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Meta founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg speaks during the Meta Connect event at Meta headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Sept. 27, 2023. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been assembling a large stockpile of Nvidia chips, spending billions of dollars so his company can develop and train advanced artificial intelligence models. But even he says the AI hype may be driving too much investment. Meta debuted its latest Llama AI model on Tuesday. The model, dubbed Llama 3.1, comes in three different versions, with one variant being the biggest and most capable AI model from Meta to date.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg, Emily Chang, He's, Sundar Pichai, Pichai Organizations: Meta, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, Tesla Locations: Menlo Park , California
Hedge fund manager Dan Niles sees this week's tech sell-off as confirmation that the trade is in significant trouble. On July 11, Niles warned on X that earnings season could expose big risks in the megacap tech trade. He was particularly worried about the Magnificent Seven stocks, which include Tesla , Nvidia , Alphabet , Meta Platforms , Microsoft , Apple and Amazon . So, you're going to have a fall off some time next year in cap equipment that's going to be horrific because of that." Longer term, Niles thinks the bull case for megacap tech stocks is intact.
Persons: Dan Niles, Niles, CNBC's, I'm, they're, China's, there's, we're, we've Organizations: Google, Niles Investment Management, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Cisco Locations: frothiness, China, Niles
The Chinese government unveiled a raft of measures to stimulate its embattled housing market. It will remove the floor on mortgage rates, offer cheaper housing loans, and lower down payments. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementChinese authorities just announced their biggest effort yet to shore up the troubled housing market. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Overbuilding, Organizations: Service, People's Bank of, Business Locations: People's Bank of China
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJim Cramer talks how overbuilding has impacted J.B. Hunt and Prologis'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer takes a closer look at J.B. Hunt and Prologis earnings and stock reaction.
Persons: Jim Cramer, overbuilding, Hunt, Prologis Locations: J.B
CNN —The world’s coal-fired power capacity grew 2% last year, its highest annual increase since 2016, driven by new builds in China and decommissioning delays elsewhere, according to research published on Thursday. Coal-fired capacity outside China also grew for the first time since 2019, while worldwide only 21.1 GW was shut down, the survey found. Currently, however, another 578 GW of coal capacity is in development. China’s coal plant retirement rate was also at its lowest in a decade last year, amid concerns over energy security. With coal-fired power incompatible with China’s declared longer-term climate goals, GEM said China is running the risk of being lumbered with billions of yuan in stranded assets.
Persons: Flora Champenois, , ” Champenois, China’s, Organizations: CNN, Global Energy Monitor, GEM, International Energy Agency Locations: China, Paris, India
But Japan's economy — the long-unconscious patient — recently started to wiggle its toe. The country's stock market is ripping; the Nikkei recently exceeded the all-time highs it set 34 years ago. Now, Koo says, Chinese academics and policymakers are flocking to Japan to glean some kind of wisdom from the country's experience. Advertisement"This has made Japan attractive for foreign investors, and the stock market has done well," Koo said. Even without a currency war with Beijing, the world is building defenses against another wave of Chinese goods.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, there's, Nomura, Richard Koo, Koo, Shinzo Abe, Japan's, What's, it's, we're, haven't, Xi Jinping, doesn't, Xi, we've, Brasília Organizations: Nikkei, Goldman, Bank of Japan, Corporations, International Monetary Fund, Japan, Peterson Institute, European Union, China Locations: East Asia, China, Japan, Real, Tokyo, Beijing, Brussels, Brasília, American, Washington, Brazil, Turkey
Read previewAmazon expects to save roughly $1.3 billion in coming years by radically reducing office vacancies, according to a person familiar with the matter and an internal document obtained by Business Insider. The company's office-vacancy rate of almost 34% results from slower growth and layoffs, the person familiar told BI. Related storiesIn an email to BI, Brad Glasser, a spokesperson for Amazon, said it's a normal business practice to review the company's real-estate portfolio. AdvertisementThe person familiar with the matter also noted that so-called "hibernations" can help reduce office costs for Amazon. Internally, Amazon is aware of how last year's RTO policy caused confusion and frustration among some employees, people familiar with the plans told BI.
Persons: , Fitch, Brad Glasser, Glasser, Andy Jassy Organizations: Service, Business, Google, Amazon, Alexa
Cathie Wood's outlook for Nvidia is slower growth, weaker demand, and fiercer competition. Wood has cut her exposure to Nvidia as she believes the market's hopes may be overblown. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementCathie Wood has sounded the alarm on Nvidia, warning its spectacular growth is likely to slow, and comparing its stock surge to Cisco during the dot-com bubble. Indeed, Nvidia stock has soared almost 90% this year, boosting the company's market capitalization to more than $2 trillion.
