Kamala Harris

Japan, Taiwan, Venezuela, Kamala Harris, McDonald’s, Telemedicine

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Japan, Taiwan, Venezuela, Kamala Harris, McDonald’s, Telemedicine

Caracal Global Daily
April 2, 2019
Curation and commentary from 
Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia 

Caracal Global Daily  = News + Analysis at the Intersection of Globalization + Disruption + Politics


TOP FIVE

✔️ WTO warns of ‘strong headwinds’ in global trade

✔️ Politically, no one knows how Brexit will end

✔️ Japan's big banks to slash hiring of new graduates due to automation

✔️ Kamala Harris raised $12 million in Q1

✔️ Julian Dunkerton is back at Superdry

ROSS RANT

Brigadoon Remote.

Details coming soon.

-Marc
 

GLOBALIZATION

FT: WTO warns of ‘strong headwinds’ in global trade

Economists forecast growth of just 2.6% this year as US-China spat and volatility bite.

Saudis vs. Bezos: Fortune reports, Jeff Bezos's security chief, Gavin de Becker, has reported back on the leak to the National Enquirer of the Amazon chief's sexts with his mistress. De Becker reckons the Saudi authorities hacked Bezos's phone as revenge for the Bezos-owned Washington Post giving heavy coverage to the Saudis' murder of Jamal Khashoggi, who wrote for the paper. He said it remains unclear whether Enquirer publisher AMI knew about the Saudis' involvement; the paid source was the mistress's brother.

"Japan's Tankan business sentiment survey showed weaker manufacturing sentiment. Sentiment is generally influenced by the media news cycle. Sensationalism in media is poorly filtered. Media reporting of the trade tensions has an impact. However, capital spending plans were better than expected. Capital spending was a major driver of weaker growth globally late last year." -- Paul Donovan of UBS.

Infectious form of African swine fever virus detected for first time in Japan, in meat from China: Japan Times, the agriculture ministry said the discovery of the virus has prompted a decision to strengthen measures against illegal imports of livestock products.

Ken Rapoza: Taiwan just became a huge variable in the China trade war

Defense contractors will love this order. Those who would like to see the trade war end, won’t love it as much.

Taiwan could creep into trade talks, becoming a greater variable than the South China Sea issue ever was.

Remember kids, it isn't a US-China trade war, it is a US-China geopolitical war.


Venezuela crisis: Opposition's Guaidó awaits army support: BBC reports, Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó has acknowledged that there can only be a change of government with the support of the armed forces. 

‘Time for tougher deterrence from China’ as US steps up patrols in South China Sea: SCMP reports, China should reinforce “deterrence facilities” in the South China Sea as the United States and its allies mount a bigger challenge in the contested waters, a prominent Chinese specialist said. 

'Killer dust' pollutes South Korea's relations with China: Nikkei reports, Beijing rebuffs Moon's attempt to share blame for deteriorating air.

Nikkei: South Korea's 5G head start puts Samsung in pole position

OTD: In 1982 Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands.

Barnier warns no-deal Brexit is increasingly likely: FT reports, EU chief negotiator says ‘strong justification’ is needed from UK for a long extension.

EU's Barnier: May deal is the only path to orderly Brexit: DW reports, EU Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has told UK lawmakers that — if they want an orderly Brexit — Theresa May’s Withdrawal Agreement is the only show in town.

FT: Theresa May weighs fourth vote on Brexit deal

Politically, no one knows how Brexit will end.

Rob Mudge: Brexit — 'Theresa through the looking glass': The UK government's handling of the Brexit process is growing increasingly shambolic by the day. Any semblance of control has gone out of the window.

NATO at 70: Europe fears tensions will outlast Trump: FT reports, as the military alliance celebrates its anniversary, America’s commitment is being questioned.

NATO is preparing to bolster its power on its front lines against Russia by boosting support to non-members Ukraine and Georgia and building up its arsenal in eastern Poland.​

DISRUPTION

Telemedicine + urgent care use on the rise: STAT reports, a new white paper released today from the nonprofit FAIR Health looked at medical pricing and other health care trends from 2012 to 2017 and found that people in the US used more telehealth services and urgent care centers in 2017 than during the previous year. Here’s a closer look at the report’s findings:

Telehealth: Use of telemedicine services grew nationally by 53 percent between 2016 and 2017, with 55 percent growth in urban areas and 29 percent growth in rural areas. Oklahoma had the most telehealth usage, New Jersey the least.

