Account Manager

Company Introduction:
XXX is a world leader in enterprise infrastructure software, delivering powerful standards-based platforms for building enterprise applications and managing Service-Oriented Architectures even in heterogeneous IT environments.

Job responsibilities:
1.Promote and sell XXX products and service to the targeted accounts: China Post and China Custom
2.Achieve or exceed the sales quota
3.Build up and/or maintain a good reputation of XXX among the targeted accounts and control the relationship with them
4.Find, plan and execute business opportunities which will turn out to be real revenue

Applicant requirements:
1.Bachelor’s degree in computer/telecom/electrical engineering or relevant field
2.Minimum 5-year’s working experience and 3 years or above sales experience in IT industry;
3.Must possess experience in software selling or solution selling
4.Good sales achievements and solid relation with targeted accounts is preferred;
5.Multinational company experience is preferred.
6.Strong sense of responsibility, willing to take more job beyond own scope to help to team to success
7.Hard working, result orientation, team spirit and willingness to take challenges.

Education: Bachelor or above

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to: ‘topjob_it075bj@dacare.com’

Market Research Manager

Company introduction:
As one of the world’s leading pharmaceutical companies,our business is focused on turning good ideas into innovatives,effective medicines that make a real difference in important areas of the healthcare.

The Market Research manager position is charged with providing the brand team with penetrating and actionable insights gleaned through research, data and analyses. As a core member of brand team, the incumbent will support marketing managers by identifying business issues, designing research project, analyzing the results and providing actionable insights. In addition, the manager is responsible, by working with marketing team, in planning, executing and managing the market research budget for each brand.

Key Responsibilities:
1.Summarize insights learned from past research and agree with marketing on issues to be addressed
2.Identify and agree research projects to be done and associated cost, which is built into the brand action plan
3.Create RFP with brand managers and identify vendors to be invited
4.Independently design and manage market research projects,
5.Effectively communicate with key stakeholders on the research insights
6.Identify and agree with marketing on actions to address key business issues.
7.manage and build the Market research Repository
8.Proactively sharing learning cross brands,
9.Lead market research workshops
10.Build strong relations with high quality external vendors

Qualifications:
To qualify, candidates must have:
1.Bachelor required, but Master preferred in marketing, business administration, statistical analyses Advanced degrees desirable
2.Work Experience: Minimum of 3 years in role with brand management or marketing research responsibilities with min 1 year in pharmaceutical industry
3.Work Requirements: working knowledge of key China pharmaceutical data souces,such as Xiehe and IMS
4.Demonstrate strong skills in communicating with and persuading others
5.Cross functional experience in marketing,strategic planning.MBA is highly desirable
6.Hihgly skilled in powpoint,Excel.Ability to run functions/programming in Excel or other statistics

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English) to: ‘topjob_mkt146sh@dacare.com’

E-mail leads Morgan Stanley analyst to resign

SINGAPORE Andy Xie’s resignation as Morgan Stanley’s chief economist in Asia last week followed an e-mail message in which he characterized Singapore as an economic failure.

Xie, a Shanghai-born economist who worked at Morgan Stanley for nine years, sent the message to his colleagues after attending the International Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings last month in the Southeast Asian island state.

In the e-mail message, he questioned why Singapore had been chosen as host for the conference and said that delegates “were competing with each other to praise Singapore as the success story of globalization.”

Xie also made unsubstantiated allegations about the use made of Singapore’s financial services by corrupt officials and businessmen in Indonesia.

The $118 billion Singaporean economy has experienced three recessions since the 1997 Asian financial crisis, and is expected to grow by as much as 7.5 percent this year.

The city-state is grappling with growing competition from China and India, the most populous and second most populous countries, respectively, where labor costs are less than a quarter of those in Singapore.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore said last month that the city- state’s economy could sustain annual growth of 3 percent to 5 percent for the next 10 to 15 years as the country expanded industries from information technology to tourism.

Singapore is ending a four-decade ban on casinos. The government plans to triple tourism revenue to $19 billion and double visitors to 17 million by 2015.

Officials from the public relations departments of the Monetary Authority of Singapore and the government information service declined to comment on the contents of Xie’s message. They also declined to be identified.

