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President Donald Trump meets business leaders at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China, in November, 2017. Donald Trump's victory in U.S. elections has raised the specter of higher tariffs on China — but it may not be the only Asian country that faces this predicament, according to Goldman Sachs. Meanwhile, Vietnam's trade surplus with the U.S between January and September stands at $90 billion. U.S. data shows that the U.S. trade deficit with China narrowed to $279.11 billion in 2023, from $346.83 billion in 2016. Regardless of tariffs, Goldman still expects continued pressure for the relocation of certain supply chains from China to Southeast Asia, India or Mexico in particular.
Persons: Donald Trump, Donald Trump's, Goldman Sachs, Trump, Andrew Tilton, Tilton, Mr Trump, Trump's, Brian Tan, Mari Pangestu, Pangestu, Goldman Organizations: of, People, Pacific, Trump, U.S, United, Emerging Asia, Barclays Bank, FT Commodities Locations: Beijing, China, U.S, Asia, Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam, South, United States, India, Japan, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Mexico, Indonesia, Trump, Southeast Asia
For some who’ve run afoul of Trump, the election results have sparked fresh worries that he may enter office looking for retribution. During the campaign, Trump has made different statements about whether he might target people who’ve upset him. Rep. Jim Jordan, a staunch Trump ally in Congress, said he doesn’t expect any of the prosecutors to face reprisals over Trump investigations. One former Trump White House official who has publicly spoken against Trump described feeling “scared” and declined to let their name be used. Now Fanone says he is hunkering down in his Virginia mountain-area home for fear that Trump could weaponize the police.
Persons: WASHINGTON, Olivia Troye, Trump, “ I’m, I’ll, ” Troye, , He’s, he’s, he’ll, Joe Biden, Biden, , haven’t, Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, Jack Smith, Smith, Jim Jordan, ” Jordan, Richard Nixon, ” Nixon, Mark Zaid, ” Zaid, Michael Cohen, Cohen, Alvin Hellerstein, who’ve, yank, JD Vance, Joe Biden’s, Hunter, Vance, podcaster Joe Rogan, ” Larry Pfeiffer, won’t, aren’t, ” Trump, Schiff, Pelosi, Dan Goldman, Trump’s, ” It’s, it’s, Michael Fanone, Fanone, “ I’ll, Hunter Biden, what’s, “ We’re, they’re, John Bolton, Bolton, Ronald Reagan’s, I’m, Susie Wiles, Pat Summerall, Jared Moskowitz, Aquilino, ” Gonell, Kamala Harris, Gonell Organizations: Trump, Democratic, White, Fox News, Sunday, CNN, Washington, CIA, Los Angeles Times, New York Democrat, Joe Biden weaponized, Department of Justice, Justice, Trump White House, D.C, Washington Post, Justice Department, NFL, , U.S . Capitol, Capitol Locations: United States, America, California, Manhattan, U.S, Virginia
Bitcoin hits $80,000. Why Trump is boosting crypto
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
After briefly touching the $80,000 milestone, bitcoin was trading just below it Sunday mid-morning. The crypto industry believes Trump’s victory is a bullish sign for bitcoin and other digital currencies. Although Trump was once a bitcoin skeptic, once saying it “was based on thin air,” he has fully embraced crypto in recent months — unlike the Biden administration, which has sought to rein in crypto. A big reason Trump has changed his tune on crypto: He now has a financial stake in it. In September, Trump and his children started a new crypto business called World Liberty Financial.
Persons: CNN — Bitcoin, Donald Trump, Bitcoin, Trump, , ” Trump, , Biden, Gary Gensler, ” Gensler’s, Sam Bankman, Gensler, Gensler’s, cryptocurrencies, Elon Musk Organizations: CNN, Biden, Liberty, . Securities, Exchange, ” Gensler’s SEC, SEC, Department of Justice, cryptocurrencies Locations: USA
Insider Today: Preparing for Trump 2.0
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Preparing for 47Donald Trump, now the 2024 president-elect, never really stopped running for office after losing the 2020 election. Treasury yields also finished the week higher, as investors bet that a Trump White House will drive inflation. Also read:Risky businessGetty Images; iStock; Natalie Ammari/BIThere's no such thing as free lunch — or in one investor's case, free dinner. The great American shoplifting spreeGetty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIRegular Americans are shoplifting everything from tape measures to blocks of cheese.
