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Morning News: June 19, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 19th, 2024 at 7:05 amFrance and Italy Get EU Deficit Scolding as Markets Watch
Japan Bank to Overhaul Investments as Wrong-Way Rate Bets Trigger Bond Losses
Bond Trading by China’s PBOC Wouldn’t Be Quantitative Easing, Gov. Says
JPMorgan Ignites $40 Billion Rush Into Indian Bonds
JPMorgan Joins Goldman in Scrapping Cap on London Banker Bonuses
Strikes Loom as 200,000 German Bank Staff Fight for Hefty Pay Rise
US FDIC Chair Nominee Likely Has the Votes But Confirmation Process Could Drag
Nvidia’s 591,078% Rally to Most Valuable Stock Came in Waves
What Does Musk’s Shareholder Win Mean for His Pay Package?
Researchers Say Social Media Warning Is Too Broad
HPE’s $14 Billion Juniper Deal Attracts UK Antitrust Scrutiny
Vodafone to Raise $2 Billion Via Stake Sale in Indian Telecom Tower Company
Cyberattack Led to Harrowing Lapses at Ascension Hospitals, Clinicians Say
Codelco Struggles to Halt Persistent Slide in Copper Output
US Backs Angola Plan to Process Critical Minerals, Export Power
Coffeeholics in South Africa Feel the Heat of Surging Prices
Boeing CEO Apologizes to MAX Crash Families, Calls Culture ‘Far From Perfect’
Chinese Carmakers Call for 25% Tax on Large European Cars, CCTV Reports
In Rare Rebuke, Toyota Chairman’s Investor Support Tumbles
Yes In God’s Backyard? This Housing Solution May Be the Answer to Your Prayers
Washington Post CEO Plans a Mysterious ‘Third Newsroom.’ His Past Offers a Clue
Super-Star Sneaker Maker Golden Goose Postpones IPO Amid Market Turmoil
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CWS Market Review – June 18, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 18th, 2024 at 6:25 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 closed at another all-time high today. This is the S&P 500’s 31st new high this year. The Nasdaq rose for its seventh day in a row.
The stock market also reached another milestone. Nvidia passed Microsoft to become the world’s most valuable public company. The chipmaker now has a valuation of $3.3 trillion. It’s larger than every company in the Russell 2000 combined.
Ten years ago, Nvidia was worth $10 billion. CEO Jensen Huang’s first job was as a busboy at Denny’s. Now he’s worth $117 billion. Not bad.
As I’ve mentioned many times before, this market has been heavily tilted toward growth stocks. In fact, today snapped an 11-day winning streak of the S&P 500 Growth ETF (SPYG) outpacing the S&P 500 ETF (SPY).
As strong as this market has been, it’s been very narrow. Despite being at a new high, only 50 stocks in the index touched 52-week highs today.
Soaring markets can be surprisingly tricky for investors. Watching share prices march steadily higher can induce intense fear in some investors. They tend to think that we must be getting near a cliff and that it would therefore be best to cash out now.
That’s a mistake. A rising market doesn’t necessarily mean we’re in a bubble. It only means that share prices are higher than where they were. Rallies can go on for longer than you think. Peter Lynch said, “Far more money has been lost by investors trying to anticipate corrections, than lost in the corrections themselves.”
A few years ago, I looked into the data and found that the stock market does very well when it’s at an all-time high. Not only that, but the market is significantly less volatile when it’s at a new high. It’s pretty rare that the market rallies by more than 1% in a day following an all-time high.
Where do we go from here? That’s hard to say but I’ll note that July has been up for the last nine years in a row.
Let’s look at the market’s current valuation.
The S&P 500 closed Monday at 5,473.23. Wall Street currently expects the S&P 500 to earn $240.78 per share this year. That gives the market a forward price/earnings ratio of 22.7.
That works out to an earnings yield of 4.40% (i.e., the inverse of the p/e ratio, it’s the e/p ratio). To get an idea of how expensive that is, we want to compare the S&P 500’s earnings yield with the current yield on the long-term Treasury bonds. The 10-year Treasury currently yields 4.22%.
In other words, investors are getting a very mild safety cushion of 20 basis points by being in Treasury bonds. That’s not much. The risk/reward balance still leans towards stocks.
There are some important caveats. The market’s forecast for earnings this year is just that, a forecast. Wall Street analysts have often been wrong, and sometimes by a lot. Wall Street has already lowered its earnings forecast for this year, and it can do it some more.
