Selasa, 12 November 2019

Dean Foods files for bankruptcy, in talks to sell substantially all of its assets - MarketWatch

Dean Foods Co. DF, +2.29% has voluntarily filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Tuesday, with the dairy company saying it was working toward an "orderly" sale of the company. The company, which brands include DairyPure, Land O Lakes and Lehigh Valley Dairy Farms, said it has secured commitments for $850 million in debtor-in-possession (DIP) financing to support its operations during the process. The company said it has been in advanced discussions with the Dairy Farmers of America Inc. regarding the potential sales of substantially all of its assets. "The actions we are announcing today are designed to enable us to continue serving our customers and operating as normal as we work toward the sale of our business," said Chief Executive Eric Beringause. "Despite our best efforts to make our business more agile and cost-efficient, we continue to be impacted by a challenging operating environment marked by continuing declines in consumer milk consumption." The stock, which was halted for news, had closed Monday at 80 cents. It had plunged 79% year to date, while the S&P 500 SPX, -0.20% has climbed 23%.

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https://www.marketwatch.com/story/dean-foods-files-for-bankruptcy-in-talks-to-sell-substantially-all-of-its-assets-2019-11-12

2019-11-12 12:15:00Z
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Global stocks seek enlightenment from Trump on trade - Investing.com

© Reuters. Passerbys walk past an electric screen showing Asian markets indices outside a brokerage in Tokyo © Reuters. Passerbys walk past an electric screen showing Asian markets indices outside a brokerage in Tokyo

By Marc Jones

LONDON (Reuters) - World shares inched higher on Tuesday as investors awaited a speech by President Donald Trump on U.S. trade policy and on news he was likely to delay a decision on European auto tariffs.

Bond markets also seemed increasingly confident a recession will be avoided as EU officials said Trump was expected to announce this week that he was delaying the tariff decision on EU cars and parts for another six months.

The news boosted expectations about Trump's speech later in the day and for some resolution to his administration's long-running trade war with China.

The pan-European shuffled 0.2% higher, back towards 4-year highs helped by upbeat chipmaker shares. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan had climbed 0.5%, following a sharp 1.2% pullback on Monday.

Japan's , which dithered either side of flat most of the day, ended 0.8% higher. But Shanghai blue chips eased 0.2% after bank lending growth undershot analysts' estimates, while Australian shares were down, too.

A positive signal on U.S.-China trade would likely satisfy traders even without specific details, said Rob Marshall-Lee investment leader for Emerging Market and Asian Equities at Newton Investment Management.

"I think that there will be some kind of deal that comes of all of this," Marshall-Lee said, adding that whatever emerges both Washington and Beijing will want to claim it as a win domestically.

Trump wrongfooted markets over the weekend when he said there had been incorrect reporting about U.S. willingness to lift tariffs on China.

Investors were also anxious about the situation in Hong Kong after a violent escalation of protests had knocked 3% off the and nearly 2% off Asia-exposed banks HSBC and StanChart in recent days.

Hong Kong's embattled leader Carrie Lam on Tuesday said protesters who are trying to "paralyze" the city were extremely selfish and hoped all universities and schools would urge students not to participate in violence.

Lam was speaking a day after police shot a protester and a man was set on fire in some of the most dramatic scenes to grip the city during the more than five months of civil unrest. The Hang Seng managed to claw back 0.5%.

BORIS GETS BREXIT BOOST

Bond markets were also stirring again.

A partial holiday in the United States had closed the Treasury market on Monday but there was an early milestone on Tuesday with the gap between short-term 3-month and longer-term 10-year yields hitting the widest level of the year so far.

That widening, or steepening of the 'curve' as it is also known, adds to signs that faith in the global economy in gaining again after fears it was heading into recession.

Treasury yields on 10-year notes were fractionally higher at 1.9350% having dropping away from last week's three-month top of 1.97%. European yields were also a touch higher.

