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UPS executive sees supply chain disarray extending into 2022

By - Sep 13,2021 - Last updated at Sep 13,2021

In this file photo a United Parcel Service logo is displayed on a delivery truck on October 24, 2014 in San Francisco, California (AFP photo)

NEW YORK — The United Parcel Service (UPS) is girding for more supply chain problems in 2022 after this year's upheaval, but does not expect the disruption to cause huge spikes in transport costs, the shipping giant's international president Scott Price said. 

Founded in 1907, UPS is an American multinational shipping & receiving and supply chain management company.

Price said low vaccination rates in key developing countries will likely lead to additional shortages of raw materials and components similar to those that have plagued industries from automakers to apparel to homebuilders.

"The logistics industry does not see 2022 as having any less disruption in supply chains than in 2021," Price said in an interview.

"I half-jokingly tell people 'Order your Christmas presents now because otherwise on Christmas day, there may just be a picture of something that's not coming until February or March,'" Price said.

But Price expressed confidence that transport costs could be contained in 2022 after the company enacted a series of surcharges earlier in the pandemic amid skyrocketing demand and higher operating expenses. 

UPS spent more paying for disinfectant, installing plastic dividers in work sites and covering hotel costs for employees in markets where workers were unable to commute to their homes due to strict government mandates.

"Some of those costs are going away," said Price, who said 2022 shipping rates would be increased by 2.8 per cent on average, well below the 10-year average.

In 2021, UPS raised prices between 4 and 5.5 per cent, depending on the market.

 

Vaccine 'inequity' 

 

UPS's outlook for more supply chain disarray follows announcements from several other companies over the last week, including Toyota, which said on Friday it will cut car output by 70,000 units in September and 330,000 in October because of ongoing virus disruptions and a chronic global semiconductor chip shortage.

Homebuilder PulteGroup, which has previously suffered shortages of lumber and glass, warned this week of slower home closings, saying "the supply chain issues that have plagued the industry throughout the pandemic have increased during the second half of the year". 

Paint company Sherwin-Williams announced surcharges due to raw material shortages worsened by Hurricane Ida, which took key US petrochemical production off line. 

Apparel company Lululemon Athletica said coronavirus restrictions forced closure of factories in Vietnam, which account for one-fifth its inventory. The company is scrambling to shift some of that production to other manufacturing centers and also spending more on air shipments due to backlogs at shipping ports.

Price said one of the big dislocations during the pandemic has been the loss of shipping capacity on commercial jets, which typically deliver some cargo on international flights. 

But with the downturn in international travel, "we've got a lot of aircraft sitting in deserts", said Price, adding that the dynamic pushes even more goods to ports, or to the air services of UPS or competitors.

A key question will be the economic fallout from the "inequity in COVID vaccine access" between the developed and developing world, Price said.

"When you look at where raw materials come from, some of these rare earths, they come from those locations that don't have the vaccine," he said. "So there's still disruption risk going into 2022."

UPS normally announces its annual rate increase in November, but wanted to go early this year to allow clients increasingly worried about inflation to plan more effectively.

Price expects to hold UPS's price increases to the 2.8 per cent level as more aspects of the supply chain normalise. This should happen as long as the COVID-19 situation does not dramatically worsen.

"God forbid something worse than the Delta variant comes out," he said. "Then all bets are off for everybody."

 

Oil sector in balance as Norway votes

By - Sep 13,2021 - Last updated at Sep 13,2021

OSLO — Norway’s “Red-Green” opposition was seen winning Monday’s general election, a change of power that could potentially impact oil activities in the largest producer in Western Europe.

First estimates based on advance ballots were to be released when voting ends at 9:00pm.

According to opinion polls, a clear majority is emerging to unseat Prime Minister Erna Solberg’s centre-right government, which has ruled the Nordic country for the last eight years.

The leader of Norway’s Labour Party, Jonas Gahr Store, a 61-year-old millionaire who has campaigned against social inequality, seems well placed to succeed her, but the exact shape of the coalition needed to pave his way to office is still unclear.

His party’s preferred allies are the agrarian Centre Party and the Socialist Left Party, but if they are unable to reach a majority on their own they might depend on the support of the Green Party and or the communist Red Party, potentially complicating negotiations.

