Jumat, 31 Mei 2019
Stocks slump after Trump expands trade war to Mexico - ABC News
https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/stocks-slump-us-expands-trade-war-mexico-63399646
2019-05-31 17:35:00Z
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Are You Ready for Amazon or Comcast to Be the Next Big Wireless Carrier? - Gizmodo
While the T-Mobile–Sprint merger still hasn’t gotten the green light from the Justice Department, the FCC has already approved the deal and as part of the FCC’s stipulations, T-Mobile/Sprint would be forced to sell off Boost Mobile. However, the more important question is trying to figure out which company would be interested in buying Boost and making a bigger push into the wireless market.
According to a recent report from Reuters, it seems one potential candidate is online retailer megacorp Amazon, which, according to sources familiar with the matter, is not only interested in buying Boost Mobile, but possibly acquiring wireless spectrum that the new T-Mobile/Sprint would need to also divest as part of the merger.
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Currently, it’s not entirely clear why Amazon is suddenly interested in operating its own MVNO (mobile virtual network operator). However, it seems one of the big lures of the deal would be the ability to use T-Mobile’s wireless network to enhance its service for at least six years. And with Google already operating its own MVNO in Fi, it probably shouldn’t be a surprise that Amazon is entertaining the idea of doing the same.
That said, Amazon may not be the only company eye the potential future sale of Boost Mobile; based on a report from Bloomberg, it seems Comcast is also interested in acquiring Boost Mobile if and when a T-Mobile/Sprint merger gets approved.
For Comcast, the deal makes a lot more sense, as it’s already a player in the wireless space thanks to Xfinity Mobile. Currently, Xfinity Mobile’s service relies on a network of wifi hotspots and cell coverage that runs off Verizon’s 4G network, so the addition of Boost Mobile, its estimated 7 million subscribers, and added wireless spectrum would give Comcast and Xfinity Mobile a lot more resources to work with.
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But where things get really interesting is, according to another Bloomberg report, in order for the Justice Department to approve the merger, T-Mobile/Sprint may have to help create a whole new national wireless carrier to ensure that even after the companies merge, there will be four major wireless providers instead of just three.
This would mean simply renting bandwidth from one of the other carriers wouldn’t be enough, as the new entity would need to operate its own network, including all the equipment, wireless spectrum, and cell towers necessary to make that happen. That would be a huge endeavor, even for companies with deep pockets like Amazon or Comcast.
If that did happen, it would mean living in a world where the U.S.’s four big wireless carriers are AT&T, Verizon, new T-Mobile, and either Comcast or Amazon. For a lot of people, that’s a chilling thought. Sure, right now it’s just speculation. But what if? Which company do you think would make a better—or worse—nationwide wireless carrier: Comcast or Amazon?
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https://gizmodo.com/are-you-ready-for-amazon-or-comcast-to-be-the-next-big-1835147723
2019-05-31 14:49:00Z
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Uber Lost $1 Billion In 1st Quarter, Hopes Profit-Slashing Price Cuts Ease Up Soon - NPR
For most companies, losing $1 billion in a quarter would be a big disappointment. But Uber's first report as a publicly traded company was actually better than it had warned investors to expect.
The ride-hailing and food-delivery giant brought in more than $3 billion in revenue in the first three months of 2019 — a 20% jump from the same quarter a year earlier.
Before going public earlier this month, Uber had told investors to be prepared for an even larger loss in the first quarter. Now, it's telling them it expects the price-cutting competition that has hurt its profits to ease up soon.
Uber has burned through money for years by spending heavily on growth — offering financial incentives to attract new riders and drivers, and taking on the costs of expanding into new markets around the world. So far, that growth has never translated into profits.
Uber's IPO did not go well. Despite pricing its shares relatively conservatively, at least compared with early expectations, the company saw its stock drop immediately, and it finished day one lower than it started. Since then, Uber shares have never sold at the value set for the initial offering.
Wall Street liked what it saw in Uber's first earnings report. Its stock was up more than 1% in early trading Friday.
Uber's earnings report shows the company continues to expand rapidly, especially in Uber Eats, its food delivery branch. In South America, however, the company saw revenue shrink as it faces intense competition from rival Didi.
In the U.S., meanwhile, Uber is facing off with its smaller competitor Lyft.
Around the world, competition in ride-hailing is driving down prices and contributing to Uber's losses. In the earnings call on Thursday, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said he expects Uber and Lyft, at least, will be easing off their price-slashing battle soon.
"The competition is going to be more healthy," he said. "It's going to be based on brand and product and technology, which we think is the right way to compete, versus throwing money at the problem."
He also acknowledged that Uber has faced headwinds in the U.S. due in part to the tremendous damage to the brand over the past few years — marked by sexual harassment allegations, reports of illegal business practices, data breaches and other scandals.
https://www.npr.org/2019/05/31/728576269/uber-lost-1-billion-in-1st-quarter-hopes-profit-slashing-price-cuts-ease-up-soon
2019-05-31 13:54:00Z
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Solving The Tech Industry's Ethics Problem Could Start In The Classroom - NPR
Ethics is something the world's largest tech companies are being forced to reckon with. Facebook has been criticized for failing to quickly remove toxic content, including the livestream of the New Zealand mosque shooting. YouTube had to disable comments on videos of minors after pedophiles flocked to its platform.
Some companies have hired ethicists to help them spot some of these issues. But philosophy professor Abby Everett Jaques of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology says that's not enough. It's crucial for future engineers and computer scientists to understand the pitfalls of tech, she says. So she created a class at MIT called Ethics of Technology.
As artificial intelligence continues to creep into our lives, Jaques worries about privacy. She's especially concerned about facial recognition "tracking us continuously and pervasively."
