multibrand Retail Sector as Political Support Wanes

June 27, 2013, 9:24 a.m. ET

Wal-Mart, Others Wary of India’s Multibrand Retail Sector as Political Support Wanes

Overhaul of Retail Sector Divides Parties

RAJESH ROY

Global retailers hoping to invest in India’s recently opened retail sector are holding back as political support for foreign tie-ups appears to be crumbling.

“Some prospective investors have…generally conveyed that they will have to address apprehensions of their boards” while planning their investments, according to a document prepared by India’s Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion during Trade Minister Anand Sharma’s visit to London recently. Read more of this post

Peugeot family ready to step aside for GM; Peugeot’s shares have fallen 77 percent over the past two years, compared with a 1.4 percent slide for the STOXX Europe 600 autos & parts index

Peugeot family ready to step aside for GM- sources

8:39am EDT

By Sophie SassardLaurence Frost and Gilles Guillaume

LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) – PSA Peugeot Citroen’s (PEUP.PA: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) founding family has offered to give up control of the troubled French automaker as it tries to revive plans for a closer tie-up with General Motors (GM.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) backed by a fresh capital injection, sources said.

But any deal combining Peugeot with GM’s European Opel division would face major political hurdles because it would bring more factory closures and job losses in France and Germany, people with knowledge of the discussions told Reuters. Read more of this post

The Books That Inspired Tech’s Most Influential People

The Books That Inspired Tech’s Most Influential People

ALYSON SHONTELL JUN. 26, 2013, 11:28 AM 35,472 2

What are the books that influenced Steve Jobs, Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk and Bill Gates? The following books shaped tech’s most influential people and helped them become the CEOs and global leaders they are today.

Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos enjoys business book “Built to Last” and a fictional novel, “The Remains of the Day.”

Given that Jeff Bezos founded Amazon as a marketplace for books, it’s not surprising he reads a lot. He once told told Fast Company he buys 10 books per month. His favorites? Built to Last: Successful Habits of Visionary Companies by Jim Collins and Jerry Porras and  The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro. He told Newsweek: “If you read The Remains of the Day, which is one of my favorite books, you can’t help but come away and think, I just spent 10 hours living an alternate life and I learned something about life and about regret.”

Read more of this post

Secrets of the Little Blue Box, the 1971 article that inspired Steve Jobs to collaborate with Steve Wozniak

Secrets of the Little Blue Box

by Ron Rosenbaum

A story so incredible it may even make you feel sorry for the phone company


The Blue Box Is Introduced: Its Qualities Are Remarked


I am in the expensively furnished living room of Al Gilbertson*, the creator of the “blue box.” Gilbertson is holding one of his shiny black-and-silver “blue boxes” comfortably in the palm of his hand, pointing out the thirteen little red push buttons sticking up from the console. He is dancing his fingers over the buttons, tapping out discordant beeping electronic jingles. He is trying to explain to me how his little blue box does nothing less than place the entire telephone system of the world, satellites, cables and all, at the service of the blue-box operator, free of charge.

“That’s what it does. Essentially it gives you the power of a super operator. You seize a tandem with this top button,” he presses the top button with his index finger and the blue box emits a high-pitched cheep,  Read more of this post

Student-Loan Rates Set to Double as Fix Eludes Congress

Student-Loan Rates Set to Double as Fix Eludes Congress

It’s increasingly unlikely Congress will act in time to avert a doubling next week of the interest rate that low-income college students pay for subsidized federal education loans, said senators involved in negotiations.

“We probably can’t get anything done this week,” Senator Tom Harkin, an Iowa Democrat and chairman of the Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Committee, told reporters yesterday. Read more of this post

China Cash Crunch Spreads; Businesses Turn to Alternatives Such as Bankers’ Acceptances to Pay Their Bills

June 26, 2013, 8:19 p.m. ET

China Cash Crunch Spreads

Businesses Turn to Alternatives Such as Bankers’ Acceptances to Pay Their Bills

DINNY MCMAHON

BEIJING—Even as Chinese officials indicate a softening of their tight grip on cash, some businesses are reporting liquidity is increasingly hard to find in some places and that customers are turning to alternatives.

