Australia Warns of Fire Danger as Heatwave Hits

Australia Warns of Fire Danger as Heatwave Hits

By Amy Coopes on 4:45 pm January 14, 2014.

Sydney. Australian authorities warned Tuesday of some of the worst fire danger since a 2009 inferno which killed 173 people, with most of the continent’s southeast sweltering through a major heatwave. Victoria state, where the so-called Black Saturday firestorm flattened entire villages in 2009 and destroyed more than 2,000 homes, was again bracing for extreme fire weather. Read more of this post

Ways to Fall Asleep Faster: Four Methods to Ease Into Bedtime; For some people, the hardest part about getting a good night’s sleep is winding down

Ways to Fall Asleep Faster

Four Methods to Ease Into Bedtime

JENNIFER ALSEVER

Jan. 13, 2014 7:12 p.m. ET

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For some people, the hardest part about getting a good night’s sleep is winding down.

Plenty of products and services promise to help. Americans spent $32.4 billion in 2012 on sleep-related aids—from noise machines to specialty pillows, according to IMS Health, a marketing analytics firm in Parsippany, N.J. And according to an August study from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 8.6 million people in the U.S. reported taking medication for better sleep in the month before. Read more of this post

Four Points Beginner Risk Managers Should Learn from Jeff Holman’s Mistakes in the Discussion of Antifragile

Four Points Beginner Risk Managers Should Learn from Jeff Holman’s Mistakes in the Discussion of AntifragileNassim Nicholas Taleb 

New York University; Université Paris I Panthéon-Sorbonne – Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne (CES)
December 16, 2013

Abstract: 
Using Jeff Holman’s comments in Quantitative Finance to illustrate 4 critical errors students should learn to avoid: 1) Mistaking tails (4th moment) for volatility (2nd moment), 2) Missing Jensen’s Inequality, 3) Analyzing the hedging wihout the underlying, 4) The necessity of a numeraire in finance.

Francine McKenna on the moral bankruptcy of the audit profession; Canceled: Why I Won’t Be Speaking At Ethics And Compliance Officers Association Annual Conference

Francine McKenna on the moral bankruptcy of the audit profession

Canceled: Why I Won’t Be Speaking At Ethics And Compliance Officers Association Annual Conference

By Francine • Sep 17th, 2013 • Category: The Big 4 And Consulting

I was really looking forward to it. But an “ethics” organization buckled under pressure from sponsors, some of whom are also board members, to rescind their offer to me to speak because I might “insult” or “disparage” one of them from the podium. Read more of this post

Giorgio Armani is studying the possibility of creating a foundation to protect the future of his fashion empire; “I don’t want to leave problems for the people who come after me”

Giorgio Armani is studying the possibility of creating a foundation to protect the future of his fashion empire; “I don’t want to leave problems for the people who come

Giorgio Armani looking at creating foundation

Mon, Jan 13 2014

By Isla Binnie

MILAN (Reuters) – Giorgio Armani is studying the possibility of creating a foundation to protect the future of his fashion empire, the Italian designer and businessman said on Monday. Read more of this post

Ulrich Hartmann, Who Remade German Energy Market, Dies at 75

Ulrich Hartmann, Who Remade German Energy Market, Dies at 75

Ulrich Hartmann, the chief executive officer who shook up the European energy market when he engineered the merger that turned EON SE into Germany’s largest utility, has died. He was 75. Read more of this post

Corporate Disclosure of Material Information: The Evolution—and the Need to Evolve Again

Corporate Disclosure of Material Information: The Evolution—and the Need to Evolve Again

Jean Rogers1, Robert Herz2

Article first published online: 23 DEC 2013

Journal of Applied Corporate Finance

Volume 25Issue 3pages 50–55, Summer 2013

This article by the former chairman of the FASB and the founder and executive director of the new Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) presents the rationale for and mission of the SASB. As the authors point out, both the Securities and Exchange Commission, which was created in 1934, and the Financial Accounting Standards Board, set up in 1973, emerged during times of low investor confidence to restore trust in the capital markets. And the institutional changes brought about by the creation of both the SEC and the FASB succeeded in eliciting new information for investors and in raising the standards by which such information was reported.

How to Create Value Without Earnings: The Case of Amazon

Josh Tarasoff1, John McCormack2

Article first published online: 23 DEC 2013

Journal of Applied Corporate Finance

Volume 25Issue 3pages 39–43, Summer 2013

Investors and commentators often equate GAAP accounting metrics, especially earnings per share, with financial success. The reality, however, is that there is no simple, linear relationship between GAAP earnings and intrinsic value, which is defined as the present value of expected future cash flows. And adjustments of GAAP metrics, though admittedly subjective, are often required to understand the economic reality of a business.

http://Amazon.com Inc. provides a case study that throws into sharp relief the need to look beyond GAAP in order to analyze underlying fundamentals and value. In this paper, the authors argue that Amazon has done a superb job of building shareholder wealth, all the while reporting low and declining operating and net income margins. The article provides a framework for thinking about Amazon’s underlying profitability that is based on the concept of return on capital in relation to the cost of capital, and shows how that profitability has been masked by GAAP accounting. The authors demonstrate that the company is now investing very large amounts of capital with the expectation of earning rates of return well above its cost of capital. And their analysis suggests that if such investment can continue over the long term, Amazon’s current market value of $140 billion can be readily justified.

