Jumat, 21 Juni 2019

Slack IPO: Huge Pop Unleashes Animal Spirits - Seeking Alpha

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  1. Slack IPO: Huge Pop Unleashes Animal Spirits  Seeking Alpha
  2. Slack Ends First Day of Trading Worth $21 Billion. Now the Hard Work Begins  Yahoo Finance
  3. Why Slack's IPO Investor Sentiment Might Be A Good Omen  Benzinga
  4. Slack Ends Its First Day of Trading Worth $21 Billion. Now the Hard Work Begins  Fortune
  5. How Slack Made Other Startup CEOs Wealthy: Term Sheet  Yahoo Finance
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://seekingalpha.com/article/4271463-slack-ipo-huge-pop-unleashes-animal-spirits

2019-06-21 14:31:00Z
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Elon Musk doubled down on his theory that world population is headed for collapse - Business Insider

Elon MuskElon Musk believes the human population is headed for decline.REUTERS/Mike Blake

  • Elon Musk tweeted on Friday, doubling down on his theory that the global population will be in decline by 2050.
  • The Tesla and SpaceX CEO first backed the theory in 2017 in response to a New Scientist article about a "population bomb."
  • The idea isn't universally accepted, with the UN predicting that the human population will grow to 9.3 billion by 2050.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Elon Musk is still worried about the human population.

The Tesla and SpaceX CEO tweeted on Friday, doubling down on a theory he's backed in the past — that the human population is headed for implosion.

Responding to a tweet, which projected the global population to grow by roughly 1.6 billion by 2050, Musk said the real problem facing humanity is an "aging [sic] and declining world population."

Musk cites Jørgen Randers, a Norwegian academic who in his 2012 book "2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years" argued that the human population will start dwindling from around 2040.

Musk drew attention to the prospect of the human population peaking two years ago, when he pointed to a New Scientist article about a "population bomb" going off by 2076. "The world's population is accelerating towards collapse, but few seem to notice or care," Musk tweeted in 2017.

The idea is not universally accepted. The 2019 UN World Population Prospects Report estimated that the Earth's population could reach 9.7 billion in 2050. However, it did also conclude the world's population is growing at a slowing rate, and noted the "unprecedented ageing of the world's population."

Musk thinks that the world's population will begin to look like an inverted pyramid over the next three decades. "Demographics, stratified by age, will look like an upside down pyramid with many old people & fewer young," he tweeted on Friday morning.

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https://www.businessinsider.com/elon-musk-reiterates-global-population-is-headed-for-collapse-2019-6

2019-06-21 10:55:46Z
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Tanger Factory Outlet Centers: An 8% Recession-Resilient Dividend Yield - Seeking Alpha

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Tanger Factory Outlet Centers: An 8% Recession-Resilient Dividend Yield  Seeking Alpha

The retail environment is undergoing significant changes due to the growth of e-commerce and changing consumer buying habits. REITs face the challenges ...


https://seekingalpha.com/article/4271417-tanger-factory-outlet-centers-8-percent-recession-resilient-dividend-yield

2019-06-21 10:45:00Z
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Canopy Growth Shares Slump After Q4 Earnings; Canadian Pot Sales Slow - TheStreet.com

Canopy Growth Corp. (CGC - Get Report) shares were indicated sharply lower in pre-market trading Friday after the Canadian cannabis group posted a wider-than-expected fourth quarter loss and said recreational sales slowed from the previous three month period. 

Canopy Growth said its loss for the three months ending in March came in at C$0.98 per share, well shy of the C$0.32 loss expected by analysts that cover the cannabis growing group, taking its full-year loss to C$670 million ($507.87 million). Group revenues, however, rose 191% to C$226.3 million for the full year, the company said, with the fourth quarter tally coming in at $94.1 million, just ahead of the Street's C$92.6 million forecast.

Canopy also cautioned that its recently approved deal to acquire rights for U.S. based Acreage Holdings will lead to a charge that will have "a materially negative impact on net income in the first quarter of fiscal 2020."

