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Financial News

Analysis-Consumer boom nearly over as Central Europe heads into “decade of peril”

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Gergely Szakacs, Alan Charlish and Jason Hovet

VELENCE, Hungary/WARSAW/PRAGUE – War may be raging on their doorstep but Central Europe’s economies are outpacing their euro zone peers as consumer spending booms. A reversal could come as soon as this summer, however, leaving a painful, inflation-laced hangover.

Economists are already sounding the alarm about inflation momentum in Hungary and Poland, fuelled partly in both countries by government transfers to households that helped supercharge demand in the first quarter.

Sharp interest rate rises have so far failed to curb price pressures, as a region-wide shortage of workers pushes up wages and the conflict in Ukraine causes energy prices to soar.

At the Velence Resort and Spa, beside a lake just four hours’ drive from Hungary’s border with Ukraine, director Peter Barsony expects a bumper 2022, with a strong increase in weekend bookings since February despite recent price rises.

“Unless trends change, this will be a substantially better year than last in terms of revenue,” Barsony said. “The purchasing power of Hungarians has definitely not deteriorated for the time being.”

Hungarian retail sales surged by an annual 16.2% in March, driven by higher spending on fuels and non-food items.

While economic fundamentals are strong, consumer spending has been boosted by Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s pre-election wage hikes and handouts to families. In Poland, robust growth in retail sales after pandemic restrictions were lifted has been further supported by spending on millions of refugees fleeing neighbouring Ukraine.

Hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians have also poured into Hungary, like Poland a member of NATO, since Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24.

As Europe heads into what Orban described last week as a “decade of peril”, with the war escalating an energy crisis, central banks are struggling to contain inflation that has blasted past their targets and is on track to reach 14% to 15%.

“DONE IN TWO SENTENCES”

Zsolt Csombok, a 51-year-old IT services entrepreneur, has raised wages three times over the past year – Hungarian unemployment is at a record low – and increased his company’s hourly fees by 25% to 30% to cover that and other expenses.

He says his clients, similarly plagued by supply chain issues and rising costs, have simply accepted the price hikes, signalling strong demand-side inflation pressures.

“Something which would have taken tough negotiations to push through just a year ago can now be done in two sentences,” Csombok said.

Projecting first-quarter growth at 7% to 8%, Hungary’s central bank, already in its third-steepest tightening cycle since Communist rule ended in 1989, has warned Orban to start rebalancing the economy. Core inflation, which strips out volatile energy and food, hit a near 21-year high in March.

“Tighter policy is needed to take the heat out of domestic demand,” said Liam Peach at Capital Economics.

“This will require a combination of tax hikes, spending cuts as well as interest rates rising above 8% for a prolonged period of time to cause GDP growth to weaken.”

In Poland, retail sales beat forecasts in March and returned to their pre-pandemic trend, economists at Bank Pekao said, while warning of “bleak” consumer prospects for later 2022 as the war sours sentiment. Most respondents in an April survey nevertheless said they were not worried about job security.

Maciej Skurczynski, a 34-year-old specialist in industrial real estate, said he was unsettled by the conflict, but trying to live a normal life.

“We can only live or we can stay at home. And I prefer to live,” Skurczynski said as he finished off a lunchtime burger at a food hall in central Warsaw.

DEMAND-DRIVEN INFLATION

With inflation still rampant, the Polish and Czech central banks are set to hike borrowing costs again on Thursday.

Hungary’s central bank has raised its base rate by nearly 500 basis points since June, but government price controls, wage hikes and caps on mortgage rates are acting as a counterweight.

“Pre-war data from retail, industry, and construction sectors, and even the latest big data, are suggesting surprisingly strong first-quarter GDP growth,” ING economist Peter Virovacz said.

“This could mean a wider positive output gap, translating into longer and stronger demand-driven inflation for the remainder of the year, in our view.”

The Czech economy grew by a better-than-expected 4.6% year-on-year in the first quarter, but with less government help for households facing double-digit inflation, consumer confidence hit its lowest in nearly a decade in April.

Central bank Vice-Governor Marek Mora told Reuters on April 26 that he foresaw a 6% to 8% fall in real wages this year.

And some companies are already bracing for when consumer appetite, buoyed recently by savings accrued during COVID lockdowns, cools further.

“People are still buying our products and volumes are increasing,” Martin Pisklak, chief financial officer of Czech soft drinks maker Kofola Ceskoslovenkso, told an analyst call last month.

“But with the high numbers in inflation, we expect in the second half of the year or during the next winter, there will be pressure on the volumes for sure because of the lower purchasing power of our consumers.”

(Writing by Gergely Szakacs; Additional reporting by Krisztina Fenyo; Editing by Catherine Evans)

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Financial News

CVS Health raises annual profit view after better-than-expected first quarter

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Mrinalika Roy

(Reuters) -CVS Health Corp beat estimates for first-quarter results on Wednesday, helped by strong performance in its retail store operations and insurance unit, encouraging the company to raise annual adjusted profit forecast.

