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The functioning of Russia's stock market is an illusion, two Yale researchers told Insider. That apparently stellar performance of the Russian stock market this year is ultimately an illusion meant to mask deepening pain in the country's economy. It's a move that was intended to prop up Russia's stock market, the researchers said. "The Russian stock market performance is very misleading, It is a Roach Motel of assets," Sonnenfeld told Insider. Other experts have warned of more pain for Russia's economy as its costly war in Ukraine drags on.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Steven Tian, Ukraine haven't, that's, Tian, Sonnenfeld, Putin Organizations: Yale, Investments, Service, Yale School of Management, Putin, Levada Locations: Wall, Silicon, Moscow, Russia, Ukraine, Poland, Baltic, Russian, Armenia, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan
Palo Alto Networks — Shares of the cybersecurity company edged 1.8% lower in premarket trading Friday. Palo Alto Networks' fiscal fourth-quarter earnings are expected to come out Friday afternoon. Analysts surveyed by FactSet's StreetAccount called for $1.96 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $1.29. The company reported adjusted earning per share of 7 cents, while analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had forecast a loss of 4 cents per share. The electronic design company said it anticipates adjusted earnings of $1.83 to $1.89 per share on revenue of $1.29 billion to $1.31 billion.
Persons: FactSet's StreetAccount, Alibaba, PDD, Nio, Estee Lauder —, Estee Lauder, Refinitiv, Keysight, Jeffrey Smith's, — CNBC's Michelle Fox Theobald, Jesse Pound Organizations: Palo Alto, Palo Alto Networks, Ross, Ross Stores, Refinitiv . Revenue, Technologies, Street Journal
A Moscow court has banned UBS and Credit Suisse from disposing of shares in their Russian subsidiaries. Russia witnessed an exodus of Western companies after it invaded Ukraine. A Moscow court has banned two major Swiss banks — UBS and Credit Suisse — from trying to wriggle their way out of their Russian subsidiaries, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing court documents. Moscow-based Zenit Bank requested the ban, citing concerns about losing money should the two Swiss banks exit, per the news agency. Zenit also requested the court to seize funds belonging to UBS and Credit Suisse, but the application was not granted, per Reuters.
Persons: UBS —, Vladimir Putin, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld Organizations: UBS, Credit Suisse, Zenit Bank ., Service, Credit Suisse —, Reuters, Zenit Bank, Zenit, Carlsberg, Danone, Yale School of Management Locations: Moscow, Zenit Bank . Russia, Ukraine, Wall, Silicon, Russia, Intergrain, Luxembourg, Russian
Starboard Value's Jeffrey Smith has called artificial intelligence "an enormous opportunity," and there are hints of his enthusiasm in his latest, quarterly 13F filing to SEC. The activist investor drastically increased his stake in Wix.com , making it his ninth-biggest holding at the end of June. The hedge fund manager said there's more room for Salesforce to grow and the stock can rally another 30% on the back of the AI boom. Nine years later he spun out his New York-based hedge fund and became the CEO. The hedge fund manager also added a relatively small stake in British life science company Abcam PLC last quarter.
Persons: Jeffrey Smith, Wix.com, Smith, There's, blockchain, there's, Splunk Organizations: SEC, Acacia Research, CNBC, Abcam Locations: Wix.com, Salesforce, New York
“No way I can get a fair trial, or even close to a fair trial, in Washington, D.C. Several January 6 defendants have argued that there’s been too much pretrial publicity in DC for a fair trial and that the jury pool in the city would be too biased. Still, Trump attorney John Lauro on Sunday cast doubt on the idea that Trump could receive a fair trial in the nation’s capital. Former Vice President Mike Pence, who recently made his sharpest condemnation of Trump, told CBS on Sunday he “would hope” Trump can receive a fair trial in Washington. That’s one reason why the January 6 defendants’ trials have gone forward without delay even though so many attempted to move their cases out of Washington, DC.
