Why Is It So Difficult to Make Long-Term Predictions?

February 21, 2014, 10:00 AM ET

Why Is It So Difficult to Make Long-Term Predictions?

By Irving Wladawsky-Berger

Guest Contributor

What will the world be like in 2064? Will we be living in a radically different post-singularity world, where machines far surpass humans in intelligence? Or will we continue to co-evolve with and shape our tools, as we have from time immemorial? Will technology advances lead to increased economic inequalities and conflicts, or to major reductions in poverty in a more stable world? Will it be an era of environmental crises and scarce water, food and energy, or will sustainable innovations and worldwide cooperation help us confront global challenges? Read more of this post

Strange Brew: Beer Enters The Internet of Things

February 21, 2014, 4:55 PM ET

Strange Brew: Beer Enters The Internet of Things

By Clint Boulton

A startup is looking to save restaurant staff repeated trips to the cooler to check beer quantities, which can be an especially onerous task for large establishments where it’s not uncommon to have 30 or more barrels of brew. SteadyServ Technologies LLC outfits kegs with sensors that monitor beer levels and let managers know when it’s time to tap a fresh keg. Read more of this post

Feb 21, 2014

THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR

The ABCs of Investors’ DNA

JASON ZWEIG

image001-29

Some people become value investors. Some might be born that way.

Consider Benjamin Graham, Warren Buffett’s mentor and the author of “Security Analysis” and “The Intelligent Investor.”

Graham’s widowed mother was a small-time speculator; she was wiped out during the Panic of 1907, when he was 13 years old. Read more of this post

Moody’s Offers to Increase Its Stake in India’s ICRA to 55%

Moody’s Offers to Increase Its Stake in India’s ICRA to 55%

ICRA is a Provider of Credit Ratings and Research in Region’s Emergings Markets

ERIN MCCARTHY

Feb. 21, 2014 8:44 a.m. ET

Moody’s Corp. MCO -0.16% unveiled plans to seek a majority stake in ICRA Ltd.532835.BY +4.18% , a provider of credit ratings and research in India, through a tender offer.

Moody’s, a ratings and analytics company, offered to acquire up to 2.65 million shares of ICRA at a price of 2,000 Indian rupees (about $32.19) a share, a 26% premium over ICRA’s closing price on the National Stock Exchange of India Ltd. on Thursday. The offer represents a 22% premium to ICRA’s record-high closing price at the end of last year, Moody’s said. Read more of this post

Fitbit to Stop Selling and Recall Its Force Wristband; Fitbit CEO Says Recall ‘Out of Abundance of Caution’; Huawei’s Answer to FuelBand and Fitbit

Fitbit to Stop Selling and Recall Its Force Wristband

Fitbit CEO Says Recall ‘Out of Abundance of Caution’

KATHERINE ROSMAN

Updated Feb. 21, 2014 7:00 p.m. ET

image001-27

One user says she developed this rash after wearing the Fitbit Force. Kim Reichelt

Fitbit said it is halting sales of its newest fitness-tracking bracelet and recalling the product after months of complaints from consumers who say the band has caused rashes on their wrists. Read more of this post

China Faces “Vicious Circle” As Commodity Collateral Collapses

China Faces “Vicious Circle” As Commodity Collateral Collapses

Tyler Durden on 02/21/2014 19:32 -0500

As we warned last week, stockpiles of iron-ore have reached record levels in China as end-demand slumps but, as Bloomberg notes, this is potentially creating massive dislocations in other markets. Record imports of iron ore and copper, driven by traders who use them as loan collateral, risk repeating the vicious cycle of repayment difficulties and falling prices already seen in the steel-trading market. A stunning 40 percent of the iron ore at China’s ports are part of finance deals (having replaced copper after China’s last shadow-banking crackdown) and with the glut, prices drop (driving down the value of collateral on loans) and “borrowers, forced by their bankers to repay loans or to top up collateral, will have to sell the metals, sinking market prices even further and begetting a vicious cycle.” Read more of this post