Pharmacy chains like CVS have benefited from distribution of COVID-19 vaccines and tests during the pandemic. However, in February, the company said it expected a big decline in COVID-19 vaccination and testing administered at its stores this year.

The company administered over eight million COVID-19 vaccines at its stores in the quarter, and now expects to administer 18 million vaccines in total in 2022. This is in stark contrast to over 20 million vaccines it administered in the preceding quarter.

COVID-related contribution to retail business is expected to fall 60%-65% this year, Chief Financial Officer Shawn Guertin said during a post-earnings call.

The company also administered fewer COVID tests at its stores than the preceding quarter but said demand for over-the-counter COVID-19 tests was higher which added to its retail segment growth.

Retail segment performance was also driven by inflation of branded drugs and higher prescription volumes.

Same-store sales rose 10.7% in the quarter, as easing coronavirus curbs boosted footfalls.

Falling demand for COVID-19 related products was also offset by membership growth in its healthcare benefits segment, which offers various insurance products and services. The segment saw a 12.8% rise in revenue in the quarter and the company now expects membership increases between 24 million and 24.3 million for the full year.

Morningstar analyst Julie Utterback said CVS turned in a ‘stellar’ quarterly performance which allowed management to slightly increase its bottom-line outlook for the full year.

On an adjusted basis, CVS earned $2.22 per share, compared with estimates of $2.15.

The company now expects 2022 full-year adjusted profit to be between $8.20 and $8.40 per share, higher than its prior guidance of $8.10 and $8.30 per share.

(Reporting by Mrinalika Roy in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri and Rashmi Aich)

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Financial News

Google picks former Modi think-tank official as India policy head -source

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Aditya Kalra

NEW DELHI – Alphabet Inc’s Google has hired a new public policy head in India, Archana Gulati, who previously worked at Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s federal think-tank and the country’s antitrust watchdog, a source with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.

A number of Indian government officials have been hired by Big Tech companies which are battling tighter data and privacy regulation, as well as competition law scrutiny, under Modi’s federal government.

Gulati is a long-term Indian government employee, having worked until March 2021 as a joint secretary for digital communications at Modi’s federal think tank, Niti Aayog, a body that is critical to government’s policy making across sectors.

Before that, between 2014 and 2016, she worked as a senior official at India’s antitrust body, the Competition Commission of India, according to her LinkedIn profile.

A Google India spokesperson confirmed the development to Reuters, but did not elaborate. Gulati did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The source declined to be named as the hiring decision was not public.

India’s antitrust watchdog is currently looking into Google’s business conduct in the market of smart TVs, its Android operating system as well as its in-app payments system.

Last year, Meta Platforms Inc hired Rajiv Aggarwal – who spent years working in India’s federal and state governments – as its head of policy.

Another former Indian antitrust and federal government official, Anand Jha, in 2019 joined Walmart as India public policy officer. He currently manages government relations for Blackstone in India.

(Reporting by Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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Breaking NewsMonmouth County NewsNew Jersey NewsOcean County NewsPolitics

Ethics Complaint Filed Against Monmouth County Sheriff Questions Conflicts of Interest

by Phil Stilton May 4, 2022
By Phil Stilton

FREEHOLD, NJ – A formal ethics complaint has been filed against Monmouth County Sheriff Shaun Golden, who also serves as the Monmouth County Republican Party Chairman, by a former Monmouth County Freeholder.

Gary Rich, a former two-term Monmouth County Republican Freeholder and former mayor of Belmar alleges Golden’s dual role as both an elected law enforcement officer and the head of one of the state’s most powerful Republican political organizations is a clear conflict of interest.

Related Story: How Ocean County Sheriff Silently Created New “Special Investigator” Unit Full of Crony Hires

“Earlier this year, the public’s confidence in Golden and the Monmouth County Board of Commissioners was shaken when the New Jersey Office of the State Comptroller (“OSC”} issued a report finding that the Board gave Golden a massive pay raise without a public hearing or a public vote. The pay raise and Golden’s conflicts of interest warrant scrutiny by your office,” Rich said in his complaint to the New Jersey Department of Community Affairs. “As you may know, Sheriff Golden moonlights as the chairman of the Monmouth County Republican Committee (“MCRC”} which exists as a creature of the laws of the State of New Jersey. Under state statute and the bylaws of the MCRC, this political office empowers him to assert
substantial power over municipal officials, municipal republican committees, all aspects of county government, and even county elected officials who he can reward with preferential ballot placement or punish with visual obscurity on the ballot.”

Rich says Golden’s role as campaign manager for the county commissioners in their annual elections is also a conflict of interest.

“As party boss and campaign manager, Golden completely controls the political fortunes of the very Board of County Commissioners who should be free to act independently as the governing body of the County but are actually beholden to him for their tenure in office,” Rich added. “All this influence supplements his power as the leading law enforcement executive in Monmouth County.”

