Selasa, 03 Desember 2019

AK Steel Stock Up, Cleveland-Cliffs Stock Down on Acquisition News. Here’s Why. - Barron's

Iron ore miner Cleveland-Cliffs shocked the steel establishment with a surprise all-stock buyout of AK Steel. The move has AK Steel shares up in premarket trading while Cliffs shares are tumbling.

Untangling the logic of the deal will take some time and requires a dive into raw material markets and the nature of steelmaking. For now, the Street is panning the deal. The combined value of both firms is lower than it was before the deal was announced. One plus one is equaling less than two for these steel-based companies.

First, the details. AK Steel (ticker: AKS) shareholders will receive 0.4 shares of Cleveland-Cliffs (CLF) for each AK share held. That works out to about $3.36 per AK share, a 16% premium over the $2.89, based on Monday closing prices. AK Steel stock is up 6.2% to $3.07 in premarket trading at 8:35 a.m.

Cliffs stock, however, has dropped 9.4% to $7.62. Cliffs stock is down for two reasons. The first is technical. When an all-stock deal is announced merger arbitrage investors will sell the buyer’s share—Cliffs in this instance—and buy the target’s stock, locking in a spread, a profit earned if the deal closes as originally envisioned.

The merger-arb aspect of this deal, however, isn’t why Cliffs share are down a lot. Cliffs investors were happy owning iron ore capacity, but aren’t very happy to be owning steelmaking capacity. Iron ore margins, over time, have been better than margins for U.S. steel producers. The deal creates a far more complicated company with a more complex profit margin structure.

It gets more complicated still. AK Steel is a customer of Cliffs, and that means part of Cliffs’ profit was derived from AK Steel. Now both companies are slated to become one so AK Steel’s costs go down—in theory. AK doesn’t have to pay a spread above Cliff cost for iron ore any longer. That pushes up AK earnings, but it reduces iron ore profits—again, in theory. The profitability of the overall entity isn’t changed when a supplier buys a customer.

Cliffs says it earns $30 to $40 per ton of iron ore pellets shipped to AK Steel in the merger presentation available on the company’s website. What’s more, the presentation says the combined companies have a more competitive cost structure by having captive iron ore supply. But the majority of the U.S. steel industry has captive iron ore. And the supplier-buying-customer paradox still exists. AK Steel margins are more competitive at the expense of Cliff profits.

Deal cost synergies will approach $120 million in savings a year, according to the companies. It isn’t clear how those are being calculated. And there is another proposed benefit from the merger. AK Steel won’t have to close a blast furnace because it has access to lower cost raw materials. That is, again, predicated on the supplier-customer paradox. What’s more, additional pig iron supply isn’t good for overall industry pricing.

The deal benefits are far from certain. And there is financial leverage to consider too.

The deal is all-stock because both companies have a lot of debt. The combined enterprise value of both firms—the debt plus market capitalization—is about $8 billion. The combined market cap of both firms is less than $4 billion. More than half of the total firm accrues to debtholders. More debt means, at minimum, the stock reactions will be more violent than comparable deals with less financial leverage.

The deal might make strategic sense in the long run, but based on the initial reaction of markets, management of both companies have some convincing to do. The Street isn’t buying the cost synergies or strategic benefits yet. The companies host a conference call for investors and analysts at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time.

This merger comes at an interesting time for the industry. Steel stocks are down a lot from all-time highs and the industry is seeking ongoing protection from foreign producers. The industry has a point. China makes about half of the 1.8 billion metric tons of steel made annually—more than it needs for its internal consumption. What’s more, most of the steel capacity is government owned. It wasn’t financed with private market funds.

The last time steel mergers picked up was more than a decade ago when Chinese demand for steel was ramping up and the Middle kingdom wasn’t exporting as much product. Back then, China’s insatiable demand for steel products pushed up raw material costs raising the value of U.S. firms—like Cliffs—that operated existing iron ore assets. Cleveland-Cliffs stock all time high is more than $100 a share set back in 2008 before the financial crisis hit.

