Small Turns Big in China’s Stock Market as ChiNext Values Surge

Small Turns Big in China’s Stock Market as ChiNext Values Surge

Companies in China’s benchmark index for small-capitalization stocks have never been so big.

The ChiNext Index has surged 80 percent in the past 12 months, lifting the median market value of its components to a record $1.1 billion on Jan. 15. That’s the highest ever relative to the nation’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP), which has a median value of $784 million, and the biggest among small-cap measures in the world’s 10 largest equity markets. Gauges for small companies in Brazil, Russia and India have dropped at least 10 percent during the same period. Read more of this post

Chinese New Year TV galas axed amid frugality push

Chinese New Year TV galas axed amid frugality push

Xinhua

2014-01-17

China has cut three out of four widely watched Spring Festival galas sponsored by ministries and state media, as the ruling party has stepped up efforts to cut pomp and fight corruption. Read more of this post

Chinese Developers Face Tighter Financing, Local Curbs, S&P Says

Chinese Developers Face Tighter Financing, Local Curbs, S&P Says

Chinese developers face risks such as narrowing financing channels and more property tightening measures by local governments this year, according to Standard & Poor’s. Read more of this post

China’s Toxic Debt Doctors Prepare for Surgery; Banks and governments are gearing up to shift non-performing loans to locally controlled asset management companies

01.08.2014 17:44

China’s Toxic Debt Doctors Prepare for Surgery

Banks and governments are gearing up to shift non-performing loans to locally controlled asset management companies

By staff reporters Wu Hongyuran and Huo Kan

(Beijing) — Regulators eager to resolve China’s local government debt conundrum are setting standards for an emerging class of asset management companies (AMCs) responsible for settling bad loans without Beijing’s help. Read more of this post

China’s IPO Freeze Ends as Neway to Debut Amid Pricing Crackdown

China’s IPO Freeze Ends as Neway to Debut Amid Pricing Crackdown

Neway Valve (Suzhou) Co. (603699), a maker of industrial valves, will become the first company to start trading in China today after a freeze on initial public offerings that lasted more than 15 months. Read more of this post

China Migrant Workers Face Hardship of Separation From Children

China Migrant Workers Face Hardship of Separation From Children

Yang Wei, 26, and his wife share a small apartment in the manufacturing hub of Dongguan, in the Pearl River Delta. Every morning they bicycle a few kilometers to their jobs at two electronics components plants. To see their 6-year-old daughter they take a 17-hour train ride, followed by six more hours on three buses. She lives in mountainous Fenghuang County, Hunan, more than 600 kilometers (373 miles) to the northwest, with Yang’s 53-year-old mother. He and his wife see their daughter once every 12 months for 10 days during the Chinese New Year. Read more of this post

China bank regulator urges banks to control shadow-bank risks

China bank regulator urges banks to control shadow-bank risks

3:33am EST

By Hongmei Zhao

and Gabriel Wildau

HONG KONG/SHANGHAI (Reuters) – China’s banking regulator is pressuring banks to curb reliance on short-term borrowing and control risks from off-balance-sheet lending, according to a document obtained by Reuters, following two severe cash crunches in the last six months. Read more of this post

Beijing’s Corruption Crackdown Is a Boon for Bargain-Hunting Chinese; Loss of Government Business Has Hotels, Restaurants and Airlines Cutting Prices

Beijing’s Corruption Crackdown Is a Boon for Bargain-Hunting Chinese

Loss of Government Business Has Hotels, Restaurants and Airlines Cutting Prices

WEI GU

Jan. 16, 2014 10:16 a.m. ET

AM-BB900_WEICOL_G_20140116064511

China’s crackdown on corruption is forcing restaurants to replace lavish banquets with parties for new babies and airlines to cut the prices for business-class seats. But the pain suffered by these businesses is a balm for frugal Chinese.

