For Shoppers, Next Level of Instant Gratification; New shopping services will allow consumers to instantly buy items they see on television, in magazines and even in their refrigerators.

October 8, 2013

For Shoppers, Next Level of Instant Gratification

By HILARY STOUT

Peapod, an online grocer, lets shoppers restock items from home by scanning bar codes on packages via a smartphone.

All the world’s a shopping cart. A wave of experiments at various companies could take consumer convenience (and impulsiveness) to new heights. The ultimate vision is a form of shopping nirvana, where consumers can buy what they covet on the spot — straight from an attention-grabbing magazine ad, for instance, or off a television screen, or even from a refrigerator. Read more of this post

TSMC in top 100 global innovators, marking a milestone for both the company and Taiwan’s business world

TSMC in top 100 global innovators: Reuters

By Kathryn Chiu ,The China Post
October 8, 2013, 12:08 am TWN

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) was named as one of the world’s top 100 most innovative organizations for 2013 in a survey released by Thomson Reuters, marking a milestone for both the company and Taiwan’s business world. The IP & Science division of Thomson Reuters, provider of information for businesses and professionals, announced its 2013 Top 100 Global Innovators list, which included a Taiwanese company for the first time since its initial publication in 2011. Read more of this post

Taiwn biotech produces next-gen paper cups that provide resistance against high temperatures, acid and alkaline solutions, with some beverage chain stores already using them

Taiwn biotech produces next-gen paper cups

CNA 2013-10-08

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Cup developer Chang Ching-wen with his new product. (Photo/CNA)

A biotechnology company in Taichung, central Taiwan has developed paper cups that provide resistance against high temperatures, acid and alkaline solutions, with some beverage chain stores already using them, the company owner said Monday. Taiwan uses about 200 million paper cups a month and the safety of food containers has attracted concern after it was reported that a major Taichung supplier of paper food containers had been found using toxic solvent to wipe excess ink off its food containers. Read more of this post

Terry Gou touts Hon Hai’s evolution as it has adopted an innovative business model that ranges from supplying key components to serving the end user

Terry Gou touts Hon Hai’s evolution at APEC summit

CNA 2013-10-08

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Terry Gou at the APEC summit. (Photo/CNA)

Hon Hai Precision Industry, the world’s largest contract electronics manufacturer, has adopted an innovative business model that ranges from supplying key components to serving the end user, said Hon Hai chairman Terry Gou on Monday. He called the model “IIDM,” or Integration Innovation Design Manufacture, singling out integrated innovation as the capability that a company needs to stand out in the current age of technological revolution. Read more of this post

Young Chinese shunning factory jobs, says Foxconn founder; “The young generation don’t want to work in factories, they want to work in services or the internet or another more easy and relaxed job”

Last updated: October 7, 2013 11:13 pm

Young Chinese shunning factory jobs, says Foxconn founder

By Ben Bland in Nusa Dua, Bali and Sarah Mishkin in Taipei

Young people across China are increasingly shunning monotonous, low-paid assembly line jobs, leaving Foxconn, the maker of iPhones and iPads, struggling to attract enough workers, according to the electronics manufacturer’s chairman. Terry Gou, founder of the company which is China’s largest private employer, says he is upgrading Foxconn’s training programs and automating more of its assembly lines in the face of a labour shortage. “The young generation don’t want to work in factories, they want to work in services or the internet or another more easy and relaxed job,” he said on the sidelines of a meeting of Asian business and political leaders in Bali, Indonesia. Read more of this post

Huayi Bros’ Wang Zhongjun living his own fairytale

Huayi Bros’ Wang Zhongjun living his own fairytale

Staff Reporter

2013-10-08

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Wang Zhongjun, founder of Huayi Brothers Media. (Photo/CNS)