1987 Berkshire Letter And Warren Buffett’s Thoughts on High ROE

1987 Berkshire Letter And Warren Buffett’s Thoughts on High ROE

by John HuberFebruary 20, 2014, 6:57 pm

I am in the midst of writing a few posts on the importance of Return on Invested Capital (ROIC). I wrote two posts last week discussing Greenblatt’s formula and some thoughts on the topic (Here and Here). I’ll have one or two more posts next week discussing a few brief examples of compounders (companies that exhibit unusually high returns on capital over extended periods of time, allowing them to grow–or “compound”–shareholder value over long periods of time).

There always seems to be a strong divide between “value and growth“, deep value (aka cigar butts) and quality value, etc… I too have mentioned these differences numerous times. And it’s true that many investors can do well simply buying great businesses at fair prices and holding them for long periods of time, while other investors prefer to slowly and steadily buy cheap stocks of average quality and sell them as they appreciate to fair value, repeating the process over time as they cycle through endless new opportunities.

The styles are different, but not as different as most people describe them to be. The tactics used are different, but the objective is exactly the same: trying to buy something for less than what its really worth. Both strategies rely on Graham’s famous “margin of safety” concept, which is probably the most important concept in the investing discipline.

Both Quality and Valuation Impact Margin of Safety

The margin of safety can be derived from the gap between price and value, and it can also be derived from the quality of the business. The latter point is really part of the former… For example, a business that can steadily grow intrinsic value at a rate of say 12% annually is worth much more than a business that is growing its value at say 4% annually–all other things being equal. And since the higher quality compounder is worth more than the lower quality business, the quality compounder offers a larger margin of safety.

Of course, in the real world, it’s not that easy. The lower quality business might offer an extremely attractive discount between current price and value, which is significant enough to make the investment opportunity preferable to the compounder. This is often the case in real life–compounders are rarely are offered cheaply.

But too often, value investors get enticed by cheap metrics and seemingly large discounts between price and value in businesses with shrinking intrinsic value. The problem in these types of cigar butts is that the margin of safety (gap between purchase price and value) is largest the day of the investment. Every day thereafter the business value slowly erodes further, making the investment a race against time.

Now, not all cheap stocks have eroding intrinsic value. On the contrary, many high quality, or average quality businesses are occasionally offered quite cheap. But in my opinion, it’s always much more reassuring to be invested in businesses that have intrinsic values that are growing over time, as it allows for larger margins of error in the event that you’re wrong, and better returns in the event that you’re right. A couple days ago I read a quote somewhere that I believe Allan Mecham said that I’ll paraphrase: If investors focused on reducing unforced errors as opposed to hitting the next home run, their returns would improve dramatically.

So it’s like the amateur tennis champion that wins because they had the fewest mistakes, not necessarily the most forehand winners.

Reducing Unforced Errors and Buffett’s 1987 Roster

One way to reduce unforced errors in investing is to carefully choose the businesses that you decide to own. The gap between price and value will ultimately determine your returns, but picking the right business is one important step in reducing errors.

One way to reduce errors is to focus on studying high quality businesses with high returns on capital. In the last post, I mentioned an article that Buffett referenced in the 1987 Berkshire shareholder letter. In this letter, Buffett mentions that Berkshire’s seven largest non-financial subsidiary companies made $180 million of operating earnings and $100 million after tax earnings. But, he says “by itself, this figure says nothing about economic performance. To evaluate that, we must know how much total capital – debt and equity – was needed to produce these earnings.

So Buffett was interested in return on invested capital. However, he goes on to state that these seven business units used virtually no debt, incurring just $2 million of total combined interest charges in 1987, so virtually all capital employed to produce those earnings was equity capital. And these 7 businesses had a combined equity of only $175 million.

