Business Maverick: Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day

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Business Maverick: Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your Day By Bloomberg

The British voted on alternatives to Prime Minister Theresa May’s Brexit deal — and rejected all eight of the proposed models. The pound retreated. Earlier, May promised to resign from the leadership if her Conservative Party colleagues drop their opposition to her Brexit strategy and vote to ratify her deal. There were early signs that May’s dramatic gamble could pay off.

Energy companies in the S&P 500 Index joined a slide in oil, while industrial shares gained. Traders piled into bonds amid concern about a slowdown in global growth. Recent data showed weakness from U.S. housing to retail sales and consumer sentiment, prompting a more dovish tone from the central bank.Facebook Inc. will ban content that references white nationalism and white separatism, taking a major step toward curbing racism and hate speech on the site.

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Business: Five Things You Need to Know to Start Your DayBrexit’s path keeps getting muddier, Trump’s fiasco over North Korean sanctions, Apple loses patent ruling. Here are some of the things people in markets are talking about.
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MAVERICK BUSINESS ANALYSIS: South Africa’s enterprise sector critically illThe parlous state of the enterprise sector in SA can be seen in dismal company income tax receipts over the past five years, which are declining and very heavily weighted in favour of large companies. The decline in profitability means 74% of all companies pay no tax at all and the vast majority of company tax receipts come from just 0.09% of SA’s corporates.
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BUSINESS MAVERICK OP-ED: Why do financial markets overreact to bad news?We live in the era of the 24-hour news cycle. Corporate issues make the headlines and then rumbleon and on, taking new turns and causing more damage as company responses are analysed in minute detail. Sometimes, major incidents beget huge crises where significant investor responses are justified. In others, we often get the feeling that markets go over the top.
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BUSINESS MAVERICK : China and the US: Xi and Trump miss their chance for meaningful trade reformsWhile Chinese President Xi Jinping appears to care only about maintaining political control, US President Donald Trump seems to care only about himself.
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MAVERICK BUSINESS: The Purple Cow’s basic income plan is either genius or a bovine pattyThe Negative Income Tax, says the Capitalist Party of South Africa’s Kanthan Pillay, ‘is our riposte to the constant clamour for the Basic Income Grant’. It is a proposal, he says, to conquer unemployment, especially in the light of the effect on jobs of the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Unemployment too high for it to be viable 😕
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BUSINESS MAVERICK: Take more savings offshore, money managers urge SA investorsIncreasingly, financial advisers are recommending that SA investors take as much of their discretionary investments out of the country as they can. But is taking 100% of your investment income out of the country sensible, never mind unpatriotic?
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