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California governor dismisses PG&E’s restructuring proposal

Bloomberg California Governor Gavin Newsom rejected PG&E Corp’s proposed restructuring plan, dealing a major blow to the power giant as it tries to exit the biggest utility bankruptcy in US history. Newsom said in a letter to PG&E Chief Executive Officer Bill Johnson that the utility’s restructuring plan falls “woefully short” of the state’s requirements. The governor said any reorganisation ...

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Congo revises plan for Inga hydra plant

Bloomberg The Democratic Republic of Congo will proceed with a smaller version of the Inga III hydropower project and expand the facility over time, President Felix Tshisekedi said. The Inga III dam, which will begin as a 4,800 megawatt plant, will have its capacity increased to 7,500 megawatts and 11,000 megawatts eventually, Tshisekedi told lawmakers in his first state of ...

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China’s State Grid to buy stake in Oman firm

Bloomberg State Grid Corp of China is nearing an agreement to acquire a 49% stake in Oman’s state-owned transmission company in the first major privatisation by the Middle East’s largest non-OPEC oil producer, people with knowledge of the matter said. The Beijing-based company will acquire the stake in a deal that values Oman Electricity Transmission Co at about $2 billion, ...

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Indonesia stirs ghosts of 1998 with deficit debate

When even Indonesia starts talking about relaxing deficit rules, you know government spending is back in vogue as a remedy for faltering economic growth. The country has more reason than most to be wary of backsliding on its commitment to budget discipline. Its deficit ceiling is an important piece of the economic and political architecture that emerged from the Asian ...

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China’s steel spike isn’t a stimulus sign

Is China about to embark on a fresh bout of stimulus? Some people in the metals market seem to think so. Prices of benchmark 62% iron ore in Singapore have been booming, jumping 5.3% on December 9 and closing more than 21% up on their level a month earlier. There seems to be real activity behind that movement: Rolling three-month ...

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Just Eat investors deserve a bigger slice of the pie

Prosus NV’s latest bid to acquire food delivery specialist Just Eat Plc was still little more than an appetizer. The Amsterdam-based technology investment firm raised its offer a measly 4.2% to 740 pence-per-share, while lowering the acceptance threshold to 50%. It had little alternative but to increase the value of its proposal: the recent recovery in shares of counterbidder Takeaway.com ...

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What Boris Johnson’s win means for markets

Sterling has punched up to new highs for the year on the back of a comprehensive election victory for Boris Johnson’s Conservative Party. With the parliamentary handbrake on Johnson’s Brexit deal now released — and the trouncing of Jeremy Corbyn’s high-taxing, business-baiting Labour Party delivered with great force — we should see sustained pound gains. Nevertheless, as I outlined earlier, ...

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Seven ways economics can heal itself in the next year

Economics changed a lot in the 2010s, mostly in good and healthy ways. But much remains to be done in terms of the discipline’s public image, the reliability of its methods and the success of its policy recommendations. Here are a few ways that economics should strive to change itself in the 2020s: Reform Economics Education Economic research has become ...

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Online shopping is growing, but isn’t creating more jobs

This has not been a great century for working in retail. The sector, which added about 5 million jobs from 1980 through the end of 2000, has added only 416,100 since. Since January 2017, retailers have shed 145,200 jobs even as overall employment growth has remained strong. The obvious explanation here is the rise of online shopping. Nonstore retailers such ...

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Boeing’s timeline on 737 Max return foiled again

As another deadline for the return of Boeing Co.’s troubled 737 Max slips out of reach, the aerospace company doesn’t appear to have any better handle on its messaging now than it did when this crisis started more than a year ago. Federal Aviation Administration Administrator (FAA) Stephen Dickson told CNBC that the agency won’t complete the necessary approvals for ...

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