Rule Makers Tighten Accounting for ‘Repos’; Under New FASB Rule, to Take Effect in 2015, Most Repos Will Be Treated as Borrowings

Rule Makers Tighten Accounting for ‘Repos’

Under New FASB Rule, to Take Effect in 2015, Most Repos Will Be Treated as Borrowings

MICHAEL RAPOPORT

Updated June 12, 2014 5:45 p.m. ET

Rule makers on Thursday closed a loophole in the accounting for a key form of financing used by securities firms and that both Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and MF Global Holdings Inc. used to make themselves appear healthier before they collapsed. Read more of this post

Modern Shakespeare for a Theater-Mad Chinese Crowd; “In China, the people who go to the theater are exactly the opposite of who goes in the Western world. It’s really popular among the younger generation.”

Modern Shakespeare for a Theater-Mad Chinese Crowd

Tim Robbins brings his Los Angeles production of ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ to Beijing and Shanghai.

ALYSSA ABKOWITZ

June 12, 2014 6:40 p.m. ET

Humor doesn’t always get lost in translation.

That is what Academy Award-winner and the Actors’ Gang ensemble founder Tim Robbins discovered while directing “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in China. “There’s so much heart in this play,” Mr. Robbins told the audience, who whistled and yelled “Bravo!” at the end of the opening-night performance. “I’m so thrilled and honored and blessed to hear you react this way.” Read more of this post

Thai Generals and Corruption; A modest proposal to privatize Thailand’s state enterprises

Thai Generals and Corruption

A modest proposal to privatize Thailand’s state enterprises.

Updated June 12, 2014 10:25 p.m. ET

The Thai junta sent out its spokesman, Colonel Werachon Sukondhapatipak, on Wednesday to tell foreign journalists to stop calling last month’s “military intervention” a coup. Also, he reminded the press corps that Thailand doesn’t have political prisoners, just people who have been invited to enjoy the military’s comfortable accommodations. Read more of this post

Indonesia’s Candidates: July’s election could be a lost opportunity for Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

Indonesia’s Candidates

July’s election could be a lost opportunity for Southeast Asia’s largest economy.

Updated June 12, 2014 10:25 p.m. ET

At first glance, Indonesia’s July 9 presidential election offers voters a clear choice. The two candidates, Joko Widodo and Prabowo Subianto, promise very different governing styles—populist humility from one, military-style efficiency from the other. Read more of this post

Japan’s First Lady Launches Talk Show “Abe Akie no Shiawase-no Katachi” (Akie Abe’s Shape of Happiness) on Web that will feature guest speakers exchanging their thoughts on “what happiness is” with her

Jun 13, 2014

Japan’s First Lady Launches Talk Show on Web

JUN HONGO

Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s wife Akie is launching a web-based talk showthat will feature guest speakers exchanging their thoughts on “what happiness is” with her.

The program, titled “Abe Akie no Shiawase-no Katachi” (Akie Abe’s Shape of Happiness), will be shot at the prime minister’s residence with volunteer staff. It will “invite guests from a variety of backgrounds and ask them what happiness means to them,” Mrs. Abe explains in opening remarks, before adding that she hopes to “make this a fun and happy program.” Read more of this post

Keeping Big Data Small: Beware the temptation of open-ended projects

June 12, 2014

CFO.com | US

Keeping Big Data Small

Beware the temptation of open-ended projects.

Keith Button

In 1973, the British economist E.F. Schumacherpublished a popular book whose title became a rallying cry for those who thought the overuse of technology was destroying the earth’s resources:Small is Beautiful. With much of corporate America on the verge of plunging into projects involving “big data,” finance chiefs are being advised to take Schumacher’s dictum to heart. Read more of this post

How Big Data Brought Good Decisions to Life; A Big Data case study

June 12, 2014

CFO.com | US

How Big Data Brought Good Decisions to Life

A Big Data case study.

Keith Button

For Merchant Cash and Capital of New York, an alternative financing company for small merchants, the initial goals for its first Big Data project were pretty straightforward, says its CFO, Jeffrey Beckwith: lower the company’s underwriting cost per deal and improve the underwriting decisions. Read more of this post

Big Data: Where the Money Is; Free-standing Big Data businesses can evolve from the expansion of data gathering and analysis within a single company

June 12, 2014

CFO.com | US

Big Data: Where the Money Is

Free-standing Big Data businesses can evolve from the expansion of data gathering and analysis within a single company.

As Big Data grows bigger, more complicated, and more difficult to deal with, the choice of which data get retained and which discarded becomes pivotal. Read more of this post

Who Will Be the Data Keepers? As Big Data grows bigger, more complicated, and more difficult to deal with, the choice of which data get retained and which discarded becomes pivotal

June 12, 2014

CFO.com | US

Who Will Be the Data Keepers?