Rich claims Golden “Has used those powers as chairman and campaign manager to eliminate local elected officials and even a popular state legislator.”

He claims Golden’s dual role in the county is in violation of the Monmouth County Code of Ethics, Section 4.01 H, “No officer … shall have an interest in a business organization or engage in any business, transaction, or professional activity, which is in substantial conflict with the proper discharge of his or her duties in the public interest.”

In the complaint, Rich is requesting the state to investigate Golden’s actions and to report their findings to the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.

The investigation could send waves throughout the Jersey Shore were in Ocean County, Sheriff Michael Mastronardy, Golden’s former boss when he served as a Toms River police officer, is now seeking to follow in his former underling’s footsteps and is running to become the Ocean County GOP Chairman. Mastronardy, if successful, would hold similar conflicting positions in Ocean County.

Related: Why the FBI is Investigating Ocean County Commissioners and Hiring Practices?

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

Knife Yielding Man Robs D.C. Store

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating an Armed Robbery using a knife which took place on April 29th. This incident happened on the 4500 block of Wisconsin Avenue in Northwest D.C.. Detectives are asking for help to identify the suspect involved in this case.

According to investigators, “At approximately 6:46 pm, the suspect entered an establishment at the listed location. The suspect brandished a knife and demanded money from the register. The employee complied and the suspect fled the scene.”

Nearby surveillance cameras captured the suspect.  

If you have any information about this incident, please take no action but call the police at (202) 727-9099.

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Top HeadlinesUS and World News

Leaked draft abortion ruling a major blow to Supreme Court, experts say

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Andrew Chung

(Reuters) – The leak of a U.S. Supreme Court draft opinion that would overturn the constitutional right to abortion is a major breach of confidentiality that has heightened the stakes in an already politically-charged case, experts say.

Politico on Monday night published a draft majority opinion that it had obtained striking down the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision, which guaranteed the right to abortion nationwide. It was a sign that the court’s 6-3 conservative majority was ready to flex its muscle.

While the substance of the draft sparked praise from anti-abortion conservatives and Republicans and condemnation from abortion rights advocates and Democrats, many court watchers blasted on the leak itself as a rare if not unprecedented occurrence.

They predicted chaos inside the court and unpredictable consequences, whose longstanding tradition of confidentiality and trust surrounding its deliberations helps lend the institution its remove from the political branches of government.

Unlike the White House and Congress, where leaks are a regular fact of life and a tool of political operatives trying to advance their agendas, the Supreme Court typically keeps its internal deliberations private.

“This is the equivalent of the Pentagon Papers leak, but at the Supreme Court,” Neal Katyal, a former acting U.S. Solicitor General, who argues frequently before the court, said in a Twitter post. He was referring to secret U.S. documents on the Vietnam War published by the New York Times in 1971

The widely followed SCOTUSblog wrote on its Twitter account: “It’s impossible to overstate the earthquake this will cause inside the court, in terms of the destruction of trust among the justices and staff.”

‘MASSIVE VIOLATION’

“Leaking a draft opinion is a massive violation of settled norms. It just doesn’t happen,” tweeted Dan Epps, a professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis, adding that the culprit likely “would be someone who is upset” about what the court is doing.

Ilya Shapiro, a lecturer at the Georgetown University Law Center, posted that the leaker is “someone on the left engaged in civil disobedience” and called the leak “inexcusable and threatens the court’s functioning.”

While a number of commentators said the person who leaked the draft is probably seeking to whip up public fervor to change the justices’ minds or get progressive voters to the polls for the Nov. 8 congressional midterm elections, others disagreed, asserting the leaker might be someone – a clerk or even a justice – who sympathizes with the majority.

Such a person would be “worried (in a slightly crazy way) about locking that majority down, and willing to take the extreme step of leaking to advance that goal,” said Joseph Fishkin, a professor at the University of California Los Angeles.

This is not the first time an opinion has been leaked before its intended release, according to Jonathan Peters, a law professor at the University of Georgia School of Law. He said that the New York Tribune reported the outcome in an 1852 case involving the Wheeling and Belmont Bridge Company 10 days before the court issued the decision.

Peters noted that other leaks have commented on decisions after their release or on personal relationships and conflicts among the justices.

In January National Public Radio reported that due to a surge in COVID-19 infections the justices had been asked to wear masks but only Neil Gorsuch refused, prompting a denial by the court.

Some observers said that the controversy, which is certain to persist, could distract from the court’s actions on the right to abortion.

Law professor Rick Hasen said the development actually helps the majority that overturns Roe v. Wade by deflecting commentary to breach of court secrecy norms and by “lessening the blow by setting expectations.”

(The story is refiled to correct wording in first paragraph)

(Reporting by Andrew Chung in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and Michael Perry)

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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

D.C. Police Search for Armed Robbers Caught on Camera

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating an Armed Robbery which took place on April 28th. This incident happened on the 4100 Block of Wisconsin Avenue in Northwest D.C.. Detectives are asking for help to identify the suspects involved in this case.

