Friday, May 31, 2013

New chairman for Bank of China

Tian Guoli, the new Party secretary to Bank of China Ltd, was elected chairman of the major State-owned lender by its board members on Wednesday after a shareholders’ meeting.

The Shanghai Securities News reported on Thursday that the appointment of Tian, former vice-chairman of Citic Group, still needs approval from the China Banking Regulatory Commission.

Tian was appointed as BOC’s Party secretary in April to succeed XiaoGang, the current chairman of China Securities Regulatory Commission.He has worked as president of China Cinda Asset Management, the company set up to take over bad loans from China Construction Bank.

China's interest rate challenge

China's successful transformation from a middle-income country to a modern, high-income country will depend largely on the reforms that the government undertakes over the next decade. Financial reforms should top the agenda, beginning with interest-rate liberalization. But liberalizing interest rates carries both risks and rewards, and will create both winners and losers, so policymakers must be prudent in their approach.

In 2012, the People's Bank of China allowed commercial banks to float interest rates on deposits upward by 10 percent from the benchmark, and on bank loans downward by 20 percent. So, if the PBOC sets the interest rate on one-year deposits at 3 percent, commercial banks can offer depositors a rate as high as 3.3 percent. Many analysts viewed this policy,which introduced a small degree of previously non-existent competition among commercial banks, as a sign that China would soon liberalize interest rates further.

But any further move toward interest-rate liberalization must account for all potential costs and benefits. Chinese policymakers should begin with a careful examination of the effects of current financial repression (the practice of keeping interest rates below the market equilibrium level).

The degree of financial repression in a country can be estimated by calculating the gap between the average nominal GDP growth rate and the average long-term interest rate, with a larger gap indicating more severe repression. In the last 20 years, this gap has been 8 percent age points for China, compared to roughly 4 percentage points on average for emerging economies and nearly zero for most developed economies, where interest rates are fully liberalized.

Developing-country central banks keep interest rates artificially low to ensure sufficient low-costfinancing for the public sector, while avoiding large fiscal deficits and high inflation. But, in thelong run, such low interest rates may also discourage households from saving, lead toinsufficient private-sector investment, and eventually result in economy-wide underinvestment,as occurred in many Latin American countries in the past.

In many ways, China is breaking the mold. Despite severe financial repression, it hasexperienced extremely high savings and investment, owing mainly to Chinese households'strong propensity to save and massive government-driven investment, particularly by localgovernments.

China to 'lead global economic growth'

China will lead the rise of the global economy and sectors related to energy, and consumption in the country has great investment potential, a senior executive at private equity company Warburg Pincus said on Thursday.

"There will continue to be the great rise of the emerging markets," said Charles Kaye, co-president of Warburg Pincus LLC, at a forum held by AVCJ Group Ltd.

"While China and India, each with over 1 billion people, have led this rise, other countries,representing several billion more people, are joining the process."

Global GDP growth will almost certainly come from outside the developed world, with theurbanization drive in emerging markets expected to double the size of the middle class, Kayesaid.

According to Kaye, resources including energy have been a global challenge recently. Whilethe competition for new exploration ventures in the United States has been fierce, WarburgPincus is looking at other sites as well, including Asia, Canada, Europe, Latin America andAfrica.

"In China, we are quite positive on our investment in AAG (Asian American Gas Energy Inc) andthink there will be many more opportunities to bring much of what we have learned here," saidKaye.

Asian American Gas Energy, a China-based gas developer backed by Warburg Pincus, BaringPrivate Equity Asia and Chengwei Ventures, was reportedly planning at the end of last year toraise up to $200 million through a Hong Kong initial public offering. AAG engages in theexploration, development, production and marketing of coalbed methane resources.

"As the nature of China's growth shifts and new supply from unconventional plays, as well asthe oil sands and new areas of development from around the world comes on stream, thechallenges of staying balanced - and dealing with inevitable volatility and shocks - will beincreasingly important," Kaye said.

"The focus around the consumer - whether consumer products and retail or healthcare,financial services and real estate - remains at the heart of our own investment strategy inChina," he added.

Last year, Warburg Pincus exited from the Intime Department Store Group and made four newinvestments, which play to the emerging consumer sector - of which China Auto RentalHoldings Inc, China Kidswant Investment Holdings Co Ltd, an emerging maternity, infant andchildren specialty retailer, and Cubic City (China) Service Apartment Group Ltd were revealed.

According to Kaye, China's growth miracle has been remarkable, but the model of export-ledand then investment-and-infrastructure building-led growth is becoming harder to follow, andperhaps even unavailable.

The transition to domestic demand and consumption has been much talked about but it's noteasy to accomplish, he said.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

6 International Shipping Mistakes and Ways to Avoid Them


When Spreadshirt, a global custom T-shirt company, investigated why its shipping costs were so high, it soon realized the company was paying more than $60,000 simply for products that weren’t deliverable because of invalid customer addresses. “Our shipping company would then charge to ship the package back to the U.S. from France or Greece. We were paying customs and shipping charges twice for each undeliverable package,” says Juergen Gauger, chief operating officer of Spreadshirt, based in Germany. 
Unfortunately, mistakes such as these are often learned the hard way, after too many customer complaints and lost time and money. To make things easier on yourself, take a look at some common international shipping mistakes and the steps you can take to avoid them.

1. Not understanding the regulations for your destination. Each country has specific customs requirements, says Gauger, and the requirements you use for one might get your product stuck in customs in another. Before you set delivery expectations for your customers, research if your package fulfills the necessary requirements or regulations, such as certificates to prove the product’s country of origin. Mark Baxa, board member of Council of Supply Chain Management Professionals, says most countries maintain an up-to-date version of their trade laws and custom requirements online. He also suggests hiring a consultant or trade attorney familiar with the destination to research the regulations.

2. Incorrectly packaged shipments. With international shipping, it is essential to safely package your product to ensure intact arrival, Baxa says, given loads shifting in their packages and containers that can be accidently dropped. He recommends that companies find out the number of times a container will be handled and the mode of transportation. For example, he says if you are moving fine glassware, you need a very dense and shock absorbent type of packaging to protect it in transit.

You should also be aware of any regulations on shipping containers for the destination country. Businesses using wood pallets, for instance, might not realize that some countries regulate wood packaging to control pests and ask companies to follow specific standards The U.S. Department of Agriculture website maintains a database of the countries with special wood packaging requirements, but your consultant or lawyer should be to advise you on what regulations apply to your specific container materials.

3. Check your labels. As Spreadshirt learned, incorrect address labeling can delay packages and increase shipping charges. In this case, the company turned to an address verification system, which averages around 5 cents per order, to cut down on error. But keep in mind that your cartons and labels will need other specific markings, revealing information such as the country of origin and the presence of any hazardous materials. Gauger recommends that companies bone up on labeling requirements but to also to talk to their shipping provider who can advise them on any labeling errors that should be addressed. Hiring a lawyer representing trade in your destination country, one who is knowledgeable about your particular product type, can also help you validate labeling requirements.

4. Picking the wrong shipping company for your destination. No one international shipping vendor or method is the best provider for every circumstance. Since certain shipping companies have established relationships with customs in specific destinations, selecting a company for specific countries may speed up delivery to your customers. “Any vendor that you hire for international shipping services must understand the trade lane you are in and the appropriate solution to move your product safely, timely, intact and in fulfillment of all required regulations,” says Baxa. He says you can determine if the supplier has expertise in the destination by checking references and asking questions about how many years it has been serving the country, the number of transactions in the region and how many employees work on the ground. Baxa says that most shipping vendors with a strong presence in a country will also have a physical office location in the destination.


5. Know who’s shipping your goods. When you contract with a shipping service to ship your products to another company, many businesses assume that the company will be handling the actual shipping. However, often the company then turns the package over to a shipping management company which then handles the shipping timeline and method. “Since the management company is out to make a profit, they often ship the product by the cheapest way possible, which is often the slowest,” says George T. Haley, Director of the Center for International Industry Competitiveness at the University of New Haven. Before hiring a shipping company, Haley recommends asking what management company it uses and determine if it guarantees a delivery date or method.

