I Don’t Distinguish Between Traditional and Modern Practices: Rahul Bajaj, patriarch of the Bajaj Group

I Don’t Distinguish Between Traditional and Modern Practices: Rahul Bajaj

by Ashish K Mishra | Mar 11, 2014

There’s only good and bad management, says Rahul Bajaj

He isn’t the most traditional or conservative face of the Marwari community but Rahul Bajaj, grandson of Jamnalal Bajaj and patriarch of the Bajaj Group, is certainly among its most influential.  Read more of this post

Made in China: one game company’s struggle to do what they love

Made in China: one game company’s struggle to do what they love

March 10, 2014

by Iain Garner

You probably haven’t heard of Songtang Animations. It’s a small developer with a staff of just 25 operating out of Haicang, Xiamen. The team is led by the charismatic Mr. Wu, a veteran with fifteen years experience in China’s gaming industry. Read more of this post

The next step for the Internet of Things: Less screen, more living

The next step for the Internet of Things: Less screen, more living

By Erin Griffith March 10, 2014: 10:03 AM ET

The Aether Cone is smarter than your average smart device.

FORTUNE — Duncan Lamb has a mission. He wants to put a dent in our smartphone addictions and allow us, the screen-obsessed people of the web, to look up from those devices a little more. As a former creative director of Nokia, that’s a slightly confusing mission. Read more of this post

A New Blood Test Predicts Alzheimer’s With 90% Accuracy

A New Blood Test Predicts Alzheimer’s With 90% Accuracy

AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE SCIENCE  MAR. 10, 2014, 6:32 PM

Researchers in the United States say they have developed a prototype blood test that can tell with 90-percent accuracy whether a healthy person will develop Alzheimer’s disease within three years. Read more of this post

Why Major Companies Like Whole Foods And Chipotle Have 2 CEOs

Why Major Companies Like Whole Foods And Chipotle Have 2 CEOs

RICHARD FELONI STRATEGY  MAR. 10, 2014, 10:23 PM

Chipotle, Whole Foods, and Deutsche Bank are all major companies run by two CEOs. Samsung even has three of them. But why? Read more of this post

McDonald’s Might Start Copying Chipotle’s Strategy; In an attempt to reverse declining sales, McDonald’s is testing letting customers customize their burgers

McDonald’s Might Start Copying Chipotle’s Strategy

ASHLEY LUTZ RETAIL  MAR. 11, 2014, 12:31 AM

McDonald’s might be taking a cue from Chipotle’s playbook.

In an attempt to reverse declining sales, McDonald’s is testing letting customers customize their burgers, reports Catey Hill at MarketWatch.

But don’t expect to actually point to the ingredients that will go on your burger.  Read more of this post

9 Things Successful People Do Right Before Bed

9 Things Successful People Do Right Before Bed

JACQUELYN SMITH CAREERS  MAR. 11, 2014, 2:18 AM

The very last thing you do before bed tends to have a significant impact on your mood and energy level the following day, since it often determines how well and how much you sleep. Read more of this post

A NYT Op-Ed On How Terrible London Is Has Prompted A Major Backlash

A NYT Op-Ed On How Terrible London Is Has Prompted A Major Backlash

MAMTA BADKAR MARKETS  MAR. 11, 2014, 2:27 AM

Last Friday, Ben Judah wrote  a scathing indictment of London as a town now thriving on “Russian oligarchs and Qatari princes,” and that Britain’s youth are now “oligarchs’ valets.” Read more of this post

The Story Of How Marc Andreessen Told Ben Horowitz ‘F- You’ – And Then They Became Lifelong Partners

The Story Of How Marc Andreessen Told Ben Horowitz ‘F— You’ — And Then They Became Lifelong Partners

NICHOLAS CARLSON TECH  MAR. 11, 2014, 3:42 AM

Back when he was still running Netscape in the 1990s, Marc Andreessen hired an executive named Ben Horowitz.

