France delivers postal blow to Amazon; Law to aid bookshops stops internet booksellers offering free delivery

October 3, 2013 5:15 pm

France targets Amazon to protect bookshops

By Hugh Carnegy in Paris

France’s parliament has passed a law preventing internet booksellers from offering free delivery to customers, in an attempt to protect the country’s struggling bookshops from the growing dominance of US online retailer Amazon. On Thursday, Aurélie Filippetti, the culture minister who originally proposed the move, denounced Amazon for its alleged “strategy of dumping”, claiming that the company used offers of free delivery to get around French laws controlling the price of books. Read more of this post

Amazon plans TV streaming box in time for holidays

Amazon plans TV streaming box in time for holidays: WSJ

3:12pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – Amazon.com Inc, which entered the gadget-making business with the Kindle e-reader, intends to sell a set-top box that can stream Internet content to televisions in time for the holidays, the Wall Street Journal reported on Thursday. The Internet retailer has approached media software developers as well as cable television providers in recent weeks, hoping to secure content partners for the device by mid-October, the newspaper reported, citing people briefed on the company’s plans. Read more of this post

Xi Jinping Is No Fun; China’s president turns back the clock, and the Communist Party elite put away their Rolexes

Xi Jinping Is No Fun

By Dexter Roberts October 03, 2013

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At the end of September, Chinese officials gathered in Shijiazhuang, in Hebei province, to discuss their shortcomings in Maoist-style self-criticism sessions. Under the watchful eye of President Xi Jinping, senior Communist Party members admitted to sins ranging from excessive ambition to detachment from the people. “Formalism, bureaucracy, hedonism, and extravagance,” are “undesirable work styles,” that are “harmful, stubborn in nature, and prone to relapse,” Xi warned the Hebei party secretary and other assembled provincial cadres, reported the Xinhua News Agency on Sept. 25. “Party members and officials should be taught to look in the mirror, straighten their attire, take a bath, and seek remedies,” Xi said. Read more of this post

Rise of China’s consumers drives tourist frenzy

October 3, 2013 7:40 am

Rise of China’s consumers drives tourist frenzy

By Simon Rabinovitch in Shanghai and Lucy Hornby in Beijing

With China’s highways snarled by traffic, thousands of tourists stranded at one of the country’s beloved national parks and millions more crushing into its most popular attractions, there is little question that the Chinese nation is once again on holiday. Early government estimates are that thisNational Day holiday week, which began on Tuesday, will be a record for the country in terms of domestic visitor numbers and tourism revenue, with both up about 20 per cent compared with the same period 12 months earlier. Read more of this post

Crucial China support for gold may fade; There are indications demand is beginning to slow

Last updated: October 3, 2013 6:56 pm

Crucial China support for gold may fade

By Neil Hume in London

Where would be we without China? It is a question many people in the commodities industry have asked in recent years. But it has particular resonance for gold. An explosion in physical demand from the second biggest economy has prevented a sharp sell-off from becoming a disorderly rout – and provided nervous investors with a reason to remain positive on gold as its 13-year bull run comes to an end. Read more of this post

Chinese Still Prefer Property Over Stocks; real estate has made up more than 60 percent of household assets since 2008, compared with 48 percent in the U.K., 32 percent in Japan, and 26 percent in the U.S.

Chinese Still Prefer Property Over Stocks

By Bloomberg News October 03, 2013

Matthew Zhou and his wife spent 1.6 million yuan ($261,000) to buy a two-bedroom apartment in eastern Shanghai in August because they saw no potential to make money in China’s financial markets. “Home prices keep rising, so I’d rather buy a place now than put the money in the stock market,” says Zhou, 30, an information technology engineer at a state-controlled bank in Shanghai. Gains in equities “could never outpace the growth of home prices,” he says. Read more of this post

China’s Second-Generation Entrepreneurs a Different Breed

October 3, 2013, 10:44 a.m. ET

China’s Second-Generation Entrepreneurs a Different Breed

Many Are Foreign Educated and Don’t Follow in Their Parents’ Footsteps

WEI GU

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A big part of China’s private economy will change hands in the next decade, from first-generation entrepreneurs to their children, many of whom are foreign-educated and have a very different view about running a business than their parents do. Kelly Zong, who has been groomed to take over her father’s Hangzhou Wahaha Group, is outspoken in saying she doesn’t favor her father’s hands-on management style. Nor is she a big fan of the way government and business interact in China. “I believe the government needs to face our generation,” the daughter of China’s second-richest man was quoted as saying in Guangzhou’s Time Weekly. “Our generation can never be like my father’s generation.” Ms. Zong, who attended high school and college in California, declined to comment directly but acknowledged she made the comments to the Time Weekly.

