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Elon Musk World’s Richest Man – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks Rise as Dismal Jobs Data Spur Stimulus Bets

Stocks rose after data showing a sharp slowdown in U.S. hiring bolstered speculation on further stimulus to revive economic growth as the pandemic ravages the country. The S&P 500 climbed toward another record, led by energy producers, retailers and technology companies. While economists expect vaccinations will lead to a faster pace of job growth in the second quarter, the intervening months could bring more labour-market pain until many more Americans are inoculated.
The S&P 500 gained 0.4% as of early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 0.6%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 2%.

2. Elon Musk Surpasses Bezos to Become World’s Richest Person

On Thursday, Tesla’s shares surged 7.9%, boosting Musk past Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, a ranking of the world’s 500 wealthiest people. Musk is worth $194.8 billion, or $9.5 billion more than Bezos, whose Blue Origin is a rival to Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Ltd., or SpaceX, in the private space race. Tesla’s ascent thrusts its brash founder into a role occupied by only a handful of other people in recent decades and underscores the dramatic stock moves that have upended the global wealth rankings of late. Over the past year the South Africa-born engineer has added more than $165 billion to his fortune in what’s probably the fastest bout of wealth creation in history. 

3. Apple Supplier TSMC’s Revenue Hits Record on iPhone Sales

Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. reported record quarterly revenue, joining other Apple Inc. suppliers in signalling strong demand for the new 5G iPhones. The world’s largest contract chipmaker said Friday that December sales totalled $4.2 billion. Shares of Apple’s main chipmaker have rallied more than 70% over the past 12 months and reached a record high on Friday. The company has predicted that the industry “megatrends” of 5G and high-performance computing-related products will continue to drive growth over the long term.

4. U.S. Daily Deaths Surpass 4,000; London Crisis: Virus Update

The U.S. suffered more than 4,000 coronavirus deaths in a single day for the first time, as the pandemic picks up pace. London declared a “major incident” due to a surging number of cases. The U.K. toughened rules for inbound travellers, while the European Union secured an extra 300 million doses of the Pfizer Inc.-BioNTech SE shot. Germany reported the most daily fatalities since the start of the pandemic. Israel agreed to a data deal with Pfizer that will allow all citizens over 16 to be inoculated by the end of March. Moderna Inc.’s vaccination won U.K. emergency approval. Iran banned U.S. and U.K. coronavirus vaccinations, even as it contends with rising numbers of cases.

5. Brent Oil Hits $55 With Saudi Cuts Adding Fuel to Vaccine Rally

Brent oil topped $55 a barrel for the first time since February as gains in broader markets added to investor optimism already buoyed by Saudi Arabia’s unilateral plan to cut output. The move caps a stellar few months for the oil market, with crude emerging as a favoured play to bet on coronavirus vaccines and global reflation. Saudi Arabia’s pledge earlier in the week to cut production by 1 million barrels a day in February and March added vigour to the rally, while Democrat gains in the U.S. have spurred broader markets higher in expectation of additional stimulus.

6. Gold Tumbles Back Below $1,900 as Technicals Drive Selling

Gold dropped below $1,900 as technical selling took over after an earlier recovery in the dollar sent prices falling. Bullion slipped as much as 2% in London, erasing gains made at the start of this year, as stock futures rose after data showed a sharp slowdown in U.S. hiring, bolstering speculation on further stimulus. Gold’s initial drop was exacerbated after prices broke below the 100-day moving average, a key technical level. “The move lower is technically driven,” triggered by a stronger U.S. dollar and higher Treasury yields, said Georgette Boele, an analyst at ABN Amro Bank NV. The metal should now test support at $1,870 an ounce, she added.

7. Fastest Rally in History Takes Emerging-Market Stocks to Record

The emerging-market equity benchmark rose to a record Friday, topping its previous high reached before the 2008 financial crisis, as a flood of liquidity and optimism over a global economic rebound fuel risk appetite. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 1.8%, extending its recovery from the March fall to 79%. The milestone comes after stock valuations and market capitalization both reached record highs in a rally that’s added $10.6 trillion in a little over nine months, the fastest bout of wealth creation in the history of emerging markets. While the flurry of records underscores the strength of the risk-on shift in global markets since Joe Biden’s victory in U.S. elections, it is already sparking nervousness among some investors that emerging equities are overheating. Even though earnings estimates continue to rise, the index has surged so fast that technical indicators are flashing red.

8. White-Knuckle Bitcoin Rally Powers Crypto’s Best Week Since 2017

Cryptocurrencies are on course for their biggest weekly surge since the last bubble in Bitcoin peaked about three years ago, ahead of a spectacular crash. The Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index, which includes Bitcoin, Ether and three other digital coins, has rallied 52% this week, the most since December 2017. Bitcoin jumped to a new record on Friday, with prices approaching $42,000. Cryptocurrencies are becoming emblematic both of the exuberance in financial markets as well as of the concern that the pace of gains is unsustainable. Believers in Bitcoin see it as a maturing asset that provides a hedge against dollar weakness and inflation risk. 

9. Google Ads Changes Face U.K. Review

U.K. regulators are investigating whether a Google privacy initiative will hurt publishers’ ability to generate revenue, in the first big post-Brexit antitrust probe. The Competition and Markets Authority said it will review Google’s move to curb the ways in which advertising data is collected because the move could “undermine competition in digital advertising, entrenching Google’s market power.” The British investigation adds to Google’s legal headaches around the world. The Mountain View, California-based company faces lawsuits from the U.S. Department of Justice and multiple states over allegedly anti-competitive practices. The increasingly tech-focused CMA is preparing to unveil a new digital regulator later in the spring with powers to rein in firms designated as holding strategic market status.

10. U.K. House Prices Climb to Record as Tax Cut Stokes Market

U.K. house prices rose to a record high last month as a government incentive to buy and a desire to move out of big cities boosted demand. Prices rose 6% from a year earlier in December to an average 253,374 pounds ($340,000). In one month alone, they gained 0.2%. The property boom is being fueled by a tax cut on transactions worth as much as 15,000 pounds to buyers. The Covid-19 pandemic is also boosting interest in moving to larger properties and those outside of city centres as remote working becomes increasingly common. The number of Britons working from home will rise five-fold by 2025, according to a separate survey of chief financial officers published by Deloitte.

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Democrats Hopeful of Senate Control – Top 10 Global News

1. Treasury Yields Reach 1%; Nasdaq Futures Tumble

Benchmark Treasury yields touched 1% for the first time since March while investors rotated out of technology and into cyclical stocks on speculation Democrats are on the cusp of taking control of U.S. Congress. Democrat Raphael Warnock ousted Republican Kelly Loeffler in a runoff race, leaving control of the Senate hinging on the state’s other election, which remains too close to call. Cyclical assets posted strong gains on Wednesday. Energy stocks and banks lifted equity benchmarks in Europe. In contrast, technology companies suffered and fell more than 2% in U.S. pre-market trading. 

Futures on the S&P 500 Index fell 0.2% as of afternoon London time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index climbed 0.9%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index gained 0.2%.

2. Democrats’ Senate Bid Hangs in Balance After First Georgia Win

Democrats’ hopes of taking control of the U.S. Senate received a huge boost early Wednesday after the party captured one seat in the Georgia runoff elections and waited on the outcome of another race that remained too close to call. To secure a narrow majority, Democrats need to win both Senate seats, which would split the chamber 50-50 between Republicans and the Democratic caucus, with Vice President-elect Kamala Harris casting tie-breaking votes. Senate control, paired with the Democrats’ narrow majority in the House, would give Democratic President-elect Joe Biden full control of the U.S. government and allow him to implement major pieces of his agenda.

3. Saudis Take Charge of Oil Market With Surprise Output Cut

Saudi Arabia surprised the market with a large cut in crude production, an assertion of primacy over the global oil industry that came directly from the kingdom’s de-facto ruler. The move papered over cracks in the OPEC+ coalition and was a U-turn from some recent Saudi oil-policy priorities, but those things paled in comparison next to the global impact of the decision. Crude prices jumped to a 10-month high and shares of energy giants in London and shale drillers in Texas surged. 

4. U.K. Steps Up Biggest Vaccine Drive, With 1 in 50 Now Infected

More than 1 million people in England now have coronavirus, the British government said, as medics raced to vaccinate the most vulnerable against the rapidly spreading disease. Rocketing case rates from the new virus strain mean one person in every 50 in England now has Covid-19, while in London one in 30 is infected. Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled the statistics as he vowed to speed up the government’s vaccination program, in order eventually to lift the latest lockdown. He said 23% of all over-80s in England have now been given a dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, meaning some of those at the greatest risk are starting to get the protection they need.

5. Hong Kong Arrests U.S. Citizen, Dozens More Under Security Law

Hong Kong arrested dozens of opposition figures under a controversial national security law, an unprecedented crackdown that included an American lawyer, as authorities work to quash any dissent that remains in the former British colony. Police said they had swept up 53 people in the Wednesday operation and that around 1,000 officers had been dispatched to carry out the detentions. Those arrested included several prominent former lawmakers, with allegations centred on an informal July primary to choose candidates for legislative elections subsequently postponed by the government.

6. Faang Stocks Step Back as Democrats Advance in Senate

The Faang mega-cap stocks fell premarket Wednesday after Democrats won one of two seats in Georgia that they need to take control of the U.S. Senate. The other race remains too close to call. A blue sweep of Georgia that puts the Senate in Democratic control would be a “clear negative” for big tech, raising the potential for greater antitrust regulations in the sector. Facebook Inc. shares dropped 2.4% premarket, while Amazon.com Inc., Apple Inc., Netflix Inc., Alphabet Inc. and Microsoft Corp. fell less than 2%. Nasdaq 100 futures fell 1.4% while S&P 500 futures were trading lower by 0.3%.

