Rabu, 08 Mei 2019

Hackers Are Shuffling Binance's Stolen Bitcoin - CoinDesk

A team at blockchain services company Coinfirm has been watching the erratic movements of the bitcoin associated with $40 million stolen in the latest Binance breach.

At 4:11 AM on May 8 the hacker or hackers moved 1214 BTC ($7.16 million) to new addresses and then moved another 1337 “to 2 new addresses held by the hacker.”

This is the fourth major exchange hack of the year, following Cryptopia, DragonEx and Bithumb.


Image via Coinfirm

The hack took place at 5:15:24PM on May 7 when hackers dragged over 7,000 bitcoin from a single Binance hot wallet into in a number of smaller wallets in a single transaction. The hackers then moved small amounts into smaller wallets. Given the nature of the BTC blockchain it’s easy to see where each Binance bitcoin is going but it is difficult to perform real forensics on the wallets in order to understand who – or what – created them.

Why the brisk back and forth movement? Writer and blockchain analyst Amy Castor thinks the hackers are trying to erase their tracks.

“Money laundering 101: breaking the transactions up into smaller and smaller amounts making them more and more difficult to track,” she said.


Image via Coinfirm

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https://www.coindesk.com/hackers-are-shuffling-binances-stolen-bitcoin

2019-05-08 17:56:00Z
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Rush-hour Uber and Lyft driver strike was a flop in NYC - New York Post

Ride-hailing strike? What ride-hailing strike?

A driver strike that was planned for Wednesday-morning rush hour against ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft appeared to be a flop in New York City, as cars appeared plentiful and surge pricing was scarce.

The New York Taxi Workers Alliance had hoped to get the participation of 10,000 drivers between 7 a.m. and 9 a.m. to protest the fact that drivers are getting left out of Uber’s planned initial public offering on Thursday, which is expected to value the company at $90 billion.

But an Uber driver that picked up a Post reporter at 7:30 a.m. in Astoria, Queens for a trip to Midtown Manhattan claimed he hadn’t heard about the strike, and was unsure he would have participated if he had.

“If it made a difference, I would’ve done it,” said the driver, whose Uber profile identified him as “Stiv”. “But I don’t know what would change for us, IPO or no IPO.”

The driver even opened up his Lyft app to see if prices were surging, but told The Post that it seemed to be an ordinary morning.

Eliza Bates, a spokeswoman for the New York Taxi Workers Alliance, told The Post in an email following the two-hour strike that 10,000 drivers “really” did participate. She failed to respond, however, when asked why the strike had no significant effect on service.

Organizers, who also planned strikes in Boston, Washington DC and Chicago on Wednesday morning, as well as Los Angeles and San Diego, Calif., had claimed that protesters would be holding banners and leafleting at the Queens entrance of the 59th Street Bridge. But at 7:45 a.m. there was no discernible demonstration.

Twitter traffic of the strike’s hashtag, #UberLyftStrike, was low, with many users posting about the strike’s low profile.

“So I was curious about the Uber and Lyft strike impact, it’s surprisingly low!” one user posted. “Looks like many drivers have ‘crossed the picket line.’ Peak hour wait times are roughly normal on both platforms, only 10%-15% yellow cabs are vacant, the streets are still congested.”

Former Taxi and Limousine Commissioner Matt Daus, who now works in transportation law, told The Post that the strike appeared to be “mostly symbolic.”

“It remains to be seen what will happen,” Daus said. “I think if they’re smart, they’ll listen to what the drivers have to say.”

Uber Chief Executive Dara Khosrowshahi, hired to help guide the company past a series of scandals and manage the IPO, has promised to treat drivers better. Uber is paying more than a million drivers about $300 million in one-time bonuses, for instance, and has changed policies such as allowing riders to tip.

“Whether it’s being able to track your earnings or stronger insurance protections, we’ll continue working to improve the experience for and with drivers,” the company said.

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https://nypost.com/2019/05/08/rush-hour-uber-and-lyft-driver-strike-was-a-flop-in-nyc/

2019-05-08 14:16:00Z
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Americans have 'incredible' misconceptions about Social Security - Fox Business

Older Americans – including current and future retirees – appear to have a meaningful lack of knowledge about Social Security and how it can boost their retirement income streams, according to a new report from the Nationwide Retirement Institute.

