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Here are Thursday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Bank of America reiterates Qualcomm as buy Bank of America said it's standing by its buy rating on the stock after its earnings report Wednesday. Citi reiterates Eli Lilly as buy Citi said it sees further upside after the company's earnings report Thursday. RBC downgrades Estée Lauder to sector perform from outperform RBC downgraded the stock after the company's earnings report. Pivotal upgrades Roku to hold from sell Pivotal upgraded the stock after its earnings report Wednesday. " Guggenheim downgrades SolarEdge to neutral from buy The firm said it's "giving up" on its positive stance on the stock.
Persons: RUN's, Taylor Morrison, WK Kellogg, Truist, Amgen, it's, Citi, Eli Lilly, Janus Henderson, underperform KBW, Estée Lauder, F1Q, Bernstein, Hess, CVX, Guggenheim, SolarEdge, Stifel Organizations: Bank of America, Qualcomm, HSBC, Amazon, BMO, Toll, M.D.C . Holdings, JPMorgan, Health, of America, UBS, Eastman Chemical, Citi, Management, RBC, Chevron Locations: Ecommerce, China, U.S
Court Sends Stock-Buyback Rule Back to SEC
  + stars: | 2023-11-01 | by ( Paul Kiernan | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
The Securities and Exchange Commission has recently been pushing an aggressive regulatory agenda. Photo: Ariel Zambelich/The Wall Street JournalWASHINGTON—A conservative appeals court dealt a setback to the Securities and Exchange Commission’s plan to give investors more information about stock buybacks after business groups challenged the rule. Responding to a May lawsuit by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and two Texas-based business groups, a three-judge panel on the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the SEC’s new requirements for share repurchases were “arbitrary and capricious.” The judges agreed with the groups’ assertion that the SEC didn’t adequately explain the rule’s costs and benefits.
Persons: Ariel Zambelich Organizations: Securities, Exchange Commission, Street Journal WASHINGTON, Exchange, U.S . Chamber of Commerce, Fifth Circuit, Appeals, SEC Locations: Texas
The world's top-selling automaker reported a record operating profit of 1.44 trillion yen ($9.5 billion) in the three months to end-September, a 155.6% increase from a year earlier. It lifted its full-year profit forecast to 4.5 trillion yen from 3 trillion yen, largely due to favourable effects from foreign exchange rates. Toyota expects the weaker yen to account for 1.18 trillion yen of the revision to the full-year profit. The new projection compared to analysts' average forecast of 4.0 trillion yen. Toyota assumed an average rate of 141 yen per dollar in its calculations for the 2023/24 financial year compared to 125 yen previously.
Persons: Issei Kato, Yoichi Miyazaki, Daniel Leussink, David Dolan, Muralikumar Organizations: Toyota, Japan, REUTERS, Nissan, Honda, EVs, Nikkei, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, TOKYO, United States, Asia, China, Southeast, Thailand, North Carolina
A job seeker walks past a sign of the Headhunter recruitment site at a local job fair in the southern city of Stavropol, Russia October 25, 2017. REUTERS/Eduard Korniyenko/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsMOSCOW, Nov 1 (Reuters) - Russian recruiting agency Headhunter said it had offered holders of its ordinary shares and American Depositary Shares (ADSs) held outside Russia's depository infrastructure the chance to sell back their holdings or exchange them for newly issued shares. Headhunter was previously listed on the U.S. Nasdaq exchange, but its shares were suspended soon after Moscow despatched troops to Ukraine in February 2022, and subsequently delisted. Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Kevin LiffeyOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Eduard Korniyenko, Headhunter, Kevin Liffey Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, U.S, Nasdaq, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Stavropol, Russia, Moscow, Ukraine
US Treasury increases size of most of its debt auctions
  + stars: | 2023-11-01 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
A bronze seal for the Department of the Treasury is shown at the U.S. Treasury building in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2023. Treasury yields fell after the announcement on relief the increases were not as large as some had feared. The Treasury said on Wednesday it plans to increase the size of its two-year and five-year note auctions by $3 billion per month, and to increase the size of its 3-year and 7-year note auctions by $2 billion and $1 billion per month, respectively. The government will also increase the size of its two-year floating rate note new issue and reopenings by $2 billion. Some Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) auction sizes will also be increased, with a $1 billion increase in the December 5-year TIPS auction and January 10-year TIPS auction.