Studies have already shown that facial recognition misidentifies dark-skinned people. Google came under fire when its photo app labeled black people as gorillas.
"I'm an ethicist, and I'm especially interested in these questions around ethics of things we make," Jaques says.
In one exercise, Jaques has her class of 30 students play a game that's designed to make them think about how to achieve fairness.
Jaques places a large paper bag at the front of the room. The students don't know its exact contents — only that there are treats inside. And they have to figure out how best to share them.
"All right, let's hear some ideas," Jaques tells the class.
One student suggests they dump everything out of the bag and figure things out from there. Another says they should put someone in charge of deciding what to do.
After considering a dozen ideas, the class votes to do it this way: Each student is randomly assigned a number and allowed to pick something based on their number once the bag is opened.
Jaques empties the bag. Turns out it was filled with assorted baked goods, including rice crispy treats and chocolate chip cookies.
One student has a concern: "Sorry, can we like determine who's vegan here?"
The class didn't account for different dietary needs. And that's exactly what Jaques wants the students to think about.
"Our system didn't protect a certain important minority," she says. "So we're trying to build in something afterwards [to account for that]."
That resonates with Cel Skeggs, a senior studying computer science:
"I've been the person throughout the semester beating the dead horse of 'How does this technology affect LGBTQ people?' " Skeggs says. "To the extent that some people have suggested solutions to things and then when that question's imposed, they're like, 'Oh, I didn't actually think about that thing at all.' "
This comes into play in real life too. For instance, some transgender Uber drivers were kicked off the app when a security feature couldn't recognize them. The feature required drivers to take a selfie to verify their identity but didn't account for people who are transitioning.
Srinivas Kaza, a computer science major, says learning about ethics has influenced what companies he's willing to work for. "I eliminated a lot of choices," he says and laughs.
Kaza says he wants to work with image technology, but he's really concerned about doctored photos and the spread of misinformation. "I think it's just important to not contribute to the problem," he says.
And that's exactly why Jaques created this class — for these students to understand that ethics is essential to their work as engineers and computer scientists.
"Companies better get ready because the students are going to be asking a lot of questions," she says.
https://www.npr.org/2019/05/31/727945689/solving-the-tech-industrys-ethics-problem-could-start-in-the-classroom
2019-05-31 13:00:00Z
CAIiECCjtSM3hHCHULG1V5Biw9wqFggEKg4IACoGCAow9vBNMK3UCDCvpUk
Uber's earnings print inspires new bull - Seeking Alpha
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- Uber's earnings print inspires new bull Seeking Alpha
- Uber loses $1 billion in quarter as costs grow for drivers, food delivery Yahoo Finance
- Uber lost more than $1 billion in the first quarter CNN
- How Uber Hopes to Profit From Public Transit The New York Times
- Uber loses $1 billion in quarter as costs grow for... Daily Mail
- View full coverage on Google News
https://seekingalpha.com/news/3468261-ubers-earnings-print-inspires-new-bull
2019-05-31 13:10:00Z
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Kamis, 30 Mei 2019
Wall St steadies after trade tension-driven selloff - Investing.com
By Amy Caren Daniel
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks inched higher for the first time this week on Thursday, as President Donald Trump said trade talks with China were going well, offering a glimmer of hope to markets roiled by worries that a protracted dispute would slow global growth.
A senior Chinese diplomat said provoking trade disputes is "naked economic terrorism", even as Trump said Beijing wanted to make a deal with Washington.
The escalating dispute has weighed heavily on Wall Street this month, putting its main indexes on track for losses of at least 5% in May. The benchmark is now 5.8% away from its all-time high of 2,954.13 hit on May 1.
"We're seeing just a little bit of a relief to markets after the selling over the past couple of days, whether it morphs into something more than that it's hard to say," said Paul Nolte, portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago
"Markets are focused on trade talks, or lack there of. We're starting to see more and more signs that the economy is looking more recessionary that expansionary."
U.S. treasury yields fell on Thursday and hovered near 20-month lows as investors sought safety in government bonds. [US/]
The yield curve between three-month bills and 10-year notes remained inverted, with money markets pricing in roughly two U.S. rate cuts by the start of next year.
Interest-rate sensitive bank stocks fell 0.55%, while the broader financial sector declined 0.10%.
Technology stocks, among the worst performing S&P sectors this month, rose 0.60% and boosted markets.
The sector was helped by a 11.7% jump in Keysight Technologies after the electronic measurement equipment maker reported better-than-expected quarterly results and announced a $500 million share buyback plan.
Apple Inc (NASDAQ:), Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:) and Intel Corp (NASDAQ:) also rose and offered support.
Also helping sentiment was data that confirmed domestic economic growth accelerated in the first quarter, but there were signs that the temporary boost from exports and inventory accumulation was already fading.
At 12:52 p.m. ET the was up 81.69 points, or 0.33%, at 25,208.10. The S&P 500 was up 9.62 points, or 0.35%, at 2,792.64 and the was up 31.00 points, or 0.41%, at 7,578.31.
The energy sector fell 0.85%, the most among the four major S&P sectors trading lower.
Among other stocks, Dollar General Corp (NYSE:) jumped 7.9% after the discount retailer's same-store sales and profit topped expectations.
Viacom Inc climbed 6.1% after report that CBS Corp (NYSE:) is preparing for merger talks with the media company. CBS rose 3.6%.
PVH Corp (NYSE:) plunged 14.2%, the most among S&P companies, after the Calvin Klein owner cut its annual profit forecast as it grapples with tariffs and slowing retail growth.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.51-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.35-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P index recorded one new 52-week high and 23 new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 22 new highs and 96 new lows.
