You are here

Business

Business section

Damascus raises petrol prices by more than 50%

By - Mar 17,2021 - Last updated at Mar 17,2021

DAMASCUS — Damascus raised petrol prices in government-held parts of Syria by more than 50 per cent after the Syrian pound hit record lows in the black market.

The cost per litre of subsidised petrol rose to 750 from 475 Syrian pounds, the trade ministry said on Monday.

The price increase amounts to “officially” 60 US cents, or 17 US cents at black market rates.

Syrian motorists are allocated 75 litres of subsidised petrol per vehicle per month, then must pay unsubsidised rates — which also rose from 1,300 to 2,000 pounds a litre, the ministry said.

Gas canisters used in homes are now selling for 3,850 pounds, up from 2,700, it added. 

Damascus has repeatedly raised fuel prices in recent years to tackle an accelerating economic crisis sparked by a decade-long civil war and compounded by sanctions, the coronavirus pandemic and a financial crunch in neighbouring Lebanon.

The trade ministry did not provide a reason for the latest hike, but in the past it has blamed Western sanctions.

The oil ministry last week said it had been forced to cut fuel supplies due to "a delay in the arrival of imported fuel derivatives because of the US blockade".

Washington has imposed several rounds of economic sanctions on the Syrian government since the war broke out in 2011.

The trade ministry's latest announcement came as the Syrian pound continued to plunge against the dollar on the black market after it hit a record low of 4,000 to the dollar this month.

The pound, officially valued at 1,256 to the greenback, was selling for around 4200 on the black market on Tuesday, according to money exchangers. 

The economic crunch has seen food prices skyrocket over the past year in a country where the majority of the population lives below the poverty line.

Rani, a 37-year-old food wholesaler, said the hike in fuel prices would hit other goods.

"We are going to have to raise the price of our products to make up for steeper fuel prices," he said.

Heating fuel, petrol and cooking gas have been in short supply in government-held areas for years, and motorists have grown used to long queues to fill up.

Syria used to produce almost 400,000 barrels of crude per day before the war.

Nokia to cut up to 10,000 jobs by 2023

By - Mar 17,2021 - Last updated at Mar 17,2021

Finnish telecoms equipment maker, Nokia, is going to slash up to 10,000 jobs over the next two years (AFP photo)

HELSINKI — Finnish telecoms equipment maker Nokia announced on Tuesday it will slash up to 11 per cent of its workforce within two years as the firm looks to cut costs and focus on a few key areas in the face of tough competition over super-fast 5G networks.

Announcing a 600 million-euro ($715-million) cost-cutting programme, it said it expects to become "an 80,000-85,000 employee organisation, over an 18-24-month period, instead of the approximately 90,000 employees Nokia has today".

The company said it is "too early to comment in detail" on where the job cuts will take place, but told AFP that "France is excluded due to previously announced planned restructuring".

The loss of over 1,000 jobs in France is still underway following Nokia's 2016 takeover of Alcatel-Lucent.

Finland, where the group is headquartered and where it last year recruited over 1,200 new 5G posts, is also expected to be largely spared, with Nokia saying that it expects the restructuring to have a "net positive" impact in the Nordic country.

Market developments in the next two years will determine the exact number of job losses, the company said, adding that the firm will also streamline its portfolio and reduce "site fragmentation" in the long-term.

Nokia has flagged in the three-way race against Ericsson and Huawei to dominate the 5G equipment market, losing out on a major Verizon contract in the US last year and failing to make inroads in China.

The firm has in the past had difficulties competing on price against its rivals and has struggled to convert its existing 4G bases into 5G contracts.

After chief executive Pekka Lundmark took the helm in August last year, he scrapped previous CEO Rajeev Suri's "end-to-end solutions" strategy, replacing it with a more focused approach and pledging to "invest whatever it takes to win in 5G". 

The company will in future be structured around four business groups aligned with customer buying behaviour — Mobile Networks, IP and Fixed Networks, Cloud and Network Services and Nokia Technologies — each with its own profit and loss sheet.

"In those areas where we choose to compete, we will play to win," Lundmark said in Tuesday's statement.

In February, the firm announced that predicted market share loss in North America in 5G and 4G along with price erosion meant the firm's 2021 outlook remained unchanged, with a 7-10 per cent operating margin target. 

