South Korea’s financial firms are pruning their workforces in the face of challenges such as deteriorating margins and bleak outlook for next year

Financial firms slimming down

Kim Gyu-sik, Lee Duk-joo, Lee Yoo-sup

2013.11.22 16:45:58

South Korea’s financial firms are pruning their workforces in the face of challenges such as deteriorating margins and bleak outlook for next year. At a time when insurers, securities firms and credit card issuers have announced a series of job-cutting plans, foreign banks are trimming down in size through branch shut-downs.
Samsung Life Insurance, a top life insurer in South Korea, has embarked on pruning workforces under the name of “support for executives and employees transitioning to new career.”  Read more of this post

South Korea’s conglomerates and small and mid-sized wholesalers are battling in the country’s 40 trillion won ($37.7 billion) wholesale food product market

SMBs, conglomerates clash in $38bn wholesale food product market

Seo Chan-dong, Kim Tae-sung

2013.11.22 16:53:56

South Korea’s conglomerates and small and mid-sized wholesalers are battling in the country’s 40 trillion won ($37.7 billion) wholesale food product market. The national retailer association submitted petition to National Commission for Corporate Partnership (NCCP) Thursday to legally categorize the wholesale food product sector as industry suitable for small and mid-sized businesses (SMBs), arguing conglomerates that supply food products are increasingly hurting SMBs, said sources in the relevant sector Friday.  Read more of this post

FTC chief asks department stores to cut fees for suppliers during discount sales

FTC chief asks department stores to cut fees for suppliers during discount sales

Chun Beom-joo

2013.11.21 18:09:08

Fair Trade Commission Chairman Noh Dae-rae has suggested that local department stores should slash merchant fees for its suppliers in line with their discounted supply of goods in time of discount sales. Large retailers are on alert, while the anti-trust watchdog agency has opened its first probe into them after the implementation of a law to emphasize fair transactions. During the FTC’s full-member meeting held Wednesday, Noh said, “I do not see a problem with department stores lowering merchant fees since suppliers also supply goods at a lower price during discount sales.” A vice president of a department store who was attending reportedly said he would take the matter back for discussion. The suggestion, if accepted, would force department stores to lower the merchant fee rate from 30% to 21% if a supplier provided a product with a price tag of KRW100,000 at KRW70,000 during the sale event. In this case, the department store would see a slash in its profit from KRW21,000 to KRW14,700. Noh’s suggestion is seen as a compromise after the commission’s failed attempt to fine large retailors for burdening suppliers to pay excessive expenses during a discount sale. The FTC tried to fine them 21.7 billion won but the commission’s full-member meeting ordered re-examination of the case due to lack of evidence.

 

Indian Banks’ Rising Bad Debt Is ‘Major Challenge,’ RBI Says

Indian Banks’ Rising Bad Debt Is ‘Major Challenge,’ RBI Says

Rising bad loans at Indian lenders remain “a major challenge” amid a slowdown in Asia’s third-largest economy, the nation’s central bank said. Nonperforming loans rose to 986 billion rupees ($15.7 billion) at the end of March from 652 billion rupees a year earlier, the Reserve Bank of India said in a report yesterday on the country’s banking industry. The ratio of sour debt to total lending swelled to 3.6 percent from 3.1 percent. Read more of this post

Toxic Lakes From Tar-Sand Projects Planned for Alberta; Canada is blessed with 3 million lakes, more than any country on Earth

Toxic Lakes From Tar-Sand Projects Planned for Alberta

Canada is blessed with 3 million lakes, more than any country on Earth — and it may soon start manufacturing new ones. They’re just not the kind that will attract anglers or tourists. The oil sands industry is in the throes of a major expansion, powered by C$20 billion ($19 billion) a year in investments. Companies including Syncrude Canada Ltd., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp. affiliate Imperial Oil Ltd. are running out of room to store the contaminated water that is a byproduct of the process used to turn bitumen — a highly viscous form of petroleum — into diesel and other fuels. Read more of this post

Shale Boom in the U.S. Is Bridge to Future Cleaner-Burning Fuels

Shale Boom in the U.S. Is Bridge to Future Cleaner-Burning Fuels

A shale boom in the U.S. that’s led to lower natural gas prices and higher energy efficiency will act as a bridge to cleaner burning fuels, Carol Browner, a former Environmental Protection Agency head, said today. “Right now there are a lot of reasons” to favor using natural gas, said Browner, a senior counselor at Albright Stonebridge Group, a Washington-based global strategy organization. She spoke at “The Year Ahead: 2014,” a two-day conference sponsored by Bloomberg LP in Chicago. Read more of this post

