Overcrowding, broken furniture and bed bugs: Foreign students complain about S’pore hostels

Overcrowding, broken furniture and bed bugs: Foreign students complain about S’pore hostels

hostel

Stomp
Thursday, Oct 24, 2013

A recent news report by a Taiwan media company highlighted the poor living conditions of foreign students who come to Singapore seeking work, and how this greatly differed from what they had been promised. In the video published by China Times which Stomp readers Derome and Steric alerted Stomp to, an 18-year-old Taiwanese student shares his experience about how he had come to Singapore to work and study English at the same time. Despite paying $280 for a room every month, he has to share the space with six to eight others. The tenants also have to take turns and wait to use a small bathroom. Read more of this post

This ‘Reverse Microwave’ Chills Beer In 45 Seconds

This ‘Reverse Microwave’ Chills Beer In 45 Seconds

CAMERON CIMCIKFOODBEAST
OCT. 24, 2013, 10:49 AM 5,699 6

Microwaves are handy little units when we want to heat food or drinks up quickly. However, never before has there been a gadget that does just the opposite — cooling without the long wait. That is, until now. A product of Enviro-Cool Limited, V-Tex is an environmentally-friendly, efficient system that cools beverages in a matter of seconds. From wine bottles to soda cans, the unit is able to chill drinks in all types of containers without disturbing carbonation. How? V-Tex uses a “start stop rotational sequence” to create a Rankine vortex, which essentially keeps a drink in its original state while quickly bringing down the temperature. The reverse microwave requires nearly 80% less energy than many standard drink chillers, allowing consumers to save money and keep things green. It also frees up standard refrigerator space, since most beverages can be stored at room temperature elsewhere until right before serving. Enviro-Cool plans to release both commercial and domestic versions of V-Tex, but until then, we’ll have to settle for poppin’ bottles in the fridge. See how it works below:

Tencent Has Invested $2 bn in Overseas Markets. Here’s the Full List

Tencent Has Invested $2 bn in Overseas Markets. Here’s the Full List.

By Tracey Xiang on October 23, 2013

Tencent has invested $2 billion in overseas markets, a large part of which went to startups, disclosed Martin Lau, president of Tencent, at GMIC 2013 Sillicon Valley. Not only does Tencent inject money into those startups, the company would also pass on experience or help them enter China market, he said. Online gaming has been the major contributor to its total revenues and Tencent counts on mobile gaming in order to monetize the huge user base it has already had through WeChat, Mobile QQ and other mobile apps. So most of foreign businesses Tencent has stakes in are gaming-related. Below is a list of overseas investments we have heard about since the company started making investments in other companies, big or small — Years back Chinese Internet companies preferred to develop me-too products by themselves. Tencent was famous for that it could always kill the existing ones with better-than-copy versions. Read more of this post

Traders in Yiwu cashing in on e-commerce shops

Traders in Yiwu cashing in on e-commerce shops

Updated: 2013-10-25 02:19

By YU RAN in Yiwu, Zhejiang ( China Daily) Read more of this post

Spike in China money rates raises cash-crunch fears

October 24, 2013 5:32 am

Spike in China money rates raises cash-crunch fears

By Simon Rabinovitch in Shanghai

China’s money rates shot up on Thursday after the central bank withdrew cash from the financial system, fuelling worries that the world’s second-biggest economy might see a replay of a liquidity squeeze that rattled global markets earlier this year. Read more of this post

Response to a City’s Smog Points to a Change in Chinese Attitude

October 24, 2013

Response to a City’s Smog Points to a Change in Chinese Attitude

By EDWARD WONG

BEIJING — Emergency measures came swiftly in Harbin, the northeastern city blanketed with hazardous smog this week: Schools were shut down, buses ordered off the roads, the airport closed, police roadblocks set up to check tailpipe emissions from cars. City officials even fanned out in the surrounding countryside, ordering farmers to stop burning the cornstalks left in their fields after the harvest. They were reacting to the first notable surge of air pollution in China this autumn. Residents across the nation’s north fear that the smog is a sign of things to come. With winter approaching, cities north of the Huai River are turning on their coal-fired municipal heating systems, whose emissions were found in one study to shorten residents’ life spans by an average of five years. Read more of this post

New China H7N9 bird flu cases ‘signal potential winter epidemic’

