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A view of the exterior of the China International Exhibition Center (Shunyi Hall), venue for the second China International Supply Chain Expo (CISCE), on November 26, 2024 in Beijing, China. American business leaders are in China this week for meetings with officials and a high-profile supply chain expo as trade threats from a second Donald Trump presidency mount. Among them is Apple CEO Tim Cook, who will be in attendance for the second annual 'China International Supply Chain Expo,' which kicked off Tuesday. Ahead of the expo, the CEO met with Chinese Premier Li Qiang alongside other top executives from global companies, the American Chamber of Commerce in China said in a social media post. Organized by the China International Exhibition Center Group, the second CISCE expo will focus on key supply chains, such as advanced manufacturing, green and digital technology as well as supply chain services.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tim Cook, We're, Cook, Premier Li Qiang Organizations: China International Exhibition, China, Chain, Apple, China International, Premier, American Chamber of Commerce, CNBC, Corning, Rio Tinto, Lenovo, China International Exhibition Center Locations: Beijing, China, American, Rio
CNBC's Jim Cramer told investors not to write off Big Tech megacap stocks, some of which were able to jump on Tuesday after recent declines. Cramer reviewed the action in stocks including Apple , Amazon , Nvidia , Microsoft and Meta . According to Cramer, Apple and Amazon are reaping the rewards of two positive analyst notes, with Bank of America praising the latter's e-commerce and online advertising businesses. Cramer was less certain about the reasons for Tuesday's wins in Meta and Microsoft. "Here's the bottom line: don't begrudge the megacaps," Cramer said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Morgan Stanley, Tim Cook's, Donald Trump Organizations: Big Tech, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Bank of America, President Locations: China
AdvertisementApple CEO Tim Cook is visiting China for the third time this year. Cook attended discussions focused on supply chain and trade issues, per Bloomberg. Apple CEO Tim Cook is visiting China for at least the third time this year as the tech giant prepares for president-elect Donald Trump's proposed import tariffs and the impact on global trade. AdvertisementAccording to Bloomberg, the discussion was focused on supply chain and trade issues. AdvertisementCook has made at least three public appearances in China this year to show his commitment to the country.
Persons: Tim Cook, Cook, Donald Trump's, Premier Li Qiang, Trump Organizations: Bloomberg, Apple, Premier, Beijing, Trump, Companies, China Central Television, Huawei Locations: China, Beijing
AdvertisementApple CEO Tim Cook is visiting China for the third time this year. Cook attended discussions focused on supply chain and trade issues, per Bloomberg. Apple CEO Tim Cook is visiting China for at least the third time this year as the tech giant prepares for president-elect Donald Trump's proposed import tariffs and the impact on global trade. AdvertisementAccording to Bloomberg, the discussion was focused on supply chain and trade issues. AdvertisementCook has made at least three public appearances in China this year to show his commitment to the country.
Persons: Tim Cook, Cook, Donald Trump's, Premier Li Qiang, Trump Organizations: Bloomberg, Apple, Premier, Beijing, Trump, Companies, China Central Television, Huawei Locations: China, Beijing
AdvertisementHuawei is set to launch its new line of Mate 70 phones on Tuesday. It marks a new era of self-sufficiency at a moment of tech division between the US and China. On Tuesday, the Shenzhen-based tech giant is set to unveil a slate of new smartphones — the Mate 70 series — that will be the most free they have ever been of Western software and hardware. The Huawei Mate 60. Depending on the success of the Mate 70 phones, that gap could widen in the months ahead.
