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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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KNTV
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reviews apparently, a lot of reviews on amazon are fake or paid for. usually you can tell i mean check it out. for instance, here's a yoga mat. the fake review says, "i use it every day. it's comfortable and easy to clean. [ laughter ] real review says, "i carry it around all in my bag so people think i did yoga whether or not i actually did yoga. [ laughter ] [ applause ] next up, here's a roomba the fake review says, "it's really good at cleaning the floors." real review says, "i'm trying to train it to bring me a bud light from the kitchen." [ laughter and applause trying to train a roomba just get -- takes you longer to train it to just -- whatever >> steve: go >> jimmy: look at this this is for a one gallon of pure protein powder. fake review says, "drank this shake and got jacked." [ laughter ] real review says, "this thing has been sitting on top of my fridge for nine years in three different apartments." [ laughter and applause yeah, just pack it in the box. i'll use it one day. and finally, here's a slip 'n slide. the fake review says, "so muc
reviews apparently, a lot of reviews on amazon are fake or paid for. usually you can tell i mean check it out. for instance, here's a yoga mat. the fake review says, "i use it every day. it's comfortable and easy to clean. [ laughter ] real review says, "i carry it around all in my bag so people think i did yoga whether or not i actually did yoga. [ laughter ] [ applause ] next up, here's a roomba the fake review says, "it's really good at cleaning the floors." real review...
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Jul 21, 2019
07/19
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CNNW
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amazon added 1,000 over the last year according to a study by oxford economis. just in the last two decades, the number of robots used around the world tripled to 2 tony 25 million. it brings me to my question, how many robots will be in the work force by 2030? 5 million? 10 million? 20 million? or 50 million? stay tuned. we'll tell you the correct answer. my book of the week is "the guarded gate" two generations that kept yous, italian and european immigrants out of america. the title says it all. the book is a gripping accoun of a dark wave in american history, yes, it does bring to mind some of the forces that play in america right now. the answer to my gps challenge this week is c, 20 million robots will be in use by 2030 with some 14 million in china alone, according to oxford economic, while many have heralded the end of an era in china, actually the world's great workshop looks forward to cement its position as the leading global manufacturer. internationally this trajectory will cost some 20 million people their manufacturing jobs, even as it increases p
amazon added 1,000 over the last year according to a study by oxford economis. just in the last two decades, the number of robots used around the world tripled to 2 tony 25 million. it brings me to my question, how many robots will be in the work force by 2030? 5 million? 10 million? 20 million? or 50 million? stay tuned. we'll tell you the correct answer. my book of the week is "the guarded gate" two generations that kept yous, italian and european immigrants out of america. the...
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287
Jul 18, 2019
07/19
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FBC
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maria: yeah. >> because aoc has dna at the crime scene in terms of amazon taking off. maria: good point. all those jobs. a lot of -- >> overlapping the congressional district. maria: there's netflix earnings, the stock is down big this morning, down 10 and a half percent, lost significant number of subscribers in the u.s. first time in nearly decade, blaming downward trend of second-quarter content, the stock is coming down. >> i'm not surprised by this, there was going to be point where there was many competition in the field too, the whole idea of cutting the cord was that your bill should be cheaper, if you're subscribing to every service, they will not end up being cheaper, they are going for content and there's a lot more to choose from. maria: you the behemoth like a disney coming out and putting content from netflix. >> that's certainly an issue and users will see where am i getting the most content for value that i'm getting, they will switch and adjust bills that way. >> viewers have a finite wallet that they are willing to pay for subscriptions and netflix ju
maria: yeah. >> because aoc has dna at the crime scene in terms of amazon taking off. maria: good point. all those jobs. a lot of -- >> overlapping the congressional district. maria: there's netflix earnings, the stock is down big this morning, down 10 and a half percent, lost significant number of subscribers in the u.s. first time in nearly decade, blaming downward trend of second-quarter content, the stock is coming down. >> i'm not surprised by this, there was going to be...
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Jul 15, 2019
07/19
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CNNW
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. >>> so amazon prime's annual shopping holiday is here. it's supposed to be bigger and better than ever. >> okay. an online shopping holiday. remember this. the company is facing some backlash this year. thousands of warehouse workers in europe and some of the united states are expected to walk off their jobs monday and tuesday demanding better pay and working conditions. you know, this would be the first ever amazon prime day strike in the united states. >>> still ahead here on "newsroom," work is moving ahead restoring notre dame after that devastating fire. you remember that three months ago. we've got an update on the progress for you. >> yeah, we'll be waiting to see that. >>> plus, a thrilling finish and a bit of history made as two heavyweights battle for the men's wimbledon title. you don't want to miss the highlights. of savings and service. whoa. travis in it made it. it's amazing. oh is that travis's app? it's pretty cool, isn't it? there's two of them. they're multiplying. no, guys, its me. see, i'm real. i'm real! he thinks he
. >>> so amazon prime's annual shopping holiday is here. it's supposed to be bigger and better than ever. >> okay. an online shopping holiday. remember this. the company is facing some backlash this year. thousands of warehouse workers in europe and some of the united states are expected to walk off their jobs monday and tuesday demanding better pay and working conditions. you know, this would be the first ever amazon prime day strike in the united states. >>> still...
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Jul 17, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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amazon's prime event we don't know how the full thing wrapped up it was the longest by 12 hours amazon has told us so far that worldwide sellers, predominantly small and medium sized businesses saw the biggest 24 hours sale day in amazon's history. amazon's first 24 hours of prime day sales were 79% higher than last year according to e-receipts adobe analytics says they saw a 64% increase in sales versus an average monday in july compared to last year's 54% growth on prime day. even the niche retailers saw a 30% increase on online sales based on an analysis of pain views, the echo show 5, fire tv stick with alexa remote and kindle paper weight were the top sellers. it makes sense because those were drastically discounted on amazon's sales day events. walmart during prime day, the page views there indicat instapot, the apple watch 3, the vizio 54 inch 4k tv were the big sellers. when you have a big peak and a swell of packages coming through the system at the same time, deliveries could be slower >> you need to tell sorkin about the exchange we did. >> the shoe store. >> you know about
amazon's prime event we don't know how the full thing wrapped up it was the longest by 12 hours amazon has told us so far that worldwide sellers, predominantly small and medium sized businesses saw the biggest 24 hours sale day in amazon's history. amazon's first 24 hours of prime day sales were 79% higher than last year according to e-receipts adobe analytics says they saw a 64% increase in sales versus an average monday in july compared to last year's 54% growth on prime day. even the niche...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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BLOOMBERG
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amazon missed earnings expectations. amazon missed the consensus were like eight or nine straight quarters, it went through the moon. amazon is on an island. presidentgoing to trump, who is speaking at the white house. american wines: are great. thingidn't do the right when they start taxing our companies. we tax our companies. him, i said don't do it. we are working on that right now. i just spoke to him. i have a good relationship. they shouldn't have done this. they are used to taking advantage of the united states. donek at deals that were with other presidents in this country, and it it's a disgrace countries have allowed this to happen. from $300 was making -- $500to $5 billion billion a year, now we are taking in billions of dollars from china, and it is all turning around. try -- i don't think personally china would sign a deal. would say let's wait, maybe trump would lose it. like the people who allow these deals to happen. i blame the united states for allowing that to happen. if iran wants to make a deal, i ca
amazon missed earnings expectations. amazon missed the consensus were like eight or nine straight quarters, it went through the moon. amazon is on an island. presidentgoing to trump, who is speaking at the white house. american wines: are great. thingidn't do the right when they start taxing our companies. we tax our companies. him, i said don't do it. we are working on that right now. i just spoke to him. i have a good relationship. they shouldn't have done this. they are used to taking...