New China H7N9 bird flu cases ‘signal potential winter epidemic’

By Kate Kelland

LONDON (Reuters) – Fresh human cases in eastern China of a deadly new strain of bird flu signal the potential for “a new epidemic wave” of the disease in coming winter months, scientists said on Thursday. The strain, known as H7N9, emerged for the first time in humans earlier this year and killed around 45 of the some 135 people it infected before appearing to peter out in China During the summer. Read more of this post

Muddy Waters Risks Curbing Chinese IPO Demand

Muddy Waters Risks Curbing IPO Demand: China Overnight

By Belinda Cao and Matthew Kanterman  Oct 24, 2013

Short seller Muddy Waters LLC’s call to sell shares of Chinese mobile-security service provider NQ Mobile Inc. (NQ) will hinder initial public offerings from the country, Needham & Co. said. Shares of NQ Mobile tumbled as much as 63 percent in New York yesterday before trading was halted. The Bloomberg China-US Equity Index of the most-traded Chinese stocks in the U.S. climbed 0.5 percent to 103.26, led by New Oriental Education & Technology Group (EDU) and Vipshop Holdings Ltd. Read more of this post

Chinese Moviegoers Prefer Local Films to Hollywood’s

Chinese Moviegoers Prefer Local Films to Hollywood’s

By Christopher Palmeri October 24, 2013

A year ago the Chinese government raised the number of foreign films allowed into the country to 34 from 20 per year. Many thought Hollywood studios were set to play a starring role in the world’s second-largest movie market. Instead, Chinese filmmakers are capturing most of the industry’s growth because of booming interest in local productions and talent. A case in point: Journey to the West: Conquering the Demons. The action-adventure film, featuring a Buddhist monk who battles a pig demon and a monkey king, is China’s top-grossing film this year, with $189 million in ticket sales. Read more of this post

China Said to Plan Letting More Companies Sell Short-Term Debt

China Said to Plan Letting More Companies Sell Short-Term Debt

By Bloomberg News  Oct 24, 2013

China plans to let more companies sell short-term debt that matures in 270 days or less, said two people with direct knowledge of the matter. The National Association of Financial Market Institutional Investors, which regulates the sales, will require issuers to have a credit grade of AA+ or above from China Credit Rating Co. in addition to a similar rating from another company, said the people, who asked not to be identified as they weren’t authorized to speak publicly about the plans. Read more of this post

China Party’s Secretive Judicial System Laid Bare in Torture Case

China Party’s Secretive Judicial System Laid Bare in Torture Case

By Sui-Lee Wee on 3:18 pm October 24, 2013.
As Yu Qiyi’s interrogation entered its 39th day, officials from the Chinese Communist Party’s anti-corruption watchdog debated how to get a confession out of the detained man, the chief engineer at a state-owned firm in eastern Wenzhou city. One official noted he had forced Yu’s head under water the night before. A day later, Yu died after being dunked repeatedly in a bucket of ice-cold water. Read more of this post

Betel nut industry in Hunan now worth RMB10bn a year

Betel nut industry in Hunan now worth RMB10bn a year

Staff Reporter

2013-10-25

China’s huge industry supply chain for areca nut — more commonly known as betel nut — involves 2.3 million farmers in the southern island province of Hainan and more than 400,000 workers in Hunan’s betel nut-processing industry, which has a production value of nearly 10 billion yuan (US$1.6 billion), the Guangzhou-based Time Weekly reports. The size of the industry has come under the spotlight after reports that chewing betel nut can lead to cancer. About 1 billion people in the world consume the nut for its mild stimulant properties, chiefly in India, where it is known as paan, and throughout Southeast Asia. It is popular in Taiwan and in mainland China its use is centered on the south-central province of Hunan. India and Taiwan grow betel nut locally which is consumed fresh; Hunan, not originally a producer, imports its betel nuts and processes them with preservatives and flavorings. Read more of this post

‘Beautiful China’ tourism pitch clouded over in smog

‘Beautiful China’ tourism pitch clouded over in smog

October 24, 2013

Beijing: Forget all the headlines about eye-watering pollution in Beijing and Shanghai — the Middle Kingdom’s latest tourism slogan invites visitors to “Beautiful China.” Adorning buses and trains in cities such as London, the marketing effort has been derided as particularly inept at a time when record-busting smog has drawn attention to the environmental and health costs of China’s unfettered industrialisation. Like this year’s typically clunky theme for visitors “China Ocean Tourism Year,” the slogan highlights the tin ear of an industry that has ridden the coattails of China’s rapid economic growth and increased global prominence but failed to keep up with international travel trends. Read more of this post

