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https://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/12479311/10/23/estonia-roba-mas-de-5000-emprendedores-digitales-a-espana.htmlSaludos.
Cita de: Cadavre Exquis en Octubre 09, 2023, 08:07:50 amhttps://www.eleconomista.es/economia/noticias/12479311/10/23/estonia-roba-mas-de-5000-emprendedores-digitales-a-espana.htmlSaludos.Roba... ¿o rescata?
Con todo, esto supone un problema para poder retener el talento nacional en una compañía española. “Nosotros formamos y le damos las primeras oportunidades laborales, pero luego acaban en una empresa internacional. Con la mejor de las suertes se quedan en nuestro país, pero gran parte se van fuera de España para seguir trabajando”, remarcan las fuentes consultadas.
El Gobierno empieza tramitar los indultos de los exaltos cargos del PSOE condenados de los EREEl Ejecutivo de Pedro Sánchez, al estar en funciones, puede comenzar con el procedimiento pero no conceder la gracia
China's Country Garden eyes debt deal, Evergrande creditors anticipate liquidationHONG KONG, Oct 9 (Reuters) - China's Country Garden (2007.HK) may announce a restructuring of its offshore debt soon, local media reported, while bondholders of embattled peer China Evergrande Group (3333.HK) raised concerns about a possible liquidation as its debt plans floundered.Country Garden, which missed two dollar interest payments last month, has two coupons totalling $66.8 million coming due on Monday. Media outlet Cailianshe said the company may announce a restructuring soon.The developer declined to comment on the media report and whether it has made any payments.Country Garden has $10.96 billion offshore bonds and 42.4 billion yuan ($5.81 billion) worth of loans not denominated in yuan. If it defaults, these debt will need to be restructured, and the company or its assets also risk liquidation by creditors.The coupons due on Monday are tied to Country Garden's 6.5% April 2024 and 7.25% April 2026 bonds. The payments have a 30-day grace period, but the developer faces a big test later this month, when its entire offshore debt could be deemed in default if it fails to pay a $15 million September coupon by Oct. 17.China's property sector has been hit by a debt crisis since 2021. Companies accounting for 40% of Chinese home sales - mostly private property developers - have defaulted on debt obligations, leaving many homes unfinished.More than two years on, the crisis has deepened as confidence in both housing and capital markets dried up, further squeezing developers' liquidity.A key bondholder group of Evergrande said in a statement on Monday it was surprised by Evergrande's recent announcement that its offshore debt restructuring plan failed to meet regulatory requirements.Evergrande, which is at the centre of China's debt crisis, said late last month that its billionaire founder was being investigated over unspecified crimes. It has also said it was unable to issue new debt - a crucial step in a restructuring - due to an ongoing investigation of its main unit.The bondholder group said it had not been given any documents or filings from Evergrande despite repeated requests, and it urged the developer to seek a resolution from regulators to allow the restructuring to proceed."This is the only way the cloud of uncertainty surrounding the regulatory issues can be resolved," it said. "Until then, the base case is that China Evergrande Group will be liquidated at the next winding up hearing on October 30, 2023."Evergrande did not respond to a request for comment from Reuters.BEIJING SUPPORTSome market participants are now betting on authorities stepping in to manage the fallout, as a messy collapse of Evergrande could rip through the already-sputtering economy. The property giant has hundreds of thousands of unfinished homes across the country and $300 billion worth of liabilities at home in China alone.Beijing has rolled out a range of support measures in recent months to revive the sector, which makes up about a quarter of the world's second-largest economy.Some analysts, however, say more measures are needed.In a research note on Friday, UBS said property sales growth in major cities likely stayed weak in September, suggesting a limited rebound of sales despite more supportive measures to ease the property crisis.China's average daily home sales based on floor area during the Golden Week holiday were down 17% from a year ago, according to China Index Academy on Saturday.The market is closely watching whether Country Garden can manage to dodge default again by making payments at the last minute.In September, Country Garden won approval from its onshore creditors to extend yuan bond payments, and in the same month made coupon payments on the offshore markets in the last hours of end of a grace period.But the developer has not yet paid a $15 million coupon due Sept 17 and another $40 million coupon due on Sept 27, both of which have 30-day grace periods.Shares in Country Garden fell more than 6% on Monday, while Evergrande Group shares tumbled 11%, compared to a 1.9% fall in the Hang Seng Mainland Properties Index (.HSMPI).Shares of unit China Evergrande New Energy Vehicle Group (0708.HK) were volatile after it said on Sunday a share sale plan with U.S.-listed NWTN (NWTN.O) had been halted amid "significant uncertainties" tied to Evergrande group.The stock, which had been suspended since Sept. 28, traded between a 10% fall and a 9% gain.($1 = 7.2951 Chinese yuan renminbi)