6. Relying too much on your vendors to educate you. As Spreadshirt learned, shipping is complicated and most entrepreneurs won’t ever become shipping experts. However, Baxa cautions businesses to rely only on their vendors to update them on changes in things like import and export requirements under U.S. law. “You need to remain in a constant state of curiosity about the world of international shipping to be successful because there are changes every day,” Baxa says.

Easy ways to stay in the loop can include regularly reading the Tradeology blog maintained by the U.S. International Trade Administration as well as studies and white papers produced by the International Safe Transit Association. The National Export Initiative’s relaunched site can connect you with information on regulations, events, free webinars as well as experts who can answer your shipping questions.

Yiwu to host concurrent knitting & machinery expos in Nov

With 13 years' experience and development, The China (Yiwu) International Exhibition on Hosiery, Knitting, Dyeing & Finishing Machinery (hereinafter as "YIWU KNITTING") has become a highly internationalized and professional exhibition specializing in knitting technology.
From 2013 onwards, the show will join force with Zhejiang Government and her exhibition, The China Yiwu International Manufacturing Equipment Expo, and stage concurrently at Yiwu International Expo Center on 19-22 November, 2013.
With theme on automatic garment machinery, The 3rd China (Yiwu) International Exhibition on Automatic Garment Machinery & Sewing Equipment (hereinafter as "YIWU SEWING") will also be staged concurrently. With a wide variety of thematic zones, the exhibitions will bring new opportunities for exhibitors and buyers who are eager to have technological transformation and upgrading in textile industry.
Tapping into the Market Pulse for Business Opportunities
Knitted garments play an important role in fashion industry. It becomes the hottest costumes both in the public and fashion world.
With the rapid development of clothing industry, the changes of consumption concept and the improvement of living standard, together with the continuous enhancement of knitting and dyeing & finishing technology and diversified applications on raw materials, knitted garment industry has entered a high-end development stage. China's knitting industry trend towards globalization is irreversible.
The statistics show that over 40% of knitted garments in China are exported every year. In  Jan-Oct 2012, Yiwu's export in garment & accessories valued at USD 1.83 billion while there was only 30.1% of the total value of exports at the same period last year.
The above data shows that knitted garment not only has become an important part of modern clothing, but also an important position in fashion design, research & development and production.
YIWU KNITTING Extends from a Professional Exhibition to a High-end Sourcing Platform
Having been serving the industry for 12 years, "YIWU KNITTING" focus on business effectiveness and integrated market demand.  The show is renowned as the leader of knitting and hosiery industry and also the preferred sourcing platform for enterprises to get latest information.
The exhibition runs through the upstream and downstream industry in order to showcase a comprehensive picture of the latest knitting technology, the high-end and fashion concept which lead the rapid development of the industry.
YIWU KNITTING provides buyers with one-stop sourcing and exchange platform, which has attracted numerous local and international buyers and associations to visit the show.
In 2012, the exhibition reached an area of 12,000 sqm and displayed over 400 sets of high-end hosiery and knitting related machinery by 153 exhibitors from 11 countries and regions, including France, Germany, Hong Kong SAR, Italy, Korea, PR China, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan Province, Turkey and United Kingdom.

YIWU KNITTING has received enormous support from industry players, more than 10 associations and enterprise delegations visited the show last year (2012), including Wenzhou Chamber of Commerce-Ladies Wear Branch and Nanjing Women's Clothing Chamber of Commerce, which were the first time to organize delegations and 20 enterprises were grouped respectively to visit and source at onsite.
It was also the 4th year that Hanning Hosiery Industry Association organized a group of over 30 enterprises to visit the show. Besides, Pujiang County Knitting, Printing and Dyeing Industry Association, Pujiang Clothing Industry Association, Jinhua Chamber of Commerce, etc. have also attended the show. Corporate representatives including MengNa Hosiery, Langsha Group, China Bonas Group, Zhejiang Manzi Knitting, Wanyu Knitting, Jodoll Garment, Kingeagle Group, etc. have come to visit the shows.
Their attendance have further proven the importance and uniqueness of the shows as well as brought unlimited business opportunities to exhibitors. The 4-day shows recorded 10,866 attendance of professional trade visitors and buyers, which affirmed YIWU KNITTING to be a highly professional and international exhibition which brings abundant business opportunities.

Lenovo eyes high-end mobiles



As PC era ends, company seeks profits from other hardware

Lenovo Group is eyeing the high-end mobile market and plans to make it generate profits inthe post-personal computer era.

The world's second largest PC maker by shipments has speeded up its business transition thisyear in efforts to become a strong consumer electronics company to compete with Apple Incand Samsung Electronics Co.

"Lenovo will become the No 1 smartphone vendor within China in two years," said Liu Jun,senior vice-president of Lenovo and head of the company's PC, smartphone and tablet businesses.

Sales turnover of Lenovo's smartphone business is projected to make up more than 15 percentof the company's total by the end of this year, he said.

On May 16, the Beijing-based manufacturer released its latest smartphone, the K900. Selling at3,299 yuan ($538), the company hopes the new device will attract customers from Samsung'sGalaxy Note series and Apple's iPhone 5.

Lenovo hopes to sell 1 milliion of the new devices in China, saying the market needs newgadgets to break Apple and Samsung's domination of the high-end market.

High-end customers in China need more options and Lenovo is poised to fulfill that demand,said Liu.

Smartphones priced above 3,000 yuan are categorized as high-end products. They took 10 to15 percent of the market share in China, according to Chen Wenhui, Lenovo's vice-president and head of its mobile business.

During the first quarter of this year, Lenovo's China market share lagged behind Samsung,Nokia Corp and Apple because the company's smartphones did not get much market attentionuntil last year, the report pointed out.

Samsung took nearly a quarter of the nation's market share while the declining Nokia managed15 percent. Accused of being slow to release the latest iPhone and of having a poorer warrantythan in other countries, Apple grabbed about 13 percent of the market share in China, saidiiMedia Research.

Although overseas brands took more market share and sell more high-end devices in thecountry, there is "a strong momentum" for local brands to take market share from overseasvendors in the coming quarters, added the research company.

Lenovo was the top local smartphone maker in terms of market share.

PC slump

Lenovo's "attack" strategy in the mobile market comes in the middle of a damaging recession inthe PC industry.

United States research company IDC warned earlier this year that international PC shipmentsare poised to suffer a double-digit slump in the second quarter of this year.

Shuanghui acquires world's largest pork processor

China's Shuanghui International Holdings Limited announced Wednesday that ithas entered into a definitive merger agreement with the world's largest pork processor,Smithfield Foods, to create a leading global pork enterprise.

The acquisition valued Smithfield at approximately $7.1 billion, including the assumption ofSmithfield's net debt.

Under the terms of the agreement, Shuanghui will acquire all of the outstanding shares ofSmithfield for 34 dollars per share in cash. The purchase price represents a premium ofapproximately 31 percent over Smithfield's closing stock price on Tuesday.

"Together we will be able to meet the growing demand in China for pork by importing high-quality meat products from the United States, while continuing to serve markets in the UnitedStates and around the world," said Shuanghui Chairman Wan Long.

The transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2013. The closing of the transactionis subject to the approval by Smithfield's shareholders and related legal procedures, amongothers.

"This transaction provides Smithfield shareholders with significant and immediate cash value fortheir investment, and ensures that Smithfield will continue to execute on its strategic prioritieswhile maintaining our brand excellence, community involvement, and our commitment toenvironmental stewardship and animal welfare," said C. Larry Pope, president and CEO ofSmithfield.

Smithfield Foods is a 13-billion dollar global food company and the world's largest porkprocessor and hog producer. Shuanghui International and its subsidiaries are the majorityshareholders of Henan Shuanghui Investment and Development Co., which is China's largestmeat processing enterprise and is publicly traded on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange.

Is Guanxi Bad For China?

A business student asked me recently, "Michael, as a Westerner and a teacher in a business college, what do you think of our Chinese concept of 'guanxi'?" This is a question that I've avoided for some time. I like staying positive about China and especially in a blog/forum like this one. Anyone with no original thought or even the slightest level of intelligence can have an opinion. The less intelligence usually is indicated by those who are almost always negative about things. It takes zero intelligence to find problems. It takes more creative thought to find what's good and try to make it even better.


