Machines Gauging Your Star Potential Automate HR Hiring

Machines Gauging Your Star Potential Automate HR Hiring

They can drive cars, win Jeopardy and find your soon-to-be favorite song. Machines are also learning to decipher the most human qualities about you — and help businesses predict your potential to be their next star employee. A handful of technology companies from Knack.it Corp. to Evolv Inc. are doing just that, developing video games and online questionnaires that measure personality attributes in a job applicant. Based on patterns of how a company’s best performers responded in these assessments, the software estimates a candidate’s suitability to be everything from a warehouse worker to an investment bank analyst. Read more of this post

Number of Chinese Billionaires Skyrockets

October 11, 2013, 8:30 AM

Number of Chinese Billionaires Skyrockets

Asia sprouted a new crop of millionaires over the past year, with growth of wealth in China topping the charts. According to a report this week by Credit Suisse, the country now has 6% of the world’s total of ultra-high-net-worth individuals, or those with fortunes in excess of $50 million. That’s second only to the United States, which commands nearly half the world’s total.

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Nestle Has Patent For Nespresso System Revoked

October 11, 2013, 8:23 a.m. ET

Nestle Has Patent For Nespresso System Revoked

By John Revill

ZURICH–A European regulatory body revoked a Nestle SA (NESN.VX) patent covering its Nespresso coffee system, the latest blow to the Swiss food giant’s efforts to protect its lucrative brand from encroaching rivals. The European Patent Office’s appeals board said Nestle’s patent for a device that handles coffee capsules as they sit in the Nespresso machine was invalid and will detail its reasons in the next few weeks. The patent covered the way capsules are ejected from the machine after being used. Read more of this post

Billionaire’s Metro Builder Downgraded in Crunch: India Credit

Billionaire’s Metro Builder Downgraded in Crunch: India Credit

Indian corporate debt ratings are deteriorating at the fastest pace since 2010 amid a cash crunch created to buoy the rupee and a deepening economic slowdown. Billionaire Anil Ambani’s Reliance Infrastructure Ltd., which holds 69 percent in a venture building a metro network in Mumbai, and Apollo Tyres Ltd., which plans India’s largest acquisition in North America, were among 478 companies that had their rankings cut in the last six months at Crisil Ltd., the local unit of Standard & Poor’s. Only 417 firms were upgraded, a ratio of 0.87 against downgrades that was the lowest since September 2010. Read more of this post

Tycoon Robert Kuok keeps himself rooted despite leaving his hometown

Tycoon keeps himself rooted despite leaving his hometown

Singapore – There is a bit of a romantic streak in South-east Asia’s richest man, it seems. Four decades ago, Mr Robert Kuok decamped Malaysia for Hong Kong. The ostensible reason: lower taxes in Hong Kong. What some say: a fierce dislike of Malaysia’s controversial New Economic Policy favouring the bumiputeras and the resulting cronyism. Whatever it was, today, Mr Kuok says of the country in which he was born: “I haven’t lost my affection for Malaysia.” In a telephone interview with The Straits Times on Tuesday, the tycoon elaborated on his donation of RM100 million (S$39 million) to build Xiamen University’s first overseas campus in Salak Tinggi, Selangor. The largess was announced last week during a lunch with Chinese President Xi Jinping when the latter visited Malaysia. “It is a gesture of appreciation. I wish Malaysia only well,” says Mr Kuok. The magnate, who marked his 90th birthday on Sunday and is known for being averse to media interviews – he had not granted one to the international media for 16 years barring one to Bloomberg in January – showed little signs of his age except in some impact on his hearing. Read more of this post

Can’t Buy Them Love: China’s Heiresses Struggle With Singleness

October 11, 2013, 4:19 PM

Can’t Buy Them Love: China’s Heiresses Struggle With Singleness

This story was originally published on The Wall Street Journal’s Chinese website under the headline “中国女富二代为何难找夫婿

Wealth has its privileges, particularly in China where worship of money conveys high status on the rich. But for the well-educated single daughters of Chinese tycoons, wealth can also be a curse. Kelly Zong, the daughter of Chinese billionaire beverage tycoon Zong Qinghou, said earlier this year that she has never had a boyfriend. The 30-year-old hard-charging businesswoman, who looks after overseas deals at Wahaha Group,  bemoaned in a recent interview that she feels “pessimistic about love” after so many men have been found wanting. Ms. Zong is just one of several female members of China’s so-calledfu’erdai, or second-generation rich, who say they are finding it hard to find a suitable mate – a trend that complicates the future for several of China’s family-owned businesses, and is giving new purpose to some of the country’s entrepreneur networks. Read more of this post