Read more of this post

Aier Eye Hospital Envisions ‘Golden Age’ For PRC Ophthalmology

AIER EYE HOSPITAL Envisions ‘Golden Age’ For PRC Ophthalmologg

Written by Andrew Vanburen (in Shenzhen)

Friday, 17 January 2014 06:30

AIER EYE HOSPITAL GROUP (SZA: 300015), the first healthcare play to go public in China, saw its April-September revenue rise by nearly a quarter to 1.5 billion yuan.

The ophthalmological chain with nearly 50 hospitals to its name envisions even stronger growth going forward on a robust expansion strategy and a strong brand image.
Aier is not only China’s top dedicated ophthalmology group, but is also the world’s largest ophthalmological hospital chain.
“Mainland China’s medical industry is somewhat special. Read more of this post

Actavis to Quit China as Trouble Seen for Little Profit

Actavis to Quit China as Trouble Seen for Little Profit

Actavis Plc (ACT), the second-biggest generic drugmaker by market capitalization, said it will end its presence in China because of the difficult business climate. Read more of this post

Japan’s Coming “Wage Surprise”

Shinzo Abe is Prime Minister of Japan.

JAN 6, 2014

Japan’s Coming “Wage Surprise”

TOKYO – The year 2013 saw the Japanese economy turn the corner on two decades of stagnation. And the future will become even brighter with the appearance of what we are calling the “wage surprise.” Read more of this post

Who Wants to Be Microsoft’s Next CEO?

Who Wants to Be Microsoft’s Next CEO?

Pity the people who have to find the next chief executive officer of Microsoft Corp. Few are qualified, and fewer seem to want the job. Even so, there are reasons to think that shareholders could do better than Hans Vestberg, the boss of Ericsson AB, who, according to Bloomberg News, is on the short list to succeed Steve Ballmer, the current CEO. Read more of this post

Venture capitalists: From leafy to lofty; VC is adapting itself to the new startup landscape; VC firms are no longer seen as God-like. Some experts now claim that most of them are actually not that good at what they do

Venture capitalists: From leafy to lofty; Venture capital is adapting itself to the new startup landscape

Jan 18th 2014 | From the print edition

TECH MONEYMEN LIKE altitude. In Silicon Valley the leading venture-capital firms cluster on a leafy hill overlooking Stanford University. And when Benchmark Capital opened a branch in San Francisco, it moved into the top floor of the Warfield building, home to a popular music venue. Although it is in the Tenderloin, one of the city’s seediest districts, it offers a great view of the South of Market area, a breeding-ground for startups. Read more of this post

The new GE: Google, everywhere: With a string of deals the internet giant has positioned itself to become a big inventor, and reinventor, of hardware

The new GE: Google, everywhere: With a string of deals the internet giant has positioned itself to become a big inventor, and reinventor, of hardware

Jan 18th 2014 | SAN FRANCISCO | From the print edition

20140118_WBD001_0 20140118_WBC150_0

AT GOOGLE they call it the toothbrush test. Shortly after returning to being the firm’s chief executive in 2011, Larry Page said he wanted it to develop more services that everyone would use at least twice a day, like a toothbrush. Its search engine and its Android operating system for mobile devices pass that test. Now, with a string of recent acquisitions, Google seems to be planning to become as big in hardware as it is in software, developing “toothbrush” products in a variety of areas from robots to cars to domestic-heating controls. Read more of this post

Something to stand on: Proliferating digital platforms will be at the heart of tomorrow’s economy, and even government

Something to stand on: Proliferating digital platforms will be at the heart of tomorrow’s economy, and even government

Jan 18th 2014 | From the print edition

PROVIDING THE RIGHT platform is sometimes all it takes. Instead of planning new pedestrian plazas by the usual bureaucratic means, New York City’s department of transportation just marks an area on a street with temporary materials and then lets local organisations, architects and citizens decide what to do with it. The programme has so far produced 59 plazas, including the Pearl Street Triangle in Brooklyn, a small urban oasis with big potted plants and shaded seating. Read more of this post

Out of juice: Disposable batteries are a costly way to buy power. Their days are numbered

Out of juice: Disposable batteries are a costly way to buy power. Their days are numbered