In China’s entertainment and capital industry circles, few can compare with Wang Zhongjun, chairman of Shenzhen-listed film company Huayi Brothers Media, a media industry source once said. Wang, born in Beijing in 1960, has served in the military, studied overseas and worked as a magazine publisher and photographer; he founded Huayi Brothers Media with his younger brother Wang Zhonglei in 1994, marking the start of his journey to develop a media empire. Some of his fans like his extravagant lifestyle but others have criticized as a wily and arrogant businessman. He reportedly owns seven large mansions and two European-style villas in suburban Beijing, in addition to numerous limousines. Read more of this post

China’s National Day travel madness exposes paid leave taboo

China’s National Day travel madness exposes paid leave taboo

Staff Reporter

2013-10-08

While it seems a given that governments should should create practical and adequate conditions that allow employees to enjoy their vacation days, China faces unique cultural pressures that leave many in the office year-round. An important step to take would be staggering employee vacations, according to a report in Chinese-language news portal QQ.com. People who work in Western countries usually use their paid leave to take vacations, as they do not get several consecutive days off for national holidays. In China, however, people are used to taking vacations and making trips during national holidays such as the Golden Week National Day and the Spring festival Lunar New Year holiday since they are given several consecutive days off at the time, said the report. Read more of this post

Beijing’s anti-monopoly law finally begins to bite

Beijing’s anti-monopoly law finally begins to bite

Staff Reporter

2013-10-08

China’s anti-monopoly law has been in place for five years, but its full impact has not been felt until recently, according to Guangzhou’s Southern Weekly. The government increased the number of fines issued to companies violating the law this year, breaking new records with the total fines rising from 144 million yuan (US$23.4 million) in January to 247 million yuan (US$40.2 million) in February. As of August, the rise stood at 670 million yuan (US$108.9 million), the paper said. Read more of this post

ASX seeks more tech listings; Corporate governance is why the ASX has so many zombie tech companies

ASX seeks more tech listings

PUBLISHED: 5 HOURS 7 MINUTES AGO | UPDATE: 4 HOURS 53 MINUTES AGO

When Freelancer.com founder Matt Barrie spurned deep-pocketed suitors in favour of an Australian Securities Exchange listing for his online job outsourcing business, ASX chief Elmer Funke Kupper was one of the first to congratulate him. Mr Funke Kupper understands the need for ASX to attract more technology listings, says Mr Barrie. But Mr Barrie’s decision surprised many in the market, particularly because Australian investors have traditionally shunned capital raisings for young technology or biotechnology companies. For a long time, the view has been that the risks associated with investing in these types of businesses are too great. In turn, the companies themselves have felt that investors here simply do not understand their businesses. Read more of this post

The Pratt family appears set for a $500 million lift following reports that family member Raphael Geminder is considering a $2 billion float of his fully-owned packaging business, Pact Group

Andrew Heathcote Rich Lists editor

Proposed Pact Group float to give $500 million boost to Pratt family’s wealth

Published 07 October 2013 11:20, Updated 08 October 2013 07:12

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The wider Pratt family’s Rich 200 valuation could be set for a boost if Pact’s IPO goes ahead.

The Pratt family appears set for a $500 million lift following reports that family member Raphael Geminder is considering a $2 billion float of his fully-owned packaging business, Pact Group. The Australian Financial Review has reported that Geminder has appointed Credit Suisse and Macquarie Capital to explore options for a float. The suggested $2 billion valuation is $500 million more than the value placed on it by BRW in its determination of this year’s Rich 200 rankings. Anthony Pratt & family ranked fourth on the Rich 200 with $5.95 billion, just $50 million behind third ranked James Packer. Read more of this post

