Large retail shops change consumers’ shopping pattern; E-Mart, Korea’s largest discount store chain, said its shop in Chang-dong located in the north part of Seoul, will mark its 20th anniversary

Large retail shops change consumers’ shopping pattern

Sohn Dong-woo, Lee Yu-jin

2013.11.08 16:35:00

E-Mart, Korea’s largest discount store chain, said Friday its shop in Chang-dong located in the north part of Seoul, will mark its 20th anniversary next Tuesday.
The 20-year-old retail shop and the advent of followers grew rapidly for a short period, changing the nation’s retail industry and consumers’ shopping practices completely. Large retail shops take up a significant part of Korea’s retail industry. Their market value reaches 38.8 trillion won ($36.44 billion), larger than that of department stores with 29.1 trillion won. The number of such shops amount to 470 in Korea and 627, including those outside Korea.  Read more of this post

122 Korean SMBs to go under restructuring

122 SMBs to go under restructuring

Lee Jin-myung

2013.11.08 15:56:54

South Korea’s 112 small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs) will face restructuring. The Financial Supervisory Service (FSS) along with creditor banks conducted credit risk assessment of 1,502 SMBs with weaker financials Friday and thereby rated 54 companies as grade C, a rating reserved for companies that need workout, and 58 companies as grade D, a rating for those that need to go under court receivership or shut down business. The total number of SMBs subject to restructuring was up 15.5 percent from a year ago to the highest level unseen since 2010.  Read more of this post

Why Has Japan’s Massive Government Debt Not Wreaked Havoc (Yet)?

Why Has Japan’s Massive Government Debt Not Wreaked Havoc (Yet)?

Charles Y. HoriokaTakaaki NomotoAkiko Terada-Hagiwara

NBER Working Paper No. 19596
Issued in October 2013
In this paper, we present data on trends over time in government debt financing in Japan since 2010 with emphasis on the importance of foreign holders and speculate about the determinants of those trends. We find that Japanese government securities were held primarily by domestic holders until recently because robust domestic saving (combined with strong home bias) made it possible for domestic investors to absorb most of the government debt but that foreign holdings of Japanese government securities have increased sharply in recent years, especially in the case of short-term government securities. We show that trends in foreign holdings of Japanese government securities can be explained by conventional economic factors such returns and risks and that the recent surge in foreign holdings of short-term Japanese government securities is attributable to foreign investors in search of a safe haven for their funds in the face of the Global Financial Crisis of 2008-09 precipitated by the Lehman crisis. Our analysis suggests that the surge in foreign holdings of Japanese government securities will subside (in fact, it already has), and this, combined with the projected decline in domestic saving (especially household saving) caused by population aging, will create increasing pressures for fiscal adjustment to reduce her massive government debt. Thus, Japan’s massive government debt has not resulted in high economic costs in the past because of robust domestic saving and a temporary inflow of foreign capital caused by the Global Financial Crisis, but it may have substantial costs in the future as both of these factors become less applicable unless the government debt can be brought under control.

Savings tapped as pay falls: ‘Abenomics’ on notice

Savings tapped as pay falls: ‘Abenomics’ on notice

31% of households lack financial assets

BLOOMBERG

NOV 8, 2013

The share of Japanese households with no financial assets rose to a record high as falling incomes forced people to dig into their savings, highlighting the potential for widening disparities under “Abenomics.” The proportion reached 31 percent, according to a Bank of Japan survey released Thursday in, up from 26 percent a year earlier and the highest since the poll began in 1963. The BOJ surveyed 8,000 households of two or more people aged 20 years or older from June 14 though July 23. Read more of this post

Indonesian finance minister Basri Sees Rupiah Back to 2009 Levels After QE Taper

Basri Sees Rupiah Back to 2009 Levels After QE Taper

By Bloomberg on 5:10 pm November 8, 2013.

