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The Fed Meets In opposition to a Revamped Financial Backdrop: Dwell Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Mandel Ngan/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The Federal Reserve is staring down a challenge that would have been all but unthinkable a year ago: With its policies set on emergency mode to bolster growth in the face of the pandemic’s shock, it must now navigate an economy that is expected to strengthen rapidly in the coming months.

Officials will release an interest rate policy decision and their first economic projections of 2021 at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, and they are virtually certain to leave borrowing costs unchanged at near zero.

But analysts and Wall Street investors alike are eager to see whether growing economic optimism will shake up the outlook for policy in the months and years ahead.

The Fed slashed interest rates to rock bottom a year ago as the pandemic shut down huge swaths of the economy. It has also been buying $120 billion in bonds per month, a policy meant to keep credit cheap and help the economy rebound from a virus that has thrown millions out of work.

Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, has been clear for months that officials expect to be patient in removing that policy help — a cautious tone that he is expected to maintain at a news conference on Wednesday.

“This is one of the most critical Fed meetings we’ve had in a while,” said Michelle Meyer, head of U.S. economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. “Markets are really paying attention, and they’re going to dissect everything he says.”

That’s because the economic backdrop is shifting. Coronavirus vaccines are fueling hopes for reopening parts of the service sector. A freshly signed stimulus package will pump $1.9 trillion into the economy, with an eye on preventing evictions, funneling cash to parents and putting $1,400 checks directly into bank accounts.

Against that improving backdrop, economists in a Bloomberg survey expect the Fed to increase rates twice in 2023, the news outlet reported. In December, they expected rates to remain unchanged until 2024 or later.

As investors expect faster growth, higher inflation and a quicker-moving Fed, they have pushed up the yield on 10-year Treasury notes. That has weighed on stock indexes, which tend to fall when rates rise.

The Fed’s economic projections — which anonymously report officials’ forecasts for interest rates, unemployment, inflation and growth both through 2023 and in the longer run — could show a shift when they are released on Wednesday.

Wall Street will pay particular attention to the inflation forecast and the policy rate path. The Fed’s median interest rate forecast previously showed no rate increases over the next three years, but analysts expect that officials could now pencil in one move in 2023.

Wall Street has been paying close attention to the outlook for inflation in recent weeks. Key price indexes are expected to bounce back after weak readings last year, and some economists have warned that big government spending could keep them elevated.

That could put a spotlight on Federal Reserve officials’ inflation estimates, and on anything that Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, says about the outlook during his news conference after the central bank’s meeting on Wednesday.

The Fed is trying to use its policies to coax the economy back to full employment while lifting and stabilizing inflation, which has been slipping in recent decades. It wants to hit 2 percent annual price gains on average, and it has pledged not to raise rates from near zero until they are poised to hum along at a slightly faster pace for some time.

But some prominent onlookers have warned that the economy could overheat. They say inflation may jump well above the 2 percent average target, thanks to government outlays and booming demand in a reopening economy.

Fed officials have been consistently less concerned about that possibility, and will give an up-to-date snapshot of their own expectations in their first Summary of Economic Projections of 2021. The last set of estimates, released in December, showed inflation stabilizing at 2 percent.

“How much do they revise up inflation? That’s something I’ll be looking for,” said Seth Carpenter, chief U.S. economist at UBS and a former Fed employee.

Analysts broadly expect price gains to accelerate in the coming months for a mechanical reason: The data are about to lap very weak readings from last spring. The most closely watched inflation measures are compared against the same month a year earlier, a recipe for an automatic increase.

But Fed leaders have been clear that a short-lived bounce is not what they’re talking about when they say they want to see quicker increases.

“There’s a difference between a one-time surge in prices and ongoing inflation,” Mr. Powell said this month.

An increase in longer-term bond yields could prompt the Fed to revamp its bond-buying program.Credit…Olivier Douliery/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Investors expect a stronger economy and slightly higher inflation in 2021, and they will watch the Federal Reserve chair, Jerome H. Powell, at his news conference on Wednesday for any hints about what that portends for the central bank’s bond-buying plans.

The Fed has been buying $120 billion in Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds each month, and officials have said they will continue that pace until they see “substantial” further progress.

But Mr. Powell and crew haven’t defined “substantial” with any precision. What counts as sufficient economic healing — when the Fed might slow and stop its program — matters to markets because the buying helps to push up prices in bonds and stocks alike.

Some investors have begun to expect the Fed to taper off its buying sooner than they had been forecasting. Others think a recent increase in longer-term bond yields, which has been driven by investor expectations for growth and inflation, could prompt the Fed to revamp its program in the near term.

That’s because those higher market-based rates could make mortgages more expensive and corporate investments less attractive, working against the Fed’s goals. The central bank could shift the composition of its purchases or even buy more to keep interest rates historically low across the spectrum.

Mr. Powell has pushed back on the idea that a taper is imminent and has promised that the Fed will alert investors well before the slowdown starts. He has also pointed out that rates are moving up because of a brightening outlook, and has suggested that the change isn’t worrying for now.

“I would be concerned by disorderly conditions in markets or a persistent tightening in financial conditions that threatens the achievement of our goals,” Mr. Powell said at an event this month, while stressing that the Fed looks at a range of financial conditions.

Keith Gill, known as Roaring Kitty, testified at the House Financial Service Committee’s first GameStop hearing.Credit…House Financial Services Committee

The House Financial Services Committee is holding its second hearing on the GameStop frenzy on Wednesday, with a range of experts expected to expound on what the saga says about the stock market’s plumbing.

The hearing appears likely to have a more wonkish tone than the committee’s first hearing on GameStop, which put a spotlight on Robinhood, the trading app at the center of a remarkable rally that sent shares of the struggling video game retailer up by over 1,600 percent in January,

Witnesses will include stock exchange officials, market analysts, former regulators and academics. Prepared testimony suggests the witnesses will focus on what — if any — deficiencies in the American stock trading system were revealed by the surge of trading in GameStop.

Sal Arnuk, co-founder of trading firm Themis Trading, plans to spotlight the growing role of payment-for-order-flow, where retail brokerage houses such as Robinhood channel customer orders to specific trading firms in exchange for payments.

