Less sin, more shrek in Macau as China takes aim in corruption fight

Updated: Monday November 4, 2013 MYT 7:39:41 AM

Less sin, more shrek in Macau as China takes aim in corruption fight

MACAU: The media scrum surrounding the politically connected chairman of a Chinese financial services company was interested in one particular unpaid loan. The amount – $1.3 million (816,224 pounds) – was nothing extraordinary. But the story behind it was. Xie Xiaoqing, chairman of Rongzhong Group, was sued in January for failing to repay the money to Sands China Ltd, U.S. billionaire Sheldon Adelson’s Macau gambling unit. Xie has said he wasn’t gambling and the money was for a friend. A spokesman for his company said Xie was not available to comment. Read more of this post

Xi Borrows From Mao Playbook in Power Play Ahead of China Plenum

Xi Borrows From Mao Playbook in Power Play Ahead of China Plenum

The mission for the near-dozen Communists sitting round a table at a Beijing ministry was explicit: criticize their boss, who was present. Party cadres carefully recorded their comments as they spoke, in an echo of sessions held decades ago under Chairman Mao Zedong’s direction. “Every party member, every division chief, each department head and the ministers have to go through it,” said 31-year-old Tang, who participated in the September gathering and asked to withhold his full name and work unit because he isn’t authorized to talk to reporters. “There are clear instructions that criticism must be genuine. For instance, you can’t say ‘Oh, you have worked too hard and should take more breaks.’” Read more of this post

Muddy Waters Viewed Right on NQ Mobile Payments, Wrong on Cash

Muddy Waters Viewed Right on NQ Mobile Payments, Wrong on Cash

Research firm Muddy Waters LLC was correct to focus on NQ Mobile Inc. (NQ)’s delays in collecting customers’ payments as part of an 81-page report that labeled the Beijing-based mobile service provider a “massive fraud,” according to three accounting experts. At the same time, accountants, professors and a lawyer interviewed by Bloomberg News said the report’s criticism of NQ’s cash accounting and the way the Chinese company got funds from its U.S. public offering may be unfounded. On other points Muddy Waters raised in its Oct. 24 report, it’s still hard for observers to gauge their validity. Read more of this post

Twitter’s Gambit to Revolutionize Advertising

Twitter’s Gambit to Revolutionize Advertising

The social media giant, which will go public this week, could remake the way TV ads sell us products.

ANDY KESSLER

Nov. 3, 2013 6:41 p.m. ET

If all goes according to plan, Twitter is expected to price its initial public offering this week and could start trading Thursday on the New York Stock ExchangeNYX +1.00% Brace yourself for #yougottabekiddingme and #bubble hashtags. It’s been hard to escape the hype. From Ashton Kutcher’s 15 million followers, to the tweeted photos in 2009 of the miraculous landing of US Airways LCC +2.14% Flight 1549 in the Hudson River, Twitter’s 140-character messages are now entrenched in the culture. It’s a classic Silicon Valley story—trial and error and drama among the founders since its July 2006 launch—until the company took off in 2009 by taking advantage of billions of mobile devices. The company is now valued at somewhere around $13 billion. But is it a business? Read more of this post

IBM Ad Campaign Attacks Amazon

Nov 3, 2013

IBM Ad Campaign Attacks Amazon

SPENCER E. ANTE

The IBMIBM +0.01% logo is seen at their booth prior to the opening of the CeBIT IT fair on March 5, 2012 in Hanover, Germany. IBM is stepping up its fight againstAmazon.comAMZN -1.38% around cloud computing. In an unusual move, IBM is launching a marketing campaign Monday that names Amazon as a rival and implicitly claims that IBM is the leader in the estimated $40 billion-a-year cloud-computing market. IBM rarely mentions competitors in any of its advertisements. Read more of this post

Fear of ‘Showrooming’ Fades; Best Buy, Other Retailers Are Optimistic Price-Matching Can Stanch Trend; “A year ago, people said that showrooming would kill Best Buy. I think that Best Buy has killed showrooming.”

