Sri Lanka, for decades a destination for backpackers, religious pilgrims and beach-lovers, is building high-end hotels and casinos to woo wealthier tourists from India and China as it seeks to emulate the success of Singapore and Macau

Crown’s Sri Lanka Casino Resort Venture to Cost $400 Million

Crown Ltd. (CWN), Australia’s largest gambling company, said a casino resort it’s in talks over co-developing in Sri Lanka will cost about $400 million. The five-star resort will have about 450 hotel rooms and suites at Beira Lake in the center of the capital Colombo, the Melbourne-based company said in a regulatory statement today. Crown, controlled by billionaire Chairman James Packer, also said it’s seeking joint venture partners for the project. Read more of this post

In Myanmar, avoiding the traps of foreign investment; Aung San Suu Kyi warned against “reckless optimism” by investors

In Myanmar, avoiding the traps of foreign investment

As potential investors converge on the Golden Land from all over, Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi voiced her desire for “democracy-friendly investment”, in particular, foreign direct investment (FDI) that creates jobs Myanmar’s unemployed youth. She warned against “reckless optimism” by investors.

BY HTWE HTWE THEIN –

1 HOUR 32 MIN AGO

As potential investors converge on the Golden Land from all over, Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi voiced her desire for “democracy-friendly investment”, in particular, foreign direct investment (FDI) that creates jobs Myanmar’s unemployed youth. She warned against “reckless optimism” by investors. Western governments indeed are encouraging their businesses to act as role models in terms of setting labour standards, looking after the environment, giving back to society and so on. Meanwhile, Asian governments and businesses wrangle over Myanmar’s natural resources and infrastructure projects. Read more of this post

GS Engineering Falls Most in Six Months after it was sued by a group of investors over losses caused by unexpected cost increases on overseas environmental projects

GS Engineering Falls Most in Six Months on Lawsuit: Seoul Mover

GS Engineering & Construction Corp. (006360) fell the most in six months in Seoul trading after the South Korean builder said it was sued by a group of investors over losses caused by unexpected cost increases on overseas projects. GS Engineering dropped as much as 4.8 percent, headed for the biggest decline since April 15, to 35,400 won and traded at 36,050 won as of 12:35 p.m. South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index rose 0.3 percent. Fifteen investors filed the lawsuit against GS Engineering on Oct. 8 at the Seoul Central District Court, the Seoul-based company said in a regulatory filing today. The investors claim GS Engineering failed to make proper estimates in financial statements for costs that may arise from the projects, according to today’s statement. The builder said in April it expects an operating loss this year because of the cost increases. The company said it will appoint a lawyer to handle the case. GS Engineering in April reported an unexpected operating loss in the first quarter because costs increased for some of its overseas environment-related projects. That caused shares of builders to slump on concerns that other construction companies may face similar problems.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kyunghee Park in Singapore at kpark3@bloomberg.net

A supply glut in India’s hotel market is preventing an industry revival in the country after average revenue per room fell to a three-year low, says Accor SA (AC), Europe’s largest hotel operator

Europe’s Top Hotel Says Glut to Thwart Revival: Corporate India

A supply glut in India’s hotel market is preventing an industry revival in the country after average revenue per room fell to a three-year low, according to Accor SA (AC), Europe’s largest hotel operator. A key performance gauge, calculated by multiplying a hotel’s average daily room rate by its occupancy, dropped to the least since at least 2010 in the quarter through June, according to data provided by Cushman & Wakefield Inc. In contrast, that metric has risen in the developed markets of Europe and the U.S., said Michael Issenberg, Accor’s chairman for Asia-Pacific. Read more of this post

India’s Closed Shop. Excessive regulation turned Delhi’s retail opening into a failure

India’s Closed Shop. Excessive regulation turned Delhi’s retail opening into a failure.

Updated Oct. 17, 2013 5:37 p.m. ET

Wal-Mart WMT +0.24% last week announced it would close its retail outlets in India and part ways with local partner Bharti Enterprises. The American company says it can’t make a profit due to a government requirement that 30% of inventory be sourced from local channels, a rule that doesn’t apply to Indian firms. Wal-Mart’s exit means not a single multinational is taking advantage of India’s decision last year to allow foreign retailers to own 51% of joint ventures. Read more of this post

