No one knows how much time they possess, so the meaning of time is not about its length

Andy Lau exudes passion and style as Cartier’s new leading man

155424155432155364155384

Hong Kong veteran actor and singer Andy Lau is the face of French luxury brand’s Cartier Tank MC timepiece. Hong Kong – Hong Kong celebrity Andy Lau brought to life the essence of the Cartier Tank MC timepiece in a short film as he delivered a message of daring, excellence and passion – values held dear to the veteran star himself. Centering on leading man Lau, the 91-second film begins as he prepares to go to a performance. On his way there, he sees things which sends him into flashbacks of his memories. Read more of this post

A Canadian Journalist Dreams Of The Day When Her Country Finally Merges With The United States

A Canadian Journalist Dreams Of The Day When Her Country Finally Merges With The United States

SARANYA KAPUR OCT. 5, 2013, 9:33 AM 4,120 56

In the dystopian future imagined by Canadian journalist Diane Francis, Russia owns all of Canada’s oil and the Chinese own all its ports. Canada is rendered a colony of the two non-Western superpowers, while the U.S. is left out in the cold, surrounded by its enemies and unable to access that sweet, sweet oil.  Calling current trade relations between these superpowers a “new cold war,” Francis believes that the U.S. and Canada need to do what any two businesses would do in the face of an external threat: consolidate. In her controversial new book, “Merger of the Century: Why Canada and America Should Become One Country,” Francis lays out her thesis for uniting the two North American countries into one. She writes, Read more of this post

Boy Sends Question About Ninjas To Head Of US Joint Special Ops, Gets A Response

Boy Sends Question About Ninjas To Head Of US Joint Special Ops, Gets A Response

GEOFFREY INGERSOLL OCT. 4, 2013, 2:16 PM 755,551 74

Is a Navy SEAL quieter than a ninja? Six-year-old Walker Greentree is a kid in a military family who was determined to find out, so he wrote to Admiral William McRaven. McRaven is head of U.S. Special Operations Command, credited with organizing and executing the raid that killed Osama Bin Laden, and is a Navy SEAL himself — he’s without a doubt one of the deadliest men on the planet. Surely, he would have an answer. Here’s how it all started, according to military nonprofit Blue Star Families: One afternoon while playing with a friend in the yard, the young Greentree was scolded by his mother.  “Be quiet like a SEAL,” said Vivian Greentree.  His friend immediately replied — as one would expect from a 7-year old. “Ninjas are quieter than SEALS.” And thus, a monumental argument began.  WHO is quieter? Ninjas or SEALS?  SEALS or Ninjas? Greentree wrote a letter to McRaven, and McRaven wrote back with an answer: “I think ninjas are probably quieter than SEALs, but we are better swimmers, and also better with guns and blowing things up.” See both letters below in a graphic from Blue Star:

final_seal_infographic

Doctor Ignores Urgent Emails, Fails To Tell Patients Of Their Cancer

Doctor Ignores Urgent Emails, Fails To Tell Patients Of Their Cancer

PATRICK SAWER, LAURA DONELLYTHE DAILY TELEGRAPH OCT. 6, 2013, 9:01 AM 2,338 5

A nurse has told how she was forced out of working for her local NHS after warning about a series of potentially dangerous problems at the GP surgery where she was employed. Annabelle Blackburn warned health managers that she had found blood test results being ignored and emails going unanswered. The problems she claimed to have found included evidence that a woman had not been told about a probable diagnosis of leukaemia, and a man who should have been told he had prostate cancer. But when the experienced nurse spoke out, other GPs in the county where she worked were told she was “exaggerating her concerns” and should not be regarded as a genuine whistleblower. Read more of this post

Buffett’s Crisis-Lending Haul Reaches $10 Billion; Berkshire Hathaway Reaps Benefit From Tossing Lifeline to Handful of Firms