We also don’t know where interest rates will go. If inflation comes back, that would send yields soaring. It was only eight months ago that the 10-year Treasury was yielding close to 5%. Right now, the bigger fear is that the economy will turn south.
Retail Sales Were Weak Last Month
Americans haven’t been shopping as briskly as expected, which is odd since you might think that shopping was our national pastime.
To be fair, this morning’s retail sales report was only a little weaker than expected. Last month, retail sales rose by 0.1% which was 0.1% below expectations. Over the last year, retail sales are up by 2.3%. That’s not adjusted for inflation. The number for April was revised to a decline of 0.2%.
Here’s the year-over-year growth in retail sales:
If we don’t exclude autos, then retail sales for May fell by 0.1% whereas Wall Street had been expecting an increase of 0.2%. So what caused the sluggish shopping numbers?
Moderating gas prices helped hurt receipts at gas stations, which reported a 2.2% monthly decline. That was offset somewhat by a 2.8% increase at sports goods, music and book stores.
Online outlets reported a 0.8% increase, while bars and restaurants saw a 0.4% decline. Furniture and home furnishing stores also reported a 1.1% drop.
The retail sales report is important because consumer spending makes up about 70% of the economy. The good inflation news has come at the same time that consumer spending has apparently weakened.
Following the report, the odds of a September rate cut edged up from 61.5% yesterday to 67% today. Futures traders think there’s a 66% chance that the Fed will cut rates twice this year.
The most troubling news today came from the Congressional Budget Office. The CBO increased its estimate for the U.S. budget deficit by 27% to nearly $2 trillion. The new estimate is $400 billion higher than the previous estimate in March. Last year, the deficit was $1.69 trillion. For this year, the CBO sees it reaching $1.92 trillion.
As a percent of GDP, the CBO sees the deficit getting to 6.7%. That’s up from the prior estimates of 5.3%. Last year’s deficit was 6.3% of GDP.
According to Bloomberg, “Over the coming decade, the CBO sees US deficits totalling $22.1 trillion, up more than $2 trillion from February’s report.”
The CBO listed four major reasons for the budget revisions: President Biden’s student loan forgiveness plans, aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan, FDIC payments for bank failures and heightened Medicaid spending. What’s frustrating is that the CBO sees higher revenues incoming but not enough to offset the higher spending.
If world markets become convinced that the U.S. is too much of a risk to invest in, that would hit the dollar and our ability to borrow money. So far, the market doesn’t seem too concerned. I don’t know how long that can last.
Stock Focus: Nathan’s Famous
With July 4th coming up, I wanted to highlight one of my favorite unfollowed stocks which is Nathan’s Famous (NATH), the hotdog stand.
Not many people realize that the Coney Island mainstay is publicly traded, but it is. Not only is Nathan’s listed on the exchange, but it’s been a great stock for decades.
Nathan’s is currently priced at $67.65 per share. That’s not a bad valuation. Nathan’s Enterprise Value/EBITDA is currently 9.73 which isn’t bad.
The company has a market value of $282 million. Last week, Nathan’s reported earnings for fiscal 2024 of $4.81 per share. That was up by one penny per share from one year before. Sales growth is low but positive.
Currently not a single analyst follows Nathan’s. Since December 31, 1999, Nathan’s is up 3,846% while the S&P 500 is up 493%.
That’s all for now. The stock market is closed tomorrow for Juneteenth. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.