7. Moderna’s Covid Vaccine Wins Backing of EU Drugs Regulator

Moderna Inc.’s Covid-19 vaccine won the backing of the European Union drugs regulator, clearing the way for a second weapon in the bloc’s fight to stem the pandemic. The recommendation was announced by the European Medicines Agency on Wednesday. The European Commission is working “at full speed” on the final clearance step, President Ursula Von Der Leyen said in a tweet. EU leaders are facing growing pressure to speed up clearance and deployment of vaccines to tame a virus resurgence across the continent. The 27-nation bloc began immunizations last week with the vaccine developed by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE, but the pace of the rollout has been uneven, prompting unfavourable comparisons with the U.K. and U.S.

8. China’s Bottled Water King Is Now Richer Than Warren Buffett

The chairman of Nongfu Spring Co., a bottled-water company that’s ubiquitous in China, is now richer than Warren Buffett as his fortune surged $13.5 billion since the start of the year to $91.7 billion on Tuesday. Zhong, 66, is now the sixth-wealthiest person on the planet. Nongfu shares jumped 18% in the first two trading days of 2021, taking the advance since their September listing to more than 200%. It’s only the second time a Chinese national has broken into the world’s Top 10 — property tycoon Wang Jianlin hit No. 8 in 2015 — and no one from the mainland has ever ranked this high. Nicknamed locally as the “Lone Wolf” for avoiding involvement in clubby business groups or politics, Zhong also took vaccine maker Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy Enterprise Co. public in April. The stock has soared more than 2,800%.

9. World’s Super-Rich Families Want More Hedge Funds

More than a third of 185 investment firms for wealthy clans plan to boost allocations amid the economic upheaval caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, according to a survey released Wednesday by BlackRock Inc. and Juniper Place, a London-based firm that helps asset managers raise capital. Family offices and other investors soured on hedge funds in recent years, bemoaning high fees and lacklustre returns. But the health crisis has given some of those managers a boost, particularly stock-pickers who benefited from aggressive bets on technology stocks and copious economic stimulus that drove equities to new heights.

10. Gulf Arabs Agree to Restore Qatar Ties But No Word on OPEC Role

Saudi Arabia and three other Arab states agreed to fully restore ties with neighbouring Qatar on Tuesday after a sustained U.S. push for the countries to unite against Iran. The breakthrough ending a dispute among some of the world’s top oil and gas producers that erupted in 2017 came just two weeks before President-elect Joe Biden takes office after pledging a new start with Tehran. Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt signed an accord with Qatar in a mirrored concert hall in the northwestern Saudi town of Al Ula during a summit of Gulf Cooperation Council leaders, bringing the regional split to an end — at least on paper. The same day, Saudi Arabia asserted its primacy over the global oil industry by surprising the market with a large crude production cut that secured its leadership among global producers and sent crude prices soaring. The Gulf leaders made no mention of whether Qatar would rejoin the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. The nation, which pumps around 650,000 barrels a day of crude in addition to gas, decided to leave the cartel at the start of 2019, in one of the most visible consequences of the fallout.

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Bitcoin Crashes as Crazy Rally Ends – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks Climb Toward Record While Bonds Decline

Stocks rose on speculation that widespread vaccine distribution and government stimulus will reignite economic growth and boost corporate profits. The dollar fell toward an almost three-year low. Markets shrugged off concern over a surge in global coronavirus cases and the threat of more stringent restrictions amid a rally in risk assets on the first trading day of 2021. The S&P 500 advanced toward another record, led by commodity, retail and technology companies.
The S&P 500 Index fell 0.1% as of early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index surged 1.3%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 0.8%.

2. Bitcoin’s Rally Comes to a Halt as Prices Fall Most Since March

Bitcoin fizzled in Monday trading as the famously volatile cryptocurrency pulled back after a spectacular new-year rally. Prices fell as much as 17% in the biggest drop since March before recovering. The losses are small in the context of Bitcoin’s broader rally, with a 50% jump in December alone. After a parabolic 2020, the digital currency had started the new year with a bang, surging as high as $34,000 and hitting all-time highs on Sunday. As ever in the world of crypto, it’s hard to pinpoint the proximate cause for the latest bout of volatility.

3. Tesla Poised for Expansion After Just Missing 2020 Target

Tesla came close to meeting its 500,000 vehicle-deliveries goals for 2020, setting the stage for a new year in which it’s expanding in China and poised to open new factories in Texas and Germany. The electric-car maker said on Jan. 2 it handed over 180,570 vehicles in the year’s final three months, the most for any quarter but just 450 vehicles shy of the half-million mark Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk sought for the year. Tesla has been ramping up output of its more mass-market models to meet rising global demand for battery-powered cars, with 2020’s total jumping 36% from the prior year. Musk and Tesla had a remarkable year, with the company joining the S&P 500 Index in December after five consecutive quarters of profit. The shares rallied 743% in 2020, giving the carmaker a $668.9 billion stock-market capitalization. Musk ended the year as the world’s second-richest person.

4. Dollar Stumbles Into 2021 as Bets on Global Recovery Dominate

The U.S. dollar kicked off the new year with a weak start as expectations for a global economic recovery bolstered demand for riskier assets. It lost ground against almost every major currency on Monday, pushing a gauge of its strength to the lowest level in nearly three years, after purchasing managers indexes across Europe and Asia showed factory activity gathering pace. The euro rose as much as 0.7% against the dollar toward a high last seen more than two years ago, while the greenback touched the weakest level against the Chinese yuan since June 2018. 

5. U.K. Mortgage Approvals Surge to 13-Year High

U.K. mortgage approvals reached the highest since 2007 in November as housing continued to boom in spite of a broader economic downturn. The housing market is surging largely because of a tax cut on house purchases that is worth as much as 15,000 pounds ($20,000) to buyers. That’s pushed prices higher in a nation where demand has outstripped supply for decades, while measures to control the pandemic have also led to a change in working habits, boosting interest in larger properties and those outside of city centres. The jump also reflects pent-up demand from the first lockdown, when the market was largely shuttered and mortgage approvals collapsed.

6. Hong Kong Extends School Closures Until Lunar New Year

Hong Kong pushed back the re-opening of classrooms for more than a month as part of government measures to stamp out the spread of the coronavirus. The suspension of in-person classes at kindergartens through high school, a restriction originally scheduled to expire Jan. 10, will be extended until the lunar new year holidays, which begin on Feb. 12. The city reported 53 new cases for the day, 43 of which were local. Hong Kong has been one of the most aggressive places worldwide to close schools despite research from the likes of the United Nations warning about the adverse consequences of doing so.

7. Johnson Faces Third Lockdown as Virus Surges Across U.K.

Boris Johnson’s government is on the brink of another pandemic U-turn with a third national lockdown looking increasingly inevitable. A surge in infections threatens to overwhelm hospitals and throws his plan to get English children back into classrooms into disarray on a day the British prime minister had hoped to celebrate the delivery of the first shots of a Covid-19 vaccine developed by the University of Oxford and AstraZeneca. Instead, the government is back in crisis mode, with new virus cases exceeding 50,000 a day and hospital admissions soaring past the peak of the first wave in April. Johnson on Monday warned that a “surging epidemic” means stricter rules are coming.

8. Treasuries Inflation Gauge Exceeds 2% for First Time Since 2018

Traders see U.S. inflation averaging at least 2% per year over the coming decade, the first time that expectations have climbed that high since 2018. The 10-year breakeven rate — a measure that draws on pricing for inflation-linked Treasuries — rose as high as 2.0025% Monday, a level last seen more than two years ago. The gauge has gained momentum as traders prepare for an uptick in the world economy in the wake of a deal on Brexit and congressional approval for additional virus-relief aid. The roll-out of vaccinations against the coronavirus has also fueled the move higher. The Federal Reserve is setting the tone for markets, making a renewed push to revive inflation — which has been too low for years. 

9. Oil Fluctuates With OPEC+ Gathering to Decide on Feb Output

Oil swung between gains and losses ahead of an OPEC+ meeting to decide whether the group can keep lifting output as a surging virus threatens the global energy demand recovery. OPEC and its allies are gathering to gauge whether the market has the appetite to absorb another increase in supply after they raised output by 500,000 barrels a day for January. The demand outlook for the first half of this year is mixed and there are still many downside risks to juggle, OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo said on Sunday. There are signs that lockdowns in some countries are set to be extended, potentially curbing oil demand. Germany is poised to prolong stricter lockdown measures beyond Jan. 10, while Japan is considering another state of emergency for the Tokyo area.

10. Israel Sets Pace on Vaccine Rollout; Schools Close: Virus Update

Global coronavirus infections climbed above 85 million, after daily cases in the U.S. soared to a record of nearly 300,000 following the New Year holiday. Germany is set to extend its lockdown, while Hong Kong won’t re-open classrooms for more than a month, as many nations opt to delay reopening schools. Japan’s prime minister is considering another state of emergency for the Tokyo area, with cases at records and a vaccine rollout more than a month away. Israel said it plans to vaccinate 70% to 80% of its population by April or May. The U.K. gave the first shots of AstraZeneca’s vaccine on Monday, in a race against a faster-spreading variant that’s prompted lockdowns across the country.