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“What’s a little disappointing is that there continues to be an incredible number of misconceptions about Social Security,” Tina Ambrozy, president of financial distribution at Nationwide, told FOX Business. “The report showed that people really don’t understand the way Social Security works … [down to] even understanding what your income would be.”

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People tend to grossly overestimate the size of their Social Security checks, the results showed. Future retirees expect to receive $1,805 in monthly benefits – but yet retirees currently collecting receive $1,408, on average – a 28 percent difference.

Ambrozy said that disconnect is “alarming,” but findings also reveal that some people believe if you begin collecting at age 62, your check will actually increase when you reach age 65. In fact, the reduction of benefits for those who claim at 62 is 25 percent, 20 percent for those that claim at 63, 13.3 percent at age 64 and 6.7 percent at 65.

The average age current retirees started collecting was 62. However, delaying when you collect, when possible, can actually increase a worker’s benefit by as much as 32 percent.

Meanwhile, about 25 percent of people think they can live on Social Security alone – even though the program was designed to be supplemental, not the primary form of retirement income.

As previously reported by FOX Business, the annual trustees report forecast that Social Security will not be able to pay full benefits by 2035, at which time trustees predict the program’s reserve funds will be depleted. At that time, only 80 percent of the benefits will be payable.

Only 8 percent of people were able to identify the factors that determine the maximum benefit an individual can receive – including work history, age, benefits start date and marital status.

The lack of knowledge – and planning – has barely changed in the six years Nationwide has been conducting the survey, Ambrozy noted.

While a little less than half of people said they were confident or very confident in their Social Security knowledge, when asked specific questions, people didn’t always know the answers.

Only 30 percent of people know that if they don’t work for at least 35 years, their benefit will be reduced. Only a slightly higher percentage of people knew that someone earning $150,000 pays as much in Social Security taxes as a millionaire. Less than half of respondents knew Social Security is protected against inflation, while about one-third of people thought benefits are tax-free.

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Working with a financial adviser, however, has proven to help. According to the survey, those who worked with an expert saw 15 percent greater lifetime income benefits – $1,551 versus $1,324.

The survey was conducted online Feb. 11-21 among more than 1,300 people, including pre-retirees (ages 50-plus), recent retirees and people who have been retired for at least 10 years.

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https://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/americans-misconceptions-social-security

2019-05-08 12:50:27Z
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Uber drivers strike: drivers are striking across the world as Uber prepares IPO - Vox.com

Uber and Lyft drivers have been fighting for years for the right to unionize and negotiate better pay. So far, they’ve failed — but they’ve found another way to flex their power.

A loose network of ride-share drivers are on strike today, from San Diego all the way to São Paulo and Sydney. They’ve urged drivers to boycott ride-sharing applications for 24 hours Wednesday and to instead spend the day picketing to demand more money. They also want cities to regulate ride-hailing platforms the way New York City does.

The work stoppage comes two days before Uber’s long-awaited public debut Friday on the stock market, and that’s no coincidence. Drivers want company executives to know they are really, really unhappy.

Uber has been cutting driver pay rates in major cities to boost its bottom line as it prepares for its initial public offerings (IPO). That has infuriated drivers, who say they were already struggling to make ends meet. They are particularly incensed by the fact that Uber investors are expected to reap millions (even billions) of dollars from the IPO because of their labor.

“This is not fair; something has to change,” Karim Bayumi, a Los Angeles Uber driver, said in a video posted on Twitter. “What’s the point of flexibility if you have to work so much more, without getting paid more or overtime?”

Bayumi, who drives full time to support a family of three, is one of the drivers organizing the strike in LA with Rideshare Drivers United, an unofficial group of Uber and Lyft drivers advocating for policy changes. Other groups, like the Boston Independent Drivers Guild and Chicago Rideshare Advocates, are coordinating similar strikes.

What started with a call on social media has since spread to about a dozen US cities, including Atlanta, Philadelphia, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Washington, DC, and Dayton, Ohio. News of the strike has even inspired Uber drivers across the world. Groups of drivers in Kenya, Nigeria, Chile, Costa Rica, and the United Kingdom are striking too.

