Future of STX remains in doubt; W3 tril. liquidity injection plan fails to restore confidence

2013-07-17 16:55

Future of STX remains in doubt

W3 tril. liquidity injection plan fails to restore confidence
By Kim Rahn

Concerns are growing over a plan by creditors to inject 3 trillion won into cash-strapped STX Offshore & Shipbuilding because it is uncertain whether the shipbuilder will recover, even with the fresh liquidity.
Experts say the company’s full recovery depends on unforeseeable economic factors. Even creditors have raised concerns over whether the shipbuilding firm will recover and become profitable again because the sluggish shipbuilding and shipping industry are unlikely to improve soon. Read more of this post

Korea must shed homogeneity jinx

2013-07-17

Korea must shed homogeneity jinx

Kim Ji-soo

Korea should more positively shed the yoke of racial homogeneity and welcome immigrants with open arms in order to get ahead globally, an international politico-economic expert claims in an interview. Talking about his recent book on the future of Korea immigration, Mo Jongryn, said, “Look at Apple. Everybody, irrespective of nationality, wants to work there.” “By changing its concept, Samsung will be able to tap into the 7 billion of the world population rather than from 50 million South Koreans,” Mo said about Korea’s global winning strategy. Read more of this post

Corporate bonds with detachable warrants (BDWs) will be no longer available for issuance from late next month in South Korea after 15 years of rocking the political and business circles

Corporate bonds with detachable warrant to vanish in S. Korea

Hwang Ji-hye, Oh Soo-hyun

2013.07.17

Corporate bonds with detachable warrants (BDWs) will be no longer available for issuance from late next month in South Korea after 15 years of rocking the political and business circles. This has prompted companies to rush to issue BDWs. Buyers of BDWs can give the issuer warrant in exchange for shares and sell the shares at a market price to take profits if share price rises above the exercise price. However, the revised Capital Market Integration Act will take effect on August 29, which prohibits issuance of BDWs. The National Assembly came up with such regulations to prevent majority shareholders from employing BDWs to fraudulently gain profits or hand over their shares as inheritance. Since its adoption in 1999, BDWs became a subject of nationwide controversy when corporations such as Samsung SDS and Doosan were accused of issuing BDWs to illegally transfer shares to parties of special interest. The accusation prompted prosecutors to seek investigation into the charge. In addition, BDWs triggered political controversy during the presidential election last year, as prominent candidate Ahn Cheol-soo was suspected of having converted BDWs into stocks exceeding the bonds’ value while running a computer vaccine company. The issuance of bonds with warrants has jumped 30 percent year-on-year (yoy) this year, said local financial information provider FnGuide Wednesday.

Legoland Korea will open in Chuncheon in Gangwon Province, South Korea in July 2016.

Legoland Korea starts countdown for formal contract

Gee Hong-goo

2013.07.18

Educational theme park Legoland Korea will open in Chuncheon in Gangwon Province, South Korea in July 2016.

If the 1.32 million square-meter (400,000 pyeong) Legoland Korea is constructed in Jungdo, the most attractive tourist place in Chuncheon, it will become the world’s seventh largest and East’s Asia’s first Lego-themed theme park.  The Maeil Business Newspaper found Merlin Entertainments Group wrapped up fine-tuning process for the formal contract Thursday to sign it around early next week. A formal contract came 22 months after the memorandum of agreement (MOA) signed in September 2011.  Read more of this post

Robert Taub back in Israel to combat snoring; The Omrix founder can’t resist Israel’s medical technologies as shown by sleep apnea prevention company Nyxoah; Taub is known for founding biological glue company Omrix and selling it to Johnson & Johnson in 2008 for $483 million

Robert Taub back in Israel to combat snoring

The Omrix founder can’t resist Israel’s medical technologies as shown by sleep apnea prevention company Nyxoah.