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/futures-tick-higher-after-prior-sessions-selloff-1882964
2019-05-30 17:21:00Z
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Wall St. pauses after trade tension-driven selloff - Investing.com
By Amy Caren Daniel
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose for the first time this week on Thursday, as President Donald Trump said trade talks with China were going well, offering a glimmer of hope to markets roiled by worries that a protracted dispute would slow economic growth.
A senior Chinese diplomat said provoking trade disputes is "naked economic terrorism", even as Trump said Beijing wanted to make a deal with Washington.
The escalating dispute has weighed heavily on Wall Street this month, putting its main indexes on track for losses of more than 5% in May. The benchmark is now 5.9% away from its all-time high of 2,954.13 hit on May 1.
"The positivity in markets is very muted today, there are fractional gains," said Peter Kenny, founder of Kenny's Commentary LLC in New York.
"Uncertainty is still the primary driver on the trade front. We have increasingly seen the fear of uncertainty being priced into the market, and that is all about trade and the prospect of a slowdown."
Despite a tick up in U.S. treasury yields on Thursday, they still hovered near 20-month lows as investors sought safety in government bonds. [US/]
The yield curve between three-month bills and 10-year notes remained inverted, with money markets pricing in roughly two U.S. rate cuts by the start of next year.
Interest-rate sensitive bank stocks fell 0.54%, while the broader financial sector declined 0.24%.
Technology stocks, among the worst performing S&P sectors this month, rose 0.38% and boosted markets.
The sector was helped by a 9.6% jump in Keysight Technologies after the electronic measurement equipment maker reported better-than-expected quarterly results and announced a $500 million share buyback plan.
Apple Inc (NASDAQ:), Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:) and Intel Corp (NASDAQ:) also rose and offered support.
Also helping sentiment was data that confirmed domestic economic growth accelerated in the first quarter, but there were signs that the temporary boost from exports and inventory accumulation was already fading.
At 11:10 a.m. ET the was up 6.11 points, or 0.02%, at 25,132.52. The S&P 500 was up 5.54 points, or 0.20%, at 2,788.56 and the was up 19.47 points, or 0.26%, at 7,566.78.
The energy sector fell 1.1%, the most among the four major S&P sectors trading lower.
Among other stocks, Dollar General Corp (NYSE:) jumped 6.8% after the discount retailer's same-store sales and profit topped expectations.
Viacom Inc climbed 4.8% after report that CBS Corp (NYSE:) is preparing for merger talks with the media company. CBS rose 2.7%.
PVH Corp (NYSE:) tumbled 14.3%, the most among S&P companies, after the Calvin Klein owner cut its annual profit forecast as it grapples with tariffs and slowing retail growth.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 1.45-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 1.28-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P index recorded one new 52-week high and 13 new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 18 new highs and 69 new lows.
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/futures-tick-higher-after-prior-sessions-selloff-1882964
2019-05-30 15:51:00Z
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'It is unwise to have so much power concentrated in one person': Here's the stinging message that will be read out to Mark Zuckerberg today by an investor who wants to take him down - Business Insider
- Activist Facebook investors will on Thursday vote on whether to fire Mark Zuckerberg as chairman and rip up the firm's dual-class share structure.
- The idea to oust Zuckerberg was put forward by Trillium Asset Management, and the firm's boss, Jonas Kron, will read out a message during Facebook's shareholder meeting.
- With Zuckerberg in the room, he will say it is "unwise to have so much power concentrated in one person" following a string of Facebook scandals.
- You can read his message in full below.
- Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.
Mark Zuckerberg is heading for a showdown with investors on Thursday, as the Facebook boss faces a vote on whether he should remain as both CEO and chairman.
At Facebook's annual shareholder meeting in Silicon Valley, investors will vote on two proposals: to hire an independent chairman above Zuckerberg, and to rip up the firm's dual-class share structure.
The former idea, to oust Zuckerberg as chairman, was put forward by activist shareholder Trillium Asset Management, and the firm's senior vice president, Jonas Kron, will read out a message in support of his proposal during today's meeting.
With Zuckerberg in the room, Kron will make the case that Zuckerberg's enormous power has exacerbated Facebook's problems over the past two years, such as the Cambridge Analytica scandal and election meddling on the social network.
"We have watched with growing dismay as that list of controversial and damaging social impacts grew very long. And as rigorous reporting from the New York Times has shown us, having a unified chair and CEO severely limited the board's ability to provide the company the oversight it needed," he will tell Zuckerberg and the Facebook board, according to a statement sent to Business Insider.
"It is unwise to have so much power concentrated in one person," he will add, as he bids to drum up support from fellow investors. "Let us not miss this opportunity to make a simple, yet powerful change that would go a long way towards creating a successful future."
Facebook has always maintained that hiring an independent chairman would not be a good idea. "We do not believe that requiring the Chair to be independent will provide appreciably better direction and performance, and instead could cause inefficiency in board and management function and relations," it said in a filing last month.
The chance of Trillium's proposal becoming a reality is extremely slim, despite it being backed by investors that control around $3 billion of Facebook stock. A similar proposal in 2017 was popular among independent investors but was crushed because of Zuckerberg's voting power.
This is because of Facebook's dual-class share structure. Class B shares have 10 times the voting power of class A shares, and it just so happens that Zuckerberg owns more than 75% of class B stock. It means he has more than half of the voting power at Facebook.
Here's the full message Jonas Kron will read out to Mark Zuckerberg:
Good morning Mr. Chairman, members of the board, fellow shareholders. My name is Jonas Kron and I am here on behalf of Trillium Asset Management and the Park Foundation to hereby move Item Number 6, seeking an independent board chair policy for Facebook.
