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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren: Expect the core PCE index to continue trending downwardFormer Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's inflation fight, state of the U.S. economy, interest rate path outlook, and more.
Persons: Eric Rosengren Organizations: Former Boston Fed, Boston Fed Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDecline in average hourly earnings is positive for rate cuts, says Fmr. Boston Fed PresidentEric Rosengren, Former Boston Fed president, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to discuss the March jobs report and its impact on Fed policy moving forward.
Persons: Eric Rosengren Organizations: Boston Fed
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer Boston Fed Pres. Eric Rosengren: The Fed should be 'forecast dependent', not data dependentFormer Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the February CPI inflation data, what it means for the Fed's interest rate outlook, and more.
Persons: Former Boston Fed Pres, Eric Rosengren Organizations: Former Boston Fed, Boston Fed
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBond rates will probably come down, but not dramatically, says Fmr. Boston Fed PresidentEric Rosengren, Former Boston Fed president, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the FOMC's next move, what's in store for the bond market, the state of the economy and more.
Persons: Eric Rosengren Organizations: Boston Fed
Jack Ma Doubles Down on Alibaba
  + stars: | 2024-01-23 | by ( Andrew Ross Sorkin | Ravi Mattu | Bernhard Warner | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +6 min
(Both men already hold sizable amounts of Alibaba stock.) Alibaba itself bought back $9.5 billion worth of stock last year, reducing its share count by over 3 percent. The stock purchases will probably bring attention back to Ma, a former English teacher who helped start Alibaba as an e-commerce platform. Ma, who hasn’t held a management role at Alibaba or Ant in years but remains a lifetime partner in the Alibaba Partnership, now largely focuses on Bill Gates-style philanthropy. And she’s expected to take swipes at Trump’s economic record as president.
Persons: Tsai, Ma, Alibaba, Ant, hasn’t, Bill Gates, Nikki Haley, Donald Trump, Eric Rosengren, Robert Kaplan, Kaplan, Rosengren, Archer, Daniels, Vikram Luthar, Scott Stuber, Spike Lee, Martin Scorsese, Jane Campion, Stuber, Ted Sarandos, Netflix’s, Bela Bajaria, Biden’s, Janet Yellen, Lael Brainard, they’re, Biden, ” Ray Fair Organizations: Pool Management, Alibaba, Brooklyn Nets, New York Liberty, Nets, Boston Fed, Dallas Fed, Republican, Biden, Yale, Times Locations: U.S, Hong Kong, China, Ma, Beijing, , Paris, New Hampshire, Dixville
A watchdog review into market trading from two former high-ranking Federal Reserve officials criticizes their actions but does not accuse either of doing anything illegal. Revelations showed that some Fed officials engaged in market trading at a time when they also were considering important and delicate policy matters in the early days of the Covid pandemic in 2020. The report concludes that their actions resulted in conflicts of interest that raised issues over impartiality and the proper conduct of central bank officials. On Kaplan, the report states that the OIG "did not find that his trading activities violated laws, rules, regulations, or policies related to trading activities as investigated by our office." Since the controversy, the Fed has revamped its trading rules and now prohibits officials from owning stocks, bonds and cryptocurrencies.
Persons: Robert Kaplan, Eric Rosengren, — Kaplan, Jerome Powell, Richard Clarida, Raphael Bostic, Clarida, Kaplan Organizations: Eccles Federal, Federal, Fed's, Dallas, Atlanta Fed, Fed, Kaplan, CNBC, Federal Reserve, Dallas Fed Locations: Washington , DC, Boston, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailABB CEO: Desire for sustainability and divisional growth driving strong performanceBjörn Rosengren, CEO at ABB, discusses the company's Capital Markets Day, his outlook for the Chinese economy, and how ABB is achieving its ambitious margin targets.
Persons: Rosengren Organizations: ABB
The logo of ABB is seen at an office building in Zurich, Switzerland September 10, 2020. The goals, announced ahead of ABB's investor day in Italy, were an upgrade from the previous annual revenue growth target of 4% to 7%. Most of the sales will come from internal growth, ABB said, with an expected five to seven percentage points of extra revenue, while an additional one to two percentage points is expected from acquisitions. ABB, which supplies industry and transportation networks with robots, electrification equipment and motors, also raised its core profitability target to a range of 16% to 19%. The International Monetary Fund recently downgraded its forecast for global growth for next year, with advanced economies expected to significantly slow as interest rates rise.
