Dragon Capital (Arehada) appoints new CFO

Dragon Capital Corporation (TSX: AHD – News), a miner and producer of zinc, lead and silver in China, today announced the appointment of Graham Warren as Chief Financial Officer. Mr. Warren will replace Oliver Xing; the appointment is subject to approval of the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Graham Warren is a Certified Management Accountant and his previous experience includes various assignments as CFO for a number of public and private companies. He is especially familiar with business in China as a director (and former CFO) of Hanfeng Evergreen (TSX) and a founder of Changfeng Energy Limited.

“We believe we are significantly strengthening our management team with the addition of Mr. Warren,” said Christopher Harrop, Chairman of Dragon Capital. “On behalf of the Board of Directors, I would also like to extend our gratitude to Mr. Xing for his contribution to Dragon Capital during its formative period as a Canadian public company.”

About Dragon Capital (Arehada)

Through its 100% owned subsidiary Arehada Mining Corporation, Dragon Capital is engaged in the exploration, development, extraction and refining of zinc, lead and silver in Dongwuzhumuqinqi, located in Inner Mongolia, China. Arehada produces zinc and lead concentrates, which are then sold to smelters in China.

Arehada is currently constructing its own zinc plant with a designed processing capacity of 100,000 tons per annum. The first phase, with a rated capacity of 50,000 tons per annum, will produce zinc oxide and sulphuric acid.

For further information

Christopher Harrop, Chairman, Dragon Capital Corporation, Tel.: (416) 350-5133, Email: porrah@gmail.com
Martti Kangas, Investor Relations, The Equicom Group, Tel: (416) 815-0700 x 243, Email: mkangas@equicomgroup.com

Legal Recruiting in Mainland China

(by Asian Legal online & DaCare Legal)

Over the last year or so the number of clients, both private practice and in-house, seeking to recruit lawyers for their operations in Beijing and Shanghai has seen a steady increase and this is expected to continue throughout 2004. Mainland China is a vast and complex market for most businesses and the position is no different for law firms operating there.

Recruiting the right people for offices on the ground is very difficult and for law firms it is often the case of making the upfront investment in people with the returns on the investment lagging far behind. Not only do language skills play a big part but also experience in the local markets is increasingly important. Beijing and Shanghai are different legal markets and if a client is recruiting for example in Shanghai their clear preference is to have someone already in the local market. The trend in the past has been to relocate people with the necessary skills from Hong Kong and, while this will continue, there will be a developing market in both Beijing and Shanghai for people already on the ground moving firms.

The development of local law firms is also worth noting. The writer on a recent trip to Shanghai met with a number of successful local firms who also face complex recruitment issues. While not an immediate trend, it is envisaged that major local players will eventually seek to recruit lawyers from Hong Kong for their offices in Shanghai or Beijing. The practising rules and CEPA already envisage this kind of movement with the only obstacle being the discrepancy in salary levels.

The Mainland in-house market will also continue to develop at a pace. Of all the legal recruitment markets over the last year, the in-house market has held up well. There is an ever-increasing need to recruit good quality local lawyers for in-house positions with multinationals. There already exists a well-organised in-house lawyers group whose members are being presented with an ever-increasing range of in-house opportunities.

There is no doubt that the legal market in Mainland China will continue to grow – the challenge for everyone involved will be how to attract the right people and how to make a return on the investment involved – there will be no easy fixes in this regard.

Search Firm: DaCare Legal Search
Website: www.dacare-legal.com

Office: shanghai, beijing, china
Keywords: legal recruiting, law jobs, attorney jobs in China

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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Programmer Analyst ¡ªWeb Applications

Job Description
Responsibilities
1. Reporting to the project manager, the incumbent will develop and maintain the Company¡¯s intranet/internet portal sites and web based applications systems
2. Conduct system testing and implementation of the final system
3. Perform database administration tasks
4. Coordinate scripting ang programming efforts with users and other outside parties

Requirements
a) University Degree in Computer Studies or equivalent
b) Minimum 3 years¡¯ experience on web development
i. Must have experience in Microsoft SharePoint Portal Server and Visual Studio . NET development for wed applications
ii. Familiar with XML,ASP,ASP.NET,JSP,VB and Java
iii. Work with most databases (Oracle, MS SQL Server and MS Access)
c) Vast knowledge of web navigation methodology and familiar with content management systems such as OotNetDuck
d) Knowledge in DHTML &Flash design will be definite advantage
e) Able to work under pressure and tight schedule
f) Self-motivated and work independently
g) Excellent interpersonal and communication skills

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to:
‘topjob_it111sh#dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)

China’s new weapon: Low executive pay

BEIJING–Will globalization someday stick it to the man?

Excessive executive pay has been a hot-button issue in American politics for years, but worldwide factors could one day make it a liability on the balance sheet.

