Meikka: Luxury Handbag Rental Service

Meikka: Luxury Handbag Rental Service

By Emma Lee on September 30, 2013

China has become world’s largest market for luxury products in the wake of the economic development and the formation of middle class. However, the daunting prices of luxury handbags are still not affordable for every handbag-conscious fashionistas. Meikka, a Chinese Rent the Runway clone focused on handbags, can ease the torture of luxury enthusiasts by allowing them to hire designer handbags such as Channel, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Fendi, etc., for a fraction of the retail price. The platform will deliver and pick up the handbags from customers who can rent with around 0.6% of the retail price per day.

Read more of this post

Macy’s Rethinks Web Plans in China; Retailer Puts Online-Expansion Effort on Hold Amid Economic Slowdown

October 6, 2013, 2:12 p.m. ET

Macy’s Rethinks Web Plans in China

Retailer Puts Online-Expansion Effort on Hold Amid Economic Slowdown

KATHY CHU

Macy’s Inc. has shelved an online-expansion plan in China, the latest retailer to do so as economic growth slows in the world’s second-largest economy. The company had planned to begin online sales of a private-label brand in China in the spring, after buying a minority stake last year in Chinese retail company VIPStore Co. Macy’s, one of the largest U.S.-based department-store operators, has put those plans on hold because it needs to learn more about Chinese shoppers, not because it is concerned about China’s slowing economy or appetite for luxury goods, said Macy’s spokesman Jim Sluzewski. Read more of this post

Company cashes in on business of sounds; China’s first sound property rights exchange, www.vocc.cn, went online officially in Hefei, Anhui, on July 1

Company cashes in on business of sounds

Updated: 2013-10-06 07:07

By Shi Jing in Shanghai ( China Daily) Read more of this post

China’s ‘Golden Week’ losing its luster; Critics say the holiday causes traffic chaos, large crowds and high levels of stress

‘Golden Week’ losing its luster

Updated: 2013-10-06 08:58

By He Na and Tang Yue ( China Daily) Read more of this post

Animation more than a fantasy; It took Steven Spielberg’s DreamWorks studio to make the blockbuster Kung Fu Panda – and both the martial art and animal are Chinese icons

Animation more than a fantasy

Updated: 2013-10-05 09:30

By Eric Jou ( China Daily) Read more of this post

A Bureaucrat’s Tricky Task: Reignite Chinese Growth

October 6, 2013, 11:01 p.m. ET

A Bureaucrat’s Tricky Task: Reignite Chinese Growth

Liu He Is Piecing Together an Overhaul to Guide the Country for the Decade to Come—Just As Weakness Rears Up

BOB DAVIS and LINGLING WEI

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BEIJING—When then-U.S. National Security Adviser Tom Donilon flew to Beijing in May to set up a China-U.S. summit, he didn’t schedule a meeting with one of the most important men shaping China’s future. Chinese leader Xi Jinping quickly made clear that was an oversight. “This is Liu He,” Mr. Xi told Mr. Donilon, pointing to a tall, scholarly looking aide by his side. “He is very important to me,” Mr. Xi said, according to officials familiar with the interchange. Liu He is leading the development of the latest blueprint for China’s economy, to be unveiled next month at a closed-door session of the top 450 Communist Party officials. Read more of this post

Why ‘Mittelstand’ matters to Korea

2013-10-06 11:08

Why ‘Mittelstand’ matters to Korea

Merck discusses success of German small and medium enterprises
By Kim Da-ye
Merck, a leading liquid crystal supplier, is surely not a “Mittelstand” company, a German term for a small and medium enterprise (SME). Founded in 1668, the firm employs some 38,000 people in 66 countries, and posted 10.74 billion euros in sales in 2012. But when it comes to the spirit of the company, Merck wishes to stay with its Mittelstand roots.
“We still behave like a medium-sized company. We want to act like an entrepreneur and act like Mittelstand. That would be ideal,” says Roman Maisch, vice president of the performance materials division at Merck, in an interview with The Korea Times’ Business Focus. The German “Mittelstand” refers to more than 3.6 million small- and medium-sized firms, which together produce more than half of the country’s gross domestic product and employ roughly 15.5 million as of 2012, according to the German Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology. Read more of this post

