TimeLine Layout

March, 2019

  • 24 March

    India’s stocks rally clouded by fog of war

    It’s amazing what a bit of chest-beating and military posturing can do. India’s war of words with and air strikes on Pakistan have reinvigorated the re-election campaign of Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Opinion polls (if you believe them) are predicting a bigger margin of victory for Modi’s National Democratic Alliance than they were two months ago. A creeping skepticism that ...

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  • 24 March

    Europe is preparing for the end of Theresa May

    Europe is no stranger to last-ditch emergency summits in which 28 countries try to patch up their differences in the face of a crisis, or on the brink of a meltdown, or at the precipice of disaster – whichever way you choose to phrase it. The only unknown is at which ungodly hour bleary-eyed officials will emerge with a solution. ...

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  • 24 March

    Hong Kong taxi drivers are getting a lot older

    The South China Morning Post published an analysis of the 210,000 licensed drivers of Hong Kong’s iconic taxi fleet. Those Toyota Crown sedans are a venerable design, released in 1995. More venerable still are its drivers, nearly half of whom are older than 60. Hong Kong’s taxi drivers are a service sector aging in real time, a microcosm of a ...

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  • 24 March

    Norwegian can’t easily solve its 737 Max problem

    Luck plays a much greater role in success than successful people often acknowledge, and the same applies to business. Norwegian Air Shuttle ASA, which like its peers has been forced to ground its 18-strong fleet of 737 Max planes following the tragedy in Ethiopia, could certainly use some serendipity. While corporate fortunes seem unimportant when you’re talking about a large ...

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  • 24 March

    Direct lenders ready to step in as Brexit makes banks retreat

    Bloomberg Direct lenders are gearing up for more business in the UK as they see banks shrinking their sterling corporate loan books in the wake of Brexit-linked volatility and slower economic growth. Private credit fund managers say they are already witnessing an increase in deal flow as traditional lenders turn more cautious in the run up to Britain leaving the ...

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  • 24 March

    BOE: More firms trigger plans for no-deal Brexit

    Bloomberg The Bank of England (BOE) said more companies are triggering plans for a no-deal Brexit as it kept policy in a holding pattern while the government takes withdrawal talks to the brink. Around two-thirds of firms surveyed by the central bank said they had started implementing contingencies for a disorderly departure from the European Union. About 80 percent judged ...

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  • 24 March

    Fed nominee Moore says Dec rate hike was a mistake

    Bloomberg Federal Reserve nominee Stephen Moore called the Fed’s December interest-rate hike “a very substantial mistake” while adding that he looks forward to working with Chairman Jerome Powell to help ensure the US economy continues to expand. “Everyone would now acknowledge that what they did in December with the rate increase — it was a very substantial mistake,” Moore said ...

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  • 24 March

    US sanctions Venezuela’s bank Bandes

    Bloomberg The US imposed sanctions against Venezuela’s national development bank and four financial institutions it controls, alleging it helped prop up the government of the country’s president, Nicolas Maduro. The penalties were imposed on Banco de Desarrollo Economico y Social de Venezuela, or Bandes, the Treasury Department said. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin cited the arrest of opposition leader Juan Guaido’s ...

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  • 24 March

    Philippines holds key interest rate

    Bloomberg The Philippine central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged in Governor Benjamin Diokno’s first policy meeting, as officials remained cautious even as inflation eases. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas held the overnight reverse repurchase rate at 4.75 percent, it said in a statement in Manila, in line with the forecasts of all 21 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The ratio ...

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  • 24 March

    737 Max crisis tests Boeing’s influence in Washington

    Bloomberg Boeing Co has spent decades spreading big money around Washington. Now the aerospace giant will need to lean on its network of lawmakers and lobbyists as it grapples with one of the worst crises in its history. The company has almost tripled its spending on US politicians and political committees in the past decade. It’s also shelled out $15 ...

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