Peter Long, Tui Travel: The head of Europe’s biggest tour operator has ridden many storms
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
THE MONDAY INTERVIEW
March 23, 2014 1:26 pm
Peter Long, Tui Travel
By Roger Blitz
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R.E.S.-ilience in Value Creation 《竹经:经商经世离不得立根创新》
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
THE MONDAY INTERVIEW
March 23, 2014 1:26 pm
Peter Long, Tui Travel
By Roger Blitz
Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
March 23, 2014 10:46 am
Japan’s retailers play games with tax rise prices
By Ben McLannahan in Tokyo
Consumption tax rise comes at delicate stage in recovery
Japan’s revival under Shinzo Abe has pushed up inflation higher than base wages, so many people are feeling poorer. Is this a good time for taxes to go up too? Not really. Which is why the government is allowing retailers to act like they haven’t. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
March 23, 2014 3:13 pm
Executives take note: activists are sometimes right
By John Authers
McKinsey’s consultants suggest the best strategy is to listen
Executives need to beware of activist investors. They are better armed than ever before, and they are coming after ever bigger targets. As this year’s proxy season in the US comes into view, with annual meetings and board elections on the agenda, heads of big corporations should no longer assume that they are safe. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
March 23, 2014 7:09 pm
‘Fragile by Design’, by Charles Calomiris and Stephen Haber
Review by Martin Sandbu
An analysis of close ties between governments and bankers is a fine addition to standard economic models but leaves questions hanging Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
March 23, 2014 3:02 pm
Candy Crush: Play it again
By Tim Bradshaw and Richard Milne

The makers of the mobile game insist a secret sauce justifies their multibillion dollar valuation
On a sunny spring morning in San Francisco, thousands of gamer geeks huddle together in a dark room, all fretting over when to deploy the lollipop hammer. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
The New Hedge-Fund-Like Retail Funds
Mutual funds that aim to copy hedge-fund strategies are proliferating.
ROB COPELAND
March 21, 2014 5:24 p.m. ET
It is getting easier to invest like a hedge fund. That doesn’t necessarily mean you should.
Hedge funds have long served an exclusive clientele of deep-pocketed institutions and wealthy individuals. Now, an expanding array of mutual funds is bringing hedge-fund strategies to the masses.
Investors who crave a seat at the table have poured billions of dollars into the mutual funds, swelling their assets to $286 billion by year-end, compared with $41 billion at the end of 2008, according to fund tracker Lipper. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Firms Find Ways to Cut Big-Data Costs
Facebook-Inspired Designs Are Helping Some Companies Build Data Centers On the Cheap
RACHAEL KING
March 23, 2014 4:56 p.m. ET
Hardware costs can add up quickly in the era of big data.
As large companies collect, analyze and store increasing quantities of information, the expense of adding servers, hard drives and other equipment is threatening to crimp their big-data plans. Indeed, hardware sales related to corporate-data projects are expected to more than double to $15.7 billion in 2017 from $7.16 billion last year, according to Wikibon, a Marlborough, Mass., research organization. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
The Data Companies Wish They Had
They Know a Lot About Customers, but They’d Like to Know Even More
MAX TAVES
Updated March 23, 2014 4:36 p.m. ET
FOR SOME companies, big data isn’t quite big enough yet.
These firms already collect loads of information about their customers and suppliers—but that has only whet their appetites for even more. Some retailers want to see what customers buy from other stores, for instance, while health providers want a real-time rundown on their patients’ vital stats to get an early warning about potential health problems. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Promoting Brands in Real Time With Social Media
Advertisers Watch What’s Trending—and Craft Content to Match
GEORGIA WELLS
Updated March 23, 2014 7:22 p.m. ET
A still from a video posted by General Electric on Twitter’s Vine app, showing how color moves through liquid. The video has been liked by more than 227,000 viewers, spreading awareness of the GE brand.General Electric
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April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
How Consumers Are Using Big Data
New apps help people find the cheapest flights, improve their diets, become better drivers
LORA KOLODNY
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April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Big Data Enters the Classroom
Technological Advances and Privacy Concerns Clash
LISA FLEISHER
March 23, 2014 4:35 p.m. ET
With the shift to computerized testing, tablets in the classroom and digitized personal records, schools are collecting more data than ever on how children are doing. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Shiller Metric Carries Warning for Stocks
SPENCER JAKAB
March 23, 2014 12:27 p.m. ET
Asked to define a bubble, some Wall Street wags say it is a bull market that an investor has missed.
