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The London Stock Exchange Group offices are seen in the City of London, Britain, December 29, 2017. Following the data, yields on short-term UK Gilts, reflecting near-term interest rate expectations, slid, aiding a 7.0% surge in rate sensitive real estate investment trusts (.FTNMX351020). "It may well be due to potential sentiment coming ahead of tomorrow's UK CPI data, with the hope that it comes in lower as well," said Christopher Peters, trading floor manager at Accendo Markets. UK October CPI data, due on Wednesday, could throw further light on the outlook for domestic monetary policy. Reporting by Khushi Singh and Johan M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Sherry Jacob-Phillips and Alex RichardsonOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Toby Melville, Christopher Peters, Jefferies, Tim Clark, Khushi Singh, Johan M Cherian, Sherry Jacob, Phillips, Alex Richardson Organizations: London Stock Exchange Group, City of, REUTERS, Vodafone, Federal, tomorrow's, Accendo Markets, Investors, Entain, Royce, Emirates, Thomson Locations: City, City of London, Britain, Teck, U.S, Italy, Bengaluru
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Tuesday said that the economy is headed for a soft landing thanks to new inflation data that came in below Wall Street's estimates. By close, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 1.43%, the S&P 500 rose 1.91% and the Nasdaq Composite jumped 2.37%. But to Cramer, much of the easy money has already been made when investors were fearful about the Federal Reserve's ability to calm inflation. Cramer said stocks that did well Tuesday were ones that had been crushed by soaring interest rates, such as real estate investment trusts. He advised investors to "find aberrations" and lean into companies that will benefit once inflation is more under control.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer Organizations: Dow Jones, Nasdaq Locations: China, San Francisco
"Dr. Doom" Nouriel Roubini is launching a crypto token after years of bashing the crypto industry. The token will be pegged to investments Roubini has touted in the past, including gold and other commodities. Roubini has been a vocal crypto critic, previously calling the industry "totally corrupt." Now, his asset management firm is creating its own crypto token. And he's warned of some form of disaster for the US economy for most of the past two decades.
Persons: Doom, , Roubini, he's, Atlas, That's Organizations: Service, US Dollar Atlas Capital
If you have all or most of your money in a single investment account, you're missing opportunities to build wealth. If you're serious about building wealth, there are seven types of accounts you need to have to make it happen. If you're making estimated quarterly tax payments, you'll need to accumulate funds in your tax savings account as you earn them. Note that a "tax savings account" is not a different banking product — it's just a designated use for a savings account, like an emergency fund would be. (Like the tax savings account, this isn't a different product your bank offers — it's a specific use for an account like a high-yield savings account.)
Persons: , Ally, Charles Schwab, it's, you'll, Roth, you've, It's, Robinhood, That's, We're, There's, I've, multimillionaires, Read Organizations: Service, Roth IRA, Roth, IRA
REUTERS/Toby Melville/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSummaryCompanies Real estate shares top losersMelrose surges after unit signs deal with GE AerospaceFTSE 100 down 0.1%, FTSE 250 off 0.4%Nov 6 (Reuters) - UK stocks inched lower on Monday led by a drop in shares of real estate investment trusts, while investors awaited key economic data to assess the strength of the British economy. The commodity-heavy FTSE 100 (.FTSE) edged 0.1% lower, while the mid-cap index FTSE 250 (.FTMC) fell 0.4% after logging its best week in a year on Friday. Shares of real estate investment trusts (.FTNMX351020) shed 1.2% after the index tracking real estate stocks rose sharply last week. Other economic data this week includes housing prices, construction and services activity for October. Reporting by Shubham Batra in Bengaluru; Editing by Varun H K and Eileen SorengOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Toby Melville, Sanjay Raja, Andrew Bailey, Shubham Batra, Varun, Eileen Soreng Organizations: London Stock Exchange Group, City of, REUTERS, Real, Melrose, GE Aerospace FTSE, Aerospace, Melrose Industries, GKN Aerospace, GE Aerospace, Deutsche Bank, Bank of England, Wizz, Ryanair, JD Sports, Citigroup, Thomson Locations: City, City of London, Britain, Irish, Bengaluru
Mexican businesses warmed by glow of 'nearshoring' dawn
  + stars: | 2023-11-06 | by ( Noe Torres | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
MEXICO CITY, Nov 6 (Reuters) - Mexican businesses, particularly those linked to real estate and construction, are counting on investment from so-called "nearshoring" to boost profits and economic growth, especially in industrial zones near the U.S. border. "Many companies are already talking about this - about nearshoring and the economic benefits," said Gerardo Copca, an analyst at consultancy MetAnalisis. One notable project - electric vehicle maker Tesla's plans for a reported $5 billion factory in northern Mexico - has been credited with attracting $1 billion in Chinese investments to nearby industries. Mexican real estate investment trust Fibra Uno (FUNO11.MX) plans to launch a trust allowing investors to cash in on expected growth of industrial assets. Total Mexican construction output jumped almost by 46% in August year-on-year, with northern states performing strongly.