Persons: Kevin Lamarque, Steven Ricchiuto, Karen Brettell, Herb Lash, Paul Simao, Andrea Ricci Organizations: Department of, U.S . Treasury, REUTERS, U.S . Treasury Department, Treasury, U.S, Mizuho Securities USA, Securities, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, New York, U.S
Toyota Motor on Wednesday said its quarterly profit more than doubled from a year ago on strong global demand for hybrids and favorable exchange-rate moves. On average, during the quarter, $1 was worth 145 yen, up from 138 yen in the same quarter of 2022. It now expects profit of 4.5 trillion yen ($29.8 billion), up from 3 trillion yen in its earlier guidance. It said it expects the weaker yen to account for the majority – about 1.2 trillion yen – of that increase. The company also announced a 100 billion yen ($662 million) share buyback and increased its dividend by 5 yen from a year ago, to 30 yen (20 cents) per share.
Organizations: Toyota, Los Angeles Auto, U.S, U.S . Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S, North Carolina
Bud Light sales keep sinking
  + stars: | 2023-10-31 | by ( Jordan Valinsky | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
New York CNN —Bud Light continues to drag Anheuser-Busch InBev’s bottom line in the United States, but the world’s biggest brewer’s sales rose because of higher prices. The company reported a 13.5% decline in third-quarter US revenue per 100 liters, a key measure of beer sales, as an ongoing backlash to Bud Light continues. The brand’s customers turned their backs on Bud Light after the company partnered with a transgender influencer – and then muddled its response. Tuesday’s report painted a bleak picture for Bud Light, sales and shipments of which have weakened dramatically since its brief and limited partnership with trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney in the spring. Sales of Bud Light are still sinking, with volumes down 30% year-over-year for the four weeks ending on October 7, according to NIQ data given to Beer Business Daily newsletter.
Persons: Bud Light, , Dylan Mulvaney Organizations: New, New York CNN, Anheuser, Busch, InBev, Modelo, UFC, Beer Business, BUD Locations: New York, United States, East, Africa, Asia, Pacific, Europe
"BP reported weak numbers this morning...However, notably, BP has reported exceptional gas trading results on several occasions in the last couple of years, including last quarter," said RBC analyst Biraj Borkhataria. In the downstream, customers & products reported $2.1 bln vs consensus $2.4 bln, despite being supported by very strong oil trading results, suggesting weaker refining margin capture in the third quarter." That was up from the $2.6 billion profit the company reported in the prior three months due to higher oil and gas production, strong refining margins, lower refinery maintenance and "a very strong oil trading result", but natural gas marketing and trading were weak. BP expects capital expenditure of $16 billion this year, the lower end of its indicated range of $16-$18 billion. Rivals Chevron (CVX.N) and Exxon Mobil (XOM.N) last week posted sharp year-on-year drops in third quarter profit as energy prices cooled.
Persons: Norway's, Biraj Borkhataria, Murray Auchincloss, Bernard Looney, Ron Bousso, Louise Heavens, Jason Neely Organizations: windfarm, BP, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Rivals Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Thomson, & $ Locations: U.S, British, New York
LONDON — Oil major BP on Tuesday reported a steep year-on-year fall in profits, missing analyst estimates. The British energy giant logged underlying replacement cost profit, used as a proxy for net profit, of $3.293 billion in the third quarter. Analysts had expected profit to come in at $4.059 billion in the third quarter, according to a collection of estimates by LSEG. Quarterly growth came from a rise in oil and gas production and higher realized refining margins, along with a "very strong oil trading result," BP said. The year-on-year profits of BP and other energy majors plunged in the second quarter, following weaker fossil fuel prices that have since risen sharply.