Jan 18th 2014 | From the print edition

20140118_WBC159

TIME was when a household torch used an incandescent bulb and gobbled disposable batteries. Now it is more likely to have a low-power LED (light-emitting diode) and a long-lasting rechargeable battery—or none at all: a flick of the wrist or a twist of a handle can provide enough juice for a bright steady light. Read more of this post

IBM has laid out plans for a rapid expansion of its data centres around the world as it races to make up for lost time and prevent internet companies such as Amazon from cornering the fast-growing cloud computing market

January 17, 2014 2:22 am

IBM plans rapid cloud expansion

By Richard Waters in San Francisco

IBM has laid out plans for a rapid expansion of its data centres around the world as it races to make up for lost time and prevent internet companies such as Amazon from cornering the fast-growing cloud computing market. Read more of this post

Google zooms in on smart contact lens designed to help diabetics track their blood sugar levels in the blink of an eye

January 17, 2014 1:16 am

Google zooms in on smart lenses

By Richard Waters in San Francisco

google-smart-contact-lens

Google is aiming to take a lead in an area of “wearable” health devices where Microsoft once hoped to be a pioneer, as it tests a contact lens designed to help diabetics track their blood sugar levels in the blink of an eye. Read more of this post

Google and the internet of things: Feathering its Nest

Google and the internet of things: Feathering its Nest

Jan 14th 2014, 8:34 by M.G.| SAN FRANCISCO

“HOLY cripes, Google just broke into my home”, was a typical reaction on Twitter to news on January 13th that the internet giant had splashed out $3.2 billion of its cash pile on Nest, a startup that makes smart thermostats and smoke-alarm systems for houses and apartments. The deal is striking not just because it represents a massive pay day for a hardware company that is only a few years old. It is also a landmark deal that signals the coming of age of the internet of things, or “Thingternet”—a world in which everything from household gadgets to cars, clothes and pets are connected wirelessly to the web. Read more of this post

Coming to an office near you: The effect of today’s technology on tomorrow’s jobs will be immense—and no country is ready for it

Coming to an office near you: The effect of today’s technology on tomorrow’s jobs will be immense—and no country is ready for it

Jan 18th 2014 | From the print edition

INNOVATION, the elixir of progress, has always cost people their jobs. In the Industrial Revolution artisan weavers were swept aside by the mechanical loom. Over the past 30 years the digital revolution has displaced many of the mid-skill jobs that underpinned 20th-century middle-class life. Typists, ticket agents, bank tellers and many production-line jobs have been dispensed with, just as the weavers were.

Read more of this post

A penny stock called Nestor just surged 1,900% because people confused it with the company Google just bought; Insider Trading Law Cannot Handle Nest and Nestor

A penny stock called Nestor just surged 1,900% because people confused it with the company Google just bought

Steven Perlberg, Business Insider | January 15, 2014 | Last Updated: Jan 15 2:40 PM ET
Nestor Inc is a Providence, Rhode Island-based company that sells automated traffic enforcement systems to local governments. It has 89 employees and trades over-the-counter under the ticker “NEST.” Read more of this post

A Cambrian moment: Cheap and ubiquitous building blocks for digital products and services have caused an explosion in startups. Ludwig Siegele weighs its significance

A Cambrian moment: Cheap and ubiquitous building blocks for digital products and services have caused an explosion in startups. Ludwig Siegele weighs its significance

Jan 18th 2014 | From the print edition

20140118_SRD001_220140118_SRC045_1

ABOUT 540M YEARS ago something amazing happened on planet Earth: life forms began to multiply, leading to what is known as the “Cambrian explosion”. Until then sponges and other simple creatures had the planet largely to themselves, but within a few million years the animal kingdom became much more varied. Read more of this post

Rahul Gandhi and India: Watery sunrise; The problems of Congress’s front man

Rahul Gandhi and India: Watery sunrise; The problems of Congress’s front man

Jan 18th 2014 | DELHI | From the print edition

IT IS an irony of Indian politics that the man who could have taken over as prime minister at any point in the past five years has never wanted the job. Rahul Gandhi is the 43-year-old scion of the Nehru-Gandhi dynasty that has dominated the ruling Congress party for most of a century. His mother, Sonia Gandhi, the party president, is the political boss of the deferential prime minister, Manmohan Singh. Read more of this post

