Combined market cap of Wells Fargo and JP Morgan ($440bn) exceeds that of every Energy and Materials company in BRIC; Less than three years ago, those two banks were valued at less than half the market cap of the BRIC commodity sectors, indicating how quickly market leadership has rotated away from China to the US real estate story

How the mighty have fallen: EM edition

David Keohane

| Jul 18 11:03 | 2 comments | Share

Today, the combined market capitalization of Wells Fargo and JP Morgan ($440bn) exceeds that of every Energy and Materials company in Brazil, Russia, India and China ($420bn). Less than three years ago, those two banks were valued at less than half the market cap of the BRIC commodity sectors, indicating how quickly market leadership has rotated away from China to the US real estate story. Read more of this post

Investment firm raided in Qatar now being set up in Singapore

Investment firm raided in Qatar now being set up in Singapore

July 18th, 2013 |  Author: Online Press

The QFCRA warned investors against dealing with investment firm Portable Fund. (16 July) – Qatar has warned Singaporean authorities of an investment firm which has moved its headquarters to the Asian country days after Qatari authorities raided its Doha offices and arrested the CEO over false claims the firm was licensed to offer investment advice. Qatar Financial Centre Regulatory Authority (QFCRA) last week warned investors against dealing with investment firm Portable Fund, stating the company had falsely claiming it was licensed by the Qatar Financial Centre Authority (QFCA). “The QFCRA took swift action after becoming aware that Portable was falsely claiming to be regulated by the QFCRA and licensed by the QFCA. In order to protect consumers and investors the QFCRA issued an alert and directed the company to remove these false claims from its website, as well as the false claim that it operated from Tornado Tower in Doha,” a QFCRA spokesperson said in a statement. Christina Miller, a Portable Fund customer service official, told Arabian Business the fund was in the process of renewing its licence when its offices were raided and its CEO arrested by police: “We were providing service to the investors from all over the world from our Qatar office. “Our license was expired recently and we were having issues with QFC to renew the license… But suddenly police came and asked to shut down the office and arrested the CEO Alex Russman.” Miller confirmed Russman had been released from custody and was now in Singapore setting up the company’s new office. A QFCRA spokesperson confirmed it “has taken steps to alert Singaporean regulatory authorities to the claims of Portable Fund.” “In relation to any allegation of fraud or criminal enquiry in Qatar, that is a matter for the law enforcement authorities… The QFCRA repeats its warning to investors and consumers to avoid any dealings with Portable,” the statement added. According to its website, Portable Fund was established in Qatar in April 2007, has paid up capital of $50m and, as of May 2013, managed more than $200m worth of funds. It claimed it had investors from all over the world and was pursuing opportunities in the Middle East, Africa, Turkey, South Asia and South-East Asia. It states it’s new office is located at 21 Maxwell Road, 069113 Singapore.

Singapore Has The Biggest Pay Gap Among Developed Countries

Singapore Has The Biggest Pay Gap Among Developed Countries

July 18th, 2013 |  Author: Contributions

Roy * The author blogs at http://thehearttruths.com

inequity-rate slide110 slide210 gap-between-top-and-bottom-earners-grew-from-2000-page-001 wage-gap-u-turned-in-2000-page-001 Read more of this post

Asia Has World’s Biggest Pay Gap

Jul 15, 2013

Asia Has World’s Biggest Pay Gap

By Riva Gold

In Asia, middle managers such as department heads make more than 14 times as much as operational employees such as clerical workers–the biggest such pay disparity in the world, according to a report by global management consulting firm Hay Group. The difference in pay in Asia is far greater, for example, than in North America (3.5 times) and Europe (2.9 times), and somewhat bigger than in the Middle East (11.9 times) and Central and South America (10.2), other regions comprised mostly of emerging markets, the report said. Read more of this post

Indonesia faces daunting obstacles in value chain; Country needs to do more than export raw natural resources it has in abundance

July 18, 2013 3:15 pm

Indonesia faces daunting obstacles in value chain

By Henny Sender

Country needs to do more than export raw natural resources it has in abundance

Asia desperately wants to believe it is relatively immune to the darker clouds over the world today and nowhere is that hope more passionate than inIndonesia, one of the principal victims of the Asian financial crisis 15 years ago. That hope is grounded partly in the fact that since Indonesia did go through a crisis, today its banks are independently run, better managed and have fewer vulnerabilities than at that time. It is also based on the fact that unlike its neighbours to the north, Indonesia’s demographics are favourable. Analysts love to trumpet a young population whose demand will propel the Indonesian economy. Read more of this post

True pragmatic patriotic innovator: Check Point CEO recommends US IPOs

Check Point CEO recommends US IPOs

Gil Shwed: Israeli technology companies considering an offering should go to the US and not to Israel.

