Holy Smokes: E-Cigarette Ads Debut on TV

Holy Smokes: E-Cigarette Ads Debut on TV

MIKE ESTERL

Dec. 26, 2013 7:00 p.m. ET

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Electronic cigarettes turn nicotine-laced liquid into vapor, representing an alternative to conventional cigarettes. Getty Images

The electronic-cigarette industry has big television advertising plans for 2014—if they’re not snuffed out first. The Food and Drug Administration is expected as early as January to propose curbs on the battery-powered devices amid calls from politicians and anti-tobacco groups to regulate them like traditional smokes, which haven’t been allowed in TV commercials since 1971. Read more of this post

Harry Potter and the Moneymaking Magic of Pop Culture Stamps

Harry Potter and the Moneymaking Magic of Pop Culture Stamps

By Claire Suddath December 03, 2013

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It took two years and no small amount of controversy before Harry Potter received his very own U.S. postage stamp, but the official cultural gatekeepers of the American stamp world finally gave the fictional British wizard his due and sales have been magical so far. Read more of this post

Does Big Soap Have Clean Hands?

Does Big Soap Have Clean Hands?

Soap companies don’t seem to think soap really gets people, or dishes, clean. About half the liquid soaps they sell in the U.S. are fortified with bacteria-killing chemicals.

Soap companies say an abundance of evidence shows that these products kill more germs than ordinary soap does. That’s debatable, but it’s not even the point. There’s no benefit to killing germs unless the result is less illness. And there is no good evidence that antimicrobials protect people’s health. And increasing evidence suggests they may help make germs more powerful. Read more of this post

Millions of Tons of Metals Stashed in Shadow Warehouses

Millions of Tons of Metals Stashed in Shadow Warehouses

TATYANA SHUMSKY

Dec. 26, 2013 6:14 p.m. ET

The world’s metal is slipping into the shadows.

Banks, hedge funds, commodity merchants and others are stashing tens of millions of tons of aluminum, copper, nickel and zinc in a hidden system of warehouses that span the globe. These facilities are known to some in the industry as “shadow warehouses” because they are unregulated and don’t disclose their holdings. Read more of this post

Food prices; a bricks and mortar problem for Indian economy

Food prices; a bricks and mortar problem for Indian economy

4:06pm EST

By Rajesh Kumar Singh and Aditi Shah

GURGAON, India (Reuters) – Three months since journeying more than 700 milesfrom his village in central India to take a job in this bustling city near the capital, New Delhi, Charan is already looking forward to a 10 percent pay rise. He isn’t an engineer or programmer. He hauls bricks and sand at a local construction site for less than $100 a month. Read more of this post

For Indian Stocks, the Answer Is Blowing in the Political Wind; On average since 1989, the Sensex index has risen 38% in the 12 months after a general election, as investors get some resolution of uncertainty about the outlook

For Indian Stocks, the Answer Is Blowing in the Political Wind

A Victory by Narendra Modi Could Offer a Boost

ABHEEK BHATTACHARYA 

Dec. 26, 2013 11:34 a.m. ET

After a year of economic jolts, investors in India’s stock market looking forward to 2014 have politics in mind, and one politician in particular: opposition candidate Narendra Modi. They shouldn’t get too excited. Read more of this post

Abenomics Drives Japanese Hedge Funds to World’s Best Performers

Abenomics Drives Japanese Hedge Funds to World’s Best Performers

Japanese hedge funds are heading for record returns this year as investors bet that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s policies will succeed in reviving the world’s third-largest economy. Stratton Street Capital LLP’s warrant fund returned more than 300 percent, while the Hayate Japan Equity Long-Short Fund almost doubled. The Eurekahedge Japan Hedge Fund Index, which tracks about 80 funds, returned 24 percent in the 11 months through November, heading for the best year since the Singapore-based researcher began compiling data in 2000. Read more of this post

Toyota will probably become the first automaker in the world to build 10 million vehicles in a single year

Toyota nears 10 million car annual output

KYODO

DEC 26, 2013

NAGOYA – Toyota Motor Corp. will probably become the first automaker in the world to build 10 million vehicles in a single year, its global data through November indicate. Read more of this post

Korean toy, Tobot, defeats Lego

2013-12-26 17:23

Korean toy, Tobot, defeats Lego

By Kim Tae-jong

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Lee Jeong-mi, a mother of a 4-year boy, had to search all the big shopping centers and department stores near her house as well as online shopping malls to buy her son a Christmas present even a week before the holiday. The toy that her son wanted was so popular that almost every store put “sold-out” sign for it long before the holiday. “The prices of the toy I looked for were more than doubled at some online shopping malls due to its huge popularity,” she said. “In the end, I managed to buy one at a toy store that not many people visit, at a slightly higher price.” Read more of this post

Who will dare be Korea’s Mandela?

