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Morning News: February 19, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 19th, 2025 at 7:05 amChina Inc. Reduces Bets on North American Projects
Even Brazil’s Billionaires Scrap Investment Plans as Rates Hit Double Digits
Rare Earths in Ukraine? No, Only Scorched Earth.
Europe Is Becoming an Afterthought for the World
U.K. Inflation Reaches 10-Month High, Complicating Bank of England’s Rate Path
Rubio Says Sanctions Stay for Now as Trump Eyes Putin Summit
Trump Floats 25% Tariffs on US Auto, Drug, Chip Imports
HHS Job Cuts Jeopardize Our Health and Safety
Elon Musk Zeroes In on the I.R.S.
DOGE Says It’s Saved $55 Billion; Itemized Data Show Far Less
Struggle Over Americans’ Personal Data Plays Out Across the Government
The Cryptocurrency Scam That Turned a Small Town Against Itself
Private Credit Is the Hot New Thing on Wall Street. But What Is It?
Citrone Joins Top-Paid Hedge Fund Ranks With $730 Million Payday
Mastercard Faces Scrutiny Over £200 Million Deal in £10 Billion Case
HP to Buy Parts of Humane, Maker of the Ai Pin, for $116 Million
Musk’s X in Talks to Raise Money at a $44 Billion Valuation
Trump Is Scrambling Global Automakers’ Reliance on America
Mitsui to Acquire $5.3 Billion Stake in Rio Tinto’s Australia Iron Ore Project
How Med Spas Conquered America
How Temu’s Online Dollar Store Became a Trade War Target
Shein $30 Billion IPO Would Still Be a Stretch
Canadian Tire Selling Helly Hansen to Kontoor Brands for C$1.28 Billion
Hermes in ‘League of Their Own’ as Family Gets $5 Billion Payout
The French Billionaire Working His Trump Ties to Spare His Luxury Empire
Bao Buns and Coat Checks Come to Lucky Strike Bowling Alleys (and Cost Cuts Too)
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CWS Market Review – February 18, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 18th, 2025 at 6:17 pm(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)
The stock market was closed yesterday in honor of President’s Day. The long weekend wasn’t enough to stop the bulls. The S&P 500 closed Tuesday at 6,129.58. That’s another new all-time closing high.
For any person who’s watched financial markets long enough, you’re struck by how easily the market can rally amid unpleasant news. The old saying is that “the market climbs a wall of worry.”
Think of all the scary news that could have led you to dump all your stocks. Yet, through it all, sitting and waiting was a great strategy.
Despite it being another up day for Wall Street, Meta Platforms (META), the parent of Facebook, snapped a 20-day winning streak today. The last time that Meta’s stock closed lower was on January 16. Over that time period, Mark Zuckerberg’s net worth increased by $40 billion.
On January 29, Meta reported Q4 earnings of $8.02 per share. That was 18% higher than Wall Street’s forecast. Check out all those black crosses in a row!
December Retail Sales Drop 0.9%
Wall Street got a big shock on Friday with the latest retail sales report. According to the report, retail sales fell 0.9% last month. Bear in mind, that’s not adjusted for the 0.5% inflation we saw last month.
That retail sales report was much worse than expected. Wall Street had been expecting a modest decline of 0.2%. The number for November was revised to 0.7%.
This suggests that consumers are holding back on their shopping. I can’t blame them. Consumers are getting squeezed by higher prices – eggs are up over 50% over the last year – and also by small wage gains. Consumers make up two-thirds of the U.S. economy. If shoppers aren’t happy, the economy won’t prosper.
Excluding autos, prices fell 0.4%, also well off the consensus forecast for a 0.3% increase. A “control” measure that strips out several nonessential categories and figures directly into calculations for gross domestic product fell 0.8% after an upwardly revised increase of 0.8%.
With consumer spending making up about two-thirds of all economic activity in the U.S., the sales numbers indicate a potential weakening in growth for the first quarter.
Receipts at sporting goods, music and book stores tumbled 4.6% on the month, while online outlets reported a 1.9% decline and motor vehicles and parts spending dropped 2.8%. Gas stations along with food and drinking establishments both reported 0.9% increases.
Some folks are saying the report really isn’t that bad. Some of the drop is due to bad weather. Also, auto sales fell after delivering a big gain in December. Maybe so, but those factors were known prior to the report and it still fell far below expectations.
