China Protester Risks Riches Joining Street Fight for Justice

China Protester Risks Riches Joining Street Fight for Justice

After leaving a downtown park in southern China where they held banners protesting nuclear tests by China-ally North Korea, Wang Aizhong says he and about a dozen others were tailed to a restaurant by Guangzhou police. As food began to arrive, the cops stormed their private room and ordered the diners to squat. Wang, 37, says he slammed his hands on the table and shouted: “Why?” Read more of this post

Starbucks to Audi Face China Clampdown on Foreign Firms

Starbucks to Audi Face China Clampdown on Foreign Firms

As Chinese President Xi Jinping promises the nation’s biggest market opening in two decades, the reality for some of the most successful foreign companies in the country is a raft of probes and laws that curb their operations. This month, after China’s ruling Communist Party promised to make markets “decisive” in shaping the world’s second-largest economy, carmakers Jaguar Land Rover Automotive Plc, Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. (7270)’s Subaru division and Audi AG became the latest targets when state media accused them of charging “unfair” prices for spare parts. Read more of this post

Australia Orders Banks to Raise Capital

Australia Orders Banks to Raise Capital

ROSS KELLY

Updated Dec. 23, 2013 9:43 p.m. ET

SYDNEY—Australia’s banking regulator ordered the nation’s largest lenders to deepen capital reserves to protect themselves against economic shocks, tying up funds that might otherwise have been used to fatten dividend payments. Read more of this post

Do Investors Recognise the Conflicts and Incentives in IPOs?

Do Investors Recognise the Conflicts and Incentives in IPOs?

valuewalk.com/2013/12/investors-recognise-conflicts-incentives-ipos/

CFA Institute Contributors

Do Investors Recognise the Conflicts and Incentives in IPOs? by Colin McLeanThe process for initial public offerings (IPOs) is one of the most opaque areas of the market and is ripe for reform. The current IPO boom mirrors the excesses of the tech bubble a decade ago. That bubble resulted in fines and new rules, but it’s still not fixed. Read more of this post

The 81-year-old Japanese executive who built 7-Eleven into the world’s biggest convenience store chain has a new mission: turning more than 50,000 brick-and-mortar stores in Japan into portals to a new online retail empire

Updated: Tuesday December 24, 2013 MYT 12:27:29 PM

Japan’s 7-Eleven kingpin goes online

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TOKYO: The 81-year-old Japanese executive who built 7-Eleven into the world’s biggest convenience store chain has a new mission: turning more than 50,000 brick-and-mortar stores in Japan into portals to a new online retail empire. Read more of this post

Xi’s Recipe; China’s leaders apparently worry that Western-style investigative journalism inside China could trigger just such a crisis

DEC 23, 2013

Xi’s Recipe

Anne-Marie Slaughter, a former director of policy planning in the US State Department (2009-2011), is President and CEO of the New America Foundation and Professor Emerita of Politics and International Affairs at Princeton University. She is the author of The Idea That Is America: Keeping Faith with Our Values in a Dangerous World.

WASHINGTON, DC – China’s government is cracking down hard on Western journalists, threatening not to renew visas for reporters from the New York Times and Bloomberg in retaliation for their reporting on the corruption of senior Chinese officials. Times columnist Thomas Friedman recently penned an open letter to the Chinese government telling them that, because the top “cause of death of Chinese regimes in history is greed and corruption,” a free press is more likely to help than hurt. Read more of this post

The Big Churn — How High Partner Turnover Damages China’s Private Equity Industry

The Big Churn — How High Partner Turnover Damages China’s Private Equity Industry

2013-12-24 15:42:12

Peter Fuhrman, Chairman and CEO China First Capital

What’s the biggest risk in China private equity investing? Depends who you’re asking. If you ask LPs, the people who provide all the money that PE firms live off, you will often hear a surprising answer: turnover at PE firms. Nowhere else in the PE and VC world do you find so many firms where partners are feuding, quitting or being thrown off the bus. Read more of this post

SOE Reform in China — Big Changes On the Way

SOE Reform in China — Big Changes On the Way

2013-12-24 15:44:43

Peter Fuhrman, Chairman and CEO China First Capital

China’s state-owned enterprises (SOEs) are a lucky breed, or so conventional wisdom would have it. They have lower cost of capital and less competitive pressures of private sector competitors. China’s big banks (also state-owned) are always happy to lend, and if things do turn sour, China’s government will bail everyone out. Read more of this post