17 July 13 15:18, Gali Weinreb

About two years ago, at the height of the State of Israel’s trial against Omrix and its founder Robert Taub, he said that he would not establish any more companies in Israel. He founded Nyxoah, his new baby, in Belgium and even moved the company’s CEO Dr. Adi Mashiach there. Later Taub registered an Israeli subsidiary of Nyxoah in Tel Aviv. The trial is expected to go to mediation and now Taub reveals that while the company is registered in Belgium, half of its employees are in Israel. “The biotech and medtech sector in Israel is still very attractive. As in the past, I very much admire the entrepreneurship of Israeli companies and Israeli scientists,” he said. Read more of this post

Pushing the Right Buttons: Apple’s steps to reimagine television, like teaming up with ESPN, stand in stark contrast to efforts by Google to compete with established companies

July 17, 2013

Pushing the Right Buttons

By BRIAN STELTER

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When Apple wanted to revolutionize cellphones, it held hands with AT&T. The partners fought endlessly, but the public loved the finished product: the iPhone. Now, as Apple tries to reimagine television, it is taking the partnership route again, collaborating with distributors like Time Warner Cable and programmers like the Walt Disney Company on apps that might eliminate the unpleasant parts of TV watching, like bothersome set-top boxes or clunky remote controls. Apple’s broader strategy — what its chief executive, Timothy D. Cook, recently called its “grand vision” for television — remains shrouded in secrecy, as everything Apple-related tends to be. Some analysts continue to predict, as they have for years, that the company will someday come out with a full-blown television set. Read more of this post

Activist Billionaire Investor Nelson Peltz Presses PepsiCo to Spin Off Beverages and Buy Mondelez

Updated July 17, 2013, 10:03 p.m. ET

Peltz Presses PepsiCo to Spin Off Beverages and Buy Mondelez

MIKE ESTERL, JULIET CHUNG and JULIE JARGON

Activist shareholder Nelson Peltz said he is urging PepsiCo Inc. PEP +1.45% to acquire Mondelez International Inc. MDLZ +2.13% to create a global snack giant and spin off PepsiCo’s underperforming beverage business. But PepsiCo “right now doesn’t love” the proposed deal, Mr. Peltz said in an interview on CNBC, adding that he is continuing to talk with the snack and beverage company. Read more of this post

Ruling: Amazon Can’t Own ‘.Amazon’

July 17, 2013, 2:48 PM

Ruling: Amazon Can’t Own ‘.Amazon’

By Greg Bensinger

Amazon.com AMZN +0.59% is facing rough waters in its quest to claim “.Amazon.” Late Tuesday, a committee of the nonprofit organization overseeing the Internet’s top-level domain names (the ones after the final dot in a website name), recommended against allowing “.Amazon” to be controlled by the Seattle company. Amazon had hoped to win control over the domain as “a unique and dedicated platform for Amazon,” and as “a further platform for innovation” and, ultimately, to “support the business goals of Amazon,” according to filings it made with the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN. Read more of this post

A Bailout Lifeline to a Brazilian Billionaire Would Be Risky

JULY 17, 2013, 3:29 PM

A Lifeline to a Brazilian Billionaire Would Be Risky

By CHRISTOPHER SWANN

A bailout of billionaire Eike Batista would look bad for Brazil. Whiffs of cronyism hang over reports that state development bank BNDES has eased debt terms for the once high-flying tycoon. Taxpayers already have up to $4.7 billion wagered on his collapsing empire. If Brasilia risks more to save a pampered tycoon, it had better be prepared for another round of street protests.

The flamboyant billionaire once called BNDES “the best bank in the world.” Now he may have even more reason to think so. Daily newspaper O Estado de S. Paulo reported that the bank is voluntarily softening the loan conditions for his heavily indebted group of companies. BNDES, Mr. Batista’s largest creditor, has denied any favoritism. Still, it would not be the first time the government has come to the entrepreneur’s aid. Read more of this post

Tech revolution to inch into what we wear; Three categories of device will become prevalent, says Intel chief

