Investors No Longer Bet the Farm on Deere; Results Should Shed More Light on Fears That Soft Commodities Are Slipping Like Hard Ones, Threatening Customers’ Incomes

August 13, 2013, 4:04 p.m. ET

Investors No Longer Bet the Farm on Deere

Wednesday’s Results Should Shed More Light on Fears That Soft Commodities Are Slipping Like Hard Ones, Threatening Customers’ Incomes

SPENCER JAKAB

Investors have been echoing Eddie Albert, who crooned that “Green Acres is the place for me.” Even after slipping recently, tractor maker Deere DE +0.64% & Co. has had a great decade. Its share price has plowed over not just the S&P 500, by 166 percentage points, but even fellow U.S. machinery giant Caterpillar Inc., CAT +0.29% by 74 points. That company also rode rising commodity prices and wealth in the developing world. But it did so through exposure to construction machinery and mineral resources—weak spots lately as China’s economy slows.

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Coca-Cola has announced the launch of its first herbal drink, Habu, for the Thai market. Thailand is the first country to unveil this new beverage

Coke picks Thailand for Habu launch

Kwanchai Rungfapaisarn
The Nation August 14, 2013 1:00 am

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Diggy Dey, second left, business development director at Coca-Cola Thailand, and Charnvit Charindhorn, second right, senior vice president for marketing at ThaiNamthip, announce the launch of Coke

Coca-Cola has announced the launch of its first herbal drink, Habu, for the Thai market. Thailand is the first country to unveil this new beverage. Diggy Dey, business development director at Coca-Cola Thailand, said herbal beverages had always been an integral part of Thai culture, so the company saw an opportunity to develop one here, specifically made for Thai consumers. “The heritage of herbal drinks is the key inspiration behind the product and brand design – the brand name Habu is easy to pronounce and identifiably Asian with similarities to the English word ‘herbal’. Habu’s label and packaging are our modern interpretation of beautiful clay pots traditionally used to brew healing herbal drinks,” Dey said. The new ready-to-drink herbal-blended beverage is a combination of four cooling ingredients: rosella, liquorice, luo han guo, and cogon grass. Read more of this post

51 US Stocks Up 150%+ YTD

51 Stocks Up 150%+

MONDAY, AUGUST 12, 2013 AT 04:31PM

best ytd2013

The Russell 3,000 index of large, mid and smallcap stocks represents roughly 98% of the US stock market.  So far this year, this cap-weighted index is up 19.41%.  The average stock in the index is up much more than that at 28.47%, so the smaller companies are significantly outperforming the big blue chips. Below is a list of the 51 Russell 3,000 stocks that are up more than 150% so far this year.  If you have owned any of these stocks since the close on December 31st, your portfolio is definitely thanking you for it.  As shown, Revolution Lighting Technologies (RVLT) ranks number one overall with a YTD gain of 563.89%.  On 12/31/12, RVLT closed at $0.63.  As of the close today, RVLT shares were at $4.19.   Read more of this post

US Treasury Finally Admits The Truth: It’s All POMO

US Treasury Finally Admits The Truth: It’s All POMO

Tyler Durden on 08/13/2013 18:15 -0400

No One Dares Fight Fed_0

Back in 2010, when few still dared to question that the entire move in the market is predicated on the Fed’s daily POMO (then still on QE2), we laid out, in a way so easy even a caveman could grasp it, how every tiny move in the stock market is nothing but a function of the Fed’s daily POMO on those days in which Bernanke would be directly injecting liquidity into the capital markets using his Primary Dealer frontmen. Since then nearly three years have passed, and thousands of POMO days. All of which brings us to this quarter’s Treasury refunding presentation, and specifically the section “Effects of policy and market structure” from the Presentation to the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee, in which we learn that we had in fact been right all along, and that perhaps for the first time ever, the Treasury admitted that not only “no one dares fight the Fed” but that, as expected, it is “all POMO.” There, hidden on page 26, or slide 76 of 100, where the Treasury discusses “The Impact Of Monetary Policy”, the biggest “conspiracy theory” of all becomes merely the latest conspiracy fact. First, for corporate bonds… Read more of this post

The rise of the one-tenant REIT

The rise of the one-tenant REIT

Garry Marr | 13/08/12 | Last Updated: 13/08/13 2:02 PM ET
If you want to own publicly-traded retail real estate, your choice until recently was RioCan Real Estate Investment Trust, Calloway REIT or First Capital Realty Inc. — old school real estate landlords, behemoths now after one to two decades of growth in the ever-expanding Canadian retail market. Read more of this post

Ports a Hot Commodity

Aug 13, 2013

Ports a Hot Commodity

By Gillian Tan

The sale of 99-year leases attached to two Australian ports in the nation’s most-populous state for US$5.3 billion earlier this year was at a multiple so rich that two other owners of berths have since put their interests up for sale. Australian port assets are prized for their stable revenue and rarely come up for sale, but the country has emerged as a hotbed for port deals this year. Read more of this post

Legal Cloud Hangs Over Banks

August 12, 2013, 3:53 p.m. ET

Legal Cloud Hangs Over Banks

DAVID REILLY

MI-BX800_BANKHE_G_20130812210905

Almost five years after the worst throes of the financial crisis, the biggest U.S. banks face a widening array of legal challenges. The U.S. Department of Justice this month filed civil charges against Bank of AmericaBAC +0.69% alleging it defrauded investors when selling mortgage-backed debt in 2008. J.P. Morgan JPM +0.37% indicated in its most recent securities filing that it is also facing government scrutiny related to sales of such securities, even as it continues to grapple with multiple inquiries into its “London Whale” trading debacle.