As companies in countries like China and India move away from performing behind-the-scenes functions, they’re selling products and services under their own brand names directly against U.S. and European counterparts.

Since high-level executives and other white collar professionals in Asian companies typically make less than their Western equivalents, these companies potentially will have a cost advantage.

How or even whether the differences in executive salary will impact the market remains unclear: multinational companies are hiring their own executives in these regions, too, after all. Nonetheless, the numbers are tough to ignore: engineers aren’t the only “talent” that costs less in developing markets. Executives cost a lot less, too.

Shanghai’s SunTech Holdings, for instance, has moved from being a bit player in solar panels to becoming one of the largest manufacturers in the world. Most of the company’s panels end up overseas, and it can produce those panels more cheaply than American competitors for various reasons. Among them: the company isn’t lavishing huge compensation packages on its executives.

“There aren’t 10 executives in the company that make more than $200,000,” said Steve Chan, vice president of business development at SunTech Power Holdings.

U.S. execs make far more. In a survey conducted by Forbes last year, the magazine found that the average big company CEO made $3.3 million in salary and bonuses.

It trickles down from there. Chinese engineers make about one-third to one-half the salary of their U.S. counterparts, said one executive who runs Asian operations for a U.S. high tech firm. Marketing execs can make about half as much as their stateside colleagues.

“If you have one (marketing manager) that makes about $100,000 in the U.S, you can hire one here for $50,000,” he said.

Professional services firms also pay less than U.S. counterparts, said Ted Dean, managing director of BDA, an analyst firm specializing in Asian markets. New college graduates hired by services firms might make $400 to $500 a month, or $4,800 to $6,000 annually. A well-regarded person with years of experience might make $30,000 to $50,000 annually. In the U.S., the same person can graze around the $100,000 mark.

While executive compensation can be absorbed somewhat in manufacturing companies, it can be pronounced in purely white-collar service operations. Panorama Media Holdings, based in Beijing, sells high-resolution photos to advertising agencies, similar to Getty Images and Corbis.

Panorama, though, can sell its products for an eighth the price, according to Wayne Shiong, a partner in venture firm WI Harper, an investor in Panorama. Wherever Getty charges $50,000 for services, Panorama can charge 50,000 RMB (China Yuan Renminbi), or about $6,600.

Panorama primarily sells its photos to Asian advertising agencies. Shiong, though, said that the multinational photo outfits have not reacted to lower their prices for the local market. Additionally, Panorama is contemplating taking out office space in New York to test out the international opportunities.

The Spartan start-up
The pay discrepancy starts during the start-up phase. Founding CEOs of some Chinese start-ups deliberately take low wages to keep costs down, according to Shiong and others. The CEO at a company that’s just finished a Series A round of funding might pay himself 500,000 RMB a year, or about $67,000.

Documents filed by Chinese companies with the Securities and Exchange Commission back this up. Focus Media Holding, which specializes in outdoor advertising kiosks, paid $100,000 to its two executive officers in 2004 combined. In 2005, the year the company went public on Nasdaq, Focus had 13 executives and directors and the total pay for all of them for the year was $512,947.

In 2005, the company’s four executives and directors pulled in $100,000 combined. The four executives and directors of Trina Solar Limited pulled in $128,039 in 2005. None had severance packages, the filing states.

Compare that to a pre-public U.S. company. DivX, which makes media software, paid its top five execs about $1 million in 2005, the year before it went public. Shutterfly paid its top five people $1.1 million the year before an IPO–only one made under $210,000.

Chinese executives make their wealth in stock options, which U.S. execs get, too. Suntech founder Shi Zhengrong is considered one of the richest individuals in China, with a net worth exceeding $2 billion, according to various studies. Focus awarded 22.5 million in options to executives and employees in 2005. Salaries also rise after an IPO, but generally not to U.S. levels. One reason, of course, is that the cost of living is lower. Someone making $50,000 in China will likely be able to retain a driver and other household help. That’s not enough to rent a decent one-bedroom apartment in many American cities.

Conversely, to expand internationally, Chinese companies have to hire U.S. and European executives, who will command U.S. salaries. Suntech’s Chan said that will be an issue for his company. In the first few years of the company’s growth, the salespeople came out of China. Expanding internationally will also take quite some time.

Victor Canto, chairman of La Jolla Economics, added that many executives in Asian companies will also leap to U.S. competitors to get salary raises. “That will decrease the disparity,” he said.

Still, in the end, multinationals of course have some of their higher-level people in more expensive countries, so a discrepancy should be expected.

“Foreign vendors might be able to achieve comparable manufacturing costs, but they still will have a huge R&D lab in Finland,” said BDA’s Dean.

Deloitte appoints CEO for Asia Pacific region

Chaly Mah, the CEO of Deloitte Singapore, has been appointed as the regional managing partner and CEO for Deloitte, Asia Pacific and a member of Deloitte’s global executive.

