China’s laying out the red carpet for foreign banks. This time, few will be rushing in. The country’s top banking regulator, Guo Shuqing, says the market share of overseas lenders is falling and that isn’t good for competition. The government plans to ease ownership and business restrictions to make life easier for them. The share of global financial institutions in ...
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A new coal subsidy would come at a high price
In its determination to do whatever it takes to ‘save coal,’ the Trump administration has never let public health or the climate stand in the way. Now it wants to go one better. Its latest sacrifice to the cause is simple economic efficiency. To stop the recent spate of coal-fired electricity plant closures, Energy Secretary Rick Perry wants power markets ...
Read More »The Catalan crisis is an avoidable disaster
The latest escalation of the crisis in Catalonia is a grave threat to Spain and a serious test for the European Union. The immediate priority should be moving back from the brink of violent confrontation, and the EU can help by urging restraint on Madrid. This was an avoidable breakdown. The Catalan leadership is chiefly to blame — first, for ...
Read More »India’s ailing banks need more than a bailout
India has long been faced with a slow-motion bank crisis. In particular, the state-controlled institutions that dominate the sector have a bad-loan ratio that’s almost twice as bad as their private counterparts. At last count, non-performing assets made up more than 10% of banks’ advances, and were growing ever faster. Naturally, banks faced with this burden aren’t exactly eager to ...
Read More »Can active funds beat passive? UBS says yes – in Europe
It is a truth (almost) universally acknowledged these days that an investor in want of a good fortune needs to be in possession of an index-tracking fund rather than an active manager. UBS AG, though, disagrees — at least in Europe. The Swiss bank’s analysts, led by Michael Werner, who covers the fund management industry from London, crunched the numbers ...
Read More »Apple’s struggle to get iPhone X to market on time
As of early fall, it was clearer than ever that production problems meant Apple Inc. wouldn’t have enough iPhone Xs in time for the holidays. The challenge was how to make the sophisticated phone—with advanced features such as facial recognition—in large enough numbers. As Wall Street analysts and fan blogs watched for signs that the company would stumble, Apple came ...
Read More »Bernanke’s anxiety
Ben Bernanke is worried — and perhaps we should be, too. As chairman of the Federal Reserve from 2006 to 2014, it was Bernanke who, along with others, prevented the worst recession since World War II from becoming the Great Depression 2.0. Now he fears that, should another sharp recession occur, the Fed won’t be able to contain it. Traditionally, ...
Read More »What Trump accomplished in first nine months in office
There’s a bit of a phony debate breaking out about Donald Trump’s accomplishments. On the one hand, the president himself is his usual bombastic and factually inaccurate self about what he’s done in office. In a series of tweets over the weekend, Trump claimed “perhaps no Administration has done more in its first 9 months than this Administration. Over 50 ...
Read More »Give Yellen another term
President Donald Trump is weighing one of his most consequential appointments: Who should lead the Federal Reserve after current chair Janet Yellen’s term ends in February? The choice comes down to whether the president wants broad continuity in the way the Fed does its job — or a big change, and the accompanying uncertainty. The US economy has done well ...
Read More »The Brexit talks are running out of time
In view of the deepening Brexit gloom ahead of the meeting, last week’s amicable European Union summit was moderately encouraging: At least the talks didn’t break down. Both sides ought to understand, however, that when they meet next time, moving to actual trade negotiations is essential. Instead of negotiating the shape of their future trade arrangements, Britain and the EU ...
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