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maria: a new amazon dropoff, a major retailer now accepts amazon returns. retirement out of reach, why many americans fear they will never stop working. back in a minute. ♪ what if i lose it all. ♪ twenty-four people came together to sign an agreement that created the stock exchange. just the right elements coming together. it started when scores more people came together, just down the street and traded bonds that helped pay for the revolution, and the nation it created. it started in an office on the corner where the right people witnessed the telegraph and brought information and humanity together forever. it started with the markets, bringing together steel and buildings and silicon and medicine and rockets. we believe the possibilities of life and investing are greater when we come together. it's why for eighty years we've connected ideas with technology, data with inspiration, investors with solutions. so that every day together, it all starts again. ♪ the cloud i need? it has to keep up with sales, supply chain, inventory - ♪ ♪ it needs to
maria: a new amazon dropoff, a major retailer now accepts amazon returns. retirement out of reach, why many americans fear they will never stop working. back in a minute. ♪ what if i lose it all. ♪ twenty-four people came together to sign an agreement that created the stock exchange. just the right elements coming together. it started when scores more people came together, just down the street and traded bonds that helped pay for the revolution, and the nation it created. it started in an...
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Jul 23, 2019
07/19
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CNNW
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i learned it was number one on amazon national security list, so thank you so much for doing that. >> it's only going to get better. >> elie, josh, seung min, thank you so much. >>> demonstrations are turning violent in san juan puerto rico after police fired tear gas at protesters outside the governor's mansion as calls intention for ricardo rosello to resign. what do you have? >> reporter: this is where it happened last night. this is where protests which have started yesterday peacefully and hundreds of thousands down the main expressway, into san juan, fuelled by puerto rican celebrities like ricky martin. a number of them braved torrential rains. and they started out, and there were a number of police warnings and the police fired tear gas into the crowd, causing them to scatter and a large number fanned out in the streets, sometimes in running battles with protesters there. we're hearing from a police officer that some police were injured. i didn't see that myself. they're wearing a lot of protective clothing and down the street, we saw blood on the pavement, suggesting perhaps
i learned it was number one on amazon national security list, so thank you so much for doing that. >> it's only going to get better. >> elie, josh, seung min, thank you so much. >>> demonstrations are turning violent in san juan puerto rico after police fired tear gas at protesters outside the governor's mansion as calls intention for ricardo rosello to resign. what do you have? >> reporter: this is where it happened last night. this is where protests which have...
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124
Jul 17, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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stocks, mostly amazon. so this is a play, just so viewers know, this is really a play on amazon >> it is it is. when you take the three products, you multiply the holding of amazon by three so you get a significant exposure to that stock which in the short-term has done quite well >> that is want. what is need >> need is consumer staples. >> toothpaste? >> exactly >> paper towels. >> that defensive play like cycle performer play. it's the consumer is going up sort of holding back but they'll keep buying toilet paper and toothpaste so you have the full staples a good balance sheets, good net income and dividends they don't pop as much lower beta to the market >> we have netflix earnings out today. netflix is a name everybody knows. a lot of people out there may have invested in it. what products do you have that would highlight a name like a netflix? if you're going big -- these stocks can move big. rolling the dice in a big way, is there a way to play netflix >> 3x communications is tak, you get exposure to
stocks, mostly amazon. so this is a play, just so viewers know, this is really a play on amazon >> it is it is. when you take the three products, you multiply the holding of amazon by three so you get a significant exposure to that stock which in the short-term has done quite well >> that is want. what is need >> need is consumer staples. >> toothpaste? >> exactly >> paper towels. >> that defensive play like cycle performer play. it's the consumer is...
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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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KRON
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>>amazon who is letting us talk to them. according to these protesters amazon does more than just sell products online. >>was on actually sells amazon web services which is a technology. it's a data platform that allows it. >>ice to collect data. so target people and then deport them. >>they also claim amazon has attempted to sell the feds facial recognition software. >>which can also be used to target people in a really invasive it's scary when there's actuly lot of civil rights activists saying that this technology has not been. >>i actually be good news for other people so there's actually also a racial profiling issue with this use of this technology be reached out to amazon about the activist claims that have yet to hear back. >>but they've reportedly responded to other media outlets saying in part companies and government organizations need to use existing and new technology responsibly and lawfully maureen kelly kron 4 news. new this morning senator and presidential candidate kamala harris has unveiled a plan that let
>>amazon who is letting us talk to them. according to these protesters amazon does more than just sell products online. >>was on actually sells amazon web services which is a technology. it's a data platform that allows it. >>ice to collect data. so target people and then deport them. >>they also claim amazon has attempted to sell the feds facial recognition software. >>which can also be used to target people in a really invasive it's scary when there's actuly lot...
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Jul 27, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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amazon had an okay print to negative, it went down a little bit. google had an unexpected good print and went up a lot. the one thing about google, alphabet and apple, expectations are relatively low, both off 10% or so from the all time highs. when i think about the quarter next week, the options market is implying $9 between now and next friday's close. on average, this stock moved 6% after day's earnings that's a lot for a name this big. i think expectations are low they put up a decent enough print into a weird quarter i think they have a mulligan almost with the trade stuff and i think the stock goes higher and option prices are probably pretty reasonable enough to make an at-the-money bet to get a breakout at that level the trade is simple to me. if you are bullish and you think it has the potential to outperform like google, you buy a call when the stock was trading at 208, you could buy the august 210 call playing 4.25 for that that breaks even at 214 a quarter. that's up only 3% from the current stock price here you are risking about 2% of
amazon had an okay print to negative, it went down a little bit. google had an unexpected good print and went up a lot. the one thing about google, alphabet and apple, expectations are relatively low, both off 10% or so from the all time highs. when i think about the quarter next week, the options market is implying $9 between now and next friday's close. on average, this stock moved 6% after day's earnings that's a lot for a name this big. i think expectations are low they put up a decent...
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Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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FBC
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all of amazon profits. so it is actually greater than retail now. >> trying to take a bite out of market share, and the big guy oracle microsoft et. great to have you this morning. thanks so much. >> thank you. john freeman coming up democrats divided but maybe not for long what to expect from nancy pelosi meeting with congressman alexandria and numbers after the break. $4.95. delivery drones or the latest phones. $4.95. no matter what you trade, at fidelity it's just $4.95 per online u.s. equity trade. no matter what you trade, at fidelity don't miss your gto experience our most advanced safety technology on a full line of vehicles. now, at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379 a month, for 36 months, and we'll make your first month's payment. experience amazing. welcome back i'm maria bartiromo and it is thursday july 25th your top stories right now, 23u6 30 a.m. on east coast first full day on the job for a new u.k. prime minister, boris johnson meeting with his new cab
all of amazon profits. so it is actually greater than retail now. >> trying to take a bite out of market share, and the big guy oracle microsoft et. great to have you this morning. thanks so much. >> thank you. john freeman coming up democrats divided but maybe not for long what to expect from nancy pelosi meeting with congressman alexandria and numbers after the break. $4.95. delivery drones or the latest phones. $4.95. no matter what you trade, at fidelity it's just $4.95 per...
