Get Ready for the Surge of Cheap Tablets

Get Ready for the Surge of Cheap Tablets

By Peter Burrows October 31, 2013

news_tech45_chart_202inline

Apple (AAPL), Amazon.com (AMZN), and Google (GOOG) have a secret: Cutting-edge tablet parts may be pricey, but pretty good ones are getting cheap. You wouldn’t know it from those companies’ latest tablet launches, all of them well above $200. The new retina display-equipped iPad Mini 2 goes for $399. Phil Schiller, Apple’s vice president for product marketing, says his company isn’t interested in devices priced below $200. “We think there are two markets, the iPad and everything else,” Schiller says. Read more of this post

Facebook Holds Line on Balance of Ads for User Experience

Facebook Holds Line on Balance of Ads for User Experience

By Brian Womack and Sarah Frier  Nov 1, 2013

Facebook Inc. (FB) has decided not to push the limits of how many online advertisements people can tolerate.

The world’s largest social-networking company said this week that it doesn’t plan to increase the balance of ads that it shows to users in their news feeds, the main hub for content on its services. Facebook said ads took up 5 percent of the posts in news feeds in the second quarter and have risen only modestly since then. That amounts to about one ad for every 20 photos, status updates or other posts. Read more of this post

Architect Eli Attia: Google stole my life’s work; Eli Attia has developed an innovative building design and construction concept that Google sees generating $120 billion annually

Architect Eli Attia: Google stole my life’s work

Eli Attia has developed an innovative building design and construction concept that Google sees generating $120 billion annually.

29 October 13 14:46, Moshe Lichtman

“Globes” can reveal the real story behind Google Inc.’s (Nasdaq: GOOG) sophisticated software for the construction industry under development at the company’s secret unit, Google X. “Globes” was the first to report this innovative technology, Google technology could halve construction costs, including how the company spun off Vannevar Technology Inc., founded and run by Google X executives, to further develop the software. Read more of this post

Taiwan food company indicted for fraud

Taiwan food company indicted for fraud

Friday, November 1, 2013 – 09:37

Lauly Li

The China Post/Asia News Network

TAIPEI – The Changhua District Prosecutors’ Office on Thursday indicted Flavor Full Foods (富味鄉食品) Chairman Chen Wen-nan (陳文南) and five other company employees on charges of fraud and violations of the Act Governing Food Sanitation. Prosecutor said that Chen, who doubles as the firm’s manager, and technical director Chen Rui-li (陳瑞禮), research & development centre manager Lin Rui-tsung (林瑞聰), and supplies section chief Liu Chi-wei (劉騏瑋) had allegedly added low-cost sesame oil into the firm’s three so-called 100-per cent pure sesame oil products since December 2009. Read more of this post

For Animation Studio, a Hit or Turkey?; As Hollywood Flocks to Cartoons, the Latest Entry Is Reel FX With ‘Free Birds’

For Animation Studio, a Hit or Turkey?

As Hollywood Flocks to Cartoons, the Latest Entry Is Reel FX With ‘Free Birds’

ERICH SCHWARTZEL

Updated Oct. 31, 2013 8:57 p.m. ET

BN-AF762_REELFX_G_20131031202711

With “Free Birds,” an animated movie about time-traveling turkeys that opens Friday, Reel FX Inc. is entering a mobbed market where results are often feast or famine. The film will be the 10th animated feature out of Hollywood so far this year, and the first original full-length release for Reel FX, even though the Dallas-based animation shop has been around for 20 years. After decades of working on ads, short films and promotions for other features, the studio is finally trying the big leagues. Laying the groundwork for a series of films already planned for the next several years, the studio has recently hired top animation talent behind franchises like “Shrek” and “Kung Fu Panda.” Read more of this post

Japan Stocks Sink to Monthly Worst in Developed Markets

Japan Stocks Sink to Monthly Worst in Developed Markets

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Toshiro Hasegawa  Nov 1, 2013