The retail sales report is especially worrisome because it comes after another bad inflation report. It’s becoming very clear that inflation isn’t going away. Core inflation is holding steady around 3.3% or so, which is much higher than the Fed’s target.
The Budget Deficit Soars
Yesterday, the government said it ran a budget deficit last month of $129 billion. Holy moly, that’s big! The deficit is up significantly from the $22 billion deficit it ran for last January.
It’s not hard to pinpoint the problem. For January, receipts grew 8% to $513 billion, but outlays were up 29% to $642 billion.
The Treasury said there were some technical reasons for the big increase such as benefit payment calendar shifts. Also, payments of $87 billion worth of February benefits were paid out in January. Treasury said the adjusted deficit increase for the month would have been $21 billion instead of the reported $107 billion.
Still, that doesn’t exactly put me at ease. For the first four months of this fiscal year, the U.S. Treasury reported a deficit of $840 billion. That’s up 58% from last year. For the year so far, receipts are up 1% to $1.6 trillion, but outlays are up 15% to $2.4 trillion. For the new fiscal year, individual income taxes are up 6%.
Customs receipts were up 12% but that’s a very small portion of receipts. This doesn’t yet reflect any of the new tariffs on Chinese goods that went into effect recently.
The most concerning number is the interest payments on the debt. You can’t escape those. So far this year, interest expenses are up 10% to $318 billion. Social Security outlays, which is the single-largest item on the budget, are up 8% to $529 billion. Military spending rose 13% to $318 billion.
I try not to be an alarmist on these matters, but if we’re in better fiscal shape, that gives the Fed a lot more room to lower interest rates. The rolling 12-month deficit is now running at 7.3% of GDP. Ideally, that should be cut in half. These deficits are having an effect. Consider that over the last 16 months, the price for gold has gained close to 50%.
Even with the holiday-shortened week, there are still a few things to look out for this week. Tomorrow we’ll get reports on housing starts and building permits. The Fed will also release the minutes of its last meeting. The Fed decided to leave interest rates alone, but it will be interesting to see if the central bank has any broader concerns about the economy.
On Thursday, we’ll get the regular jobless claims report. This data series has held up well in recent months despite the concerns news about retail sales. Then on Friday, we’ll get the report on existing home sales.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: February 18, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 18th, 2025 at 7:01 amXi’s Embrace of China Tech CEOs Spurs Hope of Big Economic Shift
Xi’s Tech Meetup Is a Bullish Sign for China’s Economy
ASEAN Nations Needs a Supergrid to Meet Climate Goals
Kurdistan Oil-Export Resumption Could Pose Challenges for Iraq
Europe’s Natural Gas Euphoria Masks a Gloomy Reality
World Bank to Decentralize Operations, Shift Regional VPs to Overseas Hubs
There’s No Template for the Shock Europe Just Got
Trump and Putin Teams Meet in Saudi With Europe Sidelined
Trump Isn’t Playacting When He Invokes Napoleon
Former Staffers Say India’s Biggest IT Firm Was Gaming the US Visa System
The World’s Most Important Market Sends a Warning
Can the Fed Look Past Trump’s Tariffs?
Fed Wanted an Inclusive Jobs Recovery. Some Are Asking If That Helped Fuel Inflation
At the ‘Wall Street of Eggs,’ Demand Is Surging
No, Elon Musk Hasn’t ‘Discovered’ Fraud at Social Security
Republicans Want Lower Taxes. The Hard Part Is Choosing What to Cut.
JPMorgan Set to Relive ‘Huge Mistake’ at Javice Fraud Trial
Musk Debuts Grok-3 AI Chatbot to Rival OpenAI, DeepSeek
Cisco and IBM Show Old-School Tech Names Can Be AI Winners Too
With AI Friends Like These, Who Needs Humans?
