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US stocks start may lower, with eyes on Apple; dollar rallies

Bloomberg US stocks opened lower on Tuesday, when much attention will be focused on Apple Inc.’s earnings report after the close. The dollar extended its rally, while UK equities climbed during a lackluster session in which many major markets were closed. The S&P 500 Index fell in morning trading, with industrial and energy stocks leading a broad-based, if shallow, decline ...

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Plus500 hits record on crypto trades as Barclays mulls entry

Bloomberg Plus500 Ltd., the brokerage for complex derivatives sold to retail investors, soared to the highest on record as demand for cryptocurrencies swelled, while British lender Barclays Plc signalled it may begin to trade in similar products. Shares in Plus500 surged to the highest level since the Haifa-based firm first sold shares to the public in 2013, as revenue more ...

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Why can’t China make decent semiconductors?

Jack Ma says he’s ready for China to make semiconductors at home. It’s a longstanding goal for the Chinese government. And thanks to a recent crackdown on certain technology exports by the US, it’s now a critical one. The question is whether China can finally conquer this challenge after decades of failures. Semiconductors are the building blocks of electronics, found ...

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Farfetch’s valuation could wind up farfetched

Who wears it best in online luxury? Investors are about to decide. Just as Cie Financiere Richemont is taking control of Yoox Net-A-Porter Group, rival Farfetch U.K. Ltd may be eyeing a $6 billion initial public offering. Though YNAP is a digital pioneer, it apes a traditional department store. It buys stock and holds it until it is sold to ...

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Airbus is building gliders while Boeing floats on cash

What’s the difference between Boeing Co. and Airbus SE? One builds commercial aircraft, the other makes “gliders” (a pejorative term for passenger jets without engines.) Airbus shipped just 121 aircraft during the first quarter, the least since 2011, notes Bloomberg News’s Benjamin Katz this morning. That’s also one third fewer than Boeing managed in the same period. The main problem ...

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Walmart’s major overseas ambitions require big moves

Walmart Inc. is starting to make moves that reveal its international ambitions. The retailing giant has agreed to sell its UK grocery chain, Asda, to rival J Sainsbury PLC in a transaction worth about $10.1 billion. Walmart will retain a 42 percent stake in the combined company. That splashy deal comes amid signs Walmart is considering other big changes to ...

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UK government eyes Southeast Asia for post-Brexit trade bursts

Bloomberg The lone non-Asian trade minister at last week’s Southeast Asian leaders’ summit in Singapore, UK Trade Minister Greg Hands had plenty of room to make the case that Brexit won’t interfere with his country’s ambitious plans in the region. As it scrambles to roll over some 40 European Union trade deals into individual agreements with the UK, London has ...

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L&T agrees to sell unit to Schneider for $2.1bn

Bloomberg Larsen & Toubro Ltd., India’s largest engineering and construction company, has agreed to sell its electrical unit to a consortium led by Schneider Electric SE, people with knowledge of the matter said. A deal, which values Larsen’s electrical and automation division at about 140 billion rupees ($2.1 billion) including debt, could be announced as soon as this week, said ...

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Japan’s traditional utilities face nuke threat from their own

Bloomberg Japan’s traditional regional utilities, already defending their territory against nimbler new entrants, face a fresh threat: one of their own is now stealing customers thanks to cheaper nuclear-powered electricity rates. Kansai Electric Power Co. is one of a few utilities to restart atomic power plants, which will allow it to offer cheaper rates as it continues its expansion outside ...

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Panasonic to pay $280mn to end corruption probe

Bloomberg Panasonic Corp. will pay about $280 million to resolve US allegations that executives at its in-flight-entertainment unit improperly hid payments to consultants in the Middle East and Asia, some of whom did little or no work for the company. The Panasonic parent company, in a settlement announced, will pay $143 million in disgorgement to the Securities and Exchange Commission, ...

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