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2021 Begins with Record-High Virus Cases & Deaths – Top 10 Global News

1. S&P 500 Rallies to Close the Year at Record High

The S&P 500 Index and Dow Jones Industrial Average turned positive yesterday afternoon and ended at all-time highs. Volume was about 15% below average. Financial companies were among the best performers, while energy producers slumped. European stocks dipped. Markets in Japan, Germany and South Korea were shut for New Year’s Eve. In Asia, China’s benchmark CSI 300 Index closed at a five-year high as officials gave the green light to its first coronavirus vaccine for general public use and data showed a steady economic recovery. The offshore yuan strengthened to the highest since June 2018.

The S&P 500 Index rose 0.6% as of market close in New York.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 0.3%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was little changed.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index rose 0.1%.

2. Pandemic Exits 2020 With Record Cases Across Globe

One year after a mysterious pathogen first revealed itself in Wuhan, China, the Covid-19 pandemic enters 2021 with no signs of slowing down. Global daily deaths reached record highs this week, while U.S. infections approached 20 million, almost twice as many as second-worst hit country India. Countries from Japan to South Africa ended 2020 with record daily cases. In the U.S., New York state and Florida shattered their previous case records, while Texas saw a new high for hospitalizations. The U.S. added 227,616 cases on Dec. 31. China and Brazil became the latest to report infections of the new, highly transmissible virus strain.

3. Britain Leaps Into Unknown With Split From EU at Critical Moment

The U.K. completed its divorce from the European Union, leaving the bloc’s single market and customs regime more than four years after voting for Brexit and with the country gripped by a deepening crisis. The end of the transition period at 11 p.m. in London on New Year’s Eve launched the U.K. on a new path on its own, free from EU laws, able to strike trade agreements around the world and to reshape its economy. “This is an amazing moment for this country,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in his New Year’s message. “We have our freedom in our hands and it is up to us to make the most of it.” Yet many areas — including the critical financial services industry — still need to be agreed to, while in the background the coronavirus pandemic is engulfing more people than ever and another lockdown is weighing on the nation.

4. NYSE to Delist Chinese Telco Giants on U.S. Executive Order

The New York Stock Exchange said it will delist three Chinese corporations to comply with a U.S. executive order that imposed restrictions on companies identified as affiliated with the Chinese military. China Mobile Ltd., China Telecom Corp Ltd., China Unicom Hong Kong Ltd. will be suspended from trading between Jan. 7 and Jan. 11, and proceedings to delist them have started. The three Chinese companies have separate listings in Hong Kong. All generate the entirety of their revenue in China and have no meaningful presence in the U.S. Their shares are also thinly traded on the NYSE compared to their primary listings in Hong Kong, making this NYSE delisting more of a symbolic blow amid geopolitical friction between the U.S. and China.

5. Faster-Spreading Covid Strain Affects Young the Most

The new coronavirus variant that emerged in the U.K. is more transmissible and appears to affect a higher proportion of people under 20. The mutation of concern has “a substantial transmission advantage” and is linked to “epidemic growth in nearly all areas,” the scientists wrote. It can raise the virus’s reproduction rate, which indicates how many people one patient infects, by as much as 0.7. “This will make control more difficult and further accentuates the urgency of rolling out vaccination as quickly as possible,” said Neil Ferguson, a professor at Imperial who has worked on modelling the outbreak. Social distancing measures that worked against earlier strains of the virus were insufficient to control the spread of the new variant. The government had previously said the new strain was as much as 70% more transmissible than other versions.

6. Huawei Removes Tencent Games in Dispute Over Cooperation

Huawei Technologies Co. removed Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s games from its app store as some terms of cooperation are changing between the two technology giants. The action was taken after Tencent made a “big change” on Dec. 31 to how the companies work with each other. While most smartphones in China use Google’s Android operating system, the U.S. company’s Play Store isn’t available and apps are instead sold by mainland manufacturers and others. Huawei was the biggest smartphone maker in the country during the September quarter with 43% of shipments. Huawei said its decision followed an assessment by its legal team and was based on the premise that Tencent is unilaterally asking to halt cooperation.

7. Millions of Americans Are Calling In Sick, Stunting the Recovery

Amid the surge in the ranks of the unemployed during the pandemic, another crucial problem in the labour market has gone mostly overlooked: Workers are calling out sick in record numbers this year. Whether it’s because they have Covid-19 themselves, are worried about getting it or are taking care of someone who already has it, the number of workers who’ve missed days on the job has doubled in the pandemic. What’s more, unlike the jobless rate, which has steadily declined from its April peak, the rate of absenteeism has remained high. Almost 1.8 million workers were absent in November because of illness, nearly matching the record 2 million set back in April.

8. Tesla Sets Price of China-made Model Y SUV Below Competitors

Tesla will start deliveries of its China-made Model Y SUV this month to customers in the country, as it set the vehicle at a price below some of its rivals to maintain a competitive edge. The Model Y starts from 339,900 yuan ($52,074), while the Model Y Performance car will be from 369,900 yuan. Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk has said the Model Y has the potential to outsell all other vehicles it makes. Tesla also launched a modified Model 3 sedan which remained at a post-subsidy price of 249,900 yuan for the basic version. The Model 3 qualifies for China’s national subsidy for electric vehicles, while the Model Y doesn’t. China is Tesla’s largest market after the U.S., with sales topping 120,000 units in 2020.

9. Oman Plans 2021 Borrowing as Oil Price, Virus Batter Economy

Oman’s government will finance most of its budget shortfall in 2021 by borrowing to plug a fiscal gap battered by a decline in oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic. The Persian Gulf state is looking into borrowing that will cover 73%, or 1.6 billion rials ($4.2 billion), of the country’s 2.2 billion-rial shortage, with the remaining 600 million rials to be drawn from its reserves. The government based its 2021 budget plan on an oil price of $45 per barrel. Oman has taken measures such as reduced spending and plans to impose a 5% value-added tax in 2021.

10. Singapore and Malaysia Terminate High-Speed Rail Project

The two countries were unable to reach an agreement on the project after Malaysia sought changes because of the pandemic’s economic impact. Malaysia will have to compensate Singapore for costs already incurred. The announcement came just after a Dec. 31 deadline for the second and final extension of the suspension of the project, which was first mooted a decade ago and given the green light in 2013. The on-again, off-again 350 kilometres (218 miles) high-speed rail link would have cut travel time between the centres down to about 90 minutes versus more than four hours by car. The service was due to start in 2026.

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Ambani loses Richest Man of Asia Title – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks Steady Near All-Time Highs; Dollar Dips

Markets are ending a tumultuous year on a quiet note, with global stock indexes holding near record highs and the dollar at the lowest in two years. U.S. equity futures dipped on the last day of 2020 and all of the industries in the Europe Stoxx 600 were in the red. Markets in Japan, Germany and South Korea were shut for New Year’s Eve. In Asia, China’s benchmark CSI 300 Index closed at a five-year high. The yuan strengthened to the highest since June 2018.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index dipped 0.1% as of early morning London time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index fell 0.3%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.2%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index climbed 0.4%.

2. Bitcoin Touches $29,000 for Another Record High

Bitcoin vaulted above $29,000 to reach yet another record level on the last day of 2020, in a fitting end to a groundbreaking year for the world’s largest digital currency. It has advanced almost 50% in December, on track for its biggest monthly gain since May 2019. Bitcoin has now quadrupled in value this year amid the global coronavirus pandemic, while the wider Bloomberg Galaxy Crypto Index tracking the largest digital currencies is up about 280% as rival coins such as Ether have also rallied.

3. Slow Vaccine Campaign Raises Doubts of U.S. Dysfunction

U.S. health officials acknowledged that a Covid-19 immunization campaign is crawling out of the starting gate, raising the prospect that the nation’s all-in bet on vaccines could be afflicted by the same dysfunction that hobbled other measures to contain the pandemic. Only about 2.7 million Americans had been vaccinated as of Wednesday evening in New York. With one day remaining in the year, that represented roughly 13.5% of the U.S.’s stated goal of immunizing 20 million Americans by the end of 2020 — a number already repeatedly reduced. The task of delivering shots that could end a pandemic that has killed 341,000 U.S. residents is taxing a largely private medical system designed to maximize profit rather than deliver public health. Governments and institutions are struggling with complex logistics to keep the shots cold, organizing cohorts of people to receive them and persuading those made sceptical by a flood of online disinformation.

4. Homebuyers in the U.S. Face Worst Affordability Squeeze in 12 Years

Record-low mortgage rates were supposed to make it easier for homebuyers. Instead, they’ve helped push affordability to a 12-year low. Buyers in the fourth quarter needed to spend almost 30% of the average wage to afford a typical house, the biggest share for any three-month period since 2008. Low borrowing costs, now below 3% for a 30-year loan, have spurred a buying frenzy, driving up prices across the country as shoppers compete for a shrinking supply of listings. During the pandemic, prices have increased faster than earnings, leaping by double digits in 79% of the 499 counties included in the report. More than half of those counties are now less affordable than their historic averages.

5. Gold Heads for Best Year in a Decade With Dollar on the Ropes

Gold is set for the biggest annual advance in a decade after a tumultuous year, with gains this month aided by the dollar’s decline to the lowest level since April 2018. Bullion hit a record in August as investors feared an unprecedented wave of stimulus by central banks and governments would lead to currency debasement and inflation. Holdings in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds set an all-time high in October. While prices dropped as the roll-out of vaccines injected optimism into financial markets, the dollar’s continued weakness has helped support gold into the year-end.