So Berkshire had seven businesses that combined to produce the following numbers:

$178 million pretax earnings

$100 million after tax earnings

$175 equity capital

57% ROE

102% Pretax ROE

So Buffett’s top 7 non-financial businesses produced fabulously high returns on equity with very little use of debt. In short, they were outstanding businesses. Buffett proudly goes on to say that “You’ll seldom see such a percentage anywhere, let alone at large, diversified companies with nominal leverage.”Of course, investor returns depend on price paid in relation to value received, and we are only discussing the value received part of the equation here.

Buffett then voices his opinion on the importance of predictability and stability in business models:

image001-24

1987 Berkshire Letter

He then references an interesting study by Fortune that backs up his empirical observation. In this study, Fortune looked at 1000 of the largest stocks in the US. Here are some interesting facts:

Only 6 of the 1000 companies averaged over 30% ROE over the previous decade (1977-1986)

Only 25 of the 1000 companies averaged over 20% ROE and had no single year lower than 15% ROE

These 25 “business superstars were also stock market superstars” as 24 out of 25 outperformed the S&P 500 during the 1977-1986 period.

The last statistic is remarkable. Even in the really high performing value baskets such as low P/B or low P/E groups, you’ll typically see a ratio of around one-half to two-thirds of the stocks that outperform the market. Sometimes you’ll even have a majority of underperformers that are paid for by a few large winners in these basket situations. But in this case, even with a small sample space, it’s pretty telling that 96% of the group outperformed over a period of meaningful length (10 years).

Of course, this begs a question along the following lines: “Great, by looking in the rear view mirror, it’s easy to determine great businesses… how do we know what the next 10 years will look like?”.

Buffett again provides some ideas:

image002-9

1987 Berkshire Letter

The idea is to locate quality businesses in an effort to reduce unforced errors. Again, one way to do this is to focus on valuation alone. I think Schloss implemented this method the best. Another way is to study compounders and be disciplined to only invest when the valuation aligns with your hurdle rate.

And in terms of percentages, there will likely be fewer errors made (fewer permanent capital losses) in the compounder category than there will be in the cigar butt category. It doesn’t mean one will do better than the other, as higher winning percentage doesn’t necessarily mean higher returns. But if you want to reduce unforced errors (reduce losing investments), it helps to get familiar with stable, predictable businesses with long histories of producing above average returns on invested capital. 

So circling back to the compounders… and the question of: “Yeah the last 10 years are great, but how do we find the winners for the next 10 years?” One possible place to look would be to glance at the same list that Fortune put together. I attempted to recreat the Fortune list in Morningstar based on the last 10 years (2004-2013). As I’ve mentioned before, I keep a few quality lists at Morningstar including:

Non-financial stocks that have grown revenues and maintained positive earnings for 10 consecutive years (81 stocks, less than 1% of the database)

Non-financial stocks that have produced positive free cash flow in each of the last 10 years(596 stocks, 6% of the database)

Stocks that have produced returns on equity of 15% or more in each of the last 10 years (143 stocks, or just over 1% of the database)

My attempt to recreate Fortune’s list will fall short, because I can’t easily determine the average ROE of these 143 businesses, but this list would be a good place to start looking. Many of these stocks have performed very well in the past 10 years, just from glancing at the list.

And it’s worth noting that this list is the previous 10 years, it doesn’t mean that these stocks will maintain their strong returns on equity over the next 10, although research shows that most strong businesses tend to remain strong over time (mean reversion plays much less a role than is commonly assumed).

So it might be worth checking out this list, and keeping it as a watchlist for quality companies that might become available at low prices at some time or another. Or use it as a list to go through one by one, learning about successful business models in the process.

Here is a look at the list of consistent ROE stocks sorted by lowest 25 P/E ratios:

image003-14

Here is a look at the same list of 143 stocks that have produced 15% ROE in each of the past 10 years, this time sorted by highest Returns on Assets:

image003-14

1987 Berkshire Letter

Remember, all of these firms have achieved at least 15% ROE in each of the past 10 years, something 99% of public companies failed to do. This list certainly contains stocks that aren’t undervalued (many are quite expensive), but it’s probably a good list to keep an eye on from time to time, as it certainly contains a healthy amount of businesses with compounding intrinsic values.