Pickpockets from China targeting flights to, from Southeast Asia: diplomat

Pickpockets from China targeting flights to, from Southeast Asia: diplomat
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
The China Post news staff

Professional mainland Chinese pickpockets have been targeting flights to and from Southeast Asia, a member of Taiwan’s representative office in Indonesia said, urging Taiwanese travelers to remain alert. Read more of this post

PetroChina’s Chief Accountant Targeted as Corruption Probe Widens

PetroChina’s Chief Accountant Targeted as Corruption Probe Widens

12-17 10:38 Caijing

This is the latest in a series of arrests of executives in the state-owned oil giants.

A corruption probe into PetroChina, the country’s largest oil producer, has widened to include its chief accountant Wen Qingshan, who is also a member of the company’s party leadership, reported by the Ta Kung Pao. Read more of this post

People’s Bank cannot solve China’s fund shortage alone

People’s Bank cannot solve China’s fund shortage alone

Staff Reporter

2013-12-24

China’s market has again reported a fund shortage but as the nation still has more than 100 trillion yuan (US$16.5 trillion) of circulating M2, the situation has resulted from the country’s twisted bank funding structure and lack of a reasonable funding plan, reports the Chinese-language Shanghai Securities News. Read more of this post

How Tighter Government Spending Contributed to China Rate Spike

Dec 23, 2013

How Tighter Government Spending Contributed to China Rate Spike

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An unusual shift to slower government spending toward the end of the year caught the Chinese central bank off guard and helped send money-market rates last week to their highest levelssince a crisis in June, economists say. Read more of this post

How they fell: The collapse of Chinese cross-border listings

How they fell: The collapse of Chinese cross-border listings

As the China–US IPO pipeline restarts, recent history offers lessons for companies, investors, and regulators.

December 2013 | byDavid Cogman and Gordon Orr

Amid the frenzy around Twitter’s $1.8 billion IPO on November 7, it would have been easy to miss a pair of small Chinese IPOs in New York a week earlier. Qunar, the Chinese travel-booking service, raised $167 million on November 1, with share prices rising 89 percent above the initial offering. The day before, 58.com—a Chinese version of Craigslist—raised $187 million, exceeding the initial offering by 47 percent. Read more of this post

Debt of China Railway Corp reaches RMB3tn ($504bn) and counting

Debt of China Railway Corp reaches RMB3tn and counting

Staff Reporter

2013-12-24

The total debt of national railway operator China Railway Corporation (CR), has topped the staggering 3 trillion yuan (US$504 billion) mark and counting as it continues to execute major railway projects, reports the Chinese-language Economic Information Daily. Read more of this post

Chinese Rate Crunch Exposes Cracks

Chinese Rate Crunch Exposes Cracks

ARON BACK

Dec. 23, 2013 6:35 a.m. ET

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The squeeze is on—again. In an echo of last June’s cash crunch, interest rates that Chinese banks charge each other for short-term funds have again shot up to worrying levels. Despite moves by the central bank to calm the interbank market, the benchmark seven-day repo rate averaged 8.94% on Monday and spiked as high as 9.8%. That’s up from an already elevated 8.2% on Friday.

Read more of this post

Chinese Energy Giants Refocus on Traditional Assets; Shale Gas and Oil Sands Are Losing Their Allure Because of a Lack of Export Infrastructure

Chinese Energy Giants Refocus on Traditional Assets

Shale Gas and Oil Sands Are Losing Their Allure Because of a Lack of Export Infrastructure

YVONNE LEE

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China’s energy giants, which have long been the country’s biggest foreign acquirers, are focusing on traditional oil and gas assets once again after favoring unconventional energy assets like shale gas and oil sands in recent years. Read more of this post

Chinese county govt cracks down on Xmas gathering

Chinese county govt cracks down on Xmas gathering

BEIJING — Lawyers and churchgoers said they had been prevented from meeting in a central Chinese county yesterday to commemorate Christmas and draw attention to the detention of a pastor and his aides.