Canada’s Saputo to take over Australian dairy producer Warrnambool for A$392.7m

Canada’s Saputo to take over Australian dairy producer Warrnambool

Mon, Oct 7 2013

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Saputo Inc (SAP.TO: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz), Canada’s largest dairy producer, will acquire Warrnambool Cheese and Butter Factory Company Holdings Ltd (WCB.AX: Quote,ProfileResearchStock Buzz) in a deal valuing Australia’s oldest dairy processor at A$392.7 million ($370.10 million). Saputo, which operates in Canada, the United States and Argentina, has been looking at Australia as a platform to expand its global presence and tap growing demand in Asia’s emerging markets. Warrnambool, whose brands include the Sungold Milk range of fresh milk, supplies dairy products to both domestic and international customers. Read more of this post

Commodity hedge funds face bleak future

October 6, 2013 4:22 am

Commodity hedge funds face bleak future

By Madison Marriage

The commodity hedge fund industry is likely to come under greater pressure as weak performance and waning client interest forces major funds to close. The latest victim of this trend is Clive Capital, once one of the world’s largest commodity hedge funds, which last month announced it would wind down and return $1bn to investors. This follows the closure of a number of well-known commodity funds over the past two years, including Arbalet, Bluegold, Centaurus and Fortress. Read more of this post

The Netherworld of What Constitutes Insider Trading

OCTOBER 7, 2013, 11:01 AM

The Netherworld of What Constitutes Insider Trading

By PETER J. HENNING

Identifying insider trading sometimes seems like a game of three-card monte: first you see it, then you don’t. A recent settlement by Citigroup with a Massachusetts regulator over leaking internal research to clients raises question about when such disclosure crosses the line into insider trading. Citigroup agreed to a consent order entered by the Massachusetts Securities Division requiring it to pay a $30 million penalty after it failed to have proper procedures in place to protect against the early release of research by the firm’s analysts. Read more of this post

US default fears spark liquidity warning; America cannot live so carelessly forever; Playing Russian roulette is never advisable. Congress may find a bullet in the chamber this time

October 7, 2013 7:37 pm

US default fears spark liquidity warning

By Gina Chon and Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Washington and Michael MacKenzie in New York

Financial firms trading in US Treasury securities are preparing contingency plans in the event of a debt default, as experts warn that such a scenario could result in a catastrophic liquidity drain. “This would be an unprecedented event and the consequences for the market are dangerously unpredictable,” says Rob Toomey, associate general counsel at Sifma, a lobby group representing hundreds of securities firms, banks and asset managers that has drawn up plans for a coordinated strategy. “I think all the work in the world will not save us from uncertainty.” Read more of this post

No Way U.S. Would Allow Debt Default? Don’t Bet on It

OCTOBER 7, 2013, 9:01 PM

No Way U.S. Would Allow Debt Default? Don’t Bet on It

By ANDREW ROSS SORKIN

“The United States government is not going to default, ever.” That’s what Vincent Reinhart, former head of the Federal Reserve’s monetary division and now managing director and chief United States economist for Morgan Stanley, said late last week. “As political theater,” he said, “the debt ceiling is not a useful threat, because politicians are basically threatening to shoot themselves, as they will rightly shoulder the blame for the serious global economic consequences of a default.” Read more of this post

JULIAN ROBERTSON: I Think We’re In The Middle Of A Bubble Market And When It Breaks It Will Be ‘Pretty Bad’

JULIAN ROBERTSON: I Think We’re In The Middle Of A Bubble Market And When It Breaks It Will Be ‘Pretty Bad’

JULIA LA ROCHE OCT. 7, 2013, 3:51 PM 4,159 5

In recent weeks, we’ve had three investing legends — Stan Druckenmiller, Carl Icahn and Warren Buffett — all suggest that the stock market is fully valued. Now Julian Robertson, the 81-year-old founder of Tiger Management, has said the same thing in an interview with CNBC’s Maria Bartiromo on “Closing Bell” today. Robertson also thinks we’re in the middle of a bubble market right now and when it does burst the reactions will be “pretty bad.”  Here’s an excerpt from Robertson’s interview with Bartiromo courtesy of CNBC. (Emphasis ours).    Read more of this post

DE Shaw shuts doors to new investors; Traditional hedge fund strategies not as profitable as before