Urgent care centers: The use of urgent care centers in urban areas increased by 15 percent in 2017 compared to 2016, while staying the same in rural areas. The average price per 30-minute visit was most expensive for urgent care centers, at $213, compared to $207 in a doctor’s office and $129 in a retail clinic.

Goals and rewards redraw the brain’s map of the world: Two new studies show that the brain’s navigation system changes how it represents physical space to reflect personal experience. http://bit.ly/2JW6EYq

New York City embraced congestion pricing. Will other cities follow? New York’s decision to charge drivers to enter Manhattan’s most congested neighborhoods may embolden cities like Philadelphia and Los Angeles.

A robot walks into a bar, doesn’t get the joke: struggling to teach humor to AI https://lat.ms/2JYRilK 

Japan's big banks to slash hiring of new graduates in 2020 due to automation: Japan Times, major lender MUFG Bank plans to hire only 530 new graduates next April, down about 45 percent from this year, according to informed sources. Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. and Mizuho Financial Group Inc. also plan to slash their hiring of new graduates.

POLITICS

Full Mueller: House Judiciary Committee said it will vote on Wednesday on whether to authorize subpoenas to obtain Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s full report.

The Guardian: Joe Biden's very bad week: has his White House run failed before it begins?

WSJ - Editorial: Joe Biden’s identity reckoning: He may have been VP, but he’s old, white, male and heterosexual.

Michelle Goldberg: The wrong time for Joe Biden: He’s not a sexual predator, but he is out of touch.

David Brooks: Why you love Mayor Pete: Buttigieg detaches progressive policy from the culture war.

In Buttigieg's last race for mayor, he only needed to secure 8,500 votes total to win the office. And it appears his biggest decision was whether or not open a main street to two-way traffic.

Kamala Harris of California raised $12 million in the first three months of 2019.

A Trump mutiny? Republican prospects warily eye 2020 presidential run: LAT reports, Bill Weld is exploring the possibility of challenging President Trump and John Kasich and Larry Hogan aren't ruling it out. But the odds facing them are steep.

One of the GOP’s brightest female stars is dogged by Trump in 2020: Politico reports, Iowa Sen. Joni Ernst will have to outrun the president, whose trade war has damaged his standing in the state.

Plastic bag ban: New York will become the second state after California to ban (most) single-use plastic bags starting in March 2020. NYC residents use 71,000 tons of nonbiodegradable plastic bags annually, and according to Gov. Andrew Cuomo, the bags “have blighted our environment and clogged our waterways.” Small business and retail trade groups criticized the policy.

Royal Dutch Shell said it had found “material misalignment” over climate policy with the American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM) and would quit the body in 2020.

COMMERCE

Seat to lead Volkswagen’s drive into cheap electric cars: FT reports, Spanish brand aims to produce electric vehicles costing less than €20,000.

FT - Editorial: Consolidation is key for the automotive industry: Declines in sales and the rise of electric vehicles make tie-ups a must.

Kellogg is reportedly nearing a deal to sell its Keebler, Famous Amos and fruit snacks businesses to Nutella-owner Ferrero for between $1B-$1.5B.

Airbnb buys stake in Indian hotel start-up Oyo: FT reports, Oyo, the fast-growing Indian hotel franchise, has raised over $100m from US room-booking site Airbnb, giving fresh firepower for its international expansion drive. Founded in 2013 by then 19-year-old university dropout Ritesh Agarwal, Oyo has become the world’s most rapidly expanding hotel chain, adding more than 700 properties each month.

Bitcoin burst to its highest level in almost five months on Tuesday, sending smaller cryptocurrencies up, with analysts ascribing the move to a major order by an anonymous buyer that triggered a frenzy of computer-driven trading.

P&G drafts video game team to boost brand with esports fans: Cincinnati Business Courier reports, Procter & Gamble Co. assembled a team of 11 Twitch streamers from around the world to represent the Gillette brand and create content for viewers of increasingly popular electronic sports, also known as esports.

