TimeLine Layout

October, 2019

  • 26 October

    Why we should impeach, remove president Trump

    No one has worked more aggressively to trigger impeachment than the president. You may remember that, during the campaign, then-candidate Donald Trump suggested that, should he win, he might become one of the most “boring” presidents in history. There was in this curious pledge — which, as we now know, has been broken along with many other campaign promises — ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Brexit has British fleeing to Europe

    Five years ago, I emigrated to Germany from Russia, because it had abandoned any pretense of wanting to be a European country. Now, I’m watching in amazement as Britons are doing the same, in droves, for the same reason. It’s well known that tens of thousands of UK citizens have obtained second passports from Ireland as insurance against a post-Brexit ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Normal yield curve doesn’t mean everything’s normal

    As we count down to this month’s meetings of the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve, both of which are expected to maintain their monetary easing stance, the US yield curve has been quietly undoing the inversion that had raised alarms in the corridors of the world’s two most systemically important central banks. Over the last few weeks, the ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Facebook could do to banks what it did to newspapers

    On October 23, Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook’s chief executive, testified about his company’s cryptocurrency project at a hearing held by the House Financial Services Committee. In his testimony, Zuckerberg tried to reassure Congress that Facebook’s Libra cryptocurrency would square the circle between financial inclusion and regulatory adherence, consumer privacy and proactive fraud detection. The one thing he didn’t manage to address ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Economic growth shouldn’t be a death sentence for Earth

    Among some intellectuals and environmentalists, it’s an article of faith that economic growth must be brought to a stop. If we fail to act, we’ll use up the planet’s resources and growth will suffer a disastrous collapse. For example, British writer George Monbiot has been advancing this point of view for quite some time. In April, he declared: Perpetual growth ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    UBS superstar banker has a lot riding on him

    UBS Group AG’s assets under management reached a record $2.5 trillion in the third quarter of 2019, buoyed in part by money from rich clients. Unfortunately, the world’s largest wealth manager is finding it harder to squeeze more profit out of this business; its chief executive officer Sergio Ermotti may be running out of ideas. Net profit at the Swiss ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    How Jokowi became Indonesia’s ‘tech star’

    When political outsider Joko Widodo was first sworn in as Indonesia’s president five years ago, a little company called PT GO-JEK Indonesia was barely known. Their rise together since then has broken a technology barrier that was holding back the world’s fourth-most-populous country and promises the chance for a better future. Jokowi, as he’s known, is starting his second term ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Hooked on Gmail free storage! Now pay for it

    Bloomberg Google lured billions of consumers to its digital services by offering copious free cloud storage. That’s beginning to change. The Alphabet Inc unit has whittled down some free storage offers in recent months, while prodding more users towards a new paid cloud subscription called Google One. That’s happening as the amount of data people stash online continues to soar. ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Apple Pay top mobile payment service at brick-and-mortar stores

    Bloomberg Following fits and starts, Apple Pay has become the top mobile payment method at brick-and-mortar stores in the US, according to research firm EMarketer. Apple Inc’s payment service will have 30.3 million users in the US this year, compared with 25.2 million for the Starbucks payment app, EMarketer estimated. Starbucks Corp had been the leader, with innovative features that ...

    Read More »
  • 26 October

    Flying taxis of the future look like toys come to life

    Bloomberg Flying taxis, once the purview of science-fiction films such as The Fifth Element, might soon be a staple of urban transport, as better batteries and innovative designs make it cheaper, cleaner, and quieter to travel short distances by air. Citigroup thinks sales of air taxis could reach $5 billion a year by the end of the next decade. Two ...

    Read More »
Send this to a friend