Last updated: October 7, 2013 5:42 pm

Hedge fund DE Shaw shuts doors to new investors

By Sam Jones, Hedge Fund Correspondent

One of the most profitable hedge funds has closed its doors to new clients, calling time on the industry’s ability to square vast inflows of money with the promise of market-beating returns. DE Shaw’s move means that of the largest six hedge funds, only two, the UK’s Man Group and the US firm Och-Ziff, are still accepting cash into their flagship funds. Many traditional hedge fund strategies have become far less profitable due to quantitative easing, bank deleveraging and a tail-off in corporate dealmaking. Read more of this post

Journalist Who Proposed US-Canada Merger Explains Why Her Plan Isn’t Crazy

Journalist Who Proposed US-Canada Merger Explains Why Her Plan Isn’t Crazy

ADAM TAYLOR OCT. 7, 2013, 5:40 PM 5,820 37

Since the publication of her book calling for a merger between the U.S. and Canada, Diane Francis has been showered on Twitter and elsewhere with some not-too-kind reactions. One person called it a “loony idea,” while another wrote that they had to check the calender to see if it was April Fool’s Day. “You, Madam, are a traitor!” another man wrote, before more succinctly explaining his position in a one word follow up tweet: “TREASON!” But her book, “Merger of the Century: Why Canada and America Should Become One Country,” is meant to generate serious debate. Read more of this post

Here’s The Real S&P 500 Chart That No One Ever Talks About

Here’s The Real S&P 500 Chart That No One Ever Talks About

J.C. PARETSALL STAR CHARTS OCT. 7, 2013, 1:42 PM 3,386 5

As market participants we look at charts every day for a variety of reasons. But whether we’re doing so for idea generation, risk management or entry/exit points, we’re charting to go out there and try to make money. Other times, however, looking at longer-term charts just helps to put things in perspective. With the day-to-day noise out there coming from the government, media and investing public, sometimes it’s important to bring in a longer-term view to supplement our short-term outlook. Here is a chart of the S&P500 adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index, which is released monthly by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. What still stands out to me is the consistency of the lower lows and lower highs since the year 2000. Hardly the uptrend and bull market that we hear about so often. You rarely see a chart like this because the “all-time high” headlines are so much sexier. No one likes to add the,“But in real terms we’re still far from it”. Who wants to buy a newspaper that says that? I know I wouldn’t. But fortunately I’m not in that business and I can share with you guys any chart I want. And I think it’s important that when I speak with investors, they understand how in Real terms, not only is the S&P500 not at all-time highs, but actually down 20% over the last 13.5 years. It’s all about purchasing power isn’t it? Or in this case, the lack there of?

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China’s ‘Basketball girl’ gets a new set of legs; the story of Qian Hongyan, a girl from Yunnan is a classic example of how determination can overcome overwhelming odds

China’s ‘Basketball girl’ gets a new set of legs

20131007_hongyan_main_reuters

Monday, Oct 07, 2013
The New Paper

CHINA – At first glance, she looks like any other beautiful teenager enjoying life without a care in the world. But the story of Qian Hongyan, a girl from Luliang county in Yunnan, China, is a classic example of how determination can overcome overwhelming odds. It was eight years ago that the world got a glimpse of her. Then 10 years old, Hongyan had no legs – they were amputated after a car accident when she was four. She learned to walk on her hands, using a basketball cut in half to steady herself. The locals began calling her “basketball girl”. Read more of this post

Purpose-driven work

Updated: Tuesday October 8, 2013 MYT 7:53:56 AM

Purpose-driven work

BY JEANISHA WAN

A friend who has held a regional marketing role in a multinational company for the past eight years had a long chat with me recently. Although enjoying a very good salary, the opportunity to travel and the flexibility to work from home, she was unsure of her career and was thinking of leaving the company. You must wonder why. After all, is that not the kind of dream job that most people would want? But, I can empathise with her as I have felt the same before. When we first enter the corporate world, many have the following checklist for a dream career: high salary, multinational company, travel opportunities, flexibility to work from home, and perks for family members. Then, as we progress in our career, we start to look less at the material benefits and more into the meaning of what we do. Read more of this post

Asia’s Crisis of Leadership

Asia’s Crisis of Leadership

The day Asian leaders have long dreaded is here: The era of rapid growth is over.

