
Friday — US personal income and spending data; Constellation Brands (STZ) earnings
https://www.cnn.com/2019/06/28/investing/premarket-stocks-trading/index.html
2019-06-28 11:07:00Z
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Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reports that after the Apple Watch launched in 2015, Ive had already started relinquishing his responsibilities because of the strain it was putting on him personally.
Around the time, Ive told the New Yorker he'd become "deeply, deeply tired," and said the year leading up to the Apple Watch debut was "the most difficult" since he joined Apple.
To extend his time at the company, Apple subsequently agreed to change his official role to Chief Design Officer, which allowed day-to-day responsibility of the hardware and software design teams to shift to executives Alan Dye and Richard Howarth.
From then onward, Ive began coming to Apple headquarters "as little as twice a week," and many meetings with his design team reportedly took place in San Francisco so Ive could avoid the long commute from his home in the Pacific Heights district to Apple's HQ in Cupertino, California.
Ive sometimes even met with his team at the homes of his employees, at hotels, or other venues, according to people familiar with the matter, while the design executive did much of his work at a San Francisco office and studio, which has now become the base of his new LoveFrom business.
Ive also frequently travelled to London, near to where he was raised, according to Bloomberg's Gurman.
About two years into his new role, at the end of 2017, Apple said Ive had re-assumed some of the leadership responsibilities he had previously given up, and Howarth and Dye were removed from Apple's leadership page. But still Ive only came to the office a couple of days a week.
Some people familiar with Apple are worried about the new design leadership, reports Gurman. With Ive leaving, longtime Apple designer Evans Hankey will run the hardware design group. Hankey, who has more than 300 patents to her name, is described as a "great team leader", yet one person familiar with the design team told Gurman that Apple "now lacks a true design brain on its executive team, which is a concern."
Hankey and Dye will report to Chief Operating Officer Jeff Williams, who will likely gain more control over product direction, and some employees are also said to be concerned that the re-organization is another sign that Apple is less design-focused and becoming more of an operations company.
"The design team is made up of the most creative people, but now there is an operations barrier that wasn't there before," one former Apple executive said. "People are scared to be innovative."
Howarth is a designer at heart and didn’t want to manage. Hankey is known as a better manager, but isn’t a designer. The entire group of designers has reported to her and she to Ive after Howarth was demoted from VP a couple years ago. The org structure isn’t actually changing. https://t.co/oSxLRFUkkf
— Mark Gurman (@markgurman) June 28, 2019

Apple announced the resignation of its famed design chief Jony Ive on Thursday after his near-30-year tenure at the company.
The news of came as a shock to many including analysts who described Ive as "irreplaceable" and said his departure would "leave a hole" in the company. On hearing the news, Apple's stock dropped -0.87%, wiping out $8 billion of Apple's market cap.
But Ive's departure had been a long time in the making, according to Business Insider's Troy Wolverton who said that there have been "rumblings for years" that he could leave after he shifted focus from the day-to-day business of designing Apple's products.
A new report from Bloomberg's Mark Gurman revealed that Ive had been "shedding responsibilities" since the launch of the Apple Watch in 2015 and he came into Apple's headquarters as little as twice a week.
Sources familiar with the matter told Bloomberg that many of Ive's meetings moved to San Francisco, where he lives and has an office and studio set up, to avoid him having to make the one hour commute to Apple's headquarters in Cupertino, California. Other meetings were reportedly held at the homes of his employees or at hotels.
"This has been a long time in the making," one person familiar with the matter told Bloomberg, who wished to remain anonymous as they were not authorized to discuss Ive's resignation. "He's been at Apple over 25 years, and it's a really taxing job."
Ive is considered to be the mastermind behind Apple's biggest products, including the iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Mac, and iPod. He joined the company when it was on the brink of bankruptcy in the late 1990s and help turn it into the trillion-dollar company that it is today.
He was also a close confidant of Steve Jobs, Apple's late cofounder and former CEO, and reported directly to him.
"Most of the greatest debates at Apple happened between those two as they walked together," Matt Rogers, cofounder of Nest Labs who worked on iPhone and iPod software from 2007 to 2010, told Bloomberg.
Jobs and Ive would lunch together regularly and walk around Apple's headquarters making design decisions together, according to Bloomberg. When Jobs died in 2011, Ive became the most important person at the company, it added.
But his intense stint at Apple had reportedly begun to wear him down. "It's been an extremely tense 25 years for him at Apple and there's a time for everyone to slow down," the person who wished to remain anonymous told Bloomberg.
Ive is now going on to set up his own design company, called LoveFrom. Apple will be one of his new clients.

