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CNN —Tommy Hilfiger has set the stage for a new chapter at his eponymous megabrand — and he did so by coming home. Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior/Tommy Hilfiger In photos: Looks from Tommy Hilfiger's "elevated" Fall-Winter 2024 fashion show Prev NextFrom streetwear to sailing gear to sporty and preppy, often with a frisson of celebrity, it’s this lifestyle-driven approach, which is perhaps less about the fashion than it is the feeling, that is the key to Hilfiger’s modern — and continued — success. Elliot Grainge and Sofia Richie Grainge attend Hilfiger's show. Richie Grainge herself has evolved her stylistic approach from an ostentatious Los Angeleno verve into a look that’s more low-key highbrow. “Sofia is a style icon, and she’s also just an incredible person.”Gigi Hadid and Tommy Hilfiger walk the runway at the Tommy Hilfiger's Fall-Winter 2018 show during Milan Fashion Week on February 25, 2018.
Persons: Tommy Hilfiger, , Hilfiger, , ” Tommy Hilfiger, Robert R, McElroy, à, Filippo Fior, Tommy Hilfiger Filippo Fior, Tommy Hilfiger's, Sofia Richie Grainge, Tommy, Damson Idris, Sonam Kampoor, Noah Beck, Jacob Rott, Chris Appleton, Halima Aden, Jasmine Tookes, Elsa Hosk, Elliot Grainge, Rob Berry, Kelly Rutherford, Lily van der, Blake Lively, Serena, Richie Grainge, ” Hilfiger, , she’ll, Gigi Hadid, she’s, ” Gigi Hadid, Daniele Venturelli, Richie, we’ve, We’ve, Thomas Iannaccone, Corey Tenold, Hilfiger’s, NYFW, ebullience Organizations: CNN, Oyster, Grand Central, New, Hilfiger, HBO, Warner Bros ., verve, Milan, Penske Media, New York Locations: New York, Madison, New York City, , Sofia, “ Sofia, American
Morning Bid: Small caps pick up baton, China rating hit
  + stars: | 2023-12-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +6 min
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., September 26, 2023. The likes of Microsoft (MSFT.O), Apple (AAPL.O), Nvidia (NVDA.O) and Amazon (AMZN.O) fell back over 1%, pressured by a modest bounceback in U.S. Treasury yields. China's blue-chip stocks slumped to their lowest since February 2019 amid fears of a possible cut to China's sovereign credit rating cut after Moody's outlook reduction. By Mike Dolan, Editing by Bernadette Baum; <a href="mailto:mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com" target="_blank">mike.dolan@thomsonreuters.com</a>Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Mike Dolan, Russell, that's, Moody's, Isabel Schnabel, Michael Gibson, Christine Laggard, Mongo, Zero Fox, Bernadette Baum Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Reserve, Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Treasury, Reserve Bank of Australia, Central Bank, Reuters, ECB, Barclays, Qatar, P Global, Federal, Division, Supervision, Financial Innovation, Descartes Systems, Health, Powell Industries, Dave, Buster's Entertainment, Reuters Graphics, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Global, York, Treasuries, Europe
Australia pick up the pace before India showdown
  + stars: | 2023-11-17 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Nov 17 (Reuters) - Australia head into their World Cup decider against India with all pieces in place following a devastating return to form of their vaunted pace attack in the South Africa semi-final. "It's probably not been the tournament I would have liked from the get-go," Starc told reporters. "It's huge, and the bigger the game the more important it becomes," said Hazlewood of capturing early wickets. Australia beat England in Ahmedabad on a pitch which Hazlewood described as good "without being an absolute flat track". He said he expected similar for the final but was confident Australia's quicks would be able to deal with any conditions.
Persons: Mitchell Starc, Josh Hazlewood, Pat Cummins, Starc, Hazlewood, legspinner Adam Zampa, India's peerless, It's, Pace, Aaron Finch's, Glenn Maxwell, Australia's quicks, Zealand's pacemen, Rohit Sharma, Shubman Gill, Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, We've, they've, we've, Ian Ransom Organizations: India, United Arab Emirates, UAE, New, Australia, England, Thomson Locations: Australia, South Africa, Kolkata, New Zealand, Mumbai ., India, Mumbai, Ahmedabad, Melbourne
WeWork seeks bankruptcy protectionLIMITED EXPOSUREWeWork's dramatic fall followed lavish predictions about its prospects from SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son, despite immense losses as it grew. Still, it had a credit support deal with the company worth $1.1 billion as of end-June. MST Financial analyst David Gibson said the credit support was significant, but it was not clear how much of it had been withdrawn. SoftBank declined to comment on the credit support. SoftBank owns around 71% of WeWork, which it privately valued at $47 billion at its peak but is now valued at just $44 million.
Persons: SoftBank, Adam Neumann, Neumann, WeWork, Masayoshi Son, Son, David Gibson, Anton Bridge, David Dolan, Miyoung Kim, Mark Potter Organizations: Thomson Locations: TOKYO
PinnedIt’s been a slow, bumpy road, but the labor market appears to be rounding itself into a more familiar shape. “Right now a good characterization of the labor market would be ‘normalizing’ rather than ‘slowing,’” said Agron Nicaj, an economist with the Japanese bank MUFG. Most of that is a reversion to historical averages — a “normalization,” as Mr. Nicaj prefers to call it. “Strong profit margins have allowed companies to maintain employment,” Mr. Nicaj said. “When you do see that shrinking, that’s a pretty strong signal that at some point you’re going to see job losses.”
