David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Global Middle Class

    Brexit Deal Hopes Rise as Sunak Set for Weekend Crunch Talks

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    The British premier had been preparing to unveil a new deal this week, but vocal opposition from unionists in Northern Ireland and Brexit hardliners in Sunak’s own Conservative Party scuppered the plan. Sunak had a positive talk with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen late Friday and they will speak again soon, a person familiar said. He’s also gearing up to talk to his Cabinet before Monday, people directly involved in the plans said.

    Sunak also wants to have further discussions with DUP Leader Jeffrey Donaldson, whose party has blocked the formation of Northern Ireland’s devolved power-sharing government for more than a year over the current post-Brexit trading arrangements, known as the Northern Ireland Protocol. His endorsement is likely to prove crucial and without it an announcement of the deal may be further delayed. 

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    Apple Ad Rules Send Internet Economy Into Prolonged 'Recession'

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    A factor that’s gotten less attention, though, is something a bit more arcane, something more specific to the business models that have both enriched some of the world’s biggest tech companies and shaped the way many of us experience the internet. That factor is the iPhone.

    In 2021, Apple rolled out what it called App Tracking Transparency. Henceforth, iPhone users had to opt in to certain forms of digital tracking, in particular targeting that involves the sharing of information between different apps.

    Social media companies rely heavily on that technique to serve up the targeted ads that are their profit engines. The data they collect can form an ever-more-detailed mosaic of a user and, most importantly, a better sense of what kind of person responds to which types of ads.

    Apple presented its anti-tracking policy as a way for people to take control of their information, at a time when lawmakers around the world are championing a similar cause. Ads are intrusive and annoying, and being closely tracked on the internet is creepy. If you are a political dissident or a woman researching abortion in a place where the procedure is illegal, it is terrifying.

    At the time, however, Facebook’s parent company Meta saw the change as a serious threat. Social media executives feared that lots of iPhone users would opt out of this kind of app tracking when given the option. Almost two years on, they seem to have been right. Meta estimated that the change cost it $10 billion in 2022, or 9% of its total revenue.

    Eric Michael Seufert, an analyst at Mobile Dev Memo, went so far as to call it “the App Tracking Transparency recession.” Seufert argued that the tech companies having the hardest time right now are those most directly affected by Apple’s policy. As he points out, revenue at YouTube, Google's video arm that relies heavily on third-party ad tracking, has lagged the company's search revenue, which is far less reliant on this type of tracking.

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    George Soros on Climate Change, China, Elections

    This video of George Soros’s speech at the Munich security conference over the weekend may be of interest. 

    Norfolk Southern Drops as EPA Asks It to Pay for Ohio Cleanup

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Norfolk Southern Corp. fell again as the railroad faced growing fallout from a train derailment that spilled chemicals in Ohio early this month.

    The US Environmental Protection Agency notified the company of its “potential liability” and encouraged Norfolk Southern to reimburse the agency for its costs related to the crash. The EPA urged a quick response in its Feb. 10 letter.

    The railroad said it received the EPA’s request and “will continue to perform or finance environmental monitoring and remediation,” according to an emailed statement. Norfolk Southern’s hazardous materials team was at the scene within an hour of the accident and continues to work with authorities, the company said in the statement.

    The 150-car train derailed at 8:55 p.m. Eastern time on Feb. 3. It was hauling about 20 railcars with chemicals, including vinyl chloride, ethylhexyl acrylate and isobutylene, according to the EPA. 

    Those chemicals were released into the air, surface soils and surface waters near East Palestine, Ohio. 

    Norfolk Southern slid 1.2% Monday in New York, the fourth decline in six trading days since the spill. The shares are down 2.7% this year, while the S&P 500 Index is up 7.8%

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    EU Considers Granting Telecoms' Greatest Hopes and Dreams

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Top European Union officials raised the possibility last year of making major streaming operators like Netflix Inc. and YouTube help pay for 5G and fiber infrastructure. Telcos had been pushing for such a move for over a decade.

    The EU’s executive arm is expected to publish a request for feedback on the idea this month, the first step toward a formal proposal. When a draft of this consultation was circulated around Brussels recently, telcos read it with glee — and tech companies with horror. The consensus was that the EU is no longer asking whether it will do something but rather, how.

