Kim Jong Un

Queen Elizabeth II, Kim Jong Un, CRISPR, Joe Biden, Guy Raz

CGD.png

Queen Elizabeth II, Kim Jong Un, CRISPR, Joe Biden, Guy Raz

Caracal Global Daily
April 24, 2019
Curation and commentary from 
Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia 

Caracal Global Daily  = News + Analysis at the Intersection of Globalization + Disruption + Politics


TOP FIVE

✔️ Trump finally gets his British state visit

✔️ Drones to deliver medicines to 12 million people in Ghana

✔️ Beer and cigarette makers join the pot lobbying parade

✔️ Beyond Meat targets $1.2 billion valuation

✔️ Tribeca Film Festival opens in New York

ROSS RANT

Brigadoon Remote 2019 - Save the Date

Think of four days where you can work remotely in a country estate, spend the day as you want, work on your book, strategize, think, read, whiteboard, check-out, go for a hike, and have evening dinners with fellow participants where the topic of conversation is business development and entrepreneurship.

November 11-15, 2019
One hour outside of Edinburgh, Scotland
Limited to 7 participants
$250.00 deposit secures your spot


Ping at marc@thebrigadoon.com if you want to attend.

-Marc

GLOBALIZATION

London Town: Trump and FLOTUS accepted the invitation of Her Royal Majesty Queen Elizabeth II to visit the United Kingdom from June 3 to 5, 2019.

Trump finally gets his British state visit — but tensions that led to delay remain: WP reports, the president, deeply unpopular in Britain, will probably not be able to avoid massive demonstrations against his visit, scheduled for early June.

May approves Huawei involvement in UK 5G network: FT reports, Chinese telecoms group banned from most sensitive parts of project on security concerns.

The Times: Theresa May set to anger US with ‘limited access’ for Huawei

Today
: The funeral of Lyra McKee, the Northern Irish journalist who was shot dead last week during riots, is held in Belfast.

China's Belt and Road cracks down on corruption in image revamp: Bloomberg reports, the Belt and Road Initiative is getting a makeover to tone down government rhetoric and tighten oversight, after allegations of corruption and a lack of sustainability dogged some of its highest-profile projects. Beijing is taking a range of steps to exert more control over the program, officials and participants said, including a more muted publicity drive, clearer rules for state-owned-enterprises, restricting use of the BRI brand, and building overseas auditing and anti-corruption mechanisms. It’s also stepping up efforts to get developed nations to join in to spread the risk of building projects in poorer nations and to counter allegations that BRI is just an attempt to build China’s political influence.

Beijing to defend initiative as it welcomes 37 heads of state to summit this week.

Chinese enterprises invested over $90 billion in BRI countries.

China has signed 173 cooperation documents on BRI with 125 countries and 29 international organizations as of April 18, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.


OTD: In 1970 China launched its first satellite, which orbited the Earth transmitting the patriotic tune The East is Red.

Mnuchin and Lighthizer to head to Beijing as trade talks resume: FT reports, talks to focus on stubborn hurdles of intellectual property, technology transfers.

“The subjects of next week’s discussions will cover trade issues including intellectual property, forced technology transfer, non-tariff barriers, agriculture, services, purchases, and enforcement,” the White House said.

Kim and Putin set for talks as Russia seeks influence: FT reports, Pyongyang pivots to northern neighbor as ties founder with US.

‘I have long dreamed of visiting’: Kim Jong Un arrives in Russia for talks with Putin: WP reports, the Kremlin has said no major agreements will be signed during Kim’s meeting with Vladimir Putin, which is expected to take place behind closed doors.

Russia's Putin meets North Korea's Kim: Side-show or power move in nuclear crisis? DW reports, in the wake of stalled nuclear talks with the US, Kim is seeking diplomatic assistance from the Kremlin. Russia wants stability on its far-eastern border — but President Putin may have a bigger picture in mind.

