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Jian Jiao left the Bay Area in 2021 and moved his family to Austin, Texas. The Bay Area had a great job market for senior tech roles with many similar people around. AdvertisementAdvertisementAustin is expensive for Texas but cheap compared with the Bay Area. When my parents flew in from Beijing, they had multiple direct flights into the Bay Area. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe North Austin-South Austin divideMost of the new developments are in north Austin because that's where the tech hubs have been set up.
Persons: Jian Jiao, Jiao, Austin, , we've, I've, it's, there's Organizations: Area, Service, BP, Google, Oracle, that's Locations: Austin , Texas, San Francisco, Austin, Sunnyvale, California, America, Orange County, Irvine, Southern California, Texas, Bay, Dallas, San Antonio, Houston, Beijing, South Austin
In this article BP.-GBMSFTBKR Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTThis image from 2016 shows a carbon capture project in Texas. Other processes in the sector include direct air capture, with firms like Climeworks operating in the space. Climeworks, which specializes in direct air capture and storage, has offices in Switzerland and Germany. Its clients include businesses such as Stripe and Microsoft , and the Microsoft Climate Innovation Fund has invested in the company. While carbon capture has its advocates, the technology is divisive and has been questioned by a range of organizations.
Persons: Baker Hughes, Lorenzo Simonelli, Simonelli, Bill Gates, Gates, Bob Dudley, there'll, We've, Dudley, — that's Organizations: Houston Chronicle, hearst Newspapers, Getty, Hearst Newspapers, CNBC, ADIPEC, U.S . Department of Energy, Microsoft, Innovation Fund, BBC, Breakthrough Energy, International Energy Agency, Greenpeace Locations: Texas, Abu Dhabi, United States, Europe, Switzerland, Germany, Kenya, Paris
Speaking at this week's global finance meeting in Riyadh, HSBC boss Noel Quinn warned of a potential "tipping point on fiscal deficits" for a number of countries across the world. And some analysts fear the uncertainty of next year's funding crush is filtering out the steepening yield curve via the term premium. Term premium at highest in 8 yearsReuters GraphicsCBO long-term US debt and deficit projections'DOOM LOOP'? That's spooky enough, until you start to factor in the recent yield spike and or a return of the term premium to 60-year averages of 150 bp. Tipping point or not, there's a danger the market is starting crystallise the problem it fears most.
Persons: Sukree, Noel Quinn, it's, that's, Stephen Jen, Jen, Goldman Sachs, Jeremy Hunt, Mike Dolan Organizations: HSBC, New York Fed, Federal Reserve, Fed, JPMorgan, Treasury, CBO, Moody's, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Kasikornbank, Bangkok, Riyadh, U.S, Washington, Europe, Italy
SummaryCompanies Shell to cut 200 jobs, or 15%, of low-carbon solutions unitA further 130 jobs under reviewShell scraps hydrogen light mobility unitLONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Shell (SHEL.L) will cut around 15% of the workforce at its low-carbon solutions division and scale back its hydrogen business as part of CEO Wael Sawan's drive to boost profits, it said on Wednesday. Shell plans to sharply scale back its hydrogen light mobility operations, which develop technologies for light passenger vehicles, the company said. It will also merge two of four general manager roles in the hydrogen business, Shell said. The retreat from the light mobility sector follows the departure of the business's manager Oliver Bishop several months ago. Bishop today leads rival BP's (BP.L) global hydrogen mobility business.
Persons: Wael Sawan's, Sawan, Shell, Oliver Bishop, BP's, London . Sawan, Ron Bousso, Jason Neely, Jan Harvey Organizations: Shell, Reuters, Solutions, Sawan, Energy Intelligence, BP, Exxon Mobil, Chevron, Thomson Locations: Shell, Britain, Netherlands, Europe's, Louisiana, London ., U.S
Speculation that Chevron and Exxon might try to buy rivals BP (BP.L) and Shell (SHEL.L) intensified over the last two years as the European majors underperformed their U.S. rivals. Investors punished the European companies for their pivot towards renewables and low carbon energy while rewarding the U.S. companies' focus on oil and gas production that drove record profits last year. The oil industry last went through an era of major consolidation in the late 1990s when Exxon, Shell, BP and France's TotalEnergies merged with rivals to create huge integrated companies. A senior industry source close to the issue, as well as analysts and investors dismissed any imminent U.S. purchase of European rivals. Some European investors have also campaigned for energy companies to shift their business models to help tackle climate change.