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Chatib Basri said the rupiah and bond yields will return to levels seen in 2009 after the Federal Reserve cuts stimulus that has buoyed emerging-market assets. (GA Photo/Defrizal)

Indonesia’s rupiah and bond yields will return to levels seen in 2009 after the Federal Reserve cuts stimulus that has buoyed emerging-market assets, Finance Minister Chatib Basri said. The currency traded at an average of 10,396 per dollar in 2009, compared with 11,408 as of 1:15 p.m. in Jakarta, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. Read more of this post

How the Holes in Indonesia’s Safety Nets Hamper Poverty Reduction

How the Holes in Indonesia’s Safety Nets Hamper Poverty Reduction

By IRIN News on 4:24 pm November 8, 2013.

Indonesia’s economy grew by roughly 6 percent in 2013, but its poverty reduction has nearly stalled with almost half the population living in poverty — and experts struggling to identify and serve the neediest among them. “It’s true that [social] targeting is not easy and it’s complicated,” Nina Sardjunani, the Indonesian government’s deputy development planning minister, told IRIN. Read more of this post

Intuitive Surgical Robot Incident Reports Double in Year

Intuitive Surgical Robot Incident Reports Double in Year

The number of adverse incident reports involving Intuitive Surgical Inc.’s (ISRG) robots more than doubled this year, according to U.S. regulators who also released a physician survey showing no consistent training exists for the complex machines. The Food and Drug Administration received 3,697 adverse reports through Nov. 3, compared with 1,595 in 2012. The surge, though, doesn’t necessarily mean the rate has changed, said William Maisel, with the FDA’s device unit. Rising robot use and recent media reports and recalls may have spurred public attention, he said. The reports, from the company and medical professionals, are largely unverified by the agency. Read more of this post

Ms Lei Jufang, billionaire founder of Shenzhen-listed Cheezheng has ridden the stunning success of her traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) firm

LEI JUFANG: Tycoon’s Traditional Recipe For Riches

Written by Andrew Vanburen (China Correspondent)

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Saturday, 09 November 2013 09:01Cheezheng Tibetan Medicine Chairperson Ms. Lei Jufang has a net worth of over one billion usd.Photos: imageschina, richonline
MS. LEI JUFANG, chairperson of Shenzhen-listed Cheezheng, has ridden the stunning success of her traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) firm to the tune of a net worth of over one billion usd.
Born in 1955 in the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu, one of the PRC’s poorest, Ms. Lei nevertheless has gradually risen to become one of the country’s wealthiest women. Gansu Province is renowned as a source for wild medicinal herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine – a geographic factor which influenced the billionaire’s business direction later in life. In 1995, she founded Cheezheng Tibetan Medicine (SZA: 002287) in Linzhi, Tibet and currently serves as the TCM firm’s chairperson, owning 81% of its issued shares. Read more of this post

Luxury brands follow wealthy customers

November 8, 2013 9:04 pm

Luxury brands follow wealthy customers

By Rachel Sanderson

Call it the year of transition. A slowing in the Chinese luxury goods market, returning confidence among US buyers, the growing power of tourist shoppers and a relentless incursion from the digital world – from online shopping to smart watches – are all shaking up the industry of watches and jewellery. The cue for change came from Richemont, the industry’s bellwether. Johann Rupert, its billionaire tycoon owner, chose this year to take a sabbatical after a quarter of a century running the group whose other brands include Cartier and Van Cleef & Arpels. Read more of this post

Lululemon’s failure to communicate; Without Christine Day as the face of the company, Lululemon will struggle to control Wilson and his unpredictable mouth from smearing its image. Better education will decrease product complaints, but a brand associated with a polarizing, unfiltered leader can quickly lose its appeal

Lululemon’s failure to communicate

By Colleen Leahey, Reporter November 8, 2013: 4:46 PM ET

With a wildcard founder and complex offerings, the company struggles to win over the crop of haters that arose after last spring’s product recall. FORTUNE — Thursday, Lululemon (LULU) founder and chairman Chip Wilson blamed his company’s customers for the retailer’s product issues. “Quite frankly some women’s bodies just actually don’t work for it,” he said on Bloomberg TV, referring to sheerness and pilling in Lululemon’s famed yoga pants. Read more of this post

Alibaba Builds a ‘Black Friday’ for China; It’s the Biggest Online Shopping Day in the World. And It’s in China, Not the U.S. Taobao and Tmall account for more than half of all parcel deliveries in China

Alibaba Builds a ‘Black Friday’ for China

It’s the Biggest Online Shopping Day in the World. And It’s in China, Not the U.S.