Diamondback Energy to Acquire Double Eagle
Scania Agrees to Buy Northvolt’s Heavy Industry Battery Business
United Rentals Drops $3.4 Billion Purchase of H&E Equipment
The Startup That Stepped In When the Baby Formula Supply Chain Broke
‘Gut Pop’ Is Injecting New Fizz Into the Beverage Aisle
Heineken CEO Aims to Tap Into Thirst for Zero-Alcohol Beer
China’s Love Affair With Luxury Has Cooled
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Morning News: February 17, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 17th, 2025 at 7:06 amThe Transatlantic Alliance as We’ve Known It Is Dead
Trump’s New World Order Leaves Europe Flailing
Ukraine Ceasefire Hopes Offer Europe’s Markets a Tailwind in the Shadow of Tariffs
Trump Proposals Would Cut German Growth, Bundesbank’s Nagel Says
Trump Leads US Down the Foggy Road of Reciprocal Trade
How Trump’s One-for-One Tariff Plan Threatens the Global Economy
India Plans More Tariff Changes to Curb Trump’s Trade Threats
Milei Stumbles Into Crypto Memecoin Scandal Before US Trip
Trump’s Phone Call With Putin Is Causing a Stir in Taiwan
Xi Voices Support for Jack Ma, China Private Sector Chiefs
Wall Street’s China Plans in Tatters After Years of Setbacks
From Japan, a Hard Lesson About a Weak Currency
Japan Economy Grew Faster Than Expected in Final Quarter of 2024
Five Iraqi Banks to Be Banned from US Dollar Transactions
Trump Wants to Bring Down Treasury Yields. Here’s What to Know.
Musk’s DOGE Team Tries to Gain Access to Taxpayer Information
Bain Capital Ends Pursuit of Fuji Soft
OPEC+ Considers Delaying April Supply Restart, Delegates Say
California Insurer of Last Resort Went Bust. It Won’t Be Alone.
Posting Through It: Climate Change Is Fueling Social Media Use
Anglo American to Retain 20% Stake in Demerged Platinum Business
South Korea Bans Downloads of DeepSeek, the Chinese A.I. App
Why Did Microsoft Admit That AI Is Making Us Dumb?
Shein Is Said to Face Investor Pressure to Slash Valuation to $30 Billion
Dry January Is the Least of Big Booze’s Problems
One Fix for Ailing Movie Theaters? Becoming Nonprofits.
Why Porsche Is No Longer a ‘Premium’ Sports Car in China
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Morning News: February 14, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 14th, 2025 at 7:01 amIn Europe, Ordinary Russians Are Shunned By Wary Banks
America First? For Europe, It’s America as Usual
Trump Officials Ordered by Judge to Lift Freeze on USAID Funding
China’s Central Bank Signals Policy Adjustments Amid Rising Global Risks
Trump Is Newly Unleashed on Trade, With Global Consequences
Trump’s Reciprocal Tariff Policy ‘a Step in the Wrong Direction,’ EU Says
What Are the Reciprocal Tariffs Trump Is Promising?
Whiskey Offers Window Into the Pain of a Trade War
Tariff Man Strikes Again — And Markets Ignore Him
Why Investors Appear Unfazed by the Latest Trump Tariffs
How Torsten Slok Solved the ‘Sherlock Holmes Mystery’ of the Economy
Traders Look for $10 Million Payout in Bet on 5% US Yield
Goldbug FOMO Is Setting Up the Market for a Fall
Trump’s Push to End Pennies Offers Money Lessons from Collectors
Trump Tax-Cut Push Kicks Off With Much-Worse Deficit This Time
ICE Raids Send Chill Through Migrant Workforces
Back Up Everything. Even if Elon Musk Isn’t Looking at It.
The Unicorn Boom Is Over, and Startups Are Getting Desperate
DeepSeek Doesn’t Scare OpenAI, Thanks to the ‘Jevons Paradox’
The Tulip’s Quiet War on Roses: A Valentine’s Day Battle
‘You’ve Blown a Hole in the Family’: Inside the Murdochs’ Succession Drama
Boeing’s Push to Boost 737 Production Starts With Closing ‘Shadow Factory’
Umicore Shares Fall After Dividend Policy Reset
Walmart Is Retail King Again. Can It Keep the Crown?
Birkin Bag Maker Hermes Posts Higher Revenue on Strong Americas Performance
A Libertarian Island Dream in Honduras Is Now an $11 Billion Nightmare
The NBA Has Fallen Into an Efficiency Trap
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Morning News: February 13, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 13th, 2025 at 7:06 amTrump’s Ukraine Deal Looks Great — for Putin
Trump’s Ukraine Plans Mean a $3 Trillion Bill for European Allies
Germany Requests Exemptions From Gas Storage Filling Target
Taiwan Prepares for Trump’s Tariffs, and a Changed Washington
Trump Vows Reciprocal Tariffs Today Without Giving Details
Chaotic USAID Shutdown Costs Intensified by Wasted Supplies, Layoffs and Lawsuits
‘Deregulation by Firings’: Breaking Down the Cuts to Financial Oversight
With Attack on Consumer Bureau, Musk Removes Obstacle to His ‘X Money’ Vision
Republicans Love Trump’s Spending Cuts. Just Not in Their States.
