Minggu, 02 Februari 2020

Chinese stocks are having their worst day in years as the coronavirus outbreak escalates - CNN

The Shanghai Composite (SHCOMP) and the Shenzhen Component Index plummeted more than 8% on their first day of trading after an extended Lunar New Year holiday. They've been closed since January 24.
The plunge puts Shanghai on pace for its worst day since August 2015's "Black Monday," when global markets were rattled by China slowdown fears. Shenzhen, meanwhile, hasn't recorded a single-day percentage drop this bad since 2007.
China's currency also fell. The onshore yuan sank 1.5%, dropping below seven yuan to one US dollar in its first day back from the holiday break. The yuan also weakened below the seven mark offshore, where it moves more freely and has been trading since last week.
While global markets have had several days to weigh the rapid spread of the coronavirus, this is the first chance that mainland China has had to react in more than a week. Before the holiday, the number of cases numbered roughly 800 — now, there are more than 17,000.
Markets were originally scheduled to reopen last Friday, but the Chinese government extended the holiday as it worked to control the outbreak.

Pumping money into the market

Authorities knew Monday's shock was likely inevitable. The People's Bank of China said Sunday that it would inject $1.2 trillion yuan ($173 billion) into the Chinese markets using the purchase of short-term bonds to shore up banks' ability to lend money. The measure will help maintain "reasonably ample liquidity" in the banking system and keep currency markets stable, the bank said.
The net amount of liquidity being injected into the markets is much lower. According to Reuters calculations using central bank data, more than $1 trillion yuan worth of other short-term bond agreements will mature Monday. That brings the net amount of cash flooding into the markets down to 150 billion yuan ($22 billion).
The central bank will also keep in contact with financial institutions and markets to determine what other policy responses may be necessary, according to Pan Gongsheng, deputy governor of the central bank.
The coronavirus could cost China's economy $60 billion this quarter. Beijing will have to act fast to avert a bigger hit
Protecting China's financial markets and economy is a top priority for the government, which is also bracing for a potentially severe hit to first quarter economic growth. Some economists have said that China's growth rate could drop two percentage points this quarter — a decline that could mean $62 billion in lost growth.
Along with Monday's liquidity kick, top financial and economic regulators have announced dozens of other measures to stabilize China.
For example, the National Development and Reform Commission — the country's top economic planning agency — said Monday the government would "go to all lengths" to make sure that people have what they need to live, including food and other necessities. It also encouraged companies "that are key to control and prevent the virus" or are "of vital importance to the national economy" to resume production as soon as they can.
And the People's Bank of China said Saturday that it would provide money at low interest rates to commercial banks so that those banks could offer cheap loans to companies that make clinical masks, coronavirus testing kits and other types of medical supplies. The central government will also subsidize those special loans.
The country's stock exchange regulators have also said they would allow companies to delay 2019 annual reports and 2020 quarterly earnings reports if they are affected by the disruption.

Other markets react

Markets elsewhere in Asia opened lower Monday, too — though their losses were not nearly as dramatic as in China.
In Japan, where 20 cases of the virus have been confirmed, the Nikkei 225 (N225) fell 1%. In South Korea, which has 15 confirmed cases, the benchmark Kospi (KOSPI) fell 0.5%.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index (HSI), meanwhile, is about flat, moving between small gains and losses. The index lost more than 6% last week after investors returned from the Lunar New Year holiday. Unlike in mainland China, Hong Kong markets reopened last Wednesday.
In the United States, stock futures were actually higher overnight. Dow (INDU), S&P 500 (SPX) and Nasdaq Composite (COMP) futures were all at least 0.6% higher during Asian trading hours.
US markets haven't been immune from fears over the coronavirus, though. Last Friday, the Dow fell 600 points, capping a turbulent week for stocks.

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2020-02-03 04:35:00Z
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China moves to limit short selling as virus looms over market reopening - Reuters

(Reuters) - China has taken steps to limit short-selling activities as the country’s financial markets prepare to reopen on Monday amid an outbreak of a new coronavirus, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

The sources said China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) had issued a verbal directive to brokerages including Citic Securities Co. and China International Capital Corp. to bar their clients from selling borrowed stocks on Feb. 3.

It was not clear if the suspension — which was first reported on Sunday by Chinese media outlet 21st Century Business Herald — would be extended beyond Monday, one of the sources said.

In an internal memo sent to its branches, Citic called the move a “political task” aimed at helping stabilize the market on the first trading day of the stock market in the Lunar New Year of Rat as the coronavirus outbreak unsettles global markets.

Investors are bracing for a volatile session in Chinese markets when onshore trades resume on Monday after a break for the Lunar New Year which was extended by the government.

