Emperor Akihito, Juan Guaido, George Washington, Jürgen Klopp, Ayrton Senna

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Emperor Akihito, Juan Guaido, George Washington, Jürgen Klopp, Ayrton Senna

Caracal Global Daily
April 30, 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

✔️ Japan’s Emperor Akihito abdicates throne as son is set to ascend

✔️ Starbucks, Dunkin race against bans, taxes on disposable cups

✔️ OTD: In 1789 George Washington was inaugurated as the first POTUS

✔️ Vodafone found hidden backdoors in Huawei equipment

✔️ Jürgen Klopp: From the German second division to Liverpool manager

ROSS RANT

Brigadoon Radio: Episode 11: Why Brigadoon works

I spoke with Brendan Kownacki about the idea of Brigadoon and shared my thoughts on curating multi-day gatherings at Sundance, Utah since 2013.

From the start, my vision for Brigadoon has been focused on connecting subject matter experts at a venue tucked in a magical canyon in the Utah mountains. 

As I begin work on the eighth Brigadoon Sundance gathering, this simple concept has proven to be rewarding for attendees and for me as the organizer.

The episode was recorded Pinehaven House at Sundance Mountain Resort during Brigadoon Sundance 2019.

You can watch the session - here.

GLOBALIZATION

ISIS leader Baghdadi makes first video appearance in 5 years, emphasizes group’s global reach.

Bolton: Trump wants solo, not multi-party talks with North Korea: AP reports, the US has little interest in joining other countries in a multi-nation effort to get North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons, President Donald Trump’s national security adviser said Sunday. 

US-Japan trade deal? Trump said he wants to sign a trade deal with Japan by the time he visits next month but officials are still working on what’s actually going to be in the agreement.

Trump is traveling to Japan at the end of May to meet the newly crowned emperor. 

Trump is also expected to go to Japan for the G-20 summit in Osaka on June 28-29.

The administration is looking to get a quick initial deal with Japan and then work out something more comprehensive at a later date.


WSJ: Japan’s Emperor Akihito abdicates throne as son is set to ascend

It was the first abdication by a Japanese emperor in more than 200 years.

Nikkei: Mongolia is Japan's new frontier in the search for IT talent

Romania and Myanmar are also among the hunting grounds for tech specialists.

Xi urges youth to 'love' the Communist Party: AFP reports,  Xi Jinping urged China's youth on Tuesday to be loyal to the Communist Party as he sought to whip up patriotic sentiment in a nationalist speech marking the centennial of a student protest. Xi delivered his hour-long plea at the Great Hall of the People to commemorate the May Fourth Movement, a landmark protest against colonialism and imperialism that rocked China in 1919.

FT: China renegotiated $50bn in loans to developing countries

Study challenges ‘debt-trap’ narrative surrounding Beijing’s lending.

SCMP: US and China will have many more battles to fight when the trade war ends

Negotiators are focused on resolving a long-running tariff dispute but the conflict between Washington and Beijing extends far beyond sales of soybeans and aluminum.

Technology, politics, ideology and even the military are all areas where tensions could bubble over, analysts say.

Xi mulling June visit to US: Xi Jinping could travel to the United States as soon as June to sign a deal with Trump face to face. “June is an option but it could be later,” a source told SCMP’s Zhou Xin. The trip may “either be a grand state visit or a relatively low-key working visit.”

Singapore's industrial production looks awful.

China and US square off in Taiwan's presidential race: Nikkei reports, feted in Washington, Tsai faces threat from Beijing -- and within her own party.

Indonesia unveils $33bn plan to move capital: FT reports, the proposal comes two weeks after elections but lacks details on location and schedule.

The government was examining three cities away from the archipelago’s main island of Java as possible alternatives, Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo said on Tuesday, without naming them.

Nikkei: Indonesia to move capital out of Jakarta to jump-start economy

Government eyes alleviating pain of serious traffic jams with relocation off Java.