“These practices create a massive incentive for such brokers to sell their clients orders to sophisticated trading firms uniquely tooled to profit off of them,” Mr. Arnuk will say, according to preliminary testimony released by the House committee. “This is a needless conflict that can harm retail investors, and it degrades the integrity of the market ecosystem as a whole.”

Other witnesses, such as Alexis Goldstein, a senior policy analyst at Americans for Financial Reform, will underscore the growing dominance of the trading firms that pay retail brokerage firms to execute their orders.

Two major market-makers, Citadel Securities and Virtu Financial, “execute a larger volume of U.S. stocks than the New York Stock Exchange,” she said in prepared testimony, urging regulators to look at whether their growth has worsened the prices that are available to investors on the public exchanges.

The hearing is to begin at 10 a.m. Other participants include Michael Blaugrund, chief operating officer of the New York Stock Exchange; Vicki L. Bogan, a Cornell University professor who focuses on the financial and investment behavior of households; Dennis Kelleher, the chief executive of Better Markets, which advocates market reforms; and Michael Piwowar, executive director of the Milken Institute Center for Financial Markets and a former S.E.C. commissioner.

BMWs on display at last year’s Bangkok auto show. The German carmaker is taking a more cautious approach to electric vehicles than some rivals.Credit…Jorge Silva/Reuters

BMW became the latest carmaker to promote its commitment to electric vehicles Wednesday, moving up the introduction of a new electric sedan, hinting at plans for an electric Rolls-Royce, and saying that its Mini cars will run exclusively on batteries, though not until the 2030s.

BMW follows rivals like Volkswagen, General Motors and Volvo that have recently declared their intention to shift to electric vehicles. But BMW, based in Munich, is pursuing a more cautious strategy than some of the others.

Unlike Volkswagen, for example, BMW has not introduced a platform — a chassis and other components shared among numerous body styles — designed exclusively for electric propulsion. BMW models will accommodate either battery power or internal combustion engines, an approach that inevitably involves engineering compromises.

Oliver Zipse, the BMW chief executive, said the company’s strategy gave customers more choice. “Others focus on individual market segments and niches,” he said during a news conference Wednesday. “We, on the other hand, are taking a targeted approach across all market segments.”

Some analysts say BMW’s approach prevents it from fully exploiting the advantages of battery power, such as the opportunity to create roomier interiors.

BMW said Wednesday it would introduce its last new Mini with an internal combustion engine in 2025, but would continue to sell the model into the 2030s. In addition, BMW will begin selling its electric i4 BMW sedan this year, sooner than planned. Rolls-Royce, which has been owned by BMW since the late 1990s, will also offer an electric model, Mr. Zipse said, but he did not give details.

Unlike General Motors or Volvo, BMW and other German carmakers have not set a deadline to stop selling cars that run on fossil fuels. They argue that many regions lack charging stations for electric vehicles. “It is not realistic that the same technologies will prevail equally in every country at the same time,” Mr. Zipse said Wednesday.

BMW sold 2.3 million passenger cars last year, 8 percent fewer than in 2019. That is a relatively small number of vehicles compared with Volkswagen or Toyota, which sell four times that number, and could be a disadvantage as the industry goes electric.

BMW as well as Daimler will have trouble selling enough electric vehicles to justify the expense of retooling factories or developing dedicated platforms, Patrick Hummel, an auto industry analyst at UBS, said during a conference call with reporters last week.

“BMW and Daimler will not be in a position to replicate what Volkswagen is doing,” Mr. Hummel said.

Payments top out at $1,400 per person, including children and adult dependents. To qualify for the full $1,400, a single person must have an adjusted gross income of $75,000 or below.Credit…Matt Rourke/Associated Press

The stimulus money promised under the American Rescue Plan will hit the bank accounts of many Americans on Wednesday — the first official payment date — though some financial institutions chose to make the cash available to people even before it arrived from the government.

Not everyone eligible to receive a payment will get one on Wednesday, though. Additional rounds of payments will be made in the coming weeks, including for people who will receive theirs by mail as a check or debit card. You can check the status of your payment with the Internal Revenue Service’s Get My Payment tool.

Payments top out at $1,400 per person, including children and adult dependents. To qualify for the full $1,400, a single person must have an adjusted gross income of $75,000 or below. For heads of household, adjusted gross income must be $112,500 or less, and for married couples filing jointly, that number has to be $150,000 or below. Partial payments are available to people who earn more, but the amounts fall quickly.

The payments are calculated using the most recent information on file with the I.R.S., which could be your 2019 tax return if you haven’t yet filed for 2020.

If you’re newly eligible for a payment based on your 2020 income but haven’t yet filed your return, the law allows the Treasury Department to continue payments until September. If you don’t get one during that period, you can claim what you’re owed when you file your 2021 taxes.

  • Uber will reclassify more than 70,000 drivers in Britain as workers, it said on Tuesday. The decision, which will provide the drivers a minimum wage, vacation pay and access to a pension plan, is the first time the company has agreed to classify its drivers in this way, Uber said. It comes in response to a landmark British Supreme Court decision last month that said Uber drivers were entitled to more protections. The decision represents a shift for Uber, though the move was made easier by British labor rules that offer a middle ground between freelancers and full employees that doesn’t exist in other countries.

  • Google is cutting in half its commission on developers’ first $1 million in app sales, following a similar move by Apple that is aimed at appeasing developers and regulators who accuse the companies of abusing their dominance of the smartphone industry. Google said that starting July 1, it would take 15 percent of the first $1 million developers take in from certain app sales, down from 30 percent. Google will still charge 30 percent after the first $1 million.

  • The S&P 500 index is set to open slightly lower on Wednesday, futures indicated, before the latest Federal Reserve monetary policy decisions are announced.

  • The S&P 500 pulled back from a record high on Tuesday, but volatility in stock markets has subsided from earlier in the month when bond yields jumped higher at a rate that took investors by surprises and caught the attention of central bank officials.

  • Government bond prices fell on Wednesday, sending their yields higher. The yield on 10-year Treasury notes rose 2 basis points, or 0.02 percentage points, to 1.64 percent.

