Toys ‘R’ Us is heading into the holidays with a new leader who has little experience with the U.S. market, owners who don’t always see eye to eye and a debt burden that tops $5 billion

No Joy in Toys ‘R’ Us Land

Management Void Is Finally Filled, but Debt and Ownership Structure Burden Retailer

SUZANNE KAPNER and JOANN S. LUBLIN

Updated Oct. 17, 2013 5:29 p.m. ET

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Toys ‘R’ Us hired an insider to be its CEO after external candidates turned down the job. Above, the retailer’s Times Square store in New York. Keith Bedford for The Wall Street Journal

With the holidays approaching, this should be the happiest time of year for a toy company. But Toys “R” Us Inc. is facing a season of uncertainty. The company that helped create the “category killer” retail model is headed into the crucial shopping period with a new leader who has little experience with the hyper-competitive U.S. market. Meanwhile, the company’s longer-term strategy is in flux, and people close to the company say it is hamstrung by owners who don’t always see eye to eye and a debt burden that tops $5 billion. Read more of this post

How U.S. Debt Per Capita Has Changed Under Every President Since JFK

How U.S. Debt Per Capita Has Changed Under Every President Since JFK

By Giovanni Salzano October 17, 2013

The national debt has not always been the hot-button issue it is today. In the Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon, and Carter administrations, inflation-adjusted debt per capita dropped.

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The Best Cheap and Probably Legal Way to Watch Every NFL Game Online; That’s the promise of Canadian startup Adfreetime.com, one of a handful of providers to offer what’s called a DNS-switching service

The Best Cheap and Probably Legal Way to Watch Every NFL Game Online

By Aaron Rutkoff October 11, 2013

The National Football League has $6 billion worth of annual incentives to keep Americans from watching games online. So fiercely does the league guard its lucrative television deals that to watch football online in the U.S., fans still have to pay a television provider: The only Americans who are technically allowed to watch NFL’s live streams are those customers who purchase DirecTV’s (DTV) all-access Sunday Ticket package, a deal worth $1 billion to the NFL. Read more of this post

SIM-Card Hackers’ Phone Fraud Is Costing Mobile Carriers a Fortune; Carriers around the world will suffer an estimated $3.6 billion in losses from fraudulent account takeovers

SIM-Card Hackers’ Phone Fraud Is Costing Mobile Carriers a Fortune

By Jordan Robertson October 17, 2013

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Wireless carriers including AT&T (T) and South Africa’s Vodacom Group (VOD:SJ) are facing a new threat: the illegal hacking of SIM cards, the small plastic chips that verify the identity of customers on mobile networks. Globally, carriers are expected to rack up $3.6 billion in losses from account fraud this year, nearly triple the amount in 2011, according to the Communications Fraud Control Association. “Attackers are definitely getting more advanced,” says Lawrence Pingree, a mobile-security researcher at Gartner. “It’s almost like stealing at a bank—going right in and doing it in person. It’s very personal.” Read more of this post

Silicon Valley finds new ways to back tomorrow’s winners

Silicon Valley finds new ways to back tomorrow’s winners

12:15pm EDT

By Sarah McBride

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) – A group of high-flying Silicon Valley investors is betting that there is room for one more program that fosters early-stage companies. This time, they are focused on the massive amounts of information generated in part by the Internet and known collectively as big data. The creation of Data Elite, a hybrid between a venture fund and an incubator, underscores the obsession among the valley’s investors of finding promising companies at the very earliest stages. Read more of this post

PayPal shows strength, but competitors loom; Amazon stepped into the ring, announcing a new program, “Login and Pay,” that allows users to do just that by using their Amazon accounts to let the tech titan process and authorize payments

PayPal shows strength, but competitors loom

By Hayley Tsukayama, Published: October 17

Times are good for online payments, with PayPal reporting a 12 percent jump in revenue in the last quarter, even as parent company eBay reported a lower-than-expected future outlook, including the holiday season. On an earnings call, eBay chief executive John Donahoe said that PayPal users were up 17 percent in the past quarter and that the service now weighs in at 137 million users. And 32 percent of those users are coming in through mobile devices. Read more of this post

Deep Divide Lingers After Impasse Ends; Pessimism Greets Lawmakers as They Start Negotiations on Broad Budget Deal

