PayPal Nabs Uber Partnership in Pursuit of Mobile Growth

PayPal Nabs Uber Partnership in Pursuit of Mobile Growth

PayPal, the online payment service that succeeded by wedding itself to EBay Inc. (EBAY), is moving into more modern marketplaces through a deal with car-service company Uber Technologies Inc. Users of Uber’s popular mobile-booking application will be able to pay with PayPal starting today in the U.S., France, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands, David Marcus, president of PayPal, said in an interview. Riders who use PayPal before Nov. 28 will receive $15 or 15 euros toward their next trip. Read more of this post

New apps allow music fans to interact with records

New apps allow music fans to interact with records

12:04pm EST

By Natasha Baker

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Musicians in the digital age are turning to apps to woo fans and also engage them in the creative process to create new music and art. Apps featuring indie rock band Metric, pop sensation Lady Gaga and the late John Lennon were released last week that allow fans to re-mix tracks, create music-inspired art or access rare recordings. Read more of this post

Is It Game Over for Video Game Consoles?

Is It Game Over for Video Game Consoles?

By Cliff Edwards and Takashi Amano November 14, 2013

As a kid, Jared Cate spent long hours playing Nintendo’s (7974:JP) Pokemon and The Legend of Zelda video games. So when the company released its Wii U console before Christmas last year, Cate, 23, rushed to a local GameStop (GME) store in Atlanta to buy one. “I was about to move to San Francisco and figured it’d be a great thing to play with my family in my last few days at home,” he recalls. Read more of this post

Google Fosters South Korean Startups

Google Fosters South Korean Startups

U.S. Search Company Provides Links to Venture Capitalists, Helping Tech Firms Build Global Profiles

JONATHAN CHENG

Updated Nov. 17, 2013 6:04 p.m. ET

Dave Cho co-created Classting, a social-media app for South Korean schools that allows teachers to interact with students and parents. Jonathan Cheng/The Wall Street Journal

SEOUL—Until about nine months ago, Dave Cho woke up every morning to teach fifth-graders math, history and science at a school in the South Korean port city of Incheon. But Mr. Cho’s audience has changed. These days, the 28-year-old Mr. Cho is busy pitching his young technology startup to venture capitalists in Silicon Valley, Asia and the U.K., with assistance from Google Inc. GOOG +0.96% Read more of this post

Facebook, Still Dominant, Strives to Keep Cachet

November 17, 2013

Facebook, Still Dominant, Strives to Keep Cachet

By JENNA WORTHAMVINDU GOEL and NICOLE PERLROTH

When Evan Spiegel peered into a crystal ball to divine a future for his company, Snapchat, he did not see Facebook. He saw something else, something much bigger — a social network that could exist on its own, outside Facebook. Facebook is still the dominant social media service, and has been an attractive suitor for many start-ups. And Snapchat most likely spurned Facebook partly because it thought it could fetch much more than the billions Facebook was willing to pay. Read more of this post

Easy Mobile Payments Are Almost Here

Easy Mobile Payments Are Almost Here

By Brad Stone and Olga Kharif November 14, 2013

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It’s noon at the crowded Steins Beer Garden in Mountain View, Calif., and executives from EBay’s(EBAY) PayPal are discussing the future of the massive market for retail and restaurant payments with a reporter who’s paying for lunch. Without ever opening his wallet, the reporter enters a four-digit number printed at the bottom of the check into a PayPal app on his smartphone. An itemized bill for three smoked chicken salads, a tomato bisque, and two Diet Cokes appears on the screen. One click later, without ever needing to flag down a waiter, the check is paid. Read more of this post

Disney Struggles to Make Its Free Gaming Apps Pay

November 17, 2013

Disney Struggles to Make Its Free Gaming Apps Pay

By BROOKS BARNES

LOS ANGELES — Two months ago, Disney released a sequel to Where’s My Water?, a hit smartphone game about a showering alligator. Hopes were high: Disney had pointed to the original game as evidence of overdue traction in mobile gaming. It flopped. For the Walt Disney Company — where theme parks, TV, merchandise and films deliver more than $6 billion in annual profit — the failure of one smartphone game, even an important one, has no financial consequence. But mobile games are a major growth opportunity, and analysts say Where’s My Water? 2 underscores the degree to which Disney is encountering new challenges in a shifting marketplace. Read more of this post

Ears Follow Eyes as Target in $1.84 Billion Wearable Boom

Ears Follow Eyes as Target in $1.84 Billion Wearable Boom

Google Inc. is going after consumers’ eyes with its Glass Internet spectacles, and Samsung Electronics Co. went for the wrist with its Galaxy Gear smartwatch. Iriver Inc. is seeking to connect another body part: the ear. Last month, Iriver released a headset in the U.S. with a Tic-Tac-sized sensor that shines light into the ear to track a user’s heart rate, distance and speed traveled, and calories burned. Startup Looxcie Inc. sells an ear-mounted camera, and other ear-based devices have been patented by the likes of Intel Corp. and Samsung, or developed by researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Keio University. Read more of this post