But, since this student asked and I told him how I see 'guanxi', my whole class then asked me to share my views here on the blog. 'Guanxi', as I understand it, is at best what we call nepotism. That is favoring relatives and friends in business and jobs. Friends include classmates, schoolmates and even not too distance acquaintances. From what I've observed first hand, it pays little to no attention to the qualifications, talents, education or abilities of the individual who is shown favor.


I've seen people here who have gotten their job through guanxi who do nothing all day long. It is far more common than I would ever expect. They are chatting on QQ, watching movies or shopping online. They are not being productive for their business or employer.


In the West, we value talent, education, experience, ability and creativity. If a relative or someone we have 'relations' with possesses the expertise and ability to do a job, I'm sure they are considered for hiring. But, if they get such a job and aren't the most qualified to do the job, there is little to no hesitation for them to be fired.


Americans value results. Perhaps that is why America is seen as a rich country. We value profits and results. Relations mean very little. Qualifications mean almost everything.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Chinese developer invests $1.5b in London

LONDON - An agreement, worth 1 billion pounds ($1.51 billion), to transform a dockland in eastern London into a business port for attracting Chinese and Asian companies to develop in Europe was signed in London on Wednesday.

ABP Chinese (Holding), a private company founded in 2003, plans to build the Asian business port, the first of such in Europe, and a new financial center in the 130-year-old Royal Albert Dock area in Newham in eastern London, claiming to be the largest commercial real estate development project involving Chinese investment in Britain and in the history of China-Britain cooperation.

"I am very pleased and very proud that my company ABP has reached this agreement for the Royal Albert Dock with the Greater London Authority. This project will be hugely significant for both the Chinese and British economies," said Xu Weiping, Chairman of the ABP.

"My vision is to develop a world class international business district which will initially target Asian businesses to help them secure a destination in London, which in China is seen as the gateway to both the United Kingdom and the wider European economy."

"The Asian business port is expected to help promote employment and promote local economic growth by attracting Chinese companies and Asian business as well," said Xu.

The investment project is estimated to create 20,000 jobs and its development to contribute about 6 billion pounds to the British economy upon completion, said the London city government in a statement.

In an interview with Xinhua, Xu said that he is confident to turn the deserted port area into an economic prosperous one in a period of 10 years, and expressed the hope to make the area an example of full integration of culture and economy between the East and the West.

Mayor of London Boris Johnson said: "Creating a third financial district in the capital, this development will act as a beacon for eastern investors looking west, bringing with it tens of thousands of jobs and billions of pounds of investment for the UK economy."

Chinese ambassador to Britain Liu Xiaoming and British Communities secretary Eric Pickles were present at the signing ceremony.

Liu said the project has made two records, namely the biggest comprehensive real estate project that a Chinese company has ever undertaken in Britain and the biggest Chinese investment so far in Britain this year.

According to the ambassador, Chinese investments in Britain amounted to $8 billion last year.

Speaking of the 1 billion pounds investment in the project, Xu said 30 percent will be from ABP, 30-40 percent from bank loans and PE and the remaining part from pre-sales and sale of the property.

The project is designed to be carried out in five phases and completed in about 8-10 years.

Auto industry faces uphill challenges: Experts

A leading industry analyst has warned that China's automobile sales could slow considerably within the next two years, choked mainly by the inability of roads and highways to cope with the growing volume of traffic, particularly in the major cities.

Hou Yankun, head of China Equity Research and head of Asia Autos at UBS Securities, said that 2013 will witness the "last wave" of sales surges in China's auto industry.

He estimated total sales to grow by 8.4 percent year-on-year in 2013, with sales of passenger vehicles up by 8.1 percent from 2012.

But Hou stressed that bottlenecks already exist in infrastructure development, which is likely to lead to more vehicle purchase restrictions in the near future.

China's auto sales increased at compound annual growth rates above 20 percent between 2005 and 2010, but that level has already dropped significantly since 2011, mainly as a result of a slowing economy and exit of stimulus policies.

Many analysts still hold the view that the Chinese market is promising due to its low penetration rate, which is around 8 percent, compared with 50 percent in developed economies.

Moreover, affordability of cars is rising, as prices continue to drop and people's income swells.

Theoretically speaking, if car affordability continues to follow the examples of Japan and South Korea, sales could maintain rapid growth for at least 10 years in China.

But Hou said the ability of the country's roads to cope with that level of growth is already being stretched.

Data show that there are about 550 cars for every kilometer in Beijing, compared to 300 even in packed Hong Kong.

The average annual mileage of cars in the mainland is five times that of Hong Kong, added Hou.

"It will be a challenge for the government to raise the speed of road construction, to keep pace with the acceleration of auto ownership," he said.

Mega-cities including Beijing and Guangzhou have already introduced car-purchasing restrictions, and people in Shanghai have to enter an auction for car licenses because of massive demand.

Statistics show cities such as Fuzhou, Tianjin, and Nanjing are all suffering from low average driving speeds caused by chronic traffic congestion, which may force the local governments to consider purchasing restrictions, Hou said.

Some industry commentators noted that China's auto industry is also starting to face an oversupply of vehicles.

Several of the country's major automakers have raised their capacity targets over the next few years, which could push vehicle production past government projections, listed as 37 million units in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15), to as much as 40 million by 2015.

KPMG warned in a report that vehicle "manufacturing overcapacity is apparent", and the Chinese government, industry experts and analysts have also alerted automakers of the potential problem.

"If China could effectively cut the occupancy of roads by a single car through improving its public transportation system, and sufficiently exploring the rural market, it could still achieve a high auto penetration rate of 50 percent," Hou added.

But that requires a stronger economy as support, which Hou estimates could take 10 years.

Eric Wu, a hedge fund analyst based in Shanghai, said he agreed that automaker margins are shrinking due to fierce competition.

"But I remain more optimistic about market growth," he added.

"New products are going to stimulate people's desire to buy, and the vast rural area is waiting to be explored."

Amazon's Kindle to be launched in China in June

Amazon.com Inc will start selling its e-book readers in China next month as the online retailer seeks to cash in on the digital content it offers in the world's second-largest economy.

The move follows the earlier launch of the company's Android-oriented app store in China, and means it has leapt the final hurdle as it seeks to sell its hardware in the country.

Suning Commerce Group Co Ltd, the country's top retailer of home appliances by market value, has signed an exclusive partnership with Amazon to roll out the Kindle e-book readers and the Kindle Fire tablet, said Ge Shuang, Suning's public relations manager.

The products will be available to Chinese customers in early June, another source at Suning told China Daily on Wednesday.

Apart from Amazon's website, the Kindle will be available to customers via Suning's e-commerce platform as well as its bricks-and-mortar outlets, said the source, who declined to be named.

Suning's e-commerce portal will serve as an alternative for online purchases of the Kindle, enabling nationwide delivery. In addition, special booths will be set up in several Suning outlets to promote the devices.

"Drawing from our prior experience with Microsoft Corp's Surface tablet, we'll basically start with the booths in our flagship stores across China's first- and second-tier cities and gradually expand to other outlets nationwide," said the source.

He did not disclose the pricing structure for the gadgets, and calls to Amazon China's public relations officer went unanswered on Wednesday.

In the United States, the latest version of the Kindle, known as the Paperwhite, sells from $119 to $179, and the 9.7-inch-screen Kindle DX is priced at $299.

Amazon has laid solid ground for the entry of the devices in the Chinese market. Last year, four Kindle models received approval from the State Radio Regulation of China, the regulatory body for radio and wireless products. It also opened a Kindle store in December that sells Chinese e-books.

Everything is now in place for Amazon's hardware to hit the Chinese market, after it unveiled some weeks ago its Cloud Drive storage service and an Android application store that offers paid apps.

The strategy in China is in line with an ambitious plan disclosed in April. At the time, Amazon pledged to take its app store services into nearly 200 new markets.

China's e-book market is expected to reach 8.23 billion yuan ($1.34 billion) in 2014, up 52 percent from 5.42 billion yuan in 2012, according to an estimate from Analysys International, aBeijing-based IT consultancy.