Baidu Raises Eyebrows by Promising High 8% Yield on New Investment Product; Baidu Can’t Guarantee Returns on Online Fund Products, CSRC Says

10.23.2013 16:28

Baidu Raises Eyebrows by Promising High Yield on New Investment Product

Search engine company pledges 8 percent return, but then deletes the weibo post that made the guarantee

By staff reporter Liu Zhuozhe

(Beijing) – Baidu, China’s version of Google, is in the spotlight over exceptionally high returns it promised for an investment product the company plans to unveil. The search engine firm said on October 21 on weibo, the country’s Twitter-like microblog service, that it will introduce a wealth management service on its website on October 28 in cooperation with China AMC, the largest public fund management company in China. The service, called Bai Fa, will have an annual yield of 8 percent and investors can withdraw money from their account at any time, the announcement said. Baidu did not explain how it works. Read more of this post

South Korea’s education system: The great decompression; There are perils for a country in having all your children working too hard for one big exam

South Korea’s education system: The great decompression; There are perils for a country in having all your children working too hard for one big exam

Oct 26th 2013 |From the print edition

FEW countries have done better than South Korea over the past half-century. Within the span of a single working life, its economy has grown 17-fold, its government has evolved from an austere dictatorship into a rowdy democracy, and its culture, once scarred by censorship, now beguiles the world with its music, soap operas and cinema. Scholars enthuse about the speed and precocity of its “compressed development”. Read more of this post

Mercedes Halves Costs as Gangnam Showrooms Boom: Korea Markets

Mercedes Halves Costs as Gangnam Showrooms Boom: Korea Markets

Mercedes-Benz Financial Services Korea Co. slashed borrowing costs by more than 50 percent as record demand for imported cars in Seoul’s Gangnam luxury-goods district spurs its lending business. The unit of German automotive group Daimler AG (DAI) sold 130 billion won ($122 million) of two-year notes on Oct. 14 at 3.38 percent, 57 basis points more than similar-maturity government bonds, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That’s lower than both the spread on 2014 securities sold in November of 123 basis points and the average premium for two-year A+ rated finance debt of 73. The sale was expanded by 30 percent to meet demand. Read more of this post

Word of mouth has turned Yeti’s sturdy ice chests, which are priced as high as $1,300, into a cult brand

The Most Expensive, Bear-Proof, Thief-Baiting Way to Keep Your Beer Cold

By Keenan Mayo October 17, 2013

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When he went fishing, Roy Seiders had a habit of breaking his coolers. It was 2005, and the Austin (Tex.)-based builder of fishing boats was desperate for something tougher than a typical Igloo or Rubbermaid (NWL). “Everything about my boat was durable except for the coolers, which you need to store fish and keep drinks cold,” he says. “But you also need them as seats—or as a casting platform where you can stand and cast to the fish.” So Seiders and his older brother Ryan, who makes fishing rods (their father owns Flex Coat, which creates an epoxy “wrap finish” for fishing rods), set out to make a cooler that could stand up to their own abuse. Read more of this post

Bunge may struggle to lure suitors for loss-making sugar mills bought four years ago for $1.5 billion when they were considered the crown jewels of a burgeoning biofuel industry

Bunge may struggle to lure suitors for loss-making sugar mills

12:25am EDT

By Chris Prentice and Reese Ewing

NEW YORK/SAO PAULO (Reuters) – When Bunge Ltd (BG.N: QuoteProfileResearchStock Buzz) bought five sugar mills in Brazil’s Sao Paulo state four years ago for $1.5 billion, they were considered the crown jewels of a burgeoning biofuel industry. Now, they may be little more than millstones, hard-to-sell assets at a time of crushed margins and weak prices. In the industry’s first major capitulation to depressed market conditions, Bunge’s new chief executive announced on Thursday he will explore options, including a sale, for the loss-making business. Read more of this post

Every October, hundreds of South Korean teachers and professors are sequestered — like jurors in a mafia trial — in a secret, guarded compound: prisoners of their country’s obsession with education