Mah’s appointment means he has joined a team put in place by James H. Quigley, the new global CEO of Deloitte whose term also commenced on June 1 2007.

Jim Quigley succeeded William G. Parrett, who has served as CEO for the past four years.

In relation to the Asia Pacific region, Mah said, ‘Our region’s prospect is very bright, with countless opportunities in the market to seize.

‘Our current economies are incredibly strong, including Japan, the world’s second largest economy, and China and India, two of the world’s fastest growing economies, not to mention Vietnam, whose recent entry into the WTO has propelled its growing presence on the global stage.’

Mah will continue to serve as CEO of Deloitte Singapore and Deloitte Southeast Asia which includes Singapore, Guam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam.

Sandmeyer Steel Names China Representative

PHILADELPHIA, PA Sandmeyer Steel Company has announced the appointment of ITC Group as the Company’s Representative Office and Sales Support Center in China. ITC, with offices in Guangzhou and Hong Kong, will assist Sandmeyer in penetrating the Chinese market for stainless steel and nickel alloy plate products.

ITC’s Chairman, Dr. Stanley Yuen, and Sandmeyer Steel’s CEO, Ronald P. Sandmeyer, Jr., finalized the agreement during Sandmeyer’s visit to Beijing, where the Company and ITC’s sales team exhibited at AchemAsia 2007, a trade show that targets the Asian process equipment industry market.

Family-owned and managed for three generations, Sandmeyer Steel Company is recognized as a leading producer of stainless steel and nickel alloy plate products used in the process industries equipment market. ITC was founded in 1993 by Dr. Yuen. Since then, ITC has been pursuing international trading opportunities between China and the rest of the world, providing sales and marketing services, all import/export logistics, and after-sale support.

Chairman of Danone JV in China Resigns

SHANGHAI, China (AP) — French dairy and beverage maker Groupe Danone SA said Thursday that the chairman of its troubled joint venture, Wahaha, has resigned.
Danone said in a statement that it accepted Zong Qinghou’s resignation and appointed the venture’s French vice chairman, Emmanuel Faber, to replace him.

The announcement came just days after Danone filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles over alleged illegal sales in China by companies it said are run by Zong’s relatives.

Danone has accused Hangzhou Wahaha, one of China’s biggest domestic beverage makers, of illegally selling products identical to those sold by the companies’ joint ventures.

Zong lashed back, accusing board members of Paris-based Danone of “insulting and framing” him.

“It was very hard to work with people who do not understand the Chinese market and culture,” Zong said in an open letter distributed via e-mail. “They only want to take the profit and benefit instead of taking on risks and carrying out their responsibilities,” he said.

“Therefore, I decided to resign from the joint venture,” he said.

The feud between Danone and Wahaha surfaced several months ago, when the Zong publicly rejected a plan by Danone to buy out some of Wahaha’s assets, accusing the French company of attempting a hostile takeover.

Danone earlier filed for arbitration in Stockholm to help resolve the dispute.

Danone and Wahaha began their joint venture in China in 1996 and the beverage operation has become one of China’s largest.

Shares in Danone rose 0.5 percent to 57.36 euros ($77.53) in Paris.

UTStarcom shows China chief the door

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. — After completing a strategic-alternatives review launched in October, network equipment vendor UTStarcom Inc. has rejected proposals for selling the company or splitting it apart. But the company has replaced the chief executive of its China operations, Ying Wu, over what the board considered “differing opinions regarding the company’s strategy to enhance shareholder value,” according to a statement.

Hong Lu, CEO of UTStarcom, will oversee China operations until a new chief is found for that business.

UTStarcom is headquartered in Alameda, Calif., but was founded in China and has continued to realize most of its network equipment sales there. The company has developed a broad range of network infrastructure equipment for both wireline and wireless networks, ranging from cellular basestation controllers to optical transport and Internet Protocol switching systems. It made a concerted effort to break into the North American market following the telecom crash of 2001 but gained only moderate success, even as sales stagnated in China. Layoffs in 2005 and 2006 led to October’s strategic review.

In a prepared statement, UTStarcom chairman Thomas Toy said the best method of maximizing shareholder value was to “move forward with the company as it exists today.”

Investment approval for firms eases

CHINA eased the approval process for state-owned companies investing abroad as the government tries to narrow the surplus of incoming payments from overseas.

State-owned companies investing less than US$30 million in overseas resource-exploration projects may apply directly to the central government’s National Development and Reform Commission, the agency said on its Website yesterday. Other types of cross-border investments have a threshold of US$10 million. Approval previously had to go through local-level affiliates of the agency.

So You Want To Be A China Lawyer?