18 July 13 16:11, Ron Steinblatt

“I would recommend to Israeli technology companies considering an offering to go to the US and not to Israel, because that’s where the competitors and investors relevant to their market are found,” said Check Point Software Technologies Ltd. (Nasdaq: CHKP) chairman and CEO Gil Shwed at the press conference, following the publication of the company’s financial report for the second quarter of 2013. Shwed added, “We’re a small country with a tiny capital market. What percentage can be invested here in technology companies? That does not mean that the Israeli market is bad or that there are no smart and talented people here. The problem is global, and regrettably, the Israeli market is not attractive for technology companies.” Shwed remarks about the Israeli capital market come against the backdrop of the decision by Mellanox Technologies Ltd. (Nasdaq:MLNX; TASE:MLNX) to delist from the TASE, which will come into effect at the end of August. Read more of this post

With 5 million registered accounts, no more than 500 thousand monthly active users, Jiepang managed to break even in two months last year by doing location-based campaigns or branded photo filters for brands such as Startbucks

Jiepang Isn’t China’s Foursquare Wannabe Anymore

By Tracey Xiang on July 19, 2013

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Two years ago we started asking, Are Chinese still checking-in? (I can’t believe it’s been two years.)  Those hyped check-in apps, unsurprisingly, disappeared one by one. It was believed then that location check-in would be a must-have feature with almost all social services and the standalone couldn’t work out. Jiepang, to my surprise, has been holding on. With 5 million registered accounts,  no more than 500 thousand monthly active users, Jiepang managed to break even in two months last year by doing location-based campaigns or branded photo filters for brands such as Startbucks. Read more of this post

3 Korean retail giants put in hot water; Lotte, Shinsegae, CJ under scrutiny for unfair practices in abusing their dominant market position, a business practice against President Park Geun-hye’s drive for “economic democratization

2013-07-18 17:14

3 retail giants put in hot water

Lotte, Shinsegae, CJ under scrutiny for unfair practices
By Kim Tae-jong
Tensions are high in the retail industry because the nation’s leading retail companies have become the target of intensive probes by multiple government agencies in recent months. Market insiders believe that the government is investigating retail giants because they have often been criticized for abusing their dominant market position, a business practice against President Park Geun-hye’s drive for “economic democratization.”Tensions are high in the retail industry because the nation’s leading retail companies have become the target of intensive probes by multiple government agencies in recent months. Read more of this post

Muddy Waters’ Carson Block Shreds American Tower, Warns Of Misstatements, And Explains Why Its Stock Will Collapse

Carson Block Shreds American Tower, Warns Of Misstatements, And Explains Why Its Stock Will Collapse

STEVEN PERLBERG JUL. 18, 2013, 11:49 AM 7,548

Muddy Waters founder Carson Block took communications powerhouse American Tower Corp to task on Bloomberg Market Makers yesterday. Block’s research firm is out with a new report that casts doubt over AMT’s work in emerging markets, hinting that the company has been misleading, if not outright fraudulent. “We rate AMT a Strong Sell and value it at $44.57 per share, representing downside of 40%,” Muddy Waters writes in the report. “It has engaged in a value destroying investment binge overseas, and we have identified a significant material misstatement in the Company’s accounts that could amount to fraud.” Muddy Waters flagged one transaction in particular, a $585 million purchase of towers in Brazil. “There is an approximately US$250 million discrepancy between what AMT claims to have paid for the acquisition of towers in Brazil, and the actual selling price,” according to the report. Muddy Waters provided the research to the SEC.jpg (25) jpg (26) jpg (27) jpg (28) jpg (29)

How Two First-Time Founders Went From $28,000 Salaries To Owning A $100 Million Media Brand in Refinery29

How Two First-Time Founders Went From $28,000 Salaries To Owning A $100 Million Media Brand

ALYSON SHONTELL APR. 22, 2013, 12:48 PM 37,594 8

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Philippe von Borries and Justin Stefano are first-time entrepreneurs and the founders of Refinery29.

