America’s new tax rules are a gift to Europe

The effects of the Trump administration corporate tax reform on US multinationals that were, as of the end of last year, holding some $1.4 trillion in cash overseas, are largely beneficial: Now these companies finally know how much of that money the US wants — and there’s also some long-awaited clarity on how foreign profits will be taxed going forward. ...

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Emanuel Macron can lead a horse to China, but not an Airbus A380

French president Emmanuel Macron gave a horse to his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping, but handing over the Airbus A380 has proved more difficult. The visit started with talk about Airbus offering China a production role on its superjumbo aircraft to secure a program-extending order for the slow-selling jet. While discussions were held on sales of the A380, according to Macron, ...

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Britain’s GKN shouldn’t surrender for $9.5bn

GKN Plc’s defenses could scarcely be weaker in the face of Last week’s unsolicited takeover approach from plucky deal machine Melrose Industries Plc. But the British engineer was right to reject this audacious proposal. Its shareholders, however desperate for a boost, should be wary of surrender. Last year was terrible for GKN. Accounting errors and mismanagement in its US operations ...

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China bond selloff won’t signal global bear market

The unrelenting selloff in China’s $9 trillion onshore bond market last year caused deep angst among investors. That performance is far from enticing as the country aims to further open up this market, the world’s third largest, through initiatives such as the Bond Connect programme. For now, foreign investors account for less than 2 percent of the onshore market, though ...

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Cryptocurrencies steal volatility away from stocks

What drives volatility? In equities these days, it turns out, not much. With just 6.8 percent realized volatility in the S&P 500 Index, 2017 marked the least volatile year since 1964. Low correlation among stocks, muted inflation variability and market-friendly central bank policies all played a role. But that hasn’t stopped investors from asking, ‘Who ate the vol?’ We point ...

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Citi’s positives outweigh one big, bad headline

Citigroup Inc. investors are rightly looking past the ugly headline. The bank on Tuesday reported a large fourth-quarter loss, reflecting a bigger-than-expected $22 billion writeoff related to changes in US corporate tax laws and a move to a territorial tax regime. Importantly, the one-time charge shouldn’t compromise Chief Executive Officer Mike Corbat’s ability to deliver on targets due by 2020, ...

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Succour or slap? India’s bond market needs a bit of both

India’s banks were hoping the regulator would feel the pain of their bond-market losses and maybe offer a palliative. What they got instead from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was tough love. Condemnation by deputy governor Viral Acharya may be correct, but it won’t resolve the mess. In a speech in Mumbai on Monday, Acharya revisited the nexus between ...

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Yen emerges as top currency wager for fund bets on central bank shift

Bloomberg A minor tweak in the Bank of Japan’s bond purchases has emboldened investors to bet the central bank is about to wind back monetary stimulus. Going long on the yen is the biggest currency wager for AMP Capital Investors Ltd.’s Nader Naeimi. Singapore-based hedge fund Kit Trading Fund Ltd. started a bet on the yen last week, predicting the ...

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Citigroup positive on lower tax rates ahead

Bloomberg Citigroup Inc. envisions years of tax-reform benefits ahead, even as competitors warned that their rewards may soon start fading away. Last month’s Republican-led legislation cut Citigroup’s effective threshold to about 25 percent in 2018 and company executives said it will go even lower from there, leading the bank to boost its forecast for profitability. That contrasts with JPMorgan Chase ...

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Philippines in dilemma over reserve ratio cut

Bloomberg Philippine central bank Governor Nestor Espenilla said it’s getting harder to cut the reserve requirement ratio for lenders as he’d pledged to do when he took office six months ago, with inflation set to pick up. “We have to be careful that we don’t send the signal that we are lowering the guard in terms of fighting inflation and ...

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