Thursday, April 28, 2022

Qui Suis-Je? ( Emmanuel MACRON )

                       Qui suis-je ?

Né de parents docteurs en 1977 à Amiens, il suit une brillante scolarité qui lui permet d'être diplômé de Sciences Po.  En 2002, il entre à la prestigieuse ENA, où il intègre la promotion Léopold Sédar Senghor.  En 2005, après l'obtention de son diplôme, elle débute sa carrière professionnelle à l'Inspection des Finances.  Après une ascension fulgurante, il se retrouve chargé d'une mission à la tête de l'Inspection générale.

2008 est l'année du premier changement de direction.  Alors qu'il n'a que 30 ans, il est embauché par la Banque Rothschild, dont il ne devient co-gérant que deux ans plus tard.  Comme les carrières ont souvent été marquées par des jalons espacés de deux ans, il est tout à fait logique que 2012 soit un nouveau tournant.  François Hollande lui propose le poste de secrétaire général adjoint de la présidence, qu'il accepte.

Dans une nouvelle étape de deux ans en 2014, il devient ministre de l'Économie et des Finances dans le gouvernement Valls II.  Suite à sa diffusion de son poste de ministre le 30 août 2016, il a annoncé qu'il était candidat à l'élection présidentielle.

 Le 23 avril 2017, lors du premier tour de l'élection présidentielle, il arrive en tête avec 24 % des voix.  Quatre mois après avoir fondé son propre mouvement politique appelé "En Marche!"  .

Auteur d'un grand ouvrage, où il raconte pour la première fois son histoire personnelle, ses inspirations, sa vision de la France et de son avenir, dans un monde nouveau qui traverse une "grande transformation"


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Référence :

Révolution

20 minutes

C'est la France

Élysée France


Friday, April 22, 2022

Mexico's Banorte eyes Banamex, shares surge

 Mexico`s Banorte stated on Friday that "non-disclosure agreements" have been signed as an initial step in the direction of a likely bid for Citigroup (NYSE:C)'s Citibanamex subsidiary whilst the Mexican lender goals natural boom with the deliberate release of a virtual bank.


Shares in Banorte had been up extra than 7%, hitting a two-week excessive after the employer additionally brought better-than-predicted income and bosses stated the lender is in search of approval from regulators to release a virtual bank.

Chief Executive Marcos Ramirez Miguel stated Banorte is fighting "for an excellent gambling field" as opposed to startups.

Banorte will gift an offer to its board and shareholders if it perspectives phrases concerning Citibanamex as "convenient," Miguel stated. Analysts have stated they anticipate numerous banks might be interested in making an offer.

Banorte Chief Operations Officer Rafael Arana declined to mention whether or not Citi's "statistics room," wherein it'd outline sale phrases, had already opened.


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Netflix: Is There More Downside After Stock’s 37% Post-Earnings Plunge?

 

  • Netflix’s slide shows that the streaming giant has lost momentum
  • Now worth less than $100 billion, down from $308 billion in November
  • Wall Street analysts have downgraded NFLX stock, citing uncertainty

Netflix's (NASDAQ:NFLX) massive earnings miss earlier this week showed investors that the pandemic-driven surge in subscriber growth was just an illusion, as reality in the crowded streaming world is getting grimmer.

The Los Gatos, California-based company told investors Tuesday that its business lost momentum in the first quarter of 2022, with a 200,000 decrease in total customers.

And the future doesn’t look very bright either. Netflix expects to lose another 2 million subscribers this quarter, a forecast that helped propel a daily 35% plunge in its stock—its most significant one-day loss since 2004.

The descent has been so fast and furious that Netflix is now worth less than $100 billion, down from its $308 billion market cap in November.

This debacle came after two years of unprecedented growth, primarily due to the stay-at-home environment and the worldwide COVID-driven closing of movie theaters. Netflix picked up more than 36 million customers in 2020 and 18.2 million in 2021.

After this week’s decline, Netflix is now the worst-performing stock of the year on both the benchmark S&P 500 and NASDAQ 100 indexes.

Losing Ground

The post-pandemic inflationary environment is among the many headwinds that high-growth companies face these days. But in the case of Netflix, the reasons for this downfall are more company-specific.

Netflix pointed to the prevalence of password sharing and growing competition as two leading factors contributing to the fall in subscriber growth. The company cited that more than 100 million households use its service and don’t pay for it.

Netflix is also losing ground to other streaming companies. Yesterday, HBO and HBO Max reported having 76.8 million subscribers at the end of the first quarter of 2022. That means a 3 million subscriber increase from the previous quarter and a 12.8 million year-over-year jump.

Where Will Netflix Go From Here?

In the short run, it seems no one has a clear idea. However, analysts have been downgrading the stock in the aftermath of its disastrous earnings report.

At least, ten different Wall Street firms cut their ratings on the stock this week, according to CNBC.com, including two that issued rare double downgrades.

Bank of America’s Nat Schindler moved the stock to underperform from buy, telling clients that it would take time for Netflix to prove itself as a good investment again. Its note adds:

“The Street now knows that the low guide last quarter was not an aberration, and we expect it will take a while for investors to believe NFLX can return to growth.”

Analysts were also not sure how long it would take for Netflix to succeed in its plans to limit password sharing and introduce a service that carries advertisements.

While downgrading the stock to neutral from overweight, Piper Sandler said the hit for the next two years would be substantial. The note said:

“While password sharing is being addressed and a new ad-supported tier sounds viable, we substantially lowered sub adds forecasts for’ 22/’23. It’s lower growth, lower visibility model, prompting us to move to the sidelines.”

Billionaire investor William Ackman sold the entire stake that his hedge fund accumulated in Netflix after the January sell-off yesterday. His exit implied a loss of about $400 million to his fund. Ackman said his fund Pershing Square had:

lost confidence in our ability to predict the company’s future prospects.”

Bottom Line

Netflix has lost momentum after producing remarkable growth during the past decade. There is considerable uncertainty about the success of its future plans and the competitive environment is still evolving so buying on the dip can be a risky strategy.

By  Investing.com (Haris Anwar/Investing.com)

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