AK Steel stock is up about 28% year to date after rising almost 40% over the past three months, better than the comparable gains of the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average over the same span. It’s been a wild ride for steel investors as tariffs and demand have whipsawed steel prices. Despite the recent rally, AK Steel stock is still down 11% over the past 12 months. Cleveland-Cliffs shares are up about 9% year to date as of Monday’s closing price.

Write to Al Root at allen.root@dowjones.com

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2019-12-03 14:07:00Z
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Cyber Monday totalled $9.2B in US online sales, smartphones accounted for a record $3B - TechCrunch

Cyber Monday — the final day of the extended Thanksgiving weekend that traditionally kicks off holiday season spend — broke another e-commerce record: US shoppers racked up a total of $9.2 billion in online sales, according to figures from Adobe.

To put that number into some perspective, at its peak, consumers were spending $11 billion per minute, this was the first day to see sales via smartphones break the $3 billion mark, and this was $1.3 billion more than shoppers spent on Cyber Monday a year ago (remember the days when breaking $1 billion was a big deal?). There has so far been just over $72 billion spent online since the beginning of November.

On the other hand, there is an undercurrent of more sluggish buying than had been anticipated. Following the pattern set during Thanksgiving and Black Friday — the total actually just fell short of what Adobe had expected for the day, which was $9.4 billion. Adobe expected an increase of nearly 19%; in the end it was more like 16.5%.

(And it should be noted that a forecast for sales Salesforce was even more conservative: it projected that Cyber Monday sales would total $8 billion in U.S. sales and $30 billion worldwide — representing 15% and 12% year-over-year growth, respectively.)

That’s despite very aggressive pricing on the part of online sellers. “Retailers unlocked sales earlier to combat a shorter shopping season, while continuing to drive up promotion of the big branded days including Black Friday and Cyber Monday,” said John Copeland, head of Marketing and Consumer Insights at Adobe, in a statement. “Consumers capitalized on deals and ramped up spending, especially on smartphones, where activity increased on days when shoppers were snowed or rained in.”

Top items sold on the day included Frozen 2 Toys, L.O.L Surprise Dolls, NERF products, Madden 20, Nintendo Switch, Jedi Fallen Order, Samsung TVs, Fire TV, Airpods and Air Fryers. One report claims Apple may have sold as many as 3 million pairs of AirPods from Black Friday until Cyber Monday. (RIP my bank account.) The best deals on the day were for TVs (19% savings on average).

The final figures for the day might have a slight shift as Adobe finishes all of its tallies. It follows a morning total of $473 million, and sales passing the $5 billion mark at 5pm Pacific time — a sign of just how much shopping online — more than $4 billion — happens in the evening hours (indeed, some refer to them as the “golden hours” of retail).

(Adobe’s forecasts and reports are based on over 1 trillion visits to U.S. online retail sites and 55 million SKUs. And its Adobe Analytics service is able to measure transactions from 80 of the top 100 U.S. retailers.)

While Black Friday’s online shopping has seen brick-and-mortar stores competing for the same shoppers, and Thanksgiving still has a seam of tradition underpinning it that keeps some people away from consumerism, Cyber Monday is the day of sales and shopping perhaps most dedicated to the pursuit of product procurement via the web. Folks are back at work, and less likely to go into physical stores, but they’re still shopping for holiday bargains.

The $3 billion of products purchased via smartphones accounted for about one-third of all sales. In itself, this is huge, as smartphone growth was up 46%: in other words, smartphone growth is outpacing and very much driving overall growth of online sales.

Browsing continues to also be popular but is growing less fast: smartphones drove 54% of all site visits, up 19% on a year ago. This makes sense since people might casually look for deals while on the go, but when it comes to sitting down and doing all the fiddly parts of entering card numbers and addresses, people opt for more comfortable keyboards and larger screens.

Some of the trends that Adobe picked up in the days leading up to Cyber Monday are continuing to be played out. These include the fact that the big are getting bigger. That is to say, larger e-commerce giants, with sales of over $1 billion annually, continue to make the most during these huge promotional periods.

Their sales have gone up 71% this year, compared to smaller retailers’ share going up by just 32%. They saw a 71% boost in revenue so far, while the smaller online retailers saw a 32% boost.