After Microsoft announced that it would bundle its browser with Windows 95, Andreessen, Horowitz, and another guy named Mike Homer spent months coming up with a counter-move. Read more of this post

Why Apple Should Fear Samsung’s New ‘Tizen’ Strategy; Samsung’s decision to use Tizen, a non-Android operating system, on its Gear line of smart watches has mostly been seen as a blow to Google

Why Apple Should Fear Samsung’s New ‘Tizen’ Strategy

JIM EDWARDS TECH  MAR. 11, 2014, 8:29 AM

Samsung’s decision to use Tizen, a non-Android operating system, on its Gear line of smart watches has mostly been seen as a blow to Google, Android’s developer. Read more of this post

Do Brain Workouts Work? Science Isn’t Sure; Tools like Lumosity promise to stimulate your mind, though researchers question how much they improve cognitive performance

MARCH 10, 2014, 7:39 PM  Comment

Do Brain Workouts Work? Science Isn’t Sure

By TARA PARKER-POPE

For a $14.95 monthly membership, the website Lumosity promises to “train” your brain with games designed to stave off mental decline. Users view a quick succession of bird images and numbers to test attention span, for instance, or match increasingly complex tile patterns to challenge memory. Read more of this post

The decision by Jardines to jettison premium listings for its group companies in London is, on the face of it, a snub to regulators anxious to restore the City’s reputation for corporate governance

March 10, 2014 7:47 pm

Jardines sidesteps, others will not follow

By Sam Fleming and Jennifer Hughes

The decision by Jardines to jettison premium listings for its group companies in London is, on the face of it, a snub to regulators anxious to restore the City’s reputation for corporate governance. Read more of this post

Explosive growth pushes Alibaba online fund up global rankings; Number of investors in Yu’e Bao exceeds total in China equities

March 10, 2014 12:40 pm

Explosive growth pushes Alibaba online fund up global rankings

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing

A Chinese internet money market fund that launched just nine months ago has more investors than the country’s equity markets in a sign of how quickly Beijing’s reforms are reshaping the financial services industry. Read more of this post

Supermarket pricing made merger of Chiquita and Fyffes necessary

Last updated: March 10, 2014 8:54 pm

Supermarket pricing made merger of Chiquita and Fyffes necessary

By FT reporters

The deal to create the world’s largest banana company was first discussed amid multicoloured fruit and flower displays at last October’s Fresh Summit in New Orleans – the annual meeting of the world’s produce distributors. But it was arguably made necessary by the fresh fruit deals to be found in the aisles of any supermarket. Read more of this post

How to recognise signs of impending workplace burnout; Why do executives not just walk away from the job? Many suffer from “priority confusion”, which means they are unable to see how ill they are and have a poor work-life balance

March 10, 2014 5:04 pm

How to recognise signs of impending workplace burnout

By Charles Wallace

With financial markets in many regions near all-time highs, logic would suggest that executives should be feeling happier than during the worst of the downturn. In fact, the opposite is true for some occupants of C-suites, resulting in a troubling number of executive suicides in different parts of the globe in recent months. Read more of this post

A year from now, the Audit Commission will be abolished. With it will go an important principle of public life: the genuinely independent appointment of auditors to local authorities, and to a range of other public bodies

March 10, 2014 6:10 pm

Killing off the Audit Commission is bad for the taxpayer

By Nicholas Timmins

Sometimes it is better to reshape an agency than to light the gunpowder, says Nicholas Timmins Read more of this post

Private equity: Apollo’s charge to the top; A deep understanding of debt has helped the firm become the industry’s most powerful player

March 10, 2014 6:58 pm

Private equity: Apollo’s charge to the top

By Henny Sender

A deep understanding of debt has helped the firm become the industry’s most powerful player

Late last year Apollo Global Management sold its last chunk of LyondellBasell, the chemical company that many had given up for dead years earlier. With that final sale, Apollo’s profits from its buyout of the company reached $10bn, sealing what was probably the greatest private equity deal of all time. Read more of this post

Ways to Say ‘No’ More Effectively: The word makes some people uncomfortable, but it is necessary for setting boundaries, experts say

Ways to Say ‘No’ More Effectively

The word makes some people uncomfortable, but it is necessary for setting boundaries, experts say

ELIZABETH BERNSTEIN

March 10, 2014 7:09 p.m. ET

Lesley Ronson Brown knew the woman on the phone asking her to serve on the board of a nonprofit was making a good point, detailing how the group would benefit from her leadership skills. Ms. Brown politely explained that she was busy with other volunteer activities and wanted to spend more time with her family. Read more of this post