6. U.K. Tells Public to Stay Home for New Year’s Eve Celebrations

Everyone in England should stay at home when they celebrate the New Year on Thursday night, the U.K. government said. People were asked to act as if they have Covid-19 to avoid spreading the virus. The advice is universal and applies to everyone regardless of which of England’s pandemic restriction tiers their region is in. The advice coincides with new rules putting 78% of the country’s population in the strictest tier 4 pandemic curbs, banning almost all household mixing and closing non-essential shops. While ministers say the rollout of vaccines will allow the country to start getting back normal by spring 2021, they have also warned the weeks ahead may be the hardest yet.

7. Bubble Tea Chain Naixue Raises New Funds at $2 Billion Value

The owner of bubble tea chain Nayuki, also known as Naixue’s Tea in Chinese, has completed a new funding round that values the company at nearly $2 billion. Shenzhen Pindao Restaurant Management Co. has raised more than $100 million in a Series C funding round led by private equity firm PAG. Billionaire Jack Ma’s Yunfeng Capital is also among the investors in the latest round. The bubble tea chain owner is considering an initial public offering in Hong Kong after the coronavirus outbreak clouded its earlier plans for a U.S. listing. The firm will spend the fresh funds on product research and supply chain digitization, while it has no IPO plan in the near term.

8. Tokyo Sets New Case Record; New Strain Spreads: Virus Update

Global deaths from Covid-19 passed 18 lakh. Tokyo recorded a record number of new infections, and Japan warned it could consider a state of emergency if the new outbreak can’t be contained. Cities that had gone weeks without new infections, including Beijing and Melbourne, are now reporting clusters, and the new, highly transmissible virus strain was found in Singapore and California. Countries around the world tightened border controls. The EU said it would bar travellers from the U.K. after Britain’s official exit on Jan. 1. Travel between Sydney and Melbourne will be blocked as of Jan. 2; both cities are seeing a resurgence in cases. Chinese authorities are urging people to stay home during the Lunar New Year holidays, which begin Feb. 11.

9. Putin Battles to Sell Russia’s Vaccine in New Rift With West

Russia is accusing the West of maligning its achievements in the global race to defeat Covid-19 as attempts to win key markets for its Sputnik V vaccine run up against the demands of regulators. Like neighbouring China, which is struggling to reassure nations testing its vaccines, Russia’s drive to convert what it calls a scientific triumph into geopolitical dividends has hit unexpected headwinds. President Vladimir Putin has pushed the inoculation in calls with other world leaders since touting Russia’s approval of Sputnik V in August as the globe’s first Covid-19 vaccine. But many countries’ regulators have been unwilling to give Sputnik V fast-track approval — even as they welcome U.S. and European vaccines that first completed comprehensive trials.

10. Ambani is no longer Asia’s richest man

Zhong Shanshan is a private billionaire who’s rarely quoted in the press. Now, after an improbable career spanning journalism, mushroom farming and health care, he’s become Asia’s richest person, eclipsing India’s Mukesh Ambani and a group of Chinese tech titans including Jack Ma. Zhong’s net worth has surged $70.9 billion this year to $77.8 billion, making him the 11th-richest person on the planet, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It’s one of the fastest accumulations of wealth in history, and all the more remarkable considering that until this year he was little known outside of China. Zhong, 66, isn’t involved in politics and his business interests aren’t entwined with other rich families such as the property tycoons, which is why he’s known locally as the “Lone Wolf.” He owes his success to two unrelated fields. He took vaccine maker Beijing Wantai Biological Pharmacy Enterprise Co public in April, then months later Nongfu Spring Co, a maker of bottled water, became one of Hong Kong’s hottest listings. Nongfu shares have jumped 155% since their debut, and Wantai’s are up more than 2,000%.

HAPPY NEW YEAR, READERS!

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Human-Run Funds Beat Quant Funds in 2020 – Top 10 Global News

1. U.S. Stocks Rise on Vaccine Optimism; Dollar Falls

U.S. stocks climbed as vaccine progress boosted optimism in one of the final trading sessions of 2020. The dollar continued its slide, weakening to the lowest in 2 1/2 years. Energy shares were among the best performers in S&P 500 Index. Travel and leisure companies advanced in Europe after the U.K. approved a coronavirus shot by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford. Volumes were light during the holiday week, with the Stoxx 600 Index seeing about half of the usual activity as it edged lower. Bitcoin extended its record-breaking rally, trading near $28,000.

The S&P 500 Index gained 0.4% as of 10 a.m. in New York.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 0.1%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index climbed 1.5%.

2. AstraZeneca-Oxford Covid Vaccine Gains First Clearance With U.K. Nod

AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford’s Covid-19 vaccine won U.K. clearance, marking the first approval worldwide for a shot that will be key to mass immunizations despite continuing questions over its efficacy. The vaccine will be prioritized for the country’s most vulnerable groups, with shots starting Monday, according to the government. It’s the second coronavirus injection to be cleared for emergency use in the U.K. after one from Pfizer and BioNTech was authorized in early December. The move will help the U.K. ramp up vaccinations as a surge in coronavirus infections that’s fueled by a new strain puts growing pressure on hospitals.

3. Human-Run Hedge Funds Trounce Quants in Covid Year

After years of being outgunned and outclassed by computer-driven quantitative strategies, human stock-pickers climbed back on top in 2020, helped by aggressive bets in technology and the flood of central bank money that buoyed markets. The dizzying gyrations of the pandemic-stricken year humbled even the most sophisticated of quants — notably behemoths Renaissance Technologies and Two Sigma — whose trading models were thrown off by swings their computers had never seen before. Overall, human-run funds put up some of their best numbers in a decade, with several boldfaced names, including Tiger, Coatue and D1, posting returns in excess of 35%. Whether by luck or by skill, they showed that in this most unusual of years, stock-pickers could still stand up to the seemingly inexorable rise of the machines.

4. England Faces Wider Lockdown in Race to Control New Strain

More areas of England are set to be placed under lockdown, as the new coronavirus strain puts growing pressure on hospitals. People living in London, Essex and Kent should behave as if they have Covid-19, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said in an interview with LBC radio on Wednesday. The spread of the new variant means more parts of the country will be placed under toughest tier 4 lockdown restrictions, Hancock said. He will set out details in a statement to Parliament on Wednesday afternoon. His comments come amid growing fears the National Health Service is at risk of being overwhelmed after the U.K. reported more than 50,000 new cases on Tuesday, the highest daily figure since the start of the pandemic. The number of people being treated in the hospital for coronavirus already exceeds the peak recorded during the first wave of infections in spring.

5. Republicans Rebuff Trump, Democrats by Blocking $2,000 Checks

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell on Tuesday blocked an attempt by Democrats to force quick action increasing direct stimulus payments to $2,000 as President Donald Trump warned that failing to act now amounted to a “death wish” by Republicans. McConnell objected to a motion by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer to approve by unanimous consent a stimulus-checks bill that passed the House on Monday. He also blocked a motion by Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont to vote on the stimulus checks immediately after the Senate votes on overriding Trump’s veto of a key defence policy bill.

6. Johnson’s Brexit Deal Clears Its First Parliamentary Hurdle

Boris Johnson’s Brexit deal cleared the House of Commons, putting the U.K.’s trade agreement with the European Union on course to become law within hours. Members of parliament voted 521 to 73 to approve the accord after they were recalled from their Christmas break for an emergency session on Wednesday. The House of Lords, the unelected upper chamber, will vote on the legislation later in the evening. With the main opposition Labour Party backing the bill, the legislation is almost certain to become law in a single day, 24 hours before the U.K. leaves the EU’s single market and customs union.

7. U.S.’s First Case of U.K. Mutation Sparks Search for Source

A 20-something man from Colorado is the first American known to be infected with a new variant of coronavirus that emerged this fall in the U.K., raising concern that a more transmissible strain could spread widely across the country. The Colorado State Laboratory confirmed the patient had the mutated form of the virus, known as B.1.1.7, and informed the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The infected man has no recent travel history, challenging health officials to find the possible source of infection and identify others who may be at risk. He is currently in isolation in Elbert County, located halfway between Denver and Colorado Springs.

8. EU, China Give Political Nod to Market-Opening Investment Pact

The European Union and China announced the political approval of an agreement to open the Chinese market further to EU investors, marking a major step in talks that began in 2013. The breakthrough in negotiations on an EU-China investment deal signals the bloc’s determination to focus on economic opportunities in Asia even amid criticism of Beijing’s record on human rights. The accord could enter into force in early 2022. For the EU, the deal risks irking the incoming U.S. administration, which has urged the Europeans to consult with them over China’s economic practices. Failure by the U.S. and EU to forge a common position would give Beijing an advantage as western leaders reassess geopolitical relations in the wake of Donald Trump’s presidency.

9. Pending Sales of U.S. Existing Homes Decline for a Third Month

A gauge of U.S. pending home sales fell for the third consecutive month in November, suggesting higher prices and limited inventory are slowing momentum in the housing market despite record-low borrowing costs. The National Association of Realtors’ index of contract signings to purchase previously owned homes declined 2.6% from the prior month to 125.7, according to data released Tuesday. The drop in the index from the prior month shows more tempered activity in the housing market as prices continue to climb amid lean inventory. Still, the pending sales gauge remains well above pre-pandemic levels, indicating still-elevated demand as buyers seek more space.