  • Most European stock indexes were down. The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 0.3 percent, led by health care and industrial companies. In Britain, the FTSE 100 index dropped 0.4 percent and the CAC 40 in France was 0.2 percent lower.

  • Oil prices fell. Futures on West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. crude benchmark, fell 0.7 percent to $64.34 a barrel.

  • A Bank of America analyst maintained his “buy” rating on Uber after the company said it would reclassify all 70,000 of its drivers in Britain as workers, giving them additional benefits, following a court ruling last month. Justin Post, the analyst, said the change would increase driver costs in the country by 7 percent to 9 percent but the outcome “reflects evolution, not platform risk.”

  • The benefits could make Uber more appealing for drivers, force other companies to make similar changes and make it harder for new entrants in the market, Mr. Post wrote in a research note. Uber’s share price fell 2.2 percent on Tuesday before the announcement.

The problems of Greensill Capital, a financial firm with ties to SoftBank and Credit Suisse, deepened Tuesday after its German unit entered insolvency proceedings.

Germany’s banking regulator, known as BaFin, said Tuesday that a judge had granted its request to open insolvency proceedings for Greensill Bank in Bremen. BaFin also formally determined that Greensill Bank was not able to repay all of its customers’ deposits, a step that allows depositors to receive compensation from public and private insurance funds.

The insolvency of the German unit was expected after Greensill Capital, which provides financing to companies and has been advised by former Prime Minister David Cameron of Britain, filed for a form of bankruptcy protection in Britain last week.

Credit Suisse acknowledged on Tuesday that it was likely to suffer losses from a loan it had made to the firm. It said that it had received $50 million from the administrator of Greensill Capital’s assets in Britain but that $90 million of the loan was outstanding.

Credit Suisse’s asset management unit oversaw $10 billion in funds that Greensill packaged based on financing it provided to companies. The loans allowed companies to stretch out payments to suppliers. Credit Suisse has returned $3 billion in cash to investors in the funds and said it was working to recover more money.

Credit Suisse said Tuesday that the funds’ managers “intend to announce further cash distributions over the coming months.” The bank has not specified what losses, if any, investors in the funds might ultimately suffer.

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German Covid circumstances rising ‘exponentially’ amid dangerous vaccine pause

A health care worker will take care of a Covid 19 patient in the intensive care unit of the Robert Bosch Hospital in Stuttgart on Tuesday, January 12, 2021.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

It’s no secret that Germany has seen a sharp rise in coronavirus cases in recent weeks, but a leading health expert in the country is now warning of an “exponential growth” in the number of infections.

It does so at a time when the country has stopped using the AstraZeneca University of Oxford’s coronavirus vaccine.

Epidemiologist Dirk Brockmann, an expert at the Robert Koch Institute for Infectious Diseases, said a recent relaxation of Covid restrictions has allowed a faster spread of a more virulent variant of the virus that was discovered in the UK late last year.

“We are exactly on the flank of the third wave. That can no longer be denied. And at this point in time we relaxed the restrictions and that accelerates the exponential growth,” Brockmann told the German ARD on Tuesday.

“It was completely irrational to relax here. It just powers this exponential growth,” he said.

Germany has been praised for its initial response to the pandemic, which has managed to lower cases through an effective track and tracing regime and keep the death rate lower thanks to its modern hospital infrastructure.

But over the past few months, over the winter, and with new, more virulent variants of the virus, it has seemed difficult to contain infections. The slow adoption of vaccines in the EU has not helped. The block has been criticized for its slower procurement and slower use of vaccines. The introduction of vaccinations in Germany faced several hurdles that frustrated officials and health professionals in the country.

Chancellor Angela Merkel and heads of state agreed earlier this month to gradually ease restrictions and an “emergency brake” that would allow authorities to reverse course if the number of infections rises above 100 per 100,000 for three consecutive days.

According to the government, the emergency brake is intended “in the event of exponential growth” in the cases. Merkel and the regional leaders are expected to review the measures on March 22nd and decide whether or not to proceed with the next step of reopening.

The number of cases per 100,000 reported Tuesday was 83.7 down from 68 a week ago, and the RKI has said the metric could hit 200 by the middle of next month, Reuters said in a report on Tuesday.

The lockdown in Germany is currently expected to last at least until March 28th, but some restrictions have already been relaxed. Schools, daycare centers and hairdressers will reopen at the beginning of the month.

Then a week ago, bookshops and florists were allowed to reopen and some museums too. However, regional rules may vary, with states being given discretion as to how and when to reopen certain case rates.

On March 22nd, Germany’s five-point reopening plan had envisaged that some restaurants, theaters and outdoor cinemas could be reopened. But the rising number of infections could derail that schedule.

Vaccine suspension

The epidemiologist’s key comments come from the fact that Germany and a handful of other European countries have decided to suspend the use of the coronavirus vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford amid concerns about reports of blood clots in a handful of people who have been vaccinated.

The move has baffled experts around the world as the World Health Organization and the European Medicines Agency (both of which are conducting a safety review of the vaccine) insist that all available evidence shows that the vaccine is safe and effective, rather than asking for a higher one Risk of blood clots, which are common in the general population.

The vaccine manufacturer itself has highlighted that the data shows that the number of blood clots in the vaccinated population was actually lower than expected.

WHO and EMA, due to release the results of their safety review Thursday, say the vaccine’s benefits outweigh the risks and that countries shouldn’t interrupt their vaccination programs. Nevertheless, more than a dozen European countries have stopped using it. According to experts, this could lead to a dangerous increase in infections and deaths.

“Latest figures suggest 40 fatal cases for every 20 million cases vaccinated with Astra-Zeneca shocks. Every single case is always terrible, but that percentage is statistically insignificant. Instead, vaccination delays cost Europe about 2,000 more deaths a day – and tens of billions of euros for closings, closed shops, “said Guido Cozzi, professor of macroeconomics at the University of St. Gallen, in a note on Tuesday.

Even though public health authorities like WHO and EMA reiterated on Thursday that the vaccine is safe, experts fear that more damage has already been done to the vaccine’s reputation.