Persons: , Andrew Yeung, that's, Donald Trump's, Donald Trump, Evan Vucci, Stocks, Bitcoin, Tesla, Steve Madden, Trump's, Goldman's, David Solomon Jeenah Moon, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, It's, Andy Jassy, Carter Smith, Chelsea Jia Feng, Jassy, Natalie Ammari, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Trump, — Goldman Sachs Organizations: Business, Service, Google, AP, Trump White House, Airbus, Bloomberg, Getty, Getty Images, Amazon, BI Locations: Silicon Valley, China
CNN —Pick one word to describe Republicans and Donald Trump, the focus group moderator asked, and one word to describe Democrats and Kamala Harris. “Donald Trump is a uniquely more popular figure, but what is it about him that makes him that way? Former President Donald Trump gestures during a campaign rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, 2023. But what Democrats face is much deeper than the usual finger-pointing by a losing campaign or speculation about the next set of presidential primary candidates. It goes beyond easy comments about talking more to the working class when Democrats lost ground among nearly every demographic in the presidential race.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, , , hadn’t, Harris, Joe Biden, she’d “, what’s, Hillary Clinton, JB Pritzker, “ Donald Trump, Barack Obama, Obama, Leah Millis, Vermont Sen, Bernie Sanders, David Plouffe, Biden, Jen O’Malley Dillon, Stephanie Cutter, ’ ”, Pat Ryan, Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, Republican she’d, “ It’s, ” Gluesenkamp Perez, ” Harris, Hannah McKay, weren’t, Joe Rogan, Rogan, Trump, Sanders, – Pritzker, Tim Walz, Gavin Newsom, Hakeem Jeffries, Angie Craig, we’ve, Craig, She’s, ’ ” Craig, Gluesenkamp Perez, Joe Morelle, Josh Shapiro’s, Chris Deluzio, Democratic Sen, Bob Casey, ” Deluzio, David Goldman, Bill Clinton, Jimmy Carter, hasn’t, George W, Bush’s, Levi Strauss, Daniel Lurie, London Breed, Harris ’, Oprah Winfrey, Ryan Organizations: CNN, Trump, Democratic, Gov, Biden, Lone Star, Electoral, Reuters, New York Democrat, Republican, Howard University, Tuesday, Trumpism, California Gov, Minnesota, Twin, Democrats, New York Rep, Pennsylvania Gov, Pennsylvania, London, Democratic Party Locations: Pennsylvania, Illinois, Michigan, Lone Star State, Washington, , Texas, Waco , Texas, Vermont, Hudson Valley, , Wilmington , Delaware, America, Minnesota, Twin Cities, Pittsburgh, Dearborn , Michigan, Grant Park, New York
Europe's banks brace for tougher competition under Trump 2.0
  + stars: | 2024-11-09 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
JPMorgan , Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley shares all soared while the STOXX Europe 600 Banks index is down more than 1% for the week. "If U.S. banks get the expected policy support, they could ramp up loan volumes and optimize capital in ways that Europe's banks just can't match right now," Materazzi said. Since early 2010, European banking shares have fallen 10%, while U.S. lenders have more than tripled. The European Central Bank has estimated that euro zone banks' return on equity fluctuates around 5%, against 10% in the U.S., linking it to higher U.S. fee income and legacy non-performing loans with which European banks still grapple. A wave of deregulation should give European banks some leverage to lobby for easing the rules in Europe, which are already more onerous, one banking executive told Reuters.