"The fourth quarter wraps up a historic year with major steps taken in Canada to build-out our national platform while scaling all of our processes to bring cannabis to market. The third quarter of the year benefitted from months of advanced production while the fourth quarter relied more on efficient throughput and a more automated platform," said CEO Bruce Linton. "With more product formats coming to the Canadian market later in the year, we are working hard to ensure that we are ready to hit the ground running with products, formats and brands that Canadians trust."

Canopy Growth's U.S.-listed shares were marked 4.6% lower in pre-market trading, indicating an opening bell price of $41.70 each, a move that would still leave the stock with a 55.2% year-to-date gain.

The company said the material non-cash charge it anticipates taking will occur "upon approval of certain modifications of the investor rights agreement with Constellation Brands, as well as terms of existing warrants."

Constellation Brands (STZ - Get Report) took a CA$5 billion ($4 billion) stake in Canopy last year, to help fund the company's expansion in Canada, where marijuana use was legalized last year, and in other countries around the world where restrictions on its use are relaxing.

Recreational cannabis sales in Canada, which became the world's second country to legalize use of the drug in October of last year, slowed 3.8% to C$68.9 million, the company said. Medical marijuana sales in Canada also slowed over the three months ending in March by 2.5% to C$68.8 million.

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https://www.thestreet.com/investing/earnings/canopy-growth-shares-slump-after-q4-earnings-canadian-pot-sales-slow-14996688

2019-06-21 10:08:30Z
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Are you smarter about money than most Americans? Here's how you can find out. - USA TODAY

A better economy does not make a smarter consumer.

As Americans' finances recovered from the Great Recession – spurred by the longest bull market, 50-year unemployment lows and an almost record-breaking expansion – they got dumber about money matters. 

Just 34% could answer four out of five financial literacy questions correctly last year, down from 42% in 2009, according to the 2018 Financial Capability Study from FINRA Investor Education Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to financial education and empowerment. The figure was down from the 2012 and 2015 studies as well.

The money topics with the biggest drops in comprehension were inflation, risk and interest rates. But the share of right answers to all five questions fell since 2009.

Potential reasons for the declines? Many adults haven't lived through cycles of higher and lower interest rates, or swings in inflation, which affect their mortgages, credit cards and yields in savings.

Little understood money topics

The share of Americans who got the test's inflation question right dropped 10 percentage points to 55% from 2009. Similarly, 43% answered a question about risk accurately, down from 53% in 2009.

Money snapshot: The economy is booming. But are Americans' finances healthier because of it?

Family matters: Parents, here's another expense you'll have to charge to your card this summer: childcare.

When it came to interest rates, 72% answered correctly, down from 78% in 2009. But that question – and the one about mortgages – had the highest share of correct responses overall. In 2018, 73% of Americans got the mortgage question right, according to the study. That's compared with 76% in 2009.

The least understood concept was bond prices. Only 26% of respondents got that question right; 37% got it wrong, while 36% answered: “Don’t Know.”

Want to test your money knowledge? Take the test here

Who’s dumber about money?

Younger and middle-aged adults led the declines.

The share of 18- to 34-year-olds who answered four of the five questions correctly fell by nearly half in the last nine years, going from 30% in 2009 to 17% in 2018. The decline was 45% to 33% for 35- to 54-year-olds. Only those 55 and over showed a modest drop from 51% nearly a decade ago to 48% today.

Golden years: Millennials, you've got this all wrong. You need to stop 'saving' for retirement.

One reason may be exposure, says Gerri Walsh, president of the FINRA Foundation.

Younger people have lived much of their adult lives in a low interest-rate and low-inflation environment, unlike Baby Boomers who can remember the early 1980s when the effective federal funds rate hit 19%. The rate – a benchmark to set interest rates on consumer loans and a tool to fight inflation – is now at 2.4% and was effectively zero from 2009 to 2015.

“These concepts are not relevant to everyday life to those 35 and under where most of the declines are happening,” Walsh says.

Unfortunately, most Americans are also unaware of what they don’t know, the study found. Seven in 10 gave themselves high marks when it came to financial knowledge, even though only a third answered four of the five questions right.

