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Morning News: October 15, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 15th, 2024 at 7:06 amChina Moves to Tax the Ultra-Rich for Overseas Investment Gains
Why Taiwan’s Status Risks Igniting a US-China Clash
German Economic Expectations Climb Ahead of ECB Rate Cut
IMF Warns Rise In Government Debt Could Be Sharper Than Anticipated
US Weighs Capping Exports of AI Chips From Nvidia and AMD to Some Countries
Prediction Markets Tell a Different Story From the Polls
Can the Stock Market Keep Going Up? Market Watchers Think So.
The Battle Between Dockworkers and Robots Isn’t Over
To Lure Home Buyers, Builders Still Have to Help With High Mortgage Costs
Simple Economics Can Help Cut Health-Care Costs
The Mighty American Consumer Is Powered by Higher Earners
Some Hedge Funds Are Missing a Trick — Volume Alpha
Goldman Stock Traders Head to Record Year, Fuel 45% Profit Surge
BofA Investment Bankers, Traders Help Earnings Top Estimates
A Key to Citi’s Regulatory Woes – Staff Need Skills ‘Enhancement’
Female Leadership Suffers When Private Equity Firms Invest
Bankers Are at a Loss When It Comes to Biodiversity
IEA Trims Oil-Demand Forecast for Third Consecutive Month
TotalEnergies Expects Continued Refining Weakness, Lower Hydrocarbon Production
The Shipping Industry Can Chart a Clearer Course to Go Green
This Year’s Hottest App Is a Wildfire Tracker
Boeing to Raise as Much as $25 Billion to Boost Liquidity
VW, BMW and Mercedes Are Getting Left in the Dust by China’s EVs
Walgreens Plans to Shutter 14% of US Stores Over Three Years
How Starbucks Became a Sugary Teen Emporium
Bandai Namco Begins to Cut Headcount After Culling Game Titles
New York Times to Bezos-Backed AI Startup: Stop Using Our Stuff
What Should a Music Magazine Be in the TikTok Era? Pitchfork Alumni Have an Idea.
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Morning News: October 14, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 14th, 2024 at 7:05 amOPEC Cuts Global Oil Demand Growth Forecasts for Third Consecutive Month
Russian Oil Flows Through Western ‘Price Cap’ as Shadow Fleet Grows
China Carbon Prices Hit Record High Ahead of Compliance Deadline
China’s Clean Up Job to Tidy its Property and Local Government Mess
Killing of Japanese Boy Leaves Chinese Asking: Is This My Country?
Chinese Stocks Climb as Traders See Hope in Beijing’s Promises
Asia Watching China’s Policy Push Closely as Economies Brace for Spillover
Nobel for Economics Awarded to Authors of ‘Why Nations Fail,’ Former IMF Chief Economist
The Fed Has a Dependency Problem That Needs Fixing
CEOs and Analysts Are at Odds About S&P 500’s Earnings Outlook
Economists Say Inflation, Deficits Will Be Higher Under Trump Than Harris
Can Wall St. Help Harris Win Pennsylvania?
