• English
  • 简体中文
  • 繁體中文
  • Tiếng Việt
  • ไทย
  • Indonesia
Subscribe
Real-time News
Rijksmash Financial: Raises its target price for Arm (ARM.O) from $166 to $244.On May 7, Li Hongzhong, member of the Political Bureau of the CPC Central Committee and Vice Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National Peoples Congress, conducted research in Beijing. He emphasized the need to adhere to Xi Jinping Thought on Socialism with Chinese Characteristics for a New Era as guidance, thoroughly study and implement the spirit of General Secretary Xi Jinpings important speeches during the National Peoples Congress and the Chinese Peoples Political Consultative Conference (NPC and CPPCC) sessions, earnestly implement the arrangements of the Fourth Plenary Session of the 20th CPC Central Committee and the "15th Five-Year Plan" outline, actively leverage the functions of the NPC, and better serve high-quality development. Building a modern industrial system and achieving an overall leap forward in the industrial system are important strategic tasks during the "15th Five-Year Plan" period. The NPC should focus on consolidating and strengthening the foundation of the real economy and leading the development of new productive forces, strengthen institutional supply and legal guarantees, actively promote legislation in emerging fields such as artificial intelligence, low-altitude economy, and biomedicine, improve the ecosystem for industrial innovation and development, and cultivate and strengthen new drivers of growth.McDonalds (MCD.N) reported an 11% increase in global system sales in the first quarter.McDonalds (MCD.N) reported revenue of $6.517 billion in Q1 2026, compared to $5.96 billion in the same period last year, and market expectations of $6.472 billion.On May 7th, Boston Federal Reserve President Collins stated that she agrees with the position of her colleagues who objected to the wording of last weeks monetary policy meetings post-meeting statement, which suggested the Fed would eventually resume interest rate cuts. Collins said she "strongly supports" the decision to keep interest rates unchanged, but at the same time prefers to adjust the wording of the statement to "not be too close to statements suggesting the next step will be a rate cut." Collinss view on the statements wording highlights a further shift within the FOMC towards no longer considering near-term rate cuts. A growing number of officials want the Fed to signal more clearly that the next step could be either a rate cut or a rate hike. Collins stated that with the energy shock triggered by the Middle East conflict delaying progress toward the 2% inflation target, she tends to take a more "agnostic" stance on the future path of interest rates. Interest rates may remain unchanged for "a longer period," with "further easing expected in the more distant future." However, in some cases, the Fed may need to consider raising rates, but she emphasized that this is not her baseline expectation. "Im more concerned about the persistence of inflation," Collins said, noting that as the global spillover effects of war continue, supply chain disruptions could cause price increases to spread from energy to the food sector. She added that interest rates should remain at their current "moderately restrictive" level. "But if the inflation path looks clearly heading in the wrong direction," policymakers will "need to reassess what is the right policy."

According to Australian Retailer Woolworths, Inflation Is Driving Home Dining

Haiden Holmes

Feb 22, 2023 14:10

微信截图_20230222141146.png


Woolworths Group Ltd, a leading Australian retailer, said that an inflation-driven move away from dining out aided in boosting sales, driving its shares higher after its half-year earnings above expectations despite cost challenges.


Since COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 prompted supermarket hoarding, Woolworths and its smaller competitor Coles Group (OTC:CLEGF) Ltd have witnessed significant fluctuations in Australian customer behavior. As lockdowns were lifted in 2021, and again in 2022, sales slowed as rising energy and labor costs pushed up shelf prices.


Woolworths said on Wednesday that cost-of-living constraints, including skyrocketing electricity prices and nine interest rate rises since May, are now beginning to benefit stores as consumers choose for in-home consumption.


Since the beginning of 2023, food sales have increased 6.5%, roughly in step with inflation, compared to just 2.4% in the six months leading up to the end of December, the business reported.


"The shift from eating in restaurants to eating at home has become more evident," said Chief Executive Brad Banducci to reporters.


He stated that a growing number of clients from all demographic groups are now preparing meals at home since eating out is becoming more expensive.


The company's net profit before significant items increased 14% to A$907 million ($622 million), above the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of A$877 million. The majority of the increase was attributable to employee back pay linked to a prior salaries miscalculation.


Similar to Tuesday's announcement of Coles' interim results, Woolworths' profit increase was aided by a dramatic drop in COVID-19-related expenditures.


At midday, Woolworths shares were up 2%, compared to a 0.3% decline in the overall index, as analysts hailed the potential of profit margin expansion at a business vulnerable to rising supplier prices.


Phillip Kimber, a retail analyst at E&P Financial, wrote in a client note, "The momentum in the core Australian Food industry remains strong, with sales growth rates above expectations in early 2H23."


Woolworths declared an interim dividend of 46 Australian cents per share, up from 39 Australian cents per share the previous year.