Persons: Donald Trump, Joe Biden's, Trump, , Wang Gang, Beijing's mandarins, Tim Cook, Steve Jobs Organizations: Huawei, Wall Street, Kirin, Bloomberg, Apple Locations: China, Shenzhen, Washington
Opinion | Flattery as Trump Management Strategy
  + stars: | 2024-11-23 | by ( Katherine Miller | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
One of the things that has been clear with Donald Trump’s win this time is how different it is: no shock wave jolting society. This is, according to polling, one of the presidential election outcomes most widely accepted as legitimate of the past 25 years. On the public level, we’re back in business in some way, back to an earlier pre-Trump era of normal relations, strategic silence, public deference and an antiseptic corporate friendliness — a bit of flattery, at times, for Mr. Trump. Tim Cook, the Apple C.E.O., wrote on X on Nov. 6: “Congratulations President Trump on your victory! “We didn’t see eye-to-eye on a lot of issues and we told him so,” Joe Scarborough said.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump, Biden, Tim Cook, ” Phil Murphy, he’ll, Joe ”, , Joe Scarborough, ” Mika Brzezinski Organizations: Mr, Apple, Democratic New Locations: United States, Democratic New Jersey
AdvertisementTrump's proposed tariffs could raise costs for hardware startups making physical goods. Hardware startups rely on a host of manufacturers that are mostly based in China. When China-based manufacturers ship the final products back, the hardware startups may get hit with levees of up to 60 percent on goods from China, according to Trump's statements during his campaign. AdvertisementThe impact on startups: 'We're done here'In the aftermath of Trump's election win, euphoria is sweeping through the business world. AdvertisementHe said he's worried about the potential for Trump tariffs to spark a recession.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Nikhil Basu Trivedi, Jared Friedman, Combinator, Friedman, Graham Anderson, Marc Andreessen, Elon Musk, Bradley Tusk, Santosh Sankar, Trump's, Tim Cook, Cook, Donald Trump, Ivanka Trump, Steven Mnuchin, Mandel Ngan, Alan Deardorff, Trump, Deardorff, he'll, Lea Suzuki, Spencer Penn, Tesla, Penn, , Chris Van Dyke's, he's, Van Dyke Organizations: Investors, Elon, Washington Post, Washington, Dynamo Ventures, Apple, Trump, Mac, Getty, Big Tech, University of Michigan, Tesla, San Francisco Locations: China, Asia, When China, Flexport, Austin , Texas, AFP, Fremont , California, Europe
Munster, managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, said he isn't holding his breath for an Apple TV. Munster said it's still a "painful topic" since he spent a lot of time looking into the Apple TV and was emphatic that it would happen. However, in 2014, another author, Yukari Iwatani Kane, wrote in "Haunted Empire: Apple After Steve Jobs" that Jobs told Apple employees in 2010 that a TV set wasn't happening. The lesson Munster learned about a company assembling a team and putting resources behind projects that may remain on the shelf continues to apply. Still, Munster's lesson didn't stop him from making a plea for CEO Tim Cook to bring the Apple TV to shelves.
Persons: Gene Munster, he's, Munster, Apple, it's, I'm, Walter Isaacson, Steve Jobs, Yukari Iwatani Kane, Jobs, Tim Cook Organizations: Apple, Bloomberg, Munster, Deepwater Asset Management, Apple TV
AdvertisementDonald Trump has selected several Big Tech critics for top roles in his second administration. A number of his picks have been harsh critics of the Big Tech industry. Tom Williams/CQ Roll CallTrump's pick for attorney general, former Florida Rep. Matt Gaetz, has for years criticized Big Tech companies. Anna MoneymakerVice President-elect JD Vance cut his teeth in venture capital, and has long been a proponent for breaking up Big Tech. AdvertisementVance said that his experience in Silicon Valley taught him to be weary of Big Tech.
Persons: Donald Trump, Matt Gaetz, JD Vance, Elon Musk, Brendan Carr, Trump's, Trump, Brendan Carr Trump, Tom Williams, Carr, Elon, Musk's, Matt Gaetz Trump, Gaetz, Lina Khan, Jonathan Kanter, Elon Musk Elon, Marc Piasecki, Musk, donald, Biden, Tim Cook, X, Anna Moneymaker, Vance, we're Organizations: Big Tech, Trump, GOP, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Federal Communications Commission, Inc, Getty, Heritage, FCC, TikTok, United, Florida Rep, Federal Trade, Elon, Government, of Government, SpaceX, OpenAI, Bloomberg News Locations: Starlink, Florida, Silicon Valley, Trump
AdvertisementGoogle pays Apple at least $20 billion a year to make its search engine the default on iPhones. Those payments were at the heart of a federal antitrust case Google lost earlier this year. That's because a long-running deal between Apple and Google, where Google pays Apple at least $20 billion a year to make Google the default search engine on iPhones, is at the heart of the US government's antitrust case against Google. (Though, confusingly, an earlier Bloomberg report about the DOJ's plan focused on forcing Google to sell off its Chrome browser and never mentioned the Apple payments.) AdvertisementBut even if that happens, it doesn't mean Apple automatically loses all the money Google pays it every year.