Persons: Donald Trump, ” Trump, Trump –, there’s, Roger Stone, Richard Nixon, Trump, John Lauro, ” Lauro, CNN’s Dana, Lauro, , I’m, Trump’s, Chris Christie, Bash, ” Christie, Mike Pence, Jeffrey Skilling, Tsarnaev Organizations: CNN, DC, Capitol, Democratic, , Court, CBS, Union, District of Columbia, Sunday, Enron, Boston Marathon Locations: Washington ,, Washington, DC, West Virginia, “ State, New Jersey, Houston, Boston
Veteran banker Jeffrey Schmid picked to lead Kansas City Fed
  + stars: | 2023-08-02 | by ( Jeff Cox | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Jeffrey Schmid, the new president and CEO of the Kansas City Fed. The Kansas City Federal Reserve is about to get a new leader as the inflation-fighting central bank plots its course ahead. Schmid will serve the remainder of George's five-year term helming the Kansas City Fed, which will take him to Feb. 28, 2026. Interestingly, he arrives at the Fed just before the Kansas City district hosts its annual Jackson Hole summit, which this year will run from Aug. 24-26. The retreat features a keynote address from the Fed chair and often is pivotal in laying out policy strategy.
Persons: Jeffrey Schmid, Jeffrey R, Schmid, Esther George, Southern Methodist University's, Maria Griego, George, Jackson Organizations: Kansas City Fed, Kansas City Federal, Southern Methodist, Southern Methodist University's Cox School of Business, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Mutual, Omaha Bank, Federal Reserve, Associates, Fed, Kansas City Locations: Omaha, Raby, Albuquerque , New Mexico, Kansas
Starboard Value's Jeffrey Smith has been one of the busiest activist investors over the last two decades, best known for his proxy fights in the restaurant space. Darden shares saw a nearly 60% jump under Smith's activism, from October 2014 to April 2016. After Darden, Smith sought a turnaround at pizza chain Papa Johns , taking a $200 million stake in the company and becoming chairman in 2019. Smith took an activist stake in software company Salesforce last year. The Starboard CEO was even active during the Covid pandemic, calling for changes at Humana, Kohl's, Mercury Systems and other companies.
Persons: Jeffrey Smith, Smith, Darden, Papa, John Schnatter Organizations: Olive, Darden, Wharton grad, Mercury Systems Locations: New York
LONDON/SYDNEY, July 31 (Reuters) - Commercial real estate investors and lenders are slowly confronting an ugly question - if people never again shop in malls or work in offices the way they did before the pandemic, how safe are the fortunes they piled into bricks and mortar? WALL OF DEBTGlobal banks hold about half of the $6 trillion outstanding commercial real estate debt, Moody's Investors Service said in June, with the largest share maturing in 2023-2026. U.S. banks revealed spiralling losses from property in their first half figures and warned of more to come. Borrowers in the UK real estate holding & development category were 4% more likely to default. But the whale could be commercial real estate in the U.S.".
Persons: Richard Murphy, Jeffrey Sherman, Charles, Henry Monchau, Bank Syz, Jones Lang LaSalle, Savills, JLL, Dhara Ranasinghe, Huw Jones, Clare Jim, Kirsten Donovan Organizations: Employers, UK's Sheffield University, Reuters, Investors, Moody's Investors Service, Fed, Federal, Bank, Suisse, Washington D.C, HSBC, Capital Economics, Thomson Locations: SYDNEY, London, Los Angeles and New York, U.S, New York, Beijing, San Francisco, Tokyo, Washington, Shanghai, North America, Hong Kong
The US economy is barreling toward a serious recession, DoubleLine Capital's Jeffrey Sherman says. Sherman predicts an embattled Fed will cut interest rates by a whole percentage point in response. "A multitude of economic indicators we look at are flashing either warning or recessionary signals," Jeffrey Sherman told Bloomberg. "The bond market is telling the Fed that they've overtightened and they will have to cut rates," Sherman said. "I think one signal to watch now is the rising default rate within the loan market," Sherman noted.
Persons: DoubleLine Capital's Jeffrey Sherman, Sherman, Jeffrey Gundlach, DoubleLine, Jeffrey Sherman, He's Organizations: Service, Federal Reserve, Bloomberg, Fed Locations: Wall, Silicon
London CNN —When Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, a slew of Western companies left in protest. Companies now find themselves caught between Western sanctions and public outrage on the one hand, and an increasingly hostile Russian government on the other. The Kremlin is making it more difficult for Western firms to sell their Russian assets — and imposing steep discounts and punitive taxes when they do. Both companies had been finalizing sales to local buyers when President Vladimir Putin signed an order nationalizing their local assets earlier this month. Spurred by sweeping Western sanctions, oil companies, automakers, technology firms, consultancies and banks led the initial wave of departures.