10. Qatar Wealth Fund Invests $125 Million in Battery Firm Fluence

Fluence, a global battery storage joint venture of Siemens AG and AES Corp., said it reached an agreement with the sovereign wealth fund of Qatar for a $125 million investment. The funding will give the Qatar Investment Authority a 12% stake in Fluence and values the battery company at more than $1 billion. Siemens and AES will retain a 44% stake each following completion of the deal, the companies said. The global energy storage business is expected to boom in the coming decades as utilities will look to batteries to backstop an increasing amount of intermittent solar and wind power.

Readers!
Thank you for reading the article. Apologies on the slight delay in posting today as I was travelling in the evening with no access to the internet.
Happy New Year!

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Merry Brexmas! EU-UK Trade Deal Sees Light – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks & Equity Futures Climb; Bonds Retreat

U.S. equity futures and global stocks pushed higher after President Donald Trump backed away from earlier threats and signed a coronavirus aid package. S&P 500 Index contracts climbed after Trump’s surprise approval of the combined $2.3 trillion Covid-19 relief and government funding package. Germany’s DAX Index rose to a record and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index was up 0.3%. Bonds retreated and the dollar ticked lower.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index rose 0.7% as of early morning in New York.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.8%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.3%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index was little changed.

2. EU-U.K. Trade Deal Gets Nod From Bloc’s Envoys in Brussels

European Union ambassadors gave the go-ahead to the bloc’s draft free-trade agreement with the U.K., paving the way for the deal to take effect on Jan. 1. “EU ambassadors have unanimously approved the provisional application of the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement as of January 1, 2021,” Sebastian Fischer, a Brussels-based spokesman for the German government, whose country currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said in a Twitter post on Monday. The thumbs-up by EU member-country envoys sets the stage for formal approval by the 27-nation bloc’s governments on Tuesday and for a vote by the U.K. House of Commons on Dec. 30.

3. Bitcoin on Longest Winning Run Since 2019 – Tops $28,000

Bitcoin is on track for its longest monthly winning streak in more than a year after touching a record above $28,000 over the weekend. The largest cryptocurrency reached an all-time high of $28,365 on Sunday before paring some of the advances. The run of outsized returns over October, November and December so far is the longest such stretch since mid-2019. “My sense is we’re very close to a top — we could hit $30,000 though,” said Vijay Ayyar, head of business development with crypto exchange Luno in Singapore. “We should definitely see a pullback, but the magnitude is probably lesser. We might only see 10% to 15% drops.” The cryptocurrency has advanced about 270% this year.

4. Europe Rushes to Boost Vaccine Output to Speed Pandemic Exit

Germany is pushing to ramp up production of Covid-19 vaccines as Europe faces pressure to close the gap with Britain and the U.S. in a bid to end the pandemic. With inoculations gradually getting started across the region, authorities are concerned about the slow pace of the rollout could force longer lockdowns and cause more economic damage for months to come. “We’re working intensely on having additional production here in Germany soon,” Jens Spahn, the country’s health minister, said Monday on ZDF television, adding that more capacity could be available at a facility in Marburg as soon as February. “That would increase the amount considerably.” The sense of urgency has grown amid concerns about a faster-spreading strain that emerged in the U.K. and has been found in Spain and elsewhere in Europe.

5. Turkey Hikes Minimum Wage by 22%; Short of Labor Demands

Turkey’s minimum wage will rise 22% next year, challenging efforts to keep down inflation while dismaying unions that found it insufficient to address the economic hardships caused by the coronavirus. The monthly net minimum wage will be 2,826 liras ($377), Labor Minister Zehra Zumrut Selcuk said in Ankara on Monday. About half of all workers in the country of 83 million people earn a monthly salary at or near minimum wage. Turkey’s largest labour confederation, Turk-Is, which represented workers at the wage negotiations, called the increase “inadequate.” But unions had no immediate plans to combat the government’s decision.

6. India Stocks Climb to Fresh Records on Steady Foreign Inflows

India stocks rose as inflows from foreign investors headed for a record quarter. The S&P BSE Sensex climbed 0.8% to 47,353.75 in Mumbai. The NSE Nifty 50 Index advanced 0.9%. Both gauges closed at fresh all-time highs. Indian equities have surged as part of a global shift by investors into emerging markets as countries begin rolling out vaccines. The inflows have shown little sign of slowing for the holiday season, as investors poured about $6.5 billion into the market this month. That would be the second-highest monthly total on record.

7. Alibaba Probe Stirs Global Worry, $200 Billion China Tech Rout

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. led a second day of frenetic selling among China’s largest tech firms, driven by fears that antitrust scrutiny will spread beyond Jack Ma’s internet empire and engulf the country’s most powerful corporations. Alibaba and its three largest rivals — Tencent Holdings Ltd., food delivery giant Meituan and JD.com Inc. — have shed nearly $200 billion over two sessions since Thursday when regulators revealed an investigation into alleged monopolistic practices at Ma’s signature company. That marked the formal start of the Communist Party’s crackdown on not just Alibaba but also, potentially, the wider and increasingly influential tech sphere. Alibaba fell 8% Monday, shedding $270 billion of value since its October peak. Tencent and Meituan both tumbled more than 6%. 

8. Oil Gains on U.S. Stimulus and Covid-19 Vaccine Optimism

Oil climbed as the U.K. is poised to grant regulatory approval to another Covid-19 vaccine and as the U.S. passed its stimulus bill into law. Futures in New York are trading 1.2% higher after dipping in early trading. Britain’s drug regulator could clear the shot produced by AstraZeneca Plc and the University of Oxford for use as early as this week. Crude reversed losses of as much as 1.5% after President Donald Trump signed the long-awaited bill containing $900 billion of virus relief, having previously criticized the stimulus package. The bill’s approval weakened the dollar, raising demand for dollar-denominated commodities, and also raised hopes of higher oil consumption in the future.

9. Drugmakers Agree to Halve Prices to Secure Access to China

Drugmakers from AstraZeneca Plc and GlaxoSmithKline to BeiGene agreed to cut prices on some of their newest drugs in China by an average of 51% in order to be covered by the country’s national insurance fund. A total of 119 new therapies — treating ailments from pulmonary diseases and diabetes to cancers and lupus — were added for coverage by the state-run medical safety net after drawn-out negotiations, the National Healthcare Security Administration said in a notice posted on its website Monday. Companies are eager to get their treatments on the list even at steep discounts to gain access to the world’s second-biggest market for pharmaceuticals.

10. Germany Plans Vaccine Boost; Norway’s Quarantine: Virus Update

Germany is seeking to expand production of Covid-19 shots to help bolster Europe’s vaccination program. The sense of urgency has grown amid concerns about a faster-spreading strain that emerged in the U.K. and has since been found elsewhere in Europe. U.S. President Donald Trump signed a bill containing $900 billion in pandemic relief. Top U.S. health officials warned of a post-Christmas surge in infections, as cases slowed amid scattered holiday reporting. Singapore began relaxing virus rules Monday as the city-state moves into the final phase of curbs. Indonesia imposed a temporary ban on all foreigners from visiting the country, while Taiwan will increase the quarantine period for flight crews to seven days.

CURATED FROM ECONOMIC TIMES, THE NEW YORK TIMES, AND BLOOMBERG.

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China Probes Alibaba over Monopoly – Top 10 Global News

1. U.S. Futures Rise; Pound Gains on Brexit Deal Hope

U.S. futures climbed with European stocks and the pound jumped as investors awaited the unveiling of a post-Brexit trade accord after both sides earlier agreed on an outline of the deal. The Stoxx 600 Index edged higher ahead of an expected press conference from Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Thursday, which was delayed over last-minute haggling. Negotiators worked through the night putting the finishing touches on the historic pact, which will formally complete Britain’s separation from the European Union. The pound rose to the highest in about a week, while the euro was steady. Contracts on the S&P 500 Index nudged higher and most Asian stocks gained. Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. sank more than 8% in Hong Kong after China kicked off an investigation into alleged monopolistic practices at the tech giant.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index rose 0.1% as of early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index increased 0.2%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.5%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index gained 0.4%.

2. GOP Blocks Bid for $2,000 Payments Trump Demanded

House Republicans blocked Democrats’ attempt to meet President Donald Trump’s demand to pay most Americans $2,000 to help weather the coronavirus pandemic. Republicans objected to the bill House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer sought to pass by unanimous consent Thursday to replace the $600 payments in the latest pandemic relief legislation with the $2,000 payments. Democrats will try again with a roll call vote on a new bill Dec. 28, when the House also plans a vote to override Trump’s veto on the National Defense Authorization Act.

3. China Targets Jack Ma’s Alibaba Empire in Monopoly Probe

China kicked off an investigation into alleged monopolistic practices at Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and summoned affiliate Ant Group Co. to a high-level meeting over financial regulations, escalating scrutiny over the twin pillars of billionaire Jack Ma’s internet empire. The probe announced Thursday marks the formal start of the Communist Party’s crackdown on the crown jewel of Ma’s sprawling dominion, spanning everything from e-commerce to logistics and social media. The pressure on Ma is central to a broader effort to rein in an increasingly influential internet sphere: Draft anti-monopoly rules released November gave the government wide latitude to restrain entrepreneurs who until recently enjoyed unusual freedom to expand their realms.

4. New Virus Strain’s Transmissibility to Cause More Deaths

The mutated coronavirus strain that’s been spreading in the U.K. appears to be more contagious and will likely lead to higher levels of hospitalizations and deaths next year. The variant is 56% more transmissible than other strains. There’s no clear evidence that it results in more or less severe disease. The U.K. government had previously said the mutated variant appears to be as much as 70% more transmissible than other circulating strains. Additionally, it has almost two dozen mutations that may affect proteins made by the coronavirus. That has raised concern that tests, treatments and vaccines that just started rolling out might be less effective, though Europe’s health regulator said the variant probably isn’t different enough from earlier ones to elude Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE’s shot. Countries including Australia, Denmark and Singapore have also discovered the strain.

