Rupiah to Rupee Lead Worst Year for Asian Currencies Since 2008

Rupiah to Rupee Lead Worst Year for Asian Currencies Since 2008

Asian currencies headed for their worst year since the 2008 global financial crisis as overseas investors fled emerging markets in anticipation of the Federal Reserve’s decision to taper its record stimulus. Read more of this post

Four Trends to Watch in Asia in 2014

Four Trends to Watch in Asia in 2014

As we head into 2014, one thing is clear about the outlook for Asia: No one really has a clue what’s in store for this increasingly eclectic, cacophonous and unpredictable region. Read more of this post

Coming in 2014: Extremely Smart Watches and Wearable TVs

DECEMBER 29, 2013, 11:00 AM

Disruptions: Coming in 2014: Extremely Smart Watches and Wearable TVs

By NICK BILTON

For technological innovation, 2013 was a remarkably boring year. Apple, often the hotbed of “new,” mostly just updated familiar devices in different colors and with crisper screens. Social media companies fought over who had better photo filters. And Silicon Valley start-ups offered more of less, with slight iterations on existing products. Read more of this post

HUDs all the rage in car navigation; Electronics makers are racing to develop next-generation car navigation systems that allow drivers to check traffic and other information without taking their eyes off the road

HUDs all the rage in car navigation

JIJI

DEC 30, 2013

Electronics makers are racing to develop next-generation car navigation systems that allow drivers to check traffic and other information without taking their eyes off the road. Read more of this post

No Wonder Why Microsoft Has Started Trashing Google’s Chromebooks

No Wonder Why Microsoft Has Started Trashing Google’s Chromebooks

STEVE KOVACH

A few weeks ago, Microsoft released a commercial trashing Google’s Chromebook laptops. It’s one of those man-on-the-street schticks where a Microsoft guy goes up to strangers and asks them loaded questions about which device they’d prefer — a Chromebook or Windows 8 laptop. Every use case is skewed to favor the Windows device, of course. (Want to use Office? You can’t do that on a Chromebook!) Read more of this post

Beware the Tech Bubble—But Stay Calm; How to Reap the Best of the Sector While Staving Off Irrational Exuberance

Beware the Tech Bubble—But Stay Calm

How to Reap the Best of the Sector While Staving Off Irrational Exuberance

FARHAD MANJOO

Dec. 29, 2013 4:19 p.m. ET

I spend a lot of time worrying about the next tech bubble. It’s my job to worry, of course, and this year, worrying became a full-time occupation. Ever since Facebook‘s FB -3.35% stock price rebounded this year to the level of its initial public offering, tech startups have seen an incredible run-up in valuations. Boxrecently raised financing that valued the data-storage company for businesses at $2 billion, almost double its value when it raised funds in the summer of last year. The value of Palantir, whose software analyzes data for law-enforcement agencies, shot up to $9 billion from $6 billion in just three months. Even more suspicious are the dollars being thrown at companies that barely make money: Pinterest’s investors value it at nearly $4 billion, for instance, and Facebook was willing to pay around $3 billion for Snapchat. Read more of this post

Vietnam set to approve bigger foreign stakes in listed companies

Updated: Tuesday December 31, 2013 MYT 1:17:09 PM

Vietnam set to approve bigger foreign stakes in listed companies

HANOI: Vietnam’s prime minister is expected within days to approve an amended law allowing foreigners to own up to 60% of shares in some listed firms, the latest incremental move towards easing tight state controls on the economy. Read more of this post

Singapore Leads Pack as Cities Prepare for an Influx of Fliers; Singapore is unusually forward-looking in its expansion, but passenger demand is forcing airports from Beijing to Seoul to grow

December 30, 2013

Singapore Leads Pack as Cities Prepare for an Influx of Fliers

By BETTINA WASSENER

SINGAPORE — Travelers passing through the gigantic Changi International Airport here rarely have to wait long for bags or boarding. Unlike many other airports in this fast-growing region, Singapore’s airport can handle far more than the 53 million travelers that embarked and departed there this year. Read more of this post

Little India riot: The dog that did not bark

Little India riot: The dog that did not bark

In the aftermath of the Little India riot, the focus and dominant narrative, unsurprisingly, have been on law and order issues.

