Thai army chief and songwriter: Prayuth opens his heart

Thai army chief and songwriter: Prayuth opens his heart

Tuesday, June 10, 2014 – 10:23

AFP

The show, aired on all digital TV channels last Friday, has become the talk of the town and left people asking this question: Who is the producer?

Prayuth did not look stiff like he did when he last appeared on television. He seemed relaxed and one could sense his aura of power, his command and confidence. Read more of this post

Former journalist CK Moon, a political novice, named South Korea’s new PM; Moon has “long tried to correct the wrong practices and deep-rooted evils in our society through rational solutions and a cool-headed critical mind.”

Park Nominates Former Journalist as New South Korean Premier

South Korean President Park Geun Hye nominated a former journalist as prime minister to lead a government shakeup prompted by public anger over the Sewol ferry sinking.

Moon Chang Keuk, who worked at JoongAng Ilbo newspaper and teaches journalism at Seoul National University, was picked to replace Prime Minister Chung Hong Won, presidential spokesman Min Kyung Wook said today at a televised briefing. Chung offered his resignation to assume responsibility for the April 16 sinking that left about 300 people dead or missing, most of them high school students on a field trip. Read more of this post

Johor housing Bill amended after uproar over sultan’s powers

Johor housing Bill amended after uproar over sultan’s powers

Wednesday, June 11, 2014 – 04:00

Yong Yen Nie

The Straits Times

Johor Menteri Besar Mohamed Khaled Nordin yesterday amended a controversial housing Bill that would have given powers to the Johor sultan to intervene in housing and property matters, following an uproar from law experts, politicians and the media that it could be unconstitutional. Read more of this post

Former SEC Chair Cox Declares IFRS “Bereft of Life”; The former chairman of the SEC declares that full-scale adoption of IFRS in the United States is no longer possible, but his European counterparts disagree

June 10, 2014

CFO.com | US

Former SEC Chair Cox Declares IFRS “Bereft of Life”

The former chairman of the SEC declares that full-scale adoption of IFRS in the United States is no longer possible, but his European counterparts disagree.

Vincent Ryan

In 2008, addressing an audience of accountants who were worried that the United States would adopt global accounting standards too fast, Christopher Cox said the end of U.S. GAAP and the full-scale adoption of International Financial Reporting Standards wouldn’t happen for “many, many years.” Read more of this post

Does ‘Could’ Lead to Good? Toward a Theory of Moral Insight

Does ‘Could’ Lead to Good? Toward a Theory of Moral Insight

Ting Zhang 

Harvard Business School

Francesca Gino 

Harvard University – Harvard Business School

Joshua D. Margolis 

Harvard University
June 2, 2014
Harvard Business School NOM Unit Working Paper No. 14-118
Harvard Business School Organizational Behavior Unit Working Paper No. 14-118

Abstract: 
We introduce the construct of moral insight and study how it can be elicited when people face ethical dilemmas – challenging decisions that feature tradeoffs between competing and seemingly incompatible values. Moral insight consists of discovering solutions that move beyond selecting one conflicting ethical option over another. Moral insight encompasses both a cognitive process and a discernible output: it involves the realization that an ethical dilemma might be addressed other than by conceding one set of moral imperatives to meet another, and it involves the generation of solutions that allow competing objectives to be met. Across four studies, we find that moral insight is generated when individuals are prompted to consider the question “What could I do?” in place of their intuitive approach of considering “What should I do?” Together, these studies point toward a theory of moral insight and important practical implications.

UberBay: Dissecting Uber’s valuation case

UberBay

Dan McCrum Author alerts | Jun 10 10:29 | 11 comments Share

An online service that matches buyers and sellers you say? Worth $18bn? Well, there are a lot of taxis in the world.

We have seen this one before though, so $18bn is entirely possible, if not necessarily sensible.

Consider this chart of the original dot com network effect superstar, eBay.

image001-3 image002-1 Read more of this post

What Uber needs to do to justify its $18.2bn price tag

What Uber needs to do to justify its $18.2bn price tag

Richard Waters | Jun 08 06:22 | 6 comments | Share

Without seeing Uber’s financials, it’s impossible to say whether its amazing post-money valuation of $18.2bn is deserved. But even if its business is starting to take off, as seems to the case, it still has a long way to go to live up to the hype generated by its latest fund-raising.