Persons: Gerardo Copca, Nearshoring, Fibra Uno, Andre El, Mann, AMPIP, Lorenzo Berho, El, Berho, Enrique Navarro, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador's, Noe Torres, Dave Graham, David Alire Garcia, Christian Plumb, Josie Kao Organizations: MEXICO CITY, Fibra, Banco Regional, U.S, UBS, Cement, GCC, Thomson Locations: MEXICO, U.S, Mexico, Asia, Mexican, Queretaro, Guanajuato, Jalisco, United States, Canada, China, Swiss, Chihuahua, Texas
CNN —Alphabet’s Google has scrapped a development deal to build $15 billion worth of homes, offices and retail space in California’s Silicon Valley. The announcement comes amid a period of deep cost-cutting and layoffs for Google and during a time when commercial real estate is faltering. Billion-dollar investmentsIn June 2019, Google made a $1 billion pledge to help develop more affordable housing in the increasingly unaffordable region. A month later, Google partnered with Lendlease to redevelop its landholdings for a 10- to 15-year project valued at $15 billion. Lending to commercial real estate developers and managers largely comes from small and mid-sized banks, where the pressure on liquidity has been most severe.
Persons: Lendlease, , ” Lendlease, Google’s, we’ve, , Sundar Pichai, “ We’ve, ” Scott Foster, Goldman Sachs Organizations: CNN, Google, San Francisco Bay Project, Alexa, Wall Street Journal, Lendlease Locations: Silicon, San Francisco Bay, San Jose, Sunnyvale, Bay, Mountain View
Backed by Japan's SoftBank, WeWork aimed to revolutionise the office market by taking long leases on large properties and renting the space to multiple smaller businesses on more flexible, shorter arrangements. Some leveraged property investors could struggle to earn enough rental income to service rising debt costs, they said. The number and volume of real estate loans due for refinancing in 2024 is unclear because many deals are struck privately between borrower and lender, Ed Daubeney, co-head, debt and structured finance, EMEA, at real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle, told Reuters. U.S. industrial and office real estate investment trusts (REITs) were seen 35.8% more likely to default, versus expectations a year ago. "We're at a massive turning point in the real estate investment market globally," Jose Pellicer, head of real estate strategy at M&G Real Estate, said.
Persons: Kate Munsch, Japan's SoftBank, WeWork, Jeffrey Havsy, Ed Daubeney, Jones Lang LaSalle, Savills, refinancings, What's, MSCI, Jefferies, Jose Pellicer, Sinead Cruise, Elisa Martinuzzi, Mark Potter Organizations: REUTERS, Media, Real Estate, Reuters, Analysts, Europe, Flex, BNP, G, Thomson Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S, York, New York, London, United States, Europe, Britain, Germany, California
[1/2] 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. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly Acquire Licensing RightsNEW YORK, Nov 2 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs (GS.N) will promote 608 executives to managing directors next year, fewer than the 643 senior bankers it elevated two years ago, according to a company memo. But progress on racial representation slowed, as Black employees accounted for only 2% of managing directors, down from 5% in 2021. About 3% of the managing directors were from the LGBT+ community, unchanged from 2021. On the deals front, Goldman Sachs was among the advisors to Pioneer Natural Resources, which agreed to sell itself to ExxonMobil in a $60 billion deal.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Andrew Kelly, Goldman, Julian Salisbury, we've, David Solomon, John Waldron, Saeed Azhar, Lananh Nguyen, Chris Reese, David Evans Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Sixth, Arm Holdings, Natural Resources, ExxonMobil, Thomson Locations: New York City , New York, U.S, United States, Ukraine
Google ended an agreement with Australian construction firm Lendlease to build four campuses in the Bay Area. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. It additionally worked with Lendlease to pave the way for 12,900 units to be built in San José and Mountain View. Lendlease laid off 67 employees earlier this year including several community engagement managers, senior development managers, a head of business operations, and other executives, per CNBC. This was after Google halted construction of its Downtown West campus in San José.