Investing’s Biggest Irony: Everyone Thinks They’re a Contrarian

Investing’s Biggest Irony: Everyone Thinks They’re a Contrarian

By Morgan Housel | More Articles | Save For Later
February 14, 2014 | Comments (15)

Robert Shiller won the Nobel Prize in economics last year for his research on spotting market bubbles. He’s also a pioneer of behavioral finance, developing brilliant explanations for how psychology causes us to do dumb things with our money.  Read more of this post

Data dump: New reporting rules for derivatives have produced a confusing mass of data

Data dump: New reporting rules for derivatives have produced a confusing mass of data

Feb 22nd 2014 | From the print edition

DURING the financial crisis regulators discovered the hard way how little they knew about the risky derivatives portfolios built up by large financial institutions. Lehman Brothers, for example, was thought to have been a counterparty to about $5 trillion of credit default swaps. When they turned sour in 2008, it brought the financial system to its knees. In response leaders of the world’s main economies demanded in 2009 that derivatives deals should all be reported to “trade repositories”—vast central databases—to make it easier to identify and then reduce systemic risks. Read more of this post

Against the odds: The costs of actively managed funds are higher than most investors realise

Against the odds: The costs of actively managed funds are higher than most investors realise

Feb 22nd 2014 | From the print edition

image001-22

EVERYONE knows that if you go to a casino, the odds are rigged in favour of the house. But people still dream of making a killing. The same psychology seems to apply to fund management, where investors flock to high-cost mutual funds even though the odds are against them. Russel Kinnel, the director of fund research at Morningstar, has described fund costs as “the most dependable predictor of performance”. Read more of this post

Global banking: Inglorious isolation; To avoid another crisis, the Fed further fragments global finance

Global banking: Inglorious isolation; To avoid another crisis, the Fed further fragments global finance

Feb 22nd 2014 | Washington, DC | From the print edition

image001-21

THE economics of international banking are straightforward enough: raise funds in countries where they are cheap, lend where they are dear. Done right, this is both lucrative for bankers and good for the world, by channelling savings to their most productive use. Read more of this post

Korea’s major builders are undergoing two contrasting paths. Some of them have enjoyed handsome gains despite the economic slump, while others are suffering; Hyundai, POSCO rise, while Daelim, GS fall

2014-02-20 17:36

Builders follow contrasting paths

Hyundai, POSCO rise, while Daelim, GS fall
By Yi Whan-woo
Korea’s major builders are undergoing two contrasting paths.
Some of them have enjoyed handsome gains despite the economic slump, while others are suffering from less than expected outcomes from their oversea projects. Read more of this post

Buffett’s Business Wire ends feeds to high-speed traders

February 20, 2014 11:38 pm

Buffett’s Business Wire ends feeds to high-speed traders

By Stephen Foley, Kara Scannell and Arash Massoudi in New York

Business Wire, which has published corporate news releases in the US for the last half century, will stop selling direct feeds to high-speed traders, amid concerns that the practice gives the firms an unfair advantage over other investors.

Warren Buffett, whose conglomerate Berkshire Hathaway owns Business Wire, stepped in personally to examine the direct sales, fearing that recent publicity around the practice could hurt the company’s reputation. Read more of this post

Huge losses by Malaysia Airlines can’t be tolerated forever

Huge losses by MAS can’t be tolerated forever

image001-1

MAS has just reported a fourth consecutive quarter of losses with a net loss of RM343 million for this last quarter.
For the full FY 2013, the net loss amounted to a whopping RM1.17 billion, compared with a net loss of RM433 million in FY 2012.  Read more of this post

P&G’s smart toothbrush keeps tabs on tooth care

P&G’s smart toothbrush keeps tabs on tooth care

5:42am EST

By Paul Sandle

LONDON (Reuters) – Procter & Gamble Co is bringing the dentist into the bathroom with the world’s first smartphone-connected toothbrush, a device that gives personalized advice to help people improve their brushing. Read more of this post

Make a Crisis Last: How to convert extraordinary behaviors into ordinary parts of your culture.