BY –

5 HOURS 18 MIN AGO

BEIJING — Lawyers and churchgoers said they had been prevented from meeting in a central Chinese county yesterday to commemorate Christmas and draw attention to the detention of a pastor and his aides.The proposed meeting at the church in Henan province’s Nanle county came during a month-long crackdown on the church over a land dispute that pits its popular preacher against the county government. Read more of this post

China’s Liquidity Crisis Worsens As Fed Vs PBOC “Taper” Wars Escalate

China’s Liquidity Crisis Worsens As Fed Vs PBOC “Taper” Wars Escalate

Tyler Durden on 12/23/2013 19:08 -0500

While global currency wars have esclataed over the last 4 years (as we noted here), the potential return to fund outflows triggered by the Fed taper, combined with higher demand for funds ahead of Chinese New Year, means there will be continued pressure for China’s money market rates to stay high heading into January. With China’s reform and rate liberalization plans, it seems 2014 may be the year of the Taper Wars. Read more of this post

China’s family-planning agency aims to roll out changes to the country’s one-child policy, allowing some parents to have a second child, in the beginning of next year

China’s One-Child Policy to Change in New Year

Government Concerned About Falling Birthrate

LAURIE BURKITT

Dec. 23, 2013 10:36 p.m. ET

BEIJING—China’s family-planning agency aims to roll out changes to the country’s one-child policy, allowing some parents to have a second child, in the beginning of next year, according to China’s official Xinhua news agency. Read more of this post

China’s Appliance Retailers Run an Online Marathon, Uphill; Traditional appliance retailers Gome and Suning plunged into online retailing and don’t know how far they’ll fall

12.20.2013 17:19

Appliance Retailers Run an Online Marathon, Uphill

Traditional appliance retailers Gome and Suning plunged into online retailing and don’t know how far they’ll fall

By staff reporter He Chunmei and intern reporter Li Huiling

(Beijing) — No one expected the running to be easy when two of China’s largest and most competitive retailers started racing a marathon on an e-commerce track. Indeed, it’s been an uphill race ever since Gome Electrical Appliances Holding Ltd. and Suning Commerce Group Co. Ltd. decided in around 2009 to gradually migrate business from traditional storefronts to online retailing. Read more of this post

China’s matchmaker apps vie with tradition for hearts and minds

December 23, 2013 7:02 pm

China’s matchmaker apps vie with tradition for hearts and minds

By Sarah Mishkin in Taipei

For singles in China under pressure to get married, there are plenty of professional matchmakers, and busybody parents. But for young people seeking to avoid such interference, there is now a bevy of smartphone apps offering a less formal approach. Read more of this post

China will promote a mixed-ownership economy by diversifying the shareholding structure of state-owned enterprises (SOEs)

Beijing to diversify SOE shareholding

Xinhua

2013-12-20

China will promote a mixed-ownership economy by diversifying the shareholding structure of state-owned enterprises (SOEs), an official with the country’s SOEs regulator said on Thursday. Huang Shuhe, vice chairman of the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, told a press conference that the country will speed up the transformation of SOEs, especially parent companies, into joint-stock firms. It will also improve the shareholding structure of the companies. Read more of this post

Are You Qualified to Be a Journalist in China? Take the Test; What did Marx and Engels ask of newspaper reporters? How do Chinese and Western views on journalism differ?

DECEMBER 23, 2013, 2:49 AM

Are You Qualified to Be a Journalist in China? Take the Test

By MIA LI and BREE FENG

What is the essence of the Chinese Dream? What did Marx and Engels ask of newspaper reporters? How do Chinese and Western views on journalism differ? Those are some of the questions Chinese journalists can expect to be quizzed on when they renew their press cards in early 2014. Read more of this post

Babes in a Digital Toyland: Even 3-Year-Olds Get Gadgets

December 23, 2013

Babes in a Digital Toyland: Even 3-Year-Olds Get Gadgets

By HILARY STOUT and ELIZABETH A. HARRIS

The children come day after day, lining up in the cold and snow on Main Street in Midland, Mich., to wait their turn to enter Santa’s house and whisper their Christmas longings to the jolly man in the red suit.

“Cellphone.”

“IPad.”

“Notebook.”

