Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "G Capital"


25 mentions found


Switzerland wanted its big banks to be fortresses. In practice, the country’s “too big to fail” banking laws made a sand castle of Credit Suisse. The Swiss rules in question have become an object lesson in the difficulties of designing financial regulation. Created to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis bailouts, Switzerland’s customized version of international capital requirements laid the groundwork for the biggest bank rescue since.
Organizations: Credit Suisse Locations: Switzerland, Credit, Swiss
[1/3] Flags flutter on the facade of the Colombian Ministry of Information and Communications Technologies building in Bogota, Colombia, November 8, 2023. Colombia hopes to improve connectivity as it joins its Latin American neighbors, including Argentina and Mexico, which already have 5G services. "We're going to award up to four blocks of 100 megahertz in the 3,500 frequency," Minister of Information and Communications Technologies, Mauricio Lizcano, said in an interview. "Whoever pays the most wins the spectrum, ... it's impossible for there to be a defect in the procedure," Lizcano said. Colombia had 80.8 million cellphone subscribers at the end of 2022, spread among operators including Claro, Movistar, Tigo and WOM.
Persons: Luis Jaime Acosta, Mauricio Lizcano, Lizcano, Oliver Griffin, Diane Craft Organizations: Colombian Ministry of Information, Communications Technologies, REUTERS, Rights, Information, Thomson Locations: Bogota, Colombia, Rights BOGOTA, Argentina, Mexico, Claro, Movistar
Logos of Swiss banks Credit Suisse and UBS are seen before a news conference in Zurich Switzerland, August 30, 2023. The state-engineered merger led to a wipeout of $17 billion of Credit Suisse's AT1 bonds. "Their structure is very new and shows they listened to investors who were angry about the permanent write-down feature," said Jerome Legras, head of research at Axiom Alternative Investments, who held Credit Suisse AT1 bonds before the March banking crisis. The Credit Suisse AT1s wipeout spurned a number of claims against Switzerland's financial regulator FINMA, which inverted the long-established seniority of bondholders over shareholders over the assets of a company in distress. That dented sentiment in the key market for bank bonds and prompted regulators in Europe and Asia to reassure investors.
Persons: Denis Balibouse, Jerome Legras, Joost Beaumont, March's writedown, Noele Illien, Dhara Ranasinghe, Elaine Hardcastle, Alexander Smith Organizations: Credit Suisse, UBS, REUTERS, CS, AT1s, ZURICH, P Global, Suisse, ABN AMRO, Singapore, Thomson Locations: Zurich Switzerland, Swiss, Switzerland's, Europe, Asia
Last quarter, Disney’s linear television revenue continued to slip, declining 7% compared to the same quarter last year. Disney World angstIt may not be all bad news for Disney, though. However, Disney World Resort in Florida has struggled with declining attendance in recent months. Over the summer, Disney World parkgoers experienced shorter-than-expected ride wait times and fewer crowds. Nearly one year ago, Iger unexpectedly came out of retirement to take over the role of Disney CEO once again after the board unexpectedly fired his successor, Bob Chapek.
Persons: Ron DeSantis, Bob Iger, Hugh Johnston, Christine McCarthy, Iger, ” Iger, I’ve, expansively, Indiana Jones, Reynaud Julien, Bank of America’s Jessica Reif Ehrlich, Ehrlich, Jason Bazinet, Disney, Disney isn’t, , Vijay Jayant, underperformance, Bob Chapek, Johnston Organizations: Los Angeles CNN, Disney, Republican, Gov, Warner Bros, CNN, Media, YouTube, ESPN, Wall Street, PepsiCo, ABC, Disney Channel, Geographic, , Destiny, Cannes Film, APS, Bank of America’s, Citigroup, Shanghai Disney Resort, Hong Kong Disneyland Locations: Florida, Refinitiv, Cannes, France, Canada, Hulu, Shanghai, Hong, Central Florida
Net profit fell to $32.6 billion for the quarter to Sept. 30, above the $31.8 billion expected by 12 analysts in a company-provided forecast. The Saudi oil producer said lower oil prices and volumes were partially offset by a reduction in production royalties, which are linked to Brent prices. Chevron (CVX.N) and Exxon Mobil (XOM.N) last month reported sharp year-on-year falls in third-quarter profit as energy prices cooled. Saudi Aramco logo and stock graph are seen through a magnifier displayed in this illustration taken September 4, 2022. Back in 2021, Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, said that Saudi Aramco would sell more shares, with the proceeds going to bolster the PIF, the Vision 2030's main funding source.
