Ghost cities springing up near China’s first-tier cities

Ghost cities springing up near China’s first-tier cities

Kao Hang and Staff Reporter

2013-10-22

China’s property prices have continued to boom, but the phenomenon of the so-called ghost cities, a result of high vacancy rates, has been worsening. In the past, the ghost cities were mainly third-tier or fourth-tier cities, but recently first-tier cities have also seen the rise of this phenomenon, with Shenzhen’s neighboring Daya Bay area going into an apparent state of hibernation, ringing alarm bells in relation to the abnormal development of the mainland property market, our sister paper Want Daily reports. Read more of this post

FTZ ‘Negative List’ Positively Disappoints Analysts; It’s too long, critics say, and worse yet a Shanghai official admits it is to some extent a copy of an existing catalog on foreign investment

10.21.2013 17:17

FTZ ‘Negative List’ Positively Disappoints Analysts

It’s too long, critics say, and worse yet a Shanghai official admits it is to some extent a copy of an existing catalog on foreign investment

By staff reporter Yu Hairong

(Beijing) – A closer examination of the Shanghai Free Trade Zone (FTZ) “negative list” in comparison with the policy that guides foreign investment elsewhere in the country has left many observers disappointed. Supposedly a big step toward greater openness, the list has aroused criticism for containing too many items – 190 special regulatory measures for roughly 17.8 percent of all industries in the country. Read more of this post

China: An Increasingly Risky Bet for Drug Makers

October 21, 2013, 7:34 PM

China: An Increasingly Risky Bet for Drug Makers

For the world’s largest pharmaceutical companies, China is an increasingly critical, yet risky bet. Multinational drug companies expect sales from China to continue to grow quickly, as they did last year, accounting for 3.8% of total sales, up from 3% in 2011, according to a new report from consultancy McKinsey & Co. Meanwhile, nearly half of the 50 senior pharmaceutical industry executives surveyed said that they expect China to account for over 10% of their global sales by 2020, when China is projected to become the world’s second-largest pharmaceutical market. Sales of 85 brands exceeded $50 million in China last year, with 11 surpassing $200 million, according to the study. Read more of this post

Asia, Where Mobile Games Flowered, Extends Its Reach

October 21, 2013

Asia, Where Mobile Games Flowered, Extends Its Reach

By ERIC PFANNER

TOKYO — When SoftBank, the Japanese telecommunications provider, announced last week that it had agreed to buy a 51 percent stake in a Finnish mobile game company for $1.5 billion, many people in both industries reacted with disbelief. Suddenly Supercell, a three-year-old game developer in Helsinki with only 100 or so employees and two successful games, was worth $3 billion. The investment in Supercell, the developer of Hay Day and Clash of Clans, reflects the growing global ambitions of Asian companies like SoftBank in mobile gaming, the fastest-growing part of the game business. Read more of this post

Is Smart Wi-Fi Router the Next Big Thing in China?

Is Smart Wi-Fi Router the Next Big Thing in China?

By Tracey Xiang on October 12, 2013

Smart Wi-Fi router HiWiFi confirmed that it had risen some ten million dollars in Series A funding from Innovation Works and GGV Capital. It is rumored that famous Chinese angel investors, Zhou Hongyi and Lei Jun, and Baidu showed interest in it too. The gadget caught our eye because of a built-in app that helps users in mainland China visit web services inaccessible here. More than 20 thousand pieces have reportedly been sold since July launch.

Read more of this post

Omnichannel Alchemy: Turning Online Grocery Sales to Gold

Omnichannel Alchemy: Turning Online Grocery Sales to Gold

by Chris Biggs and Julian Suhren

OCTOBER 02, 2013

Ask most industry executives about the prospects for online grocery shopping, and you’ll encounter hesitancy, if not skepticism. Ask consumers—especially younger, more affluent consumers and families—and they’ll tell you that they are excited by the idea. They wonder why the industry has been slow to deliver. Online grocery shopping has yet to take off in most countries for many reasons—cost, logistical complexity, and the prospects for profitability key among them. There’s also the fact that many of the business’s early pioneers went bust. We believe that the prevailing doubtful view is about to hit its expiration date. We expect the global online grocery market to reach $100 billion by 2018. (See Exhibit 1.) Based onnew consumer research in eight countries1, as well as on our experience with leading companies around the world, we also believe that establishing profitable online grocery operations is not only possible, it is essential for those that want to continue to grow and maintain market leadership. Early movers will seize a significant competitive advantage over those that come late to the game.