As Big Data grows bigger, more complicated, and more difficult to deal with, the choice of which data get retained and which discarded becomes pivotal.

John Parkinson

Free-standing Big Data businesses can evolve from the expansion of data gathering and analysis within a single company. Read more of this post

Stock-Trade Winds Don’t Blow Wall Street’s Way

Stock-Trade Winds Don’t Blow Wall Street’s Way

JOHN CARNEY

June 12, 2014 3:41 p.m. ET

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“A perfect storm” is what sailors call a disastrous concurrence of perilous weather events. Wall Street, by contrast, has experienced in the second quarter what might be better described as “a perfect calm.”

Banks often get a revenue boost from jittery investors shifting portfolios in more volatile times. Trading desks benefit from both higher volume and wider spreads—or the difference between what one investor will sell for and what another will pay—that tend to accompany price swings, as long as they aren’t too sudden or abrupt. Read more of this post

Twitter Isn’t Getting Fitter

Twitter Isn’t Getting Fitter

MIRIAM GOTTFRIED

June 12, 2014 4:31 p.m. ET

It hasn’t gotten much easier to be a Twitter TWTR +3.52% user. The same is true for Twitter investors.

The micromessaging service’s struggle to jump-start user growth was thrown into the spotlight again on Thursday with the resignation of Chief Operating Officer Ali Rowghani. It is unclear whether Mr. Rowghani’s departure resulted from anything more than internal politics. But the fact that he was in charge of Twitter’s product team, tasked with making the platform more appealing to new users, highlights the company’s ongoing problems.

Desktop users were reminded about the clunkiness and complexity of Twitter’s Web platform when they were forced onto it Wednesday during a temporary outage of its TweetDeck application. The shutdown, enforced while the company dealt with a security bug, also underlined the service’s reputation for being prone to glitches.

Granted, Twitter is primarily a mobile-focused company, with 78% of its monthly average users and 80% of advertising revenue coming from that platform in the first quarter. But its mobile application also could use some tweaks, including the ability to view customized lists of people followed, as is possible on TweetDeck.

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These details matter because Twitter’s rich valuation rests on its ability to grow its user base. The company failed to satisfy lofty expectations in the first quarter, reporting sequential user growth of 6%—only slightly better than the prior quarter’s 4%. Read more of this post

Alibaba to Detail Internet Business in New IPO Document; Move Is in Response to Concerns From Potential Investors

Alibaba to Detail Internet Business in New IPO Document

Move Is in Response to Concerns From Potential Investors

TELIS DEMOS

Updated June 12, 2014 10:26 p.m. ET

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., responding to concerns from investors that it has been too tight-lipped, plans to give out more details about its Internet empire as it readies its potential $20 billion initial public offering, said people familiar with the matter. Read more of this post

These CEOs Have Some Unexpected Hobbies: Stickers, Anyone? Corporate Bosses Unwind by Designing Fireworks, Playing With Toy Trains and Crafting Hunting Knives

These CEOs Have Some Unexpected Hobbies: Stickers, Anyone?

Corporate Bosses Unwind by Designing Fireworks, Playing With Toy Trains and Crafting Hunting Knives

JOANN S. LUBLIN

June 12, 2014 10:30 p.m. ET

On average, American chief executives work more than 50 hours a week, according to a recent study co-led by Harvard Business School. For the rest of the time, they have hobbies.

Larry Ellison, the billionaire leader of Oracle Corp. ORCL -1.32% , races yachts.Jim Hagedorn, chief of Scotts Miracle-Gro Co. SMG -3.21% , occasionally flies around in his World War II P-51 Mustang. But that doesn’t even begin to cover the array of activities bosses pursue to relax from their high-octane jobs. Read more of this post

Hedge Funds Get Stung by Slow Markets; Louis Bacon and Paul Tudor Jones Are Among Prominent Investors Losing Money on Bad Bets

Hedge Funds Get Stung by Slow Markets

Louis Bacon and Paul Tudor Jones Are Among Prominent Investors Losing Money on Bad Bets

GREGORY ZUCKERMAN, ROB COPELAND and JULIET CHUNG

Updated June 12, 2014 7:13 p.m. ET

Some of the biggest investors on Wall Street are losing money with wrong-way bets in markets around the globe, a surprising black eye amid a rise in stock and bond prices.