Evergrande Creditors Call Pulled Debt Plan ‘Complete Surprise’*Ad-hoc group of offshore creditors comment in press release*Holders of $6 billion notes ask for clarification and updatesA group of offshore creditors of China Evergrande Group said they were “left in the dark” after the developer scrapped a meeting for its multi-billion dollar restructuring plan, in the latest example of investor frustration with governance issues at some Chinese firms.The holders of more than $6 billion of the defaulted builder’s offshore public bonds implored the company to resolve any regulatory issues with the country’s securities regulator and top economic planning agency, describing the development as a “complete surprise,” according to a press release Monday.The comments come after Evergrande said late last month that it was canceling key creditor meetings and must reassess its proposed restructuring. One of the major setbacks the builder cited was that it’s been unable to meet regulator qualifications to issue new bonds, which had been a crucial part of its restructuring proposal.The creditors’ complaint adds a new twist to Evergrande’s increasingly uncertain destiny, now that Chinese authorities also have launched a probe into founder Hui Ka Yan’s suspected crimes. The world’s most indebted developer with liabilities exceeding $300 billion will face an Oct. 30 court hearing in Hong Kong of a petition to liquidate the firm.The latest development also expands a growing list of distressed Chinese companies, including Evergrande’s industry peer Country Garden Holdings Co., that have faced criticism of weak governance and disclosure practices that are putting investors off the country’s borrowers longer-term.Evergrande’s position “that the restructuring cannot be implemented for regulatory reasons just does not add up,” according to the press release. “It is difficult to believe that NDRC would actually stop a distressed company from restructuring” by means of amending defaulted debt, it added, referring to the state planning agency National Development and Reform Commission.The ad hoc creditor group is advised by Moelis & Company Asia Ltd. and Kirkland & Ellis, and its members comprise international investors based in New York, London and Hong Kong, the release said.Evergrande’s shares fell 13% Monday, registering a four-day losing streak. “The ongoing uncertainty and lack of transparency surrounding Evergrande and its executives have exacerbated the nervousness and negative sentiment in the Chinese real estate sector,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.
Evergrande Investors Warn of ‘Uncontrollable Collapse’The developer canceled a debt restructuring deal last month, leaving investors in limboChina Evergrande’s 11th-hour cancellation of a $19 billion debt restructuring could lead to a messy collapse and have “a catastrophic effect” on other troubled companies in the sector, its bond investors said Monday. The Chinese property giant abandoned a bond restructuring deal late last month, after spending almost two years in discussions with its investors. Evergrande said regulators had barred it from issuing new securities—a key feature of the restructuring—because its main onshore real estate subsidiary was being investigated.But in a statement, a group of investors holding some of Evergrande’s bonds raised doubts about how hard the company had tried to win the support of regulators and questioned why it had repeatedly assured them that the deal had been approved. The investors said that unless Evergrande convinces regulators to allow the deal to go ahead, it is on course to be wound up at a hearing on Oct. 30. “This will likely lead to the uncontrolled collapse of the group,” wrote the investors, who hold more than $6 billion of Evergrande’s bonds in notional terms.Evergrande didn’t respond to a request for comment.(...)
The Free-Money Experiment Is OverCarnage from the bond market—where the rout is worse than anything you’ll find in the history books—is spreading, and the implications are nasty.Strategists at Bank of America Corp. recently got their hands on US bond market data going all the way back to the founding of the nation. And it shows, they say, that never before has there been an extended period of losses like the past three years.It’s hard to know, of course, just how accurate the figures were from those early post-colonial years. (How often could bonds have traded during the War of 1812?) Still, there’s something jarring about a worst-in-236-years statistic. It’s a poignant reminder of the magnitude of the pain rippling through the financial world in the aftermath of an inflation shock and interest-rate surge that few saw coming. The pain was severe enough to take down Silicon Valley Bank and three other regional banks this year and pushed others into crisis until policymakers in Washington rushed to prop them up.(...)“There’s just way too much debt,” says Ed Yardeni, a longtime Wall Street economist and founder of Yardeni Research Inc.(...)