Sun Peilin, senior analyst at the consultancy, said he believes that Amazon's app store should boost revenues for developers by placing a stronger emphasis on paying for digital content.

"The Amazon app store is featured as the main store on Amazon's Kindle tablets, even though it supports any Android device," Sun said.

He said that Amazon promised to offer Chinese users some locally made and overseas gaming titles on the store, but that it will be hard to make any profits because of the fierce domestic competition and the rampant use of pirate apps.

"I think that the Kindle products will pave the way for future marketing in China for Amazon," he said, suggesting that the company should consider cooperating with Chinese Internet companies.

The Chinese e-book readers' market is largely dominated by Shanda Interactive Entertainment Ltd's Bambook and Hanvon Technology Co Ltd's gadgets. But the market was dealt a heavy blow in the past two years by the emergence of devices such as the iPad.

Wang Juelin, 30, a Chinese game developer in California, said that about 80 percent of his colleagues have iPads even though the Kindle has long been available in the United States.

"The iPad is a better option if you happen to use an iPhone, as they work in a similar way. Besides, telecom carriers such as AT&T offer rebates if we buy iPads," he said.

Food firm China's biggest buy in US

In what would be the biggest takeover of a US company by a Chinese buyer, Shuanghui International Holdings Ltd has agreed to pay $4.72 billion to acquire Smithfield Foods Inc, the world's leading pork producer, to meet growing demand for US-made pork.

The transaction, which also includes $2.38 billion in assumed debt, is China's largest cross-border deal since CNOOC Ltd last year paid $15.1 billion for Canadian oil and gas producer Nexen Ltd. It faces regulatory scrutiny because it would bring a major US business under foreign control.

The announcement on Wednesday comes a week before the June 7-8 meeting in Southern California between US President Barack Obama and Chinese President Xi Jinping. It also comes at a time when food safety, along with environmental pollution, is a chronic problem in China, prompting the central government to crack down on some food producers. The country is the world's largest consumer of pork.

In a conference call with analysts after the deal was announced, Smithfield CEO C. Larry Pope characterized the transaction as "exporting America to the world" rather than as part of a strategy to import Chinese pork into the United States. The companies had been in discussions for four years before reaching agreement, he said.

"We saw the opportunity," Pope said, but "pricing has always been an issue".

Shareholders have long been critical of Smithfield's stock price with Pope in charge. Terms of the deal prompted at least one lawsuit by shareholders who claim the company board breached its fiduciary responsibility by accepting an offer that was too low.

In March, Continental Grain Co, which owns about 6 percent of Smithfield's outstanding shares, called on management of the Virginia-based company to consider breaking it up into separate segments - hog production, fresh pork and packaged meats - to boost its share price on the New York Stock Exchange.

Smithfield stock will no longer be publicly traded once the deal closes, expected later this year.

Under the agreement, which requires the approval of Smithfield shareholders, Shuanghui will pay $34 for each Smithfield share. The offer represents a 31 percent premium to the shares' Tuesday closing price of $25.97. Based on Smithfield's 138.8 million shares outstanding, the cash portion of the deal is worth $4.72 billion. The companies valued the deal, including assumed debt, at $7.1 billion, meaning the value of the debt is about $2.38 billion.

With annual revenue of $13 billion and more than 46,000 employees, Smithfield, based in a small Virginia town of the same name, has facilities in 26 US states, including the world's largest slaughterhouse and meat-processing plant, in North Carolina. It also has operations in Mexico and 10 European countries.

The company's brands include Smithfield ham, Farmland bacon and Healthy Ones lunch meats. It raises some 15 million pigs a year and processes 27 million, producing more than 6 billion pounds (2.7 billion kilograms) of pork.

Hong Kong-based Shuanghui owns businesses in food production, logistics and flavorings.

The deal gives Shuanghui, which already is the majority shareholder in China's largest meat-processing enterprise, a major foothold in the US food industry.

Amid a fourfold increase in the nation's annual per-capita meat consumption, China became a net importer of pork in 2008. According to the Earth Policy Institute, an environmental organization, China has imported about 400,000 metric tons of pork annually in recent years, compared with a global pork trade of almost 7 million metric tons.

In the past decade, Chinese pork prices have more than doubled, contributing to a slowdown in consumption, according to Dutch financial-services provider Rabobank.

In a statement to China Daily, the National Pork Producers Council, a Washington-based industry group, declined to comment directly on the Shuanghui-Smithfield deal, but it said the sale "does have the potential to increase US pork exports to China, which would benefit all US pork producers".

In the companies' announcement, Shuanghui Chairman Wan Long said: "Together we will be able to meet the growing demand in China for pork by importing high-quality meat products from the United States, while continuing to serve markets in the United States and around the world."

The proposed takeover is subject to approval by US regulators on antitrust and competition grounds, as well as a review by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States.

The interagency committee, led by the Treasury Department, evaluates large or sensitive deals involving foreign investors that could affect US national security. CFIUS has in the past rejected some proposed acquisitions by Chinese companies.

A federal judge in Washington is still considering a lawsuit by Chinese-controlled Ralls Corp that challenges Obama's nullification in September, following a CFIUS review, of a deal for Oregon wind farms near a US Navy weapons-testing facility. It was the first time in 22 years that a US president had blocked a foreign company for national security reasons.

A Treasury Department spokeswoman declined to comment, saying federal law bars CFIUS from publicly disclosing information filed with it, including whether a filing has been made.

In announcing the deal, Smithfield's Pope cited Shuanghui's recognition of the US company's "outstanding food safety practices" and said those, as well as management, won't change.

As the nation's chief regulator of meat products, both domestic and imported, the US Department of Agriculture will also have a say in the CFIUS review. That US producers, including Smithfield, export around the world makes it unlikely that safety concerns about imports would be enough to scuttle the deal.

US Representative Randy Forbes, a Republican whose southeastern Virginia congressional district includes the town of Smithfield, said the deal "warrants robust analysis and review to ensure the safety and security of America's citizens as well as the preservation of national economic interests, food safety, and environmental standards".

"I look forward to following that review process closely," Forbes said in a statement.

Andy Levine, a New York-based partner of law firm Jones Day who specializes in mergers and acquisitions, told Bloomberg Television it was unclear if the deal would clear the CFIUS review.

It's "theoretically possible", Levine said, to argue that meat products are a potential national security risk due to food production's role as critical infrastructure. An obstacle for the deal, he believes, could arise from arguments that Shuanghui would have access to sensitive technology.

In China, citizens were outraged in March when over 16,000 rotting pigs were found floating in the Huangpu River, one of Shanghai's main water sources.

Shop online, but with caution

Buying products at unbelievably low prices via the Internet even from well-known and seemingly trustworthy shopping sites could be a frustrating experience at times. For one, online retailers can forget to ship some of the articles you have ordered, or mistakenly - or otherwise - cancel orders placed to cash in on special offers without even bothering to inform you through the phone or e-mail. The frustration increases when a buyer cannot figure out whom to turn to for help.

China Central Television once telecast an investigative program on a consumer's experience of buying a Casio watch from Dangdang.com, which started as a popular online bookstore and later developed into a comprehensive online shopping site.

Discovering that the serial number on the reverse side of the watch was different from the one on the box and that the watch itself was different from the one he had checked out at a Casio outlet, the consumer contacted the after-service center of the website. He was told that they would handle his complaint only after he provided proof, such as an authoritative inspection report, that the watch was counterfeit. The poor man, after being turned down by the local quality supervision department, finally got some help when he approached the Casio company, which verified that the watch was indeed a fake.

The e-commerce industry has grown by leaps and bounds in almost every conceivable sector - from books and home appliances to food products and daily necessities - in the past few years. According to iResearch figures, online trade was worth 1.304 trillion yuan ($212.56 billion) in 2012, a year-on-year increase of 66.2 percent and accounting for 6.3 percent of the total retail sales in China.