Each group has its own set of demands, but most want a firm cap on Uber’s commission from each ride, which varies widely but averages about 33 percent. Drivers in the US also want the company to reverse recent pay cuts, and to guarantee drivers $15 to $20 an hour in take-home pay. Right now, they earn an average of $10 to $12 an hour in the US, after expense, according to several researchers.

An Uber spokesperson didn’t comment on the strike but pointed out to Vox that the company is giving drivers bonuses ahead of the IPO.

“Drivers are at the heart of our service — we can’t succeed without them — and thousands of people come into work at Uber every day focused on how to make their experience better, on and off the road,” he wrote in a statement to Vox. “Whether it’s more consistent earnings, stronger insurance protections or fully funded four-year degrees for drivers or their families, we’ll continue working to improve the experience for and with drivers.”

It’s unclear how many drivers plan to take part in Wednesday’s stoppage, and whether they will change anything. Yet the event’s swift spread to major cities across the world marks a pivotal moment for the so-called gig economy, which relies heavily on workers with no labor protections or collective bargaining rights. Gig economy workers are starting to recognize they can organize and exert pressure even without a formal labor union.

Uber’s profit model, like all others in the gig economy, involves much more than providing a popular service to customers. It depends on all the money saved from skirting US labor laws.

By classifying drivers as independent contractors instead of employees, Uber doesn’t need to pay certain taxes, benefits, overtime, or minimum wages to tens of thousands of drivers. As self-employed contractors, drivers don’t have a legal right to form labor unions and negotiate contracts either.

Uber drivers have spent more than six years fighting the company in court, saying they’ve been intentionally misclassified. They argue that drivers should be considered employees because the company has so much control over their workday, including strict rules on their vehicle conditions, what rides they can take, and which routes to take.

Uber has fought back, maintaining that drivers are not employees because they set their own schedules and provide their own cars.

So far, the issue has not been resolved.

Last month, Uber settled the main court case with 13,600 Uber drivers, agreeing to pay them $20 million, but without changing their status as independent contractors. The other 350,000 drivers who were part of the initial class-action lawsuit had signed mandatory arbitration agreements, so a federal judge is requiring them to pursue their cases in a private forum, where they are less likely to win their case.

Any challenge to the drivers’ status as contractors threatens Uber’s bottom line, which is another reason the strikes are so significant.

Uber has been upfront with investors about the risk of a labor revolt. In a new Securities and Exchange Commission filing, Uber acknowledges that giving drivers the same legal rights as employees would “fundamentally change” the company’s financial model:

If, as a result of legislation or judicial decisions, we are required to classify Drivers as employees ... we would incur significant additional expenses for compensating Drivers, potentially including expenses associated with the application of wage and hour laws (including minimum wage, overtime, and meal and rest period requirements), employee benefits, social security contributions, taxes, and penalties.

It’s worth reemphasizing this: Uber doesn’t want to pay drivers to take 15-minute rest breaks every few hours because it would cost too much, even though all US employers are required to give hourly workers paid breaks under federal law.

In the filing, the company says that dissatisfied drivers could become a business liability, as recent protests in India, the United Kingdom, and the United States have interrupted business on the platform. Instead of outlining ways to make drivers happy, Uber suggests it will just get worse.

“As we aim to reduce driver incentives to improve our financial performance, we expect Driver dissatisfaction will generally increase,” the company stated.

That dissatisfaction is leading Uber and Lyft drivers to organize.

In March, hundreds of Uber and Lyft drivers refused to pick up customers for an entire day — part of a one-day strike to protest the company’s recent decision to slash pay rates for drivers in the area.

Uber had cut its per-mile pay by 25 percent in Los Angeles County and parts of Orange County. That means drivers are now earning 60 cents per mile instead of 80 cents. That decision pushed drivers, who were already scraping by, over the edge.

Hundreds of them swarmed the streets, chanting and picketing outside Uber’s office in suburban LA. They asked customers to use public transportation instead of using the apps.

“Help us end this neo-indentured servitude,” Sinakhone Keodara, one of the drivers organizing the strike, tweeted that day.

A spokesperson for Uber told me at the time that the company had revamped its pay formula so that drivers will earn about the same amount that they did before Uber last increased pay rates in September.