Justin Stefano and Philippe von Borries had never started a company before. Neither had worked in fashion before either. But in 2005, they left their jobs in law and politics respectively to start Refinery29Refinery29 is a New York-based fashion content and commerce company. For a long time, no one took Stefano or von Borries seriously. Now Refinery29 is one of the few new media companies that is expected to exit north of $100 million. In February, Refinery29 raised a modest $4.2 million Series B round from First Round Capital, Floodgate, Lerer Ventures, and Hearst led by president David Carey. In 2009 it generated $400,000 annually. This year it’s expected to pull in $24 million. We spoke with Stefano and von Borries about how they grew from from a largely bootstrapped business to a major fashion brand. Read more of this post

Pepsi chief pursues snack innovation

July 18, 2013 6:08 pm

Pepsi chief pursues snack innovation

By Shannon Bond in New York

While Nelson Peltz and other investors arepushing PepsiCo to split its portfolio of snacks and drinks brands, chief executive Indra Nooyi has something else on her mind – drinkable oatmeal. The company’s Quaker unit sells an oat-based drink in Latin America, and Ms Nooyi has pointed to the product as the possible future of “drinkified” snacks. “The lines between snacks and beverages are blurring,” she told an investor conference in May. “We keep talking artificially about snacks and beverages only because some people used to track this industry differently. I think that’s over. This is convenience.” Read more of this post

Flagship UK pension scheme hit by £1.4m fraud

July 17, 2013 11:45 am

Flagship UK pension scheme hit by £1.4m fraud

By Josephine Cumbo

The body behind the government-run pension scheme, the National Employment Savings Trust (Nest), has been forced to tighten its security controls after falling victim to a £1.4m fraud. The Nest Corporation, a trustee body that operates at arm’s length to the UK government and runs the Nest pension scheme, disclosed the loss in its annual accounts, presented to parliament on Tuesday. Read more of this post

The Social Media Bubble Is Quietly Deflating

The Social Media Bubble Is Quietly Deflating

By Joshua Brustein on July 16, 2013

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Two years ago, when the craze for social media startups was in full swing, a former Facebook (FB) engineer summed up the situation with a memorable lament: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads,” the engineer, Jeff Hammerbacher, told Bloomberg Businessweek at the time. “That sucks,” he added. It might be over. Read more of this post

Internet IPOs: First, RetailMeNot. Next, Twitter?

Internet IPOs: First, RetailMeNot. Next, Twitter?

By Ari Levy on July 18, 2013

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After Facebook’s (FB) initial public offering 14 months ago—featuring a computer malfunction, misplaced trades, and lawsuits galore—a nuclear winter descended on consumer Internet equity listings. Investors interested in new technology deals ran from ill-defined metrics like consumer engagement and monthly active users. Instead, they sought solid revenue models powered by subscription and licensing fees at business software outfits such as data-visualization company Tableau Software (DATA) and human resources software maker Workday (WDAY). Read more of this post

Why Everybody Loves Tesla

Why Everybody Loves Tesla

By Ashlee Vance on July 18, 2013

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The Tesla Motors (TSLA) design studio in Los Angeles is a huge open space that usually has a couple of prototype cars on the floor and parts scattered along the walls. Tonight, it’s a lounge, with red lighting, white leather couches dotting tiered plateaus of AstroTurf, Daft Punk on the sound system, and women in little black dresses serving cocktails. A few hundred guests mingle and snap photos. Most are local owners of the Model S, the luxury sedan Tesla introduced last year to near-universal acclaim.

The crowd parts for the star of the evening, Elon Musk, Tesla’s chief executive officer, and closes behind him as he works the room. After about an hour, Musk, wearing a black velvet jacket, hops onto a stage outfitted with the kind of wheel guides and drive-over repair pit you’d see at a Jiffy Lube. He tells them they’re about to witness history: a refueling contest between gasoline and electricity. “You’re here for the title fight!” he says. Read more of this post

PepsiCo, Others Bet Hummus Can Be the Next Salsa

PepsiCo, Others Bet Hummus Can Be the Next Salsa

By Duane Stanford on July 18, 2013

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For most guys looking for a quick bite, salted snacks reign supreme. But Ronen Zohar wants man caves everywhere to give hummus a place of honor, right up there with salsa and beer. The chief executive officer of PepsiCo’s (PEP) Sabra Dipping venture recently launched its first national television commercials. One instructs consumers to “dip life to the fullest” by dunking all-American staples—think chicken wings and potato chips—into the mashed chickpea paste. And Sabra soon will kick off as the National Football League’s official dips sponsor, putting the brand squarely in the sights of male fans for whom snacking is also a national pastime.