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has about 3 months worth but i would expect you know delays to ripple through to companies like apple amazon samsung but also to be expecting higher prices for these products and some sort of very wide ranging effects could this also affect the way to grow a lot of 5 g. networks around the world really. right well that's a concern for europe and you know the background here is that you're up to spend lagging behind in 5 g. it's it's not anywhere near the 5 g. standards that the u.s. or asia is that right now. so semiconductors are obviously a huge part of the internet of things so there definitely is concern that any sort of cut back the amount of semiconductors out there could slow down. just generally the amount of speed of 5 g. adoption so it's many i'm friends with thank you. many companies today prevent pretend that they're socially conscious and ecological but if you look at the value changed things often look different the value chain expresses where the money is being made and by whom under what conditions who gets what share of the final price of a product in the textile industry fo
has about 3 months worth but i would expect you know delays to ripple through to companies like apple amazon samsung but also to be expecting higher prices for these products and some sort of very wide ranging effects could this also affect the way to grow a lot of 5 g. networks around the world really. right well that's a concern for europe and you know the background here is that you're up to spend lagging behind in 5 g. it's it's not anywhere near the 5 g. standards that the u.s. or asia is...
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Jul 24, 2019
07/19
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BBCNEWS
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the justice department didn't name any companies, but facebook, google, amazon and apple are likely to be scrutinised in the wide—ranging probe. it marks the latest scrutiny of the tech giants' power over the american economy. the company behind social media app snapchat says it added 13 million daily active users in the last quarter. snap inc beat analysts' estimates as it got a boost from a better version of its android app and the launch of new augmented reality photo lenses. shares of snapjumped 9% in after hours trading. we have many companies reporting their earnings this week and ford is one of them. ford will announce its latest earnings later, after showing a strong first—quarter on growing demand for its pickup trucks and suvs. ahead of that the carmaking giant has revealed details about its plans to develop an all—electric version of america's best selling vehicle — the f150 pickup. bbc business correspondent michelle fleury has more. ten double—decker train cars weighing over1 ten double—decker train cars weighing over 1 million ten double—decker train cars we
the justice department didn't name any companies, but facebook, google, amazon and apple are likely to be scrutinised in the wide—ranging probe. it marks the latest scrutiny of the tech giants' power over the american economy. the company behind social media app snapchat says it added 13 million daily active users in the last quarter. snap inc beat analysts' estimates as it got a boost from a better version of its android app and the launch of new augmented reality photo lenses. shares of...
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Jul 30, 2019
07/19
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FBC
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so she knew amazon's system very well. in this case, where capital one had a potential breach in the firewall, she was able to get in and she used the screen namer ne eratic. there was a white hat hacker who fight ifigured it out and got ih with capital one. as you go to the cloud, the risks are increasing. here we have one for capital one. the ceo addressed it, saying he apologized to everyone, doing their best to address it. maria: look at the impact on the stock, down 5% on capital one. >> this is serious, 100 million people. maria: normally you see all of these hacks from china and russia and you understand what they're trying to do, try to infiltrate our systems. but an american citizen just hacking, a hundred million accounts. >> it's the new face of criminality, the jesse james of this century, i guess. >> we saw with equifax finally a number put on the cost to the company when they had a monster fine for having allowed a lot of data to get out. i think this is no longer sort of a sin-free world. now regulators are
so she knew amazon's system very well. in this case, where capital one had a potential breach in the firewall, she was able to get in and she used the screen namer ne eratic. there was a white hat hacker who fight ifigured it out and got ih with capital one. as you go to the cloud, the risks are increasing. here we have one for capital one. the ceo addressed it, saying he apologized to everyone, doing their best to address it. maria: look at the impact on the stock, down 5% on capital one....
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Jul 18, 2019
07/19
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BLOOMBERG
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trump wants more details about a cloud computing contract the pentagon is set to award amazon or amazon -- or microsoft. is worth $10 billion with amazon seen as the favorite. but the president has reportedly been told of complaints that companies were frozen out of the bidding. of second deadliest outbreak the ebola virus has become a global health emergency. that is according to the world health organization. there are concerns the virus could spread outside of the democratic republic of congo. this outbreak has already killed more than 1500 people. the bank of korea has unexpectedly cut its benchmark rate as the nation's exports slump continues to drag on. the rate was lowered 25 basis points to 1.5%. the banks governor painted a gloomy picture for the economy. he said rising protectionism -- cited rising protectionism and increased tension with japan. shares of sap fell the most in years. they were up 15% after a 26% gain in the first three months of the year. they have spent more than $10 billion to buy to u.s. based cloud startups. global news, 24 hours a day on air, on tictoc, an
trump wants more details about a cloud computing contract the pentagon is set to award amazon or amazon -- or microsoft. is worth $10 billion with amazon seen as the favorite. but the president has reportedly been told of complaints that companies were frozen out of the bidding. of second deadliest outbreak the ebola virus has become a global health emergency. that is according to the world health organization. there are concerns the virus could spread outside of the democratic republic of...
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Jul 3, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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you get overwhelmed with it in just one streaming service netflix, amazon prime video. you've got now at&t warner media that will launch a streaming service and all of these cost money. if it's a stand alone, $16, $17 which is what at&t says it is going to cost. big deal but you try to bundle those altogether and try to figure out content. is this a scenario where those who are late to the party miss out entirely if you missed being on cable in the '90s >> well, you know, i don't know if that's the case but what i do know is that there are several content companies out there that could be very attractive to somebody who want to bundle or somebody that want to add to their content. >> like what >> well, there's discovery out there which is, great assets you deal with john malone to get it or lion's gate and that kind of thing also amc which is a very attractive asset in terms of content creation and audience. also, i think there's an opportunity for what i call targeted content companies to find a place and build a brand and ultimately may be acquired we have one within
you get overwhelmed with it in just one streaming service netflix, amazon prime video. you've got now at&t warner media that will launch a streaming service and all of these cost money. if it's a stand alone, $16, $17 which is what at&t says it is going to cost. big deal but you try to bundle those altogether and try to figure out content. is this a scenario where those who are late to the party miss out entirely if you missed being on cable in the '90s >> well, you know, i don't...
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120
Jul 8, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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a lot of retailers get prepared to hone in on amazon's prime event next week. back over to you >> bertha, thank you >>> millennial traders are breaking from the rest of the market for the first time in two years. t.d. ameritrade is seeing a divergence between millennials and the general public, according to their june imx survey joining us now is chief market strategist at t.d. ameritrade. so let's talk about that age gap differential >> for the first time since november of 2016, our clients were net sellers of things not just equities but overall. >> by a big margin >> well, yeah, a pretty good margin, particularly in equities even more so than fixed income i think one of the interesting things about this is it shows that although, you know, as the market is at all-time highs, at the end of the day it was a good first half of the year for retail traders i think they've gotten to a point where they're like, okay, there is so much on the horizon. maybe we should take some risk off the table overall. i think it's interesting they didn't go equities right into fix
a lot of retailers get prepared to hone in on amazon's prime event next week. back over to you >> bertha, thank you >>> millennial traders are breaking from the rest of the market for the first time in two years. t.d. ameritrade is seeing a divergence between millennials and the general public, according to their june imx survey joining us now is chief market strategist at t.d. ameritrade. so let's talk about that age gap differential >> for the first time since november of...