AstraZeneca’s vaccine has already faced several hurdles ranging from question marks about trial methods and data to false hesitation about the vaccine’s effectiveness in those over 65 and disputes over delays in delivery to the EU. Real-world data shows the vaccine is extremely effective at preventing severe Covid cases, hospitalizations and adult deaths.

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To Assist Black Builders, Applications Begin With Entry to Capital

Harvey Yancey has been building and renovating marketable homes, affordable apartments, and commercial space in Washington, DC for 15 years. During that time, his company H2DesignBuild has overcome funding challenges and found its way into profitable businesses.

But all along, Mr Yancey, who is black, said he was aware of the racial homogeneity of the industry and the restrictions he was exposed to because of the color of his skin. “It was always the quiet conversation in the room,” he said.

Commercial real estate to this day is an area where the vast majority of developers are white. Few reliable statistics are available, but the industry association NAIOP reported in a survey from 2013, the most recent year available, that 4.4 percent of commercial real estate professionals were black. That year, only 5 percent of the Urban Land Institute members identified themselves as black or African American.

The inequality has many causes, including many African Americans’ ignorance of the area and the resulting lack of connections. However, according to Black developers, the biggest challenge is getting access to capital, including loans, loan guarantees, and equity. This can be due to limited balance sheets, short track records, or a lack of wealthy and influential networks. As a result, their businesses struggle to grow and stay on the sidelines as cities across the country see their inner cities being reshaped by other deeply pocketed developers.

Observers say it is not a new problem.

“Real estate has a long history. It’s been systematic and distinct for decades, centuries, ”said Christopher J. Mayer, professor of real estate at Columbia Business School. “People have been talking about it, watching that fact, but the really strong commitment to doing something is much younger.”

The assassination of George Floyd last May and the subsequent protests against Black Lives Matter have increased the focus on racial differences across the country. Over the summer and fall, lenders and other financial services firms announced initiatives aimed at eradicating racial inequalities. As an industry, financial services themselves are overwhelmingly white, even though their leaders commit to change.

Banking giants like Bank of America, Citigroup, and JPMorgan Chase, as well as smaller institutions, have announced multi-billion dollar initiatives focused primarily on communities and entrepreneurs with color. A portion of the funds are earmarked for affordable housing and commercial development in low-income communities, from which all real estate developers will benefit.

Longtime practitioners and analysts in the field say that if new dollars are to eradicate the industry’s racial imbalance, funds must be carefully designed so that more money gets into the hands of black developers.

In October, JPMorgan Chase announced a $ 30 billion racial justice initiative that included significant commitments for minority-run small businesses and black and Latin American households. The announcement also listed $ 14 billion in new loans and investments over the next five years to expand affordable rental housing in low-income communities.

Observers welcome the size and breadth of these initiatives, but some point out that funding such as this is often not directed specifically to color developers.

And when the funding isn’t for minority developers, “history has shown us that it ultimately goes to majority developers,” said Ken McIntyre, executive director of the Real Estate Executive Council, a trade association for color commercial real estate managers.

That’s a disadvantage for the black developers who are focused on affordable housing – and for the communities themselves, McIntyre said. Black developers are more likely to hire black contractors and other workers, some of whom may live in these neighborhoods, so the money can be turned over multiple times and an area can be gradually improved. But when the developers are white, “they take home equity at the end of the day,” he said.

“If you don’t tell the money to go to the community in a way that you know it will stay, it will go away and you will do the same,” he said.

JPMorgan Chase will continue to build on its efforts to identify and strengthen the Black developer pipeline, said a bank director who spoke on condition of anonymity because the details were not public.

In September, Citigroup announced $ 200 million in equity and funding for affordable housing projects from minority developers.

Proponents say it’s important to make sure that capital goes to companies that need it.

“It’s a lot easier to tie up the money than to deliver it,” said Alicia Glen, founder of real estate development platform MSquared and former deputy mayor for housing and economic development in New York. “You have to find the people who have the relationships, either with minority developers or in minority communities.”

This could mean that capital is channeled through lenders known as financial institutions for community development. These are tasked with deploying funding in marginalized communities and tend to have close ties with developers and color communities.

For example, City First Bank, a Washington lender, has strong relationships with its borrowers and finds ways to raise capital to promising but young companies. The bank is seeing a surge in interest from larger financial institutions, said its chief lending officer, Sonja Wells, “but everything is still smaller than it could be.”

Regardless of how well the initiatives are designed, most black developer loan funds tend to focus on the same thing: affordable housing. Many proponents agree that developers should look like the communities they are building in, but steering color developers solely to low-income homes or workers diminishes their potential influence – and profits. Margins on affordable housing are limited, which makes it difficult for developers who only work in this area to grow.

“What I have found is that the resources that exist for color developers are driving you into lower affordability, or limited to it altogether,” said Moddie Turay, founder of City Growth Partners, a Detroit development company.

However, market price projects require more private equity. And that has traditionally been a challenge for black developers, who often have fewer connections to generational wealth. Before the pandemic, the net worth of a typical black family in America was one-tenth that of a white family, according to a study by the Brookings Institution. Black developers say it’s often impossible to raise millions of dollars in equity for “friends and family” because their networks don’t have that money.

“Equity is not readily available,” said Craig Livingston, managing partner at Exact Capital and chairman of the New York Real Estate Chamber. He and his colleagues may have an incredible track record, he said, “but we don’t have the same financial base or access to venture capital when competing with second- or third-generation developers.”

A number of initiatives have emerged to address this problem. In June, for example, Morgan Stanley and the Ford Foundation launched a $ 26 million fund to provide equity to emerging minority and women-owned companies. The fund, which is the result of nearly a decade of strategizing how best to help color developers, is managed by TruFund Financial Services, a community development financial institution.

And Blue Vista, a Chicago investment management firm, is creating a $ 100 million private equity fund for minority and women-owned real estate companies. Moved by the racial justice protests that summer, Robert G. Byron, co-founder of the company, examined the company’s history. In doing so, he found that the deals in which the company had provided capital to new ventures run by people of color and women had been successful in a Good Getaway.