Martin Wolf: The age of the elected despot is here: People want to believe a powerful and charismatic leader is on their side in an unjust world.

DISRUPTION

A new normal: A journey through America’s complex history with cannabis. Directed by Spike Jonze. (video) http://bit.ly/2L7kPdw

University of California gets its CRISPR patent: Six years after the initial application — and after a legal dispute that sucked up tens of millions of dollars — a foundational CRISPR-Cas9 patent will be granted to the University of California. The patent, based on the work of Jennifer Doudna, Emmanuelle Charpentier, and their colleagues, covers CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing in every kind of cell, in lab dishes and in living organisms. 

FT: Drones to deliver medicines to 12 million people in Ghana

Zipline project is the world’s largest drone delivery network. The drones are planned to be able to deliver to 2,000 clinics across Ghana.

POLITICS

WP: White House plans to fight House subpoena of former counsel Donald McGahn for testimony on Mueller report

OTD
: In 1800 President John Adams approved the spending of $5,000 to establish a Library of Congress.

WSJ: S&P 500 and NASDAQ hit closing records

Stocks have flourished this year—the S&P 500 is up 17% while the Nasdaq has gained 22%.

Morning Consult Political Intelligence report:

- Biden remains the top overall pick among all likely Democratic primary voters and voters in early primary states.

- Buttigieg moves up to third place with 9% of the vote: More than half (64%) of likely Democratic primary voters have now heard of Buttigieg.

- Health care and the economy remain the most important issues to Democratic voters.

- Trump's approval hits record low: The President's net approval of -18 is his worst since taking office.


Trump camp descends on Pennsylvania as alarms grow over 2020: Politico reports, the president's team is set to meet with a state Republican Party riven by dissension.

Larry Hogan derides Trump as ‘dear leader’: Politico reports, Maryland Governor Hogan (R) said he's unafraid to stand up to the president but is in no rush to jump into the 2020 race.

Joe Biden: He’ll be the 21st Democrat to enter the party’s 2020 presidential field and will now announce his 2020 presidential bid on Thursday.

WP: Joe Biden to enter 2020 presidential race with Thursday video announcement

Inside Biden's battle plan
: Politico reports, he is seeking to mark his entrance into the 2020 race with a rush of union support, early-state endorsements, and fundraising figures.

Rivals are scrambling to dig up dirt on Pete Buttigieg: NBC News, Buttigieg was on nobody's radar as a serious presidential contender until a few weeks ago. Now his competitors are scrambling to find vulnerabilities.

Beto O’Rourke opens his California campaign Saturday in Los Angeles: LAT reports, Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke will launch his 2020 California Democratic presidential primary campaign on Saturday with a four-day swing, stopping in Los Angeles, San Francisco, the Central Valley, and San Diego.

Trump orders administration officials not to attend White House correspondents dinner: Reuters reports, Trump, who bemoaned his treatment by the news media in a flurry of tweets on Tuesday, has barred members of his staff and administration from attending the White House Correspondents' Association dinner on Saturday, officials said.

Beer and cigarette makers join the pot lobbying parade: Politico reports, the push to legalize marijuana quickly transformed the cannabis industry into a multibillion-dollar legal business. And now Fortune 500 companies and elite K Street lobbying firms have joined the green gold rush. Altria, the tobacco giant better known for Marlboros, recently took a $1.8 billion stake in the cannabis company Cronos Group. Constellation Brands, which makes Corona beer, has spent money on cannabis lobbying after making a major investment in Canopy Growth, a Canadian marijuana company. On K Street, powerhouse firms like Holland & Knight — which has represented Comcast, Google and Dow Chemical — have taken on marijuana clients.

Pot may be illegal at the federal level but corporate giants and K Street are preparing for the push to legalize.

COMMERCE

Applied Materials halts work for red-flagged Chinese chipmaker: FT reports, US supplier pulls staff from San’an Optoelectronics following government listing.

