Exxon activists banished best with vote, not court 22 Jan 2024 The $385 bln oil giant wants a judge to stop a shareholder proposal urging stringent emissions limits from going to a vote. Similar measures failed before. Fighting rather than letting this one fall flat amplifies dissent and echoes past doomed dismissals of investor concerns.
On close inspection, Boeing misreads quality guide 22 Jan 2024 The embattled 737 maker is opening factories to customers and hiring more pros to scrutinize aircraft. Management guru W. Edwards Deming advised in “Out of the Crisis” to drop such crutches and focus elsewhere instead. In times of trouble, it’s best to revert to first principles.
Red Sea oil tension may revive Russia-Saudi spat 22 Jan 2024 Exchanges of fire between Yemen’s Houthis and the US military have hiked costs for Moscow to ship oil via the Suez Canal to China and India. One upshot could be Russia loses market share to Saudi Arabia. That may reopen the sort of tensions that led to the duo’s 2020 price war.
It will take more than Draghi to boost EU growth 22 Jan 2024 Europe can’t decide if it will be more competitive with open markets or heavily protected national champions, and it wants Mario Draghi to pick. Italy’s former PM is more likely to reflect than resolve tensions among members. But the bloc can’t up its game behind closed doors.
Capital Calls: Microsoft’s Russian hacker 22 Jan 2024 Concise views on global finance: The $3 trln tech firm disclosed that a nation-state hack accessed leaders’ email, saying it showed the need for potentially “disruptive” measures. It’s a worrying acknowledgement of the still-vague costs of geopolitical tensions for tech giants.
Davos holds up funhouse mirror to shifting world 22 Jan 2024 Delegates from the Middle East and India made a splash at last week’s World Economic Forum, reflecting their wealth and investment appeal. Europeans and Chinese were subdued. Big Tech looks the winner from AI. This year’s Swiss conflab arguably exaggerated more than it distorted.
Jack Bogle’s ghost haunts Vanguard’s crypto plans 19 Jan 2024 The asset manager’s rival BlackRock is plunging into digital currency with a bitcoin ETF that brought in over $1 bln in a week. That strategy, divergent from Vanguard, highlights the desperation to differentiate. Bogle’s former firm’s decision to shun crypto may leave it behind.
Overdraft fee reform has a big, small-bank flaw 19 Jan 2024 The US consumer watchdog’s assault against charges levied when accounts go into the red is a win for customers – but only those of the biggest banks. Small lenders are exempt, partly because of their political clout. Trouble is, they often bank the neediest bunch.
Shein’s waste factor is its ultimate IPO risk 19 Jan 2024 The China-linked retailer’s lean production model helps it keep inventory low. Yet its polyester garments are carbon-intensive and hard to recycle. Regulators’ growing unease about textile pollution, and the cost of addressing the mess, may require giving up clients or margins.
Private credit gets the slice-and-dice treatment 19 Jan 2024 Managers like Blackstone and Blue Owl are selling ‘collateralised loan obligations’ backed by privately issued debt. Such alchemy, common in traditional lending, helps lenders raise cheap funds. It also adds complexity, and makes private credit more dependent on flighty markets.
Capital Calls: Birkenstock 19 Jan 2024 Concise views on global finance: The German sandal maker gets a reality check from investors three months after its much-hyped IPO.
Ola IPO will drive Indian EVs back to the future 19 Jan 2024 The SoftBank-backed e-scooter maker is revving up to go public at a mooted $8 bln valuation. The deal, plus a burgeoning home market, marks a moment reminiscent of an earlier mania for Chinese upstarts like Nio. Investors hoping for a similar ride, though, may be disappointed.
Disney’s Bob Iger falls flat by his own standards 18 Jan 2024 Activist Nelson Peltz wants the $166 bln media company’s shareholders to back his board slate. Iger’s defense as CEO is that Disney is on the right path by taking sports network ESPN direct to viewers and cutting streaming losses. Trouble is, progress looks slim on both measures.
Obesity drug firms choose golden goose pricing 18 Jan 2024 Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk can’t keep up with demand for weight loss drugs, yet they are offering big discounts to those whose insurance won’t help pay. That probably will harvest more eggs over time.
Sporting goods IPO plays winning China game 18 Jan 2024 Amer is growing fast in the home market of Fujian-based Anta, which co-bought the maker of Arc’teryx parkas and Salomon skis in 2019. Using Nike, Lululemon and On as guides imputes a $15 bln valuation. But chunky debt and the Wilson tennis brand weaken its competitive edge.