Persons: Wood, , Cathie Wood, hasn't, Tesla, Jensen Huang, Sam Yeh Organizations: Nvidia, Ark, Service, Cisco, Ark Invest, Oracle, AMD, Getty, Apple Locations: AFP
Mark Zuckerberg said that tech layoffs since the pandemic are due to multiple factors. Meta's CEO said more recent layoffs are because companies realized being leaner can make you "more efficient." AdvertisementMark Zuckerberg has a theory for why tech layoffs aren't slowing down: Companies are realizing that, while painful, there are benefits to being "leaner." But as people returned to stores and the economy adjusted, companies like Meta realized they had overhired and had to make major cuts. While a lot of tech companies were reluctant to make cuts at first, they realized it didn't spell the end, Zuckerberg said.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, , Zuckerberg, — they're, Zuckerberg's, Meta didn't Organizations: Service, Meta, Microsoft, Google
Starting Tuesday, Bluesky is finally out of "beta" and will be open to anyone — no codes needed. Like Mastodon and Threads, Bluesky is an experiment in a new, "decentralized" way of running a social app, where users can create their own communities and moderation rules. AdvertisementJack Dorsey was involved in creating Bluesky while he was still at Twitter and now sits on its board. Business Insider spoke with Jay Graber, the CEO of Bluesky, about the app — which she said now has 3 million users. If you've never modified anything else, that's like a normal social app experience.
Persons: , Bluesky, Joe Biden couldn't, Jack Dorsey, Meta, Jay Graber, We've, we've, you've Organizations: Service, Twitter, Meta, Business
Land sales and home prices showed some improvement in China's property market, Reuters reported. Government land sales rose for the first time in two years, while prices saw their fastest rise since mid-2021. AdvertisementReal estate in China may finally be nearing the end of a yearslong slide, with home prices and land sales demonstrating fresh strength, Reuters reported. Average city prices rose 0.15% month-on-month in January, marking the fastest gain since mid-2021. Government land sale revenue that month also notched a 1.8% gain from a year prior, the first time sales rose in 23 months, the outlet said.
Persons: Fitch, , overbuilding Organizations: Reuters, Service, Fitch Locations: China, Beijing
Officials in China are boosting property sector relief measures to blunt the impact of Evergrande's collapse. The new measures are part of a wider series of economy-boosting initiatives, especially in the real estate sector, which constitutes one-quarter of the country's economy. The crisis in the property sector stems from huge debt and overbuilding in the last decade, which has resulted in a liquidity crisis for many property developers, including Evergrande. The company's troubles sent country's property sector into a tailspin starting in 2022 when it defaulted on some of its offshore bonds. China is moving mountains to hold the real estate sector's crisis from pouring into other sectors.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Beijing, China's Ministry of Housing, China Mingsheng Banking Corp, China Securities Journal, Guangzhou, Reuters, Bloomberg Locations: China, Hong Kong, Nanning, Guangxi, Chongqing, Suzhou, Shanghai, restructurings
Everything was getting bigger — its cultural influence, geopolitical ambition, population — and seemed poised to continue until the world was remade in China's image. But now China's economy is withering, and the future Beijing imagined is being cut down to size along with it. What Beijing does — or fails to do — to fight this malaise will determine the course of humanity for decades to come. China's deflation worries started in earnest in the summer. Years of overbuilding — by about double the population, according to some estimates — and slowing population growth caused prices to collapse .
Persons: Minxin Pei, there's, Charlene Chu, Autonomous Research Charlene Chu, Chu, Wei Yao, Générale, I'm, Ben Bernanke, Bernanke, Xi Jinping, Xie Huanchi, Société Générale's Yao, Yao, It's, , aren't, Logan Wright, Wright, Xi doesn't, Jinping, it's, Xi, Claremont's Pei, magnanimity Organizations: Claremont McKenna College, Autonomous Research, Federal Reserve, Getty Images Japan, Chinese Communist Party, Xi, CCP Locations: China, Beijing, dauphin, Xinhua, Japan, Xi's China, East Asia, Taiwan, Europe
Chinese Premier Makes Surprise Economic Growth Disclosure
  + stars: | 2024-01-16 | by ( Jason Douglas | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaChinese Premier Li Qiang gave global business elites a big hint on highly anticipated growth figures, as he sought to reassure them that investing in China is an opportunity—not a risk. Li delivered the message in an address at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, as Chinese leaders seek to stem an exodus of foreign investment with growth slowing and relations deteriorating with the U.S.-led West.
