TimeLine Layout

September, 2019

  • 17 September

    US likely not to hike auto tariffs on Japan

    Bloomberg Japan and the US are working towards a joint leaders’ statement that would include a US promise not to hike tariffs or introduce quotas on Japanese cars, the Tokyo Shimbun newspaper said. The statement is set to be issued after a meeting between President Donald Trump and Japanese PM Shinzo Abe in New York, the paper said. The two ...

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  • 17 September

    Lawmakers seek intel from customers in Big Tech probe

    Bloomberg A House panel investigating big tech companies for potential antitrust violations is seeking information from customers of Amazon, Apple, Google and Facebook about the state of competition in digital markets and the adequacy of existing enforcement, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg. It’s the latest development in the bipartisan congressional investigation being conducted by House antitrust subcommittee chair David ...

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  • 17 September

    US ‘locked and loaded’ if Iran behind Saudi attack: Trump

    Bloomberg President Donald Trump promised to help allies following attacks on major Saudi Arabian oil facilities, even though he said the US is no longer directly reliant on Middle Eastern oil and gas and has few tankers there. “We are a net Energy Exporter,” Trump tweeted. “We don’t need Middle Eastern Oil & Gas, & in fact have very few ...

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  • 17 September

    South Korea clarifies that it can’t confirm Kim invite to Trump

    Bloomberg South Korea clarified Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-wha’s remarks earlier in the day in which she appeared to confirm a local newspaper report saying Kim Jong-un invited US President Donald Trump to visit Pyongyang. Kang was asked at a parliamentary session on Monday about a report by South Korea’s Joongang Ilbo newspaper that detailed Kim’s offer for another summit. It ...

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  • 17 September

    China pips Taiwan for Solomon ties

    Bloomberg The Solomon Islands broke diplomatic ties with Taipei in favour of Beijing, leaving the democratically run island with just 16 diplomatic partners amid China’s efforts to isolate it. It’s the seventh nation — and the first in the Pacific — to establish ties with Beijing since Taiwan’s independence-leaning President Tsai Ing-wen was elected in January 2016. Reuters reported earlier ...

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  • 17 September

    US sanctions: 800k Iranians may lose cash handouts

    Bloomberg As many as 800,000 Iranians are set to lose cash handouts within the next month as US-imposed sanctions take their toll on the Islamic Republic’s economy. Iran plans to wean up to 30 million people off cash subsidies in the long term, but it “cannot take them off under the current economic situation,” said government spokesman Ali Rabiei at ...

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  • 17 September

    Myanmar should face Hague over atrocities: UN mission

    Bloomberg Myanmar’s powerful military should be brought before the International Court of Justice for its continued role in grave violations against ethnic groups including Rohingya Muslims, the United Nations fact-finding mission concluded on Monday following a two-year investigation. The final report — to be presented to the Human Rights Council in Geneva — details the ongoing systematic use of murder, ...

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  • 17 September

    Hong Kong’s summer of courageous dissent

    The masked men who recently tossed firebombs at Jimmy Lai’s home targeted one of this city’s foremost democracy advocates. Lai, a 71-year-old media billionaire, calls this summer’s ongoing protest “a martyrdom movement” and “a last-straw movement.” It has an intensity and dynamic that bewilders the protesters’ opponents in Beijing and in Hong Kong’s Beijing-obedient city administration. Today’s mostly young protesters ...

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  • 17 September

    Can banks survive negative rates?

    The declining economic outlook and increasing political pressure are pushing central banks into more aggressive unconventional monetary policies. Simultaneously, fears are growing that such steps, especially negative interest rates, actually threaten the stability of the financial system. They risk setting off dangerous feedback loops in credit markets and the real economy, where the second and third-order effects are difficult to ...

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  • 17 September

    How presidents should be talking about the Fed

    Donald Trump’s persistent attacks on the Federal Reserve raise an important question: What should and shouldn’t presidents say about the central bank? The key is to understand the difference between the concepts of independence and accountability. It’s crucial that the Fed enjoy independence from elected officials in deciding how to pursue the goals that Congress set out for it — ...

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