Matthew d’Ancona: Nigel Farage is fuelled by the betrayal myth. And Brexit is only the start. His rhetoric was always that the elite would thwart the will of the people, enabling a new movement to rise up amid the anger.

Robert Shrimsley: Conservatives are drawing the wrong lesson from the Brexit party: Brexit is no longer a policy — it is a religion and selection is by faith alone.

Michael Auslin: Donald Trump can deliver Britain a post-Brexit trade boost: A trilateral deal between the US, UK and Japan would counter fears of isolation.

David Seymour: The time is ripe for a new partnership between the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand: The free movement of people, ideas, information and capital has made both nations more prosperous. The two countries share a belief in equality, secularism and multiculturalism. We have a common law legal system and a Westminster parliamentary democracy that share common heritage.

The Times: Ditch Huawei or we may stop sharing intelligence, US warns

Italian wage growth is slowing.

Sweden's household loan growth hit the lowest level since 2013.


Spanish election reflects Europe’s widening political fragmentation: WSJ reports, incumbent Socialists finish first, but forming a governing coalition could prove tricky, in latest example of upstarts’ gains at traditional parties’ expense.

No party won more than 30% of the vote in Spain on Sunday.

The main opposition conservative People’s Party took less than 17%, the worst showing in its 30-year history.


Venezuela’s Juan Guaido leads military uprising: AP reports, Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó took to the streets Tuesday with detained activist Leopoldo Lopez and a small contingent of heavily armed soldiers in a military uprising. "This is the moment of all Venezuelans, those in uniform and those who aren't," said Lopez in his first public appearance since being detained in 2014 for leading anti-government protests. "Everyone should come to the streets, in peace."

AFP: Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido claims support of ‘brave soldiers’ as govt denounces ‘coup attempt’

Venezuelan opposition leader Guaidó appears to stage military-backed challenge to Maduro
: WP reports, Juan Guaidó issued a video with troops in which he urged other soldiers to join an operation meant to force President Nicolás Maduro from power.

Venezuelans in exile fear they may never be able to return: WSJ reports, those who fled South America’s worst humanitarian crisis are losing hope as President Maduro clings to power and conditions worsen at home; ‘I’m resigned to stay where we are.’

Around 3.4 million residents have left Venezuela.

Argentina's central bank took further action to stabilize the peso.

The price of a cup of coffee with milk in Venezuela (a measure of inflation) continues to rise exponentially.


Pew: Many across the globe are dissatisfied with how democracy is working

Discontent is tied to concerns about the economy, individual rights, and out-of-touch elites.

The link between views of the economy and assessments of democratic performance is strong. In 24 of 27 countries surveyed, people who say the national economy is in bad shape are more likely than those who say it is in good shape to be dissatisfied with the way democracy is working. In the other three countries surveyed, so few people say the economy is good that this relationship cannot be analyzed.


DISRUPTION

Starbucks, Dunkin race against bans, taxes on disposable cups: Bloomberg reports, inspired by plastic bag bans, jurisdictions have set their sights on a much bigger target: the to-go coffee cup

"There are some big structural changes in manufacturing. The world will make relatively fewer things in the future as digitization replaces goods with services." -- Paul Donovan @ UBS

Bloomberg: Teens say they don't vape, they Juul, making e-cigarette use hard to track

For the first time, public health officials will ask about Juul by name in an annual youth tobacco survey.

POLITICS

OTD: In 1789 George Washington was inaugurated as the first president of the United States.

Rod Rosenstein to resign effective May 11: WP reports, the deputy attorney general, who oversaw special counsel Robert S. Mueller III’s investigation of President Trump and Russia, will step down after a tumultuous two years on the job.

Sue me, sue you: Trump, three of his children and his real-estate businesses filed a federal lawsuit to block Deutsche Bank and Capital One from complying with congressional subpoenas for documents 

Most Americans say they won’t vote for Trump next year — but will they vote at all? WP reports, a poll shows most Americans don’t really like Trump. But that won’t be enough to secure a victory for Democrats.