B. Riley Reaches Deal With Oaktree on Great American Partnership
The Harsh Reality of ‘Hurricane Insurance’
Why OpenAI Is at War With an Obscure Idea Man
Amazon Delivers Fewer Big Swings, Lower Costs in the Jassy Era
US Tech Firms to Invest $8.2 Billion in UK Data Centres
GM, Barclays Sign Long-Term Credit Card Partnership Agreement
Rivian: The Sinking Ship Of The EV Revolution
aBoeing’s Endless Doom Loop Gives No Respite to CEO Ortberg
Why Lasers Could Be Kryptonite for Drones
Lundbeck to Buy Longboard Pharma in $2.6 Billion Deal
Starbucks Scales Back Discounts Under New CEO
The Secretive Dynasty That Controls the Boar’s Head Brand
Attention Kmart Shoppers: It’s Closing Time
The Perils of Personalizing Your $500,000 Ferrari
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Morning News: October 11, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 11th, 2024 at 7:02 amGlobal Trade Grows but Remains Vulnerable to War and Geopolitics
China Investors Expect $283 Billion of New Stimulus This Weekend
Hurricanes and Other Disasters Will Help Shape Our Future Cities
Amazon Prefers Solar and Wind Energy to Nuclear Power in Asia
Middle East Conflict Creates a Volatile Moment for Oil Markets
Big Oil Gives a Reminder of the Market’s Weak Foundations
Bank of Korea Cuts Rate, Joining Global Wave of Policy Easing
A Record $6.47 Trillion Is Piling Up in US Money-Market Funds
Inflation Is Finally Losing Its Power Over Markets
The Market Has Been Fabulous, Maybe Excessively So
Wall St. Profits Surge Despite Questions About the Economy
BlackRock Hits $11.5 Trillion of Assets With Private-Market Push
JPMorgan Profit Beats Estimates on Investment Banking Strength, Higher Interest Income
Wells Fargo Profit Beats Forecasts as Provisions Shrink, Shares Rise
BNY Q3 Profit Rises as Assets Under Custody and Administration top $50 Trillion
The IPO Slump Is Fine Unless You’re Jamie Dimon
Boeing Hardens Tone With Union, Laments ‘Bad Faith Bargaining’
How Uber and Lyft Used a Loophole to Deny NYC Drivers Millions in Pay
Noel Tata Is New Tata Trusts Head to oversee $165 Billion Group
Musk Shows Tesla Cybercab, Sees Sub-$30,000 Cost and 2026 Production
Polestar CEO Says EV Maker Must Start ‘Actively Selling Cars’
Stellantis Shares Fall as Executive Shake-Up Fails to Calm Nerves
Nippon Steel to Sell Stake in Calvert JV to ArcelorMittal in Push for U.S. Steel Deal
Sanofi in Talks to Sell Controlling Stake in Consumer Health Arm to CD&R
Butter Made From CO2 Is Coming as Startups Chase New Fat Sources
For Student Athletes in Missouri, Playing at Home Is Lucrative
Lego Leaps Into Documentaries, With Pharrell Williams as the Subject
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Morning News: October 10, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 10th, 2024 at 7:04 amTop African Lithium Producer, Zimbabwe Plans Incentives to Encourage Mineral Processing
China’s Central Bank Launches Swap Facility to Boost Stock Market
China Wages End Two Quarters of Gains, Adding Deflationary Risks
Hedge Funds Sold Record Chinese Stocks on Tuesday, Goldman Says
Multilateral Banks Could Lend Up to $480 Billion More Before Rating Downgrades, Fitch Says
Hurricane Milton and the Economy
US CPI Data Will Likely Show Further Disinflation in September
For Bond Traders, It’s Wait Till Next Year (Again)
Lina Khan Is Just Getting Started (She Hopes)
This Election Marks a New Low for Fiscal Fakery
Interest Rates Will Be Higher in the Future, Especially if Trump Is President
Kamala Harris Win May Boost US Effort to Rein In ‘Junk Fees’ Levied on Consumers
Why Budgeting is Terrible Advice for Lower-Income People
The Endless Downfall of a Crypto Power Couple
Amazon Could Be Forced to Treat Drivers as Employees
Tesla’s ‘Dream Premium’ Faces Moment of Truth at Robotaxi Reveal
China Detains Four Taiwanese Employees at Apple’s ‘iPhone City’
Deutsche Telekom Looks to AI to Boost Revenue Growth, Trim Costs
Brookfield Outbids Segro With $728 Million Deal to Buy Tritax EuroBox
Delta’s Guidance Misses Estimates After Summer Upheaval
Unilever Sells Russian Business
7-Eleven Owner Plans Revamp of Noncore Businesses Amid Buyout Interest From Couche-Tard
Uniqlo Owner Posts Record Annual Earnings
Givaudan Reaffirms 2025 Targets After Sales Growth
While N.B.A. Plays in Abu Dhabi, Critics Cry ‘Sportswashing’
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Morning News: October 9, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 9th, 2024 at 7:07 amChinese Stocks Tumble Most Since 2020 on Stimulus Skepticism
China Has Only Begun Its Long Road Toward Economic Revival
How a Series of Blunders Ruined a Latin American Socialist Success Story
Renewables Growth Set to Surge by 2030 But Falls Short of U.N. Climate Goal, IEA Says
Why the Market Shrugs Off the Mother of All Oil Shocks
Rio Tinto to Acquire Arcadium Lithium for $6.7 Billion
Reinsurers Prepare For a Historic Loss
Michigan State Channels Warren Buffett to Beat Ivy League Funds
Wall Street Salaries Decline Further From Pandemic Heights
Wall Street Bonuses Projected to Rise More than 7% in 2024, NY Comptroller Says
‘I’m Not Going to Wait’: Young Chinese Jump Into Stock Frenzy
Why Robinhood Is Seeking Merry Traders Overseas
Should You Refinance Your Mortgage Now as Rates Drop?