July 17, 2013 7:46 pm

Tech revolution to inch into what we wear

By Richard Waters

Three categories of device will become prevalent, says Intel chief

The revolution will be wearable. Only, like most technology revolutions, it will not come as fast or in quite the form that the visionaries predict. That is the safe bet for what is quickly becoming Silicon Valley’s most hyped new claim: that “smart” devices like watches and glasses represent that next front in personal computing. The plunging costs of hardware and the spread of wireless networks certainly point to a time when digital intelligence and connectivity will creep into many different personal items – not to mention the broader world of inanimate objects, creating a much-predicted “internet of things”. More difficult to anticipate is exactly how this revolution will first be felt, though there are clues. Read more of this post

Downbeat Maersk Line chief warns of new era in shipping; Container shipping industry faces lower annual growth

July 17, 2013 11:02 am

Downbeat Maersk Line chief warns of new era in shipping

By Mark Odell, Transport Correspondent

The struggling container shipping industry must prepare for a new era that will see growth in demand fall to half the levels seen over the past two decades, the head of the world’s largest carrier has warned. Søren Skou, chief executive of Maersk Line, a bellwether for global trade, told the Financial Times that the more downbeat outlook was not just due to an prediction of sustained weaker economic growth globally. Read more of this post

Thai farm subsidy creates rice mountain; the effects on world prices could be serious if Thailand floods the market with its rice

July 17, 2013 2:52 pm

Thai farm subsidy creates rice mountain

By Emiko Terazono

Europe has had its butter mountain and wine lake. Now the Thai government is sitting on a rice hoard large enough to supply half of global imports for a year – and traders fear a price collapse as it starts to sell. Bangkok’s rice buying policy, designed to boost farmers’ incomes, has led to a stockpile of 17m-18m tonnes. With the new crop set to be harvested in October, the Thai government needs to dispose of its existing inventory to raise money for the new purchases. Rice market experts are on high alert as Bangkok could issue tenders for about 350,000 tonnes of its rice as early as next week. Concepción Calpe, senior rice analyst at the Food and Agriculture Organisation in Rome, warns the effects on world prices could be serious if Thailand floods the market with its rice. “It could potentially have catastrophic consequences,” she said. Read more of this post

Why Startups Are Sporting Increasingly Quirky Names; Lack of Short, Recognizable URLs Prompts Use of Misspellings, Word Mash-Ups

July 17, 2013, 7:19 p.m. ET

Why Startups Are Sporting Increasingly Quirky Names

Lack of Short, Recognizable URLs Prompts Use of Misspellings, Word Mash-Ups

LINDSAY GELLMAN

The New York cousins who started a digital sing-along storybook business have settled on the name Mibblio. The Australian founder of a startup connecting big companies to big-data scientists has dubbed his service Kaggle. The former toy executive behind a two-year-old mobile screen-sharing platform is going with the name Shodogg. And the Missourian who founded a website giving customers access to local merchants and service providers? He thinks it should be called Zaarly. Quirky names for startups first surfaced about 20 years ago in Silicon Valley, with the birth of search engines such as YahooYHOO +10.34% —which stands for “Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle,” and GoogleGOOG -0.12% a misspelling of googol,” the almost unfathomably high number represented by a 1 followed by 100 zeroes. Read more of this post

New Intel CEO: Stay Tuned for Much Cheaper Portable PCs

July 17, 2013, 9:10 PM

New Intel CEO: Stay Tuned for Much Cheaper Portable PCs

By Don Clark

Why does new Intel INTC -0.41% CEO Brian Krzanich sound so upbeat amid the personal computer market’s contraction? His first earnings call Wednesday supplied some clues, including a bet on the impact of much lower PC prices. The chip giant’s profits fell 29% in the second period, and Intel predicted its revenue will be flat for all of 2013, down from a prior prediction of growth “in the low single digits.” But Krzanich is betting that some new chips–particularly those stemming from an overhaul of its low-end Atom line–will have a big impact on demand later this year and into 2014. Read more of this post

The 40-Year Club: America’s Longest-Serving Directors; Board Colleagues Say They Provide Useful Context, While Activist Investors Question Independence

July 16, 2013, 7:45 p.m. ET

The 40-Year Club: America’s Longest-Serving Directors

Board Colleagues Say They Provide Useful Context, While Activist Investors Question Independence

