Kamis, 26 September 2019

Tobacco giant's stock crashes on vaping crackdown warning - Yahoo Finance

A man uses a vape as he walks on Broadway in New York City, US. Photo: Andrew Kelly/Reuters

Shares in tobacco giant Imperial Brands (IMB.L) crashed by 10% on Thursday after it warned of a slowdown in the US vaping market.

Imperial said that revenue growth was set to be slower than expected this year due to the “challenging” US vaping market and changes in Africa, Asia, and Australia.

“Whilst this is disappointing for the current year, we believe that NGP [next generation products] provides a significant opportunity to deliver additive growth to complement our Tobacco business,” Imperial said in a statement.

Imperial owns brands like Lambert & Butler cigarettes, Rizla rolling papers, and Golden Virginia tobacco. It’s “next generation products” include vaping product Blu.

Imperial said “environment has deteriorated considerably over the last quarter with increased regulatory uncertainty, including individual US state actions.”

Regulators in the US have been cracking down on vaping amid reports of deaths potentially linked to the tobacco alternative. Earlier this month Donald Trump announced that the US Food and Drug Administration would ban all flavoured vapes and last week the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention advised people to avoid vaping until possible health risks were better understood.

“This has prompted a marked slowdown in the growth of the vapour category in recent weeks, with an increasing number of wholesalers and retailers not ordering or not allowing promotion of vaping products,” Imperial said on Thursday.

READ MORE: Cigarette giant behind Lucky Strike cuts 2,300 job amid shift to vaping

Nicholas Hyett, an equity analyst at investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown, said: “Vaping’s only a small contributor to revenues and profits at the moment, which is why full year earnings per share look set to come in flat year-on-year, but hopes had been high that the vaping segment would drive growth as traditional tobacco declines.”

Imperial is not the only company to have suffered from the US vaping crackdown in recent weeks.

The CEO of Juul, America’s biggest vaping company, resigned earlier this week as the company agreed to stop marketing, amid pressure over its marketing to teens.

Tobacco giants Philip Morris (PM) and Altria (MO), which owns 35% of Juul, also ended merger talks on Wednesday. Analysts said the vaping crackdown was likely a factor in ending the $200bn deal.

“It is not a good time to be a vaping company,” Russ Mould, investment director at stockbroker AJ Bell said. “Political and regulatory pressures are coming down hard on the sector.

“While the public has been slowly switching from cigarettes to smoke-free products, there is a growing negative backlash in other circles caused by concerns over the large number of younger people vaping and the potential health threats.”

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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/imperial-brands-profit-warning-vaping-crackdown-us-blue-084504972.html

2019-09-26 08:45:00Z
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Asian markets mostly rise on trade optimism - CNN

Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index (HSI) gained 0.2%, after US President Trump suggested a trade deal with China might come soon.
Trump told reporters Wednesday at the United Nations in New York that a US-China deal could come sooner "than you think," according to multiple reports.
The news cheered American investors on Wednesday, with US stock markets having their best day in two weeks.
"Investors have been 'trade war' bearish for so long that any sliver of optimism is cheered," wrote Stephen Innes, a market strategist for Asia Pacific at AxiTrader.
Japan's Nikkei (N225) also edged up 0.2%, after Trump and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe signed a trade deal Wednesday, which reduced tariffs on some agricultural and industrial goods for both sides.
"We welcome these achievements as tangible evidence of the strength of the relationship between our two nations," the two leaders said in a joint statement.
China's Shanghai Composite Index (SHCOMP) opened higher, but slid into negative territory in the morning trade and lost 0.7%.
On Wednesday, the US imposed sanctions on several Chinese companies and their executive officers for alleged involvement in transporting oil from Iran.
"We're telling China and all nations, know that we will sanction every violation of sanctionable activity," Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said at a conference organized by the group United Against Nuclear Iran.
Elsewhere in the regions, Korea's Kospi (KOSPI) added 0.1%.