According to detectives, “At approximately 4:40 pm, the suspects approached the victim at the listed location. One of the suspects brandished a gun and demanded the victim’s property. The suspects took property from the victim then fled the scene.”

Nearby surveillance cameras captured the suspects.  

If you have any information about this incident , please take no action but call the police at 202-727-9099.

 

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Financial News

JPMorgan names global co-heads of market infrastructure – memo

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Pamela Barbaglia

LONDON – JPMorgan has elevated two senior bankers in its financial institutions group (FIG) to global co-heads of market infrastructure as it seeks to bolster its sprawling financial services franchise, according to a memo seen by Reuters.

Jeremy Capstick and Howard Chen will co-head the bank’s market infrastructure division while former JPMorgan banker Chetan Singh will rejoin the firm to replace Capstick as co-head of EMEA FIG, the memo said.

Singh, who quit JPMorgan in 2016 to join British insurer Aviva where he recently became a managing director of its annuities and equity release business, will share the leadership of EMEA FIG with Andreas Lindh.

Both Singh and Lindh will report to Laurent Nevi who co-heads JPMorgan’s FIG industry group globally.

(Reporting by Pamela Barbaglia;Editing by Elaine Hardcastle)

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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

Teen Shot in Northeast D.C.

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a shooting that took place on May 3rd. This incident happened on the 1200 Block of 5th Street, in Northeast D.C.

According to investigators, “At approximately 10:15 am, members of the Fifth District responded to the listed location for the report of the sounds of gunshots. Upon arrival, members located a juvenile male victim suffering from an apparent gunshot wound. The victim was transported to a local hospital for treatment of non life-threatening injuries.”

A nearby surveillance camera captured the suspect.

If you have any information about this case, please take no action but call the police at (202) 727-9099.

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Financial News

IMF urges Nepal to tighten monetary policy to bolster forex reserves

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Gopal Sharma

KATHMANDU -Nepal should engage in monetary tightening including interest rate hikes to bolster its dwindling foreign exchange reserves, without resorting to import curbs that could push up prices and hamper economic growth, a senior International Monetary Fund (IMF) official said on Wednesday.

The government must address inflationary pressures and growing external imbalances while safeguarding the economic recovery, Robert Gregory, head of an IMF team that held week-long discussions with government officials, said in a statement.

Nepal, a landlocked country between China and India, has banned luxury goods imports until mid-July to rein in capital outflows as foreign exchange reserves fell over 18% to $9.6 billion as of mid-March from mid-July – enough to last the country around six months.

Following a sharp rise in the cost of imports due to soaring global crude oil and other commodity prices after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Nepal’s international reserves “have declined more than anticipated,” the IMF statement said.

However, a prudent budget, as suggested under its financial support programme, along with monetary tightening would help address the inflationary pressures and growing economic imbalances, the statement said.

Consumers in the Himalayan nation of 29 million people are facing tough times as annual retail inflation hit a five-year high of 7.14% in the month through mid-March, pushed up by rising fuel and food prices, while household income levels are still below pre-pandemic levels.

The IMF team praised the government’s recent steps to tackle external pressures by gradually exiting from a pandemic-related expansionary monetary policy and said forex reserves were adequate for now.

The World Bank said on Wednesday it would provide $150 million for the “Finance for Growth” Development Policy Credit (DPC) to strengthen financial sector stability, diversify financial solutions, and increase access to financial services in Nepal.

Nepal Finance Ministry official Ishwari Aryal said the IMF team’s comments “will be addressed accordingly.”

(Writing by Manoj Kumar;Editing by Alexandra Hudson and Paul Simao)

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Financial News

Allianz CEO wants to resolve fund debacle soon

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

FRANKFURT – Allianz wants to resolve investigations into its Structured Alpha investment funds soon, Chief Executive Oliver Baete told shareholders on Wednesday.

The demise of the funds has been under investigation by the U.S. Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission, Allianz has disclosed, as well as the subject of numerous investor lawsuits.

The company has so far paid around $4.5 billion in compensation to investors and plaintiffs, board member Renate Wagner said in response to shareholders’ questions on the matter.

In February, Allianz set aside a provision of 3.7 billion euros ($3.90 billion) to cover anticipated costs for the issue.

($1 = 0.9492 euros)

(Reporting by Tom Sims and Alexander Huebner; Editing by Riham Alkousaa and Miranda Murray)

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Financial News

Robust imports push U.S. trade deficit to record high in March

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

WASHINGTON – The U.S. trade deficit surged to a record high in March, confirming that trade weighed on the economy in the first quarter and could remain a drag for a while as businesses replenish inventories with imported goods.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday that the trade deficit accelerated 22.3% to $109.8 billion in March amid a record increase in imports. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast a $107 billion deficit.

The government reported last week that a record trade deficit sliced 3.20 percentage points from gross domestic product in the first quarter, resulting in GDP contracting at a 1.4% annualized rate after growing at a robust 6.9% pace in the fourth quarter.