WP: Frustrations with economic and political system, and how Americans' weigh Trump's agenda ahead of 2020 election

- A clear majority of Americans, including large shares of Democratic and independent voters and a significant slice of Republicans, think the economy mainly benefits people already in power.

- About 8 in 10 Democrats and more than 6 in 10 independents say the country’s economic system gives an advantage to those already in power, while nearly a third of Republicans share that view.

- The survey finds that 42 percent of registered voters say Trump’s handling of the economy makes them more likely to vote for him in 2020, while 32 percent say it makes them less likely to support him.


Democrat Stacey Abrams of Georgia says she will not run for a US Senate seat in 2020.

Kamala Harris has hired Jim Margolis, one of the Democratic Party’s most accomplished admakers, as her media adviser.

Biden starts his campaign with pitch to working class: FT reports, the Democratic presidential hopeful for 2020 lays out his credentials for beating Donald Trump.

“Democrats see Biden as wobbly 2020 front-runner”

I see a Biden - Harris 2020 ticket.


Morning Consult Poll: Biden posts 6-point bump among likely Democratic voters amid campaign launch

Biden 36%
Sanders 22%
Warren 9%
Buttigieg 8%
Harris 7%
O'Rourke 5%
Booker 3%
Klobuchar 2%
Yang 2%


- Former VP has a 14-point lead over Sen. Bernie Sanders, his biggest yet

- 36% of likely Democratic primary voters said Biden was their first-choice candidate for president, his best Morning Consult showing in 2019.

- Biden’s increased his first-choice share with women, especially with black women, among whom he leads the current primary field with 47% support.

- 76% of Democratic primary voters view him favorably, while 14% view him unfavorably.  


Maryland takes step toward capping drug prices: WSJ reports, governor is poised to sign bill creating panel to review expensive prescription drugs and limit what agencies will pay for them.

COMMERCE

Amazon posts first jobs for HQ2, says operations will begin in area in June: WP reports, the company is leasing temporary space in Crystal City for new employees. Two Amazon vice presidents also are moving to the area from Seattle.

FanDuel Group will be the first US sports betting operator to offer live-sports broadcasts alongside odds on its website and mobile app, part of an expanded partnership with Swiss data and media giant Sportradar AG.

Boeing said certain safety alerts on its now-grounded 737 MAX jets didn’t operate as airlines would have anticipated because of a previously undisclosed slip-up on its part.

Foxconn tore up a small town to build a big factory—then retreated: WSJ reports, the iPhone maker got fat incentives to build a $10 billion LCD plant that largely hasn’t materialized on land where Mount Pleasant, Wis., razed homes and crops.

When the time is right, I suspect to see this empty heavily subsidized plant to appear in direct mail attacking Trump's failed economic policies.

Netflix continues to rapidly expand its presence in Hollywood, signing two more leases in the neighborhood and furthering its position as one of the biggest office tenants in Los Angeles.

Vodafone found hidden backdoors in Huawei equipment: Bloomberg reports, while the carrier says the issues found in 2011 and 2012 were resolved at the time, the revelation may further damage the reputation of a Chinese powerhouse.

Tim Culpan: The West finally has its Huawei smoking gun: WSJ reports, it may not be enough to sway those who are already convinced of the Chinese company’s innocence.

CULTURE

John Singleton, ‘Boyz N the Hood’ director, is dead at 51: NYT reports, his first film, which he began shooting when he was in his early 20s, earned an Oscar nomination for best director — the first for an African-American.

LAT: Filmmaker John Singleton dies; ‘Boyz n the Hood’ was his own personal LA story

The 1991 film, nominated for two Academy Awards, pulled John Singleton into the company of emerging black moviemakers such as Spike Lee, Mario Van Peebles and Matty Rich. Relevant and thoughtful, Singleton remained prolific over the decades.

SPORT

Ayrton Senna: 25 years since F1 lost its flawed, fascinating hero: Richard Williams writes, this week sees the 25th anniversary of the Imola accident that took the Brazilian’s life and had a devastating impact not just on his millions of fans but on grand prix racing as a whole.