– Eddy
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Morning News: June 18, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 18th, 2024 at 7:02 amBiden’s Tough-on-China Stance Threatens Green America Push
Indonesia Can’t Ignore the Cost of Its Battery Metal Boom
Carbon Removal Fund Backed By Meta, Alphabet Agrees Europe Deal
The Deadly Mining Complex Powering the EV Revolution
Waabi Raises $200 Million to Deploy Driverless Trucks by 2025
Electric-Vehicle Startup Fisker Files for Bankruptcy
Coke—and Dozens of Others—Pledged to Quit Russia. They’re Still There
Western Multinationals Fleeing Nigeria Are Being Replaced by Asian and Turkish Firms
India Regulator Plans Tweaks to Address Derivative Trading Risks
EU Finance Chief Says Ditch National Symbols to Boost Capital Market
Central Banks Expect to Snap Up More Gold This Year Amid Dollar Pessimism
Biden’s Stimulus Juiced the Economy, but Its Political Effects Are Muddled
Citi Pitches Money-Moving ‘Crown Jewel’ as Central to Revamp
Goldman Sees US Jobs at Inflection Point, Sticks to Two-Cut Call
BofA Poll Shows Investors Primed to Fuel Stock Rally With Cash
JPMorgan’s Latest Fintech Fight Highlights the Pain of Sellers’ Remorse
Hedge Fund’s Trades With Lenders Point to Return of Crisis-Era Structures
A Korean Secret to Keeping Friendships Strong: Savings Groups
Amazon Union Workers Join Forces With the Teamsters
‘I Live in Hell’: Anti-Growth Fervor Grips US South After Pandemic Boom
TikTok Challenges Congress’s Secrecy on Alleged Security Threat
Apple Scraps Its Buy Now, Pay Later Product. Forget Payments, AI Is the Focus
Best Buy Trains 30,000 to Handle Microsoft’s AI Laptops Launch
Bacon Ice Cream and Nugget Overload Sees Misfiring McDonald’s AI Withdrawn
Boeing’s Bumpy Ride Isn’t Over
Blackstone to Buy Japanese E-Comic Provider
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Morning News: June 17, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 17th, 2024 at 7:03 amBerlin Holds Key to Remaining Russia Gas Flows to Europe
China Property Drag Is Getting Worse, Factory Output Disappoints
Facing E.V. Tariffs, China Threatens Pork Imports From Europe
Global Central Banks Recalibrate as the Big Policy Easing of 2024 Fizzles
Paris Loses Crown as Europe’s Biggest Stock Market to London
ECB Pays Attention to Good Functioning of Markets, Lagarde Says, After France Spooks Investors
How the US Mopped Up a Third of Global Capital Flows Since Covid
Latest Inflation Data Provides Potential for ‘Even Greater Upside’ in the Stock Market Rally
Hedge Funds’ Secret Weapon to Fight the SEC Lives in Texas
Trump’s Planned Tariffs Would Tax US Households, Economists Warn
Momentum Is Still Drawing Magnificent Mojo
Trailing 97% of Bond Funds, Western’s Flagship Is Losing Cash
Popular Arbitrage Trade Backfires as TSMC Frenzy Grows in US
Google DeepMind Shifts From Research Lab to AI Product Factory
Apple’s Vision for AI Simplicity Highlights Miss by Microsoft
Surgeon General Calls for Warning Labels on Social Media Platforms
Inside DOJ’s Wrenching Decision on Whether to Prosecute Boeing
When Will America Get Its $25,000 Electric Car?
Stellantis, Champion of Home Work, Asks Engineers Back to Office
Toyota Investors Challenge Scion’s Grip at a ‘Critical Juncture’
How A.I. Is Revolutionizing Drug Development
It Will Take More Than US Bargaining Power to Cut Drug Costs
US Olympian Shaun White Launches Snowboarding League
As N.B.A. TV Deal Nears, Warner Bros. Discovery Is on the Outside
Adidas Investigates Allegations of Bribery in China
China’s Lust for Durian Is Creating Fortunes in Southeast Asia
Primo Water, BlueTriton Brands Affiliate to Merge
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Morning News: June 14, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 14th, 2024 at 7:02 amGas Markets Brace for Price Spikes During Turbulent Summer
Global Food Roundup: Farming’s AI Answer and Struggling Startups
Industrial Policy Balances Politics and the Planet
BOJ’s Lack of Detail on Bond Buying Cuts Leaves Yen Vulnerable
Macron Election Call Sends French Markets to Worst Week in Years
US Money-Market Funds Hit All-Time High of $6.12 Trillion
Why the Stock Market Has Risen Even With No Fed Rate Cut
Crypto Titans’ $160 Million War Chest Threatens Senate Democrats
The Case for Investing in Bitcoin or Gold, or Both
Former Bank Bailout Watchdog Is Choice to Lead F.D.I.C.
The Pandemic Felled Dozens of Stellar Credit Ratings. CFOs Want Them Back
Visa, Mastercard $30 Billion Fee Settlement in Peril
Courting C.E.O.s, Trump Says He Intends to Cut Corporate Taxes Again
F.A.A. Investigating How Counterfeit Titanium Got Into Boeing and Airbus Jets
Musk Pay Victory Removes Cloud at Tesla, but Fresh Legal Fight Looms
Tesla Can’t Be All About Elon Musk
Nice EV You Got There—Can You Afford to Insure It?
Stellantis Moves Some EV Production Out of China Due to EU Tariffs
Why Are Shares of Adobe Stock Soaring After Earnings?
