Selasa, 30 Juli 2019

The Fed’s real message: Save the economy from Trump - POLITICO

Jerome Powell

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell continues to be the subject of criticism from President Donald Trump. | Jacquelyn Martin/AP Photo

finance

The central bank is expected to cut rates this week in part to offset President Donald Trump’s trade war.

In the case of Donald Trump vs. the U.S. Federal Reserve, the president of the United States is likely to secure a winning verdict this week.

Central bank officials are expected to cut interest rates for the first time since the global financial crisis not because Trump demanded it. Instead, they will move in part because the president’s bruising trade policy has helped fuel a global manufacturing slowdown and injected deep uncertainty into executive suites around the world.

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Fed Chairman Jerome Powell won’t directly say it directly after his meetings Tuesday and Wednesday. But the central bank will reverse course at least in part to save the Trump economy from Trump.

“There is just no question that Powell has been 'Trumped' here,” said Ed Yardeni, president and chief investment strategist of Yardeni Research Inc. “Just read Powell’s comments during his recent congressional testimony and trade comes up eight times in the context of weighing on the global economy. All Trump had to do was keep up geopolitical trade uncertainty for a while and he’d get the Fed to cut rates.”

Trump continued to hammer away at the Fed in public comments and tweets on Monday, arguing that a series of rate hikes over the last three years slowed what would otherwise be a much faster economy.

“The Fed ‘raised’ way too early and way too much,” Trump tweeted. “Their quantitative tightening was another big mistake. While our Country is doing very well, the potential wealth creation that was missed, especially when measured against our debt, is staggering.”

But the data does not really support his argument. Interest rates, adjusted for inflation, remain historically low. And consumer spending, which is where higher rates might slow things down, remains the dominant engine of growth. It is on the corporate investment side — where the 2017 tax cut was supposed to unleash a wave of growth — where conditions have stalled.

The U.S. GDP report out last week showed growth slowing to a 2.1 percent pace in the second quarter from 3.1 percent in the first. Most of the gains came from consumer spending, which rose a strong 4.3 percent. Business investment declined by 0.6 percent, the first such drop since the first quarter of 2016. Exports, a key metric for Trump’s promise to reinvigorate American manufacturing, plunged by 5.2 percent and imports rose, increasing the trade deficit.

Trump administration officials say the president is taking a longer-term view of trade relationships and hopes to eventually win concessions from China on important issues including forced technology transfer and intellectual property theft.

They also contend the Fed went too far in rate hikes. National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow said in a recent interview that the Fed should make an "insurance" cut in rates to prevent any slowdown and give the tax cuts more time to work.

Meanwhile, signs of a declining manufacturing sector in the U.S. and abroad continue to pile up. The J.P. Morgan Global Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index, or PMI, reading recently moved into contraction territory for the first time since 2012. Of the 30 nations issuing a PMI report for June, 18 registered a contraction including China, Japan, the UK and Germany.

In the United States, the Institute for Supply Management index for manufacturing dropped for a third straight month in June to 51.7, still indicating expansion but at the weakest level since October 2016, before the trade battles began. Fresh manufacturing data for the U.S. and China will come out later this week.

Job growth in manufacturing companies has also slowed from 22,000 new jobs per month last year to 8,000 per month this year. The Fed said earlier this month that U.S. industrial production was technically in recession, meaning two straight quarters of contraction.

Powell on multiple occasions has cited concerns that trade fights were hurting growth and denting confidence, while being careful not to antagonize Trump directly.

“What we’re seeing is business fixed investment … it’s really slowed down now,” Powell said in congressional testimony earlier this month. “There’s no perfect way to identify these things, but we do connect that to trade policy uncertainty and also uncertainty on global growth, weaker manufacturing around the world.”

The Fed has made clear that trade tensions loom large in its worries about risks to the economy. Company investments in long-term projects like factories and technology picked up during the first half of 2018 in the wake of corporate tax cuts, but those investments have faded much faster than expected.

The central bank’s business contacts tell the Fed they aren’t sure where to put their money because they’re not sure where tariffs might show up next.

“If you’re a manufacturing company in our economy, of any size, chances are pretty good that your supply chain goes across national borders,” Powell said in his testimony. “That supply chain is really part of how you do business, and you just assume that it’s working and you can focus on your clients. When your supply chain is called into question — we hear this a lot from businesses — when it’s called into question, you pull back.”