“I hope that after today’s vote we’ll be in a position where we can put pressure on the next Norwegian government, which we hope will be led by Store and will have a good climate and oil policy,” the head of the Greens, Une Bastholm, said after voting on Monday.

According to an average of opinion polls conducted between August 2 and September 11 and published late Sunday by TV2, Store’s preferred three-party coalition was due to get 85 of 169 seats in parliament, giving it the narrowest possible majority.

The centre-right was seen garnering 67 mandates, while the Red Party was predicted to take nine and the Greens eight.

 

Green ultimatum 

 

The August “code red for humanity” report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) put the issue at the top of the agenda for the election campaign and forced the country to reflect on the oil that has made it immensely rich.

The report energised those who want to get rid of oil, both on the left and, to a lesser extent, the right.

The Green Party is leading the charge in calling for an immediate halt to all oil exploration and a 2035 deadline for exploitation.

That ultimatum has been rejected by Store, a former foreign minister.

Like the Conservative Party, the other dominant political force in the country, Labour instead advocates only a gradual exit from oil.

The oil sector accounts for 14 per cent of gross domestic product, as well as 40 per cent of its exports and 160,000 direct jobs.

In addition, the cash cow has helped the country of 5.4 million people amass the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund, today worth close to 12 trillion kroner (almost 1.2 trillion euros, $1.4 trillion).

According to many observers, a compromise will depend on the success of the parties with environmentalist leanings and could involve cutting off certain waters for oil exploration, particularly in the Arctic.

 

‘Good record’ 

 

“I have a good feeling,” Store said as he cast his ballot at a school in Oslo on Sunday, with voting opening a day earlier in the major cities.

More than 1.6 million Norwegians, or 42.3 percent of the electorate, made use of early voting opportunities.

For voter Fredrik Wessel, a 62-year-old lawyer at an insurance company, the main issue in the election was to “maintain good economic policy”.

“And then of course I’m concerned about the climate, that we consider everything we can to improve our climate,” he told AFP as he left an Oslo polling station.

Meanwhile, a 76-year-old pensioner said her “main issue is the big difference between rich and poor which is growing bigger and bigger in Norway, even if it is better than many countries in Europe and the world”.

After eight years in power, and multiple crises including migration, falling oil prices and COVID-19, Solberg defended her “good record”.

“Unemployment is decreasing, employment is going up... We need to keep up these good things,” the 60-year-old said on Monday as she cast her ballot in her home town of Bergen.

 

Greek PM offers tax cuts, improved growth

By - Sep 12,2021 - Last updated at Sep 12,2021

THESSALONIKI, Greece — Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis on Saturday promised tax cuts and better economic growth prospects in a bid to repair the damage wrought by last month's destructive forest fires.

"I am able to announce a revised growth target of 5.9 per cent" for 2021, Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis said in a keynote speech at the Thessaloniki International Fair.

Official Greek data last week showed the economy growing 3.4 per cent between the first and second quarters of 2021, and a better-than-expected 16.2 per cent year-on-year, despite partial lockdowns.

Greek authorities look forward to positive tourism takings in July and August being reflected in the third quarter data.

Mitsotakis ruled out another pandemic lockdown in the fall, stressing: "The economy and society will not shut down again."

The PM also announced new tax cuts, benefits for green energy and digital investment, and an initiative to encourage youth employment.

"Greeks are now paying less tax across the board," he said.

Three years after Greece exited its last international bailout, nearly one in three Greeks under 24 is unemployed.

Halfway through his four-year term, Mitsotakis has seen his conservative party's ratings flag after wildfires destroyed over 100,000 hectares of forest, farmland and crops around the country.

Just before his speech, police fired tear gas and water cannon at anti-vaccine and anarchist demonstrators who tried to approach the fair venue.

Around 9,000 people took part in protests, police said, against the government's vaccine policy and recent labour laws on overtime and strikes.

Reshuffle 

Though Mitsotakis is more popular than rival leaders, his New Democracy party's lead over the leftist Syriza Party fell to 10.1 per cent in August from between 12.8 and 16.5 per cent in July.