In response, Blue Vista structured its new fund with a plan to provide seed capital and mentoring to a handful of talented new developers. Within a few years, recipients will be more willing to raise capital from more established sources.

Blue Vista’s program is similar to what Don Peebles, a successful Black developer in New York, announced in 2019. Mr. Peebles aims to raise $ 450 million in investments for undercapitalized developers in several key markets. But there doesn’t seem to be any real competition among private equity firms, Byron said, to find and invest in these developers.

“Just by scratching the surface, without marketing, we found really capable people – smart, talented, experienced,” said Byron. Investors are also enthusiastic.

“What I hear from both investors and potential users is, ‘That’s exactly what we asked for,” he said. “It’s a no-brainer.”

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Do not wager on the top of the world

Jim Cramer on “Mad Money”.

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

A year ago, on Tuesday, the S&P 500 suffered its worst one-day decline in more than three decades amid a severe week-long decline sparked by the global coronavirus pandemic.

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said stocks have more than rebounded from a rapid decline fueled by historic government interventions that helped avert an even worse crisis.

“If there’s just one thing you can learn from the pandemic … I want you to remind yourself that betting at the end of the world is a sucker game,” said the Mad Money host. “The next time you think the world is going to end, you have to assume that it isn’t. I want you to take the other side of the deal. I want you to bet against the end of the world.”

The key averages bottomed out about a week after the March 16, 2020 meeting.

Since its lowest point last year, the Nasdaq Composite has more than doubled since trading closed on Tuesday of 13,471.57. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average both rebounded more than 80% to 3,962.71 and 32,825.95, respectively.

Cramer accused Washington lawmakers and officials of helping to turn the market after thousands of business closings and the loss of millions of jobs.

“If our policy makers are really learning from the past and our scientists are doing their magic, then the darkest moment is really just before daybreak and the light at the end of the tunnel is real sun, not that of an oncoming train,” said Cramer.

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Republican Attorneys Common Press Biden Over Restrictions on State Support in Stimulus Plan

WASHINGTON – Twenty-one Republican attorneys general urged the Biden administration Tuesday to clarify a provision of the $ 1.9 trillion economic aid package the president signed last week, warning that its restrictions on state tax cut efforts were “the biggest Attempt could be invasion of state sovereignty by Congress in the history of our republic. “

The seven-page letter was signed by a number of Republican officials, including the Attorney General of Texas, Arizona, Georgia, and Utah. They challenge a restriction lawmakers put in a $ 350 billion relief effort to state, local, and tribal governments that prevents them from using federal funds to “either directly or indirectly reduce net tax revenues to offset as a result of taxes ”cuts. These governments have lost revenue and laid off more than a million public employees during the coronavirus pandemic.

The law requires repayment to the federal government of funds that violate these terms.

In her letter, Republican officials asked Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen to clarify how broadly her department would interpret this part of the law. Will states simply forbid states to use the federal dollar to offset new tax cuts, or instead prohibit them from lowering taxes for any reason, even if those cuts were in the works before the law was passed? The officials said the broader restriction was harmful and most likely unconstitutional.

“That language could be read to deny states the ability to reduce taxes in any way – even if they had granted such tax relief with or without the prospect of Covid-19 relief funds,” the attorney general wrote. “Without a more sensible interpretation by your department, this provision would mean an unprecedented and unconstitutional encroachment on the separate sovereignty of states by usurping essentially half of the state’s tax books” – their ability to generate revenue.

Oklahoma, for example, has already passed an income tax cut through its House of Representatives, including an increase in the state’s tax credit to help low-income workers, Mike Hunter, the state’s attorney general, said in a statement Tuesday. “But,” he warned, “the federal incentive law could prohibit Oklahoma from providing this economic relief without losing its share of federal funding.”

A White House spokesman declined to comment on the letter Tuesday evening. A finance spokesman did not immediately return a request for comment.

Republican lawmakers in Washington and across the country previously raised concerns about the provision.

“We wanted to give – to cut sales tax on used cars, that is, low and middle income,” said Governor Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas on CBS’s “Face the Nation” program on Sunday. “And now we’re worried whether this will be banned under this bill. The language seems to suggest that it is so. “

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Extra EU international locations halt AstraZeneca shot as EMA opinions uncomfortable side effects

An Army health worker prepares a dose of Covishield, AstraZeneca / Oxford’s Covid-19 coronavirus vaccine from the Indian Serum Institute at an Army hospital in Colombo on January 29, 2021.

Sign S. Kodikara | AFP | Getty Images

LONDON – Two other countries decided on Tuesday to suspend use of the AstraZeneca vaccine in Europe amid blood clot concerns as regulators conducted a new side effects review.

Sweden and Latvia announced Tuesday morning that they are suspending the rollout of the AstraZeneca vaccine developed with Oxford University. Portugal, Luxembourg and Slovenia decided to stop using the shot on Monday evening. Earlier in the day, Germany, France, Italy and Spain also joined the group of nations that stopped using the vaccine.

So far, 13 countries in the European Union have made this decision, while a few others have stopped using individual lots of the AstraZeneca vaccine. Austria first decided last week after the death of a 49-year-old woman who received this vaccine to stop using a certain batch of AstraZeneca shots.

“The benefits still outweigh the risks.”

The European health authority has insisted that “the benefits of the AstraZeneca vaccine in preventing Covid-19, with the associated risk of hospitalization and death, outweigh the risks of side effects”.

In a statement on Monday, the European Medicines Agency said it would “look further into the information” and called an extraordinary meeting on Thursday on the subject. The institution then reiterated its position during a press conference on Tuesday.

“There is currently no evidence that vaccination caused these conditions,” said Emer Cooke, director of the European Medicines Agency. “The benefits still outweigh the risks, but this is a serious problem and requires serious and detailed scientific assessment. We are currently involved in that.”

She added, “We are concerned that this could affect vaccine confidence … but our job is to make sure the products we approve are safe.”

Of course, we need speed, not just for the economy, but above all for the health of our citizens, but at the same time we need security.