Persons: , Vladimir Putin, Carlsberg, Maria Shagina, Andrey Rudakov, Konstantin Zavrazhin, Hein Schumacher, Schumacher, , ” Procter, Gamble, ” Mondelez, Fortum Oyj, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, ” Sonnenfeld, — Olesya Dmitracova Organizations: London CNN, Nestlé, Heineken, Companies, Danone, Carlsberg, Breweries, International Institute for Strategic Studies, CNN, Bloomberg, Getty, Yale University, Yale, Unilever, UL, Procter, Gamble, Treasury, Foreign, Control, Carlsberg — Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Lyubuchany, Rosneft, Moscow, Russian
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTD Cowen President Jeff Solomon: Expected more disruption from the Fed's aggressive rate strategyTD Cowen President Jeffrey Solomon joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss Solomon's worries with liquidity, Solomon's expectations for the Federal Reserve's next moves, and more.
Persons: Cowen, Jeff Solomon, Jeffrey Solomon Organizations: Federal
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Persons: Dow Jones
China imported 2.13 million barrels per day of Russian crude in the first half of 2023. Russia so far this year has been the top oil supplier to China, peaking at 2.57 million barrels a day in June. Over the last six months, China imported 11.4 million barrels per day of crude, an 11.7% jump from the same time last year according to Financial Times data. Of that, 2.13 million barrels a day came from Russia, with those imports peaking to 2.57 million in June. Chinese customs data cited by the FT implies that Russian barrels have come cheaper than those from other OPEC+ nations since the start of the war in Ukraine.
Persons: Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Vladimir Putin, Mikhail Korostikov, Xi Jinping Organizations: Service, Privacy, Financial Times, United Arab Locations: China, Russia, Wall, Silicon, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Malaysia, United Arab Emirates, Oman, Brazil, Ukraine, Moscow, Beijing
BlackRock named Aramco CEO Amin Nasser to its board Monday. Nasser leads the world's largest oil producer, which is mainly owned by the Saudi Arabian state. Its decision to name Aramco CEO Amin Nasser to its board Monday provides further ammunition for those critics, signaling that the firm might not be as socially conscious as it says it is. That is the wrong player here, unless [BlackRock CEO] Larry Fink really wants to blur their image on the ESG front," Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, the Yale professor and management expert, said on CNBC Tuesday. Amin H. Nasser, president and chief executive officer of Saudi Arabian Oil Company (Saudi Aramco), speaks at the China Development Forum in Beijing, China, March 19, 2017.
Persons: Amin Nasser, Nasser, Larry Fink's, it's, Larry Fink, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Biden, Jamal Khashoggi, He'll, that's, Amin H, Shu Zhang, Reuters Fink, BlackRock's, It's, Fink, he'd Organizations: BlackRock, Aramco, Yale, CNBC, Washington Post, Saudi Arabian Oil Company, China Development Forum, Reuters, McKinsey, Republican Locations: Saudi Arabian, Saudi Arabia, Saudi, Saudi Aramco, Beijing, China, Massachusetts
Smith has not tipped his hand over what charges Trump could face. Former Trump lawyer Ty Cobb told CNN’s Erin Burnett on Tuesday that any potential indictment relating to election interference ought to be viewed as a particularly historic stain. How a new indictment could impact the GOP presidential raceThe possibility of another indictment against Trump also raises new political questions. “If you notice recently, President Trump went up in the polls and was actually surpassing President Biden for reelection. A third indictment would also further fuse Trump’s legal campaign and political one.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jack Smith’s, Smith, who’s, , , ” Trump, Joe Biden, , Trump’s, Ty Cobb, CNN’s Erin Burnett, ” Cobb, J, Michael Luttig, Jack Smith, ” Luttig, Jeffrey Sloman, Dana Nessel, CNN’s Jake Tapper, Ron DeSantis, we’ll, I’ll, ” DeSantis, Nikki Haley, ” Haley, Kevin McCarthy –, Biden, ” McCarthy, he’s, he’d, Hillary, Aileen Cannon, Cannon, David Harbach Organizations: CNN, Justice Department, GOP, Democratic, Congress, Trump, Law, Southern, Southern District of, Democrat, Wolverine State, Florida Gov, ” Former South Carolina Gov, Fox News, Republican, Capitol, Oval, Republican National Convention Locations: Manhattan, Lago, Florida, Iowa, United States, Southern District, Southern District of Florida, , Trump’s, Georgia, Trump
Yale data shared with Insider illustrate that China is now Russia's largest import and export partner. Thousands of companies have pulled out of Russia in the last year and that's made Moscow increasingly reliant on Beijing. Yale figures shared with Insider shows that China is now Russia's largest import and export partner by a big margin, but the relationship is heavily lopsided. By comparison, Russia is the 11th largest importer of Chinese goods, with the US, Hong Kong, and Japan taking in far more as China's three biggest trade partners. China and Russia have an asymmetric trade relationship.