Persons: Hess, Dado Ruvic, Tyler Tebbs, Bernard Looney, Lucas Herrmann, Shell's, Exxon's, Ron Bousso, Simon Webb, Barbara Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Chevron, Hess, LONDON, Exxon Mobil, Exxon, BP, Shell, Investors, France's, Natural Resources, MKP Advisors, BNP, Reuters, European, Thomson Locations: Ukraine, Chevron, U.S
Speculation that Chevron and Exxon might try to buy rivals BP (BP.L) and Shell (SHEL.L) intensified over the last two years as the European majors underperformed their U.S. rivals. Investors punished the European companies for their pivot towards renewables and low carbon energy while rewarding the U.S. companies' focus on oil and gas production that drove record profits last year. The oil industry last went through an era of major consolidation in the late 1990s when Exxon, Shell, BP and France's TotalEnergies merged with rivals to create huge integrated companies. A senior industry source close to the issue, as well as analysts and investors dismissed any imminent U.S. purchase of European rivals. Some European investors have also campaigned for energy companies to shift their business models to help tackle climate change.
Persons: Hess, Dado Ruvic, Tyler Tebbs, Bernard Looney, Lucas Herrmann, Shell's, Exxon's, Ron Bousso, Simon Webb, Barbara Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Chevron, Hess, LONDON, Exxon Mobil, Exxon, BP, Shell, Investors, France's, Natural Resources, MKP Advisors, BNP, Reuters, European, Thomson Locations: Ukraine, Chevron, U.S
Japanese national flag is hoisted atop the headquarters of Bank of Japan in Tokyo, Japan September 20, 2023. The benchmark JGB yield climbed to 0.845% right at the start of the trading day, its highest since July 2013, after revisiting peaks the previous day as well. But it eased immediately after the BOJ announcement, and was last 1.0 basis point (bp) lower than Thursday's closing level at 0.83%. The BOJ caps the 10-year yield at 1% under its yield curve control (YCC) policy, after doubling it in a surprise move at the end of July. "If the yen crosses 150, it would of course be more difficult for the BOJ to intervene in the JGB market.
Persons: Issei Kato, Masayuki Kichikawa, YCC, Fumio Kishida, Brigid Riley, Kevin Buckland, Shri Navaratnam Organizations: Bank of Japan, REUTERS, Rights, Sumitomo Mitsui DS Asset Management, Treasury, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, U.S
A Siemens Gamesa blade factory on the banks of the River Humber in Hull, England on October 11, 2021. Siemens Energy made the headlines earlier this year when it scrapped its profit forecast and warned that costly failures at wind turbine subsidiary Siemens Gamesa could drag on for years. It sparked concerns about wider problems across the industry and thrust Europe's wind energy giants' earnings into the spotlight. Read more:Deutsche had previously highlighted challenges in the wind turbine industry including supplier delays, lower tax credits and rising rates. Reliability issues Those surveyed by ONYX also expressed reliability concerns, with 69% expecting more reliability issues due to aging assets and 56% seeing problems associated with new turbine technology.
Persons: PAUL ELLIS, Kepler Cheuvreux, Morgan Stanley, Morgan, Ben Uglow, Ørsted, Read, , Ashley Crowther, Crowther Organizations: Siemens, AFP, Getty, Siemens Energy, Grid Technologies, Siemens Gamesa, Gas, Grid, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Vestas, ONYX Locations: Hull , England, Ukraine
Israel’s fossil fuel boon becomes less clear-cut
  + stars: | 2023-10-19 | by ( Yawen Chen | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
LONDON, Oct 19 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Israel’s growing gas sector has a significance that extends east and west. Analysts at Israel’s Bank Leumi had estimated that exports would jump to at least 11 bcm this year. Israel’s 1,087 bcm of gas reserves in 2022 yielded 21 bcm of production, of which 9 bcm was exported, with a doubling of exports to Israel’s main market, Egypt. Still, Israel’s gas sector has gone from a helping hand to a potential headache. Follow @ywchen1 on XCONTEXT NEWSDutch TTF Natural Gas Futures, Europe’s benchmark gas index, were trading at 48 euros per megawatt hour as of 0823 GMT on Oct. 19.