According to reports in the crypto press Thursday, cryptocurrency exchange Binance is talking to Facebook about getting involved in the social media giant’s upcoming Libra project.
Finance Magnates says it spoke to Binance at the FinTech Junction event in Israel on Thursday, with the exchange’s CSO, Gin Chao, saying that early discussions have taken place with Facebook over a possible future listing of the libra token.
Chao said that as libra will be on a private blockchain initially, it won’t need external liquidity. However, Facebook may ultimately desire a secondary market, he said, adding:
“Currencies benefit from a secondary market, so it would be in their best interest to want to be listed.”
In another report from CryptoPotato, which also spoke to Chao at the Tel Aviv event, he further suggested that Binance may support the Libra blockchain by acting as a permissioned node that validates transactions.
Facebook has said that it will eventually have 100 nodes and has already named firms like Visa, Uber, eBay and Lyft as having already committed to the role (at the princely sum of roughly $10 million apiece).
Chao said that Binance is “definitely considering” the option, although a final decision is yet to be made.
Speaking generally about the Libra project, which was unveiled in mid-June, he said:
“It’s a good thing, for sure. Any time a company with the weight, size, resources, and impact of Facebook gets involved, it validates both blockchain and [cryptocurrencies]. So whether or not Libra becomes incredibly successful, it’s already a good thing.”
Binance image via Shutterstock

Jony Ive is famous for designing countless Apple products that have been worldwide successes. Now that he's leaving, however, Apple staff are also revealing details of his projects that were never released. They include hardware such as the origins of Apple's Project Titan car, the secret Apple TV set and politics such as how Ive snuck in to replace Scott Forstall as head of Apple's Human Interface team.
Forstall was the senior vice president of iOS Software and was ousted following problems at the launch of Apple Maps. It was known that Ive replaced Forstall, putting him in charge of both software and hardware design, but it wasn't known how swiftly that change was made.
According to The Information, in 2012, Ive joined a regular meeting of Apple's Human Interface team, previously overseen by Forstall, just prior to Forstall's departure.
One of the designers present asked where Forstall was, and it was Ive who answered.
"Scott isn't with us anymore," he reportedly said from the back of the room.
Following that meeting, Ive took direct charge and immediately brought that team over to see Apple's industrial design studio. According to The Information's source who was there, the team got to see a prototype of the Apple Watch three years before it was released. They also got to see an Apple television set.
"It was super-minimal," says the source. "Just a piece of glass with nice details."
Apple never released that television set, and so far it also hasn't released the much-rumored self-driving car. However, other sources speaking to The Information have revealed how Ive approached the idea.

Reportedly, Ive was so involved in the original design of an Apple car that he made a prototype model out of leather and wood specifically to show CEO Tim Cook. The most visibly notable feature of the model was that Ive insisted it should not have a steering wheel.
Instead, the car was to be predominantly voice-controlled. And for his demonstration to Cook, Ive hired an actress to perform as Siri, responding to voice commands.
It's not known how that prototype was received or how close Apple's car plans hew to it, but the company did at least temporarily table the initiative. While Project Titan continues to this day under hardware engineer Bob Mansfield, Apple is not as chasing a full-functioning vehicle as aggressively as it was in 2015.
Ive was more clearly successful with his design work on Apple Park, the new campus that he and Steve Jobs had pushed for — but which Ive now reportedly rarely works in. According to Bloomberg sources, Ive began backing away from day-to-day business shortly after Apple Watch launched in 2015.
Instead of Apple Park, Ive has been working out of the a studio in San Francisco that he has now made the base of his new LoveFrom business. The Information reports that he has been working there for some years.
"It felt special to get invited to his private studio," said a source who has not been there but whose colleagues had.
Nonetheless, enough people do visit the studio in San Francisco's Pacific Heights region that neighbors have reportedly complained. .

The FDA investigated more than 500 reports of the life-threatening disease, canine dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and its possible link to certain kinds of dog food.
The FDA also said dry food formulations have by far the most reported cases of DCM.
The FDA report hasn't concluded how certain diets may be associated with DCM in some dogs.
Click here to read the FDA report.