Barron\'s - 16.09.2019

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14 BARRON’S September 16, 2019


27,219.


Dow Industrials:+422.






Dow Global Index:+5.


1.90%


10-year treasury note:+0.


APPLE INTRODUCES THE IPHONE 11


Warming Trade Winds


Stocks soared in a sudden trade thaw.


China said it would exempt 16 U.S.


products from tariffs. President Trump


then agreed to delay levies on some


Chinese imports, and China tossed


pork and soybeans into the no-tariff


basket. The White House then put a


damper on a deal. Still, for the week the


Dow industrials rose 1.6%, to 27,219.52;


the S&P 500 was up 1%, to 3,007.39;


and the Nasdaq Composite edged up


0.9%, to 8176.71.


Trump and the Taliban


After a U.S. soldier was killed in


Afghanistan by a car bomb, Trump


tweeted that he was canceling a secret


meeting with the Taliban at Camp


David to complete a peace treaty. On


Monday, he declared the talks dead.


By Tuesday, Trump’s third national


security adviser, John Bolton, who


criticized the meeting, was either fired


by tweet or resigned.


Draghi’s Swan Song


In his last major act as president of the


European Central Bank, Mario Draghi


pushed through rate cuts and restarted


quantitative easing. Trump used the


ECB’s actions to criticize the Fed,


which meets this week, and call for


negative rates. He also called Fed offi-


cials “boneheads.”


WeWork Sweats an IPO


The initial public offering of We Co.,


the parent of WeWork, staggered


along.SoftBank Group,whichmade


$2 billion investment in the start-up at


a $47 billion valuation, urged it to post-


pone the IPO, which may give it a valu-


ation below $20 billion. The company


was also mulling governance changes.


Meanwhile,SmileDirectClubthud-


ded 28% after its debut on Thursday,


but rose on Friday. And J.P. Morgan


leads a group of banks underwriting


the big IPO of Saudi Aramco, Saudi


Arabia’s state-owned oil company.


Elliott and AT&T


Activist investor Elliott Management


took a $3.2 billion stake inAT&Tand


immediately pressed the company to


sell off units and refocus on telecom.


Elliott says its plan would bring AT&T


stock to $60. AT&T says it is already


working on a restructuring plan and


had hired Goldman Sachs for defense.


Brexit Follies


Opposition in Parliament outmaneu-


vered United Kingdom Prime Minister


Boris Johnson, blocking his attempt to


call a snap election and passing a law


banning the U.K. from leaving the Eu-


ropean Union without a deal. Scotland’s


highest civil court also said the PM’s


suspension of Parliament was illegal.


Annals of Regulation


Trump said the administration plans to


ban fruit-flavored e-cigarettes after


lung problems emerged. The California


legislature neared passage of a bill


ordering gig-economy companies like


LyftandUberto reclassify its drivers


as contract employees. And the Sackler


family, owner of OxyContin maker


Purdue Pharma, agreed to pay $3 bil-


lion to settle lawsuits.


It’s All About


The Camera


GiveApplesome credit. To build a company worth


nearly $1 trillion, you need to think a few steps ahead.


And that’s exactly what Apple demonstrated at Tues-


day’s fall launch event.


Heading into the event, the conventional wisdom was


that this would be an off year for the iPhone. The world


would largely ignore the new iPhone 11, while awaiting


the first Apple 5G phones, expected to debut a year from


now. Investors have fretted about slowing iPhone sales


and have focused instead on Apple driving revenue via


peripheral devices (AirPods and Apple Watches) and


services (Apple Card, iCloud, and Apple Music).


But leave it to Apple to cut right when everyone ex-


pected it to cut left. Apple argued that while the world is


zeroed in on having more bandwidth with 5G, its focus


should be on images. Almost the entire discussion


around the phones centered on their ability to produce


professional quality images and video. The new higher-


end Pro models feature three separate lenses, including


wide angle and telephoto, and nifty new tools, like the


ability to take a video while shooting still photos by


holding down the shutter button. And get ready to hear


about the front-facing camera’s slow-motion capability.


People are already psyched to take “slowfies.”


A few years ago, Apple realized that health and fitness


apps were the best reason to switch from analog watches


to Apple Watches. Apple knows any phone can make calls


or run apps; what differentiates its phones are their ability


to capture images. You could upload them faster with 5G;


but faster won’t make the images better.—Eric J. Savitz


$63 K


U.S. household median income


in 2018, up 0.9% over 2017, and


adjusted for inflation, the same


as peaks in 1999 and 2007



  1. 8%


Increase in spending for per-


sonal insurance and pensions in



  1. Total household spending


grew 1.9%


27.5 M


Number of Americans without


health insurance in 2018, an


increase of 7.4% over 2017.


47 %


Increase in price of pork in


China after a bout of African


swine fever


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THE NUMBERS


HE SAID


“I haven’t been


this alarmed


since before the


financial crisis....


The probability


of a recession


beginning at the


end of next year is


just below 50%.”


Harvard economics professor and


former Treasury Secretary


Lawrence Summers


Mark Kauzlarich/Bloomberg (Summers)

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