Persons: , Yair Lapid, Israel’s Bank Leumi, It’s, NewMed, Abraham, Gaza’s, Isabel Dotzenrath, George Hay, Streisand Neto Organizations: Reuters, United, United Arab Emirates, Israel’s Bank, LNG, Abu, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, NewMed Energy, Abraham Accords, BP, Natural Gas Futures, Intercontinental Exchange, Chevron, Mediterranean Gas, Oil, Energy, Thomson Locations: United Arab, Israel, Europe, Russia, Egypt, Brussels, Abu Dhabi, Ahli, , Jihad, Gaza, Jordan, Denver
Renewables (and gas) have been substitutes for fossil fuels such as coal and oil enabling a significant reduction in greenhouse emissions. Renewables (and gas) have served as complements to other fossil fuels – ensuring energy remains affordable and reliable even as consumption increases significantly. EMISSIONS PEAK BUT NOT SOONEventually, China and India’s energy consumption will start to grow more slowly, at which point renewables will substitute for fossil fuels rather than just complement them. Even so, in 2022, fossil fuels accounted for 82% of primary energy consumption in China and 88% in India, including 70% of total electricity generation in China and 77% in India. Policymakers from OECD countries use the U.N. conference process and other diplomatic forums to press China and India to speed up their transition from fossil fuels to zero-emission alternatives.
Persons: Tingshu Wang, Barack Obama, John Kemp, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Huawei, REUTERS, Organisation for Economic Cooperation, Development, OECD, Renewables, United Nations Population Division, ³, World Energy, Energy Institute, BP, Thomson, Reuters Locations: Shenmu, Yulin city, Shaanxi, China, India, North America, Europe, Chartbook, United States, Western Europe, U.S, Portugal, Switzerland
London CNN —Aircraft engine maker Rolls-Royce will slash up to 2,500 jobs worldwide in a bid to streamline its operations and tackle years of underperformance. (Rolls-Royce is a separate company from Rolls-Royce Motor Cars, a wholly owned subsidiary of BMW. The two businesses bearing the Rolls-Royce name were part of the same firm until the 1970s.) “This is another step on our multi-year transformation journey to build a high-performing, competitive, resilient and growing Rolls-Royce,” Erginbilgic said. “Its transformation plan is faring well, with improving operations, the post-pandemic rebound in international flying and increased defense spending.”
Persons: Royce, Tufan Erginbilgic, Germany Nadja Wohlleben, Erginbilgic —, , , Erginbilgic, Grazia Vittadini, ” Erginbilgic Organizations: London CNN — Aircraft, Boeing, Airbus, Royce, Rolls, BMW, BP, , Victoria Scholar, Interactive Locations: Dahlewitz, Berlin, Germany, London’s
The logo for Goldman Sachs is seen on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, New York, U.S., November 17, 2021. According to Goldman Sachs, higher oil prices will feed into higher revenues, benefiting commodity-related sectors — for which analysts at the brokerage expect positive earnings upgrades. Shares of European oil majors BP (BP.L), Shell (SHEL.L) and TotalEnergies (TTEF.PA) have gained between 4.5% and 7% since the conflict began. Adjusting for inflation, however, Goldman Sachs expects earnings in Europe to fall 2% this year. Through 2025, Goldman expects European and U.S. companies' profits to grow at 5% annually from current levels, but only 2% in real terms for Europe in the same period.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Andrew Kelly, Brent, Lilia Peytavin, Goldman, Roshan Abraham, Susan Mathew, Shilpi Majumdar Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Brent, East, BP, Shell, European, Thomson Locations: New York City , New York, U.S, Europe, Bengaluru
The exception among major commodities was copper, where imports of the unwrought metal were up in September from August, but down from the year earlier month. Copper imports were 480,426 metric tons in September, up from August's 473,330, but down 5.8% from 509,954 in September last year. For the first nine months of 2023, unwrought copper imports were down 9.5% to 3.99 million metric tons. Crude oil imports were 11.13 million barrels per day (bpd) in September, down from August's 12.4 million bpd, although it's worth noting that August was third strongest month on record. IRON ORE, COALIron ore imports dropped to 101.18 million metric tons in October, down 4.9% from August's 106.42 million, but it's worth noting that August was the strongest month since October 2020.