JOANN S. LUBLIN

MK-CE793A_TROPH_G_20130716202002

Corporate governance has changed dramatically in 40 years. Just ask Robert Ted Enloe III. He’s been on the board of Leggett & Platt Inc LEG +0.69% . that whole time. “Governance is far better today,” says Mr. Enloe. The 74-year-old former attorney has served on the board of the maker of bedding and commercial fixtures since 1969. Mr. Enloe belongs to an unusual elite: He’s one of 28 outside directors with at least 40 years’ tenure at a company in the Russell 3000 stock index. Aged 67 to 87 years old, these senior statesmen—and they are all men—hold board seats at big businesses such asNike Inc., NKE +1.00% Level 3 Communications Inc. LVLT -0.05% andCenturyLink Inc., CTL -0.44% according to an analysis by governance researchers GMI Ratings for The Wall Street Journal. Read more of this post

Paying Auditors for Honest Appraisals; An Experiment in India’s Gujarat State Shows a Way to Realign Interests and Incentives

Updated July 17, 2013, 9:21 p.m. ET

Paying Auditors for Honest Appraisals

An Experiment in India’s Gujarat State Shows a Way to Realign Interests and Incentives

DAVID WESSEL

The auditing business rests on what Joshua Ronen, a New York University accounting professor, once called “a structural infirmity.” Auditors are paid by companies they audit, much as rating agencies are paid by companies they rate. This gives auditors an economic incentive to lie on their clients’ behalf, even if that puts their reputations at risk. As an old German proverb puts it: Whose bread I eat, his song I sing. These conflicts of interest figured in the corporate-accounting scandals of the early 2000s and the subprime-mortgage securitization debacle of the late 2000s. Despite attempts to lessen conflicts, resolution has defied easy solution. Read more of this post

The Demanding Off-Hour Escapes of China’s High-Tech Workers

http://nyti.ms/1bmHNnt

July 16, 2013

The Demanding Off-Hour Escapes of China’s High-Tech Workers

By DAN LEVIN

ZHENGZHOU, China — The hottest nightclub in this factory town is a neon-encrusted dive down the road from the industrial park where iPhones are made 24 hours a day. Tucked behind an open construction site, “Through the Summer,” as the nightspot is known, had it all on a recent Saturday night — plastic whistles, fruit plates, a toddler with a mohawk, counterfeit light sabers and a bawdy comedian who imbibed beer through his nose. Read more of this post

Once-Coveted Asian Oil Riches Take Backseat to U.S. Shale

Jul 17, 2013

Once-Coveted Asian Oil Riches Take Backseat to U.S. Shale

By Ross Kelly

Once captivated by Asia’s untapped oil-and-gas riches, some midsize U.S. energy producers are now selling their Asian assets as the North American shale revolution offers bright prospects closer to home. Companies such as Anadarko Petroleum CorpAPC +0.73%Hess Corp. HES +0.76% andNewfield Exploration Co. NFX +1.91% recently started looking for buyers for either all or some of their Asian portfolios, together worth billions of dollars. Assets for sale include oil fields in China’s Bohai Bay and natural-gas hubs in Thailand. Pulling back from Asia may appear counterintuitive. China’s energy demand alone will rise by 60% between 2010 and 2035, accounting for the largest share of growth in global energy use, according to the International Energy Agency. Read more of this post

China renews pledge to push property tax expansion

China renews pledge to push property tax expansion

English.news.cn   2013-07-17

BEIJING, July 17 (Xinhua) — The long-discussed expansion of China’s property tax plan has once again come under the spotlight following a renewed pledge by tax authorities to research the plan. The State Administration of Taxation (SAT) said in a circular issued late Tuesday that it will research the possible expansion of property tax pilot programs. However, like similar statements previously made by other authorities, the circular did not include any details regarding a timetable for the expansion. The comment is the latest in a string of official statements in which authorities have vowed to implement a property tax plan currently being used in the cities of Shanghai and Chongqing. Read more of this post