Persons: Lendlease, , we've, Google's, Meta Organizations: Google, Service, CNBC, Big Tech, Facebook Locations: Bay, San Francisco, San José, Moffet, Sunnyvale, Bayshore, Mountain View, Francisco Bay, Downtown West, London
FILE PHOTO: A sign is pictured outside a Google office near the company's headquarters in Mountain View, California, U.S., May 8, 2019. Under the project, Lendlease was to develop up to 15 million square feet of residential, retail and hospitality space and Google would develop office space. As of June-end, 12,900 of the planned housing units were approved for development in San Jose and Mountain View, according to Google. Lendlease said it will remove the San Francisco Bay project, which was expected to commence construction in fiscal 2026, from its development pipeline. Lendlease retained its forecast for fiscal 2024, with core operating return on equity at the lower end of its 8%-10% range.
Persons: Paresh Dave, Lendlease, Himanshi, Ayushman Ojha, Sonia Cheema, Rashmi, Sohini Organizations: REUTERS, Lendlease, Google, San Francisco Bay Area, Francisco's, Alexa Arena, San, UBS, Thomson Locations: Mountain View , California, U.S, San Francisco Bay, Sunnyvale, San Jose, Mountain, Westfield, Bay, Hayes, San Francisco, Americas, Bengaluru
Backed by Japan's SoftBank, WeWork aimed to revolutionise the office market by taking long leases on large properties and renting the space to multiple smaller businesses on more flexible, shorter arrangements. Some leveraged property investors could struggle to earn enough rental income to service rising debt costs, they said. The number and volume of real estate loans due for refinancing in 2024 is unclear because many deals are struck privately between borrower and lender, Ed Daubeney, co-head, debt and structured finance, EMEA, at real estate services firm Jones Lang LaSalle, told Reuters. U.S. industrial and office real estate investment trusts (REITs) were seen 35.8% more likely to default, versus expectations a year ago. "We're at a massive turning point in the real estate investment market globally," Jose Pellicer, head of real estate strategy at M&G Real Estate, said.
Persons: Kate Munsch, Japan's SoftBank, WeWork, Jeffrey Havsy, Ed Daubeney, Jones Lang LaSalle, Savills, refinancings, What's, MSCI, Jefferies, Jose Pellicer, Sinead Cruise, Elisa Martinuzzi, Mark Potter Organizations: REUTERS, Media, Real Estate, Reuters, Analysts, Europe, Flex, BNP, G, Thomson Locations: San Francisco , California, U.S, York, New York, London, United States, Europe, Britain, Germany, California
Google confirmed on Thursday that the company ended its agreement with the development partner that was working on four key campus sites. Alphabet-owned Google is embarking on its most expansive cost cuts in its almost two decades on the public market. CNBC reported that, as part of Google's downsizing that went into effect early this year, the company gutted its development team for the San Jose campus. As recently as September, Google executives, including CFO Ruth Porat, appeared at a San Jose event that aimed to reaffirm the company's commitment to building in the city. San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said in a statement to CNBC that the latest news "doesn't change Google's commitment to San Jose or their timeline."
Persons: Lendlease, we've, Ruth Porat, Matt Mahan, Mahan Organizations: Google, Lendlease, Downtown, San, Alexa, CNBC, San Jose Locations: Jose, Sunnyvale, Bayshore, Mountain View, San Francisco Bay, Bay, San Jose, San
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
And as secondary home activity dwindles, some smaller housing-related businesses in leisure hot spots say they are feeling the pinch as well. “Services for existing rentals has grown, but services for larger ticket remodeling work on new vacation rentals has stopped," said Tim Allen, owner of Kopa Home Services, based in Flagstaff, Arizona. Allen has had to decrease unit prices in his separate vacation rental business, Local Vacation Team, to keep occupancy figures above market. For Flagstaff, that figure is 14%, according to data from AirDNA, a short-term rental data provider. "With the acceleration of the creation of vacation rentals during the pandemic, now if visitors are at 1,000, there are 3,000 rentals available,” he said.