When reached on his cellphone Monday, Xie said that he had not decided on what he would do next.

“I’m not at liberty to comment on anything,” Xie said. “I’m in Guangzhou, and I’m taking a break on top of a mountain. It’s quite nice here.”

Morgan Stanley confirmed the contents of the e-mail message, but the firm, based in New York, said that it did not elaborate on the reasons behind departures of employees.

“This is an internal e-mail based on personal suppositions and aimed at stimulating internal debate amongst a small group of intended recipients,” Cheung Po-ling, a spokeswoman for Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, wrote in a statement. “The e-mail expresses the views of one individual, and does not in any way represent the views of the firm.”

“Morgan Stanley has been a very strong supporter of Singapore, and has a great deal of respect for Singapore’s achievements,” Cheung said.

Morgan Stanley has handled $1.5 billion in merger deals in Singapore this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg News.

It advised Temasek Holdings, the Singapore government investment company, in its purchase in March of a 9.9 percent stake in Tata Teleservices, based in Mumbai, India.

Xie worked at the corporate finance division at Macquarie Bank in Singapore before joining Morgan Stanley.

Morgan Stanley star analyst Andy Xie resigns

BEIJING (Reuters) – Morgan Stanley’s star Asia Pacific economist, Andy Xie, has resigned and is expected to embark on a new career elsewhere, the U.S. investment bank and an industry source said on Sunday.

Xie, whose widely-read reports on the Chinese economy have boosted Morgan Stanley’s image in the region, tendered his resignation last week and had left the firm as of Friday, said Hong Kong-based spokeswoman Po-ling Cheung.

“An internal memo was sent out (on Friday) informing employees that he has resigned from the firm,” she said by telephone.

“He has left the firm,” she added.

Xie confirmed the news by telephone, but declined to say what he would do next.

A source close to Morgan Stanley said that Xie would likely join another firm in the industry in the near future.

U.S. Insurers Press China for Access

BEIJING — American life insurance companies are pressing China to make good on WTO commitments to give them equal access to its booming market, arguing that they can help meet the needs of a fast-aging population, the head of an industry group said Tuesday.

Insurers want Beijing to remove obstacles that limit their ability to set up nationwide operations and cap foreign ownership of a Chinese insurer at 50 percent, said Frank Keating, president of the American Council of Life Insurers.

He said China’s life insurance market, now about one-tenth the size of the $540 billion-a-year U.S. market, could grow in coming years to become the world’s biggest.

Keating said his group pressed regulators in meetings this week to bring China’s licensing system in line with its promise to the World Trade Organization to treat foreign and Chinese insurers equally.

China’s current system requires foreign insurers to apply to open new offices one at a time, while Chinese competitors can win permission for a nationwide operation, Keating said.

China promised in 2004 to end such geographic restrictions and officials acknowledge that they are no longer required by regulations, but regulators still use the old system, he said.

“Our message here was a gentle chiding message that as this process goes forward it is important to be prompt, to be fair and to provide a competitive market for all,” Keating told reporters.

China faces a Dec. 11 deadline for meeting commitments to open its banking, insurance and other financial industries to foreign competitors.

Trade groups say Beijing has met most of its commitments to repeal formal barriers to foreign competition. But they say that in some areas, companies are still waiting for promised regulations that are meant to put them on an equal footing with Chinese competitors.

Keating said he told Chinese officials that foreign insurers can help Beijing cope with the needs of a rapidly graying population by selling life insurance, annuities and other retirement-related services to millions of families who can afford them.

That would let government focus on helping the poor, he said.

Keating, a former governor of the U.S. state of Oklahoma, said he plans to meet with U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson in hopes of having equal treatment in insurance made part of a U.S.-Chinese dialogue on economic matters.

The dialogue was launched last week when Paulson visited Beijing.

Keating also said that while Beijing has met its WTO commitment to let foreign investors own up to 50 percent of a Chinese insurer, his group wants to see that limit raised to allow full ownership.

The American Council of Life Insurers represents 377 companies that sell life insurance, annuities and pensions, including about 20 that operate in China.

U.S. insurers accounted for $1.5 billion of the $61.6 billion in life insurance premiums paid in China last year, according to Brad Smith, the insurance group’s vice president for international relations.