Developing a Fax Machine to Copy Life on Mars; DNA sequencing and DNA synthesis are becoming faster and cheaper, and J. Craig Venter wants to use the technology to bring Martian life to Earth

November 17, 2013

Developing a Fax Machine to Copy Life on Mars

By ANDREW POLLACK

MOJAVE NATIONAL PRESERVE, Calif. — J. Craig Venter, the maverick scientist, is looking for a new world to conquer — Mars. He wants to detect life on Mars and bring it to Earth using a device called a digital biological converter, or biological teleporter. Although the idea conjures up “Star Trek,” the analogy is not exact. The transporter on that program actually moves Captain Kirk from one location to another. Dr. Venter’s machine would merely create a copy of an organism from a distant location — more like a biological fax machine. Read more of this post

Console Bet Is Played Out at AMD

Console Bet Is Played Out at AMD

DAN GALLAGHER

Nov. 18, 2013 3:49 p.m. ET

Prospects for Advanced Micro Devices AMD -0.86% have become closely tied to new videogame consoles hitting the market this month. But the chip maker remains tethered to the personal-computer market. Sony said it sold one million units of its PlayStation 4 console in the U.S. and Canada in the first 24 hours following its launch late last week. Microsoft‘s MSFT -1.69% Xbox One goes on sale Friday. Both use a customized version of AMD’s Jaguar chip family. Read more of this post

Bundled Cable TV Withstands Consumer Opposition

Bundled Cable TV Withstands Consumer Opposition

By Alex Sherman November 14, 2013

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Many Americans don’t understand why they’re paying about $80 a month on average for cable or satellite television when they only watch a few of the networks. But their anger toward their pay-TV operator may be misplaced. Sure, Comcast (CMCSA),DirecTV (DTV), and Time Warner Cable (TWC), who charge their customers nearly double the cost they pay for programming, make a healthy profit margin on their cable bundles. But they’d likely be willing to get that same hefty return on smaller bundles of channels and charge less for the package. The challenge comes in convincing programmers—the companies that crank out must-see shows such as Duck Dynasty orThe Walking Dead—to let them offer some but not all of their channels. Read more of this post

Apple’s Decline in China’s Smartphone Market

Apple’s Decline in China’s Smartphone Market

By John Butler November 14, 2013

Apple’s (AAPLshare of the smartphone business in China is shrinking as a half-dozen local vendors emerge to take a bite out of the market. They’re using social media and tapping into local brand loyalty to build share. Lenovo (992:HK) and Xiaomi have had success selling cheap, feature-loaded smartphones priced well below the iPhone.

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Amazon’s Toys Cheaper Than Wal-Mart Online

Amazon’s Toys Cheaper Than Wal-Mart Online

Amazon.com Inc.’s toy prices were lower than those available online from Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. last week as retailers seek to attract shoppers heading into the crucial holiday selling season. Amazon’s prices, excluding those from its third-party sellers, were 3 percent lower on average than Wal-Mart’s on a basket of 87 toys, according to a study conducted by Bloomberg Industries on Nov. 14. Including the Marketplace vendors, which use Amazon’s platform to sell their own products, the pool of comparable goods expanded to 115, and Wal-Mart was cheaper by 1.2 percent, on average. Read more of this post

Amazon and Twitter: #hatchingwinners; Two very different leadership sagas have produced titans of tech

Amazon and Twitter: #hatchingwinners; Two very different leadership sagas have produced titans of tech

Nov 16th 2013 |From the print edition

Hatching Twitter: A True Story of Money, Power, Friendship, and Betrayal. By Nick Bilton. Penguin Portfolio; 304 pages; $28.95. Sceptre; £14.99. Buy fromAmazon.comAmazon.co.uk

The Everything Store: Jeff Bezos and the Age of Amazon. By Brad Stone. Little Brown; 384 pages; $28. Bantam Press; £18.99. Buy from Amazon.com,Amazon.co.uk

THESE are heady times in the world of high technology. Twitter’s recent stockmarket debut has been a success, earning it a market capitalisation of about $25 billion after its first day of trading. Ambitious students are shunning Wall Street and joining obscure tech startups. URL strategies—Silicon Valley shorthand for “Ubiquity first, worry about Revenue Later”—are all the rage again. And venture capitalists are bestowing multi-billion-dollar valuations on fledgling firms bleeding red ink. The hope is that these nascent companies will one day become as wildly successful as firms such as Twitter and Amazon. Read more of this post