Singapore Operator Plans to Buy Rio Airport for $8.3 Billion

Singapore Operator Plans to Buy Rio Airport for $8.3 Billion

Brazil sold the country’s second-busiest airport for almost four times the minimum bid as part of President Dilma Rousseff’s program to modernize infrastructure and shore up investor confidence. The Aeroportos do Futuro group led by Odebrecht SA, and including Singapore airport operator Changi Airport Group, offered 19 billion reais ($8.3 billion) and won the right to run Galeao airport in Rio de Janeiro, which will host tourists for the soccer World Cup next year and the 2016 Olympic Games, for 25 years. The offer compares with the minimum required bid of 4.83 billion reais. Read more of this post

Straits Trading seeks to emulate Blackstone for property funds

Straits Trading seeks to emulate Blackstone for property funds

SINGAPORE — Straits Trading, an investor in Singapore’s biggest publicly traded property trust manager, is planning “Blackstone-like” funds as Asia’s appetite for real estate investments increases.

BY –

6 HOURS 13 MIN AGO

SINGAPORE — Straits Trading, an investor in Singapore’s biggest publicly traded property trust manager, is planning “Blackstone-like” funds as Asia’s appetite for real estate investments increases. Straits Trading last month invested in Singapore-listed ARA Asset Management, the property trust manager partly owned by billionaire Li Ka-shing, and set up a joint venture with ARA’s CEO John Lim to invest in property funds. Read more of this post

Apple dives deeper into designing and inventing tech for manufacturing process

Apple dives deeper into designing and inventing tech for manufacturing process

By Adam Satariano, Saturday, November 23, 12:22 AM

Apple is putting a record $10.5 billion to work in new technology — from assembly robots to milling machines — that consumers will never see. To get a jump on rivals such as Samsung Electronics and lay the groundwork for new products, Apple is spending more on the machines that do the behind-the-scenes work of mass producing iPhones, iPads and other gadgets. That includes equipment to polish the new iPhone 5c’s colorful plastic, laser and milling machines to carve the MacBook’s aluminum body and testing gear for the iPhone and iPad camera lens, said people with knowledge of its manufacturing methods. Read more of this post

Corporate Incubators Popping Up in Europe

NOVEMBER 22, 2013, 5:09 PM

Corporate Incubators Popping Up in Europe

By MARK SCOTT

LONDON – In an Art Deco office block on a side street in central London, groups of 20-something programmers and engineers sat hunched over laptops in teams of three or four people. Surrounded by the trappings of a fast-growing start-up, including table tennis equipment and a fully stocked kitchen, the developers were tapping out computer code and planning marketing campaigns just like many other fledgling companies spread across the British capital. Yet unlike other strapped start-ups, these small tech companies already have links to the corporate world. Read more of this post

Druckenmiller Shorting IBM in Bet Cloud Computing to Win

Druckenmiller Shorting IBM in Bet Cloud Computing to Win

Stan Druckenmiller, who has one of the best track records in the hedge-fund industry over the past three decades, said he’s betting against the shares of International Business Machines Corp. (IBM) because the company’s business will be replaced by technology such as cloud computing. “It’s one of the more higher-probability shorts I have seen in years,” Druckenmiller, 60, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV’s Stephanie Ruhle at the Robin Hood Investors Conference in New York today. “IBM is old technology being replaced by cloud technology.” Read more of this post

For Cisco and Huawei, a bruising rivalry reaches stalemate

For Cisco and Huawei, a bruising rivalry reaches stalemate

12:29pm EST

By Jeremy Wagstaff, Sinead Carew and Jim Finkle

(Reuters) – Cisco Systems Inc and Huawei Technologies Co, two of the world’s largest communications equipment makers, have been slugging it out for a decade now – in court, in emerging markets, in the lobbies of government and even on blogs. The past year suggests they’ve ground to an expensive stalemate, raising questions about their futures on each other’s lucrative home turf. Read more of this post