The Chinese market for insurance has been growing by 15 percent to 20 percent a year over the past decade, Smith said.

Smith said he couldn’t estimate what share of China’s insurance market foreign companies might be able to capture. But elsewhere in Asia, foreign companies account for 25 percent of Japan’s insurance market and 13 percent of South Korea’s, he said.

Insurers hope to see Beijing create tax and other incentives for families to invest in annuities, long-term health care policies and other retirement services, Keating said.

“That will free the government to focus on the 60 million poorest people,” he said. “That’s good public policy.”

Calpers looks at investing in China

The California Public Employees Retirement System, the largest US public pension fund, is considering investing for the first time in Chinese companies, aiming both to capitalise on the country’s booming economy and to raise its exposure to emerging markets.

Such a move by Calpers, which has not invested any of its $208bn (€164bn) portfolio in Chinese companies because of poor corporate governance standards, could have a ripple effect on other US public pension funds and increase demand for Chinese shares.

In an interview with the Financial Times, Russell Read, Calpers’ recently appointed chief investment officer, indicated that the fund could begin by investing in Chinese companies with US or international listings through American Depository Receipts and Global Depository Receipts.

He said the pension fund’s staff could recommend the strategy to Calpers’ board in the coming months.

Mr Read, who shaken up Calpers’ investment strategy since joining in June, said the issue of how to invest in China and other emerging markets was a primary focus for the Sacramento-based fund. “Investing properly in the emerging markets . . . is fundamental to our investment success,” he said.

Calpers, which has a reputation as a tough guardian of shareholders’ rights, has so far excluded China from its list of investable markets.

The list is updated yearly and is up for re-evaluation by the Calpers board in February, although permission to invest in ADRs and GDRs could come sooner.

In spite of China’s fast-growing economy, its capital markets have proved disappointing to foreign investors. The local stock markets have been volatile and are closed to all but a small group of investors picked by the Chinese government.

However, several big companies, including the state oil giants Petrochina and CNOOC and telecommunications operators China Telecom and China Mobile, have listings in Hong Kong and trade ADRs in the US.

Calpers has some real estate holdings in China. Other US public pension funds also have a degree of exposure to China, although in most cases it appears to be limited to real estate.

Citigroup, Northern Trust named China NSSF custodians – source

BEIJING (XFN-ASIA) – China’s National Social Security Fund (NSSF) has named Citigroup and Northern Trust as its custodian banks for overseas investment, an unidentified fund official said.

‘Citigroup and Northern Trust have been appointed,’ the official told XFN-Asia, adding that an official announcement will be made soon.

By the end of 2005, NSSF had total assets of 211.79 bln yuan.

Xiang Huaicheng, head of the NSSF, said earlier that the agency plans to invest up to 800 mln usd overseas by the end of the year, mainly focusing on Hong Kong as well as US and European markets.

China’s ICBC: The World’s Largest IPO Ever

Well it’s official. On Sept. 27, China’s mega-lender and biggest mainland bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China [ICBC], disclosed details of its upcoming $19 billion share offering in Hong Kong and Shanghai that will go down in history as the world’s biggest initial stock listing. And judging by the overwhelming investor responses to previous share offerings by China Merchants Bank and Bank of China this year, get ready for a stampede.

ICBC certainly has a lot going for it. It is the mainland’s biggest bank with $815 billion in assets and some $415 billion in outstanding loans. And it is No. 1 in corporate and personal banking in China and has as branch network of some 18,000 branches, according to an initial sales document posted on the Web site of the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. [The ICBC offering documents can be found here.]

ICBC is forecasting a 47% increase in earnings this year to nearly $7 billion. “The bank has a very strong franchise in China,” says May Yan, vice-president and senior credit officer with Moody’s Asia Pacific in Hong Kong. “It’s the biggest in almost every banking business.”

INVESTORS LINING UP. And thanks to government help, both in outright capital injections and purchases of non-performing loans, ICBC’s balance sheet is a lot stronger than in recent years. Its capital adequacy ratio is 10.7% and the ratio of dud loans to its overall loans has fallen to 4.1% as of June of this year from 21% at the end of 2004.