Amazon’s Costly Space Race Is Grounding Profit Margin Hopes
US Weighs Google Breakup in Historic Big Tech Antitrust Case
How to Say No to Our A.I. Overlords
US Debates Who Should Be Able to Buy American AI Chips
OpenAI Says China-Linked Group Tried to Phish Its Employees
Some of the Web’s Sketchiest Sites Share an Address in Iceland
Boeing Withdraws Contract Offer as Union Talks Break Down
Healthcare Premiums Are Soaring Even as Inflation Eases, in Charts
Nobel Prize in Chemistry Goes to 3 Scientists for Predicting and Creating Proteins
How Shame, Blame and the Internet Eroded Trust in Science
Abortion Rights Get New, Wealthy Backer in Melinda French Gates
Boehringer Open to Deals While ‘Laser-Focused’ on Obesity Drug
Disneyland Raises Prices by About 6% for Most Popular Days
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CWS Market Review – October 8, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 8th, 2024 at 5:32 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 Economy Created 254,000 Jobs Last Month
Last Monday, the stock market closed out the quarter and month at an all-time high. Through September, this year’s market is on pace for being the strongest market in a presidential election year since 1928.
This has happened despite numerous reasons for investors to be scared. Nevertheless, the stock market keeps on climbing.
There’s an important lesson for investors in this. The long-term trend is very much in your favor. To be a good investor means you simply have to wait out bad times.
Wall Street then got a big shock on Friday when the Labor Department reported that the U.S. economy created 254,000 net new jobs last month. That was well above expectations for a gain of 150,000 new jobs. The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.1%.
I looked at the decimals, and the unemployment rate was technically 4.051%. In other words, the jobless rate came very close to rounding down to 4.0%.
The unemployment rate is lower today than it was in every single month from February 1970 to November 1999. (To be transparent, they have changed the methodology on that data several times.)
Wall Street liked the news. On Friday, the stock market rallied close to 1%. The market was up another 1% today.
Many of the details in the report are quite good. For example, the labor force participation rate for prime working-age adults is near a multi-decade high.
The jobs gain data for August were revised higher to 159,000. July’s number was increased by 55,000 to a monthly gain of 144,000.
I was very happy to see that average hourly earnings increased by 0.4%. That was 0.1% ahead of expectations. Over the last year, average hourly earnings are up by 4% which is ahead of inflation, but not by much. Still, it’s good to see that workers are finally getting a raise. One concern is that the average workweek fell by 0.1 hours to 34.2 hours.
Here are some details:
Restaurants and bars led job creation for the month, with the hospitality industry adding 69,000 positions in September after averaging just 14,000 over the previous 12 months.
Health care, a consistent leader in job growth, contributed 45,000, while government grew by 31,000. Other gainers included social assistance (27,000) and construction (25,000).
A more encompassing measure of unemployment that includes discouraged workers and those holding part-time jobs for economic reasons dropped to 7.7%. The share of the workforce either working or looking for work, known as the labor force participation rate, held steady at 62.7%.
One interesting detail in Friday’s report is that many full-time positions were created last month. The number of part-time jobs decreased by 95,000 while fulltime employment increased by 414,000.
Where does this leave the Federal Reserve? That’s a good question. The Fed has made it clear that it wanted to lower rates before the economy skidded off the road and plowed into a ditch. Now it appears that the economy is doing well. Or at least, well enough. So are all these cuts needed?
