Dutch court hands Shell chairman shakeup stick 26 May 2021 A Hague judge has told the oil giant to toughen up its targets for cutting carbon emissions. Besides appealing, Shell could try to dodge the ruling by moving its headquarters. Alternatively, new chair Andrew Mackenzie could shunt the group in the direction of rivals BP and Total.
Belarus plays airspace poker with a weak hand 25 May 2021 Irate western powers have banned flights over the Russian ally’s territory after it forced a Ryanair jet to land. Engaging in “air piracy” is easier for countries that can afford to lose overflight fees or are too big to fly around. Neither is obviously the case for Belarus.
Capital Calls: Retail sales’ wild ride 19 May 2021 Concise views on global finance: Some U.S. retailers are reporting better growth than others, but there’s still much to play for.
Credit Suisse best bet is hardball over Greensill 18 May 2021 The bank’s clients want it to cover up to $2.3 bln of possible fund losses related to the collapsed financier. Doing so might stop them from pulling business, but it may also complicate legal wrangling and force CEO Thomas Gottstein to raise capital. Better to weather their ire.
Capital Calls: AT&T’s bankers, Blackstone in Italy 17 May 2021 Concise views on global finance: The U.S. telecom giant’s unwinding of its purchase of Time Warner is a gift for advisers on Wall Street; a court rules that the U.S. private equity firm’s 2013 purchase of Corriere della Sera’s HQ was valid.
Apple’s App battle has only slightly epic ending 5 May 2021 A ruling against the $2 trillion tech behemoth in the case brought by video game company Epic could optically be bad for Apple and have global implications. But even if App Store sales fall in half, it would shave just 3% from Apple’s market value. Being a giant has privileges.
Capital Calls: Pfizer, ConocoPhillips 4 May 2021 Concise views on global finance: About $6 bln of additional earnings from Covid vaccines at the U.S. drug giant should mean more capital returned to investors; the independent oil group is offloading stock in Canada-based Cenovus it collected as part of a deal four years ago.
Guest view: A qualified opinion on UK audit reform 28 Apr 2021 Corporate collapses like Carillion and Thomas Cook highlight flaws in accounting for capital and dividends, argues Natasha Landell-Mills of Sarasin & Partners. Proposals to restore trust in accounts fall dangerously short. The government should focus on enforcing existing laws.
Capital Calls: Jerome Powell, Shopify 28 Apr 2021 Concise views on global finance: The clock is ticking on the Fed boss’s taper timeline; the e-commerce firm grew even as it warns of a post-pandemic lull.
Capital Calls: SXSW 19 Apr 2021 Concise views on global finance: Rolling Stone publisher Penske Media is taking a 50% stake in hipster arts festival South By Southwest.
EU’s new supply-chain stick delivers fair whack 16 Apr 2021 Germany and others plan to make firms liable for human rights and environmental abuses by suppliers. The financial gains derived from outsourcing justify the legal stretch. Scandal-wary giants like Nestlé already self-police their sourcing. Hefty fines are an added incentive.
Capital Calls: Icahn’s new CEO, Google vs. Oracle 1 Apr 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: Activist investor Carl Icahn takes on a GE veteran adept at building businesses up and breaking them down; why Google’s win in the U.S. Supreme Court ought to benefit startups too.
Capital Calls: BlackRock’s Archegos angle, SPACs 30 Mar 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: The fallout from the collapse of Bill Hwang’s family office gives regulators reasons to focus on funds, not fund managers; and bosses of blank-check companies don’t take investor questions.
Capital Calls: WFH deals, Suez Canal, NorNickel 29 Mar 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: Fintech firm Broadridge pays a full price for trading platform; with the waterway clear, all sides will be taking up positions for a legal battle royal; the Russian nickel producer cashes in on high copper prices.
Capital Calls: Twitter time-wasting, News Corp 25 Mar 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: Congressional hearings on Big Tech get ever less productive; meanwhile, the parent of the Wall Street Journal snaps up Investor’s Business Daily.
Review: When “Ocean’s Eleven” meets Chapter 11 19 Mar 2021 “The Caesars Palace Coup” rolls a casino caper and legal thriller into one edifying book. Dense bankruptcy lingo sometimes bogs down the ruthless scrap over $18 bln of distressed debt. And it’s hard to find a Danny Ocean in a Wall Street dramatis personae full of Terry Benedicts.
Fashion’s supply ignorance is no longer bliss 17 Mar 2021 The U.S. is detaining products containing cotton produced in China’s Xinjiang region over forced-labour concerns. The burden of proof is on the importer, so groups like Inditex and Ralph Lauren need to know the fibre’s origins. Or some goods may fail to reach American shelves.
Capital Calls: New York, Allegro exit 17 Mar 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: The Big Apple reigns in a new ranking of global cities, but the prize isn’t what it was; shareholders in Polish e-commerce group Allegro sell down early.
UK finance watchdog finds rare area to act tough 16 Mar 2021 The Financial Conduct Authority launched its first criminal case against a bank for allegedly failing to spot suspicious transactions. The humiliation for NatWest may be as damaging as any eventual fine. Harsher enforcement is reassuring given post-Brexit deregulation elsewhere.
Capital Calls: CPPIB, Barclays, McPlant, DoorDash 26 Feb 2021 Concise views on global finance in the Covid-19 era: Canada Pension Plan Investment Board's CEO is booted for jab-line jumping; the UK bank wins a legal, if not ethical, victory over financier Amanda Staveley; Beyond Meat partners with McDonald’s and Yum; and DoorDash is too hot.