Japan’s stocks trailed every other developed market last month, with the steepest rally in 40 years petering out on concern a higher sales tax will curb growth while U.S. stimulus bolsters the yen. The Topix index rose less than 0.1 percent in October, the smallest gain among 24 developed markets tracked by Bloomberg. The gauge, which remains the best performer this year with a 39 percent surge, has fallen for four of the past six months. Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Oct. 1 he will proceed with a plan to raise the sales levy in April to 8 percent from 5 percent. Strategists pared forecasts for yen declines as a weaker economic outlook spurred speculation that the Federal Reserve will delay reducing its monthly bond purchases. Read more of this post

The Bank of Korea has warned that the middle class, which constitutes the economic backbone of our society, could possibly collapse due to debt burden

2013-11-01 16:51

Middle class on brink

The Bank of Korea has warned that the middle class, which constitutes the economic backbone of our society, could possibly collapse. According to a report on financial stability released by the central bank on Thursday, people in the middle-income pool with medium credit ratings are increasingly feeling the weight of their debt burden. This is because the financial authorities, concerned over the increasing growth of household debt in 2011 and 2012, encouraged banks and other financial institutions to tighten their lending, which resulted in those with lower credit ratings seeking out loans with higher interest from non-banking private lenders. Aside from the prolonged business slump, a sharp rise in “jeonse’’ ― which requires renters to make a lump-sum deposit for a rental space ― has also amplified the burden on middle-income debtors. Read more of this post

Google to showcase Korean civilisation, culture

Google to showcase Korean civilisation, culture

Thursday, October 31, 2013 – 12:17

Bae Ji-sook

The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

20131031_google_korea

SEOUL – Google, the world’s most-visited website, will dedicate a section to Korean culture including traditional dress, architecture, film and Hangeul. The Internet giant will also support the development of a special programme and space where children of multicultural families and foreigners can learn and understand the unique Korean writing system at the Hangeul Museum, which is slated to open in Seoul in 2014, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and Google announced Wednesday at a joint press briefing. Read more of this post

Japan electronics firms struggle; Sony suffers TV relapse as peers change channel

Updated: Friday November 1, 2013 MYT 8:25:17 AM

Japan electronics firms struggle

TOKYO: Japan’s top electronics firms have reported mixed earnings, with Sony slashing its full-year profit outlook while hard-hit Panasonic turned in strong earnings and boosted its annual forecast. The firms have undergone painful restructuring to stem years of losses as they struggle to keep up in the low-margin television business, while rivals including Apple and South Korea’s Samsung surge ahead in the lucrative smartphone sector. Read more of this post

Abe Aide Honda Advocates 29% Japan Corporate Tax to Stoke Growth

Abe Aide Honda Advocates 29% Japan Corporate Tax to Stoke Growth

Japan should lower its effective corporate tax rate to Germany’s level, around 29 percent, to help bolster growth, according to one of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s top economic aides. “The effective rate should be lowered to the global standard of advanced economies,” Etsuro Honda, 58, said in an interview at the Prime Minister’s office in Tokyo yesterday. A reduction in the rate, estimated by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development at 37 percent, should be included in the reforms Abe plans to help revive the nation’s economy after two decades of stagnation, according to Honda. Read more of this post

Jakarta monorail builder sees on-time completion

Jakarta monorail builder sees on-time completion

Friday, Nov 01, 2013

Jeffery Hutton

The Business Times

JAKARTA – The chief executive officer of Jakarta’s recently revived US$1.6 billion (S$2 billion) monorail transit system says that strong political backing from the central government as well as the municipal government of Governor Joko Widodo will help ensure that the project is completed, as it is now hoped, in 2016, more than a decade after plans for the service were first unveiled. Read more of this post

Multi Commodity Exchange Vice Chairman Jignesh Shah Resigns

Multi Commodity Exchange Vice Chairman Jignesh Shah Resigns

DEBIPRASAD NAYAK and BIMAN MUKHERJI

Oct. 31, 2013 11:18 a.m. ET

MUMBAI—Multi Commodity Exchange of India Ltd. 500790.BY +0.39% ‘s executive vice chairman, Jignesh Shah, Thursday resigned from the bourse that he founded, in the wake of a snowballing payment crisis at another commodity exchange he helped build. Mr. Shah has steered the Multi Commodity Exchange from scratch to one of the world’s largest commodity futures exchange in about a decade. His company, Financial Technologies (India) Ltd. 526881.BY +0.76% , also co-founded the National Spot Exchange and the MCX Stock Exchange. Read more of this post