While the goal is to make the Middle Eastern dip accessible to Middle America, Zohar faces a lot of work to make it a fixture at Super Bowl parties. Annual U.S. salsa sales are about $1.1 billion, more than twice those of flavored spreads like hummus. Still, the spreads are growing at a 14 percent pace as Sabra and its main rivals, Nestlè’s (NSRGY) part-owned Tribe and Kraft Foods Group’s (KRFT) Athenos, appeal to Americans’ desire to eat healthier. “Most of the people in the U.S. never tasted hummus,” the Israeli-born Zohar says. “You have to change their mind-set that even if the name is strange and the brown color of the hummus is not as appetizing, it tastes wonderful.” Read more of this post

Kremlin Intrigue Threatens Russia’s Silicon Valley; A $4.6 billion effort to jump-start Russia’s technology industry is running into trouble even before it’s finished

Kremlin Intrigue Threatens Russia’s Silicon Valley

By Henry Meyer on July 18, 2013

When agents stormed the offices of the Skolkovo technology hub in Moscow on April 18 to seize documents, a top Intel (INTC) executive unexpectedly got caught up in the raid. Dusty Robbins, head of global programs for the chipmaker, had to surrender his mobile phone. He was only allowed to leave the building escorted by officers after Skolkovo managers appealed to investigators to let him go. Robbins flew back to the U.S., skipping a planned meeting with the tech complex’s billionaire president, Viktor Vekselberg. Read more of this post

Book Publishers Try to Sell Chinese Fiction in Translation

Book Publishers Try to Sell Chinese Fiction in Translation

By Christina Larson on July 18, 2013

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Although China is now the world’s second-largest economy, few Chinese writers are read outside the country or inform the global conversation. In 2012, American publishers purchased translation rights for just 453 foreign titles, about 3 percent of the total books published in the U.S. Of those, just 16 were books first published in Chinese, according to records kept by Chad Post, publisher of New York-based Open Letter Books press. (The percentages for translated books in the U.K. are similar, according to Open Letter.) “China has the largest reading public in the world, but until recently we’ve had relatively little access to its literary scene,” says Post. Yet he is optimistic about the future of translated Chinese works in America. “People are more familiar with China. The pitch for a book doesn’t have to rely on painting China as exotic and crazy anymore.” Read more of this post

SEC staff morale low, atmosphere marked by distrust: study

SEC staff morale low, atmosphere marked by distrust: study

Thu, Jul 18 2013

By Sarah N. Lynch

(Reuters) – The Securities and Exchange Commission is not the best place to work among federal agencies in Washington, according to a new study by a government watchdog. The SEC’s organizational structure “has not been conducive to motivating and encouraging a high level of performance,” concluded the Government Accountability Office in a report released on Thursday. “Many staff indicated that morale is low and a significant percentage characterize the atmosphere of the agency as one of distrust,” the GAO said. Read more of this post

Pot-Based Diabetes Drug Maker GW Sees Slowing of Illness

Pot-Based Diabetes Drug Maker GW Sees Slowing of Illness

The marijuana plant contains at least 60 different chemical compounds, only one of which gets a smoker high. GW Pharmaceuticals Plc (GWP) says one of the other 59 shows promise in treating Type 2 diabetes.

In a mid-stage study, an experimental drug, currently known by its candidate name GWP42004, helped improve the pancreas’s ability to produce insulin and led to a drop in blood sugar levels between meals, among other findings, according to the London-based company. GW plans to publish the results of that trial this year. Read more of this post

China Communist Party Fate Seen Resting on Farmers’ Land Rights

China Communist Party Fate Seen Resting on Farmers’ Land Rights

China’s growth and the future of the Communist Party rest on giving farmers their land and allowing equal rights for migrants in cities, according to the state researcher who wrote a reform road-map.

“Land and hukou reform is the cornerstone for future economic growth and political-system reform,” said Yuan Xucheng, of the China Society of Economic Reform, who was the lead author of a report submitted to top officials. Yuan spoke in an interview in Singapore last week. Hukou is the term for a household registration system which limits migrants’ rights. Read more of this post

Chipotle under attack by noodles and clones

Chipotle under attack by noodles and clones

7:43pm EDT

By Lisa Baertlein

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG.N:QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) is one of the restaurant industry’s hottest stocks, but fickle diners and an ever-expanding selection of entrepreneurial eateries threaten to make it harder for the upscale burrito seller to keep delivering the explosive growth investors savor.