Jürgen Klopp: From the German second division to Liverpool manager: DW reports, it's been a long journey for Jürgen Klopp - from a second-division player to Liverpool manager. He failed at the final hurdle in the Champions League last season, now he faces Barcelona in the semifinals.

'In Klopp we trust'

Champions League - Final Four:

Tottenham v Ajax: 30 April + 8 May
Barcelona v Liverpool: 1 + 7 May


All matches at 3:00 pm ET

Spain, Creativity, New NAFTA, Spotify, Avengers: Endgame

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Spain, Creativity, New NAFTA, Spotify, Avengers: Endgame

Caracal Global Daily
April 29, 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

✔️ Spain’s Socialists seek to govern alone after poll win

✔️ Creativity peaks in your 20s and 50s

✔️ Trump’s new NAFTA faces mounting trouble in House

✔️ Spotify now has 100 million paying users

✔️ Avengers: Endgame smashes box-office records in $1.2 billion debut

MR IN THE NEWS

Bloomberg Radio - Sound On: Trade Talks, North Korea + 2020 Campaigns 

I was on Bloomberg Radio Friday night. 

I joined Bloomberg Chief Washington Correspondent Kevin Cirilli and Ben Chang, former White House National Security Council director of communications in a wide-ranging discussion covering current global and domestic political issues such as:

- CIA on Instagram
- Zlatan Ibrahimović
- UN Arms Trade Treaty
- Ford Motor Company + USCMA 
- Speaker Nancy Pelosi + Impeachment
- White House Correspondents Dinner + Prince
- Globalization + Politics + US agricultural exports
- Prime Minister Shinzō Abe weekend at the White House
- Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un meeting with President Vladimir Putin


You can listen to the nearly 50-minute episode - here.

GLOBALIZATION

Reuters: Two US Navy warships sail through strategic Taiwan Strait

A move that angered China just days after it marked the 70th anniversary of its navy. 

Mnuchin says trade negotiations with China are in ‘the final laps’: NYT reports, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin travels to Beijing this week as trade talks with China reach a critical point.

US-China talks to resume with significant issues unresolved: Bloomberg reports, the possibility remains that Donald Trump would walk away from the negotiating table.

Talks will resume in Beijing this week with the aim of a deal sometime next month.

Both of these stories are correct.

Pro-tip: Trade negotiations with China will never end.


US-China trade ties hinge on enforcement mechanism: Reuters reports, US negotiators head to China to try to hammer out details to end the two countries' trade war, including the shape of an enforcement mechanism, the success or failure of which could set the trajectory of ties for years to come.

Edward Luce: China, the US and trade in a dog-eat-dog world: An agreement between the world’s two biggest economies would sideline the WTO.

Britain's FM urges caution over Huawei role in 5G network: AFP reports, British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt has urged caution over the role of China's Huawei in the UK, saying the government should think carefully before opening its doors to the technology giant to develop next-generation 5G mobile networks. His comments come after Prime Minister Theresa May conditionally allowed China's Huawei to build the UK 5G network, according to media reports last week.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond vs. Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt 

Abe and Canada's Justin Trudeau look to rule of law in resolving dispute over Huawei: TJT reports, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe agrees with his Canadian counterpart to seek the rule of law in resolving international issues, including China’s arrest of two Canadian citizens.

With China in mind, Japan eyes new infrastructure investment rules for G20: TJT reports, the Abe government is considering proposing a set of rules for infrastructure investment in developing countries when Japan hosts the Group of 20 summit in Osaka in June, after China has been criticized for engaging in “debt-trap” diplomacy with its aggressive project financing, according to sources.

Incoming Imperial monarchs offer Japan something new: TJT reports, Crown Prince Naruhito and his wife, Crown Princess Masako, represent a lot of firsts for the nation's next Imperial monarchs: university-educated, multilingual and with years of experience living overseas, during which the monarch-to-be even did his own laundry. 