Persons: Brent, Aramco's, Dado Ruvic, Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Hadeel Al Sayegh, Yousef Saba, Miral Fahmy, Jason Neely, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: DUBAI, Saudi Aramco, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Reuters Graphics, OPEC, Aramco, REUTERS, Investment Fund, Energy, RBC, Riyadh bourse, Wall Street, Thomson Locations: Saudi, Reuters Graphics Saudi Arabia, Saudi Arabia, Aramco, Riyadh
Saudi Aramco logo and stock graph are seen through a magnifier displayed in this illustration taken September 4, 2022. Net profit fell to $32.6 billion for the quarter to Sept. 30 from $42.4 billion a year earlier. The Saudi oil producer said lower oil prices and volumes were partially offset by a reduction in production royalties. Chevron (CVX.N) and Exxon Mobil <XOM.N> last month posted sharp year-on-year falls in third-quarter profit as energy prices cooled. Aramco's revenue fell to $113.09 billion in the quarter from $144.99 billion a year earlier.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Hadeel Al Sayegh, Yousef Saba, Miral Fahmy, Jason Neely Organizations: Saudi Aramco, REUTERS, DUBAI, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, OPEC, Aramco, Energy, Thomson Locations: Saudi, Saudi Arabia
"We can confirm there was an explosion at our High Commission in Nigeria. Nigerian President Bola Tinubu's spokesperson said that there were deaths and injuries in a fire on Monday at the High Commission of Canada but did not give any figures. Canada's High Commission in Nigeria, without commenting on the explosion, said on social media that it had "temporarily suspended operations until further notice." The embassy issued a travel advisory, warning against non-essential travel to Nigeria, including capital Abuja, "due to the unpredictable security situation throughout the country and the significant risk of terrorism, crime, inter-communal clashes, armed attacks and kidnappings." Western countries routinely issue warning about travelling to Nigeria, which the Abuja government often dismisses as lacking merit.
Persons: Melanie Joly, " Joly, Bola Tinubu's, Tinubu, MacDonald Dzirutwe, Ismail Shakil, Cynthia Osterman, Sandra Maler Organizations: Ottawa, Washington, Commission, High Commission of, Thomson Locations: LAGOS, Canada, Nigeria, London, West African, High Commission of Canada, Canada's, Abuja, United States, Britain, Nigeria's, Lagos, Ottawa
I'm fucking done," she told a reporter at Time, who described Wolfe Herd as "blinking back tears" during the interview. "My hands are tied," Wolfe Herd told the audience, according to several people who were in the room. Wolfe Herd once called him her biggest mentor, saying, "He's become my family and one of my best friends." Some early employees said they only found out about the shadow-equity program, and who received it, years later. Based on the current share price, Wolfe Herd is no longer a billionaire, though her fortune still sits at an estimated $627 million.
Persons: Whitney Wolfe Herd, Andrey Andreev, Wolfe Herd, Bumble, Whitney Wolfe, Wolfe, Bumble wasn't, Charley Gallay, I've, Robbie McKay, McKay, Jerod Harris, Sarah Mick, Bumble's, That's, Mick, Justin Mateen, Tinder, Antoine Antoniol, Andreev, What's, He's, , Jody Thelander, Alexandra Williamson, Samantha Fulgham, Chelsea Maclin, Caroline Ellis Roche, Michael Herd, they'd, Taylor, they're, Vivien Killilea, didn't, Charles Elson, Elson, Blackstone, Forbes, Ben Bergman Organizations: Worldwide Vision, Nasdaq, Carlton, Getty, Fortune, Andreev's, TechCrunch, Southwest, telltale, Founders, Chelsea, Austin, Ritz, Mailchimp, Intuit, University of Delaware, Twitter Locations: Russian, Austin, Los Angeles , California, Bumble, Northern California, Deer Valley , Utah, Punta Mita , Mexico, Tinder, London, Bermuda, WVL, San Francisco, Texas, Positano, Italy, Bay, Atlanta, MagicLab, Badoo, bbergman@insider.com
When Tyson Foods announced in August that it was closing its 1,500-worker chicken plant in Noel, Missouri, residents knew the rural town would be hit hard. Tyson didn't immediately comment on its compensation of former Noel employees. said Corina Chinchilla, 32, who worked for 13 years at the Noel plant, ultimately becoming a production supervisor for packaging chicken breasts and tenders. Other Tyson workers, like Ryan Coulter, 27, declined to move. State and federal officials, wary of economic fallout in the region, have pressed Tyson to sell some of the sites it's vacating.