This proposal has been co-filed by the New York City Comptroller, the Treasurers of Illinois, Rhode Island, Connecticut, and Oregon, and a multitude of smaller and faith based investors.
At its core this shareholder proposal is about the risk of concentrating too much power in one person – any person.
As proxy advisory firm Glass Lewis put it in its report supporting this shareholder proposal - "vesting a single person with both executive and board leadership concentrates too much responsibility in a single person and inhibits independent board oversight of executives …"
Facebook is incredibly powerful - with wide ranging and difficult to understand, let alone control, social impacts. Over the last two years we have watched with growing dismay as that list of controversial and damaging social impacts grew very long. And as rigorous reporting from the New York Times has shown us, having a unified Chair and CEO severely limited the board's ability to provide the company the oversight it needed.
It is these very facts about power and impact – responsibility and accountability - which highlight why a unified chair and CEO is such a misguided idea – it is unwise to have so much power concentrated in one person.
Which is why we should look to the examples of highly successful companies such as Alphabet, Apple, Autodesk, and Microsoft – to name just a few – which all have independent board chairs.
We recognize that Facebook has a lead independent director. And we acknowledge that the board has recently taken steps to articulate more clearly her powers and responsibilities. However, these recent changes are fundamentally insufficient to meet the task at hand because a lead independent director does not command the same authority as an independent board chair.
This question comes to shareholders at a critical moment. Facebook is embarking on a privacy pivot which leadership has described as requiring a completely new platform. At a time when there is little public trust in Facebook, it is navigating a regulatory landscape that is changing quickly. In this difficult and challenging environment it is important to stop and consider that the CEO position is the most demanding job in corporate America and the responsibilities of a Chairman of the Board are enormously time consuming. We need different people in these two distinctly different leadership positions.
Let us not miss this opportunity to make a simple, yet powerful change that would go a long way towards creating a successful future, not only for Facebook and its employees and its shareholders, but for individuals, families, and communities around the world.
Thank you for your time and attention – and for your support for an independent board chair.
https://www.businessinsider.com/investors-demand-facebook-fire-mark-zuckerberg-as-chairman-2019-5
2019-05-30 14:30:43Z
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Wall Street rises after trade-driven selloff - Investing.com
By Amy Caren Daniel
(Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose for the first time this week on Thursday, as President Donald Trump said trade talks with China are doing well, offering a glimmer of hope to markets roiled by trade tensions.
A senior Chinese diplomat said that provoking trade disputes is "naked economic terrorism", even as Trump said Beijing wanted to make a deal with Washington.
The escalating trade war has weighed heavily on Wall Street, putting its main indexes on track for a monthly loss of more than 5% in May. The benchmark is now 5.7% away from its all-time high of 2954.13 hit on May 1.
"People are trying to figure out how much of the bad news is already priced in. The trade war looks like it might dampen growth but not enough to throw us into a recession," said Scott Brown, chief economist at Raymond James in St. Petersburg, Florida.
"There has been talk about the Fed possibly cutting rates and that is a little bit positive for the stock market."
Despite a tick up in U.S. treasury yields on Thursday, they were still at 20-month lows as investors sought safety in government bonds.
The yield curve between three-month bills and 10-year notes also remained inverted and money markets were pricing in roughly two U.S. rate cuts by the start of next year. [US/]
The technology sector, among the worst performing S&P sectors this month, rose 0.60%, and provided the biggest boost to markets.
The sector was helped by a 11% jump in shares of Keysight Technologies after the electronic measurement equipment maker's quarterly results topped estimates and the company announced a $500 million share buyback program.
Apple Inc (NASDAQ:), Microsoft Corp (NASDAQ:) and Intel Corp (NASDAQ:) rose between 0.3% and 1.3%, supporting the markets.
At 9:42 a.m. ET the was up 74.96 points, or 0.30%, at 25,201.37. The S&P 500 was up 12.02 points, or 0.43%, at 2,795.04 and the was up 32.96 points, or 0.44%, at 7,580.27.
Nine of the 11 major S&P sectors were trading higher, with only the energy and communication services sectors in the red.
Adding to the upbeat mood, the government confirmed domestic economic growth accelerated in the first quarter, but there are signs that the temporary boost from exports and inventory accumulation is already fading, and production at factories slowing.
Among other stocks, Citigroup Inc (NYSE:) rose 1.4% after Goldman Sachs (NYSE:) raised the bank's shares to "buy", as it expects the lender to achieve a higher return on equity in 2020.
Discount retailer Dollar General Corp (NYSE:) jumped 6.2% after the company reported quarterly same-store sales and profit above expectations.
PVH Corp (NYSE:) tumbled 12.1%, the most among S&P companies, after the Calvin Klein owner cut its annual profit forecast as it grapples with tariffs and slowing retail growth.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners by a 3.25-to-1 ratio on the NYSE and by a 2.48-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P index recorded no new 52-week high and six new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded eight new highs and 26 new lows.
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/futures-tick-higher-after-prior-sessions-selloff-1882964
2019-05-30 14:24:00Z
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Generate - May 30, 2019 - Axios
Ships are the latest mode of transportation to see electric upgrades as the maritime industry faces increased pressure to reduce greenhouse gases, writes Axios Expert Voices contributor Maggie Teliska.
The big picture: Passenger ferries are ideal for electric propulsion using current battery technology, which can reduce water and air pollution while providing a quiet, vibration-free trip. Short routes with frequent stops along populated shorelines offer ample opportunities to charge the battery packs.
Where it stands: Globally, there were 185 battery-powered vessels operating or scheduled for delivery in 2018, 58 of which were passenger ferries. Norway introduced the first all-electric ferry, named the MF Ampere, in 2015 to shuttle passengers between villages in the fjords.