Persons: Boris Roessler, Donald Trump, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, David Materazzi, Materazzi, Karin Keller, Sutter, Rachel Reeves, Trump Organizations: Getty, JPMorgan, Galileo, European Central Bank, Trump . Swiss, Reuters, The Locations: Frankfurt, U.S, Britain, Basel, Italy, USA, Europe, The U.S
CNBC Pro combed through the most recent Wall Street research to find companies analysts really like heading into 2025 based on potential Trump policies. They include General Motors, Ford Motor, Robinhood , Coinbase , GE Aerospace and Goldman Sachs. "We see F and GM as the main beneficiaries from the Trump administration," analyst John Murphy wrote. GE Aerospace The aerospace company has pricing power, according to Deutsche Bank analyst Scott Deuschle, who says GE can benefit under a Trump administration. "Additionally, we think GE could be among the largest beneficiaries of this potential trend within our aerospace coverage," Deuschle said.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Goldman Sachs, Trump, John Murphy, Murphy, Robinhood Needham, John Todaro, Todaro, Coinbase, Scott Deuschle, Deuschle, Coinbase – Needham, – Needham, HOOD, Wells Organizations: White, CNBC, General Motors, Ford Motor, GE Aerospace, Ford, General Motors Bank of America, Trump, GM, Senate, Deutsche Bank, GE, GOP White House, GM – Bank of America, SEC, GE Aerospace – Deutsche Bank, GS Locations: Mexico
Feroz Khosla, part of Goldman Sachs' financing group, was named a Goldman partner on Thursday. AdvertisementFeroz Khosla was seated at his desk at Goldman Sachs' lower Manhattan headquarters when the call came in. AdvertisementGoldman Sachs partners comprise the firm's highest-ranking executives outside the C-Suite, responsible for units representing billions of dollars in business. At one point, someone leaned over and said to Khosla's wife: "Welcome to the family," he said. "Goldman Sachs was the first family that I really had when I left India," he said, adding: "Frankly, it's the only jersey I want to wear."
Persons: Feroz Khosla, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Khosla, , John Waldron, Waldron, He's, David Solomon, Michael Kovac Champagne toasts, Manhattan . Khosla, Vivek Bantwal, Bantwal, he'd, Lucy, Reed Alexander Organizations: Service, Manhattan ., Education Locations: Manhattan, India, America
For one, the market was already in a sturdy uptrend, the S & P ahead by 20% in 2024 by October. Now, the S & P is up 44% in the past 18 months and the P/E is above 22 on more elevated margins. Here's the S & P 500 Value vs Growth relationship since 2014. His call is for investors to fade any near-term rally that takes the S & P above his 6100 "bull case" target for year end. For sure, the S & P 500 is by some measures running a bit hot, pushing above the top end of its two-year bull-market path.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Jay Powell, Trump, Cyclicals, Russell, YTD, Doug Ramsey, we're, reflating, Scott Chronert, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Republican, Trump Trade, Federal, Treasury, financials, Nasdaq, Group, Investment, Trump, Russell, Citi Locations: upending Washington, U.S, year's
Nike recently signed a 12-year deal with the NBA, WNBA, and NBA G League. AdvertisementNike is deepening its partnerships with the NBA and WNBA as basketball explodes in popularity in 2024. That's good news for the company as it tries to get back to its sports roots and reinvigorate sales — and as women's basketball becomes increasingly popular. The sportswear giant announced in October that it signed a 12-year agreement with the NBA, WNBA, and NBA G League to be the exclusive uniform and apparel provider for each league. While Nike started as a running brand, its business has historically been linked with basketball after a 1984 collaboration with Michael Jordan.