Persons: Adam Adada, Li Qiang, , Li Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City, Economic, U.S Locations: Malaysia’s Forest, China, Davos, Switzerland
Offices Around America Hit a New Vacancy Record
  + stars: | 2024-01-13 | by ( Konrad Putzier | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
With housing in short supply, developers are converting more empty offices into apartments. But not all buildings are candidates for reuse. Photo Illustration: Amber BragdonAmerica’s offices are emptier than at any point in at least four decades, reflecting years of overbuilding and shifting work habits that were accelerated by the pandemic. A staggering 19.6% of office space in major U.S. cities wasn’t leased as of the fourth quarter, according to Moody’s Analytics, up from 18.8% a year earlier. That is slightly above the previous records of 19.3% set in 1986 and 1991 and the highest number since at least 1979, which is as far back as Moody’s data go.
Persons: Amber Bragdon Locations: U.S, wasn’t
It’s Too Soon to Bet on China’s Housing Turnaround
  + stars: | 2023-11-15 | by ( Jacky Wong | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaChina’s troubled property market remains on shaky ground despite a raft of government policies to stabilize it—and a big jump in property developer stocks today. Beijing still needs much more forceful measures if it wants to turn around the market and stabilize the economy. They fell 3.7% year-over-year in the first 10 months of 2023, compared with a 3.2% decline in the first nine.
Persons: Adam Adada China’s Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City Locations: Malaysia’s Forest, Beijing, China
The U.S. is expected to outpace other developed markets again with estimated growth of 2.1%, Goldman said. Goldman noted global manufacturing activity has been weighed down by a weaker-than-expected rebound in Chinese manufacturing and the European energy crisis, as well as an inventory cycle that had to correct for overbuilding last year. S&P Global's gauge of worldwide manufacturing activity came in at 49.1 in September. Additionally, China's Caixin/S&P Global manufacturing PMI fell to 49.5 in October from 50.6 in September, marking the first contraction since July. Manufacturing activity should recover somewhat in 2024 from a subdued 2023 pace, Goldman economists led by chief economist Jan Hatzius said, especially as "spending patterns normalize, gas-intensive European production finds a trough, and inventories-to-GDP ratios stabilize."
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Jerome Powell, Jan Hatzius, China's Organizations: Bloomberg, U.S . Federal Reserve, Global, Goldman Sachs, P Global, PMI Locations: York, U.S, Japan
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaAfter being stuck in a housing downturn for two years, cities across China are giving real-estate developers the go-ahead to cut prices on new homes to revive sales. They are quickly running into resistance from homeowners who don’t want to see the values of their properties go down.
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City Locations: Malaysia’s Forest, China
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaWith China’s property bust threatening to sink the country’s economic recovery, Xi Jinping is looking for someone to blame. After putting the billionaire founder of Evergrande , a heavily indebted property firm, under investigation for possible crimes, Beijing is expanding its probes to include bankers and financial institutions that facilitated developers’ risky behavior, people familiar with the matter say.
Persons: Adam Adada, Xi Jinping Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City Locations: Malaysia’s Forest, Beijing
A Financial Crisis in China Is No Longer Unthinkable
  + stars: | 2023-10-19 | by ( Greg Ip | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaThe world’s second-largest economy has a deflating property bubble, local governments struggling to pay their debts and a banking system heavily exposed to both. Anywhere else these factors would be seen as precursors of a financial crisis. But not in China, conventional wisdom goes, because its debts are owed to domestic rather than foreign investors, the government already stands behind much of the financial system and capable technocrats are on top of things.
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City Locations: Malaysia’s Forest, China
Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia’s Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam AdadaChinese property giant Country Garden has missed a final deadline to pay interest on a dollar bond, capping a remarkable fall from grace for a company that was once considered among the safest developers in the country. The company hasn’t made a $15.4 million interest payment on an outstanding dollar bond, according to two investors who hold the bond. Country Garden had around $15.2 billion of international bonds and loans outstanding at the end of June, according to its public disclosures.
Persons: Adam Adada, hasn’t Organizations: Malaysia’s Forest City Locations: Malaysia’s Forest
What This $100 Billion Ghost City Says About China’s Real-Estate Crisis Country Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia's Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam Adada
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia's Forest City Locations: Malaysia's Forest
Watch: Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano Erupts for Third Time This Year
  + stars: | 2023-09-11 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
What This $100 Billion Ghost City Says About China’s Real-Estate CrisisCountry Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia's Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam Adada
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia's Forest City Locations: Malaysia's Forest
What This $100 Billion Ghost City Says About China’s Real-Estate CrisisCountry Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia's Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam Adada
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia's Forest City Locations: Malaysia's Forest
Morocco Earthquake Kills More Than 1,000 People
  + stars: | 2023-09-09 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
What This $100 Billion Ghost City Says About China’s Real-Estate CrisisCountry Garden, once seen as one of China’s most stable property developers, is now struggling financially, leaving the future of unfinished megadevelopments like Malaysia's Forest City in doubt. Here’s how overbuilding, and a streak of bad luck, have left China’s real-estate developers in the red. Photo: Adam Adada
Persons: Adam Adada Organizations: Malaysia's Forest City Locations: Malaysia's Forest
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