What's new: Maid of the Mist plans to launch 2 all-electric, zero-emission boats in September on the U.S. side of Niagara Falls — the first domestically built all-electric boats used for tourists in the U.S.
- Washington State Ferries will introduce a 150-passenger hybrid ferry later this year in Puget Sound that runs on both diesel and battery power, using up to 60% less fuel than diesel counterparts.
- Also this year, New York City plans to introduce a 150-person ferry to shuttle commuters across the East River, from Brooklyn to Manhattan.
Teliska is a technical specialist at Caldwell Intellectual Property Law and CTO of Regent Power. She is also a member of GLG, a platform connecting businesses with industry experts.
https://www.axios.com/newsletters/axios-generate-381c9392-75df-476d-834f-f01e216b3a55.html
2019-05-30 12:33:50Z
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Investors Brace for a New Cold War That Will 'Last Our Careers' - Bloomberg
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- Investors Brace for a New Cold War That Will 'Last Our Careers' Bloomberg
- Ray Dalio warns China restricting rare earth metals would be 'major escalation' of trade war CNBC
- Stocks Have Had Enough Of The Bond Rally Seeking Alpha
- Dalio Sees a 'Risky Time' Ahead in U.S.-China Trade Conflict Bloomberg
- Ray Dalio says brinksmanship is pushing U.S.-China conflict to a ‘risky’ level MarketWatch
- View full coverage on Google News
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-30/investors-brace-for-a-new-cold-war-that-will-last-our-careers
2019-05-30 09:10:00Z
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Safe Or Scary? The Shifting Reputation Of Glyphosate, AKA Roundup - NPR
John Draper and I are sitting in the cab of a tractor on the research farm he manages for the University of Maryland, alongside the Chesapeake Bay. Behind us, there's a sprayer.
"So, away we go!" Draper says. He pushes a button, and we start to move. A fine mist emerges from nozzles on the arms of the sprayer.
We're spraying glyphosate, killing off this field's soil-building "cover crop" of rye before planting soybeans.
Farmers have been using this chemical, often under the trade name Roundup, for about four decades now.
But now it's under fierce attack, accused of causing cancer. In three civil cases so far, U.S. juries have ordered Roundup's inventor, Monsanto, now owned by Bayer, to pay enormous damages to cancer survivors. Thousands more lawsuits have been filed.
For this chemical, and for Monsanto, it's a stunning change in fortunes.
Farmers felt that they could spray glyphosate with a clear conscience. It doesn't persist in the environment as much as, say, DDT did. It doesn't build up in groundwater like another widely used herbicide, atrazine. And it's certainly less toxic than some alternatives.
"If we were spraying Gramoxone [the trade name for paraquat, another herbicide], even for you to be standing next to the sprayer, you'd have to have a respirator on. I'd have to wear a respirator even in the tractor, spraying," says Draper.
Monsanto started selling Roundup in 1974. For 20 years, it didn't attract much attention. That was Act 1 of the glyphosate drama: the quiet years.
Act 2 began in the late 1990s.
In 1996, Monsanto started selling genetically modified crops, or GMOs. They were modified so they could tolerate glyphosate. This meant that farmers could now spray this chemical right over their "Roundup Ready" soybeans, corn and cotton, and the crops would be fine but the weeds would all die.
It was a farming revolution built on glyphosate. Monsanto quickly became the world's biggest seed company. And farmers started spraying a lot more Roundup. Sales of the chemical increased more than ten-fold.
It all happened so fast that it scared a lot of people. There were anti-GMO protests around the world, and glyphosate came under increasing scrutiny.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer, part of the World Health Organization, decided to carry out a new assessment of glyphosate's risks.
On March 20, 2015, IARC announced its conclusion: Glyphosate is "probably carcinogenic to humans."
That conclusion rests on three kinds of studies. First, IARC found "strong evidence" that glyphosate can damage DNA in cells. This kind of damage, inducing mutations, is the first step in causing cancer. Second, there are studies showing that when mice ate glyphosate, they got more tumors. Kate Guyton, a senior toxicologist at IARC, told reporters at a news conference that "these two studies gave sufficient evidence of cancer in animals."
Finally, IARC says there's "limited evidence" that people exposed to glyphosate had higher rates of a particular kind of cancer — non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
Guyton has been studying the causes of cancer for decades. Nothing she has ever done, she says, provoked as much of a reaction as the glyphosate announcement. "The Internet kind of exploded," she says.
Anti-GMO groups felt vindicated. Monsanto's top executives were furious and launched a public relations campaign attacking IARC and its report.
And in the small town of Orange, Va., a personal injury lawyer named Michael Miller started lining up clients — people with non-Hodgkin lymphoma who'd used Roundup. "I decided that these people needed a voice in the courtroom," he says.
The scientific picture got more complicated, though. Other government agencies, including the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the European Food Safety Authority, took a fresh look at glyphosate. And they concluded that it probably is not giving people cancer.
David Eastmond, a toxicologist from the University of California, Riverside, helped conduct one of these glyphosate reviews for another part of the World Health Organization, the Joint FAO/WHO Meeting on Pesticide Residues.
"From my reading of things, if glyphosate causes cancer, it's a pretty weak carcinogen, which means that you're going to need pretty high doses in order to cause it," he says.
Eastmond says that there are several reasons for this apparent disagreement between IARC and the other agencies.
First, IARC just looks at whether glyphosate can cause cancer; regulators, on the other hand, have to decide whether it actually will, considering how much of it people are exposed to.
Second — and most important, according to Eastmond — different agencies considered different evidence. Eastmond's committee and regulatory agencies like the EPA considered a large number of studies that aren't publicly available because Monsanto paid for them and submitted them to the agencies. "I have never seen a chemical with as many animal cancer studies as glyphosate," Eastmond says.
