Selasa, 11 Juni 2019

Exclusive: US state attorneys general plan lawsuit to stop Sprint and T-Mobile merger - One America News Network

A smartphones with Sprint logo are seen in front of a screen projection of T-mobile logo, in this picture illustration
A smartphones with Sprint logo are seen in front of a screen projection of T-mobile logo, in this picture illustration taken April 30, 2018. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

June 11, 2019

By Diane Bartz and David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – At least 10 state attorneys general plan to jointly file a lawsuit as soon as Tuesday to stop the $26 billion merger of Sprint and T-Mobile, a deal that would reduce the number of nationwide wireless carriers to three from four, according to three sources familiar with the matter.

New York state’s attorney general is leading the lawsuit, one source said. New York’s attorney general’s office has announced a press conference for this afternoon.

The lawsuit is to be filed in New York, according to one source.

T-Mobile, whose parent company is Deutsche Telekom AG, and Sprint, which is controlled by Japan’s SoftBank Group Ltd, did not immediately comment. A spokeswoman for the New York attorney general declined to comment.

Sprint Chief Executive Marcelo Claure and his counterpart at T-Mobile, John Legere, met with the Justice Department on Monday, according to a source familiar with the matter.

The companies have offered to sell prepaid brand Boost Mobile, to reduce the combined company’s market share in the prepaid wireless business. They have also indicated that they were considering divesting wireless spectrum.

The deal has won the backing of a majority of the Federal Communications Commission. The U.S. Justice Department’s antitrust division staff has recommended that the agency block the deal, but no final decision has been made.

(Reporting by Diane Bartz, David Shepardson, Karen Freifeld)

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https://www.oann.com/exclusive-u-s-state-ags-prepare-lawsuit-to-stop-sprint-and-t-mobile-merger/

2019-06-11 14:37:30Z
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Apple can make US-bound iPhones outside of China if necessary - Engadget

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Zhang Peng/LightRocket via Getty Images

If the trade war between the US and China spirals out of control and leads to Chinese retaliation against American tech production, is Apple hosed? Not necessarily. Senior Foxconn exec Young Liu told investors that his manufacturing company has "enough capacity" to make US-bound iPhones outside of China if necessary. About a quarter of that capacity is elsewhere, Liu said, including growing Indian production. While Apple hasn't made any moves on that front, Foxconn can shift its lines elsewhere if things go south.

China reportedly met with tech companies in recent days, telling them not to comply with US orders that would dramatically affect their Chinese manufacturing plans. It allegedly threatened serious consequences, although it didn't outline what those were.

The safety net could be vital for Apple, not to mention for millions of people who could suddenly be cut off from future iPhones. However, this doesn't guarantee that Apple or other companies would be safe. Even if Apple can keep relying on Foxconn outside of China, some of its individual component suppliers are still located in the region -- there could be trouble if any of those partners are cut off. And even a quick transition could still choke production at a critical moment if it happens anywhere near the release of new iPhones. While Apple might avoid the worst, its situation could still be far from ideal.

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https://www.engadget.com/2019/06/11/apple-can-make-us-iphones-outside-of-china/

2019-06-11 13:22:47Z
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Trump says Fed is keeping interest rates 'way too high' - MarketWatch

President Donald Trump on Tuesday complained on Twitter that the Federal Reserve was keeping interest rates "way too high," allowing "the Euro and other currencies" to be devalued versus the dollar. "The Fed interest rate way too high, added to ridiculous quantitative tightening. They don't have a clue," he wrote. Trump highlighted a Bloomberg story that tourists are flocking to Europe this summer.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-says-fed-is-keeping-interest-rates-way-too-high-2019-06-11

2019-06-11 13:13:00Z
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All US iPhones could be made outside of China if needed, says Foxconn - The Verge

A senior Foxconn executive says that the company could move production of all iPhones destined for the US out of China if the current trade war demands it. In comments reported by Bloomberg and The Wall Street Journal, the head of Foxconn’s semiconductor business group, Young Liu, said, “25 percent of our production capacity is outside of China and we can help Apple respond to its needs in the U.S. market.”