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Here’s Why You Need To Worry About The IPO Boom

Here’s Why You Need To Worry About The IPO Boom

The Huffington Post  |  By Mark Gongloff Posted: 08/13/2013 12:27 pm EDT  |  Updated: 08/13/2013 12:45 pm EDT

The IPO market is back in full swing. Believe it or not, that’s bad news for the stock market. So far this year, 126 companies have priced initial public offerings in the U.S., according to IPO tracker Renaissance Capital, up 40 percent from a year ago. Those companies have raised $27.1 billion, which puts the total IPO market on track to raise more than $43 billion this year, by my estimate. Adjusted for inflation, that would be the most money raised in the U.S. since 2007. (Story continues below chart.) Why is this terrible news? Well, as MarketWatch columnist Mark Hulbert points out, peak moments of stock issuance are typically followed by bad stock-market returns. Read more of this post

Alleged Penny-Stock Scam Nets $140 Million

Updated August 13, 2013, 8:22 p.m. ET

Alleged Penny-Stock Scam Nets $140 Million

CHAD BRAY

Federal prosecutors said they uncovered an unusually sophisticated international scheme to sell stock in companies that barely existed, one that allegedly netted its organizers $140 million.

Working with throwaway cellphones and from call centers in places like Thailand and Canada, the people behind the alleged scheme plied unsuspecting investors with stock in companies such as Resource Group International, a Wyoming corporation based in Thailand that says it developed a revolutionary fertilizer, and RainEarth Inc.,RNER -12.50% a Nevada corporation with its principal office in Beijing that says it is in the mineral-exploration business and developing a specialized fiber, according to prosecutors. Read more of this post

India’s newspapers shrug off industry woes

August 13, 2013 9:00 am

India’s newspapers shrug off industry woes

By Victor Mallet in Kolkata, India

Newspaper executives in the US or Europe can only fantasise about the problems confronting their Indian peers: how to source the extra newsprint for rising circulations and catch the eye of the millions of new readers each year.

Chennai and Kolkata are a long way from Boston and Washington, where two of the best-known US titles were sold this month – the Boston Globe for only $70m, less than a tenth of the price the paper fetched a decade ago. Read more of this post

Rajan’s ideas can lift India’s corporate torpor; Business chiefs should be more vocal about performance. There is an Indian proverb about finding fault with others: “Those who can’t dance say the yard is tilted.”

August 13, 2013 2:46 pm

Rajan’s ideas can lift India’s corporate torpor

By James Crabtree in Mumbai

Business chiefs should be more vocal about performance

There is an Indian proverb about finding fault with others: “Those who can’t dance say the yard is tilted.” It is a saying that could easily be applied to the country’s corporate sector, as it seeks to assign blame for faltering growth. True enough, India’s situation looks increasingly dire: the rupee keeps tumbling, growth is stagnant, private investment has collapsed and corporate earnings show no sign of revival. As a result there is much quiet muttering from business types about their feckless political counterparts, alongside occasional respectful public requests for policy “reforms”. It is often noted that Indian business is unwilling to criticise its government openly. But it is just as true to say the recent slowdown has brought little in the way of self-examination from the corporate sector, parts of which are also badly in need of a shake-up. The upper echelons of Indian business can speak from a position of authority, given that the cream of India’s well-run large companies is among the few bright spots in a now-tarnished growth story.

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Prathap C. Reddy, the cardiologist who built a hospital chain valued at $2 billion over three decades in India, says he’s seeking growth overseas as the nation’s visa policies drive medical tourists to rivals.

Cayman to Singapore Gain as Rules Stump Clinics: Corporate India

Prathap C. Reddy, the cardiologist who built a hospital chain valued at $2 billion over three decades in India, says he’s seeking growth overseas as the nation’s visa policies drive medical tourists to rivals.

Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd. (APHS) is considering hospitals in Indonesia, Cambodia and Tanzania, Reddy said in an interview at his Chennai office. Growth in the number of visitors seeking treatment for heart ailments, cancer and orthopedic surgery is falling short of Reddy’s estimates as India’s special visa for patients forces them to visit an immigration office, he said. Read more of this post

India increases gold tax third time this year in piecemeal approach to cut deficit and defend rupee

India unveils gold duties in piecemeal approach to defend rupee

7:13am EDT

By Rafael Nam and Swati Bhat

MUMBAI (Reuters) – India raised import taxes on gold and silver on Tuesday as policymakers scrambled to narrow a gaping current account deficit, but concerns about the slowing economy and fears of more capital outflows kept up pressure on the ailing rupee. The rupee got a small lift after the gold measures were announced in late afternoon, after earlier threatening to test record lows. Read more of this post

The Entrepreneurial Gap: How Managers Adjust Span of Accountability and Span of Control to Implement Business Strategy

The Entrepreneurial Gap: How Managers Adjust Span of Accountability and Span of Control to Implement Business Strategy

Robert Simons Harvard Business School

July 15, 2013
Harvard Business School Accounting & Management Unit Working Paper No. 13-100

Abstract: 
This study focuses on the relationship between business strategy, organization structure, and diagnostic control systems. The project analyzes data from 75 field studies to illustrate how managers adjust span of accountability and span of control to motivate different levels of innovation and entrepreneurial behavior. Six propositions are derived inductively about when, why, and how managers make these choices.