Mistress-Driven Anticorruption in China: Study Says 15% of Accusers Are Lovers

October 17, 2013, 6:30 AM

Mistress-Driven Anticorruption: Study Says 15% of Accusers Are Lovers

In the early days of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s drive to clean up the Communist Party’s image, disciplinary authorities benefited from the work of a group of accusers with particularly intimate knowledge of corrupt bureaucrats’ nefarious activities: their extramarital lovers. A district party chief in the southwestern mega-city of Chongqing, a police chief in the northwestern region of Xinjiang and the former deputy head of China’s top economic planning body all were removed from office thanks in part to their illicit sexual activities. Read more of this post

Bid Battle Intensifies for Australian Dairy Producer Warrnambool Cheese & Butter

Oct 17, 2013

Bid Battle Intensifies for Australian Dairy Producer

GILLIAN TAN

It’s now a three-way battle for one of Australia’s largest-listed dairy companies. Australia’s Murray Goulburn Co-operative Co. Ltd has made a takeover offer for Warrnambool Cheese & Butter Factory Co. Holdings Ltd. that values the dairy producer at 420 million Australian dollar (US$404 million), trumping two rival bids. The combination of Warrnambool Cheese & Butter and farmer-controlled Murray Goulburn would make it one of Australia’s five largest food and beverage companies, with expected revenues of more than A$3.2 billion and export sales of A$1.4 billion to more than 60 countries.  It expects to process more than 4 billion liters of milk annually from more than 3,000 suppliers. Read more of this post

Milder Accounts of Hardships Under Mao Arise as His Birthday Nears

October 16, 2013

Milder Accounts of Hardships Under Mao Arise as His Birthday Nears

By CHRIS BUCKLEY

HONG KONG — The famine that gripped China from 1958 to 1962 is widely judged to be the deadliest in recorded history, killing 20 to 30 million people or more, and is one of the defining calamities of Mao Zedong’s rule. Ever since, the party has shrouded that disaster in censorship and euphemisms, seeking to maintain an aura of reverence around the founding leader of the Communist state. Read more of this post

China’s top 10 failing industries

China’s top 10 failing industries

Staff Reporter

2013-10-17

With some industries in China possibly facing bankruptcy, the Party-run Beijing Youth Daily interviewed several market observers and experts to compile a list of the top ten industries in China that are likely to face a shutdown. The first such sector could be that of group-buying websites. The group buying business model gained popularity when it was first introduced in March 2010. But several noted group buying sites, such as Tuanbao and Juqi, have been experiencing operational difficulties. Read more of this post

50%-off luxury goods coupons scamming China’s online shoppers

50%-off luxury goods coupons scamming China’s online shoppers

Staff Reporter

2013-10-17

Fake shopping vouchers are flooding China’s online trading platforms, deceptively offering 30%-50% discounts on foreign luxury goods. The 10-40 yuan (US$1.60-$6.50) slips could not possible offer such hefty reductions on internationally shipped goods, insiders said. Overseas shopping vouchers are no longer proof of the authenticity of luxury goods, as they are often forged by online shopping agents using thermal printers, an insider said in an interview with the Chinese-language Beijing Business Daily. Read more of this post

Groceries Become a Guy Thing: Packaging for products traditionally marketed with women in mind aims to win men over as they shop more

Groceries Become a Guy Thing

As Men Shop More, Packaging Aims to Win Them Over; ‘Inner Abs’ Appeal

ANNE MARIE CHAKER

Oct. 16, 2013 7:00 p.m. ET

101613lunchmanly_640x360

Yogurt for men is radically different from the yogurt women buy: The label is black. Food makers, including giants Kraft Foods Group Inc. KRFT +1.82% and General MillsInc., GIS +1.80% eager for any potential new sales, are trying to win over men. Research indicates men are doing a greater share of the grocery shopping and meal preparation. In a June survey of 900 meat-eating men ages 18 to 64, 47% were deemed “manfluencers” by Midan Marketing LLC, a Chicago market research group focused on the meat industry. Manfluencers are responsible for at least half of the grocery shopping and meal preparation for their households. Read more of this post

Hong Kong’s Enduring Identity Crisis; 16 years after the territory reverted to Chinese sovereignty, its residents feel increasingly uneasy with Beijing’s rule

Hong Kong’s Enduring Identity Crisis

16 years after the territory reverted to Chinese sovereignty, its residents feel increasingly uneasy with Beijing’s rule.

