Undressing today’s man: Men’s fashion enters a renaissance

Undressing today’s man: Men’s fashion enters a renaissance

By Claire Zillman, reporter March 14, 2014: 11:37 AM ET

For the past few years, the gentleman shopper has been flexing his fashion purchasing power. What’s behind the remarkable growth in menswear sales?

FORTUNE — To all the ladies out there wondering, yes, that man in the cubicle next door or the guy at the grocery store does indeed have a better wardrobe than you. Read more of this post

So you fail, so what! The corporate athlete success formula

So you fail, so what! The corporate athlete success formula

By Patricia Sellers March 14, 2014: 12:51 PM ET

A group of star women with deep connections to sports know that if you learn to love failure, you’re more likely to become a successful leader.

FORTUNE — So You Fail, So What. That’s the title of a Fortune cover story that I wrote two decades ago. The story still has legs (readers ask me about it to this day) and is more relevant now than ever: The global flow of ideas and money enables anyone to innovate, test, fail, pivot and try again. Read more of this post

Internet TV is growing, but there’s a catch; Demand for streaming television and movies continues to rise. But the target of this disruption — cable companies — stands to benefit

Internet TV is growing, but there’s a catch

March 14, 2014: 1:57 PM ET

Demand for streaming television and movies continues to rise. But the target of this disruption — cable companies — stands to benefit.

By Peter Suciu

ORTUNE — Tens of thousands of viewers who tried to tune in for Sunday’s season finale of the HBO (TWX) hit crime drama True Detective may have been left without a resolution to the complex plotline. Read more of this post

Could Pivotal be EMC’s next big hit? Revenue, talent, market demand: EMC’s latest software offshoot looks a lot like VMware did in 2004. Will lightning strike twice?

Could Pivotal be EMC’s next big hit?

By Adam Lashinsky, Sr. Editor at Large March 14, 2014: 3:00 PM ET

Revenue, talent, market demand: EMC’s latest software offshoot looks a lot like VMware did in 2004. Will lightning strike twice?

FORTUNE — A decade ago, the storage computer maker EMC (EMC) completed one of the most successful acquisitions in tech-company history. It bought VMware (VMW), a leader in a type of software that makes server computers more efficient, for $625 million. Today, EMC’s nearly 80% stake in VMware is worth about $35 billion. Read more of this post

In Joko Widodo Candidacy, A ‘Historic Decision’

In Joko Widodo Candidacy, A ‘Historic Decision’

By Jakarta Globe on 10:45 am Mar 15, 2014

Jakarta. The country’s main opposition party has tagged Jakarta Governor Joko Widodo as its presidential candidate for the July 9 election, in a surprise announcement on Friday that brings an end to months of speculation over whether party chairwoman Megawati Soekarnoputri would seek another stab at the presidency. Read more of this post

Tesla’s Elon Musk: State ban on direct sales of EVs to buyers is ‘twisted’

Tesla’s Elon Musk: State ban on direct sales of EVs is ‘twisted’

March 14, 2014: 6:06 PM ET

Facing New Jersey regulation that bars the company from selling electric cars directly to buyers, Tesla turns to showrooming and blog brawling.

By Kirsten Korosec

FORTUNE — Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk accused New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on Friday of cutting a “backroom deal” with the state’s auto dealer lobby to push through a rule change that effectively bars the electric car company from selling vehicles directly to consumers. Read more of this post

Why Skepticism Pays; Here’s what ETF experts say investors should do to keep up with the explosion in new offerings

SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014

Why Skepticism Pays

By BRENDAN CONWAY | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Here’s what ETF experts say investors should do to keep up with the explosion in new offerings.