IARC, however, didn't look at most of this research because it accepts only studies that are publicly available. This allows any other scientist to see exactly what IARC's conclusions are based on.
Eastmond, for his part, thinks company-financed studies are credible and valuable, despite the potential conflict of interest for companies carrying out those studies. The labs, he says, have to follow strict guidelines.
Finally, scientists sometimes look at the same data and disagree about what it means. Eastmond says that he and Guyton had "animated discussions" about some of the data. "We just evaluated the evidence differently, but, you know, these are honest disagreements [among] people who I think are well-meaning," Eastmond says.
Then Act 3 arrived. Glyphosate went to court. There were three civil trials in or near San Francisco.
Lawyers for Bayer, which now owns Monsanto, repeatedly reminded jurors that regulatory agencies had concluded that glyphosate is not a cancer risk.
Lawyers for the cancer victims, though, suggested that those same regulators couldn't be trusted because they'd been manipulated or fooled by Monsanto.
Miller and his legal team showed the juries a whole collection of internal Monsanto emails. In one, company executives described phone calls with an official at the EPA. As Miller describes it, the official said, "I don't need to see any more studies. I'm going to declare Roundup safe, and I'm going to stop another agency from looking at it."
Another Monsanto executive discussed ghostwriting papers on glyphosate's safety that scientists could publish under their own names.
"I think the jury was rightfully offended," Miller says.
All three trials ended with resounding verdicts in favor of the cancer victims. The juries ordered Bayer to pay huge punitive damages. In the most recent case, the damages totaled $2 billion.
Bayer is appealing these verdicts — and the damages probably will be reduced. But more lawsuits are waiting. The total value of Bayer's stock has fallen $40 billion since the first verdict was announced.
Alexandra Lahav, a professor at the University of Connecticut School of Law, says that one lesson of this case so far is that attempts to get favorable decisions from regulators can backfire in court.
"They then open themselves up for the jury to say, 'Wait a minute — you're trying to convince the regulator not to regulate you, and now you want me to believe that the regulator is completely objective,' " Lahav says.
When regulators are seen as weak or ineffectual watchdogs, she says, their seal of approval also carries less weight with the public — and with juries.
The next glyphosate trial is set for August in St. Louis.
https://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2019/05/30/727914874/safe-or-scary-the-shifting-reputation-of-glyphosate-aka-roundup
2019-05-30 09:00:00Z
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'Molecules of freedom': US Energy Department tries rebranding natural gas - ABC News
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/molecules-freedom-us-energy-department-rebranding-natural-gas/story?id=63366255
2019-05-30 07:47:00Z
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Fears of prolonged trade war weigh on Asia stocks; bonds rally - Investing.com
By Shinichi Saoshiro
TOKYO (Reuters) - Asian stocks tracked Wall Street losses on Thursday as the latest exchanges between Beijing and Washington signaled the heightened risk of a prolonged trade war, stoking investors' concerns about the impact on global economic growth.
European stock futures were higher in early trade, trimming some losses after falling sharply the previous day. The pan-region were up 0.46%, German edge up 0.34% and futures gained 0.25%.
"We oppose a trade war but are not afraid of a trade war. This kind of deliberately provoking trade disputes is naked economic terrorism, economic chauvinism, economic bullying," Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Hanhui said, when asked about the trade war with the United States.
His comments followed reports from Chinese newspapers that Beijing could use rare earths to strike back at Washington after U.S. President Donald Trump remarked he was "not yet ready" to make a deal with China over trade.
As investors switched out of equities, safe-haven assets such as government bonds found favor, with yields on German benchmark debt approaching record lows.
The fell 0.7% and Hong Kong's lost 0.4%.
Japan's was down 0.5% and Australian stocks shed 0.85%.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan slipped to a fresh four-month low before finding a bit of traction to edge up 0.1%.
"The equity markets are in the midst of pricing in a long-term trade war, with participants shaping their portfolios in anticipation of a protracted conflict," said Soichiro Monji, senior strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management.
"The upcoming G20 summit could provide the markets with relief, as the United States and China could use the event to begin negotiating again over trade."
The G20 meeting is set for June 28-29 in Japan.
Observers elsewhere expressed less optimism toward the G20 meeting.
"It seems to us that a Trump-Xi meeting on the sidelines of the G20 meeting is more wishful thinking than hard political reality," wrote Marc Chandler, chief market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex. "This is a moment that defines before and after."
Amid the flight-to-safety, Germany's 10-year bond yield fell to a three-year trough of minus 0.179% overnight. A drop below minus 0.200% set in 2016 would take the yield to a record low.
Spanish and Portuguese 10-year yields fell to record lows as deeply negative German Bund yields have encouraged investors to look elsewhere for returns. [GVD/EUR]
The stood at 2.267% after falling to a 20-month low of 2.210% on Wednesday.
Notwithstanding lower Treasury yields, the against a basket of six major currencies was steady at 98.085 and in reach of a two-year peak of 98.371 set last week, with the greenback serving as a safe haven.
The euro was a shade higher at $1.1137, pulling back slightly following three successive days of losses.
The dollar was little changed at 109.660 yen after bouncing back from a two-week low of 109.150 brushed on Wednesday.
Oil prices rose modestly after an industry report showed a decline in inventories that exceeded analyst expectations.
The rise followed volatile trading on Wednesday, when oil prices fell to near three-month lows at one point as trade war fears gripped the commodity markets.
U.S. crude futures were up 0.66% at $59.20 per barrel after brushing $56.88 the previous day, their lowest since March 12.
added 0.37% to $69.71 per barrel.
Trade worries have weighed on oil but supply constraints linked to the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries' output cuts and political tensions in the Middle East have offered some support.