It isn’t clear how deep the liquidity issues have trickled down from the financial sector, which has been gripped this month by a cash crunch widely believed to be aimed at deflating ballooning credit in the Chinese economy. But it suggests the pain could spread to other areas if cash borrowing rates for banks remain stubbornly high. Read more of this post

Exit Signs Blurry for Private Equity

Updated June 26, 2013, 10:09 p.m. ET

Exit Signs Blurry for Private Equity

MIKE SPECTOR and TELIS DEMOS

It all was going so well. For the first 5½ months of the year, private-equity firms took advantage of soaring markets and eager investors to raise about $35 billion by selling stakes in their companies, not to mention billions of dollars more through initial public offerings.

The rush for cash prompted some buyout executives and bankers to view 2013 as the year of the exit, a moment to reap what they sowed, including on some highly indebted, controversial deals just before the eruption of the financial crisis. Leon Black, Apollo Global Management LLC APO +1.79% co-founder, in April called the market’s receptiveness to such sell-downs “biblical.” Read more of this post

Hong Kong Stocks Show Property Collapse to BNP

Hong Kong Stocks Show Property Collapse to BNP

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Hong Kong real estate has become more unhinged from the city’s stock market than ever before as shares of developers tumble while property prices stay near record highs.

The CHART OF THE DAY’s lower panel shows the 20-week correlation between Centaline Property Agency Ltd.’s housing-price gauge and the Hang Seng Property Index has dropped to minus 0.68 this month, the lowest level since Bloomberg began compiling the data in 1994. The Centaline index slipped 3 percent from its peak in March through its most recent report on June 16, while the stock index, which includes Sun Hung Kai Properties Ltd. (16) and Cheung Kong Holdings Ltd. (1), declined 19 percent from this year’s high on Jan. 28 through yesterday. Read more of this post

How the Web and an Attitude of Sharing Helped a Law Firm Take Off; Clients are banging down the door. The feeling is, “If they give this much away for free, what must it be like if you pay them?”; murthy.com is the world’s most visited law firm site

June 26, 2013

How the Web and an Attitude of Sharing Helped a Law Firm Take Off

By ADRIANA GARDELLA

When it comes to making use of the Web, law firms generally have not been pioneers. The Murthy Law Firm, which handles immigration matters, is an exception.

Founded in 1994 by Sheela Murthy, an Indian immigrant, the firm introduced a site that provided legal information that same year. “So few law firms were even on the Internet, it was considered weird,” Ms. Murthy said. Read more of this post

Inside Google’s culture of relentless self-surveying

Inside Google’s culture of relentless self-surveying

By Tim Fernholz @timfernholz June 26, 2013

When Google recently admitted that the baffling brainteasers it posed to interviewees were utterly useless at predicting which ones would make good employees, it was another example of the power of what Google calls “people analytics”—the mixing of Big Data with management science to come up with smarter ways to work.

The company’s obsession with human data is perhaps best known for producing the rule that no employee should sit more than 150 feet (46 meters) away from a micro-kitchen, and that in those kitchens the chocolate M&Ms be kept in opaque jarswhile healthier food is in clear containers, to encourage healthy eating habits. Google’s often controversial culture of omniscience about its users is mirrored, inside its posh campuses, by a team of industrial-organizational psychologists, behavioral economists, consultants and statisticians who survey and experiment with Google’s staff. Read more of this post

Trivitron and the Impending Rise of Medical Technology

Trivitron and the Impending Rise of Medical Technology

by Seema Singh | Jun 27, 2013

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GSK Velu, founder and managing director of Trivitron, is one of the boldest entrepreneurs in health care

With four businesses to boot, why GSK Velu is placing his highest bet on medical technology

Gomathy SK Velu, one of the boldest entrepreneurs in health care, is fidgety on the sofa. In the residential lane of Abhiramapuram in Chennai, Trivitron’s office is quiet; the staff would arrive after 9.30 am. Inside the boardroom, impressive with stacked awards and citations, Velu finally settles after a short question-answer session. Then he is on a roll. Still, over the course of the two-hour conversation in which he gives a graphic flashback of the industry, the restless streak is evident. Perhaps this is what characterises a serial entrepreneur, a “compulsive risk-taker”. At 45, he has four businesses to boot and Velu doesn’t rule out additions.  Read more of this post

Li’s Shock Treatment to China Lenders Evokes Ex-Reformer

Li’s Shock Treatment to China Lenders Evokes Ex-Reformer

The jolt Premier Li Keqiang delivered to China’s financial system emulates a playbook crafted by predecessor Zhu Rongji in the 1990s, inflicting short-term pain in the anticipation of long-term gain.