The latest poll, in Ta Nea daily, found nearly 55 per cent of respondents disagreed with the government's policies on tackling the COVID-19 pandemic.

Over 14,000 people in Greece have died from causes related to the pandemic. Over half of the country's 11 million residents have been fully vaccinated.

There has been opposition to the mandatory COVID-19 vaccination of all health workers, who are threatened with suspension unless they comply.

Over 5,000 health staff have been sidelined so far, including some 500 doctors according to the health ministry.

Tougher air, sea and rail transport restrictions also come into effect on Monday, with the unvaccinated no longer entitled to free testing. 

They will also be barred from indoor dining and entertainment unless they can furnish a negative test, or proof of recent COVID recovery.

Mitsotakis has also been criticised for a recent reshuffle in which he entrusted the health ministry to a former far-right lawyer who has expressed strongly anti-migrant views.

Upon becoming minister, Thanos Plevris — the son of a prominent Greek Holocaust denier — rejected having any "anti-Semitic sentiments".

Alongside the ministers for interior and development, Plevris is now the third Cabinet member appointed by Mitsotakis among defectors from the far-right Laos Party in 2012.

Cash is king in Venezuela property market as loans elude would-be buyers

Sep 12,2021 - Last updated at Sep 12,2021

By Javier Tovar
Agence France-Presse

CARACAS — Gustavo Martinez has a stable job as an engineer at an oil company in Caracas, but he can only dream of buying an apartment because Venezuela's inflation, the highest in the world, has crippled real estate financing.

With banks not offering loans, would-be homeowners are expected to pay for property in a single or handful of installments, using wire transfers, cheques and even briefcases full of US dollars.

The national currency, the bolivar, has lost 73 per cent of its value to the dollar so far this year, and a single US dollar now costs 4 million bolivars.

The greenback, though not official currency, is widely used to pay for goods and services across Venezuela and it is the only accepted means of payment in real estate transactions.

But in a country with a minimum public service wage of just $2 per month, Venezuelans often cannot afford even to rent and many young adults, including couples, end up living with their parents much longer than they had planned.

Venezuela's eye-watering inflation, hovering around 3,000 per cent, means that banks are loath to risk giving out loans in bolivars. In the rare event they do, the repayment period is generally under six months.

There are no credit cards, either.

In January, the government said banks could give out loans in dollars only with the permission of the Central Bank, making it a near-impossibility.

'No job pays you that' 

As a result, Venezuelan banks have given out only $140 million in loans to a population of some 30 million, compared to $14 billion in loans in neighbouring Colombia, which has some 50 million people.

Of the total loan amount, only $840,000 or 0.6 per cent, were mortgage loans, based on official figures released in March.

Economist Cesar Aristimuno said this was a sharp drop from 7.2 per cent in 2014, before a global crash in oil prices tanked Venezuela's economy, heavily dependent on crude exports.

Martinez, the oil company engineer in Caracas, is luckier than most.

After moving to the capital in January, he lived with his grandmother for a while but is now renting an apartment with his girlfriend.

Martinez, 30, did not want to reveal how much he earns, but he said it is more than the average Venezuelan salary of $50 a month. Apartment rents in a modest suburb of the capital start from $150, according to realtor Carolina Quintero.

"An apartment costs about $50,000 dollars. No job pays you that," Martinez told AFP. "Much less will you be able to pay it in a single installment."

The figure he mentioned can buy a flat of about 74 square metres in a middle-income neighbourhood in Caracas.

There are no public figures on how many Venezuelans live at home into their 30s or 40s, but it is a widely-observed phenomenon.

'Something of my own' 

While buying a home remains a distant dream for most Venezuelans, the country's eager, though informal, adoption of the dollar as a shield against inflation has given the real estate sector at least a bit of a boost over the past two years.

"In 2019, we grew 5 per cent and we hope to close with more than 20 per cent in 2021," says Francisco Lopez, president of the Real Estate Chamber of Venezuela. 

Most transactions, explained Quintero, are conducted via transfers from foreign banks, though buyers may be required to provide a deposit of up to 20 per cent in cash. 