Omnichannel-Alchemy-ex1_large_tcm80-145454 Omnichannel-Alchemy-ex2-NEW_large_tcm80-145457 Omnichannel-Alchemy-ex3_large_tcm80-145460 Omnichannel-Alchemy-ex4_large_tcm80-145463 Omnichannel-Alchemy-ex5_large_tcm80-145466 Read more of this post

Smartwatches Pose 1970s-Style Threat to Swiss Industry

Smartwatches Pose 1970s-Style Threat to Swiss Industry

In the 1970s, Switzerland’s watchmakers were almost put out of business when they underestimated the importance of the quartz watch. Though the industry recovered and is even prospering, today it faces a new technological challenge from “smartwatches” such as Samsung Electronics Co. (005930)’s $299 Galaxy Gear. As with quartz four decades ago, the devices are being met with a shrug. According to a survey by consultants Deloitte, two-thirds of executives in the Swiss industry say smartwatches pose no threat. Read more of this post

With Amazon’s Kindle Worlds, fanfiction authors can now earn money from their formerly not-for-profit enterprise

Updated: Thursday October 17, 2013 MYT 11:58:23 AM

Playing in other worlds

BY ELIZABETH TAI

With Amazon’s Kindle Worlds, fanfiction authors can now earn money from their formerly not-for-profit enterprise.

I CONFESS: I’m an occasional reader of the weird, wacky and wonderful of fanfiction where people write stories based on their favourite TV shows or books. Some do it so well that it might’ve been another episode of the series. Others go in directions that would probably be unauthorised by right holders: relationship pairings that would raise eyebrows, crossovers with other TV shows, gender swaps, male pregnancies… Read more of this post

With gargantuan revenue, Amazon’s recent profits have been slim to nonexistent. In its quest to become the world’s bazaar, are earnings beside the point?

October 21, 2013

Sales Are Colossal, Shares Are Soaring. All Amazon.com Is Missing Is a Profit.

By DAVID STREITFELD

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SAN FRANCISCO — Nearly every day, Amazon announces a new venture. It just bought an online education company and introduced a payment mechanism for Internet retailers that competes with PayPal. It started selling wine for the first time in New York, updated its line of tablets, gave the go-ahead to three new comedy pilots and began a design competition for its fashion division. It is setting up mini-warehouses inside suppliers like Procter & Gamble to ship goods faster. But one thing it will not be announcing this month: a significant profit. Who cares? Amazon lost money in 2012, and analysts are anticipating another loss when the company releases its third-quarter results on Thursday. Yet the stock is at a record high. Read more of this post

Twitter arrives on TV in India with Airtel deal

Twitter arrives on TV in India with Airtel deal

October 21, 2013

by Pankaj Maru

Technology and platform convergence is the next big thing that businesses are looking for – whether it be mobile and internet or internet and TV. It’s all about a revenue stream for the future. Airtel Digital TV, an arm of Indian telco Bharti Airtel, revealed today that it has integrated Twitter with its digital TV offerings for the first time. With this new form of convergence, users can actually tweet while watching TV and can view tweets related to their TV shows as well. It launches tomorrow at no extra charge to subscribers. Read more of this post

Rice losses at ‘Bt200 bn a year’

Rice losses at ‘Bt200 bn a year’

The Nation October 22, 2013 1:00 am

The Finance Ministry yesterday put the annual losses from the government’s controversial rice-pledging scheme in the vicinity of Bt200 billion after wrapping up its audit.
Supa Piyajitti, deputy permanent secretary and chairwoman of the audit team, did not disclose the exact figure from the audit report signed by her former boss Areepong Bhoocha-oom. Areepong was transferred from permanent secretary of the ministry to the post of secretary-general of the Public Sector Development Commission, reportedly for his inability to control Finance Ministry officials who repeatedly expressed concerns over the scheme’s impact on the national fiscal position. Read more of this post

China Metal Recycler, accused of fraudulent accounting, in wind-up fight; Atlantis Investment Management Liu Yang, dubbed “China’s female Buffett”, sold 4.42m shares in Aug off-market at HK$1, a discount of 90%