Rahul Gandhi Won’t Be Congress Party’s Prime Minister Candidate

Rahul Gandhi Won’t Be Congress Party’s Prime Minister Candidate

Rahul Gandhi will lead the campaign of India’s ruling Congress party in national elections due to be held by May, though the scion of the country’s most famous political family won’t be its formal prime minister candidate, a party spokesman said. Read more of this post

Indian business takes aim at AAP’s economic policies

January 16, 2014 1:46 pm

Indian business takes aim at AAP’s economic policies

By Victor Mallet in New Delhi

India’s upstart Aam Aadmi party, the champion of the “common man” propelled unexpectedly into power in Delhi by December’s state election, has enchanted millions of voters from all walks of life with its single-minded campaign against corruption. Read more of this post

Shenzhen Overtakes Hong Kong as Third Busiest Container Port

Shenzhen Overtakes Hong Kong as Third Busiest Container Port

China’s Shenzhen surpassed Hong Kong to become the world’s third-busiest container port for the first time last year, as a strike diverted ships away from the former British colony. Terminals in Shenzhen, in Guangdong province, handled 23.3 million twenty-foot equivalent containers last year, outpacing Hong Kong’s 22.3 million in the same period, data from the Transport Commission of Shenzhen Municipality and Hong Kong Port Development Council show. Port workers at billionaire Li Ka-shing’s Hongkong International Terminals Ltd. went on a 40-day strike in late March last year, demanding higher wages. Evergreen Marine Corp. Taiwan Ltd. and Japan’s Mitsui OSK Lines Ltd. were among shipping lines that diverted vessels to other ports. Shanghai and Singapore remain the world’s two biggest container ports.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rachel Butt in Hong Kong at rbutt4@bloomberg.net

Spain’s next Zara? Fashion label Desigual speeds global growth

Spain’s next Zara? Fashion label Desigual speeds global growth

Thu, Jan 16 2014

By Emma Thomasson

BERLIN (Reuters) – Spanish fashion label Desigual is accelerating its expansion in Europe and emerging markets, seeking to ride predictions of fast growth in women’s apparel while also taking the colorful brand into new areas like perfume and shoes. Read more of this post

In Retail, Culture Trumps Technology

January 16, 2014, 8:42 PM ET

In Retail, Culture Trumps Technology

MICHAEL HICKINS

We’ve all heard the pitch for over a decade: technology will help retailers send contextually relevant marketing messages to mobile devices of consumers wandering around malls and shopping districts. But despite advances in telecommunications infrastructure and data collection and analysis, there’s little proof that any of this actually sells so much as an extra pair of jeans. Read more of this post

I Can’t Believe It’s Butter in My Unilever Rama Spread

I Can’t Believe It’s Butter in My Unilever Rama Spread

Paul Polman, the head of margarine maker Unilever (UNA), has criticized butter in the past, saying the dairy fat “kills.” With sales of the company’s spreads sagging, he is now embracing it. Read more of this post

Precious Metals Manipulation Worse Than Libor Scandal, German Regulator Says

Precious Metals Manipulation Worse Than Libor Scandal, German Regulator Says

Tyler Durden on 01/16/2014 18:39 -0500

Remember when banks were exposed manipulating virtually everything except precious metals, because obviously nobody ever manipulates the price of gold and silver? After all, the biggest “conspiracy theory” of all is that crazy gold bugs blame every move against them on some vile manipulator. It may be time to shift yet another conspiracy “theory” into the “fact” bin, thanks to Elke Koenig, the president of Germany’s top financial regulator, Bafin, which apparently is not as corrupt, complicit and clueless as its US equivalent, and who said that in addition to currency rates, manipulation of precious metals “is worse than the Libor-rigging scandal.” Hear that Bart Chilton and friends from the CFTC? Read more of this post