‘Most beautiful CPPCC member’ Liu Yingxia sacked without explanation

‘Most beautiful CPPCC member’ Liu Yingxia sacked without explanation

Staff Reporter

2014-02-25

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Liu Yingxia attends the third plenary session of the 11th CPPCC national committee in Beijing on March 10, 2013. (Photo/CNS)

Liu Yingxia, dubbed “the most beautiful member of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC),” has been thrust under China’s political spotlight following her unexplained sacking from the government’s political advisory body. Read more of this post

Foreign nationals quit China due to smog and layoffs

Foreign nationals quit China due to smog and layoffs

Staff Reporter

2014-02-25

While heavy air pollution has invaded most of China’s provinces and prompted Beijing to take action to curb the incessant haze, it has boosted the business of relocation firms such as Santa Fe Relocations as many foreign workers are opting to leave the country because of the smog, reports Beijing’s Economic Weekly. Read more of this post

The South Korean government will roll up sleeves to encourage a ‘second venture boom’ in a bid to boost dynamics of the nation’s economy.

Gov’t to reignite 2nd venture boom

2014.02.25 16:18:58

The South Korean government will roll up sleeves to encourage a ‘second venture boom’ in a bid to boost dynamics of the nation’s economy.
In a move, the government is set to inject four trillion won ($3.7 billion) by 2017 and offer tax deduction on angel investment of up to 15 million won for three years.  Read more of this post

NPS gets tough on sketchy directors

NPS gets tough on sketchy directors

Feb 25,2014

The National Pension Service (NPS), the country’s largest investor, made changes to its voting guidelines so it can reject the appointment of corrupt directors to boards of companies it invests in. Read more of this post

Lenovo continues strategy of acquiring loss-making firms

Lenovo continues strategy of acquiring loss-making firms

Staff Reporter

2014-02-25

Chinese PC giant Lenovo Group announced two major acquisitions before the Chinese New Year holiday at the end of January, almost a decade after it bought IBM’s PC business, the move which paved the way for its global expansion, China Entrepreneur magazine reports. Read more of this post

For every Fuji Xerox there’s a Sony Ericsson: the pros and pitfalls of merging your business

For every Fuji Xerox there’s a Sony Ericsson: the pros and pitfalls of merging your business

Published 24 February 2014 11:28, Updated 25 February 2014 09:31

Michael McQueen

Wedding bells are ringing. Business marriages seem to be in season. First there were the Microsoft-Nokia nuptials last year and now the blessed union of WhatsApp and Facebook. Even one-time retail rivals Myer and David Jones are flirting with the idea of engaging in consummation rather than competition. Read more of this post

Another “Successful Banker” Found Dead

Another “Successful Banker” Found Dead

Tyler Durden on 02/24/2014 21:04 -0500

The dismal trail of dead bankers continues. As The Journal Star reports, a successful Lincoln businessman and member of a prominent local family died last week. Former National Bank of Commerce CEO James Stuart Jr. was found dead in Scottsdale, Ariz., the morning of Feb. 19. A family spokesman did not say what caused the death. This brings the total of banker deaths in recent weeks to 9 as Stuart is sadly survived by three sons and four daughters. Read more of this post

Abraham Lincoln Had A Brilliant Strategy For Dealing With Setbacks

Abraham Lincoln Had A Brilliant Strategy For Dealing With Setbacks

THE BUILD NETWORK STRATEGY  FEB. 25, 2014, 4:10 AM

What was the secret of Abraham Lincoln’s success in dealing with people?

Incredibly, this is not just a question that a business journalist would ask. Dale Carnegie himself — the author of How to Win Friends and Influence People — asked the exact same question on page 8 of that famous book.