High-security isolation for South Korea’s exam-setters

2013-10-24 13:12

by Jung Ha-Won

SEOUL, October 24, 2013 (AFP) – Every October, hundreds of South Korean teachers and professors are sequestered — like jurors in a mafia trial — in a secret, guarded compound: prisoners of their country’s obsession with education. For one month, they are kept in complete isolation under conditions that resemble house arrest, with everything down to their food waste subject to rigorous examination. Their sole task is to compile the annual college entrance exam — the importance of which in the minds of stressed-out students and their often equally stressed-out parents is almost impossible to exaggerate. Read more of this post

To Expand Offshore Power, Japan Builds Floating Windmills; Harnessing wind in deeper waters off Japan could generate as much as 1,570 gigawatts of electricity, roughly eight times the current capacity of all of Japan’s power companies combined

October 24, 2013

To Expand Offshore Power, Japan Builds Floating Windmills

By HIROKO TABUCHI

WIND-articleLarge

OFF THE COAST OF FUKUSHIMA, Japan — Twelve miles out to sea from the severely damaged and leaking nuclear reactors at Fukushima, a giant floating wind turbine signals the start of Japan’s most ambitious bet yet on clean energy. When this 350-foot-tall windmill is switched on next month, it will generate enough electricity to power 1,700 homes. Unremarkable, perhaps, but consider the goal of this offshore project: to generate over 1 gigawatt of electricity from 140 wind turbines by 2020. That is equivalent to the power generated by a nuclear reactor. Read more of this post

Abe’s Farmers Fight Fat as TPP Means Tariff Cuts in Japan

Abe’s Farmers Fight Fat as TPP Means Tariff Cuts in Japan

From rice to control blood glucose levels to soybeans that reduce fatty acids, Japan is seeking new ways to make money from agriculture as pressure mounts to cut the tariffs its farmers rely on to make a living. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government estimates there’s a potential 600 billion yen ($6.2 billion) market for so-called functional foods, strains of mostly fruits, vegetables and grains with provable health benefits beyond regular nutrition. He’s put 2 billion yen into the agriculture ministry’s coffers for a three-year project to develop new varieties of rice, soybeans, barley, onions and buckwheat. Read more of this post

Tobacco Control Stumps Indonesia’s Health Minister; There are few places in the world where cigarettes are cheaper than in Indonesia. Indeed, they are affordable even for the poorest households and children

Tobacco Control Stumps Indonesia’s Health Minister

By Markus Junianto Sihaloho & Dina Manafe on 10:42 am October 24, 2013.
Tobacco industry lobbyists and lawmakers are rebuffing demands for stricter regulation, saying such a move would end millions of livelihoods. “Many small industries can no longer survive. We feel like we are going to get murdered and only big industry will survive,” said Hafash Gunaman, head of the Association of Kudus Cigarette Makers. Hafash was responding to renewed calls on the government to accede to the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), a treaty convened by the World Health Organization in 2003, after the world community singled out Indonesia as the only country in Asia, the Pacific or the G20 that has not attempted to pass tobacco control laws that meet even minimum international standards. Read more of this post

Jakarta Stands by Relentless Drive Against Dirty Officials

City Stands by Relentless Drive Against Dirty Officials

By Lenny Tristia Tambun on 8:45 am October 25, 2013.
Jakarta Deputy Governor Basuki Tjahaja Purnama has denied that the administration of Governor Joko Widodo is on a witch hunt against officials from the term of the previous governor, amid an antigraft crackdown on senior city bureaucrats. “No, that never crossed our minds, we never had any such thoughts,” Basuki said at City Hall on Thursday. Basuki said it was the various law enforcement agencies that had flagged the alleged corruption by the officials in question, and that the Jakarta administration, especially Joko and himself, never intervened in the investigations. Read more of this post

Record-Low H.K. Home Sales Spur Realtor Loss: Chart of the Day

Record-Low H.K. Home Sales Spur Realtor Loss: Chart of the Day

The tumble in Hong Kong’s home sales to a record low signals further declines in Midland (1200) Holdings Ltd., the city’s largest listed realtor, according to Bocom International Holdings Co. The CHART OF THE DAY shows the three-month average of residential transactions in Hong Kong fell to 3,693 units in September, the lowest since at least 1996, according to government data compiled by Bloomberg. Sales have plunged even as Centaline Property Agency Ltd.’s housing-price gauge holds within 3.1 percent of a record high. The lower panel shows Midland had 9,576 employees at the end of June, according to the latest company statement, the most ever and triple the amount a decade ago, alongside the company’s stock price. Read more of this post

