Tag Archives: Dollars

Sterling collapses as investors fly into dollars

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  • Sterling hits record low; risk of BOE response
  • Euro down 1%; Aussie, kiwi, yuan hit multi year lows
  • S&P 500 futures drop 0.6%

SYDNEY, Sept 26 (Reuters) – Sterling slumped to a record low on Monday, prompting speculation of an emergency response from the Bank of England, as confidence evaporated in Britain’s plan to borrow its way out of trouble, with spooked investors piling in to U.S. dollars.

Broadening worry that high interest rates will hurt growth hit Asia’s currencies and equities too, with exporters from Japanese carmakers to Australian miners hit hard.

The pound plunged nearly 5% at one point to $1.0327, breaking below 1985 lows. Moves were exacerbated by thinner liquidity in the Asia session, but even after stumbling back to $1.05 the currency is still down some 7% in just two sessions.

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“You’ve got to buy the dollar as a risk off-trade. There is nowhere else to go,” said Rabobank strategist Michael Every in Singapore.

“The BOE are going to have to step in today, surely, at which point everyone’s going to end up with massively higher mortgage rates to try and stabilise sterling.”

The collapse sent the dollar higher broadly and it hit multi-year peaks on the Aussie, kiwi and yuan and a new 20-year top of $0.9528 per euro .

In stocks, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) was down 1% to a two-year low. It is heading for a monthly loss of 11%, the largest since March 2020. Japan’s Nikkei (.N225) fell 2.2%.

S&P 500 futures fell 0.5%.

Last week, stocks and bonds crumbled after the United States and half a dozen other countries raised rates and projected pain ahead. Japan intervened in currency trade to support the yen. Investors lost confidence in Britain’s economic management.

The Nasdaq (.IXIC) lost more than 5% for the second week running. The S&P 500 (.SPX) fell 4.8%.

Gilts suffered their heaviest selling in three decades on Friday and on Monday the pound made a 37-year low at $1.0765 as investors reckon planned tax cuts will stretch government finances to the limit.

Sterling is down 11% this quarter.

Five-year gilt yields rose 94 basis points last week, by far the biggest weekly jump recorded in Refinitiv data stretching back to the mid 1980s. Treasuries tanked as well last week, with two-year yields up 35 bps to 4.2140% and benchmark 10-year yields up 25 bps to 3.6970%.

The euro wobbled to a two-decade low at $0.9660 as risks rise of war escalating in Ukraine, before steadying at $0.9686.

In Italy, a right-wing alliance led by Giorgia Meloni’s Brothers of Italy party was on course for a clear majority in the next parliament, as expected. Some took heart from a middling performance by eurosceptics The League.

“I expect relatively little impact considering that the League, the party with the least pro-European stance, seems to have come out weak,” said Giuseppe Sersale, fund manager and strategist at Anthilia in Milan.

Oil and gold steadied after drops against the rising dollar last week. Gold hit a more-than two-year low on Friday and bought $1,643 an ounce on Monday. Brent crude futures sat at $86.29.

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Additional reporting by Danilo Masoni in Milan; Editing by Sam Holmes

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Thieves steal at least 20 whole briskets worth thousands of dollars from famous Texas barbecue restaurant

Every time I go to Texas, I stop for authentic barbecue.Shutterstock

  • Thieves stole briskets worth thousands of dollars from a famous Austin restaurant, KVUE reported.

  • La Barbecue said the thief was filmed jumping a fence before loading the meat into an SUV.

  • Briskets at the restaurant, which said it has been broken into five times, are worth about $180.

Thieves broke into a famous Texas barbecue restaurant and stole thousands of dollars’ worth of beef briskets, according to local reports.

Austin’s KVUE reported that a thief broke into la Barbecue at 4am Thursday local time, jumping over the side fence, cutting off the barbecue pit locks and loading more than 20 whole briskets into an SUV before driving off.

Each brisket was worth $180, according to reports, meaning at least $3,500 worth of brisket appears to have been stolen.

 

On its Instagram page, the restaurant wrote: “It happened again!!! This time this guy took 20 briskets that were prepped and cold smoking on our pits overnight. I am so sick of this!! Does anyone recognize this guy or car?”

This was the fifth break-in at its Austin site since opening a decade ago, the restaurant told KVUE. It is appealing to anyone with information to call local police.

According to a report by MySA, brisket is more expensive than ever amid rising production costs and soaring demand among amateur pitmasters across the US. High price rises appear to have made the delicacy more attractive to thieves.