Nokia's share price fell slightly after the announcement but had rallied to its previous close of 3.62 euros by 11:30am (09:30 GMT) on the Helsinki stock exchange.

The Finnish group is due to announce further details of its strategy and long-term financial forecasts on Thursday. 

Rogers buys Canada Telecom rival Shaw

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

OTTAWA — Rogers Communications announced on Monday the purchase of its rival Shaw for Can$26 billion ($21 billion) in a telecoms deal that would merge two Canadian family dynasties.

By combining, the two firms said they will have the "the scale, assets and capabilities" to accelerate a rollout of fifth generation (5G) mobile communications and better compete with the nation's top two providers Bell and Telus.

The transaction, however, must still be approved by shareholders and regulators.

Both companies were founded in the 1960s and grew mostly through acquisitions of smaller cable companies. Founders Ted Rogers died in 2008 and JR Shaw passed away last March.

The deal follows Rogers' failed joint bid with Altice USA last year for Quebec's Cogeco Communications, as well as Shaw's entry into the wireless business by acquiring startup Wind Mobile in 2016.

According to a statement, Toronto-based Rogers will pay Can$40.50 per share in cash — a 70 per cent premium — for the shares of its Western Canada competitor, for a total of Can$20 billion.

Rogers will also take on Shaw's Can$6 billion debt, bringing the total value of the deal supported by the Shaw family to Can$26 billion.

The merged company, they said, would invest Can$2.5 billion to build up 5G networks in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia provinces and add 3,000 new jobs.

Yellen says Biden has yet to decide on a wealth tax

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

WASHINGTON — Amid reports that the richest Americans have grown far richer during the pandemic year, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Sunday the Biden administration had yet to decide on imposing a new wealth tax.

"That's something that we haven't decided yet," Yellen said on ABC's "This Week" programme.

She said that President Joe Biden "hasn't proposed a wealth tax, but he has proposed that corporations and wealthy individuals should pay more in order to meet the needs of the economy, the spending we need to do".

Senator Elizabeth Warren, a liberal Democrat, has called for an annual tax of 2 per cent on every dollar of people's wealth above $50 million, and 3 per cent on every dollar above $1 billion.

Last month, Yellen told the New York Times that a Warren-style wealth tax would have "very difficult implementation problems". But she said she would consider other approaches that might have a similar effect.

A recent study by the humanitarian group Oxfam found that the world's richest 10 people — including Americans Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk and Bill Gates — had collectively seen their fortunes grow by $540 billion since the pandemic began, even as millions of Americans suffered.

The trillions of dollars spent in government stimulus plans during the pandemic have greatly swollen the federal deficit, and Republicans — who supported stimulus spending during the Trump administration — now warn that the deficits risk becoming unsupportable. 

Not one Republican supported Biden's $1.9 trillion stimulus plan, and the president could face similar resistance as he seeks to push through massive infrastructure or green-energy plans.

But, Yellen noted, the current exceptionally low interest rates have greatly reduced the cost of government borrowing. 

"Interest payments relative to the size of the economy have remained quite low," she said, "no higher than they were back in 2007".

The secretary did add that "in the longer run we need to get deficits under control to make sure that our fiscal situation is sustainable".

Yellen, a former chair of the Federal Reserve, again played down fears that stimulus spending could fuel dangerous levels of inflation, especially as the coronavirus vaccinations of millions of Americans raise hope of an economic boom.

"I think there's a small risk of inflation," she conceded. But "the most significant risk we face is a workforce that is scarred by a long period of unemployment."

Yellen said she "absolutely" does not expect a return to the runaway inflation of the 1970s.

If lower levels of inflation should emerge, the secretary said, "We have the tools to address it."

UK economy to hit pre-pandemic level late 2021 — BoE

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

This photo shows a man carrying paper shopping bags as he walks along Oxford Street in London, on November 26, 2019 (AFP file photo)

LONDON — Britain's economic activity will return to its pre-coronavirus level at the end of this year following the country's vaccine rollout, Bank of England (BoE) governor Andrew Bailey forecast on Monday.

The earlier-than-expected recovery — the BoE's expectation had been for early 2022 — comes ahead of the central bank's latest interest rate decision on Thursday.

