Indonesia’s green step not yet a leap for mankind 18 Nov 2022 Jakarta will get $20 bln of overseas public and private cash to help it decarbonise. The deal struck at the COP27 summit paves the way to channel capital to poor countries at the required scale. But big foreign transfers are fraught. Lenders have plenty of reason to hesitate.
Capital Calls: Ticketmaster and Taylor Swift 18 Nov 2022 Concise views on global finance: A meltdown involving the pop star’s upcoming “Eras” concert tour is attracting an audience on Capitol Hill and risks an unwanted corporate fight with the artist herself.
UK’s new fiscal plan narrowly navigates recession 17 Nov 2022 As the economy shrinks, new finance chief Jeremy Hunt intends to raise taxes and cut spending. The 55 bln pound package goes some way to rebuilding Britain’s cracked credibility with investors. Delaying the pain by a few years could also help his party’s electoral prospects.
Capital Calls: Nexperia’s UK woes 17 Nov 2022 Concise views on global finance: The British government’s order to the Chinese group to sell its Welsh chip factory may prove an empty gesture without a plan to go forward.
Burberry revival rests on more leather power 17 Nov 2022 New CEO Jonathan Akeroyd wants to grow sales by 40% in coming years at the stagnating fashion house. Success hinges on star designer Daniel Lee’s ability to create alluring high-margin bags and shoes. But the move will take time and may hurt demand for items currently in store.
COP28 may make up for COP27’s shortcomings 17 Nov 2022 The global climate meeting has mostly failed to lure the same corporate big hitters as Glasgow did last year. In this Viewsroom podcast, Breakingviews columnists discuss how even if the gathering in Egypt’s Sharm El-Sheikh yields little progress, 2023 in the UAE could be better.
Crypto watchdogs have a giant offshore problem 17 Nov 2022 FTX’s collapse should trigger tougher oversight of digital-asset groups in the Unites States and elsewhere. Yet big players, like Binance and the $40 bln decentralised-finance system, may stay out of reach. Clearer rules could bring more business onshore, but not all of it.
Naspers swaps one Tencent headache for another 17 Nov 2022 The South African investor’s valuation discount to its $100 bln stake in the Chinese tech giant has narrowed since it started selling the shares to fund buybacks. But Tencent's plunging value is another factor. Though Naspers' prized asset has become a drag, exiting is tough.
Fiscal “black hole” obsession adds to UK problems 16 Nov 2022 Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s government is set to tighten the public finances by about 50 bln pounds, equivalent to 2% of GDP. Yet the case for such a large package is based on dubious logic. If it’s front-loaded and overly reliant on spending cuts, it will also hurt growth.
India watchdog ire cools foreign banks’ ambitions 16 Nov 2022 It’s bristling at the idea of Europe’s regulators inspecting its clearing houses. The fallout could lump SocGen, BNP Paribas and others with costs making them uncompetitive. Throw in uncertainties in China, and India is giving bankers a new reason to consider an Asian retreat.
Capital Calls: American shoppers 16 Nov 2022 Concise views on global finance: Target blamed its ugly quarterly results on consumers pulling back on discretionary items even as fresh government data shows they keep buying loads of stuff.
Crypto readies itself for a post-FTX hose-down 15 Nov 2022 The collapse of Sam Bankman-Fried’s empire exposed the vulnerabilities of a vast, unregulated world of digital finance. Rivals like Circle CEO Jeremy Allaire hope to prove there’s a safer side of crypto worth saving. He presents his case in this episode of The Exchange podcast.
Capital Calls: Jeff Bezos 15 Nov 2022 Concise views on global finance: The Amazon founder is telling consumers to batten down the hatches. Yet the e-commerce giant has plenty of room to capture more online market share.
Vodafone’s misery strengthens Xavier Niel’s hand 15 Nov 2022 The 26 bln pound group’s shares sank 8% after it cut its profit forecast. CEO Nick Read’s efforts to streamline the sprawling telco are getting bogged down by rising costs and weak growth. His new shareholder, the Iliad founder, may push for faster disposals and deeper cost cuts.
Credit Suisse’s fuzzy Apollo deal better than none 15 Nov 2022 Boss Ulrich Körner is offloading $55 bln of assets in a securitised product unit, chiefly to the U.S. behemoth. Credit Suisse did not reveal the price, and it will pay Apollo to manage the remaining assets. But at least Körner avoided selling at a discount amid tricky markets.
Sam Bankman-Fried did financial system a favour 14 Nov 2022 The curly-haired cryptocurrency kingpin pushed regulators and politicians to legitimise assets like bitcoin. A few more years and his now-bankrupt exchange FTX would have burrowed deeper into mainstream finance, amplifying the damage. His downfall sends the process into reverse.
The shafts of light in a dark, dark world 14 Nov 2022 As the G20 kicks off, there are many negatives: a frying planet, economic crisis, conflict in Ukraine, and maybe a cold war with China. But there are positives too, says Hugo Dixon: Putin is losing, autocrats are struggling, and carbon emissions may peak earlier than expected.
Capital Calls: Roche’s risky big drug bets 14 Nov 2022 Concise views on global finance: Shares in the Swiss drugmaker fell 4% after a treatment for dementia produced disappointing results in a late-stage trial, reminding investors of the downsides of pursuing potential blockbusters.
Tech mess hastens Irish economic turn inwards 11 Nov 2022 Multinationals like Meta Platforms bring in a quarter of Ireland’s $68 bln tax revenue, and the salaries they pay prop up its housing market. Now they’re shedding staff, the risk is a budget hole. Irish business may not like how a future Sinn Féin government would fill it.
Don’t dump on U.S. coal plan. Make it better! 11 Nov 2022 Sceptics fear an American plan to use voluntary carbon markets to accelerate the energy transition in poor countries, unveiled at COP27, could amount to greenwashing. But done properly, it could help developing markets close down coal plants, a major source of pollution.