Persons: Aly, China's, Lincoln Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Port, Shanghai, China, Rights LAUNCESTON, Australia, August's
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In turn, higher rates will dampen interest-sensitive expenditure and likely lead to slower growth in oil consumption in 2024. Services are less energy-intensive but more labour-intensive than manufacturing, so the sector’s inflation rate tends to be more persistent and a better indicator of the overall amount of inflationary pressure within the economy. Most rate traders anticipate the central bank will be forced to keep overnight rates higher for longer to squeeze persistent inflation out of the economy. In the short term, the renewed expansion of the U.S. manufacturing and service sectors is supporting oil consumption and prices. In the medium term, however, the higher-for-longer rates needed to bring inflation back to target will likely depress business activity and slow oil consumption growth in 2024.
Persons: Eduardo Munoz, John Kemp, Rod Nickel Organizations: Exxon, REUTERS, Institute, Supply, Federal Reserve, Treasury, Thomson, Reuters Locations: Newport , New Jersey, U.S, United States, Europe, Ukraine
The proposed tax credit, 45V, is meant to turbocharge the production of low-emissions hydrogen. "The IRA's section 45V production tax credit is the most generous clean hydrogen subsidy in the world," Jesse Jenkins, professor of macro-scale energy systems at Princeton University, told CNBC. John Macdougall | Afp | Getty ImagesThe adjudication of the hydrogen tax credit has become about more than just the hydrogen tax credit, too. The amount of the hydrogen tax credit, which is available for 10 years, depends on the emissions generated in making hydrogen. If hydrogen is produced without releasing any carbon emissions, the tax credit is maxed out at $3 per kilogram of hydrogen.
Persons: that's, It's, Jesse Jenkins, John Macdougall, Wilson Ricks, Jenkins, Ricks, Rachel Fakhry, electrolyzers, Andriy Onufriyenko, Eric Guter, Josef Kallo, H2FLY, Guter, Phil Musser, Shannon Angielski, Angielski, Shi, Fakhry Organizations: Istock, Treasury, Princeton University, CNBC, Daimler Truck Holding, Afp, Getty, Energy, Research, Princeton, Natural Resources Defense Council, Power, Singularity, Air Products, Bloomberg, Air, Products, Hydrogen Company, European, EU, NextEra Energy, Hydrogen Future Coalition, BP, Duke Energy, Exxon Mobile, General Electric, Siemens Energy, American, Shell, Hydrogen, Coalition Locations: Biden's, United States, U.S, Berlin, additionality, Maribor, Slovenia, Oxagon, Saudi Arabia, Wilbarger County , Texas
The commodity-focussed FTSE 100 (.FTSE) was down 0.1%, while the mid-cap index FTSE 250 (.FTMC) lost 0.5%. The yield on the UK benchmark bond edged higher after Bailey's comments but remained lower for the day at 4.402%. "Although higher dollar and yields would typically weaken gold, the geopolitical concerns are pushing gold higher," said Giles Coghlan, chief market analyst at GCFX. Industrial metal miners (.FTNMX551020) also advanced 0.6% following a rise in copper prices. UK wealth manager St James's Place (SJP.L) was pushed by regulators to overhaul fees, with the stock tumbling 13.5% to the bottom of the FTSE 100.