Number of chaebol’s affiliates soar 50% in five years, raising chances of liquidity problems; Many are acquisitions, but analysts warn of over-reliance on debt

2013-10-06 16:49

Number of chaebol’s affiliates soar 50% in five years

By Choi Kyong-ae

Chaebol Affiliates

Conglomerates are expanding their business territories fast here by setting up new affiliates and acquiring smaller firms, raising chances of liquidity problems, economists said Sunday.  The response comes after Chaebul.com, a local chaebol research company, said Korea’s top 30 companies increased the number of their affiliates by 48 percent over the past five years through 2012 to 1,246 from 843 at the end of 2007. Read more of this post

Nearly half of districts in Korea’s FEZs face possible default

Nearly half of districts in FEZs face possible default

2013/10/07 14:27

SEOUL, Oct. 7 (Yonhap) — Nearly half of all individual districts in the country’s eight free economic zones (FEZs) may be undesignated even before they ever take off, partly due to their failure to attract investors, a lawmaker said Monday, citing related data. According to Rep. Oh Young-sik of the main opposition Democratic Party, 46, or 46.9 percent, of 98 districts in eight FEZs still lack any development plan. Read more of this post

Local cities dream to renaissance; the nation’s top leading IT and game companies have relocated their headquarters to Jeju Island

2013-10-02 17:14

Local cities dream to renaissance

By Kim Ji-soo
In terms of size, the city of Tongyeong in South Gyeongsang Province is a medium-sized one with a population estimated at about 140,000. The city is absent the high-rises one might see in Seoul or Busan, with the large modern E-mart building being one of the most conspicuous edifices. The food the seaside city boasts of ― honey-dipped fried red-bean round donuts, dried sweet potato porridges, the numerous fish dishes ― are truly local. But so many names, legendarily etched in Korean cultural history, hail from the area, giving it an aura to contend with. There is the late novelist Park Kyung-ni, the musician Yoon I-sang, and artists Lee Joong-sup and Jeon Hyuk-lim, to name just a few. Read more of this post

Hallyu in the Sixties

2013-10-06 17:38

Hallyu in the Sixties

Michael Duffy
Long before the current international craze for K-pop, and before Gangnam Style’s 1.7 billion hits on YouTube, there was another Korean act that achieved considerable success in the United States if on a slightly more modest level than Psy. This was the Kim Sisters —Sook-ja (the eldest), Mi-ja, and Ae-ja. The sisters came from a distinguished musical family; their father, Kim Hae-song, had been a popular singer, composer and multi-instrumentalist from the 1920s, and their mother, Lee Nan-young, recorded one of the most popular songs of Korea’s Japanese colonial period, “Mokpoeui Nunmul” (Tears of Mokpo). Following its release in 1935, the record sold over 50,000 copies, a huge number for the time. Read more of this post

40 Korean companies caught for stashing away $945.5mn in tax havens

40 companies caught for stashing away $945.5mn in tax havens

2013.10.07 15:10:42

The Korea Customs Service (KCS) said Monday its extraordinary investigation into illicit capital outflows into tax havens, which started in June, found that 40 companies were engaged in illegal foreign currency transactions, siphoning off national wealth of 1.0 trillion won ($945.5 million) overseas. 13 of the 40 companies were reported to have been responsible for illegal foreign currency transactions totaling 738.9 billion won, according to online press media Korea Center for Investigative Journalism (KCIJ).  Of 182 Koreans listed as culprits by the KCIJ, the customs agency verified backgrounds of 160 people and first looked into 26 companies suspected of having been engaged in illicit export and import deals. Meanwhile, the KCS confirmed five of the 40 companies evaded corporate tax payment worth 15 billion won and informed the National Tax Service the inquiry’s outcome. The customs agency will be notifying the national tax agency a full result once the allegations against the remaining 35 companies are verified.  Baek Un-chan, commissioner of the KCS, said “this extraordinary probe was conducted in cooperation with the Supreme Prosecutors’ Office, National Tax Service and Financial Supervisory Service, and is expected to significantly contribute to bringing underground economy to a legitimate market and ensuring fair taxation.” The investigation found that five companies manipulated export and import prices and stashed away 630.1 billion won in tax havens.