2013-12-13 16:13

Who will dare be Korea’s Mandela?

By Jason Lim
In some ways, Nelson Mandela was a large part of my life. I don’t mean that I ever met him or even considered him my personal hero growing up. But I remember that a large part of the socially conscious background noise of my generation had to do with boycotting companies doing business with the apartheid South Africa and signing Amnesty International petitions calling for Mandela’s release from prison. Read more of this post

8½ Things That Went Right in 2013

8½ Things That Went Right in 2013

By Peter Coy December 19, 2013

It was a year of cronuts and pretzel buns, green eggs and ham, of Syria and Mali and the East China Sea, of Edward Snowden and Pope Francis, Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un. Jeff Bezos showed off a package-delivering drone. Twitter (TWTR) tweeted its own IPO announcement. Stocks went up, housing revived, unemployment fell, and banks got fined. American Airlines (AAL) and US Airways merged, and a solar-powered airplane hopscotched across the U.S. We can’t discern much of a pattern here. But in the spirit of the holidays, here’s a look on the bright side—a list of the things that went right in 2013, sometimes unexpectedly. It is short, admittedly, but sweet. May 2014 be better yet. Read more of this post

Bond Downgrades Escalate With Leverage Highest Since 2007

Bond Downgrades Escalate With Leverage Highest Since 2007

Credit quality for U.S. companies is showing signs of weakening as issuers from Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ) to Apple Inc. borrow unprecedented amounts of money to expand and reward shareholders. Read more of this post

Insurers may be at the centre of the next big crisis; As banks are finding some business too costly, insurers are moving in

December 26, 2013 7:14 pm

Insurers may be at the centre of the next big crisis

By Patrick Jenkins

As banks are finding some business too costly, insurers are moving in, writes Patrick Jenkins

It would make a good pub quiz question: what was the most costly bailout of the 2008 financial crisis?Royal Bank of ScotlandCitigroup? Many assume so. Of course, the biggest failure of them all was not a bank at all, but insurer AIG. Read more of this post

Mexico’s Economic Reform Breakout; More than two million jobs have been created in Mexico since early 2010. Illegal immigration to the U.S. may soon be history

Mexico’s Economic Reform Breakout

More than two million jobs have been created in Mexico since early 2010. Illegal immigration to the U.S. may soon be history.

PIERPAOLO BARBIERI And NIALL FERGUSON

Dec. 26, 2013 7:22 p.m. ET

For much of the last decade, Mexico and Brazil were a study in contrasts. “Brazil Takes Off” was a typical magazine cover, depicting Rio’s huge statue of Christ literally blasting off. The equivalent story for Mexico was “The War Next Door: Why Mexico’s Drug Violence is America’s Problem Too.” Read more of this post

Next year will mark the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I. Historians still argue whether Europe’s plunge into war was an accidental outcome or inevitable

2013-12-18 16:57

The concert of Asia

By John Burton 
Next year will mark the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of World War I. Historians still argue whether Europe’s plunge into war was an accidental outcome or inevitable. But what is indisputable is that the events of August 1914 did mark the sudden collapse of a system that had kept Europe largely peaceful for the previous century.  Read more of this post

Will Facebook Stock Suffer The MySpace Syndrome?

Will Facebook Stock Suffer The MySpace Syndrome?