Persons: Rachel Wolff, , John Donahoe, Elliott Hill, Michael Jordan, Jordan Brand, Hill, Sue Bird, Kevin Durant, Jayson Tatum, Nike execs, Adam Silver, Nike It's, Goldman Sachs, Nike's, Caitlin Clark, Simeon Siegel, Siegel, Nike, execs, EMARKETER's Wolff, Wolff Organizations: Nike, NBA, WNBA, NBA G League, Service, Paris Olympics, NCAA, Nielsen, ESPN, G League, Adidas, Bloomberg, Business, Street, BMO Capital Markets, BI, BMO Locations: California, Portland , Oregon, Toronto, EMARKETER
Trump Media & Technology Group — Shares of President-elect Donald Trump's media company fell another 4.6% in premarket trading following a 23% plunge in the previous session. The company saw $162 million in revenue, topping the consensus expectation for $150 million. Analysts polled by FactSet penciled in 43 cents in earnings per share and $1.91 billion in revenue. Affirm lost an adjusted 31 cents per share, narrower than the consensus forecast of 35 cents, according to LSEG. Bath & Body Works — The fragrance retailer slid 2.7% in the wake of a Barclays downgrade to underweight from equal weight.
Persons: Donald Trump's, platform's, DraftKings, Sweetgreen, LSEG, Toast, StreetAccount penciling, Versace, Michael Kors, FactSet, BioNTech, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Trump Media & Technology, LSEG, Arista Networks, Arista, Capri Holdings, Capri, Beverage, Revenue, Barclays Locations: LSEG, BioNTech —
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . In today's big story, the Fed cutting interest rates yesterday was never really in doubt . Additional rate cuts aren't as clear, though, as Donald Trump's proposed widespread tariffs could slow down the Fed's plans . The market is indicating inflation could lead the Fed to keep borrowing rates high. AdvertisementGreg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.com, told Insider Today that Fed Chair Jerome Powell didn't indicate a pause in cuts was coming in December during Thursday's press conference.
Persons: , MANDEL NGAN, Chelsea Jia Feng, Donald Trump's, Paul Krugman, It's, Chip Somodevilla, Greg McBride, Jerome Powell didn't, Powell, McBride, There's, Dominique Lapointe, Lapointe, Trump, ANGELA WEISS, Morningstar, Trump's, Dave Sekera, Goldman execs, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Donald Trump, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Elon Musk, David Zaslav, Zaslav, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Ella Hopkins, Amanda Yen, Milan Sehmbi Organizations: Business, Service, Getty Images, BI, Federal Reserve, Treasury, Fed, Manulife Investment Management, Morningstar, Elon, Trump, Keystone State, Big Tech's, Walmart, Target, Costco, Big Media, Warner Bros, Discovery, Paramount, Sony Locations: AFP, China, Pennsylvania, New York, London
Goldman Sachs is optimistic on BioNTech as a result of a new oncology asset. The bank upgraded shares of the German biotechnology firm to a buy rating from neutral. Analyst Chris Shibutani accompanied the move by hiking his price target to $137 from $90, which implies upside of $27%. BNTX YTD mountain BNTX YTD chart BioNTech can also support an innovative and expansive clinical development program for BNT327 that could challenge the status quo of immune-oncology regimens, Shibutani added. Of the 19 who cover it, 12 have buy or strong buy ratings on BioNTech, LSEG data shows.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Chris Shibutani, BNTX
Treasury yields have ripped higher of late, even as the Federal Reserve continues to cut rates. The benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield has soared nearly 70 basis points to 4.3% since mid-September, when the Fed cut rates by a half-point. Despite the Fed's latest action, the incoming Trump administration is likely to keep yields elevated, according to Ned Davis Research. Dimitrova noted that rising debt-to-GDP ratio has been closely linked with higher bond yields. The question for investors now is: How long until higher yields start putting pressure on equities?
Persons: Trump, Ned Davis, Veneta, Dimitrova, Goldman Sachs, BNTX Organizations: Federal Reserve, Ned Davis Research
CNN —President-elect Donald Trump’s social media stock had been sinking fast after a short-lived, post-election-victory surge this week. Then, with a single post on Truth Social, he helped boost the stock again – and added a half billion dollars to his net worth as a result. Trump is the company’s single largest shareholder, and his 114.75 million shares are now worth about $3.7 billion. Trump media rose just 4.4% over the past five days. That could be difficult to do, anyway, because the company’s valuation depends almost entirely on Trump’s ownership and participation on Truth Social, its core product.
