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Is United States trapped in damaging debt spiral?

From Scotland, where Adam Smith pioneered systematic thinking about economics, comes an adjective, ‘carnaptious,’ that fits people who are allergic to economic euphoria. It means cantankerous. Let’s think carnaptiously about this fact: The interest rate on 10-year Treasury bonds recently rose briefly to 3 percent, and soon may move above this. This is more than evidence of the economy’s strength. ...

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Letting the sunshine in on tax havens

The UK has bowed to public concern over illicit money flowing through offshore tax havens. Territories such as the British Virgin Islands will have to publish open registers of company ownership by 2020. It’s a welcome step, considering the UK’s historical hands-off approach, but transparency must be followed by accountability to produce long-lasting change. First, the good news: an open ...

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Wayfair must prove this isn’t as good as it gets

Wayfair Inc.’s latest earnings results show just how much of a disruptor it’s been in the home-furnishings industry. The company reported that its retail net revenue was $1.4 billion, a 48 percent increase over a year earlier. It notched 11.8 million active customers in the quarter, a 33 percent increase over last year. It is a veritable market-share-grabbing machine, and ...

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In trade spat, China has a decided advantage

Inconsequential tariffs don’t cause trade wars; the US bankrupting China’s technology companies just might. Trade rhetoric between the countries will likely escalate, but the potential bankruptcy of ZTE Corp. after the US banned exports to the company last month could turn out to be the shot that triggers the war. China would likely respond with a strong reprisal against US ...

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Own an android phone? You might not get that loan

I have great respect for Apple, but I refuse to buy its $1,000 phones. Instead, I use a $250 Android device with a long battery life. In the emerging big data-based economy, however, that could cost me in ways I can’t even predict. A recent paper by Tobias Berg of the Frankfurt School of Finance and Management in Germany and ...

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HSBC’s hungry lions need fresh prey

Stephen and Stitt — the iconic HSBC Holdings Plc lions — are crouching and ready to pounce. Adjusted profit from Asian operations jumped 8.5 percent from a year earlier to $4.76 billion in the first-quarter results showed last week. That’s even as ho-hum performance everywhere else dragged down return on equity to an annualized rate of 7.5 percent, a drop ...

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Climate change turns coastal property into a junk bond

A friend of mine who is a bit of a climate-change skeptic once challenged me with this question: If climate change is such a pressing danger, why haven’t coastal real estate prices crashed? It’s a fair question. If financial markets are even close to efficient, and if everyone knows climate change is about to flood the coasts, then it stands ...

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Smart money selling emerging markets assets, says JPMorgan

Bloomberg Stocks down for a third successive week, bond yields at their highest since 2016 and a currency market replete with bears. Such have been the declines in emerging markets that the more sanguine commentators have begun saying the selloff has run its course and it may even be time to buy the dip. But JPMorgan Chase & Co. says ...

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