- The Rising Mountain of Debt May Be the Next Crisis
- SEC May Reinstate Rules for Short-Selling Stocks
- Major Nations Should Back the Dollar: Japan
- Earnings Season: A Likely Game-Changer
- Slideshow: Best-Selling Fourth of July Fireworks
- US Home Prices Seen Plunging 40% Overall: Analyst
- OPEC President Says Is Satisfied with Current Oil Price
- Divisions Dominate as Third Quarter Begins
- A Day at Wimbledon '09
- Fireworks At Pharma's Market
- Value of Warren Buffett's Annual Gift to Gates Foundation Falls Along With Berkshire's Stock
- Michael Jackson: The Music And The Money
- Five Stock Picks for This Market
- Realities of the New Obama Refis
- Weak Dollar Means Gold at $1,040: Strategist
- Court Ruling Could Mean Trouble for TiVo
- Lance, Please Back Out Of Tour
- TeleMedicine Gets An Apple App Store Facelift
- Tropicana Las Vegas emerges from bankruptcy
- Carstens: Mexican economy to shrink 5.5 percent
- Caribbean leaders voice concern on ALBA alliance
- Ruling favors Antiguan receiver in Stanford case
- Communities bug out over cuts to mosquito control
- Brazil court orders release of airline magnate
- Kan. gov. likely to get OK for internal borrowing
- JetAmerica discount airline delays launch
- Cummins reopening Ind. plant, while another closes
HONG KONG - Hong Kong's South China Morning Post newspaper has named a top Wall Street Journal editor as new editor-in-chief.
The appointment was announced Thursday by Kuok Hui Kwong, chief executive of South China Morning Post Publishers Limited.
Reginald Chua, 48, most recently served as deputy managing editor of the Journal, based in New York.
Before that, he was editor of the business paper's Asian edition between 1997 and 2005, leading its coverage of the region's financial crisis, China's economy and other stories.
He also previously reported for Reuters and the Singapore's Straits Times newspaper.
Chua's appointment comes after the resignation of editor C.K. Lau.
The paper, Hong Kong's largest English-language daily newspaper, also announced the appointment of David Lague as managing editor. Lague has served as managing editor of the Far Eastern Economic Review and worked for the Sydney Morning Herald and the International Herald Tribune.