Wall Street futures for the inched up 0.1%. Monday's partial holiday had made for a quiet session after the record highs of last week. The ended up 0.04%, while the S&P 500 lost 0.20% and the Nasdaq 0.13%.

In currency markets, the main mover was sterling which gave back ground after surging on Monday after the Brexit Party said it would not contest previously Conservative held seats in the last UK election.

It had jumped to a 6-month high versus the euro and as much as 1% on the dollar but shed around 0.3% to 0.86 per euro and $1.2823 when Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage then said on Tuesday he would not give any more ground.

Against a basket of currencies, the dollar steadied at 98.224. The euro hovered around $1.1030 just away from a three-week low of $1.1015, while the dollar faded to 109.26 yen.

Gold looked to be heading for a third day of declines, touching its lowest since early August at $1,447.89 per ounce. It was last trading at $1,453.01.

gained 28 cents to $57.14 a barrel, while futures added 35 cents to $62.53.

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https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/asia-shares-turn-sluggish-ahead-of-trump-speech-2018381

2019-11-12 10:08:00Z
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Chinese tech will face tough US restrictions regardless of any trade deal, economist says - CNBC

Huawei and other Chinese tech companies will be subject to tough restrictions from the United States irrespective of any future trade deal, an economist told CNBC Tuesday.

The two largest economies in the world have been at odds over their trade links for about 18 months. Their tit-for-tat tariff dispute escalated in May, when the U.S. took steps to ban Huawei from selling its technology in the U.S. market.

"Even with a phase one trade deal or even a complete trade deal, our conviction is that tougher restrictions from the U.S. on technology will continue," Tao Wang, chief China economist at UBS, told CNBC's Joumanna Bercetche.

Speaking at the UBS European Conference, Wang said that the U.S. decision to ban Huawei was a "catalyst to show that actually the dispute on the trade front has spread to other areas, like technology."

In May, President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring that the U.S. telecoms sector was experiencing a "national emergency." "Foreign adversaries are increasingly creating and exploiting vulnerabilities in information and communications technology and services," Trump said in the order.

According to Wang, the national security argument makes it more difficult for the U.S. to change its position on Chinese tech.

"Once you mention that, I think it's very difficult for any politician to say 'I don't care about national security.' It is going to be difficult to actually reverse," she said.

Last month, Trump said that the U.S. and China have put together a "very substantial phase one deal" and that "phase two will start almost immediately" after the first part is signed. According to the U.S. president, the first part of the deal is about "60%" of the full agreement. For now, there is no scheduled date nor place for the first signing between China and the U.S.

China could grow 5.7% in 2020

According to UBS, China is set to grow at a pace of 5.7% in 2020, after the U.S. administration decided in October not to implement more tariff increases on Chinese goods. The bank's forecast assumes there won't be an escalation in trade tensions between Beijing and Washington.

At the same time, UBS has also noted that the several increases in tariffs throughout 2019 have impacted investment into the Chinese corporate and manufacturing sectors. Property starts and investment are also likely to weaken modestly in 2020 as a result of trade uncertainty, it said.

Wang told CNBC that overall the Chinese growth rate in 2020 will depend on the trade war. She said that if the latest round of potential duties were removed, alongside the September tariffs, "China has a pretty decent chance of getting to 6% (GDP in 2020)."

LIANYUNGANG, CHINA - NOVEMBER 09: Cars sit parked before shipping aboard at a port on November 9, 2019 in Lianyungang, Jiangsu Province of China.

VCG | Visual China Group | Getty Images

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https://www.cnbc.com/2019/11/12/huawei-to-face-tough-us-rules-irrespective-of-trade-deal-econbomist.html

2019-11-12 09:56:00Z
CAIiEEbme45lsrecYu1n7PPbYaMqGQgEKhAIACoHCAow2Nb3CjDivdcCMP3ungY

Explainer: What a roll-back of Trump tariffs on Chinese goods may look like - Reuters

(Reuters) - The latest bargaining chip in U.S.-China negotiations to cool a 16-month-old trade war is whether President Donald Trump would roll back tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of Chinese imports, and how soon.

