Press "Enter" to skip to content

Posts published in “Personal Finance”

Silicon Valley in the pandemic

The crisis has hit tech’s spiritual home hard, but it is already planning aheadEditor’s note: The Economist is making some of its most important coverage of the covid-19 pandemic freely available to readers of The Economist Today, our daily newsletter. To receive it, register here. For our coronavirus tracker and more coverage, see our hubFIRING…

Japan Inc’s IT needs a security patch

Japanese firms are more vulnerable to cyber-attacks than Western peersJAPAN HAS a reputation for technophilia. Robots have even been enlisted to cheer players at professional baseball games while covid-19 keeps fans away from stadiums. Yet when it comes to more humdrum information technology (IT), the country lags behind other advanced economies—nowhere more so than in…

Elon, Masa and Boris in low-Earth orbit

SCHUMPETER IS ONLY an amateur stargazer. His equipment is no fancier than a pair of eyes and a place in the countryside, away from London’s light pollution. That is enough to make out Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn—and, occasionally, the International Space Station crossing the firmament. In the past few years a new spectacle has…

Why SMIC is surging

China’s leading chipmaker looks unfazed by Uncle Sam’s semiconductor sabre-rattlingTIMES SEEM tough for China’s chipmaking champion, the Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC). Over the past year America has attacked its supply chains, cutting it off from essential high-tech tools. It has slapped export controls on SMIC’s customers and enacted new rules which threaten to designate…

India Inc’s inward turn

FACEBOOK WAS first to open its wallet. In April the social network said it would spend $5.7bn on a 9.9% stake in Jio Platforms, the digital arm of Reliance Industries, India’s biggest firm. The investment was followed in short order by nine other entities, including global private-equity (PE) giants such as KKR, as well as…

Nissan’s newish boss wants to re-engineer the troubled carmaker

Remodelling the global alliance with Renault and Mitsubishi will be tougherNISSAN IS IN for a makeover. On July 15th the Japanese car giant will unveil what is rumoured to be a sleeker, more minimalist logo more in line with the contemporary aesthetic. To its boss, Uchida Makoto, the redesign is the outward expression of deeper…

Joining the S&P 500 may not be as big a boon as often assumed

New research suggests that the share-price premium for entering Wall Street’s flagship index isn’t what it used to beLAST MONTH Tesla reported second-quarter net income of $104m. This came as a surprise; the pandemic has pushed many carmakers into the red as cash-strapped consumers put off purchases. It also had Tesla’s investors aflutter, for it…

Swedish firms have outshone German ones in the pandemic

How two northern European corporate realms have weathered covid-19SINCE THE Middle Ages, when the Hanseatic League of merchant guilds dominated trade in northern Europe, the German and Swedish business worlds have been close. This remains the case. Both economies depend on exports, manufacturing and retail. Germany is the biggest market for many Swedish firms. Nearly…