Swedish fingerprint tech company caught in hoax Samsung bid

Swedish tech company caught in hoax Samsung bid

1:23pm EDT

By Johannes Hellstrom and Daniel Dickson

STOCKHOLM (Reuters) – A fake press release claiming electronics firm Samsung (005930.KS: QuoteProfile,ResearchStock Buzz) was buying Sweden’s Fingerprint Cards (FINGb.ST: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) sent shares in the biometrics company soaring on Friday, prompting an investigation into suspected market manipulation. The Swedish Economic Crime Authority said it would launch a preliminary fraud probe after company news distributor Cision (CISI.ST: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) published a statement saying Samsung Electronics Co Ltd was buying Fingerprint Cards for $650 million in cash. Read more of this post

Mondi Tracks Pampers to China in Bet on Packaging Boom

Mondi Tracks Pampers to China in Bet on Packaging Boom

Mondi Ltd. (MND), the South African packaging company that joined the U.K.’s benchmark FTSE 100 Index last month, is opening factories in China and Iraq as it follows clients into emerging markets to boost earnings. Customers including Procter & Gamble Co. (PG) and Nestle SA (NESN) are tapping booming local demand for products such as diapers and microwaveable food and Mondi has to stay close to meet specific requirements in each market, Chief Executive Officer David Hathorn said in an interview in Johannesburg. Mondi this year inaugurated a plant in China’s Jiangsu province to supply stretchy films for P&G’s range of Pampers diapers, he said. Read more of this post

China to install GPS in government cars to track misuse

China to install GPS in government cars to track misuse

6:29am EDT

BEIJING (Reuters) – China will install GPS systems in government cars to thwart personal use by officials, domestic media said on Friday, citing the Communist Party’s anti-corruption watchdog, as it cracks down on the profligate lifestyles of corrupt officials. Almost 200,000 government cars have been misused for private purposes, the Beijing Times newspaper said, citing the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection. Read more of this post

Lavish nights at Club Godfather opened door to Japan pension fund bribery case

Lavish nights at Club Godfather opened door to Japan pension fund bribery case

Thu, Oct 10 2013

* Pension fund exec handed suspended 18-mth jail term

* Two KTOs fund execs also given suspended sentences

* Regulator cracking down on excessive client entertainment

* Regulator also probing unrelated cases at investment banks

By Nathan Layne

SAPPORO, Japan, Oct 10 (Reuters) – When a Tokyo-based investment manager set out to win business from a pension fund in northern Japan, the cost included dozens of nights drinking at Club Godfather, a discrete watering hole with a $200 cover charge and kimono-clad hostesses. Kazuyoshi Takahama, now 71, was treated to more than 50 nights out at the club in Sapporo as KTOs Capital Partners, a hedge fund, lobbied for a share of the $245 million pension fund he helped oversee as its chairman, prosecutors say. Takahama favored shochu, a local liquor, while his free-spending hosts ordered up expensive wines. Read more of this post

AlphaMetrix Fires CFO as Cash Shortage Hits Commodity Fund; The revelations are another blow to confidence in the futures industry after it suffered two of its largest failures with the collapse of MF Global and Peregrine

AlphaMetrix Terminates CFO as Cash Shortfall Hits Commodity Fund

AlphaMetrix Group LLC, which connects investors with hedge fund managers and futures traders, said it’s experiencing “significant cash flow issues” and fired its chief financial officer. The Chicago-based company runs a business known as a commodity pool operator, AlphaMetrix LLC, which lets customers invest in futures accounts managed by professional traders. The parent company told clients in a letter yesterday that both its liabilities and those of the commodity pool operator “greatly exceed” liquid assets and that the net asset values of some pools may be affected. Read more of this post