Innovation is terrific. It has brought us jazz, the moon landing, drug-coated stents, and the iPhone. It has also brought us more than 150 new exchange-traded products last year and nearly 50 so far this year. Read more of this post

How to Profit From the Next Wave of Corporate Spending; These four companies should shine as corporate spending shifts from repurchases to reinvestment

SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014

How to Profit From the Next Wave of Corporate Spending

By JACK HOUGH | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

These four companies should shine as corporate spending shifts from repurchases to reinvestment.

image001-3Warren Buffett foreshadowed a new investment trend in his annual letter to investors, released at the start of this month. He boasted that Berkshire Hathaway subsidiaries had capital expenditures of $11 billion last year, roughly double their depreciation charges. In other words, they’re upgrading plants and equipment twice as fast as they’re using them up. Meanwhile, Berkshire spent zero to buy back its shares, because the shares didn’t sink below Buffett’s cutoff of 120% of book value. Read more of this post

Finally, Sensors Get Personal; South by Southwest had a lot of technology on offer: Most impressive was the sensor technology. No doubt we’ll be using them to monitor all manner of health issues, but which company will be the big winner?

SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014

Finally, Sensors Get Personal

By TIERNAN RAY | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

South by Southwest had a lot of technology on offer: Most impressive was the sensor technology. No doubt we’ll be using them to monitor all manner of health issues, but which company will be the big winner?

One of the beautiful things about investing in technology is that despite the sector’s complexity, it’s a realm where one can often cut through the fluff to an essential truth. Read more of this post

Alan Mulally, imported from the aircraft industry to modernize the Ford Motor Co., used management principles he could have learned in middle school to get the company through the financial crisis

SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014

The Long Road Back

By JACK FALVEY | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Alan Mulally, imported from the aircraft industry to modernize the Ford Motor Co., used management principles he could have learned in middle school to get the company through the financial crisis.

In 2006, Ford Motor was headed into a long financial tunnel from which there might be no return. Chairman William Ford Jr., his family, and the board of directors knew they needed a new direction. One of the directors, John Thornton, made an overture to Alan Mulally, who had led Boeing back from the abyss. Did he think he could do the same for Ford? His answer was yes. Read more of this post

Jeremy Grantham: Learning to Live With a Stock Bubble

SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 2014

Jeremy Grantham: Learning to Live With a Stock Bubble

By LAWRENCE C. STRAUSS | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

Famed strategist Jeremy Grantham views the market as 65% overvalued, but still sees some pockets of attractive investments.

For Jeremy Grantham, founder and strategist at GMO, a Boston-based money manager that oversees about $120 billion, it hasn’t been easy watching equity markets rack up huge gains. As of Dec. 31, GMO was forecasting an annual real return of minus 1.7% for large-cap U.S. stocks over the next seven years. Grantham and his colleagues don’t see much hope for bonds, either. Still, Grantham, 75, says the current stock boom has a much different feel than the tech bubble of 1999 and 2000. Back then, “there were clients who not only wanted to fire us, but who didn’t want to ever see us again,” he recalls. Read more of this post

Wanted in Indonesia – Technocrats

Wanted — Technocrats

By Karim Raslan on 06:20 pm Mar 12, 2014

On Jan. 31, Gita Wirjawan, who was Indonesia’s minister of trade, surprised everyone by resigning from his Cabinet post in order to concentrate on his nascent political career. Read more of this post

Buffett gets the better of everyone, version 4,762

Buffett gets the better of everyone, version 4,762

Dan McCrum

| Mar 14 15:12 | 16 comments Share

We have always admired Warren Buffett’s ability to combine hard headed capitalism with incredible popularity. America’s favourite billionaire and all that. Read more of this post

Japan’s Sumitomo Acquires 40% of Indonesia’s BTPN; The bank is known for serving retired civil servants, but has been expanding into Indonesia’s small businesses market

Japan’s Sumitomo Acquires 40% of BTPN

By Francezka Nangoy on 11:30 pm Mar 14, 2014

Jakarta. Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, one of Japan’s largest banking groups, has concluded its 40 percent stake acquisition in Indonesia’s Bank Tabungan Pensiunan Nasional. Read more of this post

