The Economist - USA (2022-01-22)

(Antfer) #1

TheEconomistJanuary22nd 2022 7
The world this week Business


Inwhatisbyfarthebiggest­
evertakeoverinthegaming
industry,Microsoftagreedto
buyActivisionBlizzard, the
companybehindthe“Callof
Duty”seriesand“Warcraft”,for
$69bn.Microsoftishungryfor
newcontentasit seeksto
developa Netflixforgames,
whichcanbestreamedfrom
anydevice,suchasphones,
andnotjustitsXboxconsole.
Gaming“willplaya keyrolein
thedevelopmentofmetaverse
platforms”,statedSatya
Nadella,Microsoft’sboss.


Unileversaidit wouldnot
increaseits£50bn($68bn)
offerforGlaxoSmithKline’s
consumerhealth­carebusi­
ness,whichineffectendsits
pursuitofa deal.Itsambitious
playforthebusiness,which
includessuchfamiliarbrands
asAdvil,Nicorette,Panadol
andSensodyne,andinwhich
Pfizerownsa 32%stake,didn’t
godownwellwithUnilever’s
investors.Theconglomerate’s
stockswoonedwhennewsof
thebidwasmadepublic.


Betterlatethannever
ExxonMobillaid out its strat­
egy to reduce carbon emis­
sions, with an aim to reach
net­zero emissions by 
and a pledge to reduce them by
a fifth by 2030 compared with


2016. But the plan counts only
the company’s own green­
house gases from its produc­
tion of oil and gas, and not the
broader category of “Scope 3”
emissions, which are generat­
ed across a firm’s value chain,
suppliers and customers.


Providing reassurance that
pandemic restrictions really
do apply to everyone, António
Horta-Osórioresigned as
chairman of Credit Suisse after
the bank’s board reportedly
found that he broke quaran­
tine rules, including on a trip
to the Wimbledon tennis final
in July. Mr Horta­Osório had
held the job for less than nine
months.


The global job marketwill
take longer to recover from the
covid­19 crisis than had been
thought, according to the


InternationalLabourOrgani­
sation.Itslatestforecastesti­
matesthattherewillbe52m
fewerjobsin 2022 compared
with2019,andthata fullrecov­
eryin 2023 “remainselusive”.

Anothersurgeincovidand
supply­chain bottlenecks
caused Germany’s economy
to shrink by up to 1% in the
fourth quarter of 2021 com­
pared with the third, according
to an initial official estimate.
For the whole year, German
gdprose by 2.7%, though
output was still 2% lower than
in 2019, before the pandemic. 

The People’s Bank of China cut
one of its main interest rates.
The reduction was small, but a
signal to markets that officials
are prepared to act to stabilise
the economy amid covid and
difficulties in the housing
market. The main lending rate
for mortgages was also cut.
China’sgdpgrew by 4% in the

fourthquarter,yearonyear,
theslowestpacesincethe
depthsofthepandemic.The
economyofficiallygrewby
8.1%forthewholeof2021.

Britain’sannualrateof
inflationroseto5.4%,its
highestlevelin 30 years. Food
pricesareclimbingattheir
fastestpacesince2008.Energy
costsarealsorocketing,and
areexpectedtosoareven
higherwhentheregulator’s
pricecapisliftedinApril.The
numberofhouseholdsunder
“fuelstress”,spendingatleast
10%oftheirincomeonenergy
bills,issettojump.

In some good news for the
British economy, gdprose
above its pre­pandemic level
for the first time in November.
Although that was before
Omicron struck. 

Governments in the euare also
struggling to control the im­
pact of higher energy costs. In
France, edf, an energy provid­
er, saw its market value slump
by a fifth after it said that the
French government’s attempt
to limit rises in electricity bills
would hurt its earnings. 

Meanwhile oil priceshit a
seven­year high, as markets
tried to assess whether de­
mand will outpace supply this

year.Brentcrudetradedwell
above$88a barrel;theprice
hasrisenby13%sincethestart
oftheyear.

TheBankofJapanraisedits
inflationforecastfor 2022 to
1.1%,lowbyinternational
standardsbutuncommonina
countrythathasbattleddefla­
tionfordecades.Higherener­
gyandfoodpricesarefeeding
throughtotheeconomy,but
withinflationstillfarbelow
thecentralbank’s2%targetit
seesnoneedtoincrease
interestrates.

at&tandVerizonagainpost­
ponedtheirroll­outof5g
servicesat some airports amid
warnings that the cellular
towers could interfere with
aircraft navigation systems. 

Asqueezeonhouseholds
The price of orange­juice
futures surged, after this year’s
orange cropin Florida was
forecast to be the smallest
since 1945. The Sunshine
State’s orange groves are
plagued with tree lice. Orange
prices are also sensitive to a
drought in Brazil, which has
hurt citrus production there.
The overall demand for orange
has lost some zest in recent
years, as consumers switch to
low­sugar drinks. 

Germany’s GDP
% change from previous quarter

Source: Federal
Statistics Office *Estimated range

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