Paranoia from Soviet Union collapse haunts China’s Communist Party, 22 years on

Paranoia from Soviet Union collapse haunts China’s Communist Party, 22 years on

Monday, 18 November, 2013, 3:44pm

Cary Huang cary.huang@scmp.com

Party cadres made to watch documentaries on failure of Russian communism, by new leader determined not to see history repeat

In the heyday of Sino-Soviet socialist brotherhood in the 1950s, Chinese liked to say that “today’s Soviet Union is tomorrow’s China”, as Beijing faithfully followed Moscow’s every footstep in development. But since the collapse of communist rule and the Soviet Union in early 1990s, the old saying has become an evil omen haunting China’s communist leaders.  Read more of this post

Jim Rogers: Biggest Event of Next 10-20 Years Just Happened in China

Nov 18, 2013

Jim Rogers: Biggest Event of Next 10-20 Years Just Happened in China

By Kevin Kingsbury

The initial reaction from many following this month’s key gathering of communist-party leaders in China was of disappointment as Tuesday’s blueprint left much to be desired. But on Friday came a significantly more in-depth document regarding issues like land reform, easing of the one-child policy and cleaning up pollution. Read more of this post

He Xinming has just one job and one life mission – Dongpeng, China’s largest ceramic tile manufacturer.

The good earth
Grace Cao 
Monday, November 18, 2013

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He Xinming has just one job and one life mission – Dongpeng Holdings Company. “Chinese love ceramic products. That’s why our country is named China,” chuckles the 57-year-old chairman of the largest mainland ceramic tile manufacturer. At first glance, there appears nothing special about the entrepreneur, who is of average height and build. He seems a bit defensive at the start of the conversation but quickly loosens up when asked about his career. Read more of this post

Guangzhou announces new property curbs

Guangzhou announces new property curbs

Xinhua

2013-11-19

The municipal government of Guangzhou, the capital of south China’s Guangdong province, spelled out new rules to cool down the property market on Monday, following moves by three other mega-cities. The government will increase down payments for second-home purchasers from the current level of no less than 60% of the property value, according to a government statement. Read more of this post

Chinese Steer Billions Abroad in Quest for Safety: Real Estate

Chinese Steer Billions Abroad in Quest for Safety: Real Estate

More than a dozen Chinese developers gathered for breakfast at a Los Angeles hotel one Sunday earlier this month before taking off for meetings with property brokers, attorneys and potential business partners. The visitors, none of whom have invested in U.S. real estate development before, would then catch an evening flight to San Jose, California, and meet with more property executives there and in nearby San Francisco. In all, they would stop in six cities over 14 days, including New York and Washington. Read more of this post

China’s Pharma Potential Diminished

China’s Pharma Potential Diminished

By Drew Armstrong November 14, 2013

Big Pharma thought China had the cure for two conditions the industry had long endured: anemic sales growth in developed markets and revenue erosion because of competition from generics. Unfortunately for Western giants, the China effect wore off fast. While sales in the country for eight foreign drugmakers, including GlaxoSmithKline (GSK), Pfizer (PFE), and Merck (MRK), climbed 40 percent in 2011, growth has dwindled to 20 percent this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The main cause of the decline is a slowdown in the Chinese economy. A corruption crackdown threatens to pull down sales further. Read more of this post

China’s Bold Reform Plans Don’t Mean Much Yet

China’s Bold Reform Plans Don’t Mean Much Yet

The world appeared to change on Nov. 15, the day bold and epochal reforms were unveiled that promised to overhaul one of the world’s biggest economies. Analysts, investors and historians alike rejoiced at the audacity of the plan. That was Japan. On Nov. 15, 2012, Shinzo Abe, then one month away from becoming prime minister, pledged “unlimited” stimulus and the kind of supply-side policies for which investors had long been clamoring. A year later, the buzz is gone, and not a single structural reform has been implemented. Abe’s record should give pause to those now rushing to praise Xi Jinping for a Chinese reform document that is as vague as it appears bold. Read more of this post

China to Move Slowly on One-Child Law Reform

China to Move Slowly on One-Child Law Reform

LAURIE BURKITT

Nov. 17, 2013 2:39 p.m. ET

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China is easing its one-child policy as part of a blueprint of economic and social reforms drawn up by the Communist Party leadership. Professor and demographer Feng Wang tells Deborah Kan why the country needs more babies to support its aging population.