Germany’s SAP may speed up shift to the cloud

Germany’s SAP may speed up shift to the cloud

8:55am EST

By Paul Sandle

BARCELONA (Reuters) – German business software group SAP may speed up a shift towards providing its products over the internet in order to tap demand for so-called cloud services and take advantage of Germany’s reputation for data privacy, it said on Friday. SAP and rivals such as IBM and Oracle are dashing to meet surging demand for cloud computing, which allows clients to reduce costs by ditching bulky local servers for network-based software and storage in remote data centers. Read more of this post

Intel’s Recovery Realization; Company executives admitted that their fixation on personal computers blinded it to the reality that computing intelligence is traveling to ever-smaller things

NOVEMBER 21, 2013, 11:10 PM

Intel’s Recovery Realization

By QUENTIN HARDY

SANTA CLARA, Calif. — In the temple of technology, Intel has confessed to straying from the true path. That may prove to be the start of salvation for the company, the world’s largest maker of semiconductors, but at a price that is yet to be known. Thursday’s annual meeting for Wall Street analysts at Intel’s headquarters here didn’t take long to get to the mea culpa. “A year ago, I was personally embarrassed that we seemed to have lost our way,” Andy Bryant, Intel’s chairman, said in his opening remarks. “We’re paying a price for that.” Read more of this post

MakerBot says shoppers ready for 3D printers, some have doubts

MakerBot says shoppers ready for 3D printers, some have doubts

6:29pm EST

By Jim Finkle

BOSTON (Reuters) – MakerBot, a 3D printer maker which opened two new retail stores this week, is among the companies trying to bring the cutting-edge digital manufacturing technology to Main Street consumers, but skeptics say the rollout is premature. MakerBot, a unit of Stratasys Ltd, opened retail stores this week in Boston and in Greenwich, Connecticut, both of which are twice the size of MakerBot’s first store, 1,500 square feet in downtown Manhattan. Read more of this post

Microsoft’s New Xbox One Sells Out; Like Sony, Launch Is Strong, But Questions Hang Over Console Business; Microsoft Says Initial Xbox One Sales Exceed 1 Million

Microsoft’s New Xbox One Sells Out

Like Sony, Launch Is Strong, But Questions Hang Over Console Business

IAN SHERR

Updated Nov. 22, 2013 8:30 p.m. ET

Microsoft Corp.’s MSFT +0.45% new videogame console drew crowds for its debut, emulating an upbeat launch by rival Sony Corp. 6758.TO -1.00% while offering a different take on living-room entertainment. The Redmond, Wash., tech giant said it sold more than one million units of its Xbox One videogame console in the less than 24 hours since its debut. The $499 device launched in 13 markets around the world, and sold out at most retailers.

Read more of this post

Now Trending: Big Data at Walmart.com

November 22, 2013, 12:09 PM ET

Now Trending: Big Data at Walmart.com

By Noelle Knox

Big Data is so integrated into the finance department at Walmart.com that the analytics team can’t change an Internet search algorithm or pay more for GoogleGOOG -0.21% Ad Words without the green-light from the division’s chief financial officer. “It’s really been in the last couple of years, since we invented that algorithm, that the role of the CFO has changed. You need to be able to understand how it works at a pretty detailed level,” Liz Coddington, vice president of finance and CFO of Walmart.com, told a CFO conference this week. Read more of this post

Xbox One vs. PS4: Microsoft More Profit Per Console

Xbox One vs. PS4: Microsoft More Profit Per Console

11/22/2013 05:40 PM EST

OTTAWA, — Microsoft comes out punching with a significant upgrade to the Xbox franchise console and a true competitor to Sony’s PS4 while delivering per-unit profits. TechInsights Teardown costing shows both companies can profit from sales of their gaming consoles this holiday season. In fact, they used many similar parts to optimize their investment in the next generation of gaming consoles. Though AMD came out as a big winner in the APU (integrated CPU and GPU), there are choice design differences around both the processor design and the use of memory in each device. The TechInsights bill of materials for the Microsoft Xbox One amounts to $331. Based on this — and when the estimated costs for the peripherals are included — TechInsights believes Microsoft will have a gross profit of approximately $100 per console sold. This is far better than the $43 Sony will make per complete unit.