What poet WH Auden can teach us in times of crisis

March 14, 2014 5:44 pm

What WH Auden can teach us in times of crisis

By Alexander McCall Smith

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WH Auden in the Tom Quadrangle at Christ Church College, Oxford

Introduction

FT Weekend is proud to be the media partner of this year’s Oxford Literary Festival (March 22 to 30), one of the world’s most prestigious literary events. Read more of this post

Buffett faces challenge on dividend; Proposal to start Berkshire payouts on agenda at AGM

March 14, 2014 7:40 pm

Buffett faces challenge on Berkshire dividend

By Stephen Foley in New York

A mild mannered accountant from Cincinnati, Ohio, is taking on Warren Buffett in a showdown over whether the veteran investor’s company, Berkshire Hathaway, should finally start paying a dividend. Read more of this post

Dr Copper catches a dose of Chinese flu; Fears China copper inventory will flood market behind price falls

Last updated: March 14, 2014 7:52 pm

Dr Copper catches a dose of Chinese flu

By Neil Hume, Commodities Editor

Fears China copper inventory will flood market behind price falls

“Dr Copper” is poorly. And the prognosis isn’t clear. Read more of this post

The US Federal Reserve has unrealised losses of $53.2bn on its securities portfolio, laying bare the potential long-run price of quantitative easing

March 14, 2014 5:36 pm

US Federal Reserve’s unrealised losses rise to $53.2bn

By Robin Harding in Washington

The US Federal Reserve has unrealised losses of $53.2bn on its securities portfolio, laying bare the potential long-run price of quantitative easing. Read more of this post

Russian companies withdraw billions from west, say Moscow bankers

Last updated: March 14, 2014 7:57 pm

Russian companies withdraw billions from west, say Moscow bankers

By Patrick Jenkins and Daniel Schäfer in London and Courtney Weaver and Jack Farchy in Moscow

Russian companies are pulling billions out of western banks, fearful that any US sanctions over the Crimean crisis could lead to an asset freeze, according to bankers in Moscow. Read more of this post

Alejandro Zaffaroni, life scientist and entrepreneur, 1923-2014

March 14, 2014 6:02 pm

Alejandro Zaffaroni, life scientist and entrepreneur, 1923-2014

By Andrew Ward

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As the second world war drew to a close in 1945, Alejandro Zaffaroni hitched a ride on a US military cargo ship from his native Uruguay to New York. It was the start of a journey that led to his becoming one of America’s most prolific biotechnology entrepreneurs, playing an important role in development of the birth control pill, the nicotine patch and DNA chips used in genetic research. Read more of this post

The lost art of finance: ‘Back in the days when “money” meant sacks of gold coins, artists had something tangible to paint’; the power of art is that it can make us see the world afresh – there can be beauty in the unseen details of daily life

March 14, 2014 1:22 pm

The lost art of finance

image001By Gillian Tett

‘Back in the days when “money” meant sacks of gold coins, artists had something tangible to paint’

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Last month I received a striking request from the Museum of Modern Art in New York. It was not an invitation to a trendy exhibition opening or an appeal for funds. Instead, MoMA curators were seeking blog posts from writers on pieces of art in its collection linked to exploitation and violence. Read more of this post

All roads lead back to Cézanne: From unmissable watercolours to the turbulence of Van Gogh, the Pearlman Collection – now in Europe for the first time – offers a fresh vision of modern painting

March 14, 2014 6:32 pm

All roads lead back to Cézanne

By Jackie Wullschlager

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One wintry wartime day in 1945, businessman Henry Pearlman was walking down New York’s Park Avenue when a painting by Chaim Soutine hanging in the window at Parke-Bernet auction house caught his eye. He bid $825 and took home “View of Céret”. Read more of this post

New York ousts London as top financial centre amid concerns about Britain’s future in the EU, scandals in the City and a growing regulatory burden

Last updated: March 15, 2014 12:00 am

New York ousts London as top financial centre

By James Pickford, London and Southeast Correspondent

London has lost the top slot in a barometer of global financial centres amid concerns about Britain’s future in the EU, scandals in the City and a growing regulatory burden. Read more of this post

Haunted by the Bull That Got Away; The pain of missing out on the tripling of the U.S. stock market since March 2009 has become almost unbearable for many investors who have been watching from the sidelines

Mar 14, 2014

THE INTELLIGENT INVESTOR

Haunted by the Bull That Got Away

JASON ZWEIG

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It might have been.