Persons: Arnd, France's Schneider, Bjorn Rosengren, John Revill, Tom Hogue, Jacqueline Wong Organizations: ABB, REUTERS, Rights, Germany's Siemens, Monetary Fund, Thomson Locations: Zurich, Switzerland, Swiss, Italy, Frosinone
While Fed officials haven't indicated how many months in a row it will take of easing inflation data to reach that conclusion, 12-month core CPI has fallen each month since April. The Fed prefers core inflation measures as a better gauge of long-run inflation trends. Traders appear to have more certainty than Fed officials at this point. If correct, that would take the benchmark rate down to a target range of 4.25%-4.5% and would be twice as aggressive as the pace Fed officials penciled in back in September. But pricing of Fed actions can be volatile, and there are two more inflation reports ahead before that meeting.
Persons: Spencer Platt, Lou Crandall, Wrightson ICAP, We're, Crandall, Jerome Powell, haven't, They're, Eric Rosengren Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Getty, Federal Reserve, Labor Department, Boston Fed Locations: New York City, Atlanta
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFormer Boston Fed Pres. Rosengren: October CPI 'about as good of an outcome' as the Fed could expectFormer Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss October's CPI data, the impact on the Fed's inflation fight, whether we've seen the full effects of rate hikes, rate path outlook, and more.
Persons: Rosengren, Eric Rosengren, we've Organizations: Former Boston Fed, Boston Fed
The logo of Swiss power technology and automation group ABB is seen during the company's annual news conference in Zurich, Switzerland February 28, 2019. ABB said it anticipated low- to mid-single digit comparable revenue growth in the fourth quarter after reporting a comparable 11% increase in the third quarter. "Orders in China declined at a low single-digit comparable growth rate particularly hampered by weakness in robotics and construction demand," said Chief Executive Bjorn Rosengren in a statement. For the full year 2023, the group said it expected comparable revenue growth to be in the low double-digit percentage range, and an operational margin to be in the range of 16.5% to 17.0%. Previously it had said it expected revenue growth of at least 10% and an operational margin above 16%.
Persons: Arnd, France's Schneider, ABB's, Bjorn Rosengren, Noele Illien, Rachel More, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: ABB, REUTERS, Rights, Germany's Siemens, Thomson Locations: Swiss, Zurich, Switzerland, China, United States, India, Asia, Europe
But at the regional level, the IG has yet to weigh in on the trading activities of Rosengren, Kaplan and current Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic. Both Rosengren and Kaplan have said they followed the Fed rules that governed trading at the time, and their disclosures were approved by Fed lawyers. Conti-Brown praised the central bank's new ethics regime as likely the best in government, which he said casts the IG's work in an even worse light. They have proposed legislation that would make the Fed IG position a presidential appointment requiring confirmation by the Senate, something Bialek has publicly opposed. During a hearing in the Senate in May, Bialek said the Fed had never interfered in his work.
Persons: That's, Jerome Powell, Eric Rosengren, Robert Kaplan, Mark Bialek, Elizabeth Warren, Rick Scott, Peter Conti, Brown, Powell, Richard Clarida, Kaplan, Raphael Bostic, Rosengren, Bostic, Conti, Warren, Scott, Bialek, Clarida, she's, There's, Michael S, Dan Burns, Paul Simao Organizations: Dallas, Boston Federal Reserve, U.S . Congress, Boston Fed, Dallas Fed, Fed, Democratic, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Reserve Bank, Rosengren, Atlanta Fed, Senate, Committee, Thomson Locations: U.S
Sept. 9, 2021: Kaplan and Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren pledge to divest their stock holdings. Sept. 27, 2021: Kaplan and Rosengren announce their departures from the Fed within hours of one another. Oct. 4, 2021: Powell refers the matter to Fed Inspector General Mark Bialek for a fuller investigation. July 14, 2022: The IG clears Powell and Clarida of wrongdoing over trades that violated the Fed's investment policy. Oct. 14, 2022: Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic announces what he said were inadvertent violations of policies restricting when Fed officials could trade and invest.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Evelyn Hockstein, Powell, Robert Kaplan, Kaplan, Eric Rosengren, Elizabeth Warren, supportto Kaplan, Rosengren, Mark Bialek, Richard Clarida, Clarida, Raphael Bostic, Bostic, Michael S, Dan Burns, Paul Simao Organizations: Federal, Federal Reserve, REUTERS, Street Journal, Dallas, Boston Fed, Dallas Fed, Democratic U.S, Fed, Rosengren, Boston, New York Times, Atlanta Fed, Senate, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Dallas
CNN —A university observatory in Russia has been inscribed onto the UNESCO World Heritage List. The astronomical observatories of Kazan Federal University, located in the city of Kazan, were added to the esteemed list on Monday as UNESCO’s World Heritage Committee continued its deliberations in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. New additionsEthiopia’s Bale Mountains National Park has been inscribed on the coveted UNESCO World Heritage List. ‘Outstanding universal value’Maison Carrée, an ancient Roman temple in Nîmes, southern France, was added to the World Heritage List. Dominique Marck/Ville de Nîmes/UNESCO World Heritage Nomination OfficeThe committee is to review the remaining nominations, which includes Ohio’s Hopewell Ceremonial Earthworks, over the next few days.