The latest strike comes at a key moment for the ride-hailing industry. Lyft recently launched its IPO, which converted the platform into a publicly traded company. Uber is next, and its initial public offering is expected to create a financial windfall for dozens of early investors who will turn into overnight millionaires. Meanwhile, drivers say they can barely make ends meet on poverty wages.

Bayumi and other drivers helped organize Wednesday’s strike with Rideshare Drivers United. The group has been active in Los Angeles for a few years and has organized strikes before, but their impact was limited by the small group of members. That has changed recently.

Within the past two years, the group has gone from 300 drivers to about 3,000. As part of their strike, drivers demanded that Uber reverse the 25 percent rate cut and guarantee drivers a $28-per-hour minimum rate.

That didn’t happen, but that doesn’t mean the pressure is dying down. Drivers in New York City have proven that forming labor unions isn’t the only way for workers to secure better pay.

The explosion of ride-hailing apps has been great for the startups’ investors — but not so great for actual drivers. Researchers say drivers in the US earn about $12 an hour, after deducting car expenses and gasoline.

In New York City, the unrestricted growth of these companies put serious financial strain on the city’s taxi drivers and has made it hard for all drivers to compete and earn a decent living.

Economists at the New School and the University of California Berkeley published a report in July with some limited pay data, and discovered something alarming: Driving for ride-hailing apps in New York City is not really a part-time gig for people who want to earn extra cash.

More than half of their drivers are ferrying around passengers on a full-time basis, and about half of all drivers are supporting families with children on that income. But their earnings are so low that 40 percent of drivers qualified for Medicaid, and about 18 percent qualified for food stamps.

The New School report showed that the average hourly wage for app-based drivers in New York was about $12. “The app companies could easily absorb an increase in driver pay with a minimal fare adjustment and little inconvenience to passengers,” they wrote.

The report helped drivers persuade city officials in December to pass the nation’s first minimum pay rate for drivers working with the four largest app-based firms: Uber, Lyft, Juno, and Via.

Starting in January, ride-hailing companies were required to start paying drivers around $17.22 per hour (after expenses) — about $5 more per hour than the previous average of $11.90 per hour, according to the Independent Drivers Guild, which represents about 70,000 Uber, Lyft, Juno, and Via drivers in the city. The new pay rate is calculated per ride, but the guild expects it to give full-time drivers an extra $9,600 a year. (Lyft and Juno are now suing the city, arguing that the calculated rate favors Uber, but said they are using a different formula to meet the minimum hourly pay rate.)

Because Uber and Lyft drivers are considered independent contractors and not employees, they are not subject to the city’s minimum hourly wage, which is now $15 per hour. But the new rules essentially get around that loophole and ensure that drivers are earning at least the minimum wage, with a few dollars extra to cover payroll taxes and some paid time off.

Uber and Lyft have pushed back against the pay increase, saying it would hurt competition and discourage drivers from taking riders out of Manhattan. The current lawsuits suggest that Lyft and Juno are not done fighting it (Uber is not part of the lawsuits).

But if there’s any moment for drivers to demand more, it’s now. Companies are having a harder and harder time finding workers to fill jobs, which means the competition for labor is getting fierce.

The US economy is currently experiencing a major labor shortage. There just aren’t enough workers to fill all the available jobs.

For nearly a year now, the number of open jobs each month has been higher than the number of people looking for work — the first time that’s happened since the Department of Labor began tracking job turnover two decades ago.

At the end of January, the US economy had 7.6 million unfilled jobs, but only 6.5 million people were looking for work, according to data released earlier this month by the US Department of Labor. This was the 11th straight month that the number of job openings was higher than the number of job seekers. And each month, the gap has grown.

Employers have been complaining about a shortage of skilled workers in recent years, particularly workers with advanced degrees in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) fields. Nearly every industry now has a labor shortage, but here’s the twist: Employers are having a harder time filling blue-collar positions than professional positions that require a college education.

The hardest-to-find workers are no longer computer engineers; instead, they are home health care aides, restaurant workers, and hotel staff. The shift is happening because more and more Americans are going to college and taking professional jobs, while working-class baby boomers are retiring en masse.

So, for once, low-skilled workers have the most leverage in the current labor market. Uber and Lyft drivers won’t have a hard time finding other jobs in today’s economy — which means there’s no better time for working-class Americans to demand better wages, benefits, schedules, and work conditions.