Ms. Zong may be particularly outspoken, but the children of China’s most successful entrepreneurs in general have little patience for the endless wining and dining of government officials that is necessary to do business in China. And they are not the nuts-and-bolts, get-their-hands-dirty managers that their parents are.

But many are shifting their parents’ businesses into service industries in sectors such as health care and finance that are important areas in China’s economic overhaul. Others are following their parent’s entrepreneurial spirit. Either way, the government faces the question of how to embrace this homegrown resource even if this generation doesn’t follow standard Chinese business practices.

“It is harder to be an entrepreneur in China compared to in the West, but there are also more opportunities here,” said Duan Liuwen, who heads up an organization for second-generation wealthy called Relay China that has about 200 members. “The good thing is the government is changing, too; even in the government there are more overseas returnees.”

Mr. Duan, 32 years old, has a relatively unusual background. His father, Duan Yongji, one of China’s most successful technology entrepreneurs and former chairman for Sina Corp., was worried that his son might get spoiled, so he sent him to a military college in Chongqing to study to be a doctor.

Mr. Duan tried a few times to escape the school by scaling its walls, but ultimately graduated and went on to the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He later returned to China to set up Halation Photonics Corp., a display-technology company. Mr. Duan sees no benefit to working for his father. “When I worked at Sina, no one would give me any real work, but the credit all came to me when it was done,” he said.

Karen Chen’s parents built a profitable property business around Shanghai, but with the government trying to rein in real-estate prices, the business is struggling to grow. Ms. Chen is now building senior-citizen homes, which is encouraged by China as the population ages.

Armed with an economics degree from a Canadian University, she also started a micro-financing business, to help women in small businesses. And she is working with a co-founder of peer-to-peer finance company Lendingclub.com to build a similar company in China.

“I have to change the business model and do the right things to keep the business alive,” said the 29-year-old Ms. Chen. “My education abroad has helped us to look at the long term and think about ways to combine businesses with social responsibility.”

Similarly, Yoyo Yao is adding modern management style and ideas that fit with China’s long-term development goals to her family’s property business. She is trying to build a plastic-surgery center in Hebei province, after seeing a lot of Chinese going to Korea for such services. The development, about three hours north of Beijing, covers an area about 10 times the size of Monaco.

“When I was little, I didn’t want to go into properties, thinking it’s not very elegant for ladies,” said Ms. Yao. “My father says, now you have finally started to pay attention.”

Some second-generation wealthy Chinese have chosen to stay abroad, because they are pessimistic about the Chinese economy. Carl Meng, who got a master’s from Cambridge University, is one of them. “It will be difficult for me to adjust to the Chinese way of doing things,” said Mr. Meng, who now works for an investment bank in London. “The Chinese economy looks like a dead end and my parents don’t mind me staying abroad either.”

But there are also plenty of these young Chinese entrepreneurs who are ambitious and eager to build their own legacy at home.

“I’m quite optimistic about China’s second generation,” said Rupert Hoogewerf, founder of Hurun China Rich list. “They have good education, broad experiences—not just in China—and a lot of DNA close to their parents, who have succeeded against all odds.”

China’s drive to clean up thriving but dirty recycling business jolts global industry

China’s drive to clean up thriving but dirty recycling business jolts global industry

By Associated Press, Published: October 3

BEIJING — China for years has welcomed the world’s trash, creating a roaring business in recycling and livelihoods for tens of thousands. Now authorities are clamping down on an industry that has helped the rich West dispose of its waste but also added to the degradation of China’s environment. Read more of this post

Rio Tinto Replacing Train Drivers Paid Like U.S. Surgeons; The 400-plus workers in the remote Pilbara region who earn about A$240,000 ($224,000) a year probably are the highest-paid train drivers in the world

Rio Replacing Train Drivers Paid Like U.S. Surgeons

Train drivers employed by Rio Tinto Group to haul iron ore across Australia’s outback make about the same money as surgeons in the U.S. It’s little wonder the mining company will replace them with robot locomotives. The 400-plus workers in the remote Pilbara region who earn about A$240,000 ($224,000) a year probably are the highest-paid train drivers in the world, according to U.K.-based transport historian Christian Wolmar. Australia’s decade-long mining boom has sucked up skilled workers, raising wages for engineers to drivers at Rio, the second-largest exporter of the mineral, and its closest competitors, Vale SA (VALE) and BHP Billiton Ltd. Read more of this post