“We have enough capacity to meet Apple’s demand,” Liu said at an investors’ conference. Apple has yet to instruct Foxconn to move production out of China according to Liu.

Apple might need to rethink manufacturing after tariffs up to 25 percent come into effect at the end of June. The new tariff is expected to apply to the wholesale cost of devices like phones, laptops, and tablets imported from China to the USA, the market where a third of Apple’s iPhone revenue comes from. It would be up to Apple to decide how much of the extra cost to pass on to US consumers. Analysts quoted by Bloomberg suggest that passing the cost of the tariffs on in their entirety could result in price increases of between nine and 16 percent, resulting in a drop in demand of anywhere between 10 and 40 percent. Alternatively, absorbing the cost entirely could hit Apple’s earnings per share by six to seven percent.

Foxconn has a big incentive to help Apple since the company is said to be responsible for as much as half of Foxconn’s revenue. A drop in demand for iPhones would lead to a drop in manufacturing demand from Foxconn. The manufacturer is already preparing to shift some iPhone production to India in an attempt to avoid India’s 20 percent import duties.

However, with China planning to retaliate to the Trump administration with a tariff increase of its own, it will be difficult for Apple to escape the impact of the trade war entirely.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/6/11/18661036/foxconn-iphone-production-china-usa-tariffs-import-duties

2019-06-11 11:56:26Z
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Apple Has a Backup Plan If the U.S.-China Trade War Triggers iPhone Tariffs - Fortune

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http://fortune.com/2019/06/11/apple-iphone-china-trade-war/

2019-06-11 11:39:52Z
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European shares gain on Trump tariff relief, carmakers shine - Investing.com

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Signage is seen outside the entrance of the London Stock Exchange in London © Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Signage is seen outside the entrance of the London Stock Exchange in London

By Tom Wilson

LONDON (Reuters) - European shares gained ground on Tuesday, with Germany's carmakers outperforming, as risk appetite held firm after the United States stepped back from imposing tariffs on Mexico.

The pan-European climbed 0.62%, on course for a sixth day of gains in the last seven, with Frankfurt's racing up 1.2% as German investors returned from a one-day holiday.

There, BMW, Daimler and VW - seen as sensitive to trade tariffs - all gained between 1.8%-2%, mirroring a 1.9% gain for the auto sector.

Investors have breathed easier this week after the United States and Mexico reached a deal on Friday to avert tariffs threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump if steps were not taken to curb the flow of mostly Central American migrants.

That eased - for now at least - fears that the United States would find itself in a trade war with another of its largest commercial partners, adding to the dispute with China.

Trump said on Monday he may impose more tariffs on Chinese imports if he cannot make progress in talks with President Xi Jingping at a Group of 20 summit in Japan later this month.

Market participants said that investors would have to wait until the G20 summit, scheduled for June 28-29, for clear signs of how the spat would play out.

In the meantime, stocks are likely to be buoyed by expectations of a cut in rates by the U.S. Federal Reserve. Markets have priced in a cut by July.

"It looks like we will have to wait to see at the end of the month, to see what the next move will be," said David Madden, an analyst at CMC Markets. "In that time, if nothing is said, stocks could press on higher – the belief that the Fed will all of a sudden become dovish is really driving markets."

The MSCI world equity index, which tracks shares in 47 countries, advanced 0.24%. Wall Street futures were also seen opening higher, with S&P500 mini futures up 0.26%.

In Asia, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gained 0.9%, with Shanghai's bourse climbing 2% after China tweaked policy on major investment projects in an attempt to support its slowing economy.

Bourses in Australia, South Korea and Japan also gained.

FED EXPECTATIONS

The dollar held steady above a 2-1/2 month low against a basket of currencies, with rising expectations for a Fed rate cut tempered by a reluctance to close positions before the G20.

The nudged down 0.03% to 96.747 after advancing 0.2% on Monday.