Persons: Kevin Lamarque, , Chuck Tuttle, they’re, ” Tuttle, Tuttle, Tim Allen, Jessica Lautz, Allen, , Amina Niasse, Daniel Burns, Bill Berkrot Organizations: REUTERS, National Association of Realtors, William, Hilton, Lake Havasu, Federal Reserve, Mortgage Bankers Association, realtors, “ Services, Kopa Home Services, NAR, Thomson Locations: Island , South Carolina, U.S, Lake Havasu City , Arizona, William Raveis, Cape Cod, Massachusetts, Lake, Lake Havasu City, Flagstaff , Arizona, Flagstaff, AirDNA
Oct 30 (Reuters) - Realty Income (O.N) said on Monday it would buy Spirit Realty Capital (SRC.N) in an all-stock deal valued at $9.3 billion as it looks to expand its real estate portfolio. Commercial real estate, especially offices, has been hit by interest rates hikes and workers choosing to stay at home. The combined portfolio is expected to result in reduced rent concentration for Realty Income's clients, while increasing the combined portfolio's annualized contractual rent from $3.8 billion to $4.5 billion, Realty Income said. Wells Fargo is the financial adviser to Realty Income, while J.P. Morgan Securities and Morgan Stanley & Co are serving as financial advisers to Spirit Realty. Spirit Realty primarily invests in single-tenant real estate assets given on long-term leases.
Persons: Sumit Roy, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Kannaki, Shilpi Majumdar Organizations: Spirit Realty, Realty, Spirit, Morgan Securities, Thomson Locations: U.S, Wells, Bengaluru
SoFi Technologies — Shares seesawed as traders digested the company's latest quarterly results. McDonald's — Shares gained 2.3% after the company beat both top and bottom lines for the third quarter. Western Digital — Shares of the data storage company jumped 6% after the company performed better than analysts polled by LSEG expected in the fiscal first quarter. Invitation Homes — The home leasing company rose nearly 1% following an upgrade to outperform by Oppenheimer. Saia — The transportation stock rose 3.4% on the back of an upgrade to outperform from peer perform by Wolfe Research.
Persons: SoFi, originations, McDonald's, Stellantis, LSEG, Revvity, FactSet, Oppenheimer, L3Harris, Raymond James, Eastman, AbbVie, Tesla, Bernstein, TD Cowen, , Femsa, Saia, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Justin Sullivan Organizations: General Motors, GM, CNBC, Ford, Spirit Realty Capital, Realty, Western Digital, Semiconductor, FactSet, Eastman Chemical —, JPMorgan, Barclays, Citi, Wolfe Research, SoFi Technologies Locations: U.S, San Francisco , California
The way Boomers and Millennials are spending can inform investment decisions, Bank of America analysts say. In a note published Friday, BofA analysts wrote that investors should go "long Boomer stocks" and "short Millennial stocks." Specifically, they're spending a lot on health care, entertainment, and home improvement. When they are shelling out, they're spending more on housing and apparel, but are generally more strapped for cash. Millennials, meanwhile, are skint as borrowing costs shoot up and wealth accumulation gets stymied by a historically unaffordable housing market.
Persons: , BofA, they're, Millennials, Boomer Organizations: Bank of America, Boomers, Service, of America, AARP, Toll
Is Crypto Financing Terrorism?
  + stars: | 2023-10-28 | by ( Ephrat Livni | Joe Nocera | More About Ephrat Livni | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
In 1980, there were 24 private equity firms, according to Prequin, which tracks alternative assets; by 2022, there were around 5,000 private equity firms controlling some 18,000 companies. Among the industries where private equity sank deep roots was health care. Thin margins have forced many nursing homes to shrink their nursing staff, leaving them ill prepared when the pandemic hit. One New Jersey analysis found that facilities owned by private equity had a higher rate of Covid-19 deaths and cases than nursing homes not owned by private equity. Fewer than 20 percent of all nursing homes meet a recently proposed minimum staffing level, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation estimate.
Persons: equity’s, Sabrina T, Howell, Mark Parkinson, Ms, Organizations: Healthcare Private Equity Association, New York University, Genesis Healthcare, Formation Capital, Kaiser Family, American Health Care Association Locations: Jersey, New Hampshire
UPS — The shipping company saw shares decline 5.9% after releasing its third-quarter earnings report, which showed disappointing revenue. Full-year revenue guidance was also slightly below expectations. Whirlpool — The home appliance company dropped 15.8% on Thursday after Whirlpool issued full year earnings guidance of about $16 per share. Bristol-Myers Squibb — Shares of the drug maker fell 6.2% after the company reported a decline in sales of its popular blood cancer drug, Revlimid, citing generic competition. ServiceNow — The workflow software company jumped 1.6% after posting third-quarter earnings and revenue that beat analyst expectations.