By the way, China isn’t rebalancing

By the way, China isn’t rebalancing

Kate Mackenzie

| Jul 17 13:09 | 14 comments | Share

Stephen Roach recently wrote for Yale Global Online arguing that yes, rebalancing is happening, but the new leadership have it under control because they are enacting the necessary reforms to facilitate this transition. A quick look at the composition of second quarter growth statistics suggests that is not happening — at least not now. INET’s China Economics Seminar summarises the composition revealed at the National Bureau of Statistics press conference on Monday: […]the spokesman of the NBS told reporters that overall consumption contributed 45.2% of GDP growth in the first six months of 2013 while investment’s contribution still stood well above half at 53.9%. Net exports contributed the rest at 0.9%. Consumption’s 45.2% is the lowest proportion since 2010, as consumption contributed 55.5% and 51.8% of GDP growth in 2011 and 2012 respectively. Read more of this post

When does a Chinese growth deceleration become a crisis?

When does a Chinese growth deceleration become a crisis?

Kate Mackenzie

| Jul 17 11:55 | 23 comments | Share

China-investment-ratio-vs-HK-Japan-Singapore-Taiwan-Thailand-AlsoSprachAnalyst-IMF China-capital-output-ratio-crop-Nomura-ICMR

It’s clear to everyone that something big is happening in China.

Double-digit growth is long forgotten and even high single-digit growth is above the consensus (for whatever that’s worth). The implications of this alone are quite massive and you could throw around any number of predictions about what it might mean for commodities, global imbalances, and more. Nomura sees a 30 per cent chance of growth falling below 7 per cent later this year, and Barclays are talking about the odds of growth slowing to as little as 3 per cent growth. Even entertaining the possibility of an outright economic contraction would not get you accused of being a crazed permabear these days. Read more of this post

Can Google’s Online TV Kill Cable?

Can Google’s Online TV Kill Cable?

The Internet is coming for your TV.

Google is in discussions to create an online-television service, the Wall Street Journal reports. While they face roadblocks, Google and other technology companies’ efforts to marry Internet with TV represent a telling shift in the Web’s increasing role as the backbone of our communications networks.

The idea: Let users stream live channels and on-demand shows on their TVs — just by connecting to the Internet. This combines the traditional TV packages of cable and satellite companies with the newer model of Netflix, Hulu and Amazon.com. Read more of this post

China defies IMF on mounting credit risk and need for urgent reform

China defies IMF on mounting credit risk and need for urgent reform

If you think China’s Communist Party fully understands the mess it has created by ramping credit to 200pc of GDP and running the greatest investment bubble know to man, read its shockingly complacent response to warnings from the International Monetary Fund.

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

8:00PM BST 17 Jul 2013

Chart1_2620453c Chart3_2620455c

The IMF’s Article IV report on China states – as clearly as the IMF dares – that excess credit has been pushed to the outer limits of sanity, and that there is a growing risk of an “adverse feedback loop” as the financial system and the economy take each other down in a mutually reinforcing spiral.

As you can see from the first chart, total credit has jumped from 129pc to 195pc of GDP since 2008, and has completely departed from its historic trend. The great mistake, plainly, was to keep the foot on the floor in 2010 and 2011, long after the Lehman crisis had subsided. Read more of this post

China’s Easy Money Flows Abroad as Credit Squeeze Hurts at Home

China’s Easy Money Flows Abroad as Credit Squeeze Hurts at Home

As China’s cash squeeze claims victims across the nation — from a bailout-seeking shipyard to a solar-panel maker missing a bond payment — there are places where Chinese money remains cheap and plentiful. Like Nigeria.

China Development Bank Corp. and Export-Import Bank of China are lending billions of yuan to some of the world’s riskiest regimes at interest rates hundreds of basis points below the cheapest commercial loans available at home. That lending in turn generates overseas contracts to build airports, roads and shopping malls for state-owned Chinese companies that are mired in debt. Read more of this post

SEC Said Near Proposal on Disclosure of CEO-to-Worker Pay Ratios

SEC Said Near Proposal on Disclosure of CEO-to-Worker Pay Ratios

Public companies would be required to disclose how much more their chief executives are paid than rank-and-file workers under a rule to be proposed next month by U.S. securities regulators, according to two people familiar with the matter.

