Wednesday Morning Briefing: 'Fire it bravely for the Party and the motherland!'

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South Korea's Hyunmoo II missile is fired during an exercise at an undefined location in the east coast of South Korea, November 29, 2017. The Defence Ministry/Yonhap via REUTERS

 


 

North Korea

 

North Korea said it successfully tested a powerful new intercontinental ballistic missile that put the entire U.S. mainland within range of its nuclear weapons. 

 

“Fire it bravely for the Party and the motherland!” leader Kim Jong Un wrote on the missile order, according to a photograph shown on North Korean state television. 

 

In a broadcast on state TV, North Korea said the newly developed Hwasong-15 has “much greater advantages in its tactical and technological specifications and technical characteristics” than its Hwasong-14 ICBM, tested twice in July. 

 

Interactive: Nuclear North Korea 

 


U.S. politics

 

Senate Republicans rammed forward President Donald Trump’s tax-cut bill in an abrupt, partisan committee vote that set up a full vote by the Senate as soon as Thursday, although some details of the measure remained unsettled. 

 

Democratic leaders in Congress skipped a meeting with Trump on that was to have focused on the budget, raising the risk of a government shutdown next month with both sides far apart on the terms of an agreement.

A District Court judge sided with Trump in a legal battle over who should be in charge of the U.S. consumer finance watchdog, allowing White House budget director Mick Mulvaney to serve as acting head. 

 


Business

 

Signs of progress with U.S. tax cuts and Europe’s Brexit negotiations brought fresh highs for world stocks, while bitcoin topped $10,000 in a frenzy for cryptocurrencies.

 

Bitcoin soared to an all-time high on major exchanges and digital currency indexes, including the widely followed Luxembourg-based trading platform BitStamp. It has increased more than 10-fold in value so far this year, posting the largest gain of all asset classes, amid increased institutional demand for crypto-currencies as financial and mainstream use has expanded. 

 

After Tesla’s Model S sedans and Model X SUVs roll off the company’s Fremont, California assembly line, the electric vehicles usually make another stop - for repairs, nine current and former employees have told Reuters. At Tesla “so much goes into rework after the car is done ... that’s where their money is being spent,” a former Tesla supervisor said. 

 

Daimler has rebuffed an offer from China’s Geely to take a stake of up to 5 percent via a discounted share placement due to long-held reluctance to see existing shareholdings diluted, people with knowledge of the discussions said. 

 

Breakingviews: Slim chance of Kochs taking over Meredith media 

 


 

Newborn white Bengal tiger cubs are shown to the media at San Jorge zoo in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, November 28, 2017. REUTERS/Jose Luis Gonzalez

 

Slideshow: Pictures of the year 2017 

 


Tech

 

The Supreme Court takes up a major test of privacy rights in the digital age as it weighs whether police must obtain warrants to get data on the past locations of criminal suspects using cellphone data from wireless providers. 

 

SWIFT, the global messaging system used to move trillions of dollars each day, warned banks that the threat of digital heists is on the rise as hackers use increasingly sophisticated tools and techniques to launch new attacks. 

 

Soaring shares of Apple, Alphabet and Tencent this year have made technology a top global performer, with few signs that investors are worried that rising valuations might be increasing the risk of a downturn. 

 

A consortium led by SoftBank launched its tender offer for shares of Uber and the Japanese company said that some notable early Uber investors planned to sell stock. 

 

Uber’s quarterly losses widened, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters, as the ride-hailing company wades through legal troubles and faces regulatory scrutiny across the globe. 

 


World

 

Reuters TV: Britain ‘close to deal’ on Brexit bill 

 

Senior Saudi Arabian prince Miteb bin Abdullah, once seen as a leading contender to the throne, has been freed after agreeing to pay over $1 billion to settle corruption allegations against him, a Saudi official said. 

 

Australia’s upper house Senate passed a measure to legalize same-sex marriage, perhaps as soon as next week, after lawmakers dismissed a conservative push to allow religious objectors to refuse service to same-sex couples.

 

When a caravan of armored personnel carriers was spotted traveling on the main roads northwest of Harare on Nov. 14, journalists raced to see if it was the start of a coup against Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwe’s long-serving president. Read the latest Backstory. 

 


Commentary

 

Trump should not agree to proposals to send arms to Ukraine, writes Daniel DePetris. "Opening up America’s stockpile to Ukraine is not in Washington’s national security interest. In fact, it is bound to make a conflict that is mostly frozen into a more deadly one and it complicates any reasonable chance of a diplomatic resolution," says DePetris, a fellow at Defense Priorities.  