More than 20,000 Kasikornbank staff nationwide all found on their desks a green apple that contained a smile-shaped sticker: “Kasikornbank’s success comes from small smiles of us all.”

Smile: secret to success?
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Last Friday brought a big surprise to more than 20,000 Kasikornbank staff nationwide. That morning, they all found on their desks a green apple that contained a smile-shaped sticker. With the apple was a card. Written and signed by chairman Banthoon Lamsam, the card said: “Pan Yim Hai Khun – Kasikornbank’s success comes from small smiles of us all.”
We knew “Pan” was Banthoon’s nickname. With the apple and the card, he gave smiles to all and reminded them all how important smiles are. Banthoon was also onstage at KBank’s head office in Bangkok’s Rat Burana district, to launch the internal rebranding. He told the staff about the importance of smiles, which were key to the bank’s success when it was established 68 years ago. He acknowledged that smiles could evaporate because of economic hardship, but says smiles don’t cost anything, so everyone should start smiling.
It seems all the executives agree. They appear in the music video, singing the song “Yim Noi Yim Yai” (Big and Small Smiles).  Well, Khun Pan, we can expect you to keep smiling too, right?

Philippines fastfood giant Jollibee going to Indonesia, Canada

Jollibee going to Indonesia, Canada

By Neil Jerome C. Morales (The Philippine Star) | Updated October 7, 2013 – 12:00am

MANILA, Philippines – Fastfood giant Jollibee Foods Corp. (JFC) is expanding into new territories including Indonesia next year and Canada in 2015, catering to both the local population and Filipinos overseas. Tapping new markets is in line with the company’s goal of becoming Asia’s largest homegrown quick service restaurant chain, an executive said. “We just opened in Houston, Texas. Our next target is to open in Chicago and near future Toronto, Canada. It will be our first in Canada,” JFC chief operating officer Ernesto Tanmantiong said in an interview. Read more of this post

October 4, 2013, 2:14 PM ET

Amid Corporate Crime Crackdown, Expectations for Board Rise

CHRISTOPHER M. MATTHEWS

A growing expectation among U.S. enforcement agencies that companies investigate themselves when allegations of corporate misconduct arise and turn over the results means the consequences of mishandling the probe have never been larger. Amid the heightened risks, prosecutors increasingly prefer an even higher standard of review. They want internal probes to be led by the board of directors to ensure independence from management interference, according to current and former officials at the Department of Justice. Read more of this post

New battle cry in France: ‘Let us work Sundays!’

New battle cry in France: ‘Let us work Sundays!’

BY JAMEY KEATEN

AP OCT 6, 2013

PARIS – When economic inequalities helped foment the French Revolution, the legendary cry from on high was, “Let them eat cake!” Now, as modern France struggles economically, the cry from below is, “Let us work!” As France battles high unemployment, rising taxes and pinched pocketbooks, the Socialist government has said its main focus is job creation. Now, critics of a more-than-century-old law that prevents most stores from opening on Sundays say revising it would be a good step in that direction. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart Entertains a Pitch: ‘Made in U.S.A.’; Some Manufacturers See Opportunity in Opening State-Side Factories

October 6, 2013, 8:25 p.m. ET

Wal-Mart Entertains a Pitch: ‘Made in U.S.A.’

