Long-term unemployment: What the U.S. can learn from Sweden

Long-term unemployment: What the U.S. can learn from Sweden

By Christopher Matthews April 14, 2014: 5:00 AM ET

The U.S. can learn from other countries who have had to battle the most stubborn problem in the job market today.

FORTUNE — It’s doubtful most Americans had any idea how good they’d had it.

The scourge of widespread, long-term unemployment was a problem the U.S. hasn’t really had to deal with since The Great Depression. For instance, in 2002, the U.S. had the fourth-lowest rate of long-term unemployment — when taken as a share of the overall unemployment rate — among all OECD countries. Back then, less than 10% of Americans who were unemployed had been so for more than 27 weeks. Now, 35.8% of unemployed Americans fit into this category. Read more of this post

How Zuck met Oculus: The story behind Facebook’s big bet on virtual reality

How Zuck met Oculus: The story behind Facebook’s big bet on virtual reality

By Erin Griffith April 14, 2014: 9:27 AM ET

CEO Brendan Iribe recounts the steps leading up to the $2 billion deal.

FORTUNE — Mark Zuckerberg’s acquisitions have a formula: They never, ever leak because they come together quickly. Facebook’s (FB) $19 billion acquisition of WhatsApp, for example, was reportedly sealed over chocolate-covered strawberries on Valentines Day, and the deal announced four days later. One month after that, Facebook’s $2 billion deal for Oculus VR was solidified over dinner at Zuckerberg’s home. Within the week, the deal was done. Read more of this post

China Set to Elevate Environment Over Development in New Law

China Set to Elevate Environment Over Development in New Law

By Sui-Lee Wee & David Stanway on 12:04 pm Apr 15, 2014

Beijing. Smog-hit China is set to pass a new law that would give Beijing more powers to shut polluting factories and punish officials, and even place protected regions off-limits to industrial development, scholars with knowledge of the situation said. Read more of this post

Indonesia rides its way to being next auto hub

Indonesia rides its way to being next auto hub 

Linda Yulisman, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Business | Mon, April 14 2014, 10:50 AM

Indonesia, driven by its growing car market, looks to be heading toward becoming an important automobile-production hub, not only for its own market, but also for other developing countries. Read more of this post

The Lok Sabha of dreams

The Lok Sabha of dreams

David Keohane | Apr 14 09:58 | 7 comments Share

If we come, will they build it? Here’s the Indian economy charted, by Citi:

image001-1

A slight exaggeration we grant you but there is so much focus on infrastructure and capex at the moment that it’s really not far off. The lack of decent infrastructure in India is a perennial problem and stalled infra projects lie behind a large number of bad loans clogging up the banking system. Read more of this post

Upworthy’s Headlines Are Insufferable. Here’s Why You Click Anyway; “Curiosity-gap headlines” hook us in. Here’s what psychologists say about our need to fill in the blanks

Upworthy’s Headlines Are Insufferable. Here’s Why You Click Anyway

“CURIOSITY-GAP HEADLINES” HOOK US IN. HERE’S WHAT PSYCHOLOGISTS SAY ABOUT OUR NEED TO FILL IN THE BLANKS.

The news site Upworthy has earned a reputation for engineering “curiosity gap” headlines–story titles that coerce a click through just the right balance of information and intrigue. Read more of this post

When is reform of a Chinese state-owned enterprise not reform at all? When it’s not going to create value

SOE this is what passes for reform?

David Keohane

| Apr 14 14:29 | Comment Share

When is reform of a Chinese state-owned enterprise not reform at all? Read more of this post

Yangtze River Delta becomes epicentre for China credit risk

Yangtze River Delta becomes epicentre for China credit risk

3:05am IST

By Gabriel Wildau

SUZHOU China (Reuters) – Suzhou, an ancient city in Jiangsu province 100 km (60 miles) west of Shanghai, lives in legend as one of China’s most beautiful, famous for its elegant gardens and charming canals. Read more of this post

Missing Suharto yet? Nostalgia mounts in Indonesia as democracy fails to protect Indonesians from the worst excesses of capitalism

Updated: Tuesday April 15, 2014 MYT 6:45:26 AM

Missing Suharto yet?

BY KARIM RASLAN

Nostalgia mounts in Indonesia as democracy fails to protect Indonesians from the worst excesses of capitalism.

