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Ardern accelerates border reopening as ‘Jacindamania’ wanes

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Ardern accelerates border reopening as ‘Jacindamania’ wanes

Jacinda Ardern has accelerated the total reopening of New Zealand’s borders after declaring the Pacific nation to be a “secure place” to go to solely days after a ballot revealed that her Labour social gathering had fallen behind its major rival for the primary time in 5 years.

The prime minister stated on Wednesday that New Zealand was “able to welcome the world again” as she introduced ahead the border reopening for vaccinated travellers from Australia to the second week of April and for folks arriving from different nations that didn’t require a visa to Might from July.

The sooner reopening was introduced simply six weeks after Ardern stated the nation would reopen regularly after a two-year interval when it adopted one of many strictest approaches on the planet to managing the unfold of Covid-19.

“We’re prepared to securely transfer into a brand new chapter in our administration of the pandemic,” stated Ardern, signalling the tip of the “Fortress New Zealand” period. She added the nation had the bottom fee of deaths through the pandemic within the OECD.

Ardern’s reputation has waned because the begin of the pandemic and final week her Labour social gathering fell behind the Nationwide social gathering within the polls for the primary time since she was elected. She remained effectively forward of her rival Christopher Luxon as most well-liked prime minister, in keeping with the 1News/Kantar however her 34 per cent score had fallen sharply from 58 per cent in 2020.

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“These glory days of Labour receiving 50 per cent help are effectively and actually over,” Bryce Edwards, a political analyst on the Victoria College of Wellington, stated. “These heights got here at a time when New Zealand appeared to have eradicated Covid completely, and there actually was a renewed ‘Jacindamania’. Since then there have been a mess of things which have tarnished the report of the federal government.”

The ruling social gathering’s reputation waned partly due to frustration over the prolonged border closures and the dealing with of a protest in opposition to vaccine mandates exterior the parliament constructing in Wellington, which culminated in violence between the police and demonstrators.

The most recent ballot swing has been triggered by a pointy rise in the price of dwelling following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, which has despatched the value of meals and petrol greater. Luxon has promised a programme of tax cuts and has accused the federal government of appearing too slowly.

Ardern admitted this week that there was a “price of dwelling disaster” as she decreased gas taxes.

Edwards stated that the federal government can be credited with being versatile and listening to the general public on borders and “bread and butter” points, however different voters may see the modifications as “caving into stress”.

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The accelerated reopening would although be a boon to the nation’s struggling tourism trade, which accounts for five.5 per cent of the nation’s economic system and eight per cent of the workforce.

Ardern stated that she was notably eager to welcome again Australians, who made up 40 per cent of complete vacationers earlier than the pandemic struck, for the Easter faculty holidays.

Covid-19 infections in New Zealand had risen sharply because the onset of Omicron in December however fell final week to a seven-day rolling common of about 20,000 circumstances.

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Japanese shares rout deepens after tech sell-off on Wall Street

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Japanese shares rout deepens after tech sell-off on Wall Street

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Japanese stocks ended an already turbulent week in a nosedive, dropping to a six-month low as global funds fled risk and the strengthening yen continued to squeeze speculators out of the so-called carry trade.

The broad Topix benchmark of Japanese stocks, which peaked at an all-time high in mid-July and had been one of the world’s best-performing indices of 2024, fell 5.5 per cent in the first hour of Tokyo trading on Friday.

The sell-off followed a 3.2 per cent fall in the Topix on Thursday and heavy overnight drops on Wall Street led by growing market concerns around the US economy and resilience of the tech sector.

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“We haven’t really seen these moves since Covid. Why are they so extreme? Because bad data in the US is now being treated as bad data,” said Takeo Kamai, head of execution services at CLSA in Tokyo. He added that weak economic data was now fuelling recession fears, whereas previously investors took negative US data as a sign that interest rates might come down and boost equities.

“Geopolitics and earnings are playing into this,” said Kamai. “Uncertainty is very high, and people are de-risking.”

The sell-off has been accelerated by heavily leveraged Japanese retail investors rushing to get out of a popular exchange traded fund, the Nomura NF Nikkei 225 ETF, traders said. The ETF fell 9.55 per cent on Friday as individual investors rushed to stem losses.

A 20 per cent plunge in Intel shares after US markets closed spooked Tokyo, where tech and semiconductor names have been among the most attractive to foreign investors.

Bellwether Japanese technology names, led by Tokyo Electron, SoftBank, Lasertec and Advantest all fell heavily in a rout that traders at two Japanese houses said appeared to have been led by large overnight sell orders from European and US long-only funds.