It has taken five years, but the fallout from what Asians call the “Lehman shock” is finally hitting gross domestic product and living standards. These risks are the talk of Bali, where Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation nations are mulling what to do about a world where “risks remain tilted to the downside.” There, Michael Taylor, chief credit officer for Asia at Moody’s Investors Service, said chaotic markets and a slow recovery in advanced nations is driving a “change in the economic cycle” that makes sustaining growth in the region “more challenging.” Read more of this post

FX Concepts, once the world’s largest currency hedge fund, closing funds, firing employees as losses mount; AUM shrunk from $12bn in 2009 to $661m

FX Concepts Closing Funds, Firing Employees as Losses Mount

FX Concepts LLC, the currency hedge fund founded by John Taylor that was once the world’s largest, is closing funds and shedding employees as losses for the company’s main trading program approach 15 percent this year. The hedge fund’s assets under management shrunk to $661 million as of Sept. 26, from about $12 billion in 2009, according to data from the New York-based company’s investor website. The San Francisco Employees’ Retirement System voted on Sept. 11 to pull the more than $450 million it had invested with FX Concepts, according to CNBC. Alison Johnson, a spokeswoman for the San Francisco pension fund, didn’t immediately return a call seeking comment. Read more of this post

A Tiny Pronoun Says a Lot About You: How Often You Say ‘I’ Says More Than You Realize

A Tiny Pronoun Says a Lot About You

How Often You Say ‘I’ Says More Than You Realize

ELIZABETH BERNSTEIN

Oct. 7, 2013 7:04 p.m. ET

It’s a common belief that people who say “I” a lot are full of themselves, maybe even narcissists. Surprising new research turns that assumption on it’s head. Elizabeth Bernstein and University of Texas researcher James Pennebaker explain. Photo: AP.

You probably don’t think about how often you say the word “I.” You should. Researchers say that your usage of the pronoun says more about you than you may realize. Surprising new research from the University of Texas suggests that people who often say “I” are less powerful and less sure of themselves than those who limit their use of the word. Frequent “I” users subconsciously believe they are subordinate to the person to whom they are talking. Read more of this post

Why Does Chronic Pain Hurt Some People More? Brain research reveals new clues about the reasons behind different physical reactions among those who suffer injuries.

October 7, 2013, 7:07 p.m. ET

Why Does Chronic Pain Hurt Some People More?

Brain Research Reveals New Clues

SHIRLEY S. WANG

Why does pain from the same type of injury linger in some people but not others? Genetics and brain-based biological factors are the latest frontier of research on chronic pain, along with personality traits, coping strategies and life experiences. The question is a riddle researchers have been trying to solve for decades. Better identifying which injuries may lead to chronic pain, defined as lasting beyond normal healing for at least three months, is hugely important for the 100 million Americans who suffer from it. Lower-back pain is the most common type, with nearly one-third of U.S. adults reporting in 2010 having experienced it within the previous three months, according an Institute of Medicine report on pain. Read more of this post

Philippine billionaire Henry Sy plans to spend 54.5 billion pesos ($1.26 billion) to reclaim land in Manila Bay as large plots for development become scarce in the capital. “You can never escape Manila. You have to go where the consumers are.”

