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In a confusing move for everybody, the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) has scrapped plans to delist three Chinese companies it announced just four days earlier.
Just last week, the NYSE had said it had determined that the three companies–China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom Hong Kong– were “no longer suitable for listing,” and cited President Trump executive order from last November when declared a national emergency due to a threat posed by China’s military-industrial complex.
According to the order, starting in November this year, U.S. investors are banned from buying shares of companies that Washington alleges are owned or controlled by the Chinese military.
Yet, after “further consultation with relevant regulatory authorities,” the exchange said in the statement late Monday it would no longer go ahead with plans to remove three companies from its index, scheduled for January 11th.
In a brief statement announcing its reversal, the exchange said that the companies would continue to be listed and traded on the NYSE “at this time.”
Even though no official reason was provided for the decision, some media reported that the exchange was influenced by the U.S. Treasury’s desire to reverse the ruling.
Such speculation roiled hardliners who have been targeting China…CLICK for complete article

But Tesla’s market capitalization is higher than the combined total of Toyota, Volkswagen, Daimler, GM, BMW, Honda, Ford, and Fiat-Chrysler. The zoo has gone nuts.
Tesla announced today that it finally almost reached 500,000 deliveries in a calendar year, with its 499,550 vehicles delivered globally in 2020, and that it finally hit its target of producing 500,000 vehicles a year – two years behind its promises. Back in May 2016, it had promised in its quarterly report that it would produce 500,000 vehicles in 2018.
But it didn’t happen in 2018, far from it, and it didn’t happen in 2019 either. It finally happened in 2020. That promise in May 2016, like so many of Tesla’s and CEO Elon Musk’s promises, had caused its shares to surge.
Every promise Tesla and Musk issue is worth many billions of dollars in the company’s market capitalization, which then allows the company to raise many more billions of dollars by selling more shares. In 2020 alone, it raised $12.3 billion through share sales, on top of the $20 billion or so it had raised since its IPO. CLICK for complete article

I’m starting the New Year wondering if the Malicious Market Gods have launched the planet on to a new more vomit-inducing loop of the rollercoaster?
It feels like we’ve become anaesthetised and insensitive to shock.. The bizarre has become normal and we simply shrug it things that would have seem impossibly improbable just a few years ago. We forget the lessons of the past – thus are doomed to repeat them. I can’t fathom some of the headlines: Bitcoin soared to $34500 on the third day of the new year, and proponents snake-oil salesmen sagely proclaiming it’s headed for $100k by year end. Donald Trump is still plotting to hold the White House, yet Republicans still support him. Brexit got done but didn’t. The ECB is going to focus on climate change. And markets look set to rise and rise and rise and rise….
Whoa. Hand me a bottle of common sense….
The end of the old year and the beginning of the new is the traditional time to address fundamental questions about future returns, risk, value and the economic outlook. Jan 1st is just another date, and these are concepts investors should be constantly questioning. Everyone is determined that 2021 will be a better year! Which the market takes to mean – going higher…
Boy Scout Time: Be Prepared…
As the narrative develops, the outlook changes. A new time frame leads to an increased danger of confirmation bias, misreading the lessons, and reinforcing false-positive highlights. Which is why I’m concerned the overly rosy market “past performance in 2020” is setting us up for a nasty rash of reality in the coming 12 months.
There you go.. in my very first paragraphs of the New Year I’m sounding bearish! I’m not. I’m merely reminding readers of the possibility that all that glitters is not necessarily gold.
I fully expect 2021 will see a sharp recovery and uptick in global economic activity. Successful vaccination programmes and repressed consumer demand will drive massive discretionary spending, but drive up retail debt to pay for it. Governments will keep their fingers on the fiscal boost button, and the money presses busy, to sustain economies through to the end of the pandemic and beyond. As money seeps into the real economy – which hasn’t happened despite years of QE – inflation is a distinct possibility.
There will be good news, and bad news to balance it. Consequences are inevitable. Reflating the global economy creates new risks that will need to be addressed; the years of too low interest rates, inflation, and mismatched risk returns.

Apple Inc’s ambitions in the transportation space mean the iPhone maker could emerge as Tesla Inc’s “first true competitor,” Loup Ventures analyst Gene Munster said Monday.
Regardless of the approach the Tim Cook-led company takes, it has transportation industry ambitions that could result in “meaningful revenue” and pitch the tech giant head-on with Tesla, wrote Munster.
A Marriage Of Titans: “Apple building a car is not news,” the analyst noted — mentioning the company’s self-driving car project, Project Titan, that started in 2014.
In that era, Munster says, the company had three avenues, “First, build an Apple-branded car. Second, build software and license it to other automakers. Third, acquire Tesla.”
The analyst dismissed all likely Project Titan outcomes, noting that the Apple-Tesla marriage, on the table five years ago, did not occur because both the firms felt strongly about design…CLICK for complete article

The COVID-19 pandemic has damaged the airline and automobile sectors around the globe. Fortunately, the rollout of vaccines in late 2020 has sparked hope in the general population. Today, I want to look at two top TSX stocks that have gained momentum in the final weeks of this momentous year. Air Canada and BlackBerry went through rough patches in 2020, but are finishing strong.
Which is the better stock to own in 2021 and beyond?
The case for Air Canada stock
Air Canada is the top domestic airliner and has emerged as one of the top growth stocks on the TSX during the 2010s. Its shares have plunged 46% in 2020 as of close on December 14. The stock is up 34% over the past month. Airliners have been pulverized by the pandemic, but the vaccine rollout has the industry hopeful for a return to normalcy in 2021.
Earlier this month, I’d discussed why Air Canada stock was poised to erupt in the months and years ahead. The airliner had rattled off record earnings in quarter after quarter coming into 2020. There will be a recovery period when this pandemic is history, but airliners should benefit from a global population that will be itching to travel.
In the near term, investors will still need to brace for some turbulence for airliners. Although the vaccine has arrived, it will take time before a satisfactory number of Canadians are inoculated. There are murmurs that the United States-Canada border could open in the spring. That is a good time for investors to expect things to loosen for Air Canada and its peers.
Why BlackBerry has surged in December
Canadian technology stocks like Shopify and Kinaxis put together a great performance in the face of the pandemic. However, BlackBerry was either struggling or static for most of the year. The Waterloo-based company’s exposure to the automobile sector caused its earnings to falter. In December, its fortunes turned, and the stock is attracting enthusiasm again…CLICK for complete article
