Archive for the ‘business’ Category

The most deserving company

12.05.09

Have you heard about InTrust Domains before? If not, InTrust Domains is a very helpful website when it comes to domain backorder. In our world today, thousands of valuable high traffic, low number of characters, and brandable domain names expire daily and InTrust Domains works with top registrars to help you register these desired domains. InTrust Domains has established a place in buying expired domains with them. Making them as the top choice of many domain buyers from all over the world.

Their best company asset would probably be, almost 80% of the backordered domains are catch and awarded to future owners at a very short period of time. This company enable their customer to enjoy other things than watching their desired domains until it reaches expiration. In other word, this company does all the job in finding your desired domain. As soon as your desired domain available it will be delivered to you without any hassle. While some domain backorder company has auction on all domains, Intrust Domains is 100% free auction. No need to worry that your desired domain will be lost. InTrust Domains deserves all the good praise from satisfied customer from all over the world. I recommend to give it a try.

Companies to learn from

08.12.09

Each year, Asiamoney has asked fund managers across the region to nominate the companies they believe have the highest quality of management — in terms of strategy and corporate governance. We have now tabulated all the results over the years to reveal the best of the best in each country and explain what sets them apart from the pack.

The Asiamoney Best Managed Companies survey has been running since 1991. Its purpose is to identify those stocks in Asia that are best thought of by the international investment community on account of the quality of that company’s management.

Their consistent approach— asking fund managers to judge companies on the basis of their ability to pinpoint and execute corporate strategy and explain that strategy to investors — has allowed the companies themselves and the investing community to gauge corporate performance over the short term and the longer term.

In this article, they reveal which companies have performed best over the life of the polls to date. To calculate the individual rankings, we gave five points to each company that topped a poll each time it did so. We gave four points to second-placed companies and so on. We then added up the points scored.

Singapore Airlines, for example, has scored 30 points — the equivalent of six first places. That is an impressive performance given that the survey has only been run seven times (it was suspended in 1994 for reasons that nobody can now remember). The individual country results are reported in the following pages.

They could not, though, resist the opportunity to then pull that data together and create a top 10 table. Sadly, while this was fun to do, the table is a statistician’s nightmare and of little practical use.

The first problem in trying to compare the performance of the companies across countries is that some companies have had less opportunity to run up a score than others.

Only Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines have been ever present in the poil. Korea, Australia and Taiwan have only missed a single year, but China and New Zealand are relatively late entries.