Persons: it's, Judge Amit P, Mehta, Microsoft's Bing, they're, Trump, Tim Cook, Cook Organizations: Apple, Google, US Department of Justice, Street, Bloomberg, Trump, Big Tech Locations: China
AdvertisementApple has increasingly used its own silicon chips in its devices in recent years. Apple says it has a "secret weapon" in its approach to making the chips that power many of its devices. The company also benefits from making chips strictly for its own use rather than being a traditional chip-maker that sells to other companies, Millet said. Apple's newest Macs are based on Apple's latest silicon chips, the M4 line. AdvertisementMillet said Apple silicon takes advantage of "three major components, the architecture, the design, and the process technology."
Persons: Apple execs, Apple's, Apple, Don McGuire Tim Millet, Tom Boger, Boger, Millet, Tim Cook, Biden's, TSMC Organizations: Apple, Indian Express, Mac, Qualcomm, Intel, Imagination Technologies, M4, BI Locations: Arizona, Phoenix , Arizona
That's for good reason: An Apple TV set didn't make sense years ago. But in theory, if that goes well, then maybe Apple will be more interested in chasing an Actual TV Set. Apple still sells a dedicated Apple TV box, which you can plug into any TV to transform it into an "Apple TV." AdvertisementYou can debate whether Apple TV+ is actually successful — its movie strategy seems … challenged — but it at least makes sense strategically: Apple TV+ is supposed to generate recurring monthly revenue, and Apple is all about recurring monthly revenue as part of its "services" push. A TV set — even the most awesome TV set — would be a one-and-done proposition for Apple.
Persons: you've, That's, Mark Gurman, Gurman, doesn't, Tim Cook's, Donald Trump, Cook, Trump, Apple, we've, Ben Lovejoy, Steve Jobs, Yukari Iwatani Kane, Walt Mossberg, Jobs, I'm Organizations: Apple, Trump, YouTube, Google
That's sure to result in increased volatility for the companies in our portfolio exposed to China, the world's second-largest economy. Consumer-dependent stocks Apple and Starbucks may be the most at risk given they are more discretionary versus the aforementioned names. At the Club, Jim has bestowed his "own it, don't trade it" designation on only those two stocks, Apple and Nvidia. AAPL YTD mountain Apple YTD Furthermore, while China growth may be tempered, Apple is aggressively looking to grow its presence in India — both on the consumer side and product manufacturing side of its business. Bottom line The risks for companies that do business in China have certainly increased following Trump's presidential election win.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jim Cramer, Joe Biden, Jensen Huang, Leonardo da Vinci, Lisa Su, Su, Tim Cook, Trump, Jim, China —, Brian Niccol, Niccol, we're, Jim Cramer's, Xi Jinping, Kevin Lemarque Organizations: Devices, Nvidia, GE Healthcare, Apple, AMD, Trump, Club, Bloomberg, U.S, Starbucks, Yum Brands, China, Taco Bell, Chipotle, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: we're, China, U.S, India, Vietnam, Osaka, Japan
Under a 25% tariff on goods from China, the Wall Street investment bank sees an EPS loss for Apple of 9.2%. Those estimates make Apple the fifth most vulnerable tech company to potential tariffs on goods from China in Morgan Stanley's research coverage. Bank of America analyst Wamsi Mohan agrees, seeing any tariff impact as "manageable." He sees a 60% tariff on Chinese goods possibly resulting in about a 4% hit to Apple's EPS. By contrast, Dell – which he noted looks positioned to be "most vulnerable" to tariffs – could see an EPS impact of up to about 90%, according to his model.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Tim Cook's Apple, Morgan Stanley, Erik Woodring, Trump, Tesla, , Morgan, it's, Angelo Zino, Zino, Wamsi Mohan, Apple, Bernstein, Toni Sacconaghi, Sacconaghi, It's, BofA's Mohan, Mohan, Jason Snipe Organizations: Apple, Wall, CNBC, of, Bank of America, Dell, Odyssey Capital, Apple Intelligence Locations: China, U.S, India, Vietnam, Malaysia