Some Manufacturers See Opportunity in Opening State-Side Factories

JAMES R. HAGERTY

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. WMT -0.49% has long lured Americans with a cornucopia of low-cost merchandise from overseas, ranging from softball bats made in China to candles from Vietnam. For the past nine months, however, Wal-Mart has been trumpeting patriotic promises to stock more U.S.-made goods. Manufacturing means “good middle-class jobs, and that’s exactly what our country needs,” said Bill Simon, chief executive of Wal-Mart’s U.S. arm, in a revival-style speech at a recent supplier meeting in Orlando, where a children’s choir sang the national anthem. Read more of this post

Intel Israel president: I hate “Start-up Nation”; We’ve become a country that crowns kings, and then damns them, stones them. We have no trapped profits.

Intel Israel president: I hate “Start-up Nation”

Mooly Eden: Start-ups are fine, but we must attract the multinationals.

3 October 13 17:53, Adrian Filut

“There is stigma over the tax breaks in the Law for the Encouragement of Capital Investments. It’s unpleasant to read the newspaper every day. The newspaper does not even call to ask whether a report is right. We’ve become a country that crowns kings, and then damns them, stones them. We have no trapped profits. People don’t understand that the tax breaks are legal. Every man in the street believes that I am stealing the money. We built a fab for $4 billion. Then they began to shout and we lost the fab to Ireland. So how much should we give: a little more than a country that competes against us. We have advantages, but we also have disadvantages, like the geopolitical situation. I don’t think that too much is being given to Intel. The fact is that we lost a fab to Ireland,” said Intel Israel president Mooly Eden, speaking on the panel moderated by “Globes” editor-in-chief Hagai Golan at the Go Global Project on Wednesday. Read more of this post

How to Look Under a Hedge Fund’s Hood: Seven questions investors should ask before investing

October 3, 2013, 10:42 a.m. ET

How to Look Under a Hedge Fund’s Hood

Seven questions investors should ask before investing

JULIE STEINBERG

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Now that hedge funds are allowed to advertise their wares in the marketplace, it will be important for investors to understand this sophisticated asset. If you meet the income or asset minimums required to invest, hedge funds can be a good way to diversify your portfolio and achieve impressive risk-adjusted rates of return. But hedge funds may require high minimum investments and can lock up your money for months. Because of the funds’ private nature, there is also increased potential of fraud. Before giving the green light to your financial adviser or handing your money directly to a hedge-fund manager, here are seven key questions to ask: Read more of this post

Dow’s Exiles Often Have Last Laugh?

October 6, 2013, 5:30 p.m. ET

Dow’s Exiles Often Have Last Laugh

Recently Dropped From Dow, Alcoa Could Be Set to Outperform, If Past Holds True

SPENCER JAKAB

MI-BY892_AOT_NS_20131006175403

“How’d the market do today?” If your answer takes the form of a number, then it had better be in Dow points. Citing some index other than the Dow Jones Industrial Average to an American is akin to complaining about the temperature in Celsius or your weight in kilograms. But investment professionals roll their eyes at the attention the 117-year-old index receives. Far more products are linked to the S&P 500-stock index with its broader footprint and more sophisticated design. That the two indexes have performed almost identically in the long run is viewed as a curiosity. (The Dow is overseen by S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC, in which Dow Jones & Co., publisher of The Wall Street Journal, owns a stake.) Read more of this post

A ‘Perfect Storm’ Hits TIPS Funds; Rising interest rates and falling inflation expectations batter Treasury inflation-protected securities

October 6, 2013, 4:50 p.m. ET

A ‘Perfect Storm’ Hits TIPS Funds

Rising interest rates and falling inflation expectations batter Treasury inflation-protected securities

TOM LAURICELLA

Owners of inflation-protected-bond funds have learned a painful lesson this year, and it’s one well-heeded by all investors: Understand how an investment will perform in unlikely scenarios, not just likely ones. These funds, which are usually purchased as a hedge against spiking inflation, own government bonds designed to adjust their payouts as inflation rises and falls. Read more of this post

Why Bentley’s boss is driven to succeed; The German chief executive of the quintessentially British luxury car maker is on a mission to expand the brand’s appeal

Why Bentley’s boss is driven to succeed

The German chief executive of the quintessentially British luxury car maker is on a mission to expand the brand’s appeal.

