Billionaire Seeks to Double Cairn Oil Output: Corporate India

Billionaire Seeks to Double Cairn Oil Output: Corporate India

Billionaire Anil Agarwal has asked Cairn India Ltd. (CAIR), which enjoys the highest profit margin among the top Asian oil companies, to explore ways to double output as his mining business in the South Asian nation founders. Cairn India “has a mission” to accelerate its target to 400,000 barrels a day from about 200,000 barrels, Chief Executive Officer P. Elango said. The company, which possesses about $3 billion of cash, plans to drill 450 new wells in its fields in the northwestern state of Rajasthan, he said. Read more of this post

Delhi’s rubble-strewn Connaught Place mirrors Congress’ election struggle

Delhi’s rubble-strewn Connaught Place mirrors Congress’ election struggle

DelhiChiefMinister

Delhi’s Chief Minister Sheila Dikshit gestures as she shows her ink-marked finger after casting her vote at a polling station during the state assembly elections in New Delhi December 4, 2013.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013 – 18:11

Reuters

NEW DELHI – The broken paving stones and exposed cables that mar the neo-Georgian grandeur of India’s prime shopping precinct give a glimpse into why the ruling Congress party might struggle to hold on to the capital Delhi in a local election on Wednesday. Read more of this post

High-End Motorcycles Rev Up Sales in India; Harley, Yamaha, Ducati See Untapped Market Among Affluent Indians

High-End Motorcycles Rev Up Sales in India

Harley, Yamaha, Ducati See Untapped Market Among Affluent Indians

SANTANU CHOUDHURY

Dec. 3, 2013 7:17 p.m. ET

Indian roads have been getting a little bit louder these days as affluent Indians, longtime fans of designer watches and the Mercedes-Benz DAI.XE -2.12% sedan, are starting to snap up high-end motorcycles. Despite a nationwide slowdown, more Indians are mounting large, noisy motorcycles asHarley-Davidson Inc., HOG -0.48% Yamaha Motor Co. 7272.TO -1.74% , Ducati Motor Holding SpA and others set up shop in the subcontinent, hoping to capture its first generation of elite easy riders. Read more of this post

How to win at leapfrog: India has a unique opportunity to avoid repeating other countries’ mistakes

How to win at leapfrog

India has a unique opportunity to avoid repeating other countries’ mistakes. Khosla Ventures founding partner Vinod Khosla argues that the “leapfrogging” mind-set requires policies that foster innovation not imitation.

December 2013 | byVinod Khosla

There’s a general tendency in life to want to do what others have done. It’s an understandable impulse but shortsighted. One of the great things about being a relatively poor, trailing, but rising power like India is that you have the opportunity to see what you want to imitate—and, more important, what you want to skip. Read more of this post

India allows greater flexibility for pension fund investments

India allows greater flexibility for pension fund investments

Wednesday, December 4, 2013 – 18:16

Reuters

MUMBAI – India will allow a portion of the country’s US$80 billion in employee pensions to be invested in a wider array of debt, including short-term bills, in a bid to boost returns and further develop domestic bond markets. Fund managers handling money on behalf of the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) will also be given more flexibility to invest in corporate bonds, according to new rules from the Labour Ministry marking the first overhaul of investment rules in a decade. Read more of this post

India Shadow Banker Fights to Keep Empire Built on Poor

India Shadow Banker Fights to Keep Empire Built on Poor

Tucked away on a hillock in the suburbs of Mumbai, a missile-proof bunker twice the size of the U.S. White House holds the key to a $3.8 billion puzzle. The underground vault below a data-storage center is in a compound watched by 84 security cameras and surrounded by a 3.7-meter (12-foot) wall topped with barbed wire, Bloomberg Markets magazine will report in its January issue. The 66,600 fire-resistant metal boxes inside contain 200 million documents with the personal information of 30 million investors in Subrata Roy’s group of companies known as Sahara India Pariwar. That’s more than the combined population of Australia and New Zealand. Read more of this post