JURO OSAWA

Updated Nov. 8, 2013 7:13 p.m. ET

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In the U.S., it takes Thanksgiving, plus the approach of the year-end holidays, to trigger the biggest shopping weekend of the year. In China, all it takes is a sale by Alibaba. Every Nov. 11, millions of Chinese shoppers flock to the e-commerce websites operated by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. They spend more on those sites during that one day of discounts than Americans do on all online retailers on Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined. Read more of this post

Shanghai raised the minimum down payment required for buyers of a second home to 70 percent from 60 percent as house prices in China’s financial hub surge

Shanghai Raises Home Down-Payment Requirement as Prices Jump

Shanghai raised the minimum down payment required for buyers of a second home to 70 percent from 60 percent as house prices in China’s financial hub surge. Counties and municipal departments should take measures to ensure the city’s annual price-control target is met, according to a statement on the local housing bureau’s website. The city also tightened the qualifications required for non-local home buyers and will increase residential land supplies, according to the statement. Read more of this post

History Suggests China Plenum Reforms Will Be Limited

History Suggests China Plenum Reforms Will Be Limited

By Bill Powell on 4:04 pm November 8, 2013.

Shanghai. If history is any guide, the next wave of Chinese reform is likely to be smaller and slower than before. As President Xi Jinping and other Communist Party leaders gather at the weekend for a landmark conclave, foreign investors hoping that wide-ranging reforms will follow should consider that previous such meetings have shown a pattern of diminishing returns. Read more of this post

Chinese Industrialization and its Discontents

Chinese Industrialization and its Discontents

BARRY EICHENGREEN

NOV 8, 2013

TOKYO – As the Third Plenum of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party convenes in Beijing, China stands at a crossroads. Its recent growth record is stupendous; no country in history can match it. But China’s economic imbalances are also stupendous. The country has sustained its output growth by investing fully one-half of GDP, though no country can productively invest more than a third of national income for an extended period. Household consumption accounts for only one-third of GDP, compared to two-thirds in a normal economy. Read more of this post

Chinese Attacks Ignite Terrorism Debate; Tiananmen Square, Central China Violence Provoke Different Set of Reactions; “The government ought to contemplate the source of these conflicts. That’s more important than arresting and executing

Chinese Attacks Ignite Terrorism Debate

Tiananmen Square, Central China Violence Provoke Different Set of Reactions

JOSH CHIN

Nov. 8, 2013 3:32 p.m. ET

BEIJING—Two deadly attacks in China in the weeks leading up to a much-anticipated leadership meeting have ignited debate around the thorny question of what China considers to be terrorism. State media said the culprit in the latest attack, in which homemade explosives detonated outside a Communist Party building in central China, was “dissatisfied with society.” Meanwhile, officials and state media have said a suicide attack last week at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square was the work of terrorists. Read more of this post

China Can’t Be a Global Innovation Leader Unless It Does These Three Things

China Can’t Be a Global Innovation Leader Unless It Does These Three Things

by Anil Gupta and Haiyan Wang  |   1:00 PM November 8, 2013

When the Chinese Communist Party’s central committee wraps up the Third Plenum on November 12, 2014, a shift from efficiency to innovation will likely be one of the major planks in its vision for China.  The government’s imperatives are clear: It wants to double incomes by 2020 in the face of a declining population of working-age; an appreciating currency, and, relative to other emerging economies, high and rising wages.  Promoting innovation is also one of the eight key reform priorities in the “383” plan being circulated by the State Council’s Development Research Center. Read more of this post

Can Malaysian-listed China firms buck their bearish trend? When an entire group of stocks are under water that the investors will wonder about the issues dragging their investments down.

Updated: Saturday November 9, 2013 MYT 7:04:24 AM

Can China firms buck their bearish trend?