The Uber strikes will also test how much leverage gig workers have in making these demands, and how effective it is to organize without a labor union.

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https://www.vox.com/2019/5/8/18535367/uber-drivers-strike-2019-cities

2019-05-08 12:40:00Z
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Stock Futures Slip On China Trade War Worries - Investor's Business Daily

Stocks quickly trimmed early losses Wednesday, as concerns eased over an escalating China trade war. Meanwhile earnings news sent a number of stocks — including Match Group (MTCH), Avalara (AVLR) and Electronic Arts (EA) — sharply higher.

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The Nasdaq dropped 0.4%, then narrowed losses and was toggling in and out of narrow gains. The S&P 500 cut its decline to a fraction. The Dow Jones industrials traded almost level, just below the index's 50-day moving average.

Tuesday's after-hours reporting session sent Electronic Arts and IBD Leaderboard stock Match Group up sharply after their reports. 2U Inc. (TWOU) and 3D Systems (DDD) posted double-digit declines. The closely watched first public report from Lyft (LYFT) was mixed, holding the stock to a 0.5% advance in early trade. Cloud-based IPO Avalara (AVLR) rocketed after its report late Tuesday.

Wednesday's earnings reports triggered strong early gains by Siemens (SIEGY) and Bunge Group (BG).  TripAdvisor (TRIP) fell 7%.

Chip stocks were mixed, with Qorvo (QRVO) and Macom Technology (MTSI) soaring on earnings results, while Microchip Technology (MCHP) took a hard early hit following a soft fiscal first-quarter outlook.

Beyond Meat (BYND), also an IBD Leaderboard name, traded more than 3% higher.

China trade-sensitive Walmart (WMT) fell 1.2%, the worst loss among Dow Jones stocks. Dow Jones peer Merck (MRK) gained 0.4% after announcing positive clinical trial results.

Microchip and China's Netease (NTES) sunk to the bottom of the Nasdaq. Electronic Arts topped the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 indexes.

Earnings News: Match Group, Electronic Arts

IBD Leaderboard stock Match Group grabbed an early 7% gain, moving beyond buy range after the open. The stock ended Tuesday in a buy range, just above a 60.02 cup-with-handle buy point.

A 28% earnings jump and a 14% rise in revenue both topped analyst estimates for Match. Subscriber growth for its Tinder dating app also topped forecasts.

Video game pioneer Electronic Arts rallied nearly 5% after reporting big revenue and earnings beats in its fiscal fourth quarter. The company's outlook was mixed, however, with first-quarter earnings and revenue guidance well below analyst targets, while full-year earnings were far above expectations. The stock is not near a buy point, but it is positioned for a test of resistance at its converged 10- and 40-week moving averages — which have halted the stock's progress since August.

China Trade War: Nets Broken?

Trade negotiators plan to launch back into efforts on Thursday to end the U.S.-China trade war. China's chief trade official, Vice-Premier Liu He, is in Washington to lead China's side of the talks. Unlike a week ago, hopes are not high. Although news reports early Wednesday quoted President Donald Trump saying that Chinese negotiators told the White House they intended to make a deal on trade. The Trump administration has committed to a tariff increase on Friday if China shows no flexibility. China's state media, meanwhile, reports Beijing has reached its limit on concessions, and is prepared for increased tariffs.

One expert quoted by the South China Morning Post Wednesday said China has dug in at its current level of concessions, and increased tariffs will encourage no further compromises, only deteriorated negotiations. "It will be a situation where fishes are dead and nets are broken," said Liu Weidong, a U.S. affairs expert at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

China markets took heavy losses Wednesday, with the Shanghai Composite down 1.1% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index dropping 1.2%. Japan succumbed to the mood as safe-haven trading drove the yen higher, with Tokyo's Nikkei 225 down 1.5% and breaking below key levels of support.

In Europe, markets turned mixed in afternoon trade. London's FTSE 100 slipped 0.2%. The CAC-40 in Paris shed its losses and gained 0.1%. Frankfurt's DAX also reversed early losses, rising 0.4% in late trade.