Global risk pile-up penetrates Davos bubble 18 Jan 2024 Nearly 3,000 movers and shakers have converged on the Swiss resort amid crises in the Red Sea, Gaza and Ukraine. In this Viewsroom podcast, Breakingviews columnists discuss how Davos-goers unable to ignore these perils are nervously anticipating another Trump presidency.
Capital Calls: Richemont revival 18 Jan 2024 Concise views on global finance: Shares in the $72 bln owner of Cartier rallied 9% after its quarterly results beat expectations, but concerns over the luxury sector persist.
Athleisure boom offers edge to premium retailers 18 Jan 2024 Wealthy shoppers are splurging on pricey leggings and sneakers despite inflationary pressure. That helps premium brands like $59 bln Lululemon and On while Nike and others deal with inventory pile-ups. If the big players can’t catch up, valuation gaps will only get wider.
Carbon markets have a long shot at redemption 18 Jan 2024 The US hopes to raise over $200 bln using carbon credits to help emerging markets cut emissions. The idea of enabling firms to offset pollution with cuts elsewhere has long been flawed. Washington’s wager is that a lack of green cash for developing states is a bigger evil.
China’s war on corruption turns into high wire act 18 Jan 2024 Xi Jinping is declaring victory in his decade-long war on graft. He has made more progress than India and the US over the same period by some global standards. Yet the decision to double down on cleaning up the finance sector when the economy is weak could come at a heavy cost.
Elon Musk’s losing streak is heading for Tesla 17 Jan 2024 The billionaire wants 25% control at the $690 bln carmaker, after trimming his stake in part to finance an ill-advised deal for Twitter. Musk’s social-media frolic risked making him an absentee CEO; containing that threat means following bad governance with worse.
US Steel deal stokes fiery stakeholder standoff 17 Jan 2024 The $14 bln sale to Nippon Steel is riling workers and politicians. A rival Cleveland-Cliffs bid will attract trustbusters. Staying independent would anger shareholders and squeeze automakers. It epitomizes today’s fraught M&A, but the Japanese buyer is in the strongest position.
BP’s business-as-usual vibe can only go so far 17 Jan 2024 The UK oil major has appointed Murray Auchincloss to the top job. While the ex-CFO seems to want to stick with BP’s current strategy, that might not help its valuation discount. Ways that conceivably could – like spinning off his transition assets – are worth his consideration.
Time for EU to assist its solar panel industry 17 Jan 2024 Meyer Burger’s stock tanked 35% after it threatened to shut Europe’s biggest photovoltaic plant unless it gets German incentives. Stuck between US subsidies and cheap Chinese products, continental players are weak. Turning support for fossil fuels into green aid would help.
BoE can win inflation race but lag on rate cuts 17 Jan 2024 UK price growth could drop in the spring due to lower energy bills, enabling the Bank of England to hit its 2% target before the US and Europe. But wage and services inflation will stop Governor Andrew Bailey from reducing borrowing costs. So will a likely UK fiscal splurge.
China consumers keep Beijing, and world, on edge 17 Jan 2024 The economy expanded 5.2% last quarter, thanks to manufacturing. But local demand remains weak, forcing factories to look abroad. That will stoke global trade tensions and add to fears that China will export deflation. All eyes are on how Beijing stimulates domestic consumption.
Spirit deal loss eases anxiety for everyone else 16 Jan 2024 A judge grounded JetBlue’s $4 bln purchase of the ultra-cheap carrier. The defeat avoided a potentially unprecedented intervention by regulators that would have clouded the industry, while affirming antitrust blowback. But Spirit’s shares halved, for good reason.
Chiplets-to-chips future featured in $35 bln deal 16 Jan 2024 Semiconductor designer Synopsys is buying Ansys, a firm which helps integrate systems. The buyer’s rich stock price should make an estimated low return tolerable. But the key is the future of the chip business: fancier technology requires more integration.
Goldman’s new durability message cuts two ways 16 Jan 2024 After failing in consumer finance, the investment bank wants to emphasize the predictability of its existing businesses. Boss David Solomon makes a good case that a chunk of revenue is more reliable than it once was. And yet arch-rival Morgan Stanley generates even more of it.
General Atlantic buys infrastructure for its IPO 16 Jan 2024 The US buyout firm is taking control of UK specialist asset manager Actis. The deal gives it $12.5 bln of assets in hot markets and geographies. Boss Bill Ford is trying to build a more diversified firm ahead of a possible float. His pitch to investors just got stronger.