Powell said trade uncertainty “spiked” in May. Though he didn’t explain why, that coincides with the president’s threat to put tariffs on Mexico over the ongoing migration crisis. Trump's tweet on Mexico spooked investors because it threw the future of the renegotiated NAFTA deal into doubt and raised the possibility of retaliatory tariffs from the U.S.’s third-largest trading partner.

The central bank has also quantified the direct impacts of the trade battles, though those are less a factor in the growth picture. In its semiannual monetary policy report to Congress earlier this month, the central bank estimated that new tariffs might have lowered U.S. imports by roughly $70 billion.

The impact of Trump’s trade wars are starting to weighing on some corporate earnings like those of equipment maker Caterpillar, Apple and chip-maker Nvidia, among others. Economists fear it could get worse.

“Trump’s trade policies are starting to show up in corporate balance sheets,” said Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at consulting firm RSM. “In the third quarter you’d expect to see profit-margin compression across a wider array of earnings reports and the consumer will feel it, which could cause a pullback in consumption. That’s where the problem is for the White House.”

Businesses are also becoming less bullish about future growth, in part because they are uncertain how they will be impacted by tariff policy. The National Association for Business Economics on Monday reported that in its latest survey, members said they believed growth will slow and corporate sales and profits will decline this year.

Inside the survey, 56 percent of goods-producing firms said they had altered supply chains in response to trade policy and 38 percent said they’d delayed investments.

The Fed will likely step into this slowdown scenario on Wednesday with a rate cut of at least a quarter point and perhaps as much as a half a point. Trump already predicted on Monday that whatever it does will not be enough for him.

Economists, meanwhile, question whether a Fed rate cut will do very much to alter the economic picture. Part of the Fed’s rationale for a cut is that the inflation central banks feared would arrive with the jobless rate at historic lows has not arrived. In that sense, the pivot to cuts will be a big win for progressives who have long argued for Powell and the central bank to allow the economy to run hotter.

But with borrowing costs still very low, it’s not likely to change underlying corporate behavior, which may only respond to a more certain policy environment.

“The biggest risk to growth for the economy is the uncertainty as to where economic policy is headed,” said Steven Ricchiuto, chief U.S. economist at Mizuho Securities USA. “And it’s not as if the Fed can fix some of these problems related to uncertainty caused by the administration and these global-related issues.”

There is also some fear that the Fed cutting interest rates will keep investors searching for investments that offer a higher rate of return. These so called “high yield” investments include lower-grade corporate debt and high-risk loans that have risen in volume in recent years and could create significant problems if a sharper slowdown forces defaults.

“The lack of credit is not the problem in the global economy,” Yardeni said. “Central bankers are convinced they can fix problems, when in fact they can’t. And the reach for yield is starting to get borderline insane with the lack of covenants in bonds and loans. I’m starting to get a little feeling of deja vu all over again.”

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https://www.politico.com/story/2019/07/30/powell-trump-trade-interest-rates-1625961

2019-07-30 09:05:00Z
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Super Mario Maker 2 Sold 2.42 Million Copies In Just Three Days - Nintendo Life

Smm2

We all thought that Super Mario Maker 2 would be a pretty popular release, but new financial data from Nintendo has revealed that it's a little more than simply 'popular'.

Nintendo has released its official financial results for the three months ending on 30th June 2019. In that time, Super Mario Maker 2 has gotten off to what Nintendo has called "a good start" by selling 2.42 million copies worldwide.

The data only covers April through June 2019, and the game only released on 28th June; you've probably worked it out already, but that means that Super Mario Maker 2 managed to sell all of those copies in just three days. Wow.

We haven't heard of a Nintendo game having this level of success since Super Smash Bros. Ultimate launched late last year. The game sold 1.2 million copies in its first five days in Japan alone, with later figures revealing that it had surpassed 3 million sales in the US within a week and a half.

Nintendo's data also notes that "sales of titles released in previous fiscal years and titles released by other software publishers continued to grow at a steady pace" over the three-month time frame, including Mario Kart 8 Deluxe which sold another 1.2 million units.

Things certainly are looking good on the Switch software front. Did you buy a copy of Super Mario Maker 2? Let us know in the comments.

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http://www.nintendolife.com/news/2019/07/super_mario_maker_2_sold_2_42_million_copies_in_just_three_days

2019-07-30 09:00:00Z
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Huawei says its first-half revenue jumped 23.2% despite political headwinds - CNBC

A Huawei logo is pictured at their store at Vina del Mar, Chile July 18, 2019.

