Dollar-and-Cents Secrets of Music Streaming; Staying Power Is More Important Than Bursting on the Scene

Dollar-and-Cents Secrets of Music Streaming

Staying Power Is More Important Than Bursting on the Scene

ETHAN SMITH

Dec. 23, 2013 7:29 p.m. ET

MK-CI812_STREAM_G_20131223183904

In the good old days of the CD boom, the music industry was all about the first week. Prime the pump with endless airplay on pop radio and MTV, blanket major markets with billboard ads and buy acres of promotional space in big record stores, with a crescendo toward the release date. Read more of this post

Babes in a Digital Toyland: Even 3-Year-Olds Get Gadgets

December 23, 2013

Babes in a Digital Toyland: Even 3-Year-Olds Get Gadgets

By HILARY STOUT and ELIZABETH A. HARRIS

The children come day after day, lining up in the cold and snow on Main Street in Midland, Mich., to wait their turn to enter Santa’s house and whisper their Christmas longings to the jolly man in the red suit.

“Cellphone.”

“IPad.”

“Notebook.”

And when they say such things, Tom Valent, now in his 38th year as Santa Claus, unleashes his best “Ho-ho-ho” and replies: “Well, I’m good at toys. Electronics — that’s a bit of a challenge.” Read more of this post

All Buyers No Sellers as Nordic Phone Companies Seek Mergers

All Buyers No Sellers as Nordic Phone Companies Seek Mergers

Scandinavia’s biggest phone companies agree takeovers would benefit the region and corporate earnings. There’s just one obstacle — no one is selling.

Sweden and Denmark have too many carriers vying for video-gobbling smartphone and tablet users, with four main players each. In Norway, Ukrainian-born billionaire Len Blavatnik’s Access Industries Holdings Inc. recently stunned a trio of existing carriers by buying spectrum for a new fourth-generation network. “It’s a crowded market but that doesn’t mean anything is going to happen,” Kjell-Morten Johnsen, head of Telenor ASA (TEL)’s European unit, said in an interview in Stockholm. There’s “no way” Telenor or TeliaSonera (TLSN) AB will exit Sweden and Tele2 AB (TEL2B) and 3 Scandinavia, owned by billionaire Li Ka-shing’s Hutchison Whampoa Ltd. (13), haven’t shown an interest in backing out, he said. Read more of this post

Acer to embrace cloud technology to combat losses

Acer to embrace cloud technology to combat losses

CNA

2013-12-19

E626TL01H_2013資料照片F_copy1Acer chairman and CEO Stan Shih. (File Photo/Liu Tsung-lung)

Taiwanese computer maker Acer said on Wednesday that it will transform into a “hardware plus software and services company” as it prepares to embrace new opportunities in the era of cloud technology. Read more of this post

The Bank of Korea (BOK) is experiencing snowballing losses in the value of its gold holdings, as the price of the precious metal continues to plummet on global markets

