A grass-roots campaign to snuff out Indonesia’s ubiquitous tobacco
advertising is gaining traction online as thousands of anti-smoking
advocates urged the Ministry of Technology and Communication to ban
cigarette ads in mass media.
Indonesia is the only country in Southeast Asia, and one of the few
in the world, to still allow cigarette ads on television. Tobacco ads
can air between 9:30 p.m. and 5 a.m. and are barred from showing people
smoking or cigarette boxes under the country’s 2002 Broadcast Law.
The regulation has been seen as a limited attempt to rein in tobacco
companies, which spent $202 million in 2010 advertising on everything
from concert stages to motorcycle taxi stalls. But the law, which still
allows print, radio and television ads, as well as corporate sponsorship
and billboards, doesn’t go far enough, said Usman Hamid, co-founder of
Best opportunity to read fresh news about celebrities and their lives. smoking celebrities always present interest to everyone, either they accept their behavior or not.
Wednesday, June 26, 2013
It's the dangerous new way teens are getting drunk -- and it's going viral. Now doctors say it could be deadly.
It's called "smoking alcohol." You don't drink the booze, you inhale it. Sounds bizarre, but those vapors give you an instant high.
Here's the problem: Doctors say it's incredibly dangerous and can be extremely addictive. Pure alcohol shooting into your brain. Doctors are issuing an urgent warning: Don't try this at home.
Chances are your teenager
It's called "smoking alcohol." You don't drink the booze, you inhale it. Sounds bizarre, but those vapors give you an instant high.
Here's the problem: Doctors say it's incredibly dangerous and can be extremely addictive. Pure alcohol shooting into your brain. Doctors are issuing an urgent warning: Don't try this at home.
Chances are your teenager
Friday, June 21, 2013
Domestic tobacco market specialists are cautious
An opinion survey , which was undertaken on RusTabak portal in October
2011, showed that tobacco market specialists see the following main reasons for
the success of Donskoy Tabak: aggressive advertising targeting young people
(40.35%), export to unrecognised republics (26.68%), and credit terms for trade
partners (24.95%). Another 2.39% of respondents saw the reason in “dumping”,
while 3.04% chose “all the above”. Only 2.59% attributed the company’s success
to “other business practices”. These disheartening results from a survey of
specialists gives evidence that the picture portrayed by the factory for
investors is very much different from what experts see.
The real situation at the factory is such that its
future is more than uncertain, regardless of whether it is sold now. It remains
to be seen whether a decline will begin under its present owner or whether
growth will continue, but it is quite obvious, that the new owners of Donskoy
Tabak, whoever they are, will inherit a number of unsolved problems and
questionable business practices and thus may eventually see the return on their
investment being different
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
Thursday, June 6, 2013
Marlboro maker Altria plans electronic cigarette as sales drop
Altria
Group Inc., the largest U.S. tobacco company, said Thursday it will
introduce an electronic cigarette this year amid a continuing slump in
sales of its top-selling Marlboro brand.
Some of Altria's competitors -- including Lorillard Inc., with its blue eCigs brand, as well as smaller rivals such as NJOY -- have been quicker to seize on the rising popularity of e-cigarettes.Altria Group is alos producer of Bond cigarettes and Chesterfield cigarettes .
E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that heat liquid nicotine in a disposable cartridge and produce a vapor that's inhaled. Consumers can buy refill cartridges in various flavors, often at a discount to what traditional cigarettes cost.
Altria's move could cannibalize sales of Marlboro and its other brands, but analysts say the company could grab a significant piece of the business in short order given its size and resources.
"We are pleased to announce another step in our efforts to address the changing preferences of adult tobacco consumers," Marty Barrington, Altria's chairman and chief executive, said Thursday. "In the second half of this year, Altria's subsidiary, Nu Mark, plans to introduce an electronic cigarette."
Despite increased use of e-cigarettes, they remain a relatively small part of the overall market, according to industry experts.
Some anti-smoking groups and lawmakers have called for more regulation of e-cigarettes. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been reviewing the product category.
Altria reported Thursday that its cigarette sales volume fell 5.2% in the first quarter. The Marlboro brand's sales volume dropped 5.5%.
The company, based in Richmond, Va., said its first-quarter net income grew 16% to $1.4 billion, or 69 cents a share, from $1.2 billion, or 59 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue declined 2% to $5.5 billion.