“That’s why we encourage everyone to take the quiz to see how they stack up,” Walsh says. “And then they can turn to other resources if they need to learn more about money.”

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2019/06/21/finances-you-smarter-money-than-most-americans/1514359001/

2019-06-21 10:01:00Z
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Dollars in the detail; banks pan for gold in 'data lakes' - CNA

LONDON: From sending special offers on restaurants to burger-loving current account holders to selling anonymised credit card records, banks are racing to monetize the huge troves of data they hold.

Wall Street trails Silicon Valley in using customer information to boost revenue but with tech giants such as Amazon and Google wading onto their turf with forays into lending and payments, banks including JPMorgan, HSBC and Barclays are moving to narrow the gap.

Mining mountains of trading data to predict stock moves; partnering with retailers on marketing campaigns and using artificial intelligence (AI) tools to try and speed up credit decisions are some of the areas banks are focusing on.

In the digital era, knowing how much people earn, where they spend it and what they buy – information some wouldn't divulge to their closest confidants – is valuable, particularly when banks' earnings from lending and trading are under pressure from persistently low interest rates and tougher regulation.

"We are now seeing some amazing uses of data in banking, and the reason is pretty simple: they know their clients better than anyone, they have a name and address, information about what you're buying and once you have those you can do so much," said Craig Macdonald, head of data monetization at Accenture.

The surge in data mining is happening against a changed regulatory backdrop. New European Union (EU) rules introduced last year allow technology companies to access banks' customer data if they have customers' permission.

The EU has also toughened its privacy laws. Companies now have to get permission before they can collect and use personal information gleaned online from people living in the bloc.

But even with the extra protections, sensitive data is still at risk of being exploited because many people are not aware of how they can shield themselves.

Less than a third of Europeans were aware of all their data rights and only 13 percent said they read privacy statements fully, according to a poll this year of 27,000 EU citizens.

Banks do not disclose how much they earn from analyzing and marketing customer data or other ways in which they monetize the information they hold. But, in comparison to the billions earned from lending and trading, the amounts generated are likely to be small.

"If there was a gold mine people would probably have found it by now," said Benjamin Ensor, an analyst at Forrester. "But if you can generate some marginal incremental revenue at relatively little cost why wouldn't you do that?"

CUSTOMER 12345

Tie-ups with retail firms is one way banks are monetizing their data.

Customers of Britain's Lloyds and Spain's Santander can get special offers from a range of retailers after the banks joined a digital loyalty scheme run by US-based data advertising firm Cardlytics.

The scheme uses spending data to give customers discounts at shops they already frequent or which are in their neighborhood. So, burger-aficionados get deals at local burger restaurants and fashion fans get ads about discounts at clothing stores.

The banks get a percentage of any purchase that results and Cardlytics gets insights on consumer behavior which help the retailers tailor and fund the offers and discounts.

Cardlytics, Lloyds and Santander declined to comment on what cut the banks get from purchases made through the deal.

"We leverage transaction data that's created every time the card is tapped, every time a direct debit is made by a customer, in an anonymised way," said Campbell Shaw, London-based head of bank partnerships at Cardlytics.

"We only need to know it’s customer 12345, we don't need to know the name of the customer for any reason."

Bank clients have to enroll in the rewards program.

A spokesman for Santander said their customer spending data was only shared with Cardlytics if customers choose to receive retail offers. The bank said the information was shared on an anonymised basis meaning the customer's name is replaced by a unique identifying number.

Lloyds declined to comment on the specifics of the deal. Its privacy policy said the scheme would use customers' mobile location data only with their permission.

Even with the tougher regulations around big data, privacy experts warn there is still scope for abuse, for example, if highly-indebted people are targeted with unsuitable offers for high interest loans or credit cards.

"If you can use data to get a customer to buy something that they otherwise wouldn't, it's good for the bank but not necessarily for the customer and the potential for misuse is significant," said Paul Bernal, an expert in data privacy at University of East Anglia.