Hedge-fund managers including Paul Tudor Jones, Louis Bacon and Alan Howardare among those who have misread broad economic and financial trends. Some have lost money as Japanese stocks fell, while others have been upended by the surprising resilience of U.S. bonds. Read more of this post

Britain Warns Boom in Real-Estate Prices Threatens Economy; Financial Policy Makers Enact New Powers to Curb Mortgage Lending, Seek to Avoid Hurting Overall Recovery

Britain Warns Boom in Real-Estate Prices Threatens Economy

Financial Policy Makers Enact New Powers to Curb Mortgage Lending, Seek to Avoid Hurting Overall Recovery

ART PATNAUDE and JASON DOUGLAS

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June 12, 2014 4:01 p.m. ET

LONDON—The U.K.’s two chief financial-policy makers warned Thursday in strident tones that the British fervor for real estate had swelled into a threat to the wider economy, and the government moved to enact new powers to curb mortgage lending amid a gathering boom. Read more of this post

Samsung Makes Push Into High-End Tablet Market; Electronics Giant Rolls Out Two New Android-Based Models

Samsung Makes Push Into High-End Tablet Market

Electronics Giant Rolls Out Two New Android-Based Models

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MIN-JEONG LEE and YUN-HEE KIM

Updated June 12, 2014 8:04 p.m. ET

Samsung’s Galaxy Tab S can pair with a Galaxy S5 smartphone so that you can share files, view apps and even take calls from the tablet’s screen. Marshall Crook/The Wall Street Journal Read more of this post

China Commodity Loans Add to Surge in Offshore Borrowing; Beijing Tries to Limit Flow of Funds; Collateral in Qingdao

China Commodity Loans Add to Surge in Offshore Borrowing

Beijing Tries to Limit Flow of Funds; Collateral in Qingdao

DANIEL INMAN, FIONA LAW and ENDA CURRAN

June 12, 2014 10:35 a.m. ET

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The commodity-backed loans at the center of a probe into an alleged financial scam at a Chinese port are part of a ramp-up in offshore borrowing by Chinese companies that Beijing is looking to tamp down. Read more of this post

Prabowo Debt Plan Stirs Isia Rating Worries; Isia has a 0.5 percent chance of defaulting within a year, more than ten times higher than Msia or the Philippines, even though its liability ratio is half that of its Southeast Asian peers

Prabowo Debt Plan Stirs Indonesia Rating Worries: Asean Credit

Presidential contender Prabowo Subianto’s pledge to spur economic growth by doubling the rate of borrowing risks raising Indonesia’s chance of default.

Prabowo sees Southeast Asia’s largest economy as “underleveraged” and would raise its debt-to-gross domestic product ratio toward 50 percent, compared with the current 24 percent, Hashim Djojohadikusumo, his brother and economic adviser, said in a June 6 seminar in Jakarta. The plan includes raising $300 billion from the capital markets over five years to achieve a 10 percent growth rate, Hashim said.

Read more of this post

Silicon Valley’s Welch Vows Nationwide Fight on Tenure

Silicon Valley’s Welch Vows Nationwide Fight on Tenure

The fight to end teacher tenure is just beginning, said David Welch, the Silicon Valley entrepreneur who backed a California lawsuit in which a state judge ruled the practice was unconstitutional.

Students Matter, a nonprofit group founded by Welch, is talking to other states about bringing similar lawsuits, he said, and he vowed to support the California case against appeals all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary.

Read more of this post

Global Capital Markets 2014: The Quest for Revenue Growth

Global Capital Markets 2014: The Quest for Revenue Growth

by Philippe Morel, Nick Gardiner, Gwenhaël Le Boulay, James Malick, Pierre Paoli, Sukand Ramachandran, Shubh Saumya, and Astrid Woloszczuk

MAY 06, 2014

Overview

The capital markets and investment banking (CMIB) industry continues to try to navigate its way through a transformational period that requires tough strategic choices. Declining revenues, an extremely challenging regulatory climate, clients that demand higher service levels and more innovative products, a shifting workforce culture, and the need to forge meaningful business partnerships are common items on the agendas of senior management teams globally. Read more of this post

Enabling Big Data: Building the Capabilities That Really Matter

Enabling Big Data: Building the Capabilities That Really Matter

by Rashi Agarwal, Elias Baltassis, Jon Brock, and James Platt

MAY 13, 2014

Overview

It’s no secret that big data offers enormous potential for businesses. Every C-suite on the planet understands the promise. Less understood—and much less put into practice—are the steps that companies must take in order to realize that potential. For all their justifiable enthusiasm about big data, too many businesses risk leaving its vast potential on the table—or, worse, ceding it to competitors.