But with the period between earnings seasons now under way and the S&P 500 back near its record high, investors may turn more attention to the stock market’s overall health rather than just that of its components. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
A ‘Crisis’ in Online Ads: One-Third of Traffic Is Bogus
As Digital Advertising Climbs Toward $50 Billion This Year, Marketers Battle Fraudulent Visitors
SUZANNE VRANICA
March 23, 2014 6:47 p.m. ET
Billions of dollars are flowing into online advertising. But marketers also are confronting an uncomfortable reality: rampant fraud.
About 36% of all Web traffic is considered fake, the product of computers hijacked by viruses and programmed to visit sites, according to estimates cited recently by the Interactive Advertising Bureau trade group.
So-called bot traffic cheats advertisers because marketers typically pay for ads whenever they are loaded in response to users visiting Web pages—regardless of whether the users are actual people.
The fraudsters erect sites with phony traffic and collect payments from advertisers through the middlemen who aggregate space across many sites and resell the space for most Web publishers. The identities of the fraudsters are murky, and they often operate from far-flung places such as Eastern Europe, security experts say.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE • VOL. LXVII, NO. 2 • APRIL 2012
Don’t Believe the Hype: Local Media Slant, Local Advertising, and Firm Value
UMIT G. GURUN and ALEXANDER W. BUTLER∗
ABSTRACT
When local media report news about local companies, they use fewer negative words
compared to the same media reporting about nonlocal companies. We document that
one reason for this positive slant is the firms’ local media advertising expenditures.
Abnormal positive local media slant strongly relates to firm equity values. The effect
is stronger for small firms; firms held predominantly by individual investors; and
firms with illiquid or highly volatile stock, low analyst following, or high dispersion of
analyst forecasts. These findings show that news content varies systematically with
the characteristics and conflicts of interest of the source.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
THE JOURNAL OF FINANCE • VOL. LXVI, NO. 1 • FEBRUARY 2011
When Is a Liability Not a Liability? Textual Analysis, Dictionaries, and 10-Ks
TIM LOUGHRAN and BILL MCDONALD∗
ABSTRACT
Previous research uses negative word counts to measure the tone of a text. We show
that word lists developed for other disciplines misclassify common words in financial
text. In a large sample of 10-Ks during 1994 to 2008, almost three-fourths of the words
identified as negative by the widely used Harvard Dictionary are words typically not
considered negative in financial contexts. We develop an alternative negative word
list, along with five other word lists, that better reflect tone in financial text. We link
the word lists to 10-K filing returns, trading volume, return volatility, fraud, material
weakness, and unexpected earnings.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
University of Notre Dame
University of Notre Dame – Mendoza College of Business – Department of Finance
July 16, 2013
Journal of Finance, Forthcoming
Abstract:
Defining and measuring readability in the context of financial disclosures becomes important with the increasing use of textual analysis and the SEC’s plain English initiative. We propose defining readability as the effective communication of valuation relevant information. The Fog Index — the most commonly applied readability measure — is shown to be poorly specified in financial applications. Of Fog’s two components, one is misspecified and the other is difficult to measure. We report that 10-K document file size provides a simple readability proxy that outperforms the Fog Index, does not require document parsing, facilitates replication, and is correlated with alternative readability constructs.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Stop Throwing the Book at Investors
JUSTIN LAHART
March 23, 2014 1:20 p.m. ET
Most firms have filed their 10-Ks for last year and boy, must investors’ arms be tired.