Ex-Leighton boss Wal King spent thousands on company credit card

Ex-Leighton boss Wal King spent thousands on company credit card

October 4, 2013 – 12:55PM

Nick McKenzie and Richard Baker

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Wal King’s exit entitled him to $6 million in consultancy fees over three years, a company credit card, an office and IT support. Photo: Rob Homer

EXCLUSIVE: Former Leighton boss Wal King repaid $40,000 worth of unauthorised expenses – including trips to Madrid, a $780 meal at Sydney’s Rockpool restaurant and stays at luxury hotels – that he billed to a company credit card in the weeks after he had left the construction giant. A Fairfax Media investigation can also reveal a small number of senior Leighton staff were so concerned by a $6 million consultancy awarded to Mr King upon his 2011 departure that external legal advice was sought to determine if it might have breached Australian corporate laws that apply to retirement benefits. Read more of this post

Australia’s Booming House Prices Spark Concern; Low Interest Rates May Be Boosting Property Speculation; The Central Bank Is Concerned

October 3, 2013, 5:06 a.m. ET

Australia’s Booming House Prices Spark Concern

Low Interest Rates May Be Boosting Property Speculation; The Central Bank Is Concerned

JAMES GLYNN And SHANI RAJA

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SYDNEY—Samantha Walton and her fiancé Simon Cleary feel their dream of buying an apartment in Sydney’s trendy eastern suburbs is slipping out of reach. They have secure jobs and live with Ms. Walton’s parents, an arrangement that has helped them save money for a deposit over the past year. Their ambitions are modest: a one-bedroom property worth 500,000 Australian dollars (US$470,000), well below the average for a new Australian home. Read more of this post

Yes, Real Men Drink Beer and Use Skin Moisturizer

Yes, Real Men Drink Beer and Use Skin Moisturizer

By Matthew Boyle October 03, 2013

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Adam Causgrove is not a metrosexual. The 29-year-old grant administrator in Pittsburgh is a die-hard Pirates fan and sports a 6-inch handlebar mustache. He loves bourbon, drives a Chevy, and has a dog named Diesel. Yet after shaving, the only thing he trusts to soothe his “horrible” razor burn is Crabtree & Evelyn’s alcohol-free lotion. “Six years ago I had one shampoo, a body wash, and a toothbrush, and that was it,” he says. “As I’ve gotten older and more self-aware, I cannot begrudge anyone for wanting to put their best face forward.” Read more of this post

Urban Outfitters already have 25 percent of all of their sales coming online

JPMorgan Chase’s Brian Tunick on Retail’s Recovery via Value Pricing

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

What do shoppers want? Experts discuss the forces reordering the retail industry.

Is the retail industry over the recession? 
I have 25 companies in my universe in specialty retail. The sales as a group are the highest they’ve ever been, the sales per square foot are the highest they’ve ever been, and the profit margins are the highest they’ve ever been. Value is probably the overarching theme. Look at T.J. Maxx (TJX), Marshalls, and, to a little degree, Burlington Coat(BURL). The pace of the growth in off-price has been almost double the pace of regular apparel spending. And on top of that, there’s not a weekend where an average specialty retailer in the mall is not offering some kind of 30 to 40 percent off deal. It certainly feels like the consumer is not shopping unless there’s some kind of deal attached to it. And it’s very hard to pull back when the consumer gets used to buying things on sale. The good news is margins, overall, are pretty good. But it’s more of a function of benefiting from lower cotton costs, more efficiencies as companies close stores to focus on their better stores and returns, and using e-com as a vehicle to also help profitability. Read more of this post

Walgreen’s Beth Stiller on Customer Behavior Since the Recession

Walgreen’s Beth Stiller on Customer Behavior Since the Recession

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

What do shoppers want? Experts discuss the forces reordering the retail industry.