Just one in six Hong Kong students who take on student loans will be able to repay the full amount within the stipulated time, a survey has found

Students with loans feel the squeeze
Hilary Wong 
Friday, October 25, 2013
Just one in six who take on student loans will be able to repay the full amount within the stipulated time, a survey has found. The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups said yesterday the average loan of 727 students interviewed during August and September was HK$110,000, while those on self-financed programs borrowed about HK$190,000. Only 16 percent said they would be able to pay back the loans on time, it found. According to the Student Financial Assistance Agency, students have two ways to apply for a government loan. Read more of this post

Electric car manufacturer Tesla has a higher market capitalisation than it “deserves”, its chief executive said

October 24, 2013 10:00 pm

Tesla admits market cap is supercharged

By Henry Foy in London

Electric car manufacturer Tesla has a higher market capitalisation than it “deserves”, its chief executive said. Tesla, which expects to sell just 21,000 cars this year, is worth about $22bn, roughly half the value of Ford and a third of the value of General Motors, which sold more than 9m vehicles last year. The California-based company, which counts Hollywood stars such as Cameron Diaz as customers, has seen its stock price rise about 400 per cent so far in 2013. “I think that we have quite a high valuation, and a higher valuation than we have any right to deserve,” chief executive Elon Musk said at an event to mark the opening of a new Tesla showroom in London. Read more of this post

Siam Cement Using Cash Pile to Accelerate Growth: Southeast Asia

Siam Cement Using Cash Pile to Accelerate Growth: Southeast Asia

Siam Cement Pcl (SCC), Asia’s biggest cement producer by market value, plans to buy as many as five companies in Southeast Asia as rising incomes boost demand for homes and governments increase spending on infrastructure. Bangkok-based Siam Cement is in talks with companies including a building-materials producer in Vietnam, President Kan Trakulhoon said, without naming them. The value of each deal will be between a few billion baht and 10 billion baht ($321 million), he said in an interview yesterday. Read more of this post

Why Pinterest makes no money but is now worth $3.8 billion

Why Pinterest makes no money but is now worth $3.8 billion

BY CARMEL DEAMICIS 
ON OCTOBER 23, 2013

AllThingsD just broke the news that Pinterest has raised another huge round with an even fatter valuation, and it’s done it without any revenue to boot. Late-stage investor Fidelity Investments led the round, which topped out at $225 million with a $3.8 billion valuation for the online scrapbooking company. Whoa mama. That’s a lot of cash. And it comes on the heels of Pinterest’s recent February Series D, where it raised $200 million. Are your eyes swimming in dollar signs yet? I imagine Pinterest’s founders are. Read more of this post

Tesla’s Amazonian Attributes

Tesla’s Amazonian Attributes

LIAM DENNING

Oct. 24, 2013 11:06 a.m. ET

Tesla Motors TSLA +5.26% has a finger-lickin’ valuation.

That’s according to noted short seller Jim Chanos —and not in the tasty fried-chicken sense, either. At a recent Heard on the Street conference, the Kynikos Associates founder criticized an analyst’s hefty valuation of the electric-vehicle pioneer as resting mostly on far-off forecasts. He licked his finger and held it up as if testing the wind to demonstrate the uncertainty inherent in such long-range predictions. Read more of this post

One Last Look At The Giant Money Pit That Is Microsoft’s Online Operations

One Last Look At The Giant Money Pit That Is Microsoft’s Online Operations

JAY YAROW OCT. 24, 2013, 5:10 PM 2,525 7

Take a long look at this chart of Microsoft’s online losses, it’s the last time you’re going to see it. Microsoft is changing how it reports its earnings, killing the traditional reporting lines that revealed losses in the online division. In the future, online losses will be buried in “Commercial Other,” so we won’t see how much money Microsoft is losing on Bing, and MSN. Microsoft reported the Online losses one last time, as part of a transition to the new reporting system. For the record, since the March quarter of 2006, Microsoft has lost $12.36 billion trying to beat Google.

chart-of-the-day-microsoft-online-losses