SEBASTIAN VEGOCT 16 2013,

By Sebastian Veg

When Hong Kong reverted to Chinese sovereignty in 1997, expectations were high—in Beijing and among the pro-mainland forces in Hong Kong—that identification with the Chinese nation would slowly but surely strengthen among the local population, especially among the younger generations, eventually solving the problem of Hong Kong’s full integration into China. Once the colonial education system ceased poisoning young minds, it was thought, future generations would embrace the worldview and politics favored in Beijing. However, 16 years later the situation is very different. It is precisely the younger generations, the ones educated after the handover, who are most hostile to the mainland and its local advocates. A June 2013 poll, the latest in a series released every six months, shows that identification with Hong Kong has even increased since the handover: today, 62 percent of the population identify primarily with Hong Kong and 38 percent exclusively. More surprisingly, the proportion is 84.3 percent among the 18 to 29 group (of which 55.8 percent identify exclusively with Hong Kong). Read more of this post

Hong Kong Peg Turning 30 as Another Decade Forecast: Currencies

Hong Kong Peg Turning 30 as Another Decade Forecast: Currencies

Banny Lam recalls how, in the first nine months of 1983, he helped his family stockpile rice as a drop of more than 30 percent in Hong Kong’s dollar led to panic-buying of goods. “Sometimes the shelves would be empty,” said Lam, the 41-year-old co-head of research at Agricultural Bank of China International Securities Co. in Hong Kong. “At that time, we just didn’t know what would happen tomorrow with the currency.” Read more of this post

BlackRock Cuts Hong Kong Investment Seeing Drop in Prices

BlackRock Cuts Hong Kong Investment Seeing Drop in Prices

BlackRock Inc. (BLK) is reducing its investment in Hong Kong, betting the city’s equity and property markets will trail other Asian countries as growth slows in the world’s two biggest economies. Hong Kong stocks may underperform as the U.S. pares stimulus and China tightens credit, said Andrew Swan, head of Asian equities at BlackRock, which manages $3.86 trillion as of June 30. Home values in the city may fall more than 10 percent into 2014 amid government measures to curb prices and rising U.S. interest rates, he said. Read more of this post

South Korea Introduces ‘Gangnam Style’ Tourist Police to protect tourists from being ripped off during their stay in the South Korean capital

South Korea Introduces ‘Gangnam Style’ Tourist Police

By Agence France-Presse on 2:34 pm October 16, 2013.
South Korean “tourist police” officers salute during their inauguration ceremony at Gwanghwamun square in Seoul on October 16, 2013. South Korea unveiled its new ‘tourist police’ force, with snappy uniforms from rapper Psy’s costume designer, formed to protect tourists from being ripped off during their stay in the South Korean capital. (AFP Photo/Jung Yeon–Je)

Seoul. South Korea unveiled its new “tourist police” force Wednesday, with snappy uniforms from rapper Psy’s costume designer and a “Gangnam Style” launch in central Seoul. Around 100 young policemen and women make up the first batch of the new force — formed to protect tourists from being ripped off during their stay in the South Korean capital. The officers were handpicked for their linguistic skills, and can speak a range of languages including English, Japanese and Mandarin. Read more of this post

FamilyMart joins 10,000 outlets in Japan club

FamilyMart joins 10,000 outlets in Japan club

JIJI

OCT 16, 2013

Major Japanese convenience store chain FamilyMart Co. now has more than 10,000 domestic outlets. FamilyMart is the third convenience store chain in Japan to reach the 10,000-store mark, following Japan’s largest convenience store chain, Seven-Eleven Japan Co., and the second-largest, Lawson Inc. FamilyMart opened its first store in 1973 in Sayama, Saitama Prefecture. “This achievement is just a passing point,” FamilyMart President Isamu Nakayama said at a ceremony held Tuesday at the 10,000th store, which opened in Nakano Ward, Tokyo. He said that as the FamilyMart name suggests, he hopes the chain will become popular with all people, including the elderly and women. Convenience stores in Japan exceeded 50,000 in 2012. The market is said to be saturated, but Seven-Eleven and FamilyMart each plan to open 1,500 new stores in the current business year. Major convenience store chains are trying to attract customers from other business categories amid intensifying competition. They have recently started focusing on the elderly and working women, with more frozen and prepared meals on offer.

The French will soon be able buy their cigarettes and do their banking at the same time with the launch of a stripped-down, cut price bank account by the country’s huge network of tobacconists

French banks face new foe as tobacconists offer accounts

12:23pm EDT

By Lionel Laurent and Matthias Blamont

PARIS (Reuters) – The French will soon be able buy their cigarettes and do their banking at the same time with the launch of a stripped-down, cut price bank account by the country’s huge network of tobacconists. France’s 27,000 “tabacs”, whose distinctive red, diamond-shaped signs dot the nation’s streets, will be out to win business from the likes of BNP Paribas and Societe Generale as established banks cut back their retail networks in a stagnating economy. Read more of this post