Recycler steels in wind-up fight
Gary Chau
Tuesday, October 22, 2013
China Metal Recycling (0773) chairman Chun Chi-wai said yesterday a petition by the Securities and Futures Commission to liquidate his company is not in the interests of shareholders. It was Chun’s first public statement since his arrest in July for alleged fraudulent accounting. Outside the High Court, he said the liquidation is neither fair nor appropriate and claimed he did nothing illegal. The SFC probe has already affected the Guangzhou-based recycler’s operations and caused losses, he said. Read more of this post

With psy and currency swaps S. Korea grabs global influence

Updated: Tuesday October 22, 2013 MYT 7:12:59 AM

With psy and currency swaps S. Korea grabs global influence

SEOUL: From rapper Psy to overseas financial aid, an economically and culturally confidentSouth Korea appears to be taking on bigger neighbours Japan and China for the hearts and minds of the rest of Asia and beyond.Its most recent effort to leverage brand “Korea” – three currency swap deals worth more than $20 billion that were announced this month. South Korea had the seventh largest currency reserves in the world at the end of August, worth $331.1 billion, according to the Bank of Korea. It can easily afford to match cultural diplomacy with economic muscle as it competes with Japan and China for influence. Read more of this post

Market attention has been focused on Dongbu Group in recent weeks, based on fears that the group is dogged with an impending liquidity shortage like the ailing Tongyang Group

2013-10-21 17:22

Dongbu’s health still in question

By Kim Rahn

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Market attention has been focused on Dongbu Group in recent weeks, based on fears that the group is dogged with an impending liquidity shortage like the ailing Tongyang Group. Despite the face saving denial by its chief, analysts remain skeptical of the group’s financial strength. This recent speculation has been influenced by the failure of some of Tongyang’s affiliates to pay maturing debts and filing for court receivership at the end of last month. Read more of this post

How should we promote Korea to the outside world? Going beyond K-pop and tradition

Going beyond K-pop and tradition

Oct 22,2013

by Daniel Tudor

How should we promote Korea to the outside world?
This is a question that comes up again and again in the media and in public life. It reared its head again recently with a rather bizarre “romantic mushrooms” campaign for Korean food in the United States. So much time and money is spent on promoting Korea and Korean culture that it constantly amazes me how counter-productive such campaigns are.
Since I am a foreigner (yawn), I expect some readers will consider this an “attack” on Korea, or at least, a “critical” article. Please do not take it that way. I am simply a person who fell in love with Korea as a tourist, and decided to stay. I want to promote Korea, so others can experience the same thing. This is why I want to openly offer my own suggestions on how Korea should and should not promote itself.  Read more of this post

Abenomics might eat itself, a Pettis production

Abenomics might eat itself, a Pettis production

David Keohane

| Oct 21 12:28 | 9 comments | Share

It may seem like an odd time to stress out about Japan running an overly aggressive current account surplus, which might in turn push Abenomics off the tracks, but since the fears over a deficit have been so well covered… This is from Michael Pettis, who argues that one of the automatic, if not always intended consequences of Abenomics is to really force up Japan’s current account surplus, and it’s not clear the world will be ready or able to absorb it. In his defense he’s looking a few years, rather than quarters, out: What matters, I think, is that in order to generate growth Tokyo is planning to implement polices aimed at raising both inflation and real GDP, and these policies are likely to force up the national savings rate relative to investment. Read more of this post

Indonesia’s anti-corruption website is now getting 1,000 crowdsourced reports every day

Indonesia’s anti-corruption website is now getting 1,000 crowdsourced reports every day

October 21, 2013

by Enricko Lukman

lapor-ads

While a lot of people are skeptical that the Indonesian government has what it takes to build a good tech product, this is one of those cases where the government proves its skeptics wrong. It’s been six months since we discussed Indonesia’s anti-corruption weapon Lapor. The team behind Lapor, the President’s Delivery Unit of Development Monitoring and Oversight (UKP4), tells Tech in Asia that the site is proving popular. Lapor allows citizens to report on the wrongdoings of Indonesia’s government via a website, mobile app, or SMS. It could range from bribery by traffic officers to massive corruption by politicians. Read more of this post

Stiletto Networks Grow as Women Rise on Boards: Corporate India

Stiletto Networks Grow as Women Rise on Boards: Corporate India

Egon Zehnder International, an executive search firm, is getting three times as many calls as last year at its Mumbai office from Indian companies seeking women for board positions, spurred by a new law. Enacted in August by India’s parliament, the Companies Act requires every listed company to have at least one female director within a year, while others reporting minimum revenue of 3 billion rupees ($49 million) have three years to comply. The legislation and a scramble for qualified candidates are spawning girls-only networking forums through which they mentor and recommend each other, much like their Wall Street peers. Read more of this post