But the growth of the industry has been accompanied by rising problems, from the disappearance of group buying websites overnight to the delivery of counterfeit products. It is becoming increasingly difficult for online buyers to protect even their basic rights. For example, since the Law on the Protection of the Rights and Interests of Consumers does not have specific clauses on the fast growing online retail industry, online consumers have a tough time getting refunds or replacements for unsatisfactory products.

Many people prefer online shopping for its convenience - they can buy almost anything without stepping out of their homes and at cheaper prices, too. But many times the quality of the delivered goods are inferior and after-sales service is almost non-existent to help solve consumers' problems.

China's economic growth to remain stable

China's economy will see stable yearly growth of 7 to 8 percent through 2017 without any collapse, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday.

The renowned US bond credit rating agency said at an annual credit risk conference thatChina's new leadership is advancing the country's reform and rebalancing at a measured pace,which can tamp down asset bubbles and prevent a boom-bust cycle.

China's consumer price index, a main gauge of inflation, will also remain low to moderate, and asset inflation in land and housing prices are contained, according to Moody's.

The agency kept China's rating at A a3, but cut the country's credit outlook to stable from positive in April, citing concerns about its opaque local government debt, fast bank lending growth and stalled economic reforms.

Tom Byrne, senior vice president of Moody's sovereign group, said China's fundamentals areunder pinned by its robust economic growth and strong central government finances.

He also mentioned the pace and scope of China's structural reform may not be sufficient overthe next 12 to 18 months to justify a rating upgrade.

Mao Zhenhua, director of the Economic Research Institute at Renmin University, said localgovernment debt is still under control but needs thorough reform in the local liability system toavoid local governments bearing excessive risks.

Moody's said the absorption of local-government associate contingent liabilities will lead to avery gradual decline in the debt burden.

Meanwhile, slower growth and increasing demand for social welfare expenditure will lead tomoderately higher budget deficits, which will impede a more rapid decline in the debt burden.

In the latest official numbers available, China's National Audit Office (NAO) put the debt of localgovernments at 10.7 trillion yuan ($1.73 trillion) at the end of 2010.

Bank loans surged in the first quarter of 2013 and the China Banking Regulatory Commissionin April issued guidance to strengthen the supervision of loans to local governments' financingvehicles.

Imports to shore up shipping

China's growing imports are expected to lift global trade volume, shoring up a shipping industry that has been struggling with difficult market conditions in recent years, a senior official from the world's largest container operator said on Tuesday.

But the industry's troubles are likely to persist due to overall weak demand, depressed freightrates and exacerbating price wars, said Tim Smith, North Asia region CEO of Maersk Line, thecontainer arm of the Danish shipping conglomerate AP-Moeller Maersk Group.

China has displayed "optimistic signs" in terms of global trade demand, as disposable incomeof the nation's emerging middle class has significantly increased in recent decades, Smith said.

The company expects to see "good growth" in China's imports in the near future.

Dubbed the barometer of the global trade, shipping companies are sensitive to changes incargo flow patterns. The Danish company, which ships about 14 percent of world container cargo by tonnage, recently slashed its growth forecast for global seaborne demand this year to between 2 and 4 percent from above 4 percent previously.

Smith said the United States is showing the "strongest growth", despite the negative impactcaused by its fiscal squeeze.

Growth in Europe has been hampered by debts and other problems and is expected to remainflat, he added.

"Europe is dragging down the global economy," Maersk Group CEO Nils Andersen said in arecent interview.

But for the shipping industry, the problem of weak demand has been further compounded bythe oversupply of vessels.

Industry consultant forecasts estimate that the global container fleet will grow 7.5 percent thisyear, well above demand growth of around 5 percent.

This means that 2013 will be the fifth consecutive year to see vessel supply exceed demand,according to industry data.

Industry analysts said these factors will put downward pressure on shipping freight rates,putting the industry deeper into the red.

The Shanghai Containerized Freight Index, which measures the cost of shipping containers from China, has fallen to one of its lowest points in recent years. The current price to transport a container to Europe is less than $700, far below the break-even point for shipping companies.

"The current freight rates are unsustainable. We need a strong push to raise the rates back tothe sustainable level," Smith said.

The Danish company recently announced plans to double the rates from the current level onthe Asia-Europe route, beginning from July 1. But analysts doubt customers would agree to thefull hike.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Premier's first tour a success

During Li's maiden official trip, bilateral relations with the four countries he visited were significantly strengthened and a number of agreements were signed to promote economic cooperation.

Premier Li Keqiang concluded on Monday his first foreign official tour since taking up the post in March. The visit, which took him to India, Pakistan, Switzerland and Germany, has been hailed as fruitful, strengthening friendship and trust and promoting bilateral trade. During the nine-day trip, which started on May 19, Li exchanged in-depth views with foreign leaders, met local business leaders, old friends of the Chinese people and overseas Chinese. The premier witnessed the signing of a number of agreements to promote economic cooperation, including a significant accord for a free trade agreement with Switzerland.


German Chancellor Angela Merkel watches Premier Li Keqiang sign the guest book on his arrival for a dinner at the German government's Meseberg Palace in Meseberg some 60 km north of Berlin, on Sunday. Odd Andersen / Reuters

Monday, May 27, 2013

Apple to reportedly start production for cheaper iPhone in July

A new report suggests that Apple is preparing to begin testing its long-rumored low-cost iPhone sometime next month. According to Japanese website Macotakara, the handset will be available in a variety of colors, including Navy, Gold-Orange, White, Gray, Pink, Green, Blue and Yellow-Orange. Only 1,000 units of the low-cost iPhone will reportedly be produced for field tests in June, with consumer production slated to take place between July and September. Earlier reports claimed Apple would offer the device for as little as $99 or $149 from retailers. It has also been suggested that the cheaper iPhone would feature a shell made of polycarbonate plastic to bring the price down.

Li paves way for German investors

Premier Li Keqiang pledged on Monday more opportunities for German investors while also giving his endorsement for more Chinese enterprises to invest in Germany and the rest of Europe.

Preferential terms will be given to German investors in the logistics, education and medicaltraining sectors, Li said in Berlin, the German capital.

He was speaking on the last day of his tour to Germany, Switzerland, Pakistan and India.

China's focus has changed from large-scale investment in basic manufacturing to a large variety of modern services needed for the nation's unprecedented urbanization program.

Li chose Germany as his first stop in the European Union since taking office in March, aiming toexpand mutual investment between China and Europe.

Ongoing industrialization, urbanization, the spread of information technology use, andagricultural modernization in China will provide huge potential for investment from Germany andfrom the world, Li said.

Commenting on China's economic situation, he assured his audience that the country's growthrate is within a "reasonable" range although it slowed slightly in the first quarter of the year fromthe last quarter of 2012.

Continuing reforms will help the economy remain on a steady course for growth, the premiersaid.

The founding of the China-Germany Chamber of Commerce was also announced on Monday inBerlin. It is set to be one of the largest business organizations for Chinese enterprisesoperating overseas.

After Li met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday, China and Germany said theywill strengthen their partnership in urbanization and cooperate on agriculture, forestry, grain,consumer protection, food safety and eco-labeling.

They also agreed to deepen dialogue between their central banks, and improve the dialoguemechanism between their finance ministers.

In 2012, China became the third-largest foreign investor in Germany in terms of the number ofprojects, trailing only the United States and Switzerland.

Outbound direct investment from China to Germany increased by more than 100 percent lastyear, overtaking Germany's annual investment in China for the first time. Germany was thedestination for more than 50 percent of China's ODI in Europe last year, according to theCommerce Ministry.

China's cumulative investment in Germany accounts for 2 percent of total foreign directinvestment in the country.

Yan Jin, deputy director of the School of International Studies at Peking University, said the twocountries will complement each other much more rather than acting as competitors.

Germany is a good partner to help China sharpen its innovative capabilities, improve thequality of its technology and add value to the manufacturing sector, she said.

"Germany's high-end machinery manufacturing, energy conservation and environmentalprotection sectors can provide more exports of techniques and goods to China, while Chinahas advantages in labor- and capital-intensive industries," Yan added.

Mei Xinyu, a senior economist at the Chinese Academy of International Trade and EconomicCooperation, said: "The premier's visit to Germany is expected to inject fresh impetus intorebounding Sino-EU trade and help the EU economic recovery.