Jobs on the line as India’s gold sector suffers under government curbs

Jobs on the line as India’s gold sector suffers under government curbs

5:04pm EDT

By Siddesh Mayenkar and A. Ananthalakshmi

MUMBAI/SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Squeezed by government rules meant to curb a surge in gold imports, India’s bullion industry is shrinking, with banks and others opting to redeploy personnel for now but possibly facing big job cuts in coming months. Refiners, jewelry manufacturers and retailers say they could start cutting jobs after Diwali, one of India’s biggest festivals, in the first week of November as festive demand will have sucked supply dry. Some have already begun to do so. Read more of this post

Construction of world’s tallest statue begins in India

Construction of world’s tallest statue begins in India

20110617.105153_stat

Thursday, October 31, 2013 – 17:41

Rajesh Joshi AFP

AHMEDABAD – Indian farmers were urged Thursday to hand over scraps of metal and tools for the world’s tallest statue, as construction began on what promoters hope will be a wonder of the world. The tribute to Sardar Patel, the first home minister of independent India, is set to be twice the size of the Statue of Liberty and four times higher than Christ the Redeemer in Rio de Janeiro.  Read more of this post

Valeant is taking over profitable market niches that its mega-cap competitors ignore

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2013

Valeant Pharmaceuticals: Stock Could Climb 42%

By TERESA RIVAS | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Valeant is taking over profitable market niches that its mega-cap competitors ignore.

Hefty research and development expenses, patent cliffs, and slow growth levels are well-known knocks against big pharmaceutical companies. They’re all problems that Valeant Pharmaceuticals International (ticker: VRX) doesn’t have. Over the past five years CEO Michael Pearson has transformed the specialty pharmaceutical company with a series of savvy acquisitions, diversifying its product mix to lower patent and approval risk, and expanding in fast-growing emerging markets. Yet investors can still buy the stock for about 12 times forward earnings—on par or cheaper than other big drug makers. Read more of this post

A medical matryoshka doll: Three-layered chemical bombs may destroy previously untreatable cancers

A medical matryoshka doll: Three-layered chemical bombs may destroy previously untreatable cancers

Nov 2nd 2013 |From the print edition

TRIPLE-NEGATIVE breast cancer is one of the nastiest there is. It is hard to treat and almost always fatal. One reason treatments tend to fail is that its cells are armed with molecular pumps which remove anti-cancer drugs that manage to get inside them. But Paula Hammond, a chemical engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, thinks she can deal with this defence using triple-layered chemical bombs a few billionths of a metre across. The layers, somewhat reminiscent of a Russian matryoshka doll, first sabotage the pumps and then deliver a poisonous payload when the cells are thus unprotected. Read more of this post

Shell – when size becomes a problem

Shell – when size becomes a problem

October 31, 2013 7:03 pmby Nick Butler

It seems bizarre to say that a company which will generate cash this year of between $40bn and $45bn has a fundamental structural problem. But the latest results from Royal Dutch Shell show just how weak the correlation between size and performance has proved to be. Capital expenditure is so high that even cash at that level may be insufficient to cover spending and dividends. The company looks lost – a lumbering dinosaur in a world where the prizes go to the quick and nimble. I know that is unfair to Shell’s excellent people and world-class technical skills. But to release the potential the Anglo-Dutch company needs to be broken up, allowing entrepreneurial talent to operate free from the cloying bureaucracy created decades ago to save the energy group from dangerously over powerful chief executives. Shell is a commercial enterprise not a nation state. The sooner it is run as such the better for all concerned, including the staff and the long suffering shareholders. Read more of this post

Refining overcapacity hits oil majors

Last updated: October 31, 2013 7:57 pm

Refining overcapacity hits oil majors

By Guy Chazan in London and Ed Crooks in New York

Squeezed margins in the global refining industry are hurting the world’s largest oil companies, as Royal Dutch ShellTotal andExxonMobil all blamed poor quarterly earnings on a decline in their downstream businesses. Results from Shell were the most disappointing Thursday, as its profit dropped almost a third to $4.5bn. ExxonMobil’sprofit fell 18 per cent to $7.87bn, while Total’s declined almost a fifth to €2.72bn.