Those aren’t only the saddest words for lovers, as the poet John Greenleaf Whittier wrote, but also for investors. Read more of this post

A New Way to Learn Chinese: Entrepreneur ShaoLan Hsueh aims to bridge the gap between East and West by teaching Westerners how to read Chinese

A New Way to Learn Chinese

Entrepreneur ShaoLan Hsueh aims to bridge the gap between East and West by teaching Westerners how to read Chinese

ALEXANDRA WOLFE

March 14, 2014 8:37 p.m. ET

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Entrepreneur and author ShaoLan Hsueh aims to teach English speakers how to start reading Chinese in under 10 minutes. See an excerpt for the video that was produced for her Kickstarter campaign. Read more of this post

The Future of Brain Implants: How soon can we expect to see brain implants for perfect memory, enhanced vision, hypernormal focus or an expert golf swing?

The Future of Brain Implants

How soon can we expect to see brain implants for perfect memory, enhanced vision, hypernormal focus or an expert golf swing?

GARY MARCUS and CHRISTOF KOCH

March 14, 2014 7:30 p.m. ET

Brain implants today are where laser eye surgery was several decades ago, fraught with risk, applicable only to a narrowly defined set of patients – but a sign of things to come. NYU Professor of Psychology Gary Marcus discusses on Lunch Break. Photo: Getty. Read more of this post

Expert Was Needed to Disable Malaysia Airlines Jet Systems

Expert Was Needed to Disable Malaysia Airlines Jet Systems

Detailed Knowledge Would Be Required

JON OSTROWER

Updated March 14, 2014 11:42 p.m. ET

If multiple communication systems aboard Malaysia Airlines 3786.KU +2.13% Flight 370 were manually disabled, as investigators increasingly suspect happened, it would have required detailed knowledge of the long-range Boeing Co. BA +1.00% 777’s inner workings. Read more of this post

See family still holds court in Kian Joo Can

Updated: Saturday March 15, 2014 MYT 12:04:21 PM

See family still holds court in Kian Joo

BY M SHANMUGAM

HAVING a competing bid for their company is the kind the stuff shareholders dream of. In this respect, shareholders of Kian Joo Can Factory Bhd have nothing much to complain about. Read more of this post

Big money in kuay teow

Updated: Saturday March 15, 2014 MYT 8:31:40 AM

Big money in kuay teow

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The kuay teow production lines at Ipoh Kueh Teow and Noodles.

IN January 2014, the selling price of 100g of kuay teow in a leading hypermarket in Kelana Jaya was recorded at RM1.45. Read more of this post

Why Nothing Is Truly Alive: Life is a concept, not a reality, says Ferris Jabr, who suggests distinguishing between mental models and pure concepts

Why Nothing Is Truly Alive

Life is a concept, not a reality, says Ferris Jabr, who explains why nothing is truly alive and suggests distinguishing between mental models and pure concepts

By FERRIS JABR

MARCH 12, 2014

On a windy day in Ypenburg, the Netherlands, you can sometimes see sculptures the size of buses scuttling across a sandy hill. Made mostly from intricately conjoined plastic tubes, wood and sails, the many-legged skeletons move so fluidly and autonomously that it’s tempting to think of them as alive. Their maker, the Dutch artist Theo Jansen, certainly does. “Since 1990, I have been occupied creating new forms of life,” he says on his website. He calls them Strandbeest. “Eventually I want to put these animals out in herds on the beaches, so they will live their own lives.” Read more of this post