Reiwa Era to open in wake of decades of tumultuous economic change in Japan: TJT reports the Heisei Era began three decades ago with Emperor Akihito ascending the throne near the zenith of one of the biggest stock market bubbles in history. It's been punctuated by the triple hit of an earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown.

Bill Shorten wins first election debate against Scott Morrison: SMH reports, Opposition Leader Bill Shorten has won the popular vote in the first leaders’ debate of the federal election campaign after using his closing remarks to tell Australians the economy was not working for them. Shorten emphasized the cost of services ranging from childcare to private health insurance in a challenge to Prime Minister Scott Morrison over economic management during the live debate in Perth.

Pedro Sanchez's Socialists win election but miss majority: DW reports, in a vote that saw one of the highest turnouts in recent years, Spain's ruling Socialists have won the most seats but fell well short of a majority. The far-right Vox party will enter parliament for the first time.

Spain’s Socialists seek to govern alone after poll win: FT reports, PM Pedro Sánchez also has coalition options after defeating the fragmented conservative challenge.

The Times: Socialists ready to run Spain alone

Spain’s Socialist Party has signaled that it could try to govern as a minority administration instead of working in a formal coalition.

Ferdinando Giugliano: Spain's election is a radical opportunity: A coalition between the Socialists and the centrists looks a long shot, but the benefits for the country’s economy would be considerable.

Bernd Riegert: Spain loses its innocence: The Socialists may have won the general election, but the real story is the rise of the far-right nationalist Vox party as it enters the Spanish parliament.

How Brexit might help the Scottish independence quest: Reuters reports, Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon’s plans to lead her nation to independence from the United Kingdom have been muddled by Brexit, but the whirlwind at the center of British politics may yet advance her cause.

DISRUPTION

Creativity peaks in your 20s and 50s: BBC reports, New research from Ohio State University found that our mid-20s is when our brains first become fertile ground for innovation. The study looked at previous winners of the Nobel Prize in economics. It found that those who did their most groundbreaking work in their 20s tended to be "conceptual" innovators. So basically they had a light bulb moment and acted upon it. But don't panic if you've gone past your mid-20s without a flicker of an idea - some of us won't hit our inspirational stride until our mid-50s.

The study is from THE Ohio State University so who knows?!?

The anatomy of a great decision: Making better decisions is one of the best skills we can develop. Good decisions save time, money, and stress. Here, Shane Parrish breaks down what makes a good decision and what we can do to improve our decision-making processes. http://bit.ly/2L8vMf7

POLITICS

Barr’s Feud with House escalates with threat of subpoena: NYT reports, the House Judiciary Committee was planning to question Attorney General William P. Barr on Thursday. But he objected to the panel’s proposed format. “The witness is not going to tell the committee how to conduct its hearing, period,” the committee chairman, Representative Jerrold Nadler said.

Trump did ‘nothing wrong’ to warrant impeachment, Sen. Lindsey Graham says: LAT reports, ‘What President Trump did here was completely cooperate in an investigation,’ Graham argued on CBS’ ‘Face the Nation.’

Sen. Lindsey Graham challenges Jared Kushner’s bid to downplay Russian interference in 2016 election: WP reports, the Senate Judiciary Committee chairman said Russia’s interference was “not just a few Facebook ads,” as the White House senior adviser asserted last week. 

Rising tide of white nationalism is at forefront of 2020 presidential race: WP reports, the California synagogue shooting and President Trump’s latest defense of his Charlottesville comments have prompted some Republicans to acknowledge that the president is taking a political risk by continuing to stand by his words.

Trump’s new NAFTA faces mounting trouble in House: WSJ reports, Trump’s push to revamp North America’s trade rules is hitting a roadblock in Washington as Democrats and labor groups demand changes, dimming its chances of passage before next year’s election. 

Joe Biden won the endorsement of the nation’s largest firefighters union Monday.