Deep Divide Lingers After Impasse Ends

Pessimism Greets Lawmakers as They Start Negotiations on Broad Budget Deal

DAMIAN PALETTA

Updated Oct. 17, 2013 8:01 p.m. ET

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WASHINGTON—Eight hours after President Barack Obama signed a bill to reopen the federal government, top congressional budget leaders from both parties gathered over breakfast to try to find common ground in coming weeks. But differences between the two sides remain stark, and a number of congressional aides said the chances of devising a budget that both parties can live with are low. The conference committee the lawmakers head faces a Dec. 13 deadline under the package Congress approved late Wednesday. Read more of this post

Shutdown Hit Boehner’s Favorite Diner as $24 Billion Lost; money lost during shutdown can’t be easily recovered, creating a long-term ripple effect that will be difficult to forget

Shutdown Hit Boehner’s Favorite Diner as $24 Billion Lost

Gum Tong owns a diner in Washington, D.C., and Matt Bellinger charters fishing boats in the Florida Everglades. They have this in common: The shutdown of the U.S. government cost them money they will never get back. Pete’s Diner & Carryout, a 50-year-old Capitol Hill eatery frequented by House Speaker John Boehner, lost about 80 percent of its usual business, said Tong, surrounded by empty seats and Halloween decorations. Bellinger missed out on $1,000 a day in canceled charters because Everglades National Park was closed. Read more of this post

Restarting U.S. Government Seen as Harder Than Shutdown

Restarting U.S. Government Seen as Harder Than Shutdown

Starting up the government will be harder than it was to shut it. The legislation passed by Congress last night to raise the debt ceiling and fund the government into 2014 will bring hundreds of thousands of federal workers back to their jobs and reopen national parks and museums. Yet it may be weeks or even months before the government resumes issuing loans, payments and contracts at a normal pace. Read more of this post

Ikea Keeps Lid on Billy Prices in Europe as Inflation Weakens; The Billy index calculates the cost across 43 countries of Ikea’s white bookcase

Ikea Keeps Lid on Billy Prices in Europe as Inflation Weakens

Ikea will keep a lid on prices of its Billy bookshelves in most euro-area countries next year, underscoring a lack of inflation in the 17-member currency bloc. The signature bookcase remains cheapest in Europe, according to the 2014 catalog on the website of the world’s biggest home-furnishings retailer, compiled in Bloomberg’s annual global index. The shelves are least expensive in Slovakia and the Netherlands, with a price of 34.95 euros ($46.48). Read more of this post

Fed’s Fisher warns of potential U.S. housing bubble, MBS buys

Fed’s Fisher warns of potential U.S. housing bubble, MBS buys

11:14am EDT

By Jonathan Spicer

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A top Federal Reserve official said on Thursday he is seeing fresh signs of a U.S. “housing bubble” and warned about the central bank’s ongoing purchases of mortgage-based bonds. “I’m beginning to see signs not just in my district but across the country that we are entering, once again, a housing bubble,” Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher told reporters after a speech in New York. “So that leads me … to be very cautious about our mortgage-backed securities purchase program.” Read more of this post

EBay, Ellison Embrace Microgrids in Threat to Utilities

EBay, Ellison Embrace Microgrids in Threat to Utilities

Oracle Corp. Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison plans to build one to power the Hawaiian island he bought last year. EBay Inc. (EBAY) has one to run a data center. The University of California at San Diego and the federal government have invested tens of millions of dollars in the technology.

Microgrids are emerging as a credible threat to the dominance of America’s 100-year-old-plus utility monopoly. The small-scale versions of centralized power systems, once just used against blackouts, are now gaining thousands of customers as homeowners in states with high power costs turn to them as a way to manage rooftop solar systems, cut electricity bills and, in some cases, say goodbye to their power companies.

The systems use computer software and remote measuring devices to control energy sources such as rooftop solar panels and natural gas-fueled power generators. They allow a home or business owner, a college systems engineer or a farmer on a mountainside to generate, distribute and regulate their locally produced power with an ease and sophistication that only utilities had a few years ago.

Not much of a factor a decade ago, microgrids are expected to explode into a $40 billion-a-year global business by 2020, according to Navigant Research, a clean-technology data and consulting company. In the U.S., about 6 gigawatts of electricity — enough to power as many as 4.8 million homes — will flow through microgrids by 2020, Navigant said.

Utility Leapfrog

“Microgrids are going from evolutionary to revolutionary,” said Jon Creyts, a program director at the Rocky Mountain Institute, a nonprofit energy and environmental think tank. While microgrids control a sliver of generation in relation to the overall grid, they are being built with a speed and projected scale that is cause for utilities to worry, according to Creyts.

In the developing world, they may leapfrog the need for conventional utilities — the same way mobile phones leapfrogged the need for landlines — and bring power almost half of the 1.3 billion people on Earth who don’t have it.