Start with revenue and growth. A leaked internal report late last year showed thatthe company’s billings had reached an annualised rate of more than $1.1bn, suggesting net revenue of something north of $200m. That pointed to an acceleration in its business compared to the $125m full-year revenue excepted earlier in 2013. Read more of this post

Déjà vu: echoes of pre-crisis world mount

June 10, 2014 6:07 am

Déjà vu: echoes of pre-crisis world mount

By John Plender

But missing credit bubble indicates next crash is not imminent

An occupational hazard of observing markets is a recurring sense of déjà vu. Even so, 2014 is proving a vintage year for echoes of the pre-crisis world.

First, we have the return of the Great Moderation, that period of eerie stability before 2007 which economists and central bankers hailed as the harbinger of a new era of non-inflationary growth. Today market volatility has again collapsed across all asset classes. Ten-year US Treasuries, the global bond market benchmark, have been trading in a relatively narrow range all year. Read more of this post

Nearly 10,000 descendants of Song general Yue Fei in Anhui

Nearly 10,000 descendants of Song general Yue Fei in Anhui

Staff Reporter

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2014-06-10

Around 200 descendants of Yue Fei pay their respects to the Song general in Jiujiang, Jiangxi province. (Photo/CNS)

Nearly 10,000 descendants of Yue Fei, a famous military general during the Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279 CE), are reportedly still living in Anhui province, reports the local Anhui News. Read more of this post

China Reminds Hong Kong of Its Control; Unusual ‘White Paper’ Warning Comes Days After Tiananmen Remembrance

China Reminds Hong Kong of Its Control

Unusual ‘White Paper’ Warning Comes Days After Tiananmen Remembrance

CHESTER YUNG

June 10, 2014 10:42 a.m. ET

HONG KONG—Days after tens of thousands of people held a candlelight vigil commemorating the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown, China’s cabinet gave a blunt reminder to Hong Kong residents that it was in charge in the city and would fend off any intervention from an “external force.” Read more of this post

Huawei tries to be a healthy “sapling” in competition with “big trees”: interview

Huawei tries to be a healthy “sapling” in competition with “big trees”: interview

LOS ANGELES, June 9 (Xinhua) — Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd, a Shenzhen-based Chinese telecommunication giant, is trying to get more business momentum in the U.S. market by joining hands with local partners.

“By continuously strengthening cooperation with local partners, Huawei is gradually expanding the visibility and credibility in the U.S. market”, said Shen Jingyang (Victor Shen), the CEO of Huawei Enterprise USA Inc. Read more of this post

These questions from the 2014 Chinese college entrance exam will melt your mind! “The world belongs to you only after you stand up.” Please choose your own angle and write about your thoughts on this sentence

These questions from the 2014 Chinese college entrance exam will melt your mind!

Last Saturday marked first time ever that the Chinese college entrance examination, Gaokao (高考) was hosted at the same time as its US counterpart, the SAT (Scholastic Assessment Test). Although two tests are in completely different formats, they both have one section in common, the essay/composition. We’ve compiled a list of Gaokao composition topics from different regions in China this year and translated them into English to give you a sense of just how damn cryptic they are. Read more of this post

China Tries to Electrify Clean Car Market as Consumers Yawn

Jun 10, 2014

China Tries to Electrify Clean Car Market as Consumers Yawn

From next year, Chinese owners of electric cars will be able to zip from Beijing to Hong Kong, stopping off en route at charging stations, according to media reports.

But even as the number of new initiatives aimed at addressing the country’s lack of charging stations for electric cars increases, more data has emerged that suggests electric vehicles may becoming even less popular among Chinese consumers. Read more of this post

New Zealand’s Orr: One of the World’s Most Innovative Investors

New Zealand’s Orr: One of the World’s Most Innovative Investors

05 JUN 2014 – LOCH ADAMSON

When Adrian Orr left New Zealand’s central bank in February 2007 to run the country’s fledgling sovereign wealth fund, he knew he was taking a calculated risk. An economist by training, Orr had never led an asset management team or overseen a diversified investment portfolio. As deputy governor and head of financial stability at the Wellington-based Reserve Bank of New Zealand, he’d been closely involved in managing reserves, assessing macroeconomic risk and participating in policy discussions — and he liked the idea of using his skills to help build a lasting institution for New Zealand. But he had no inkling of the size of the challenge he was about to face. Read more of this post

Betting on boring brings stock outperformance in 2014

Betting on boring brings stock outperformance in 2014

7:12am EDT

By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Largely ignored during much of last year’s 30 percent rally in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, the stocks leading the U.S. market this year rank among its usually sleepiest components.