FILE PHOTO: A 100 yuan banknote (R) is placed next to a $100 banknote in this picture illustration taken in Beijing November 7, 2010. REUTERS/Petar Kujundzic/File Photo

The Trump administration began imposing the tariffs in July 2018 on industrial components and technology goods from China. After Beijing retaliated with higher duties on U.S. farm goods, Trump struck back with more tariffs - many already enacted, some still threatened - under which the vast majority of Chinese imports could be affected by the end of 2019.

As U.S. and Chinese negotiators close in on a “phase one” trade deal, expectations are rising that at least some of these tariffs will be removed.

China’s Commerce Ministry and a U.S. official said on Nov. 7 that a deal would include tariff rollbacks, but Trump undercut the idea after pushback from China hawks in his administration, saying he has not decided to do so.

Following is a look at current and planned U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, listed in reverse chronological order. Trade experts say the most recent tariffs would be the likeliest to be removed.

DEC. 15 TARIFFS, $156 BILLION "LIST 4B" here

The United States is scheduled to levy 15% tariffs on about $156 billion of Chinese products on Dec. 15, including cellphones, laptop computers, toys and clothing - known as “List 4B.”

People briefed on the trade talks say the United States has effectively agreed not to proceed with this round of tariffs as part of the phase one trade deal. A U.S. official has said the fate of these tariffs would be considered as part of the final negotiation over the deal’s text.

CANCELED OCT. 15 RATE INCREASE

After an early October round of talks led to a White House handshake on the interim deal with Chinese Vice Premier Liu He, Trump decided not to proceed with an Oct. 15 increase on tariffs on about $250 billion worth of Chinese goods to 30% from the 25% rate already imposed.

If talks to complete the text for the phase one trade deal collapse, Trump could move to reimpose this increase. Affected goods range widely from industrial components and semiconductors to furniture and building materials.

SEPT. 1 TARIFFS: $125 BILLION, "LIST 4A" here

The United States imposed a 15% tariff on about $125 billion of goods on Sept. 1, 2019, including flat-panel television sets, flash memory devices, smart speakers, Bluetooth headphones, bed linens, multifunction printers and many types of footwear.

Trump imposed these tariffs, and set the Dec. 15 duties in motion, after a late-July round of negotiations failed to result in a major increase of Chinese purchases of U.S. farm goods. The phase one trade deal now being discussed would roughly double such purchases from pre-trade-war levels over a period of time, according to U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin.

People familiar with the discussions say that China has asked for these Sept. 1 tariffs to be removed as part of the deal and the request is being considered.

MAY 10 TARIFF RATE INCREASE

On May 10, 2019, Trump increased tariffs on $200 billion worth of Chinese goods to 25% from 10% after China pulled back from a proposed deal that U.S. officials said was nearly completed.

The higher tariffs applied to nearly 6,000 products that were originally taxed in September 2018, from computer modems and routers to vacuum cleaners, lighting fixtures and furniture.

The U.S. trade representative’s office issued exclusions on hundreds of these products in September 2019, including some computer circuit boards, laminated wood flooring and dog collars.

SEPT. 24, 2018, $200 BILLION TARIFF ACTION: "LIST 3" here

Trump imposed tariffs on a $200 billion list of Chinese imports on Sept. 24, 2018, after Beijing retaliated against an initial U.S. volley of tariffs with its own duties on American farm products and manufactured goods.

This list of product tariffs, and the two previous lists below, may be the least likely to be rolled back, trade experts and people familiar with the talks say, adding that keeping some tariffs in place would maintain leverage over China for future negotiations. Trump has said he will not do a complete rollback of tariffs on Chinese goods.

AUG/SEPT 2018 TARIFFS, $50 BILLION "LIST 1" here "LIST 2" here

The first U.S. tariffs on Chinese imports imposed in the summer of 2018 covered $50 billion of Chinese goods considered core to U.S. “Section 301” allegations that China systematically steals and forces the transfer of American intellectual property to Chinese firms.