Persons: It’s, ’ ”, Agron Nicaj, Nicaj, , ” Mr, Locations: Silicon Valley
Morning Bid: Business brakes in June swoon, dollar jumps
  + stars: | 2023-06-23 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike DolanJust as world stock prices raced ahead this month, broader business activity appeared to be stalling again. Equivalent Japanese and British surveys also showed sub-forecast growth and markets nervously await the U.S. version later on Friday. The dollar was the big market mover - surging into the weekend against Asia and European currencies. Inflation is falling faster, real wage growth is back positive, the jobs market is loosening slightly and housing is rebounding somewhat. So even as stock prices have come off the year's highs, the VIX (.VIX) implied volatility gauge continues to fall away - closing below 13 on Thursday for the first time since January 2020.
Persons: Mike Dolan, Jerome Powell, Wall, Powell's, Raphael Bostic, James Bullard, Loretta Mester, Jane Merriman Organizations: Asia, Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Swiss National Bank, Brent, Japan's, Swiss, Atlanta Federal Reserve, St Louis Fed, Cleveland Fed, Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics, Thomson, Reuters Locations: U.S, Europe, Shanghai, Asia, United States
Evercore ISI's Julian Emanuel wrote that market momentum can continue despite the latest Fed news. And he wrote that the capitulation of record shorts in today's market is a warning sign as well. If they rise to over 300,000 a week and stay there, then today's momentum market might be coming to an end. "Timing whether this is the beginning, middle or end of a Momentum Market is extraordinarily difficult," Emanuel wrote. The 16 stocks Emanuel uncovered that could outperform as today's momentum market continues are below.
Persons: Evercore, Julian Emanuel, Emanuel, they'll, that's, Russell Organizations: Evercore ISI, Big Tech, Nasdaq, American Association of
Microsoft's market capitalization climbed to an unprecedented $2.59 trillion Thursday as its stock extended gains. The tech giant's shares have rallied more than 45% so far this year, buoyed by the investor frenzy over AI-related stocks. Microsoft has been viewed as one of the lead adopters of AI technology among software companies. Sign up for our newsletter to get the inside scoop on what traders are talking about — delivered daily to your inbox. Microsoft's stock has extended its year-to-date rally to over 45%.
Persons: Organizations: Microsoft, Service, JPMorgan, Reuters, Tech, Federal Reserve, Nvidia, Nasdaq Locations: Friday's
Similarly, the U.S. economy and stock markets tend to outperform during booms and draw in overseas investment that lifts demand for dollars. Surely times of great banking and credit stress should boost the greenback? And now we face a bout of severe banking stress alongside stubbornly high inflation that had almost all major central banks raising interest rates again over the past week despite the pretty clear underlying credit stress. JPMorgan's take on the stressed side of the dollar smile last week pointed out that "the underlying macro-financial pathology that necessitates lower yields is the primary determinant of dollar direction". Clearly, the dollar smile is no laughing matter.
The Act states the Fed should conduct monetary policy "so as to promote effectively the goals of maximum employment, stable prices, and moderate long-term interest rates." On that basis, the average core PCE inflation rate since 2010 is exactly 2.0% - even after the recent scare and with the monthly rate ebbing again fast. At 1.25%, real 10-year yields - measured by market inflation expectations rather than prevailing inflation - are far above sub-zero post-pandemic troughs and are also some of the highest in over a decade. And hence the cat and mouse game between Fedspeak and market pricing - rather than a material change to investors' assumption that the Fed is nearly done. U.S. Fed has missed the mark on inflationThe opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
Morning bid: Tech tonic, recession rethink
  + stars: | 2023-01-24 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
Pumped-up hopes for U.S. tech sector earnings in a heavy week for corporate updates generally have twinned with the latest sign Europe may have dodged a winter recession. With Microsoft in view, attention will be on the extent for cost cutting and job shedding in the tech and digital space. Music-streamer Spotify (SPOT.N) rose 2% on Monday as it joined a growing list of tech firms to announce staff cuts, shedding 6% of its workforce. Reports of Ford's F.N plan to cut 3,200 workers in Europe shows job attrition may not be confined to tech sector. Whether that's just too rosy and markets have yet to price a full-blown earnings recession is this year's big question.
Morning Bid: Bonds lap up crude, costs and Canada
  + stars: | 2022-12-08 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
The big consensus bet of 2023 is already in full swing - bonds are bid. With year-on-year oil price gains evaporating to zero, that is dragging inflation expectations down in lockstep. The exception was in Hong Kong, which the Hang Seng benchmark (.HSI) has now recouped all this year's underperformance versus world indices and the S&P500. The Hang Seng added another 3% on Thursday as the Hong Kong government loosened its COVID-19 curbs further. The isolation period for patients and contacts will be cut to five days from seven days and requirements for arrivals to Hong Kong to undergo daily tests will similarly be reduced to five days.
Blackstone gets a slap from efficient markets
  + stars: | 2022-12-08 | by ( Jonathan Guilford | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +9 min
NEW YORK, Dec 8 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Private markets seemed, for a while, the perfect antidote to the weirdness of public markets. Those models typically move much more slowly than the rapidly changing prices served up by public markets. These charms became much more potent during the stresses of Covid-19, when it became clear that public markets are not always a ruthlessly efficient price-discovery mechanism. RESILIENCE OR INTRANSIGENCECovid briefly scrambled the world, but bigger changes are coming that may scramble the calculus for private markets. During Covid, public markets seemed backward-looking, overreacting to the present moment while private markets were able to focus on the future.
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