The best sector in 2014 is utilities, including Consolidated Edison, about as staid a group as one can get. They’re up 14.5 percent on a total return basis this year, compared with 6.4 percent for the S&P 500 as a whole. Read more of this post

Inside Buffett’s Brain; Math-minded researchers are attempting to distill the mind of the world’s greatest investor. Even if they fall short of replicating Warren Buffett’s craft—and they will—there are good lessons here about what it takes to beat

Inside Buffett’s Brain

image001-2 image002-2 image003

 Math-minded researchers are attempting to distill the mind of the world’s greatest investor. Even if they fall short of replicating Warren Buffett’s craft—and they will—there are good lessons here about what it takes to beat the market.

Warren Buffett isn’t merely a great investor. He’s also the great investor you think you can learn from, and maybe even copy (at least a little). Read more of this post

Watsons sells 25% stake to Singapore’s Temasek

Watsons sells 25% stake to Singapore’s Temasek

Staff Reporter

2014-06-04

Hong Kong business tycoon Li Ka-shing has sold a nearly 25% stake in Hutchison Whampoa’s personal care store chain Watsons to Temasek Holdings of Singapore for HK$44 billion (US$5.5 billion) after speculation arose that the retailer was planning to go public this year. Read more of this post

China Scrambling After “Discovering” Thousands Of Tons Of Rehypothecated Copper, Aluminum Missing

China Scrambling After “Discovering” Thousands Of Tons Of Rehypothecated Copper, Aluminum Missing

Tyler Durden on 06/04/2014 09:22 -0400

“Banks are worried about their exposure,” warns one warehousing source, “there is a scramble for people to head down there at the minute and make sure that their metal that they think is covered by a warehouse receipt actually exists.”

The rehypothecated catastrophe that we discussed in great detail here (copper financing)here (all commodities), and here (global contagion) appears to be gathering speed as the China’s northeastern port of Qingdao has halted shipments of aluminum and copper due to an investigation by authorities after they found “there is a discrepancy in metal that should be there and metal that is actually there.”

image001

Copper prices are tumbling already (despite Gartman’s most recent prognostication on Dr. Copper’s China recovery meme) as the world’s 7th largest port disallows any shipments until the probe is complete.

“It’s such a massive port I would think virtually everybody has exposure,” warned one analyst, adding that this will bebearish for metals as “a lot of Western banks will try to offload material and try not to deal with Chinese merchants.

Reuters reports,

China’s northeastern port of Qingdao has halted shipments of aluminium and copper due to an investigation by authorities, causing concern among bankers and trade houses financing the metals, trading and warehousing sources said on Monday. Port authorities could not immediately be reached for comment. China has a public holiday on Monday.

 

“We were told we can’t ship any material out while they do this investigation,” a source at a trading house said. The port of Qingdao is China’s third-largest foreign trade port and the world’s seventh-largest port, trading with 700 ports in more than 180 countries, according to its website (www.qdport.com/).

 

Banks are worried about their exposure,” one warehousing source in Singapore said.

 

There is a scramble for people to head down there at the minute and make sure that their metal that they think is covered by a warehouse receipt actually exists,” he said.

Metal imports have been partly driven in China as a means to raise finance, where traders can pledge metal as collateral to obtain better terms. In some cases the same shipment can be pledged to more than one bank, fuelling hot money inflows and spurring a clampdown by Chinese authorities.

It appears there is a discrepancy in metal that should be there and metal that is actually there,” said another source at a warehouse company with operations at the port.

 image002-1

We hear the discrepancy is 80,000 tonnes of aluminium and 20,000 tonnes of copper, but we hear that the volumes will actually be higher. It’s either missing or it was never there – there have been triple issuing of documentation,” he said.

 

Beijing last year set new rules to curb currency speculation amid signs that hot money inflows helped push the yuan to a series of record highs. The rules required banks to tighten the management of their foreign exchange lending and types of clients that are able to access those loans.

 

“It’s such a massive port I would think virtually everybody has exposure,” the trading source said.

 

“Once the investigation is over, it could be bearish for metals. I think that a lot of Western banks will try to offload material and try not to deal with Chinese merchants,” the trading source added.