A growing number of properties are being bought and sold on social media by agents who provide their own down payment options, such as requiring an initial investment of a third of the purchase price, with 11 months to pay the rest.

Of course, there are the loan sharks, charging 15 per cent per month in interest and demanding guarantees that can triple the amount of the loan to be paid back.

Martinez still hopes to buy "something of my own" one day, and he said he was dabbling in small-scale investments as a way of saving some money.

"It would have been great if there was a system of loans in dollars so that people who can afford the down payments can get credit," he said. 

Few women decide to keep their jobs at Kabul airport despite fears

Sep 12,2021 - Last updated at Sep 12,2021

Afghan women airport workers are pictured at a security checkpoint of the airport in Kabul on Sunday. Of the more than 80 women working at the airport before Kabul fell to the Taliban on August 15, just 12 have returned to their jobs (AFP photo)

By Mohamad Ali Harissi
Agence France-Presse

KABUL — Less than a month after the Taliban rolled into the Afghan capital, Rabia Jamal made a tough decision — she would brave the hardliners and return to work at the airport.

With hardline Taliban saying women should stay at home for their own security, the risks were all too clear, but the 35-year-old mother of three felt she had little choice.

"I need money to support my family," said Rabia, wearing a navy-blue suit and make-up.

"I felt tension at home... I felt very bad," she said."Now I feel better."

Of the more than 80 women working at the airport before Kabul fell to the Taliban on August 15, just 12 have returned to their jobs.

But they are among very few women in the capital allowed to return to work. The Taliban have told most not to go back until further notice.

Six of the women airport workers were standing at the main entrance on Saturday, chatting and laughing while waiting to scan and search female passengers taking a domestic flight.

Rabia's sister, 49-year-old Qudsiya Jamal, said the Taliban takeover had "shocked" her.

"I was very afraid," said the mother of five, who is also her family's sole provider.

"My family was scared for me — they told me not to go back — but I am happy now, relaxed... no problems so far."

'Take me to Paris' 

Women's rights in Afghanistan were sharply curtailed under the Taliban's 1996-2001 rule, but since returning to power the group claims they will be less extreme.

Women will be allowed to attend university as long as classes are segregated by sex or at least divided by a curtain, the Taliban's education authority has said, but females must also wear an abaya, an all-covering robe, and face-covering niqab veil.

Still, Alison Davidian, a representative for UN Women in Afghanistan, warned on Wednesday that the Taliban were already neglecting their promise to respect Afghan women's rights.

At the airport, which is returning to action after the hurried US withdrawal left it unusable, Rabia says she will keep working unless she is forced to stop.

Under new rules, women may work "in accordance with the principles of Islam", the Taliban have decreed, but few details have yet been given as to what exactly that might mean.

"My dream is to be the richest girl in Afghanistan, and I feel I am always the luckiest," said Rabia, who has worked since 2010 at the terminal for GAAC, a UAE-based company providing ground and security handling.

"I will do what I love until I am not lucky anymore."

Rabia's colleague, who gave her name as Zala, dreams of something completely different. 

The 30-year-old was learning French in Kabul before she was forced to stop and stay at home for three weeks after the takeover.

"Good morning, take me to Paris," she said in broken French, as her five colleagues burst into laughter.

"But not now. Today I am one of the last women of the airport."

Wells Fargo gets $250m fine for failing to pay back hurt customers

By - Sep 11,2021 - Last updated at Sep 11,2021

A security guard wearing mask and gloves walks outside a branch of the Wells Fargo bank, amid the novel coronavirus pandemic, in West Hollywood, California, in this photo taken, on May 15, 2020 (AFP file photo)

WASHINGTON — US bank Wells Fargo was hit on Thursday with a new fine — $250 million for failing to meet requirements in an agreement to pay previously harmed customers.

The penalty was set by the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), one of the main US banking sector regulators.

"Wells Fargo has not met the requirements of the OCC's 2018 action against the bank. This is unacceptable," said Acting Comptroller of the Currency Michael Hsu.

Wells Fargo admitted to opening 3.5 million fake accounts between 2002 and 2017, allowing its employees to earn bonuses related to the sale of new products, and charge unnecessary insurance premiums to more than half-a-million customers on their car loans.