Small wonder that ICBC has attracted the likes of Goldman Sachs (GS), German insurer Allianz (AZ), and American Express (AXP) as strategic investors. They have collectively spent $3.8 billion for an 8.5% stake in the bank ahead of ICBC’s offering that will start trading on Oct. 27. Another $3.7 billion will be sold to an array of corporate investors such as China Life Insurance, Hong Kong tycoons and the investment arms of governments such as Kuwait, Qatar, and Singapore.

The rest will be up for grabs among mainland investors for the Shanghai portion of the offering of about $5 billion and global investors via the Hong Kong side, where the plan is to raise $14 billion. Judging by recent offerings, the ICBC listing will be heavily over-subscribed. Two big mainland state-owned banks, China Construction Bank and Bank of China, had little trouble selling a combined $22 billion-plus worth of share offerings over the past year in listings in Hong Kong and Shanghai [see BusinessWeek.com, 5/31/06, “A Golden Age for Chinese Banks”].

DOUBLE DIGIT DEPOSITS. If you want a China play with broad exposure to the mainland economy, it’s hard to pass up big banks that lend to so many different industries and will benefit from the country’s prospering and growing middle class. “The financial sector is really one sector that you need to invest in” to capitalize on the China growth story, Tat Auyeung, a fund manager at Apex Capital Management in Hong Kong, told BusinessWeek.com recently.

Also, the economy grew 10+% during the first half of 2006 and deposits are rolling into Chinese banks at a double digit pace [see BusinessWeek.com, 9/5/06, “Chinese Bank Stocks: What, Me Worry?”].

Chinese bank stocks have generally done well post-IPO, too. China Construction Bank’s share price has appreciated more than 40% since its IPO last October. China Merchants Bank shot up 25% in its first day of trading on Sept. 22. The betting is that ICBC could well come out of its IPO with a market capitalization of $180 billion-plus.

China Grants QFII License To 2 More Foreign Institutions

SHANGHAI -(Dow Jones)- China’s securities regulator approved Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management Co. and UBS Global Asset Management (Singapore) Co. to invest in China’s yuan-denominated securities listed on the exchange.

The China Securities Regulatory Commission disclosed the information on its Web site Friday.

The program to invest in yuan securities called Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program, or QFII, was launched in the middle of 2003 to introduce foreign funds into China’s underdeveloped domestic capital market as part of efforts to liberalize its capital account.
-Sun Yan contributed to this story; Dow Jones Newswires; 8621 6120-1200; yan.sun@dowjones.com

Morgan Stanley obtains China banking license

Oct. 2, 2006 (China Knowledge) – Days after launching the first U.S.-registered fund to invest in China A-shares, Morgan Stanley has made a move to acquire a coveted Chinese commercial banking license.

The world’s largest securities firm by market value has taken over Nan Tung Bank, and in the process, gained a foothold in the China’s US$5.1 trillion banking industry. Now a wholly-owned subsidiary of the New York-based firm, the Zhuhai-based Nan Tung Bank was formerly funded by a Macau-based unit of Bank of China Ltd..

Following an approval by the China Banking Regulatory Commission, the acquisition will give Morgan Stanley a banking license to offer foreign-currency denominated services, including deposits, mortgage loans, and trade finance to individual and corporate customers based primarily in the Pearl River Delta region of Guangdong Province.

Morgan Stanley believes the license would propel it ahead of its investment banking rivals, such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Merrill Lynch & Co. Inc. and Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

The securities firm is yet to win a license to offer local-currency denominated services. However, by fully acquiring Nan Tung, Morgan Stanley will be eligible to apply for a local-currency license immediately, rather than having to wait for five years should they have started their operations in China from scratch.

Nan Tung Bank, which is one of the few Chinese banks open to foreign ownership, serves customers mainly from Hong Kong and Macau.

Since joining the World Trade Organization in December 2001, China has allowed foreign banks to conduct local-currency business with companies in 25 cities. The government will also remove all geographic and business restrictions on overseas lenders by the end of this year.

Foreign banks are allowed to own up to 25% of local lenders, with a single financial institution restricted to no more than 20%, which is 5% higher than in 2003.