Part of the reason for this is because larger retailers can give bigger discounts; because they simply have larger ranges of items; and lastly because they have a more flexible range of choices when it comes to delivery. Adobe noted that the trend of “buy online, pickup in-store/curbside” services was up 43% over last year. 

Through this weekend, consumers spent $7.4 billion, including “Small Business Saturday” and “Super Sunday,” which are newer terms for the big shopping days after Thanksgiving and Black Friday.

In addition to the usual factors that influence Cyber Monday sales, this year’s shopping period may get a boost from the bad weather, too (storms are currently swirling around different regions of the US). When extreme weather arrives, shoppers tend to stay indoors and shop at home. On Black Friday, for example, states that recorded more than two inches of snow saw a 7% bump in online sales.

“Online shopping received some unexpected boosts this holiday season. Retailer fears of a shorter season meant that deals came much sooner than usual, and consumers took notice. In some areas of the country, adverse weather in the form of snow and heavy rain meant that many opted to stay home instead and grabbed the best deals online. Just look at Black Friday, which brought in $7.4 billion online and is just below last year’s Cyber Monday at $7.9 billion,” said Taylor Schreiner, principal analyst and head of Adobe Digital Insights.

“Consumers are reimagining what it means to shop during the holidays, with smartphones having a breakout season as well. We expect that consumers will spend $14 billion more this holiday season via their phones,” Schreiner added.

Last but not least, another trend Adobe is tracking points to why the biggest online retailers like Amazon are getting increasingly involved in the advertising business. Adobe notes that paid search accounted for 24.4% of sales (up 5.2% on last year), more than three percentage points more than actual direct traffic (21.2% and declining). “Natural” search accounted for 18.8% of sales, while email accounted 16.8% (up 8.9% YoY). Social media, as a category, has “minimal impact” when it comes to driving online sales (just 2.6%) but — true to form — it’s proving to be a big influencer, driving some 8% of visits and up 17.5% over a year ago.

Updated with final figures from Adobe

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2019-12-03 12:45:00Z
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Here’s What Happens to Markets If U.S. Tariffs on China Kick in Dec. 15 - Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) -- Terms of Trade is a daily newsletter that untangles a world embroiled in trade wars. Sign up here. 

President Donald Trump’s latest missives on trade are a wake-up call to markets close to record highs that a major deadline is looming with China.

The Dec. 15 flashpoint on tariffs was thrown into sharp relief Tuesday when Trump said he sees no urgency to complete a deal, right after he threatened an assortment of trading partners with levies.

“If tariffs scheduled for Dec. 15 are implemented it would be a huge shock to the market consensus,” said Sue Trinh, managing director for global macro strategy at Manulife Investment Management in Hong Kong. “Trump would be the Grinch that stole Christmas,” she said.

Global equities came within a whisker of their all-time high last month, propelled in part by swelling optimism that at least an interim U.S.-China trade deal was in the offing. Meantime, the clock kept ticking towards Dec. 15, when Trump has threatened to impose 15% levies on $160 billion of Chinese imports.

With about two weeks to go on the China front, the Trump administration Monday hit Brazil and Argentina with steel tariffs and proposed levies on France as punishment over a tax that’s hit large American tech companies.

Moves by self-styled Tariff Man Monday were enough to trigger the biggest Wall Street sell-off in eight weeks -- with a little help from a weak U.S. manufacturing report.

“I have no deadline,” Trump told reporters Tuesday in London when asked if he wanted an agreement by year end. Stocks fell.

The U.S. president suggested that in some ways, it might be better to wait until after the November election.

The following are the views of a number of market participants on what happens if the tariffs on China kick in Dec. 15.

‘Gloomy Future’

It will be “definitely risk-off across the screen,” Tongli Han, chief investment officer at Deepblue Global Investment, said in an interview with Bloomberg TV. “What happened recently makes this trade deal more costly for Chinese leaders -- so I’m seeing a gloomy future for the short term, one-to-two months.”

Better Luck Next Year

With the clock running down on 2019 and a prospects of a trade deal looking more remote it’s time for investors to take a little bit of risk off the table, said Steve Brice, chief investment strategist at Standard Chartered private bank, on Bloomberg TV.

