France claims breakthrough with artificial human heart

December 22, 2013 2:19 pm

France claims breakthrough with artificial human heart

By Hugh Carnegy in Paris

France has claimed a breakthrough in human organ technology with the first implant of an artificial heart designed to replace the need for a transplant from another person. President François Hollande, anxious to lift amood of pessimism  over the country’s economy, hailed the event as an example of French innovation. Read more of this post

Unwanted Memories Erased in Electroconvulsive Therapy Experiment; Scientists Search for New Treatments for Mental Trauma

Unwanted Memories Erased in Electroconvulsive Therapy Experiment

Scientists Search for New Treatments for Mental Trauma

GAUTAM NAIK

Updated Dec. 22, 2013 7:54 p.m. ET

Scientists have zapped an electrical current to people’s brains to erase distressing memories, part of an ambitious quest to better treat ailments such as mental trauma, psychiatric disorders and drug addiction. Read more of this post

TCM Still Struggling to Find Cure for Its FDA Woes

12.09.2013 17:47

TCM Still Struggling to Find Cure for Its FDA Woes

Traditional Chinese medicines usually do not get very far in U.S. testing, and even the one that has made it into the final round has a ways to go

By staff reporter He Chunmei and intern reporter Li Huiling

(Beijing) – In November, the traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) Fuzheng Huayu Tablets passed the second phase of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) clinical testing. Read more of this post

What Anesthesia Can Teach Us About Consciousness

December 10, 2013

What Anesthesia Can Teach Us About Consciousness

By MAGGIE KOERTH-BAKER

More than a decade ago, a 43-year-old woman went to a surgeon for a hysterectomy. She was put under, and everything seemed to be going according to plan, until, for a horrible interval, her anesthesia stopped working. She couldn’t open her eyes or move her fingers. She tried to breathe, but even that most basic reflex didn’t seem to work; a tube was lodged in her throat. She was awake and aware on the operating table, but frozen and unable to tell anyone what was happening. Read more of this post

Rampant Returns Plague E-Retailers; Sellers Suggest Sizes and Redirect Discounts to Break Bad Habits

Rampant Returns Plague E-Retailers

Sellers Suggest Sizes and Redirect Discounts to Break Bad Habits

SHELLY BANJO

Dec. 22, 2013 6:23 p.m. ET

Free shipping and lenient return policies have given online retailing a huge boost. Now, chains are mining their order data to get shoppers to keep more purchases. Behind the uptick in e-commerce is a little known secret: As much as a third of all Internet sales gets returned, according to retail consultancy Kurt Salmon. And the tide of goods flowing back to retailers is rising. Shipper United Parcel Service Inc. UPS +0.15% expects returns to jump 15% this season from last year, making them a significant and growing cost for retailers. Read more of this post

Data brokers outpace regulators as they mine new technologies

December 22, 2013 5:01 pm

Data brokers outpace regulators as they mine new technologies

By Emily Steel in New York

Companies that create data dossiers on consumers are tapping new technologies to unearth ever more intimate information despite intensifying regulatory scrutiny of the multibillion-dollar data broker industry. Read more of this post

Twitter’s Dorsey Vies With SoftBank’s Son for Japan Shops: Tech

Twitter’s Dorsey Vies With SoftBank’s Son for Japan Shops: Tech

Twitter Inc. co-founder Jack Dorsey sparked a price war over Japanese credit-card transactions with SoftBank Corp. (9984)’s Masayoshi Son. Entrepreneurs like Yukiko Kurano are the biggest winners so far. Read more of this post

This Insane Chinese Concept Train Doesn’t Need To Stop At Stations To Pick Up Passengers

This Insane Chinese Concept Train Doesn’t Need To Stop At Stations To Pick Up Passengers

DYLAN LOVE

DEC. 22, 2013, 11:45 AM 34,025 20

A train in motion is a train carrying out its purpose. So why bother stopping at stations?! That’s the idea behind this concept train from China. Check out the video below which demonstrates how it works: Passengers step onto a compartment platform above an incoming train, which is then snagged by the train as it moves through the platform. At the next station, anyone wanting to get off moves up into the compartment, which is then snagged by the station. The train itself never stops, it simply trades embarkation capsules as its moves through a station, giving passengers a window of time to board without the train needing to stop.

More Chinese enterprises jump on e-commerce bandwagon

More Chinese enterprises jump on e-commerce bandwagon

Staff Reporter

2013-12-22

In line with the growing integration of virtual and physical commerce, Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group announced on Dec. 9 a strategic partnership with consumer electronics and appliance producer Haier, under which Alibaba will inject 2.822 billion yuan (US$465 million) into Haier in exchange for a 34% stake in the latter’s subsidiary Ririshun Logistics. Read more of this post

Alibaba’s online investment account is becoming a serious threat to Chinese banks

Alibaba’s online investment account is becoming a serious threat to Chinese banks