Persons: Bale, Daniel Rosengren, Ethiopia’s Bale, Mount Pelée, Maison Carrée, Dominique Marck, Sophia Cathedral, , CNN’s Marnie Hunter, Francesca Street Organizations: CNN, UNESCO, Kazan Federal University, Heritage Committee, Observatory, de Nîmes Locations: Russia, Kazan, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, France, Phrygia, Turkey, Gaya, South Korea, Denmark, Odzala, Congo, Mount, Martinique, Nîmes, Ukraine, Kyiv, Pechersk, Lviv
ABB invests $280 mln in new robotics factory in Sweden
  + stars: | 2023-09-13 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
The logo of ABB is seen at an office building in Zurich, Switzerland September 10, 2020. ABB, whose products range from industrial motors and drives, to chargers for electric vehicles, will build the new factory at its site in Vasteras, eastern Sweden. The new facility, due to open in 2026, will have 50% more production capacity than its old site and employ 1,300 people, ABB said. "The investment in our new campus is driven by customer demand and projected market growth," ABB CEO Björn Rosengren said in a statement. ABB said the European robotics and automation market is expected to grow by 7% per year between 2023 and the end of 2027, driven by companies bringing back production from Asia.
Persons: Arnd, Björn Rosengren, Joe Biden's, Sami Atiya, John Revill, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: ABB, REUTERS, Rights, Japan's Fanuc Corp, BMW, Scania, Volkswagen, Manufacturers, European Union, ABB’s Robotics, Thomson Locations: Zurich, Switzerland, Sweden, Swiss, Asia, Vasteras, European, United States, Washington, Beijing
The CEO of Swedish-Swiss multinational robotics firm ABB said he has been "disappointed" by the state of the Chinese market, adding he expects conditions will prove challenging for the rest of the year. "We are pretty pessimistic at the moment" on China, said Rosengren. With its machines embedded in so many major global companies' factories, the company's performance serves as something of a barometer for the health of the manufacturing sector — and the broader economy. ABB says it's the leading robotics player in the Chinese market, accounting for more than 90% of sales from locally-made products, solutions and services there. In the second quarter of 2023, ABB reported a 2% increase in orders on a comparable basis, to $8.7 billion.
Persons: Bjorn Rosengren, CNBC's Joumanna Bercetche, Rosengren, it's, It's, we'd Organizations: ABB Locations: Swiss, China, China's
U.S. crude futures climb over $2 late in session
  + stars: | 2023-08-31 | by ( Erwin Seba | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures for October settled at $83.63 a barrel, up $2, or 2.45%. Brent crude futures for October, expiring on Thursday, finished up $1, 1.16%, at $86.86 a barrel. "The crude market is reacting to OPEC production cuts being extended," said Andrew Lipow, president of Lipow Oil Associates. On Thursday, six-month U.S. crude oil futures traded as low as $3.83 below crude for front month delivery , the steepest discount since Nov. 17, signalling tight supplies and encouraging inventory draws. Analysts expect Saudi Arabia to extend a voluntary oil production cut of 1 million bpd into October, adding to cuts put in place by OPEC+.