By Louise Armitstead

8:30PM BST 06 Oct 2013

This is not a dream. My right foot hovers over a pedal that controls a 6.0 litre W-12 engine with 616 brake horse power. With the lightest command, the vast engine will propel this 2.5 tonne, red machine to 60mph in 4.1 seconds, and 100mph in 9.7 seconds. While I grip the hand-stitched leather steering-wheel and flip the gear stick into “sport”, the PR man tightens his fist around a disclaimer I’ve signed without reading. Bentley reckons that its Continental GT Speed Convertible, which has a top speed of 202mph, is the fastest soft top on earth. We – the PR man, me and the A530 outside Crewe – are about to find out. Read more of this post

New American Economy Leaves Behind World Consumer of Last Resort; The rising American economy isn’t lifting all boats — and may even sink some

New American Economy Leaves Behind World Consumer of Last Resort

The rising American economy isn’t lifting all boats — and may even sink some.

As the U.S. looks set to accelerate, economists from Bank of America Corp. to Morgan Stanley predict it will provide less oomph abroad than it once did, partly because of changes wrought by the financial crisis and recession. The new-look America is focused on greater demand and production at home and taps more of its own energy, paring the need to buy overseas in a trend reflected by the smallest current-account deficit since 1999. Read more of this post

Stock market historian Russell Napier focuses on great times to buy; When the answer is 400 in great scheme of buying opportunities

October 6, 2013 6:39 pm

When the answer is 400 in great scheme of buying opportunities

By John Authers

Could the S&P 500 drop to 400? At present, with the world’s most-tracked index at 1,690, barely below its all-time high, such a question seems outlandish. A fall to 400 would require a crash of more than 75 per cent. Even after the Lehman Brothers disaster, it never fell below 666. And yet the stock market historian Russell Napier has been making that forecast ever since the market hit its lows four years ago. He has cult status among investors for his book Anatomy of the Bear , which looked at the lows of the four great bear markets in the 20th century, all of which were excellent times to buy. Read more of this post

Singapore’s Blumont Group slumps 80 percent after trading halt lifted; Asiasons Capital tumbles, requests trading halt continue

Blumont Group slumps 80 percent after trading halt lifted

Monday, Oct 07, 2013, Reuters

SINGAPORE – Shares in Blumont Group Ltd fell 80 per cent in early trade to around S$0.18 after trading resumed following a halt imposed by Singapore Exchange on Friday. Singapore Exchange Ltd halted trading in Blumont, along with Asiasons Capital Ltd and LionGold Corp after their stock prices plunged. The bourse said on Sunday it would allow trading in those stocks to resume, subject to restrictions that included a ban on short selling. LionGold has requested its trading halt continue due to a pending announcement.

Asiasons Capital tumbles, requests trading halt continue

Monday, Oct 07, 2013, Reuters

SINGAPORE – The share price of Singapore-listed Asiasons Capital Ltd dropped as much as 90 percent to S$0.17  after a  trading halt was lifted on Monday. Singapore Exchange Ltd suspended trading in Asiasons and LionGold on Friday, along with Blumont Group Ltd after a plunge in their share prices. Blumont shares resumed trading, down 81 percent to S$0.167. Asiasons Capital Ltd requested on Monday that trading in its shares remain halted. Asiasons followed LionGold Corp in asking for trading halt due to a pending announcement. The bourse said on Sunday it would allow trading in those stocks to resume, subject to restrictions that included a ban on short selling.

Japan Exchange Group Inc. (8697) will this year announce criteria and about 500 stocks for the new index, which will be based on fundamentals; “It’s going to be a quality index, not just a quantity index, and that’s very important. “It’s going to be like a membership of the country club and many companies will want to join a special club.”