“It looks like it’s going to be pushed to the beginning of next year at the best case,” Brice said. The message to investors is “maybe trim a little bit of equity exposure, or certainly not chase the market at this stage. But look to do so in the next few weeks if we see a 5-to-7% pullback.”

Longer term, Brice remains optimistic “the U.S. and China will still strike a deal of some sort. That will reduce uncertainty and help the global economy do well.”

Optimism Dashed

For Kerry Craig, global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management, a key concern is markets have already priced in the prospect of a trade deal that has yet to be signed.

“There had been a lot of optimism built in around a trade deal and it’s still the thing that will weigh on markets over the coming months,” Craig said on Bloomberg TV. “In the meantime we need to see more of a pick-up in the global economy to really offset some of those uncertainties.”

Buy the Dip

For some, the retreat in equities at the start of the week already presents a buying opportunity.

“I’d fade the correction today,” Eli Lee, head of investment strategy at Bank of Singapore, told Bloomberg TV.

The renewed tariff pressures on South America and Europe are likely an effort to bolster Trump’s “tariff man” image ahead of a trade deal with China, he said.

“With the economy in a very delicate situation, if this came on, it would seriously ratchet up the risk of a recession -- and the White House wouldn’t want this situation going into the 2020 presidential election next year,” Lee said.

‘Wild Day’

There may be some massive initial market swings in store, said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Group Ltd. in a note to clients.

“We could face a wild day,” he said. The S&P 500 is likely to fall about 2%, with currencies including the yuan, Australian dollar and Korean won also likely to move, he said. A relief rally may be in the offing afterward, particularly if there’s agreement to revisit talks in 2020, he said.

Even Worse?

“Even if there is a trade deal, it doesn’t solve most of the issues that we still have with China,” which is something that markets are going to have to reflect in time, said Christopher Smart, chief global strategist at Barings Investment Institute, on Bloomberg TV. “In fact, it probably makes the relationship more difficult to manage, because we’ve taken tariffs off the table.”

Smart said “time is running out” to get a deal done this year, given the logistics involved in setting up a presidential meeting. What does offer solace is that global central banks have eased policy and injected liquidity, postponing the recession that investors had been worrying about, he said.

“We would hope that a bout of common sense breaks out,” Philip Shaw, chief economist at Investec, told Bloomberg TV. “Don’t forget that this situation is very volatile -- it swings to and fro. We wouldn’t interpret too strongly events of one day.”

(Updates with latest Trump comments on timing for a China deal.)

--With assistance from Cormac Mullen, Andreea Papuc, Joanna Ossinger and Francine Lacqua.

To contact the reporters on this story: Eric Lam in Hong Kong at elam87@bloomberg.net;Gregor Stuart Hunter in Hong Kong at ghunter21@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Christopher Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net, Cecile Gutscher

For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.com

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

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2019-12-03 11:51:00Z
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Huawei plans to shift research center from US to Canada, founder Ren Zhengfei says - CNBC

The Huawei logo is seen on the side of the main building at the company's production campus on April 25, 2019 in Dongguan, near Shenzhen, China.

Kevin Frayer | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Huawei Technologies plans to shift its research center to Canada from the United States, Ren Zhengfei, the founder of the Chinese telecoms equipment maker, said in an interview with Canada's Globe and Mail.

Ren's remarks came as Reuters reported on Friday that the U.S. is weighing expanding its power to stop more foreign shipments of products with U.S. technology to Huawei. The U.S. Commerce Department in May placed Huawei on a trade blacklist, citing national security concerns.

Huawei's "center for research and development will be moved out of the U.S. And that will be relocated to Canada," Ren told the Globe and Mail, adding that the company will also manufacture some mobile network equipment outside China.

The Huawei founder wants to build new factory capacity in Europe to make fifth-generation (5G) networking equipment there, hoping to assuage fears stemming from U.S. allegations that its product could be used by China for spying, the Globe and Mail reported.

Huawei was not immediately available to comment on Ren's interview when contacted by Reuters. The firm has previously denied it is a risk to U.S. national security.