5. Brexit Deal Gets Held Up by Last-Minute Haggling Over Fish

U.K. and European Union negotiators are locked in talks in Brussels over the final details of a historic post-Brexit trade accord, with both sides engaged in last-minute haggling over fishing rights. While the outline terms of the deal, including broad fishing quotas, were agreed on Wednesday, negotiators have hit a last-minute disagreement over the precise number of each species EU boats will be able to catch in U.K. waters. It isn’t clear how long it will now take for the discussions to reach a conclusion. In a sign the deal may only emerge late on Christmas Eve, EU ambassadors, who are required to scrutinize any agreement after it is made public, were stood down on Thursday afternoon and told to make themselves available over the holiday period.

6. China’s Rebound Continues With Exports and Commodities Booming

China’s economic recovery continued in December, underpinned by booming global demand for exports, rising commodity prices and a rallying stock market. China was already pulling further ahead of other major economies in November, with domestic demand growing, foreign investment rising and record export demand propelling growth even as other major nations struggle amid soaring virus cases. With the Communist Party signalling there won’t be a sudden withdrawal of monetary and fiscal assistance, there’s growing confidence for a healthy expansion in 2021.

7. U.K. Strain 56% More Infectious; Israel Locks Down: Virus Update

China said it would pause flights to and from the U.K., which yesterday imposed tougher regulations across a swath of England in an effort to rein in a new strain of coronavirus. A study showed that the variant is 56% more transmissible than other strains, although there’s no clear evidence that it results in more or less severe disease. Pfizer Inc. and partner BioNTech SE will double the supply of their vaccines to the U.S., which said it has administered a total of more than 1 million shots in 10 days. California became the first U.S. state to surpass 2 million infections after a jump in cases. Israel’s cabinet approved a third national lockdown of as long as four weeks.

8. Robinhood Financial Hit With Class-Action Suit for Selling Stock Orders

Robinhood Financial LLC was sued in a proposed class action for allegedly failing to inform clients it was selling their stock orders to trading firms and effectively charging back-door commission fees. The complaint filed Wednesday in San Francisco federal court follows the company’s $65 million settlement last week with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over similar allegations. While Robinhood touted “commission-free” trading on its platform, it didn’t disclose that it relied extensively on “payment for order flow,” collecting payment from market makers in exchange for executing trades, according to the suit.

9. Turkey Central Banker Tightens Again in Boost to Credibility

Turkey’s central bank governor delivered another meaty interest-rate hike, bolstering credibility with investors after he pledged to tighten policy when needed to keep prices in check. The Monetary Policy Committee led by Governor Naci Agbal lifted the one-week repo rate to 17% from 15% on Thursday. The lira extended gains against the dollar and was trading 0.9% higher. The Borsa Istanbul 100 Index of equities rose as much as 0.8% after the decision. The bank pledged in its rates decision to maintain a tight stance until it sees “a permanent fall in inflation,” citing risks from a weak lira, domestic demand and commodity prices including food costs.

10. Dover Truck Backups Persist on Christmas Eve Despite Progress

The U.K.’s main trucking gateway to the European Union remained backed up for the fifth day, despite progress moving traffic through the Port of Dover. Thousands of truckers were stuck in logjams around Britain’s busiest ferry port on Christmas Eve, separated from families, many as far away as Poland. Some 4,000 trucks alone were crowded onto the site of Manston Airport, a disused airfield in Kent being used to conduct Covid-19 testing required before they can board ferries to Calais, France. Some 170 military personnel tested truckers overnight, enabling their journeys to continue into Europe. France reopened its borders on Wednesday after a two-day blockade, on the condition that drivers have proof of a negative test.

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New Covid Strain Shakes Global Markets – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks, Futures Slump on Virus Curbs; Bonds Rally

Stocks and futures were a sea of red on Monday as a new variant of the coronavirus in the U.K. caused chaos ahead of the Christmas holiday, with regional neighbours suspending travel. Energy and travel shares dragged the Stoxx 600 Index down 2.5% as Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium and France closed their borders to the U.K. The dollar gained the most since June. In the U.S., equity futures pointed to sharp declines at the open even after Congressional leaders reached a deal on spending to support the economy. Losses were concentrated in energy producers and stocks that would benefit from a return to more normal economic activity.  The pound slumped by the most since March as an official said “significant differences” remain in Britain’s trade talks with the European Union. Crude oil fell by more than 3%.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index sank 1.8% as of early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index sank 2.6%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dipped 0.6%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index dipped 1.1%.

2. Congress Poised for Vote on $900 Billion Pandemic Relief Plan

The House and Senate are set to vote Monday on a roughly $900 billion pandemic relief bill that would be the second-biggest economic rescue measure in the nation’s history. The aid package will be attached to a $1.4 trillion measure to fund government operations through the end of the fiscal year, and congressional leaders said they expect the legislation to easily pass both chambers. The White House said President Donald Trump would sign it. The deal followed more than a week of furious negotiations sparked by a group of Democratic and Republican senators who drew up their own compromise proposal and urged their leaders to act.

3. Tesla Slides in First Day of Trading on the S&P 500 Index

Tesla’s shares fell as much as 6.4% in premarket trading on its first day after being added to the S&P 500 Index, as the broader market slid and the stock retraced gains from Friday when tens of millions of shares were purchased by index-fund managers. Futures contracts on the S&P 500 plunged 2.5%, following European stocks lower after several major countries moved to suspend travel from the U.K. amid concerns about a new strain of Covid-19. Tesla has catapulted 731% this year in anticipation of the historic inclusion, making it the biggest company ever to be added to the benchmark.

4. Biden Will Inherit a Strong Hand Against Xi, Thanks to Trump

Joe Biden will be sworn in as president after Trump’s administration spent years ramping up pressure on China, including levying tariffs on $370 billion in imports, getting Canada to place a Chinese executive for Huawei Technologies Co. under house arrest, threatening access to U.S. capital markets and blaming the Communist Party for the scale of the Covid-19 outbreak. President Trump’s pressure campaign continued last week, as the administration blacklisted more than 60 Chinese companies, limiting their ability to get U.S. technology, in order “to protect national security”.

5. JPMorgan Says Flows to Into Major Crypto Fund Are Key to Bitcoin’s Outlook

The odds of a Bitcoin correction would increase if the flows into the world’s largest traded cryptocurrency fund slow significantly, according to strategists at JPMorgan Chase & Co. The Grayscale Bitcoin Trust’s assets under management have climbed to $13.1 billion from $2 billion at the start of December last year, amid a tripling in the digital currency’s price so far in 2020. Inflows into the fund are running at about $1 billion per month, the strategists wrote in a note Friday. Bitcoin reached an all-time high of $24,291.38 on Sunday. The cryptocurrency’s backers argue it’s gaining ground among longer-term investors as a hedge against dollar weakness and risks such as higher inflation. Others claim an unsustainable speculative fervour, exacerbated by trend-following quant funds, lies behind much of the rally in Bitcoin and other digital assets.

6. Hong Kong May Consider Unprecedented Virus Curbs, Including Curfews

Unprecedented virus control measures including curfews and shutdowns of non-essential businesses may be considered in Hong Kong, according to a government health adviser, as the city continues to see a high number of locally-transmitted cases and the holiday season looms. Limiting the number of people per household allowed to shop for groceries, shuttering all businesses deemed non-essential and shortening mall operating hours are among the curbs that may have to be imposed to prevent another Covid-19 wave.

7. France Halts U.K. Freight Over Virus Alarm, Rocking Supplies

Britain’s biggest port stopped all traffic heading to Europe, triggering delays to food supplies after the discovery of a new variant of the virus prompted a wave of countries to ban travel from the U.K. The escalating crisis prompted Boris Johnson to convene a meeting of the government’s emergency committee on Monday in a bid to keep goods flowing. The concern is focused on links with France, which suspended inbound travel from the U.K., including freight, for 48 hours starting midnight Sunday. The disruption comes at a critical time for Johnson’s government, which is still negotiating the terms of post-Brexit trade with the European Union. It’s also battling a surge in coronavirus infections which forced ministers to put London and much of southeast England into lockdown over the weekend, heaping more misery on businesses in the critical pre-Christmas period.

8. Pound Plummets as Virus Threatens U.K.’s Supply Chains With EU

The pound had its worst day since the coronavirus roiled global markets in March, as a new strain of the pathogen disrupted the U.K.’s supply chains with Europe. Sterling tumbled 2.5% to as low as $1.3188 as Britain’s biggest port in Dover stopped all traffic heading to the continent, and after another Brexit deadline went past without results. The currency’s one-week implied volatility is the highest for a Christmas period in more than a decade. Expectations of monetary easing by the Bank of England mounted, with money markets bringing forward bets for a 10-basis-point interest-rate cut to September, compared with March 2022 on Friday. Ten-year bonds rallied, with yields slipping as much as nine basis points, and the FTSE 100 share index fell as much as 3.3%. 

9. Saudi Arabia, Oman Suspend Foreign Travel Over Mutant Virus

Saudi Arabia and Oman halted international flights and closed their borders for a week over fears about the fast-spreading new strain of the coronavirus. State-run Saudi Press Agency said the kingdom may extend the suspension for another week depending on the nature of the virus spread. Oman halted passenger traffic through its air, land and seaports for a week starting Tuesday, but freight services are exempt from the ban. The U.K. has warned that the new virus strain is “out of control,” prompting countries including France and Germany to suspend travel from Britain. 