Amazon Has Upended the Streaming Ad Market, and Netflix Is Paying the Price
Paramount Will Keep Its Family Discount
Red Lobster Looks to New Wall Street Savior After Prior Woes
Cava Is Worth $33 Million Per Restaurant After Blistering Debut
The N.B.A. Sees Its Future in Africa
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Morning News: June 13, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 13th, 2024 at 7:06 amDeadly and Wildly Profitable, Uranium Fever Breaks Out
Chinese Trader’s $20 Million Pile of Russian Copper Goes Missing
G-7 Agree to Tap Frozen Russian Assets for $50B to Ukraine
China’s Once-Mighty Credit Cycle Is a Fading Force on World Markets
Why Biden Is Escalating Trump’s China Tariffs
Taiwan Central Bank Leaves Key Interest Rates Unchanged
Why Bond Markets Are So Spooked by the French Election
Bond Market Splits From Fed Again by Betting on 2024 Rate Cuts
Private Lenders Storm Public Bond Markets at Record-Setting Pace
Treasury Secretary Yellen Says U.S. Debt Load is in ‘Reasonable Place’ If It Remains at this Level
Why Investors Don’t Believe the Fed
Why Big US Banks Are Resisting Bigger ‘Capital Cushions’
Goldman Sachs Aims to Double Lending to Wealthy Private Bank Clients
Trump to Pitch Dimon, Fraser as Verdict Fails to Scare Off CEOs
JPMorgan to Wager on Weight-Loss Craze With $500 Million Fund
Big Tech Wins Again on Double Whammy Day
TikTok, Snap Find It’s Not Easy to Keep Young Kids Off the Apps
Larry Ellison’s Fortune Passes Brin and Ballmer as AI Boosts Oracle
China’s EV Makers Saw Europe Tariffs Coming, and Many Already Have a Plan
Tesla Expects to Raise Model 3 Price In Europe Due to EU Tariffs on EVs From China
Tesla Share Price Is Its Own Referendum on Musk
Tesla Jumps After Musk Says Shareholders Backed Pay Package
Elon Musk Allegations Are a Reminder That Harassment Is About Power
Montana Has More Cows Than People. Why Are Locals Eating Beef From Brazil?
The Rise and Fall of a $600 Million Strip-Mall Tycoon
Disney and DeSantis Reach Agreement, Ending Protracted Fight
HBO Could Use a Hit. Enter the Dragons
Sony Pictures Acquires Alamo Drafthouse in Lifeline to Cinema Chain
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Morning News: June 12, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 12th, 2024 at 7:04 amOPEC+ Producers Are Caught Between Diverging Oil Forecasts
The World Will Be Swimming in Excess Oil by End of This Decade, IEA Says
G-7 to Call on China to Stop Helping Russia’s War in Ukraine
EU to Impose Additional Tariffs on EV Imports From China
Umicore Slashes Guidance After Slower EV Demand Hits Battery-Materials Business
Uniper Wins $14 Billion Arbitration Ruling Against Gazprom
Far Right May Irk EU in €500 Billion Investment Push, Scope Says
FedEx to Lay Off up to 2,000 Employees in Europe Amid Cost-Cutting Efforts
U.K. Economy Slows, Underlining Government’s Challenges as Elections Loom
Peso Gets Crushed as Investors Worry Sheinbaum’s Win Was Too Big
Fed Officials Eye Key Inflation Metric Hours Before Rate Decision
Biden Nears Pick for Next F.D.I.C. Chair
JPMorgan Risk Swap Ends Up at a Familiar Place: Rival Banks
US Money Funds Look Past Reform Angst Thanks to High Rates
The Tiny Trades That Brought Down Segantii’s Giant Hedge Fund
GameStop Raises Over $2 Billion After Roaring Kitty Rally
McKinsey Boss’s Next Big Consulting Project: His Own Firm
Asia’s Family Office Frenzy Comes With Plenty of Imposters
Explosive Cases Flow to US Supreme Court from ‘Bold’ Regional Court
I Spent a Day Down TikTok’s Disinformation Rabbit Hole
Paramount Can’t Stay Independent Long After Rebuffing Skydance
Why the Paramount Deal Talks Failed
Losing a Bridge Upends Life in Baltimore (and It May Soon Get Worse)
Buyers Snap Up Aging and Empty Office Buildings for Deep Discounts
More Than 75% of US Hotels Remain Short-Staffed
The World’s Most Online Male Gymnast Prepares for the Paris Olympics
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CWS Market Review – June 11, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 11th, 2024 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 S&P 500 Makes Another All-Time High
The stock market closed today at yet another all-time high. This market has been impressively resilient, especially the growth side. Since May 1, the S&P 500 has gained 7.1%.