Trade has subtracted from GDP for seven straight quarters. Imports of goods and services jumped 10.3% to $351.5 billion, outpacing a 5.6% rise in exports to $241.7 billion.

(Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrew Heavens)

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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

45 Year-Old Man Shot Multiple Times and Killed in Northeast D.C.

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a homicide that took place on May 2nd. This incident happened on the 1600 Block of Benning Road in Northeast D.C.

According to investigators, “At approximately 3:17 pm, members of the Fifth District responded to the listed location for the report of a shooting. Upon arrival, members located an adult male victim suffering from multiple gunshot wounds. DC Fire and Emergency Medical Services responded to the scene and transported the victim to a local hospital for treatment. After all life-saving efforts failed, the victim was pronounced dead.”

45-year-old Junior Johnson, of Southwest, D.C. was named as the victim.

If you have any information about this incident , please call the police at 202-727-9099.

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Financial News

Analysis-Barely visible wage growth already a trigger for ECB

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Balazs Koranyi

FRANKFURT – Wage growth in Europe is still barely visible but underlying pressures are intense and the European Central Bank may already have left it too late to stop strong income growth from seeping into record-high inflation.

The ECB has been curbing stimulus by the smallest possible increments despite record inflation, arguing that wage growth, a precondition for durable inflation is absent, so prices are bound to moderate once the energy shock passes.

That argument is on increasingly shaky ground, however, and the ECB can ill afford to wait for hard data as they need to preempt and not react to runaway wages, analysts and policymakers argue.

Indeed, conditions for a surge in wages are already set and there is evidence that a rise is happening, even if government agencies will need time to collect the data.

“The data are backward-looking and we need to pursue a forward-looking monetary policy,” ECB board member Isabel Schnabel said this week.

“So we can’t afford to wait until a wage-price spiral has already set in before responding,” she told German newspaper Handelsblatt. “We need to act.”

The evidence so far is patchy but all point in the same direction, making the case for rapid ECB action.

On Tuesday, most unions of Amazon’s French arm rejected a 3.5% wage increase offer, demanding 5% instead. And Germany’s IG Metall, an influential trade union, last week tabled an 8.2% wage rise demand to offset the huge rise in inflation.

ECB chief economist Philip Lane has long argued that wage growth of 3% would be consistent with inflation settling at the bank’s 2% target and recorded increases have been well below 2%.

But JPMorgan’s Greg Fuzesi sees wage growth already rising to 2.3% in the first quarter, before big wage negotiations take place and even this figure is at risk of coming in higher.

Marco Valli, an economist at UniCredit, meanwhile, said that his models indicate a surge in negotiated wage growth to over 4% this year.

Sharp increases in inflation have caused the cost of living to jump across the euro area, making it a hot issue politically. Trade unions who were willing to forego big wage demands during the early months of the pandemic now need to recoup their members’ lost purchasing power.

A key additional reason for the expected jump in wages is that the euro zone labour market is in its best shape in decades.

Unemployment is at a record low 6.8% with further drops expected, and employment, at nearly 162 million, is higher than it has ever been.

“There is anecdotal evidence that companies are already paying some kind of inflation compensation on top of collectively agreed pay,” Deutsche Bank said. “There is a clear risk that our current forecast of an annual 3.5% rise in 2022 effective (German) wages might be too low.”

With underlying inflation excluding food and fuel prices already at almost 4%, waiting for wage growth to take hold risks fuelling even more inflation. This could then entrench high price growth in a difficult-to-break spiral.

ECB chief Christine Lagarde has already warned that the longer inflation stays high, the more likely it is to factor into wage negotiations.

Longer-term inflation expectations are at 2.5%, indicating market doubts about the ECB’s willingness to rein in prices.

Policy tightening will not lower energy prices but will confirm the ECB’s commitment to its 2% target, a signal to firms and unions as they negotiate pay.

But policymakers agree with Schnabel that talk is no longer enough, so the ECB must end bond purchases within weeks and start raising rates, getting back at least to zero by the end of the year. [L8N2WM08Y]

“Like the Fed, the ECB is behind the curve and thus is playing catch up, even if the ECB is unlikely to move as quickly or as far as the Fed,” BNP Paribas said. “Wage growth is quickly gathering momentum.”

(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

D.C. Police Need Help Identifying Armed Carjackers

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating an Armed Carjacking that took place on the 900 Block of Longfellow Street in Northwest D.C.. This incident happened on May 1st. The police need assistance to identify the suspects involved in the carjacking.

According to detectives, “At approximately 11:30 pm, the suspects approached the victims, who were exiting their vehicle, at the listed location. One of the suspects brandished a handgun and demanded the victims’ property. The suspects took the vehicle keys from one of the victims. The suspects fled the scene in the victims’ vehicle.”

Nearby surveillance cameras captured one of the suspects.