THE dust is still settling over last week’s legislative elections in Indonesia. Pundits are still mulling over the “whys” and “how’s” of the results. Read more of this post

Why Amazon Is Copying Zappos and Paying Employees to Quit

Why Amazon Is Copying Zappos and Paying Employees to Quit

by Bill Taylor  |   2:05 PM April 14, 2014

Last week, Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos released his annual letter to shareholders. As is the case every year, it is a tour de force of ideas and initiatives about the customer experience (Amazon Prime), disruptive technology (Fire TV), fast-growing product initiatives (Amazon Web Services), and strategic consistency. (As he does every year, Bezos attached his first letter to shareholders from back in 1997 to underscore the company’s long-term commitments.) Read more of this post

Getting along at work: A primer on personal intelligence; Many challenges at the office come down to managing our own personalities

Getting along at work: A primer on personal intelligence

April 14, 2014: 12:57 PM ET

Many challenges at the office come down to managing our own personalities.

By John D. Mayer

FORTUNE — Most of us would prefer to get through the workday without a scuffle. After all, very few of us are actively looking for a fight. Read more of this post

What Gets in the Way of Listening

What Gets in the Way of Listening

by Amy Jen Su and Muriel Maignan Wilkins  |   8:00 AM April 14, 2014

As your role grows in scale and influence, so too must your ability to listen. But listening is one of the toughest skills to master — and requires uncovering deeper barriers within oneself. Read more of this post

Rooting Out Hubris, Before a Fall

Rooting Out Hubris, Before a Fall

by Steven Berglas  |   10:00 AM April 14, 2014

Hubris, the sin of overweening pride or arrogance, may be the most misunderstood disorder an executive will ever be confronted with. It’s not just narcissism; it’s much more dangerous than that. Read more of this post

Chinese firms could have locked up as much as 1,000 tonnes of gold in financing deals, an industry report said, indicating a big a slice of imports has been used to raise funds due to tight credit conditions, rather than to meet consume

Updated: Tuesday April 15, 2014 MYT 12:15:54 PM

China may have 1,000 tonnes of gold tied in financing: WGC

A customer looks at a golden figurine on display for sale at a department store in Beijing. In China, imported gold is being used via gold loans and letters of credit to raise low-cost funds for business investment and speculation, says the World Gold Council – Reuters Photo. Read more of this post

Only 1 in 7 Japanese scientists are women: Study

Only 1 in 7 Japanese scientists are women: Study

Tuesday, April 15, 2014 – 13:19

AFP

TOKYO – Just a seventh of scientists in Japan are female, government figures show – the lowest rate of any developed nation, despite being a record high for the country. Read more of this post

His devotion to ailing wife will move you to tears

His devotion to ailing wife will move you to tears

Tuesday, Apr 15, 2014
The New Paper
By Maureen Koh

SINGAPORE – Devotion is a word not often used these days where love is the common currency of expression between a man and woman. If you want to truly understand it, you need to read this story.

image001-6 Read more of this post

Temasek’s dealmaking reflects big bets on rise of the consumer

Last updated: April 14, 2014 7:25 pm

Temasek’s dealmaking reflects big bets on rise of the consumer

By Jeremy Grant in Singapore

From toothpaste and shampoo in China to instant noodles and tomato paste in Africa, Temasek is betting big on growth in an emerging middle class – a significant shift for Singapore’s $171bn national investment agency, long known for its emphasis on the financial sector.

image001-5 Read more of this post

Buffett derivatives, just ignore the volatility

Buffett derivatives, just ignore the volatility

Dan McCrum | Apr 14 16:44 | Comment Share

Part of the BUFFETT DERIVATIVES SERIES

There’s an old Russian proverb, popularised by Ronald Reagan, which comes up among due diligence types: trust, but verify. Read more of this post

Is ‘smart beta’ the latest magic money tree? Returns could decline as more money flows into the strategies

April 14, 2014 8:30 am

Is ‘smart beta’ the latest magic money tree?

By Pauline Skypala

Returns could decline as more money flows into the strategies

Investors are always on the lookout for a magic money tree. The latest candidate for that label has been dubbed “smart beta”, although some would argue it fits neither of those descriptions. Read more of this post

Chinese munis will help curb shadow banks; Beijing to hasten launch of municipal bond market

April 15, 2014 6:38 am

Chinese munis will help curb shadow banks

By Henny Sender

Beijing to hasten launch of municipal bond market

It is never a good idea to have an overdeveloped capital market, as is the case in the US. Nor is it a good idea to have an under-developed capital market, as is the case in China. But at least governments can address the former more easily than the latter. Read more of this post

China engineers ‘Potemkin defaults’ to mask debt reality; Beijing wants market discipline without halting growth

April 14, 2014 11:46 am

China engineers ‘Potemkin defaults’ to mask debt reality

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing

Beijing wants market discipline without halting growth

In the past two months, China has suffered its first domestic bond default in recent history and a series of small bankruptcies that have some investors fretting the country could face its very own “Lehman moment”. Read more of this post

The Fragile Middle: China’s migrant workers test urbanisation drive; One in five Chinese only a wage away from losing middle-class status