Indeed, one of the ramifications of rising inflation is likely to be more crime, with a criminologist telling Insider that Americans could expect more theft, burglaries, and even homicide as a result of soaring prices.

La Barbecue was founded in 2012 in Austin by Leann Mueller after parting ways with legendary pitmaster John after a spat, according to Texas Monthly. The joint regularly appears on lists of essential barbecue restaurants in the city published by the likes of Conde Nast Traveler and Eater.

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Thieves steal at least 20 whole briskets worth thousands of dollars from famous Texas barbecue restaurant

Every time I go to Texas, I stop for authentic barbecue.Shutterstock

  • Thieves stole briskets worth thousands of dollars from a famous Austin restaurant, KVUE reported.

  • La Barbecue said the thief was filmed jumping a fence before loading the meat into an SUV.

  • Briskets at the restaurant, which said it has been broken into five times, are worth about $180.

Thieves broke into a famous Texas barbecue restaurant and stole thousands of dollars’ worth of beef briskets, according to local reports.

Austin’s KVUE reported that a thief broke into la Barbecue at 4am Thursday local time, jumping over the side fence, cutting off the barbecue pit locks and loading more than 20 whole briskets into an SUV before driving off.

Each brisket was worth $180, according to reports, meaning at least $3,500 worth of brisket appears to have been stolen.

 

On its Instagram page, the restaurant wrote: “It happened again!!! This time this guy took 20 briskets that were prepped and cold smoking on our pits overnight. I am so sick of this!! Does anyone recognize this guy or car?”

This was the fifth break-in at its Austin site since opening a decade ago, the restaurant told KVUE. It is appealing to anyone with information to call local police.

According to a report by MySA, brisket is more expensive than ever amid rising production costs and soaring demand among amateur pitmasters across the US. High price rises appear to have made the delicacy more attractive to thieves.

Indeed, one of the ramifications of rising inflation is likely to be more crime, with a criminologist telling Insider that Americans could expect more theft, burglaries, and even homicide as a result of soaring prices.

La Barbecue was founded in 2012 in Austin by Leann Mueller after parting ways with legendary pitmaster John after a spat, according to Texas Monthly. The joint regularly appears on lists of essential barbecue restaurants in the city published by the likes of Conde Nast Traveler and Eater.

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An American man flew from Costa Rica to Miami just to retrieve his stranded bag, which he says had thousands of dollars of drone gear in it

Robert Gentel took matters into his own hands to retrieve his luggage, which he says contained thousands of dollars of drone equipment, in June.Robert Gentel

  • Robert Gentel flew from Costa Rica to Miami just to retrieve his stranded luggage.

  • The bag got stuck in Miami after his flight was canceled in June.

  • The aviation industry is dealing with a messy summer travel season with flight delays and chaos.

An American man flew from Costa Rica to Miami just to retrieve his luggage after his bags were incorrectly tracked.

Robert Gentel, a drone-racing enthusiast who lives in Costa Rica, told Insider the trouble started on June 15. He was due to fly from his parents’ house in San Antonio, Texas, back to his home in Santa Ana, Costa Rica, to celebrate his birthday. He booked a first-class seat on American Airlines with a layover in Miami.

He checked two bags for the flight. Gentel told Insider the bags had thousands of dollars of drone gear in them, as he had taken part in the 2022 MultiGP International Open drone race in Indiana from June 8 to June 12.

However, after he checked his bags, his flight to Miami was canceled due to a maintenance issue, he said. The airline rebooked him on United Airlines flights to Houston and then on to Costa Rica on June 16.

“I came back to the airport the next day and checked with the American desk about my bags, and was told all was fine and that the bags were already on their way,” he told Insider over Twitter.

But Gentel found out later they were not. He had placed Apple AirTags in the checked bags and saw them making their way to Miami.

Gentel made it to Costa Rica for his birthday on June 16, but spent the day texting American and United about his bags as he was bounced from one department to another. Insider reviewed some of the chats he had with the airlines.

One of Gentel’s two bags was sent to Costa Rica after a few days, but the other — based on its AirTags location — was still stuck in Miami, he said.

“With each day that was passing, I was more and more concerned that the luggage would not make it to me and would eventually be lost for good,” he told Insider.

Booking a new flight

After days with no resolution, he decided to fly from Costa Rica to Miami on June 20 to pick up the bag himself.

Once he arrived in Miami, he said he handed his baggage tag to the person at the storage room. “The guy looking for it in the storage room said it was not on the rack it was supposed to be on, so I used the AirTag to locate it on the rack next to it,” he added.