RIP: Richard Lugar, a leading Republican voice on arms control in his 36 years as a senator representing Indiana, died Sunday in a Virginia hospital. He was 87.

COMMERCE

Spotify now has 100 million paying users.

FT: Anadarko prepares to endorse $55bn bid from Occidental

Sale of Texas-based oil and gas company to Chevron in jeopardy.

Decentralized browser Brave has launched Brave Ads: An option that enables its users to earn rewards for watching advertising. The development was announced on Brave’s website on April 24. The announcement reads that users of Brave — which is an open-source blockchain-powered browser that blocks ads and website trackers — can now receive 70% of the ad revenue share as a reward for their attention in the form of the browser’s native cryptocurrency, basic attention tokens (BAT). 

CULTURE

Avengers: Endgame smashes box-office records in $1.2 billion debut.

Belt and Road, Shinzo Abe, Starbucks, Maria Butina, Don Quijote, Vacation

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Belt and Road, Shinzo Abe, Starbucks, Maria Butina, Don Quijote, Vacation

Caracal Global Daily
April 26, 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

✔️ Xi vows new direction for ‘Belt and Road’ after criticism

✔️ Does Starbucks make you smarter?

✔️ Maria Butina is not a Russian spy, but a 'spotter'

✔️ “I haven’t seen anything else quite like Don Quijote”

✔️ The new vacation perk: Celebrity encounters

ROSS RANT

21 ways to not have the right network:

1. Same backgrounds - think homophily.

2. Lack of mission statement.

3. Thinking small.

4. Too much self-reliance.

5. Same skills. Same talents. Same ideas.

6. Too provincial.

7. Limited perspective.

8. Choosing personality over purpose.

9. Reactive. 

10. Not stubborn enough.

11. Easily swayed.

12. Over-reliance on cash and class as the connection.

13. Spending not investing.

14. No reboot.

15. Too many jerks.

16. More campaign, not cause.

17. Comfortable and content.

18. Thinking the hype is real.

19. Lack of moxie.

20. Don’t do the work.

21. Many ideas, no execution.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross specializes in thought leader strategy for executives and entrepreneurs working at the intersection of globalization, disruption, and politics.

GLOBALIZATION

China’s Xi vows new direction for ‘Belt and Road’ after criticism: WSJ reports, China’s President Xi Jinping signaled a recalibration of his global infrastructure-building program as he sought to assuage foreign critics who blame Beijing for pushing excessive lending onto developing economies.

Xi pledges open Belt and Road but west is split on programme: FT reports, Beijing chips away at wariness over flagship infrastructure building project.

Nikkei: Xi pledges Belt and Road reboot amid rising 'debt trap' concerns

China's Belt and Road is 'green and clean,' says Xi
: DW reports, Chinese President Xi Jinping says the Belt and Road program must be "open, green and clean." Beijing wants to dispel fears that its infrastructure plans will leave countries saddled with debt and environmental damage.

UK in China: Philip Hammond, the chancellor, attends the 2nd Belt and Road Forum in Beijing, along with President Putin.

China lobbies ASEAN on yuan use, cracking dollar dominance: Nikkei reports, Beijing proposes Asian currencies, including yen, be added to emergency pool.

AFP: Xi says will abolish anti-competitive subsidies to Chinese firms

China’s Xi signals approval for Trump’s trade war demands
: Bloomberg reports, Xi spent a large portion of his speech Friday addressing Chinese domestic reforms, pledging to address state subsidies, protect intellectual property rights, allow foreign investment in more sectors and avoid competitive devaluation of the yuan. All four are issues the US is addressing in trade talks with Beijing.

China's rocket start-ups develop 'shoebox' satellites: Reuters reports, China's private rocket manufacturers are racing to develop small rockets capable of sending satellites into space at affordable prices, as part of a broader Chinese dream of building commercial satellites that can offer services from high-speed internet for aircraft to tracking coal shipments.

Geoffrey Owen: How to meet the challenge of China: Western governments should think twice before trying to keep Chinese companies out.

