Sabtu, 01 Juni 2019

Buffett’s Charity Auction Breaks Record With $4.57 Million Bid - Bloomberg

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  1. Buffett’s Charity Auction Breaks Record With $4.57 Million Bid  Bloomberg
  2. How to Have Lunch With Warren Buffett  The Wall Street Journal
  3. Warren Buffett: His Best Investing Strategies, Stocks, and Advice  Motley Fool
  4. From software to soft serve, Bill Gates joins Warren Buffett in dishing up ice cream at Dairy Queen  GeekWire
  5. Warren Buffett's Charity Auction Bidding Surges Past $4 Million Level  Bloomberg
  6. View full coverage on Google News

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-06-01/buffett-s-charity-auction-breaks-record-with-4-57-million-bid

2019-06-01 10:20:17Z
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Justice Dept. Explores Google Antitrust Case - The New York Times

WASHINGTON — The Justice Department is exploring whether to open a case against Google for potential antitrust violations, putting renewed scrutiny on the company amid a growing chorus of criticism about the power of Big Tech, three people with knowledge of the deliberations said Friday.

An investigation into how Google arranges search results could revive a case closed in 2013 by another government agency, the Federal Trade Commission. The five F.T.C. commissioners voted unanimously at the time against bringing charges against the company. Google agreed to make some changes to search practices tied to advertising.

But this year, with a new antitrust task force announced in February, the trade commission renewed its interest in Google. In recent weeks, the commission referred complaints about the company to the Justice Department, which also oversees antitrust regulations, according to two people familiar with the actions. The commission has also told companies and others with complaints against Google to take them to the Justice Department.

The task force had been looking into Google’s advertising practices and influence in the online advertising industry, according to two of the people. One of the people said the agency was also looking into its search practices. Most of Google’s revenue comes from advertisements tied to its search results.

A Justice Department spokesman, Jeremy Edwards, declined to comment, as did representatives for Google and the F.T.C.

The Wall Street Journal earlier reported on the Justice Department’s potential inquiry into Google.

If the Justice Department opens a formal investigation, it will be its first major antitrust case against a big tech company during the Trump administration. Google, Facebook and Amazon have come under intense bipartisan criticism, and calls to break up the firms have become a talking point in the race for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination.

Political leaders and consumer advocacy groups have criticized American regulators for inaction against tech companies. Google, Amazon and Facebook have faced stiff penalties from a variety of European regulators for antitrust and privacy issues. This year, European regulators fined Google 1.5 billion euros for antitrust violations in the online advertising market, the third antitrust move against the company by European officials in three years.

American regulators have been investigating Facebook’s privacy practices, and the outcome is widely seen as a test of the nation’s ability to police how giant tech firms handle user data. The F.T.C. is negotiating a settlement with Facebook that expected to be as much as $5 billion for failing to protect its users’ data from being used for political profiling by Cambridge Analytica, a British political consulting firm that had worked for President Trump’s presidential campaign.

There has been a wave of new antitrust scrutiny into tech companies in Washington, including a Senate hearing in May on digital advertising that featured accusations that Google engaged in anticompetitive practices.

The call to regulate and scrutinize Big Tech has also become a consistent campaign promise among Democratic presidential candidates, even longtime friends of Silicon Valley such as Senators Cory Booker of New Jersey and Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota. Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts brought her “Break Up Big Tech” slogan to a billboard in San Francisco this week.

“Today’s big tech companies have too much power — too much power over our economy, our society and our democracy,” Ms. Warren wrote in a blog post on Medium this year.

When the F.T.C. announced the antitrust task force, the agency’s chairman, Joseph J. Simons, said it had been created because technology companies presented new challenges to decades-long regulation of antitrust. Companies like Google and Facebook offer free services and can argue that alternative search and social networks are a click away for consumers. That can complicate arguments that the services harm consumers or stifle competition.

The task force has started to steer complaints about Google to the Justice Department’s antitrust division. The department and the F.T.C. regularly negotiate over who has jurisdiction over antitrust cases, including investigations into competition violations and the review of mergers.

While some of the complaints against Google are years old, there has been a surge of new ones in recent months as concerns over Silicon Valley’s influence and power have grown, according to one of the people with knowledge of deliberations.

Stephen Kaufer, the chief executive of TripAdvisor, a company that has complained about Google’s practices in the past, said he welcomed the new scrutiny on the tech giant.

“TripAdvisor remains concerned about Google’s practices in the U.S., the E.U. and throughout the world,” he said in a statement, referring to the European Union. “For the good of consumers and competition on the internet, we welcome any renewed interest by U.S. regulators into Google’s anticompetitive behavior.”

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https://www.nytimes.com/2019/05/31/business/google-antitrust-justice-department.html

2019-06-01 04:03:30Z
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How much? Bidder pays $4.6m for lunch with Warren Buffett - Financial Times

The chance to talk business over a lunchtime steak with the third-richest man in the world has cost an anonymous bidder more than $4.5m. 

On Friday, a charity auction for a meal with renowned investor Warren Buffett, 88, closed at $4,567,888, all of which goes to Glide, a charity working to alleviate poverty and homelessness in the San Francisco Bay Area.

The eager diner’s bid broke the previous record of $3.46m, the amount paid in 2012 and 2016, and takes the total sum raised in the 20 years Mr Buffett has hosted the lunch to more than $33m. 