Persons: that's, That's, Vladimir Putin's, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Russia's, Geely, Putin, Putin isn't, Xi Jinping, Mikhail Korostikov Organizations: Yale, Service, Bank of Locations: China, Russia, Moscow, Beijing, Wall, Silicon, Ukraine, Germany, Hong Kong, Japan, Russian, Bank of Russia
Russia's economy is going from bad to worse as Western sanctions hammer the country's key sectors. From plunging car sales to a dramatic collapse in its current-account surplus, there's no way to hide Moscow's troubles. Some have even blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for inflicting so much pain on the nation, with Yale researchers saying he's "cannibalizing" Russia's economy in his urge to conquer Ukraine. Insider's Phil Rosen reported that car sales in Moscow have tanked by nearly 75% since the Ukraine war broke out. Plunging exportsAnother sign that Russia's economy is flailing is the dramatic collapse in its current-account balance.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, he's, Putin, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Steven Tian, Insider's Phil Rosen, Tian, Konstantin Sonin, Wagner Organizations: Service, Yale, Energy, Russia's Finance Ministry, University of Chicago Locations: Russia, Wall, Silicon, Ukraine, Russian, Moscow
Russia's foreign minister urged Southeast Asian countries to trade with Russia using local currencies. urged Southeast Asian countries to trade with Russia using local currencies. Even President Vladimir Putin championed the use of local currencies for trade in recent weeks. Russia's trade with Southeast Asia fell 4.4% in 2022 amid sweeping sanctions against Moscow. Russia's trade with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations — a 10-country intergovernmental bloc — fell by 4.4% in 2022 from a year ago.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, it's, Sergey Lavrov, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Steven Tian, Phil Rosen, Lavrov, Kompas Organizations: Moscow, Service, Association of Southeast, Yale, Russia, Bank of International Locations: Russia, Southeast Asia, Wall, Silicon, Moscow, Indonesia, Nations, Ukraine, Russian, Indonesian, Europe
July 13 (Reuters) - The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved the first over-the-counter contraceptive pill, paving the way for millions of women in the country to purchase birth control without prescription. Perrigo will next week share its pricing plan for the pill, which will be available in stores and online in the first quarter of next year. Women should take a progestin-only pill within the same three hours every day to avoid pregnancy. The National Catholic Bioethics Center and other groups have opposed making Opill available without prescription, saying physicians should be involved in health decisions, especially for teenagers, along with parental supervision, to avoid harm. Perrigo gained the daily-use pill first through its $2.13 billion acquisition of Paris-based HRA Pharma in 2021.
Persons: Roe, Wade, Xavier Becerra, Opill, Jeffrey Singer, Perrigo, Manas Mishra, Sriparna Roy, Arun Koyyur Organizations: U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Perrigo, Human Services, Cato Institute, FDA, Catholic Bioethics Center, HRA Pharma, Thomson Locations: U.S, Paris, Bengaluru
Geopolitical tension is the biggest risk to companies' bottom lines right now said Columbia University economics professor, Jeffrey Sachs. We should negotiate a peace in Ukraine," Sachs told CNBC. He said issues between China, Ukraine and Russia are major reasons why global profitability is low. Trade conflict between the U.S. and China is strained due to a history involving tariffs, tech rivalry and alleged spying. As a result, the U.S. government is dismantling long-standing supply chain relationships with China, creating supply shocks.