But as the authors go on to argue, we now live in a different world, one in which the management of environmental, social, and governance issues is increasingly viewed as critical to the long-run value creation of companies. And because today’s corporate reporting fails to account in a systematic way for material non-financial issues, it’s time once again for the capital markets to evolve. The SASB aims to meet this need by creating sustainability accounting standards for use by public companies in disclosing a minimum set of material sustainability impacts for companies in over 80 different industries. As part of a natural evolution in disclosure, the SASB aims to achieve the same goal the SEC and FASB started with: to protect investors and the public.

Private Equity Boss Has A Message To All Those Interns Whining About How Tired They Are

Private Equity Boss Has A Message To All Those Interns Whining About How Tired They Are

LINETTE LOPEZ

54 MINUTES AGO 335

David Rubenstein, founder of one of the most powerful private equity firms in the world, The Carlyle Group, has a message for all the young people on Wall Street concerned about burning out on long hours. Read more of this post

As Parents Age, Asian-Americans Struggle to Obey a Cultural Code; Asian-Americans are struggling to abide by a strong tradition in which they are commonly expected to care for their parents at home, but few institutions are prepared to help.

As Parents Age, Asian-Americans Struggle to Obey a Cultural Code

By TANZINA VEGAJAN. 14, 2014

SOUDERTON, Pa. — Two thick blankets wrapped in a cloth tie lay near a pillow on the red leather sofa in Phuong Lu’s living room. Doanh Nguyen, Ms. Lu’s 81-year-old mother, had prepared the blankets for a trip she wanted to take. “She’s ready to go to Vietnam,” Ms. Lu said. Read more of this post

Are You Your Employees’ Worst Enemy? Many leaders inadvertently stand in the way of superior performance. Here’s how to avoid the hindrance trap

November 12, 2013 / Winter 2013 / Issue 73

Are You Your Employees’ Worst Enemy?

Many leaders inadvertently stand in the way of superior performance. Here’s how to avoid the hindrance trap. And to check your own performance, take ourinteractive survey.

by Kannan Ramaswamy and William Youngdahl

Do you help bring out the best in your people or do you inadvertently hold them back from superior performance? Complete this assessment to find out. Read more of this post

Why We Buy in a Marked-Up Market; Investors need to overcome the instincts that lead them to buy and sell stocks at precisely the wrong times

Why We Buy in a Marked-Up Market

By CARL RICHARDSJAN. 13, 2014

When dividends are included, 2013 was the fifth consecutive year of positive performance in the stock market (as measured by the annualized Standard & Poor’s 500 return). The stock market is now up more than 200 percent from the bottom of the financial crisis in March 2009. Returns since those dark days have been unbelievable, including the market’s most recent performance in 2013 of around 30 percent. Read more of this post

Winning at investing made simple

Winning at investing made simple

By Pat Regnier   @Money January 10, 2014: 4:25 PM ET

Here are just a few of the ways Wall Street pros try to eke out an edge in the market. You can’t do any of them:

With a subscription to the Bloomberg online news service (price: about $20,000 a year), traders can instantly see anything from the location of oil tankers around the globe to supply-chain maps of a company’s vendors and customers. Read more of this post

Yuan Longping, China’s ‘father of hybrid rice’

Yuan Longping, China’s ‘father of hybrid rice’

Staff Reporter

2014-01-14

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Yuan Longping and his award-winning team at Changshanan Railway Station on Jan. 11, 2014. (Photo/CNS)

A team led by Yuan Longping, China’s “father of hybrid rice,” has won a national award for progress in science and technology for his work on two-line hybrid rice technology, reports our Chinese-language sister paper Want Daily.

The special prize was handed out in Beijing by the National Office for Science and Technology Awards on Jan. 10. The 83-year-old scientist, whose “brand” has been estimated by industry analysts to be worth more than 100 billion yuan (US$16.5 billion), says his wish is to be able to generate 1,000 kilograms of hybrid rice per mu — a Chinese unit of measurement equal to about 666 square meters — by 2015. Read more of this post

Bill Gates: The Emerging World’s Vaccine Pioneers

BILL GATES

The Emerging World’s Vaccine Pioneers

SEATTLE – Vaccines work wonders. They prevent disease from striking, which is better than treating it after the fact. They are also relatively cheap and easy to deliver. Yet millions of children do not get them. This has always been stunning to me. When we started the Gates Foundation 15 years ago, we assumed that all of the obvious steps were already being taken, and that we would have to go after the expensive or unproven solutions. In fact, delivering basic vaccines is still one of our top priorities. Read more of this post

Searching Genes to Avoid Medical Side Effects; Can patients’ DNA warn doctors against prescribing antidepressants, other drugs?