In April, President Joe Biden signed a law that requires China’s ByteDance to sell TikTok by Jan. 19. Although both Republicans and Democrats supported the Biden TikTok ban in April, Trump voiced opposition to the ban during his candidacy. At TikTok, meanwhile, Chew has remained quiet since Trump’s victory, just as he had been in the lead-up to Election Day. In his March interview with “Squawk Box,” Trump said Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram, posed a much bigger problem than TikTok. Since launching his TikTok account in June, Trump has amassed over 14 million followers.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tim Cook, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Shou Zi Chew, Joe Biden, Jan, Trump’s, Trump, CNBC’s, , Kamala Harris, “ We’re, Trump hasn’t, Vance, Karoline Leavitt, ” Leavitt, TikTok, Jeff Yass, Sarah Kreps, Chew, Long Le, Le, “ He’s, ” Le, ” TikTok, ” Trump, , Mark Zuckerberg, Cornell’s Kreps, Zuckerberg, ” Kreps, ” Meta, Milton Mueller, ” Mueller, Sen, Rand Paul, “ They’re, he’s Organizations: U.S, U.S ., Apple, Google, White, Democrats, Biden, Trump, Democratic, CNBC, Republican, Susquehanna International Group, NBC, Cornell University, Santa Clara University, Facebook, Meta, Georgia Tech’s School of Public Locations: U.S, Chew, TikTok, ByteDance, Yass, China, Ky
Apple is exploring new headsets and smart-home devices to expand its lineup. Its plans don't always work out; it scrapped a car project and faces weak demand for the Vision Pro. The company in February scrapped plans for a car, and its $3,500 Vision Pro has gotten mixed reviews in the months since its release. Bloomberg on Tuesday reported on a wall-mounted smart-home tablet in Apple's production lineup that could operate home appliances, use Apple Intelligence, and access Apple apps. AdvertisementThe report said the project, code-named J490, could come as early as March, a month before new Apple Intelligence features are expected to roll out.
Persons: , Mark Gurman, Ming, Chi Kuo, Apple's, Gurman, Apple, EMARKETER, Kuo, Meta, William Kerwin, Tim Cook, who's Organizations: Apple, Vision, Service, Bloomberg, Apple Intelligence, Big Tech, Asset Management, Business Locations: Taiwan, Morningstar
In April, President Joe Biden signed a law that requires China's ByteDance to sell TikTok by Jan. 19. Although both Republicans and Democrats supported the Biden TikTok ban in April, Trump voiced opposition to the ban during his candidacy. Since his election, Trump hasn't publicly discussed his plans for TikTok, but Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt told CNBC that the president-elect "will deliver." "The American people re-elected President Trump by a resounding margin giving him a mandate to implement the promises he made on the campaign trail," Leavitt said in a statement. That month it was also reported that Yass was a part owner of the business that merged with the parent company of Trump's Truth Social.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tim Cook, Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Shou Zi Chew, Joe Biden, Jan, Trump's, Trump, CNBC's, Kamala Harris, We're, Trump hasn't, Vance, Karoline Leavitt, Leavitt, TikTok, Jeff Yass Organizations: U.S, Apple, U.S ., Google, White, Democrats, Biden, Trump, CNBC, Republican, Susquehanna International Group, NBC Locations: Communist China, U.S, Smithton , Pennsylvania, Chew, TikTok, ByteDance, Yass
LISBON — Apple will not introduce a smart ring, the CEO of health-tech firm Oura told CNBC, despite speculation the iPhone giant may be considering a move into this product category. Samsung's smart ring debut earlier this year has put the product firmly in the spotlight, with one analyst predicting earlier this year that Apple could launch its own smart ring in 2026. But Tom Hale, CEO of Oura — which has been developing smart rings since the company was established in 2013 — said he doesn't think Apple will enter the space. "I think they're probably keeping a close eye on Samsung and a close eye on us, but it's hard to do this product category right." Under CEO Tim Cook, Apple has put a large focus on health applications through the Apple Watch and related services.