A.P. Accuses White House of Violating First Amendment
How Elon Musk and the Right Are Trying to Recast Reporting as ‘Doxxing’
Top N.I.H. Official Abruptly Resigns as Trump Orders Deep Cuts
Bird Flu Is a Big Threat. The US Needs to Start Acting Like It.
Eggs-istential Inflation Scrambles Bond Markets
US Bonds Rise After Hot Inflation Fuels Worst Day Since December
Inflation Expectations Are Back in the Debate Over Fed Rates
Inflation Helped Trump Get Elected. Now It’s His Problem.
Why 10-Year Yields Are on the Treasury Secretary’s Mind
The Secretive Hedge Fund Rewriting the Rules of $4.5 Trillion Industry
As Buyers Fail to Show Up, More Homes Are Being Pulled From Sale
How Silicon Valley Swung From Obama to Trump
Quantum Computing Is Closer Than Ever. Everybody’s Too Busy to Pay Attention.
Apple’s Stock-Market Performance Is Increasingly Made in China
Honda and Nissan Scrap $50 Billion Merger Plan
Unilever Picks Amsterdam Over London for Ice Cream Unit’s Primary Listing
Japan Perfected 7-Eleven. Why Can’t the US Get It Right?
SharkNinja CEO Says There’s No Supply Chain for US-Made Blenders
Crocs 4Q Results Beat Estimate with Lift from Heydude Brand
As Salaries Boom, It’s a Good Time to Be an N.F.L. Coach
Your Stolen Car Is In a Shipping Container, Bound for Africa
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Morning News: February 12, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 12th, 2025 at 7:03 amEuropean Defense Startups Drive $5.2 Billion Funding Spree in 2024
Milei’s Plan to Boost Farm Exports: Stop Ships From Running Aground
China’s Property Crisis Enters a Dangerous New Phase
How China’s Growth Headwinds Shape Its Response to Trump
What Modi and India Can Offer Trump on Tariffs and Trade
Why Trump Hit the International Criminal Court With Sanctions
Trump Advisers Look to Shift US Foreign Aid to Wall Street Ally
America First Is Quickly Becoming America Alone
To Win the Global Money Game, America Has to Play
Who Pays for Tariffs (Hint: It’s most often not other countries.)
A Hot Inflation Print Is Set to Derail S&P 500’s Run to Record
With High Prices Persisting, Trump Tempers Tone on Slaying Inflation
How Car Insurance Would Help Tariffs Cast a Long Inflation Shadow
Activist Breakup Wins Should Rattle Size-Obsessed CEOs
Fearing Trump, Wall Street Sounds a Retreat on Diversity Efforts
McKinsey Champions Diversity While Rivals Abandon Targets
SoftBank Posts Quarterly Loss, Gears Up for Giant AI Project
How Trump’s Policies Have Shaken America’s IT Departments
Nvidia Shares No Longer Bulletproof as DeepSeek Fears Linger
Alibaba Becomes China’s New AI Darling With $87 Billion Rally
Meta’s Accounting Move on AI Servers to Boost Profit This Year
China’s Vast Energy Market Swallows DeepSeek Impact
Tesla Can’t Afford Another Twitter-Size Distraction
Ford Chief Executive Says Trump Policies May Lead to Layoffs
Biogen Forecasts Bigger Annual Sales Decline Than Expected
CVS Rises After Fourth-Quarter Profit Signals Improvement
How Oura’s Smart Ring Bridged the Gap From Tech Bros to Normies
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CWS Market Review – February 11, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 11th, 2025 at 6:38 pm(This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)
After a very good 2024, the stock market seems to have settled into its comfort zone. For the S&P 500, that’s apparently anywhere between 6,025 and 6,085. The index has closed inside that narrow range ten times in the last eleven trading sessions.
On Thursday, the S&P 500 closed higher by one-thirtieth of 1%. That means for every $30 you have in the market, you made one penny today.