Updated October 6, 2013, 8:20 p.m. ET

Buffett’s Crisis-Lending Haul Reaches $10 Billion

Berkshire Hathaway Reaps Benefit From Tossing Lifeline to Handful of Firms

ANUPREETA DAS

P1-BN428_BUFFET_G_20131006184207

Billionaire Warren Buffett tossed lifelines to a handful of blue-chip companies during the financial crisis. Five years later the payoff on those deals is becoming clear: $10 billion and counting. Mr. Buffett approached that figure after he collected another hefty payment last week, bringing to nearly 40% the pretax income on his crisis-era investments, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis. The bounty is a vivid illustration of one of Mr. Buffett’s favorite investing maxims: “Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.” Read more of this post

Singapore’s Blumont Group slumps 80 percent after trading halt lifted; Asiasons Capital tumbles, requests trading halt continue

Blumont Group slumps 80 percent after trading halt lifted

Monday, Oct 07, 2013, Reuters

SINGAPORE – Shares in Blumont Group Ltd fell 80 per cent in early trade to around S$0.18 after trading resumed following a halt imposed by Singapore Exchange on Friday. Singapore Exchange Ltd halted trading in Blumont, along with Asiasons Capital Ltd and LionGold Corp after their stock prices plunged. The bourse said on Sunday it would allow trading in those stocks to resume, subject to restrictions that included a ban on short selling. LionGold has requested its trading halt continue due to a pending announcement.

Asiasons Capital tumbles, requests trading halt continue

Monday, Oct 07, 2013, Reuters

SINGAPORE – The share price of Singapore-listed Asiasons Capital Ltd dropped as much as 90 percent to S$0.17  after a  trading halt was lifted on Monday. Singapore Exchange Ltd suspended trading in Asiasons and LionGold on Friday, along with Blumont Group Ltd after a plunge in their share prices. Blumont shares resumed trading, down 81 percent to S$0.167. Asiasons Capital Ltd requested on Monday that trading in its shares remain halted. Asiasons followed LionGold Corp in asking for trading halt due to a pending announcement. The bourse said on Sunday it would allow trading in those stocks to resume, subject to restrictions that included a ban on short selling.

Japan Exchange Group Inc. (8697) will this year announce criteria and about 500 stocks for the new index, which will be based on fundamentals; “It’s going to be a quality index, not just a quantity index, and that’s very important. “It’s going to be like a membership of the country club and many companies will want to join a special club.”

Japan’s GPIF May Opt for Growth Stocks in Bid for Returns

A state-run Japanese fund that’s the world’s biggest manager of retirement savings may boost investment in growth stocks to increase returns after record domestic bond losses this year eroded gains on its assets. The 121 trillion yen ($1.24 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund will allocate several billion yen to a new domestic index focused on returns on equity, governance and trading volume, the Nikkei newspaper reported today. It may later boost investment to several trillion yen, Nikkei said without citing anyone. Japan Exchange Group Inc. (8697) will this year announce criteria and about 500 stocks for the new index, which will be based on fundamentals, CEO Atsushi Saito said in Tokyo on July 30. That will be a departure from benchmarks like the Topix index, which includes all stocks listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s first section, or the Nikkei 225 Stock Average. “It’s going to be like a membership of the country club and many companies will want to join a special club,” Curtis Freeze, the Tokyo-based chief investment officer at Prospect Co., which manages about $330 million in Japanese equities for overseas investors, said by phone today. “It’s going to be a quality index, not just a quantity index, and that’s very important.” Read more of this post

China’s doctors not part of society’s elite; “When I see so many patients each day how can I smile at them? They still want me to smile at them”.