Fear of ‘Showrooming’ Fades

Best Buy, Other Retailers Are Optimistic Price-Matching Can Stanch Trend

DREW FITZGERALD

Updated Nov. 3, 2013 7:39 p.m. ET

MK-CH544A_SHOWR_G_20131103183005 MK-CH530_SHOWRO_NS_20131103184204

Best Buy Co. BBY +0.30% is daring bargain hunters to use its stores as showrooms. With four weeks to go before Thanksgiving, the big-box retailer is running television ads that tout its stores as “the ultimate holiday showroom,” playing on the phenomenon in which shoppers visit traditional retailers to check out products and then leave to buy them online for less. That’s a big reversal from last year. Concerns that Best Buy was losing sales to online retailers at alarming rates sent its shares plunging toward single digits. Analysts warned that the company’s 1,400 stores were becoming little more than a testing ground forAmazon.com Inc. AMZN -1.38% ‘s customers. And Best Buy interim Chief Executive G. Mike Mikan made it his top priority to combat “showrooming” before handing the reins to current CEO Hubert Joly. Read more of this post

Chip designers see dollar signs in Bitcoin miners

Chip designers see dollar signs in Bitcoin miners

11:28am EST

By Noel Randewich

SUNNYVALE, California (Reuters) – Tucked away in an air conditioned data center in Silicon Valley is a hodgepodge of black boxes, circuit boards and cooling fans owned by 27-year-old Aaron Jackson-Wilde, a modern-day prospector looking for Bitcoins. Since discovering the digital currency a few months ago, Jackson-Wilde has paid about $2,000 for his “rigs,” which are powered by specialized computer chips. They are designed to help operate and maintain the Bitcoin network – and, in return, generate a small reward in a process known as “Bitcoin mining.” Read more of this post

Hong Kong luxury home buyers queue amid talk of last hurrah

Hong Kong luxury home buyers queue amid talk of last hurrah

4:04pm EST

By Yimou Lee and Alice Woodhouse

HONG KONG (Reuters) – In a shopping mall in one of Hong Kong’s prime retail districts, more than 100 people wait patiently to take a lift to the sales floors – not to buy luxury bags or clothes, but high-end apartments with price tags of up to $4.4 million. Foster Lee, a 30-year-old banker, was among the lucky ones who won the chance to buy a unit after a ballot in which more than 1,600 people signed up for just 80 luxury units on offer. Read more of this post

Could fracking boom peter out sooner than DOE expects?

Could fracking boom peter out sooner than DOE expects?

Wendy Koch, USA TODAY10:46 a.m. EST November 3, 2013

The future of the U.S. fossil fuel industry rests largely on fracking, which has brought a surge in oil and gas production. Energy experts disagree, though, on how long this boom will last.

STORY HIGHLIGHTS

Fracking has led to a surge in U.S. oil and gas production

Yet energy experts disagree about how long this shale boom will last

The U.S. government cites uncertainties in its own mixed forecast

Surging oil and gas production is nudging the nation closer to energy independence. But new research suggests the boom could peter out long before the United States reaches this decades-old goal. Many wells behind the energy gush are quickly losing productivity, and some areas could hit peak levels sooner than the U.S. government expects, according to analyses presented last week at a Geological Society of America meeting in Denver. Read more of this post

Big Oil’s Tricky Mix of Shale and Scale

Big Oil’s Tricky Mix of Shale and Scale–Heard on the Street

Size Isn’t an Advantage in the Shale Patch

LIAM DENNING

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

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If you are going to be big, you have to make it work for you. The problem for Big Oil is that one of the world’s biggest opportunities, shale, doesn’t necessarily reward bigness. Royal Dutch Shell‘s RDSB.LN +1.39% partial retreat from U.S. shale this year suggests it overreached as it scooped up assets there. Latecomers always risk getting the crumbs after first-movers have picked up the choice cuts. But there also is a structural problem confronting Big Oil. Read more of this post