Persons: Tyson, , Jimi Lasiter, I'm, Lasiter, hadn't, Tyson didn't, Noel, Joe Biden, Corina Chinchilla, I've, didn't, Chinchilla, David Handy, Handy didn't, Ryan Coulter, Coulter, Terry Lance, Harry S, he'd, Lance, Sen, Josh Hawley, Andrew Bailey, Hawley, Donnie King Organizations: Tyson Foods, Bowling, NBC News, Value Foods, Amazon, Costco, Truman Coordinating Council, Missouri Independent Locations: Noel , Missouri, Danville , Virginia, Bowling Green , Kentucky, Monett , Missouri, Noel, Neosho, Ozark, Rock , Arkansas, Arkansas, Little Rock, Missouri, Texas, Somalia, United States, Dexter
Oil and natural gas producer Coterra Energy (CTRA) delivered strong results Monday after closing bell, including beating expectations where it matters most: free cash flow. Bottom line All line items are important, but it's free cash flow that supports cash returns to shareholders. But it's important to remember that cash flow is a function of energy prices, and is therefore largely out of management's control. Guidance Operating and free cash flow guidance missed expectations, but the numbers are purely a function of oil prices and out of management's control. Bottom lineAll line items are important, but it's free cash flow that supports cash returns to shareholders.
Persons: It's, Coterra, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Nick Oxford Organizations: Coterra Energy, LSEG, buybacks, Management, CNBC, Reuters Oil Locations: Wink , Texas
Much like Michael Burry and Steve Eisman, who shot to fame and fortune by calling the housing bubble in 2008, Bill Martin stood out as the "big short" during this year's banking crisis. The founder of family office Raging Capital Ventures bet against Silicon Valley Bank before its collapse in March. "Just like you would short a bank in Texas when oil prices collapse, I was looking for banks with exposure to venture. And that's what led me to Silicon Valley Bank," Martin said in CNBC PRO's "Art of the Trade." The short seller also shared how he managed risk for the volatile trade, as well as other opportunities he capitalized on during the crisis.
Persons: Michael Burry, Steve Eisman, Bill Martin, Martin Organizations: Raging Capital Ventures, Silicon Valley Bank, CNBC Locations: Texas, Silicon
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailArt of the Trade: Bill Martin breaks down his 'big short' call on the banking crisisRaging Capital Venture's Bill Martin sits down with CNBC's Yun Li to discuss why he saw the writing on the wall before Silicon Valley Bank's collapse in March. Martin explains how he was able to leverage his entrepreneurial background and his connections on the west coast to cash in on his lucrative short bet.
Persons: Bill Martin, CNBC's Yun Li, Martin Organizations: Trade
Chris DongCapital One's third airport lounge is a 10,800 square-foot "glass fishbowl" in Denver International Airport (DEN). Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card and Capital One Venture X Business Card† credit cardholders get unlimited complimentary access and can bring up to two guests for free. Capital One Venture Rewards Credit Card and Capital One Spark Miles for Business† cardholders get two complimentary passes per year. Capital One Venture X Rewards Credit Card and Capital One Venture X Business Card† cardholders enjoy unlimited complimentary access to all Capital One Lounges. The parents' room in Capital One's Denver airport lounge offers a quiet space for rest, diaper changes, and feedings.