Superdry has lost a bitter battle against Julian Dunkerton after shareholders narrowly voted in favor of the reappointment of the co-founder and former chief executive.

Whatsapp targets fake messages ahead of India mega-election: AFP reports, WhatsApp launched a hotline Tuesday allowing Indians to flag rumors circulating ahead of the upcoming election, a major concern in a country where fake news has fuelled violence.

McDonald’s of the future: McDonald’s just made the Big Mac of acquisitions with its purchase of Dynamic Yield, a Tel Aviv-based startup that provides retailers with “decision logic” technology. It’s the biggest buy the brand has made since 1999 and digs into the customization boom heating up the restaurant business. But with fast food restaurants fighting over the spotlight, will the tech tactic be enough to cook up sustainable consumer attention for McDonald’s? http://bit.ly/2JVPaLK

Burger King deal fuels plant-based meat group: FT reports, Silicon Valley start-up Impossible looks to raise fresh funds after launching veggie Whopper.

Startups power Shenzhen's rise as high-tech hub: Nikkei reports, the city produces more than half of China's international patent filings.

Hal Brands: Google needs a lesson in patriotism: Alphabet shuns business with the Pentagon but is helping China develop artificial intelligence. 

Remember kids, it isn't a US-China trade war, it is a US-China tech war.

CULTURE

Algorithmic jackpot: The most-shared story on Facebook so far this year is a 119-word news brief posted to the US 105 FM New County radio station’s page. The post — “Suspected Human Trafficker, Child Predator May Be in Our Area.” — for whatever reason checked every box of the Facebook algorithm, which then accelerated the local crime brief to 800,000 shares on the platform, which is twice as high as any other English-language content of 2019.

'They're amazingly isolated': is social media making NBA players miserable? NBA commissioner says many of the stars he meets are unhappy. The criticism they face on Twitter and Instagram could be to blame.

These are the best places to own a vacation home in the US https://bloom.bg/2UtGWhO

"Summit Park -- the term for the micropolitan area -- ranked highest on Bloomberg’s Wealthiest US Vacation Havens Index. The area is home to the Park City, Silver Summit and Deer Valley resorts." 

SPORT

Final 4 odds: The Virginia Cavaliers, Michigan State Spartans, Texas Tech Red Raiders and Auburn Tigers are the sole survivors of the 2019 NCAA men’s basketball tournament. According to FiveThirtyEight predictions, their chances of winning the championship in a week’s time are 41 percent (UVA), 28 percent (MSU), 22 percent (TX Tech) and 10 percent (Auburn), respectively. 

Tesla, Facebook, Uber, Tariffs, Kamala Harris, Brian Eno || Marc Ross Daily

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Marc Ross Daily
March 20, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
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TOP FIVE

✔️ Germany's long, slow and carefully considered attack on Tesla

✔️ Trump’s tariffs are already taxing patience

✔️ Trump prepared to hit China with $60 billion in annual tariffs

✔️ Kamala Harris is dreaming big

✔️ Facebook is pummeled by user-data blowback

ROSS RANT

What America's corporate titans really think about Trump's tariffs: They might be silent. They might not be storming CNBC. They might be leaning on their lobbyists too much.

But believe you me - many think these tariffs stink. 

American business believes that tariffs will do more harm than good in bringing about an improvement in intellectual property protection for American companies in China.  

Business wants to see solutions to the issues, not just sanctions. 

Business wants to see certainty, not just campaign rhetoric.

It has repeatedly been said for years, everyone agrees China needs to adopt a stricter deterrent against counterfeiting and IP theft - including doing away with joint venture and business licensing requirements that can be used to mandate technology transfers to gain market access.  Even businesses headquartered in China know the current IP regime is not world class and will hinder China's rise.

What Trump should be doing is leading.

Harnessing a focused effort using the extensive resources of the US government to fix these IP problems is better than imposing tariffs that will bring collateral damage to American households, farmers, and manufacturers.

Trump seems content to enter a fight and throw the first punch. It has yet been made clear to me what happens when the other side punches back. I mean, he isn't fighting mano a mano. Beijing has a say in all this, and not to mention Brussels and even Brasília. 