October 6, 2013 8:04 am

China’s doctors not part of society’s elite

By Patti Waldmeir in Shanghai

©Getty

Roy Wang did not want to be a doctor but his grades were too low for engineering – so his southern China university transferred him to a course for weaker students: medicine. In most western countries, medicine is a profession that guarantees prestige, high salaries – and the approval of parents who love to brag about “my child the doctor”. But in China, the reverse is increasingly true: doctors are ill-paid, overworked and maligned or even attacked by patients – while many parents would prefer that they became bankers instead. Even Chinese doctors overwhelmingly prefer their children not to follow them into the profession: according to a 2011 survey by the Chinese Medical Doctor Association, 78 per cent of respondents said they hoped their child would not don a white coat. Many of China’s less prestigious medical schools find it hard to recruit students to train as doctors and others find that students with lower scores on the national university entrance exam, or gaokao, will use the lower requirements of some medical schools to gain entry to university, only to transfer later to faculties with higher earning potential. Read more of this post

Does ‘Gravity’ Kowtow to Chinese Ticket Buyers?

Does ‘Gravity’ Kowtow to Chinese Ticket Buyers?

‘Gravity,’ the new space-thriller starring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, lives up, IMHO, to its, um, stellar reviews. It’s gripping. It’s beautiful. It takes pains to get some of the science right. In short, it’s the kind of movie that Hollywood needs more of to pack people into theaters and keep them paying $5 for 50 cents worth of popcorn. And especially Chinese viewers, who comprise an increasingly important segment of Hollywood’s audience. (China is the second biggest movie market after the U.S.) In fact, for all the brilliance of ‘Gravity,’ am I the only one who thinks some all-too-scrutable kowtowing went on when Alfonso Cuaron and his son were writing the script? Read more of this post

In China, Golf Has a New Hazard: Killer Smog

In China, Golf Has a New Hazard: Killer Smog

This weekend, the Ladies Professional Golf Association demonstrated its willingness to sacrifice player safety for its own long-term financial health.

The occasion was the conclusion of the Reignwood LPGA Classic — the LPGA’s first tournament in China. The importance of this event for the association’s desired future in China’s rapidly expanding golf market cannot be underestimated. At the top of the leader board going into Sunday’s final round was Guangzhou-born Shanshan Feng. As the LPGA website announced, “This week is all about …. Shanshan Feng.” Read more of this post

Caviar Off the Menu for Indian Officials as Junk Rating Looms

Caviar Off the Menu for Indian Officials as Junk Rating Looms

For Arvind Mayaram, India’s push to avoid having its credit rating cut to junk means he’ll have to forgo caviar and a two-meter-long flat bed in first class on his flight from New Delhi to Washington D.C. this week. He’ll fly business class instead to the annual World Bank and International Monetary Fund meetings, saving taxpayers at least $3,000. The change is part of moves to narrow a budget deficit that reached almost 75 percent of the 5.4 trillion-rupee ($88 billion) target in the first five months of the fiscal year, imperiling efforts to limit the widest shortfall in major emerging nations. Read more of this post

Carmakers flock to new southeast Asian growth frontier

Last updated: October 6, 2013 5:06 pm

Carmakers flock to new southeast Asian growth frontier

By Ben Bland in Jakarta and Henry Foy in London

 

Until recently, the top choice for first-time car buyers in Indonesia was a Toyota Avanza or Daihatsu Xenia, the family and pothole-friendly seven-seat people carriers that dominate the nation’s traffic-clogged streets. But when Okko Agus Suwarso decided to buy his daughter a car, he opted for a five-seat Daihatsu Ayla, one of a new range of “low-cost, green cars” that global manufacturers are hoping will turbocharge growth in a thriving market at the forefront of an automotive boom in southeast Asia.