Read more of this post

Oil Sands Prevail Even if Most Carbon Becomes ‘Unburnable’: Suncor

Oil Sands Prevail Even if Most Carbon Becomes ‘Unburnable’: Suncor

The phrase “unburnable carbon” has gained currency among climate-minded investors, popularized by a U.K.-based nonprofit called the Carbon Tracker Initiative. It refers to the vast fossil-fuel reserves that, if burned, would probably push the global climate into the danger zone. Some investors are concerned that stock-market valuations would plummet if oil companies continue to spend hundreds of billions of dollars on exploration while the world lunges away from oil. Last week, a coalition of 70 large investors representing more than $3 trillion in assets said they had dispatched letters to 45 of the largest fossil-fuel companies and utilities, asking them to explain how they plan to deal with the risk. This morning, Al Gore and Generation Investment Management co-founder David Blood published a paper on the topic. Read more of this post

Tyson Foods Looks to Convenience Stores to Sell More Chicken

Tyson Foods Looks to Convenience Stores to Sell More Chicken

By Shruti Date Singh October 31, 2013

comp_tysonchart_315

Tyson Foods (TSN) is the largest U.S. commodity beef and chicken supplier, with slaughterhouses that process an average of 132,000 head of cattle and 41.4 million chickens weekly. But the company is seeking fortune beyond the supermarket meat department. That’s why it’s rushing to sell piping-hot Buffalo chicken bites near the cash register at many of the gas stations and 149,000 convenience stores across the U.S. Such locales may not be sexy or even particularly appetizing, but their sales are growing while revenue at traditional food stores is falling. The profit margins of prepared foods—even those sold alongside cigarettes and condoms—can be bigger and more stable than those for raw meat. Read more of this post

Starbucks’s Teahouse Ambitions for Its Teavana Chain

Starbucks’s Teahouse Ambitions for Its Teavana Chain

By Venessa Wong and Susan Berfield October 31, 2013

comp_teachart45_202

Starbucks (SBUX), the company that reinvented the modern coffee shop, is turning its attention to another venue: the teahouse. Last year the 19,000-cafe giant acquired Teavana, a chain of mall stores that sell tea and teaware. On Oct. 24, Starbucks opened the first Teavana tea bar on New York’s Upper East Side. It plans to open 1,000 stores in North America within 10 years. “We have confidence and excitement and optimism about … the tea bar concept, not only in the U.S. and North America, but opportunities in other places around the globe,” says Cliff Burrows, Starbucks’s president for the Americas, Europe, Middle East, and Africa, and Teavana. Read more of this post

McDonald’s is taking its coffee war with Starbucks straight to your kitchen

McDonald’s is taking its coffee war with Starbucks straight to your kitchen

By Roberto A. Ferdman @robferdman 11 hours ago

McDonald’s has high hopes that the coffee it farms out at drive-thru windows can thrive in your home. McDonald’s and Kraft Foods are planning to test McCafe-branded coffee at grocery and retail stores across the US starting in 2014, Reuters reports. The companies intend to sell three coffee products in stores next year: packages of whole coffee beans, packages of ground coffee beans, and McCafe “single-cups,” much like the K-cups made popular by Green Mountain Coffee Roasters. Kraft will be in charge of marketing and distributing McDonald’s new coffee offerings. Read more of this post

Electrolux’s Holy Trinity for Hit Products

Electrolux’s Holy Trinity for Hit Products

By Carol Matlack October 31, 2013

What is the most unpleasant thing about vacuuming? Swedish appliance maker Electrolux (ELUXA:SS) has a lot riding on the answer. So two years ago the company’s market researchers spent hours in homes in Australia, France, and Russia, watching and asking questions as people vacuumed, then cataloging the “pain points.” Their findings led Electrolux to develop a bagless vacuum cleaner, the UltraCaptic, that compresses dust into a spongy pellet, eliminating flyaway particles when the machine is emptied. Read more of this post

Avon’s shares plunged more than 20% after the cosmetics company said federal regulators are seeking much larger-than-expected penalties to resolve a long-running bribery probe