As the business guru Mike Tyson stated: "Everyone has a plan 'till they get punched in the mouth."

GEOECONOMICS

Germany's long, slow and carefully considered attack on Tesla: HG reports, they have been trailing the US e-car pioneer for years but now VW, Mercedes-Benz, and BMW are pumping billions into mass producing their own electric cars. Tesla's German competition will get really serious this year.

Trump’s tariffs are already taxing patience: LAT reports, the Trump administration’s tariffs on imported steel and aluminum are set to take effect Friday, but the rollout is being criticized as confusing, rushed and potentially crisis-inducing. Overseas, officials aren’t sure how to negotiate to avoid paying the duties, because the White House hasn’t given specifics.

Bloomberg: US plans heavy China tariff hit as soon as this week

WP: Trump prepared to hit China with $60 billion in annual tariffs: Trump is preparing to impose a package of $60 billion in annual tariffs against Chinese products, following through on a longtime threat that he says will punish China for intellectual property theft and create more US jobs. Most US businesses agree with the Trump administration’s criticisms of China. But many disagree with the administration’s strategy. “The US-China Business Council believes that tariffs will do more harm than good in bringing about an improvement in intellectual property protection for American companies in China,” said John Frisbie, president of the council, a nonpartisan group of 200 US companies that do business with China. “Business wants to see solutions to the issues, not just sanctions.” The US-China Business Council noted that many states – including some swing states that propelled to an unexpected victory in 2016 – have seen sharp increases in exports to China. Over the decade ending 2016, Pennsylvania’s exports of goods to China increased 83 percent, twice the rate as its exports to the rest of the world. And Pennsylvania’s exports of services jumped more than four-fold, more than five times the pace as its services exports to the rest of the world. Exports from Michigan, another state Trump won, showed a similar pattern. https://goo.gl/YkTwh9

Bloomberg: China pledges action on tech transfer as Trump plans tariffs: China made further promises to protect the intellectual property of foreigners investing in its economy, addressing a long-standing grievance as Trump plans new tariffs aimed at Beijing. “Businesses are very much in a position that they want to see China take action, and talking about it isn’t sufficient any more,” John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council, said of Li’s speech. “And it has to be tangible actions that matter.” https://goo.gl/da4DAz

CNBC: The business community's uncertainty about US-China relations (video): A solution is what the business community wants, not just "something that's going to do collateral damage to both economies," says John Frisbie of the US-China Business Council. https://goo.gl/Ed9WUX

China approves giant propaganda machine to improve global image: Bloomberg reports, the new broadcaster will be called “Voice of China,” the person said, mimicking the US government-funded Voice of America that started up during World War II to advance American interests.

NYT - Kevin Rudd OpEd: What the West doesn’t get about Xi Jinping: For the last five years, Western leaders and analysts have often projected onto China an image of their preferred imaginings, rather than one reflecting the actual statements of China’s own leaders, or in the physical evidence of Chinese statecraft. These have long pointed to a vastly different reality. https://goo.gl/FBBMA1

Jim O'Neill: Missing the Forest for the Xi https://goo.gl/YQiq2s

Xi Jinping promises more assertive Chinese foreign policy: FT reports, president parts decisively with the caution of the previous era in Beijing’s international relations.

Xi Jinping warns against dividing China after US passes Taiwan law: WSJ reports, attempts to split China ‘will receive the condemnation of the people and the punishment of history,’ president says.

Five important takeaways from China’s National People’s Congress: The annual meeting of China’s legislature, the National People’s Congress, is usually a sleepy, stolid affair. But this year history happened. In the 16-day session that ended on Tuesday, the Communist Party-controlled congress approved changes that could shape China for decades, especially by stretching President Xi Jinping’s hold on power far into the future. https://goo.gl/usgcTB

China wants to shape the global future of artificial intelligence: MIT Tech Review reports, drawing up technical standards is an early attempt to control how AI evolves worldwide. https://goo.gl/snAfdi