Pepsi dispenser: PepsiCo has announced a new beverage dispenser for the food service sector, colleges, and workplaces. The "hydration platform" is aimed at encouraging people to fill up their own reusable bottles, and not with soda, but rather with flavored, carbonated water. 

Ancestry.com is preparing to take the family tree research/DNA testing company public amid increasing consumer interest in DNA tests.

Beyond Meat targets $1.2 billion valuation when it becomes the first plant-based meat company to IPO.

PayPal's Venmo closes in on a new partnership to launch a credit card.

Luminary, flush with $100 million in funding, wants to sell you a $8/month subscription to deliver exclusive podcasts. It’s planning to eventually roll out more than 40 ad-free shows, which include Guy Raz (of How I Built This fame), Lena Dunham, and Trevor Noah.

Wing Aviation, a unit of Alphabet’s Google, received the first US authorization to operate a fleet of consumer delivery drones.

SoftBank Group plans to invest about $1 billion in Wirecard, forging a partnership that allows SoftBank to take a minority stake in the German payments company.

Nikkei: Huawei closes technology gap with Apple on chip design

Chinese 4G semiconductors already 'equal to or better than' US tech giant.

CULTURE

LAT: As Coachella raged, the LA tech world made plans to live on Mars

Betaspace, billed as the place where “Burning Man and the Consumer Electronics Show collide.” 

Kim Jong Un, Coffee Cancer Warning, Backcountry, General Hospital, Dave Asprey, SoulCycle *** Marc Ross Daily

Marc Ross Daily.png

Kim Jong Un, Coffee Cancer Warning, Backcountry, General Hospital, Dave Asprey, SoulCycle

Marc Ross Daily
March 30, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ Xi gave Kim Jong Un the Trump treatment

✔️ What really went on at Russia’s Seattle consulate?

✔️ Starbucks coffee in California needs cancer warning

✔️ Backcountry launches its own gear line

✔️ General Hospital is celebrating its 55th anniversary

GEOECONOMICS

538: How to win a trade war. Trump says it’s easy. Try it for yourself.
https://goo.gl/KW54HB

Trade conflict fears to keep markets on edge for weeks: Reuters reports, a full-scale global trade war has not broken out yet - but that hasn't stopped the market from fretting about one or analysts from warning about the potential cost.

How China’s Xi gave Kim Jong Un the Trump treatment: Bloomberg reports, it may have been billed as an unofficial trip, but China's President Xi Jinping pulled out all the stops during a four-day visit to Beijing by North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un, his wife and a train load of dignitaries. Trump's visit was billed as a “state-visit plus” and included a precedent-breaking tour of the Forbidden City. But when you consider the honors heaped on Kim — and the clandestine nature of his visit — should Trump's nose be out of joint? https://goo.gl/YxDBWD

Trump and Kim Jong Un have a lot in common. Is that a good thing?
WP - David Ignatius

Nikkei: Is China's Belt and Road working? A progress report from eight countries https://goo.gl/EQKL4w

Russian ambassador pleads for help in securing Washington meetings: Politico reports, Anatoly Antonov has been rebuffed by U.S. government officials who are reluctant to be seen as friendly toward the Kremlin.

What really went on at Russia’s Seattle consulate? Politico reports, the closure of the facility could limit military and tech-industry espionage—and leaves Russia with no diplomatic presence on the West Coast.

"Russia will now lack a diplomatic facility west of Houston, or any diplomatic presence on the West Coast for the first time since 1971. Russian intelligence officers—at least those under diplomatic cover—will no longer operate in easy proximity to America’s two great tech capitals." 

200 billion: Estimates of Vladimir Putin’s personal wealth range from $50 billion to $200 billion. 

Starbucks stop showcases MBS’s charm offensive: FT reports, US visit by Saudi crown prince aims to reshape how world views oil-rich kingdom.