By Gwynn Guilford @sinoceros

6 hours ago

If you work at a Chinese bank these days, the thing you’re probably sweating the most is vanishing deposits. Banks are only allowed to lend a certain percentage of their deposit bases. Artificially low government-set deposit rates have driven households and companies to hold their savings instead in higher-yielding products, such as wealth management products (WMPs). Fewer deposits means fewer loans—which means less interest income for banks. (Banks earn commissions off WMPs, so it’s not all bad.) Read more of this post

Some 14 years since it adopted its unique knowledge-oriented management, retail giant E-Land is seeing the positive results of its efforts, overcoming the sluggish domestic economy by increasing global sales

2013-12-22 18:13

E-Land expands global portfolios

By Park Ji-won

131222_p09_E-Land

Some 14 years since it adopted its unique knowledge-oriented management, retail giant E-Land is seeing the positive results of its efforts, overcoming the sluggish domestic economy by increasing global sales. Read more of this post

Russia ’98 Crisis Haunts Deutsche Bank’s Smith Seeing China Bust

Russia ’98 Crisis Haunts Deutsche Bank’s Smith Seeing China Bust

China’s push to open up its economy is winning praise from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Morgan Stanley and Jefferies Group LLC, which predicted last month a “massive” multiyear bull run for stocks. Read more of this post

Apple: The Great Call of China; A Long-Anticipated Deal With China Mobile Is Finally Here—but the Stock Seems to Have Priced Much of It in Already

Apple: The Great Call of China

A Long-Anticipated Deal With China Mobile Is Finally Here—but the Stock Seems to Have Priced Much of It in Already

DAN GALLAGHER

Dec. 5, 2013 2:41 p.m. ET

Many a market rally has been built on the strength of one word: China. But as AppleAAPL +0.51% strikes a deal with that country’s—and the world’s—largest wireless carrier by subscribers, investors should be wary of overplaying it. Read more of this post

What are investors’ best bets for 2014? World’s leading money managers weigh in.

What are investors’ best bets for 2014? World’s leading money managers weigh in.

Sunday, December 22, 6:30 AM

Following the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index’s record high in November, will stocks continue their ascent amid what is likely to be lackluster global expansion in 2014? In September, the Federal Reserve’s unexpected delay in tapering its stimulus program whipsawed debt markets. Last week it announced it would begin tapering. Where should bond investors go for returns? Read more of this post

Hyundai Group folds financial business; to Raise at Least 3.3 Trillion Won Selling Assets

Hyundai Group to Raise at Least 3.3 Trillion Won Selling Assets

Hyundai Group, owner of South Korea’s second-largest shipping company, plans to sell assets including financial units and a hotel for at least 3.3 trillion won ($3.1 billion) to boost cash. Read more of this post

An exercise in prolonging a banking credit crunch

December 22, 2013 6:36 pm

An exercise in prolonging a banking credit crunch

By Wolfgang Münchau

The lousy agreement on banking union will produce the financial sector equivalent of austerity

The agreement on a eurozone banking union is neither a glass half full, nor half empty. As many commentators are saying, last week’s deal is hideously complex, and a common resolution mechanism without a fiscal backstop for failed banks is pointless. Read more of this post

Banks Mostly Avoid Providing Bitcoin Services

Banks Mostly Avoid Providing Bitcoin Services

Lenders Don’t Share Investors’ Enthusiasm for the Virtual-Currency Craze

ROBIN SIDEL

Dec. 22, 2013 4:32 p.m. ET

Companies trying to cash in on the newfangled bitcoin craze are having trouble getting old-fashioned bank accounts. Lenders are leery of dealing with virtual-currency companies because of concerns that the businesses could run afoul of anti-money-laundering laws or be involved in illegal activities, banking executives say. Regulators and central bankers around the world have raised similar concerns in recent months. Read more of this post

Why Market Forecasts Are So Bad; Analysts’ predictions are frequently less accurate than random guesses.

Why Market Forecasts Are So Bad

Analysts’ predictions are frequently less accurate than random guesses.

JOE LIGHT

Dec. 20, 2013 7:15 p.m. ET

The oracles known as Wall Street strategists have spoken: The S&P 500 will rise 6.4% by the end of next year. But the evidence shows you’d do just as well guessing yourself. Read more of this post

Turkey Will Either Lose Erdogan or Democracy

Turkey Will Either Lose Erdogan or Democracy

There are two reasons Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan may not survive the current government corruption scandals in Turkey. And if he does, the cost to the “Turkish model” will be enormous. Read more of this post

Philippine Stocks First to Worst as Funds Sell: Southeast Asia

Philippine Stocks First to Worst as Funds Sell: Southeast Asia

A 21 percent slump in Philippine stocks that’s turned them from the world’s best performers into the biggest losers isn’t enough to lure back Macquarie Investment Management Ltd. and Bank Julius Baer & Co. Read more of this post

India’s New Corruption Watchdog Still Needs Watching

India’s New Watchdog Still Needs Watching

A half-century after the idea was first raised, India finally has its “Lokpal,” or “protector” in Hindi. The term refers to the anti-corruption watchdog body, approved by Parliament last week, whose Herculean task it will be to root out public corruption that saps billions of dollars from the exchequer, extorts bribes from ordinary citizens when they need anything from a land-use permit to a driver’s license, and has almost obliterated Indians’ faith in their once-proud democracy. Read more of this post