El lloguer a Barcelona torna a marcar un nou màxim i s’enfila fins als 1.123 € al mes
IBM CEO in Damage Control Mode After AI Job Loss CommentsPosted by msmash on Monday October 09, 2023 @11:28AM from the closer-look dept.IBM CEO Arvind Krishna appears to be in a state of damage control following recent controversial comments on AI-related job losses. From a report:CitarSpeaking at an event in the US this week, Krishna said IBM has no intention of laying off tech staff, such as developers or programmers, and instead plans to ramp up hiring for roles in these areas. "I don't intend to get rid of a single one," he said. "I'll get more." Krishna added that the company aims to increase the number of software engineering and sales staff over the next four years to accommodate for its heightened focus on generative AI. Instead, the hammer will fall largely on staff working in back-office operations, aligning closely with what we've heard previously from the exec.Earlier this year, IBM announced plans to cut nearly 8,000 staff working in positions spanning human resources in a bid to automate roles. The move means that anywhere up to 7,800 jobs at the tech giant's HR division could be cut, equivalent to around 30% of the overall workforce in the unit. IBM also said at the time that it would halt hiring for roles in the division on account of positions being automated.Krishna has been among the most outspoken big tech executives on the topic of AI job losses in recent months. While industry figureheads have repeatedly shirked the topic, Krishna, to his credit, has been candid on the subject. In an interview with CNBC in August, Krishna suggested "we should all feel better" about the influx of generative AI tools, much to the ire of critics worried about its impact on the labor market. Krishna also told the broadcaster that organizations can deliver marked improvements to productivity through generative AI, but that will come at the expense of human roles.
Speaking at an event in the US this week, Krishna said IBM has no intention of laying off tech staff, such as developers or programmers, and instead plans to ramp up hiring for roles in these areas. "I don't intend to get rid of a single one," he said. "I'll get more." Krishna added that the company aims to increase the number of software engineering and sales staff over the next four years to accommodate for its heightened focus on generative AI. Instead, the hammer will fall largely on staff working in back-office operations, aligning closely with what we've heard previously from the exec.Earlier this year, IBM announced plans to cut nearly 8,000 staff working in positions spanning human resources in a bid to automate roles. The move means that anywhere up to 7,800 jobs at the tech giant's HR division could be cut, equivalent to around 30% of the overall workforce in the unit. IBM also said at the time that it would halt hiring for roles in the division on account of positions being automated.Krishna has been among the most outspoken big tech executives on the topic of AI job losses in recent months. While industry figureheads have repeatedly shirked the topic, Krishna, to his credit, has been candid on the subject. In an interview with CNBC in August, Krishna suggested "we should all feel better" about the influx of generative AI tools, much to the ire of critics worried about its impact on the labor market. Krishna also told the broadcaster that organizations can deliver marked improvements to productivity through generative AI, but that will come at the expense of human roles.
Comparto la sorpresa que me ha causado que la sexta se posicione claramente con el PSOE y contra sumar y podemos en la cuestión del ataque de jamás.Muy raro.Y barrunto movimientos importantes políticos detrás de este movimiento inesperado. Podría ser el fin de podemos podemos sumar y la reconstrucción hegemonía de la representacion de la izquierda por el PSOE y consecuente liberación de servidumbres de pactos para mayorías.No soy nada PSOE, pero ojalá. Sds.
https://www.reuters.com/world/china/chinese-developer-country-garden-faces-fresh-offshore-payments-deadline-2023-10-09/CitarChina's Country Garden eyes debt deal, Evergrande creditors anticipate liquidationThe stock, which had been suspended since Sept. 28, traded between a 10% fall and a 9% gain.($1 = 7.2951 Chinese yuan renminbi)https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-10-09/evergrande-creditors-call-pulled-debt-plan-complete-surpriseCitarEvergrande Creditors Call Pulled Debt Plan ‘Complete Surprise’Evergrande’s shares fell 13% Monday, registering a four-day losing streak. “The ongoing uncertainty and lack of transparency surrounding Evergrande and its executives have exacerbated the nervousness and negative sentiment in the Chinese real estate sector,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.---https://www.wsj.com/business/deals/evergrande-investors-warn-of-uncontrollable-collapse-e163fe48CitarEvergrande Investors Warn of ‘Uncontrollable Collapse’Evergrande didn’t respond to a request for comment.(...)
China's Country Garden eyes debt deal, Evergrande creditors anticipate liquidationThe stock, which had been suspended since Sept. 28, traded between a 10% fall and a 9% gain.($1 = 7.2951 Chinese yuan renminbi)
Evergrande Creditors Call Pulled Debt Plan ‘Complete Surprise’Evergrande’s shares fell 13% Monday, registering a four-day losing streak. “The ongoing uncertainty and lack of transparency surrounding Evergrande and its executives have exacerbated the nervousness and negative sentiment in the Chinese real estate sector,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.
Evergrande Investors Warn of ‘Uncontrollable Collapse’Evergrande didn’t respond to a request for comment.(...)
@ShanghaiMacro This is probably one of the most important charts right now about the Chinese economy. To offset the collapse in the real estate sector, Beijing has managed to surge credit to the manufacturing sector, which has helped prevent a total collapse of domestic credit growth and demand