Persons: Toby Melville, Ashmore, Andrew Bailey, BoE Governor Andrew Bailey, Giles Coghlan, Coghlan, St James's, Khushi Singh, Sonia Cheema, Sohini Organizations: London Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Bank of England, Mining, Shell, BP, St, Thomson Locations: Canary Wharf, London, Britain, James's, Iran, Israel, China, Bengaluru
Logo of British Petrol BP is seen at a petrol station in Pienkow, Poland, June 8, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsCompanies Bp Plc FollowLONDON, Oct 10 (Reuters) - BP (BP.L) said on Tuesday it remained committed to its financial and carbon reduction ambitions, as interim Chief Executive Officer Murray Auchincloss hosted an investor day in Denver. "BP's strategy, financial frame and net zero ambition are unchanged," the energy group said in a statement. "BP remains focused on delivering its strategy safely, with disciplined delivery, quarter-on-quarter, to meet 2025 targets and 2030 aims." The company aims to achieve zero net carbon emissions by 2050 and to invest billions in renewable and low-carbon power.
Persons: Kacper, Murray Auchincloss, Bernard Looney, Ron Bousso, Tomasz Janowski, Susan Fenton, Emelia Organizations: British, REUTERS, Rights, BP, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Pienkow, Poland, Denver
DUBAI, Oct 9 (Reuters) - The United Arab Emirates is refashioning state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC) in the image of an international oil major by stepping up its global expansion and finding new revenue streams to maximise earnings for the Gulf state. The state-owned company also told Reuters it was investing in energy trading, without giving further details. ADNOC has two trading arms, both set up in 2020: ADNOC Trading, which is focused on crude oil, and ADNOC Global Trading, a joint venture with Italy's Eni (ENI.MI) and OMV which is more focused on refined products. Other recent hires include Bart Cornelissen, who left Deloitte to become ADNOC's senior vice president for group strategy and portfolio last month, according to LinkedIn. Recent senior hires for ADNOC's trading arms include alumni of Gunvor, Litasco, Shell and TotalEnergies, the employment network showed.
Persons: ADNOC, Galp, Austria's, Mohammed bin Zayed, headcount, Michele Fiorentino, Baker Hughes, Musabbeh Al Kaabi, Al Kaabi, Bart Cornelissen, Michael Hafner, Hafner, Morgan Stanley, Neil Quilliam, Sultan al, Jaber, John Kerry, Abu, Maha El Dahan, Yousef Saba, Ron Bousso, David Clarke Organizations: United, Abu, Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, Reuters, BP, NewMed Energy, Italy's Eni, UAE, IOC, Aramco, LinkedIn, Mubadala Energy, Deloitte, Greenhill &, Deutsche Bank, UBS, HSBC, Shell, Eni, Gunvor, The, Chatham House, United Nations, Masdar, Thomson Locations: DUBAI, United Arab Emirates, Abu Dhabi, Gulf, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Africa, Mozambique, ADNOC, Geneva, London, The UAE, Europe, Sultan, Dubai
Higher interest rates and lower leverage are a double whammy for stocks, according to Kostin. Markets InsiderThe result has been lower ROE across the market this year. Goldman SachsKostin broke that decline down even further, noting that, of the 69 basis-point decline this year, 31 basis points were directly attributable to higher interest expenses. "Reduced leverage, lower asset turnover, and a contraction in EBIT margins also weighed on S&P 500 ex-Financials ROE, contributing -42 bp total." Today, Kostin sees speed bumps ahead in the form of higher interest rates and deeply rooted inflation, which might stick around thanks to higher oil prices.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, David J, ROE, Kostin, Goldman Sachs Kostin, Financials ROE, Berkshire Hathaway, Jerome Powell, sector's ROE, Brent, it's, that's Organizations: Financials, Energy, Berkshire, Brent
Deal negotiations between Exxon and Pioneer are advanced but have not yet led to an agreement, Reuters reported on Thursday. These transactions were eventually allowed to be completed, and the regulator has not sued to thwart an oil and gas production deal since 2000. The lawyers and experts interviewed said the FTC would face an uphill struggle in challenging Exxon's attempted acquisition of Pioneer. "The modern U.S. experience is that oil and gas deals of any notable size get a close look. It sued to block the merger and only agreed to drop its objections after BP offered to divest oil production acreage in Alaska.