An interesting article from China Law Blog:

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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Nearly every week, I get a couple e-mails and/or calls from earnest law students seeking pearls of wisdom regarding how to break into international law or China law. I usually talk about the need to learn as many languages as possible and about the benefits of having lived overseas. A couple years ago, I gave a speech on international law careers at Indiana University School of Law and I am scheduled to be on a international law career panel at Seattle University Law School later this month. I am an expert on these issues only to the extent that I am in the business and I have very definite ideas as to what it takes.

I have no idea if my ideas on this would hold up to analysis, but I at least now know my views are part of the mainstream. Chris Carr over at the CalPolyMBA Blog just did a post, entitled “Critical Success Qualities for Expat Managers in China,” summarizing what CEOs look for in choosing their China managers. This list comes from the book China CEO: Voices of Experience from 20 International Business Leaders (of which I have heard many good things and I have just started it). Interestingly (but not surprisingly) the traits these CEOs seek in their ex-pat managers for China are pretty much the exact same traits I find necessary to be a good international lawyer. Here is the list, with my comments in italics.

1. Technical and Corporate Expertise: Select people with a rock-solid professional background and an excellent knowledge of the company.

Yes. In the legal arena, this means get smart people.

2. International Expertise: A posting in China becomes vastly more manageable after an assignment either in an Asian location or another developing market, or both.

Absolutely. The key here is that the person who has spent time in another country tends to be better equipped to deal with other countries, including those countries to which he or she has never been. I have seen this time and again with both lawyers and clients. We have many clients who when their business dried up in one country moved nearly effortlessly to another country. We also see domestic companies that simply cannot make the leap to go international at all, when they really should. What you learn in one country (but obviously not everything) does help you in another.

3. Multicultural Mindset: When selecting an executive for an overseas posting, look for someone with an adventurous spirit, a sense of humor, and an open mind.
I completely agree and this applies to lawyers as much as to anyone else. In an article I wrote a long long time ago on doing business in emerging market countries, I stressed (and stressed again …. so I was repetitive back then):

Doing business in an emerging market means taking nothing for granted. I have a mantra for my own legal work in these countries that translates well to the business world: “Assume nothing, but assume that you are assuming things without even realizing you are doing so.”
Things will be different. Very different. Things you take for granted in your home country might not exist in the emerging market country. Things you take for granted in your home country might be the exact opposite in the emerging market country. Things you think will be totally different in the emerging market country may be exactly the same. Things you thought you knew about emerging market countries based on what you know from another emerging market country may be completely different in a neighboring country, or even in another region within the same country.

The principle, one more time: Keep an open mind, and assume nothing.
4. Commitment to Learn: Learn from those around you. Listen to your employees, JV partners, clients, and customers.

Of course.

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Sponsor Link: DaCare Legal Search (China)
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5. Humility: Be humble and avoid using an authoritarian style. Influencing and coaching is the way to get the best out of your Chinese employees.
Yes. This is also the way to get the best out of the lawyers in other countries with whom you will be working.

6. Strength: Be unyielding in defending core corporate values and culture.

Yes. And in the legal context this means doing things by the law, even if you see others around you not doing so.

7. Patience: Be patient; use a step-by-step approach in China, not a Big Bang approach.

I will borrow again from my emerging markets article:

Exercise Extreme Patience. This principle stems from the maxim that everything takes twice as long as you think it will. If it takes twice as long in the West, triple that in emerging market countries. You’ll go in both as a businessperson and a teacher—and in both roles, the learning curve of your partner will almost certainly take way more time to deal with than you think.

For example, many emerging market countries have a history where “bad business” meant “thinking long-term.” A year or two after the fall of Soviet communism, I was involved in a matter where an investor put $250,000 into a Russian joint venture. The business very quickly was making good money and all indicators pointed towards steadily increasing profitability. But, quite quickly, the Russian company stole the $250,000. Was it so irrational for him to think so short term in a country where the government and tax systems had such a history of unpredictability?
8. Speed: Be flexible and quick. Stay well informed; the business environment in China is in a constant and rapid flux, probably much more so than in other markets.

This is true of international law as well, and if one is going to practice in this area, one has to enjoy and thrive on constant change and even constant uncertainty. I was talking the other day with my friend, Dan Hull, lawyer extraordinaire at Hull McGuire, and he was telling me how he has abandoned all pretext of what he calls “PCness” and he now just tells potential hires there that they had better be prepared to work tirelessly just to keep up. I can certainly vouch for Dan being right when it comes to practicing international law.

9. Guanxi-building: Build your guanxi not only internally (with subordinates, peers and superiors) but also externally with clients, suppliers and government officials). A strong guanxi network is a fundamental element of your success in China.

As a lawyer, both you and your practice will benefit by your doing more than just staying in your office poring over law books. Get to know your clients, your fellow lawyers, good people in the industries in which you are working, and treat them with respect. I see this as basic good business for anyone.

So you want to be an international (or China) lawyer? Conform to this list.