"Most of the existing laws and regulations on China-EU trade were formed in the 1980s, andalready lag far behind rapid developments," Mei said.

"We hope the two countries' leaders can jointly improve the bilateral trade mechanism, refreshthe rules, and accelerate economic cooperation and coordination."

Yan said deepened mutual trust between China and Germany is a priority to speed up theirtrade ties. "Germany is able to set a good example for the EU, in that disagreements andcontradictions can be solved through a dialogue mechanism instead of sanctions," she said.

EU members against punitive duties on Chinese solar panels

BRUSSELS - At least 14 of the European Union's 27 member states have voted against a European Commission proposal to impose punitive duties on imported Chinese solar panels,sources told Xinhua on Monday.

EU trade officials were arranging additional meetings or calls this week to reach out to at leastthree EU members that submitted written "no" positions Friday, said sources familiar with thecase.

Only four members -- France, Spain, Italy and Lithuania -- have been believed to stand on the side of the European Commission while four others have abstained, the sources said.

The positions of two other countries remain unknown, the sources said.

"If taking into account the three or four countries who have very probably voted against the proposal, the number of the no-vote countries could rise to 17," the sources said.

The non-legally binding vote was unlikely to prevent the commission from issuing regulations toslap hefty 47-percent anti-dumping duties on Chinese products, the sources said.

"However, it does weaken its strategic position for the rest of the investigation and for possiblesettlement negotiations," a source said. "The commission might attempt in the next couple ofdays to encourage some EU member states to change their position."

The sources said a number of senior EU trade officials were surprised by the voting results,which would potentially weaken their position in seeking a negotiated solution to the high-profiletrade dispute.

CPC to sharpen intra-Party management

BEIJING - The Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee on Monday published twodocuments to regulate the formation of Party rules.

The two regulations are considered an important move to improve the CPC's internalmanagement and sharpen intra-Party supervision.

One regulation is about which party organs are authorized to draft, approve, publish, amendand abolish party regulations and what procedures they should follow.

The other one details how party regulations should be put on records, reviewed, amended orabolished.

The two regulations are the first formal documents to regulate the formation of CPC rules sincethe founding of the CPC in 1921. They will affect more than 82 million members and four millionCPC organs.

The newly published regulations are based on a temporary regulation on the formation of partyrules issued in 1990.

Prof. Jiang Ming'an, with the Law School of Peking University, told Xinhua that the new CPCleadership expected to tighten up internal management through standardizing the formation ofparty rules and preventing randomness in this aspect.

"Stable and standard management of the CPC, the ruling party, is an important aspect of therule of law in China," Jiang said.

Currently, the CPC operates under a comprehensive set of regulations but some were issuedwithout proper research and some old rules have not been updated to keep up with changes inreality.

In the two regulations, the CPC has aimed to improve transparency in the drafting of partyrules.

Now, before a party regulation is issued, the CPC should solicit opinions from party members,experts and citizens through publishing the draft online or holding consultation meetings.

The new regulations also require the CPC to publish all of its regulations except in a few specialcases.

Prof. Zhen Xiaoying, with the Central Socialist Academy, said more transparency will preventthe CPC from issuing ineffective or empty rules and help reduce bureaucracy.

The new rules also regulate that the CPC should have both annual and five-year plans fordrafting and amending party rules.

This is the first time in CPC history that the Party will have a five-year plan on the formation ofparty rules, Zhen said.

A long-term plan will help the Party to realize the continuity of its rules and improve draftingwork, she said.

Since last June, the CPC has gone through all its regulatory documents that were issued afterthe founding of the People's Republic of China in 1949, in a bid to decide which should remainand which should be abolished. The process represents a first in the organization's history.

The new leadership has promised to "lock the power in the cage" so, first of all, the cage of thelaws and party regulations should be strong enough, said Prof. Ye Duchu, with the PartySchool of the CPC Central Committee.

Building the framework of rules will affect generations and help safeguard the long-term rule ofCPC in China, Ye said.

China closes the gap with Switzerland, Europe

Premier Li Keqiang shares a light moment with some Swiss youths during his visit to the Einstein Museum in Bern, Switzerland, on Saturday. [Photo/Xinhua]
Premier Li Keqiang concludes a historic free trade agreement with Switzerland that promises to tighten ties with Europe, China's largest trade partner.
The free trade agreement between China and Switzerland will benefit both nations and bring the second largest economy in the world closer to Europe, Premier Li Keqiang said during his visit to Bern on Saturday.
Both countries can tap the huge potential of cooperation in the financial, culture and innovation industries, Li said after meeting delegates from the Chinese embassy and enterprises in the Swiss capital.
"China's pace of growth is within a reasonable range. China is now and will be potentially a great and developing market for a long time yet, and this is an important driving force for the world's economy and a positive factor in the maintenance of world peace," Li said.
China and Switzerland signed a Memorandum of Understanding at the conclusion of free trade talks on Friday, lifting cooperation to a new stage.
Premier Li had talks with President of the Swiss Confederation Ueli Maurer in Bern late Friday and they agreed to expand bilateral investment and trade, and improve the cooperation in high-end machinery manufacturing, precision instruments, biological pharmacy, energy conservation and environment protection, and modern agriculture.
They announced the launch of a financial dialogue mechanism, and cooperation agreements in the horologe business, personnel training and climate change.
"China opposes trade protectionism in the European Union and will continue to advocate trade liberalization," said Li, who believes the Sino-Swiss FTA will open up major opportunities for improving economic and trade relationship between China and the whole of Europe.
The FTA "sends a powerful message to the rest of the world" that China rejects trade and investment protectionism, and embraces trade liberalization and facilitation, the premier reiterated.
China is paying close attention to the EU anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations on Chinese exports of solar panel products and telecoms equipment, and wishes to resolve the issues through dialogue and consultation, Li said.
The EU has pledged to impose punitive anti-dumping duties on Chinese solar panel products that will come up to about 46 percent. The preliminary ruling is to be released on June 6, and the final decision expected by the end of the year.
The European Commission reportedly plans to send a formal warning to China that it is ready to levy sanctions against telecoms equipment makers Huawei and ZTE Corp over illegal subsidies.
Premier Li Keqiang says the trade agreement between China and Switzerland will bring China closer to Europe, after signing a benchmark FTA with President Ueli Maurer. [Photo/Xinhua]
The signing of the memorandum means Switzerland will be the first country in continental Europe to reach such an agreement with China.
Premier Li pledged to strengthen and improve the macroeconomic policy, to boost economic growth, control inflation and push forward structural reforms.
China's GDP increased 7.7 percent in the first quarter of 2013 year on year, compared to a growth of 7.8 percent for the whole year in 2012.
Wang Haifeng, an expert at the Institute of Foreign Economics under the National Development and Reform Commission, said that the upgrading of cooperation between China and Switzerland would facilitate economic development in both countries.
"The strong innovation capacity of Swiss manufacturing and service industries will help China accelerate its economic restructuring and speed up the growth pattern transition," Wang said.
China is now Switzerland's largest trade partner in Asia, while Switzerland is China's seventh largest trade partner and the sixth largest source of foreign investment in Europe. Bilateral trade between China and Switzerland reached $26.3 billion last year. Switzerland is among the first Western countries to establish diplomatic ties with China.
Xu Hongcai, a senior economist at top government think tank China Center for International Economic Exchanges, said closer Sino-Swiss relations in the financial sector would benefit the opening-up of bilateral cooperation.
"It is likely to promote the development of an off-shore center for the yuan in Switzerland where the density of banks is the highest in the world. This will help speed up internationalization of the Chinese currency," Xu said.
Switzerland is the first stop in Europe for the premier's nine-day, four-country State visit. He ends his tour in Germany, where he will arrive on Sunday.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

The Xbox One won’t play 360 games – even digitally



It was generally expected that the Xbox One would not be backwards compatible. Despite many hopes to the contrary, it won’t be possible to just toss in an Xbox 360 disc into the Xbox One’s optical drive and have it work. That’s no real surprise either, both from a technical and a business standpoint.

What is surprising, however, is that the Xbox One won’t play any Xbox 360 or original Xbox games, even if they are downloadable.