Rodrigo Garrido | Reuters

China's Huawei reported a 23.2% year-over-year increase in revenue for the first six months of 2019 year despite facing political headwinds.

The company said its total revenue came in at 401.3 billion yuan ($58.26 billion) and its net profit margin for the period was 8.7%. In a press release, the tech giant said its operations are "smooth" and that the "organization is as sound as ever."

Huawei's carrier business, which sells core networking equipment, reported 146.5 billion yuan in sales revenue.

To date, the company says it has secured 50 commercial 5G contracts with leading global telecommunication carriers. 5G refers to the fifth generation of high-speed mobile internet — it's expected to be a major factor in the tech industry for years to come.

For its part, Huawei is considered to be one of the leading names in the race to develop the nascent 5G technology. But the company is facing mounting fears that its technology could enable Chinese espionage through those high-speed mobile networks. Huawei has repeatedly denied that its products represent any risk.

Still, countries like the United States, Australia, New Zealand and Japan have restricted the company's participation in 5G development within their borders.

In May, the United States added Huawei and its affiliates to the Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) Entity List, which effectively halted its ability to do business with American companies. Later, Washington softened its stance somewhat and the tech company could potentially be used as a bargaining chip in ongoing trade negotiations with Beijing.

"Revenue grew fast up through May," Huawei Chairman Liang Hua said in a statement. "Given the foundation we laid in the first half of the year, we continue to see growth even after we were added to the entity list. That's not to say we don't have difficulties ahead. We do, and they may affect the pace of our growth in the short term."

Huawei Founder and CEO Ren Zhengfei previously said in June that the U.S. government had launched "precise 'strikes' against us, with each 'strike' hitting our vital parts."

He said at the time that Huawei's production capacity may decrease in the coming years and its sales revenue "will be about 30 billion US dollars lower than forecasted." Ren previously predicted that Huawei's annual sales revenue would be about $100 billion in 2019 and 2020.

For 2018, Huawei topped $100 billion revenue for the first time.

Huawei phones dominate China

The technology giant's consumer business, which sells smartphones, tablets, PCs and wearables, reported 220.8 billion yuan in revenue.

Huawei said it shipped 118 million units of smartphone for the first half of 2019, resulting in a 24% on-year jump. That figure includes its Honor-branded phones,

The company is already the world's second-largest smartphone maker by shipment volume. In China, Huawei consolidated its lead by taking 38.2% market share in the three months that ended in June as major rivals lost ground, according to a new report from research firm Canalys.

In total, 64% of smartphones that the company shipped for the quarter were in China, according to Canalys data.

"Huawei's addition to the United States Entity List caused uncertainty overseas, but in China it has kept its foot on the accelerator," Mo Jia, an analyst at the research firm, said in the report. "Its core strategy remains investing in aggressive offline expansion, and luring consumers from rival brands."

"The US-China trade war is also creating new opportunities," Mo Jia added.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/07/30/huawei-first-half-results-h1-revenue-up-23percent.html

2019-07-30 07:06:55Z
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Senin, 29 Juli 2019

Uber Only Has 800 Marketing People Now - Gizmodo

Photo: Sean Gallup (Getty)

On Monday, Uber announced it had laid off a third of its marketing department. According to the New York Times, an internal email said the team had “grown bloated.”

Now its just 800 or so people.

Previously, Uber’s marketing team was more than 1,200 people.

1,200 people, marketing.

At the end of last year, 22,263 people worked at Uber. Around 5 percent of them used to work in marketing.

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Today, that number is closer to 3.6 percent (because of the layoffs).

Uber laid off about 400 people. They were laid off from 75 of its more than 700 offices.

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Some of those offices probably did not have marketing staff.

Others might have had marketing staff before, but now they don’t.

Uber became a public company this year.

Its IPO was the single worst one in U.S. stock market history.

Since then, things have not been great, either. (It laid off a third of its marketing staff, for instance.)

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It is unknown when or how Uber will ever become profitable.

Uber believes regulations and worker unrest undermine that possibility, which is true.

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It is also true that both of those things are happening.

The average marketing manager at Uber makes around $69,000 per year. At Uber’s scale, even 1,200 of those is not very much money.

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But then, Uber’s marketing department is now, give or take, just 800 people.

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https://gizmodo.com/uber-only-has-800-marketing-people-now-1836797457

2019-07-29 22:10:00Z
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Trump tweets Fed interest rate cut "will do very little" compared to Europe and China - USA TODAY

President Trump apparently won’t be satisfied with the Federal Reserve’s anticipated quarter percentage point interest cut this week, saying the Fed “will do very little by comparison” to Europe and China.