Persons: Joe Biden, Janet Yellen, Leah Millis, producer's, Lina Khan, Andre Barlow, Doyle, Barlow, Mazard PLLC, Sheldon Whitehouse, William Kovacic, George Washington, consultancies Wood MacKenzie, David Kass, Diane Bartz, David French, Mike Stone, Greg Roumeliotis, Marguerita Choy Organizations: Treasury, White, REUTERS, Exxon Mobil, Natural Resources, Exxon, Pioneer, Reuters, Federal Trade Commission, Democratic, George, Companies, Activision, FTC, Atlantic, BP, RBC Capital Markets, Chevron, PDC Energy, University of Maryland, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Atlantic Richfield, Alaska, West Texas, New Mexico, Rystad, Denver, Julesburg, Washington ,, Atlanta
A magnificent time to buy the dipHigher bond yields hurt the Magnificent Seven's shares, Kostin said, simultaneously sending their valuations lower. "The recent upgrade to consensus estimates in part reflects the largest tech stocks growing into their elevated P/E multiples – especially NVDA and AMZN." "History suggests the upcoming earnings season is a potential catalyst for the largest tech stocks," he wrote. And for investors worried about price, Kostin has good news: shares of the Magnificent Seven stocks are the cheapest they've been in six years. Goldman SachsWith higher sales and higher earnings expectations powering shares skywards, Kostin believes that shares of the Magnificent Seven could enjoy shockingly strong appreciation from today's prices.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, David Kostin, Kostin Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Meta, Treasury
Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Blackstone's year-to-date stock performance. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Sunrun's year-to-date stock performance. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon FMC's year-to-date stock performance. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon BP's year-to-date stock performance. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Paramount's year-to-date stock performance.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Blackstone, I'm, It's, we're Organizations: PSA, Dominion, Dominion Energy, FMC, Paramount
The commodities market is a "much more constructive place to invest" right now — and "integrated" names in the energy sector in particular are "extremely attractive," according to one portfolio manager. For now, Dunn said, he is "certainly concerned about and paying attention to the U.S. onshore shale era," when evaluating what equities to invest in. Integrated energy companies typically engage in the exploration, production, refinement, and distribution of oil and gas. "It's a U.S. company, but they have a lot of assets outside the U.S. and they have been investing outside the U.S.," he said. 'Uncover interesting equities' While the ongoing pullback in the U.S. stock market presents concerns on what stocks to invest in, Dunn said it can help "uncover very interesting equities."
Persons: Aaron Dunn, CNBC's, Dunn, they're, TotalEnergies, Stocks Organizations: Morgan Stanley Investment Management, ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP, ConocoPhillips, Constellation Brands, BJ's Wholesale Locations: U.S, British, Netherlands, Qatar, Australia
Morning Bid: A bond bounce, or a bull trap?
  + stars: | 2023-10-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
[1/3] Traders are pictured at their desks in front of the DAX board at the stock exchange in Frankfurt, Germany July 29, 2015. REUTERS/Remote/Pawel Kopczynski/File photo Acquire Licensing RightsA look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Tom WestbrookRelief extended from Wall Street to Marunouchi on Thursday, with bond yields and the dollar down further and stock markets stabilising. A cooler-than-expected U.S. private payrolls report and Wednesday's 5% drop in crude oil prices have helped. The oil slump was particularly noteworthy as the biggest in more than a year, pushing the price below where it was a year ago. The yen has also risen to the strong side of 149-per-dollar, giving traders something of a break from white-knuckling uncertainty over possible intervention by Japan.
Persons: DAX, Westbrook, ECB's, Fed's Kashkari, Daly, Mester, Tom Westbrook, Edmund Klamann Organizations: REUTERS, Treasury, Friday's, Thomson Locations: Frankfurt, Germany, Marunouchi, Japan, China, Asia, South Korea, Philippines, Friday's U.S, Barr
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