The answer is probably yes. The Fed meets again early next month, just after the election. The futures market thinks the Fed will go ahead with another 0.25% rate cut, and that’s probably right. Some think the Fed will hit us with another 0.5% but I’m a doubter.
As I’ve said before, the best way to view these rate cuts is as the Fed undoing its aggressive rate hikes from 2022 to 2023.
However, the big news before the Fed meeting will be this Thursday’s CPI report. The last few CPI reports have shown benign inflation, but that was with weaker jobs growth.
For September, Wall Street expects inflation of 0.1% and core inflation of 0.2%. If that’s right, it means that both core and headline inflation are slowly moving to the Fed’s target of 2%.
Some people have suggested that the good jobs numbers will alter the Fed’s course. I think it’s too early to say. Remember the basic formula: lower rates are good for value and higher rates are good for growth stocks. Interestingly, growth stocks have done well over the last few days so there’s been some impact on the mind of the market.
Yesterday, the yield on the 10-year Treasury broke above 4%. This got a lot of attention, and it’s an important psychological level, but the yield is lower than it was during much of this summer.
The overall outlook is that rates are headed lower. The only question now is about speed. The futures market expects the Fed to cut by 0.25% at its December meeting as well. For 2025, traders think the Fed will cut rates by 1%. If inflation continues to fade away, that could be the correct policy.
Tomorrow, the Fed will release the minutes from its last meeting. These are usually pretty dull affairs, but this time could be an exception. For one, the Fed decided to cut rates by 0.5%. Also, there was one dissenting vote. The Fed has made it clear that rates are going down.
Stock Focus: Public Storage
As I’ve said, when rates are headed down, you want to make sure you have some high-yielding stocks in your portfolio. These means sectors like utilities and REITs which brings me to one of my favorite REITs.
Let’s say your boss offers you a big raise and a promotion, but the catch is that the job requires you to move out of the country. You love to see the world, so you jump at the chance.
But there’s one nagging question: what do you do with all your stuff?
Nowadays, there’s an easy answer. You rent a storage unit. There are lots of these facilities all over the country. If you look long enough, you’re bound to come across Public Storage (PSA).
Public Storage is the largest self-storage real estate investment trust (REIT) in the United States. There are currently more than 3,000 Public Storage locations around the world. The company is based in Glendale, CA.
If you’re not familiar with a REIT, it’s basically the landlord of some real estate. If the REIT pays out almost all of its income to shareholders, then it gets preferential tax treatment. As a result, REITs often have good dividend yields. It’s a great way to invest in real estate.
Public Storage was founded in 1972 by B. Wayne Hughes and Kenneth Volk Jr. During a trip to Texas, Hughes saw that local real estate developers had made, in effect, mini storage units, so he decided to bring the idea to Southern California. It was a brilliant idea because he could charge as much as apartments in term of price per square foot. The difference is that the upkeep costs were far less.
The business quickly took off and by 1989, it had grown to 1,000 locations. PSA officially became a REIT in 1995. Today it has a market cap of $61 billion, and PSA is one of the largest REITs around.
More than 90% of PSA’s revenue comes from its self-storage business. The company does a lot more than just provide the space. They also provide a broad range of services for their clients. PSA offers insurance and packing products. The company also has a subsidiary that provides boxes and truck rentals.
It’s an interesting business because the storage lots tend to be located in unforgiving parts of large cities. They’re often located in dense clusters near freeways and intersections. It’s also interesting that PSA has relatively few employees. The lots are automated so customers can access their units at any time.
As any fan of the TV show Storage Wars knows, abandoned units are auctioned off. (Despite what you may have heard, most abandoned or unpaid lots contain useless junk.)
PSA has been a tremendous business over the years.
Thirty years ago, you could have picked up one share of PSA for $7. Since then, the stock has increased by 50-fold. And that doesn’t include dividends. If you include dividends, then PSA gained over 500-fold. All from renting storage units.
I really like PSA’s dividend. The company currently pays out a quarterly dividend of $3 per share, or $12 for the year. Think of it this way: If you had bought PSA 20 years ago, you’d now be yielding over 20% based on your original purchase price.