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https://www.cnn.com/2019/09/26/investing/asian-market-latest-japan-china-trade/index.html

2019-09-26 05:06:00Z
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Rabu, 25 September 2019

Juul Shake-up: C.E.O. Steps Down - The New York Times

The chief executive of Juul Labs, the dominant e-cigarette company that has been the target of public and regulatory outrage over the soaring use of teenage vaping, stepped down on Wednesday.

The executive, Kevin Burns, will be replaced by K.C. Crosthwaite, an executive from Altria, the major tobacco company that owns a 35 percent stake in Juul, the San-Francisco-based company.

Juul also said it would end one of its campaigns, “Make the Switch,” which the Food and Drug Administration had criticized as an effort to portray its e-cigarettes as safer than traditional cigarettes. The company also said it would not fight the Trump administration’s proposal to ban flavored e-cigarettes.

In addition, Altria and Philip Morris International said on Wednesday that they had ended talks to merge, dashing the chances of reuniting the two arms of what had once been Philip Morris.

In a statement, the companies said they would instead focus on rolling out the IQOS heated tobacco product in the United States. They emphasized that IQOS, which Philip Morris International sells abroad, is not “an e-vapor product,” unlike Juul’s devices.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/09/25/health/juul-vaping.html

2019-09-25 11:34:00Z
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Thomas Cook collapse: German company files for bankruptcy - BBC News

Thomas Cook's German subsidiary has announced it is filing for insolvency in an attempt to save its national brands after the collapse of the UK parent company on Monday.

Almost 100,000 holidaymakers are travelling with the German affiliates and it is not clear what the bankruptcy proceedings will mean for them.

The German government has already granted a €380m (£335m; $420m) bridging loan to the holiday airline Condor.

Condor is 49% owned by Thomas Cook.

The central state of Hesse, where Condor is based, also stepped in to rescue the airline, arguing that it was profitable.

The company said it was "operationally healthy" and the six-month loan was aimed at preventing any "bottlenecks" resulting from its British parent company. The funding will be paid out pending an agreement with the European Commission.

Thomas Cook Germany is also based in Hesse and state premier Volker Bouffier said it was in principle willing to step in to help that company too.

It said that it had long been burdened by the weak Thomas Cook business in Great Britain and by Brexit.

How are European tourists affected?

A total of 600,00 holidaymakers have been caught up in the collapse of the UK company. Many have travelled from the UK but Thomas Cook's empire stretches across Europe and tens of thousands have travelled with its subsidiaries.

Under EU package holiday rules, holidaymakers are protected financially from a company's insolvency as well as having the right to repatriation.

The UK's Civil Aviation Authority has had the task of bringing back more than 150,000 holidaymakers. It repatriated more than 14,000 passengers on Tuesday and was expecting to bring back another 16,500 on Wednesday.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Thousands of Dutch, Belgian and Polish tourists are still abroad, but the biggest group affected outside the UK is from Germany. A spokeswoman said on Wednesday that 97,000 people were currently travelling with the company.

Thomas Cook Germany employs some 2,000 people and has several national brands, including Neckermann, Ă–ger Tours, Air Marin and Bucher Reisen. A thousand people are employed by the company near Frankfurt.

It said it was talking to the German foreign ministry as well as the travel bankruptcy insurer, Zurich, about repatriating customers. Like Condor, it has asked the Hesse state government and the federal government for a bridging loan.

Thomas Cook's Polish subsidiary, Neckermann Polska, has suspended its activities and said it will also file for bankruptcy.

Why has Germany's Thomas Cook filed for bankruptcy?

The German subsidiary believes its brands have a future and is in negotiations with investors and hotel operators to continue in business.

Thomas Cook GmbH said it had been forced to seek insolvency to extricate itself from its (UK) parent company's "financial tie-ups and related liabilities".

Media playback is unsupported on your device

"We owe this to our long-standing customers, committed employees and other partners who have supported us so much over the years and in the last difficult weeks," said chief executive Stefanie Berk.

Founded in 1841, parent company Thomas Cook filed for bankruptcy after failing to secure emergency funding of £200m from the UK government.

In the UK, anyone who has bought a package holiday covered by the Air Travel Organiser's Licence scheme (Atol) will have the cost refunded.