“Xbox One hardware is not compatible with Xbox 360 games,” a representative from Microsoft told us in response to a question about downloading games from Xbox One’s marketplace. “We designed Xbox One to play an entirely new generation of games—games that are architected to take full advantage of state-of-the-art processors and the infinite power of the cloud. We care very much about the investment people have made in Xbox 360 and will continue to support it with a pipeline of new games and new apps well into the future.”

This means that the nearly 1,000 games currently available for the Xbox 360 will be unavailable to Xbox One users, and it instantly puts the Xbox One’s library at a significant disadvantage compared to what the PlayStation 4 is capable of. Using streaming technology – the same sort of cloud that Microsoft uses – the PS4 could conceivably beam any game ever released on any model of PlayStation to the new console. Granted, the technology is completely different, but the hows and whys won’t matter to gamers.

The news also marks what could be a fundamental shift for Xbox Live Marketplace. Although Microsoft hasn’t gone to quite the same lengths to mine its past library as Sony and Nintendo have, there are hundreds of original Xbox titles available to download to the Xbox 360 via Xbox Live Marketplace today. Microsoft’s early library is nowhere near as robust as its competitors, but the Xbox 360 library is filled with plenty of hits that will now be lost to those on the Xbox One.

Given the growing and lucrative market that springs from re-releasing classics both on disc and via digital download, it is possible that Microsoft will be motivated to find a way to eventually offer at least some of its previous hits on the new Xbox Live store. At the moment, however, that doesn’t seem to be a priority for the fledgling Xbox One.

Vintage Apple computer auctioned off for $668,000

An auctioneer says one of Apple's first computers -- a functioning 1976 model -- has been sold for a record 516,000 euros ($668,000).

German auction house Breker said Saturday an Asian client, who asked not to be named, bought the so-called Apple 1, which the tech company's founders Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak built in a family garage.

Breker claims it is one of only six known remaining functioning models in the world. Breker already sold one last year for 492,000 euros.

It says the computer bears Wozniak's signature. An old business transaction letter from the late Jobs also was included.

The Apple 1, which was sold for $666 in 1976, consisted of only the circuit board. A case, a keyboard and a screen had to be bought separately.

Yiwu Binwang Market

Opened on 29 November, 1995, Yiwu Binwang Market is one of the three main markets of China Commodity City. It is located in No 158, Binwang Road, Yiwu City which occupies nearly 209 Mu and 320,000 m2 building area. Binwang Market, consists of five trade districts and one international trade center, has more than 9000 booths, over 20,000 employees and the main business lines cover commodities of 16 different industries including apparel, knitting underwear, neckties, woolen yarn, towels, leather, textiles, lace, beddings, non-staple foods, dried fruits, confection, roasted seeds & nuts, grocery and furniture etc.

Yiwu Bingwang market has first class hardware facilities and perfect firefighting, water and power supply system. It has set up 3 fire control centers and equipped with over 58(set) firefighting equipments, more than 10,000(set) dry powder extinguishers and other supporting facilities. The firefighting facilities adopt intellectualized fire alarm command control system, intellectualized smoke detection alarm system, auto sprinkler & water curtain system. The power supply facilities adopt dual circuit system and equipped with two 10KV high-voltage Power Distribution Stations and other 75(set) facilities.

District A: the 1st floor is apparel trade district which has 2177 booths and 9600 m2 business area. It mainly deals in the wholesale and retail of apparel. The 2nd floor is high class knitting underwear and beddings trade district which has 1175 booths and 9600 m2 business area. It deals in bras, knitting underwear, wholesale and retail of high class beddings. The 3rd floor is leather garment trade district which has 48 booths and 1008 business area.

District B: the 1st floor is apparel trade district which has 1513 booths and 7024 m2 business area. It mainly deals in the wholesale and retail of trousers & pants and children's wear. The 2nd floor is trade district for beddings which has 193 booths and 7024 m2 business area. It mainly deals in all sorts of beddings.

District E: it's a textile trade district deals in fabrics, accessories and decorative fabrics which has 402 booths and a total market area of 6065 m2.

District C: on the 1st floor, there are 670 booths and 6246 m2 business area for non-staple foods and grocery trade. The 2nd floor is towel trade district which has 188 booths and 6246 m2 business area.

District D: there are 834 booths and 6740 m2 business area on the 1st floor for non-staple foods trade. The 2nd floor is necktie market which has 102 booths and 6740 m2 business area.

Total 9000 odd shops
Main products:
1. garments & underwear
2. necktie & lace
3. bed appliance
4. wool & towel
5. nonstaple food
6. groceries

Yiwu Binwang Market was completed and opened on Nov.29,1995. It covers an area of 209 mu with 320,000 sqm of floor area. seven parts in total Over 20,000 operators are doing their trade in 9,000 odd shops and booths.

Friday, May 24, 2013

Yiwu Shamballa market

Yiwu Shamballa market



You will find tremendous kinds of Yiwu Shamballa in the futian market .Such as the bracelets ,earings and pendants .

For the bracelets , multi color one ,crystal one ,5 balls one ,7 balls one ,England flag one and Eye ball ones you can choose .If you look carefully ,there will be some bowknots between the balls .There are two kinds of ,some is 1 bowknit,some other is 2 bowknots .You can choose the one you prefer .

There are different sizes for the earings .And many shiny colors that girls love.Some of the earings ,has 5crystals in the ball ,some have 6crystals in it .If you want more shiny ,then you can choose the one with more crystals .

Apart from the bracelets ,earings ,don’t forget to take some pendants from the yiwu shamballa market !You can choose a delicate pendants to your friends as a gift .

Also ,you can tell the facotry the idea you have for the shambhala in Yiwu shamballa market.

More information about yiwu shamballa ,pls feel free to contact us .We won’t let you down!

Vodafone shifts UK 4G launch to September, wants the iPhone 5S on its team



Ever since the completion of the UK’s 4G spectrum auction in February, many have been eagerly awaiting news of when Vodafone, O2, and Three will switch on their high-speed data networks. While Three quickly set about quelling anticipation by saying it was in no hurry, and that somewhere around the end of the year was its target, neither O2 or Vodafone committed to a time frame, but before summer was always a distinct possibility.

Now, Vodafone has confirmed to The Guardian it won’t be switching on its 4G service until after the summer, perhaps around September time. The network’s CEO told the newspaper, “We want to be able to launch it when it’s really ready,” before adding the end of summer will be, “A good commercial window for launching it.”

Why then and not before summer? After all, there is only one 4G network operating in the UK at the moment – run by EE – and giving it another few months of exclusivity means it’s another step closer to reaching its one million subscriber target for the year. “We’re convinced our own 4G will be better performing,” said the CEO, referring to EE’s primary use of the 1800MHz spectrum, rather than the 800MHz and 2.6Ghz spectrum obtained through the auction.

The “commercial window” to which he may be referring is the impending launch of the next generation Apple iPhone. The iPhone 5 doesn’t support the new 4G LTE frequencies in the UK, and only works on EE’s 1800MHz spectrum; however Vodafone seems to be banking on the iPhone 5S supporting them. At the moment, Vodafone lists three 4G Ready phones on its website, the Nokia Lumia 920, the BlackBerry Z10, and the Samsung Galaxy S4. A strong line-up, but one which Vodafone seems to think needs the cache of an iPhone before the big switch-on.

O2 still says its 4G service is coming in the summer, and its list of 4G phones has all the above, and also contains the HTC One, the BlackBerry Q10, the Lumia 820 and the Sony Xperia Z. It could also decide to wait for the iPhone 5S, or may take the opportunity to gain an advantage over Vodafone by launching its 4G option this side of August.

China unveils plan to dominate global electronics industry by 2015


By the year 2015, some of the biggest electronics companies might be based out of China… if it all goes according to the country’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s (MIIT) plan, that is. MIIT recently revealed its goal of having five to eight Chinese companies within the next two years with a total sales figure of 100 billion Yuan or $16.1 billion. As of current, only Huawei and Lenovo can boast sales that meet that target.