A legal dispute in Myanmar Brewery JV between F&N Singapore and its military-linked local partner is emerging as a crucial test for investment in the country as it opens up after decades of dictatorship

October 22, 2013 5:19 am

Trouble brewing in Myanmar

By Michael Peel in Yangon

A legal dispute in Myanmar between one of southeast Asia’s leading conglomerates and its military-linked local partner is emerging as a crucial test for investment in the country as it opens up after decades of dictatorship. Union of Myanmar Economic Holdings is battling Singapore-based Fraser & Neave, now owned by Thailand’s richest man, over the future of their Myanmar Brewery joint venture, in a case whose impact will felt by other multinationals looking to go into business with local partners. Read more of this post

The TV Industry is Consolidating Like it’s 1999

October 21, 2013, 5:01 PM

The TV Industry is Consolidating Like it’s 1999

KEACH HAGEY

The use of so-called “sidecar” agreements to let TV station owners get around FCC media ownership rules has been going on for two decades. But, as the WSJ reports today, the role of these agreements in the rapid consolidation of the TV industry in the last year and a half has begun ringing alarm bells in Washington. Just how fast is the TV station business consolidating? The anti-media consolidation group Free Press has an exhaustive report out today painting a detailed picture. The group writes that 2013 is on track to be the biggest year for broadcast television consolidation since 1999, with 211 full-power stations changing hands in the first eight months of this year. Read more of this post

Nokia’s diaspora starts again; The group’s decline has generated a new wave of entrepreneurship in its native Finland

October 21, 2013 3:38 pm

Nokia’s diaspora starts again

By Richard Milne in Helsinki

Harri Wallenius pulls out a meticulous dossier of newspaper clippings from a local Finnish newspaper. All document the €5.4bn sale of Nokia’s mobile phone business toMicrosoft. “My first reaction was shock,” he says. But the 53-year-old no longer works at Nokia. After “26 years and eight months”, in his precise engineer’s formulation, he stopped at the end of 2011 and took a redundancy package. Read more of this post

Rough ride in store for EM currencies; Pace of forex reserve drawdowns to rise for vulnerable economies

October 21, 2013 6:04 am

Rough ride in store for EM currencies

By Mark Haefele

Pace of forex reserve drawdowns to rise for vulnerable economies

Recent pressure on emerging market currencies has rightfully made headlines. But the broader issue for emerging markets is that such episodes could easily reoccur, or even get worse, over the next few years. This is because, over the past decade, these economies have increasingly pinned their economic hopes to foreign capital flows. The numbers speak for themselves; portfolio flows to the emerging markets have grown 400 per cent over the past 10 years, compared with nominal GDP growth of 200 per cent. And the same is true of the broader private capital measure, which also includes bank lending and direct investment. This has increased 5.5 times over the same period. Read more of this post

Emerging markets: While the sun shone; Only a few developing nations used their boom years to enact crucial structural reforms. This failure to pursue change has worried investors

October 21, 2013 7:32 pm

Emerging markets: While the sun shone

By Jonathan Wheatley and FT reporters

Only a few developing nations used their boom years to enact crucial structural reforms. This failure to pursue change has worried investors

In December 1994 Fernando Henrique Cardoso, president-elect of Brazil, made a speech before the country’s Senate. He held up a paper on which he had listed his priorities. It was a blueprint for profound reform of Brazil’s fiscal system and of its “economic order”, cutting across public spending, labour law, the judiciary and politics. Two decades later, despite a commodities boom and the rise of a new consumer class in the developing world, it is striking how little of Mr Cardoso’s work has been done. Read more of this post

Bundesbank warns of property bubble

Last updated: October 21, 2013 7:05 pm

German city apartments overvalued, warns Bundesbank

By Michael Steen in Frankfurt and Alice Ross in Baden-Baden

The Bundesbank has warned that apartment prices in Germany’s biggest cities could be overvalued by as much as 20 per cent, stepping up its concern about a real estate boom in the powerhouse of the European economy. The warning will feed into German concern that the European Central Bank’s monetary policy is far too loose for the country. The bank’s main refinancing rate is 0.5 per cent, a record low. Read more of this post

Are Stocks Ahead of Themselves? In his latest quarterly commentary, Wally Weitz writes that his fund shop holds “substantial cash reserves” because stocks aren’t cheap

MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2013

Are Stocks Ahead of Themselves?