As has become tradition, the lucky bidder and up to seven friends will dine at New York’s Smith & Wollensky steakhouse with the Oracle of Ohama. Hosted by online marketplace eBay, this year’s auction racked up bids from five anonymous individuals hoping to win what was billed as a “power lunch”. Bidding, which began at $25,000, surpassed $3.5m less than 12 hours after the sale opened on Sunday.

“We’re so amazed and grateful,” said Karen Hanrahan, Glide president and chief executive.

Nestled in the heart of San Francisco’s Tenderloin neighbourhood, Glide offers free meals to those in need, aims to provide a sense of community and helps with addiction problems. 

This year’s annual lunch is especially important for the charity, said Ms Hanrahan. The organisation, which has an annual operating budget of just $23m, is expanding the services it offers in the Bay Area amid worsening levels of poverty and homelessness. 

“The demand for services is skyrocketing and the gap between the rich and the poor is expanding,” she said.

Alongside adding to its daily support services, Glide is also broadening the scope of its work in order to advocate for social justice reforms on a national level. Extreme poverty is starkly visible in San Francisco, where many people live in tents and on the streets just blocks away from expensive new developments and tech billionaires. As rent in the city has soared over the past decade, some have blamed the technology companies whose expansion has transformed the local economy.

Despite the multimillion dollar price tag of lunch with the billionaire founder of Berkshire Hathaway, a successful bid in the annual auction could be considered a savvy investment: a past two-time winner of the charity lunch, Ted Weschler, was hired by Mr Buffett to help manage his stock portfolio after outbidding competitors in 2010 and 2011.

“It’s been nothing but good,” Mr Buffett told Ms Hanrahan before the auction. “I've met a lot of interesting people from all over the world. There’s nothing like backing winners and helping people become winners.”

“Warren has said he will be with us until he can't stand,” said Glide co-founder Janice Mirikitani. “He’s a wise man and a good friend.” 

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https://www.ft.com/content/92c0d21e-83f7-11e9-9935-ad75bb96c849

2019-06-01 03:17:58Z
52780306777290

Jumat, 31 Mei 2019

Stocks slump after Trump expands trade war to Mexico - ABC News

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https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/stocks-slump-us-expands-trade-war-mexico-63399646

2019-05-31 17:35:00Z
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Stocks slump after Trump expands trade war to Mexico - ABC News

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https://abcnews.go.com/Business/wireStory/stocks-slump-us-expands-trade-war-mexico-63399646

2019-05-31 15:55:00Z
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Uber Lost $1 Billion In 1st Quarter, Hopes Profit-Slashing Price Cuts Ease Up Soon - NPR

Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi says he expects Uber and Lyft will be easing off their price-slashing battle soon. Richard Drew/AP hide caption

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Richard Drew/AP

For most companies, losing $1 billion in a quarter would be a big disappointment. But Uber's first report as a publicly traded company was actually better than it had warned investors to expect.

The ride-hailing and food-delivery giant brought in more than $3 billion in revenue in the first three months of 2019 — a 20% jump from the same quarter a year earlier.

Before going public earlier this month, Uber had told investors to be prepared for an even larger loss in the first quarter. Now, it's telling them it expects the price-cutting competition that has hurt its profits to ease up soon.

Uber has burned through money for years by spending heavily on growth — offering financial incentives to attract new riders and drivers, and taking on the costs of expanding into new markets around the world. So far, that growth has never translated into profits.

Uber's IPO did not go well. Despite pricing its shares relatively conservatively, at least compared with early expectations, the company saw its stock drop immediately, and it finished day one lower than it started. Since then, Uber shares have never sold at the value set for the initial offering.

Wall Street liked what it saw in Uber's first earnings report. Its stock was up more than 1% in early trading Friday.

Uber's earnings report shows the company continues to expand rapidly, especially in Uber Eats, its food delivery branch. In South America, however, the company saw revenue shrink as it faces intense competition from rival Didi.

In the U.S., meanwhile, Uber is facing off with its smaller competitor Lyft.

Around the world, competition in ride-hailing is driving down prices and contributing to Uber's losses. In the earnings call on Thursday, Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said he expects Uber and Lyft, at least, will be easing off their price-slashing battle soon.

"The competition is going to be more healthy," he said. "It's going to be based on brand and product and technology, which we think is the right way to compete, versus throwing money at the problem."

He also acknowledged that Uber has faced headwinds in the U.S. due in part to the tremendous damage to the brand over the past few years — marked by sexual harassment allegations, reports of illegal business practices, data breaches and other scandals.

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https://www.npr.org/2019/05/31/728576269/uber-lost-1-billion-in-1st-quarter-hopes-profit-slashing-price-cuts-ease-up-soon

2019-05-31 13:54:00Z
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Uber's earnings print inspires new bull - Seeking Alpha

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Uber's earnings print inspires new bull  Seeking Alpha

Atlantic Equities upgrades Uber (UBER) from Neutral to Overweight after the first post-IPO earnings report but trims the PT from $55 to $52, implying a 31%

View full coverage on Google News
https://seekingalpha.com/news/3468261-ubers-earnings-print-inspires-new-bull

2019-05-31 13:10:00Z
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