AMERICAN POLITICS

2020 Dems staff up: Politico reports, at least a dozen potential candidates are bolstering their teams by adding aides with campaign experience. The hires are never explicitly advertised or designed to be about 2020. But the behind-the-scenes shuffle is a long-overdue stage in the traditional precampaign scramble. Potential candidates who have run before — like Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders and former Vice President Joe Biden — largely have their core teams in place. https://goo.gl/CcsnHU

Kamala Harris is dreaming big https://goo.gl/WeWDP5

Bidden - Harris 2020

Most Americans produce services, not stuff. Trump ignores that in talking about trade. NYT reports, the president’s outlook on service workers could have real economic consequences. https://goo.gl/YDpWjK

NYT: Trump’s tariffs set off storm of lobbying

Cambridge Analytica isn't into going door to door to win campaigns: An undercover investigation by Channel 4 News of Britain captured the firm’s CEO, Alexander Nix, suggesting the entrapment of a potential client’s political opponents with women and bribes. Britain’s information commissioner is now seeking a warrant to examine the firm’s data. And Facebook has hired a forensics firm to audit it.

NYT: Cambridge Analytica, Trump-tied political firm, offered to entrap politicians

ENTERPRISE

WSJ: Facebook is pummeled by user-data blowback

Cambridge Analytica’s ad targeting is the reason Facebook exists: Thousands of third-party apps were designed solely to obtain and sell your data. It's no surprise that the data ended up being used again on Facebook, one of the biggest advertising platforms on Earth. https://goo.gl/ovQKKz

Alex Stamos, Facebook's chief security officer, is planning to leave the social media giant amid internal disputes over how the platform should disclose its role in spreading disinformation, according to current and former employees.

"The uproar pushed Facebook's stock down 6.8% to $172.56 Monday, wiping out about $36 billion in market value."

Facebook will hold an emergency meeting to let employees ask questions about Cambridge Analytica.


WSJ: LinkedIn’s $27 billion challenge: Get people to use it more

Uber has stopped its driverless operations in four US cities after one of its self-driving cars hit and killed a woman in Arizona — probably the first pedestrian fatality of its kind.

SpaceX has entered into preliminary negotiations with the Port of Los Angeles for a lease that would expand the company’s port facilities to manufacture “large commercial transportation vehicles.”

Amazon has reportedly considered buying Toys “R” Us stores, for the real estate.

Claire's Stores, the pre-teen mall jewelry shop, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the US and reportedly plans to close some underperforming stores.

Why Crate and Barrel’s CEO isn’t worried about Amazon: WSJ reports, furniture chain embraces Instagram and YouTube but won’t sell its wares on Amazon.

Cheddar, the CNBC for the Snapchat generation, has raised $22 million from Raine Ventures, Liberty Global and the CEO of the NYSE’s parent company.

Five brand lessons 10 years after Visa's historic IPO https://goo.gl/2NXumU

TRENDS

Retail's middle ground is a dangerous place: A new study finds low-end and premier chains thriving; the rest, not so much. https://goo.gl/iAj9Ft

Avoid the mushy middle.

Quartz: Tiger Brands’ “old playbook of PR distraction” was no match for South Africans on Twitter https://goo.gl/keo4k5

In the age of the “see-through economy,” consumers demand immediate accountability from manufacturers.

Is technology hurting productivity? It is possible that new technologies are not just doing less to boost productivity than past innovations. They may actually have negative side effects that undermine productivity growth, and that reduce our wellbeing in other ways as well. https://goo.gl/AhMv9y

The battery boost we’ve been waiting for is only a few years out: WSJ reports, batteries that power our modern world are expected to get a jump in storage capacity of 30% or more.

CULTURE

McClatchy: Self-driving cars are here. But shouting Californians are attacking them, DMV sayshttps://goo.gl/xDAJdu

Brian Eno wants to take you ‘inside the music’: The British musician is collaborating with other artists to create a high-tech, immersive experience that will tour Europe and America. https://goo.gl/fRf2a2

SPORT

AP: Morocco bid: $16 billion for 2026 World Cup venues, infrastructure

"Morocco would need to spend almost $16 billion to prepare to host the 2026 World Cup, with every proposed stadium and training ground built from scratch or renovated, the bid said Saturday."