"Fifty-two years ago, the French journalist and politician Jean-Jacques Servan-Schreiber wrote a hugely successful book called Le Défi Américain (The American Challenge). In it, he warned that European industry was about to be overwhelmed by giant American companies such as General Motors and Ford. Unless urgent action was taken to create bigger European companies, Servan-Schreiber argued, Europe would became a technological vassal of the US."

Dan Wang: Why China will rival the US in high tech: Critics who say bureaucracy and rote education stifle innovation are missing the biggest factor in the mainland’s favor: its huge market. 

Anjani Trivedi: Why China can’t pull up the world: Beijing’s stimulus has been targeted and domestically focused. That means it won’t do much to boost growth elsewhere.

LAT: Trump's withdrawal from TPP trade deal is hurting U.S. exports to Japan

The White House is scrambling to undo the damage of Trump’s swift withdrawal from what would have been the world’s largest regional trade agreement.

The remaining 11 members proceeded anyway, slashing tariffs and leaving US businesses at a significant competitive disadvantage. 


Today: Donald Trump hosts Shinzo Abe, the Japanese prime minister, at the White House.

Japan’s Abe visits White House in latest bid to soothe Trump’s ego — and avoid his ire: WP reports,the Japanese leader has played a diligent inside game to mixed results but now faces a new test amid President Trump’s threats on trade.

Trump and Abe to meet as Japan and US seek trade deal: NYT reports, Trump and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe of Japan will meet today to discuss a bilateral deal that was almost unthinkable two years ago. But the United States may have to agree to some concessions.

The US is pushing to reduce its trade deficit with Japan and gain better access to the Asian nation’s agricultural market. Japan is looking for a concrete promise that it won’t be hit by possible US tariffs on auto imports.

Reuters: Japan tells US can't link monetary policy to trade: finance minister Aso

FT: Japanese government and Nissan reject Renault merger talks


Relations sink to new low after double snub to French carmaker.

Europe’s nationalists band together in bid for influence: WSJ reports, European Parliament elections next month will test the strength of an energized far-right’s views, offering a signpost to Europe’s politics in coming years. Nationalists are reaching across borders to try to build an alliance they hope can reshape the legislature.

France’s Macron vows to cut taxes, stay on pro-business course: WSJ reports, French President Emmanuel Macron promised to cut taxes in a long-awaited address that sidestepped demands for immediate measures to quell months of violent yellow-vest protests.

FT: French employees face challenge to short-hours culture

Macron wants citizens to work longer in bid to increase tax revenues.

Macron responds to yellow vest protests by promising tax cuts, more reforms: DW reports, President Emmanuel Macron has vowed to ease taxes on France's middle class, reform its civil service while also reinstating public order. His long Elysee Palace news conference follows months of yellow vest protests.

DISRUPTION

Virgin plastics: As the EU waves through the single-use plastics ban, broadly shuns fracking and pushes for decarbonization by 2050, plans for a wholesale contradiction involving INEOS and US ethane are underway in the city of Antwerp.

Roger Dooley: Does Starbucks make you smarter? One thing the coffee giant has been very smart about is preserving the powerful aroma of roasted coffee beans. Research shows that the mere smell of coffee can improve some cognitive functions. University of Toronto researchers recently published results which verified the concept that coffee cues prime the brain with an expectation of increased sharpness. Subjects from cultures where coffee drinking is common experienced higher levels of alertness and attention when primed with coffee cues than those from tea-oriented cultures.

One sign that neuromarketing has transcended its era of hype and hucksterism: Nielsen now has 16 neuro labs globally, including five in the US. One opened late last year in Cincinnati, Ohio, the heart of client country and home to Procter & Gamble, which is among the marketers that now have neuroscientists in-house.

"I think the industry is still a little bit of wild, wild west. It's still got plenty of snake oil in it," says Duane Varan, CEO of MediaScience.