10. Dubai Stocks Fall Most in Seven Months on Travel Worries

Stocks in Dubai slumped the most since May on fears of further travel restrictions after a new variant of the coronavirus was found in the U.K. A travel corridor between Britain and Dubai was expected to help air traffic on the route to climb by a third this month. Any anticipated boost to the city’s struggling tourism sector could also be threatened by several countries including neighbouring Saudi Arabia imposing fresh curbs.

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Global Investors Dump Indian Bonds – Top 10 Global News

1. Futures Steady After S&P Record; Dollar Rebounds

A more sober mood settled on markets Friday amid fresh U.S.-China tensions and little progress on a federal spending deal in Washington. The dollar rose for the first day in five. S&P 500 futures steadied after the index closed at an all-time high on Thursday, as Congress rushed to complete a pandemic-relief deal. In a sign of renewed friction between Washington and Beijing, the U.S. Commerce Department announced it’s blacklisting Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. and more than 60 other Chinese companies “to protect U.S. national security.” U.S. stocks may also be more volatile than usual today with options and futures on indexes and equities set to expire.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index were little changed at early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dipped 0.1%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index sank 0.4%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index declined 0.3%.

2. U.S. Blacklists More Than 60 Chinese Firms, Including SMIC

The U.S. Commerce Department announced it’s blacklisting Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp. and more than 60 other Chinese companies “to protect U.S. national security.” “This action stems from China’s military-civil fusion doctrine and evidence of activities between SMIC and entities of concern in the Chinese military-industrial complex,” the Commerce Department said in a statement. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross confirmed the move in a Friday morning interview with Fox Business. It was reported first by Reuters overnight. Shares in China’s top chipmaker slid 5.2% Friday in Hong Kong on the news.

3. Global Investors Are Dumping Indian Bonds Like Never Before

Even when viewed in isolation, the $14 billion outflows from India’s bond market in 2020 is remarkable: Foreign investors have never sold so much in a single year. That they did so at a time when Chinese bonds are attracting record foreign inflows underscores just how frustrated some money managers have become with the pace of capital-market reforms by Narendra Modi’s government. While China’s steady progress on bond-market liberalization has earned it a spot in benchmark indexes and helped lure $119 billion of inflows this year, India still has some of Asia’s toughest restrictions on foreign funds. The country’s failure thus far to join China in global debt indexes is adding to investor concerns about meagre inflation-adjusted yields and a widening fiscal deficit.

4. EU Gives Johnson Fishing Ultimatum as Brexit Reaches Climax

The European Union’s chief Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, warned British Prime Minister Boris Johnson that he will have to accept limits on access to the single market in return for greater control overfishing — or face no deal. After his British counterpart issued a statement on Thursday night describing the talks as “blocked,” Barnier said a deal could be struck if both sides make “a real effort.” But, in a speech to the European Parliament on Friday, he gave a stark assessment of the ultimatum the EU is giving to the British: access to the EU’s single market will be conditional on keeping British fishing waters open to boats from the bloc.

5. Lloyds Bank Scraps All Bonuses for 2020 After Pandemic Hammers Profit

Lloyds Banking Group is cancelling bonuses for all staff this year as the Covid-19 pandemic weighs heavily on its earnings. A spokesperson for the bank confirmed it will not pay out any group performance share awards in light of expected profitability in 2020. Lloyds expects to set aside at least 4.5 billion pounds ($6 billion) this year for loans likely to fail in the economic turmoil that’s accompanied the pandemic. While it swung to a profit in the third quarter, full-year net income is set to be sharply lower at about 1.1 billion pounds, compared to 2.5 billion pounds in 2019. The lender had already said its group executive committee had given up their bonus entitlements for the year.

6. Finablr Uncovers $1 Billion in Hidden Debt as NMC Scandal Widens

Finablr, the listed owner of two foreign-exchange businesses, uncovered about $1 billion of debt hidden from its board that may have been used for purposes outside of the company, compounding a scandal that pushed its sister firm NMC Health into administration. The London-listed company and its creditors found that Finablr Group’s overall debt was about $1.3 billion, excluding the debt of its Travelex Holdings Ltd. unit and “materially above” its last reported figure, according to a statement. Finablr had $334 million of debt at the end of June, according to a statement at the time. Chairman B.R. Shetty resigned in the wake of this corruption scandal. The announcement of Shetty’s departure was followed by news that Britain’s tax authority intends to shut down Finablr’s UAE Exchange UK and Xpress Money Services.

7. Chinese E-Commerce Newcomers Doubles Amid IPO Frenzy

Two Chinese stocks that started trading in New York this week more than doubled Thursday amid an end-of-year frenzy for newly listed companies. Oriental Culture, a provider of e-commerce services for the collectibles and art market, climbed as much as 324%. And online organic food retailer Wunong Net Technology rose as much as 147%, adding to the 440% jump in its second trading session Wednesday. Both stocks triggered a handful of volatility halts on Thursday. 

8. Bank of Japan to Extend Covid Programs Amid Virus Surge

The Bank of Japan is widely expected Friday to extend its special funding measures for pandemic-hit businesses amid a resurgence of the virus that earlier this week forced the government to suspend domestic travel incentives. Some 66% of 38 economists surveyed said the bank will lengthen the duration of crisis programs that include increased purchases of corporate bonds and commercial paper and $1.1 trillion in funding tools to support bank lending to struggling firms. The programs are currently set to expire in March. All the analysts said the BOJ will likely keep its key interest rate and main asset purchases unchanged at the meeting.

9. Mandatory Covid-19 Vaccines for Travel Would ‘Kill the Sector’

The rollout of vaccines against Covid-19 has intensified the debate about whether they should be made mandatory, with the head of a major tourism lobby saying that doing so would cause irreparable harm to the struggling sector. “I don’t think governments will require vaccination next year” for travel, Gloria Guevara, head of the World Travel and Tourism Council, said at a press conference Thursday. “If they do that they will kill their sector.” Those first in line to get the jabs include the elderly and vulnerable, who “are the last people who will travel,” she said. Instead, rules for virus testing before departure are likely to be bolstered. So far, no country has made vaccination compulsory for people crossing borders.

10. Saudi Wealth Fund Put 2008 Crisis Lessons to Use in 2020

The fund received a $40 billion transfer from the nation’s reserves in March so it could take advantage of the crash in markets, buying stakes in companies including Citigroup, Facebook and cruise-ship operator Carnival. By the end of June, it had sold most of those stakes and switched to holding about $7 billion in exchange-traded funds. The $350 billion sovereign wealth fund is a key lever for Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to revive growth. He is seeking to get his economic master plan, known as Vision 2030, back on track after what may be the deepest recession the world’s largest crude exporter has experienced in decades.

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Market News Top 10 News Top Global News

Violence at Apple’s India Factory: 450 cr Damages – Top 10 Global News

1. U.S. Stocks Set for a Rebound After Four-Day Slump

U.S. stocks are poised to open higher after a four-day slump, the longest stretch since September, with investors taking comfort in the vaccine rollout and progress on stimulus talks. While investors are pricing in optimism about the start of vaccine shots, there’s also ongoing concern over whether a stimulus bill from a bipartisan group of lawmakers will gain traction. Trading was mixed in other markets. Asian stocks fell the most in two weeks. European equities, oil and Treasuries were steady. In Europe, the pound rose and credit markets strengthened as Brexit negotiators pushed to reach a final trade deal.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index climbed 0.5% as of early morning London time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was little changed.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index decreased 0.4%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index declined 0.2%.

2. Moderna Vaccine Found Safe, Effective Ahead of Major FDA Review

Moderna’s vaccine is safe and effective for preventing Covid-19, U.S. regulators said, clearing the way for a second shot to quickly gain emergency authorization and add to the country’s sprawling immunization effort. The Food and Drug Administration’s staff said in a report on Tuesday that the experimental vaccine is 94.1% effective at preventing symptomatic Covid-19, confirming earlier results released by the company. The FDA got a much deeper look at Moderna’s clinical-trial data than the numbers previously released to the public by the company. Notably, the agency was able to review the shot’s effectiveness across a broad range of racial, ethnic and age groups, and look at evidence of how well the shot worked for people with pre-existing medical conditions that make them more vulnerable to severe Covid-19.

3. U.K. Urged to Ban Holiday Mixing; Sweden Shortages: Virus Update

Two medical journals published a rare joint editorial urging the U.K. government to ban household mixing over Christmas. Italy’s prime minister said he plans further curbs to slow cases during the festive season, and the Dutch government is imposing stricter rules for five weeks. Almost all of Sweden’s regional hospitals are struggling with staff shortages as the virus spreads faster than health authorities predicted. Hong Kong plans new relief measures before Christmas, and Singapore is creating a new “bubble” facility near the airport. In the U.S., New York risks a second full shutdown should the number of cases and hospitalizations continue at the current pace.

4. U.K.’s PM to Visit India in January as Trade Talks to Start

U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson will visit India in January to try to boost ties, with talks on a free-trade agreement due to start next year. The British government has made the expansion of global trading opportunities a priority after Brexit and is pursuing trade deals with countries including the U.S., New Zealand and Australia. The Indo-Pacific region is also high on the U.K.’s agenda, and Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab held talks with his Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar in New Delhi on Tuesday. India is the U.K.’s 17th-largest trading partner and total trade between the two countries was worth $16.5 billion in 2019.