The Securities and Exchange Commission proposal, part of the 2010 Dodd-Frank overhaul of financial markets, would require companies to calculate and disclose their CEO’s compensation as a multiple of average worker pay, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the commission’s agenda has not been made public. Read more of this post

China’s Thinning Margins Has Marubeni Betting on U.S. for Growth

China’s Thinning Margins Has Marubeni Betting on U.S. for Growth

China’s economic slowdown could be worse than official forecasts and a recovery may not come before 2014, according to the chairman of Marubeni Corp. (8002), Japan’s biggest power and agriculture trading company.

Thinning cargo volumes and trading margins suggest China’s gross domestic product may be expanding at less than the announced 7.5 percent in the second quarter, Teruo Asada said in an interview in Tokyo, making the U.S. a better prospect for the trader’s expansion. Read more of this post

Temasek Racing Exxon to Build Biggest LNG Stash: Southeast Asia

Temasek Racing Exxon to Build Biggest LNG Stash: Southeast Asia

A Temasek Holdings Pte unit is up against Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) and Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSA) in a contest to fill storage that will hold three times as much liquefied natural gas as Singapore will consume this year.

The city-state’s Energy Market Authority is seeking proposals through the end of July for stocking a 9 million metric-ton LNG terminal. The threefold expansion will allow Singapore to offer last-minute deliveries, or spot cargoes, to buyers in Asia seeking an alternative to long-term contracts linked to oil. Read more of this post

Rupee’s plunge drives up offshore debt costs for India Inc

Rupee’s plunge drives up offshore debt costs for India Inc

5:04pm EDT

By Sumeet Chatterjee

MUMBAI (Reuters) – The Indian rupee’s slide to record lows is squeezing mid-sized companies that borrowed offshore when times were good, with a slowing economy now making it even harder for them to generate the extra funds needed to cover dollar payments.

Many firms in capital-intensive industries such as infrastructure, manufacturing and metals that borrowed in offshore markets lack an overseas income stream to buffer their currency exposure, and the impact is expected to become clear in the current reporting season. Read more of this post

Designing cars in China: Can Nissan give “daqi” global appeal? “Daqi” is the hard-to-define sense of style and road “presence” that Chinese buyers look for in a vehicle.

Designing cars in China: Can Nissan give “daqi” global appeal?

5:41pm EDT

By Norihiko Shirouzu

BEIJING (Reuters) – Nissan Motor Co. plans to start selling more China-inspired cars around the world, its design chiefs said, a nod to the growing importance of China’s auto market and the country’s up-and-coming design talent. Staff at the Japanese automaker’s new design center in Beijing will attempt to export homegrown concepts like “daqi” – the hard-to-define sense of style and road “presence” that Chinese buyers look for in a vehicle.

Read more of this post

Who’s 91? Why’d Baidu Buy It? Baidu, 91 Wireless deal epitomizes mobile internet scramble

Who’s 91? Why’d Baidu Buy It?

By Tracey Xiang on July 17, 2013

$1.9 billion. It’d be, so far, the most expensive deal in China’s Internet history if Baidu successfully bought 91 Wireless. So who’s 91? Why 91?

Who’s 91?

91 started as iPhone PC Suite, an iPhone software managing tool. The developer, Xiong Jun, sold it to NetDragon for 100 thousand yuan in 2008, not long after its launch. Xiong developed 91 Assistant after joining NetDragon. Later in 2010 he left it to found Tongbu, an iOS software & content manager backed by Innovation Works. 91 Assistant got much traction as Chinese users with jailbroken iPhones could download paid apps from it for free. It reportedly had three million users in early 2010 that accounted for over 90% of jailbroken iPhones in China. It expanded to Android in 2011 by launching HiMarket, a third-party Android app market. In the same year its parent company decided to spin it off and planned to have it go IPO. Read more of this post