Ashok Vaswani, global head of consumer and payments at Barclays, told attendees at AI conference CogX in London this month that the bank would crunch data in an ethical way.

"We're going to do it in a transparent and understandable fashion," he said. "If I can't explain it I'm not going to offer it."

Like many banks, Barclays markets anonymised spending data to a range of businesses including mall operators who can see from the information which retail chains attract the most customers and are therefore worth targeting as tenants.

Barclays said it doesn't share personally identifiable information and it sends privacy notices to customers through a combination of email, text, post and via mobile apps. It also has a page on its website explaining its data privacy policy.

DATA LAKES

Using data to improve risk analysis, make faster credit decisions and anticipate customer needs is particularly appealing for banks looking to cut costs.

HSBC plans to use AI tools to rake through its 10 petabytes of data – roughly equivalent to the storage capacity of 2 million DVDs – from investment banking clients in 66 countries.

Europe's largest bank has struck a deal with Element AI, a Canadian company, to help it tap this so-called ‘data lake'.

JPMorgan, meanwhile, is developing a raft of AI applications to better predict stock moves and to map and mine 3 billion transactions it handles annually.

The bank hired Manuela Veloso, the head of the machine learning department at Carnegie Mellon University, to be its head of AI research last year.

In comparison to newer, tech-focused companies, banks are often at a disadvantage when they look to extract value from their data – they lack inhouse experts and their businesses are often siloed with legacy IT systems.

To speed things up, lenders are set to spend US$26 billion on big data and business analytics this year, according to analysis by International Data Corporation, up from US$23 billion last year and US$19.7 billion in 2017.

Hires for senior leaders with digital experience at financial firms have doubled year on year for the last five years, according to London-based headhunters Heidrick & Struggles.

“These skills are now a necessity within senior leadership teams," says Marcus De Luca, UK financial services practice leader at the recruiter.

“We are often asked if there is someone who works at Amazon, Google, Netflix, or Facebook who could be tempted to join."

(Editing by Carmel Crimmins)

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https://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/business/dollars-in-the-detail--banks-pan-for-gold-in--data-lakes--11648968

2019-06-21 06:24:16Z
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Terry Gou resigns as Foxconn’s chairman to run for president of Taiwan - TechCrunch

Terry Gou said at Foxconn’s annual general meeting today that he is leaving the electronics manufacturing giant as he prepares to run for president of Taiwan. Gou, who founded Foxconn (also known as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co.) 45 years ago and is also its biggest shareholder, will remain on the company’s board. Young Liu, the head of Foxconn’s semiconductor business, will succeed him as chairman and the company will also transition to a committee-directed management structure.

Gou first officially announced in April that he plans to resign as chairman to focus on his campaign for the nomination of Taiwan’s opposition party, the Kuomintang. If he succeeds against other KMT candidates, including Kaohsiung mayor Han Kuo-Yu, Gou will be challenging President Tsai Ing-wen, a member of the Democratic Progressive Party, for the election next January.

Foxconn (one of Apple’s biggest suppliers) is China’s largest private employer and the Kuomintang supports a closer relationship with the Chinese government, despite its stance that Taiwan is a rogue province. Gou’s ties to the country will be scrutinized during the campaign as he opposes Tsai and the DPP, advocates of Taiwan’s sovereignty. The issue is especially fraught after the recent large-scale demonstrations in Hong Kong against a bill that would have allowed extradition to China.

Last month Gou, who has never held political office before, tried to assuage critics by saying he has no plans to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping after the head of Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council of the Executive Yuan, Chen Ming-Tung, claimed Gou had said Taiwan was part of China. Gou also said that during a recent meeting with Donald Trump he had asked the president of the United States to work on improving the relationship between all three countries.

Gou’s campaign has also been marred by other controversies, such as when he said “the harem should not meddle in politics” after his wife, Delia Tseng, objected to his candidacy. Gou later apologized for the remark.

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https://techcrunch.com/2019/06/20/terry-gou-resigns-as-foxconns-chairman-to-run-for-president-of-taiwan/

2019-06-21 05:08:33Z
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