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169
Jul 2, 2019
07/19
by
KPIX
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>> you can see it on the amazon, the shopping network. >> stephen: where do you find the time? you're doing a broadway show, which is a full-time job. >> it is. it's-- it really knocks you out. >> stephen: it's an exhausting job to do. where do you find the time to-- how involved are you in the season? are you a watchmaker god where you just kind of let it go? >> i am very involved. backstage i set up the bagels for the whole staff backstage. >> stephen: oh, good. >> you know, i just wasn't happy with what was out there. it was out t f sa, "get rid of it. let's get some new bagels in here with some schmears." >> stephen: last week you were nominated for a tony award for your performance in "network" as howard beale, the mad prophet of the airwaves. congratulations for that. >> thank you. >> stephen: you've been doing seven shows a week since last fall. how long have you been doing this now? >> seven months. >> stephen: does it become easier over that period of time? or is it hard to keep the performances fresh? we do five a week and it kind of knocks me out. >> it really tests
>> you can see it on the amazon, the shopping network. >> stephen: where do you find the time? you're doing a broadway show, which is a full-time job. >> it is. it's-- it really knocks you out. >> stephen: it's an exhausting job to do. where do you find the time to-- how involved are you in the season? are you a watchmaker god where you just kind of let it go? >> i am very involved. backstage i set up the bagels for the whole staff backstage. >> stephen: oh,...
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Jul 30, 2019
07/19
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BLOOMBERG
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are in changing and the structural disinflationary influence of technology, not only because of the amazon effect, overall we have structural disinflationary pressures and qe has completely changed the game. the mindset of central banks needs to be overhauled. that is what i will say about the ecb and it applies to most of the major central banks around the world. however, the eurozone still has a growing population at the moment. there are less of those constraints there. the boj and ecb are pretty much identical balance sheet sizes. $5.3 trillion. versus $3.8 trillion for the fed. the euro zone an economy twice as large as japan. japan is the one who has way too much liquidity in the system. europe is theoretically not pushed to the end of the strain yet. in years ahead, it might go that way, but not quite yet. anna: let me ask you about what is going on in the pound. what is the lens you are looking at this through right now? seems that we are getting further away from any venue, any meeting point, physical meeting point of european leaders. without something like that on the radar, the
are in changing and the structural disinflationary influence of technology, not only because of the amazon effect, overall we have structural disinflationary pressures and qe has completely changed the game. the mindset of central banks needs to be overhauled. that is what i will say about the ecb and it applies to most of the major central banks around the world. however, the eurozone still has a growing population at the moment. there are less of those constraints there. the boj and ecb are...
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90
Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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eye 90
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of these other businesses that amazon hasn't been successful at advertising. can amazon continue to be as innovative and go into as many businesses, guloseri rgrocery, o >> jason, am i a horse's ass don't answer that question that's a separate issue. you see where i'm going. you can look wback at media companies, conglomerates over the ages, and see that history tells you they rarely stay in tact zpl it's a fair point. there are you know all these software analysts would love for that to happen >> you bet >> aws business and we would be kickoffing the retail. the e commerce side. amazon, we think is going to try to keep their business in tact for as long as they can and remember, netflix got the first competitor walmart, early customer. big competitor, so until you start to see a netflix, a walmart say you know what, we are not doing business with this xwaen, then there's what would be the other reason? so we don't think it happens in the investable future. at least right now >> see you after the bell. >> one tiny issue with your idea these are founder control
of these other businesses that amazon hasn't been successful at advertising. can amazon continue to be as innovative and go into as many businesses, guloseri rgrocery, o >> jason, am i a horse's ass don't answer that question that's a separate issue. you see where i'm going. you can look wback at media companies, conglomerates over the ages, and see that history tells you they rarely stay in tact zpl it's a fair point. there are you know all these software analysts would love for that to...
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Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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how much of that growth is driven by amazon web services. that's one part of the business that is a huge focus for people. it seems to be less about the retail operations, nmore about growth and cloud >> when you talk about profit, that's certainly the cloud that's amazon's profit engine that enabled it to make so many risky bets and go into new businesses interesting over the last few quarters, we're talking more about advertising. it's in the other revenue category it's been growing very, very quickly and taking on, you know, the duopoly that is google and facebook so it will be interesting. that's a high margin business as well we'll see what happens there we can't get away without mentioning regulatory scrutiny amazon typically plays it quiet. doesn't respond or talk a lot about this i wonder if they can get away with it this quarter with the scrutiny ramping up. >> deirdre bosa, thank you very much >>> joining us now is joel kalina, head of technology and media training over at web bush securities we heard what happened with regard to a
how much of that growth is driven by amazon web services. that's one part of the business that is a huge focus for people. it seems to be less about the retail operations, nmore about growth and cloud >> when you talk about profit, that's certainly the cloud that's amazon's profit engine that enabled it to make so many risky bets and go into new businesses interesting over the last few quarters, we're talking more about advertising. it's in the other revenue category it's been growing...
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Jul 15, 2019
07/19
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is it going to be a net win for amazon >> you know, we think it will be obviously amazon is showcasing not only great deals, they're showcasing their music they've been spending all week showcasing whole foods they've built a big infrastructure around this prime day, and we think it will be very successful for them. >> is there any indication that this drives new consumer spending, ed, or simply, well, i need a pair of jeans in a month so i might as well get it now because it's on sale and it's kind of a zero sum game. >> we think it does drive new business it creates that spontaneity, that need to buy now and people obviously tend to buy stuff they don't need. ultimately, you know, this is a very quiet time and we think this drives incremental sales across all of retail. >> you've got a $2,100 target on amazon obviously we're optimistic does this matter for amazon? do these 48 hours or so matter to the stock, or is it just part of a longer term, more macro trend? >> i think it's more of a big macro trend, but i think the big fly away with amazon is emphasizing to people it's important
is it going to be a net win for amazon >> you know, we think it will be obviously amazon is showcasing not only great deals, they're showcasing their music they've been spending all week showcasing whole foods they've built a big infrastructure around this prime day, and we think it will be very successful for them. >> is there any indication that this drives new consumer spending, ed, or simply, well, i need a pair of jeans in a month so i might as well get it now because it's on...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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but amazon is facing growing pressure over its sheer size and power. it's facing antitrust investigations in the us, along with the other tech giants, and earlier this month, the european commission also began an investigation into whether amazon is abusing its role as a marketplace provider. victoria. with us now is hussein kanji, a partner at venture capital firm hoxton ventures. thanks very much for coming in. i wonder whether you think amazon is really abusing its market dominance? it isa really abusing its market dominance? it is a hard one. it definitely has a lot of market power, and like most big companies it will exert that power, but in the end consumers benefit from lower prices, so the traditional behaviour sees customers suffering when prices go up, and thatis suffering when prices go up, and that is what we complain about with infrastructure, but in this case eve ryo ne infrastructure, but in this case everyone kind of wins, but amazon really wins in a big way. well, that is eight, it is not a traditional monopoly, so traditional monopoli
but amazon is facing growing pressure over its sheer size and power. it's facing antitrust investigations in the us, along with the other tech giants, and earlier this month, the european commission also began an investigation into whether amazon is abusing its role as a marketplace provider. victoria. with us now is hussein kanji, a partner at venture capital firm hoxton ventures. thanks very much for coming in. i wonder whether you think amazon is really abusing its market dominance? it isa...