While the earliest microgrids controlled simple generator backup systems, they have evolved into sophisticated smart grids. Operators can remain tethered to the larger grid and switch seamlessly between the electricity they generate and utility power, whichever is cheaper. They can even sell surplus electricity back to the utilities through a process known as net metering.

If the main grid goes down, a flip of a switch or automated computer program deploys their mix of green energy, backup generators and storage batteries to keep the lights on.

Eating Revenue

Microgrids have the potential to radically change the U.S. electricity paradigm as they proliferate and begin to eat into the utility revenue stream. For example, U.C. San Diego saves an estimated $850,000 a month on its electricity bill by self-generating and using its microgrid to fine-tune campus power consumption.

The 3,200 U.S. utilities are already facing what NRG Energy Inc. CEO David Crane calls a “mortal threat” to the industry. Forces including deregulation, green politics and an explosion of rooftop solar and other homemade energy — known as distributed generation — mean a reduction in the fossil-fuel electricity utilities sell.

Microgrids may be the mechanism through which this revolution in clean distributed generation will be carried out – – a portal for leaving the traditional power grid.

Mixed Reaction

For utilities, which sell $400 billion worth of electricity a year delivered by 2.7 million miles (4.3 million kilometers) of power lines, the reaction is mixed.

In California, epicenter of the rooftop solar revolution, utility executives have begun to complain to regulators that microgrid operators who remain tied to power lines should shoulder some of the costs of keeping the grid stable, perhaps through connection fees. Sempra Energy (SRE) and American Electric Power Co. are considering microgrid investments as a way to hedge the threat.

While only about 30 commercial-scale systems like those used by EBay and the U.S. Food and Drug Administration exist now, that number is projected to climb to 300 in just two years, said Steve Pullins, chief strategic officer for Green Energy Corp., a Tennessee-based builder of commercial-scale microgrids.

His company estimates that 24,000 U.S. commercial and industrial sites are ripe for large-scale microgrid conversions. Globally, about 400 additional big microgrid projects are under way. Lockheed Martin Corp. completed in May the U.S. Army’s first domestic microgrid at Fort Bliss in Texas. The military is already using them at sites in other countries to reduce fuel consumption.

Requests Increase

“We are seeing requests for proposals going up significantly, 30 to 40 percent higher than last year,” said Paul Orzeske, president of the Honeywell International Inc. unit that designs and builds commercial-scale microgrids. Honeywell built a $71 million microgrid for an FDA research center in Maryland and the agency is in the midst of a $213 million addition that will be online early next year. On the consumer level, San Francisco-based Gen110, which installs leased microgrid systems with no out-of-pocket costs to homeowners, is attracting utility customers put off by tiered pricing that penalizes them when their use exceeds a certain level. Read more of this post

Brazilian Drugstore Billionaire Open to CVS Partnership; “The Brazilian market requires knowledge of the complexity of the tax regime — that’s the main barrier.”

Drugstore Billionaire Open to CVS Partnership: Corporate Brazil

Empreendimentos Pague Menos SA, Brazil’s second-biggest drugstore company, would consider U.S. partners such as CVS Caremark Corp. and Walgreen Co. to expand amid heightened competition, its chief executive officer said. “We’ve been approached by some companies, but we would only do it with a strategic partner,” Francisco Deusmar de Queiros, 66, the billionaire CEO of the closely held chain, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Sao Paulo office without naming any prospects. “The right partner has yet to appear — the right partner that enchants us to go to the ball and dance.” Read more of this post

American Funds Defends Active Investing After Massive Investor Retreat

American Funds Defends Active Investing After Massive Investor Retreat

By Christopher Condon October 17, 2013

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On the eve of the financial crisis, Capital Group was king of the mutual fund business—even though most investors had never heard of it. The Los Angeles-based company’s American Funds unit ran seven of the nation’s 10 biggest funds, including the largest of all, the $193 billion Growth Fund of America. Eagerly sold by brokerages such as Merrill Lynch (BAC) and Edward Jones, the funds had no need for mass marketing to attract investors and even less for media attention. Capital Group has issued only three press releases in its 82-year history and politely declines most requests for comment. The idea was that the blandly named funds’ outstanding returns spoke for themselves. Read more of this post

HKMA has proposed that Chinese authorities remove a 20,000 yuan ($3,280) daily currency conversion limit on the city’s permanent residents