Posted: February 17, 2014

Jon Katzenbach is a senior executive advisor with Booz & Company based in New York, and co-leads the firm’s Katzenbach Center.

Make a Crisis Last

When a machine jammed at an Alcoa plant in Arizona, a young, overzealous worker who was eager to keep his job stepped over the safety line to repair it. But disastrously, after he unjammed the machine, a large swinging arm was released that struck and killed him. Read more of this post

Rita Gunther McGrath on the End of Competitive Advantage; The Columbia Business School professor says the era of sustainable competitive advantage is being replaced an age of flexibility. Are you ready?

Published: February 17, 2014 / Spring 2014 / Issue 74

Rita Gunther McGrath on the End of Competitive Advantage

The Columbia Business School professor says the era of sustainable competitive advantage is being replaced an age of flexibility. Are you ready?

by Theodore Kinni

Rita Gunther McGrath thinks it’s time for most companies to give up their quest to attain strategy’s holy grail: sustainable competitive advantage. Neither theory nor practice of strategy has kept pace with the realities of today’s relatively boundaryless and barrier-free markets, says the associate professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Business. As a result, the traditional approach of building a business around a competitive advantage and then hunkering down to defend it and milk it for profits no longer makes sense. Read more of this post

Creaky Trains Made of Bamboo Still Rule the Rails in Cambodia

Creaky Trains Made of Bamboo Still Rule the Rails in Cambodia

They Carry People, Logs, Booze, Coconuts; Like a Ride on a ‘Bat,’ Says One Mom

JESSE PESTA

Feb. 19, 2014 10:30 p.m. ET

Cambodia’s homemade trains, made by hand of wood and bamboo and known locally as “norrys,” shuttle passengers across the countryside on the remnants of a defunct rail system. WSJ’s Jesse Pesta reports from Battambang, Cambodia. Read more of this post

The Auditing Roadblock: It’s Not Just China

FEBRUARY 19, 2014, 2:40 PM  Comment

The Auditing Roadblock: It’s Not Just China

By FLOYD NORRIS

The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board is out with a list of 58 international audit firms that it has been unable to inspect for at least four years. Those firms all audited companies registered in the United States, and — under American law — must be inspected by the board. The board has tried to arrange joint inspections with regulators from other countries, but a variety of impediments have arisen. Read more of this post

Blackstone and GIC are in advanced talks to buy minority stakes in human resources software company Kronos at $4.5 billion, including debt

Blackstone, GIC nearing Kronos minority stake deal: sources

1:20am EST

By Nadia Damouni and Greg Roumeliotis

New York (Reuters) – Private equity firm Blackstone Group LP and Singapore sovereign wealth fund GIC are in advanced talks to buy minority stakes in Kronos Inc that could value the human resources software company at around $4.5 billion, including debt, three people familiar with the matter said. Read more of this post

Beijing is still far too reluctant to allow its equity market to function normally

Taking Stock of China’s Reforms

Beijing is still far too reluctant to allow its equity market to function normally.

CARL WALTER And FRASER HOWIE

Feb. 19, 2014 11:50 a.m. ET

If China’s leaders are as serious as they say they are about economic reform, the country’s stunted financial system will be at the top of their priorities list. So it’s worth checking in on the stock market to see how President Xi Jinping‘s economic program is going. Answer: not well. Read more of this post