Li, who took office in March, sent the clearest message yet the past week that China’s new leadership team wants lenders to rein in credit expansion, depriving money markets of liquidity in the biggest squeeze in at least a decade. Next steps may include tightening that sends some smaller financial institutions into bankruptcy, according to analysts at Nomura Holdings Inc.

Zhu’s strategy of cutting the size of state enterprises with millions on the payrolls helped set the stage for years of growth in excess of 10 percent. With a focus now on a slower expansion pace that avoids asset bubbles or bad-loan crises, Li and his team face a possible backlash from indebted local governments and state banks that are among the world’s largest by market value.

“You’ve got to use a hammer to change this system,” said James McGregor, a Beijing-based former chairman of the American Chamber of Commerce in China and author of the 2012 book “No Ancient Wisdom, No Followers: The Challenges of Chinese Authoritarian Capitalism.” “There’s no rule of law here, so you’ve got to use blunt instruments to get party members out there in the financial system to pay attention. This got their attention.”

Liquidity Support

The central bank signaled this week that while it won’t let the cash squeeze further roil money markets, any liquidity support will be focused on banks that are lending to help the economy, after credit expansion outpaced economic growth this year. Li’s State Council, or Cabinet, said last week that the financial system must better support the economy, and yesterday said China will keep consistency and stability in its policies to stabilize market expectations.

“It takes pains to get through the liquidity crunch, but it also paves way for future gains,” the official Xinhua News Agency said in a commentary last night. “For the blessing of a more sustainable economy, banks are the first, but certainly not the last to suffer the hardship.”

China’s overnight repurchase rate, a gauge of interbank funding, yesterday fell 40 basis points to 5.6 percent after the central bank said June 25 it would use tools to safeguard stability and that tight liquidity would ease. The rate, which touched a record 12.85 percent on June 20, is still more than double the 2.51 percent average during the six months through May.

Open Economy

Li, 57, has pledged to open the economy to more market forces and strip power from the government. This “self-imposed revolution” would “even feel like cutting one’s own wrist,” Li said at a March 17 press conference.

“Both premiers are reformers and investors are trying to find out if Li, like Zhu, has the courage and will to push for wrenching changes,” said Fred Hu, the Beijing-based founder of private-equity firm Primavera Capital Group and former Greater China chairman at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. “Zhu’s reforms, while unpopular and painful at the time, ultimately delivered tremendous benefits to the Chinese economy.”

Li’s economic team includes leaders who worked under Zhu in the 1990s such as People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan, who was a deputy governor from 1996 to 1998, and Finance Minister Lou Jiwei, a vice minister from 1998 to 2007. Both played roles in economic restructuring that led to China joining the World Trade Organization in 2001.

Zhou’s Position

While the PBOC’s actions this month have been “extraordinarily reckless,” Zhou is in a “very difficult position” given that he doesn’t have authority to make key decisions, said Mark Williams, a former U.K. Treasury adviser on China who is now an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. “There will be a lot of angry bankers out there and a lot of state-owned industry will be questioning what went on.”

Jiang Jianqing, chairman of Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., the nation’s biggest bank, said there was no clear direction from policy makers on their goals during the money-market turmoil, Reuters reported, citing a June 25 interview. “Those few days, even for us, we were genuinely a bit tense,” Jiang said, according to Reuters.

As the economy’s steward from the early 1990s through 2003, during which he served as vice premier, central bank governor and then premier, Zhu helped slash inflation to 2.8 percent in 1997 from more than 24 percent in 1994 while slowing growth in fixed-asset investment. More than 50 million workers were laid off at state-owned enterprises under Zhu’s watch, according to Standard Chartered Plc.

World Bank

Li, China’s first premier with an economics doctorate, gave his “unwavering commitment” to the 400-plus-page “China 2030” report published last year by the World Bank and the Development Research Center of China’s State Council, then-World Bank President Robert Zoellick said in February 2012.

The report lays out a framework to restructure China’s economy through market mechanisms. It recommends loosening controls over interest rates, boosting consumption, rolling back state enterprises and speeding a shift to market-set prices for everything from loans to raw materials.

Such initiatives may face opposition from entities including local governments that rely on debt to finance their budgets and state-owned enterprises in industries from banking to telecommunications that resist increased competition.

“Everybody who needs credit will be pushing back,” said Steve Tsang, director of the China Policy Institute at the University of Nottingham in England. “How are local governments going to service their huge debt?”