I noticed that shares of Apple popped to a new high today on news that it’s unveiling AI software. These days, all you have to do is mention AI and your stock may double. I’m exaggerating, but not by much.
Not that long ago, the market was looking a lot more fragile. On May 31, the index came close to touching its 50-day moving average but instead of falling through, the market bounced four days in a row.
Wall Street was helped on Friday by a surprisingly strong jobs report for May. The Labor Department said that the U.S. economy added 272,000 net new jobs last month. That was ahead of Wall Street’s forecast for a gain of 190,000 jobs. For context, the economy added 165,000 new jobs in April.
So is the economy soaring? Well, not exactly. The jobs report was a mix of good and bad news. The unemployment rate rose to 4.0%. That’s the first time it’s reached that level since January 2022. The labor force participation rate fell 0.2% to 62.5%. The broader U-6 rate stayed the same at 7.4%. In December, the U-6 rate was at 6.5%.
You can see that a lot of the job gains are really us getting back to the jobs trend that existed before Covid.
There are other areas of concern. For example, the separate household survey showed that the number of full-time jobs fell by 625,000 while part-time jobs rose by 286,000.
Here are some details:
Job gains were concentrated in health care, government, and leisure and hospitality, consistent with recent trends. The three sectors respectively added 68,000, 43,000 and 42,000 positions. The three sectors accounted for more than half the gains.
Other significant growth areas came in professional, scientific and technical services (32,000), social assistance (15,000), and retail (13,000).
One important bright spot is that average hourly earnings increased by 0.4% last month. That’s good to see. Wall Street had been expecting an increase of 0.3%. Over the last year, average hourly earnings are up by 4.1%. Unfortunately, a lot of that increase has been eaten up by inflation.
Why Is the Fed Talking About Cutting Rates?
With the jobs market mostly healthy and the stock market at new highs, why exactly are we talking about the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates? That’s a good question, and the answer is not entirely clear.
The latest futures prices indicate that Wall Street is about evenly divided on the need for an interest rate cut by September. Not that long ago, a broad consensus assumed that we’d be slashing rates by now. I wouldn’t be surprised to see growing dissention within the Fed.
Inflation is still above the Fed’s target, but it’s a lot better than it was a year ago. The Fed hasn’t changed rates in nearly a year, and it’s clear that higher rates have had a major impact on the economy.
We’ll get more important info. tomorrow morning when the June CPI report comes out. Wall Street expects the CPI to have increased by 0.1% last month and the core rate to have increased by 0.3%. Over the last year, Wall Street thinks the CPI rose by 3.4% and the core rate increased by 3.5%.
The Federal Reserve started its two-day meeting today. The policy statement will be released tomorrow afternoon. Don’t expect to see any change to interest rates. The Fed will also update its economic projections for the next few years (the dot plot).
I’ll be curious to see what the Fed expects for GDP growth for this year. The Q1 GDP report wasn’t so hot, but I don’t know if this was a hiccup or the start of a trend.
The last time the Fed updated its economic projections, the members saw the need for three rate cuts this year. Spoiler alert: That ain’t gonna last. My guess is that the Fed cut that back to two rate cuts. It seems that getting inflation from 9% to 3% was surprisingly easy but getting it from 3% to 2% is surprisingly difficult. At some point, it might be easiest for the Fed to declare victory and walk away from its 2% inflation target.
I’ve discussed my concern that the current market rally is too heavily tilted towards growth stocks. That’s not getting any better. If anything, the spread is getting worse. Typically, value stocks do better as interest rates fall, so the recent surge in growth stocks is closely tied to a more reluctant Federal Reserve.
Value stocks have become widely unloved. I counted 71 stocks within the S&P 500 that have a dividend yield of more than 4%, and that’s not all utilities and REITs.
Stock Focus: Hawkins Inc.
As you probably know, I love finding great stocks off the beaten path, especially ones that have done well and are ignored by Wall Street.
One such company is Hawkins Inc. (HWKN) of Roseville, Minnesota. The company describes itself as a “leading specialty chemical and ingredients” company.
Snoresville, right? No, Hawkins isn’t the most exciting business, but it’s an important one, and it’s something people need. Hawkins “formulates, distributes, blends, and manufactures products for its Industrial, Water Treatment, and Health & Nutrition customers.”