Persons: Oura, Tom Hale, , they're, Hale, Tim Cook, Apple Organizations: Apple, CNBC, Apple Watch, Samsung Locations: LISBON, Lisbon, Portugal
Elon Musk embraces Donald Trump during a campaign rally in Butler, Pennsylvania on Oct. 5, 2024. Kissinger was deeply respected in China and continued to meet with its leaders as an unofficial diplomat in efforts to promote warmer relations between the two countries. Just months before Kissinger died in November 2023, he met with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing in July 2023. They may not reach the same impact as Kissinger, given the more complex period, he said, though they could help stabilize relations. Cook and Schwarzman also regularly visit leaders in China, where they are often highlighted by Beijing as examples of positive China-U.S. business and trade relations.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump, Anna Moneymaker, Elon, Kissinger, Scott Kennedy, Henry Kissinger, Xi Jinping, Tesla, Li Qiang, Wang Yiwei, Wang, Musk's, Musk, Joe Biden, Biden, Trump, Wang Huiyao, Tim Cook, Blackstone, Stephen Schwarzman, Cook, Schwarzman, Dewardric Organizations: Getty, White, Economics, Center for Strategic, International Studies, U.S, SpaceX, Renmin University, CNBC, Trump, Center for, Longview Global Locations: Butler , Pennsylvania, Beijing, China, Washington, imploding, U.S, Center for China, Dewardric McNeal
Apple will face hefty costs if Donald Trump sticks to his blanket tariffs pledge. CEO Tim Cook joined the chorus of tech leaders congratulating Trump on winning the 2024 presidential election with an X post on Wednesday. Related storiesIf China decides to retaliate against the Trump administration's proposed tariffs, it could also hurt Apple in the region. The tech company is currently facing a US antitrust lawsuit that accuses it of maintaining an illegal monopoly on smartphones. AdvertisementSince Trump has yet to take office, Chatterjee said the world will have to "wait and see" what policies become official.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Jacob Channel, , Apple, Tim Cook, it's, Jacob, Dipanjan Chatterjee, Chatterjee Organizations: Apple, Service, Jacob Channel, Business, Trump, BI, Big Tech, Google Locations: China, India, Asia, Greater China
Donald Trump's election win boosted tech stocks the next day, with Tesla leading the gains. Trump's past policies reshaped tech; his second term may impact Big Tech similarly. So what has the stock market told us so far about which Big Tech companies might be winners and losers during a Trump second term? Google gainsGoogle is somewhat surprising as a big stock gainer in the past two trading days. 'Shock absorber for the consumer'Slowinski highlighted other Big Tech stocks this week in his note to investors.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Tesla, , Donald Trump, Trump, Tim Cook, Ben Thompson, TSMC, Elon Musk, Elon, Ana Altchek, Stefan Slowinski, Mark Zuckerberg, Slowinski, Thompson, Slowinsky Organizations: Big Tech, Service, Trump, Apple, Google, Alphabet, BNP, Trump's, Democratic, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft Locations: China, Taiwan, Stratechery, North America
Trump’s win came about with the help of Musk and his wealthy tech friends including investors Peter Thiel and David Sacks. They boosted Trump with financial contributions, fundraising help and public endorsements on subjects such as the economy and deregulation. Few other major tech executives publicly endorsed in the presidential race, though some of them made vague comments praising one or the other candidate. Trump has a complicated history with many tech CEOs. In their social media posts, several tech CEOs used the word “decisive” to describe Trump’s victory and they employed popular buzzwords like “innovation” in an apparent attempt to identify common ground.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Tim Cook, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Andy Jassy, Trump, ” Zuckerberg, ” Trump, Zuckerberg, , Musk, Trump’s, Peter Thiel, David Sacks, Bezos, Reid Hoffman, — wouldn’t, , bitcoin, Musk’s, Parler, Jeff, Mike Davis, Ivan Raiklin, Cook Organizations: Tech, Trump, titans, Meta, Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, The Washington, Democratic, Trump’s, Pentagon, The Washington Post, III, Trump Tower, Google Locations: Silicon Valley, Butler , Pennsylvania, Tesla, Coinbase, County, State
Amazon founder and Executive Chairman Jeff Bezos celebrated Trump's win in a post on X, calling it an "extraordinary political comeback and decisive victory." Trump repeatedly took aim at Bezos' ownership of the Post, Amazon's tax record and its relationship with the Postal Service. Apple CEO Tim Cook congratulated Trump on his victory in a post on X. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said in a post on X that he hopes Trump will see "huge success in the job." Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg called Trump's election win a "decisive victory" and said he looks forward to working with the Trump administration.