Persons: Chris Dong, cardholders, Business † cardholders, , chai, chia Organizations: Business, Venture, Denver International Airport, Chris Dong Capital, Denver International, Service, Dulles, Fort, International, Capital, One, Premier, Rockies, Colombe, Fenway, Cervecería, Yacht Club, Sunrise, Denver Travelers, Chase Locations: Denver, High City, Washington, Dallas, Fort Worth, DFW, One's, Concourse A, Colorado, Downtown Denver, Cervecería Colorado, Capital One's Denver
Europe's startup ecosystem has been battered this year but climate tech founders have managed to avoid the brunt of the immense downturn so far. PwC's global analysis of the sector also points to climate tech outperforming the norm, accounting for a tenth of private market investments in 2023. Venture capital investment into European startups more broadly is primed to slump by around 46% to 58.1 billion euros in 2023. These obligations have helped make climate tech startups "catnip to investors," Sustainable Ventures' Stuart Ferguson said. Last year, European companies like electric vehicle manufacturer Polestar and batter-maker Northvolt raised 1.6 billion euros and 1 billion euros respectively.
Persons: They've, Stuart Ferguson, Fabian Heilemann, Heilemann, Biden's, Warner, Namratha, Mark Bula, Northvolt, Lisa Barclay, Ferguson, Aenu's Organizations: Steel, Venture, Sustainable Ventures, Warner, Ada Ventures, Elyos Energy, Green Steel, Nesta, Investments Locations: Swedish, British, Norwegian, London, Norway
Shani Louk was a German-Israeli tattoo artist who was thought to have been kidnapped by Hamas. Shani Louk, dressed in an olive green two-piece, is one of them. AdvertisementAdvertisementRicarda Louk sits in front of a placard of her daughter Shani Louk Tuesday Oct. 17, 2023 in Tel Aviv. Evelyn Hockstein/Reutersn the early years of her life, Louk's family moved to Portland, Oregon, after her father, Nissim, got a job at Intel. In other photos posted by her sister, the Louk family appears to be very close.
Persons: Shani Louk, Louk, , Akbar, Alleruzzo, Amit, Louk's, Ricarda, Der Spiegel, Adi, Nissim, Ricarda Louk, Li, Evelyn Hockstein, Devorah Spilman, Spilman, Evenlyn Hockstein, didn't, Orión Hernández Radoux, Radoux, Amir Cohen, Netanyahu, Gallant, Ammar Awad, isn't, Shani Organizations: Service, Nova, Hamas, Sky News, Intel, Portland Jewish Academy, Orly, Reuters, Defence, Süddeutsche Zeitung, Israeli Locations: German, Gaza, Hamas, Israel, Tel Aviv, Ravensburg, Germany, Srigim, Portland , Oregon, Orly, Greece
But areas of the market dominated by small stocks and frequented by the country's retail investors have done surprisingly well. Scores of retail investors are dabbling in micro-cap stocks - stocks whose market capitalisation is tiny - operating under the radar of big funds and investors and their massive market-moving flows. Strategies such as Cui's stand out this year in a stock market depressed by China's wobbly economy, heightened geopolitical risks and surging overseas interest rates. Some brokerages are starting to recommend micro stocks to clients. GF Securities said in an October strategy report that buying micro stocks is part of a new investment paradigm in a stock market suffering from anaemic growth, and global decoupling risks.
Persons: Aly, horribilis, Joseph Cui, Cui, Yuan Yuwei, Helen Wu, Wu, Yi Huiman, Lu Deyong, Seres, Lu, Huang Yan, Jason Xue, Samuel Shen, Summer Zhen, Vidya Ranganathan, Simon Cameron, Moore Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Huawei Technologies, Regulators, Wisdom Asset, China Securities Regulatory Commission, Huawei, Security Technology, TRS Information Technology, Automotive, Seres, Securities, Shanghai QiuYang, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, Rights SHANGHAI, HONG KONG, United States, ChatGPT, Ningbo, Summer, Hong Kong
Mining companies in the West are facing two overarching challenges in trying to produce enough metals to enable the energy transition, and at the same time build alternative supply chains to lessen their dependence on China. There is little doubt that Australia is a country well-placed to play a major role in supplying many of the metals vital to the energy transition. The previous models for developing mines appear no longer effective, and even if some projects do progress, they are nowhere near enough to provide enough material for the energy transition. Michael Willoughby, global head of metals, mining and transition materials at HSBC, told a forum at IMARC that there is capital available for mining, but it's located in developing countries such as China, Indonesia and Saudi Arabia. What's not being talked about is how all the new mines, mineral processing and renewable energy equipment is going to be funded.