5. Wave of Foreign Money Threatens India’s Tight Grip on Rupee

A relentless torrent of funds rushing into India’s markets may tip the central bank’s delicate balancing act in 2021. For most of this year, the Reserve Bank of India has capped currency gains as global investors poured around $50 billion into stocks and stakes in companies. This has boosted rupee liquidity in a banking system that’s already flush with cash from the RBI’s stimulus measures. There’s growing consensus among traders and fund managers that the mounting pressures — particularly the liquidity excess distorting money markets — may spur the central bank to consider a range of changes, from relaxing its grip on Asia’s worst-performing currency to curtailing bond purchases.

6. Apple Push Into India Dealt Setback as Protest Turns Violent

Apple’s effort to expand the manufacturing of its products in India ran into trouble after workers at a supplier’s plant rioted over unpaid wages, with many arrested for violence and vandalism. Hundreds of workers stormed Wistron Corp.’s facility in the southern city of Kolar over the weekend, damaging the property and looting thousands of iPhones and laptops, according to local media. More than 150 people were arrested. Wistron estimated damages at as much as $7.1 million and said it’s doing its best to resume operations at the factory. 

7. Airbus CEO Warns No-Deal Brexit Puts U.K. Investment at Risk

Airbus Chief Executive Officer Guillaume Faury said a U.K. split from the European Union without a trade deal could threaten the planemaker’s investment plans in the country. Decisions would be made based on how easy it is to conduct business after Brexit, he said at the Conference of Montreal on Monday. In the meantime, the company has no plans to close or scale down its British factories, which make wings for all of its passenger aircraft, and would find a way to manage a no-deal scenario if it came to that, he said. Airbus was vehemently opposed to Brexit under previous CEO Tom Enders, who warned that the company could pull out of the U.K. if a deal wasn’t reached.

8. Europe May Approve Covid Vaccine by Christmas as Pressure Builds

Pressure is building in Europe for quick approval of Pfizer and BioNTech’s Covid-19 vaccine, with German authorities saying they’re optimistic that sign-off can be pushed forward by a week amid a rising death toll on the continent. Germany is “optimistic” that the European Medicines Agency will be able to make a decision by Dec. 23, Health Minister Jens Spahn said in Berlin on Tuesday. The EMA had previously said an advisory board would convene by Dec. 29 to make a recommendation on the application; approval would come within days after that.

9. Lawmakers Rush to Complete Relief Before Break: US Stimulus Update

Democratic leaders Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer face pressure to allow a vote on a Covid-19 assistance plan without the aid for states they’ve said is vital, after a bipartisan group split that and liability protections from other relief spending. With the congressional session winding down and a government funding package needed by Friday, time is running out for an agreement on the two most contentious and partisan pandemic-relief issues — Covid-19 liability protections for employers and aid for state and local governments. A bipartisan group that had floated a $908 billion plan at the start of the month offered it up in two bills on Monday.

10. Abu Dhabi Turns to Poultry, Fish Farms for Food Security

The oil-rich desert emirate of Abu Dhabi is investing $143 million to boost local production of produce, fish, cattle and poultry in its push to improve food security. Much of the money will go toward using new technologies to improve large-scale production of food in climate-controlled conditions, the Abu Dhabi Government Media Office said. Abu Dhabi — like the rest of the United Arab Emirates — must import most of its food. The coronavirus pandemic, however, has laid bare the UAE’s vulnerability to disruptions in foreign food supplies.

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Tech Giants may face 10% fine in EU – Top 10 Global News

1. Stocks, Futures Set Bullish Tone as Pound Rises

Stocks started off the week in a sea of green as investors took comfort from further stimulus bill negotiations and the impending deployment of the first vaccine in the U.S. S&P 500 futures gained about 0.7%, with the first deliveries of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in the U.S. due to arrive Monday morning. A bipartisan group of lawmakers is set to unveil a $908 billion pandemic relief bill, although there is “no guarantee” Congress will pass it. European shares got a boost after the EU’s chief Brexit negotiator told a private meeting of ambassadors that a trade deal with the U.K. could come as soon as this week. The pound jumped by the most in almost two months.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index rose 0.7% as of early morning New York time.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index jumped 0.8%.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index increased 0.2%.

The MSCI Emerging Market Index decreased 0.1%.

2. Tech Firms Risk EU Fines Up to 10% of Sales in Bid to Curb Power

Tech giants deemed to be gatekeepers could face fines as high as 10% of annual revenue if they don’t comply with new European Union rules on data usage to be unveiled Tuesday. Companies that could include Google, Amazon.com and Apple will be banned from using any data from business users to compete with them or from treating their own services more favourably in rankings, among other obligations. A company that “systemically infringes” the obligations could face orders by the European Commission to make behavioural and structural changes, such as divesting businesses. Companies will be considered to be in systematic non-compliance if the EU has issued at least three fines within a period of five years.

3. Google Services Including Gmail, YouTube Suffer Major Outage

Services from Alphabet Inc.’s Google experienced widespread outages around the world, preventing people from accessing Gmail, YouTube and other products. Errors ranged from “something went wrong” on YouTube, to “there was an error. Please try again later,” when attempting to log into the company’s mail product from about 6:30 a.m. in New York. Google tools were failing to load for users in the U.S., the U.K. and across Europe, but began functioning again for many people after about an hour. Google confirmed there was an outage for the majority of its services according to a Workspace Status Dashboard, which monitors the health of its products. Later, it said functionality was restored to the “vast majority” of users.

4. Europe Hit With Tougher Virus Curbs Ahead of Vaccine Rollout

Europe is sharpening curbs on people and businesses to slow the rapid spread of the coronavirus, risking another knock to battered economies even with the rollout of a vaccine tantalizingly close. With months of pandemic fighting ahead, authorities are tightening measures without resorting to the strict curbs that triggered a collapse in business activity in the spring. Following record daily cases and deaths on Friday, Germany is urging, but not requiring, employers to close workplaces as it starts a hard lockdown on Wednesday. Italy and the Netherlands are among the countries expected to sharpen restrictions as well.

5. China Fines Alibaba, Tencent Unit Under Anti-Monopoly Laws

China’s antitrust watchdog fined Alibaba Group Holding and a Tencent Holdings unit over a pair of years-old acquisitions and said it’s reviewing an impending Tencent-led merger, signalling Beijing’s intention to tighten oversight of internet sector deals. The State Administration for Market Regulation said Monday it’s reviewing the combination of DouYu International Holdings Ltd. with Huya Inc., which could create a Chinese game streaming leader akin to Amazon’s Twitch. It fined Alibaba 500,000 yuan ($76,500) for failing to seek approval before increasing its stake in department store chain Intime Retail Group Co. to 73.79% in 2017, while China Literature Ltd., the e-books business spun off by Tencent, was also censured over a previous deal, according to a statement.

6. U.S. Government Agencies Hit by Suspected Russian Hackers

In one of the most audacious hacks in recent memory, U.S. government agencies were attacked as part of a global campaign that exploited a flaw in the software updates of a U.S. company. The hackers are suspected to be part of a notorious hacking group tied to the Russian government. The attack included breaches in the U.S. Treasury and Commerce departments and those of other government agencies in an attack that started months ago. The same hacking group is also believed to be behind the recent attack on the cyber-security firm FireEye Inc.

7. Barnier Tells EU Envoys Deal Could Come This Week: Brexit Update

The European Union’s chief negotiator, Michel Barnier, told a private meeting of ambassadors that a trade deal with the U.K. could be completed as soon as this week, but there are still significant differences to be bridged. The U.K. has made concessions on the level playing field and is now pushing the bloc to soften its demands on fisheries, Barnier told envoys from the EU’s 27 member states on Monday, according to two diplomats with knowledge of the meeting. A compromise on the latter subject could unlock the accord, Barnier said.

8. Rapid China Inflows Spur Call for Strongest Yuan Since 1993

The unrelenting pace of inflows heading for China’s bonds and stocks has one yuan bull predicting the currency could strengthen to a level not seen in nearly three decades. A “flood” of foreign cash will chase yuan-denominated assets in 2021 because they’ll offer far better yield than the rest of the world. He predicts the currency could rally 10% or even more by the end of next year. The yuan hasn’t been that strong since late 1993, just before China’s unification of official and market exchange rates triggered a plunge in the currency.

9. Dubai Business Conditions Worsen as Pandemic Weighs on Demand

Business activity in Dubai dropped for a second month in November as the coronavirus pandemic continued to weigh on demand. The non-oil private sector economy in the Middle East’s business hub deteriorated last month to the lowest since May. Its Purchasing Managers’ Index dipped to 49 from 49.9 in October, falling further below the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction. Employment figures continued to stabilize after having dipped to the lowest on record earlier this year and the pace of job losses was the mildest seen in nine months, though a possible lapse in demand could lead to another setback for employment in the short-term, the report said.

10. Adidas Plans to Sell Reebok by Early March 2021

Adidas has begun a review of whether to sell its Reebok brand, part of the development of the German sports company’s new five-year strategy. Adidas will announce a decision on March 10, when it presents its new plan, the company said Monday. The company acquired Reebok for $3.8 billion in 2006 and in recent years returned the division to profitability and growth. Adidas was exploring a sale and might start a strategic review in October. Private-equity firms Permira and Triton have looked at acquiring Reebok, though any plans are at an exploratory stage and may not ripen into an offer. Other interested parties include VF Corp., which owns the Timberland and North Face brands, as well as China’s Anta International Group Holdings.