Patriarchal India challenged by its emboldened women

December 3, 2013 1:28 pm

Patriarchal India challenged by its emboldened women

By Amy Kazmin in New Delhi

Editor’s arrest reflects refusal to keep silent about harassment

It was a moment many Indians thought they would never see – a moment that must have made many powerful men shudder. On Saturday, the country was gripped by the dramatic night-time arrest of Tarun Tejpal, a celebrated editor of a muckraking magazine who has been accused of sexually assaulting one of his young female journalists in a hotel lift. Read more of this post

Reimagining India: A conversation with Naveen Tewari; The founder and chief executive of InMobi explains why changing the expectations and traditions of Indian society is critical to driving economic growth

Reimagining India: A conversation with Naveen Tewari

The founder and chief executive of InMobi explains why changing the expectations and traditions of Indian society is critical to driving economic growth.

December 2013

Changing society’s expectations

Creating global companies

Solving big problems

Naveen Tewari founded SMS-based search service mKhoj in 2007 before pivoting its business model to the emerging field of mobile-device advertising. Renamed InMobi in 2009, the company’s technology is now used by almost 700 million people across more than 160 countries and was named one of MIT Technology Review’s 50 most disruptive companies in 2013. In this video interview, Tewari explains why Indian attitudes toward entrepreneurs and start-ups must change if the country is to fully benefit from the technology sector’s ability not only to drive economic growth but to tackle India’s most pressing problems. What follows is an edited transcript of his remarks. Read more of this post

Sugar-Pricing Plan Seen Reviving Nation’s Mills: Corporate India

Sugar-Pricing Plan Seen Reviving Nation’s Mills: Corporate India

Sugar mills in India, the world’s largest grower after Brazil, are banking on a proposal to link the price of cane to the sweetener to reverse record losses. An accord to tie cane prices to sugar rates from the 2014-15 season would be “historic” and encourage banks to extend credit to factories in Uttar Pradesh, India’s biggest cane producer, said Abinash Verma, director general of the Indian Sugar Mills Association. Mills agreed to resume output on Dec. 1 after a two-week protest shutdown when the Uttar Pradesh government said it would consider the pricing plan. Read more of this post

Indonesia’s Investment Challenge; Attracting long-term capital can ease the pain from a Fed taper

Indonesia’s Investment Challenge

Attracting long-term capital can ease the pain from a Fed taper.

Updated Dec. 2, 2013 4:06 p.m. ET

An end to America’s quantitative easing is more remote now that Janet Yellen has been tapped to succeed Ben Bernanke at the Federal Reserve. So it’s a pleasant surprise to discover that some Asian policy makers remain chastened by the capital flight they suffered this summer when investors feared tapering was imminent. Case in point: Bank of Indonesia Deputy Governor Perry Warjiyo. Read more of this post

Rupiah Falls as Companies Take Advantage of Rally to Buy Dollars

Rupiah Falls as Companies Take Advantage of Rally to Buy Dollars

Indonesia’s rupiah declined on speculation local companies are taking advantage of yesterday’s biggest rally since September to buy dollars at a more favorable exchange rate. The rupiah surged 1.6 percent yesterday after official data showed the trade balance swung to a $42.4 million surplus in October, compared with the $775 million deficit estimated by economists surveyed by Bloomberg. A report showed yesterday that the U.S. Institute for Supply Management’s factory index climbed to the highest in more than two years, boosting prospects the Federal Reserve will start paring its monetary stimulus. Read more of this post

After massive economic stimulus, BOJ under pressure to do more

After massive economic stimulus, BOJ under pressure to do more

8:52am EST

By Leika Kihara, Yoshifumi Takemoto and Sumio Ito

TOKYO (Reuters) – A year into “Abenomics,” it was not supposed to be like this for the Bank of Japan. The central bank, its boss hand-picked by Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, shot the first, and so far most successful, arrow from Abe’s quiver of aggressive policies to pull the world’s third-biggest economy out of almost two decades of deflation and lackluster growth. Read more of this post