Some of Altria's competitors -- including Lorillard Inc., with its blue eCigs brand, as well as smaller rivals such as NJOY -- have been quicker to seize on the rising popularity of e-cigarettes.Altria Group is alos producer of Bond cigarettes and Chesterfield cigarettes .
E-cigarettes are battery-powered devices that heat liquid nicotine in a disposable cartridge and produce a vapor that's inhaled. Consumers can buy refill cartridges in various flavors, often at a discount to what traditional cigarettes cost.
Altria's move could cannibalize sales of Marlboro and its other brands, but analysts say the company could grab a significant piece of the business in short order given its size and resources.
"We are pleased to announce another step in our efforts to address the changing preferences of adult tobacco consumers," Marty Barrington, Altria's chairman and chief executive, said Thursday. "In the second half of this year, Altria's subsidiary, Nu Mark, plans to introduce an electronic cigarette."
Despite increased use of e-cigarettes, they remain a relatively small part of the overall market, according to industry experts.
Some anti-smoking groups and lawmakers have called for more regulation of e-cigarettes. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been reviewing the product category.
Altria reported Thursday that its cigarette sales volume fell 5.2% in the first quarter. The Marlboro brand's sales volume dropped 5.5%.
The company, based in Richmond, Va., said its first-quarter net income grew 16% to $1.4 billion, or 69 cents a share, from $1.2 billion, or 59 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue declined 2% to $5.5 billion.
Favor Legalization of Pot in USA
For the first time ever, a solid majority of Americans supports
legalizing marijuana for recreational use: 56%, according to the most
recent Rasmussen poll. Support for legalization has been growing steadily since the 1990s; in 1994, just 25% were in favor.
In November 2010, California residents voted on a ballot initiative to legalize the possession and sale of marijuana. Although the measure failed to pass — 46% to 54% — the fact that the initiative made it onto the ballot and garnered that much support was itself historic. Indeed, it was fear of the initiative’s passage that led then California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to decriminalize possession of up to 1 oz. of pot shortly before the vote — a move that was intended to bleed voter support from the ballot question. Had it passed, California would have been the first state to legalize the drug outright. In 2012, Colorado and Washington State will vote on total legalization.
Because support for legalization tracks closely with age, change would seem inevitable in the long run. The most recent Gallup poll found that 62% of people ages 18 to 29 favor full legalization, compared with 31% of senior citizens. As far as medical marijuana goes, Americans are nearly unanimous in their approval: 70% or more support it.
In November 2010, California residents voted on a ballot initiative to legalize the possession and sale of marijuana. Although the measure failed to pass — 46% to 54% — the fact that the initiative made it onto the ballot and garnered that much support was itself historic. Indeed, it was fear of the initiative’s passage that led then California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger to decriminalize possession of up to 1 oz. of pot shortly before the vote — a move that was intended to bleed voter support from the ballot question. Had it passed, California would have been the first state to legalize the drug outright. In 2012, Colorado and Washington State will vote on total legalization.
Because support for legalization tracks closely with age, change would seem inevitable in the long run. The most recent Gallup poll found that 62% of people ages 18 to 29 favor full legalization, compared with 31% of senior citizens. As far as medical marijuana goes, Americans are nearly unanimous in their approval: 70% or more support it.
Marijuana, Market Forces and Why Colorado’s New Pot Law Could Actually Be a Black-Market Boon
“What’s the price of an ounce of marijuana in Colorado these days?” I e-mailed a friend who I thought might know. The reply: for the top quality stuff, about as much as a share of Apple
stock. Apple shares were going for $528 recently, which raises an
interesting arbitrage possibility: What’s your guess about the price of
Apple and pot a year from now, when Colorado’s legalization of personal
pot possession establishes a legitimate commercial market for weed?
My play would be to go long on Apple and short hemp.
Colorado has made the possession of marijuana legal but hasn’t figured out much else. Looking at it from a classical economics perspective, the legitimization of marijuana raises the issue of what happens to the demand, quality, supply and price of a product that has now become legal after decades underground.
My play would be to go long on Apple and short hemp.
Colorado has made the possession of marijuana legal but hasn’t figured out much else. Looking at it from a classical economics perspective, the legitimization of marijuana raises the issue of what happens to the demand, quality, supply and price of a product that has now become legal after decades underground.
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