TOM TAULLIINVESTORPLACE.COM DEC. 26, 2013, 8:34 PM 704 2

Facebook (FB) has become a company with a market cap of $142 billion in just a decade or so, under the guidance of Mark Zuckerberg. That’s not bad for someone who is now only 29. But has Wall Street has gotten to enthused about FB stock. Read more of this post

Restoring Ranch Land for a Profit, and a ‘Trout Dividend’; Sporting Ranch Capital Management raises money from investors to buy ranches that it can fix up and resell

DECEMBER 26, 2013, 7:24 PM

Restoring Ranch Land for a Profit, and a ‘Trout Dividend’

By SARAH MAX

From the road skirting its property line, Freestone River Ranch looks like a flat, cattle-trodden pasture flanked by rolling hills. But Jay Ellis, founder of the private equity firm Sporting Ranch Capital Management, sees something sparkling in the distance. He slams on the brakes and jumps out of his rented sport utility vehicle to get a closer look at one of the dozens of natural springs spilling out from small aqueducts. “You could fill up your water bottle and drink it,” he says excitedly. “It’s that pure.” Read more of this post

Tale of Two Polish Mines Shows Biggest EU Producer’s Woes

Tale of Two Polish Mines Shows Biggest EU Producer’s Woes

Stock markets aren’t usually a subject of discussion when you’re a kilometer underground, yet Dariusz Batyra isn’t a typical Polish miner. “I check the share price each day,” said Batyra, 39, a senior foreman at the mine run by Lubelski Wegiel Bogdanka SA, one of three coal companies in Poland not controlled by the government. “Everybody does in here.” Read more of this post

Turkish prime minister loses aura of invincibility

December 26, 2013 7:41 pm

Turkish prime minister loses aura of invincibility

By Andrew Finkel in Istanbul

Just two weeks ago – before the emergence of a bribery and corruption scandal that has rocked his government – Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan appeared as he has for much of his last decade in power: invincible. Read more of this post

Curbs Following Singapore Riot Criticized; Security Measures Imposed on Ethnic Indian District Have Divided Public Opinion

Curbs Following Singapore Riot Criticized

Security Measures Imposed on Ethnic Indian District Have Divided Public Opinion

CHUN HAN WONG

Dec. 25, 2013 10:46 p.m. ET

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A notification of the suspension of sale and consumption of alcohol in the Little India district in Singapore.

SINGAPORE—Even as weekend crowds return to Singapore’s ethnic Indian district, where foreign workers staged a rare riot this month, the security measures imposed on the area have divided public opinion over the country’s treatment of its large migrant workforce. Read more of this post

Twitter’s Ballooning Market Cap; Twitter: The Christmas Cult Stock

Dec 26, 2013

Twitter’s Ballooning Market Cap

STEVEN RUSSOLILLO

Twitter Inc.TWTR +4.79%shares are flying again Thursday morning, as bullish momentum keeps building behind the microblogging site. The stock has surged 75% this month and is up 180% since the company priced its $26 initial public offering in November. Twitter sports a $38.1 billion market capitalization as of Tuesday’s close, according to FactSet. If Twitter were in the S&P 500, it would be among the top 20% of biggest companies based on market value. Read more of this post

Twitter Now Has A Larger Market Capitalization Than 80% Of All S&P 500 Companies

Twitter Now Has A Larger Market Capitalization Than 80% Of All S&P 500 Companies

Tyler Durden on 12/26/2013 18:58 -0500

As everyone is well aware by now, Twitter investors and speculators have been on a sharp, sudden and very relentless buying spree, sending the company nearly 50% higher since the first week of December, and nearly doubling it since late November. Why the stock has exploded the way it has, nobody knows, and frankly nobody cares: it has entered that mythical zone of raging momentum where things work, until they don’t for whatever reason. But in order to present readers with a sense of where TWTR’s $40 billion market cap,which is greater than 403, or 80%, of all S&P 500 companies, puts in in the context of several companies all of which have a market cap that is lower than Twitter’s, we have shown on the chart below Twitter’s 2014 projected Revenue compared to this same universe of immediately smaller S&P500 companies. Again, just for the sake of perspective. Certainly, we have no doubt that Twitter’s growth curve, based on the realistic assumption of infinite and growing advertising budgets, will promptly eclipse not only the revenues but certainly the earnings and cash flows of all the below-listed companies, and why not all other companies, both in the US and the world, too. Surely, more idiotic things have happened under Bernanke’s centrally planned regime.