In 2018, the OCC and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau fined the California bank $1 billion and ordered it to reimburse the harmed customers the amounts improperly taken, and to strengthen the bank's risk management programme.

In addition to the penalty, Wells Fargo will face "limits on the bank's future activities until existing problems in mortgage servicing are adequately addressed", Hsu said.

"The OCC will continue to use all the tools at our disposal, including business restrictions, to ensure that national banks address problems in a timely manner, treat customers fairly, and operate in a safe and sound manner," he added.

The OCC's actions "point to work we must continue to do to address significant, longstanding deficiencies", said Wells Fargo CEO Charlie Scharf.

In February 2020 the bank was hit with a $3 billion fine over the fake accounts scandal.

Wells Fargo has already paid more than $7 billion in financial penalties related to its business practices.

The OCC banned John Stumpf, the Wells Fargo CEO from 2005 to October 2016, for life from the banking industry.

Uber ordered to pay taxi drivers damages in France

By - Sep 11,2021 - Last updated at Sep 11,2021

PARIS — A French court on Friday ordered ride-hailing service Uber to pay damages to taxi drivers whose business suffered from unlicensed competitors.

Uber France will have to pay 180,000 euros ($213,000) to 910 taxi drivers and their federation who brought a civil case against Uber for unfair competition, the court ruled.

The case centered on the activities in 2014 and 2015 of UberPop, a platform that brought together clients and unlicensed drivers.

The business, marketed as ride-sharing, sparked the ire of traditional taxi drivers who felt the new service was threatening their livelihoods with cheap fares.

They notably argued that non-professional drivers did not have to pay for training, or acquire a taxi licence which in Paris can cost more than 100,000 euros, allowing them to undercut taxis.

In December 2015, Uber France had lost its appeal against a guilty verdict by a criminal court for misleading commercial practices, and was ordered to pay a fine of 150,000 euros.

In its civil case decision on Friday, the court found that passing off untrained drivers as professionals hurt the image and the reputation of licensed taxi drivers.

The damages payout works out at 192 euros for each of the 910 drivers, and 5,000 euros for the Paris taxi drivers' federation.

Uber on Friday said that it has not been using unlicensed drivers in France since 2015, and that drivers now had to take the same tests as licensed taxi drivers.

"This is a good decision which will stop other platforms from providing illegal transport," taxi federation President Christophe Jacopin said of the verdict.

China's factory gate prices hit 13-year high in August

By - Sep 09,2021 - Last updated at Sep 09,2021

BEIJING — China's factory gate inflation jumped in August to a 13-year high, with data on Thursday showing a surge in commodity prices as the global emergence from the pandemic sees demand picking up but supplies limited.

The producer price index (PPI), which measures the cost of goods at the factory gate, rose to 9.5 per cent last month from 9.0 per cent in July, the National Bureau of Statistics said.

The reading was above forecasts for 9.0 per cent and is the highest since 2008, when the figure hit 10 per cent.

The surge was "affected by a rise in prices of coal, and chemical and steel products", NBS senior statistician Dong Lijuan said in a statement.

Industries have seen "strong demand and tight supply overall", pushing up prices in coal mining, while earlier pick-ups in costs of crude oil and coal have weighed on other production costs.

The rises come despite government measures to ease pressure on factory costs such as cracking down on firms hoarding goods and ramping up supplies.

However, the spike in manufacturing costs is still to filter through to shoppers as Thursday's data also showed the consumer price index, a key gauge of retail inflation, dipped to 0.8 per cent from one per cent in July and below expectations.

The drop came on the back of cooling food costs, with pork prices sinking 44.9 per cent on-year.

Analysts also said the recent coronavirus resurgence that forced parts of the country into lockdown also likely had an impact.

"Some easing in domestic spending due to movement restrictions is expected to have weighed on household consumption," said Moody's Analytics in a note this week.

EasyJet rejects takeover bid, plots $2.0b lifeline

By - Sep 09,2021 - Last updated at Sep 09,2021

British airline EasyJet on Thursday revealed it had rejected a takeover approach, reportedly from rival Wizz Air. (AFP file photo)

LONDON — British airline EasyJet on Thursday announced it had rejected a takeover approach, reportedly from rival Wizz Air, and revealed a $2.0-billion lifeline as the battered aviation sector looks to recover.