Dow Jones Snaps Support, Faces Test

Despite some bullish signals on Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Tuesday sliced below its 50-day moving average. Whereas the index edged ever closer to its first new high since October, it now faces the task of retaking support at its 50-day line. A look at a daily or weekly chart shows that line acting as a level of resistance for the index, stalling rally attempts in November and December.

The S&P 500 found support at its 50-day line Tuesday, while the Nasdaq remained well above the line. But the Nasdaq now has declined in five of the past six sessions. The index staged a similar, five-day pullback in March, after the European Central Bank pointed to a weaker economic outlook. That pullback broke support at the index's 200-day line, then reversed as the Nasdaq ran 10.4% higher over the next eight weeks.

For more detailed analysis of the current stock market and the status of its uptrend, study the Big Picture.

IPO Watch: Avalar, Beyond Meat Surge

Aside from Lyft, early IPO action was mixed, with Avalara scorching 23% higher and Beyond Meat (BYND) up almost 7% in early trade. Zoom Video (ZM) gained 4%, while Zscaler (ZS) added 1.3%. Jumia Technologies (JMIA) slipped 2%.

Avalara spiked to fresh highs, clearing its post-IPO watermarks from June. Shares are up now up 73% since clearing an IPO base in January, and trading 207% above their initial offering price. The automated tax-program software developer reported a loss of 1 cent per share, vs. views for a 16-cent loss. Revenue surged a stronger-than-expected 38%, and second-quarter revenue guidance was above analyst forecasts.

Find Alan R. Elliott on Twitter @IBD_Aelliott

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https://www.investors.com/market-trend/stock-market-today/stock-futures-slip-on-china-trade-war-dow-jones-stocks/

2019-05-08 12:22:30Z
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Asian markets track global equity losses on persistent trade-war fears - MarketWatch

Asian markets retreated Wednesday, following sharp losses on Wall Street as investors worry the trade war between the U.S. and China could escalate.

U.S. stock futures indicated another weak session for those markets on Wednesday, after in a week that has seen losses of 2% across major U.S. indices. Investors got confirmation Tuesday that the Trump administration will increase tariffs on $200 billion of Chinese goods to 25% from 10% on Friday. Still, China’s Vice Premier Liu He will lead a delegation for ongoing trade talks in Washington on Thursday and Friday, and there remains a possibility that a deal could yet be worked out.

“Over the past 24 hours, there has been a significant sentiment shift as some investors hedge into safe-haven assets while some are falling by the wayside while the balance is opting for the sidelines,” Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management, wrote in a note Tuesday. “But one thing that is for sure, Equity investors are getting more uncomfortable by the hour.”

Markets across Asia had largely recovered Tuesday, following a sharp selloff Monday, but slid back again Wednesday. Japan’s Nikkei NIK, -1.46%   closed down 1.5%, while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HSI, -1.23%   dropped 1.2%.

Losses picked up for the Shanghai Composite SHCOMP, -1.12% which closed down 1.1%, while the smaller-cap Shenzhen Composite 399106, -0.65% slipped 0.4%. South Korea’s Kospi SEU, -0.41% also fell 0.4%, while benchmark indexes in Taiwan Y9999, -0.58%  , Singapore STI, -0.87%   and Indonesia JAKIDX, -0.43%   declined. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 XJO, -0.42%   slipped 0.4%.

New Zealand’s NZ50GR, +0.36%  main stock index bucked the weaker trend, rising 0.4% after the country’s central bank the official cash rate by 25 percentage points to 1.5%, the lowest on record. It was the first rate cut by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand since 2016, and weighed on the country’s currency NZDUSD, -0.1212%  .

Among individual stocks, Toyota 7203, -0.95%   fell in Tokyo trading, as did SoftBank 9984, +0.04%   and Fanuc 6954, -2.24%  . In Hong Kong, Tencent 0700, +1.05%   rose but Sunny Optical 2382, -2.84%  , CNOOC 0883, -1.73%   and Wharf Real Estate 1997, -2.00%   fell. Hyundai Heavy Industries 009540, -1.23%   declined in South Korea, and Foxconn 2354, -2.45%   slipped in Taiwan. Beach Energy BPT, -1.49%   slid in Australia.