Persons: Borkhataria, Bernard Looney, Murray Auchincloss, Auchincloss, Dave Lawler, Looney Organizations: Oil, BP, LSEG, RBC Capital Markets, Organization of, Petroleum Locations: Warmister, Wiltshire, England, BP's London, U.S
REUTERS/Jon Nazca/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSummaryCompanies Q3 net profit up 13% to 2.1 bln euros, slightly above forecastsQ3 NII up 22.5% to 6.4 bln euros, beating forecastsEnds quarter with capital ratio of 12.73%MADRID, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Spain's BBVA (BBVA.MC) on Tuesday posted a 13% rise in third-quarter net profit rose 13% buoyed by higher lending income in its main markets, Spain and Mexico. The third-biggest euro zone lender by market value booked a net profit of 2.08 billion euros ($2.20 billion) for the July to September period. The bottom line was slightly better than the 2 billion euros forecast by analysts polled by Reuters despite a 29% increase in loan loss provisions, which came in a bit above expectations. In Mexico, the bank's net profit rose 21% while NII climbed 30% supported by higher lending activity despite higher funding costs. In Spain, net profit rose 75%, while NII was up 62%.
Persons: Jon Nazca, NII, Jesús, Inti Landauro, Jason Neely Organizations: BBVA, REUTERS, Spain's BBVA, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Malaga, Spain, MADRID, Mexico, Europe
Anheuser-Busch InBev, the world's biggest brewing firm, on Tuesday beat expectations for the third quarter, despite an ongoing drag from controversy surrounding its online Bud Light campaign. Revenue rose 5% over the period to $15.57 billion, ahead of a company-compiled forecast of 4.7%. However, Bud Light — which lost its spot as the top-selling U.S. beer over the summer amid a conservative-led boycott, protesting its partnership with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney — weighed on U.S. performance, the company said. It marks the second quarter in which the Bud Light controversy, which includes criticism of the company for failing to support Mulvaney amid the backlash, has hit U.S. sales. Analysts at RBC Europe said the company's performance stood out within a "turbulent quarter" for earnings, noting beats on organic revenue growth and EDITDA growth expectations, despite a North America sales miss.
Persons: Bud, Bud Light, influencer Dylan Mulvaney — Organizations: Anheuser, Busch InBev, Revenue, RBC Europe, North, Brewers, Carlsberg, Heineken Locations: East, Africa, Asia, Europe, Brussels, U.S, North America, Southeast Asia
Morning Bid: Market bounce sets up Fed-dominated week ahead
  + stars: | 2023-10-30 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
A trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., October 27, 2023. A worrying late-year stock market unwind is starkest in small-cap indexes (.RUT) now tracking year-to-date losses of some 7% - even as the benchmark S&P500 (.SPX) remains up 7% and Big Tech leaders of the Nasdaq 100 are still 30% (.NDX) higher. Annual earnings growth for S&P500 companies is now expected to have picked up to a 4.3% annual growth rate, according to LSEG estimates, from as low as 1.6% before the reporting season began. But beyond Fed policy rates, it's the restive bond market and near 16-year-high long-term borrowing costs that are starting to hurt most. U.S. 10-year Treasury yields held steady at 4.85% - well below the 5% threshold they breached last week.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Mike Dolan, keener, Russell, China Evergrande, Simon Property, Louis, Nick Macfie Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Big Tech, Nasdaq, Tech, Federal Reserve, Detroit's Big, Apple, HSBC HSBA.L, Swiss, Swiss National Bank, Bank of Japan, China, HK, Dallas Fed, Western Digital, FMC, Arista Networks, Arch, Semiconductor, Treasury, Reuters, Louis Fed, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Gaza, London, Europe, Hong Kong, Loews, St