Billionaire Sy Sees Manila Reclaimed Land Growth: Southeast Asia

Philippine billionaire Henry Sy plans to spend 54.5 billion pesos ($1.26 billion) to reclaim land in Manila Bay as large plots for development become scarce in the capital. SM Land Inc., which Sy is shaping to become the nation’s largest builder, has offered to reclaim 300 hectares (741 acres) from the sea, parent SM Investments Corp. (SM) said. SM Investments is Sy’s publicly listed holding company that owns banks, malls and grocery stores. “You can never escape Manila,” SM Investments Vice Chairwoman Teresita Sy-Coson said in an Oct. 2 interview. “You have to go where the consumers are.” Read more of this post

Softbank Billionaire Masayoshi Son Takes on Mikitani’s Rakuten in E-Commerce War

Billionaire Son Takes on Mikitani’s Rakuten in E-Commerce War

Billionaire Masayoshi Son, who’s vowed to build the world’s biggest mobile phone carrier, has added another target: Japan’s e-commerce market. Son, chairman of Yahoo Japan Corp. (4689), said yesterday the Internet search and e-commerce business will eliminate fees and make it easier for shops to open on its online shopping service in a direct challenge to Rakuten Inc. (4755), operator of the country’s largest Internet shopping mall. The new strategy threatens another billionaire, Hiroshi Mikitani, founder and president of Rakuten. Investors bet the earnings of both companies will suffer, sending Rakuten down a record 20 percent in Tokyo trading. Yahoo Japan plunged a record 11 percent. “Yahoo’s new policy poses a potential threat to Rakuten’s position,” said Tomoaki Kawasaki, an analyst at Iwai Cosmo Holdings Inc. (8707) in Tokyo. “The fact that Son appeared and talked means they are serious about this.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yuki Yamaguchi in Tokyo at yyamaguchi10@bloomberg.net

A Weak Spot for Samsung? South Korean Giant Weighs Software Deals to Better Compete With Apple, Google

October 7, 2013, 8:05 p.m. ET

A Weak Spot for Samsung?

South Korean Giant Weighs Software Deals to Better Compete With Apple, Google

JONATHAN CHENG, EVELYN M. RUSLI And MIN-JEONG LEE

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Samsung Electronics Co. 005930.SE -1.11% is stepping up its hunt for acquisitions and building out its presence in Silicon Valley to try and overcome its key weakness: software. The South Korea-based company became the world’s largest maker of smartphones by manufacturing attractive devices that hit the market quickly and cheaply. But to thrive in a mobile-device market increasingly dominated by software specialists like Apple Inc., AAPL +0.98% Google Inc. GOOG -0.76% and Microsoft Corp.,MSFT -1.71% which acquired Nokia Corp.’s NOK1V.HE -0.81% phone business last month, Samsung is aiming to become a software power in its own right. Read more of this post

Fifth & Pacific to sell its once-popular Juicy Couture business to Authentic Brands Group for $195 million to focus on its fast-growing, higher-end Kate Spade brand

Fifth & Pacific sells Juicy Couture brand for $195 million

10:12am EDT

By Phil Wahba

(Reuters) – Fifth & Pacific Cos Inc (FNP.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) on Monday said it has agreed to sell its once-popular Juicy Couture business to Authentic Brands Group for $195 million to focus on its fast-growing, higher-end Kate Spade brand. Juicy, known for its velour track suits and urban feel, saw sales plummet in recent years as the brand fell out of favor. Attempts to turn around what was still Fifth & Pacific’s top selling brand last year failed. Read more of this post

Tweeting About Twerking Seen as Lifeline for TV Industry

Tweeting About Twerking Seen as Lifeline for TV Industry

Meredith Parker, a 23-year-old sales rep in New York, spends most nights out meeting friends or attending work events. Any night but Monday. That’s when she rushes home to watch ABC’s “The Bachelor,” a reality show that begins its 18th season in January. In an era when DVRs, TiVo and Web-TV services like Netflix make it easy for audiences to view programs any time they want, Parker would rather see her favorite program right when it airs. Parker’s motivation: the social-media frenzy that surrounds the show. Read more of this post