2013-12-23 15:27

By Kim Rahn

BOK suffers losses from gold price fall

The Bank of Korea (BOK) is experiencing snowballing losses in the value of its gold holdings, as the price of the precious metal continues to plummet on global markets.
There is criticism that the central bank’s gold purchase strategy, promoted under current Governor Kim Choong-soo failed to read market trends, as the price has been declining since it expanded its holdings.
According to the BOK, Monday, it held 14.4 tons of gold up to 2011. The bank bought an additional 90 tons ― at a cost of $4.79 billion ― from June 2011 through this February, for a total of 104.4 tons.
However, the price of gold, which had been increasing for a decade in the 2000s, has been declining since 2011.
According to the New York Mercantile Exchange, the price of gold was around $1,900 per ounce in September 2011 but dropped below $1,200, Friday.
The falling trend was especially sharp this year, mainly due to an optimistic outlook for a global economic recovery, dropping almost 30 percent, the largest since 1984. Market watchers say the trend may continue next year.
At the current market price, the value of the BOK’s gold holdings is now some $3.45 billion, a $1.34 billion loss to date.
A BOK official said it is embarrassing that the price of gold is falling but it does not mean the buying decision was wrong.
“It would have been better if we had bought the gold at a lower price. But regarding gold, we are maintaining a long term strategy, and long here doesn’t mean a couple of decades but a century,” he said.
The official said the 14.4 tons of gold holdings was small compared to other countries’ stock. The BOK, which used to focus on financial assets rather than real assets, began to buy gold in 2011. “We needed to diversify the portfolio of our foreign reserves,” he said.
He did not answer directly as to whether the bank will buy more gold, but hinted that it could do so in the long term.
“Considering Korea’s economic and political status, its gold holdings of 104.4 tons are still small. The United States, for example, is holding 8,000 tons,” he said.
The official also said the gold accounts for only 1.3 percent of the bank’s total foreign reserves. “In the whole picture of foreign reserve management, we see profits in other types of reserves such as bonds.”
During a parliamentary inspection of the government in October, governor Kim also refuted criticism from lawmakers about the decline in the price of gold by saying, “We buy gold not for speculation but for future use in case of emergencies. The amount of the BOK’s gold purchase is small compared to its total foreign reserves and the size of the nation’s economy.”

Japanese Team Dominates Competition to Create Generation of Rescue Robots

December 22, 2013

Japanese Team Dominates Competition to Create Generation of Rescue Robots

By JOHN MARKOFF

HOMESTEAD, Fla. — An international competition to pave the way for a new generation of rescue robots was dominated by a team of Japanese roboticists who were students in the laboratory of a pioneer in the design of intelligent humanoid machines. Read more of this post

The landscape of the Korea’s securities industry is undergoing a major shakeup, with four out of the 10 largest brokerages by assets up for sale.

2013-12-23 16:56

Securities industry faces shakeup

By Kim Tae-jong
The landscape of the nation’s securities industry is undergoing a major shakeup, with four out of the 10 largest brokerages by assets up for sale.
Now, attention is focused on who will acquire them and how that will change the pecking order in the market, which has suffered its worst slump ever. Some even raised anticipation of the emergence of an investment bank big enough to compete globally. Read more of this post

Over six out of 10 companies listed on the country’s main bourse are expected to face earnings shock in the fourth quarter due to weak domestic demand caused by the prolonged slump

2013-12-24 16:12

Six in 10 firms hit by earnings shock

By Yi Whan-woo
Over six out of 10 companies listed on the country’s main bourse are expected to face earnings shock in the fourth quarter due to weak domestic demand caused by the prolonged slump, data showed Wednesday. Read more of this post

Blockbuster year puts CGV at No. 5 in world

Blockbuster year puts CGV at No. 5 in world

Dec 24,2013

BY KIM JUNG-YOON [kjy@joongang.co.kr]

 CGV, Korea’s leading multiplex cinema operator, said yesterday it expects to be No. 5 in the global theater industry by the end of 2013. 

The cinema group estimates it will sell more than 100 million tickets this year at home and abroad, placing it behind only Regal Cinemas, AMC, Cinemark and Cinepolis of Mexico. Read more of this post

M&A market plagued by oversupply

2013-12-24 17:13

M&A market plagued by oversupply

By Kim Tae-jong
The nation’s mergers and acquisitions (M&A) market remains in the doldrums because many companies up for sale have failed to find new owners amid the prolonged economic slump. The combined value of firms on the market is estimated at dozens of trillions of won.
Experts say that it is highly likely that only a few deals will be made due to a small number of investors showing interest.  Read more of this post

Hyundai Group companies rally on restructuring plan

December 23, 2013 4:35 am

Hyundai Group companies rally on restructuring plan

By Song Jung-a in Seoul

Shares in Hyundai Group companies surged on Monday after the South Korean conglomerate announced plans to sell its financial units to repay mounting debts, as part of moves to weather a worsening liquidity crunch. Read more of this post