How have your customers changed in the five years since the onset of the recession?
I think as we start to come out the other side, we see some lasting behaviors that affect the way people shop every day. I don’t think people have gone back to the way that they used to shop. Customers have become really sophisticated, and value to customers comes in lots of different forms. It could be personal interaction in a bricks-and-mortar store. It could be the ease of your mobile app, or just convenience and helping me get what I need to get done quickly, easily, and in the way I want to do it. In our stores, we’re seeing an increased importance to our private brands. Industrywide, the importance of private brands has been growing. Price is certainly an important factor. And then we’ve also focused on differentiated brands. So how can we bring innovation and differentiation into the private brand products that maybe gives them a little surprise and delight. That’s been something that customers have reacted well to and has been really helpful. Read more of this post

Patagonia’s Robert Cohen on the Retailer-Customer Relationship

Patagonia’s Robert Cohen on the Retailer-Customer Relationship

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

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What do shoppers want? Experts discuss the forces reordering the retail industry.

Does it matter to you what channel people buy your clothing through?
Nope. I’m more interested in making sure customers get Patagonia and less obsessed with how they get Patagonia.

Is gathering information about customers more important now than it has been in the past?
It’s interesting because the consumer has gotten a lot more power. People are much more protective about their e-mail in-box than they are about their home address. They’ll sign up for a catalog or they’ll sign up for a coupon. But to get somebody’s e-mail address out of them, you know, it’s a quid-pro-quo arrangement. Nobody tends to give it up for free. Obviously that rich customer relationship that you really want is “We’re like you. We care about the same things you do. Let’s do things together.” In a lot of ways the desire to build that relationship is about retailers trying to make big business feel a lot smaller. With only 30 stores in the U.S. and 120 around the world, it is not that difficult to act small because we are small. People call the switchboard, it’s answered by a person. It’s not an automated phone number. People may think we’re much bigger than we are. Read more of this post

Panera Bread CEO Ron Shaich on Restaurant Industry Competitiveness; About 50 percent of our transactions occur on our Panera card

Panera Bread CEO Ron Shaich on Restaurant Industry Competitiveness

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

What do shoppers want? Experts discuss the forces reordering the retail industry.

What’s changed the most in the restaurant industry over the past five years?
I did a study two years ago on the profitability of restaurant companies over the prior five years. Eighty percent of the $1 billion-plus public restaurant companies made less money two years ago than they made seven years ago. You can go back and look at the top 50 restaurant companies 30 years ago; half of them no longer exist. They were sold, bought out, or hit the wall. So you have this very difficult operating environment in which competitive advantage is everything. I’ve often thought size and scale are actually bad. For a while you’re large, you take advantage of it, you build your margins. And then you wake up one day, and you go, oh my God, we don’t have a competitive position. We’ve just got an efficient operation in something that worked five years ago. And that’s the biggest threat, if I may say, that exists for this industry. There’s no technological atomic bomb that can somehow disrupt it like it did books. Read more of this post

Fifth & Pacific CEO William McComb on Retail’s Altered Landscape

Fifth & Pacific CEO William McComb on Retail’s Altered Landscape

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

What do shoppers want? Experts discuss the forces reordering the retail industry.

What have you experienced in the years since the financial crisis?
We had had a fundamental collapse in our business model a year and a half before Lehman Brothers collapsed. So at a time when things were great, we were a disaster. So that’s my preface to the answer to this question. The headline is that in some ways the economic downturn further commoditized the business. It kicked off a race to the bottom. The use of promotions increased dramatically. There was channel consolidation and brand consolidation. And at the same time the global power value players—H&M (HMB:SS) and Zara (ITX:SM)—got stronger. That segment of the market, what I’ll call the value segment, is harder than ever. And that was the bulk of what our company was. We don’t play there at all today. We’re virtually 100 percent out of it. Read more of this post

Boston’s Store For Expired Food to provide produce and other perishables, including takeout items, for consumers who could not otherwise afford it.

Boston’s Store For Expired Food Is Looking Like A Better And Better Idea

HARRISON JACOBS OCT. 3, 2013, 10:10 AM 2,682 12

Confusion over expiration dates is one of the main reasons why America throws away $165 billion in food every year, according to a study released last week by the Natural Resources Defense Council and Harvard University. See, date labels that say things like “best before,” “sell by,” and “enjoy by,” typically have nothing to do with consumer safety and depend instead on manufacturers trying to limit sales to only the freshest form of their product (and, of course, manufacturers may be able to boost wholesale receipts by posting excessively early dates). Read more of this post

As smoking fades, growers shift to sweetener ingredient stevia; Stevia is forecast to eventually account for a third of the $58 billion in annual global sweetener sales