Leftist looms large as Mexico presidential race opens: AFP reports, the campaign for Mexico's July 1 presidential election officially opens Friday, with Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, a veteran leftist promising a sharp break with the past, positioned as the man to beat.

Bitcoin hit a low of $6,915.55 late Thursday afternoon, its lowest since Feb. 6.

UK immigration: The Home Office has lost track of more than 600,000 foreigners who should have left the UK, according to a report that lays bare Britain's "shambolic" border checks.

"I don't like to worry you but Theresa May is going on a walking holiday in Wales this Easter. The prime minister has confirmed that she will retrace the steps she took a year ago when she had the bright idea to call an election. It is a gamble the notoriously risk-averse PM will not look to repeat." -- Matt Chorley

AMERICAN POLITICS

Reuters: Mueller probing Russia contacts at Republican convention: sources

@TheOnion: Mark Zuckerberg prepares for Congressional testimony by poring over lawmakers’ personal data https://trib.al/IpsGM44 

WSJ: California judge rules coffee must carry cancer warning

Gov. Jerry Brown appoints ‘deputy first dog’: Cali the Bordoodle: KTLA reports, Gov. Jerry Brown has added a new member to his staff: “Deputy First Dog” Cali Brown. The poodle, border collie mix, or bordoodle, joined the Brown family this month from a ranch in Herald, California. Cali is a “Doggocrat.”

ENTERPRISE

WSJ: Walmart in early talks to buy Humana

Can Amazon disrupt the $16-billion housekeeping industry?LAT reports, Three years ago, Amazon.com Inc. launched a marketplace to connect its customers with handymen, landscapers and housekeepers in their neighborhoods, a direct challenge to the likes of Angie's List and Yelp. The offering embraced the independent contractor model, using Amazon's web store to create a new service from scratch without hiring a single person or buying any lawnmowers, hammers or mops. Now Amazon is quietly hiring house cleaners in Seattle as direct employees. 

SCMP: 2.3 million – the number of jobs that could be lost to artificial intelligence in China’s financial sectors by 2027

Snapchat is cutting another 100 employees, with layoffs focused on its advertising side.

Inside Yiwu, China, the Easter trinket capital of the world: LAT reports, Yang Wei, 30, maintains a child's bedroom-sized world of Easter wonders. She sits amid shelves overflowing with stuffed rabbits, plastic eggs with glued-on bunny ears, and countless fuzzy chicks, like nonedible marshmallow Peeps. Most of it is bound for the US, delivered by the crate-load. "We have toy designers who go to the US or Europe to do research," said Yang, manager of the Jiangsu Taizhou City Wenhao Handicraft Product Factory. "Then they come back and come up with toys that will suit the market."

DC woes aside, Huawei is determined to lead on 5G: WSJ reports, far from Washington, where the government has called Huawei a national-security threat, the world’s largest maker of cellular-tower equipment is trying to dominate discussions on the design of 5G, the next generation of mobile networks.

Breach of Under Armour app affects 150 million users: WSJ reports, emails, usernames and passwords on the MyFitnessPal app were exposed in February.

Starbucks coffee in California needs cancer warning: judge: Reuters reports, Starbucks and other coffee sellers must put a cancer warning on coffee sold in California, a Los Angeles judge has ruled, possibly exposing the companies to millions of dollars in fines.

The New York Stock Exchange is in talks to buy the tiny Chicago Stock Exchange, after the recent collapse of a two-year acquisition effort by a Chinese-led investor group.

How SoulCycle scales community: On the #BoFVOICES stage, chief executive Melanie Whelan told CNN’s Derek Blasberg that people are the key to maintaining the cult-like indoor cycling company’s special culture as it grows. https://goo.gl/5yqmhq

Dave Asprey wants to make the gym bulletproof: Outside reports, the entrepreneur believes that biohacking can rocket your body and mind to peak performance. His Bulletproof diet zoomed into the mainstream, his Bulletproof coffee has everyone quaffing butter, and his Bulletproof books fly off the shelves. Now Bulletproof Labs is out to hack, well, everything. https://goo.gl/6jA9ER

Backcountry launches its own gear line.