The Chinese Dominoes Are About To Fall: Complete List Of Upcoming Trust Defaults

The Chinese Dominoes Are About To Fall: Complete List Of Upcoming Trust Defaults

Tyler Durden on 02/19/2014 22:03 -0500

As has been widely reported on these pages in the past month, after a near-reality experience almost claimed the first material Chinese shadow banking default, the Chinese government and central bank did what they do best: a mysterious “white knight” emerged out of nowhere, and bailed out the Credit Equals Gold #1 Trust. A few days later, we reported that China Development Bank lent 2 billion yuan to coal company Shanxi Liansheng, which owes almost 30b yuan to lenders including banks, trusts and asset management firms. And while we know how “difficult” it was for China to do the wrong thing and encourage moral hazard, despite repeated assurances by one after another PBOC director that this time the central bank means business, we have good news: these two narrowly averted Trust defaults are just the beginning – it is all downhill from here. Read more of this post

A Formal Theory of Strategy Eric Van den Steen Harvard Business School – Competition & Strategy Unit December 14, 2013 Harvard Business School Strategy Unit Working Paper No. 14-058 Abstract: What makes a decision strategic? When is strategy most important? This paper studies the structure and value of strategy (in its everyday sense), starting from a (functional) definition of strategy as ‘the smallest set of (core) choices to optimally guide the other choices.’ This definition captures the idea of strategy as the core of a – potentially flexible and adaptive – intended course of action. It coincides with the equilibrium outcome of a ‘strategy formulation game’ where a person can – at a cost – look ahead, investigate, and announce a small set of choices to the rest of the organization. Starting from that definition, the paper studies what makes a decision ‘strategic’ and what makes strategy important, considering commitment, irreversibility, and persistence of a choice; the presence of uncertainty (and the type of uncertainty); the number and strength of interactions and the centrality of a choice; its level and importance; the need for specific capabilities; and competition and dynamics. It shows, for example, that irreversibility does not make a decision more strategic but makes strategy more valuable, that long-range strategies will be more concise, why a choice what not to do can be very strategic, and that a strategy ‘bet’ can be valuable. It shows how strategy creates endogenously a hierarchy among decisions. And it also shows how understanding the structure of strategy may enable a strategist to develop the optimal strategy in a very parsimonious way.

A Formal Theory of Strategy

Eric Van den Steen 

Harvard Business School – Competition & Strategy Unit
December 14, 2013
Harvard Business School Strategy Unit Working Paper No. 14-058

Abstract: 
What makes a decision strategic? When is strategy most important? This paper studies the structure and value of strategy (in its everyday sense), starting from a (functional) definition of strategy as ‘the smallest set of (core) choices to optimally guide the other choices.’ This definition captures the idea of strategy as the core of a – potentially flexible and adaptive – intended course of action. It coincides with the equilibrium outcome of a ‘strategy formulation game’ where a person can – at a cost – look ahead, investigate, and announce a small set of choices to the rest of the organization.
Starting from that definition, the paper studies what makes a decision ‘strategic’ and what makes strategy important, considering commitment, irreversibility, and persistence of a choice; the presence of uncertainty (and the type of uncertainty); the number and strength of interactions and the centrality of a choice; its level and importance; the need for specific capabilities; and competition and dynamics. It shows, for example, that irreversibility does not make a decision more strategic but makes strategy more valuable, that long-range strategies will be more concise, why a choice what not to do can be very strategic, and that a strategy ‘bet’ can be valuable. It shows how strategy creates endogenously a hierarchy among decisions. And it also shows how understanding the structure of strategy may enable a strategist to develop the optimal strategy in a very parsimonious way.

Disclosing Adverse Earnings News and Litigation: The Importance of Large Market Declines

Disclosing Adverse Earnings News and Litigation: The Importance of Large Market Declines

Dain C. Donelson 

University of Texas at Austin – McCombs School of Business

Justin Hopkins 

University of Virginia – Darden Graduate School of Business Administration
January 27, 2014
Darden Business School Working Paper No. 2386099

Abstract: 
This study examines the legal consequences of disclosing adverse news after hours or disclosing during large market declines. The probability of litigation rises to 0.28% (from 0.16%), and settlements increase 50% over the median (by $1.7 million) when disclosure occurs during a large market decline. Disclosures issued after hours are also more likely to trigger litigation (0.36% versus 0.17%), but this is because managers disclose more adverse news during this period. In supplemental tests, we find no evidence that the timing of firm disclosures affects dismissals, or that managers delay disclosures to avoid days with large market declines. The latter result could be attributable to managers not recognizing the legal consequences to disclosing adverse news on a day where the market declines significantly because legal standards suggest that broader market forces should have no bearing on the outcome of securities litigation.