‘Complete Alignment’

The initiative to squeeze credit required the premier and President Xi Jinping “to be in complete alignment,” said McGregor, now chairman for Greater China at public-relations company APCO Worldwide Inc.

Li inherited combined government, corporate and consumer debt at about 206 percent of gross domestic product, up from 150 percent a decade earlier, Standard Chartered estimates.

With May M2 money supply expanding 15.8 percent from a year earlier, above the year’s 13 percent target, policy will remain tight in the second half, said Zhang Zhiwei, Nomura’s chief China economist in Hong Kong.

The sudden action by Li’s government contrasts with a decade of incremental policy change under former President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao.

“What you are seeing is a re-connection with the economic management and reform mindset of the period of former President Jiang Zemin and Zhu Rongji,” said Kenneth Courtis, founder of Tokyo-based advisory company Next Capital Partners and former Asia vice chairman at Goldman Sachs. “People are starting to understand more fully that the new leadership is working to move China beyond the Hu-Wen period, when change was modest and based largely on vast reforms that had gone before.”

–Kevin Hamlin. With assistance from Emma Bi in Hong Kong. Editors: Scott Lanman, Stephanie Phang

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing at khamlin@bloomberg.net;

China guideline for industries, plans targeting industrial overcapacity could be announced soon

Thursday June 27, 2013

China guideline for industries, plans targeting industrial overcapacity could be announced soon

BEIJING: China is set to release new plans soon to slim down bloated industries from steel to shipbuilding, but applying measures on the ground will be tough after years of lax oversight during a stimulus-fuelled rush to expand in Asia’s biggest economy.

The new rules, which will also target aluminium, cement and glass-making, could be announced within weeks. Despite fairly resilient demand, all these sectors have been hit by overcapacity and failure to rein in production gluts could put more pressure on already weak markets. Read more of this post

Scalpel in hand, Chinese Premier Li stirs reform hopes

Scalpel in hand, Chinese Premier Li stirs reform hopes

Wed, Jun 26 2013

By Koh Gui Qing

BEIJING (Reuters) – Investors getting stung by China’s worst financial market rout in years should find solace in the fact that the government, in particular Premier Li Keqiang, is willing to play hardball to force through much-needed policy change.

The central bank’s refusal to intervene last week to ease an unprecedented cash crunch, where interest rates in the interbank market shot as high as 30 percent, was the clearest sign yet that China’s new leaders are willing to stomach economic pain for the long-term good. Read more of this post

Arrest warrant sought for Korean CJ Group chairman

2013-06-26 16:46

Warrant sought for CJ Group chairman

By Kim Jae-wo

The prosecution said Wednesday that it has applied for an arrest warrant for CJ Group Chairman Lee Jay-hyun on charges of tax evasion, corporate fund embezzlement and stock manipulation. The Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office said that it asked the Seoul Central District Court to issue the warrant, saying the charges are serious enough for him to be taken into custody and the amount of illegal gains was huge.  The court said that senior Judge Kim Woo-soo will review the application. Prosecutors quizzed the 53-year-old tycoon Tuesday for 17 hours over allegations that he amassed a secret fund worth between 400 billion won ($347 million) and 500 billion won both at home and abroad through various illegal methods, and evaded taxes in the process. Sources say Lee admitted to instructing the group’s executives to manage the secret fund, but said it was not for personal use and that there was no intentional criminal acts. Lee is under suspicion of evading 51 billion won in taxes in creating the fund and misappropriating 60 billion won of company money. The country’s 10th richest man is additionally accused of inflicting financial losses worth 35 billion won on the group by fraudulently purchasing two buildings in Tokyo.

Debt crisis blows South Korea’s STX on to the rocks

June 26, 2013 2:22 pm

Debt crisis blows South Korea’s STX on to the rocks

By Simon Mundy in Seoul

Kang Duk-Soo was sanguine when asked three years ago whether choppy industry conditions could spell trouble for STX Group, which he had built into one of the world’s leading shipping and shipbuilding groups in less than a decade.

“We have no liquidity problems because we never seek excessive expansion. We will make efforts not to follow in the footsteps of Daewoo,” the chairman told the Financial Times, referring to the defunct South Korean conglomerate wound up in 1999 after years of debt-fuelled international growth. Read more of this post

China Out of 10 Biggest Stocks as PetroChina Ousted

China Out of 10 Biggest Stocks as PetroChina Ousted

Chinese companies have dropped out of the ranks of the world’s 10 biggest stocks by market value for the first time since 2006 amid a cash crunch, slower growth and the biggest U.S. stock rally in a decade.