Paolo Gentiloni

EU commissioner for the economy

The World Health Organization has urged nations to continue their vaccination campaigns with the AstraZeneca vaccine and Oxford University.

A number of EU countries have spoken out in favor of the shot. In Belgium, Health Minister Frank Vandenbroucke said on Monday that interrupting use was “irresponsible”. While the authorities in the Czech Republic have also announced that they will continue to administer the vaccine.

Outside the EU, Canada, Australia and the UK have also joined forces to support AstraZeneca.

According to the European Center for Disease Prevention and Control, more than 6 million doses of the AstraZeneca shot have been administered in the EU to date.

AstraZeneca announced on Sunday that of the 17 million people vaccinated in the EU and the UK, 15 had deep vein thrombosis events and 22 cases of pulmonary embolism. This is based on data received as of March 8th.

“This is much less than expected to occur naturally in a general population of this size and it is similar to other approved Covid-19 vaccines,” the company said in a statement.

Concerns about the vaccine could jeopardize the EU’s goal of vaccinating 70% of the adult population by the end of the summer. The AstraZeneca vaccine has proven popular in Europe so far because it is cheaper than its competitors and easier to store. This could then possibly delay the economic recovery in the region.

“Of course we need speed, not only for the economy, but above all for the health of our citizens, but at the same time we need security,” said Paolo Gentiloni of the European Commission at a press conference on Monday.

He added that the precautionary measures were “justified” and that the EMA review should “keep our EU citizens safe”.

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‘I Have No Cash for Meals’: Among the many Younger, Starvation Is Rising

PARIS – Amandine Chéreau rushed out of her cramped student apartment in the suburbs of Paris to catch a train for a one-hour ride into town. Her stomach growled with hunger, she said as she walked to a student-run grocery bank near the Bastille, where she joined a serpentine line with 500 young people waiting for leaflets.

Ms. Chéreau, 19, a college student, ran out of savings in September after the pandemic ended the babysitting and restaurant jobs she relied on. By October, she’d had one meal a day and said she’d lost 20 pounds.

“I have no money for food,” said Ms. Chéreau, whose father helps pay her tuition and rent but was unable to send after being fired from his 20-year job in August. “It’s terrifying,” she added as the students around her reached for vegetables, pasta, and milk. “And it all happens so quickly.”

As the second year of the pandemic begins, humanitarian organizations across Europe are warning of an alarming rise in food insecurity among young people after their families have experienced constant campus closures, downsizing and layoffs. A growing proportion face hunger and increasing financial and psychological stress, which exacerbates the differences for the most vulnerable population groups.

Food aid dependency is growing in Europe as hundreds of millions of people around the world face a worsening crisis in how to meet their basic food needs. As the global economy struggles to recover from the worst recession since World War II, hunger is rising.

In the United States, almost one in eight households does not have enough to eat. People in countries where there is already a lack of food are facing a major crisis. According to the United Nations World Food Program, food insecurity in developing countries is expected to almost double to 265 million people.

In France, Europe’s second largest economy, half of young adults have limited or unsafe access to food. Almost a quarter routinely skip at least one meal a day, according to the Cercle des Économistes, a French economic think tank that advises the government.

President Emmanuel Macron acknowledged a growing crisis after undergraduate and postgraduate students demonstrated in cities across France where higher education is considered a right and the state pays most of its costs. He announced a rapid relief plan that includes € 1 daily meals in university cafeterias, psychological support and a review of financial support for those facing “permanent and notable decline in family income”.

“Covid created a deep and serious social emergency that quickly got people into trouble,” said Julien Meimon, president of Linkee, a statewide food bank that has set up new services for students who cannot get enough food. “The students have become the new face of this precariousness,” he said.

Food insecurity among college students was not uncommon before the pandemic. However, the problem has worsened since European countries imposed national bans last spring to contain the coronavirus.

Aid organizations, which mainly fed refugees, the homeless and people below the poverty line, have realigned their operations to meet the growing demand among young people. At Restos du Coeur, one of France’s largest food banks with 1,900 branches, the number of young adults under 25 standing in line for meals has risen to almost 40 percent.

Over eight million people in France visited a food bank last year, compared to 5.5 million in 2019. Demand for food aid across Europe has increased by 30 percent, according to the European Food Banks Federation.

While the government subsidizes campus meals, it does not provide pantries. As the cost of nutrition becomes insurmountable for students with little or no income, university administrators have turned to relief groups to help fight hunger.

The pandemic has eliminated jobs in restaurants, tourism and other hard-hit sectors that were once easily accessible to young people. According to the National Observatory of Student Life, two-thirds lost the jobs that helped them make ends meet.

“We have to work, but we can’t find jobs,” said Iverson Rozas, 23, a linguistics student at New Sorbonne University in Paris, whose part-time job was reduced to one five evenings a week in a restaurant and left with just 50 euros that you can spend on food every month.

Updated

March 16, 2021, 7:09 p.m. ET

One last day of the week, he stood in a row that spanned three blocks of town for the Linkee Food Bank near the French National Library, with students graduating in math, physics, law, philosophy, or biology.

“A lot of people here have never visited a food bank, but now they live hand-to-mouth,” Meimon said. Many thought such places were for poor people – not them, he added. To ease the feeling of stigma, Linkee tries to create a festive atmosphere with helpful volunteers and student bands.

Layoffs within a family deepen the domino effect. In France, where the average takeaway pay is 1,750 euros per month, the government has spent hundreds of billions of euros to limit mass layoffs and prevent bankruptcies. But that didn’t protect parents from the growing number of recessions.

This was the case with Ms. Chéreau, who studied history and archeology at the Université Panthéon-Sorbonne in the second year and whose family contributes around 500 euros a month to her expenses.

Shortly after she lost her student jobs, her father was plunged into unemployment when the company where he spent his career collapsed. Then her mother was put on paid leave and her income cut by over 20 percent.

When Ms. Chéreau ran out of savings, she went into debt. Then her pantry ran out of food, she almost stopped eating, and quickly lost weight.

She had heard from friends about the student food banks and now, she said, they are the only way she eats. Even so, she carefully rations what she gets and drinks water to combat hunger between her daily meals.