Bringing New Apps to Market: How Five Innovators Outshone the Competition

Bringing New Apps to Market: How Five Innovators Outshone the Competition

Feb 19, 2014

While the public’s desire for specialized applications for their mobile devices continues to grow, questions of scale and long-term viability remain.

To that end, the University of Pennsylvania’s Center for Technology Transfer initiated AppitUP, a contest for Penn-related individuals and teams to create innovative applications, with the opportunity to have software development firms help them get those apps out on the market. Read more of this post

Think Your Product Is Too Boring for Word of Mouth Marketing? Think Again

Think Your Product Is Too Boring for Word of Mouth Marketing? Think Again

Feb 17, 2014

Word of mouth has become the Holy Grail for today’s marketers. Word-of-mouth marketing, also called word-of-mouth advertising or WOM, is 10 times more effective than traditional advertising, according to Jonah Berger, a Wharton marketing professor. “A great deal of research has demonstrated that word of mouth affects choice, diffusion [the process by which a group of people adopts a product] and sales,” writes Berger. Read more of this post

Malaysia’s JobStreet is selling its online job portal business to Australia’s SEEK Ltd for RM1.73bil (S$661 million) cash

JobStreet to pay almost all of $661 million from sale of online business as dividend

Thursday, Feb 20, 2014

The Star/Asia News Network

PETALING JAYA, Malaysia – JobStreet Corp Bhd, which is selling its online job portal business to Australia’s SEEK Ltd for RM1.73bil (S$661 million) cash, says it will return just about all the proceeds to shareholders as special cash dividend. Read more of this post

Facebook to Pay $19 Billion for WhatsApp; Messaging Startup to Operate Independently, Retain Brand

Facebook to Pay $19 Billion for WhatsApp

Messaging Startup to Operate Independently, Retain Brand

REED ALBERGOTTI, DOUGLAS MACMILLAN and EVELYN M. RUSLI

Updated Feb. 19, 2014 8:31 p.m. ET

image001-18

Jan Koum, founder of the WhatsApp messaging service, speaks at a conference in Germany last month.European Pressphoto Agency

Facebook Inc. FB +1.13% agreed to buy messaging company WhatsApp for $19 billion in cash and stock, a blockbuster transaction that dwarfs the already sky-high prices that other startups have been able to recently command. Read more of this post

IMF Report Warns on Emerging-Markets Problems; Says Some Countries Need to Tighten Monetary Policy, Make Structural Changes

IMF Report Warns on Emerging-Markets Problems

Says Some Countries Need to Tighten Monetary Policy, Make Structural Changes

WILLIAM MAULDIN And JONATHAN HOUSE

Updated Feb. 19, 2014 1:24 p.m. ET

The International Monetary Fund on Wednesday issued its most detailed warning about the financial problems arising in emerging markets this year, saying some countries need to tighten monetary policy and make structural economic changes.

While the IMF noted a rise of harmful inflation in developing countries, it also said Europe is at risk for the opposite problem—deflation, in which prices fall in a spiral that can sap consumption and growth. Read more of this post

The Israeli take on start-up risk

February 19, 2014 5:14 pm

The Israeli take on start-up risk

By John Reed

From his government office in Jerusalem, Avi Hasson undertakes an esoteric-sounding but important job at the centre of Israel’s innovation-rich, high tech-focused economy.

As Israel’s chief scientist, he oversees a department with a budget of $450m, through which the state funds research and development, and primes the pump for private-sector in­vestment in new businesses and technologies by signing on as an an­chor lender itself. Its funding projects range from incubators for new start-ups to costly research and development schemes undertaken by long-established Israel-based companies. Read more of this post