BY EUGENE KB TAN –

4 HOURS 31 MIN AGO

In the aftermath of the Little India riot, the focus and dominant narrative, unsurprisingly, have been on law and order issues. The Government’s narrative is that the riot was a “one-off” spontaneous mayhem; the proximate cause being the inebriated state of some foreign workers reacting angrily and violently to a fatal accident involving one of their own. Read more of this post

Malaysia to Cut Entertainment Spending as Budget Curbs Widen

Malaysia to Cut Entertainment Spending as Budget Curbs Widen

Malaysia will reduce the entertainment budgets of ministers and freeze applications to renovate government offices as Prime Minister Najib Razak widens efforts to cut public spending. Read more of this post

Three big macro questions for 2014; China’s excess credit growth remains the most worrying trend

Three big macro questions for 2014

December 30, 2013 2:10 pmby Gavyn Davies

As we enter 2014, the five-year bull market in developed market equities remains in full swing. Recently, I argued that equities now look overvalued, but not egregiously so, and that the future of the bull market could depend on when the level of global GDP started to bump up against supply side constraints, forcing a genuine tightening in global monetary conditions. Read more of this post

Winners of 2013: Boring Investors; Buying and Holding U.S. Stocks Paid Off Big This Year

Winners of 2013: Boring Investors

Buying and Holding U.S. Stocks Paid Off Big This Year

TOMI KILGORE and TOM LAURICELLA

Dec. 30, 2013 8:17 p.m. ET

In the best year for U.S. stocks since 1995, the smart way to play the markets has been to follow the dumb money. So-called dumb-money strategies, which involve buying and holding a plain-vanilla portfolio of U.S. stocks, did much better than the more complex approaches employed by hedge funds and other professional investors. Read more of this post

Unusual Emerging-Market Bet Pays Off: Two of the best-performing emerging-market bond funds made an especially unconventional bet: buying Argentine municipal debt

Bold Bets On Bonds Pay Off

NEELABH CHATURVEDI

Dec. 30, 2013 9:15 p.m. ET

For most emerging-markets investors, 2013 was a year to forget. The beginning of the end of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s giant stimulus program sucked money out of risky assets. The J.P. Morgan Emerging Market Bond Index has lost more than 5%, its worst performance in half a decade. Read more of this post

The Ride-Sharing, Handbag-Borrowing Productivity Revival

The Ride-Sharing, Handbag-Borrowing Productivity Revival

Rayshauna Gray makes frequent trips around New England from her home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The 27-year-old doesn’t own a car and says she can’t imagine ever wanting to. Read more of this post

The Bifurcated Housing Bubble; From “Why Didn’t I Buy?” To “This Is Crazy”

The Bifurcated Housing Bubble; From “Why Didn’t I Buy?” To “This Is Crazy”

Tyler Durden on 12/30/2013 18:31 -0500

20131230_home_0

Never was ‘location, location, location’ more important than in the current housing ‘recovery’. From the Bay Area to Pittsburgh and from Denver to Oklahoma, the divergence in price movements is incredible. As the WSJ reports, while headlines gloat of several cities enjoying full-scale rebounds,these cities are largely exceptions with prices in many part of the US still well below the peak. In some 1,500 cities, values are still at least 25% lower than their previous highs. For the ‘bubble’ zip-sodes, “what you’ve got is something other than a sensible market-deciding price. You’ve got it goosed by the terms of finance, which are extraordinary,” warns one realist realtor, “prices shouldn’t be up this high, this quickly. It’s a big, flapping yellow flag saying we’re back in territory that we should not be in.” Read more of this post

Poppin over to Moscow: A starchy English education is a booming export industry

Poppin over to Moscow: A starchy English education is a booming export industry

Nov 18th 2013 | From The World In 2014 print edition

20140110_brd004_p

In 2014 Hollywood will celebrate the 50th birthday of “Mary Poppins”, an adaptation of a children’s book about a magic nanny. The film was released on August 27th 1964 and starred Julie Andrews, a reassuringly well-spoken English actress, as the eponymous governess. Arriving in London by flying umbrella, Mary Poppins proceeds to reform the dysfunctional banking family that employs her. The film’s producer, The Walt Disney Company, enjoyed an even happier ending: “Mary Poppins” has made $640m (adjusted for inflation) at the box office.  Read more of this post