App Tells You How You Feel: Beyond Verbal, other developers are using voice analysis to assess people’s emotions, enabling app users to have fun and companies to keep tabs on employees, screen job applicants

App Tells You How You Feel

Technology Lets Users Have Fun, Firms Keep Tabs on Employees, Applicants

AMIR MIZROCH

March 10, 2014 7:17 p.m. ET

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TEL AVIV—Beyond Verbal Communications Ltd., a voice-recognition software developer here, is rolling out an app promising something Siri can’t yet deliver: a readout on how you’re feeling. Read more of this post

Nestlé Details Governance Changes To Comply With New Swiss Law

Nestlé Details Governance Changes To Comply With New Swiss Law

Food Company to Allow Holders to Vote for All Board Members Annually, Choose Chairperson

JOHN REVILL

March 11, 2014 2:00 a.m. ET

Nestlé SA NESN.VX -0.08% on Tuesday detailed proposed changes to the company’s rules that include annual elections of board members and binding votes on executive pay. Read more of this post

Hyundai Motor: Cruising or Skidding? Hyundai Motor is representative of the flaws of the nation’s family-controlled companies: a hierarchical structure over-dependent on charismatic personal leadership

March 11, 2014, 12:00 PM

Hyundai Motor: Cruising or Skidding?

By In-Soo Nam

For some Korea watchers, Hyundai Motor is representative of the flaws of the nation’s family-controlled companies: a hierarchical structure over-dependent on charismatic personal leadership. Read more of this post

Global furniture giant IKEA is finally coming to South Korea

March 11, 2014, 2:00 PM

IKEA Hits South Korea, Finally

JAEYEON WOO

Global furniture giant IKEA is finally coming to South Korea.

On Wednesday, the Swedish company will open a showroom, “Hej HOME!,” which will run until the end of this month in a posh neighborhood in southern Seoul as part of its preparation for the opening of its first store in Korea later this year. Read more of this post

Pollution: Causing Lung Cancer in China?

Mar 10, 2014

Pollution: Causing Lung Cancer in China?

Can air pollution cause lung cancer?

That’s the question many in China are asking as they snap up face masks to avoid breathing hazardous particles in the country’s often pewter-colored, polluted skies. Read more of this post

U.S. public pensions need more than investment windfall

U.S. public pensions need more than investment windfall

1:05am EDT

By Tim Reid and Lisa Lambert

(Reuters) – Double-digit annual returns for most U.S. public pension systems over the past two years have done little to shrink the yawning deficits facing many of them after a decade of inadequate funding, according to analysts and recent data. Read more of this post

Soft touch FX regulation falls under harsh glare

Soft touch FX regulation falls under harsh glare

Fri, Mar 7 2014

By Jamie McGeever and Carmel Crimmins

LONDON (Reuters) – In July 2006, during lunch at an upmarket restaurant overlooking the sprawling Smithfield meat market in the City of London, Bank of England officials and senior bank dealers discussed evidence of potential manipulation of the foreign exchange market. People at the lunch said the attempts to move the market meant the process of establishing official prices – known as “fixing” – was becoming “increasingly fraught”. Read more of this post

The real cost of the invisible boss; Can you thrive if your manager always goes missing in action?

The real cost of the invisible boss

March 11, 2014

Caroline James

Can you thrive if your manager always goes missing in action?

Is your boss barely there, happy to leave you to it even when workplace crises strike?

We all know managers who struggle to step back from their workers. But what about their opposite number – the invisible manager – who holds the leader’s job title but contributes little in the way of direction, mentorship or motivation? Read more of this post