If you recognize this suspect or have information about this incident, please take no action but call the police at (202) 727-9099.

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Top HeadlinesUS and World News

Ukraine says Russia is trying to increase tempo of eastern offensive

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

KYIV – Ukraine’s defence ministry said on Wednesday that Russia was attempting to increase the tempo of its offensive in the east of the country.

Defence Ministry spokesman Oleksandr Motuzyanyk gave few details but said Moscow had conducted nearly 50 air strikes on Tuesday alone.

He also said Russian artillery fire and air strikes were continuing periodically on the Azovstal steel works in Mariupol where the last Ukrainian defenders of the southern port city are holed up.

“Russia’s military command is attempting to increase the tempo of its offensive operation in eastern Ukraine,” Motuzyanyk told a briefing.

He said Russian strategic bombers had fired 18 rockets from airspace above the Caspian Sea at targets in Ukraine “with the aim of damaging our country’s transport infrastructure.”

The ministry’s account of the military situation across Ukraine could not immediately be verified.

Russian forces have turned their heaviest firepower on Ukraine’s east and south after failing to take Kyiv, the capital, in the opening weeks of the war.

When asked about the situation in the Azovstal steel works, Motuzyanyk said there had been Russian attempts to storm the plant. Mariupol Mayor Vadym Boichenko said separately that fighting at the plant continued on Wednesday.

Asked about the situation at the steel works, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “The order was publicly given by the supreme commander (Russian President Vladimir Putin) to cancel the storming (of the plant). There is no storming.”

“We see that there are escalations associated with the fact that fighters are taking up firing positions. These attempts are being suppressed very quickly, there is nothing else to say at the moment,” he said.

(Reporting by Max Hunder, Additional reporting by Mark Trevelyan in London, Editing by Timothy Heritage)

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Breaking NewsD.C. NewsPolice Blotter

Man Shot in Southeast D.C. And Police Need Your Help

by Kristen Harrison-Oneal May 4, 2022
By Kristen Harrison-Oneal

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department is investigating a shooting that took place on April 23rd. This incident happened on the 3200 Block of 23rd Street in Southeast D.C. The Seventh District detectives need assistance in identifying the suspects involved.

According to police, “At approximately 10:40 pm, members of the Seventh District responded to the listed location for the report of a shooting. Upon arrival, members located an adult male victim suffering from an apparent gunshot wound. The victim was transported to a local hospital for treatment of non-life threatening injuries.”

Nearby surveillance cameras captured the suspects.

If you have any information about this incident or could identify the suspects, please take no action but call the police at (202) 727-9099. 

May 4, 2022 0 comments
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Financial News

Bosch aims to stay profitable in 2022 despite uncertainties

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

BERLIN -German automotive supplier Bosch is aiming to be profitable this year but said that a definitive forecast is not possible due to economic and political uncertainties.

As a result, the company will need to pass on price increases to its customers, citing already-high energy and raw materials costs that have only been exacerbated by the effects of the war in Ukraine.

“The burden on our result is growing considerably due to steep increases in the cost of energy, raw materials and logistics,” Bosch’s finance chief Markus Forschner said.

The cost pressure is particularly high in Bosch’s core Mobility Solutions division, with steel prices three times higher than in 2020 and unlikely to change soon.

While Bosch increased sales in its core Mobility Solution business by 7.6% last year, to 45.3 billion euros, it generated an operating return of only 0.7%, after posting a loss the previous year.

“It’s not just automakers that have to pass on price increases, but especially suppliers such as us as well.”

The head of the Mobility Solutions division, Markus Heyn, said talks on price increases have been going on for a long time and that he was confident Bosch could reach agreement with the customer side.

Thanks to price increases and favourable exchange rates, the Bosch Group expects sales growth of more than 6% for the current year, after sales of almost 79 billion euros ($83.14 billion) in 2021, and a return on sales for 2022 of 3-4%.

($1 = 0.9502 euros)

(Reporting by Ilona Wissenbach; writing by Miranda Murray; editing by Jason Neely)

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Financial News

Cisco unveils technology to predict network issues

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

(Reuters) – Cisco Systems Inc on Wednesday unveiled a technology that it says can predict issues on enterprise networks before they happen to help prevent problems and increase reliability.

The predictive software engine will gather data from various sources within a company’s network, learn the patterns and help engineers find hardware issues, bandwidth spikes and app configuration changes before they cause difficulties.

“A dedicated team of about 30 people have been working on this over the last two years,” Cisco Chief Executive Officer Chuck Robbins told Reuters. “We will apply this technology to a broad range of products and services over the next few years.”

Cisco, which sells a range of networking equipment and software to connect devices to the internet, has tested the technology with about 15 customers, including Phillips 66 and Schneider Electric.

Traditional technologies can detect issues and react only when they happen, but if networks can predict issues and make changes proactively, the user will have a vastly better experience, Robbins said.

The company plans to announce initial integrations and offers of the product at its annual networking conference, Cisco Live, in June.