This time around, he said, he unpacked all the stuff he “cared about” and carried it on the plane ride home.

Gentel flew from Costa Rica to Miami to retrieve his stranded suitcase. He unpacked some expensive drone gear into a smaller bag to carry on his return flight.Robert Gentel

Gentel said he booked most of the flights with credit card points. Insider verified his flight details for all three flights involved in the multi-day luggage ordeal. He contacted Insider with his story after he read about a passenger in Ireland who bought a plane ticket to get into Dublin Airport to look for his lost bag.

A summer of travel chaos

Gentel’s experience comes amid a messy summer travel season with flight delays, lost baggage, and disruptions as demand has returned to pre-pandemic levels. The chaos started over Memorial Day weekend and is now particularly pronounced in Europe. Airlines are facing a slew of issues, including staff shortages, absences due to the ongoing pandemic, and bad weather.

While the process to get his bag back was time-consuming and tedious — he says neither American nor United offered any compensation for the trouble — Gentel said he was just “extremely relieved” to get his gear back. There would be “much inconvenience too in replacing my key drone racing gear like my goggles and my controller,” Gentel added.

American Airlines did not respond to Insider’s request for comment.

“We are dedicated to delivering bags to customers’ final destinations on time, and when we miss the mark we work hard to connect customers with their bags as quickly as possible,” a United Airlines representative told Insider.

Gentel is already thinking about what to do the next time he travels with more gear than he’s allowed to carry on.

“I’ve recently actually been thinking about booking a friend on a ticket on flights so that I can have an additional carry-on and be able to avoid checking in expensive gear,” he said.

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US dollar’s power is a boon to Americans traveling abroad

The surging value of the U.S. dollar in recent weeks is a boon to the American traveler, who will get more bang for their buck overseas despite surging inflation at home.  

But a strong American currency could limit international visitors to the U.S., where tourism firms are still licking their wounds from the height of the pandemic.  

The dollar recently hit parity with the euro for the first time in two decades, making trips to Europe 10 to 15 percent less expensive for Americans than at the same time last year.  

The dollar is also soaring in destinations like Thailand, India and South Korea — countries with ample tourism interest from Americans and relatively weaker economic growth than the U.S. 

“With the rising cost of travel, the strong U.S. dollar is a net positive amidst all the disruption in the industry,” said Erika Richter, vice president of communications at the American Society of Travel Advisors.

Richter noted that Americans are spending 11 percent more on travel compared to 2019. 

The idea of a strong dollar might seem like a farce to Americans after annual inflation hit 9.1 percent in June and the price of gas and food rose far faster. But the dollar has still become more valuable abroad even as it yields less in goods and services at home. 

Demand for the U.S. dollar in other countries has skyrocketed amid concerns about a global recession caused by high inflation, the war in Ukraine and lingering COVID-19 supply shocks.  

While the U.S. is not immune from those threats, the economy has held up far stronger than other nations, making its currency more valuable abroad. The dollar is also used as the world’s reserve currency, meaning foreign individuals and companies will often boost their holdings and conduct transactions in dollars to protect themselves from financial shocks. 

The strength of the U.S. economy has allowed the Federal Reserve to boost interest rates at a much faster pace. That makes the U.S. dollar more expensive to acquire — and more valuable in other countries. 

“A stronger dollar benefits American households directly if they want to travel to Europe, as the relative cost of everything is cheaper. It also makes imports cheaper for American households and businesses,” explained Angel Talavera, head of European economics at Oxford Economics. 

Half of American travelers say high prices kept them from traveling in June, up 8 percentage points from the previous month, according to a recent survey from Destination Analysts. 

But favorable exchange rates blunt the impact of inflation, which has risen at similar rates to the U.S. in Europe. Expedia data found that searches for summer trips to popular European destinations such as Paris, Frankfurt, Brussels, Amsterdam and Dublin rose by double digits last week. Copenhagen, Athens and Madrid saw similar increases in lodging interest, according to Hotels.com. 

“The U.S. has never really developed its tourism infrastructure the way Europe has, so a lot of our inventory sold out months ago,” said Leslie Overton, an advisor at travel firm Fora. “While I’m not saying either is cheap, Europe might be considered more competitive than some of the higher end product here in the U.S. right now.” 

One dollar buys roughly 15 percent more than it did one year ago in the 19 European countries that use the euro. The dollar is trading at its highest ever level against India’s rupee and Thailand’s baht. The Mexican peso and Canadian dollar have remained mostly flat.  