PetroChina Co., (PTR) the state oil producer that was the world’s sixth-biggest company in May, lost $35 billion in market value this month to $214 billion, dropping to 12th, according to data compiled by Bloomberg based on closing prices yesterday. Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. fell four places to 13th after losing $28 billion. All of the 10 largest stocks are from the U.S. after Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), the top maker of health-care products, and Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) overtook the Chinese firms. Read more of this post

Nobel Laureate Robert Engle on an increasingly risky China economy

Nobel Laureate Robert Engle on an increasingly risky economy

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

China edged its way toward a credit crunch last week, spooking investors, businesses, analysts – and perhaps more than anyone – the banks themselves.

Liquidity in the country’s money market appeared to suddenly dry up after a long holiday in early June. Interbank lending rates then shot from around 3% to 28% at one point. Exchanges in Hong Kong and Shanghai slid at the thought of highly leveraged firms losing access to credit. Read more of this post

Business Feels Pinch of Swift Rate Rise

June 26, 2013, 8:00 p.m. ET

Business Feels Pinch of Swift Rate Rise

JON HILSENRATH and VICTORIA MCGRANE

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Sharp increases in long-term interest rates, triggered by Federal Reserve statements last week, threaten sales of homes, cars and other big-ticket items that have helped drive the U.S. economic recovery.

Rate increases on interest-sensitive sectors likely aren’t severe enough to derail the recovery, say economists. But they arrived just as the economy’s lagging growth had showed welcome signs of improvement, raising worries among consumers and company executives. Read more of this post

The Middling Kingdom: By 2030, China will have more people over 65 than the U.S. has people. It stands to be the first global power to get old before getting rich

June 26, 2013, 4:27 p.m. ET

The Middling Kingdom

By 2030, China will have more people over 65 than the U.S. has people. It stands to be the first global power to get old before getting rich.

HOWARD FRENCH

Outside of world wars and market cataclysms, the relative trajectories of major powers usually trace gradual curves rather than abruptly rising or falling. After the 2008 financial crisis, however, commentators in China and to a lesser extent in the West suggested that the U.S. had hit an inflection point. China, they said, was zooming toward parity as a world power, and perhaps more.

In recent months, for somewhat less obvious reasons including Beijing’s increasing pushiness in East Asia and the country’s just-completed once-a-decade leadership transition, this conversation has been shifting again, at least in the West. America’s relative decline is anything but assured, many analysts have begun to proclaim, with some adding that China’s rise to global pre-eminence any time soon is highly unlikely. Read more of this post

Why Legal Secretaries Can’t Find Jobs; Legal secretaries are increasingly being displaced, as law firms cut back and usher in a new generation of lawyers who conduct business by email and type their own briefs

June 26, 2013, 7:31 p.m. ET

Why Legal Secretaries Can’t Find Jobs

Positions Dwindle as Firms Cut Back; Younger Lawyers Type Their Own Briefs

JENNIFER SMITH and JOE PALAZZOLO

Steve Bryant is still hunting for permanent work more than four years after he was laid off from his legal secretary job at the New York office of Latham & Watkins LLP, which slashed more than 250 staffers at the height of the recession.

Mr. Bryant has tried to burnish his résumé, obtaining a college degree and a paralegal certificate from Hunter College in New York. Despite roughly 20 job interviews, and a slew of job applications, he has landed only lower-paying work as a temp. He and his wife were leaning on credit cards until her work as an architect picked up in recent years. Read more of this post

Since the crunch began in early June, many Chinese savers have received messages from banks and their wealth managers, urging them to buy new WMPs, which are are subject to fewer official controls and pay hugher interest rates

China: savers flock to shadow-bank deposits in response to higher rates

Jun 26, 2013 1:37pm by Lydia Guo

China’s recent cash squeeze is having the perverse effect of attracting more savers into the controversial wealth management products (WMPs) that the authorities want to bring under greater scrutiny. The hike in market interest rates that has accompanied the crunch has boosted the returns many banks need to offer on these off-balance-sheet-funds so they can lend the money on to borrowers hit by the squeeze. Since the crunch began in early June, many savers have received messages from banks and their so-called wealth managers, urging them to buy new WMPs, which are similar to time deposits but are subject to fewer official controls and pay higher interest rates.

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