CJ CGV, Korea’s leading multiplex cinema operator, said it expects to be No. 5 in the global theater industry by the end of 2013

Blockbuster year puts CGV at No. 5 in world

Dec 24,2013

BY KIM JUNG-YOON [kjy@joongang.co.kr]

CGV, Korea’s leading multiplex cinema operator, said yesterday it expects to be No. 5 in the global theater industry by the end of 2013.  Read more of this post

“We shared the view that crisis awaits us next year and we need innovation to overcome it,” Samsung Group’s presidents agreed on the urgency of the conglomerate’s need to seek a fundamental change and innovate

Samsung presidents agree on need for fundamental change

Sohn Jae-gwon

2013.12.23 18:08:38

Samsung Group’s presidents and the Future Strategies Office, the group’s de facto controlling tower, agreed on the urgency of the conglomerate’s need to seek a fundamental change and innovate with respect to technologies and management system next year. According to group officials, about 400 presidents participated in an overnight workshop at Samsung Human Resources Development Center in Yongin, Gyeonggi Province, Monday, in which they brainstormed on such topics as “Mach management,” “extreme gap,” and “CSV.”  Read more of this post

Toyota to shift Thai output base to Indonesia

Toyota to shift Thai output base to Indonesia

The Jakarta Post/ANN
Karawang, Indonesia December 21, 2013 1:00 am

County president cites strong demand, growing middle-class as production of all-new Vios starts in West Java plant

Toyota Motor Manufacturing Indonesia (TMMIN) has started producing its all-new Vios at the company’s plant in Karawang, West Java, as it gradually moves its production base from Thailand to Indonesia. Read more of this post

Time to Address Corruption at Party Level in Indonesia

Time to Address Corruption at Party Level

By Pitan Daslani on 9:49 am December 24, 2013.
The biggest news that came out of Jakarta recently was not the detention of Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiyah in a bribery scandal that removed Akil Mochtar from the top position of Indonesia’s highest court. Such detentions are so common that they no longer make the news. Read more of this post

The declaration by the national audit agency on Monday that the 2008 Bank Century bailout cost the state a total of $611 million should push the country’s antigraft agency to intensify its probe into the scandal

Bank Century Case At Point of No Return

By Jakarta Globe on 10:35 am December 24, 2013.
The declaration by the national audit agency on Monday that the 2008 Bank Century bailout cost the state a total of Rp 7.43 trillion ($611 million), should push the country’s antigraft agency to intensify its probe into the scandal. Most importantly, the first announcement by the Supreme Audit Agency (BPK) that the state lost that much money should dispel any remaining doubts whether public funds had indeed been stolen and whether the bailout probe was politically motivated. Read more of this post

Indonesian politician blocks runway in air rage outburst

AFP | Mon, Dec 23 2013

Indonesian politician blocks runway in air rage outburst

JAKARTA – An Indonesian district chief got revenge on an airline that refused to let him board a full flight by sending officials to block the runway and stop the plane landing, authorities said Monday. Marianus Sae, head of Ngada district in the eastern island of Flores, wanted to get home quickly to Ngada from the city of Kupang on Timor island so that he could attend a meeting. Read more of this post

Eating Away at 300 Years of Dutch Colonialism

Eating Away at 300 Years of Dutch Colonialism

By Desi Anwar on 11:05 am December 24, 2013.
Being in Holland makes me think of the Dutch things that one can still encounter in everyday life in Indonesia. The legacy, if you like, of over three hundred years of colonization. Because visiting the Netherlands, I can see a lot here that reminds me of home. For instance, going to the local supermarket Albert Heijn, there is inevitably a wall of shelves dedicated to all things Indonesian that you wouldn’t even find in an Indonesian supermarket. In the snacks and munchies section are packets of crackers or “kroepoek” (the Indonesian letter ‘u’ used to be the Dutch ‘oe’) in different shapes and sizes and flavors, including “empings,” the crackers made from ground melinjo nuts, described on the packet as “kroepoek melinjo.” Read more of this post

Watch the Watchdog: A half-century after the idea was first raised, India finally has its “Lokpal,” or “protector” in Hindi.