No-frills carrier EasyJet said in a statement that the bid had undervalued the group, adding that the suitor was no longer considering an offer and that the airline would now sell new shares to raise around £1.2 billion ($1.6 billion, 1.4 billion euros).

Bloomberg reported that the bidder had been Hungarian budget airline Wizz Air.

EasyJet meanwhile added that it had secured a new credit facility totalling $400 million.

The coronavirus crisis and travel restrictions have rocked airlines worldwide.

Also on Thursday, Japan Airlines said it plans to raise about $2.7 billion as it weathers the continuing impact of the pandemic on its finances.

In London, EasyJet noted that its "board recently received an unsolicited preliminary takeover approach.

"This was carefully evaluated and then unanimously rejected. The potential bidder has since confirmed that it is no longer considering an offer for the company."

EasyJet said the "highly conditional all-share" proposal "fundamentally undervalued the company". 

The rights issues would "facilitate and accelerate the group's recovery from the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic", it added.

Chief executive Johan Lundgren said the financing boost would also position EasyJet for growth, allowing it to take advantage of investment opportunities "as the European aviation industry emerges from the pandemic".

Shares dive  

Traders rushed to offload EasyJet shares on Thursday's announcements.

"EasyJet shares tumbled 10 per cent after announcing a £1.2-billion rights issue and disclosing that it had turned down an unsolicited takeover offer," noted Neil Wilson, chief market analyst at Markets.com. 

The airline's need for fresh capital is "a sign of the ongoing trouble in the sector", he added. 

In the group's final fiscal quarter, or three months to the end of September, EasyJet expects to fly just over half of the capacity seen two years earlier before the pandemic erupted.

Mirroring rivals, the carrier last year slashed costs and flights as the deadly pandemic ravaged global aviation industry.

The coronavirus outbreak grounded planes worldwide, resulting in massive losses across the aviation sector.

The industry has since been boosted by partial lifting of international travel restrictions -- with full reopenings held back by the emergence of the fast-spreading Delta variant.

Japan's borders, for example, remain closed to tourists and domestic travel has been stifled by successive waves of infections and resulting virus states of emergency.

Google see the future of work as 'hybrid'

By - Sep 08,2021 - Last updated at Sep 08,2021

In this file photo, people walk in Google's main campus in Mountain View, California, on May 1, 2019 (AFP photo)

SAN FRANCISCO — Google on Wednesday ramped up cloud collaboration tools for businesses, expecting "hybrid" work routines to remain even after the pandemic has ended.

The internet titan competes with Microsoft, Zoom, Facebook and others with online services that employees can use to collaborate remotely.

Tech giants turned to their own tools after abandoning campuses early in the pandemic, which fuelled a fierce remote work trend.

"We've seen a radical transformation, and a lot of that transformation is here to stay," Google Product Management Director Dave Citron said during a briefing on new Workspace offerings.

"But I think it is too early to say that the 40-hour work week in a cubicle is permanently dead across all industries and regions."

Major tech companies themselves have postponed workers returning to offices and expect the new norm to become "hybrid" routines that mix being on-site with working remotely.

Google said it has created a hybrid work handbook for how to take advantage of tools, as well as software for employees to conduct efficient meetings no matter where they are working from.

"We're really excited to bring this to our customers to give them some best practices as they're working to redesign their offices," Citron said.

Google also announced enhancements to its Workspace portfolio that integrate the tech giant's apps for meetings, e-mail, calendars, documents, chat and more.

"As some people return to the office, teams need that ability to flexibly collaborate from anywhere, anytime," said Workspace Senior Director of Product Management Sanaz Ahari.

"The innovations we're bringing to customers today help bridge the gaps of virtual and in-person collaboration."

Workspace added a dedicated online venue for working on projects, and unveiled interactive Series One displays designed specifically for conferencing.

An all-in-one desktop model of Series One was priced at $2,000, while a larger model designed for conference rooms was priced at $7,000.

"Based on the price points, we think the vast amount of the customers will be companies buying it for their employees," Citron said.

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