After two decades without significant direct challenges in the “fast-casual” category, Chipotle is bumping up against a bevy of new rivals that also sell $10 meals made right before diners’ eyes in the open assembly-line kitchens it popularized. Read more of this post

Oreo, Meet Dorito: Does Merging PepsiCo and Mondelez Make Sense? Nelson Peltz Thinks So

Updated July 18, 2013, 8:43 p.m. ET

Oreo, Meet Dorito

Does Merging PepsiCo and Mondelez Make Sense? Nelson Peltz Thinks So

MIKE ESTERL and JULIE JARGON

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Activist investor Nelson Peltz thinks PepsiCo Inc.’s PEP +1.83% salty snacks go better with the sweet snacks at Mondelez International Inc. than soda and Gatorade. Wall Street isn’t as enthusiastic about Mr. Peltz’s suggestion, made Wednesday, that PepsiCo buy Mondelez in an $80 billion deal and then spin off PepsiCo’s beverage business. Shares of Mondelez inched up 0.3% to $30.58 on Thursday, still far below the $35 to $38 a share that Mr. Peltz said PepsiCo should pay for Mondelez, indicating investors see such a deal as far from certain. PepsiCo shares rose 1.8% to $86.80, a sign that investors are chewing over Mr. Peltz’s idea but not too sure of where it might go. The megadeal—envisioned in a white paper from Mr. Peltz’s Trian Fund Management LP—could generate synergy and scale by putting PepsiCo chip brands such as Lay’s, Doritos and Tostitos on the same trucks as Mondelez’s Cadbury chocolate bars, Oreo cookies and Trident gum around the world. Read more of this post

Why is it so damn hard to understand China’s mobile market? Introducing the China App Index.

Why is it so damn hard to understand China’s mobile market? Introducing the China App Index.

by KAI LUKOFF on 07/18/2013 · LEAVE A COMMENT

Two things stand out when I talk to foreign app developers about China:

They’re very excited about the opportunity;

They know almost nothing about the market.

If they’re so eager, then why is still so hard for them to understand the China market? First, to investigate a new market, a developer starts by reviewing the top app rankings on Google Play or the iTunes App Store. This works for nearly every market in the world, except for China. While Google Play is dominant in the rest of the world, it’s a small player in China, where Android is the vast majority of the market. The major mobile analytics firms (AppAnnie, Distimo, etc.) rely upon Google Play data, so they don’t really cover China either. Second, just as in PC internet, China is very different. If you look at the top apps in China, there’s nary a foreign app to be found. In other countries, there are many more global apps (Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, etc.) in those rankings. But foreign developers still have great opportunities in China. Among top games, foreign developers makeup roughly half. And the distribution channels (app stores), are far more open to foreign developers than the PC internet was. In the PC era, foreign game developers had to be represented by local Chinese publishers, which handicapped their access to the market (see the debacle between Blizzard & The9). Today, a foreign developer still needs to invest time to understand the market, but the regulatory barriers are not as great. So to help foreign developers understand the market, I launched at initiative at our China app store, Wandoujia. The China App Index is a monthly report with data for our top new and fastest-growing apps. But since lists alone can be a little dry, we’ve decided to pull out three catchy trends each month. For example, My WeChat ‘Moments’ (朋友圈) feed was recently flooded with pictures from the Baidu PhotoWonder celeb photo-comparison feature, so it made sense to highlight that as a trend among our fastest-growing apps.

Google’s Revenue Reignites Mobile Worries

July 18, 2013, 5:56 PM

Google’s Revenue Reignites Mobile Worries

By Amir Efrati

Google GOOG -0.86% reported lower-than-expected second-quarter revenue, reigniting concerns about the impact of mobile devices on online advertising prices and the Web giant’s push into lower-margin businesses. The Mountain View, Calif., company reported a 20% rise in revenue from its core business in the three months that ended June 30, slightly lower than the 22% revenue rise seen in the prior two quarters. The company also reported a 16% rise in profit for the second quarter in a row. Read more of this post

Microsoft Takes $900 Million Writeoff on Tablet

July 18, 2013, 5:15 PM

Microsoft Takes $900 Million Writeoff on Tablet

By Don Clark

Microsoft took a $900 million charge related to slashing the price of its struggling Surface RT tablet, contributing to fourth-quarter results that missed revenue and profit expectations by a wide mark. The software giant, which also cited effects of the soft personal computer market, reported earnings per share excluding the Surface writedown of 66 cents a share, well below Wall Street expectations on that basis of 75 cents. It reported revenue of $19.9 billion, compared with analyst expectations of $20.7 billion. Microsoft’s shares tumbled 5% in after-hours trading on the news to $33.55, off $1.89. Read more of this post