TRENDS

40 years into the war on clutter, and we’re still overwhelmed by stuff. What’s going on? It’s hard to put a start date on America’s War on Clutter, but you could trace it to 1978, when the first Container Store opened in a 1,600-square-foot space in Dallas, or to 1985, when a few professional organizers from California saw gold in people’s junk and started a trade association that today counts about 3,400 members. But despite an industry that’s grown so massive it’s become its own form of clutter — with books, and experts, and storage containers, and apps, and YouTube videos — we’ve made so little progress that even the professional organizers aren’t pretending the problem has been solved — or even that it’s solvable. https://goo.gl/32jgJE

These salad vending machines have become one of Chicago’s hot lunch spots: Founded in 2013, Farmer’s Fridge’s fresh salad machines, with salads starting at $7, are now in place across Milwaukee and Chicago–and the company is looking to expand. https://goo.gl/im2MB5

Hollywood's first blockchain movie: an end to piracy? AFP reports, Hollywood is turning to the technology behind cryptocurrency bitcoin to distribute movies in a development hailed as the beginning of the end for piracy."No Postage Necessary," a romantic indie comedy about a luckless hacker that is being distributed via peer-to-peer video network app Vevue, running on Qtum, the most advanced blockchain in the world.

CULTURE

General Hospital is celebrating its 55th anniversary.

When the road's your office, this is the gear you need https://goo.gl/M13YVq

SOTD

The Tragically Hip - Fifty-Mission Cap https://goo.gl/Fofd4R

SPORT

The origins of all 30 MLB team names https://goo.gl/jrJaAm

Cedric Villani, Kim Jong Un, Made in China 2025, Mark Zuckerberg, Virgil Abloh *** Marc Ross Daily

Marc Ross Daily.png

Cedric Villani, Kim Jong Un, Made in China 2025, Mark Zuckerberg, Virgil Abloh

Marc Ross Daily
March 28, 2018
Curation and commentary from Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia

Marc Ross Daily  = Global Business News at the Intersection of Politics + Policy + Profits

Subscribe here
https://goo.gl/bSQKwA

TOP FIVE

✔️ Math whiz has become a crucial political figure in France

✔️ Kim-Xi meeting

✔️ Trump gets SK concessions in first trade deal

✔️ Facebook goes on hiring spree for Washington lobbyists

✔️ Fosun to invest 100 billion yuan in AI

ROSS RANT

"From what we've seen, the Trump administration can be very unpredictable."

California's agriculture sector worried: California's vintners and growers are concerned they are on the frontlines of a US-China trade fight. 

There is growing prospect that wine, nuts, fruit, and other California farm exports are going to be negatively impacted by the increasing trade battle between President Trump and China. 

This $47-billion industry in the state of California and many of the workers in this sector voted for Trump in the 2016 election. 

The California wine industry, which has made significant inroads to the Chinese market in recent years, sold about $197 million of its product there last year, according to the Wine Institute, a California advocacy organization. US wine exports to China and Hong Kong have more than quadrupled in the previous decade and rose 10% last year, according to the institute.

Many working in the sector fear many of these California agriculture sectors stands to lose momentum in a worldwide competition for a share of the rapidly expanding Chinese middle-class consumer market.

GEOECONOMICS

A math whiz has become a crucial political figure in France: To hear Cedric Villani tell it, the French are better than everyone else at love, wine -- and math. A winner of the Fields Medal -- the Nobel Prize equivalent for mathematics -- Villani has in less than a year risen to become a key political figure in France with the ear of the tech-savvy President Emmanuel Macron. On Thursday, Villani takes center-stage when he unveils the country’s Artificial Intelligence strategy, aimed at putting his claim of France’s mathematical superiority to work in the global battle for emerging disruptive technologies. https://goo.gl/8c5Yw4

Brexit countdown: With just over a year to go to the UK’s exit from the European Union, PM Theresa May said the post-Brexit transition phase may end up being longer than currently planned due to the difficulties in establishing a new customs regime and avoiding a hard border with Ireland. 