(https://www.bcgperspectives.com/big_data_and_beyond)Big data has brought game-changing shifts to the way data is acquired, analyzed, stored, and used. Solutions can be more flexible, more scalable, and more cost-effective than ever before. Instead of building one-off systems designed to address specific problems for specific business units, companies can create a common platform leveraged in different ways by different parts of the business. And all kinds of data—structured and unstructured, internal and external—can be incorporated. Read more of this post

Time to Reengage with, Not Retreat from, Emerging Markets

Time to Reengage with, Not Retreat from, Emerging Markets

by Bernd Waltermann, David C. Michael, and Dinesh Khanna

MAY 19, 2014

These are challenging times for emerging markets. China’s economy is expanding at the slowest pace in more than a decade, and annual growth in once-booming nations like Brazil, Mexico, Russia, and South Africa has slowed to about 1.5 to 2.5 percent. Look around the developing world, and currencies are weakening, worries about asset bubbles and rising debt are mounting, and foreign direct investment has fallen sharply. This volatility leaves many companies wondering if they are overexposed to the risks of emerging markets. Read more of this post

Creating Value for Machinery Companies Through Services

Creating Value for Machinery Companies Through Services

by Victor Du, Kelly Howe, Rahul Jain, Rafael Rilo, Patrick Staudacher, Pekka Vanne, and Francisco Salmerón

MAY 06, 2014

Machinery companies come in forms as varied as the equipment they manufacture. Just as equipment prices range from thousands to millions of dollars, companies vary from large business conglomerates to highly specialized niche companies. What most have in common is that they generate substantial value from after-sales services. Read more of this post

A Growth Zealot’s Guide to Commercial Transformation

A Growth Zealot’s Guide to Commercial Transformation

A new e-book from BCG on Winning with Growth

MAY 02, 2014

The Go-to-Market Revolution THIS E-BOOK

This e-book is part of BCG’s Winning with Growth initiative, which aims to support transformational company growth through multiple disciplines.

A Growth Zealot’s Guide to Commercial Transformation sets the stage for companies to trigger new and untapped growth by exploiting the “Go-to-Market Revolution” hidden in their existing marketing, sales, pricing, and other commercial functions. At little cost or risk, companies can create short-term revenue growth that simultaneously funds long-term profit as well as the development of new strategic capabilities. Read more of this post

The Go-to-Market Revolution: Igniting Growth with Marketing, Sales, and Pricing

The Go-to-Market Revolution: Igniting Growth with Marketing, Sales, and Pricing

by Rich Hutchinson

MAY 02, 2014

Whether you ask a company’s CEO or its investors, they’ll likely identify revenue growth as the single biggest driver of corporate profit and shareholder value.

Over the long term, revenue growth powers 75 percent of total shareholder return (TSR) for the upper-quartile value creators of the S&P 500. Even in the short term, growth accounts for nearly a third of TSR for these outperformers—double the boost from improving margins or cash flow. A growing business also empowers employees, attracts top talent, and helps fund expansion, transformation, and more growth. Read more of this post

Ferry family boss eludes S Korea’s biggest and most bizarre manhunt

Ferry family boss eludes S Korea’s biggest and most bizarre manhunt

Thursday, June 12, 2014 – 21:28

Reuters

SEOUL – South Korea’s biggest and most bizarre manhunt, linked to a ferry disaster in which hundreds drowned, has come full circle at the compound of a sect known for its organic ice cream as police on Thursday used earth movers to search for tunnels. Read more of this post

Investors will leave if Prabowo wins: Deutsche Bank

Investors will leave if Prabowo wins: Deutsche Bank

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Thu, June 12 2014, 5:50 PM

A recent survey by Deutsche Bank shows that the investors’ investment decisions will be significantly affected by the change in government.

The survey reveals that 74 percent of investors will invest if non-active Jakarta governor Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and his running mate Jusuf Kalla win the election, while only 6 percent would sell their shares.  Read more of this post

The aim of Xi’s reforms is to preserve party control; Economic policies will not be matched by political openness, writes Robert Zoellick

June 12, 2014 11:55 am

The aim of Xi’s reforms is to preserve party control

By Robert Zoellick

Economic policies will not be matched by political openness, writes Robert Zoellick

About a year since he took office, Xi Jinping’s direction as president of China is increasingly clear. His priority is the preservation of the Communist party. Cadres now watch a documentary about the end of the Soviet Union; Mikhail Gorbachev is not the hero. Read more of this post

MIUI: Xiaomi builds its success on a solid platform

MIUI: Xiaomi builds its success on a solid platform

Staff Reporter

2014-06-12

When Chinese smartphone brand Xiaomi launched its Mi Pad tablet on May 15, the tablet version of its MIUI user interface prompted talk that it could present a viable alternative to Android, according to the Chinese-language magazine Business Value. Read more of this post

‘I Do’ Becomes ‘I Might’ as Marriage Views Shift in Seoul

Jun 12, 2014

‘I Do’ Becomes ‘I Might’ as Marriage Views Shift in Seoul

JEYUP S. KWAAK

Traditional views on marriage are changing in Seoul, with more people saying tying the knot is optional and divorce is OK. While fewer people take vows each year, the number of women marrying younger men is on the rise.

Seoul City Hall released this week a set of data from recent years that suggest that citizens are showing an increasingly lax attitude toward matrimony. Read more of this post