New Olam strategy yet to convince investors; Group fights for confidence a year after Carson Block attack

November 18, 2013 6:30 am

New Olam strategy yet to convince investors

By Jeremy Grant in Singapore

A year ago this month, Sunny Verghese, chief executive of Olamfaced the biggest crisis in the Asian agribusiness group’s 20-odd years in existence. A man dressed in a baseball cap and jeans had visited his office in Singapore a few weeks before, purporting to represent investors with questions about Olam’s business model. Read more of this post

ICE to Buy Singapore Mercantile Exchange for $150 Million

ICE to Buy Singapore Mercantile Exchange for $150 Million

IntercontinentalExchange Group Inc. (ICE) agreed to buy Singapore Mercantile Exchange Pte for $150 million to add commodity futures trading in Asia, where China reigns as the biggest user of everything from energy to metals. Atlanta-based ICE will buy the exchange operator and Singapore Mercantile Clearing Corp. from Financial Technologies (FTECH) India Ltd., the Mumbai-based company said today in a statement. Read more of this post

Myanmar is set to wrest control of its Dawei industrial complex from Thai company Italian Thai Development over its failure to attract investors to a strategically located, multi-billion dollar project tipped as a game-changer for regional trade

Myanmar turns to Japan, Thailand to kick-start stalled Dawei

4:56am EST

By Jared Ferrie

YANGON (Reuters) – Myanmar is set to wrest control of its Dawei industrial complex from Thai company Italian Thai Development over its failure to attract investors to a strategically located, multi-billion dollar project tipped as a game-changer for regional trade. Read more of this post

KL homeowners facing sharp assessment hikes

PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 19, 2013

KL homeowners facing sharp assessment hikes

City Hall plans to raise annual values by up to 300%

PAULINE NG

‘If City Hall wishes to increase the (assessment) for private homes . . . HBA proposes a hike of not more than 10 per cent.’
– Chang Kim Loong, honorary secretary-general, National House Buyers Association

KUALA LUMPUR property owners, an estimated 10-16 per cent of whom are foreigners, are facing sharply higher assessment payments of up to 300 per cent following the latest move by City Hall (DBKL) to boost its coffers. Read more of this post

Malaysian businesses are worried that they will be affected if Johor is to revert its Saturday-Sunday weekend to Friday-Saturday

Weekend change worries Johor traders

Monday, November 18, 2013 – 10:11

The Star/Asia News Network

JOHOR BARU – Businesses are worried that they will be affected if Johor is to revert its Saturday-Sunday weekend to Friday-Saturday. Johor Indian Business Association (Jiba) president P. Sivakumar called for a proper study to be conducted before any change is made. He said investments in the state, especially in Iskandar Malaysia, would lose out. Read more of this post

IAC/InterActiveCorp Chairman Barry Diller’s Media Industry Outlook for 2014

IAC/InterActiveCorp Chairman Barry Diller’s Media Industry Outlook for 2014

By Diane Brady November 14, 2013

What will we be talking about this time next year? 
In the short sweep of time—say, three to five years—this digital revolution we’ve been undergoing for 18 years is becoming the way of our lives. We now have Internet fluency among more people, and you have the kind of innovation that is the mandate of digital life. So the result is an ever-increasing velocity. Read more of this post

Why No One Wants to Drive a Truck Anymore

Why No One Wants to Drive a Truck Anymore

By Meghan Walsh November 14, 2013

Add truck driver to the list of jobs Americans don’t want to do anymore. Long weeks on the road away from home and family and stagnant salaries are making it hard to recruit drivers. The average age of a commercial driver in the U.S. is 55, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and retirements in recent years have long-haul carriers worried about filling their spots. Many would-be younger drivers are instead drawn to construction and other jobs that pay more than the average $38,000 a year truckers make. Read more of this post

Warren Buffett Cashes In on Railroad Tank Cars

Warren Buffett Cashes In on Railroad Tank Cars

By Drake Bennett November 14, 2013

Boomtowns on the prairie, young men heading west to find work as roustabouts—there’s an undeniable throwback quality to the American shale oil industry. The 21st century economy was supposed to be driven by Silicon Valley and Wall Street; instead it’s being pumped out of the ground in North Dakota and Texas. That’s creating growth in unlikely places. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart Touts $98 TV in Weakest Holiday Season Since ’09