"The markets are pricing in a 25-basis-point rate cut in July," said Peter Schaffrik, head of European rates strategy at RBC Capital Markets, adding that expectations of looser policy would likely continue.

"When you see the narrative that the market is painting, that it is all down to the negative implications from the trade war and the reduction of global trade," he said. "It's difficult to see how any one data point will change the entire picture."

Amid the cautious optimism, a rally in longer-dated euro zone government bonds stalled as the pick-up in risk sentiment globally sparked a sell-off in the bloc.

Germany's 10-year bond yield, seen as a benchmark for government debt, was up 3 basis points at minus 0.23% - still a smidgeon away from last week's record lows.

Thirty-year bond yields in Germany and France were up as much as 8 basis points in early trade.

In commodities, oil prices rose, bolstered by firmer financial markets and expectations that producer group OPEC and its allies will keep withholding supply. futures were at $62.67 at 0741 GMT, up 0.4%.

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https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/asia-stocks-rise-as-policy-tweaks-boost-china-markets-1893817

2019-06-11 08:40:00Z
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Senin, 10 Juni 2019

Salesforce is officially making Seattle its second HQ after its Tableau acquisition - TechCrunch

Here’s an interesting by-product the news today that Salesforce would be acquiring Tableau for $15.7 billion: the company is going to make Seattle, Washington (home of Tableau) the official second headquarters of San Francisco-based Salesforce, putting the company directly in the face of tech giants and Salesforce frenemies Microsoft and Amazon.

“An HQ2, if you will,” Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff quipped right after he dropped the news during the press and analyst call.

HQ2, of course, is a reference to Amazon and its year-long, massively publicised, often criticised, and ultimately botched search (it eventually cancelled plans to build an HQ in NYC, but kept Arlington) for its own second headquarters, which it also branded “HQ2.”

If real estate sends a message — and if you’ve ever seen Salesforce Tower in San Francisco, you know it does for this company — Salesforce is sending one here. And that message is: Hello, Microsoft and Amazon, we’re coming at you.

As we pointed out earlier today, there is a clear rivalry between Microsoft and Salesforce that first began to simmer in the area of CRM but has over time expanded to a wider array of products and services that cater to the needs of enterprise knowledge workers.

The most well-known of these was the tug-of-war between the two to acquire LinkedIn, a struggle that Microsoft ultimately won. Over the years, as both have continued to diversify their products to bring in a wider swathe of enterprise users, and across a wider range of use cases, that competition has become a little more pointed. (Indeed, here’s some perfect timing: just today, Microsoft expanded its business analytics tools.)

I’d argue that the competitive threat of Amazon is a little more remote. At the moment, in fact, the two work very closely: specifically in September last year, Amazon and Salesforce extended an already years-long deal to integrate AWS and Salesforce products to aid in enterprise “digital transformation” (one of Salesforce’s catch phrases).

Placing Salesforce physically closer to Amazon could even underscore how the two might work even closer together in the future — not least because cloud storage is now a notably missing jewel in Salesforce’s enterprise IT crown as it squares up to Microsoft, which has Azure. (And it’s not just a Seattle thing. Google, which has Google Cloud Platform, acquired Tableau competitor Looker last week.)

On the other hand, you have to wonder about the longer-term trajectory for Salesforce and its ambitions. The Tableau deal takes it firmly into a new area of business that up to now has been more of a side-gig: data and analytics. Coming from two different directions — infrastructure for AWS and customer management for Salesforce — enterprise data has been a remote battleground for both companies for years already, and it will be interesting to see how the two sides approach it.

Notably, this is not Salesforce’s first efforts to lay down roots in the city. It established an engineering office in the city in 2017 and as Benioff pointed out today, putting deeper roots into what he described as a “unique market with tremendous talent” will open up the company to tapping it even more.

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https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/10/salesforce-is-officially-making-seattle-its-second-headquarters-with-its-tableau-acquisition/

2019-06-10 13:56:33Z
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