The annual financial reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission make for heavy reading. For the roughly 1,100 companies in the broad S&P 1500 index with a fiscal year that ended in December, the average size of a 10-K filing so far is 152 pages. Some would give Leo Tolstoy a run for his money: Trinity Industries TRN +0.80% ‘ filing runs to a (no doubt riveting) 1,913 pages. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
University of Notre Dame – Mendoza College of Business
University of Notre Dame
University of Notre Dame – Mendoza College of Business – Department of Finance
November 18, 2013
Abstract:
Financial constraints — the wedge between the costs of external and internal funds — dictate the relevance of financial structure. We propose a new measure of financial constraints based on qualitative information contained in corporate disclosures. We parse 10-K disclosures filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to measure a document’s tone as indicated by the percentage of negative words. We find that the frequency of negative words exhibits very low correlation with traditional measures of financial constraints such as size and predicts subsequent liquidity events — like dividend cuts or omissions, debt downgrades, and asset growth — better than widely-used financial constraint indexes.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
ACCOUNTING VARIABLES, DECEPTION AND A BAG OF WORDS: ASSESSING THE TOOLS OF FRAUD DETECTION
Lynnette Purda
Queen’s School of Business
Queen’s University
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
David Skillicorn
School of Computing
Queen’s University
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
We develop a data-generated list of words most predictive of fraudulent financial reporting and compare
its success in correctly classifying truthful and fraudulent reports with predictions made by models based
on quantitative financial statement variables and four alternative fixed word lists previously shown to be
associated with fraud. We find that the data-generated list can be a useful complement to alternative
methods, greatly reducing the number of false positives produced by models based on accounting
variables and correctly identifying a higher proportion of frauds than alternative “bag of word” methods.
We study the time series of annual and interim reports of firms eventually accused of fraud and assign a
probability of truthfulness to each using the various word lists. On average, the data-generated word list
shows declines in truthfulness approximately three quarters prior to the actual instance of fraud while
other word lists measuring negative tone and the presence of litigation generate probabilities that decline
by a lesser extent much closer to the event. We find that a word list designed to capture conscious
deception has no predictive power in this setting, consistent with financial reports being written by
multiple individuals, many of whom are likely unaware that misrepresentation is occurring. Our results
contribute not only the development of a new detection tool but also to improving our understanding of
how textual analysis may ultimately contribute to the financial investigators’ toolkit.
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Tuberculosis Affects Children More Than Previously Thought
New Study Says About One Million Kids Under 15 Contract Disease Every Year
BETSY MCKAY
March 23, 2014 6:31 p.m. ET
About one million children world-wide under 15 years old contract tuberculosis every year, twice as many as previously thought, according to a new study from researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Cities Move to Rein in Horse-Drawn Carriages
Efforts to Ban the Vehicles on Cruelty Grounds Are Gaining Steam
MARA GAY
March 23, 2014 7:50 p.m. ET
Horse-drawn carriages in New York City, where a recent poll indicated nearly two-thirds of city voters don’t want to outlaw the vehicles. Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
NEW YORK—Efforts to ban horse-drawn carriages from city streets on animal-cruelty grounds are spreading at a fast clip across the country, imperiling a popular way for tourists to take in the urban sights. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
MasterCard Faces Diverse Asian Needs
Asia-Pacific chief Vicky Bindra talks about the business promise of Myanmar and the hostile regulatory environment in China
JAKE MAXWELL WATTS
March 23, 2014 2:50 p.m. ET
Faced with staunch protectionism in China, tech-savvy consumers in Singapore and a virgin market in Myanmar, Vicky Bindra, MasterCard Inc. MA -3.09% ‘s Asia Pacific head, is a full-time juggler of very different demands. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
There is a lesson in Mother Teresa’s view on death rites
It is a lack of empathy and not “Religion getting in the way of filial piety” (March 22).