In Cambodia, pressure mounts on a longtime leader

In Cambodia, pressure mounts on a longtime leader

Tuesday, December 31, 2013 – 16:37

Reuters

PHNOM PENH – Cambodian garment factory workers Then Any and Vong Pov aren’t showing up for work anymore. They make pairs of jeans sold in American stores at prices per pair higher than their $80 monthly income and struggle to make ends meet. Read more of this post

Gold With Silver Heading for Worst Decline in Three Decades

Gold With Silver Heading for Worst Decline in Three Decades

Gold headed for the biggest slump in three decades and the first annual loss since 2000 as an improving economy cut demand for wealth protection. Silver was set for the worst annual performance since 1981. Read more of this post

Credit Score, by Multiple Choice; Where credit scores are rare, banks are using a psychometric test developed at Harvard to help lend to small-business owners

December 30, 2013

Credit Score, by Multiple Choice

By SARAH WHEATON

No credit? No problem — just take a test.

That’s the message being delivered to more than 70,000 small-business owners in developing countries where credit ratings are rare and many potential entrepreneurs keep their money in cash rather than bank accounts. Read more of this post

A world economy on the brink of fracture; What will happen in 2014? The Chinese economy will slow; the price of oil will sink; Germany will slide into recession; the EU will remain intact and the internet will begin to Balkanise

A world economy on the brink of fracture

What will happen in 2014? The Chinese economy will slow; the price of oil will sink; Germany will slide into recession; the EU will remain intact and the internet will begin to Balkanise

By Jeremy Warner

6:58PM GMT 30 Dec 2013

Up against a gathering credit crunch, the Chinese economy will slow to almost stall-speed; the price of Brent crude will sink below $80 a barrel; Germany will slide back into recession; the European Union will remain intact and the internet will begin to Balkanise, leading to a boom in encryption technology but problems for the big global online brands. Read more of this post

A tougher year for emerging markets; 2014 could be when the richer world strikes back

December 30, 2013 6:20 pm

A tougher year for emerging markets

2014 could be when the richer world strikes back

Since the financial crisis, the global economy has travelled at two speeds. Developing countries have steamed ahead, powered by China’s voracious appetite for raw materials. Meanwhile, the west has limped along, as households and states cut back spending to address towering debts. Read more of this post

“What The Bubble…” Chart Of The Day: Half Of Loans Issued In 2013 Were “Covenant Lite”

“What The Bubble…” Chart Of The Day: Half Of Loans Issued In 2013 Were “Covenant Lite”

Tyler Durden on 12/30/2013 15:54 -0500

20131230_covlite1_0 Median Leverage_0 (1)

If you ask anyone at The Fed (apart from Jeremy Stein) if there is a bubble in the credit markets, the answer is definitive “no” since bubbles are always obvious. Well, hopefully, the following chart will make it “obvious” that the Fed’s policy has driven a ‘reach for yield’ so excessive as to explode the growth of so-called cov-lite loans. This ‘riskiest of risky’ loan issuance, while already at record high levels, has now massively exceeded the previous bubble in terms of percent issued as the demand for anything with yield ‘enables’ the worst of the worst companies to refinance their zombie-like existence. Read more of this post

Russian Tycoon Is Free, but His Money Is Still Tied Up

December 30, 2013

Russian Tycoon Is Free, but His Money Is Still Tied Up

By ANDREW E. KRAMER

MOSCOW — Before he went to prison 10 years ago, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky was Russia’s richest man, worth maybe $15 billion. Set free this month, he could only guess at his vastly depleted, but still formidable, wealth. Read more of this post

Solving Problems for Real World, Using Design

December 29, 2013

Solving Problems for Real World, Using Design

By NICOLE PERLROTH

PALO ALTO — Akshay Kothari’s first assignment at the D.school  — formally known as the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design at Stanford University — was to rethink how people eat ramen noodles. His last D.school assignment led to a news-reading app that was bought by LinkedIn for $90 million. Read more of this post

Asia picks its words of the year, and they are a bunch of sad characters

Asia picks its words of the year, and they are a bunch of sad characters

By Herman Wong @hermanywong

December 29, 2013

characters_of_the_year

Asia has chosen some somber words to sum up its year. China Realtime Report rounded up the character of the year (kanji of the year in Japan) from five Asian nations, which were based on polls or selected by a committee. Unlike Oxford Dictionaries’ choice for word of the year, these characters capture a sense of people’s anxiety and, in one case, of collective achievement.