Class disturbed

Updated March 15, 2021

The latest on how the pandemic is changing education.

“It was hard at first,” Ms. Chéreau said, clutching a folder of homework she brought to work on while she stood on the food line. “But now I’m used to it.”

Mr Macron’s actions are welcome, but they can only help so much. In the northwestern city of Rennes, the € 1 dishes are so popular that they attract queues for over an hour. But some people have to take courses online and can’t wait that long. Others live too far away.

“A lot of people just go without food,” said Alan Guillemin, co-president of the student union at the University of Rennes.

The demand is so great that some enterprising students have started to address an urgent need.

Co’p1 / Solidarités Étudiantes, the grocery bank visited by Ms Chéreau, opened near the Bastille in October when six students from Paris’s Sorbonne University joined forces after more peers went hungry.

With the support of the Paris Mayor’s Office and the Red Cross, they negotiated donations from supermarkets and food companies like Danone. Now 250 volunteer students are organizing pasta, muesli, baguettes, milk, soda, vegetables and hygiene items to cater to 1,000 students a week – although the need is five times greater, said Ulysse Guttmann-Faure, law student and founder of the group. Students go online to reserve a place on the line.

“At first it took three days for these slots to fill up,” he said. “Now you are booked in three hours.”

Food banks like this one, run by volunteer students for other students, have become a rare ray of hope for thousands who have silently struggled to cope with the psychological stress of living with the pandemic.

Thomas Naves, 23, A Nanterre University scholarship student philosophy student said he felt abandoned and isolated after months of taking online classes in a tiny studio.

When his student jobs were cut, he looked for food banks that were set up on his campus twice a week. There he not only found much-needed meals, but also a way to escape loneliness and cope with his growing hardship. His parents were both sick and could barely make ends meet.

Mr. Naves sat down behind a small table in his student dormitory one afternoon to eat a microwave-cooled curry he’d gotten from the campus pantry. There was a small supply of donated pasta and canned food in his closet – enough to keep him going for a few more meals.

“Going to the food bank is the only way I can feed myself,” he said.

“But when I met other students in my situation, I realized that we all share this suffering together.”

Gaëlle Fournier contributed to the coverage.

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Dutchie raises $200 million in funding; acquires Greenbits, LeafLogix

The cannabis technology platform Dutchie announced on Tuesday the acquisition of the software companies Greenbits and LeafLogix to optimize the e-commerce tools for their pharmacy partners.

Greenbits and LeafLogix create enterprise resource planning and point of sale software for cannabis companies. Dutchie declined to disclose the financial terms.

Founded in Oregon in 2017 by brothers Ross and Zach Lipson, Dutchie works with 2,116 pharmacies in 36 markets across the US and Canada to facilitate online cannabis ordering, including pickup and delivery.

The deals come as more states like Virginia try to legalize cannabis and the pace of consolidation in the sector accelerates. Six states have passed legalization measures since November.

Also on Tuesday, Dutchie announced that it had received $ 200 million from investors in a Series C funding round, representing a valuation of $ 1.7 billion.

The last round of funding was led by Tiger Global with new investors Dragoneer and DFJ Growth. Existing investors such as Casa Verde Capital, Thrive Capital, Gron Ventures and former Starbucks CEO and founder Howard Schultz also attended.

Ross Lipson, Dutchie CEO, told CNBC that he remains optimistic that the move will boost the company’s presence in the fast-growing industry.

Speaking of business trends, Lipson said that while the majority of customers buy cannabis flower products, the company sees greater demand in the industry for many other forms of the plant.

“There are more and more categories like Vaporizers, Themes, Foods and Tinctures and the demand for them continues to grow as well. I think that as technology and education advances, the product offerings will certainly expand,” said Lipson.

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Inter Milan Is Threatened by Challenges at Suning, Its Chinese language Proprietor

HONG KONG – The new, high profile Chinese owner should take Inter Milan back to its glory days. A lot of money was spent on successful goalscorers like Romelu Lukaku and Christian Eriksen. After five years of investment, the famous Milan football club is in the immediate vicinity of its first Italian championship title in ten years.

Now the bill is due – and Inter Milan’s future is suddenly in doubt.

Suning, an electronics retailer who is the club’s majority owner, is dependent on cash and is trying to sell its stake. The club is bleeding money. Some of its players have agreed to defer payment, such as someone close to the club who has asked for anonymity because the information is not public.

Inter Milan have held talks with at least one potential investor, but the parties have not been able to agree on a price with knowledge of the negotiations, according to others.

Suning’s football wishes are also crumbling at home. The company abruptly closed its national team four months after winning the Chinese national championship. Some stars, many of whom would rather play there than Chelsea or Liverpool, have said they went unpaid.

China has failed in its dream of becoming a global player in the world’s most popular sport. Driven in part by the ambitions of China’s frontrunner and passionate soccer fan, Xi Jinping, a new generation of Chinese tycoons plowed billions of dollars into marquee clubs and star players, changing the game’s economics. Chinese investors spent $ 1.8 billion buying stakes in more than a dozen European teams between 2015 and 2017, and China’s cash-soaked domestic league paid the highest salaries ever awarded to foreign recruits.

But the grandeur has exposed international football to the specifics of the Chinese business world. The deep involvement of the Communist Party makes companies vulnerable to sharp changes in the political winds. The freelance tycoons often lacked international experience or sophistication.

Discussions about default settings, fire sales, and hasty exits now dominate discussions about boardroom tables. A mining tycoon lost control of AC Milan when he asked questions about his business empire. The owner of a soap maker and food additive company gave up his stake in Aston Villa. An energy conglomerate lost its stake in Slavia Prague after its founder disappeared.

Suning’s plight mirrors “the whole rise and fall of this era of Chinese football,” said Zhe Ji, director of Red Lantern, a sports marketing company that works for top European football teams in China. “When people started talking about Chinese football and all the attention it got in 2016, it was very quick, but it was also very quick.”

Suning paid $ 306 million in 2016 for a larger stake in Inter Milan. Suning is a household name in China, with stores stocking computers, iPads, and rice cookers for the country’s growing middle class. While it was hurt by China’s e-commerce revolution, Alibaba, the online shopping titan, is among its top investors.