Japan’s GPIF May Opt for Growth Stocks in Bid for Returns

A state-run Japanese fund that’s the world’s biggest manager of retirement savings may boost investment in growth stocks to increase returns after record domestic bond losses this year eroded gains on its assets. The 121 trillion yen ($1.24 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund will allocate several billion yen to a new domestic index focused on returns on equity, governance and trading volume, the Nikkei newspaper reported today. It may later boost investment to several trillion yen, Nikkei said without citing anyone. Japan Exchange Group Inc. (8697) will this year announce criteria and about 500 stocks for the new index, which will be based on fundamentals, CEO Atsushi Saito said in Tokyo on July 30. That will be a departure from benchmarks like the Topix index, which includes all stocks listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange’s first section, or the Nikkei 225 Stock Average. “It’s going to be like a membership of the country club and many companies will want to join a special club,” Curtis Freeze, the Tokyo-based chief investment officer at Prospect Co., which manages about $330 million in Japanese equities for overseas investors, said by phone today. “It’s going to be a quality index, not just a quantity index, and that’s very important.” Read more of this post

China’s doctors not part of society’s elite; “When I see so many patients each day how can I smile at them? They still want me to smile at them”.

October 6, 2013 8:04 am

China’s doctors not part of society’s elite

By Patti Waldmeir in Shanghai

©Getty

Roy Wang did not want to be a doctor but his grades were too low for engineering – so his southern China university transferred him to a course for weaker students: medicine. In most western countries, medicine is a profession that guarantees prestige, high salaries – and the approval of parents who love to brag about “my child the doctor”. But in China, the reverse is increasingly true: doctors are ill-paid, overworked and maligned or even attacked by patients – while many parents would prefer that they became bankers instead. Even Chinese doctors overwhelmingly prefer their children not to follow them into the profession: according to a 2011 survey by the Chinese Medical Doctor Association, 78 per cent of respondents said they hoped their child would not don a white coat. Many of China’s less prestigious medical schools find it hard to recruit students to train as doctors and others find that students with lower scores on the national university entrance exam, or gaokao, will use the lower requirements of some medical schools to gain entry to university, only to transfer later to faculties with higher earning potential. Read more of this post

Does ‘Gravity’ Kowtow to Chinese Ticket Buyers?

Does ‘Gravity’ Kowtow to Chinese Ticket Buyers?

‘Gravity,’ the new space-thriller starring Sandra Bullock and George Clooney, lives up, IMHO, to its, um, stellar reviews. It’s gripping. It’s beautiful. It takes pains to get some of the science right. In short, it’s the kind of movie that Hollywood needs more of to pack people into theaters and keep them paying $5 for 50 cents worth of popcorn. And especially Chinese viewers, who comprise an increasingly important segment of Hollywood’s audience. (China is the second biggest movie market after the U.S.) In fact, for all the brilliance of ‘Gravity,’ am I the only one who thinks some all-too-scrutable kowtowing went on when Alfonso Cuaron and his son were writing the script? Read more of this post

In China, Golf Has a New Hazard: Killer Smog

In China, Golf Has a New Hazard: Killer Smog

This weekend, the Ladies Professional Golf Association demonstrated its willingness to sacrifice player safety for its own long-term financial health.

The occasion was the conclusion of the Reignwood LPGA Classic — the LPGA’s first tournament in China. The importance of this event for the association’s desired future in China’s rapidly expanding golf market cannot be underestimated. At the top of the leader board going into Sunday’s final round was Guangzhou-born Shanshan Feng. As the LPGA website announced, “This week is all about …. Shanshan Feng.” Read more of this post

Caviar Off the Menu for Indian Officials as Junk Rating Looms

Caviar Off the Menu for Indian Officials as Junk Rating Looms

For Arvind Mayaram, India’s push to avoid having its credit rating cut to junk means he’ll have to forgo caviar and a two-meter-long flat bed in first class on his flight from New Delhi to Washington D.C. this week. He’ll fly business class instead to the annual World Bank and International Monetary Fund meetings, saving taxpayers at least $3,000. The change is part of moves to narrow a budget deficit that reached almost 75 percent of the 5.4 trillion-rupee ($88 billion) target in the first five months of the fiscal year, imperiling efforts to limit the widest shortfall in major emerging nations. Read more of this post