BEIJING—China’s family-planning agency is projecting a slow rollout for an easing of its one-child policy, signaling the government’s reluctance to quickly amend a law that has been in place for decades. Read more of this post

China Reshapes Landscape for Firms From Alibaba to GM

China Reshapes Landscape for Firms From Alibaba to GM

China’s planned economic reforms are poised to reshape the competitive landscape, allowing private firms such as Alibaba Group Holdings Inc. to compete with state-owned banks, and easing the one-child policy to bolster markets for companies from Nestle SA (NESN) to General Motors Co. (GM) China’s financial sector is set to change with plans that include a new registration system for initial public offerings and allowing qualified private investors to set up small-to-medium sized banks. That has progressed in the past few months as Tencent Holdings Ltd. (700), Asia’s biggest Internet company, is part of a group applying for a banking license in China. Read more of this post

China Adopts “New” GDP-Boosting Accounting System

China Adopts “New” GDP-Boosting Accounting System

Tyler Durden on 11/18/2013 11:02 -0500

China’s GDP is about to undergo the same magic that US GDP received earlier in the year. The “Chinese system of National Accounts” will see five significant adjustments that are expected to (surprise) boost the size of the nation’s estimate of its GDP. The National Bureau of Statistics is considering making the changes to reflect the latest economic and social developments and implement the reform guidelines unveiled at the 3rd Plenum recently. From the addition of research and development – intellectual properrty – (just as the US did) to including mark-to-market changes (read rises) in employee stock options and real estate in consumption data, the Chinese appear dead set on making a once-unbelievably goal-seeked number into an entirely fantastical representation of reality (which of course enables moar higher manipulation as to avoid any debt-to-gdp hurdles that the real world might see as a concern). Read more of this post

1964, 1969, 1972: the cream of China’s entrepreneurial crop

1964, 1969, 1972: the cream of China’s entrepreneurial crop

Staff Reporter

2013-11-19

The years 1964, 1969 and 1972 were golden for the birth of Chinese entrepreneurs who now populate the upper echelons of China’s tech industries, according to the Chinese-language book Outliers, published in 2009. Take the top four icons in the industry, all born in 1964: founder of Kingsoft Computer Qiu Bojun, CEO of Legend Group Yang Yuanqing, CEO of Sohu Zhang Chaoyang and founder and executive chairman of Alibaba Group Jack Ma. Read more of this post

Australian kangaroo exporters look to hop into meat-hungry China

Australian kangaroo exporters look to hop into meat-hungry China

2:28am EST

By Colin Packham

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Once considered pet food, kangaroo meat could soon be sold to China as a luxury product, to encourage Chinese consumers to do something few Australians will – eat it. With a booming middle class, China’s appetite for meat is expected to rise nearly 17 percent over the next eight years, the World Trade Organization says. Read more of this post

Lego in Asia: Who dares, plays; A toymaker taps into a new market for selling to pussycat mums

Lego in Asia: Who dares, plays; A toymaker taps into a new market for selling to pussycat mums

Nov 16th 2013 | SINGAPORE |From the print edition

SQUEEZED between the boutique cafés and posh handbag shops in a Singapore shopping mall, Joey Tan is offering something very different, even radical, to the city-state’s consumers: play. Her shop, a franchise of “bricks4kids”, is selling classes for children to play with Lego bricks, and her idea is clearly taking off. Read more of this post

Asia Is Personal-Care Product Makers’ Growth Market

Asia Is Personal-Care Product Makers’ Growth Market

By Caroline Winter  November 14, 2013

Makers of personal-care products target emerging markets in Asia for a simple reason: That’s where the growth is. Euromonitor International forecasts sales in China of such goods will rise 8 percent, to $37 billion, in 2014.

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Supermarkets Offer Personalized Pricing

Supermarkets Offer Personalized Pricing

By Olga Kharif November 14, 2013

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Kimberley Cornwell’s husband is on a high-protein diet, and he usually eats eggs for breakfast. So when a Safeway (SWY) shopping app offered a deal a few months ago on 18 eggs for $1.89, she took it. Cornwell had never given the store any information about her family’s health or fitness needs. The Chicago recruiter is a member of Safeway’s Just for U program, which uses complex algorithms to sift through shopping data to guess her needs and produce special personalized offers. “Sometimes I’d see something, and it’s a good deal or something I’d like to try,” Cornwell says. “I can usually save $10 to $20.” Read more of this post

Electronic Health Records’ ‘Make-or-Break Year’

Electronic Health Records’ ‘Make-or-Break Year’