Cool Japan Led by Ex-Carlyle Manager Promotes Sushi to J-Pop

Cool Japan Led by Ex-Carlyle Manager Promotes Sushi to J-Pop

From sushi and ramen noodles to manga comics and pop music, Japan is promoting products it deems cool through a state-backed fund led by a former Carlyle Group LP (CG) manager. Cool Japan Fund Inc., which was formed last week with 57.5 billion yen ($560 million), is considering buying television channels and investing in retail property abroad to showcase the nation’s cuisine, fashion and animation, Chief Investment Officer Koichiro Yoshizaki said in an interview on Nov. 28. Read more of this post

Japan Wages Must Rise for Abenomics Success: GS Matsui

Japan Wages Must Rise for Abenomics Success: GS Matsui

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s success in reviving the world’s third-largest economy hinges on wages rising more than the Bank of Japan’s 2 percent inflation target, according to the investment strategist the premier has invoked as an authority on the country’s need for growth. “We need to see wages beat the cost of living here,” Kathy Matsui, chief Japan strategist for Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said in an interview at the investment bank’s Tokyo offices today. Read more of this post

Japan’s Secrets Bill Turns Journalists Into Terrorists

Japan’s Secrets Bill Turns Journalists Into Terrorists

Shinzo Abe owes Xi Jinping a debt of gratitude.

The buzz in Japanese cyberspace is that Chinese President Xi is wagging the dog by declaring a controversial “air-defense identification zone” across the East China Sea. The move has drastically ramped up tensions with Japan and the U.S., both of which have blatantly disregarded Beijing’s unilateral edict. According to one prevailing theory, Xi is whipping up an international storm to change the subject domestically away from income inequality, official corruption and China’s blackening skies. Read more of this post

Nomura to Punish Tipsters as Japan FSA Signals End to Crackdown

Nomura to Punish Tipsters as Japan FSA Signals End to Crackdown

Nomura Holdings Inc. (8604) said employees who leaked insider information on client transactions three years ago will be punished as the regulator signals an end to a crackdown that roiled Japan’s largest brokerage last year. Nomura will take “strict action” against the two employees who gave confidential data to three asset management firms, Kenji Yamashita, a spokesman in Tokyo, said yesterday, without giving details. Japan’s securities watchdog recommended fining the funds, including a unit of Nippon Life Insurance Co., for trading on the tips. JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) also said yesterday that a former employee leaked information in 2010. Read more of this post

Takeda Breaks Tradition in Naming Outsider as Heir Apparent

Takeda Breaks Tradition in Naming Outsider as Heir Apparent

Takeda Pharmaceutical Co. (4502), the more than 230-year-old Japanese drugmaker, is starting to make a practice of breaking with tradition. The drugmaker last week named Christophe Weber, a French national who has never worked at Takeda, as chief operating officer and the planned successor to CEO Yasuchika Hasegawa. Weber would be the first non-Japanese to lead the company and among the first outsiders brought in to helm a major Japanese company. Read more of this post

World’s Biggest Pension Fund Sees Japan Fail on 2% Inflation

World’s Biggest Pension Fund Sees Japan Fail on 2% Inflation

The Bank of Japan’s unprecedented monetary easing will fail in its goal of spurring 2 percent inflation, according to Takahiro Mitani, president of the fund that manages the world’s largest pool of pension savings. While Japan is making progress toward ending deflation, consumer-price gains will probably stay between 0.1 percent and 1 percent, said Mitani, the head of the 124 trillion yen ($1.21 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund. The fund may revise asset allocations in as little as a year after a government-appointed panel recommended a review of domestic bond holdings, he said. Read more of this post

Hotel Boom in South Korea Sparks Concern; Some Say Hospitality Industry Is Vulnerable to Oversupply