房 fang: house or home (China)

Even as real estate inflation in China is cooling down, the cost of buying a home in first-tier cities is still sky-high, smaller cities face rumors of collapsing prices, and the rent is too damn high.

假 jia: fake (Taiwan)

A year of political and food safety scandals has left the Taiwanese unsure of what to believe.

霾  mai: haze (Singapore)

Pollution in this city-state hit historic levels this year.

  zhang: inflation (Malaysia)

A recent poll showed that 67% of Malaysians were worried about rising inflation, which could increase to 4% in 2014 from slightly more than 2% this year.

輪 wa: circle (Japan)

This character was chosen to represent how the Japanese people worked together to win the right to host the 2020 Summer Olympic Games, and how they endured the natural calamities that have struck the country.

Loan Sharks Smell Blood in China Waters; Credit China Is Part of a New Breed of Shadow Lenders

Loan Sharks Smell Blood in China Waters

Credit China Is Part of a New Breed of Shadow Lenders

JASON CHOW

Dec. 29, 2013 8:39 p.m. ET

MI-CA465A_LOANS_NS_20131229183603

Sitting in an empty Papa John’s PZZA -1.07% pizza restaurant, real-estate developer Yang Boqun said he would somehow catch up on loan payments for 150 million yuan ($24.7 million) he borrowed to finish a five-story shopping mall in the eastern Chinese city of Jinhua. Read more of this post

Why Some People Respond to Stress by Falling Asleep

Why Some People Respond to Stress by Falling Asleep

By Elijah Wolfson

Last month, my wife and I found ourselves in a disagreement about whether or not our apartment was clean enough for guests—the type of medium-sized disagreement that likely plagues all close relationships. In the midst of it, there was a lull and, feeling exhausted all of a sudden, I got up and left the living room. In the bedroom, I immediately fell face down into the sheets. The next thing I knew it was 20 minutes later and my wife was shaking me awake. I hadn’t meant to fall asleep; I just felt so fatigued in that moment that there was nothing else I could do. Read more of this post

Christopher Chabris explains how we can be oblivious to things that later seem obvious — and why people who think they’re funny have the worst sense of humor

Q&A: Christopher Chabris, psychology professor, on everyday illusions

Chabris explains how we can be oblivious to things that later seem obvious — and why people who think they’re funny have the worst sense of humor.

When a politician tells a personal story that turns out to be false, does that make him a liar? When an employee exudes confidence, does that make her the smartest person in the room? Depite our intuition about the way our minds work, the answers might turn out to be no, according to Christopher Chabris, a psychology professor at Union College. (To see why, watch the video at bottom to test your own mind before you finish the rest of this story.) Read more of this post

In future, there may be people who – despite being fit to work – have no economic value

December 27, 2013 4:05 pm

The robots are coming and will terminate your jobs

By Tim Harford

In future, there may be people who – despite being fit to work – have no economic value

Nao robots are among those set to be deployed in public spaces to test human-robot interaction

On August 29 1997, Skynet – a computer system controlling the US nuclear arsenal – became self-aware. Panicking operators tried to deactivate it. Skynet, perceiving the threat, launched its arsenal, killed most of humanity, and ushered in a world in which the robots ruled. So went the backstory of the 1984 movie The Terminator. But computers did not become self-aware in 1997 – the closest they managed was when Deep Blue, a B-list supercomputer, beat Garry Kasparov, the world chess champion. Despite decades of hand-wringing about robots taking over, the robots never quite seem to rise. Read more of this post

This Sad And Hilarious Flow Chart Will Convince You Not To Go To Law School

This Sad And Hilarious Flow Chart Will Convince You Not To Go To Law School

ERIN FUCHS

OCT. 7, 2013, 2:22 PM 66,831 23

A Connecticut lawyer named Samuel Browning has created a massive flow chart listing all of the terrible reasons people want to go to law school these days. That chart was based on the book “Don’t Go To Law School (Unless)” by Paul Campos, which outlines the very few good reasons for getting a J.D. in the current market. Matt Leichter published the flow chart on his Law School Tuition Bubble blog, and he and Browning have given us permission to republish it here. As you can see, Browning’s chart could deter the lion’s share of lawyer hopefuls from even taking the LSAT.

flow chart