Read more of this post

The education of China’s oil company

The education of China’s oil company

8:15pm EDT

By Charlie Zhu and Bill Powell

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) – Yang Hua was a rising star at Chinese oil giant CNOOC Ltd back in 2005. Then, the 44-year-old chief financial officer participated in one of corporate China’s biggest belly flops ever. Yang helped CNOOC, the publicly listed arm of state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corp, craft an $18.5 billion bid for Unocal Corp of Los Angeles. It turned into a debacle. Political opposition exploded in Washington, where the company had done little preparation. At home in Beijing, some board members revolted after being blindsided by the bid, and some of China’s leaders were said to be queasy. CNOOC stood down and Unocal was sold to a rival, Chevron Corp. Read more of this post

New Yorkers grow to like part-pedestrianisation of Times Square; “You can actually look up at the lights of the city without being hit by a car now”

October 6, 2013 7:44 pm

New Yorkers grow to like part-pedestrianisation of Times Square

By Elaine Moore

When New York City announced plans topedestrianise parts of Times Square in 2009 the city’s residents were in uproar. Wouldn’t banning cars mean the end of the frenetic energy that gave Manhattan its edge? But in the four years since Mayor Michael Bloomberg took the decision, New Yorkers have grown increasingly accustomed to taking over parts of Broadway, walking, biking and sitting in plazas across the traffic lanes. The changes have been hailed a success by business owners, residents and tourists. “You can actually look up at the lights of the city without being hit by a car now,” said one visitor. Read more of this post

Banks take on Bloomberg with Markit; Messaging push challenges US group’s grip on communications

October 7, 2013 12:02 am

Eight investment banks embrace Markit viral messaging revolution

By Philip Stafford

Eight of the world’s largest investment banks will Monday launch their most ambitious assault on Bloomberg’s grip on daily communications in financial markets with the start of free viral messaging service. Markit, the UK data provider, will operate an industry-wide central directory switchboard to connect the messaging systems of Thomson Reuters, Goldman Sachs,Deutsche BankCitigroupCredit SuisseBarclaysJPMorgan ChaseMorgan Stanley,Bank of America Merrill Lynch and interdealer broker GFI Group. Read more of this post

Peter Voser says he regrets Shell’s huge $24 billion bet on US shale

October 6, 2013 3:23 pm

Peter Voser says he regrets Shell’s huge bet on US shale

By Guy Chazan

Peter Voser said the failure of Royal Dutch Shell’s huge bet on US shale was a big regret of his time as chief executive of the company. Speaking to the Financial Times three months before he is due to step down, Mr Voser also described the technical setbacks Shell has suffered in its exploration campaign off the coast of Alaska as one of his greatest disappointments in the job. Shell has invested at least $24bn in so-called unconventional oil and gas in North America. But it is a bet that has yet to pay off. Its North American upstream business has struggled to turn a profit and in August Shell announced a strategic review of its US shale portfolio after taking a $2.1bn impairment. “Unconventionals did not exactly play out as planned,” Mr Voser said.

Read more of this post

LG, Panasonic, Philips will introduce televisions next year equipped with Swedish software Magine Cloud so users can watch television channels flexibly online

LG, Panasonic Put Magine Cloud Service in Smart TVs for Europe

LG Electronics Inc. (066570), Panasonic Corp. (6752) and Royal Philips NV will introduce televisions next year equipped with Swedish software so users can watch television channels flexibly online. Magine AB’s cloud service lets users with an Internet link scan its TV schedules, surf channels, rewind shows and access archived content dating back 30 days via a tablet, phone, computer or TV. The application will be available on the smart TVs in the first quarter of 2014 in European countries where Magine operates. Read more of this post

Arctic shipping routes will take at least 10 to 20 years to provide commercial opportunities, according to the chief executive of the world’s biggest container line

October 6, 2013 1:18 pm

Arctic shipping routes still a long-term proposition, says Maersk

By Richard Milne in Copenhagen

Arctic shipping routes will take at least 10 to 20 years to provide commercial opportunities, according to the chief executive of the world’s biggest container line. Nils Andersen, head of Denmark’s AP Møller-Maersk, poured cold water over suggestions that the Northern Sea Route over the top of Russia could provide a viable alternative to the Suez Canal for Asia-Europe trade.