Hong Kong Proposes Removing Yuan-Conversion Limit on Locals

The Hong Kong Monetary Authority has proposed that Chinese authorities remove a 20,000 yuan ($3,280) daily currency conversion limit on the city’s permanent residents, according to Chief Executive Norman Chan. “The People’s Bank of China said this is feasible and it will pro-actively consider it,” Chan told reporters in Beijing today. “That’ll make it easier for banks to sell wealth-management products denominated in yuan.” Read more of this post

Brewing U.S. ethanol legal battle hinges on meaning of ‘supply’

Brewing U.S. ethanol legal battle hinges on meaning of ‘supply’

9:34pm EDT

By Cezary Podkul

CHICAGO (Reuters) – The fate of a landmark U.S. requirement to blend increasing amounts of biofuels into the nation’s gasoline pool rests on the meaning of three words tucked into a mammoth law: unless there is “inadequate domestic supply.” But “supply” of what? The law does not say. As a years-long battle over the future of the U.S. fuel supply begins to shift to the courts, the two fierce foes – the biofuel industry and oil refiners – are debating a definition that lawyers say leaves much room for interpretation. Read more of this post

40 Years After Embargo, OPEC Is Over a Barrel

40 Years After Embargo, OPEC Is Over a Barrel

Today marks the 40th anniversary of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries embargo against the U.S. and states that supported Israel after Egypt and Syria initiated simultaneous offensives against it on Yom Kippur in 1973. While it’s not an anniversary that many will celebrate, it’s a good opportunity to reflect on how much more secure our energy situation is, despite our continued heavy reliance on fossil fuels. Read more of this post

Billionaires Snubbed in Netherlands Show Phone Stocks Rebounding

Billionaires Snubbed in Netherlands Show Phone Stocks Rebounding

John Malone and Carlos Slim’s plans to expand their empires on the cheap in Europe’s beleaguered telecommunications market have been thwarted so far as companies in the region begin commanding higher prices. Both billionaires suffered recent setbacks in the Netherlands trying to turn leading stakes into full ownership. Cable company Ziggo NV (ZIGGO) rejected Malone’s offer and Slim’s America Movil SAB withdrew a 7.2 billion-euro ($9.8 billion) bid for Royal KPN NV after the targets said they wanted more. Read more of this post

Dynasties Reinforced as Mahathir Son in UMNO Bid: Southeast Asia

Dynasties Reinforced as Mahathir Son in UMNO Bid: Southeast Asia

Mukhriz Mahathir, the 48-year-old son of Malaysia’s longest-serving prime minister, will tomorrow contest the vice presidency of the nation’s biggest political party, staking his claim as a potential future national leader. The United Malays National Organisation, or UMNO, which has led coalitions to govern Southeast Asia’s third-biggest economy since independence from Britain in 1957, will elect party leaders who typically hold their posts for three years. As UMNO seeks to shore up its base after a May general vote that saw the government returned by its smallest margin, the meeting will provide an insight into policy priorities and leadership style ahead of the next election due in 2018. Read more of this post

Sri Lanka, for decades a destination for backpackers, religious pilgrims and beach-lovers, is building high-end hotels and casinos to woo wealthier tourists from India and China as it seeks to emulate the success of Singapore and Macau

Crown’s Sri Lanka Casino Resort Venture to Cost $400 Million

Crown Ltd. (CWN), Australia’s largest gambling company, said a casino resort it’s in talks over co-developing in Sri Lanka will cost about $400 million. The five-star resort will have about 450 hotel rooms and suites at Beira Lake in the center of the capital Colombo, the Melbourne-based company said in a regulatory statement today. Crown, controlled by billionaire Chairman James Packer, also said it’s seeking joint venture partners for the project. Read more of this post

In Myanmar, avoiding the traps of foreign investment; Aung San Suu Kyi warned against “reckless optimism” by investors

In Myanmar, avoiding the traps of foreign investment

As potential investors converge on the Golden Land from all over, Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi voiced her desire for “democracy-friendly investment”, in particular, foreign direct investment (FDI) that creates jobs Myanmar’s unemployed youth. She warned against “reckless optimism” by investors.