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Jul 17, 2019
07/19
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samee does not have the assets that amazon has. amazon kind of splits the difference. we can talk about their of as a platform player, but the thing that makes the money is amazon web services. so the effectiveness of that business is not necessarily to do with their platform, it is the things on top of it. anna: thank you very much. let's get to our top stock stories. annmarie hordern has the movers. annmarie: good morning. this is the biggest gainer on the stoxx 600, up more than 15%. , biotech technology company boosting revenue forecasts for the entire year. asml, they are to the upside. coming out of global growth slowdowns. pretty much unscathed after second-quarter results. while they are forecasting third-quarter sales trailing analyst estimates, they're keeping the outlook -- 2019 outlook the same. to the downside, down more than 2%. it is the biggest silver miner, cutting production forecasts for the year. we have not seen the stock drop that much since april. matt: thanks very much. i want to offer a sincere apology. you may notice we are experiencing some t
samee does not have the assets that amazon has. amazon kind of splits the difference. we can talk about their of as a platform player, but the thing that makes the money is amazon web services. so the effectiveness of that business is not necessarily to do with their platform, it is the things on top of it. anna: thank you very much. let's get to our top stock stories. annmarie hordern has the movers. annmarie: good morning. this is the biggest gainer on the stoxx 600, up more than 15%. ,...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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amazon did miss on earnings, revenue was ahead. first time in five quarters that amazon did not post a record profit, taking a hit from shipping costs the thesis on amazon's print is that they really care about one thing and that is increasing gmv and getting it to people quickly. >> so the cost rose 36% on shipping that was a big jump from the 20% in recent quarters moved to one day shipping. they said they saw better customer response. revenue growth of 20% was better than expected. so investors are going to have to decide whether that top line growth was good enough 37% aws, that's the cloud revenue growth was, i guess, a little light, a little lighter than it has been first time under 40% but it still is the dominant player here in cloud. >> by far, doing $8 billion a quarter now what we know from alphabet is $8 billion a year run rate for their web services or cloud-based company that's accelerating, though. listen, the standout thisalphab the standout in the early going here, re-establishing the fact they can do above 20% whe
amazon did miss on earnings, revenue was ahead. first time in five quarters that amazon did not post a record profit, taking a hit from shipping costs the thesis on amazon's print is that they really care about one thing and that is increasing gmv and getting it to people quickly. >> so the cost rose 36% on shipping that was a big jump from the 20% in recent quarters moved to one day shipping. they said they saw better customer response. revenue growth of 20% was better than expected. so...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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this amazon box is actually a cake. emily mcgwire's husband thought it would be perfect since she gets three amazon packages every week, even the shipping label was edible, featuring the address, one, two, three, four, birthday lane. that's what's happening now. deirdre: that is great, appropriate for a lot of people. lauren: only three packages a week? i've got her beat. bring on the cake. deirdre: the u.s. is set to resume trade talks with china next week. top u.s. and chinese officials meeting in shanghai for the first time since president trump and chinese president xi-jinping agreed to revive negotiations. riley walters with us now, a heritage policy analyst in asian economy and technology. riley, thanks in advance for the time. i noticed as part of the group that's going to be meeting that the chinese trade minister, who has really been absent this entire time, is going to be at the table. he's known as a hard-liner. what do you think this changes, if anything, about the conversation? >> well, with the inclusion o
this amazon box is actually a cake. emily mcgwire's husband thought it would be perfect since she gets three amazon packages every week, even the shipping label was edible, featuring the address, one, two, three, four, birthday lane. that's what's happening now. deirdre: that is great, appropriate for a lot of people. lauren: only three packages a week? i've got her beat. bring on the cake. deirdre: the u.s. is set to resume trade talks with china next week. top u.s. and chinese officials...
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Jul 5, 2019
07/19
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i like amazon. without amazon i wouldn't exist. the thing with amazon, sometimes it is hard not to use them. it is difficult, isn't it? if you decide you're going to give up amazon, like going on a diet, it's impossible because they own so many other companies. so much of the stuff that's online is a hard place to go to. andy mulcahy is strategy and insight director at imrg, the uk's industry association for online retail. andy, on its success, you can't deny this. we have to appreciate it. why was it so successful? they got there before anybody else. started seeing books and cds, which fit through the letterbox, which is useful. if you compare the range of stuff they carry and thinking about that against a shop which may have 200 products, something like that, it is so vast and it is backed up by an amazingly convenient way to buy things. everything about it is very convenient. we've all done it, you know how easy it is and there's a very fast delivery service. they sort out customer service problems quickly, and customer value. t
i like amazon. without amazon i wouldn't exist. the thing with amazon, sometimes it is hard not to use them. it is difficult, isn't it? if you decide you're going to give up amazon, like going on a diet, it's impossible because they own so many other companies. so much of the stuff that's online is a hard place to go to. andy mulcahy is strategy and insight director at imrg, the uk's industry association for online retail. andy, on its success, you can't deny this. we have to appreciate it. why...
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Jul 10, 2019
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h q2 and we're going to go in depth with exclusive new details about how virginia won amazon. guys >> all right thank you very much. scott cohn >>> competitors are taking aim at netflix, stripping the service of two of its most popular shows. "friends" and "the office. so what will be the next shot fired in the streaming wars? we'll look at that when "power lunch" returns carvana is six years old this year and is the fastest growing place to buy a car in the nation. it's because we have thousands of people working hard to make our customers' experiences the best. it's because we have tens of thousands of cars ready to be delivered to your doorstep. and it's why hundreds of thousands of happy customers have ditched the dealership and bought their car online, earning us an average 4.7 stars in the process. so if you didn't know about us before, you do now. we're carvana, and we want to give you the car buying experience you deserve. >>> welcome back netflix is losing its "friends" weeks after finding out it would be kicked out of "the office." we'll have more on that in a moment
h q2 and we're going to go in depth with exclusive new details about how virginia won amazon. guys >> all right thank you very much. scott cohn >>> competitors are taking aim at netflix, stripping the service of two of its most popular shows. "friends" and "the office. so what will be the next shot fired in the streaming wars? we'll look at that when "power lunch" returns carvana is six years old this year and is the fastest growing place to buy a car in...
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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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are they unstoppable, google, facebook, apple, amazon? stephen: a very good question. we are slightly in unchartered territory. back a couple decades, you had capital controls on currency, regimes were tightly controlled, part of the post-second world war settlement. now you're in a situation where the regulations have been relaxed, and companies have pushed the envelope. anna: stephen, thank you very much. stephen maclow-smith will be joining us on bloomberg radio, a little later on this morning. up next, an underpriced risk. we talk bond markets. this is bloomberg. ♪ ♪ matt: 30 minutes into your trading day, let's get the top headlines off of the bloomberg terminal. expect a call. steven mnuchin says he may head to beijing this week if trade talks are productive, as europe braces for u.s. tariffs on $7 billion of goods over illegal aircraft subsidies. trading revenue will be the talking point for goldman sachs and jp morgan as they report second-quarter results. wells fargo's numbers are also on the docket. we'll hear from cfo john shrewsberry. and, set to make h
are they unstoppable, google, facebook, apple, amazon? stephen: a very good question. we are slightly in unchartered territory. back a couple decades, you had capital controls on currency, regimes were tightly controlled, part of the post-second world war settlement. now you're in a situation where the regulations have been relaxed, and companies have pushed the envelope. anna: stephen, thank you very much. stephen maclow-smith will be joining us on bloomberg radio, a little later on this...
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Jul 27, 2019
07/19
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that is the rate of deforestation now hitting the brazilian amazon. the world's largest rain forest is being destroyed at a pace from which it may never recover. 1,345 square kilometers of rain forest have been cleared so far this month, mostly for farmland. that is nearly the size of london. a third of all pristine rain forests have been cut down or burned. that includes places where tribes of people have cared for the land for centuries. the elephant could now become a savanna. brazil's president has moved fast to dismantle environmental regulation, cutting budgets and giving more power to minors. all this can affect the trade deal with the european union. it's not yet been ratified and commits both sides to slowing deforestation. coordinator for an environment or social justice organization said some positive steps are being taken to protect the amazon. >> this week on tuesday, the eu published an action plan, opening the door to regulatory measures that would set standards on eu imports to be sure they are not contributing to forest decoration. if
that is the rate of deforestation now hitting the brazilian amazon. the world's largest rain forest is being destroyed at a pace from which it may never recover. 1,345 square kilometers of rain forest have been cleared so far this month, mostly for farmland. that is nearly the size of london. a third of all pristine rain forests have been cut down or burned. that includes places where tribes of people have cared for the land for centuries. the elephant could now become a savanna. brazil's...