Hotel Boom in South Korea Sparks Concern

Some Say Hospitality Industry Is Vulnerable to Oversupply

JEYUP S. KWAAK

Dec. 3, 2013 3:34 p.m. ET

SEOUL—A record number of foreign tourists visiting South Korea in recent years has fueled in Seoul what property developers are calling the biggest hotel boom in the country’s history. But some industry participants say an overreliance on visitors from China and Japan leaves South Korea vulnerable to future overcapacity. Read more of this post

Samsung heir apparent’s power grows

Samsung heir apparent’s power grows

samsung_khera

Tuesday, December 3, 2013 – 09:48

Kim Ji-hyun

The Korea Herald/Asia News Network

SOUTH KOREA – The key points in Samsung Group’s latest personnel reshuffling are the concentration of power to heir apparent Lee Jay-yong and the desire to maintain the status quo. The so-called “Lee Jay-yong’s people” who received promotions included memory business chief Jun Dong-soo, who was named chief executive of Samsung SDS, an unlisted affiliate that may now receive a boost with the move. Read more of this post

South Korea’s $35 Billion ‘Labor of Love’; Developer Struggles to Build a City From Scratch

South Korea’s $35 Billion ‘Labor of Love’

Developer Struggles to Build a City From Scratch

IN-SOO NAM

Updated Dec. 3, 2013 7:35 p.m. ET

AM-BB329_SONGDO_G_20131203154813

A pagoda stands beside Songdo’s Central Park Canal. The Northeast Asia Trade Tower, background, opens next August. Gale International

SEOUL—About a decade ago, a huge tract of land reclaimed from the Yellow Sea west of Seoul was a barren wasteland. Today it is a city named Songdo with a population of 67,000, Korea’s tallest tower and a green oasis modeled on New York’s Central Park. On Wednesday, President Park Geun-hye is scheduled to join the developers of Songdo’s centerpiece—a $35 billion business district—for a ceremony welcoming Songdo’s latest office tenants: the World Bank’s Korea office and the Green Climate Fund, a United Nations organization. Read more of this post

Thai Tourism Bends Without Breaking in Turmoil: Chart of the Day

Thai Tourism Bends Without Breaking in Turmoil: Chart of the Day

Thailand’s tourism industry, which generates revenue equivalent to at least a 10th of economic output, will rebound after the eventual resolution between the government and protesters seeking to oust the prime minister, according to DBS Vickers Securities (Thailand) Co. The CHART OF THE DAY shows monthly tourist arrivals in Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia, based on data compiled from state agencies, with Thailand on track to surpass its southern-border neighbor for the first full year since 1999, according to figures through October. The lower panel compares the benchmark Stock Exchange of Thailand Index and the SET Tourism and Leisure Index comprising 13 companies including Central Plaza Hotel Pcl and OHTL Pcl, operator of the Mandarin Oriental Bangkok. Read more of this post

Thai Protesters Pause Anti-Government Push for King’s Birthday

Thai Protesters Pause Anti-Government Push for King’s Birthday

Anti-government protesters in Bangkok said they will suspend street rallies tomorrow to mark the birthday of Thailand’s king, before resuming a push to oust Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. “From Dec. 6 we will resume the fight every day, every hour and every minute until we achieve victory,” protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban told supporters late yesterday in Bangkok. He has called for the government to be replaced by an unelected council to combat corruption and destroy the political network of Yingluck’s brother, Thaksin Shinawatra, who was toppled by a military coup in 2006. Read more of this post

Govt watching home prices, will step in if needed as price levels remain high : MAS

Govt watching home prices, will step in if needed: MAS

SINGAPORE — While property measures implemented over the last few years have dampened the rising momentum in the housing market, price levels remain high and the Government will step in, if necessary, to ensure stability and sustainability, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said yesterday.