But currency fluctuations won’t help much with soaring airfares. While domestic airfare is 13 percent higher than pre-pandemic levels, international flights are 22 percent pricier, according to data from travel firm Hopper. 

Those traveling to parts of Europe face a heightened risk of delays or cancellations.  

London’s Heathrow Airport on Wednesday asked airlines to stop selling summer tickets after staffing shortages forced the airport to delay roughly half of its flights this month. The Netherlands’ largest airport is similarly making large cuts to its flight schedules, driving up prices.  

Conversely, the strength of the dollar will make trips to the U.S. far more expensive for many international travelers, potentially weakening the U.S. tourism industry as it aims to claw back some of the millions of jobs lost during the pandemic.  

A stronger U.S. dollar also boosts pressure on global economies to raise their own interest rates to keep up, a force that raises the risk of a severe global recession that could bounce back to the U.S. in dangerous ways. 

The U.S. welcomed 22.1 million inbound travelers in 2021 — down 79 percent from 2019 — amid COVID-19 travel restrictions that lasted throughout most of the year, according to the International Trade Administration. The agency found that the lack of tourism in the U.S. in the first year of the pandemic accounted for 56 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product decline. 

Tourism has rebounded, with overseas arrivals to the U.S. surpassing 2 million in April, four times the same month in 2021. The bulk of the increase has stemmed from an influx of European tourists, who make up nearly half of foreign visitors this year, according to federal data.  

Tourists from the United Kingdom, France, Germany and India — some of the nation’s top sources of international tourists — will be paying more in the U.S. than they did one year ago. 

“While the elimination of the pre-departure testing requirement will have some positive impact on inbound travel, we do not expect the international inbound travel sector to fully recover until 2025,” said Tori Emerson Barnes, executive vice president of public affairs and policy at the U.S. Travel Association. 

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Mega Millions jackpot tops half a billion dollars after Friday night’s drawing

The next drawing is Tuesday, and the jackpot will be at least $530 million, or about $304.7 million in cash, according to the lottery organizers. That would rank it eighth in the top Mega Million jackpots ever.

The winning numbers Friday were 8, 20, 26, 53, 64, plus the gold Mega Ball 15, according to the lottery’s website. The estimated jackpot was $480 million, or about $276 million in cash.
There were some winners. One ticket bought in California matched the five white balls, and 28 tickets matched the four white balls and the Mega Ball.

A total of 1,423,423 winning tickets were sold at all prize levels, according to the lottery.

A $20 million jackpot was last won on April 15, and since then there have been more than 15.5 million winning tickets at all prize levels, including 25 worth $1 million or more, according to the lottery.

Only three other jackpots have been won in 2022 — a $426 million prize in California on January 28, a $128 million in New York on March 8 and $110 million in Minnesota on April 12.
Even though your odds of winning the Mega Millions jackpot are 1 in 302,575,350, you know what they say, you can’t win if you don’t play.

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Musk says Tesla Berlin and Austin factories losing billions of dollars

“The past two years have been an absolutely nightmare of supply chain disruptions, one thing after another, and we are not out of it yet,” Tesla CEO Elon Musk said.

Patrick T. Fallon | Reuters

Tesla’s newest car factories in Texas and Berlin are losing “billions of dollars right now” as supply chain disruptions hamper the electric vehicle giant’s ability to ramp up production, chief executive Elon Musk said in an interview published Wednesday.

“Both Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now. Okay? It should be like a giant roaring sound which is the sound of money on fire,” Musk said in the interview with Tesla Owners Silicon Valley, which was recorded on May 30.

“Berlin and Austin are losing billions of dollars right now because there’s a ton of expense and hardly any output. Getting Berlin and Austin functional and getting Shanghai back in the saddle fully are overwhelmingly our concerns. Everything else is a very small thing basically.”

Musk said that the Texas factory is “losing insane money” at the moment because of troubles ramping up production of cars with the so-called 4680 battery, Tesla’s latest technology. Meanwhile, the tools to make cars for the traditional 2170 batteries are “stuck in a port in China.”

“Just been trying to keep the factories operating the last couple years has been a very difficult thing, like supply chain interruptions have been severe, like extremely severe,” Musk said.

“The past two years have been an absolutely nightmare of supply chain disruptions, one thing after another, and we are not out of it yet.”

In China, a resurgence of Covid in recent weeks led to lockdowns in major cities such as Shanghai, where Tesla’s plant in the country is. Tesla plans to suspend most of the production at that factory in the first two weeks of July to carry out upgrades, Reuters reported on Wednesday.