FROM HO SAN CHEOW –
MARCH 24
It is a lack of empathy and not “Religion getting in the way of filial piety” (March 22).
Mother Teresa was a Catholic, yet she granted the dying people under her care the appropriate ritual for their religion. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
The biggest lease holder in Canada’s oil sands isn’t Exxon Mobil or Chevron. It’s the Koch brothers.
By Steven Mufson and Juliet Eilperin, Updated: March 20 at 11:59 am
You might expect the biggest lease owner in Canada’s oil sands, or tar sands, to be one of the international oil giants, like Exxon Mobil or Royal Dutch Shell. But that isn’t the case. The biggest lease holder in the northern Alberta oil sands is a subsidiary of Koch Industries, the privately-owned cornerstone of the fortune of conservative Koch brothers Charles and David. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Traders emulate pro athletes to improve their game, hiring coaches and metrics analysts
By Jeremy Kahn, Published: March 21 | Updated: Sunday, March 23, 8:38 AM
Graham Davidson was in a slump, the worst he’d ever known.
In 15 years as a foreign-exchange trader in Sydney, New York and London, he’d always made money. Now in the winter of 2011, he seemed to have lost his touch. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Route 11 Potato Chips finds success as a cult favorite in a fiercely competitive market
By Don Harrison, Published: March 21 | Updated: Sunday, March 23, 4:11 AM
MOUNT JACKSON, Va. — Being a small fry can have its advantages. Take the Route 11 brand of sweet potato chips. The snack-food giants — Frito-Lay and such — haven’t taken up the challenge of this more fragile of the tubers, which tends to caramelize and burn during mass production. Read more of this post
April 4, 2014 Leave a comment
Renren’s Better-Than-Facebook Label Wiped Out in Rout
Back in May 2011, investors were giddy about the chance to buy a piece of Renren Inc. (RENN)
The Chinese networking website was seen as such a can’t-miss stock on Wall Street that its initial public offering fetched a price that made the company more than twice as valuable as Facebook Inc. At $14 a share, Renren debuted at a level equal to 72 times annual sales.
April 3, 2014 Leave a comment
Good education helped US First Lady get where she is
BEIJING — United States First Lady Michelle Obama yesterday told Chinese professors, students and parents that she would not have risen to where she is if her parents had not pushed her to get a good education.
MARCH 24
BEIJING — United States First Lady Michelle Obama yesterday told Chinese professors, students and parents that she would not have risen to where she is if her parents had not pushed her to get a good education. Read more of this post
April 2, 2014 Leave a comment
George Lucas on the Meaning of Life
When a frustrated young woman asked the most brilliant man in the world why we’re alive, Einstein responded in five poignant lines. This question – at the heart of which is a concern with the meaning of life – has since been answered by many other great minds: For David Foster Wallace, it was about going through life fully conscious; for Carl Sagan, about our significant insignificance in the cosmos; for Annie Dillard, about learning to live with impermanence; forRichard Feynman, about finding the open channel; for Anaïs Nin, about living and relating to others “as if they might not be there tomorrow”; for Henry Miller, about the mesmerism of the unknown; and for Leo Tolstoy, about finding knowledge to guide our lives. Read more of this post
April 2, 2014 Leave a comment
Mindwise: How We Understand What Others Think, Believe, Feel, and Want
March 17, 2014 by Shane Parrish
“The main problem is that we think we understand the minds of others, and even our own mind, better than we actually do.”
Despite the fact I do it countless times a day, I’m sometimes terrible at it. Our lives are guided by our inferences about what others think, believe, feel, and want. Understanding the minds of others is one of the keys to social success. With that in mind, I read Nicholas Epley’s new book Mindwise: How We Understand What Others Think, Believe, Feel, and Want. Read more of this post