April 14, 2014 4:04 pm

The Fragile Middle: China’s migrant workers test urbanisation drive

By Jamil Anderlini in Beijing

Xu Bo has worked in a construction gang in Beijing for four years, helping build the city apartments and skyscrapers that symbolise China’s urban transformation. Read more of this post

How the internet is making it harder to read books

How the internet is making it harder to read books

April 8, 2014

Michael S. Rosenwald

Claire Handscombe has a commitment problem online. Like a lot of internet surfers, she clicks on links posted on social networks, reads a few sentences, looks for exciting words, and then grows restless, scampering off to the next page she probably won’t commit to. Read more of this post

A nod to the power of humour; In diplomacy, in business communications and in defensive PR, being funny is hugely valuable

April 14, 2014 2:47 pm

A nod to the power of humour

By Sam Leith

In diplomacy, in business communications and in defensive PR, being funny is hugely valuable

To Trinity College, Oxford to give a talk at the UK Speechwriters’ Guild’s annual conference for speechwriters and business communicators. A proper treat. I don’t know what the collective noun for speechwriters is, but here they were – delegates from all over Europe listening to presentations, swapping tips and eating biscuits. Read more of this post

Regulators Weigh Curbs on Trading Fees; SEC Officials Consider Testing ‘Maker-Taker’ Plans

Regulators Weigh Curbs on Trading Fees

SEC Officials Consider Testing ‘Maker-Taker’ Plans

SCOTT PATTERSON And ANDREW ACKERMAN

April 14, 2014 7:08 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON—A fee system that is a major source of revenue for exchanges and some high-frequency trading firms is coming under the heightened scrutiny of regulators concerned that market prices are being distorted, according to top Securities and Exchange Commission officials. Read more of this post

How Sports Direct won a place in the premier league of retail

April 14, 2014 5:18 pm

How Sports Direct won a place in the premier league of retail

By Andrew Hill and Andrea Felsted

Sports Direct has no official outpost in Verbier. But most weeks in winter, Mike Ashley, the sporting goods retailer’s mercurial founder, rewards small groups of top-performing staff with a stay in his chalet, complete with private chef. The association of the upmarket Swiss ski resort and the value-driven chain – with its racks of discounted trainers and tracksuits – feels unlikely. But the chalet perks are emblematic of the group’s unorthodox management, inbuilt contradictions and extraordinary ambition. Read more of this post

Housing Trouble Grows in China; Overbuilding by Real-Estate Developers Leaves Smaller Cities With Glut of Apartments

Housing Trouble Grows in China

Overbuilding by Real-Estate Developers Leaves Smaller Cities With Glut of Apartments

BOB DAVIS and

ESTHER FUNG

April 14, 2014 10:30 p.m. ET

CHANGZHOU, China— Wu Xuesong, a professor in this city on the Yangtze, says he doubled his money on an apartment he bought as an investment some years back and is ahead on a second.

image001-3 image002-1 Read more of this post

Stock Pickers Get Turn To Shine; New that markets are no longer moving in lock step, corporate fundamentals, and the ability to pick stocks, are becoming more important

Stock Pickers Get Turn To Shine

FRANCESCO GUERRERA

Updated April 14, 2014 11:11 p.m. ET

First it was Gwyneth Paltrow and Chris Martin. Now it is markets and the Federal Reserve that are engaged in “conscious uncoupling.” Read more of this post

Is Film the End of the Road for Small Cinemas? As Studios Shift to Digital Distribution, Theaters Struggle to Pay for Upgrades; A Bake Sale in Berwick

Is Film the End of the Road for Small Cinemas?

As Studios Shift to Digital Distribution, Theaters Struggle to Pay for Upgrades; A Bake Sale in Berwick

ERICH SCHWARTZEL

April 14, 2014 8:15 p.m. ET

When Renee DiAugustine-Bower’s grandfather died in 2013, she took over the one-screen movie theater he’d operated in their small Pennsylvania town for decades. She also inherited a looming need to shell out $60,000 for new technology or be forced to close the theater’s doors. Read more of this post

Wal-Mart Cries Foul on China Fines; Company Says Safety Burden Unfairly Falls on Retailers, Rather Than Manufacturers

Wal-Mart Cries Foul on China Fines

Company Says Safety Burden Unfairly Falls on Retailers, Rather Than Manufacturers

LAURIE BURKITT in Beijing And SHELLY BANJO in New York

Updated April 13, 2014 8:38 p.m. ET

China’s government is stepping up the regulation of food manufacturers and retailers. The WSJ’s Deborah Kan speaks with David Ettinger from law firm Keller and Heckman about the latest changes in China’s food standards.

image001-1 Read more of this post