I also like that PSA is the dominant player in the industry. The company buys up smaller companies all the time. There hasn’t been much self-storage building recently. That means there’s been a scramble to buy out smaller storage companies. There are lots of small operators and they’re happy to sell to PSA.
Public Storage currently yields 3.5% which isn’t that far below the current 10-year Treasury’s yield. The next earnings report is due out in three or four weeks.
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: October 8, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 8th, 2024 at 7:06 amUK Sanctions Russian Troops for Chemical Weapons Use in Ukraine
Fears of a Global Oil Shock if the Mideast Crisis Intensifies
Energy Transition Must Morph From Tortoise to Hare as 2030 Nears
Centeno Warns Against Big ECB Moves, Calls for ‘Gradualism’
Mexico Wants to Curb Chinese Imports With Help From U.S. Companies
China’s Stock Euphoria Cools as Traders Reassess Stimulus Bets
What Really Happens on the Ground When the US Slaps Tariffs on China
Fed May Struggle to Rid Backstops of Stigma Amid New Push
10-Year Treasury Yields Shifts Lower After Crossing 4% in Previous Session
Price Controls Are a Bipartisan Delusion
Treasury Rout Stalls as Traders Look to CPI to Inform Fed Bets
Cryptoverse: Bored Bitcoin Seeks Direction After Big Bang
FTX Cleared to Repay Billions to Customers After Bankruptcy Plan Approval
Soaring Insurance Costs Are Menacing Owners of Big Buildings, Too
Swiss Bank Mirabaud Shuts Brokerage Unit Due to Poor Performance
Cyber Providers See Strong Demand, but Few Feel Confident Enough to List
Honeywell Plans to Spin Off Advanced Materials Business
Northvolt Subsidiary Files for Bankruptcy After Expansion Plan is Shelved
German Industry Rebounded in August on Car Production
Americans Are Using AI at Fairly High Rates. What Does This Mean for the Economy?
AI Startups in India Seek to Upend English-Language Learning
Anything in 10 Minutes: $5 Billion Delivery App Sweeps Latin America
Kroger Adds Disney Streaming as New Perk for Grocery Delivery Program
PepsiCo Trims Sales Outlook as Consumers Remain Squeezed
Where ‘60 Minutes’ and ‘Call Her Daddy’ Fit Into Kamala Harris’s Unorthodox Media Strategy
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Morning News: October 7, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 7th, 2024 at 7:04 amEU’s New Tariffs on Chinese Cars Turn Words Into Action
Goldman Says Surging Chinese Stocks May Advance Another 20%
Two Jumbo Cuts Were Too Much to Hope For
Bond Traders Buckle Up for ‘No Landing’ After Jobs Surprise
How to Think About the Surprising US Jobs Data
Trump’s Plans Could Increase U.S. Debt While Raising Costs for Most Americans
‘100%’ Yields Are Fueling a Retail Boom in New Quick-Buck ETFs
Costco’s Gold Bars Fly Off Shelves as Bullion Prices Smash Records
How to Win the Unfinished Fight Against Cost-of-Living Shocks
The Tech Lobbying Group Helping to Broaden the First Amendment’s Reach
How E-Commerce Is Making China’s Deflation Worse
Amazon RTO Edict Reflects Fear New Hires Don’t Know Company Culture
Want to Kill Grunt Work With AI? Careful What You Wish For
Apollo Global to Take Barnes Group Private in $3.6 Billion Deal
Workday Billionaire ‘Bored Silly’ of Retirement Chases a Third IPO
American Scientists Get Medicine Nobel for Finding MicroRNA
Activist Starboard Value Takes $1 Billion Stake in Pfizer
Astra Looks to Future of Cholesterol Drugs With $2 Billion Deal
How Cannabis and Opium Poppies Became National Security Issues
Chevron to Sell Oil Sands, Shale Assets for $6.5 Billion to Canadian Natural
Shell Expects Higher LNG Output But Flags Continued Refining Weakness
Cement Is a Big Polluter. A Plant in Norway Hopes to Clean It Up.