SHANGHAI, Oct 30 (Reuters) - More than 30 Chinese listed companies unveiled share buyback and purchase plans over the weekend while major mutual fund house E Fund Management Co said it would invest in its own product as Beijing steps up efforts to put a floor under a sliding stock market. China has already announced a slew of measures, including share purchases by state fund Central Huijin, to stem declines in a stock market (.CSI300) that last week hit the lowest level since 2019. Amid government calls to revive the market, more than 20 listed companies, including Hainan Mining Co (601969.SS), Vatti Corp (002035.SZ) and Zhejiang Sanmei Chemical (603379.SS), unveiled share buyback plans or proposals late on Sunday. In addition, companies such as CRRC Corp (601766.SS) and Wuxi Lead Intelligent Equipment (300450.SZ) disclosed share purchase plans by their controlling shareholders. ($1 = 7.3145 Chinese yuan renminbi)Reporting by Samuel Shen and Tom Westbrook; Editing by Lincoln FeastOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Samuel Shen, Tom Westbrook, Lincoln Organizations: E Fund Management, Central, Hainan Mining Co, Vatti Corp, Chemical, CRRC, E, CSI, Huijin, Shanghai Securities, Thomson Locations: SHANGHAI, Beijing, China, Hainan, Zhejiang, Wuxi
A man walks past a logo of HSBC at its headquarters in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia August 6, 2019. The results from Europe's biggest bank showed the pressure it is under to deliver returns to long-suffering investors now that interest rates worldwide are rising. In the third-quarter results, the lender booked a $500 million impairment related to the commercial real estate sector in mainland China. HSBC's Asia-focused competitor Standard Chartered (STAN.L) reported last week an unexpected one-third plunge in third-quarter profit due to a nearly $1 billion combined hit from its exposure to China's real estate and banking sectors. Reporting by Selena Li in Hong Kong and Lawrence White in London; Editing by Jamie FreedOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Lim Huey Teng, Jefferies, Joe Dickerson, Selena Li, Lawrence White, Jamie Freed Organizations: HSBC, REUTERS, Barclays, Europe's, Global Banking, Markets, Standard Chartered, Thomson Locations: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, HONG KONG, London, Hong Kong, Asia, China
[1/2] Gil Shwed, Founder and CEO, Check Point Software Technologies Ltd, speaks at a Cyber security conference in Tel Aviv, Israel January 31, 2017. The Israeli-based company said it earned $2.07 per diluted share excluding one-off items in the July-September quarter, up 17% from $1.77 a year earlier. It was forecast to earn $2.02 a share on revenue of $591.5 million, according to I/B/E/S data from Refinitiv. Check Point said it bought back 2.48 million shares in the quarter, worth $325 million, as part of its ongoing $2 billion share buyback programme. CEO Gil Shwed said that despite the "tragic events in Israel over the past three weeks our global business has continued to operate as planned", introducing new products and completing acquisitions.
Persons: Gil Shwed, Baz Ratner, Steven Scheer, Louise Heavens Organizations: Software Technologies, REUTERS, Rights, Revenue, Thomson Locations: Tel Aviv, Israel
HSBC's profit after tax came in at $6.26 billion in the three months ended September, jumping 235% compared to the $2.66 billion in the same period last year. Europe largest bank by assets also saw profit before tax for the quarter rise by $4.5 billion to $7.7 billion, mainly due to a higher interest rate environment. However, the numbers missed expectations by economists, who were forecasting a third quarter profit after tax figure of $6.42 billion and profit before tax of $8.1 billion. HSBC also attributed this to the higher interest rate environment, saying that it has supported growth in net interest income in all of its global businesses. For the nine months ended September, profit after tax stood at $24.33 billion, compared to $11.59 billion in the first nine months of 2022.
Persons: , NIM Organizations: HSBC Locations: Europe, France, 4Q23, Asia
Club holding Broadcom 's (AVGO) investment prospects look bright – with or without cloud software maker VMWare (VMW) under its corporate roof. For now, though, the companies remain apart after Broadcom's planned $61 billion takeover of VMWare did not close Monday, as previously scheduled. AVGO YTD mountain Broadcom YTD With VMWare, Broadcom would be a company with sales split roughly 50-50 between its traditional semiconductor division — an artificial intelligence beneficiary — and software, which typically is higher-margin revenue. Without VMWare, Broadcom would have freed up its capacity to reward shareholders in a different, but still meaningful, way. Even with the buyback silver lining, our hope is Broadcom completes the VMWare deal because it should boost Broadcom's earnings over time.