Avon Warns of Possibly Onerous SEC Penalty

Makeup Seller Says Government’s Offer in Bribe Probe ‘Not Warranted’

SERENA NG and ANNA PRIOR

Updated Oct. 31, 2013 9:09 p.m. ET

Avon Products Inc. AVP -21.88% ‘s shares plunged more than 20% after the cosmetics company said federal regulators are seeking much larger-than-expected penalties to resolve a long-running bribery probe. The government’s position, disclosed by Avon in a regulatory filing, adds another big weight on a company already struggling to turn around a string of poor results. On Thursday, the door-to-door seller of makeup and consumer products reported a third-quarter loss following a steep drop in sales in the U.S. and China.

Read more of this post

Disney’s Mouse Has Room to Roar; Shares of big media companies have been on a tear the past year as the market power of content owners seems increasingly difficult to dispute

Disney’s Mouse Has Room to Roar

Investment in Its Business Should Start to Pay Off

MIRIAM GOTTFRIED

Oct. 31, 2013 4:02 p.m. ET

MI-BZ429_DISNEY_G_20131031163904

Walt Disney‘s DIS +0.18% kingdom has seemed less than magical in recent months. Shares of big media companies have been on a tear the past year as the market power of content owners seems increasingly difficult to dispute. All trade at, or near, 52-week highs. In that, Disney is no exception. But its shares have underperformed peers, rising 40% over the past year, compared with 62% for 21st Century FoxFOXA +0.43% 63% for ViacomVIAB -0.24% and 83% for CBSCBS +0.89% Read more of this post

Yalies Yellen-Hamada Putting Tobin’s Twist Theory to Work in QE

Yalies Yellen-Hamada Putting Tobin’s Twist Theory to Work in QE

When James Tobin joined President John F. Kennedy’s administration in 1961, the U.S. economy was struggling to recover from its third recession in seven years. As a member of Kennedy’s Council of Economic Advisers, the Yale University professor put his theoretical research on asset markets to work in fashioning a novel strategy — nicknamed Operation Twist — to reduce long-term interest rates. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart to Widows Will Feel U.S. Food Stamp Cuts

Wal-Mart to Widows Will Feel U.S. Food Stamp Cuts

By Derek Wallbank and Alan Bjerga  Nov 1, 2013

Annie Crist says she dreads telling her two daughters that cuts in food-stamp benefits taking effect today means less chicken and fewer hamburgers for dinner. And with deeper cuts looming as part of a possible U.S. budget deal, Crist and other recipients may feel an even greater pinch — along with retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc.Target Corp. and Kroger Co. Read more of this post

Trusts and financial transparency: Trusts, foundations and other “legal arrangements” are a vulnerable flank in the fight against dirty money

Trusts and financial transparency

The weak link

Oct 31st 2013, 16:50 by M.V. | NEW YORK

A FEW years ago Mark Morris, a Zurich-based tax consultant with a conscience, requested a meeting with the European Commission to explain the many devious ways in which tax evaders were using shell companies and other vehicles to conceal their interest in offshore bank accounts. The official he met “seemed uninterested and offered me 20 minutes,” Mr Morris recalls, “but once I started describing all the loopholes his eyes lit up. Two hours later he was still listening, scribbling furiously.” Read more of this post

Public Pension Funds Need to Show the Money

Public Pension Funds Need to Show the Money

By David Crane  Oct 31, 2013

Syndicated columnist David Sirota is on a mission to prevent public pension funds from investing in “alternative assets” such as private-equity and hedge funds. In Salon this month, Sirota criticized these investments as “a transfer of retirement income to Wall Street.” In another column responding to a piece I wrote defending pension-fund investment in such alternatives, he characterized the practice as “con artistry.” Read more of this post

Property hot spots renew easy-money bubble fears

Property hot spots renew easy-money bubble fears

2:36am EDT

By Alan Wheatley and Tim Reid

LONDON/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – From China to Canada and London, fast-rising property markets are haunting the global economy again, five years after the U.S. subprime mortgage bubble burst and triggered the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. For now, house price inflation is neither as high nor as widespread as it was in the middle of last decade. Except in a few cases, the warning signals are flashing amber, not red, and several countries have acted to cool overheating markets. Read more of this post