These initial lists were composed primarily of Chinese-made industrial components, machinery, semiconductors and other non-consumer goods aimed at inflicting pain on Chinese exporters while minimizing the impact on U.S. manufacturers.

The “List 1” tariffs on an initial $34 billion in Chinese goods were imposed on July 6, 2018, while a second list of $16 billion “List 2” tariffs went into effect on Aug. 23, 2018.

Reporting by David Lawder and Heather Timmons in Washington; Editing by Matthew Lewis and Leslie Adler

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https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-china-tariffs-explainer/explainer-what-a-roll-back-of-trump-tariffs-on-chinese-goods-may-look-like-idUSKBN1XM0JP

2019-11-12 06:05:00Z
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Senin, 11 November 2019

OpenText Corp. to buy cloud-focused Carbonite Inc. in billion dollar deal - CBC.ca

Canada's OpenText Corp. shares surged Monday after the company announced a $1.42-billion US deal to acquire Carbonite Inc. to strengthen its offerings in the highly competitive cloud-based software sector.

The acquisition will be the ninth cloud-focused acquisition for Waterloo, Ont.-based OpenText, said company CEO Mark Barrenechea on a conference call Monday.

"This places OpenText as a leading cloud consolidator. All assets combined, we will be approaching two exabytes 1/81 billion gigabytes 3/8 under management, 100 million end points, millions of subscribers, and cloud operations at hyper scale. Scale matters in the cloud."

OpenText shares were up $2.04, or 3.71 per cent, to $57.01 on the Toronto Stock Exchange in midmorning trading.

Boston-based Carbonite brings a focus of cloud-based subscription data protection, backup, disaster recovery, and end-point security for a variety of customers. The acquisition will strengthen Open Text's security offerings for its cloud platforms, said Barrenechea.

Cloud computing has become a key focus for many of the world's largest technology companies including Amazon, Google, IBM, Microsoft and Alibaba.

"We put security front and centre only about two years ago when we acquired Guidance, so it's a low penetration rate for us, it's still early days."

Expanding demand

He said that with Carbonite focused largely on the U.S. market, OpenText can leverage its network of clients globally in places like the U.K., France, Germany, Japan, Singapore and Australia to expand demand.

Under the deal, OpenText will pay $23 per share in cash for about $800 million in total, while debt obligations bring the total deal value to about $1.42 billion.

The company says it expects to close the deal within 90 days.

OpenText, which has a market capitalization of $15 billion, provides enterprise information management software, helping companies digitize processes and supply chains for more efficient operations among other services.



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November 12, 2019 at 12:33AM

A Bull's Guide To Oil Markets - OilPrice.com

Hedge funds know something you don’t: There are still reasons to be bullish about oil. 

Right now, there’s nothing moving the oil price needle in any real way outside of the U.S-China trade war. Everything hinges on the two powerhouses striking a deal, including global economic growth, and hence, oil demand. 

But, while it may seem impossible to try to find a bullish tint in the oil markets, it’s not.  

And while the markets appear to have turned decidedly bearish with supply/demand imbalances drowning out everything else to the extent that even an epic event such as the Saudi Aramco drone attacks that led to the biggest supply disruption in history only provide temporary support for prices, hedge funds see the light at the end of the tunnel. 

So it is time to put our rose-tinted glasses on and imagine several scenarios that could inject some optimism into oil markets on put prices on a bullish trajectory once again.

Once a trade deal is reached, then geopolitical risk will again be able to move the needle, and the rig count will have a decidedly more significant impact on prices. 

So, if you really want to follow the bulls, keep an eye on the hedge funds, which appear to think that oil has room to rally, largely thanks to positive movement on a US-China trade deal. 

During the first week of November, hedge fund bets on WTI hit their highest in a month. And even though U.S. shale producers are pumping crude like crazy and adding to supply, hedge funds see reduced drilling as a sign of lower production next year. 