Beware Of Earnings Gimmicks by Columbia Management

March 10, 2014, 1:00 pm

Beware Of Earnings Gimmicks by Columbia Management

Since the global financial crisis, economic recovery worldwide has been slow. Over the last three years, annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the U.S. was limited to 2.1%, significantly below its long-term average of 3.3%. In this low growth environment, for a majority of companies, churning out high earnings-per-share (EPS) growth rates, either through top-line growth or margin expansion, has become increasingly more difficult. At the same time, the markets are at all-time highs, with multiple-expansion driving most of the rally. Expectations are high and everyday investors and Wall Street analysts alike have adopted a “show me” attitude. The consequence for a disappointing report could be severe. To appease Wall Street, corporate managements are pressured to do everything in their power to deliver strong earnings numbers. There are a wide range of possible accounting gimmicks that could be deployed. Some examples are premature recognition of revenue, aggressive capitalization of expenses, exaggerating current expenses/losses to create cookie jar reserves, classifying one-time gains as earnings from continuing operations and hiding debt in unconsolidated subsidiaries. Read more of this post

Preparing for a Succession Emergency: Learning from Unexpected CEO Departures

Preparing for a Succession Emergency: Learning from Unexpected CEO Departures

Jason D. Schloetzer 

Georgetown University – McDonough School of Business

Edward Ferris 

Milano School of Management and Urban Policy
The Conference Board Director Notes No. DN-V5N3, February 2013
Georgetown McDonough School of Business Research Paper

Abstract: 
Succession planning is one of a board’s most important oversight responsibilities. Accordingly, a majority of corporate boards conduct an annual review of the CEO succession planning process. However, emergency succession events, such as the unexpected departure or sudden death of a CEO, act as a “stress test” of the succession process and place considerable pressure on boards to act swiftly and decisively to fill the leadership gap. A quick response can be problematic if the succession planning process lacks an emergency component or a succession-ready candidate is unavailable. This report outlines common issues that arise during an emergency succession, provides guidance on how to prepare for and respond to a succession crisis, and encourages boards to integrate succession planning into the company’s crisis-preparedness process.

Financial Statement Irregularities: Evidence from the Distributional Properties of Financial Statement Numbers

Financial Statement Irregularities: Evidence from the Distributional Properties of Financial Statement Numbers

Dan Amiram 

Columbia Business School – Accounting, Business Law & Taxation

Zahn Bozanic 

Ohio State University (OSU) – Department of Accounting & Management Information Systems

Ethan Rouen 

Columbia Business School
January 2, 2014
Columbia Business School Research Paper No. 14-9

Abstract: 
Anecdotal evidence suggests that a significant portion of financial statement irregularities are ignored or missed by reporting firms, their auditors, and the SEC. Motivated by a method used by forensic investigators and auditors to detect irregularities in a variety of settings, we create a composite, red flag financial statement measure to estimate the degree of financial reporting irregularities for a given firm-year. The measure, which has several significant conceptual and statistical advantages over available alternatives, assesses the extent to which features of the distribution of a firm’s financial statement numbers diverge from a theoretical distribution posited by Benford’s Law, or the law of first digits. We find that whether in aggregate, by year, or by industry, the empirical distribution of the numbers in firms’ financial reports generally conform to the theoretical distribution specified by Benford’s Law. In a battery of construct validity tests, we show that i) manipulating revenue for a typical conforming firm will induce an increase in the deviation from the theoretical distribution 87% of the time, ii) the divergence measure is positively correlated with commonly used earnings management proxies, iii) the restated financial reports of misstating firms exhibit greater conformity, and iv) divergence decreases in the years following restatements. Turning to the informational implications of Benford’s Law, we provide evidence that as divergence increases, information asymmetry increases and earnings persistence decreases in the year following the disclosure of the financial report. Finally, we show that our measure predicts SEC Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Releases. Compared to firms that were not caught committing fraud by the SEC, firms that were caught have a higher deviation from Benford’s Law three years prior to fraud detection. However, while firms that were not caught are able to maintain a constant level of deviation, firms that were caught appear to have a significant decline in their deviation from Benford’s Law in the years before they were caught. The results are consistent with the explanation that fraudulent firms are able to hide their activities using techniques that violate Benford’s Law, but only get caught if those techniques become unsustainable.

South Africa’s rattletrap taxis move millions – and an economy

South Africa’s rattletrap taxis move millions – and an economy

8:14am EDT

By David Dolan

SOWETO, South Africa (Reuters) – Zakes Hadebe’s minibus taxi has nearly half a million kilometers on the clock, a broken speedometer and a fuel gauge he struggles to keep just above empty. Read more of this post