POLITICS

Trump sought out loyalist to curtail special counsel — and drew Mueller’s glare: WP reports, Trump’s efforts to enlist Corey Lewandowski as a back channel were read by some legal observers as one of the clearest cases for potential obstruction of justice laid out in Robert S. Mueller III's report.

Admitted Russian agent Butina to be sentenced in US, faces deportation: Reuters reports, admitted Russian agent Maria Butina will be sentenced on Friday by a federal judge after pleading guilty in December to conspiring with a Russian official to infiltrate a gun rights group and influence U.S. conservative activists and Republicans.

USA Today: Maria Butina is not a Russian spy, but a 'spotter': DOJ revives intrigue over gun rights activist

Rolling Stone: 17 takeaways from Maria Butina’s sentencing memo
 http://bit.ly/2VvVpKE

The NRA-friendly Russian national reveals a plot to get Vladimir Putin on American cable TV.

FT: Sanders launches attack on Biden over lobbyist fundraiser event

Attendance at private function underlines ex-vice president’s urgent need for cash.

Reuters: Like Trump, Democrat Buttigieg bills himself as a turnaround expert

Bloomberg: Biden banks on Trump to help win White House in 2020


"Biden’s strategy – which his campaign said will include an emphasis on rebuilding the middle class and unifying the country – comes after more than two years of party post-mortems concluded that Hillary Clinton’s almost single-minded emphasis on Trump’s shortcomings contributed to her loss in 2016."

Offshore drilling + 2020: The Trump administration has shelved plans for a vast expansion in offshore oil and gas drilling following a court decision blocking fossil fuel activity in large swaths of the Arctic. Offshore drilling is not seen as such a swell idea in Trump must-win state Florida.

Joel Kotkin and Wendell Cox: America’s future depends on the bedroom, not the border: With a historically low unemployment rate, America is running low on workers in everything from high-tech to construction, manufacturing and services as Donald Trump’s stronger immigration policies help raise wages for existing US workers, from the lowest paid to well-paid construction workers, for the first time in decades.

COMMERCE

Uber ratcheted down its target valuation to a range of about $80 billion to $90 billion.

FT: Uber to pitch IPO between $44 and $50 a share

Ride-hailing app could raise $8bn-$10bn and will sell about $500m of stock to PayPal.

Nikkei: Japan's Don Quijote exports retail 'jungles' in age of Amazon

Discounter bets on bricks-and-mortar chaos to win Asian customers.

Bloomberg: The cult Japanese retailer making billions breaking all the rules https://bloom.bg/2Vrn13v

Don Quijote is a little like a mashup of TJ Maxx, Dollar Tree, Costco, and the no-frills grocer Aldi, with a dollop of Japanese eccentricity thrown in. 

“I haven’t seen anything else quite like Don Quijote,” says Michael Causton, a retail analyst in Tokyo for Japan Consuming. “It’s chaotic, messy stores, which belie what’s behind it—a highly disciplined, extremely rigorous management philosophy.”

Retail experts have described Donki, as it’s popularly known, as a jungle, a hoarder’s paradise, even a fire hazard, with shelves so heavily packed they look as if they might fall over. But the heart of its strategy is simple: Floor staff should have near-total autonomy to decide what to sell.

The first target is Asia for Don Quijote, which sells everything from humidifiers to sex toys.


Walmart has unveiled a new “store of the future” and test grounds for emerging technologies, including AI-enabled cameras and interactive displays. The store, a working concept called the Intelligent Retail Lab — or “IRL” for short — operates out of a Walmart Neighborhood Market in Levittown, NY.

Amazon to roll out one-day shipping worldwide: FT reports, online retailer beats estimates as profits more than double in first quarter.

Starbucks plans to expand delivery service to 50 Chinese cities.

CULTURE

The new vacation perk: Celebrity encounters: WSJ reports, To let tourists come home with bragging rights, the travel industry and fundraisers are selling access to celebs, rockers, athletes and a whole host of boldfaced names.

Tim Harford: Always seek out novelty — even at home: The search for new experiences should not just be for our holidays.