The company spent $510 million on the operations of its U.S. research arm last year, according to the Globe and Mail report, which added that it has now trimmed the arm's work force by 600 to about 250.

Separately, Ren's daughter and Huawei Chief Financial Officer Meng Wanzhou, who was arrested by Canadian police on a U.S. warrant late last year, is fighting extradition to the U.S. on charges of violating sanctions against Iran. She is currently out on bail.

Huawei has denied the charges and China has urged Canada to release her.

Commenting on her case, Ren said that it is an example of "obvious political interference from the U.S."

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2019-12-03 06:06:00Z
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Senin, 02 Desember 2019

Cyber Monday 2019: The biggest and best deals at Amazon, Walmart, Best Buy, Target and more - CNET

CNET editors pick the products & services we write about. When you buy through our links, we may get a commission.

Cyber Monday sales are here. Here's every single deal you need to know about, including phones, PlayStation, Xbox, Nintendo, speakers, headphones and more.

Listen

- 04:31

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2019-12-02 12:05:00Z
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Best Cyber Monday deals: Fitbit Versa 2, Sonos One, Nintendo Switch, and more - The Verge

Cyber Monday is Black Friday’s encore set, back with even more deals. Some are new, others are crowd favorites from a few days ago, all of them are worth checking out because they’ll soon be gone. And once they are, you’ll probably have to wait a while for prices to get this low again.

Below, you’ll find all of the best Cyber Monday deals on a range of products, including laptops, headphones, gaming tech, PC components, phones, smart speakers, and more. We’ll be keeping this list up-to-date, organized by category, and within each category, the newest deals that we find will be listed first.

Thanks for reading, and good luck on getting that deal.

Updated at 7:53AM ET, December 2nd: Added an Amazon link for the Fitbit Versa 2, which dropped to $129. The Google Nest Wifi two-pack also dropped in price at Amazon, down to $259 from $299.

Gaming

TVs / Home entertainment

Headphones

Smart home

Tablets

  • The latest iPad (Wi-Fi, 32GB) is the cheapest right now at Target and Amazon (space grey and gold), where it’s just $229.99 ($100 off). Walmart has gold and space grey available for $249 at Walmart. Every color is available at $249 if you want to shop at Best Buy.
  • The latest iPad (Wi-Fi 128GB) is $329.99 ($100 off) at Amazon, Best Buy and Target
  • The Pixel Slate Chrome OS tablet with an 8th Gen Intel Core m3 CPU starts at $449 ($350 off) and includes a Pixel Slate Keyboard and Pixelbook Pen stylus for free with purchase at the Google Store and B&H Photo.
  • The next step up in price and power for the Pixel Slate is the $649 version with an 8th Gen Intel Core i5 processor, and is available with the same bundled items at the Google Store, Best Buy, Amazon, and B&H Photo.
  • Fire HD 8 is $49.99 (usually $79.99)
  • Fire HD 10 Tablet is $99.99 (usually $149.99)
  • Kindle Paperwhite is $84.99 (usually $129.99)

PCs, components and laptops

Phones, smartwatches and accessories

Miscellaneous

Vox Media has affiliate partnerships. These do not influence editorial content, though Vox Media may earn commissions for products purchased via affiliate links. For more information, see our ethics policy.

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2019-12-02 12:00:00Z
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Cyber Monday 2019: best Amazon gaming deals - Polygon

With Black Friday behind it already, Amazon has moved on to its Cyber Monday sales, which include everything from game consoles, to graphics cards, to gaming laptops.

Most of the deals from Amazon’s Black Friday deals will still be on sale by the time Cyber Monday rolls around, but their availability will depend on what has and hasn’t sold out. This year Amazon’s got deals on several different Razer gaming laptops, as well as deals on both Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles. Also on offer during the Cyber Monday sale are plenty of PC discounts including slightly lower prices for graphics cards.

You can also find other deals by checking out the rest of our Black Friday coverage, or keeping an eye on our PolygonDeals Twitter account for updates.

Console deals

Gaming PC deals

Graphics card deals

Gaming accessory deals

TV and monitor deals

Book and comics deals

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2019-12-02 11:15:00Z
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