"This COVID effect on the economy is huge," Bailey said in a BBC interview.

"What we are saying with the recovery is that the economy will actually get back in terms of activity to around the end of this year, to where it was at the end of 2019.

"That's good news. But let's be realistic — it's not more than getting back to where we were pre-COVID," Bailey added.

He heaped praise on the British government's rapid vaccination drive that has injected around 24 million Britons with their first jab.

"I'm now more positive [on the outlook] but with a large dose of caution," Bailey said.

He said the vaccine programme has been a "great achievement" and that while the lockdown has been painful, "we are seeing the retreat of COVID".

The pandemic sparked a 10 per cent slump of UK economic output last year — the worst annual performance in more than three centuries.

Bailey added on Monday that the economy had displayed more resilience during the government's current third lockdown compared with the initial virus shutdown in the first half of 2020.

RAK to host Arab Aviation regional event

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

The Arab Aviation Summit 2021 is going to be held in Ras Al Khaimah, UAE, between March 22 and 23 (Photo courtesy of the organisers)

AMMAN — The 2021 Arab Aviation Summit (AAS), which will be held in the UAE this month will examine the impact of COVID-19 health crisis on the industry, its aftermath, and recovery path, according to a statement of the organisers.

The summit, the region’s leading aviation industry event, will be held in the emirate of Ras Al Khaimah (RAK) between March 22 and 23, said the statement. 

The summit ‘eighth edition’ will bring together experts to discuss current challenges resulting from the pandemic and ways to create a stronger future. 

It is held under the theme, “Arab Aviation in the New Normal”.

Endorsed by Arab governments and previously held in many Arab counties, the Arab Aviation Summit 2021 will be hosted in cooperation with Ras Al Khaimah Tourism Development Authority and is supported by global industry partners such as Airbus, CFM, Air Arabia, Alpha Aviation Academy and others. 

Industry experts will look into the role that aviation and tourism is expected to play in the post-pandemic economic recovery, their contribution to domestic economies.

 They will evaluate the challenges and opportunities faced by the aviation sector in the new normal phase and share ideas and strategies to address them in the coming months as the industry is set to gain traction with the availability of the vaccine, according to the statement. 

A white paper, based on participants’ deliberations, will be presented at the closing ceremony of the summit.

US tech stocks lose tug-of-war amid inflation worries

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

NEW YORK — Wall Street closed out a volatile week mostly higher on Friday, but tech shares once again lost the battle between optimism over a stronger economy and concerns about inflation.

US Treasury yields jumped again, returning to the pre-pandemic levels of February 2020, as the 10-year note rose above 1.6 per cent.

That is a sign of growing investor fears that the Federal Reserve will have to raise borrowing rates sooner than expected to contain inflation — despite the central bank's assurances to the contrary.

The tech-rich Nasdaq Composite Index recovered from the lowest point of the day, closing down 0.6 per cent at 13,319.87.

The benchmark Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.9 per cent to 32,778.64, setting another record, while broad-based S&P 500 edged up 0.1 per cent to 3,943.34, adding four points to the all-time high set on Thursday.

"There is a tug of war in the market regarding where inflation will settle," Quincy Krosby of Prudential Financial said, with traders watching how President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion stimulus package will impact the economy, as well as the infrastructure package he's pushing.

"No one is suggesting at this point that we will be due for hyperinflation," she said. But since the Fed has made it clear they will run the economy hotter, markets are now wondering, "how hot?"

Tech shares are seen as most vulnerable to rising borrowing rates, and Apple and Amazon each lost 0.8 per cent. 

Baltimore Sun deal sets up major test for non-profit news model

By - Mar 15,2021 - Last updated at Mar 15,2021

Baltimore Sun reporter Jean Marbella holds up the Baltimore Sun front page that headlined their potential take over by a non-profit group during an interview in Baltimore, Maryland ,on Friday (AFP photo)

By Rob Lever
Agence France-Presse

BALTIMORE — After years of staff cuts, shrinking budgets and declining readership, the Baltimore Sun finally has some good news to report about itself: A deal for a new non-profit group to take over, and potentially revive the struggling newspaper.

The plan unveiled in February comes in response to an extraordinary movement — supported by civic and business leaders, sports figures, journalists and others — to rescue the 184-year-old newspaper and bring it back to local ownership.

