TimeLine Layout

July, 2017

  • 11 July

    Businesses cast doubt on UK-US post-Brexit trade deal

    Bloomberg The transatlantic trade deal US President Donald Trump is offering UK Prime Minister Theresa May will ultimately prove easy to promise and hard to deliver. That’s the warning of business leaders and trade analysts after Trump told May last week that the post-Brexit accord she hankers after can be lined up “very, very quickly.” The challenge for the UK ...

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  • 11 July

    Google faces $1.3bn French ruling amid rising tax populism

    Bloomberg Google will find out this week if it owes 1.12 billion euros ($1.3 billion) in back taxes to France, just days after it was slapped with a record antitrust fine by the European Union. Paris judges are set to rule as soon as Wednesday whether Alphabet Inc.’s Google illegally dodged French taxes by routing sales in the country out ...

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  • 11 July

    Syngenta CEO sees dual listing in Europe, US

    Bloomberg Syngenta AG, the Swiss pesticide maker acquired by China National Chemical Corp. for $43 billion, is considering bourses in Europe and the US as possible locations for a re-listing of shares in about five years. “I would not be surprised if it was a combination of Europe and the US, as we were before,” Syngenta Chief Executive Officer Erik ...

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  • 11 July

    Siemens vows legal action after turbines turn up in Crimea

    Bloomberg Siemens AG scrambled to reverse a transaction with a Russian partner to try to save face after gas turbines from one of the biggest German investors in Russia’s economy turned up in the annexed region of Crimea, flouting European Union sanctions. At least two of four turbines manufactured by Siemens for Technopromexport JSC for an electricity project in Taman, ...

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  • 11 July

    Tesla seen emerging as winner in US e-car race

    Bloomberg More than a dozen automakers are jostling to lead the US electric-car race, but Bloomberg New Energy Finance sees a clear winner separating from the pack: Tesla Inc. The automaker led by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk will emerge as “the stand-out” in total cumulative deliveries through 2021, reaching almost 709,000 vehicles, according to BNEF’s Long-Term Electric Vehicle Outlook. ...

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  • 11 July

    Is the next recession being postponed?

    This is not your father’s inflation — and that’s good news. Business cycles often end when higher inflation causes a country’s central bank (the Federal Reserve in the United States) to raise interest rates, slowing the economy and, perhaps, triggering a recession. The good news: The next recession may be delayed, because the Phillips Curve has shifted. The Phillips Curve ...

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  • 11 July

    Xiaomi’s rebound portends a return to capital markets

    Growth is back at Xiaomi Corp. After suffering some pretty brutal quarters at the hands of compatriot competitors and a weakening global smartphone market, the Chinese startup trumpeted its return last week at an all-hands staff meeting. Shipments in the second quarter climbed 70% from the prior three-month period to 23.16 million handsets, founder Lei Jun said in a statement ...

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  • 11 July

    Let your taxidermist cross state lines

    The freedom to move in pursuit of opportunity is a basic — and constitutionally protected — American value. Yet it’s a value in decline. American workers are half as likely to relocate to another state as previous generations. Lower mobility may be one reason why job openings in the U.S. are at an all-time high. The country’s irrationally restrictive system ...

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  • 11 July

    The Macron revolution should be about growth

    It took brave, radical thinking for President Emmanuel Macron to transform French politics so completely. Reforming the French economy will demand no less focus and ambition. To judge by the speech he gave at Versailles last week, there’ll be no lack of ambition: It was positively regal. Focus, though, was less apparent. Once he turns to the task of governing, ...

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  • 11 July

    Passive investing might not be great for growth

    When United Airlines called security to drag passenger David Dao off of his flight back in April, some observers cheered the airline’s falling stock price, expressing the hope that this would punish the company’s executives and owners and spur them to implement a more passenger-friendly attitude. United’s stock quickly recovered. But even had it fallen a lot and not bounced ...

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