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“It’s been a profit-taking frenzy this week. The big funds are taking risk off the table, and Japan is being hardest hit after a very strong run and now a macro backdrop that looks less bright,” said one senior broker at a Japanese securities house. “How long will this go on? We are not seeing signs of strong support here.”

The selling targeted many sectors but hit financials and industrials especially hard. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, the defence contractor whose shares had surged to an all-time high this year and which had been a favourite of foreign investors, has fallen more than 13 per cent this week.

Part of the damage has been the stronger yen, with a chill cast over Japanese manufacturers whose profits are heavily bolstered when the currency is weak, traders said.

The Bank of Japan’s unexpected interest rate increase on Wednesday and the implication that it has entered a rate-raising cycle, even as the US Federal Reserve appears poised to cut rates, has propelled the yen far higher than many had expected.

At Friday’s level of ¥149.6 against the dollar, the yen is now 7 per cent higher than it was in mid-July, and at a level that currency traders said was continuing to deter speculators from the huge bets against the yen that had been built up throughout 2024.

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For Japanese stocks, the dollar-yen rate has suddenly switched from tailwind to headwind, hitting exporters and forcing investors into fairly aggressive portfolio restructuring, analysts said.

“We don’t think that the Japan story is broken at this point, but the rules of the game have definitely changed,” said Bruce Kirk, chief Japan equity strategist at Goldman Sachs.

“The way investors have made money from Japan up until now and what will be required to make money from here will be different. So less focus on a narrow group of blue-chip exporters and more work around companies with higher domestic demand exposure.”

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Trump attacks on Harris ‘unhinged, racist and wrong,’ says Ohio Democrat

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Trump attacks on Harris ‘unhinged, racist and wrong,’ says Ohio Democrat

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Apple revenues rise on strong services business and iPad sales

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Apple revenues rise on strong services business and iPad sales

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Apple’s revenue increased 5 per cent in the three months to the end of June, as earnings from its services business and a surge in iPad purchases offset a decline in iPhone sales and a continued slowdown in China.

Total net sales rose to $85.8bn from $81.8bn in the second quarter of 2023, beating analysts’ expectations for $84.5bn. Net income rose 8 per cent to $21.4bn from $19.9bn, while earnings per share were up 11 per cent year on year to $1.40 versus the consensus estimate for $1.35.

Shares flipped between small gains and losses in after-hours trading on Thursday. Apple has risen 18 per cent this year and is the most valuable company in the world with a market capitalisation of $3.3tn.

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Blemishing the quarter, revenue for the closely watched greater China region declined again, falling 7 per cent to $14.7bn from $15.8bn a year earlier, as Apple continues to face competitive pressure from local handset makers and a ban from governmental use.

While acknowledging the challenges faced in the country amid US-China geopolitical tensions, chief financial officer Luca Maestri said that on a constant currency basis the fall in sales was only 3 per cent and the rate of decline was slowing.

More encouraging was Apple’s services business — which includes the App Store, Apple Pay and the TV+ streaming platform — which continued to accelerate, rising to $24.2bn from $21.bn a year ago.

Revenue from its flagship iPhone was $39.3bn, down slightly from $39.7bn a year ago. This was offset by a 24 per cent jump in iPad sales to $7.2bn, driven by the release in May of a series of new models with more powerful chips and larger screens.

“[The] focus will be on underlying demand across various product categories, especially iPhones given concerns around overall smartphone market and China competition,” said Citigroup analyst Atif Malik.

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Apple is bullish at the prospect of many customers upgrading to the newest iPhone models to gain access to new artificial intelligence features. With the iPhone 16 expected to launch in September, investors are watching closely for signs of how quickly the anticipated AI boost will start to show.

Apple announced the new features, known as “Apple Intelligence”, at its developer conference in June. A beta version of the AI-enhanced iPhone operating system, iOS 18.1, became available to developers this week. A deal with OpenAI will also give Apple users free access to ChatGPT, and Apple has explored partnerships with other big model providers such as Google.

“The Apple intelligence rollout will provide something that we think is relevant for users and another compelling reason to upgrade,” Maestri said.

Research and development expenses rose 8 per cent to $8bn in the quarter. Maestri declined to comment on how much of this was spent on AI, including the infrastructure needed to train and run its own large language models. Apple plans to run those models on-device and in its own data centres, which it says will better protect users’ privacy and data.

“We have significantly increased our level of effort on AI over the course of the year,” Maestri said. “We redeployed engineering resources from other programmes to AI because we recognised the need and importance of this new tech.”

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Last month Apple’s new mixed reality headset, the Vision Pro, launched for consumers in Europe, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan and Australia.

Apple announced a dividend of 25 cents a share worth $3.7bn for the quarter, with total shareholder returns rising to $32bn when buybacks were included.

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