That’s so small that if the index closed higher by that much every day for an entire year, the total gain would be a little less than 9%. In fact, today’s gain almost perfectly matches the market’s average gain for a single day.
This is a big change from last year when the index steadily marched higher without much pushback.
We’re also not seeing any major undercurrents within the market. Neither value nor growth are leading the way. Large-cap tech has had some good days recently and some lousy ones, but there’s no larger trend at work except the absence of one.
We’re heading toward the back end of earnings season, and so far, this has been a very good earnings season for Wall Street. According to numbers from S&P Global Market Intelligence, the S&P 500 is on pace for Q4 earnings growth of 13.89%. That’s up from 8.71% one month ago.
Of the companies that have reported so far, 76.6% have beaten on earnings and 61.4% have beaten on sales.
So where does this put the Federal Reserve? Traditionally, the Fed has had its fingerprints near the scene of any bear market, but this time could be different.
“We Do Not Need to Be in a Hurry”
“We do not need to be in a hurry.” So said Fed Chair Jerome Powell as he testified before Congress today. In this instance, I think the Fed Chair is exactly right.
The Fed doesn’t need to act swiftly right now since the Fed has already cut rates a few times. That’s taken some of the pressure off the central bank. We also don’t know what the outcome of President Trump’s tariff policies will be, or even how long they’ll last.
Twice a year, the Fed Chairman testifies before members of Congress. I should caution you that watching members of Congress attempt monetary policy is not for the faint of heart. The boring stuff happens in the House or Senate chambers, but the real action is in the committees.
A few years ago, I went to the Senate office building to watch the festivities. I got there early and was able to snag the seat directly before Alan Greenspan. If you like endless jargon, then the Fed testimony is for you.
At its last meeting, at the end of January, the Federal Reserve decided to leave interest rates alone. The current range for the Fed funds rate is 4.25% to 4.5%. Before the January meeting, the Fed had lowered interest rates at three successive meetings. The first cut was by 0.5% and the other two were by 0.25%.
So far, there hasn’t been any disharmony between the White House and the Fed. President Trump even said he agreed with the Fed holding rates steady at its last meeting, but that goodwill may not last. Last Friday’s jobs report could lead to calls for more rate cuts.
The Economy Created 143,000 New Jobs Last Month
On Friday, the government said that the U.S. economy added 143,000 net new jobs last month. That’s an OK figure, but it’s nothing great. It was below Wall Street’s estimates of 169,000 jobs, and it was also below December’s revised gain of 307,000.
The best news in the report is that average hourly earnings rose by 0.5%. That’s a very nice gain and it’s more than inflation. In previous reports, wages have been rising but only slightly more than inflation. Over the last year, average hourly earnings are up 4.1%.
On a technical note, the Bureau of Labor Statistics did its annual revisions, and that reduced its jobs count for last year. In plain English, they overcounted the number of jobs. We already knew they overcounted, but we didn’t know by how much. It turns out that it was by 589,000 jobs.
Oopsie!
On the plus side, the jobs numbers for November and December were revised higher. The unemployment rate fell to 4.0%. Except for January 1970, the unemployment rate is lower now than it was during the entire 1970s, 80s and 90s.
Job growth for January was concentrated in health care (44,000), retail (34,000) and government (32,000). The total gain for the month was slightly off the average 166,000 in 2024, the BLS said. Social assistance added 22,000, while mining-related industries lost 8,000.
Also, more people are looking for work. The labor force participation rate increased by 0.1% to 62.6%. The broader U-6 jobless rate held steady at 7.5%. There’s really nothing in this report to convince the Fed that it needs to get back to lowering rates, but that could change.
The Fed meets again in another month and it’s very doubtful that they’ll change rates. In fact, the Fed may not make any rate changes for a few months. Currently, traders think there’s a 59% chance of a rate cut by the end of July.
The next big news will come tomorrow when the Fed releases the CPI report for December. This could be a very influential report. The backstory is that inflation came down quickly from its high, but it’s had a hard time falling much below 3% or so. The Fed’s official policy is to get inflation back to 2%.
I’m really starting to question the efficacy of a 2% inflation target. What makes 2% inflation vastly better than 3%? I don’t know the answer.