Providing critical information for the U.S. trading day. Subscribe to MarketWatch's free Need to Know newsletter. Sign up here.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/asian-markets-fall-after-wall-street-tumbles-on-trade-war-fears-2019-05-07

2019-05-08 12:20:00Z
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Uber And Lyft Drivers Are Striking — And Call On Passengers To Boycott - NPR

Uber and Lyft drivers in a number of U.S. cities are striking on Wednesday, calling for higher wages and better working conditions as Uber prepares to go public on Friday. Its valuation may be as high as $91 billion. Richard Vogel/AP hide caption

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Richard Vogel/AP

Ahead of Uber's initial public offering, drivers for Uber, Lyft and other ride-hailing companies plan to strike, turning off the apps as they flex their collective muscles to say: What about us?

Drivers in 10 cities across the country are taking action on Wednesday to draw attention to what they say are decreasing wages for drivers and a distressing lack of job security – and some are calling on passengers to temporarily boycott the ride-hailing services, too.

Among the drivers' demands in LA are a 10 percent cap on commissions taken by Uber and Lyft, hourly minimum pay, and fare breakdowns on passenger receipts that show the companies' take. New York drivers are demandingan end to sudden account deactivations and the right to appeal through the courts.

The strike was spearheaded by Rideshare Drivers United, a Los Angeles-based association of drivers. And the group is asking for the support of would-be passengers, too.

"We ask that the public support drivers in their struggle for fair wages and our Drivers bill of rights," spokesperson and member Brian Dolber said in an email to NPR. "We are calling for community standards that will ensure that Uber and Lyft do not create needless traffic and pollution. By boycotting Uber/Lyft for 24 hours, passengers can show that they stand with RDU in our fight for a rideshare industry that truly serves Angelenos."

When companies go public, it usually means big money for executives, and sometimes nice payouts for employees. San Francisco's housing market has been bracing for the thousands of newly-minted millionaires spawned by four major IPOs this spring.

Uber's valuation could be as high as $91 billion when trading begins, which would place it among the top three most valuable firms to ever debut on a U.S. exchange. Co-founder and former CEO Travis Kalanick's stake may be worth as much as $5.9 billion.

But the IPO won't be life-changing for most drivers, whom Uber insists are independent contractors, not employees. Some drivers will receive one-time bonuses according to their loyalty: Those who completed more than 2,500 trips before April 7 and at least one this year are eligible for a one-time bonus, ranging from $100 for those drivers with 2,500 completed trips to $40,000 for 40,000 completed trips. U.S. drivers can use that bonus to buy up to $10,000 in stock in the company at the IPO price.

That may not end up being a great deal, if Lyft's IPO is any indication: its shares are down about 20 percent since the initial offering. Some drivers also went on strike before Lyft went public in March.

Strikes or rallies are also planned in Chicago, Washington, Boston, Atlanta, Philadelphia, San Diego, San Francisco, and Stamford, Conn. On Twitter, organizers are using the hashtags #StrikeUberLyft and #AppsOffMay8 to build momentum.

This strike will take different forms in different cities, but in the LA metro area the strike will last for 24 hours, with a picket line at LAX airport and a noon rally. The New York Taxi Workers' Alliance called for a rush hour strike, during which drivers will turn off the Uber, Lyft, Juno and Via apps from 7 to 9 a.m., and then rally outside Uber and Lyft headquarters in Long Island City.

"Uber/Lyft going public on the stock market will make billionaires of Uber and Lyft bosses while drivers struggle in poverty and the companies destroy the livelihoods of drivers in every sector," the New York drivers' organization says in its call to action.

For those who often use ride-hailing apps and want to support the strike, today may mean a commute by public transit, a cab, or bicycle. At D.C.-area airports, officials arranged for extra cabs, and said they always encourage passengers to consider taking the Metro or the bus, The Washington Post reported.

In a statement to Post, Uber said drivers "are at the heart of our service — we can't succeed without them — and thousands of people come into work at Uber every day focused on how to make their experience better, on and off the road. Whether it's more consistent earnings, stronger insurance protections or fully-funded four-year degrees for drivers or their families, we'll continue working to improve the experience for and with drivers."

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https://www.npr.org/2019/05/08/721333408/uber-and-lyft-drivers-are-striking-and-call-on-passengers-to-boycott

2019-05-08 11:05:00Z
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