By Suzanne Allard Levingston November 14, 2013

Lelia Straw uses her home computer to help manage her type 2 diabetes. To track her blood work and stay in touch with her doctors, she logs on to HealthConnect, an online system operated by Kaiser Permanente, the Oakland (Calif.)-based health plan that covers 9.1 million Americans. “When you have the tools, you have sort of an internal motivation to use them and to pay attention to what’s going on,” Straw says. For years, the 63-year-old carried a paper record of her medical history, but she has come to realize that all her doctors now have access to even her most recent test results. Read more of this post

Work ethic, comic hero make Koreans hot shots in car design

Work ethic, comic hero make Koreans hot shots in car design

4:19pm EST

By Norihiko Shirouzu and Hyunjoo Jin

(Reuters) – In today’s auto industry, where famed Japanese quality and durability are increasingly a given, design is king and, among designers, South Koreans are hot property. From General Motors’ bold Chevrolet Camaro to the quintessential British gentlemen’s Bentley, more top models carry the flair and signature of a group of designers from South Korea, which some have dubbed “Asia’s Italy” for its impact on car design, fashion and aesthetics. Read more of this post

Ediya Coffee, the only coffee franchise that operates over 1,000 stores in Korea, has written an unparalleled success story over the past 13 years in the highly competitive industry

2013-11-17 15:15

Ediya goes after Asian coffee drinkers

Home-grown franchise aims to open 2,000 stores by 2017
By Lee Hyo-sik

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Ediya Coffee, the only coffee franchise that operates over 1,000 stores here, has written an unparalleled success story over the past 13 years in the highly competitive industry. The home-grown coffee chain, founded in 2001, has been able to expand at an explosive pace through unique growth strategies.
Ediya chose not to directly compete with Starbucks, Caffe Bene and other industry giants. While these more well-known, established coffee franchises usually operate large-scale stores in prime locations, Ediya opens small shops in subprime locations. Read more of this post

A local court ordered one of Korea’s largest accounting firms to pay a massive $36m compensation to the shareholders of a delisted Kosdaq company for failing to conduct its audits with due care

Accounting firm to pay in suit by shareholders

BY SER MYO-JA, KIM KI-HWAN [myoja@joongang.co.kr]

Nov 19,2013

A local court ordered one of the country’s largest accounting firms to pay a massive compensation to the shareholders of a delisted Kosdaq company for failing to conduct its audits with due care.  Read more of this post

The riskiest part yet of the Fukushima clean-up is soon to begin

The riskiest part yet of the Fukushima clean-up is soon to begin

Nov 16th 2013 | FUKUSHIMA |From the print edition

AMONG the twisted metal and random debris that litter much of the Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant, the fourth reactor looks in relatively good condition. A new structure covers the damage from a hydrogen explosion that blew its roof off days after a massive earthquake and tsunami hit the plant in March 2011. But the building is still unstable, and its spent-fuel storage pool highly dangerous. This month Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO) will start plucking out over 1,500 radioactive rods from the pool in order to store them more safely. Over the pool a crane waits to start the procedure, and a yellow radiation alarm stands at the ready. Experts call the operation the riskiest stage of the plant’s clean-up so far. Read more of this post

Reforming Japan: The thicket of reform; Though appearing committed to big structural change, the prime minister is moving too slowly

Reforming Japan: The thicket of reform; Though appearing committed to big structural change, the prime minister is moving too slowly

Nov 16th 2013 | TOKYO |From the print edition

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ONE farmer in central Japan has long kicked against the system. Shigeaki Okamoto, in Aichi prefecture, abandoned the family tradition of growing chrysanthemums—symbol of the imperial family—for market, because it tied him to Japan Agriculture (JA), the giant state-sponsored co-operative that stifles much of farming. Instead Mr Okamoto learned to grow strawberries, which he could sell outside the JA system. But now the government listens less to JA and more to rebels like Mr Okamoto. He has helped design rules on farming for a series of new “special economic zones” that are part of the plans of the prime minister, Shinzo Abe, to revive the economy. Read more of this post

Diaper makers target Asia in challenge to P&G

Diaper makers target Asia in challenge to P&G

JIJI

NOV 18, 2013

Japanese manufacturers of paper diapers for babies are boosting business in Asian economies outside Japan to attract demand from an expanding class of middle-income earners benefitting from economic growth. Unicharm Corp., the leading disposable diaper maker in Japan, and domestic rivals Kao Corp. and Daio Paper Corp. have seen sales grow in the region and anticipate a further demand. Read more of this post