Zhang Jindong, the billionaire founder and chairman of Suning, raised a champagne glass on a brightly lit stage and talked about how the famous Italian team, which has won 18 championships since 1910 but none since 2010, would help its brand internationally and contribute to Chinese sports industry.

Mr. Zhang boasted of Suning’s “abundant resources” and promised that the club would “return to its glory days and become a stronger property that can attract top stars from around the world.”

Led by Mr Zhang’s son Steven Zhang, now 29, the club spent more than $ 300 million on stars like Lukaku, Eriksen and Lautaro Martínez, an Argentine striker nicknamed The Bull for his relentless pursuit of goals.

Suning also agreed to pay the English Premier League $ 700 million for the rights to broadcast games in China from 2019, which impressed the industry.

Suning spent money on a domestic club that he bought in 2015. He spent $ 32 million to acquire Ramires, a Brazilian midfielder, from Chelsea and € 50 million on Alex Teixeira, a young Brazilian striker who picked the Chinese side versus Liverpool of the most popular franchises in football.

The recruits were hired to sell air conditioners and washing machines. In an advertisement, Mr. Teixeira urged viewers to buy a Chinese brand of equipment. “I’m Teixeira,” he says in Mandarin, adding, “come to Suning to buy Haier.”

The money, said Mubarak Wakaso, a Ghanaian midfielder, helped make China attractive. “The money I will earn in China is far better than in La Liga,” he said in an interview last year in a mixture of Twi and English, quoting the league in Spain where he once played. “I don’t tell lies.”

Suning’s soccer betting had a bad time. The Chinese government began to worry that large conglomerates would borrow too much and threaten the country’s financial system. A year after the Inter Milan deal, Chinese state media criticized Suning for its “irrational” takeover.

Then the pandemic hit. Even when Inter Milan won on the field, they lost goal revenue from their San Siro stadium, one of the largest in Europe. Some sponsors left because of their own financial pressures. The club lost around $ 120 million last year, one of the biggest losses any European football club has reported.

Back in China, Suning was hit by both e-commerce and the coronavirus. Problems accelerated in the fall when the company decided not to call for repayment of a $ 3 billion investment in Evergrande, a real estate developer and China’s most indebted company.

Suning’s burden is getting heavier. This year, It has to make $ 1.2 billion in bond payments. The company declined to comment.

Suning began to take drastic steps. Last year he gave up his broadcasting contract with the Premier League.

Then, in February, it closed its national team, Jiangsu Suning, almost four months after the team won China’s Super League title against an Evergrande-controlled team. At least one of the team’s overseas recruits has hired lawyers to recoup their unpaid salary, according to one implicated person.

A former Suning player, Eder, a Brazilian-born striker, got the football world going after media reports quoted him as saying that Suning hadn’t paid him. On Twitter, Eder said the comments were taken from a private online chat without his permission. His agent did not respond to requests for comment.

To save himself, Suning took a move that could complicate Inter Milan’s fate. On March 1, the company sold shares valued at US $ 2.3 billion to affiliates of the Shenzhen city government. The deal gave the Chinese authorities a say in the fate of Inter Milan.

For Inter Milan there is a threat of greater financial pressure. It has to pay off a $ 360 million bond over the next year. A minority investor in Hong Kong, Lion Rock Capital, which acquired a 31 percent stake in Inter in 2019, could exercise an option that would require Suning to buy its stake for up to $ 215 million, according to a related party.

Inter Milan representatives are looking for funding, a new partner or a sale of the team valued at around $ 1.1 billion.

The club was in exclusive talks with BC Partners, the UK private equity firm, until recently, but they could not agree on the price, said people knowledgeable about the talks.

Without fresh capital, Inter Milan could lose players. If it can’t pay salaries or transfer fees for outgoing players, European football rules say it could be banned from top competitions.

“We’re concerned but we’re not scared of this situation yet – we’re just waiting for the news,” said Manuel Corti, a member of an Inter Milan fan club based in London.

“As Inter fans,” he said, “we are never sure until the last minute.”

Alexandra Stevenson reported from Hong Kong and Tariq Panja from London. Cao Li contributed to the coverage from Hong Kong.

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Tiger Woods returns to golf video video games for the primary time since 2013

Tiger Woods plays his shot from the second tee during the final round of the PNC Championship at the Ritz-Carlton Golf Club Orlando on December 20, 2020 in Orlando, Florida.

Mike Ehrmann | Getty Images

Tiger Woods is back to video games.

New York-based software company Take-Two Interactive announced that it has partnered with Woods to capitalize on his name, image, and likeness. This allows the legendary PGA Tour figure to be featured in his golf game PGA Tour 2K. Woods will also join 2K as an executive director, the company said.

The terms of the pact were not made available.

“I look forward to getting back to the video game landscape and I’ve found the right partners in 2K and HB Studios to make it happen,” Woods said in a statement from the Golf Channel. “I am honored to take this opportunity and look forward to sharing my expertise and insights as we work together to shape the future of golf video games.”

Woods, 45, had previously signed a deal with rival game maker Electronic Arts (EA Sports) before parting ways with the company in 2013. According to a CNN article, the company sold over $ 700 million worth of golf games with Woods. The article also estimates that Woods made approximately $ 6 million a year during the partnership that began with EA Sports in 1998.

Forbes estimates that Woods made over $ 1 billion in referrals from companies like Nike and American Express. But whether Woods will return to play real golf is the more pressing question. Woods is still recovering from a February 23 car accident in Southern California, leaving the golfer with serious leg injuries.

Take-Two owns Rockstar Games and 2K Studio, the latter of which makes the National Basketball Association’s popular NBA 2K video game. The company will also return to playing National League football games for the first time since 2005 after signing a new licensing agreement with the league in March last year.

The company released its first PGA Tour game last August, developed by Canada-based HB Studios, which it announced to acquire Take-Two. Take-Two has a market cap of $ 19.9 billion. The company’s shares rose 2% Tuesday afternoon, trading at $ 173 per share.