Searching Genes to Avoid Medical Side Effects

Can patients’ DNA warn doctors against prescribing antidepressants, other drugs?

SHIRLEY S. WANG 

Jan. 13, 2014 7:09 p.m. ET

Scientists searching for a way to prevent patients from taking medications that may cause dangerous physical or behavioral responses are turning increasingly to those patients’ DNA. Shirley Wang has details on the News Hub. Photo: AP.

Scientists searching for a way to avoid prescribing medications to patients that may cause dangerous physical or behavioral responses are turning increasingly to those patients’ DNA. Read more of this post

Harvard Square Draws Deal-Seeking Drugmakers From Europe; “Here in Cambridge, everything is so condensed. It’s a very open community of innovative science.”

Harvard Square Draws Deal-Seeking Drugmakers From Europe

Martin Heidecker has traded the broad Rhine River for the banks of the Charles.

Heidecker is a venture-capital fund manager for Boehringer Ingelheim GmbH, the latest major European pharmaceutical company to set up shop across the river from Boston in Cambridge, home of Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Like its competitors, Boehringer wanted to get a piece of the local biotechnology boom that by last July had generated more than 11 percent of the U.S. drug-development pipeline. Read more of this post

Custom-Fit Treatments for Prostate Cancer

Custom-Fit Treatments for Prostate Cancer

Disease fight takes a page out of the breast-cancer approach

RON WINSLOW

Jan. 13, 2014 7:12 p.m. ET

In a bid to improve treatment for men with high-risk prostate cancer, some researchers want to take a page from the playbook for breast cancer. Medical scientists are working to develop strategies for treating prostate tumors that are tailored to individual patients, as is currently done for many women with breast cancer. Fresh advances in the understanding of prostate cancer suggest that some men with a high-risk form of the disease might benefit from more aggressive treatment.

The average age of prostate cancer diagnosis. The chance of having it rises rapidly after age 50. Men will die of prostate cancer, the second leading cause of cancer death for American men, behind lung cancer. Read more of this post

A Busy Doctor’s Right Hand, Ever Ready to Type; Scribes have entered the scene in clinics and operating rooms, liberating physicians from the constant note-taking that modern electronic health records systems demand

A Busy Doctor’s Right Hand, Ever Ready to Type

By KATIE HAFNERJAN. 12, 2014

DALLAS — Amid the controlled chaos that defines an average afternoon in an urban emergency department, Dr. Marian Bednar, an emergency room physician at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital Dallas, entered the exam room of an older woman who had fallen while walking her dog. Like any doctor, she asked questions, conducted an exam and gave a diagnosis — in this case, a fractured hand — while also doing something many physicians in today’s computerized world are no longer free to do: She gave the patient her full attention. Read more of this post

Meet a Ghost Designer; Behind Many Famed Brands: Hired Guns Who Create the Clothes

Meet a Ghost Designer; Behind Many Famed Brands: Hired Guns Who Create the Clothes

CHRISTINA BINKLEY, Jan. 14, 2014 7:27 p.m. ET

Mr. Gottardi prides himself on being pragmatic about creating designs that will sell. W.R.K.

There’s an industry of hired-gun designers behind many of the famous clothing brands we wear. Matteo Gottardi is the unnamed designer behind Rogan and Vince Camuto Men’s among others. He joins Lunch Break.(Photo: Ramsay de Give for The Wall Street Journal) The label says Vince Camuto. But the actual designer of this men’s apparel line is far from a household name. Read more of this post

Fonterra Reassures Consumers Amid Second Contamination Scare

Fonterra Reassures Consumers After N.Z. Fresh Cream Recall

Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd. (FCG), the world’s biggest dairy exporter, says its food safety standards are being maintained after a recall of a batch of fresh cream distributed within New Zealand. Read more of this post

Even Star Johansson Can’t Help SodaStream as Stock Sinks 26%; SodaStream benefits from the so-called razor-blade model of retailing where profits rely on customers repeatedly buying complementary products such as carbonation cannister

Even Star Johansson Can’t Help SodaStream as Stock Sinks 26%

A year ago, SodaStream International Ltd. (SODA) climbed to a six-month high in New York after unveiling plans for its debut Super Bowl commercial. No such luck this year. The home-soda machine maker plunged 26 percent in its first day of trading after saying it tapped Hollywood actress Scarlett Johansson for a spot during the football game as investors focused on the company’s worse-than-forecast earnings. Read more of this post