Read more of this post

For “zombie” Fukushima operator, fresh financing masks long-term woes

For “zombie” Fukushima operator, fresh financing masks long-term woes

6:29pm EDT

By Mari Saito

TOKYO (Reuters) – Its stock price has nearly trebled this year, its near-term debt trades at par, banks have extended credit, and an enterprise value of $83 billion – a rough guide to how much it could cost to buy – makes it Asia’s biggest listed electricity utility. Yet Tokyo Electric Power (9501.T: QuoteProfile,ResearchStock Buzz), or Tepco, has lost $27 billion since the 2011 disaster at its Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, and faces massive liabilities as it decommissions the facility, compensates tens of thousands of residents forced to evacuate, and pays for decontamination of an area nearly the size of Connecticut. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart says retail plans with India’s Bharti ‘not tenable’

Wal-Mart says retail plans with India’s Bharti ‘not tenable’

2:06am EDT

By Randy Fabi

NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) – Wal-Mart Stores Inc’s (WMT.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) retail plans with India partner Bharti Enterprises are “not tenable” and both sides are looking for the best way to move forward, an executive with the U.S. retailer told Reuters. Wal-Mart was expected to make a decision on its Indian retail plans later this month and Bharti will accordingly decide if those plans match its overall retail ambitions. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart is Considering Acquisitions in China; The retailer, which has 398 stores in China, is No. 2 in market share here, behind Sun Art; Wal-Mart’s low-price business model isn’t catching on with Chinese consumers, many of whom prefer to shop for bargains online and in mom-and-pop stores

October 5, 2013, 7:11 a.m. ET

Wal-Mart Looks to Gain Ground in Asia

U.S. Retailer is Considering Acquisitions in China

LAURIE BURKITT

BEIJING—Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s WMT -0.49% top executive for Asia said the company has revamped its practices and legal compliance in the region and is considering acquisitions in China, as the retailer faces headwinds in a cornerstone of its global expansion plans. Wal-Mart’s sourcing practices in Bangladesh have been under a microscope after safety problems emerged at some factories there. The company also faces a stagnant economy in Japan, government restrictions and scrutiny in India and slowing traffic and stronger rivals in China. In other regions—such as Brazil, where Wal-Mart has about 570 stores—the company has expanded more rapidly. Read more of this post

Thailand Has No Easy Options to Pay for Rice Subsidy; “It’s not clear where the new fund of 270 billion baht is coming from”

October 7, 2013, 7:22 AM

Thailand Has No Easy Options to Pay for Rice Subsidy

WARANGKANA CHOMCHUEN

BANGKOK – Thailand has decided to continue its costly rice program, but critics are questioning how the government will find the money to pay for it. The controversial program turned three years old this past week, when the government announced it would maintain an earlier agreed-upon subsidy rate for the grain harvested in the wet season, and a slightly lower rate in the off season. It also limited the maximum value of rice each farming household can sell in order to curb the ballooning subsidy expense. Read more of this post

Shadow Loans Sound New Alarm; Regulators Cite Growing Role of Individual Investors

October 6, 2013, 7:46 p.m. ET

Shadow Loans Sound New Alarm

Regulators Cite Growing Role of Individual Investors

IANTHE JEANNE DUGAN

MI-BY902_SHADOW_NS_20131006174803

Debt-laden companies are on track to borrow a record $1 trillion this year in the nonbank “shadow lending” system, and regulators are sounding alarms about one of its fast-growing funders: individual investors. The burgeoning role of individuals in lending is highlighted as a top concern in a report released last week by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as part of a continuing effort to overhaul shadow bankers—the web of largely unregulated financial firms unable to borrow in an emergency from the central bank and without traditional depositors that are insured. Read more of this post

Passive funds losing cost edge

October 4, 2013 6:27 pm

Passive funds losing cost edge

By Elaine Moore

Passive funds that allow investors to track the performance of worldwide stock markets are starting to lose their competitive edge on prices as providers of actively managed funds cut their fees. In spite of ultra-low annual fees offered by the largest providers of passive funds such as Vanguard, Legal & General Investments and HSBC, research by Morningstar has found that on average, retail equity index funds have a total expense ratio of 0.73 per cent. Read more of this post