High-priced stocks are being traded in the dark

October 16, 2013 8:42 am

High-priced stocks are being traded in the dark

By Michael Mackenzie and Arash Massoudi in New York

A number of well-known US companies boast very expensive equity prices, but trading in these companies is increasingly taking place in the dark – a trend seen hurting individual investors. One-fifth of overall trading in US equities now consists of so-called odd lots, whereby a transaction consists of buying or selling less than 100 shares in a company. These trades are not publicly reported and their size in terms of overall US equity trading volumes has risen sharply since 2007, when electronic trading transformed the industry. Read more of this post

Germany’s biggest companies say they are looking to invest overseas rather than at home in the year ahead, suggesting that low investment in Europe’s biggest economy won’t improve soon

Corporate Germany Looks to Invest Overseas—Not at Home

Low Sales Growth, High Costs Deter Companies From Increasing Spending in Germany

NINA ADAM

EM-AX526_GERINV_NS_20131016094503

Oct. 16, 2013 9:14 a.m. ET

FRANKFURT—Corporate Germany is looking to invest overseas rather than at home in the year ahead, a Wall Street Journal survey of top German companies reveals, suggesting that low investment in Europe’s biggest economy won’t improve soon.  Read more of this post

Foreign lawyers face Indonesia ethics test

October 16, 2013 8:32 am

Foreign lawyers face Indonesia ethics test

By Ben Bland in Jakarta

From corrupt judges to dodgy lawyers and capricious verdicts, Indonesia’s legal system is widely acknowledged to be in crisis. But amid a climate of growing economic protectionism, Indonesia’s bar association has a new target in its sights: foreign lawyers. Although they are banned from practising Indonesian law and can only work as international legal consultants, the bar association is proposing a new requirement that foreign lawyers must pass an ethics exam in Indonesian if they want to keep working in the country. Read more of this post

Real Estate Heating Up in Indonesia

October 15, 2013

Real Estate Heating Up in Indonesia

By KEITH BRADSHER

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Gita Wirjawan, Indonesia’s trade minister, made a steeply rising motion with his right hand, like an airplane soaring into the sky, when asked about the surging real estate market in this country. “Scary, isn’t it?” he said. But Boediono, the vice president who uses only one name and has been a leading economic policy maker for the last 16 years, was much more sanguine. Read more of this post

Lala, Mexico’s biggest dairy producer led by Chairman Eduardo Tricio Haro, started six decades ago as a dairy farmers’ collective in northern Mexico and now has 53 percent of formally tracked milk sales in the country

Lala Gains in Mexico Trading Debut After $938 Million Dairy IPO

Grupo Lala SAB (LALAB), Mexico’s biggest dairy producer, rallied in its first day of trading after raising at least 12.2 billion pesos ($938 million) in an initial public offering.

Lala gained 7.4 percent to 29.53 pesos at 9:25 a.m. in Mexico City, compared with a 0.4 percent advance for the country’s benchmark IPC index of 35 companies. The stock sold for 27.50 pesos yesterday, the top of a projected price range of 23.50 pesos to 27.50 pesos. The company offered 444.4 million shares, without considering a 15 percent overallotment option for underwriters. Read more of this post

LVMH Needs to Mix and Match; The French Fashion House Depends Heavily on Its Louis Vuitton Brand, Which May Cause Problems for Investors Unless It Can Find Another Star

LVMH Needs to Mix and Match

The French Fashion House Depends Heavily on Its Louis Vuitton Brand, Which May Cause Problems for Investors Unless It Can Find Another Star

JOHN JANNARONE

Updated Oct. 16, 2013 3:21 p.m. ET

These days, investors in LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton MC.FR -4.25% could do with a little variety. Shares of the French fashion house fell 4.3% Wednesday after the company issued disappointing third-quarter revenue. The culprit: a mere 3% rise in currency-adjusted sales from the key fashion and leather-goods division, which makes almost all of its profit from the Louis Vuitton brand. While LVMH has some other red-hot brands such as Celine, they were unable to make up for a soft performance from Louis Vuitton, which accounts for about half of operating profit overall. Read more of this post

Crocodile Bites Show Why Your Birkin Bag Is So Expensive; Exotic animal skins make up almost 10 percent of the total revenue from handbag sales for luxury brands, at least double their share a few years ago

Crocodile Bites Show Why Your Birkin Bag Is So Expensive

Crocodile-skin handbags can be to die for. Really.