Watch the Watchdog

By Bloomberg on 10:51 am December 24, 2013.
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

Indian mothers-in-law: Curse of the mummyji

Indian mothers-in-law: Curse of the mummyji

Dec 21st 2013 | DELHI | From the print edition

20131221_IMP001_1

TIHAR jail in Delhi has a special wing just for her. Young women fear and revere her; their husbands seem crushed by her embrace. On television she is a sari-clad battle-axe. Books about her offer advice including: “Run, she is trying to kill you.” Read more of this post

India’s ‘Modi Wave’ May Lose Momentum

India’s ‘Modi Wave’ May Lose Momentum

As India prepares for national elections in May, what is being called the “Modi wave” seems almost unstoppable. Since naming Narendra Modi — the controversial chief minister of the state of Gujarat — as its prime ministerial candidate, the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party has consistently topped opinion polls. Modi’s BJP decimated the ruling Congress Party in recent state elections — a harbinger, many now believe, of the national outcome. Read more of this post

Almost Every Passenger On A Flight From Dubai To India Was Found Carrying 1 Kilo Of Gold

Almost Every Passenger On A Flight From Dubai To India Was Found Carrying 1 Kilo Of Gold

Tyler Durden on 12/23/2013 23:06 -0500

Submitted by Michael Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Watching Indian bureaucrats attempt to halt more than one billion human beings’ desire for gold has been one of the more entertaining and pathetic stories of all of 2013. It is one that I have covered on many occasions, the latest being my post from earlier this month:  Gold Smuggling Increases 7x in India and Surpasses Illegal Drug Trade. Well it appears the trend continues, potentially at an accelerated rate, as we just learned that, incredibly, “almost every passenger on a flight from Dubai to Calicut was found carrying 1kg of gold.” As I have said many times in the past, if an Indian wants their gold, they will have their gold. Read more of this post

Tough choices for consumer-goods companies; Increasingly empowered consumers, rising yet volatile input prices, and tricky emerging markets mean global consumer-packaged-goods companies must rethink how they do business

Tough choices for consumer-goods companies

Increasingly empowered consumers, rising yet volatile input prices, and tricky emerging markets mean global consumer-packaged-goods companies must rethink how they do business. Here’s a guide.

December 2013 | byJim Brennan, Greg Kelly, and Anne Martinez

Over the past half century, the consumer-packaged-goods (CPG) industry has achieved enviable growth in both revenue and shareholder returns. At first blush, continued growth seems a sure thing—after all, the burgeoning economies of emerging-market countries are fueling an unparalleled boom in global consumption. And given that global CPG companies are selling more of their products to more people in more parts of the world, shouldn’t revenue growth—and, with it, healthy returns—be theirs for the taking? Read more of this post

Red Lobster Split Seen as Wrong Recipe to Boost Darden: Real M&A

Red Lobster Split Seen as Wrong Recipe to Boost Darden: Real M&A

Shareholders aren’t happy with Darden Restaurants Inc. (DRI)’s plan to sell or spin off Red Lobster, which doesn’t solve the biggest problem: finding more customers.

Darden, also the owner of Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse, slid 3.5 percent last week after announcing it will separate the Red Lobster seafood chain. Raymond James Financial Inc. says a breakup won’t create much value for Darden, which is trading at a discount to most of its competitors. The plan falls short of activist investor Barington Capital Group LP’s proposals for a bigger shakeup, including ways to profit from its real estate. Starboard Value LP, which disclosed a stake in the company today, also said Darden’s proposal is inadequate. Read more of this post

Kanye Vuitton Jibe Shows Even Rich Balk at Luxury Prices

Kanye Vuitton Jibe Shows Even Rich Balk at Luxury Prices

Kim Kardashian might as well be naughty this Christmas, because even if she’s nice her fiancé is unlikely to shell out for a Louis Vuitton handbag. Rapper Kanye West, who gave reality TV star Kardashian a diamond ring worth millions to celebrate their engagement, told a U.S. radio show recently that Vuitton’s prices are “just too extreme.” The criticism by West, who has collaborated with the Paris-based label on products including a range of $1,000 sneakers, is a signal some luxury companies may be charging too much, turning off even the wealthiest clients. Read more of this post

Did Chipotle eat Red Lobster? How upscale fast-food chains like Chipotle upended casual dining.