However, some customers whose future holidays have been cancelled have seen the price of replacement deals spiral.

How have businesses around the world been affected?

There is concern in countries such as Egypt and Greece that local businesses could be financially impacted by loss of tourism.

  • The Gambia's government has held an emergency meeting. There is concern that Thomas Cook's collapse will hurt tourism, which provides about a third of the country's GDP
  • In Egypt, Thomas Cook operator Blue Sky said reservations until April 2020 have been cancelled. The company runs many charter flights from the UK to Sharm El-Sheikh and officials say resorts there will be affected
  • In Cyprus, the loss for hoteliers and the wider economy is about €50m, according to deputy tourism minister Savvas Perdios. Hotels are owed money for July, August and September, he added
  • Greek tourism minister Grigoris Tassios has said hotels expect losses on payments from recent months. He said they would attempt to recover money from Thomas Cook in court
  • In India, Goa's Travel and Tourism Association said that the loss of Thomas Cook is a "big, big, blow to the industry"
  • Spain's Balearic Islands faces losses running into millions of euros. Thomas Cook has a tax office in Palma with hundreds of employees, and also works with hotels in the Balearic Islands and Canary Islands
  • Turkey's Hoteliers Federation (TUROFED) has warned that the country could miss out on up to 700,000 tourists a year due to the collapse.

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https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-49824427

2019-09-25 11:19:06Z
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Thomas Cook holidaymakers and crew 'can leave' Cuba, says CAA - BBC News

Thomas Cook holidaymakers and crew are free to leave Cuba, according to the Civil Aviation Authority.

Repatriation flights have been arranged with the aid of the British Ambassador to Cuba, it said.

Tourists had said they were prevented from leaving their hotels until they paid extra for their stay.

One holidaymaker, Sue Petrow, who was due to leave, said her hotel had told her she could be held at the airport unless she paid her bill.

Cabin crew from Thomas Cook had also said they were effectively being "held hostage" by security guards at a hotel.

But Dame Deirdre Hutton, the chair of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), told the BBC's Today programme: "That has been sorted out by the ambassador overnight, and the Cuban flight is in the air on its way back, which is very good news."

"It's also an example of how we're working very closely with the Foreign Office, which is great."

"It's very distressing for people who are finding difficulties with their accommodation, but what we've done is issue guarantees to the... hotels with Atol-protected British tourists," she added.

The British Ambassador to Cuba said hotels had been instructed to allow customers to depart without paying additional charges.

Antony Stokes said on Twitter: "Very grateful for patience of all affected in distressing circumstances."

Sue Petrow said she and other guests had refused to pay extra charges demanded by the hotel.

Holidaymakers like Sue may have paid for their rooms and meals months in advance, but hotels would normally only receive the money from Thomas Cook several weeks after their stay.

Reports suggested there was widespread concern in Cuba over whether the industry insurance fund Atol, which covers payments in the event of a firm failing, would foot the costs.

The fund covers bills that have been run up since Thomas Cook's collapse on Monday morning.

However, bills run up at hotels before Thomas Cook's collapse will not be covered. Affected hoteliers will have to apply to the liquidators for their money.

Counting costs

Dame Deirdre said the CAA had issued guarantees for payment to 3,000 hotels around the world, and had already started making the first payments. The CAA had 200 staff working with Thomas Cook employees, she added.

"Given how much those hotels are owed by Thomas Cook, it's hardly surprising that they are suspicious and angry," she said.

Thomas Cook owes hotels £338m, with one hotel in Mexico owed £2.5m, she added.

The Insolvency Service has written to local tourist boards to make sure hotels are working with the CAA on payments, Dame Hutton said.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Repatriation

On Monday, the CAA launched the UK's largest peacetime repatriation operation to bring more than 150,000 people back to the UK after the collapse of the holiday firm.

So far, more than 95% of people have been brought back on their original day of departure, the CAA said.

On Tuesday, 70 flights brought back more than 14,000 passengers, it said. There are 70 flights scheduled on Wednesday, bringing back a further 16,500 people.

The flying programme will continue until 6 October with more than 1,000 flights planned.