The nonprofit Sunlight for All Institute, led by businessman Stewart Bainum, struck the tentative deal to acquire the Sun and affiliated newspapers for $65 million as part of the sale of parent firm Tribune Publishing to Alden Global Capital.

The agreement represents a major new test for the non-profit model which has gained momentum in recent years in response to the deepening crisis in the sector. 

Newsroom employment at newspapers fell by half between 2008 and 2019, according to Pew Research Centre, with more cuts reported during the pandemic.

The idea had been circulating in Baltimore for years but gained steam with the "Save Our Sun" campaign launched last year by journalists, union and civic leaders and others.

"There was a huge amount of community support," said Sun journalist Liz Bowie, one of those behind the campaign.

Bowie said Baltimoreans appeared to understand the value of the longtime news organisation and what might happen if it failed or was hollowed out.

"That void can't be filled by a digital startup," she said.

Ted Venetoulis, a former county executive and gubernatorial candidate who joined the campaign, said the initiative drove home the notion that the newspaper was the "soul" and "conscience" of the community.

"They're watchdogs, they keep people honest, but they also are cheerleaders. They magnify the good things about our society," Venetoulis said.

The "Save our Sun" campaign got more than 7,000 signatures and was endorsed by prominent locals including baseball icon Cal Ripken, TV producer David Simon and film director John Waters.

The deal for Bainum's group to buy Sun Media Group would depend on Alden's acquisition of the rest of Tribune Publishing, including the Chicago Tribune, Hartford Courant and other regional dailies.

 

Going non-profit 

 

The non-profit model has been growing in recent years in the United States, and now includes some 300 news outlets, according to University of Illinois professor Brant Houston, a founder of the Institute for Nonprofit News.

Non-profits have made inroads during a crisis that has seen many local newspapers disappear and others consolidated by big chains and hedge fund owners, most of which have cut staff and coverage.

"The business model for newspapers was just not working," Houston said.

"If you have an organisation beholden to stockholders, you end up with a business model of laying people off and cutting coverage," Houston said. "That's not a strategic plan."

The Sun has won 16 Pulitzer prizes including one last year for a story on a corruption scandal which led to the resignation and prosecution of mayor Catherine Pugh.

But it has been reeling like many of its peers, with print circulation has fallen to just 43,000 on weekdays and 125,00 on Sunday, a fraction of the level from its peak years. Newsroom staff has been slashed over the years, and is now less than 100.

Sun journalists expressed hope the new model could help reverse the newspaper's decline.

"We were blown away and psyched by this," said reporter Colin Campbell.

Health reporter Meredith Cohn said she hopes the deal will lead "getting more reporters and covering the community", including areas neglected in recent years.

 

Philadelphia experiment 

 

One hopeful sign comes from Philadelphia, where the Inquirer newspaper has been under non-profit ownership since 2016 when owner Gerry Lenfest donated his stake to the Lenfest Institute along with a $20 million endowment.

Since then, "there has been an outpouring of community financial support" for the daily with some $7 million in grants in 2020 alone, said Jim Friedlich, chief executive of the nonprofit group.

The Inquirer has been able to maintain a newsroom staff of 200, far bigger than most of its peers, said Friedlich.

The Philadelphia group offered informal advice to Bainum, who has not publicly discussed his plans for the Baltimore Sun, he added.

Bainum, chairman of Choice Hotels, "has become something of a student of the news business and has been inspired by and is replicating the Lenfest nonprofit model", Friedlich said.

John Schleuss, president of the NewsGuild which represents newsroom staff and helped organise Save the Sun, is optimistic that the Sun can open the door to similar deals.

"I hope we can get back to publications which are accountable to the community, and not just interested in short-term profits."

Schleuss said he was disappointed that similar efforts failed at other Tribune dailies which will be taken over by a company "with a history of cutting a large number of jobs".

"It's good that people in Baltimore stepped up," Schleuss said. "We need that to happen all across the country."

Stocks mixed as record-breaking week approaches end

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

NEW YORK — US and European stocks had a mixed finish on Friday, capping a week that saw equities set new records on both sides of the Atlantic but also struggle with inflation fears.

In Europe, London's FTSE 100 gained as a weaker pound helped take the sting out of data showing Britain's economy tanked amid the latest COVID-19 lockdown, and post-Brexit exports to the EU plunged.