Persons: Washington Alves, Michael Willoughby, Willoughby, Miral Organizations: Sigma Lithium Corp, REUTERS, Rights, Reuters . Mining, Mining, Resources Conference, HSBC, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Itinga, Minas Gerais, Brazil, China, Sydney, Asia, Australia, CHINA, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, New South Wales, U.S
[1/2] A smartphone with displayed "Disney" logo is seen on the keyboard in this illustration taken March 24, 2020. Disney said it expected to pay NBCUniversal (NBCU) parent Comcast about $8.61 billion by Dec. 1. Hulu had 48.3 million subscribers at the end of Disney's third quarter, compared with 28 million paid subscribers for Comcast's Peacock streaming service at the end of Comcast's third quarter. Disney+ had 146.1 million global subscribers at the end of Disney's third quarter. If the value is determined to be greater than the guaranteed floor value, Disney will pay NBCU the difference.
Persons: Dado, Walt Disney, Disney, Bob Iger, Goldman Sachs, Brian Roberts, Dawn Chmielewski, Helen Coster, Sriraj Kalluvila, Sayantani Ghosh, Jamie Freed Organizations: REUTERS, ANGELES, Wednesday, Disney, Comcast, Hulu, Goldman, Thomson Locations: Hulu, Burbank , California, U.S, Los Angeles, New York
Mutual funds are preparing to issue 2023 capital gains distributions — and that could mean a tax surprise is lurking in your portfolio. Fund families are issuing estimated capital gains distributions, which they will make to their shareholders in December. The IRS deems these capital gains to be long term, meaning they're subject to rates of 0%, 15% or 20%, based on your taxable income and filing status. "Excluding 2022, we've had 10-plus years of strong stock market performance, and funds are sitting on embedded gains," said Welch. Portfolios that are actively managed can also generate big capital gains if there's a lot of turnover.
Persons: it's, Stephen Welch, we've, Welch, that's, you've, It's Organizations: Columbia Real Estate Equity Fund, IRS, Morningstar Research, Planning
Before the Bell: What do investors need to know about investing in Native American and Alaskan Native communities? Dawson Her Many Horses: Native American and Alaskan Native communities are more than an ethnic group or racial category. The National League Gaming Commission, which is the regulator for Native American casinos, publishes a yearly report on gross gaming revenues for casinos. When you look at some of the research that gets done, Native American and Alaskan Native households are almost always the most underbanked. People like to focus on what I call the ‘poverty porn’ aspects of Native American and Alaskan Native communities.
Persons: Dawson, , “ I’ve, , Bell, Banks, Wells, That’s, we’ve, Wells Fargo, they’re, Danielle Wiener, Bronner, Kit Kat, ” Hershey, Michele Buck, It’s, Dan Sadler, Covid shutdowns Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, CNN, Wells, Rosebud Sioux, The National League Gaming Commission, Bank of America, Federal, American Finance, Silicon Valley Bank, Hershey, Consumers, Dow, Federal Reserve, Apple Locations: New York, Rosebud, South Dakota, Wells Fargo, United States, Federal Government, Silicon, New York City, Alaska, Oklahoma, confections
[1/3] Colombian President Gustavo Petro casts his vote during the elections for governors, regional lawmakers and mayors, in Bogota, Colombia October 29, 2023. REUTERS/Vannessa Jimenez Acquire Licensing RightsBOGOTA, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Colombian opposition candidates largely swept elections for mayors, governors and regional lawmakers on Sunday, dealing a defeat to President Gustavo Petro's leftist coalition in votes that analysts called a referendum on his government. Petro congratulated the winning candidates and said he planned to work together. Many of the winning candidates had vowed to improve security and promote projects that will create jobs with private sector support. Although campaigning was marked by deteriorating security and threats to candidates, voting largely proceeded without incident.