Wal-Mart Touts $98 TV in Weakest Holiday Season Since ’09

By Cotten Timberlake  Nov 19, 2013

U.S. retailers are discounting earlier than ever as they brace for the weakest holiday shopping season since 2009. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) is dangling a 32-inch flat-screen TV for $98, down from $148 last year. Sears Holdings Corp. has waived layaway fees and its Kmart chain is introducing a rent-to-own program. More than a dozen retailers are opening earlier, or for the first time, on Thanksgiving Day. Among the attention-grabbing stunts: a $1 million jackpot for one of the first shoppers to visit Gap Inc. (GPS)’s Old Navy chain on Black Friday. Read more of this post

Waiting for the thaw: Most Britons are unimpressed by a recovery they do not feel

Waiting for the thaw: Most Britons are unimpressed by a recovery they do not feel

Nov 16th 2013 |From the print edition

THE 8m Britons who tuned in to watch “X-Factor”, a talent show, on November 9th were treated to a contest both lavish and cut-throat. And that was just in the ad breaks—on the weekend in which Britain’s biggest retailers unveiled their Christmas advertising campaigns. Read more of this post

The lease bad solution: Proposals to clean up lease accounting will hit many firms’ balance-sheets

The lease bad solution: Proposals to clean up lease accounting will hit many firms’ balance-sheets

Nov 16th 2013 | NEW YORK |From the print edition

ONE of the world’s biggest accountants, PwC, breathlessly bills it as perhaps “the biggest-ever accounting change”. Businesses that lease property and equipment may soon have to start treating the leases as liabilities on their balance-sheets. All sorts of outfits that make heavy use of leasing—from retailers to airlines and, indeed, professional-services firms such as accountants—may end up looking far more indebted than their books currently show. Opponents of the reform predict dire consequences, for the companies and for the economy. Read more of this post

Small no longer looks quite so beautiful; The opportunity to enter the rally in smaller companies has passed

November 13, 2013 9:07 am

Small no longer looks quite so beautiful

By John Authers

The opportunity to enter the rally in smaller companies has passed

Size isn’t everything. Indeed, of late, lack of it has been highly profitable. Small-capstocks have readily outperformed larger stocks all year, and have done so since the post-crisis rally began in March 2009. The question now is whether the rally can possibly have more legs. Read more of this post

Singapore and Malaysia market regulators face delicate task

Updated: Monday November 18, 2013 MYT 9:32:05 AM

Market regulators face delicate task

BY GURMEET KAUR

CAPITAL market oversight is no easy task. It is a fine balancing act for regulators: they can’t over-regulate less they be accused of stifling the markets, and neither can they be lax for they may be accused of not safeguarding the interests’ investors. In this context, the recent experiences of the Malaysian and Singaporean regulators are worth a look. Singapore is reeling from the aftermath of the SGX penny stock crash, involving the highly speculated plays of Asiasons Capital Ltd, Blumont Group Ltd and LionGold Corp. Shares in the three companies made huge gains earlier in the year before crashing in a frenzied 40 minutes of trading on Oct 4. Read more of this post

Retail investors may be unprepared for a move into more aggressive strategies by hedge funds

November 17, 2013 9:05 pm

Playing to the cheap seats

By Stephen Foley

Retail investors may be unprepared for a move into more aggressive strategies by hedge funds

There were “booths as far as the eye can see”, says Henry Davis. Chicago’s McCormick Place conference centre bustled with activity in June, as asset managers and boutique investment houses competed for the attention of more than 1,000 financial advisers. These advisers are the gatekeepers to America’s retail investors, so anyone hawking a mutual fund wants to hawk it at Morningstar’s Investment Conference. And that was why Mr Davis was there for the first time. Read more of this post

Oldest Italian Bell Maker Avoids Death Knell by Growing Exports

Oldest Italian Bell Maker Avoids Death Knell by Growing Exports

The process of making bronze bells hasn’t altered much in 1,000 years at the Pontifical Marinelli Foundry. What’s changing is where they chime, as Italy’s oldest family business looks abroad to dodge the economy at home. The company in Agnone, a small town about 220 kilometers (137 miles) southeast of Rome, has increased exports to 20 percent of its revenue, four times the proportion a decade ago. With the Italian economy entering a third year of recession, reliance on sales abroad is only going to get greater, said Pasquale Marinelli, who owns the foundry with his brother. Read more of this post

Oaktree’s Marks Says Bargains Hard to Find After Rally

Oaktree’s Marks Says Bargains Hard to Find After Rally

Oaktree Capital Group LLC (OAK) Chairman Howard Marks said it’s difficult to find bargains because prices of private assets have risen as investors search for yield. “The bargain hunter is having a tough time because the low level of Treasury rates has pushed everyone to riskier assets, which has driven up prices,” Marks said today in an interview on Bloomberg Television with Erik Schatzker and Stephanie Ruhle. “I’m not aware of any broad sweet spots today, and I don’t think there should be any.” Read more of this post