Persons: Broadcom's, CNBC's David Faber, Jim Cramer, Hock Tan, Jim, Broadcom's Tan, CNBC's Faber, There's, Jim Cramer's, Broadcom Lucas Jackson Organizations: Broadcom, VMWare, Club, Nvidia, Google, European Union, Financial Times, U.S, Intel, Semiconductor, Qualcomm, NXP Semiconductors, Microsoft, Activision, CNBC Locations: United Kingdom, Japan, Canada, China, California, Beijing
Hong Kong CNN —HSBC warned Monday that China’s property market has “potential for a further deterioration” as it reported profits that fell short of expectations, partly because of a $500 million charge to cover potential losses on commercial real estate loans. The results, however, fell shy of expectations from analysts, who had projected about $8.1 billion in pre-tax profit and revenue of $16.3 billion. In the third quarter, HSBC (HSBC) said it had adjusted its expected credit losses — the money it sets aside for defaults on loans — to include a charge of $500 million related to commercial real estate in mainland China. HSBC has fared better, with its latest results showing strength overall, Jefferies analysts wrote in a note Monday. HSBC shares were little changed in London following its results, while its stock listed in Hong Kong closed down 1.5%.
Persons: Noel Quinn, Quinn, Jefferies Organizations: Hong Kong CNN — HSBC, Revenue, HSBC, Chartered Locations: Hong Kong, , China, Asia, London
A bronze seal for the Department of the Treasury is shown at the U.S. Treasury building in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2023. Investors are playing close attention to this week's quarterly refunding announcement as a sharp jump in long-term Treasury yields has been partly attributed to concerns about the U.S. fiscal deficit. So far this year, the Treasury has issued about $1.6 trillion of additional bills and roughly $1.04 trillion in longer-term debt. The Treasury is also likely to announce a buyback program for a possible launch in January, aimed at improving bond market liquidity, analysts said. The projected increase in longer-term deficits in the coming years, however, will keep Treasury raising auction sizes, analysts said.
Persons: Kevin Lamarque, Guneet Dhingra, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley's Dhingra, Tom Simons, Zachary Griffiths, Gertrude Chavez, Dreyfuss, Megan Davies, Jamie Freed Organizations: Department of, U.S . Treasury, REUTERS, TD Securities, Treasury, Jefferies, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, New York, Charlotte , North Carolina
SummaryCompanies Q3 net profit beats market forecastsNII 2023 growth guidance lifted to 10 bln vs 9.25 blnTargets stable NII performance in 2024MADRID, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Caixabank (CABK.MC) reported third-quarter net profit on Friday which beat forecasts, helped by higher lending income, which the Spanish bank said would rise more than 50% in 2023 compared to 2022. The bank's net interest income, earnings on loans minus deposit costs, rose 71% year-on-year in the three-months ending Sept. 30 to 2.74 billion euros ($2.89 billion), above the 2.53 billion euros analysts expected. Against that background, Caixabank revised its 2023 guidance for lending income to equal or above 10 billion euros from previously 9.25 billion euros, implying a rise of more than 50% against an net interest income (NII) of 6.55 billion euros in 2022. Broker JP Morgan welcome an "impressive" NII performance and revised guidance for lending income though noted that customer deposits were down 1.3% quarter-on-quarter. Its net profit rose 70% year-on-year to 1.52 billion euros, more than the 1.38 billion euros analysts forecast in a Reuters poll.
Persons: Caixabank, Morgan, Jesús, Inti Landauro, Simon Cameron, Moore Organizations: Thomson Locations: MADRID
They define that form of value as "combined yield, a blend of dividend yield, free cashflow yield and net buyback yield." "Combined yield has been the best performing of the long-short European factors that we track, year-to-date," the analysts said. Stock screen AllianceBernstein performed a screen of "High Combined Yield Stocks" in Europe for the final quarter of the year. Equinor is listed on both the Oslo Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, while BP is traded on the London Stock Exchange and Frankfurt Stock Exchange. BP is also traded on the New York Stock Exchange in the form of American depositary shares.