In a tweet Monday morning, Trump said, “The E.U. and China will further lower interest rates and pump money into their systems, making it much easier for their manufacturers to sell product. In the meantime, and with very low inflation, our Fed does nothing - and probably will do very little by comparison. Too bad!"

Lower rates typically weaken a country's currency relative to other countries, boosting its exports.

Trump has been jawboning the Fed to lower rates to juice the economy since last year, a strategy that has broken with a 25-year precedent of U.S. presidents refraining from criticism of the Fed to preserve its independence.

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Economists, in fact, do expect the European Central Bank and the People’s Bank of China to lower rates later this year to combat economic slowdowns in those regions.

Analysts initially expected the Fed to cut its key short-term rate by a half percentage point after New York Fed President John Williams said in a speech earlier this month that aggressive action is needed to bolster a weakening economy when interest rates are already low.

But the New York Fed quickly clarified Williams’ remarks were not intended to give a signal about short-term interest rate decisions. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard and Dallas Fed chief Robert Kaplan then signaled they favored a more limited cut.

Some economists don’t believe the Fed should reduce rates at all with the economy growing at about a 2.6% annual rate the first half of the year and adding a better-than-expected 224,000 jobs in June. But amid a slowing global economy, the U.S. trade war with China and stubbornly low inflation, the Fed has signaled that it will vote for an unusual “insurance” rate cut to head off a potential downturn.

The thinking is that with rates already low, the Fed would have little room to cut in case a recession.

Many economists expect the Fed to lower its benchmark rate by another quarter point later this year.

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https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2019/07/29/trump-interest-rate-cut-fed-do-very-little/1855626001/

2019-07-29 14:05:00Z
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Ryanair CEO warns of job cuts, 737 Max delivery delays if Boeing doesn't get its 's--- together pretty quickly' - CNBC

Michael O'Leary, CEO of RyanAir.

Anjali Sundaram | CNBC

Ryanair's CEO Michael O'Leary on Monday warned that the prolonged grounding of the Boeing 737 Max could lead to job cuts and other challenges for the low-cost airline.

Boeing has paused deliveries of the jets, meaning airlines like European budget carrier Ryanair, cannot grow their operations as previously anticipated. Regulators have not said when they will allow the planes to fly again. Ryanair executives expected 58 of the planes for the summer of 2020, O'Leary said on an earnings call.

"It may well move to 20, it could move to 10, and it could well move to zero if Boeing don't get their s--- together pretty quickly with the regulator," O'Leary said.

Airlines including European budget carrier Ryanair are grappling with lost revenue since the fuel-efficient Boeing jetliners were grounded in mid-March following two fatal crashes that killed 346 people.

Ryanair isn't the only airline concerned about the grounding, now in its fifth month, spilling into next year. Southwest Airlines, which operates an all-Boeing 737 fleet, last week said it planned to take its new Max planes out of its schedule until early January.

Boeing did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/07/29/ryanair-rails-against-boeing-for-aircraft-delays-from-737-max-grounding.html

2019-07-29 12:06:44Z
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MYLAN: Pfizer will absorb Mylan to create new global pharmaceutical company - WPXI Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH - Pfizer announced Monday it will absorb Canonsburg-based Mylan with Upjohn, the company’s off-patent branded generic business, Mylan said in a press release.    

The two will create a new global pharmaceutical company. 

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Upjohn, makes medications Lipitor, Celebrex and Viagra. Mylan is best known for its EpiPen, an injector used to halt life-threatening allergic reactions.

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Pfizer shareholders will own a majority of the combined company, according to a press release on Mylan’s website. 

The boards of directors for both companies have unanimously approved the agreement.

The deal Monday arrives at a precarious time for big drug makers who are threatened by patent protection losses and lower-priced rivals.

>>PREVIOUS: Lawsuit alleges Mylan, other pharma companies conspired to inflate drug prices

The new company will be incorporated in Delaware and run operations in Pittsburgh, Shanghai and Hyderabad, India.

The combination is expected to close in the middle of next year.

We're continuing to follow this developing story. Refresh WPXI.com for updates. 

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 


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https://www.wpxi.com/news/top-stories/pfizer-will-absorb-mylan-to-create-new-global-pharmaceutical-company/970895521

2019-07-29 11:25:55Z
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