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From: The Bloomberg Close <noreplygmail.bloombergbusiness.com>
To: <I
Subject: Consumer alerts
Date: Tue, 19 Nov 2019 22:07:19 +0000
Bloomberg
Good afternoon. Here's what you need to know to end your day.
• The retail mood turned sour on dreary earnings.
• People listening in on Trump's Ukraine call said things weren't right.
• Want a raise? Move to Texas.
Home Depot and Kohl's posted disappointing results, raising doubts
about whether American consumers can keep up the spending as the
holiday season approaches.
• Home Depot's weak performance—comp sales grew 3.6% last
quarter versus the 4.6% consensus—was all the more surprising
since the company had told investors that the second half of the year
would be better. Same-store sales have now trailed projections for
three straight quarters
• At Kohl's, that metric increased 0.4% in the third quarter, half of
what analysts expected. The retailer now says profit ex-items will be
$4.75 to $4.95—with the new top of the range 50 cents below the
previous outlook
• Urban Outfitters reported same-store sales of 3%, which topped
the Consensus Metrix estimate but was down from 8% a year ago.
Comparable sales at its chains—Urban Outfitters, Free People and
Anthropologie—all missed. Shares fell more than 10% in late trading.
• And then there was Macy's, which doesn't report until Thursday. It
fell 11% after confirming some customers were exposed to a data
hack while shopping on its website last month.
• TJX had a better day. Shares rose on what MKM's Roxanne Meyer
called a "high quality" quarter. She believes the T.J. Maxx and
HomeGoods owner will continue to benefit from exceptional
products, effective marketing and new customer growth.
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• Stocks ended the day mixed as investors weighed the retail
data against new developments in the trade saga.
The second week of public impeachment hearings began with two
witnesses saying that Trump's Ukraine call was inappropriate.
• Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman said the July 25 call
between Donald Trump and Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskiy, which he listened in on, so alarmed him that he reported it
to the White House counsel. "It was inappropriate, it was improper
for the president to request, to demand an investigation into
a political opponent," he said.
• Jennifer Williams, a State Department employee assigned to VP
Mike Pence's office who also listened in, said the call was outside
the bounds of typical presidential interactions since "it involved
discussion of what appeared to be a domestic political matter."
• Under questioning from Republican staff lawyer Steve Castor,
Vindman said he was offered the job as Ukraine's defense minister
while on an official trip to that country. Vindman, an immigrant from
Ukraine, called the offer "comical," and said he reported it to his
superiors. Democrat Jim Himes accused Republicans of seeking to
question Vindman's loyalty to the U.S. by raising the matter.
• There sure are a lot of ribbons and badges on Lieutenant Colonel
Vindman's chest. Here's what they mean
• The afternoon session is underway, with testimony from Kurt
Volker, former special envoy to Ukraine, and Timothy Morrison, NSC
senior director for Europe and Russia.
• Volker said that he wasn't aware of and didn't knowingly take part
in any effort to urge Ukraine to investigate Trump's political rival, Joe
Biden. Follow along with our
What Else is Happening
Impeachment Update
The U.S.-China trade deal that fell apart six months ago has become the
benchmark to decide how much tariffs should be reduced in the initial
phase of an agreement, people familiar said. The White House is debating
the precise rollback, ranging from 35% to 60%. Beijing is demanding that
all levies imposed after May be removed immediately and those before
EFTA00032805
then be lifted gradually. Pence said that it would be "very hard" to sign a
deal if protests in Hong Kong are met with violence.
Speaking of which, the Senate is expected to pass bipartisan legislation
to support Hong Kong's protesters by unanimous consent later today. If it
passes, the bill would need to be reconciled with a slightly different House
version before going to Trump for his signature, who's yet to indicate
whether he will sign.
America's big banks are getting further relief from capital demands as
regulators set up a new approach for measuring risk in derivatives trades.
The revision will result in banks being considered to have about 9% less
exposure in their derivatives contracts, according to regulators' estimates.
It's the latest of a series of rollbacks coordinated by Trump appointees.
Opinion
The scaling back of Saudi Aramco's IPO—despite nearly every major
investment bank being involved— raises awkward questions about the
effectiveness of mammoth syndicates of advisers and bookrunners, Chris
Hughes writes for Bloomberg Opinion. Diluted accountability makes it
unlikely that anyone will deliver an unpopular message, like that the deal
isn't worth $2 trillion. And many, many banks may not add much in terms of
selling shares given that there's probably huge overlap between
their investment fund clients. More appears to be less
The merger party may be coming to an end, Bloomberg Opinion's Joe
Nocera writes. One of the FTC's two Democratic commissioners, Rohit
Chopra, has written that there's some evidence drug mergers "have
, creating harms that are immeasurable for those
choked off innovation
waiting for a cure." He also believes that the FTC can block mergers on
antitrust grounds. Since some senators who are also presidential
candidates have called for greater M&A scrutiny, it's a pretty good bet that
a new administration will view takeovers in a different light.
Sponsored Content by SmartAssetTM
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Mistakes
EFTA00032806
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retirement plan, but most people make these simple mistakes
when hiring one. These are 7 common but costly mistakes happy
retirees avoid.
Businessweek Today
Warby Parker wants to be the Warby Parker of contact lenses. The
retailer is introducing Scout, a line of daily contacts. It's the first time the
company has expanded beyond eyeglasses since its founding almost a
decade ago. At $440 for a year's supply, they'll be slightly cheaper than
many daily lenses but will be sold with what Warby says will be a much
improved ordering process.
The Haredim have long been isolated from secular Israeli society.
Programs like the Pardes Project seek to better integrate these ultra-
Orthodox scholars into the economy. That's caught the attention of
Mossad, the nation's intelligence agency, which wants to attract more
Haredim in a tight labor market. "These people are geniuses, and they
have no opportunities," says Pardes founder Moshe Kahan.
Ultra-Orthodox men fill out registration sheets at an employment center in
Jerusalem. Photographer Corina Kern/Laif/Redux
What Everybody's Talking About
Two guards at a Manhattan jail who were supposed to keep watch on
financier Jeffrey Epstein when he killed himself were charged with six
counts of falsifying documents and conspiracy to defraud the U.S. The
guards never checked on Epstein after 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 9 until he was
discovered the next morning, according to the indictment. Instead, they
searched the internet for furniture and motorcycle sales and sports news,
prosecutors alleged, and "appeared to have been asleep" for two hours.
Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss just made their first-ever acquisition, and
the duo behind the company they bought couldn't be more similar. Duncan
and Griffin Cock Foster are also identical twins. Their company, Nifty
EFTA00032807
Gateway, lets users buy crypto collectibles with a credit card instead of
digital currency. Yes, we're confused about it, too.
By the Way
If you want a fat salary, move to Midland, Texas. According to Commerce
Department data, the oil boom city's per capita personal income
was $122,247 last year, higher than San Jose, San Francisco, Boston or
New York. Not surprisingly, the riches drew people: The city led all metro
areas in 2018 population growth with a 4.4% gain. But—fair warning—the
good times may not last. A recent drop in local energy rigs has coincided
with slower job growth, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas data shows.
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EFTA00032808
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