Since the interview, Musk has announced plans to reduce Tesla’s salaried workforce by 10% in the next three months. But the company plans to increase the number of hourly employees. Tesla’s layoffs would affect around 3.5% of its overall workforce, Musk said this week.

Despite the supply chain issues, Tesla is still aiming to produce 1.5 million cars this year, Musk said in April, though he cautioned that customers face long wait times for their vehicles.

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Tesla’s Austin, Berlin car plants “losing billions of dollars”

Tesla’s new plants in Texas and Germany are “losing billions of dollars” as the electric car maker struggles with production due to supply chain disruptions and battery shortages, Elon Musk said in an interview released Wednesday.

What he’s saying: “Both Berlin and Austin factories are gigantic money furnaces right now,” said Musk in the interview with Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley, an official Tesla-recognized club, recorded on May 31. “It’s really like a giant roaring sound, which is the sound of money on fire.”

Why it matters: Musk told Bloomberg earlier this week that supply constraints are the biggest threat to growth for Tesla as he confirmed job cuts of up to 3.5%.

The big picture: Musk said in his interview with the Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley that pandemic-related shutdowns in China this year had proven “very, very difficult” for both Tesla’s Shanghai factory and other plants elsewhere.

  • The Austin factory in particular was “losing insane money” as it faced challenges producing Tesla’s new 4680 batteries and “the tooling necessary” for making its conventional 2170 batteries “is stuck in China,” Musk said.
  • “Overwhelmingly our concern is, how do we keep the factories operating so we can pay people and not go bankrupt?” he said.

Our thought bubble, via Axios’ Joann Muller: Musk has often complained about how hard manufacturing is. Now, with the current economic situation, he’s being reminded yet again.



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As gas prices soar, thieves steal thousands of dollars’ worth of gasoline to sell, authorities say

Now, thieves are pumping thousands of dollars’ worth of fuel from gas stations and selling it on the black market, according to authorities.

Two men were arrested in connection with the theft of thousands of dollars’ worth of gasoline from a Virginia Beach Citgo gas station, according to the Virginia Beach Police Department.

Officers began investigating after they noticed an unusual number of people pumping gas and congregating at the Citgo, which was closed at the time, a news release stated.

The officers discovered the use of devices to illegally obtain gas from the pumps and individuals selling the gas at a cheaper price, the release stated.

They also “advertised the operation on social media,” according to the release.

The suspects are being charged with grand larceny, conspiracy and possession of burglary tools, according to the release. Authorities say the investigation is ongoing.

CNN affiliate WESH in Orlando, Florida, reported police in nearby St. Cloud are looking for two people who they say stole more than 1,000 gallons of fuel from a gas station, using what police believe is a large tank in the bed used to store fuel.
CNN affiliate KVVU in Las Vegas, Nevada, reported that highly modified vehicles are being used to steal tens of thousands of gallons from local gas stations, according to authorities.
And in Greenville, South Carolina, CNN affiliate WHNS reports police have made several arrests for gas thefts. Authorities believe thousands of dollars’ worth of fuel were stolen.
President Joe Biden has invited oil company executives to a meeting next week to discuss high gas prices.

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McDonald’s left with millions of dollars of Russian food it can’t use

The company announced last month that it would temporarily close its restaurants in Russia because of the country’s invasion of Ukraine. It also closed restaurants in Ukraine. Those shutdowns cost McDonald’s $127 million last quarter.

McDonald’s said in March that it would continue to pay its 62,000 Russian employees, despite shuttering operations in the country. CEO Chris Kempczinski added during a Thursday call with analysts that McDonald’s is supporting Ukrainian employees too: “In both countries, we have continued to pay employees and provide additional support.”

Those staff costs, plus payments for leases and supplies, cost the company $27 million.

“Results included … $100 million of costs for inventory in the company’s supply chain that likely will be disposed of due to restaurants being temporarily closed,” the company said in a statement.

There were 847 McDonald’s restaurants in Russia at the close of last year, according to an investor document. Together with another 108 in Ukraine, they accounted for 9% of the company’s revenue in 2021.

The closures hit McDonald’s net income, which fell 28% in the three months ending on March 31.

Elsewhere, McDonald’s sales grew.

Globally, sales at restaurants open at least 13 months jumped 11.8% in the quarter, driven by international locations. In the United States, sales popped 3.5%, thanks in part to higher prices. Last year, McDonald’s raised prices by about 6%.

The company’s marketing of core menu items and growth in its digital business, thanks in part to its rewards program, also contributed to the growth in US sales, McDonald’s said.

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