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Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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to rebound on the latest point, amazon is our partner in food. we are the exclusive partner in food. our partners can order goods and be delivered on the same day. with amazon we have same-day delivery. that is a partnership with the best technological operators. there might have been too much retail space in the country, that is why we think closing ,ome of these spaces make sense and we are closing some of the space. there is also -- we have to be precise when we analyze the french market. it is a polarized market. buts a competitive market, there is different positioning and competitive dynamics, whether you in high growing or economically dynamic and demographically dynamic regions or you are in regions other's top competitions for a market that is shrinking. what we are doing is reducing our footprint in those regions and increasing our footprint in the dynamic region at the dynamic format of e-commerce. we think there is room for growth on profitable and new segments. isther specificity we have accompanying that with other activities such a
to rebound on the latest point, amazon is our partner in food. we are the exclusive partner in food. our partners can order goods and be delivered on the same day. with amazon we have same-day delivery. that is a partnership with the best technological operators. there might have been too much retail space in the country, that is why we think closing ,ome of these spaces make sense and we are closing some of the space. there is also -- we have to be precise when we analyze the french market. it...
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Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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tech giants of the but and amazon report -- all the bet -- alphabet and amazon report. ♪ nejra: welcome to daybreak europe. it has just gone 6:00 in london. earnings onslaught is a great way to describe it. roche numbers are coming through. at 30.4lf sales come in 7 billion. the estimate was 30.53. first half core operating profit. the red headline, let me get to that. view toits sales growth mid to high single digits. that's very interesting. raising its sales growth view to mid to high single digit. that's the red headline on roche. at 11.1.comes in the estimate was 10.65. that's a beat on first half core eps. core operating profit for the first half comes in at 12.36. the estimate was 12.16. there's a beat on some of the numbers. the headline you want to focus on is the fact that it's raising its sales growth view to mid to high single digits. there were some pressures whether it would've raised guidance a second time this year. to the ceowe speak of roast. don't miss that interview at 7:30 a.m. london time. dani burger is standing by with the nokia earnings. beat are looking at a ac
tech giants of the but and amazon report -- all the bet -- alphabet and amazon report. ♪ nejra: welcome to daybreak europe. it has just gone 6:00 in london. earnings onslaught is a great way to describe it. roche numbers are coming through. at 30.4lf sales come in 7 billion. the estimate was 30.53. first half core operating profit. the red headline, let me get to that. view toits sales growth mid to high single digits. that's very interesting. raising its sales growth view to mid to high...
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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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we'll also see at the end of amazon prime day how strong the consumer is. >> the new cyber monday was yesterday. bryn makes an important point. there are people that are getting pinched by tariffs nobody is saying they're not have you or anybody on the panel heard their family or friends or anybody they have seen in the store say, you know what, m maybele? don't buy that, it's 5% more expensive than it was. >> the euphoria citing for the consumer, if there is euphoria and the consumer has a concern it's not the tariffs as much as it is potentially housing. and the impact of salt and the fact that house prices have reached a level that somewhat unaffordab unaffordable to me the euphoria is present if we saw house prices continuing to move higher and consumers reaching through leverage to pay the higher price we are not seeing that we see the sensitivity in price. i think that's a good thing. >> i'm excited about trade wars vis-a-vis consumers in china the reason the market doesn't correct every time there is more trump rhetoric regarding the trade war is this. the upside for me as a u.
we'll also see at the end of amazon prime day how strong the consumer is. >> the new cyber monday was yesterday. bryn makes an important point. there are people that are getting pinched by tariffs nobody is saying they're not have you or anybody on the panel heard their family or friends or anybody they have seen in the store say, you know what, m maybele? don't buy that, it's 5% more expensive than it was. >> the euphoria citing for the consumer, if there is euphoria and the...
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Jul 2, 2019
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why we didn't get amazon here. there were jobs lost there. >> that was -- as i've said a million times, i thought a terrible mistake and a political one but in a very different way than people think -- >> this is arizona and arizona, i don't think the governors of oregon or washington are going to -- are going to come down on the same side as arizona. >> so joe, andrew and becky, i would point out in one of the tweets in the string that governor ducey put out he did say that arizona and the city of goodyear, arizona, are well off enough without nike being there and that is one of the reasons why they're talking about taking some of the incentives and fee rebates away from that potential nike facility in goodyear, arizona. >> okay, dom, thanks. >> let's talk more about market and possible wild cards. joining us is david bianco from dws group. and tom tessorous from head of fixed income what do you see as far as the jobs numbers coming in and do we want a strong one or a weak one and are rates going lower? >> i don't
why we didn't get amazon here. there were jobs lost there. >> that was -- as i've said a million times, i thought a terrible mistake and a political one but in a very different way than people think -- >> this is arizona and arizona, i don't think the governors of oregon or washington are going to -- are going to come down on the same side as arizona. >> so joe, andrew and becky, i would point out in one of the tweets in the string that governor ducey put out he did say that...
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Jul 30, 2019
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a former amazon employee has been charged. the data had been stored on servers from amazon's cloud services unit. capital one says it is unlikely that any of the data was used for fraud. a warning from bayer. the german company says that reaching the full-year forecast looks increasingly ambitious. bad is threatening the -- weather is threatening the performance of the agricultural division. there is a number of plaintiffs in the weedkiller lawsuit. and steps to move past a scandal. the swiss asset manager has named a blackrock veteran as its new ceo. its staro it suspended bontrager and dismissed them for what he called gross that's what it called gross misconduct -- for what it called gross misconduct. that is your "business flash." guy: thank you very much indeed. mexico's president lopez obrador says that rates in his country are too high. he spoke exclusively to john mickelthwait in mexico city on monday. pres. lopez obrador: one thing is what is to be decided and another is what is possible. i would like the central bank
a former amazon employee has been charged. the data had been stored on servers from amazon's cloud services unit. capital one says it is unlikely that any of the data was used for fraud. a warning from bayer. the german company says that reaching the full-year forecast looks increasingly ambitious. bad is threatening the -- weather is threatening the performance of the agricultural division. there is a number of plaintiffs in the weedkiller lawsuit. and steps to move past a scandal. the swiss...
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Jul 22, 2019
07/19
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is a company like google or amazon or facebook... they have done a fair number of acquisitions which have stilted competition. there is something called the kill zone which venture capitalists talk about. i will not finance any company which operates in this space because this is a space which is too close to the big guys, they will eat it up, and eat it up for pennies rather than pounds. so the point is, there may be cleverer ways to ensure that competition, what we want is competition, that competition in these industries prevails, innovation prevails, and that might mean being much cleverer. it's not just about saying, i will stop you from growing to more than 40% of the industry, but it maybe, i won't let you take over these ones. are you suggesting, if you are saying this is a message that people are sending to world leaders, are you suggesting that actually that populism is a good because it's sending a message? i think populism raises the right questions, i don't think it has the right answers, by and large. and is anybody lis
is a company like google or amazon or facebook... they have done a fair number of acquisitions which have stilted competition. there is something called the kill zone which venture capitalists talk about. i will not finance any company which operates in this space because this is a space which is too close to the big guys, they will eat it up, and eat it up for pennies rather than pounds. so the point is, there may be cleverer ways to ensure that competition, what we want is competition, that...