Persons: LSEG, Merck —, Merck, Steven Vondran, Thomas Bartlett, ServiceNow, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Tanaya, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Bunge —, Comcast, UPS, Hasbro, Whirlpool, Bristol, Myers, Merck, Technology, American Tower Corporation, Flex, IBM —, Wall, CNBC Locations: NBCUniversal, American
With just $100 and a little bit of research, you can start your own passive income stream. With a little bit of time and research, anyone can start investing in a passive income stream with as little as $100. We asked three financial experts how they'd invest $100 to start making money in their sleep, and here's what they said. Real estate investment trustsFormer Wall Streeter and TikTok financial literacy educator Vivian Tu suggests putting your money in a real estate investment trust. Yieldstreet is one of the best real estate investing apps for those interested in real estate and alternative investments.
Persons: , John Stoj, Wall Streeter, Vivian Tu, Taylor Kovar, you'll Organizations: Service, CFP
Boomers have cash and appear to be weathering rising interest rates better than other generations, according to Bank of America. Because of this, the bank sees stocks particularly exposed to the well-off group that investors of all ages should buy. In contrast, Bank of America found millennials are the only generation with a meaningful amount of mortgage debt incurred after 2021, according to Bank of America. Bank data shows boomers have yet to feel the pinch from higher rates — and the wealthy subsection of the generation is actually benefitting from them. Given apparel is more prominent among millennials, Kwon pointed to Revolve as a short play.
Persons: Ohsung Kwon, septuagenarians, Kwon, Welltower, Kwon's boomer, LSEG, — CNBC's Michael Organizations: Boomers, Bank of America, Bank of America . Bank, American, Service Corporation
Today's higher interest rate environment drives home the reason why investors should scrutinize stocks offering tempting double-digit yields. Digging beneath the surface Multiple factors may contribute to a stock touting high dividend yields at first blush. First, there are dividend sustainers – companies that have made steady payments for years, including Merck , Johnson & Johnson and Southern Co . Investors who want to hunt dividend payers shouldn't go for the biggest yielders, but instead look for names that are in the second or third quintile among dividend payers, he said. "For many investors, you can get a pretty good dividend play and a good yield through ETFs at a low cost," said Ebersole.
Persons: Bond, Charlie Gaffney, Gaffney, Eaton Vance, Jamie Ebersole, Kim Abmeyer, Morgan Stanley, shouldn't, Ebersole, Morningstar's Bryan Armour, VIG Organizations: Utilities, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, Ebersole, Abmeyer Wealth Management, Investors, Costco Wholesale, Merck, Johnson, Southern Co, Apple, Exxon Mobil, Walmart Locations: Southern
In a heat map of economy sectors which are running hot, the ratio of investment by real estate firms to gross domestic product (GDP) turned "red", a signal that the property market was overheating, the central bank said. "The increase in real estate firms' investment has been accelerated by urban redevelopment projects by major real estate developers," it added. "In some limited commercial areas in central Tokyo, transactions in the higher price range have been increasing," it said, adding that developments in the real estate transaction market "continue to warrant close monitoring". Japanese banks could also face risks from the rising possibility of interest rates remaining high overseas, it added. But credit costs could rise abruptly, particularly for loans to Asia, if overseas interest rates stay higher for longer, it warned.
Persons: Kim Kyung, Banks, Leika Kihara, Kim Coghill, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: REUTERS, Bank of Japan, Bank, U.S . Federal Reserve, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, TOKYO, Asia
Investors shouldn't be scared off by slower economic growth caused by higher-for-longer interest rates and inflation, according to JPMorgan Asset Management (JPMAM). For reference, JPMAM called for forward long-term returns of 4.3% in 2021. The firm added that productivity gains from AI will likely add a tenth of a percentage point to global growth in the next decade. The long-awaited reversal for international stocks won't happen overnight, JPMAM strategists said. The firm is highly optimistic about the asset class after its brutal multi-year selloff and expects 4.6% and 5.1% long-term returns for those groups, respectively.
Persons: it's, JPMAM, David Kelly, Kelly, Monica Issar, Grace Koo, , they're, Bob Michele, who's, he's, Bonds, REITs Organizations: Asset Management, Federal Reserve, European Central Bank, US, JPMorgan, Management, Fed, JPMorgan Asset Management, Investors Locations: Europe, Australasia, Real
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