Hedge funds aren’t going full-on bull, their net-long positions are still a lot lower than they were a couple of months ago, but they’re counting on economic improvement from a trade war reprieve, and it’s taking them out of oil’s bearish playground. 

The net long position for hedge funds is the difference between bullish and bearish bets. And on Monday, Bloomberg reported that money managers’ WTI net-long position rose 11 percent in the week ended November 5th, as did net bullish wagers on Brent. 

Here are three scenarios that could support higher oil prices in the near-and mid-term:

#1 China Deal

The long-running trade war between the world’s two biggest economies has brought about a general malaise to the global economy. 

Negotiations between Washington and Beijing have been long, intermittent and protracted with plenty of bad blood from both sides. The situation got so choppy at one juncture that it took top U.S. negotiator Robert Lighthizer reading China the riot act to get the broken talks back on track. Related: U.S. Shale Is Far From Dead

They say all’s well that ends well - finally, there seems to be some light at the end of the tunnel after the Trump-led team announced they have finalized ‘Phase One’ of the trade negotiations.

In the interim deal, the warring nations agreed to a phased rollback of extra tariffs. 

While far from being the ideal solution, investors such as private equity billionaire David Rubenstein believe it will be enough to relieve economic tensions for the next year or so.

Back in August, Helima Croft of RBC Capital Markets predicted that a China deal could support WTI price in the $60-$66 range. That’s nearly 12 percent higher at the mid-point than Monday’s close of $56.50.

Oil markets have so far remained indifferent, underlining just how much damage the trade spat has wrought on the global economy. 

Maybe all those platitudes about confidence bouncing back after an initial deal were a touch optimistic.

#2 Geopolitical Risk

Rising geopolitical risks, particularly in the Middle East - home to more than 60 percent of the world’s oil reserves - is bullish for oil, theoretically.

Tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia reached a boiling point following the September 14th attacks on Aramco’s oil facilities. 

Meanwhile, the New Iran Deal remains a highly emotive issue - especially since Iran, in a fresh act of defiance, has kicked off another round of uranium enrichment work at its Fordow site. The International Atomic Energy Agency will release a new report this week that will clarify whether Iran has been complying with its commitments.

The European Union is desperate to forge a new nuclear deal with the Islamic Republic to replace the 2015 deal that Trump scuttled last year. The EU is trying to create a Special Purpose Vehicle that will help the bloc circumvent U.S. sanctions and continue buying Iranian oil. So far, it’s clear the sanctions are working, with oil exports from Iran on a continuous decline.

In the highly likely event that Trump and his European allies are unable to forge a new deal, tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia are likely to escalate. 

A week ago, the UAE unveiled Edge, a defense conglomerate that will focus on cyberattacks and repelling military attacks in the wake of the Aramco attacks. Iranian saboteurs will, therefore, have their work cut out for them if they try to launch another attack on a scale anywhere as big as the last one. 

While chances of an all-out war with the US or Saudi Arabia appear slim, tensions in the region are likely to remain high and increase the supply risk.

#3 Declining inventories and rig count collapse

In late October, oil prices surged 3 percent after the U.S. Energy Information Administration reported a surprise decline in US crude inventories. The EIA reported that crude inventories fell by 1.7 million barrels, while gasoline stockpiles fell more than forecast.

The organization revealed that on a seasonal basis, gasoline demand in the United States has been at its highest since at least 1991.

Meanwhile, U.S. oil rig count has been trending south for many months now. Related: The World’s Biggest EV Market Braces For Another Crippling Blow

The latest Baker Hughes report showed a decline of 5 rigs from the preceding week to 817, and a massive fall from the 1,057 rigs reported at a corresponding point last year. 

So far, production has continued to rise amid the rig count collapse only because drillers are focusing on bringing the considerable fracklog of uncompleted wells online. Obviously, this can only go on for so long, and at some point, production is bound to get compromised. 

A significant decline by the world’s biggest oil producer is very likely to impact oil prices in a positive way, though this is unlikely to happen in the near future.