Libyan Oil Output Climbs Above 1 Million Barrels a Day
Saudi Arabia Said to Tee Up Multibillion-Dollar Bet on Hydrogen
From Cleveland to Chicago, NFL Teams Dream of Domed Stadiums
How Everyone Got Lost in Netflix’s Endless Library
Nutter Butter, Are You Good? An Investigation.
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Morning News: October 4, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 4th, 2024 at 7:03 amIs China Repeating Its 2014-15 Boom-Bust Cycle?
Japan PM Instructs Ministers to Compile Comprehensive Economic Package
A Big Russia Bet Is Minting Fortunes on Paper for Retail Investors
EU to Impose Tariffs Up to 45% on Chinese Electric Vehicles
Germany, France and Italy Urge the EU to Ease Banking Regulation
Trump-Proofing Europe Looks Impossible
Jobs and Oil Prices Are Keeping Markets on Edge
These Are Boom Times for ‘Degrowth’
US Money-Market Funds Hit All-Time High of $6.46 Trillion
Goldman Sachs Prodigy Finds It Hard to Crack the Hedge Fund Elite
Zuckerberg Passes Bezos to Become World’s Second-Richest Person
US Jobs Report Is Expected to Show Stable Growth in September
US Dockworkers Go Back to Work as Talks Extended to January
Pandemic Start-Ups Are Thriving, and Helping to Fuel the Economy
Retailers Have No Room for Error This Holiday
Britain Backs Plan to Store Carbon Dioxide Under the Sea
Southeast US Utilities Take Lessons From Houston to Temper Helene Backlash
‘Clean Steel’ Can Revive America’s Dying Rust Belt
Can a ‘Precision Scheduling’ Expert Fix Berkshire Hathaway’s Railroad?
Rivian Falls After Cutting EV Production Target on Supply Crunch
What Do US Vehicle Regulators Have Against Tiny Cars?
OpenAI’s Altman Concentrates Power on Path to $157 Billion Valuation
The Health Tech Boss Putting AI in Every Single Product
Hospitals Hit With IV Fluid Shortage After Hurricane Helene
CVS Is Under Pressure and Considering a Break Up. Here’s Why that Could Be Risky
Can a Neon Blue Gummy Worm Cocktail Save the Movies?
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Morning News: October 3, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on October 3rd, 2024 at 7:09 amRussian Court Freezes Funds of US Banks JP Morgan and Mellon
US Chips Guided Russian Missile That Killed 6-Year-Old Girl
Key Japan Ministers Show United Front With BOJ Amid Jitters
Buffett May Target Japan Bank and Insurance Shares, Analysts Say
World Braces for Bigger Trade Wars if Trump Wins
Is Biden’s Economy Overstimulated? Not Compared With Trump’s
Bill Dudley: How My Hard Economic Landing Forecast Went Wrong
Markets Need an October Surprise to Break Deadlock
Wall Street Races to Bring Private Credit to the Masses
Amundi Turns Bullish on Swiss Franc in Bet on Safe-Haven Appeal
Money-Market Funds Stay in Vogue Even as Reforms Go Into Effect
Banks Set to Use Swift for Token Transactions Starting in 2025
SEC Enforcement Director Who Pushed for Big Fines Steps Down
Warren Buffett Sells $338 Million of BofA Stock as Spree Slows
U.K. Home Sales Soar as Mortgage Rates Ease
US Office Market Shows Signs of Bottoming After Big Discount Sales
To Revive Manufacturing, How Much Can a President Do?
The Future of EV Charging Looks a Lot Like an Airport Lounge
Africa Oil Producers Raise Almost Half of the Seed Capital Needed for $5 Billion Energy Bank
Starbucks Buys Research Farms as Climate Change Threatens Coffee Supply
Navellier: What the Longshoremen’s Strike Is Really About – and Why It Matters
Striking Dockworkers Are Top Earners—When They Work
In Japan’s Countryside, Century-Old Firms Learn to Embrace Foreign Workers
Schools Make Millions Offering Degrees That Double as Work Visas
Japan’s Richest Person Donates $31 Million to UCLA Program
KLM Targets Savings, Explores Asset Sales to Counter High Costs
Beyoncé Released a Song and Levi’s Saw Its Moment
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