And when they say such things, Tom Valent, now in his 38th year as Santa Claus, unleashes his best “Ho-ho-ho” and replies: “Well, I’m good at toys. Electronics — that’s a bit of a challenge.” Read more of this post

The Bank of Korea (BOK) is experiencing snowballing losses in the value of its gold holdings, as the price of the precious metal continues to plummet on global markets

2013-12-23 15:27

By Kim Rahn

BOK suffers losses from gold price fall

The Bank of Korea (BOK) is experiencing snowballing losses in the value of its gold holdings, as the price of the precious metal continues to plummet on global markets.
There is criticism that the central bank’s gold purchase strategy, promoted under current Governor Kim Choong-soo failed to read market trends, as the price has been declining since it expanded its holdings.
According to the BOK, Monday, it held 14.4 tons of gold up to 2011. The bank bought an additional 90 tons ― at a cost of $4.79 billion ― from June 2011 through this February, for a total of 104.4 tons.
However, the price of gold, which had been increasing for a decade in the 2000s, has been declining since 2011.
According to the New York Mercantile Exchange, the price of gold was around $1,900 per ounce in September 2011 but dropped below $1,200, Friday.
The falling trend was especially sharp this year, mainly due to an optimistic outlook for a global economic recovery, dropping almost 30 percent, the largest since 1984. Market watchers say the trend may continue next year.
At the current market price, the value of the BOK’s gold holdings is now some $3.45 billion, a $1.34 billion loss to date.
A BOK official said it is embarrassing that the price of gold is falling but it does not mean the buying decision was wrong.
“It would have been better if we had bought the gold at a lower price. But regarding gold, we are maintaining a long term strategy, and long here doesn’t mean a couple of decades but a century,” he said.
The official said the 14.4 tons of gold holdings was small compared to other countries’ stock. The BOK, which used to focus on financial assets rather than real assets, began to buy gold in 2011. “We needed to diversify the portfolio of our foreign reserves,” he said.
He did not answer directly as to whether the bank will buy more gold, but hinted that it could do so in the long term.
“Considering Korea’s economic and political status, its gold holdings of 104.4 tons are still small. The United States, for example, is holding 8,000 tons,” he said.
The official also said the gold accounts for only 1.3 percent of the bank’s total foreign reserves. “In the whole picture of foreign reserve management, we see profits in other types of reserves such as bonds.”
During a parliamentary inspection of the government in October, governor Kim also refuted criticism from lawmakers about the decline in the price of gold by saying, “We buy gold not for speculation but for future use in case of emergencies. The amount of the BOK’s gold purchase is small compared to its total foreign reserves and the size of the nation’s economy.”

The landscape of the Korea’s securities industry is undergoing a major shakeup, with four out of the 10 largest brokerages by assets up for sale.

2013-12-23 16:56

Securities industry faces shakeup

By Kim Tae-jong
The landscape of the nation’s securities industry is undergoing a major shakeup, with four out of the 10 largest brokerages by assets up for sale.
Now, attention is focused on who will acquire them and how that will change the pecking order in the market, which has suffered its worst slump ever. Some even raised anticipation of the emergence of an investment bank big enough to compete globally. Read more of this post

Over six out of 10 companies listed on the country’s main bourse are expected to face earnings shock in the fourth quarter due to weak domestic demand caused by the prolonged slump

2013-12-24 16:12

Six in 10 firms hit by earnings shock

By Yi Whan-woo
Over six out of 10 companies listed on the country’s main bourse are expected to face earnings shock in the fourth quarter due to weak domestic demand caused by the prolonged slump, data showed Wednesday. Read more of this post

Blockbuster year puts CGV at No. 5 in world

Blockbuster year puts CGV at No. 5 in world

Dec 24,2013

BY KIM JUNG-YOON [kjy@joongang.co.kr]

 CGV, Korea’s leading multiplex cinema operator, said yesterday it expects to be No. 5 in the global theater industry by the end of 2013. 

The cinema group estimates it will sell more than 100 million tickets this year at home and abroad, placing it behind only Regal Cinemas, AMC, Cinemark and Cinepolis of Mexico. Read more of this post

M&A market plagued by oversupply

2013-12-24 17:13

M&A market plagued by oversupply

By Kim Tae-jong
The nation’s mergers and acquisitions (M&A) market remains in the doldrums because many companies up for sale have failed to find new owners amid the prolonged economic slump. The combined value of firms on the market is estimated at dozens of trillions of won.
Experts say that it is highly likely that only a few deals will be made due to a small number of investors showing interest.  Read more of this post

Hyundai Group companies rally on restructuring plan

December 23, 2013 4:35 am

Hyundai Group companies rally on restructuring plan

By Song Jung-a in Seoul

Shares in Hyundai Group companies surged on Monday after the South Korean conglomerate announced plans to sell its financial units to repay mounting debts, as part of moves to weather a worsening liquidity crunch. Read more of this post