Persons: Jeffrey Sachs, Sachs, we're Organizations: Columbia University, CNBC, U.S Locations: U.S, Ukraine, China, Russia, United States
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHow China, Russia, AI, and inflation threaten economic stability: Jeffrey SachsGeopolitical tensions with China, the U.S. and Russia will continue to hurt the economy, says Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Center for Sustainable Development. In this episode of "The Bottom Line," Sachs explains key risks for companies including climate change, inflation and productivity.
Persons: Jeffrey Sachs, Sachs Organizations: Center for Sustainable Development Locations: China, Russia, U.S
Heineken, Sbarro Pizza, TGI Fridays, WeWork, and other companies are still doing business in Russia, investigators found. Investigators downgraded a list of companies, including WeWork, Shell, Heineken, tobacco giant Philip Morris, Mondelez — the maker of Oreos —, Carl's Jr., TGI Fridays, and Sbarro Pizza. Huntsman Corporation, a chemical giant founded by the father of Ambassador Jon Huntsman, said it has working hard to leave the Russian market. The entire list of companies that have left the Russian market can be seen here. A condensed list of the companies that have been downgraded after promising to leave Russia can be read here.
Persons: Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, expeditiously, Philip Morris, Mondelez, Oreos, Carl's Jr, Carl's, Shell, Jon Huntsman, Gary Chapman, Sonnenfeld, Vladimir Putin Organizations: Yale, Heineken, Service, CNN, Investigators, Shell, Huntsman Corporation, Huntsman Locations: Russia, Wall, Silicon, Ukraine, Shell, Heineken, Russian, South Africa
WASHINGTON, July 8 (Reuters) - A Tennessee law prohibiting doctors from providing medical care such as puberty-blockers and gender affirming surgery for transgender minors can go into effect immediately, a U.S. appeals court ruled Saturday. Tennessee's law is part of a growing series of efforts by Republican lawmakers to impose new restrictions on medical care for transgender youths. The appeals court's decision Saturday said that absent a clear showing that Tennessee's law violated the Constitution, choices about medical care and protecting minors are best settled by state legislatures. Judge Helen White said she believed Tennessee's law "is likely unconstitutional" as a type of sex discrimination. Sutton wrote that the appeals court will try to reach a final decision about Tennessee's law by Sept. 30.
Persons: construing, Jeffrey Sutton, Lawmakers, Helen White, Sutton, Brad Heath, Daniel Wallis Organizations: U.S, Appeals, Sixth Circuit, . Constitution, Republican, Thomson Locations: Tennessee, U.S, .
‘An economy that is hemorrhaging’Western sanctions have not delivered a deathblow to the Russian economy. Some, including economist Larry Summers, argue that economic penalties on Russia haven’t bitten as hard as anticipated because not enough countries have imposed sanctions. Others, like Yale professor Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, say sanctions are “working tremendously” well against Russia. Petraeus praised the Treasury Department’s “very impressive” sanctions campaign, led by Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo. But the former CIA chief noted the complexity involved in modern sanctions, where target countries often find ways to evade restrictions.
Persons: Vladimir Putin, David Petraeus, “ Putin, ” Petraeus, month’s Wagner, Petraeus, Putin, , “ They’ve, Larry Summers, Russia haven’t, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, ” Sonnenfeld, Wally Adeyemo, , Biden, Washington hasn’t, , you’re Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, KKR Global Institute, Reuters, US Central Command, CIA, Yale, KKR Locations: New York, Washington, Moscow, Russian, Europe, Russia, “ Russia, Ukraine, Kyiv
The Supreme Court has banned colleges from using race as admission criteria, essentially ending affirmative action. WSJ explains how what happened then can offer a roadmap for what could happen now. / Photo Illustration: Madeline MarshallCollege admissions is a data-driven industry. In any given year, that might mean a wider geographic reach, higher GPAs, more full payers and, in many cases, greater racial and ethnic diversity. At selective colleges, where seats are limited and applications plentiful, admissions deans make a variety of trade-offs as they craft a class—this many low-income students but that many legacies, or this average SAT score but that much diversity.
Organizations: Madeline Marshall Locations: California
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