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/fears-of-prolonged-trade-war-weigh-on-asia-stocks-bonds-rally-1882426
2019-05-30 05:43:00Z
CBMidmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmludmVzdGluZy5jb20vbmV3cy9zdG9jay1tYXJrZXQtbmV3cy9mZWFycy1vZi1wcm9sb25nZWQtdHJhZGUtd2FyLXdlaWdoLW9uLWFzaWEtc3RvY2tzLWJvbmRzLXJhbGx5LTE4ODI0MjbSAQA
Rabu, 29 Mei 2019
The Bond Market Is Giving Ominous Warnings About the Global Economy - The New York Times
You know the moment in a horror movie when the characters are going about their business as normal and nothing bad has happened to them yet, but it feels as if there are ominous signs everywhere that only you, the viewer, realize?
That’s what watching global financial markets the last couple of weeks has felt like.
In a lot of ways, nothing looks particularly wrong. As of noon Wednesday, the S&P 500 was down about 1.2 percent, falling sharply for the second consecutive session, but over all is down only about 6 percent from its early May high. The unemployment rate is at a five-decade low. With major companies nearly done releasing their first-quarter results, 76 percent had results above expectations.
But along the way, global bond prices have soared, driving interest rates down sharply. Ten-year Treasury bonds are yielding only 2.22 percent as of midday Wednesday, down a full percentage point since November 2018. The outlook for inflation in the years ahead is falling as well, as are the prices of oil and other commodities.
Most significantly, the fall in longer-term bond yields has not been matched by a fall in shorter-term rates. For example, a 30-day Treasury bill is currently yielding 2.35 percent — meaning you can earn more on your money tying it up for a month risk-free than you can tying it up for a full decade.
This is not normal. It is called an inverted yield curve, and historically it has been viewed as a sign of a recession in the offing. At a minimum, it indicates that bond investors believe the Federal Reserve will soon need to cut interest rates — in effect, that they overshot with their four rate increases last year.
And there is a soft underbelly to some of the good economic data of late. Orders for capital goods like business equipment fell 0.9 percent in April, suggesting companies may not be in an expansionary mood. The Institute for Supply Management’s index of activity at manufacturing companies fell sharply in the most recent reading, though it remained in expansion territory.
The financial markets don’t always tell a tidy little story about what is happening, but here’s a theory about reconciling the apparent calm in the economy with the many worrying signs.
The breakdown in trade negotiations with China and the imposition of tariffs on Chinese goods are part of the story, but only a part.
Businesses have weathered escalating tariffs for two years now, and while tariffs can be costly, they do not need to wreck the economy. After all, prices for products fluctuate for all sorts of reasons, and market economies are pretty good at adjusting.
But what has happened in the last few weeks involves the specter of a longer, more painful form of damage. There have been signs that the world’s two largest economies might not simply have tensions and a few tariffs, but could be heading toward a broader split.
In a sense, economists may have been analyzing the trade war too narrowly, merely by calculating the cost of tariffs and where those costs may show up.
The potential long-lasting consequences are harder to model.
What if American regulators try to cut off Chinese companies’ access to Wall Street and its vast pool of financing, as some China hawks are advocating? What if China cuts off exports of the “rare earths” materials that are crucial to advanced manufacturing in the United States? Will the Trump administration’s ban of the technology giant Huawei be the first step toward a bifurcation of today’s global internet into American and Chinese spheres?
Or it could even be this simple: If there is a slowdown in the Chinese economy that causes its demand for oil and other commodities to fall, American makers of those commodities could face pain over and above that caused by tariffs directly. Falling global commodity prices would pull the world economy even further into its deflationary rut.
That last story is particularly consistent with the swings in markets this month. Because tariffs tend to increase consumer prices, you might expect the escalating trade war to cause investors’ expectations for inflation to rise.
Yet the gap in prices between bonds that are indexed to inflation and those that are not suggests that investors envision annual inflation of 1.6 percent over the next five years, down from 1.8 percent at the start of May.
There are further signs of trouble from around the world: threats of conflict with Iran, missile tests in North Korea. European politics is a mess.
It can be a mistake to assume that financial markets are responding to the latest geopolitical headlines. But put it all together, and there seems less of a mystery why bond investors are in a more pessimistic mood than the recent economic and earnings data might suggest makes sense.
It is premature to assume that a recession or a geopolitical crisis is imminent. You could imagine that U.S.-China relations will enter another period of détente, with the Federal Reserve taking a precautionary interest rate cut, and that the economy and markets will once again be off to the races.
In other words, we don’t know yet if this is a horror movie or a comedy, but in the months ahead it seems we’ll find out.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/29/upshot/the-bond-market-is-giving-ominous-warnings-about-the-global-economy.html
2019-05-29 15:38:53Z
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Canada Goose Stock, Capri Stock, Abercrombie & Fitch Dived On Earnings Reports - Investor's Business Daily
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- Canada Goose Stock, Capri Stock, Abercrombie & Fitch Dived On Earnings Reports Investor's Business Daily
- What's moving markets today: Live updates CNN
- Abercrombie & Fitch to close 3 more flagship stores as company shares drop Fox Business
- Abercrombie & Fitch Sinks Following Same-Store Sales Miss TheStreet.com
- Abercrombie & Fitch tanks 23% on weak same-store sales, says 3 big flagship stores to close CNBC
- View full coverage on Google News
https://www.investors.com/news/canada-goose-earnings-canada-goose-stock-capri-earnings-vfc-earnings/
2019-05-29 15:00:00Z
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Huawei asks court to declare US government ban unconstitutional - Engadget
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Huawei is stepping up its fight against American bans. The tech giant has motioned for a summary judgment in its lawsuit to invalidate Section 889 of the 2019 National Defense Authorization Act, arguing that it violates the "Bill of Attainder, Due Process and Vesting" clauses of the US Constitution. The law explicitly bans Huawei by name despite "no evidence" of a security risk, Huawei's Song Liuping said, and bans third-party contractors who buy from Huawei even when there's no link to the US government.