The agency is encouraging companies to achieve this goal by acquiring names recognizable in the global market via corporate mergers, alliances, and acquisitions; MIIT has long been pushing Chinese companies to actively pursue deals with companies outside the country. This move is part of China’s plan to streamline several major industries, including automobile and shipping, in order to achieve economic growth by squashing overcapacity. MIIT is also encouraging electronics companies to try their hand on IT services while also working on software and hardware in hopes of coming up with innovative products and services.

Lenovo, one of the two most aforementioned Chinese companies, has been listed by both Gartner and IDC research firms as one of the top five PC makers for 2012 in the U.S. market, so it doesn’t come as a surprise that MIIT wants to replicate its success.

How long until China produces the next Samsung?


The biggest trend of the 2013 Consumer Electronics Show, which concludes today, is not Ultra High Definition TVs, connected appliances, or oversized smartphones. It is the rise of the Chinese brands – Hisense, Haier, Huawei, ZTE, TCL, and countless others – many of which pumped up their presence at this year’s CES with Lance Armstrong-level enhancements.

Hisense led the Chinese pack with 9,600 square feet of prime show floor real estate historically inhabited by (conspicuously absent) Microsoft. Gadget maker TCL also made its big debut in the Central Hall of the Las Vegas Convention Center, with a massive, multi-colored booth that overwhelmed those around it, both in size and crowds. In the South Hall, Huawei, the world’s largest telecommunications manufacturer, and ZTE, the world’s fourth-largest mobile phone maker, flexed their marketing might with giant, gleaming-white booths and throngs of pretty people to show off their arrays of smartphones.

The collective message is clear: China wants to take the throne left by Japan and currently occupied by Korea – to strip away its reputation as the source of cheap ripoffs and become a presence in the technology lives of Americans like never before. But is that even possible? And if it is, what will it take to get there?

“Some of the guys in the press have said, ‘Oh, they think they can come in, take the Microsoft space, write a big check to CES, and all of a sudden, tomorrow, they’re a brand.’ That’s not our strategy at all,” said Chris Porter, product manager for Hisense U.S.A. “Our strategy here is to iterate the Hisense core values, and let people know that we’re a technology company, not just a low-cost manufacturer.”

To this end, Hisense – which debuted new 4K, 3D, and Google TV televisions at CES – plans to shift focus from its budget brands, Dynex and Insignia, and put its might behind the Hisense name. The same goes for Huawei, ZTE, and TCL, all of which hope to become household names in the U.S. And that means making great products.

“We recognize that we need to deliver a product that’s desirable and of the right form factor and make; and then, of course, a product that is of good quality and lasts,” said ZTE Product Planning Director Drew Wilken. “So definitely quality is one of our three key tenets.” Customization and affordability fill out the remaining two slots, Wilken said, while showing off the company’s new 5-inch Grand S Android handset on the CES show floor.

TCL made its big splash at this year’s CES with a 110-inch 4K 3D TV, dubbed the “China Star,” which launched with a tie-in to Marvel’s Iron Man 3 that included a man wearing a realistic Iron Man costume. But it’s not the theatrics that matter; it’s the products. On that point, the company says that it already has the quality part covered, and will focus on a low-and-slow rollout to build up its presence in the U.S. market.

“This is a great time to come in,” said TCL Director of Marketing Tom Heffenman. “I mean, nobody knows who we are, so [we] kind of have to come in at a lower end.”

The needs of U.S. consumers are simple, says Heffernman, and TCL believes it has precisely the bargain to fill that gadget void. “They’re looking for affordable, big screen TVs. And TCL not only has that, but they have incredible quality behind it,” he said. “[Consumers] don’t know that at this point. They think they’re just getting a no-name TV. But I think they will be won over.”

While basking in the glow of the China Star, I ran into Aaron Gieser, who runs a high-end home entertainment installation business out of his Southern California home. He said his customers are almost exclusively “super-rich people” – the only customers who actually buy the absurdly priced TVs we’ve been hearing so much about – and he was on the lookout for new inventory. I asked what he thought of TCL’s showcase.

“It looks good,” he said. “The only thing I’ve seen at the whole show is that everybody cares about thinner, apps, and all the bullshit. But nobody cares about picture qualiy. And from the few things that I’ve seen in [TCL's] booth, so far the picture quality is – not perfect – but it’s a skosh better on the motion things.”

And that’s key – the Chinese brands really did show off some impressive products at CES. According to technology analyst Rob Enderle, “the Chinese products were some of the highest quality at the show.”

“I thought the Chinese vendors nearly owned the show this year,” said Enderle in an email. “Huawei had the most interesting smartphone line, and Hisense took Microsoft’s premier spot next to Intel.”

Consumer technology expert David Elrich, who has attended CES for more than 25 years, agreed that the Chinese impressed this year, but believes they still have a long ways to go before we can call it a win.

“These Chinese companies have made tremendous advances in technology and this is readily evident at this show,” said Elrich. “That said, their products are not nearly as good as the Korean versions. They can say they’re there, but there’s still a big gap.”

Regardless of whether the Chinese brands dominated CES, doing so does not make a company successful in the tough U.S. consumer electronics market. That road is much longer, the tolls are incredibly high, and it takes a skilled driver to navigate the twisties. Right now, it’s not clear that any of the Chinese companies will reach the destination alive.

The main difficulty, says Elrich, is that Chinese companies are clueless when it comes to successfully marketing in the U.S. “There is a problem I don’t know if they’ll ever overcome: They are not effective marketing companies,” he said. And if they don’t overcome it, “they will never be a Sony, never be a Samsung.”

Enderle completely agrees: Chinese brands will only succeed in the U.S. “if they learn to market in the Western world like Samsung did,” he said. “Currently, they don’t appear to be on the path to success.”

This bear outlook is hardened by the fact that big Chinese brands have built themselves up in a market where they have an unfair advantage: Both Huawei and ZTE have close ties to China’s communist government; Hisense is, literally, owned by it. According to Elrich, this protected position has instilled a confidence in these companies’ leadership that will shatter under the blinding glare of a free market.

“They are insular and stubborn beasts,” said Elrich. “They really think they have the ability to beat these other companies. They have hubris.”

Marketing is not the only area where these companies are lacking. To truly compete, they will have to beef up their technological advancements. And that means pouring truck-loads of money into their own research and development – something many are not doing.

“Until they get to the point where they spend massive amounts on R&D, they’re never going to be a world-class player,” said Elrich. And that means setting aside at least 5 percent of annual revenue toward building their proprietary arsenals.

Difficult though it may be, all is not lost for the Chinese. And we know this because Samsung was in the same position they are today, not that long ago. During the 1970s and ’80s, Samsung was a “garbage brand,” says Elrich. But then, in the late 1990s, the company got serious about making Samsung a force in consumer tech. It ditched its low-rent subsidiaries, like Samtron, and poured unfathomable resources into R&D and marketing. Today, Samsung has overtaken Sony to become the number one consumer electronics brand in the world.

It is the story of Samsung from which the Chinese brands must learn. Of all the companies I spoke with at CES, Hisense, which brought in $600 million in U.S. sales last year, seems to understand this best.

“We have a realistic three-, five-, and ten-year plan to move this brand from what’s considered to be a best-in-class tier-three price-point brand today to a tier two to a recognized tier one,” said Hisense’s Porter. And each step includes following the trail blazed by Samsung – by cutting off the belly fat of its low-end brands, pumping 5 percent per year into R&D, loading up on patents, pleasing retail partners, and pushing the Hisense name with fiery passion around the U.S. It’s a process Hisense seems to realize will take time and patience.

“We’re a humble brand,” Porter said. “We just can’t come in and immediately take position in market share. We can take market share with price. But then we’re not profitable. And what happens? We’re gone. We’ve seen that from other Chinese manufacturers that come into the United States: Here today, gone tomorrow.”

While some of these companies may disappear overnight, it will take much longer for Hisense, or any other Chinese brand, to achieve its U.S. aspirations. But such a rise could very well happen, just as the Japanese brands stole the crown from the U.S., and the Koreans stole the crown from Japan. And one day, perhaps at the opening of CES 2023, China could pull a coup d’état of its own.

Never forget, said Porter, “history repeats itself.”