India throws rings of protection around divisive candidate Modi

India throws rings of protection around divisive candidate Modi

4:10pm EST

By Sanjeev Miglani

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – – Indian security forces are preparing for one of their most challenging assignments in decades, protecting prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi in a country with a grim history of political assassinations. A series of small bombs killed six people at a rally the Hindu nationalist leader held in the city of Patna on October 20. Read more of this post

Apollo Tyre says problems reaching a deal with Cooper’s U.S. labor union and a lack of information about a Cooper JV in China have made it impossible to raise the more than $2 billion in debt it needs to close the deal

Cooper Tire, Apollo Tyre Head to Court

With Deal in Limbo, Debate is Over Problems Reaching Labor Contract

LIZ HOFFMAN

Updated Nov. 3, 2013 7:15 p.m. ET

A $2.2 billion takeover of Cooper Tire & Rubber Co. CTB -0.31% is on the skids. Whether it closes—and at what price—may hinge on a judge’s interpretation of one of the fuzziest deal terms around. India’s Apollo Tyre Ltd. agreed in June to buy Cooper Tire for $35 a share. Cooper’s shareholders approved the deal in September, teeing up an Oct. 4 closing date. But Apollo didn’t show up to close. Read more of this post

Sony’s Credit Rating May Be Cut to Junk by Moody’s After Loss; Sony suffers TV relapse as Japan peers change channel

Sony’s Credit Rating May Be Cut to Junk by Moody’s After Loss

Sony Corp. (6758)’s credit rating may be downgraded to junk by Moody’s Investors Service Inc. after the Japanese electronics company posted a loss and cut its earnings forecast, signaling that its turnaround effort is faltering. Moody’s has placed Sony’s Baa3 long-term senior unsecured bond rating on review for a downgrade, the credit-rating company said today in a statement. Baa3 is Moody’s lowest investment-grade rating. Read more of this post

“Please bring back the old Tanah Abang”; SE Asia’s Top Textile Market Seeks to Clean Up Its Act

SE Asia’s Top Textile Market Seeks to Clean Up Its Act

By Agence France-Presse on 10:30 am November 3, 2013.
After years of being overrun by a racketeering mafia, drug addicts and prostitutes, Southeast Asia’s biggest textile market is cleaning up its act in an effort to win back droves of shoppers. Spread across several blocks in the Indonesian capital Jakarta, Tanah Abang market is a colourful whirl of activity that has attracted shoppers from across the region for centuries. While glittering skyscrapers have shot up around the city centre trading hub, the market itself, which was founded in 1735 by a Dutch businessman, is a series of modest buildings in an area of traditional, red-tiled houses. Read more of this post

Indonesia’s major mobile operators bleed as sharp drop in rupiah hurts earnings

Telcoms bleed as sharp drop in rupiah hurts earnings 

Mariel Grazella, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Mon, November 04 2013, 8:02 AM

Indonesia’s major mobile operators suffered sharp declines in their profits during the first nine months of this year partly due to lower growth in their revenues and large foreign-exchange losses. Bakrie Telecom (BTEL), one of whose commissioners is Anindya N. Bakrie, son of tycoon and presidential hopeful Aburizal Bakrie, booked a 10.2 percent decrease in its revenues in the first nine months of this year, but its profits plunged even lower due to high costs stemming from the sharp drop in the rupiah against the US dollar in the third quarter. Read more of this post

Singapore exchange mulls giving rebates to high-frequency traders after investing $250 million in HFT infrastructure