Hawkins has been around since 1938. The company has 60 facilities across 27 states. Hawkins has about 950 employees and last year, it generated revenue of $919 million.
Now for the best part. Since 2000, Hawkins is up by more than 36-fold. The S&P 500 looks like a flat line in comparison. Hawkins has also raised its dividend fairly consistently for nearly 40 years.
You might think that with a track record like that, and a with a market value of nearly $2 billion, Hawkins would grab Wall Street’s attention. That’s not the case. Hawkins is followed by just two analysts. Maybe they should change their name to AI Hawkins?
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: June 11, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 11th, 2024 at 7:07 amNigeria Confronts Its Worst Economic Crisis in a Generation
OPEC Keeps Robust Oil-Demand Outlook After Output Policy Move
Philippines Sees Nuclear as Long-Term Replacement for LNG
Wall Street Ties to Amazon Depletion Mapped Out in New Report
ECB’s Lane Says Euro Moves Haven’t Impacted Inflation
Fed Is in No Rush to Cut Rates as Economy Holds Up
Fed’s Higher-for-Longer Stance Hits Firms That Expected Rate Cut
For the Descent, Follow the Dots
As Supreme Court Decisions Loom, a Legal Assault Is Weakening SEC’s Power
Alexander Hamilton’s Bank Is Getting a New Name: BNY
Hedge Funds Pile Into Copycat Quant Trades They Once Derided
Segantii Insider Case Hinges on a Market-Moving Block Trade
Food Companies Hope You Won’t Notice Shortages Are Raising Prices
Foraging on Public Lands Is Becoming More Limited
First Came ‘Spam.’ Now, With A.I., We’ve Got ‘Slop’
Apple’s ‘AI for the Rest of Us’ Plan Gets Lukewarm Reaction
Can Apple Rescue the Vision Pro?
Nvidia Stock Slips. Why It Didn’t Benefit From an Apple Boost
Tether to Invest More Than $1 Billion in Deals Over Next Year
PR Founder-Turned-VC Investor Bucher Raises $150 Million for New Fund
Budget Computer Maker Raspberry Pi Soars in Opening Trade
French IT Firm Atos Accepts Rescue Bid From Onepoint Consortium
GM Authorizes $6 Billion Buyback as It Books Better EV Profits
Ikea Lost $5,000 When Each Worker Quit. So It Began Paying More
‘Anti-Woke’ Shareholders Are Going After Corporate Boards
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Morning News: June 10, 2024
Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on June 10th, 2024 at 7:05 amThere’s More to Asia-Middle East Trade Than Oil
Noble Corp to Buy Diamond Offshore for About $1.6 Billion
Green Wipeout Means Fights Ahead to Keep Europe’s Climate Goals
Keeping Sanctioned Russian Timber Out of the EU Is Tricky. This Nonprofit Has a Solution
Copper Miners Gun for Share of Windfall in Chile
Ukraine’s Vision of Robot Assassins Shows Need for Binding AI Rules
Homeownership Costs in the US Jumped 26% Since Pandemic Began
Week Ahead for FX, Bonds: Spotlight on U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of Japan
How the US is Daring the World to Find a Dollar Alternative
Americans Really, Really Hate Inflation—and That’s a Big Problem for the Fed
New York Fed Is Losing Talent and ‘Street Cred’ Under John Williams
Wall Street Backers See Breakthrough Moment for Carbon Offsets
As Banking Moves Online, Branch Design Takes Cues From Starbucks
Julius Baer Targets Rich Indians in Dubai With UBS, JPMorgan Hires
Don’t Say ‘Elite’: Corporate Firms’ New Pitch Is Meritocracy
The Shortcut That Allows Risky Startups to Raise Billions From Rookie Investors
Unicorns Ruled for a Decade. Tech Needs a New Beast
Apple’s $471 Billion Rally Hinges on Whether AI Event Delivers
Can Apple Think Different on A.I.?
Tesla’s Investor Vote on Elon Musk’s Pay Package Is About More Than His Money
Airlines Keep Trying to Cut Out the Middleman. Here’s Why It Backfires
A Big Decision for Boeing’s Next C.E.O.: Is It Time for a New Plane?
Volvo Car Recalls Its New Electric EX30 Car After Finding Software Glitch
Scammers Aren’t Just Selling Fake Gucci. They’re Impersonating Small Merchants
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