The company also preemptively tried to dismiss claims that there are facts up for dispute. This is a simple "matter of law," according to lead counsel Glen Nager.
A hearing on the motion is due September 19th.
This won't get Huawei off the Commerce Department's Entities List, which forced US companies to stop doing business with the Chinese firm. It would alleviate some of the pressure on the company, though, and would theoretically provide a route back to doing more business in the US if it's ever removed from the Entities List. It could also push the US to provide evidence (if there is any) to support the measure. If nothing else, it signals that Huawei won't take bans lying down.
https://www.engadget.com/2019/05/29/huawei-asks-for-summary-judgment-vs-us/
2019-05-29 13:37:20Z
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What's moving markets today: Live updates - CNN
Despite Uber's less-than-impressive performance after going public, one analyst remains optimistic on the company.
Wedbush Securities' Daniel Ives said in a new note that that despite the "negative noise," he remains positive on Uber (UBER).
The company went public earlier this month and is trading 9% below its $45 IPO price
"This week marks an important step forward for Dara & his team to prove to the Street that this business model is still in the early days of playing out," Ives said of Uber's first earnings report, which comes out Thursday.
Ives admitted that it will be a "long and winding road for Uber" to prove its value, he's optimistic the company will successfully expand beyond ride-hailing:
A core tenet of our bull thesis is around Uber's ability to morph its unrivaled ridesharing platform into a broader consumer engine with Uber Eats, Uber Freight, and autonomous initiatives 'just scratching the surface' of the full monetization potential."
https://www.cnn.com/business/live-news/stock-market-news-today-052919/index.html
2019-05-29 13:28:00Z
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Stocks - Dick's Sporting Goods Rises Premarket; Canada Goose, Boeing Slump - Investing.com
Investing.com - Stocks in focus in premarket trading on Wednesday:
• Dick’s Sporting Goods (NYSE:) stock rose 4.3% by 8:15 AM ET (12:15 GMT) after it raised its full-year guidance, even as same-store sales for the first quarter were flat.
• Canada Goose (NYSE:) stock slumped 15% after its revenue for the quarter fell short of estimates, and its forecast guidance failed to meet expectations, according to Briefing.com.
•Capri Holdings (NYSE:) stock fell 7.4% after the luxury fashion company posted weak guidance for the year. The company owns the Michael Kors, Jimmy Choo and Versace brands.
• Abercrombie & Fitch (NYSE:) stock declined 17.2% after it missed estimates for same store sales, even as net sales rose. The company reported a loss per share of $0.29 compared to expectations for a loss of $0.43 per share.
• Boeing (NYSE:) stock dipped 1.1% despite comments that its 737 Max jet could return to the sky as soon as August, according to the International Air Transport Association.
• Bed Bath & Beyond (NASDAQ:) was unmoved after it settled a dispute by activist investors and agreed to nominate four new members to its board of directors.
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https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/stocks---dicks-sporting-goods-rises-premarket-canada-goose-boeing-slump-1881499
2019-05-29 12:15:00Z
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Huawei USA security chief suggests the company could be open to 'mitigation measures' to address US national security concerns - CNBC
The chief security officer at Huawei Technologies USA signaled on CNBC on Wednesday that the Chinese telecom giant might be open to taking steps to address U.S. national security concerns.
"In different countries in the world, we negotiate with respective governments on what kind of assurance framework they need," Huawei's Andy Purty told "Squawk Box." Some measures, he said, might include requirements around selling to government or to critical infrastructure projects. While saying he cannot prejudge any possible conditions, Purdy said he would be "astounded if we weren't open to those kinds of risk mitigation measures. "
Purdy's appearance, along with Huawei outside counsel Glen Nager of Jones Day, comes as the China-based company looks to expedite its March lawsuit against the U.S. government. Huawei, which alleges that a law banning U.S. government agencies from buying its equipment is unconstitutional, is seeking a summary judgment in hopes of avoiding a full-blown trial.
Wednesday's comments from Purdy mirror ones he made about two weeks ago, in which he said a risk-mitigation process for Huawei equipment, like those used in Europe, could have been simple.
The new Huawei filing stems from President Donald Trump's signing last year of a new U.S. defense act that strengthens the Committee on Foreign Investment. However, with the U.S. most recently stepping up pressure against Huawei — as part of trade and technology tensions with China — Trump earlier this month effectively blacklisted Huawei from doing business in the U.S.
Purdy, who formerly served as a top-ranking cybersecurity official for Homeland Security, said U.S. officials have not been "willing to talk" to Huawei. "The geopolitical context between the U.S. and China is why we're in this situation," he said.
Nager said the Trump administration needs to "ramp down the rhetoric," adding that "the U.S. is worried more about the country China than the company Huawei."
Responding to a question about this weekend's Wall Street Journal report with the headline "Huawei's Yearslong Rise Is Littered With Accusations of Theft and Dubious Ethics," Purdy told CNBC, "I don't forgive acts that have happened in the past."
"Despite those, our allies have decided to push back on tremendous pressure from the U.S. government because they believe the national security threats can be addressed," he added.
Huawei has maintained that it adheres to intellectual property rights, which along with national security is at the heart of the U.S. concerns about the company and about business practices in China.
https://www.cnbc.com/2019/05/29/huawei-usa-security-chief-addresses-us-national-security-concerns.html
2019-05-29 12:57:33Z
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