Richard Moriarty, chief executive of the CAA, said: "I would like those remaining on holiday to enjoy the rest of their stay because we aim to also fly you home on the day when you were originally booked to fly with Thomas Cook, or very shortly thereafter.

"This remains a highly complex operation and I would like to thank holidaymakers for their patience as some inconvenience and disruption is likely."


How are customers protected?

If you are on a package holiday, you are covered by the Atol scheme.

  • The scheme will pay for your accommodation abroad, although you may have to move to a different hotel or apartment
  • Atol will also pay to have you brought home if the airline is no longer operating
  • If you have a holiday booked in the future, you will also be refunded by the scheme
  • If you have booked a flight-only deal, you will need to apply to your travel insurance company or credit card and debit card provider to seek a refund

What are your rights? Read more here.


The CAA has set up a dedicated website to keep Thomas Cook customers updated with the latest advice and news.

It is running a call centre and Twitter feed with open direct messages to respond to holidaymakers 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The call centre can be reached on 0300-303-2800 inside the UK and +44 1753-330330 from abroad.


Are you a Thomas Cook customer or staff member affected by the company's collapse? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

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https://www.bbc.com/news/business-49823225

2019-09-25 09:36:27Z
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Thomas Cook holidaymakers and crew 'can leave' Cuba, says CAA - BBC News

Thomas Cook holidaymakers and crew are free to leave Cuba, according to the Civil Aviation Authority.

Repatriation flights have been arranged with the aid of the British Ambassador to Cuba, it said.

Tourists had said they were prevented from leaving their hotels until they paid extra for their stay.

One holidaymaker, Sue Petrow, who was due to leave, said her hotel had told her she could be held at the airport unless she paid her bill.

Cabin crew from Thomas Cook had also said they were effectively being "held hostage" by security guards at a hotel.

But Dame Deirdre Hutton, the chair of the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), told the BBC's Today programme: "That has been sorted out by the ambassador overnight, and the Cuban flight is in the air on its way back, which is very good news."

"It's also an example of how we're working very closely with the Foreign Office, which is great."

"It's very distressing for people who are finding difficulties with their accommodation, but what we've done is issue guarantees to the... hotels with Atol-protected British tourists," she added.

The British Ambassador to Cuba said hotels had been instructed to allow customers to depart without paying additional charges.

Antony Stokes said on Twitter: "Very grateful for patience of all affected in distressing circumstances."

Sue Petrow said she and other guests had refused to pay extra charges demanded by the hotel.

Holidaymakers like Sue may have paid for their rooms and meals months in advance, but hotels would normally only receive the money from Thomas Cook several weeks after their stay.

Reports suggested there was widespread concern in Cuba over whether the industry insurance fund Atol, which covers payments in the event of a firm failing, would foot the costs.

The fund covers bills that have been run up since Thomas Cook's collapse on Monday morning.

However, bills run up at hotels before Thomas Cook's collapse will not be covered. Affected hoteliers will have to apply to the liquidators for their money.

Counting costs

Dame Deirdre said the CAA had issued guarantees for payment to 3,000 hotels around the world, and had already started making the first payments. The CAA had 200 staff working with Thomas Cook employees, she added.

"Given how much those hotels are owed by Thomas Cook, it's hardly surprising that they are suspicious and angry," she said.

Thomas Cook owes hotels £338m, with one hotel in Mexico owed £2.5m, she added.

The Insolvency Service has written to local tourist boards to make sure hotels are working with the CAA on payments, Dame Hutton said.

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Repatriation

On Monday, the CAA launched the UK's largest peacetime repatriation operation to bring more than 150,000 people back to the UK after the collapse of the holiday firm.

So far, more than 95% of people have been brought back on their original day of departure, the CAA said.

On Tuesday, 70 flights brought back more than 14,000 passengers, it said. There are 70 flights scheduled on Wednesday, bringing back a further 16,500 people.

The flying programme will continue until 6 October with more than 1,000 flights planned.

Richard Moriarty, chief executive of the CAA, said: "I would like those remaining on holiday to enjoy the rest of their stay because we aim to also fly you home on the day when you were originally booked to fly with Thomas Cook, or very shortly thereafter.