TWTR vs Revenue Comps_1_0

The Baidu IME Japanese-language input program for Windows computers poses security risk as it sends every character typed to the software provider’s server without the user’s consent

Free Chinese-made software poses security risk

BY ATSUSHI KODERA

STAFF WRITER

DEC 26, 2013

A Japanese-language input program — potentially installed on millions of computers, including those used at government agencies — sends every character typed to the software provider’s server without the user’s consent. Read more of this post

Samsung to offer Smart TVs controlled by finger gestures

Samsung to offer Smart TVs controlled by finger gestures

LONDON — Samsung has announced that it will showcase its new smart televisions, featuring voice- and motion-control, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas next month.

6 HOURS 25 MIN AGO

LONDON — Samsung has announced that it will showcase its new smart televisions, featuring voice- and motion-control, at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas next month. Read more of this post

Rolls-Royce looks to plot a course to the future with drone ships

December 26, 2013 3:42 pm

Rolls-Royce looks to plot a course to the future with drone ships

By Mark Odell

Amazon may have embraced the robotics revolution with the promise of drones making deliveries to your door, but Rolls-Royce has taken it one step further and is predicting the first drone cargo ship will enter service in the next decade. Read more of this post

Robo-Gloves, Meat Hooks Help Ease Human-Machine Teamwork; “If the robot would bump into you, it would actually say ‘Hey excuse me”. It’s almost like another person working next to you.”

GM Robo-Glove to Meat Hook Smooth Human-Machine Teamwork

Robots and humans, for decades kept separate from each other on factory floors, are inching toward integration. After years of walling off robots to ensure safety, some companies are finding ways to put them alongside people, with lightweight materials and new sensors enabling engineers to build machines that can be employees’ partners or even worn on the job. Read more of this post

Overstock to Embrace Bitcoin, Giving the Currency a Lift

DECEMBER 26, 2013, 7:58 PM

Overstock to Embrace Bitcoin, Giving the Currency a Lift

By NICK WINGFIELD

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Patrick Byrne, the chief executive of Overstock, finds the limitations of creating Bitcoins appealing. One of the biggest questions looming over Bitcoin, the digital currency generating attention in the tech business, is when big mainstream merchants will begin accepting it. Read more of this post

Online shopping grows, with some growing pains

Online shopping grows, with some growing pains

NEW YORK — Americans waited until the last minute to buy holiday gifts, but retailers were not prepared for the spike.

1 HOUR 46 MIN AGO

NEW YORK — Americans waited until the last minute to buy holiday gifts, but retailers were not prepared for the spike. Heavy spending in the final days of the mostly lackluster season sent sales up 3.5 per cent between Nov 1 and Tuesday (Dec 24), according to MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse, which tracks payments but doesn’t give dollar figures. Read more of this post

GrubHub Puts Data on Its Menu; The online food order company is pitching analytics to restaurants

GrubHub Puts Data on Its Menu

By Joshua Brustein December 19, 2013

Things were hectic at Slice on a recent Friday as the month-old cake shop in downtown Chicago hit its afternoon rush. Orders poured in, the gingerbread Bundt cake ran out, and a four-slice delivery order went missing. Slice isn’t a typical restaurant: The manager, relaying online orders from her tablet to line workers, is Sandra Dainora, director of product for GrubHub. In fact, everyone working at Slice is a GrubHub employee, serving cake to co-workers from a conference room in the headquarters of the online takeout company. Read more of this post

Fleur Pellerin Works to Make France Safe for Tech Startups

Fleur Pellerin Works to Make France Safe for Tech Startups

By Vivienne Walt December 19, 2013

The 12 guests of honor might have felt out of place as they sat down for lunch in October at the Elysée presidential palace in Paris. With its crystal chandeliers, gilded walls, and manicured gardens, the palace is a more natural setting for foreign dignitaries and heads of state than for the technology entrepreneurs who assembled for a three-hour meeting with President François Hollande. Seated next to the president was the person who’d persuaded him to clear his afternoon: a petite, 40-year-old woman of Asian descent named Fleur Pellerin. As deputy finance minister for digital innovation, Pellerin’s mission is to turn France into one of Europe’s premier hubs for tech startups. Doing so will require galvanizing not just entrepreneurs and investors but France’s political leaders as well. Read more of this post