    Last week brought another cause for celebration, at least for the bankers who work with the likes of Deutsche Telekom AG and Vodafone Group Plc. Commissioner Thierry Breton said the EU should more closely consider cross-border mergers, which could create “a true single market for telecoms” in Europe. Telcos, again, have been lobbying for consolidation for a long time.

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    US Consumer Spending Ticks Up Amid Strong Wages, BofA Says

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    Consumer spending ticked up at the start of the 2023 in the US, reversing declines late last year and suggesting that even lower-income families have some cash buffers to fall back on, according to a Bank of America Institute report.

    Bank of America credit- and debit-card spending rose 1.7% in January from December, making it a 5.1% jump from a year earlier. 

    The robust annual gain reflects in part the negative impact from the Omicron variant back in January 2022, according to the report. But it also suggests that consumption was bolstered by an increase in Social Security benefits and the minimum wage in some states, as well as the surprisingly robust labor market. Services such as airlines and restaurants in particular saw a boost.

    The data add to evidence that a pullback in late 2022 — which had economists worried that a recession was looming — may have been short-lived. Once again, the American consumer proved more resilient than expected.

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    Egypt Back in the IPO Game With Revived Sale Plan

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    “At the right price there should be plenty of appetite for any Egyptian IPO,” said Hasnain Malik, a strategist at Tellimer in Dubai. However, he said that, in general, foreign institutional investors are more likely to go for IPOs out of the private sector, whereas sovereign wealth funds will be more interested in government-related enterprises.

    “This is because, for sovereign wealth, the concern over whether their interests as a minority investor are subordinated to those of the government is outweighed by their geopolitical interest in the overall country,” he said.

    The benchmark EGX 30 Index has been on a bullish run, rising over 100% in local currency terms from its July low, and is the third-best performing benchmark globally this year. It jumped 3.9% on Thursday, extending gains to a fifth day, and closing at the highest since May 2018.

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    Brookfield Has $90 Billion for Deals After Big Fundraising Year

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Brookfield Asset Management Ltd.’s earnings rose in the fourth quarter as it wrapped up a record year of fundraising that has given the firm more than $90 billion to invest. 

    The Canadian alternative asset manager reported distributable earnings of $569 million, or 35 cents a share, up 6% from the prior year. It’s the first quarterly report for Brookfield Asset as a public company after it was spun out of parent Brookfield Corp. in December. 

    The company raised a record $93 billion in capital last year. “Our fundraising outlook remains strong,” Chief Executive Officer Bruce Flatt and President Connor Teskey said in a letter to shareholders. “In 2023, we expect to have three flagship funds in the market, along with several complementary perpetual strategies and other long-term funds.”

    Brookfield Corp. spun off a 25% stake in the division in an effort to gain a higher valuation by separating the money-management business from its own investment capital. Brookfield Asset managed $418 billion in fee-bearing capital at the end of December across asset classes including real estate, infrastructure, credit, private equity and renewable power.  

    The Toronto-based company plans to more than double that to $1 trillion by 2027, driven by ambitious plans to grow in private credit and insurance. Some of the growth may come through acquisitions, Flatt suggested at a conference in December.  

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    Turkey Halts Stock Trading for Five Days and Cancels Some Trades

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section:  

    Borsa Istanbul has also canceled trades that were executed on the morning of Feb. 8 before transactions were suspended, citing low trading volumes. Before those cancellations, the benchmark Borsa Istanbul 100 Index had erased $35 billion in value and was headed for its worst weekly performance since the 2008 global financial crisis. 

    Even with Wednesday’s trades being removed, the two days of selling following the deadly earthquakes in Turkey’s southern region wiped out $21 billion in value. Turkish stocks, which are this year’s worst performers globally, entered a technical bear market on Tuesday after falling more than 20% from their January high.

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    Lula-Central Bank Fight Intensifies as Traders Eye Rate Hike

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Lula tried to walk back prior comments on Monday, saying his criticism was not about whether or not the central bank was independent, but rather over the fact that the institution continues to keep borrowing costs high. 

    In Brazil, “the problem is that there is a culture of living with high interest rates and that doesn’t mix well with necessities and investment.” Lula said.

    The president had publicly questioned the central bank in both January and earlier this month. Current Selic levels make it “impossible” to boost growth, Lula said previously, adding that he considered the bank’s autonomy law to be “nonsense” and suggesting a higher, 4.5% inflation goal. 

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