Search Results for: hong Kong
10 results out of 961 results found for 'hong Kong'.
FORGING 10 COUNTRIES INTO ONE ASEAN MARKET IS TOUGH TASK FOR SOUTHEAST ASIA COSMETICS INDUSTRY
BY KARRYN MILLER
THE ASSOCIATION of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) covers 10 distinct countries, each with a unique culture, mirroring the personal care product markets of the European Union (EU). However, these nations do share some similarities – and maybe more than northern, southern and eastern Europe, especially when it comes to what ASEAN consumers have inside their cosmetics cabinets.…
CHINA'S WEB PORTALS AND SEARCH ENGINES DRIVE SALES FOR INTERNATIONAL COSMETICS BRANDS
BY MARK GODFREY
WITH some researchers (most recently Credit Suisse’s China analysts) predicting Chinese e-commerce revenues will grow 100%-a-year to 2015 it’s not surprising international brands are scrambling to understand and tap the dynamics of the country’s web portals. Top of the local business-to-consumer pile Taobao has evolved from an eBay knock off to a massively popular resource for wholesalers and B2C operators.…
SECOND TIER FIRMS TAKE AIM AT BIG FOUR ACHILLES HEEL IN CHINA
BY MARK GODFREY
WITH the fast-growing Chinese economy looking increasingly to overseas expansion and foreign mergers and acquisitions, it is not surprising so-called second tier accountancy alliances such as BDO and Crowe Horwath are keen for a piece of the action in China.…
BANGLADESH GOVERNMENT MOVES TO REFORM TANKER BREAKING SECTOR
BY RAGHAVENDRA VERMA
ENVIRONMENTAL concerns and the health hazards faced by the workers engaged in the ship and tanker breaking industry of Bangladesh have forced its government to reform controls of this most dangerous service. Dhaka has made administrative changes and proposed a new law that could force the international oil companies to share the costs of cleaning up the chemical and other waste left by this beach-based industry.…
VIETNAM: NEW MARKET FOR WESTERN LUXURY CLOTHING BRANDS
BY KARRYN MILLER
ON first impressions Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s two largest metropolises, seem a far cry from the fashion capitals of the world. Their wide boulevards overflow with heavy traffic and are mostly lined with small family-owned stores and restaurants, rather than well-known brands.…
JAPAN PROPERTY MARKET WITHSTANDS EARTHQUAKE DEVASTATION, ALTHOUGH NUCLEAR FEARS COULD HIT INVESTMENT
BY JULIAN RYALL
NEARLY two months after northern Japan was shaken by a magnitude-9 earthquake and then inundated by a tsunami that in places reached a height of 38 metres and devastated the Fukushima nuclear power plant, the final toll has not been calculated.…
CHINA LOOKS FOR URANIUM SUPPLIES AS IT PUSHES AHEAD WITH NUCLEAR EXPANSION
BY MARK GODFREY
IF uranium suppliers are looking for reasons to feel confident that China will continue its hunt for nuclear fuel supplies worldwide, they should remember how deeply the country is invested in this process. Indeed, it has been a sign of how hungry China has become for uranium that even private firms in this officially communist country are being allowed to hunt for overseas uranium assets.…
TOUGH EU BIOCIDE RULES DETER ASIAN COATING EXPORTERS FROM SEEKING EUROPEAN SALES
BY WANG FANGQING, MINI PANT ZACHARIAH, KARRYN MILLER and KEITH NUTHALL
EMERGING market coatings exporters sometimes claim tough environmental rules in rich jurisdictions are nothing but a form of protection. And while such arguments can always be contested, it is certainly true that the European Union’s (EU) ongoing and longstanding biocide review will throw up obstacles to Asia-Pacific coatings manufacturers wanting to secure sales in Europe.…
EU ORDERS SPECIAL CHECKS ONHONG KONG AND CHINA KITCHENWARE
BY KEITH NUTHALL
SPECIAL restrictions have been placed by the European Union (EU) Council of Ministers on the import into the EU of polyamide and melamine plastic kitchenware from China and Hong Kong because of health concerns. The EU fears that potentially carcinogenic chemicals are leaching from these products into the foods they contain in Europe’s kitchens.…
CHINA AND INDIA PHARMCEUTICAL SECTORS PLOT DEVELOPMENT OF ORIGINAL MEDICINES FOR GLOBAL MARKETS
BY WANG FANGQING and MINI PANT ZACHARIAH
THAT China and India sport efficient pharmaceutical sectors producing generic medicines with vigorous efficiency has long been a fact of life for the global pharma sector. But the ambitions of their domestic industries to produce original medicines that can seize world markets is a newer phenomenon, but a serious one – multinational pharmaceutical companies should take note.…