Some Indexers Grouse About ‘Smart Beta’ Approaches

Talk of improved index strategies riles some classic index investors

KAREN DAMATO and ARI I. WEINBERG

Nov. 3, 2013 4:16 p.m. ET

If you’re not “smart,” does that mean you’re “dumb?” That’s the question proponents of classic index investing are asking these days. Index funds aim to provide exposure to the performance—or beta—of any market. But now, new mutual and exchange-traded funds are billing themselves as “smart beta” funds, and some investors and advisers are upset. Their gripe: The term “smart beta” implies that older indexing varieties are, well, not so intelligent. Read more of this post

Hiring a property agent? Let them bid for the job online at hirepropertyagent.com

Hiring a property agent? Let them bid for the job online

Monday, Nov 04, 2013

Cheryl Ong

The Straits Times

SINGAPORE – The days of sifting through hundreds of advertisements to find a property agent could be gone if a new website has its way. The site – hirepropertyagent.com – allows agents to bid for the chance to represent a client. This upends the usual process, which involves a buyer or seller browsing through ads or asking for recommendations. They then have to negotiate over the commission payable to the agents for their services. But trying to find an agent out of a pool of thousands is often a tedious and lengthy process, which prompted website developer Ezekiel Chew to devise his site. Read more of this post

Won for the money: North Korea experiments with exchange rates

Won for the money: North Korea experiments with exchange rates

6:28pm EST

By James Pearson

SEOUL (Reuters) – In a dimly-lit Pyongyang toyshop packed with Mickey Mouse picture frames and plastic handguns, a basketball sells for 46,000 Korean People’s Won – close to $500 at North Korea’s centrally planned exchange rate. Luckily, for young North Koreans looking to shoot hoops with Dennis Rodman, the new friend of leader Kim Jong Un, the Chinese-made ball actually costs a little less than $6 based on black market rates. Read more of this post

Universal Life Policies Hurt by Low-Rate Era

Universal Life Policies Hurt by Low-Rate Era

LESLIE SCISM

Nov. 3, 2013 6:38 p.m. ET

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CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa—About 20 years ago, Steven and Joanne Carfrae, then-owners of a meat-packing plant here, took out a “universal life” insurance policy, naming local charities to receive the future $2 million in proceeds. To their dismay, the couple recently faced a stark choice: put up tens of thousands of dollars to keep the policy alive at its existing face value or reduce the death benefit sharply. They went the latter route and now have a $658,000 policy—meaning their favorite causes will receive $1.3 million less than planned. Read more of this post

Great Investors’ Best Ideas Conference Notes 2013; Notes From Excellence in Investing San Francisco 2013

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Great Investors’ Best Ideas Conference Notes 2013: Price, Akre, Gabelli, Pickens, Russo & More

Below are some brief notes from the 7th annual Great Investors’ Best Ideas Conference in Dallas benefiting the Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research and the Vickery Meadow Youth Development Foundation.
Notes From Great Investors’ Best Ideas Conference
Michael Price (MFP Investors): He pitched three ideas:  long Hospira (HSP), long Songbird Estates (SBD.LN) and long Dolby Labs (DLB).  HSP has seen value guys buying it, transitioning away from growth investors as the investor base changes.  The company has good free cash flow and he thinks the stock can hit $60.  His thesis on Songbird is a discount to NAV story (around 30%).  Dolby (DLB) has a ton of cash and no debt with huge royalty streams (80% of revenue).  As tablets and PCs continue to grow, they’ll make money. Read more of this post

Test Your Emerging-Markets IQ; Before taking the leap, fund investors should know the territory

Test Your Emerging-Markets IQ

Before taking the leap, fund investors should know the territory

CHANA R. SCHOENBERGER

Nov. 3, 2013 4:16 p.m. ET

As the world’s most advanced economies continue to sputter, investors looking for a brighter picture continue to turn to emerging markets, which are growing faster. How much do you know about emerging markets? Find out by taking this emerging-markets quiz. Investing in these countries can carry significant risks. Political turmoil, uncertain legal systems that may not favor foreign investors, and currency risk are all possible pitfalls. The payoff is a potential for higher returns as these economies expand. Many of these countries have a growing middle class that is clamoring increasingly for consumer goods. Some are also benefiting from high rates of infrastructure spending and from natural resources. Read more of this post