China’s policy makers have taken various of measures to protect the financial system from the fallout due to the outbreak. The central bank said it will inject 1.2 trillion yuan ($174 billion) worth of liquidity into the markets via reverse repo operations on Monday.

The CSRC is also considering launching hedging tools for the A-share market to help alleviate market panic and will suspend evening sessions of futures trading starting from Monday, it said.

Additional reporting by Samuel Shen and Cheng Leng; Editing by Helen Popper

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2020-02-02 17:37:00Z
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China to inject US$174 billion of liquidity into markets in virus boost - South China Morning Post

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China to inject US$174 billion of liquidity into markets in virus boost  South China Morning PostView full coverage on Google News
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2020-02-02 14:54:51Z
CBMicGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LnNjbXAuY29tL2Vjb25vbXkvY2hpbmEtZWNvbm9teS9hcnRpY2xlLzMwNDg2MTgvY2hpbmEtaW5qZWN0LXVzMTc0LWJpbGxpb24tbGlxdWlkaXR5LW1hcmtldHMtYW1pZC1uZXfSAXBodHRwczovL2FtcC5zY21wLmNvbS9lY29ub215L2NoaW5hLWVjb25vbXkvYXJ0aWNsZS8zMDQ4NjE4L2NoaW5hLWluamVjdC11czE3NC1iaWxsaW9uLWxpcXVpZGl0eS1tYXJrZXRzLWFtaWQtbmV3

Report says creepy exec made life hellish for Victoria's Secret 'Angels' - Page Six

It was hell out there for those “Angels.”

Victoria’s Secret models were constantly hounded by a creepy executive who made unwanted sexual advances and even once told supermodel Bella Hadid she had “perfect titties,” according to a New York Times investigation.

The executive, Ed Razek, 71, stepped down from its parent company, L Brands, in August — but not before fostering an “entrenched culture of misogyny, bullying and harassment” at the lingerie company, the paper found.

One model, Andi Muise, told the paper Razek had harassed her for months with intimate emails, once writing her, “I need someplace sexy to take you!”

Razek would watch Hadid and other models prepare for fashion shows and remark out loud on their appearance, the report said.

The executive denied the allegations to the Times, insisting they are “categorically untrue, misconstrued or taken out of context.”

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2020-02-02 09:50:00Z
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China central bank to inject $174 billion via reverse repos on February 3 - Reuters

FILE PHOTO: A woman walks out of the headquarters of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), the central bank, in Beijing November 20, 2013. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo

BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China’s central bank said it will inject 1.2 trillion yuan ($173.8 billion) worth of liquidity into the markets via reverse repo operations on Monday, as the country battles a new coronavirus outbreak.

The People’s Bank of China made the announcement in a statement published on its website on Sunday. It also said that the total liquidity in the banking system will be 900 billion yuan higher than the same period in 2019.

Reporting by Leng Cheng in Beijing and Brenda Goh in Shanghai; Editing by Lincoln Feast.

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2020-02-02 07:37:00Z
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Sabtu, 01 Februari 2020

The Morning After: Fox, Roku and Super Bowl LIV - Engadget

Sponsored Links

Hey, good morning! You look fabulous.

Our long national nightmare is over. After a carriage dispute that lasted absolutely no time at all, Fox and Roku have worked out their distribution squabble, and you will be able to watch Super Bowl LIV via Fox apps on the Roku platform.

That should make it easy to watch the game in "4K" if you have the right hardware, without switching apps or plugging another set-top box in. And if you don't have the right combination of hardware or services, then no problem -- we've got some advice.

-- Richard


And DIY music making.The Engadget Podcast: Why Clearview AI's facial recognition is a privacy nightmare

This week, Devindra and Cherlynn dive into how ClearView works, and what unchecked access to powerful facial recognition means for the future of privacy. (It's good for cops, not so much everybody else!) Also, managing editor Terrence O'Brien joins to break down how Billie Eilish recorded a Grammy-winning album in a spare bedroom. It's yet another milestone for DIY home audio production.

Listen on Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts or Stitcher.


Was Grimes late for a studio session?Meet SoundCloud's newest mediocre EDM artist: Elon Musk!

Sure, we said that anyone can make music in a home studio, and in the case of Billie Eilish, it can go from SoundCloud to Grammy-winning in the blink of an eye. But what we didn't expect is that the next person to follow her lead would be Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk. So how is Don't Doubt ur Vibe? It's far from the worst thing on SoundCloud/Spotify, and probably won't lead to a massive lawsuit, so there's that at least.


Bad PasswordPhishing scams leveled up, and we didn't

Columnist Violet Blue explains why we're all gullible enough to fall for phishing attacks and click on links in suspicious emails even though we shouldn't.