Persons: Lucy Nicholson, Andrew Lipow, Brent, Ole Hansen, Eric Rosengren, Ahmad Ghaddar, Jeslyn Lerh, David Goodman, Nick Macfie, Paul Simao, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: REUTERS, bbl, Fed, Organization Petroleum Exporting, . West Texas, Brent, Lipow Oil Associates, U.S . Energy, Administration, OPEC, Saxo Bank, Commerce Department, Reserve, Boston Fed, National Bureau of Statistics, Thomson Locations: Bakersfield , California, Saudi Arabia, China, HOUSTON, U.S, Singapore
China is 'not developing as we hoped,' says ABB CEO
  + stars: | 2023-08-30 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailChina is 'not developing as we hoped,' says ABB CEOBjorn Rosengren, CEO of ABB, discusses the economic activity coming out of China going into the second half of the year.
Persons: Bjorn Rosengren Organizations: China, ABB Locations: China
[1/2] The logo of Swiss power technology and automation group ABB is seen at a plant in Baden, Switzerland January 28, 2019. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File PhotoSummaryCompanies Company increases orders by 2% on comparable basisChina orders fall 9%CEO sees customer activity remaining robustCore operating margin reaches highest levelZURICH, July 20 (Reuters) - ABB (ABBN.S) said customer activity remained "robust" during its second quarter despite the Swiss engineering company providing the latest evidence of an economic slowdown in China. Still, ABB increased its orders in the United States - its biggest market - and India, which helped offset the downturn as the company increased its overall order intake by 2%. Chief Executive Bjorn Rosengren highlighted how ABB, whose products range from electric motors for ships to drives used in factories, had increased orders from "last year's already high level." "It was good to see that the customer activity remained robust throughout the period," said Rosengren in a statement.
Persons: Arnd, Bjorn Rosengren, John Revill, Friederike Heine, Kim Coghill Organizations: ABB, REUTERS, Thomson Locations: Swiss, Baden, Switzerland, China, ZURICH, Germany, United States, India
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFmr. Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren: I expect an easing in labor market in second half of 2023Eric Rosengren, former Boston Fed President and MIT Golub Center visiting scholar, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's inflation fight, whether more interest rate hikes are in store, and more.
Persons: Eric Rosengren Organizations: Boston Fed, MIT Golub Center
While that's good for them, it also means "we're definitely moving towards a slowdown," one CFO said. "They are trying to fight a problem but there's evidence around the U.S. that says the economy is slowing. One concern voiced by CFOs is that the top end of the consumer market has been masking deeper problems in the economy, with companies tracking a rise in credit delinquencies, and that is now starting to spread. But inside major corporations, executives say they see signs of mounting trouble for the economy and as another interest rate hike looms, it may be time for the Fed to stop. While traders are betting on rate cuts before year-end, the CNBC Fed Survey shows a belief from economists and money managers that the Fed will hold rates higher for eight months.
The June hike is now off the table completely, and traders now see a 15% chance of the Fed not raising at all this week or in June. This is significant for the June 14 policy decision because the Fed also releases its new Summary of Economic Projections that day. The deposit flight may have stopped but Fed officials will be acutely aware of the negative feedback loop on the economy, given the deep-rooted linkages between small banks and businesses. The March survey of small businesses by the National Federation of Independent Business showed multiple signs of weakness, and even more attention than usual will fall on the next Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey. Will the Fed be raising rates on June 14 if this is still a live issue?
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHere's why former Boston Fed president Eric Rosengren would veto a 25 basis point hikeEric Rosengren, former Boston Fed president and visiting MIT scholar, joins 'Squawk Box' to preview the Fed's two-day policy meeting, and explains why he would veto a 25 basis point hike.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailABB CEO: Saw highest first-quarter performance in company's historyBjörn Rosengren, CEO of ABB, lauds the company's highest first-quarter performance in history and weighs in on potential IPOs and the outlook for the rest of the year.
The real-estate sector has also been hard hit by Fed rate rises and commercial real estate has also been hobbled by the shift away from in-office work during the pandemic. Rechler serves as what’s called a Class B director on the 12-person panel of private citizens who oversee the New York Fed. Each of the quasi-private regional Fed banks are also operated under the oversight of the Fed’s Board of Governors in Washington, which is explicitly part of the government. The boards overseeing each of the regional Fed banks are made up of a mix of bankers, business and non-profit leaders. Their most visible role is helping regional Fed banks find new presidents, although bankers who serve as directors are by law not part of this process.
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