Persons: Donald Trump’s, Trump Organizations: CNN, Trump Media, Technology Group, Traders, Trump, Truth Locations: United States
3-Stock Lunch: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, & Vistra
  + stars: | 2024-11-08 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email3-Stock Lunch: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, & VistraScott Nations, Nations Indexes president, joins CNBC's 'Power Lunch' to discuss three stocks: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, and Vistra.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, Vistra Scott Organizations: Vistra, Vistra Scott Nations
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThree buys and a bail: Walmart, Goldman Sachs, Energy Transfer, and First SolarVictoria Greene, G Squared Private Wealth founding partner and CIO, joins CNBC's 'The Exchange' to discuss four stocks: Walmart, Goldman Sachs, Energy Transfer, and First Solar.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Victoria Greene Organizations: Walmart, Energy, Private Wealth
Pinterest — Shares of the image-sharing platform pulled back 16% after the company issued a lower-than-expected revenue outlook for the current quarter. Block — The Cash App parent company slumped more than 4.5% after its third-quarter revenue of $5.98 billion missed expectations. Toast — The restaurant management company climbed 13% after it forecast adjusted EBITDA of between $90 million and $100 million for the current quarter. Analysts expected a loss of 30 cents per share on $198 million in revenue, according to LSEG. That said, Lucid's net loss widened in the period, posting $992.5 million versus $630.9 million in the year-ago period.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon, Airbnb, DraftKings, LSEG, Monster, FactSet, Goldman Sachs, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Sean Conlon Organizations: Trump Media & Technology, Arista Networks, Arista, Capri Holdings, Beverage, Barclays
In the past decade, private investments exploded from $4 trillion to $14 trillion. Primarily led by institutional capital, investors poured money into private markets in their search for differentiated returns and alpha generation. This makes sense as alternative investments have consistently outperformed global public markets on 10-, 15-, and 20-year time horizons. As more companies stay private for longer, a portfolio limited to public companies inevitably will miss market opportunities. While private markets offer advantages of broader economic exposure, diversification and alpha generation, it is important to understand their differences from public markets.
Organizations: Bain, Private
Jefferies reiterates Nvidia and Marvell as buy The firm says the two chipmakers still have the most upside. Citi upgrades Bank of America to buy from neutral Citi says the bank could be a beneficiary of lighter regulation. Bank of America downgrades Rivian to neutral from buy Bank of America said it sees regulatory risk under a Trump administration. Bank of America upgrades Teledyne Technologies to buy from neutral The firm says it sees upside ahead for the industrial conglomerate. Goldman Sachs upgrades Wingstop to buy from neutral The firm says the wings restaurant has "best-in-class" growth.
Persons: William Blair, Warby Parker, Bernstein, Apple, Lowe's, Jefferies, Goldman Sachs, Sweetgreen, Goldman, outperformance, it's bullish, BNTX, Oppenheimer, Piper Sandler, Wells, Airbnb, Gross, Trump, TDY Organizations: Apple, Apple Intelligence, Nvidia, Marvell, Enterprise, JPMorgan, China EV, Catalyst, Holdings, Barclays downgrades, Body, Citi, U.S, Deutsche Bank, UBS, Molson Coors, OW, Bank of America, Trump Administration, " Bank of America, Teledyne Technologies Locations: AVGO, 4Q24, DPZ, UW
One US company, just two days after Trump’s reelection, says it isn’t wasting time getting out of China. Steve Madden, a $3 billion shoe company, announced Thursday that it would rapidly halve its Chinese production to avoid Trump’s tariffs. But here’s the catch: Steve Madden isn’t moving its production to the United States. ‘There for a reason’The retail industry has been crying foul over Trump’s tariffs for quite some time – apparel and shoe companies in particular. Trump’s tariffs could cost the typical middle-income US household more than $2,600 per year, according to research from Peterson Institute for International Economics.