For tomorrow, Wall Street expects the core and headline rates to have increased by 0.3% last month. That would place the 2024 headline rate at 2.8%, and the full-year core rate at 3.2%. The year-over-year rates have been moving higher in recent months, which must be frustrating for the Fed.
That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: February 11, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 11th, 2025 at 7:02 amSpooked Arab World Scrambles for Response to Trump’s Gaza Plan
Russia’s Sakhalin Island Oil Is Backing Up After US Sanctions
Why Europe’s Gas Storage Has Become More of a Worry
BP Touts ‘New Beginning,’ Fundamental Change in Strategy
How Trump’s Canadian Oil Tariff Would Hit America’s Heartland
The Black Market for Oil Will Continue to Thrive
EU Pledges Countermeasures Against Trump’s Tariffs on Metals
Is It Made of Metal? It Could Get More Expensive Under Trump’s Latest Tariffs.
Confusion Reigns as ‘a Wrecking Ball’ Hits the Consumer Bureau
Who Will Protect the Fed’s Independence? The Markets
Markets Hedge That This Time, Trump Means It
JPMorgan Defector Aims to Make Wells Fargo a Wall Street Force
Goldman Sachs’ Exclusive Investing Club Is a Powerful Draw
Hedge Funds Are Pocketing Much of Their Clients’ Gains With ‘No Limit’ Fees
Carlyle’s Schwartz Met 2024 Goals. What He Does Next Will Define Him.
Accounting Firms Hire Growth Leaders as Dealmaking Shakes Up Industry
Seeking God, or Peter Thiel, in Silicon Valley
Altman Says OpenAI Is ‘Not for Sale’ After Musk’s Offer
What’s Behind Elon Musk’s Hostile Bid for Control of OpenAI
Google, SoftBank Back Quantum Startup QuEra in $230 Million Deal
Super Micro’s Roller Coaster Continues Into Earnings with 59% Stock Pop in Past Week
Spotify Founders Pocket $1 Billion Selling Booming Tech Stock
Marriott Profit Beats Estimates in Record Year for Adding Rooms
How Loaded Fries and Large Sodas Helped One Restaurant Chain Beat Inflation Blues
Why Fast Food Could Be MAHA’s Next Target
Coca-Cola’s Higher Prices and Volume Drive Earnings Beat
Who Needs Hollywood? Chinese Animated Film Shatters Box Office Records.
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Morning News: February 10, 2025
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on February 10th, 2025 at 7:03 amNew Zealand Locks Out Foreign Home Buyers Even as Golden Visa Rules Eased
Don’t Blink Now, Trump. Russia’s Economy Is Cracking
Front-Loading Tariffs Undercuts Trump’s Promise of Faster Growth
Weaponizing Canadian Oil Would Rattle Trump
Trump Plans to Impose 25% Tariffs on Steel, Aluminum Imports
Trump’s Man of Steel Posturing Makes America Weaker
Trump’s Renewables Permit Flip-Flop Unsettles Sector
Why Fentanyl Is at the Center of New US-China Trade Fight
Shein Asks Some Chinese Suppliers to Diversify to Vietnam
Trump’s Tariffs Make Currency Trading Cool Again After Years of Decline
Trump’s Tariff Threats Extend Safe-Haven Gold’s Record Rally
The S&P 500 Is Too Big to Falter on Trump’s Tariffs
Trump Fanned Inflation Fears. Now They Haunt His Presidency.
36 Hours After Russell Vought Took Over Consumer Bureau, He Shut Its Operations
DOGE-Backed Halt at CFPB Comes Amid Musk’s Plans for ‘X’ Digital Wallet
The Musk Deputy Running DOGE’s Huge Cost-Cutting Drive
Tech Firms Want to Upend the Pentagon. The Old Defense Guard Has Some Lessons for Them.
For CEOs and Bankers, the Trump Euphoria Is Fading Fast
Trump Tells U.S. Treasury to Stop Minting Pennies
TD Bank Hopes to Raise $14 Billion in Schwab Stake Exit
Alarmed, Employers Ask: What Is ‘Illegal D.E.I.’?
What DeepSeek’s Success Says About China’s Ability to Nurture Talent
McDonald’s Sales Improve on Stronger International Results
Coke’s $7 Billion Bet on Milk Hits Big, But Wall Street Wants More
Hyatt to Buy All-Inclusive Resort Owner Playa for $2.6 Billion
Who’s Watching What on TV? Who’s to Say?
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