Bloomberg: Portrait of Brexit Britain: A divided nation makes a journey into the unknown https://goo.gl/q2aDfi

WSJ: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un visited Beijing

Bloomberg: Trump urges pressure against North Korea after Kim’s China trip

CNBC: China claims Kim Jong Un has agreed to denuclearize Korean Peninsula

WP: Kim-Xi meeting presents a new challenge for Trump on North Korea


Trump’s early trade gains could come at future cost: WP reports, the Trump administration bills its success in reworking a South Korean trade deal as vindication for the “America First” approach the president promised on trade policy, including a robust carrot-and-stick diplomatic style. In the business community, meanwhile, there is skepticism that Trump’s latest tariff threats will force China to change over intellectual property practices. “It’s still not clear to me how that gets China to move on the issue of intellectual property and technology transfer,” said Erin Ennis, senior vice president at the US-China Business Council.

Nikkei - Editorial: Trump's flawed trade policy threatens the global economy: International effort needed to convince Washington to rethink its approach.

The trade issue that most divides US and China isn’t tariffs: NYT reports, China has struck a hard stance on the issue at the root of the looming trade fight between Beijing and Washington: China’s government-led drive, which Washington describes as breaking international rules, to build the cutting-edge industries of the future. Chinese officials in recent days have been defending the government’s ambitious plan, known as Made in China 2025, to create globally competitive players in industries like advanced microchips, driverless cars and robotics. While Beijing has signaled a willingness to compromise on other matters, the intractable standoff over its core industrial policy could prolong a trade fight that has already shaken markets and led to concerns about a full-blown trade war.

Made in China 2025 = How does a nation develop an economy? Buy, borrow, or build? Competition or protectionism?

US-China trade-war crossfire threatens Asia: WSJ reports, Japan, Australia and other economies fear impact of disruption of global supply chain.

LAT: Trump closes his first trade deal, a modest step with South Korea

Politico: Trump gets South Korean concessions in first trade deal

FCC joins push to limit China’s telecom reach
: NYT reports, the Federal Communications Commission is joining the Trump administration, Congress and other government agencies that have targeted Huawei, China’s giant telecommunications equipment maker, as a national security risk. Ajit Pai, chairman of the commission, on Monday, proposed a rule to tighten restrictions on companies building internet infrastructure in the United States. Part of the rule’s impact may be to further crimp Huawei’s meager sales in America by potentially affecting some deals with small and rural carriers, analysts said.

Chinese investments in US real estate have plummeted since Beijing enacted tighter regulations on outbound investments in August.

6 = Since 1979, only six cabinet-level US officials, and no sitting presidents, have visited Taiwan, out of respect for Beijing’s “One China” policy. 

CARACAL CLASSROOM

How to communicate trade + globalization: This 90-minute, small group session will cover the best strategy and necessary tactics to communicate trade and globalization with the media, stakeholders, and elected officials. Participants will receive communication checklists, social media ideas, opinion editorial tools, and coalition mapping systems.

More information and dates here: http://www.caracal.global/events/

AMERICAN POLITICS

NYT: To reclaim the House, Democrats need to flip 24 GOP seats. 25 are in Clinton territory. https://goo.gl/DefiSb

Bloomberg: Senate Judiciary Committee invites Zuckerberg to testify on Facebook privacy

Facebook has signaled that CEO Mark Zuckerberg will testify before Congress on April 12.

Facebook goes on hiring spree for Washington lobbyists: Bloomberg reports, as a chorus of calls mounts for answers about its data practices, Facebook is looking to hire at least 11 people for policy-related positions in Washington, according to its website. The company started hiring new lobbyists last fall after revelations Russians exploited its platform to help elect President Donald Trump.

