Now that the government shutdown is over, perhaps it is appropriate to consider a delicate question: Is it still OK to tell people they need to save more money? It’s an issue that came to the fore during the last five weeks, when hundreds of thousands of federal government workers, and many contractors, didn’t get paid, leaving many of them ...
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China wants to dominate internet
For the past year, the US and China have been engaged in a wide-ranging trade war. Nominally, the dispute concerns intellectual-property violations, forced technology transfers and other unfair practices. In reality, though, this clash is a symptom of a much larger strategic showdown — one in which Chinese President Xi Jinping seeks “decisive victory.†Aided by technology, China is embarking ...
Read More »Now banks are looking worried about Brexit
The exodus from London is getting real. Ever since the UK voted to leave the European Union (EU) in June 2016, people have been watching for signs of how the prospect might affect London’s role as a global financial center. It stood to reason that it should: Assuming the breakup meant that the UK units of global banks would lose ...
Read More »Europe’s ‘right to be forgotten’ needs limits
An adviser to Europe’s top court issued an opinion this month on behalf of liberty, judicial restraint and common sense. Here’s hoping the court heeds his recommendations. At issue was the so-called right to be forgotten, a muddled and misguided legal concept under which any citizen of the European Union can ask search-engine companies like Google to take down links ...
Read More »Why India’s next budget shouldn’t be excessively bold
On February 1 in India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government will present its last federal budget before general elections are held in a few months. Unlike most other budgets, this typically isn’t a high-octane affair; governments are discouraged from locking their successors into any new spending or taxes. An “interim†budget, as it’s called, tries to avoid committing spending for ...
Read More »United Technologies offers air cover amid growth problems
United Technologies Corp.’s latest results suggest aerospace is still a safe place as worries mount about a slowdown in global growth. The $96 billion conglomerate that’s planning on splitting itself into three reported a staggering 11 percent gain in revenue excluding the impact of M&A and currency swings for the final months of 2018. That was the first time quarterly ...
Read More »Renault-Nissan’s loveless marriage will survive
Under Carlos Ghosn, the independent auto analyst Maryann Keller was telling me the other day, the alliance of Renault SA and Nissan Motor Co. was a little like Yugoslavia during the reign of Marshal Tito. Yugoslavia was a disparate collection of Slavic republics — Serbia, Bosnia, Montenegro and so on — with natural tribal enmities. In the decades after World ...
Read More »TD taps helocs to regain clients in ‘leadership push’
Bloomberg Toronto-Dominion Bank is seeking to win back customers with home-equity loans — even as concerns grow over elevated consumer debt amid a slowing Canadian economy. A push for a greater market share of home-equity lines of credit, or helocs, is part of this year’s strategy for Teri Currie, group head of Canadian personal banking at the country’s largest lender ...
Read More »Hungary central bank leaves rates unchanged
Bloomberg Hungary’s central bank left its main interest rates unchanged, sticking to a gradual shift towards the end of ultra-loose monetary policy as it assesses the need to curb brewing inflation pressures. Rate setters left the rate on required reserves unchanged at 0.9 percent and the overnight deposit rate at minus 0.15 percent on Tuesday, with both decisions matching economists’ ...
Read More »Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe to allow dollar trading to ease currency squeeze
Bloomberg Zimbabwe said it will allow companies and individuals to transfer dollars electronically, as it looks to ease a crippling scarcity of foreign exchange that’s sent the economy into meltdown and triggered protests. The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has upgraded its systems to allow for such transactions and will run testing until February 1, after which it plans to go ...
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