As demand from the world’s elite surges for the skins, luxury-goods companies from LVMH Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy SA to Gucci-owner Kering SA are making acquisitions to secure supply of the beasts, whose habits can make simply collecting their eggs a matter of life and death. Raising the reptiles from hatchling to arm candy without scratches from other crocs is another major challenge. Read more of this post

Japan’s TDK gets lifeline from China’s rising smartphone stars

Japan’s TDK gets lifeline from China’s rising smartphone stars

10:58am EDT

By Reiji Murai and Sophie Knight

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan’s TDK Corp, an electronics parts maker that has struggled to make a profit while several of its peers grew rich in the smartphone boom, has found help rebuilding its fortunes with the rise of China’s smartphone makers. Once a leading brand in cassette tapes that later prospered in magnetic heads for hard disk drives until the PC business headed south, TDK fell behind rivals such as Murata Manufacturing Ltd in making tiny, high-spec parts for mobile gadgets like Apple Inc’s iPhones and iPads. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart Takes a Pause in China; Retailer Plans to Close About 25 Underperforming Stores

Wal-Mart Takes a Pause in China

Retailer Plans to Close About 25 Underperforming Stores

LAURIE BURKITT and SHELLY BANJO

Updated Oct. 16, 2013 11:28 a.m. ET

BEIJING—After years of furiously opening stores in China, Wal-Mart Stores Inc.WMT +1.65% has concluded that a couple dozen of them just aren’t working. As a result, the retailer on Tuesday told investors it will be closing about 25 stores in China, even as it continues to open others. Based on its current expansion plans, China would still add more stores than it subtracts. Wal-Mart is set to open about 30 stores this year as part of a three-year, 100-outlet expansion effort, which will continue to 2015. Currently, Wal-Mart has 398 China-based stores. Read more of this post

Yellow Tail Maker Plans $100 Wine, Spritzers in Profit Hunt

Yellow Tail Maker Plans $100 Wine, Spritzers in Profit Hunt

Casella Wines Pty., the maker of Yellow Tail wine, is developing a label costing $100 a bottle as well as packaged spritzers as it seeks new markets amid narrowing industry profit margins. The winemaker, whose signature product sells for about $7.50 a bottle in U.S. stores and inspired the growth of low-priced, easy-drinking Australian “critter labels,” will charge about 13 times as much for the Casella 1919 brand when it’s released later this year, Managing Director John Casella said in an interview in Sydney yesterday. Read more of this post

Fed Weighs Surcharge on Banks’ Physical Commodity Businesses

Fed Weighs Surcharge on Banks’ Physical Commodity Businesses

Fee Could Spur Firms to Pare Involvement in the Sector

MICHAEL R. CRITTENDEN and JUSTIN BAER

Updated Oct. 16, 2013 6:10 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON—Federal Reserve officials are considering imposing a new capital surcharge on Wall Street banks that own oil pipelines, metals warehouses and other lucrative physical-commodities assets, according to people familiar with the matter. Such an approach could encourage banks to pare back their involvement in physical commodities, which has increasingly raised concerns among regulators and lawmakers. Read more of this post

Fiscal Uncertainty Chips Away at U.S. Prestige; Dysfunction Is Limiting U.S. Position Abroad, Observers Say; ‘Sadness From Our Trading Partners’

Fiscal Uncertainty Chips Away at U.S. Prestige

Dysfunction Is Limiting U.S. Position Abroad, Observers Say; ‘Sadness From Our Trading Partners’

THOMAS CATAN

Oct. 15, 2013 7:10 p.m. ET

BN-AA001_DEBTLI_G_20131015194502

WASHINGTON—As the world’s pre-eminent economic power, the U.S. has been the cornerstone of the global financial system since World War II. Now, observers say that prestige may have been badly dented by Washington’s latest display of fiscal dysfunction, limiting the U.S.’s ability to get things done abroad. Laurence Fink, chief executive of the world’s largest asset manager, New York-basedBlackRock Inc., BLK +2.91% said Friday that he detected “a pronounced sadness from our trading partners and our friends” as he tried to explain the fiscal impasse during his recent travels abroad. Read more of this post

Warren Buffett: Debt limit is a ‘political weapon of mass destruction’

Warren Buffett: Debt limit is a ‘political weapon of mass destruction’

By Jim Puzzanghera

October 16, 2013, 6:13 a.m.

WASHINGTON — Billionaire investor Warren Buffett on Wednesday called the U.S. debt limit a “political weapon of mass destruction” and said both political parties should pledge never to use it as leverage because of the financial damage it can cause. As lawmakers and the White House scrambled to raise the $16.7-trillion debt limit before a Thursday deadline, Buffett said it would be “asinine” for the U.S. to risk its hard-won reputation for paying its bills on time. Read more of this post