"The reality is that Facebook is threatening global democracy. It's a threat to liberal democracy on a global scale," David Kirkpatrick, author of The Facebook Effect.

NBC Universal CEO Steve Burke opened the company's fourth annual Innovation Day berating Facebook after the Cambridge Analytica scandal: "They have a very serious problem.
"

ENTERPRISE

CNBC: Calm meditation app is now worth $250 million and has Trump-related stress to thank

Apple tried to put the Chromebook genie back in the bottle with a new education product push. 

EU may try to forcebreak-up of Google: The Times reports, the EU holds “grave suspicions” about Google’s dominance and may yet force it to break up, Margrethe Vestager, the competition commissioner, said. Vestager said that officials had lost trust in the company and that the threat to dismantle it must be “kept open and on the agenda”.

The Verge: The shady data-gathering tactics used by Cambridge Analytica were an open secret to online marketers. I know, because I was one https://goo.gl/yVtWmg

Yesterday, the tech stocks that have led the market up—Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix, and Google parent Alphabet—took a beating, with Apple down 2.6%, Alphabet down 4.5%, and Facebook down 4.9%. Tesla was clobbered—down 8.2%.

SoftBank has signed a non-binding agreement with Saudi Arabia's sovereign wealth fund to build "by far the biggest solar project ever." 

Reuters: In China payment war, Walmart places bet on Tencent

Fosun to invest 100 billion yuan in AI, biotech over next decade: SCMP reports, the company was named Apple's app of the year last year and is ranked 50th among top grossing iOS apps.

Baby, you can drive my car:  Alibaba and Ford have unveiled an unstaffed Super Test-Drive Center in China's southern city Guangzhou, allowing buyers to have a three-day test drive for free as long as they have a great credit score. 

GM Korea will file for bankruptcy if its union does not agree to cut labor costs by April 20.

Waymo is buying up to 20,000 Jaguars and plans to rev up its driverless ride-hailing service.

Nestle says it has cut the sugar in a chocolate bar by 30% by spraying it into warm air while mixed with milk and water. The “structured sugar” dissolves faster in the mouth, says the confectionery company.

What Trump’s trade war means for fashion: BOF reports, as fears of a trade war begin to ebb, the tension felt by supply chain leaders appears to be lifting. But given president Trump’s characteristic unpredictability, the fashion industry is not out of the woods yet. https://goo.gl/k41hJk

TRENDS

BBC accused of dominating podcast market: The Times reports, the BBC has appointed its first commissioning editor for podcasts, fuelling concerns that the corporation’s UK dominance of the increasingly popular audio format could undermine commercial podcast providers.

Fast Company: The future of parking garages doesn’t involve cars at all: In London, a disused garage is being partially converted into studios, restaurants, and more. https://goo.gl/1rL3kz

This is old news - This was discussed at Brigadoon Sundance 2018!

Cryptocurrencies explained by John Oliver: Digital currencies are generating a lot of excitement. John Oliver enlists Keegan-Michael Key to get potential investors equally excited about the concept of caution. https://goo.gl/bWqqNF

Blockchain will prevent fraud, boost transparency: Implementing blockchain solutions in digital advertising could reduce fraud through keeping better records of transactions and better optimizing overall digital ad supply chains, writes Nicole Perrin. "A fully transparent and trustworthy ledger would mean that, for the first time, brands could see where all their digital media dollars end up," Perrin writes. https://goo.gl/5Cb7MN

McDonald's says it will phase out the use of plastic straws in its U.K. restaurants.

CULTURE

Virgil Abloh, founder of streetwear label Off-White and longtime Kanye West collaborator, is the new artistic designer of menswear at Louis Vuitton.

Things that fund managers don’t say enoughhttps://goo.gl/DQbN3K

SPORT

How Loyola used information and skill — not luck — to reach the Final Four https://goo.gl/f5RBgH