Carnegie was in a unique position to know the answer. Four years before How to Win Friends came out, he authored a book called Lincoln the Unknownwhich he spent three years working on. Read more of this post

HSBC can’t shrink its vast banking empire fast enough to satisfy investors

HSBC can’t shrink its vast banking empire fast enough to satisfy investors

By Jason Karaian @jkaraian February 24, 2014

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The numbers: What’s $2 billion between friends? Last year, banking giant HSBC generated $22.6 billion in pre-tax profits, up 9% from the previous year, it reported today. But analysts were looking for a result closer to $24.6 billion; the bank’s share price sank by nearly 4% at the London open. Read more of this post

Why Google doesn’t care about hiring top college graduates

Why Google doesn’t care about hiring top college graduates

By Max Nisen @MaxNisen February 24, 2014

Google has spent years analyzing who succeeds at the company, which has moved away from a focus on GPAs, brand name schools, and interview brain teasers.

In a conversation with The New York Times’ Tom Friedman, Google’s head of people operations, Laszlo Bock, detailed what the company looks for. And increasingly, it’s not about credentials. Read more of this post

Turning Japan into a global gambling hotspot may be just the ticket for Abenomics

Turning Japan into a global gambling hotspot may be just the ticket for Abenomics

By Lily Kuo @lilkuo February 24, 2014

The world’s biggest gambling company has vowed to spend “whatever it takes” (up to $10 billion) to set up a casino in Japan. Las Vegas Sands CEO Sheldon Adelson’s pledge comes at an auspicious time, with the Japanese government considering legalizing casinos and in desperate need of an economic boost. Read more of this post

Why so many “activist” investors are barraging companies with money-making schemes

Why so many “activist” investors are barraging companies with money-making schemes

By John McDuling @jmcduling February 24, 2014

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It’s not just Carl Icahn. Activist investors are everywhere at the moment. They’re agitating for change at companies as diverse as Darden Restaurants, the owner of the Red Lobster and Olive Garden restaurant chains, and Dow Chemical Co, the 116-year-old conglomerate. Read more of this post

Why we’re not impressed with Samsung’s latest wearable effort

Why we’re not impressed with Samsung’s latest wearable effort

By Rachel Feltman @rachelfeltman 10 hours ago

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Today at the Mobile World Congress, Samsung unveiled three new wearables to replace their previous flop: The Galaxy Gear 2, the Gear 2 Neo, and the Gear Fit. The first two are smartwatches like the original (widely-panned) Galaxy Gear. The third marks the company’s first foray into fitness tracking. Read more of this post

India’s emerging market rollercoaster has been a brutal ride for IBM

India’s emerging market rollercoaster has been a brutal ride for IBM

By Heather Timmons @HeathaT 2 hours ago

Recent tremors in developing economies have wreaked havoc with equity markets, triggering frightening currency drops and weighing on earnings at global corporations. For a specific example of what a rough ride these markets can be, look no further than IBM’s experience in India. Read more of this post

LinkedIn is doing what Facebook, Google, and Twitter can’t: expanding in China

LinkedIn is doing what Facebook, Google, and Twitter can’t: expanding in China

By John McDuling @jmcduling 7 hours ago

The only major American social network with a significant presence in China is LinkedIn. And that presence is about to get much bigger, the company hopes, after it today switches on a beta version of a mainland China-focused, Chinese-language site, branded 领英 (pronounced “ling ying.”) Read more of this post

How Citigroup stumbled in the Mexican housing market

How Citigroup stumbled in the Mexican housing market

1:12am EST

By Elinor Comlay and David Henry

ZUMPANGO, Mexico/NEW YORK – (Reuters) – Just outside the town of Zumpango, about an hour from Mexico City, packs of stray dogs sniff around abandoned homes in a half-empty neighborhood. Read more of this post

Compliance becomes hotter issue for U.S. firms in China: report

Compliance becomes hotter issue for U.S. firms in China: report

Mon, Feb 24 2014

By Adam Jourdan

SHANGHAI (Reuters) – U.S. companies in China placed greater focus on compliance last year after several high profile probes into corruption and high pricing, but rising costs and a skills shortage remained their main concerns, the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai said in its annual report. Read more of this post

Comcast to Benefit from Netflix Streaming Deal; With Netflix paying Comcast to ensure smooth video streaming, this watershed deal marks a win for cable’s long-term value

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 2014

Comcast to Benefit from Netflix Streaming Deal

By ALEXANDER EULE | MORE ARTICLES BY AUTHOR

With Netflix paying Comcast to ensure smooth video streaming, this watershed deal marks a win for cable’s long-term value.