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1 HOUR 32 MIN AGO

As potential investors converge on the Golden Land from all over, Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi voiced her desire for “democracy-friendly investment”, in particular, foreign direct investment (FDI) that creates jobs Myanmar’s unemployed youth. She warned against “reckless optimism” by investors. Western governments indeed are encouraging their businesses to act as role models in terms of setting labour standards, looking after the environment, giving back to society and so on. Meanwhile, Asian governments and businesses wrangle over Myanmar’s natural resources and infrastructure projects. Read more of this post

GS Engineering Falls Most in Six Months after it was sued by a group of investors over losses caused by unexpected cost increases on overseas environmental projects

GS Engineering Falls Most in Six Months on Lawsuit: Seoul Mover

GS Engineering & Construction Corp. (006360) fell the most in six months in Seoul trading after the South Korean builder said it was sued by a group of investors over losses caused by unexpected cost increases on overseas projects. GS Engineering dropped as much as 4.8 percent, headed for the biggest decline since April 15, to 35,400 won and traded at 36,050 won as of 12:35 p.m. South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index rose 0.3 percent. Fifteen investors filed the lawsuit against GS Engineering on Oct. 8 at the Seoul Central District Court, the Seoul-based company said in a regulatory filing today. The investors claim GS Engineering failed to make proper estimates in financial statements for costs that may arise from the projects, according to today’s statement. The builder said in April it expects an operating loss this year because of the cost increases. The company said it will appoint a lawyer to handle the case. GS Engineering in April reported an unexpected operating loss in the first quarter because costs increased for some of its overseas environment-related projects. That caused shares of builders to slump on concerns that other construction companies may face similar problems.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net

A supply glut in India’s hotel market is preventing an industry revival in the country after average revenue per room fell to a three-year low, says Accor SA (AC), Europe’s largest hotel operator

Europe’s Top Hotel Says Glut to Thwart Revival: Corporate India

A supply glut in India’s hotel market is preventing an industry revival in the country after average revenue per room fell to a three-year low, according to Accor SA (AC), Europe’s largest hotel operator. A key performance gauge, calculated by multiplying a hotel’s average daily room rate by its occupancy, dropped to the least since at least 2010 in the quarter through June, according to data provided by Cushman & Wakefield Inc. In contrast, that metric has risen in the developed markets of Europe and the U.S., said Michael Issenberg, Accor’s chairman for Asia-Pacific. Read more of this post

India’s Closed Shop. Excessive regulation turned Delhi’s retail opening into a failure

India’s Closed Shop. Excessive regulation turned Delhi’s retail opening into a failure.

Updated Oct. 17, 2013 5:37 p.m. ET

Wal-Mart WMT +0.24% last week announced it would close its retail outlets in India and part ways with local partner Bharti Enterprises. The American company says it can’t make a profit due to a government requirement that 30% of inventory be sourced from local channels, a rule that doesn’t apply to Indian firms. Wal-Mart’s exit means not a single multinational is taking advantage of India’s decision last year to allow foreign retailers to own 51% of joint ventures. Read more of this post

Lenovo will face obstacles in any BlackBerry deal

Lenovo will face obstacles in any BlackBerry deal: source

7:52pm EDT

By Nadia Damouni and Euan Rocha

NEW YORK/TORONTO (Reuters) – Chinese computer maker Lenovo, which has signed a non-disclosure deal to examine BlackBerry’s books, faces regulatory obstacles if it bids for all of the company and will likely pursue just parts, a source familiar with the matter said on Thursday. BlackBerry Ltd said in August it was exploring options that could include an outright sale. And the Canadian company, which helped pioneer smartphones, has since been linked with a string of potential buyers from private equity firms to rival technology companies. Read more of this post

Mistress-Driven Anticorruption in China: Study Says 15% of Accusers Are Lovers

October 17, 2013, 6:30 AM

Mistress-Driven Anticorruption: Study Says 15% of Accusers Are Lovers

In the early days of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s drive to clean up the Communist Party’s image, disciplinary authorities benefited from the work of a group of accusers with particularly intimate knowledge of corrupt bureaucrats’ nefarious activities: their extramarital lovers. A district party chief in the southwestern mega-city of Chongqing, a police chief in the northwestern region of Xinjiang and the former deputy head of China’s top economic planning body all were removed from office thanks in part to their illicit sexual activities. Read more of this post

Bid Battle Intensifies for Australian Dairy Producer Warrnambool Cheese & Butter

Oct 17, 2013

Bid Battle Intensifies for Australian Dairy Producer

GILLIAN TAN

It’s now a three-way battle for one of Australia’s largest-listed dairy companies. Australia’s Murray Goulburn Co-operative Co. Ltd has made a takeover offer for Warrnambool Cheese & Butter Factory Co. Holdings Ltd. that values the dairy producer at 420 million Australian dollar (US$404 million), trumping two rival bids. The combination of Warrnambool Cheese & Butter and farmer-controlled Murray Goulburn would make it one of Australia’s five largest food and beverage companies, with expected revenues of more than A$3.2 billion and export sales of A$1.4 billion to more than 60 countries.  It expects to process more than 4 billion liters of milk annually from more than 3,000 suppliers. Read more of this post