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Jul 18, 2019
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amazon web services. while that 63% premium sounds like a hefty price tag, considering there were other potential bidders, they paid what they had to pay to get the job done it's a little misleading it seems like ibm paid through the nose for red hat if you measure where the price tag was before the announcement. at the time, $116 stock, ibm sold out 190 we've been supporting it for years when it was in the 50s, 60, 70s, 80s red hat, even a year before, the price seems a lot more reasonable in june of last year the stock was at $177. after getting clobbered for a suboptimal quarter if you think jim white hearst like i do can turn things around -- and i did -- then it wasn't going to stay down here for long it was going to start climbing with or without jenny. if you take red hat's price over the year before's ibm's take overbid, $142, ibm only paid a 34% premium. in other words, i don't think they overpaid versus what this business was really worth. then there's the qualitative argument for years ibm had
amazon web services. while that 63% premium sounds like a hefty price tag, considering there were other potential bidders, they paid what they had to pay to get the job done it's a little misleading it seems like ibm paid through the nose for red hat if you measure where the price tag was before the announcement. at the time, $116 stock, ibm sold out 190 we've been supporting it for years when it was in the 50s, 60, 70s, 80s red hat, even a year before, the price seems a lot more reasonable in...
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Jul 19, 2019
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these are trillion dollar companies we're talking about. >> the growth of microsoft, amazon, google is astounding they're good innovation engines. for us, acquisitions are a thoughtful decision of where does organic need to meet inorganic. how do we continue to accelerate the pace of capability and the breadth of a product so we can continue to serve customers. we are constantly looking at both our view on splunk is control the things you can control if we serve customers effectively and enhance our official and continue with reasonable growth rates, effective growth rates, that's the piece that we can control that we're most focused on in the face of this m&a activity. >> you work with a lot of private companies. i know the likes of some cruise liners like carnival, starbucks, but what about political parties? we've seen increasingly in the uk with the brexit campaign a lot of politicians turning to big data to understand voters better and voter issues. how do you think about that and the ethics behind using data to inform campaign choices and policy choices >> going back to gdpr, it'
these are trillion dollar companies we're talking about. >> the growth of microsoft, amazon, google is astounding they're good innovation engines. for us, acquisitions are a thoughtful decision of where does organic need to meet inorganic. how do we continue to accelerate the pace of capability and the breadth of a product so we can continue to serve customers. we are constantly looking at both our view on splunk is control the things you can control if we serve customers effectively and...
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Jul 16, 2019
07/19
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money of course fleming and from the streaming services netflix and amazon, that is having an effect as well. now it's time for a look at the weather. if you like warmth and sunshine the weather may have won some awards to date! 27 degrees on the london area. but not so in the west of scotland. you can see on the satellite picture some patchy cloud around which did produce some showers through the day. behind meet more continuous cloud cover promising some rain heading through the next 2a hours. still some sunshine to be had this evening. any daytime showers should fade away and then we keep those clear skies. good news if you're hoping to see the partial lunar eclipse. a 65% eclipse them for this evening peaking at around 10:30pm. look towards the south east. you may see a bit more clout across northern ireland and western scotland as the weather system makes more progress and bring some outbreaks of rain by the end of the night. into tomorrow at low pressure starts to take charge of the weather. the frontal system a re charge of the weather. the frontal system are starting to pushi
money of course fleming and from the streaming services netflix and amazon, that is having an effect as well. now it's time for a look at the weather. if you like warmth and sunshine the weather may have won some awards to date! 27 degrees on the london area. but not so in the west of scotland. you can see on the satellite picture some patchy cloud around which did produce some showers through the day. behind meet more continuous cloud cover promising some rain heading through the next 2a...
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Jul 25, 2019
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over at amazon, soaring demand for its cloud business, the tech infrastructure thatis business, the tech infrastructure that is used by many businesses, it continues to contribute to the bottom line. the well‘s biggest online retailer is expected to post strong revenue for the second quarter. and healthy travel demand should help airlines mitigate some of the impact of a prolonged grounding of boeing 737 max jets. they are the two us airlines with the largest 737 max fleets. that is michelle, of course and itjust underlies how busy it is. joining us is richard hunter, head of markets at interactive investor. lots of earnings and we have mentioned at the european central bank, your thoughts on the ecb today? we have just been hearing from victoria about the german manufacturing data and of course, thatis manufacturing data and of course, that is very much the power within the european union so they are clearly in trouble, but at least we are not speaking like a couple of yea rs are not speaking like a couple of years ago about debt anymore, it is just that growth hasn't materialised soi
over at amazon, soaring demand for its cloud business, the tech infrastructure thatis business, the tech infrastructure that is used by many businesses, it continues to contribute to the bottom line. the well‘s biggest online retailer is expected to post strong revenue for the second quarter. and healthy travel demand should help airlines mitigate some of the impact of a prolonged grounding of boeing 737 max jets. they are the two us airlines with the largest 737 max fleets. that is michelle,...
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Jul 15, 2019
07/19
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we see the mining sector not doing too badly. 2.7%,ve writeups, up talking about how amazon could come if it doesn't managed to get its hands on it. shorting by blackrock. that is of interest, up 2.7%. and exother side, dividend story down 12%. the chairman of micro focus selling stocks, down 4.5%. anheuser-busch, we talked about this, the way they had to pull this listing of their business in asia as a result of not as much demand as anticipated. growth concerns there. plus get a bloomberg first word news update. debra mao is an hong kong. economy slowed to its weakest pace in three decades. evidencebut there's stimulus to curb the slowdown may be starting to seep through. sales beat estimates. president trump is accused of racism after suggesting for banks female lawmakers go back to the places they came from. it seemed aimed at a former group of first-term representatives, led by alexandria ocasio-cortez. three of the women were born in the u.s., but none are white. dozens arrested as protests continue in hong kong, including clashes with police. demonstrators are demanding resignat
we see the mining sector not doing too badly. 2.7%,ve writeups, up talking about how amazon could come if it doesn't managed to get its hands on it. shorting by blackrock. that is of interest, up 2.7%. and exother side, dividend story down 12%. the chairman of micro focus selling stocks, down 4.5%. anheuser-busch, we talked about this, the way they had to pull this listing of their business in asia as a result of not as much demand as anticipated. growth concerns there. plus get a bloomberg...
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Jul 23, 2019
07/19
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FBC
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names like amazon, facebook, if the fangs can't perform, i think the market will struggle. cheryl: facebook was expected to get to the settlement announcement before the close of traying tomorrow, we'll -- trading tomorrow, we'll hear about the $5 billion with the ftc. >> it's a drop in the bucket for a company like facebook. we like to think the settlement means it's settled. when it comes to facebook, it's almost like the nuclear industry was in the '80s, pharmaceuticals were in the '90s, oil was in the 2000s, that's big tech right now. they're kind of public enemy number one. my fear is whether it's on privacy, whether it's all these other issues, that the government isn't over when it comes to regulating and micro managing facebook. cheryl: elizabeth warren coming out and saying she believes there's an economic crash coming and then she said here's what i'm going to do about it, i'm going to erase student debt. >> she's got a plan. cheryl: we're going to offer free tuition. with unemployment at record lows and she talked about manufacturing jobs, i'm not sure where she'
names like amazon, facebook, if the fangs can't perform, i think the market will struggle. cheryl: facebook was expected to get to the settlement announcement before the close of traying tomorrow, we'll -- trading tomorrow, we'll hear about the $5 billion with the ftc. >> it's a drop in the bucket for a company like facebook. we like to think the settlement means it's settled. when it comes to facebook, it's almost like the nuclear industry was in the '80s, pharmaceuticals were in the...