After years of hearing about consumers cutting their cable cord, it’s the cord that’s suddenly back in demand. That’s the key takeaway from Sunday’s agreement betweenComcast (ticker: CMCSA) and Netflix (NFLX), which is finally agreeing to make a direct payment for the massive Internet bandwidth it consumes. For all its success with original content, Netflix still relies on cable companies to deliver those streams into consumers’ homes. Read more of this post

Walt Disney: Quantifying the Frozen Effect; cartoon movie Frozen has raked in nearly $1 billion worldwide

February 24, 2014, 3:57 P.M. ET

Walt Disney: Quantifying the Frozen Effect

By Ben Levisohn

Anyone who has a little girl, as I do, knows the power of Walt Disney’s (DISFrozen. She acts out the movie; she sings the songs (and has me singing them too); and she wants to grow up to be Princess Elsa, the movies ice-empowered heroine.

And anyone that’s an investor knows how well Frozen has done at the box office–the cartoon has raked in nearly $1 billion worldwide, according to Box Office Mojo. Read more of this post

Britain’s biggest supermarket chain, Tesco Plc, is reportedly dropping its brand in China when it officially enters into a JV with China Resources Enterprise

Tesco brand reportedly to be dropped in China

China Daily February 25, 2014 1:20 pm

Britain’s biggest supermarket chain, Tesco Plc, is reportedly dropping its brand in China when it officially enters into a joint venture with China Resources Enterprise Ltd, further consolidating the latter as the largest retailer in the country in terms of market share. Read more of this post

Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn issued an open letter to shareholders of the global commerce company in which he excoriated eBay’s management and board for various alleged conflicts of interest and lapses in corporate governance

Carl Icahn’s eBay battle gets nasty

By Jesse Solomon  @JesseSolomonCNN February 24, 2014: 12:48 PM ET

Carl Icahn released a letter Monday criticizing eBay’s management and two of its board of directors. EBay is fighting back.

Carl Icahn and eBay are digging into the trenches.

On Monday, the activist investor issued an open letter to shareholders of the global commerce company in which he excoriated eBay’s (EBAYFortune 500) management and board for various alleged conflicts of interest and lapses in corporate governance. Read more of this post

Older adults who take blood pressure drugs have a greater risk of serious falls and related injuries, a new study reports

FEBRUARY 24, 2014, 4:00 PM  Comment

Blood Pressure Drugs Tied to Risk of Falls

By ANAHAD O’CONNOR

Older adults who take blood pressure drugs have a greater risk of serious falls, a new study reports.

Researchers looked at nearly 5,000 Americans over age 70 during a three-year period. They found that those who were taking antihypertensive medications had a 30 to 40 percent greater likelihood of experiencing severe fall-related injuries like hip fractures and head trauma. Read more of this post

Secrets of the Ages: A wide-ranging look at the puzzle of longevity, which varies across species in often confounding ways

FEBRUARY 24, 2014, 4:09 PM  1 Comment

Secrets of the Ages

By ABIGAIL ZUGER, M.D.

The Science of Life Span and Aging. By Jonathan Silvertown. University of ChicagoPress. 208 pages. $25.