Xbox-one-vs-PS4_TechInsights

Bill of materials cost comparison of TechInsights. Read more of this post

A Record Market Is Not All That It Seems

November 22, 2013

A Record Market Is Not All That It Seems

By FLOYD NORRIS

THE stock market flirted with historical highs this week, with the Dow Jones industrial average trading over 16,000 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 exceeding 1,800 for a time. But are stock prices really at record levels? Adjusted for inflation, the answer would seem to be that they are not. On Monday, the first day the S.&P. 500-stock index traded above 1,800, it closed at 1,791.53. That was 17 percent higher than the peak reached in the spring of 2000, when the country was in the midst of a love affair with technology stocks. Adjusted for inflation, however, it is 14 percent lower than the 2000 close, as can be seen in the accompanying chart. Read more of this post

Activist investor Bill Ackman said he will take his bet against Herbalife Ltd. (HLF) “to the end of the earth” even after losing as much as $500 million on the investment

Ackman Says He’ll Take Herbalife Bet to End of the Earth

Activist investor Bill Ackman said he will take his bet against Herbalife Ltd. (HLF) “to the end of the earth” even after losing as much as $500 million on the investment. Ackman, whose Pershing Square Capital Management LP sold short at least 20 million Herbalife shares last year, was unapologetic about recently reducing the position. He stuck with claims that the company swindles unsophisticated consumers with false get-rich promises using overpriced products, such as vitamins, skin creams and meal-replacement shakes, that hide a pyramid scheme. He said he still is urging U.S. regulators, elected officials and community activists to help shut it down. Read more of this post

WPP, Dentsu Circle for New Business From Publicis-Omnicom Merger

WPP, Dentsu Circle for New Business From Publicis-Omnicom Merger

As Publicis Groupe SA (PUB) and Omnicom Group Inc. (OMC) work through regulatory delays to their plan to create a new leader in advertising, rivals say they’re picking up disgruntled customers and ad executives who fail to see how the merger helps them. “Clients don’t understand the benefit for them,” Dentsu Inc. (4324) Executive Vice President Tim Andree said at an investor conference in Barcelona yesterday. “That’s a dangerous position to be in.” Tokyo-based Dentsu said it’s won new businesses from the pending deal. Read more of this post

‘Hunger Games’ to Fuel $400 Million Profit for Lion Gate

‘Hunger Games’ to Fuel $400 Million Profit for Lion Gate

“The Hunger Games: Catching Fire,” the film sequel about teens fighting to the death in a totalitarian world, is set to dominate cinemas for three weeks and earn $400 million or more for Lions Gate Entertainment Corp. (LGF). The movie, with Jennifer Lawrence returning as heroine Katniss Everdeen and Josh Hutcherson as her co-combatant Peeta Mellark, opens in theaters worldwide today and is forecast to take in $166 million domestically this weekend, according to BoxOffice.com. That would give Lions Gate one of the top five debuts ever, based on rankings from Box Office Mojo. Read more of this post

Why to Buy Large-Cap Stocks Now; Large-Cap Stocks Tend to Lead the Market Over the Last Several Weeks of the Year

Why to Buy Large-Cap Stocks Now

Large-Cap Stocks Tend to Lead the Market Over the Last Several Weeks of the Year

MARK HULBERT

Nov. 22, 2013 6:13 p.m. ET

BF-AG255_HULBUR_D_20131122143307

Many investors are already familiar with the so-called January effect—the tendency for the stocks of the smallest companies to perform particularly well at the beginning of the year. Less well known, but equally pronounced, is another seasonal pattern, though this one occurs before the end of the year rather than after: Until Dec. 31, it’s the stocks with the largest capitalization that tend to lead the market. To exploit these tendencies, you should more heavily weight your equity portfolio toward large-cap stocks from now until the end of the year, at which point you would tilt toward small caps. Read more of this post

Spaniards Abandon Porsche Dreams in Post-Crisis Reality

Spaniards Abandon Porsche Dreams in Post-Crisis Reality

When Hugo Ramos was a teenager in La Coruna in northwest Spain, he dreamed of a good job, his own apartment and a flashy car. After a two-year recession in the country, those goals have been scaled back. “I wish I could buy a Porsche, but for that I would need a full-time job and that’s not going to happen anytime soon,” said Ramos, a 21-year-old unemployed mechanic who works odd jobs like delivering pizzas, lives with his parents and drives a two-decade-old Seat Cordoba sedan. Read more of this post