Bullish Bottom Line: 

There are different ways to be bullish on oil. You don’t have to go full bull and take big long-term positions. Right now, it’s the perfect time to play the short-term buy and sell game, buying on the dip and selling on the spike, as long as WTI is trading at a bottom range of between $49 and $55. In other words, you can be a trading bull without being an investing bull as long as crude stays in its current trading range, which is already more attractive than it was last year. 

By Alex Kimani for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com:



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November 12, 2019 at 08:00AM

The Keystone Pipeline Is Running Again Two Weeks After Major Spill - Gizmodo

After spilling more than 383,000 gallons of oil last month in North Dakota, the Keystone Pipeline is back in service. The company behind this faulty-ass piece of infrastructure, TC Energy, turned the pipeline back on Sunday at reduced pressure to make sure it’s operating properly. What’s more, this is the same company behind the plan to build the controversial Keystone XL Pipeline, and it’s showing no signs of slowing down even though its infrastructure is not immune to failure.

And that’s the problem: TC Energy can’t prevent these spills from happening, so why should it be allowed to build an even bigger project (*ahem* Keystone XL)? The growing threat of fossil fuel-driven climate change certainly doesn’t help the company’s case either. Addressing the climate crisis will require reducing our reliance on fossil fuels, so why are we expanding it?

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The climate crisis and its impacts are long-term concerns, but the immediate concern about the Keystone Pipeline revolves around the oil spill that happened last month and its impact on the natural environment. In North Dakota, the spill affected a nearby wetland, and there’s always the risk that the oil may reach any groundwater below. TC Energy has said it “observed no significant impacts to the environment,” but that hasn’t stopped environmentalists and indigenous peoples to call for the end of this type of infrastructure altogether.

“This is what pipelines do: They spill,” said Chase Iron Eyes, lead counsel for the Lakota People’s Law Project and public relations director for Oglala Sioux Tribe President Julian Bear Runner, in an emailed press statement last week. “This latest Keystone leak demonstrates why we stood against Dakota Access in the first place, why we’re doing so again now, and why we’re prepared to fight Keystone XL every step of the way.”

Yup, that black junk is the oil that spilled out of the Keystone Pipeline in October.
Photo: AP

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Clean up is still ongoing at the site of the Keystone spill. The latest update from TC Energy said that it’s recovered about 285,600 gallons of oil already, but it is still investigating what caused the incident. All this is happening as the company keeps moving forward with plans to build the highly contested Keystone XL, which would run 1,184 miles from Canada to the U.S. Up to 830,000 gallons of nasty crude oil would move through the pipeline every day. All that oil poses a serious threat to any wildlife that comes into contact with it, as well as to delicate water systems in the pipeline’s planned path.

Unfortunately, history doesn’t bode well for Keystone XL. Oil spills along the Keystone system have happened more than the company predicted during its environmental assessments according to a 2017 analysis by Reuters.

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“There is no such thing as a safe fossil fuel pipeline, nor a future in which pipelines can exist without harming people and the planet,” said Kendall Mackey, 350.org U.S. Campaigner for Keep It in the Ground, in an online statement. “Indigenous people, farmers, and workers have been advocating for a just transition away from pipelines to 100% renewable energy.”

Despite all that, the pipeline is back to business as normal. TC Energy will be gradually increasing the system’s pressure to get Keystone back to its full capacity. For this company, it’s just another day—and that’s exactly why advocates are calling for the end of new pipelines and their expansions. Senator Bernie Sanders, who is running for president, called out the dangers of such infrastructure on Twitter, noting he would shut down the Keystone Pipeline if he were president.

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While the Trump administration has sped along pipeline approvals, reversing them seems to be an action many candidates, such as Senator Elizabeth Warren and Julián Castro, would be willing to take. If we’re going to fight the climate crisis and protect natural ecosystems, the people need a leader who’s willing to take up the challenge of transitioning us off this dirty fuel for good. Or more spills will certainly happen. They always do.



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November 12, 2019 at 05:35AM