BY LEE YEN NEE –

5 HOURS 10 MIN AGO

SINGAPORE — While property measures implemented over the last few years have dampened the rising momentum in the housing market, price levels remain high and the Government will step in, if necessary, to ensure stability and sustainability, the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said yesterday. Read more of this post

Philippines’ Aquino Races the World’s Fastest Economies

Philippines’ Aquino Races the World’s Fastest Economies

Just after midnight one sultry Friday in August 1987, Manila became a battleground as rebel troops attempted a coup against Philippine President Corazon Aquino. Two blocks from the besieged presidential palace, insurgents opened fire on a car carrying Aquino’s only son, a bespectacled and soft-spoken 27-year-old junior insurance executive nicknamed Noynoy. Read more of this post

Myanmar looks abroad for investment in healthcare

Myanmar looks abroad for investment in healthcare

Mon, Dec 2 2013

By Jared Ferrie

YANGON (Reuters) – Yangon General Hospital was once the jewel in the crown of one of Southeast Asia’s best healthcare systems. These days, hundreds of patients are forced to sleep in corridors of the hulking, colonial-era red-brick building, dogs doze on the floor of the emergency ward and garbage is piled in corners. It is a scene that Myanmar’s reformist government hopes to change as it ratchets up spending on the sector and seeks foreign investment to revive one of Asia’s sickest healthcare systems. Read more of this post

Najib Faces Conservatives in Post-Election Test: Southeast Asia

Najib Faces Conservatives in Post-Election Test: Southeast Asia

As the son of a pencil factory worker, Abdul Wahid Omar grew up in poverty in Malaysia’s southern state of Johor with 10 siblings after his family left Singapore in 1969. Good test scores won him a place in a boarding school with a bed of his own, helped also by a national policy to boost the lot of ethnic Malays and indigenous people, who are about 60 percent of the population. A government scholarship led to a British accounting degree, as Abdul Wahid went on to run Malaysia’s biggest bank and become the government minister overseeing economic planning. Read more of this post

With Top 4 US Banks Holding $217 Trillion In Derivatives, Total Number Of US Banks Drops To Record Low

With Top 4 US Banks Holding $217 Trillion In Derivatives, Total Number Of US Banks Drops To Record Low

Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 09:49 -0500

total number banks

Overnight, the WSJ reported a financial factoid well-known to regular readers: namely that as a result of a broken system that ever since the LTCM bailout has encouraged banks to become take on so much risk they become systematically important (as in their failure would “end capitalism as we know it”), and thus Too Big To Fail, there has been an unprecedented roll-up of existing financial institutions especially among the top, while the smaller, less “relevant”, if far more prudent banks have been forced out of business. “The decline in bank numbers, from a peak of more than 18,000, has come almost entirely in the form of exits by banks with less than $100 million in assets, with the bulk occurring between 1984 and 2011. More than 10,000 banks left the industry during that period as a result of mergers, consolidations or failures, FDIC data show. About 17% of the banks collapsed.” Read more of this post

Unilever CEO Says Emerging Market Slowdown to Last for Years

Unilever CEO Says Emerging Market Slowdown to Last for Years

Unilever (UNA) Chief Executive Officer Paul Polman said the economic slowdown in emerging markets is here to stay as many countries need to enact structural reforms to adjust to new conditions after the boom of recent years. “They are still relatively stronger economies, but still fragile,” Polman said. “And you see that growth coming off now a little bit, obviously not being helped either by lower demand coming from Europe and the U.S. This will last a few years. And it will only be corrected if some of the reforms have been made in these places.” Read more of this post

The Coming Global Wealth Tax; Indebted governments may soon consider a big one-time levy on capital assets

Romain Hatchuel: The Coming Global Wealth Tax

Indebted governments may soon consider a big one-time levy on capital assets.

ROMAIN HATCHUEL

Dec. 3, 2013 7:15 p.m. ET

Between ObamaCare

, Iran and last quarter’s uptick in U.S. economic growth, taxpayers these days may be distracted from several dangers to come. But households from the United States to Europe and Japan may soon face fiscal shocks worse than any market crash. The White House and New York Mayor-elect Bill de Blasio aren’t the only ones calling for higher taxes (especially on the wealthy), as voices from the International Monetary Fund to billionaire investor Bill Gross increasingly make the case too. Read more of this post