Critically – this is a major problem for any shadow-banking credit creation process as if the rehypothecated commodity-backed CCFDs are ultimately unwound, 1) someone will not get their collateral (payment problems – bailouts?), 2) less real collateral means less real credit expansion (which banks can;t fill because the firms that use this method of financing are anything but creditworthy), and 3) liquidation of any assets will proceed rapidly…

Goldman concludes that “an unwind of Chinese commodity financing deals would likely result in an increase in availability of physical inventory (physical selling), and an increase in futures buying (buying back the hedge) – thereby resulting in a lower physical price than futures price, as well as resulting in a lower overall price curve (or full carry).” In other words, it would send the price of the underlying commodity lower.

 

 

 

Finally, as we showed before when it comes to commodity financing deals, in terms of total notional value, both copper and aluminum pale by comparison to the one metal most used (by value) in China as a funding substitute: gold

As we commented previously:

When we previously contemplated what the end of funding deals (which the PBOC and the China Politburo seems rather set on) may mean for the price of other commodities, we agreed with Goldman that it would be certainly negative. And yet in the case of gold, it just may be that even if China were to dump its physical to some willing 3rd party buyer, its inevitable cover of futures “hedges”, i.e. buying gold in the paper market, may not only offset the physical selling, but send the price of gold back to levels seen at the end of 2012 when gold CCFDs really took off in earnest.

 

In other words, from a purely mechanistical standpoint, the unwind of China’s shadow banking system, while negative for all non-precious metals-based commodities, may be just the gift that all those patient gold (and silver) investors have been waiting for.  This of course, excludes the impact of what the bursting of the Chinese credit bubble would do to faith in the globalized, debt-driven status quo. Add that into the picture, and into the future demand for gold, and suddenly things get really exciting.

So if tens of thousands of tons of copper and aluminum are suddenly “missing”, one can assuredly say: “at least the gold is still there.” Right?

 

Why Having Too Many Choices Is Making You Unhappy

WHY HAVING TOO MANY CHOICES IS MAKING YOU UNHAPPY

MORE OPTIONS MEANS MORE POSSIBILITIES TO BE PERFECTLY CONTENT–RIGHT? HERE’S WHY DECISION FATIGUE IS SAPPING US OF HAPPINESS AND MAKING US REGRET THE CHOICES WE MAKE.

BY JANE PORTER

Amazon sells 1,161 kinds of toilet brushes. I know this because I recently spent an evening trying to choose one of them for the bathroom in my new apartment. Nearly an hour later, after having read countless contradictory reviews and pondering far too many choices, I felt grumpy and tired and simply gave up. The next day, I happily bought the only toilet brush the local dollar store offered. Read more of this post

To Celebrate Immigration, A Reminder About Who Built America

TO CELEBRATE IMMIGRATION, A REMINDER ABOUT WHO BUILT AMERICA

BY RAE ANN FERA

To mark Immigration Heritage Month, Welcome.US creates a message of unity, and a reminder that almost all Americans came from somewhere else.

Immigration reform is a hot-button topic, one that’s complicated, far-reaching and divisive. Unfortunately, the conversation about immigration often gets rendered down to a simplistic “us and them” continuum. But pulling back focus on the topic reminds us that almost all Americans are descended from immigrants; that in its early days, the country was built by the dreams and hard work of people who came from somewhere else. Read more of this post

Walmart’s ‘Made in USA’ push exposes strains of manufacturing rebirth

Walmart’s ‘Made in USA’ push exposes strains of manufacturing rebirth

1:23am EDT

By James B. Kelleher

(Reuters) – When Walmart pledged last year to buy an extra $250 billion in U.S.-made goods over the next decade, it appeared to be just what was needed to help move America’s putative manufacturing renaissance from rhetoric to reality.

But suppliers trying to reshore production as part of the initiative by the world’s largest retailer are running into practical problems as they try to restart long-idled corners of U.S. manufacturing. Read more of this post

China state media calls for ‘severe punishment’ for Google, Apple, U.S. tech firms

China state media calls for ‘severe punishment’ for Google, Apple, U.S. tech firms

2:03am EDT

BEIJING (Reuters) – Chinese state media lashed out at Google Inc, Apple Inc and other U.S. technology companies on Wednesday, calling on Beijing “to punish severely the pawns” of the U.S. government for monitoring China and stealing secrets.