Persons: Sam Altman, Jeff Bezos, Donald Trump, JD Vance, Trump, Bezos, Kamala Harris, Andy Jassy, Jassy, Tim Cook, Cook, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Elon, Musk, Trump's, Tesla, Sundar Pichai, he's, Satya Nadella, Reid Hoffman, Hoffman, Harris, Gelsinger, Arvind Krishna, Chuck Robbins, Uber, Dara Khosrowshahi, Aaron Levie, Michael Dell Organizations: Economic, Amazon, U.S, Washington Post, Postal Service, Trump, Post, Democratic, Apple, Facebook, SpaceX, White, America PAC, Google, Microsoft, Venture, LinkedIn, Intel, Biden, IBM, Cisco, Dell Technologies Locations: Davos, Switzerland, Glasgow, Scotland, Pennsylvania, Bezos, United States, U.S
The news Trump's decisive victory over Vice President Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election comes with varying implications for Apple investors. Apple got exceptions in Trump's first term that muted the impact of tariffs on Apple. Bottom line Apple deftly navigated a first Trump term, but it's way too early to say with certainty what Trump's second term in office will mean for the California tech giant. As for tariffs, Apple has wisely expanded its manufacturing capabilities outside of China in markets like India, and it should continue to do so. In Trump's second term, "Apple is going to need what I call special pleading," Jim Cramer said during the Morning Meeting.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Trump, Apple —, Apple, Bernstein, Tim Cook, Cook, I've, Hillary Clinton, Rosenblatt, it's, Jim Cramer, they're, Jim, Jim Cramer's, Saul Loeb Organizations: Apple, Big Tech, Bank of America, Justice Department, Management, Nvidia, Microsoft, Club, Trump, Democratic, Rosenblatt, Samsung, DOJ, CNBC, American Workforce Policy, White, AFP, Getty Locations: China, U.S, India, California, Washington , DC
Tingshu Wang | ReutersFrom Apple to Starbucks , U.S. consumer brands are reporting yet another quarter of China sales declines. Apple last week reported Greater China sales fell slightly to $15.03 billion in the three months ended Sept. 28, down from $15.08 billion in the year-ago period. The quarterly sales decline reduced Apple's China revenue share to 15.8% of total net sales, down from 16.9% in the year-ago period. Low consumer confidenceU.S. sportswear giant Nike said that Greater China revenue for the quarter ended Aug. 31 fell by 4% year-on-year to $1.67 billion. In Europe, luxury giant LVMH also felt the drag from the China market.
Persons: Tingshu Wang, Tim Cook, Apple, Brian Niccol, Niccol, Matthew Friend, Jean, Jacques Guiony, Isaac Stone Fish, Cummins, Walt, Fish Organizations: Reuters, Apple, U.S, Starbucks, Nike, Carrier, Coca Cola, RTX Corporation, Honeywell, Walt Disney, Caterpillar Locations: Chengdu, Sichuan province, China, U.S, what's, Hong Kong, Macao, Taiwan, Greater China, Europe, Asia, Japan, COVID, Japan Asia
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