Tuesday Morning Briefing: Tax drama intensifies as bill faces key vote

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Ballerinas perform as U.S. First Lady Melania Trump begins a tour of the holiday decorations with reporters at the White House in Washington, U.S., November 27, 2017. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst

 


Uber

 

Japan’s SoftBank is offering to purchase shares of Uber at a valuation of $48 billion, a 30 percent discount to its most recent valuation of $68.5 billion, a person familiar with the matter said. The investment, which was approved by the Uber board in October, would also trigger a string of governance changes at Uber that would limit some early shareholders’ voting power, expand the board from 11 to 17 directors and cut the influence of former Chief Executive Travis Kalanick. 

 

Breakingviews: Uber backers face head-on collision with greed 

 

Video: Uber at a 30 percent discount

 


United States

 

President Donald Trump’s drive to overhaul the U.S. tax code headed toward a new drama in the Senate, where a pair of Republican lawmakers demanded changes to the party’s tax bill in exchange for their help in moving the measure forward. 

 

The fight for control of the U.S. consumer watchdog agency intensified as Mick Mulvaney, Trump’s pick to run the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, imposed a hiring freeze and halted any new regulations. 

 

Trump said there was a “Pocahontas” in the Congress during a meeting with Native American World War Two veterans in an apparent derogatory reference to Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. 

 


Markets

 

European shares opened slightly higher as the Bank of England deemed that UK lenders could deal with a “disorderly” Brexit, while the dollar held steady ahead of a confirmation hearing for Federal Reserve chair nominee Jerome Powell. 

 

As a nominee to lead the Fed, veteran governor Jerome Powell sides with the outgoing chair Janet Yellen in arguing that the Fed’s easy money policy has paid off by bringing millions back to work without any clear sign it has thrown markets off kilter. 

 

Oil prices fell on uncertainty over the outcome of a key OPEC meeting this week due to decide on production policy for the next year. OPEC is heading for tougher-than-expected policy talks  amid concern that its efforts to rebalance the oil market might overshoot by creating a global deficit and spurring a further price rally. 

 

Oil majors are seeking further efficiencies by adapting technologies for highly automated offshore operations to shale and pursuing advances in digitalization that have reshaped industries from auto manufacturing to retail. If they are successful, the U.S. oil industry could frustrate the ongoing effort by OPEC effort to drain a global oil glut.

 


 

Britain's Prince Harry poses with Meghan Markle in the Sunken Garden of Kensington Palace, London, Britain, November 27, 2017. REUTERS/Toby Melville

 


Tech

 

A research arm of the U.S. intelligence community just wrapped up a competition to see who could develop the best facial recognition technology. The challenge: identify as many passengers as possible walking on an aircraft boarding ramp. Of all the entries, it was a Chinese start-up company called Yitu Tech that walked away with the $25,000 prize this month, the highest of three cash awards. 

 

AirBnb, Reddit, Shutterstock, Tumblr, Etsy, Twitter and a long list of small internet companies urged the Federal Communications Commission to scrap a plan to roll back net neutrality rules

 

U.S. prosecutors have charged three Chinese nationals affiliated with a cyber security company in China with hacking into Siemens, Trimble and Moody’s Analytics to steal business secrets

 

Confronted with national regulators’ intensifying scrutiny of digital currency fund-raising, known as initial coin offerings, many entrepreneurs are moving businesses to locations more welcoming to crypto-currencies and known for low taxes. Dozens of start-ups have flocked to Singapore, Switzerland, Eastern Europe and the Caribbean this year, according to interviews with entrepreneurs and company registration data made available to Reuters. 

 


World

 

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta was sworn-in for a second five-year term in front of a rapturous crowd as riot police sealed off an area where the opposition planned a rival gathering and teargassed people trying to reach it. 

 

An aspiring British actress sued Harvey Weinstein in New York federal court accusing the movie producer of sex trafficking by inviting her to a hotel room in France and sexually assaulting her. 

 

Indonesia extended the closure of the airport on Bali as ash from a volcano swept the island, stranding thousands of tourists as authorities tried to persuade villagers to leave their homes near the erupting mountain. 

 

Pope Francis held talks with Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi, the second day of a visit fraught with tension after the United States accused the Southeast Asian nation of “ethnic cleansing” against its Muslim Rohingya people. 

 

Just four weeks after a blind date with U.S. actress Meghan Markle that left him “beautifully surprised”, Britain’s Prince Harry took his wife-to-be on a trip to Botswana to camp under the stars in his tent. In their first broadcast interview since announcing their engagement, Harry and Markle discussed the moment of their proposal and their courtship. 

 

Reuters TV: Coalition talks in Germany but no quick fix on the horizon



The battle for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau continues