Consumer testing bodies fight to stay influential; The digital age poses a challenge to the likes of Germany’s mighty Stiftung Warentest

January 13, 2014 4:35 pm

Consumer testing bodies fight to stay influential

By Rose Jacobs

In a country passionate about chocolate and proud of its domestic brands, the news for Ritter Sport last November was not good. The confectioner, whose square chocolate bars are familiar internationally, had received a grade of “defective” from Germany’s consumer-product testing agency, Stiftung Warentest. Read more of this post

Chains Infiltrate European Shopping Meccas; Influx of International Retailers Sparks Concern About Direction of the Continent’s Fashion Hot Spots

Chains Infiltrate European Shopping Meccas

Influx of International Retailers Sparks Concern About Direction of the Continent’s Fashion Hot Spots

ALESSIA PIROLO

Jan. 14, 2014 2:17 p.m. ET

With fashion weeks set to kick off from Milan to Berlin, fashionistas descending on stores across Europe might find an extraordinarily similar array of products, whether they are on London’s Oxford Street, Paris’s Champs-Élysées or Milan’s Via Montenapoleone. That is because more international retail chains, such as Zara, Tommy Hilfiger andStarbucksSBUX +0.45% are opening outlets in these markets. Read more of this post

5 Things That Led To The Decline Of Lululemon

5 Things That Led To The Decline Of Lululemon

ASHLEY LUTZ

JAN. 13, 2014, 11:03 AM 29,318 17

Lululemon shares are tumbling after the company said revenue would be lower than expected. While the crash took some by surprise, insiders have seen a Lululemon implosion coming for a long time.  Last year, equity firm The Oxen Group called Lululemon’s shares “strongly overvalued.” Popular blogger LuluAddict wrote that former CEO Christine Day had ruined “everything special” about the retailer. There’s a lot going wrong at Lululemon, but here are a few major factors that led to the current predicament.  Read more of this post

Record surge in US aluminium premiums rattles end-users

Updated: Wednesday January 15, 2014 MYT 10:43:56 AM

Record surge in US aluminium premiums rattles end-users

FORT LAUDERDALE: The unprecedented surge in US aluminum premiums to record highs has renewed concerns about the dwindling supplies and rising costs of a key raw material for automotive and beverage can makers, even as the market struggles with big stockpiles. Read more of this post

Gold mining: Squandered opportunity; Investor demands for restructuring and an end to the old approach of sprawling expansion are growing

January 14, 2014 5:57 pm

Gold mining: Squandered opportunity

By James Wilson

Investor demands for restructuring and an end to the old approach of sprawling expansion are growing

In the vast open pit at Goldstrike, electric shovels 20 metres tall crunch easily through the rock of northern Nevada. Three scoops fill a truck that hauls off 300 tonnes of gold-bearing ore, while underground teams nearby bore richer deposits at 25 metres a day. Read more of this post

Tencent will launch its wealth management business on WeChat platform on Wednesday (15 Jan) or Thursday (16 Jan) at the earliest

(700) Tencent:
Securities Times Reported citing inside source that Tencent will launch its wealth management business on WeChat platform on Wednesday (15 Jan) or Thursday (16 Jan) at the earliest, with a tentative name of WeChat Licaitong and the first business partner may be ChinaAMC.  
(700 HK) @ HK$67.15: market cap. US$13,314.5m, daily liquidity US$35.1m. Broker forecasts: 13 buys, 2 holds, 0 sells, 53.8x current year P/E, 0.4% yield.

Huawei profits jump on smartphones, US asks Hua-who?

Updated: Wednesday January 15, 2014 MYT 4:17:10 PM

Huawei profits jump on smartphones, US asks Hua-who?

BEIJING: China’s Huawei Technologies Co Ltd, known more for its telecom networking prowess than its razor-thin smartphones, is starting to see success in its consumer electronics business, though the key US market remains elusive. Read more of this post

Lessons behind L’Oréal’s about-face; China redraws the line between luxury, premium, affordable and mass market weekly

January 13, 2014 1:07 pm

Lessons behind L’Oréal’s about-face

By Andrew Hill

China redraws the line between luxury, premium, affordable and mass market weekly

When L’Oréal said last week it would stop selling Garnier products in China, many outsiders assumed the French cosmetics group was joining a wholesale retreat by big western brands, led by Revlon of the US, which last month closed all its operations in mainland China, eliminating 1,100 jobs, including those of 940 beauty advisers. It all looked pretty ugly. Read more of this post

China’s shadow banking loans leap

January 15, 2014 5:55 am

China’s shadow banking loans leap

By Tom Mitchell in Beijing

The rise of China’s shadow banking sector has been thrown into sharp relief by data from the central bank showing that it now accounts for nearly one third of aggregate financing in the world’s second biggest economy. Read more of this post