No, Bitcoin isn’t the Segway of currencies

No, Bitcoin isn’t the Segway of currencies

By Timothy B. Lee, Updated: November 22 at 9:59 am

The Atlantic’s Matthew O’Brien is one of the Internet’s smartest commentators on economic policy. But like a lot of economics writers, he’s been slow to appreciate the disruptive potential of Bitcoin, the Internet’s first completely open payment network. O’Brien says that Bitcoin is the new Segway: a technological marvel that dazzles nerds but will fail to catch on with ordinary consumers. Bitcoin is comically impractical, he suggests: “The people who have bitcoins have no reason to spend them, and the people who don’t have no reason to get them. They don’t want a currency whose value you can’t predict from one hour to the next. They don’t want to buy things anonymously. And they don’t want transactions to be irreversible.” Read more of this post

Some Stock Bulls Tread Lightly Into 2014; Strategists Take Cautious Approach on How Far S&P 500 Can Climb

Some Stock Bulls Tread Lightly Into 2014

Strategists Take Cautious Approach on How Far S&P 500 Can Climb

STEVEN RUSSOLILLO and ALEXANDRA SCAGGS 

Nov. 22, 2013 6:51 p.m. ET

BF-AG265_STRATE_G_20131122140552

Stock-market strategists, typically a bullish bunch, are taking a cautious approach to 2014. The S&P 500-stock index is heading into the final weeks of 2013 with a 27% gain despite a sluggish global economy, stalling corporate earnings growth and worries about a pullback by the Federal Reserve in its efforts to support the U.S. economy. But even as many strategists expect an improved backdrop next year, and for interest rates to stay low, they are expecting the stock rally to cool significantly. Forecasts center on gains in the mid-to-high single-digit percentages for the S&P 500 in 2014. Read more of this post

Dealer Fees for Arranging Car Loans Are Drawing Scrutiny From U.S.

NOVEMBER 22, 2013, 11:08 AM

Dealer Fees for Arranging Car Loans Are Drawing Scrutiny From U.S.

By RACHEL ABRAMS

Updated, 3:13 p.m. | When Pedro Lantigua, a 32-year-old truck driver from Oklahoma City, decided to trade in his vehicle last summer, he walked into his local dealership and drove off with a brand-new Chevrolet Silverado. Like millions of Americans, he agreed to a loan arranged by the dealer. Unlike most buyers, Mr. Lantigua actually knows how much he spent on that service, but only because the details came out when he sued the dealer for breach of contract related to his trade-in. Read more of this post

Curious tale of the central Asian oligarchs and the City of London

Curious tale of the central Asian oligarchs and the City of London

Mining firm ENRC bids farewell to the Stock Exchange but its Uzbek and Kyrgyz creators are here to stay

Simon Goodley and Mark Hollingsworth

The Guardian, Friday 22 November 2013 23.34 GMT

It is May 2010 at Monaco’s vast Le Sporting banquet hall, where 800 guests have responded to an invitation from one of central Asia’s most powerful, and secretive, oligarchs. The host has packed the venue’s gardens with white roses and arranged for entertainment from the singer Jennifer Lopez and French DJ David Guetta. Several guests execute an impromptu lezginka, a traditional dance from the Caucasus, and a crowd forms to shower them with $100 and €100 bills, a sign of the donors’ respect, which is then paid to the musicians. Read more of this post

Counting the cost of currency risk in emerging bond markets

Counting the cost of currency risk in emerging bond markets

Fri, Nov 22 2013

By Sujata Rao

LONDON (Reuters) – Once a source of rich returns for yield-hungry investors, emerging markets are hammering home a long-ignored truism: banking on currency strength to enhance returns on stocks and bonds is not a one-way ticket to profits. Currencies such as the rupiah and lira have slumped 10-20 percent this year as a seismic shift in global capital flows rattles even relatively robust markets, exacerbating international investors’ losses on the underlying assets. Read more of this post

Bubble or not, maybe the all-powerful Federal Reserve isn’t so all-powerful after all

Bubble or not, maybe the all-powerful Federal Reserve isn’t so all-powerful after all

By Zachary Karabell, Saturday, November 23, 10:24 AM

Toward the end of her Nov. 14 confirmation hearing to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve, Janet Yellen faced a question from Sen. Mike Johanns (R-Neb.) about the effect of years of easy-money policies at the Fed: “Here’s what I’m saying. . . . I think the economy has gotten used to the sugar you’ve put out there. And I just worry you’re on a sugar high.” Yellen, who has been vice chair of the central bank since 2010, was not given time to address the charge, but her prominent role in supporting such policies gives us a strong sense of her answer. Read more of this post

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