(Reporting by Supantha Mukherjee in Stockholm; Editing by Bradley Perrett)

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Financial News

Pizza Hut staffing crunch takes slice out of parent Yum Brands sales

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

(Reuters) -Yum Brands Inc missed Wall Street estimates for quarterly revenue and profit on Wednesday, as a fall in U.S. sales at Pizza Hut chain due to staffing shortages overshadowed growth at KFC and Taco Bell.

Pizza Hut rival Domino’s Pizza Inc also missed quarterly sales estimates last week and warned staffing shortages and inflation would pressure its business further into the year.

Same-store sales at U.S. Pizza Hut locations fell 6% in the first quarter, while it rose 1% and 5% at KFC and Taco Bell restaurants, respectively.

Shares of Yum declined around 4% in premarket trading, having dropped about 17% drop so far this year.

Total revenue rose to $1.55 billion from $1.49 billion a year earlier, but missed estimates of $1.59 billion.

Hourly workers have been turning to higher paying jobs in a tight labor market, leaving U.S. restaurants scrambling to staff their outlets adequately and recruit delivery drivers to fulfill online orders.

The labor crunch has hit when a strained supply chain has already made it harder for restaurants to meet consumer demand.

For Louisville, Kentucky based Yum, comparable sales rose 3% in the quarter ended March 31, missing analysts’ average estimate for a 3.8% increase, according to Refinitiv data.

Net income rose to $399 million, or $1.36 per share, from $326 million, or $1.07 per share, a year earlier.

Excluding one-time items, Yum Brands earned $1.05 per share, missing estimates of $1.07.

(Reporting by Deborah Sophia in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra Eluri and Sriraj Kalluvila)

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Financial News

UK consumer borrowing surge hints at cost-of-living crunch

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

By Andy Bruce

LONDON -British consumers increased borrowing by the most in three years over February and March, according to data that would typically be a sign of solid demand but might now reflect how the cost-of-living squeeze is forcing some households deeper into debt.

The Bank of England said lending to consumers rose by 1.3 billion pounds ($1.6 billion) in net terms in March. That was as expected in a Reuters poll of economists following a nearly 1.6 billion-pound increase in February.

It marked the highest borrowing over a two-month period since early 2019.

Credit card lending accounted for more than half of the increase in March, which was before a sharp rise in energy costs and an increase in taxes in April.

The BoE is watching for signs of how the jump in inflation is affecting the economy as it considers how much further it needs to raise interest rates.

The central bank is expected to increase its Bank Rate to 1.0% from 0.75% on Thursday.

Paul Dales, an economist with Capital Economics, said the rise in consumer borrowing suggested that a recent plunge in consumer confidence and the inflation-adjusted fall in incomes had not caused consumer spending to collapse.

But the Money Advice Trust, a charity, said the recent increases in credit card lending could be a sign of mounting pressure on household budgets rather than a sign of a strong economy.

Earlier on Wednesday the British Retail Consortium said shop prices in Britain surged last month at the fastest rate in more than a decade and worse is to come.

The BoE’s money supply data showed no sign that better-off households who accumulated savings during the pandemic were spending them – something many economists say will be needed to avert recession.

“Households’ continued unwillingness to touch the savings they accumulated during the pandemic suggests that real expenditure is set to fall in Q2 in response to the squeeze on disposable incomes,” said Samuel Tombs, economist from consultancy Pantheon Macroeconomics.

The BoE reported 7.0 billion pounds of net mortgage lending, up from 4.6 billion pounds in February, and 70,961 mortgage approvals, down slightly from the previous month but still well above the pre-pandemic norm.

Britain’s housing market retained much of its momentum in the first months of 2022, despite the phasing out of temporary tax breaks on property purchases in the second half of 2021.

($1 = 0.7988 pounds)

(Reporting by Andy BruceEditing by William Schomberg and Toby Chopra)

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Financial News

China’s PBOC pledges policy support to counter pandemic woes

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

SINGAPORE – China’s central bank on Wednesday pledged monetary policy support to ensure ample liquidity, help businesses badly hit by the latest COVID-19 outbreak in the country and support a recovery in consumption.

The remarks came after a top decision-making body of the ruling Communist Party last week also vowed to support the economy.

“(We shall) waste no time planning incremental policy tools to support steady economic growth, stabilise employment and prices … to provide a fair monetary and financial environment,” the People’s Bank of China said in a statement on Wednesday.

It did not detail what measures it could take.

Financing institutions should aim to meet the needs of the real economy, the PBOC said, such as boosting financing for small firms with lower costs, helping import and export firms, as well as the service sector and aviation companies which have been badly hit by the pandemic.

The bank also called for “stable and orderly” growth in financing the real estate sector, which has experienced a prolonged slowdown in recent months.

Economists say Beijing’s target for economic growth of about 5.5% this year will be hard to achieve without significant stimulus, as lockdowns and other tough curbs to battle the pandemic cause havoc in supply chains.