Persons: it's, AllianceBernstein, France's, Norway's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Tesco, BP, Oslo Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, London Stock Exchange, Frankfurt Stock Exchange, New York Stock Exchange, Systems, Deutsche Post Locations: Europe, Belgian, British, Swiss
UniCredit CEO says shareholders prefer buybacks to dividends
  + stars: | 2023-10-27 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
Unicredit Bank logo is seen in this illustration taken March 12, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsMILAN, Oct 27 (Reuters) - Italy's UniCredit (CRDI.MI) is using mostly share buybacks to return capital to shareholders, rather than dividends, because that is what investors prefer, Chief Executive Andrea Orcel said in a shareholders' meeting on Friday. "This is what shareholders tell us when we speak with them," Orcel told a meeting that approved a 2.5-billion-euro ($2.64 billion) share buyback. Presenting quarterly earnings on Tuesday, Orcel said that UniCredit would consider increasing over time the cash portion of its distribution, which is "arguably low." With shares trading at between 5 and 5.5 times the bank's forward earnings, "I think I am doing investors a favour by reducing the share count and boosting the yield going forward", Orcel said.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Andrea Orcel, Orcel, UniCredit, Valentina Za, Alvise Organizations: REUTERS, Thomson
BNP Paribas posts in-line Q3 profits as trading declines
  + stars: | 2023-10-26 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
BNP Paribas , the euro zone's biggest bank, posted in-line quarterly results on Thursday, as a jump in corporate financing services offset the continued retreat in trading revenue. Group sales over the three-month period ending in September rose by 4% to 11.58 billion euros, slightly above the 11.52 billion-euro consensus. Germany's Deutsche Bank reported a 12% drop in such revenue for the period, while Britain's Barclays reported a 13% decrease. BNP set aside 734 million euros for credit losses, below the 815 million euros expected by analysts. It also completed more than 85% of its 5 billion-euro share buyback program in 2023, equivalent to about 7% of its market capitalisation.
Persons: Jean, Laurent Bonnafe Organizations: BNP, French, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Bank of Locations: U.S, Ukraine, Bank
The executive leadership team is viewed as a well-oiled machine with Morgan Stanley thriving compared to its megabank peers. Leaving Morgan Stanley would require going outside their comfort zone. Employees from these executives' righthand men and rank-and-file Morgan Stanley staffers may not welcome these changes. "You would expect everyone's guard to be raised at Morgan Stanley to monitor employee reaction and manage at least the best performers." Do you work for Morgan Stanley?
Persons: Morgan Stanley's James Gorman, Ted Pick, Dan Simkowitz, Andy Saperstein, Gorman, Glenn Shorr, Glenn Schorr, It's, Mike Mayo, they've, Mayo, Morgan Stanley, Pick's anointment, Pick, fides, Morgan, America's Ebrahim Poonawala, Poonwala, Stephen Biggar, Simkowitz, Saperstein, Let's, Schorr, Hayley Cuccinello Organizations: America's, Mitsubishi, Financial Times, Management Locations: Wells Fargo, Saperstein, Mayo, Simkowitz, hcuccinello@insider.com
PARIS, Oct 26 (Reuters) - Slower economic growth in 2024 could create more opportunities for bolt-on acquisitions, BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA) Chief Financial Officer Lars Machenil said on Thursday. "If the (economic) growth is a bit more timid, which is probably what we're going to see next year, then that fuelling of additional growth - natural, organic - will be a tad slower," Machenil said. Machenil didn't elaborate on the nature of the potential bolt-on acquisitions. "Depending on how the next year will unfold, yes (there) might (be a) shift a bit towards bolting on," he said. Reporting by Mathieu Rosemain Editing by Mark PotterOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Lars Machenil, Machenil, Mathieu Rosemain, Mark Potter Organizations: BNP, Deutsche, ABN Amro, Bank of, Thomson Locations: Bank
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