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Jul 1, 2019
07/19
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BLOOMBERG
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it looks like a combination of globalization, technological shifts, which is hard to deliver amazon,lization, think and the fact that commodities like oil are having less of an effect on the overall economy. you put all of that together, you are right to think about it as a structural shift. we are more like the 1970's in things other than what the central bank says. david: pick that up in terms of what it does in the marketplace. if we are not believing what the fed has to say the way we used to, if oil is not driving the way it used to do, how does that affect an investor? .im: i think i agree with adam a lot of structural forces. one other is demographics. aging demographics in the developed world is the biggest cause because we did not develop the emerging world fast enough, which has younger demographics and we are suffering from week global growth and i think that continues for a while which is flatlined inflation. investor is not just that inflation does not come up, but what if you going to global deflation? that is frightening. i think as an investor i would like to see the fed err
it looks like a combination of globalization, technological shifts, which is hard to deliver amazon,lization, think and the fact that commodities like oil are having less of an effect on the overall economy. you put all of that together, you are right to think about it as a structural shift. we are more like the 1970's in things other than what the central bank says. david: pick that up in terms of what it does in the marketplace. if we are not believing what the fed has to say the way we used...
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antitrust regulators will investigate amazon the world's largest online retailer to see if its use of other merchants data breaches the block's antitrust rules meanwhile here in germany the consumer protection agency have a victory against the e-commerce giant german authorities are making amazon change how it works with 3rd party merchants in europe both the sellers and amazon and need to take more responsibility for incomplete or inaccurate order fulfillment will also need to wait 30 days before blocking or closing selling at closing the seller account excuse me in exchange germany's federal cartel office says it will drop its investigation into amazon. now the latest figures from the international air transport association show demand for passenger aviation in the next 2 decades is going to surge and the asia pacific region with countries like china indonesia and those leading the charge but in europe so-called flight shame is increasing social pressure on travelers not to fly as they're made out to consider the environmental impact of each trip. 100000 that's how many people come
antitrust regulators will investigate amazon the world's largest online retailer to see if its use of other merchants data breaches the block's antitrust rules meanwhile here in germany the consumer protection agency have a victory against the e-commerce giant german authorities are making amazon change how it works with 3rd party merchants in europe both the sellers and amazon and need to take more responsibility for incomplete or inaccurate order fulfillment will also need to wait 30 days...
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Jul 2, 2019
07/19
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BBCNEWS
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david shuckman, bbc news, in the amazon. the german and british foreign ministers have called on iran violation of the 2015 nuclear deal, as gareth barlow reports. european countries climates are called today runs who adhere to its commitments. the landmark 2015 nuclear deal violated, an uncertain future ahead. the secretary general is very much aware of the reports that the islamic republic of iran are may have surpassed itsjcpoa limits ona are may have surpassed itsjcpoa limits on a you reached —— enriched uranium. the plan was left in jeopardy after the united states walked away last year, donald trump, having branded it a horrible, laughable, outrageous deal. he said iran was playing with fire. they know what they are doing, they know what they are playing with and i think they are playing with fire. so no message to iran whatsoever. ever since there was pulled out of the agreement, iran, with its economy crumbling under american sanctions has look to europe to keep the deal alive. that message repeated once more. ca
david shuckman, bbc news, in the amazon. the german and british foreign ministers have called on iran violation of the 2015 nuclear deal, as gareth barlow reports. european countries climates are called today runs who adhere to its commitments. the landmark 2015 nuclear deal violated, an uncertain future ahead. the secretary general is very much aware of the reports that the islamic republic of iran are may have surpassed itsjcpoa limits ona are may have surpassed itsjcpoa limits on a you...
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Jul 26, 2019
07/19
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amazon forecasts income below expectations. alphabet and intel jump in late trading after beating expectations. good morning. matt: good morning to you, less than a half-hour hour to the start of trading. take a look at the bunds. this is something i was talking about. you saw a reversal in the bond yields. as we were heading into the ecb meeting, yields were coming down. investors were looking for the possibility of a cut. then we interviewed the german finance minister where i circled in red. and you saw but yields go up again. that's because he says there is no crisis. he sees it coming back to the economy once these man-made problems, as he describes them, are solved. meaning once the char not u.s. -- u.s. china trade war is over, he sees it coming back to germany. investors were relieved and started letting go of the paper, yields rising. look at the stoxx situation. we don't see futures falling here. but we do see asian stocks coming down. we have cac and dax futures up a little, ftse futures down, but relatively little c
amazon forecasts income below expectations. alphabet and intel jump in late trading after beating expectations. good morning. matt: good morning to you, less than a half-hour hour to the start of trading. take a look at the bunds. this is something i was talking about. you saw a reversal in the bond yields. as we were heading into the ecb meeting, yields were coming down. investors were looking for the possibility of a cut. then we interviewed the german finance minister where i circled in red....
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Jul 25, 2019
07/19
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alphabet and amazon earnings after the bell. what to expect and the numbers you need to know ahead of that, when we come back. this is bloomberg. ♪ this is bloomberg markets. i'm shery ahn in new york. amber: and on amber kammer into rocco -- in toronto. onslaught ofe an regulatory scrutiny and including a $2 billion charge tied to its ftc settlement, the social media giant still reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings and revenue after an initial advance. shares are now down over 2%. for more insight, let's bring in our senior equity analyst. he has a hold on facebook. great to have you with us. so investors did like what they saw in the performance of facebook. they don't like the regulatory environment at the moment. does the stock price right now reflect that environment? so, actually. it is pretty much the regulatory environment, the additional costs that facebook can incur because of that will keep the stock down. i think it will limit the upside to the stock, and it is trading pretty much where we valued i
alphabet and amazon earnings after the bell. what to expect and the numbers you need to know ahead of that, when we come back. this is bloomberg. ♪ this is bloomberg markets. i'm shery ahn in new york. amber: and on amber kammer into rocco -- in toronto. onslaught ofe an regulatory scrutiny and including a $2 billion charge tied to its ftc settlement, the social media giant still reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings and revenue after an initial advance. shares are now down...
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Jul 15, 2019
07/19
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CNBC
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we're all focused on amazon. this one skates right past everyone >> it got dissed by us. >> we didn't do a whole show on it there was no trillion dollar market cap ringing the bell. there was no thing we do for bitcoin in the lower right, that whole thing. >> nathan, though, you know dan, maga, that's the m in maga. >> but i think dan would say faded at this point. >> he's not here, he would hate it. >> anyway, with can we move on unh, brian kelly fade it or trade it i'm going to take a page out of carter's book and not tell you what i think. >> because you don't remember. >> take the camera off me while i look at it i'm looking at this in the beginning of the month the stock was $240, right? we've now moved up almost 30 points well over 10% move here any asset that moves up that much and particularly a stock when the volatility is relatively low to that, to me that's a fade. i'll fade it this is where you sell this one, not necessarily anything against the company, but it's just the price action. >> see this is
we're all focused on amazon. this one skates right past everyone >> it got dissed by us. >> we didn't do a whole show on it there was no trillion dollar market cap ringing the bell. there was no thing we do for bitcoin in the lower right, that whole thing. >> nathan, though, you know dan, maga, that's the m in maga. >> but i think dan would say faded at this point. >> he's not here, he would hate it. >> anyway, with can we move on unh, brian kelly fade it or...