Yahoo’s Rally: Made in China by Alibaba

July 17, 2013, 1:00 p.m. ET

Yahoo’s Rally: Made in China

In CEO Marissa Mayer’s Efforts to Turn Around the Company, Alibaba Is Buying Her Time

ROLFE WINKLER

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The typical honeymoon doesn’t last too long before the hard work of marriage begins. And so it normally is with new corporate chief executives and their shareholders. Lucky for Marissa Mayer, as well as Yahoo YHOO 0.00% shareholders, growth at Alibaba Group is extending the vacation. Yahoo’s second-quarter results, released late Tuesday, were unimpressive at best. Sales shrank 1% year over year, and the company forecasts no improvement in the third quarter. Ms. Mayer has little to show for her efforts a year after becoming CEO. Still, Yahoo shareholders didn’t seem to mind: The stock jumped 7% on Wednesday and now trades at a five-year high. Read more of this post

IBM’s Unexceptional Exceptionals; Big Blue’s reported earnings are “earnings before bad stuff.”

July 17, 2013, 7:02 p.m. ET

IBM’s Unexceptional Exceptionals

A Lot of Work Goes Into Big Blue’s Earnings—but Not Necessarily the Most Inspiring Kind

ROLFE WINKLER

If International Business Machines IBM +1.77% engineered products as well as it engineers its earnings, maybe its revenue growth wouldn’t be so anemic. Never mind that second-quarter results, reported late Wednesday, showed sales declining 3% from the prior year. IBM’s stock still increased 2.6% in after-hours trading, suggesting that investors are more focused on earnings, which are still rising. IBM said earnings per share for the full year will now amount to at least $16.90, up from guidance given last quarter of at least $16.70. That figure, though, isn’t calculated according to U.S. accounting standards—in colloquial terms, it is effectively “earnings before bad stuff.” It ignores, for instance, a $1 billion charge in the second quarter for “workforce rebalancing.” Include that charge, as well as other costs like amortization of intangible assets arising from IBM’s acquisitions, and the company’s forecast for 2013 earnings per share based on U.S. accounting standards actually falls to at least $15.08 from at least $15.53. IBM is both a serial acquirer and a serial cost cutter. In other words, these charges are a regular feature of how IBM does business. This raises the question: Why are they treated as one-time items? Just because tech rivals like Oracle ORCL -0.47%also publish an earnings-before-bad-stuff figure doesn’t mean it makes sense. IBM also boosted its earnings per share in the second quarter with the help of a lower tax rate and by buying back shares. Holding those two constant with where they were the prior year would have reduced quarterly earnings by 23 cents a share, or 8%. Investors won’t complain about IBM paying lower taxes while buying back stock. But it would inspire more confidence if the company could boost earnings by boosting its business.

Buffett’s Washington Post is buying Forney Corp., a supplier of products for industrial boilers, an usual acquisition for a media and education company

Updated July 18, 2013, 7:35 p.m. ET

Washington Post Diversifies… Into Boilers

Publishing Company Buys Industrial Unit from United Technologies

WILLIAM LAUNDER

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It’s not uncommon for an industrial company to seek some glitz by buying into media and entertainment. Washington Post Co. WPO -0.11% may be the only media company going in the other direction—adding soot and grease. The company on Thursday said it is buying a maker of parts for industrial furnaces from United TechnologiesCorp. UTX +0.48%. The decidedly un-glitzy deal is in keeping with a strategy of investing in companies that have strong earnings potential, said Post Chairman Donald Graham. Read more of this post

Once a Bridge to Renewable Energy, Shale Gas Is Now Cheap and Widely Available

July 18, 2013, 8:46 p.m. ET

So What’s the Matter With Shale Gas, Anyway?

Once a Bridge to Renewable Energy, Shale Gas Is Now Cheap and Widely Available

JOHN BUSSEY

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Sometimes it seems as if the environmental movement has been left behind by the sheer speed of America’s shale energy revolution. That may be because a resource—natural gas—that environmental groups once saw as part of the solution has become part of the problem, at least as they see it. Shale gas and oil are widely viewed as one of the biggest forces to hit the U.S. economy in modern history. Total U.S. gas production has rocketed 33% since 2008 and oil 46%, driving down energy costs. The expanding shale industry supported 1.7 million jobs in 2012 and produced $62 billion in state and federal tax revenue, according to IHS/CERA, the energy consultancy. Read more of this post