Dec. 24, 2013, 7:16 a.m. EST

Did Chipotle eat Red Lobster?

How upscale fast-food chains like Chipotle upended casual dining.

By Quentin Fottrell

As casual dining chains like Red Lobster and Olive Garden struggle, customers are turning to upscale fast-food joints like Chipotle and Panera where they can eat and run – without having to ask for the check.

Just days after saying it would either spin off or sell its Red Lobster chain, Darden Restaurant Inc.(NYSE:DRI)   has an activist shareholder calling for a more dramatic breakup of the company, The Wall Street Journal reported last week . Darden’s fiscal second-quarter sales fell 4.6% to $2.05 billion: Same-store sales fell 0.6% at Olive Garden and 4.5% at Red Lobster. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc.’s(NYSE:CMG)  most recent third-quarter sales, meanwhile, jumped 18% to $827 million; the company announced last week that it will also open a new chain called Pizzeria Locale. “Red Lobster and Olive Garden are really brands that are seen as old-fashioned,” says Julia Gallo-Torres, U.S. food service category manager at research firm Mintel. “They’ve really suffered postrecession.” Read more of this post

Investors should abandon long-term commodity bets

Investors should abandon long-term commodity bets

Guest writer | Dec 19 12:48 | 17 comments | Share

This guest post is from Mark Haefele, Global Head of Investment at UBS Wealth Management, and his colleague Chris Wright, Cross-Asset Strategist.

A key rule in financial markets is that rational investors should not take unnecessary risks. It is strange, then, that some savvy investors still allocate to commodities over a long-term, five-year-plus horizon. The assumption is that commodities diversify portfolios, hedge against inflation, and, in the case of gold, offer a safe store of value. But our research suggests these justifications for long-term bets on commodities are illusory. Read more of this post

Plan to Build Chips in Brazil Falters Amid Batista’s Woes

Plan to Build Chips in Brazil Falters Amid Batista’s Woes

As Plant Backers Scramble to Find New Investor, Project Is Delayed.

JOHN LYONS and LORETTA CHAO

Dec. 23, 2013 8:07 p.m. ET

RIBEIRAO DAS NEVES, Brazil—In the hills of southeastern Brazil, workers are building a rarity in Latin America: a state-of-the-art semiconductor plant backed by the government and companies like International Business Machines Corp. IBM +1.23% Officials say the venture illustrates how policy makers and business can team up to bring modern industries to Brazil. Read more of this post

Why 2014 could be a breakout year for mobile commerce in Southeast Asia

Why 2014 could be a breakout year for mobile commerce in Southeast Asia

December 24, 2013

by Terence Lee

At a Christmas gathering among friends in Singapore, I was surprised to learn that a couple of them have begun selling second-hand stuff on Carousell, a consumer-to-consumer mobile marketplace app. Neither are in the internet industry, and only got to know about the service through word-of-mouth. Read more of this post

Thailand’s Disloyal Opposition; The Democrats pursue power by making the country ungovernable

Thailand’s Disloyal Opposition

The Democrats pursue power by making the country ungovernable.

Is Thailand heading for civil war? The question may seem overly dramatic, but the decision of the opposition Democrat Party to boycott the Feb. 2 general election makes resolution of the struggle between the royalist Democrats and supporters of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra nearly impossible. Protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban vowed Sunday to hound Ms. Yingluck until she dies or steps down, and he ordered his supporters to block registration of candidates. Read more of this post