BY GURMEET KAUR AND YVONNE TAN

china trading

WHEN a stock trades below its initial public offering (IPO) price, investors may shrug it off and say the fault lies with the company or its valuations. It is when an entire group of stocks are under water that the investors will wonder about the issues dragging their investments down. That, in a nutshell is the story of China companies listed on Bursa Malaysia. All stocks except XiDeLang Holdings Ltd (XDL) are trading below their IPO price and questions are plentiful when one tries to understand why that is the case. Read more of this post

A Chinese City Seeks to Turn Migrants Into Urbanites; Tongling’s Recipe for Growth: Giving Rural Workers Urban Benefits

A Chinese City Seeks to Turn Migrants Into Urbanites

Tongling’s Recipe for Growth: Giving Rural Workers Urban Benefits

BOB DAVIS

Nov. 8, 2013 7:01 p.m. ET

TONGLING, China—Tongling, a copper-mining center since the Ming dynasty, is running low on ore. The Yangtze River city wants to turn itself into a manufacturing center, but it lacks a critical ingredient: a steady supply of factory workers. So it is doing what many places in China are unwilling to do. It is inviting migrants and their families to settle, giving them the same rights to education, health care and housing as locals, and even letting émigrés from China’s villages retain their exemption from China’s notorious one-child policy, so they can have a second child. Read more of this post

Pension lessons from Down Under

November 8, 2013 7:11 pm

Pension lessons from Down Under

By Josephine Cumbo

Australia may pack less punch on cricket pitches and rugby fields these days, but when it comes to pensions, Aussies still reign supreme. Their national “superannuation” scheme, known locally as “super”, is the envy of the world. As many countries, including the UK, beginto tackle their pension savings crisis, Australia can quite comfortably boast that nearly 12m of its 23m citizens have a workplace pension pot, and are on course for a decent retirement. Read more of this post

UN Says Meth Boom Sweeping Asia

UN Says Meth Boom Sweeping Asia

By Agence France-Presse on 1:48 pm November 8, 2013.
Bangkok. The United Nations on Friday sounded the alarm over record seizures of methamphetamine across much of Asia as the illegal drug floods streets and clubs. Last year 227 million methamphetamine pills were seized in East and Southeast Asia — up 59 percent from the year before and a more than seven-fold increase compared with 2008, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) said. Read more of this post

A Beer by the Sensor; An Indiana start-up showcased technology this week meant to help bars and restaurants — and maybe even patrons — keep track of the beer remaining in a keg

NOVEMBER 8, 2013, 2:38 PM

A Beer by the Sensor

By MICHAEL ROSTON

07bits-beertech-articleInline-v2

SteadyServ, an Indiana-based company, is a recent entrant in the technology industry’s desire to serve up what we want to drink whenever we want to drink it. The much-hyped Internet of Things may someday arrive as promised. While we wait, maybe we should grab a pint of good beer? That is where new technology from an Indiana start-up firm could come in handy. The company, SteadyServ Technologies, showcased technology this week to help bars and restaurants — and maybe even patrons — keep track of the beer remaining in a keg. Read more of this post

DuPont, the most valuable U.S. chemical company, is collaborating with Deere to sell software intended to boost crop yields, a move that may challenge Monsanto as it expands into the same area

DuPont Joins Deere on Software in Challenge to Monsanto

DuPont Co. (DD), the most valuable U.S. chemical company, is collaborating with Deere & Co. (DE) to sell software intended to boost crop yields, a move that may challenge Monsanto Co. (MON) as it expands into the same area. DuPont’s Pioneer seed unit will combine its Field360 software with Wireless Data Transfer technology from Deere, the world’s largest maker of agricultural equipment. Uploading data from the field as it’s collected can help growers make better decisions on seeds, fertilizer and other inputs, Wilmington, Delaware-based DuPont said today in a statement. Read more of this post

HTC can learn from Xiaomi’s success in mobile internet era

HTC can learn from Xiaomi’s success in mobile internet era

Su Yi-yi and Staff Reporter

2013-11-09

Chinese budget smartphone maker Xiaomi, which has been in business for just over three years, has outpaced Taiwan’s HTC to take the fifth spot in China’s smartphone market behind Samsung, Apple, Nokia and Huawei. HTC’s market value has declined by at least 80% since 2011 and the company must now assess how best to project its unique qualities amid global competition. HTC must also find ways to adapt to the current trends of the global mobile internet market and how it can interact with younger and trendier consumer groups. Read more of this post

Is the new mobile ecommerce experience all about avatars and auction rooms?