Japan Tobacco to Expand in Smokeless Products Via M&A, Tie-Ups as consumers demand alternatives and regulations tighten worldwide; “There are many ways to enjoy tobacco, so it doesn’t necessarily have to be cigarettes”

Japan Tobacco to Expand in Smokeless Products Via M&A, Tie-Ups

Japan Tobacco Inc. (2914) plans to expand its range of smokeless tobacco products and is looking at tie-ups or acquisitions as consumers demand alternatives and regulations tighten worldwide. “There are many ways to enjoy tobacco, so it doesn’t necessarily have to be cigarettes,” Akira Saeki, an executive deputy president who heads the tobacco business, said in an interview in Tokyo. “Cigarettes’ appeal may be diminishing” as more people are bothered by smoke, he said. Read more of this post

Gold Befuddles Bernanke as Central Banks’ Losses at $545 Billion

Gold Befuddles Bernanke as Central Banks’ Losses at $545 Billion

Ben S. Bernanke, the world’s most-powerful central banker, says he doesn’t understand gold prices. If his peers had paid attention, they might have stopped expanding reserves that lost $545 billion in value since bullion peaked in 2011. Bernanke, who holds economics degrees from Harvard College and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and led the Federal Reserve through the biggest financial disaster since the Great Depression, told the Senate Banking Committee in July that “nobody really understands gold prices and I don’t pretend to really understand them either.” Read more of this post

S’pore ‘has much to learn from Swiss branding’

S’pore ‘has much to learn from Swiss branding’

Monday, Oct 07, 2013

Mok Fei Fei

The Straits Times

The widely acknowledged quality of Swiss cheese, clocks and chemicals holds valuable lessons for Singapore, according to the Second Minister for Trade and Industry on Friday. Mr S. Iswaran said Singapore must learn from the branding of excellence built over decades and even centuries by Swiss firms. The same mindset of nurturing specialised capabilities – Singapore has such excellence in water technology, aviation services and the offshore and marine sector – for the long haul will allow the country to bolster the prestige of its own brand. Switzerland’s competitive research and development (R&D) ecosystem and its highly skilled workforce also hold important learning points for Singapore, he noted. Its private sector is responsible for almost three-quarters of Switzerland’s gross domestic R&D spending, or about 2.2 per cent of its gross domestic product. Read more of this post

Aluminum Costs Seen Dropping as LME Unclogs Depots; The rise in physical premiums contrasts with slumping futures

Aluminum Costs Seen Dropping as LME Unclogs Depots: Commodities

The London Metal Exchange’s plan to ease congestion at warehouses storing near-record amounts of aluminum will accelerate deliveries and reduce premiums paid for supply, at a time when prices are already near a four-year low. Waiting times lengthened to a year or more in some locations, driving premiums added to the LME price to a record. Delays at depots spurred at least 16 lawsuits filed in U.S. courts as well as scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators. The surcharges, which rose almost 15-fold since 2008, are now retreating as traders anticipate the changes, which are scheduled to be reviewed by the LME’s board this month. Read more of this post

Navigating the pensions maze

October 4, 2013 6:26 pm

Navigating the pensions maze

By Josephine Cumbo

Less than a generation ago, millions of workers began saving for their retirement in company pensions which, as long as their employer stayed afloat, caused them very few headaches. Aside from the sacrifice of the monthly pension deduction, their employer largely took care of building up the pension and then paying an income for their former employees when they finally retired. That income was usually based on their salary at retirement, and the length of their service. But very few of today’s workers outside the public sector are afforded the comfort of these “golden era” pensions. More common nowadays is a company pension which lays the responsibility for investing contributions, and turning them into an income, squarely on the shoulders of the employee. Employees bear all the risk, even though they have no control over the pension scheme they save into, with this choice entirely up to the employer. Read more of this post