Opinion

Brexit Britain has noxious new cloud on horizon

The sun has finally brought Britain’s shoppers out of their post-Christmas gloom – a relief of sorts for those who worry about the damage that Brexit might inflict on the country’s economy. But while I’ve argued before that the despondency has been overdone, the recent spike in gasoline prices does leave cause for concern. Still, to stick with the sunshine ...

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Alibaba incubates a health risk for global investors

Jack Ma just sowed the seed of another decacorn – a startup worth more than $10 billion – on the Hong Kong stock exchange. Largely ignored by analysts, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s health unit suddenly woke from a long hibernation last month, soaring 58 percent in two weeks to reach a market value of $8.7 billion. Most of the rally ...

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Volatility trading may be a crisis in the making

Like postmodern literature that eschews conventional plot, narrative, and characters, financial markets have become increasingly abstract and remote. Volatility trading offers a good example of why this is so dangerous. In February, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. reportedly made $200 million in profit on a single day from volatility trading. Anticipating increases, Goldman purchased volatility then sold it profitably to investors ...

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Boeing is putting a $30bn deal to the test

Heads, Boeing Co. wins. Tails, aerospace suppliers lose. The planemaker recently announced the latest step in its push to grab more of its suppliers’ rich profit margins for itself. Boeing will partner with Safran SA to develop and service auxiliary power units, which are used to start the main engine and provide power to aircraft while on the ground. If ...

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Facebook never learns from its own mistakes

The worst thing about the latest revelation involving Facebook Inc. and its questionable stewardship of people’s personal information is that the company has again shown that it never learns from its own mistakes. In an article published late on Sunday, the New York Times reported that dozens of hardware companies such as BlackBerry Ltd. and Apple Inc. had far more ...

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Are the US, China making the world safe for fraud

China and the United States are presenting themselves as exemplars of opposite models of political governance. China has laid out its vision for a rejuvenated nation: a socialist planned economy, built on data and analytics, that will displace market economies. The US is taking the opposite route: withdrawing government from the marketplace, deregulating the economy through executive orders, starving regulators ...

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Hong Kong banks, meet the 21st century

Ironically, the city that should have been first to be swept up by China’s fintech revolution is still a picture of old-world conservatism. Not for long, though. Hong Kong, whose last big innovation in retail payments is as old as the former British colony’s 1997 handover to China, is on the cusp of big change. The Hong Kong Monetary Authority’s ...

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Why buy a car when you can subscribe to one?

Venture capital investor and longtime technology observer Mary Meeker has published her annual Internet Trends presentation — 294 slides this year, including a section on transportation. There’s a useful finding on slide 128: What Americans spend on purchasing vehicles has dropped since the 1970s, while spending on “other transportation,” including public transport and ride hailing, has nearly doubled. Bloomberg New ...

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US farms can’t compete without foreign workers

American farmers have been complaining of labor shortages for several years now. Given a multi-year decline in illegal immigration, and a similarly sustained pickup in the US job market, the complaints are unlikely to stop without an overhaul of immigration rules for farm workers. Efforts to create a more straightforward agricultural-workers visa that would enable foreign workers to stay longer ...

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Italian populism may not bring economic doom

The economic policy proposals of Italy’s populist coalition have spooked the markets, which have driven up government debt yields. And yet the two coalition partners, League and the Five Star Movement, may be on to something with a proposal for a two-tier flat tax. Today, Italy has five income tax brackets with rates ranging from 23 percent to 43 percent. ...

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