U.S. companies such as Yahoo Inc, Cisco Systems Inc, Microsoft Corp and Facebook Inc threaten the cyber-security of China and its Internet users, said the People’s Daily on its microblog, in comments echoed on the front page of the English-language China Daily. Read more of this post

China’s best-selling spirit Baijiu seeks a foothold in the West

China’s best-selling spirit Baijiu seeks a foothold in the West

Tue, Jun 3 2014

By Leslie Gevirtz

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Just as Russia has its vodka, Mexico its tequila and Scotland its Scotch, China has its own distilled spirit, baijiu.

Baijiu is the world’s biggest-selling spirit category and represents a $23 billion market, according to research reports by McKinsey & Co and UBS. Read more of this post

It costs more to house the dead than the living in HK

It costs more to house the dead than the living in HK

Wednesday, June 4, 2014 – 17:18

Reuters

HONG KONG – There’s one thing even Hong Kong’s more than 40 billionaires will struggle to buy – a final resting place on their home turf. Read more of this post

Yogyakarta sultan refuses to take sides

Yogyakarta sultan refuses to take sides

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Wednesday, June 4, 2014 – 11:49

The Jakarta Post/Asia News Network

The Sultan and governor of Yogyakarta, Sri Sultan Hamengkubuwono X has insisted on his neutrality in the upcoming presidential election while hoping that if Joko “Jokowi” Widodo and Jusuf Kalla win the presidency they will use their power in the interests of the people. Read more of this post

India likely to ease restrictions for foreign online retailers next month

India likely to ease restrictions for foreign online retailers next month

7:38am EDT

By Nandita Bose and Rajesh Kumar Singh

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI (Reuters) – India could allow global online retailers such as Amazon.com Inc to sell their own products as early as next month, removing restrictions that could boost competition in one of the world’s biggest, and most price-sensitive, retail markets. Read more of this post

Open up about Tiananmen ; Chinese deserve a full accounting of the 1989 events

Open up about Tiananmen

By Tom Malinowski, Wednesday, June 4, 7:53 AM

Tom Malinowski is assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor.

Twenty-five years ago, it was possible to believe that the contest between democratic and authoritarian ideas of how societies should be organized was ending. East Germans breached their wall; Chileans voted to end the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet; and on June 4, 1989, in Poland, Solidarity won the first round of Eastern Europe’s first free, post-Communist election. But June 4 was also the day Chinese troops put down student-led protests in Tiananmen Square, ending hopes that China would join the changes sweeping the world. Ballots and bullets competed to define the age. The contest of ideas continued. Read more of this post

Beijing’s anti-graft campaign touches China Central TV

Last updated: June 2, 2014 2:16 pm

Beijing’s anti-graft campaign touches China Central TV

By Charles Clover in Beijing

The man in charge of one of China’s most notorious television shows, aimed at naming and shaming corporate malpractice, has himself been targeted in a bribery investigation by prosecutors, China’s official news agency says.

The case focuses on the head of China Central TV’s advertising department, Guo Zhenxi, who is also in charge of the Consumer Day programme, a show that targets companies – particularly foreign ones – for poor service, shoddy goods and high prices to Chinese consumers. Read more of this post

Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Cultural District – and its real estate; What you can buy for HK$5m = Nothing. Prices in nearby Olympic start at about HK$7m

May 30, 2014 1:09 pm

Hong Kong’s West Kowloon Cultural District – and its real estate

By Josh Noble

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Were this an emerging arts hub in almost any other city, property prices would surely be soaring in anticipation

Hong Kong has long been known as a city of trade and finance, but rarely one of culture. Despite the slogan “Asia’s world city”, it remains sorely lacking in the theatres, museums and music venues such a label might suggest. Most artistic endeavours have been driven – or torpedoed – by commercial interests, thanks to exorbitant rents and a particularly cut-throat form of capitalism. The drab signage for the once-promised culture park – standing dusty and alone on the edge of barren wasteland – long seemed a symbol of faded ambition. Read more of this post

TV content is king, but growth is tricky; Broadcasters are betting that, by owning the rights to quality content, they will be able to hold on to viewers and revenues, despite competition from online platforms such as Netflix and Y

June 4, 2014 8:34 am

TV content is king, but growth is tricky

By Henry Mance

It was July 2007 when Silvio Berlusconi’s Mediaset group and others sealed the acquisition of Big Brother producer Endemol.

Even by pre-crisis standards, that deal – which valued the production company at €3.4bn, or about 15 times its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation – seems foolhardy. Read more of this post