By WALLY WEITZ AND BRAD HINTON | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

In his latest quarterly commentary, Wally Weitz writes that his fund shop holds “substantial cash reserves” because stocks aren’t cheap.

(Editor’s Note: Weitz is president and founder of Weitz Funds and Hinton is the firm’s director of research. A longer version of this commentary, which includes the latest quarterly performance figures for Weitz Funds, is available on the company Website.)

Bonds, as we have discussed in recent letters, have probably come to the end of their 30-year bull market. Their yields are artificially depressed (and prices artificially inflated) by Federal Reserve actions. This leaves bond investors in an awkward position. We do not know when interest rates will rise, but absent a serious recession, they will. When this happens, holders of long-term bonds will be “locked into” current low interest rates and will experience poor returns. Read more of this post

The father of G-Shock, Kikuo Ibe, revolutionised the world of digital watches

Shock value

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Monday, Oct 21, 2013

Dylan Tan

The Business Times

KIKUO Ibe, inventor of the iconic Casio range of G-Shock timpieces, looks amused when told his biggest fan in Singapore has about 600 different models and variations of the digital watch in his collection. He has every reason to because there’s really no need to own more than one. The groundbreaking watch he created 30 years ago is virtually indestructible – it’s water-resistant; can resist drops, vibrations and G-forces; and depending on use, has been known to run for as long as 10 years without a battery change. The “G” in its name refers to “gravity” which Mr Ibe wanted to counter when he was creating the break-proof watch. Its design consists of several layers of bumpers which protect the timepiece from damage even when used in the most extreme of conditions. Read more of this post

Poor Sleep Linked to Alzheimer’s in Study of Brain Scans

Poor Sleep Linked to Alzheimer’s in Study of Brain Scans

Sleeping poorly or not getting enough rest may result in a type of brain abnormality associated with Alzheimer’s disease, a study showed. Brain images of adults with an average age of 76 found that those who said they slept less or poorly had increased build-up of beta-amyloid plaques, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer’s, according to research published today in JAMA Neurology. None of those in the study had been diagnosed with the disease. Read more of this post

NASA Says Ban on Chinese Nationals Was a Mistake

Oct 21, 2013

NASA Says Ban on Chinese Nationals Was a Mistake

JACOB GERSHMAN

NASA says it mistakenly banned Chinese scientists from attending a science conference next month, blaming the mix-up on a “misinterpretation of the agency’s policy.” It was reported earlier this month that NASA had decided to exclude Chinese nationals from the Kepler Science Conference taking place at the Ames research center in California next month. The ban provoked outrage from U.S. scientists and an angry letter from a U.S. congressman who said Congress had never authorized such a policy. Read more of this post

More Botox for Baby Boomer Men; In a Tough Job Market, Guys Seek a Little Facial Work

More Botox for Baby Boomer Men

In a Tough Job Market, Guys Seek a Little Facial Work

ELIZABETH O’BRIEN

Oct. 16, 2013 6:19 p.m. ET

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However stealthily, men are having a little work done in increasing numbers these days. Elizabeth O’Brien and dermatologist Dr. David McDaniel explain on Lunch Break. Photo: Shutterstock. David McDaniel, a dermatologist in Virginia Beach, Va., recalls an awkward scene in which a husband bumped into his wife at Dr. McDaniel’s office. Both were there for Botox, but the husband hadn’t told his wife he was getting treated. The man quickly threw his arm around Dr. McDaniel, pretending the doctor was an old buddy he had stopped by to visit. Read more of this post

Lawrence Klein, Nobel Winner for Econometric Models, Dies at 93; Economist Applied Forecasting Models to the Real World

Nobel-Winning Economist Applied Forecasting Models to the Real World

BRENDA CRONIN

Updated Oct. 21, 2013 8:13 p.m. ET

Lawrence R. Klein was the father of modern economic forecasting, which melds economics with statistics in an attempt to predict the future. Mr. Klein, who died Sunday at age 93, was the recipient of the 1980 Nobel Prize in economics for his pioneering work on econometric models. He ushered forecasting from academia into the realm of business, said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist of IHS Global Insight, the firm that ultimately evolved from the groundbreaking forecasting operation founded by Mr. Klein. Read more of this post