Some Tobacco Farmers Have a Sweet Tooth

By Duane Stanford October 03, 2013

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The once-idled leaf-processing machines at a former tobacco trading house in Alma, Ga., are coming back to life. Except now the warehouse, which still smells of tobacco leaves and cigarette smoke, is becoming a hub for a sweeter crop: stevia. Approved for commercial use in the U.S. five years ago, stevia extracts are fast becoming the sugar substitute of choice for a population trying to slim down and avoid artificial options. The no-calorie, natural sweetener, derived from plants grown mostly in China and South America, is creating an opportunity for U.S. farmers and processors looking to make up for dwindling tobacco demand and sell to the likes of Cargill and Coca-Cola (KO). Read more of this post

U.S. Is Overtaking Russia as Largest Oil-and-Gas Producer

Updated October 2, 2013, 8:10 p.m. ET

U.S. Is Overtaking Russia as Largest Oil-and-Gas Producer

RUSSELL GOLD and DANIEL GILBERT

The U.S. is overtaking Russia as the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, a shift that is reshaping markets and eroding the clout of traditional energy-rich nations. Russell Gold reports. Photo: Getty Images.

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The U.S. is overtaking Russia as the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, a startling shift that is reshaping markets and eroding the clout of traditional energy-rich nations. U.S. energy output has been surging in recent years, a comeback fueled by shale-rock formations of oil and natural gas that was unimaginable a decade ago. A Wall Street Journal analysis of global data shows that the U.S. is on track to pass Russia as the world’s largest producer of oil and gas combined this year—if it hasn’t already. The U.S. ascendance comes as Russia has struggled to maintain its energy output and has yet to embrace technologies such as hydraulic fracturing that have boosted American reserves. Read more of this post

In Hong Kong, Retail Rents Lose Their Shine; After years of surging growth, rents for storefronts in Hong Kong, on some of the world’s most expensive and crowded streets, are finally cooling

In Hong Kong, Retail Rents Lose Their Shine

After years of surging growth, rents for storefronts in Hong Kong, on some of the world’s most expensive and crowded streets, are finally cooling.

Story by TE-PING CHEN. Graphic by HENRY WILLIAMS.

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HONG KONG—After years of surging growth, rents for storefronts on some of the world’s most expensive, and crowded, streets are finally cooling. Rent increases on major Hong Kong shopping streets have paused following a slowdown in growth in spending by people chasing the latest Gucci handbags and Rolex watches. Storefronts now stand empty on prime streets in top shopping districts, a rare sight in this densely populated city of 7 million. Some have been vacant for months. “People used to fight for these spots, but now, there’s just nobody fighting,” said Nicole Wong, an analyst at CLSA, an Asia-focused brokerage. Read more of this post

Forget TVs. Sharp Sees a Future in Strawberry Farming

Forget TVs. Sharp Sees a Future in Strawberry Farming

By Joshua Brustein October 03, 2013

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The hermetically sealed grow lab is a proving ground for agricultural technology Sharp hopes to sell. The lab is stocked with components made by Sharp, including the lights, sensors, and air purifier

Sharp (6753:JP), known for its televisions, actually has its origins in mechanical pencils. Its future may rest on a business distant from either of those: growing strawberries in the deserts of Dubai. The struggling consumer-electronics company announced on Sept. 20 plans to ramp up an experiment it started in July, in which berries are grown in a hermetically sealed farm lit with Sharp’s power-efficient LED lights. Sensors made by Sharp track temperature and humidity, and the company’s Plasmacluster air-purification system, which it markets to consumers, helps protect the fruit by killing germs, bacteria, and mold. Dubai is a logical home for the project, because Japanese strawberries are popular in the Middle East, expensive, and quick to spoil. Sharp says it will collect data on how well its cultivation techniques work to “achieve stable production of high-quality strawberries.” Read more of this post

Opulent Trains Show Japan Is Eager to Spend

Opulent Trains Show Japan Is Eager to Spend

By Chris Cooper and Kiyotaka Matsuda October 03, 2013

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A four-day luxury package can cost more than $10,000. The rear car features two deluxe suites and an observation lounge

A train ride on the Seven Stars in Kyushu can set you back 391,000 yen ($3,900). For that price, a passenger gets three nights in a suite with walnut and maple paneling. A lounge car offers plush sofas and a pianist to provide live background music. The restaurant car features dishes devised by Koji Shimomura, whose Tokyo restaurant was awarded two stars by Michelin. The service makes its debut Oct. 15. Tickets are sold out until June. Read more of this post