"This remains a highly complex operation and I would like to thank holidaymakers for their patience as some inconvenience and disruption is likely."


How are customers protected?

If you are on a package holiday, you are covered by the Atol scheme.

  • The scheme will pay for your accommodation abroad, although you may have to move to a different hotel or apartment
  • Atol will also pay to have you brought home if the airline is no longer operating
  • If you have a holiday booked in the future, you will also be refunded by the scheme
  • If you have booked a flight-only deal, you will need to apply to your travel insurance company or credit card and debit card provider to seek a refund

What are your rights? Read more here.


The CAA has set up a dedicated website to keep Thomas Cook customers updated with the latest advice and news.

It is running a call centre and Twitter feed with open direct messages to respond to holidaymakers 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

The call centre can be reached on 0300-303-2800 inside the UK and +44 1753-330330 from abroad.


Are you a Thomas Cook customer or staff member affected by the company's collapse? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

Please include a contact number if you are willing to speak to a BBC journalist. You can also contact us in the following ways:

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.bbc.com/news/business-49823225

2019-09-25 09:07:52Z
52780389678619

McDonald’s is now accepting job applications through Alexa and Google Assistant - The Verge

McDonald’s today announced a new initiative the fast food chain is calling the “Apply Thru,” in which owners of Amazon Alexa or Google Assistant devices can begin job applications using standard “Alexa” and “Ok Google” voice commands. The company is envisioning this as a way to give young people more ways to start entry-level careers at one of its restaurants, and that apparently extends to artificial intelligence-powered digital voice assistants.

You can’t actually complete the application process using Alexa or Google Assistant. “After beginning the experience via Alexa or the Google Assistant, all they’ll need to do is answer a few basic questions out loud. They’ll receive a text, following their responses to these questions, with a link to complete the application process online. Simple as that,” reads McDonald’s press release. But perhaps if actually using a computer or your phone to start applying to a job at McDonald’s was too much of a hurdle, getting the ball rolling with a hands-free voice request might do the trick.

The initiative is part of a growing series of tech-adjacent efforts McDonald’s has made over the last few years designed to fashion it as a hip, millennial-friendly brand. The company has struggled over the course of the last decade with the rise of fast casual chains, healthier eating and dieting trends, and shifts in dining culture that have resulted in less late-night drive-thru runs and more mobile app ordering.

In response, McDonald’s has embraced the bold future fusion of AI, automation, and on-demand delivery. It’s also still playing up the nostalgic notion that a McDonald’s gig can be a pleasant, entry-level affair for young people — and not the type of job that seems ripe to be replaced by the very software and robotics advancements the company is betting the future of its business on.

An example of McDonald’s more aggressive tech embrace is its massive partnership with Uber Eats, which includes experimental drone delivery, and now DoorDash, as well as the global rollout of its self-order kiosks. On the other end are marketing gems like the “Snaplications” partnership with Snapchat two years ago and now the Alexa and Google-powered Apply Thru. It’s not clear anyone really wants to apply for a job using an AI voice assistant or the Snapchat app. But McDonald’s figures it can’t hurt.

Meanwhile, the real, tech-infused drivers of its business continue to be its shift to accommodate on-demand delivery and its transition into full-scale automation. McDonald’s is currently testing out even more dramatic steps, like actual robots in the kitchen and voice-activated drive-thru systems. The company has also made a number of acquisitions this year, including an estimated $300 million deal for Israel-based AI startup Dynamic Yield, to bring even more AI advancements and personalization to its drive-thru experience, its various in-store and online menus, and other facets of of the business.

The goal, of course, is to cut costs, keep margins high, and ensure McDonald’s can process, compile, and deliver orders as efficiently as possible all around the world, in both densely packed cities and spread-out suburbs and everything in between. Those sound like exciting problems to work on. But chances are the Apply Thru won’t be accepting applications for those jobs.

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https://www.theverge.com/2019/9/25/20883007/mcdonalds-apply-thru-amazon-alexa-google-assistant-job-applications-ai-automation

2019-09-25 08:01:00Z
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