Persons: Gustavo Petro, Vannessa Jimenez, Gustavo Petro's, Petro, Gustavo Bolivar, Bolivar, Sergio Guzman, Carlos Fernando Galan, Luis Jaime Acosta, Daina Beth Solomon, Lincoln, Stephen Coates Organizations: Colombian, REUTERS, Rights, New Liberalism Party, Bogota, Registrar's Office, Thomson Locations: Bogota, Colombia, Rights BOGOTA, Colombian, Colombia's, Medellin, Cali
Dimon and his family intend to sell 1 million of their 8.6 million shares, according to the filing. That is a tiny percentage of the shares outstanding in JPMorgan which has a market capitalization exceeding $409 billion, according to LSEG data. Dimon has no current plans to sell more stock, but could consider doing so in the future, the spokesman added. Shares of JPMorgan slid more than 3%, falling with peers Bank of America (BAC.N), Citigroup (C.N) and Wells Fargo (WFC.N). So far this year, JPMorgan shares have risen 1.4%, outperforming the S&P 500 Banks Index (.SPXBK), which has declined 18%.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, Dimon, Octavio Marenzi, Marenzi, they're, Schumer, Evelyn Hockstein, Wells, Brian Mulberry, Mulberry, Ben Silverman, Mike Mayo, James Gorman, Morgan Stanley, Peter Orszag, Dave Ellison, Hennessy, Scott Siefers, Piper Sandler, Siefers, Niket, Lananh Nguyen, Nupur Anand, Shilpi Majumdar, Shinjini Ganguli, Mike Harrison, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: JPMorgan, First Republic Bank, Forbes, U.S, Capitol, REUTERS, Bank of America, Citigroup, Zacks Investment Management, Wells, Wall Street, Lazard, Hennessy Funds, Banks, Thomson Locations: U.S, America, Washington , U.S, Wells Fargo, Bengaluru, Lananh, New York
There could be more pain ahead for clean technology stocks — but there may be a buying opportunity for long-term investors, according to JPMorgan. Analyst Bill Peterson said clean technology stocks have seen sentiment become even more challenged following the second-quarter earnings cycle, as investors struggle to digest sliding demand trends, inflation and project delays. Clean technology stocks have fallen about 22% since 2023 began by JPMorgan's calculations, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite has climbed around 21%. "Despite several positive catalysts on the horizon, we think the Clean Tech universe will likely see sentiment worsen before it gets better," Peterson told clients on Friday. However, the average analyst polled by LSEG has a buy rating with an expected upside of nearly 320%.
Persons: Bill Peterson, Peterson, LSEG, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, Nasdaq
Nomura's dominant position in Japan, where the stock market is trading at 33-year highs, helped it offset lethargic dealmaking and sluggish trading overseas. July-September profit came in at 35.2 billion yen ($235 million), rebounding from last year when a sharp downturn in global financial markets battered its asset management and investment banking businesses. This year, Japanese firms have been increasingly willing to embark on fundraising - either via equity or debt markets. As a result, Nomura's investment banking business saw a 19% increase in net revenue due to robust equity offerings and active dealmaking in Japan. "Encouraged by the strong stock market, Japanese companies are becoming more proactive in making investments for growth," Chief Financial Officer Takumi Kitamura told a media briefing.
Persons: Toru Hanai, Takumi Kitamura, LSEG, Makiko Yamazaki, Jamie Freed, Edwina Gibbs Organizations: Nomura Securities, REUTERS, Rights, Nomura Holdings, U.S . Federal Reserve, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan
Creating capital losses by selling losing stocks in a taxable account can provide valuable tax benefits. Illustration: Chris GashEven for many well-informed taxpayers, the most popular year-end strategy usually is the same every year: procrastination. This approach can be hazardous to your wealth. So as the year draws to a close, there are some moves investors should consider making now to ease their tax hit for 2023.
Persons: Chris Gash
Total: 25