In a separate statement, the PBOC said it had allocated an additional 100 billion yuan ($15.13 billion) worth of loans dedicated to coal production and storage, part of Beijing’s efforts to boost energy security and stabilise supply chains.

The funding is on top of a 200 billion yuan loan the government allotted in late 2021 for the coal industry including projects such as smart coal mining.

($1 = 6.6080 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Chen Aizhu; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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Financial News

Securitas grows profit as demand recovers from pandemic slump

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

STOCKHOLM -Security services group Securitas reported on Wednesday a rise in first-quarter profit that matched expectations helped by strong sales growth in Europe.

Operating profit rose to 1.25 billion Swedish crowns ($126.7 million) from a year-earlier 1.03 billion. Four analysts polled by Refinitiv had on average forecast a 1.25 billion crown profit.

CEO Magnus Ahlqvist said in a statement the group had passed on higher wage costs to customers in the quarter and expected to be able keep maintaining that balance.

Higher COVID-related sickness costs and spending related to labour shortages weighed on results while a pick-up in demand for airport security on the back of a recovery in travelling from the nadir hit during the pandemic gave a boost.

Sales at the Security Services Europe division grew 8% before acquisitions, while the North America unit experienced a 2% decline due to previously announced contract terminations and reduced COVID-related extra sales.

Securitas said in December it had agreed to buy U.S. rival Stanley Black & Decker’s electronic security solutions business for $3.2 billion in its biggest acquisition to date.

It said on Wednesday it still had the ambition to close the deal, which requires regulatory approval, towards the end of the second quarter.

Securitas in April pulled back an application for EU approval. A company spokesperson said this week the retraction was due to EU authorities needing more time to review the deal and that Securitas aimed to refile the application as soon as possible.

Shares in the world’s biggest security services group were up 2.5% at 1134 GMT.

($1 = 9.8646 Swedish crowns)

(Reporting by Anna Ringstrom; editing by Niklas Pollard)

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Financial News

Musk says Twitter may charge slight fee for commercial, government users

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

(Reuters) -Elon Musk said on Tuesday Twitter Inc might charge a “slight” fee for commercial and government users, part of the billionaire entrepreneur’s push to grow revenue which has lagged behind larger rivals like Meta Platforms Inc’s Facebook.

“Twitter will always be free for casual users, but maybe a slight cost for commercial/government users,” Musk said in a tweet. “Some revenue is better than none!” he added in another tweet.

Twitter declined to comment when contacted by Reuters.

Last week, Reuters reported that Musk told banks he would develop new ways to monetize tweets and crack down on executive pay to slash costs at the social media platform company.

Musk also told the banks he planned to develop features to grow business revenue, including new ways to make money out of tweets that contain important information or go viral, sources told Reuters.

At the annual Met Gala in New York on Monday, Musk said the reach of Twitter was currently only “niche,” and he would want a much bigger percentage of the country to be on it.

Musk, also the chief executive officer of top electric vehicle maker Tesla Inc, has been suggesting a raft of changes to Twitter since last month.

In tweets which were subsequently deleted, Musk suggested changes to Twitter Blue premium subscription service, including slashing its price, banning advertising and giving an option to pay in the cryptocurrency dogecoin.

After inking the deal to buy Twitter for $44 billion last week, Musk said he wanted to enhance the platform with new features, make the algorithms open source to increase trust, defeat spam bots, and authenticate all humans.

(Reporting by Shivani Tanna, Maria Ponnezhath and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru; editing by Uttaresh.V and Subhranshu Sahu)

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Financial News

Emerson Electric raises adjusted annual profit forecast; to exit Russia

by Reuters May 4, 2022
By Reuters

(Reuters) -Emerson Electric Co raised its forecast for adjusted annual profit on Wednesday, as the diversified U.S manufacturer benefits from companies revamping their assembly lines with automation equipment to offset a labor shortage.

Manufacturers across the globe have been making efforts to automate their assembly lines by adding robots to help meet rising demand for goods, amid a shortage of workers due to the pandemic.

Emerson, which began selling fans and electric motors a century ago, now expects its 2022 adjusted earnings per share to be between $4.95 and $5.10, up from its prior forecast of $4.90 and $5.05.

The St. Louis, Missouri-based company was involved in a string of acquisitions over the last few years to help reposition itself as a technology-focused firm.

Sales at Automation Solutions unit, Emerson’s biggest business catering to sectors from utility and mining to chemicals and automotive, rose 5.15% to $2.94 billion.

Emerson also said it would exit its business in Russia, adding that it would explore strategic options to divest Metran, its subsidiary in the country.

The U.S. factory automation equipment maker also reported net earnings to common stockholders of $674 million, or $1.13 per share, for the second quarter ended March 31, up from $561 million, or 93 cents per share, a year earlier.

Net sales rose to $4.79 billion, compared with $4.43 billion a year earlier.

(Reporting by Nathan Gomes in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi Aich)

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