Life After Sony Leads Idei to Back $82,000 Handmade Sports Cars

Life After Sony Leads Idei to Back $82,000 Handmade Sports Cars

Nobuyuki Idei once embodied Japan’s corporate establishment, the leader of technology giant Sony Corp. (6758) Now at 75, he’s aiming to reinvent himself as a cross between a Silicon Valley venture capitalist and Hollywood mogul. The former Sony chief executive officer describes himself as the “executive producer” behind a long list of projects, including a venture fund, a design consultancy and a salon for entrepreneurs. They’re all designed to boost startups in Japan, a country the World Bank ranks behind Ghana and Tanzania in ease of starting a business. Read more of this post

Japanese online store sold drugs whose sell-by date had passed at discounted prices

Online store sold drugs whose sell-by date had passed at discounted prices

KYODO

OCT 4, 2013

An online drugstore was found to have offered for sale in late July through a shopping mall of Yahoo Japan Corp. non-prescription medicines that had passed their expiry dates, and at below market prices, sources familiar with the matter said Thursday. This is the first case of its kind, and came to light as online sales of non-prescription medicines is gaining momentum in the absence of regulations to ensure the safety of drugs sold online. Read more of this post

Sluggish India economy, tight credit take toll on smaller firms

Sluggish India economy, tight credit take toll on smaller firms

5:17pm EDT

By Archana Narayanan and Abhishek Vishnoi

MUMBAI (Reuters) – Sunil Malhotra’s expansion plans had a sound logic; they would reduce his company’s exposure to imports made more costly by the slump in the rupee this year to a record low. It was an investment to improve profitability. But banks were unwilling to finance his plan, leaving him instead scrambling to find working capital let alone funds to invest in his firm, Hallmark Steel, a small company supplying the auto industry. Read more of this post

Reserve Bank of India data showed the highest ratio of short-term external debt to currency reserves in more than a decade

Goldman to Nomura Warn on Debt to Reserves Ratio: India Credit

Reserve Bank of India data showed the highest ratio of short-term external debt to currency reserves in more than a decade, raising alarm bells at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Nomura Holdings Inc. The $97 billion maturing in less than a year amounted to 34.3 percent of reserves as of June 30, the highest since at least March 2001, RBI figures released Sept. 30 show. The ratio was 146.5 percent during a balance-of-payments crisis in March 1991, according to the report’s partial data for the 1990s. Including longer-term debt, repayments due by June 2014 total $170 billion, or 60 percent of reserves. Indonesia’s comparable ratio is 55.8 percent. Read more of this post

Indian Motorcycles Grow Wings

Indian Motorcycles Grow Wings

A little more than two decades after it began to open its economy in 1991, India still counts as an emerging market. There’s still plenty of room for growth in product categories from alcohol to mobile phones, as a consumer revolution takes hold among a middle class that is expanding rapidly. Take two-wheelers, for instance. Data from the Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers show that sales of two-wheelers in India rose an astonishing 85 percent between 2007-2008 and 2011-2012, to 13.4 million units a year. Read more of this post

Gandhi Outburst Shows Reluctant Heir Emerging Before India Vote

Gandhi Outburst Shows Reluctant Heir Emerging Before India Vote

Since Rahul Gandhi joined his mother to help lead India’s ruling political party about a decade ago, he has mostly stayed on the sidelines, turning down cabinet posts and rarely speaking to the media. That changed when he gate-crashed a press briefing last week to denounce a cabinet order allowing convicted lawmakers to retain their seats. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, hand-picked by Gandhi’s mother Sonia to run the country in 2004, was forced to retract the order two days ago while rebuffing calls to resign over the public rebuke. Read more of this post

Call My Broker. No—Call My Astrologer! Mumbai’s traders hire stargazers to understand the rupee’s moves. The gyrating rupee is keeping India’s sought-after financial astrologers busy

Call My Broker. No—Call My Astrologer!

By Bhuma Shrivastava and Jeanette Rodrigues October 03, 2013

In the nervous hours of Sept. 18, markets worldwide waited to hear if the Federal Reserve would start to taper its record bond-buying program. As traders and fund managers in India hovered in offices listening for the Fed’s announcement, Atul Maheshwari, a financial astrologer, received so many calls, instant messages, and texts from his 130 clients that he gave up trying to help and shut off his phone. “People were in a frenzy. I just couldn’t answer everybody’s questions,” he says. Read more of this post

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