Tag: jul 13 2021

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M&A DEALS TOP $500 BILLION IN 2021’S FIRST HALF

Since the beginning of this year, private equity firms have taken part in 6,298 deals worth $513 billion, not including the record $34 billion that Blackstone Group, Carlyle Group, and Hellman & Friedman paid for a majority stake in medical products giant Medline Industries, the Financial Times reported. The number and value of the deals...

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TOP U.S. HOTELS ARE IN DEPRESSION OR RECESSION

Despite a recent boom in airline traffic and leisure travel, 21 of the U.S.’s 25 premiere hotels are doing recession- or depression-level business, according to a new report by the American Hotel & Lodging Association (AHLA). Most flagship hotels are located in pricey urban centers and have depended on business travelers, conventions, meetings, and special...

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CORPORATIONS CONTINUE TO SHED OFFICE SPACE

Major corporations continue downsizing their office space, many finding it worthwhile to take a one-time charge to sublease space or void leases altogether instead of holding onto useless square footage. “COVID changed everything and we became a remote-first company,” Michael Linford, CFO of loan company Affirm Holdings, told the Wall Street Journal. Ninety of the...

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NEW YORK OFFICE VACANCIES SET RECORD

Empty office space across Manhattan reached a record 18.7 percent as of 1 July, according to Newmark, a real estate services company, with downtown’s office towers standing 21 percent vacant. The vacancy rate is 15 percent higher than at the end of the 2020 and more than double that of February 2020, just before the...

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FED OFFICIAL WARNS OF “BOOM AND BUST CYCLE” IN HOUSING

“I’m not predicting we’ll necessarily have a bust” in the housing market, Eric Rosengren, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, emphasized in an interview with the Financial Times published 29 June. “But it’s worth paying close attention to what’s happening in the housing market,” he added. Housing prices rose 23.6 percent in May,...

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COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION SANK AGAIN IN MAY

Spending on commercial construction slipped 1.1 percent during May, while spending on residential construction gained 0.2 percent, the Associated General Contractors of America (AGCA) reported. Construction for the power industry, which is the largest category in private nonresidential construction, retreated 1.6 percent for the month, the AGCA said; retail, warehouse, and farm building was off...

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REMOTE WORK SPAWNS NEW INDUSTRIES

As corporations settle into a new normal of employees working partly or entirely at home, new businesses have sprung up to offer efficient designs for flexible office space, telecom software to connect team members, and other tools to make seamless connections among home-based and central-office workers. In 2020, companies spend $317 billion on technology to...

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U.S. TRADE DEFICIT WIDENS AGAIN IN MAY

The U.S. trade deficit expanded 3.1 percent in May from the month before, totaling $71.2 billion, the U.S. commerce department reported. The country imported 1.3 percent more, totaling $277.3 billion, and exported just 0.6 percent more, worth $206 billion. The U.S. brought in more crude oil, lumber, and other industrial raw materials, and also more...

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FED UNDER GROWING PRESSURE TO RAISE RATES SOONER

The U.S. Federal Reserve will need to raise interest rates no later than late 2022 or early 2023 as more government spending pushes inflation’s rate beyond the Fed’s 2-percent target, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in a 1 July statement. Early in 2022, the Fed is likely to begin to scale back its $120-billion...

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MORE STIMULUS RISKS HIGHER INFLATION, IMF WARNS

Continued federal economic stimulus could drive inflation faster, requiring the U.S. Federal Reserve to raise interest rates sooner than it now plans to, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned in a 7 July public statement. Higher U.S. interest rates could pressure other countries to increase theirs. The resulting higher yields on government bonds could suck...

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