In China’s Xinjiang, poverty, exclusion are greater threat than Islam

In China’s Xinjiang, poverty, exclusion are greater threat than Islam

4:16pm EST

By Michael Martina

URUMQI, China (Reuters) – In the dirty backstreets of the Uighur old quarter of Xinjiang’s capital Urumqi in China’s far west, Abuduwahapu frowns when asked what he thinks is the root cause of the region’s festering problem with violence and unrest. “The Han Chinese don’t have faith, and the Uighurs do. So they don’t really understand each other,” he said, referring to the Muslim religion the Turkic-speaking Uighur people follow, in contrast to the official atheism of the ruling Communist Party. Read more of this post

Emerging Markets Come to Growth Pivot Point; Whether the growth slowdown in emerging markets is cyclical or structural, one thing is certain: Deeper overhauls are a must if a prolonged downturn is to be avoided at all

Emerging Markets Come to Growth Pivot Point

Slump in Developing Nations’ Economies Could Be Cyclical or Due to Structural Problems

TOM WRIGHT

Updated Nov. 3, 2013 7:53 p.m. ET

Is the slowing growth in emerging markets from China to Turkey to Brazil a temporary blip or a harbinger of worse to come? For much of the past decade, these emerging economies expanded swiftly as people shifted from farms to more-productive urban jobs. They bounced back strongly after the global recession as large monetary and fiscal stimulus spending by China and other developing nations helped offset a drop in U.S. demand. The Federal Reserve further bolstered their growth story when it poured cheap credit into these markets by printing money to boost the U.S. economy. Read more of this post

If you’re not “smart,” does that mean you’re “dumb?” Some Indexers Grouse About ‘Smart Beta’ Approaches; Talk of improved index strategies riles some classic index investors

Some Indexers Grouse About ‘Smart Beta’ Approaches

Talk of improved index strategies riles some classic index investors

KAREN DAMATO and ARI I. WEINBERG

Nov. 3, 2013 4:16 p.m. ET

If you’re not “smart,” does that mean you’re “dumb?” That’s the question proponents of classic index investing are asking these days. Index funds aim to provide exposure to the performance—or beta—of any market. But now, new mutual and exchange-traded funds are billing themselves as “smart beta” funds, and some investors and advisers are upset. Their gripe: The term “smart beta” implies that older indexing varieties are, well, not so intelligent. Read more of this post

Fed Gives Banks New Dire Scenarios for 2014 Stress Tests

Fed Gives Banks New Dire Scenarios for 2014 Stress Tests

Lenders including JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) and Citigroup Inc. (C) will have to show they can survive the demise of a trading partner or a plunge in value of high-risk business loans in the 2014 version of U.S. stress tests. The scenarios for the annual tests, outlined by the Federal Reserve in a statement yesterday, reflect some of the most pressing threats seen by regulators as they gauge the ability of the U.S. financial system to withstand economic shocks. Bankers will have to show what would happen to the value of leveraged loans they hold, the impact of another housing bust and how they’d fare if a firm that owes them substantial sums collapses. Read more of this post

Dirty Money: Will Singapore Clean Up Its Act? Singapore has become an increasingly popular haven for money laundering and tax evasion. Can it be both a home for fortune hunters and a bastion of integrity?

11/01/2013 06:59 PM

Dirty Money: Will Singapore Clean Up Its Act?

By Martin Hesse

Singapore has become an increasingly popular haven for money laundering and tax evasion. But now it faces calls for reform and a difficult dilemma: Can it be both a home for fortune hunters and a bastion of integrity?

A yellowish-brown fog has settled in the urban canyons of Singapore’s financial district. From a skyscraper high above the harbor, you can hardly make out the endless rows of containers in the port terminals. A cloud of smog locally referred to as the “haze” — caused by the slash-and-burn farming methods of the palm oil barons in neighboring Indonesia — regularly darkens the skies of the wealthy city-state of Singapore, at the southern tip of the Malaysian Peninsula. But the air has never been as bad as it is now. Read more of this post

Welcome To The Unicorn Club: Learning From Billion-Dollar Startups

Welcome To The Unicorn Club: Learning From Billion-Dollar Startups

Posted 13 hours ago by Aileen Lee (@aileenlee)

Editor’s note: Aileen Lee is founder of Cowboy Ventures, a seed-stage fund that backs entrepreneurs reinventing work and personal life through software. Previously, she joined Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers in 1999 and was also founding CEO of digital media company RMG Networks, backed by KPCB. Follow her on Twitter @aileenlee
Many entrepreneurs, and the venture investors who back them, seek to build billion-dollar companies.

Why do investors seem to care about “billion dollar exits”? Historically, top venture funds have driven returns from their ownership in just a few companies in a given fund of many companies. Plus, traditional venture funds have grown in size, requiring larger “exits” to deliver acceptable returns. For example – to return just the initial capital of a $400 million venture fund, that might mean needing to own 20 percent of two different $1 billion companies, or 20 percent of a $2 billion company when the company is acquired or goes public. So, we wondered, as we’re a year into our new fund (which doesn’t need to back billion-dollar companies to succeed, but hey, we like to learn): how likely is it for a startup to achieve a billion-dollar valuation? Is there anything we can learn from the mega hits of the past decade, likeFacebookLinkedIn and Workday? To answer these questions, the Cowboy Ventures team built a dataset of U.S.-based tech companies started since January 2003 and most recently valued at $1 billion by private or public markets. We call it our “Learning Project,” and it’s ongoing.

unicorn-graph1c unicorn-graph2c unicorn-graph3c Read more of this post

Reduce the noise levels in your investment process

Reduce the noise levels in your investment process

By Barry Ritholtz, Published: November 1

“Signal-to-noise ratio” is an engineering concept that focuses on the amount of useful information being received compared with false or useless data. This is an especially important concept to investors. Over the past few years, I have been reducing the meaningless distractions in my investing process. You should, too. You want less of the annoying nonsense that interferes with your portfolios and more of the significant data that allow you to become a less distracted, more purposeful investor. Read more of this post

Sears’ CEO and billionaire hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert: “I’d like to go faster. I’d like to go bigger. We’re just not making money, which makes it much, much harder to fund the transformation.”

November 2, 2013

At Sears, Those Big Losses Get in the Way

By GRETCHEN MORGENSON

“I’d like to go faster. I’d like to go bigger. We’re just not making money, which makes it much, much harder to fund the transformation.” That’s Edward S. Lampert, the chairman and chief executive of Sears Holdings, speaking last Friday about what lies ahead for this embattled retailing giant, which he put together in 2005 and now oversees. Earlier in the week, the company had announced a possible spin-off of a prized asset — the trusted online retailer Lands’ End. Together with another spin-off, of Sears Auto Centers, the company could “accelerate our transformation into a leading integrated retailer,” it said. Read more of this post

Oarfish Offer Chance to Study an Elusive Animal Long Thought a Monster

November 2, 2013

Oarfish Offer Chance to Study an Elusive Animal Long Thought a Monster

By DOUGLAS QUENQUA

OARFISH-1-articleLarge

The body of an 18-foot male oarfish was found in the waters off Santa Catalina Island in California last month. Five days later, a 14-foot female washed up 50 miles away. It was a big day for marine biologists: On Oct. 13, the body of an 18-foot oarfish was dragged from the water onto Santa Catalina Island off the California coast, presenting a rare opportunity for local scientists to study one of the world’s most elusive and awe-inspiring big fish. Five days later, it was a big day again: Another oarfish washed up 50 miles away, this one 14 feet with six-foot-long ovaries full of eggs.

Read more of this post