Is the new mobile ecommerce experience all about avatars and auction rooms?

BY CARMEL DEAMICIS 
ON NOVEMBER 8, 2013

When you enter Tophatter‘s site or mobile app, it looks like a scene from a 90s simulator game. A room of (mostly) female avatars face forward, their cartoon-y heads attentively watching an auction on stage. One avatar at the front hops up and down next to the robotic auctioneer, shouting descriptions about their item to the crowd until the highest bidder is chosen. Read more of this post

Microsoft Is Finally Taking Aim At The Cable Box

Microsoft Is Finally Taking Aim At The Cable Box

Posted 15 hours ago by John Biggs

Game consoles are in an enviable position: right under millions of televisions. The popular line is that the big three – NintendoMicrosoft, and Sony – are dinosaurs choking on the smoke of a red hot mobile gaming meteor. That’s not true. Nintendo has already sold 3.91 million units as of September 2013 and the Xbox 360 sold 79 million. That’s a lot of electronics under a lot of TVs. Read more of this post

Priceline CEO Seeks Growth After Boyd’s ‘Hundred Bagger’

Priceline CEO Seeks Growth After Boyd’s ‘Hundred Bagger’

Darren Huston has a tall task at Priceline.com Inc. (PCLN), succeeding the guy who generated a 100-fold stock surge over the past 11 years, racing the company past Expedia Inc. (EXPE) Huston, 47, was named chief executive officer yesterday of the Norwalk, Connecticut-based company, replacing Jeffery Boyd, who is staying on as chairman. Huston, a former Microsoft executive, joined Priceline in 2011 as head of Booking.com, the European unit that’s fueled the company’s expansion. Read more of this post

Ubiquitous Across Globe, Cellphones Have Become Tool for Doing Good

November 8, 2013

Ubiquitous Across Globe, Cellphones Have Become Tool for Doing Good

By ESHA CHHABRA

CELL-popup

The cellphone has become more of a tool and less of a toy, especially among the poor, and those trying to help them, in emerging markets. It helps deliver, via text message, water, energy, financial services, health care and even education. The World Health Organization estimates that more than 700 million people do not have access to clean drinking water and over 2.5 billion have no access to toilets. Yet according to the International Telecommunications Union, 96 percent of the world is connected via cellphone — which is why it has become a means of doing good. Read more of this post

Meet Context, The New Photo Texting App All The Cool Kids Are Using

Meet Context, The New Photo Texting App All The Cool Kids Are Using

Posted yesterday by Ryan Lawler

context1

There are a number of apps out there seeking to displace SMS as the primary mode of communications between mobile users — there’s MessageMe, Line, WeChat, WhatsApp and others. And, of course, there’s Snapchat, which has built a big, booming following around photo messaging. Well, there’s another new messaging app out there called Context, which seeks to streamline the way users communicate what’s going on around them through that it calls “Simple, Fun Photo Texting.” Read more of this post

Thai power producers rush into solar to ride on generous government incentives

Updated: Friday November 8, 2013 MYT 2:19:22 PM

Thai power producers rush into solar

BANGKOK: Riding on generous government incentives, Thailand’s energy firms are deepening a push into solar power to bolster their profits over the next few years and perk up lacklustre shares. Utility Electricity Generating Pcl (EGCO) and refiner Bangchak Petroleum Pcl are among a dozen listed Thai companies investing as much as US$2bil combined in solar projects over the next five years to provide power to South-East Asia’s second-largest economy. Read more of this post

How to spot a bubble about to burst; The ‘adjustment phase’ of QE could be painful

November 8, 2013 6:38 pm

How to spot a bubble about to burst

By Merryn Somerset Webb

The ‘adjustment phase’ of QE could be painful

How do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly escalated asset values? That, as my colleague Jonathan Eley is keen to remind us, is the question that Alan Greenspan was rhetorically asking in his famous December 1996 speech on stock markets. He wasn’t saying he necessarily saw the characteristics of a bubble, just wondering how we would all recognise them if we saw them. Read more of this post

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