Think too much about your life span and you will never get out of bed in the morning. Once you do, though, all the scientific mysteries of the subject may lie panting on the rug at your feet. Why should your good old faithful dog (avid exerciser, nonsmoker, nondrinker) be condemned to age and die after barely a decade, while you remain firmly in your prime — and the neighbor’s African gray parrot lives loudly on and on? Read more of this post

Genetically Modified Babies: Regulators consider radical biological procedures

Genetically Modified Babies

By MARCY DARNOVSKYFEB. 23, 2014

BERKELEY, Calif. — AN advisory committee of theFood and Drug Administration is set to begin two days of meetings tomorrow to consider radical biological procedures that, if successful, would produce genetically modified human beings. This is a dangerous step. These techniques would change every cell in the bodies of children born as a result of their use, and these alterations would be passed down to future generations. Read more of this post

Like Columbus, It Floated Here: The answer of how the useful plants got to the Americas has stumped scientists, until now. Using a relatively new type of genetic analysis, researchers found that bottle gourds floated to the Americas from Africa

Like Columbus, It Floated Here

By RACHEL NUWERFEB. 24, 2014

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Using a relatively new type of genetic analysis, researchers found that bottle gourds floated to the Americas from Africa. CreditCaraMaria

By the time Columbus arrived in the New World in 1492, bottle gourds had already conquered much of the globe. After evolving in Africa, one species,Lagenaria siceraria, made a break for East Asia around 11,000 years ago and eventually took up residence in Polynesia, China, Peru and beyond, earning the title of most widely distributed pre-Columbian domesticated plant. Read more of this post

Camels Linked to Spread of Deadly MERS Virus in People

Camels Linked to Spread of Deadly Virus in People

By DENISE GRADYFEB. 25, 2014

A new study suggests that camels are the major source of the Middle East Respiratory Syndrome, or MERS, a viral disease that has sickened 182 people and killed 79 of them since it was first detected in Saudi Arabia in 2012.

The animals are most likely to infect people through respiratory secretions — from coughing, sneezing, snorting or spitting — that travel through the air or cling to surfaces. Read more of this post

Alan Alda Center for Communicating Science: Could we teach courses to turn scientists into capable communicators? An actor with a love of science seeks to apply techniques of drama to help scientists be better communicators

Alan Alda, Spokesman for Science

FEB. 24, 2014

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The actor turned educator talks about how science can be made clearer and more accessible to the public if served with a helping of improvisation.

By CLAUDIA DREIFUS

CHICAGO — The most popular speaker at the recent meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science was not a scientist but one of science’s most high-profile advocates: the actor and writer Alan Alda. Read more of this post

The Brain’s Inner Language; scientists at Allen Institute for Brain Science are working with mice to decode what a mind’s neurons are saying to each other to produce behavior

The Brain’s Inner Language

By JAMES GORMANFEB. 24, 2014

Continue reading the main storyVideo

Probing the Parliament of Neurons

Clay Reid and colleagues are going deep into the mouse brain to decipher the conversations and decisions of neurons.

SEATTLE — When Clay Reid decided to leave his job as a professor at Harvard Medical School to become a senior investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science in Seattle in 2012, some of his colleagues congratulated him warmly and understood right away why he was making the move. Read more of this post

Pension Funds Sue on a Deal Gone Cold; Alphonse Fletcher Jr., a flashy hedge fund manager, has been accused of running something akin to a Ponzi scheme, and the pension systems that say he misled them are hoping to get their money back.

FEBRUARY 24, 2014, 9:51 PM  Comment

Pension Funds Sue on a Deal Gone Cold

By RACHEL ABRAMS

Sitting around a table in Baton Rouge, La., in February 2008, a handful of board members of the Firefighters’ Retirement System of Louisiana heard an investment pitch that would later come back to haunt them. Read more of this post

Steel Industry Feeling Stress as Automakers Turn to Aluminum

Steel Industry Feeling Stress as Automakers Turn to Aluminum

By JACLYN TROPFEB. 24, 2014

DEARBORN, Mich. — For nearly a century, Ford’s River Rouge factory and its neighboring steel mill have worked in close harmony to produce some of America’s most popular vehicles, from the Model A to the F-150 pickup truck. Read more of this post