Standstill: SBY and Joko Remain in Gridlock as Rain Begins and Car Sales Soar

Standstill: SBY and Joko Remain in Gridlock as Rain Begins and Car Sales Soar

By Novy Lumanauw on 4:20 pm November 15, 2013.
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono sought on Thursday to reinforce the merit of his administration’s policy to boost sales of low-cost green cars in Indonesia in response to criticism that the boom in cheap vehicles would hasten the capital’s road to gridlock, and worsen traffic in other urbanized parts of the archipelago. Read more of this post

Plans to Exclude SOEs as State Assets Raising Fears in Indonesia; fears that stripping the state audit body of its authority to conduct audits of the companies will destroy the firms and worsen corruption within the companies

Plans to Exclude SOEs as State Assets Raising Fears

By Rizky Amelia on 8:20 am November 18, 2013.
Excluding state-owned enterprises from state assets and stripping the state audit body of its authority to conduct audits of the companies will destroy the firms and worsen corruption within the companies, experts and activists say. Read more of this post

Investors in Indonesia account for only 0.2 percent of the country’s total population, the lowest in the region

Indonesia has fewest local investors

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Tue, November 19 2013, 12:19 PM

Investors in Indonesia account for only 0.2 percent of the country’s total population, the lowest in the region, an executive in capital market supervision says.
“Compared to other Asian countries, Indonesia also has the lowest number of publicly listed companies,” Nurhaida, commissioner at the Financial Services Authority (OJK), said in Citibank’s 2014 capital market outlook seminar on Monday. Read more of this post

A North Jakarta Fishing Community Learns How They Are Being Cheated

A North Jakarta Fishing Community Learns How They Are Being Cheated

By Ismira Lutfia Tisnadibrata on 9:05 am November 18, 2013.

Members of the Muara Angke fishing community in North Jakarta make their living from the sea, but it is a living that many residents say is increasingly at risk from pollution and environmental degradation. So when one of Indonesia’s corporate law firms recently organized a class in Muara Angke, residents packed a community hall to learn about fishery and environmental laws, and to be briefed on city bylaws and regulations for running a small business, including the process to secure a business permit (SIUP) and certification for home-based food businesses. Read more of this post

Industri Jamu dan Farmasi Sido Muncul, Indonesia’s largest herbal medicine company, is looking to raise as much as Rp 990 billion ($85 million) in an IPO

Tolak Angin Maker Targets IPO

By Francezka Nangoy on 10:49 am November 19, 2013.

Sido Muncul president director Irwan Hidayat. (JG Photo/Dhana Kencana)

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Industri Jamu dan Farmasi Sido Muncul, Indonesia’s largest herbal medicine company, is looking to raise as much as Rp 990 billion ($85 million) in an initial public offering in December to help financing planned investment. In a meeting on Monday, the company announced that it would offer 1.5 billion shares, or a 10 percent stake, in a first-time share sale in early December. Read more of this post

Indonesia’s Graftbusters Battle the Establishment

Indonesia’s Graftbusters Battle the Establishment

By Kanupriya Kapoor & Randy Fabi on 9:49 am November 17, 2013.
An inspector general of Indonesian police had just withstood eight hours of interrogation on the night of October 5, last year at the Jakarta headquarters of Indonesia’s anti-corruption agency when a commotion erupted outside. Read more of this post

Onions Bring Tears to RBI’s Rajan as Prices Surge: India Credit

Onions Bring Tears to RBI’s Rajan as Prices Surge: India Credit

Record onion prices and the soaring cost of rice and coriander are frustrating Reserve Bank of India Governor Raghuram Rajan’s battle to curb inflation while supporting growth in Asia’s third-largest economy. The wholesale-price index for onions, a staple food for India’s 1.24 billion people, has climbed 155 percent this year, hitting an all-time high of 820.5 in September, according to the Ministry of Commerce and Industry. The index, set at 100 in 2004, has almost quadrupled in 12 months. A broader measure for food is up 19 percent in 2013, while spot prices for coriander climbed about 29 percent and basmati rice advanced 40 percent. Read more of this post

The Battle for India’s Waistline

November 19, 2013, 9:23 AM

The Battle for India’s Waistline

SAPTARISHI DUTTA

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With its before and after shots of dramatic weight-loss, the latest election poster from India’s main opposition, could, at first glance, pass for a Slim-Fast ad.

The youth wing of the Bharatiya Janata Party, known as Bharatiya Janata Yuva Morcha, posted the picture on its Facebook page showing an obese man who supposedly slimmed down during the Congress party’s time in office as he struggled to buy enough to eat because of high food prices. Read more of this post