Also, there are cars. And planes. And explosions.RED's Hydrogen One phone makes a cameo in the 'F9: Fast Saga' trailer

The next Fast & Furious movie is almost here, and on Friday we got a peek at its four-minute "teaser" trailer. Beyond the near-fantasy-level automotive hijinks, one thing that jumped out is the crew's choice in mobile devices. For whatever reason, more than one car has RED's much-hyped phone strapped to the dash, and this isn't even the only production to feature that hardware -- the Hydrogen One stood in as an evil plot device in the final season of Marvel's Runaways.


It'll give you range anxiety outside cities, however.Honda E first drive: Futuristic and incredibly fun to drive

It's a miracle the Honda E is even here, considering how much Honda seemed to hate electric cars. Until recently, Honda (along with Toyota) has focused on hybrid and hydrogen cars, while ceding the EV market to Tesla and others. However, a maverick gang of Honda engineers convinced management to build the Honda E. They even kept the design pretty close to the Urban E concept it's based on, right down to the wild futuristic interior.

And it paid off. The compact EV's retro-cute je ne sais quoi (not to mention all the technology inside) has grabbed the attention of car buyers and EV fans of all stripes. Now, all that remains is to see if it's as fun to be in and drive as it looks. Steve Dent took it for a spin.

But wait, there's more...


The Morning After is a new daily newsletter from Engadget designed to help you fight off FOMO. Who knows what you'll miss if you don't Subscribe.

Craving even more? Like us on Facebook or Follow us on Twitter.

Have a suggestion on how we can improve The Morning After? Send us a note.

All products recommended by Engadget are selected by our editorial team, independent of our parent company. Some of our stories include affiliate links. If you buy something through one of these links, we may earn an affiliate commission.
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2020-02-01 14:29:29Z
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Chicken wings are Super Bowl LIV's MVP with Americans expected to eat a record 1.4 billion wings - USA TODAY

The chicken sandwich may have finished 2019 as poultry's best player, but on Sunday, the chicken wing will be the MVP.

Super Bowl Sunday is the unofficial annual day of the wing; and this year, Americans are expected to eat a record 1.4 billion of them, 27 million more wings than during the big game a year ago, according to the National Chicken Council's annual Chicken Wing Report.

“Super Bowl is the single-biggest wing occasion,” National Chicken Council spokesman Tom Super told USA TODAY. “The demand for chicken has been increasing, and consumption is at an all-time high. But definitely around Super Bowl time, wings are king."

And to be clear, we're talking about the traditional bone-in wings – not boneless wings, which the Chicken Council's Super called "chicken breast with buffalo sauce." 

For game day, he estimates two-thirds of wings will come from takeout and a third will be made at home. Super Bowl Sunday has been the No. 1 revenue day of the year for chicken wing restaurants, according to an analysis by Womply, a small-business software provider.

A good bet: More people will wager on this year's Super Bowl than ever before

'Super Bowl Fever': Millions of employees expect to ditch work Monday, survey finds

Super Bowl 2020: Big food day

This Sunday is likely to be one of the biggest party days of the year. According to the National Retail Federation's 2020 Super Bowl survey, nearly 194 million adults said they had plans for the game, which pits the San Francisco 49ers against the Kansas City Chiefs in Super Bowl LIV from Miami.

All the parties and food add up.

The retail group's survey estimates the average person will spend $88.65 on food and beverages, merchandise and party supplies, for a total of $17.2 billion nationwide.

Super Bowl Sunday is also still a big day for pizza chains.

It's one of Domino's top five busiest delivery days of the year in the U.S. The pizza chain says it typically sells about 2 million pizzas on game day, which the company says is 40% more than a normal Sunday.

What about plant-based?

While KFC and Beyond Meat announced this week an expanded test of plant-based Beyond Fried Chicken, the vegan-friendly "chicken" will miss Sunday's kickoff.  The test starts Monday in more than 70 locations in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Nashville, Tennessee, and surrounding areas.

Sandy Sauter, executive chef of programs at The Culinary Institute of America, said there's also movement in "plant-forward" rather than "plant-based."

She said while Americans aren’t completely removing meat, they’re trying to make some substitutions and adding more vegetables and other plant-based ingredients into their meals, including on Super Bowl Sunday.

"One easy game-day swap is cauliflower," Sauter said. "We’re seeing a proliferation of Buffalo-style cauliflower on restaurant menus and this versatile vegetable also lends itself to other favorite wing sauces, including barbecue, sweet and sour and sweet chili pepper.”

Hosting a Super Bowl party?: Here are 15 things you need

Ad Meter 2020: Top Super Bowl commercials of all time

Follow USA TODAY reporter Kelly Tyko on Twitter: @KellyTyko

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2020-02-01 08:25:01Z
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