Persons: Donald Trump, Steve Madden, Steve Madden’s, Edward Rosenfeld, , ” Rosenfeld, Rosenfeld, Trump, Joe Biden, Madden, Laura Champine, ” Champine, it’s, Douglas Holtz, Eakin, Steven Mnuchin, Donald Trump’s, CNN’s Jake Tapper, ” Mnuchin, Mnuchin Organizations: CNN, Trump, Wall Street, National Retail Federation, Companies, Wall, American, Peterson Institute for International Economics Locations: United States, China, USA, Cambodia, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, America
A Donald Trump presidency and Republican-controlled Senate could boost big banks, according to Morgan Stanley analyst Betsy Graseck. The analyst highlighted four big banks investors should look toward: Citigroup, Goldman Sachs , Wells Fargo and Bank of America . The acceleration in capital markets should benefit all the big banks, and Goldman Sachs is set to benefit the most, she noted. Meanwhile, Citigroup is most exposed to tailwinds from higher excess capital levels as a Republican-led government is unlikely to raise current capital requirements. She estimates this will result in an $86 billion jump in current excess capital for the big banks in the firm's coverage.
Persons: Donald Trump, Morgan Stanley, Betsy Graseck, financials, Financials, Graseck, Goldman Sachs, Wells, Goldman Organizations: Republican, Trump, House Republicans, Citigroup, Bank of America Locations: Wells Fargo, Basel
Investors boosted stocks after Donald Trump won a second term. But investors shouldn't depart from their long-term investing plan, Morningstar's Dave Sekera says. Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. But even as prices soar, it's important not to get caught up in the mania beyond your normal risk tolerance, warns Morningstar Senior US Market Strategist Dave Sekera. "The small-cap space, even with today's bump, it's still the most undervalued part of the market in our view," he said.
Persons: Donald Trump, shouldn't, Dave Sekera, , Morningstar, Sekera, Trump, aren't, Goldman Sachs, shouldn't overreact, John Rekenthaler, Joe Biden, That's, it's Organizations: Service, Dow Jones, White Locations: bullishness
The firm said it sees the S & P 500 soaring to 6,600 by the end of June 2025. Already, Trump's win has spurred a huge stock market rally, with the S & P 500 soaring 2.5% on Wednesday to notch its best postelection day in history. Since 1932, the S & P 500 has averaged a 152% gain over 50 months during bull runs. The strategist listed several stocks Evercore thinks could benefit from a Trump win, and some that could outperform even further from a red sweep. Trump's win "could bring more favorable regulatory environment — and WFC is one of the most regulatory-impacted names given outstanding asset cap," the firm said.
Persons: Donald Trump's, It's, Dow, Julian Emanuel, Elect Trump, Emanuel, Goldman Sachs, Evercore, Tesla, Elon Musk Organizations: ISI, Trump, GOP, Goldman, Palo Alto Networks, Israel, Exxon Mobil, Halliburton Locations: Wells, Wednesday's, Wells Fargo, China, Israel, Russia, Ukraine, cyberattacks
A pedestrian crosses the streets in front of The Bank of England illuminated by a ray of sunlight, in central London, on February 12, 2024. LONDON — The Bank of England is widely expected to cut interest rates Thursday, when policymakers deliver their first monetary policy decision following Labour's bumper budget announcement last week. The BOE is forecast to lower rates by 25 basis points for the second time this year, bringing its key rate to 4.75%. Policymakers had signaled a "gradual approach" to cuts after holding rates steady at their September meeting. The Federal Reserve on Thursday will also deliver its latest interest rate decision following the conclusion of the U.S. presidential election, having previously cut by 50 basis points in September.
Persons: BOE, Goldman Sachs, Rachel Reeves Organizations: The Bank of England, LONDON, Bank of England, Finance, Federal Reserve, U.S Locations: London
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