Taxing time for corporates in India

December 22, 2013 7:43 am

Taxing time for corporates in India

By James Crabtree in Mumbai

Two weeks ago in Helsinki, Nokia executives waited nervously for word from a courtroom halfway around the world in New Delhi. At stake was their ability to transfer a large Indian factory to Microsoft, as part of the sale of Nokia’s €5.4bn phone business to the US group – a move that led to a fierce tax battle, involving dawn raids, frozen assets, and claims adding up to $1.1bn. Read more of this post

Japan store chain Lawson scales back expansion plans in China

December 22, 2013 1:11 pm

Japan store chain Lawson scales back expansion plans in China

By Demetri Sevastopulo in Hong Kong

Lawson, the Japanese convenience store chain, is slowing its expansion in China because it thinks the Chinese government has not done enough to spur consumption in the world’s second-largest economy. Takeshi Niinami, Lawson’s chief executive, told the Financial Times that Lawson had decided to push back its plan to open 10,000 stores in China by 2020 to about 2025. It currently has 384 stores in the country. Read more of this post

Retailers are struggling to find the right formula for the demanding baby-boomer market

December 22, 2013 8:11 pm

Fashion: A mature market

By Andrea Felsted and Norma Cohen

Retailers are struggling to find the right formula for the demanding baby-boomer market

Alison Wells, a professional singer and teacher from east London, says clothes shopping – once a delight for her – has become a chore. A trim 5ft 8in, and a size 10, Ms Wells ought to be a model fashion customer. But she is not. At 57, the task of finding clothing that is both fashionable and age-appropriate is frustrating. Read more of this post

Chicken Sales Plummet in China, Hong Kong After Bird Flu Returns

Chicken Sales Plummet in China, Hong Kong After Bird Flu Returns

Tyler Durden on 12/22/2013 21:23 -0500

The last time China’s birdflu epidemic dominated the ether, and internet, was in April, when news of numerous casualties led many to believe that the epidemic was on the verge of breaching all local containment measures. And then, suddenly, all media coverage of China’s H7N9 story disappeared as if by Department of Truth (and propaganda) magic. Naturally, the quick popular response was to assume that all was again well since the government no longer made it a notable topic – just like the Japanese government did with Fukushima. However, as in the case of Fukushima, it turns out all may not have been well. As Japan’s NHK reports, H7N9 bird flu strain is once again spreading in southern China, claiming the 148th victim of the vicious flu virus. Or perhaps instead of “once again” it was simply “constantly.” Read more of this post

An Obscure Melon Could Save The US Soda Industry

An Obscure Melon Could Save The US Soda Industry

MARINA LOPESREUTERS
DEC. 22, 2013, 3:50 PM 4,320 1

NEW YORK (Reuters) – An obscure melon once cultivated by Buddhist monks in China to sweeten tea could give the $8 billion U.S. diet soda industry a shot at winning back consumers concerned about artificial ingredients. Read more of this post

Thai Businessman of the Year: Tos Chirathivat boldly leading Central retail chain overseas

BUSINESSMAN OF THE YEAR

Tos Chirathivat boldly leading central retail chain overseas

The Nation
December 23, 2013 1:00 am

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The Chirathivat family has continued to strengthen its retail empire ever since the first Central store opened in 1957, but overseas expansion has become remarkable only recently thanks to the vision of Tos Chirathivat from the clan’s third generation. Read more of this post

Samsung Life Insurance bought a chunk of Samsung Card from a host of the group’s other finance-related subsidiaries in what analysts see as a signal that Samsung is restructuring itself

Samsung group moves suggest a restructuring

Dec 16,2013

Samsung Life Insurance bought a chunk of Samsung Card from a host of the group’s other finance-related subsidiaries in what analysts see as a signal that Samsung is restructuring itself.  Read more of this post

Hard times for Korean banks and employees; Branch closures, work reassignments promise an unhappy new year

Hard times for banks and employees

Branch closures, work reassignments promise an unhappy new year

BY LEE TAE-KYUNG, AND JEONG SEON-EON [angie@joongang.co.kr]

Dec 16,2013

A manager nicknamed Mr. A, who is an employee at Shinhan Bank with 20 years of experience, feels anxious these days. Thinking he has built a good career by working at different branches and headquarters, Mr. A was hoping he would get a promotion next year to become a branch head. However, the bank decided to close 50 underperforming branches early next year and open only five to 10 new ones. Read more of this post

HK Homebuyers waiting for 20pc slide

Homebuyers waiting for 20pc slide
Karen Chiu
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Nearly three out of five people would buy next year if secondary home prices fell around 20 percent, a survey by Midland Realty shows. Of 830 people polled last week, a quarter believed prices would decline further next year. And of the homeowners among them, almost half said they want to sell their units due to likely interest rate hikes and the imposition of more government curbs. Read more of this post