IEA Sees Oil Output Outside OPEC Rising Most Since 1970s

IEA Sees Oil Output Outside OPEC Rising Most Since 1970s

The International Energy Agency estimates that oil producers outside OPEC, led by the U.S., Canada and Kazakhstan, will bolster supplies next year by the most since the 1970s, undermining the need for OPEC’s crude. Producers outside the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will increase output by a near-record 1.7 million barrels a day next year to 56.4 million, the IEA said, boosting its forecasts from a month ago by 300,000 barrels a day. Supply losses in OPEC members Libya and Iraq, which reduced the group’s output to a two-year low, are preventing the new shipments from calming oil prices, the Paris-based adviser to energy-consuming nations said. Read more of this post

U.S. Said to Open Criminal Probe of FX Market Rigging

U.S. Said to Open Criminal Probe of FX Market Rigging

The U.S. Justice Department has opened a criminal investigation of possible manipulation of the $5.3 trillion-a-day foreign exchange market, a person familiar with the matter said. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is also looking into alleged rigging of interest rates associated with the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, is in the early stages of its currency market probe, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the inquiry is confidential. Read more of this post

Danes With World-Beating Debt Loads Prepare To Dig Deeper

Danes With World-Beating Debt Loads Prepare To Dig Deeper

Danish households, which already have the world’s biggest debt load relative to incomes, are about to use a real estate recovery to go further into the red. Five years after the country’s real-estate crash ripped through home equity and drove up the number of borrowers owing more than their properties are worth, homeowners are ready to take on bigger loans amid the first signs prices are rising, according to Nordea Bank AB (NDA), Scandinavia’s largest lender. Read more of this post

‘We Might as Well Settle the Hog Futures Contract to the Price of Peaches’; Shutdown Shuts Down U.S. Data, So Commodities Traders Fly Blind

October 11, 2013, 3:48 p.m. ET

Shutdown Shuts Down U.S. Data, So Commodities Traders Fly Blind

‘We Might as Well Settle the Hog Futures Contract to the Price of Peaches’

ALEXANDRA WEXLER

NEW YORK—Commodities traders and investors are struggling to stay on top of their markets as the U.S. government shutdown cuts off the flow of data they rely on to place bets on everything from corn to cotton to oil. Since the shutdown began on Oct. 1, the government has stopped polling farmers about the state of their crops and also isn’t releasing data on the import and export of raw materials, among other tasks. On Friday, the U.S. Energy Information Administration, one of the few agencies still collecting and releasing data, said it would cease publishing its weekly oil supply and demand surveys for the first time since the surveys began in 1979. Read more of this post

The Bag of Stars: High-Speed Idea Filtering for Open Innovation

The Bag of Stars: High-Speed Idea Filtering for Open Innovation

Ana Cristina Bicharra Garcia Universidade Federal Fluminense; Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – Sloan School of Management

Mark Klein Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) – Sloan School of Management

September 26, 2013
MIT Sloan Research Paper No. 5031-13

Abstract: 
Open innovation platforms (web sites where crowds post ideas in a shared space) enable us to elicit huge volumes of potentially valuable solutions for problems we care about, but identifying the best ideas in these collections can be prohibitively time-consuming and expensive. This paper presents an approach, called the “bag of stars”, which enables crowd to filter ideas with (our experiments show) accuracy comparable to standard (Lichert scale) rating approaches, but in only a fraction of the time.

The Quality of Expertise: we should expect experts to be systematically biased, potentially to the point that they are less reliable sources of information than non-experts

The Quality of Expertise

Edward Dickersin Van Wesep Vanderbilt University – Owen Graduate School of Management

May 7, 2013
Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management Research Paper No. 2257995

Abstract: 
Policy-makers and managers often turn to experts when in need of information: because they are more informed than others of the content and quality of current and past research, they should provide the best advice. I show, however, that we should expect experts to be systematically biased, potentially to the point that they are less reliable sources of information than non-experts. This is because the decision to research a question implies a belief that research will be fruitful. If priors about the impact of current work are correct, on average, then those who select into researching a question are optimistic about the quality of current work. In areas that are new, or feature new research technologies (e.g., data sources, technical methods, or paradigms), the selection problem is less important than the benefit of greater knowledge: experts will indeed be experts. In areas that are old and lack new research technologies, there will be significant bias. Furthermore, consistent with a large body of empirical research, this selection problem implies that experts who express greater confidence in their beliefs will be, on average, less accurate. This paper provides many empirical implications for expert accuracy, as well as mechanism design implications for hiring, task assignment, and referee assignment.