In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30, which has streaked to fresh highs repeatedly this week, gave up gains made the previous day after the European Central Bank boosted sentiment by promising more support for the economy if needed.

The Dow and S&P 500 managed to edge to new records for the second day straight day in New York trading, but rising bond yields amid fears of oncoming inflation kept investors away from tech stocks, sending the Nasdaq down 0.6 per cent at the close.

"There is a tug of war in the market regarding where inflation will settle," Quincy Krosby of Prudential Financial said. 

Traders are watching how US President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion stimulus package will impact the economy, as well as mulling added push from the infrastructure package he is expected to soon propose.

"No one is suggesting at this point that we will be due for hyperinflation," Krosby said. But since the Federal Reserve has made it clear they will run the economy hotter, markets are now wondering, "how hot?"

Asian stock markets earlier closed mostly higher.

 

Incoming stimulus 

 

Less than two months after taking office, Biden on Thursday put his signature on the huge rescue plan, which paves the way for a spending splurge widely seen as ramping up both domestic and global growth.

The package — which includes up to $1,400 in cash handouts, extended unemployment benefits and other aid programmes — comes as the US government accelerates its vaccine drive against the coronavirus.

The ECB's decision on Thursday to ramp up its own stimulus, or bond-buying programme, provided some calm to markets.

Observers said the ECB move signaled to investors that central bank officials around the world were ready to step in to keep their monetary policies ultra-low for as long as needed to help the economy get back on track.

However, an increase in money market rates this year has led some economists to fear that the largesse of global central banks and central governments will cause a surge in inflation, potentially leading to an end of the cheap cash that has powered a year-long equity rally.

Those fears were in play once again on Friday, analysts said, pointing to the rate on benchmark 10-year US government bonds rising above 1.6 per cent.

"After some relative calm on the interest rate front, another jump in the 10-year Treasury yield seems to be pressuring stocks," said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade.

"It seems that the pressure on the Nasdaq is coming amid a reallocation from tech stocks and into cyclical equities" that benefit from an increase in economic growth, he said. "While such a shift can be unnerving, it's nothing to panic about".

Bitcoin passes $60,000 for first time

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

Bitcoin briefly rose above $60,000 for the first time on Saturday (AFP photo)

PARIS — Bitcoin passed the $60,000 mark for the first time on Saturday, with analysts saying the giant US stimulus package helped boost the world's most popular virtual currency on its record-breaking run.

The cryptocurrency hit $60,197 at 12:34 GMT and continued to hover around $60,000, according to the website CoinMarketCap.

Bitcoin has tripled in value over the last three months — it was worth $20,000 in December — bolstered by increasing backing from corporate heavyweights.

Markets.com analyst Neil Wilson said that in recent days "Bitcoin went up as investors looked to the imminent arrival of stimulus cheques".

Individuals in the US earning up to $75,000 will receive a cheque for $1,400 from this weekend, after President Joe Biden signed his $1.9 trillion COVID-19 rescue plan into law this week.

Bitcoin has been on a meteoric rise since March last year, when it stood at $5,000, spurred by online payments giant PayPal saying it would allow account holders to use cryptocurrency.

Last month, Elon Musk's electric carmaker Tesla invested $1.5 billion in the virtual unit, while Twitter chief Jack Dorsey and rap mogul Jay-Z said they are creating a fund aimed at making Bitcoin "the internet's currency".

Others jumping on the bandwagon include Wall Street player BNY Mellon, investment fund giant BlackRock and credit card titan Mastercard.

Bitcoin, which was launched back in 2009, hit the headlines in 2017 after soaring from less than $1,000 in January to almost $20,000 in December of the same year.

The virtual bubble then burst in subsequent days, with bitcoin's value fluctuating wildly before sinking below $5,000 by October 2018.

However, the last year's rise has been more steady, with investors and Wall Street finance giants wooed by dizzying growth, the opportunity for profit and asset diversification, and a safe store of value to guard against inflation.

Bitcoins are traded via a decentralised registry system known as a blockchain.

The system requires massive computer processing power in order to manage and implement transactions.

That power is provided by "miners", who do so in the hope they will receive new bitcoins for validating transaction data.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF