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tv   Bloomberg Business Week  Bloomberg  March 19, 2016 7:00am-7:31am EDT

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carol: welcome to bloomberg businessweek. defending yourself from online defamation. let's meet the editor. carol: we are here with the editor of bloomberg businessweek. you write about a capital mystery. meaning capital expenditure. we look at why companies
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are investing last in software , the percentage of total investment on an annual basis is down. we treated as a sherlock holmes mystery, complete with an illustration of sherlock holmes and we look at why that may be. people say corporate taxes are too high. it is a variety of reasons. it has led to stagnating wages, stagnating standards of living, productivity down. economists are trying to figure out why that is. there is the possibility that companies are returning money to investors rather than buying equipment. it is a problem. it has added up to slow growth. a story involving online defamation, writing about how she was defamed online.
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ellen: this is a story that took courage to write. wrote a story about how she went on line one day and got to a website that labeled her as racist, dom, bloated on fried chicken. it went on and on. it went back to a guy she interviewed for a story about chinese companies buying u.s. shells in order to get listed on the exchanges. she has been indicted -- he has been indicted on a variety of crimes. he has been indicted for a number of crimes that have nothing to do with this. uneng the way, what d realize, there was nothing she
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could do about it. there was very little recourse for her. every time she would check and search her name, there it would be at the top of search results. it has gone on for a couple of years. if you search on general election, -- general electric, it is different than it was. a company our readers are fascinated with. it is an iconic company. itous for jack welsh heading up. having gone through rough times in recent years, pulled down by its unit, ge capital. jeffrey has been the ceo for quite a while. he has hit on what will be a solution. he is trying to turn the company into a software company.
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he hopes it will be in the top 10 software companies in 2020. there are signs the company is changing the way it does business. it is a real transformation. he has been in there since 2001 and people have been waiting for something to happen. have given up. in the last year, they are outperforming the s&p, he is getting rid of financial assets, that caused trouble during the financial crisis. they focus heavily on the industrial side in the industrial internet. they have developed an operating system to connect this stuff. we associate ge with refrigerators and jet engines, and jeff comes in and he wanted to become a software company. people by surprise,
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especially the people they try to hire. company,up a software started calling people, people did not know they were there. they did not know ge was in the software business. it is a battle they have been fighting. you write that everyone knows about the internet of things. you talk about ge doing the internet of very big things. software is crucial to that. develop jet engines and how are generators. it is not like an iphone. customers keep these things for years, for decades. especially for a power generator. money ge makes is in the service contracts. this is a way to optimize. called predicts.
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's is like apple's ios, google android system. it is for big machines. it is more secure. they collect all of this data and they analyze it. they hope to do this not just for the comers, but for other big manufacturers. david: ge moving to boston, is the apprentice for that a desire to attract more tech talent? whole thing is trying to attract more millennials. millennials will not want to work in the suburbs. they want to work in the city. they have gotten rid of annual reviews and all of the stuff welsh and back to before that. ge had a different image.
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had to change their image and make themselves more appealing to the younger people and hopefully more software literate people. they have had a great commercial running. when you see it, you did not know it was general electric. >> i got a job. all of this writing code. that technologist, despite what they have done, it is an uphill battle. kids and young people would rather develop apps. they don't think ge is cool. that is the making fun of themselves but a knowledge inc. -- but acknowledging that they are a software company. that is the ticket. next up, what to do when you or your business is the
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target of a social media smear campaign. netflix house of cards may have up its sleeve. rap video explaining beijing's development strategy. ♪
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david: welcome back. carol: if you have been struggling to understand china's long-term strategy, never fear, beijing has its animated rap for you. ♪ it in thisd about week's economic section.
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it talks about reform and prosperity. pretty amazing. waving is armdad raisin in the air. it is a special kind of propaganda. carol: it does deal with serious issues. we talk about the transition the chinese economy is undergoing. is a consumer economy and you see it in this video. dune lawrence gives us a life-hand account of her and career after a series of defamatory articles were written about her.
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dune: i got this e-mail racism, got into the nitty-gritty, sources say you have gained weight due to stress, the important questions. few days later, out came this story. david: one of the first things that comes up is a photograph of you, colored in red. began here andl persists until today. how did it come about and what was he trying to do? exploiting the protections that online content gets. it is good. created the internet as we have it today. liable for some random content that someone else posts. carol: are you racist? dune: i am not racist. u take kickbacks?
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dune: no. have written an article about all of the harm that this has caused. you are not suing him. you decided not to do that. naive. was very i should have known more about this. i did not realize that i would short ofmpossible suing him to get the stuff taken off-line. it seemed egregious to me. twitter, facebook, to them, that is censoring the internet. i thought it would go away. it did not go away. even after he was indicted, it still did not go away. this guy is under criminal indictment.
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you are not alone. dune: i am the least of his victims. a rediscovered masterpiece by leonardo da vinci. russian billionaire and a well-known art dealer. he is a swiss businessman. he runs his business out of the freeport, a tax-free business storage for high-priced art. you have the russian billionaire bouvier of selling them are, marking up the price cketing the difference. has brought the attention of pasta cutera in monaco and prosecutors in the u.s. who are
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scrutinizing some of these deals. they're looking to see if this could be constituted as fraud. you could be seeing a misunderstanding of what the relationship between a buyer and the seller is. that is at the heart of this dispute. what role do our dealers and if you call them our dealers play in these high-priced, often no paperwork involved deals. these paintings are in the hundreds of millions of dollars. david: when it comes to the investigation of this, is the u.s. looking into it? keri: monaco arrested and has charged yves with money laundering and fraud. prosecutors have opened up an inquiry looking into the deals, is in thebouvier
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middle of. it could lead to charges of him or other people. carol: there could be other clients involved. keri: my guess is there is going to be more and more complaints coming out of the woodwork now that it is more public. also, now that we have u.s. authorities looking into it. carol: if you have watched house of cards, i have your next fix. "occupied." thrillers a political from norway, 10 episodes. airing in the u.s.. is it doing well? >> it is doing well. it is getting a time of buzz and claim. it is set in off slow in the near future. it falls in a climate science
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fiction. it involves oil drilling and gas drilling. stopping doing this and russia does not want them to stop. thus in sue's the political drama. carol: we will take you inside america's deepest mine shaft. david: what happens when your bonus is tied to the price of --. carol: redefining how men by close. ♪
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david: bonuses are often tied to a company's performance.
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the university of arizona does this in an interesting way for its football and basketball coaches. it is tied to the price of oil. carol: that could be good or bad. david: we have seen the price of oil decline. those bonuses have dropped 38%. universities are trying in termst top talent of coaches. they are trying to figure out different ways to do it. this is a way of transferring the risk to the coaches. these bonuses given by anonymous donors to the university, it really stands out as a school that does this differently than other institutions. you can see what it is like to be lowered into the deepest mine in america. almost 7000 feet down from the surface. wet. really hot and
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it is like you are in a tropical rainstorm. they board through an ancient lake and it is pouring into the mine shaft. they have been trying to figure out how to stop the water from coming in. they had to build a huge pumping system to shoot it out. carries the heat of the molten core. they have to have a huge refrigeration system to cool it. lots of ways to get hurt. tinto takes things very seriously, takes safety seriously. i never felt in danger. david: what is the bet they are taking? matthew: they are going to be about $7 billion in by the time they get their first ounce of copper out. the bet is the historic crash we
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prices isin metal going to rebound. they will have timed it perfectly, they think. by the time it is in production, the surplus will be in the way and demand will be rising. it is a bet. any will be $7 billion into analysts are saying i would not be doing that. carol: the hope is there will be demand at some point down the road. of what the respective happens to china. they are hooking this to the growing demand in the u.s.. they think by the time this is all capacity they will produce asthma much copper as the u.s. imports. takeshink wind turbine several tons of copper, lithium-ion batteries take a lot of copper. that is what they are hanging this on. brod: have you heard of
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tailors? carol: sam explains. retailers are online who have a swagger to their identity. they mirror the 20 something-year-old man in america. they specialize in one kind of garment, shorts, rugby shirts, they mostly sell online. they have become successful. carol: even the names for some of these garments is fun. it is a growing business. sam: companies are taking advantage of how easy it is to be an e-commerce retailer. any garment and there is a company that wants to sell it to you with irreverence, wit, and silliness. they are speaking the same language as their customers.
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we are here with elle n. and has to do with robots in europe. ellen: the number of elderly are going to increased romantically over time. decided one of the solutions is robots. they are investing in companies that create robots. the idea is a robot will escort you from your room in a nursing home to the dining room. it will help you with your shopping, will have a touchscreen. they are creating a wide variety, hoping robots help patients without timers. a millioneat yourself
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times, the robot will not be annoyed. david: how often will they have these companions? senses some of these projects will come out in the next few years. david: an article about do-it-yourself -- types. ellen: the idea is you don't have to live in new york city or london to be a quant or outer.ng, using we call them free range quants. we interviewed a guy who has created his own algorithms, written his own code. are doing the kind of trading that big operations in new york are doing. can do it too.e
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they use open-source coding. carol: diy for coders. they are giving the established elite a run for their money. aren: some of the traders like -- they cannot compete with us. you may think that, but there are smart people everywhere. in the company section, you have a story about coca-cola and what they're doing with milk. -- thisan interesting is an area they are interested in working in. ellen: we call it designer milk. lower lactose, high calcium, lower sugar. coca-cola is collaborating with a dairy company. is doing this.
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the idea is that you are more fancy milk.y one of the reasons coca-cola is doing it, soft drink sales are down. people are trying to avoid sugary drinks. those specialty milk sales are up, something like 20%, as regular milk and soft drinks go down. for me, it is skim milk and nothing else. david: thank you. ellen: thank you. carol: bloomberg businessweek is on stands now. we will see you next week. ♪
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♪ haslinda: hello, and welcome to "high flyers," the show of the gives you a 360 preview of asia's business elite. today, we need a man who dreams in a big way. he built one of the largest private banks in indonesia, but is not stopping there. he is constantly looking for ways to pay back society. let's meet --

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