-
Dec 15, 2024 |
fortune.com | Jana Randow |Martin Ademmer
Volkswagen workers in Dresden at a second warning strike on Monday. Craig Stennett—Getty Images
-
Sep 17, 2024 |
mk.bloombergadria.com | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer
Компании 17 септември 2024, 12:19 „Фолксваген“ (Volkswagen AG) е подготвен да затвори фабрики во својата татковина, Германија, за прв пат во својата историја, потег што повлекува нишка што може да доведе до расплетување на деценискиот договор меѓу работниците и нивните работодавци.
-
Sep 17, 2024 |
mk.bloombergadria.com | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer
Компании 17 септември 2024, 12:19 „Фолксваген“ (Volkswagen AG) е подготвен да затвори фабрики во својата татковина Германија за првпат во својата историја, потег што повлекува нишка што може да доведе до расплетување на деценискиот договор меѓу работниците и нивните работодавци.
-
Sep 17, 2024 |
bnnbloomberg.ca | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer
(Bloomberg) -- Volkswagen AG is set to shutter factories in its German homeland for the first time in its history, a move that pulls at a thread that could see a decades-long deal between workers and their employers unravel. If it does, inflation could move structurally higher, current account surpluses could shrink and investment flows could shift, according to Bloomberg Economics research.
-
Sep 17, 2024 |
bloomberg.com | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer
Volkswagen AG is set to shutter factories in its German homeland for the first time in its history, a move that pulls at a thread that could see a decades-long deal between workers and their employers unravel. If it does, inflation could move structurally higher, current account surpluses could shrink and investment flows could shift, according to Bloomberg Economics research.
-
Nov 11, 2023 |
sentinelsource.com | Maeva Cousin |Martin Ademmer
What's the most important price in the global economy? The price of oil? The price of semiconductors? The price of a Big Mac? More important than any of these is the price of money. For more than three decades it was falling. Now it's going up. Ask most people how the price of money is set, and they'll say central banks. True, when it comes to direct control of U.S. interest rates, the Federal Reserve calls the shots. But there's a deeper logic at work.
-
Nov 10, 2023 |
banoyi.com | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer |Maeva Cousin |Tom Orlik
What’s the most important price in the global economy? The price of oil? The price of semiconductors? The price of a Big Mac? More important than any of these is the price of money. For more than three decades it was falling. Now it’s going up. Ask most people how the price of money is set, and they’ll say central banks. True, when it comes to direct control of US interest rates, the Federal Reserve calls the shots. But there’s a deeper logic at work.
-
Nov 6, 2023 |
bnnbloomberg.ca | Martin Ademmer |Ana B. Galvao |Ana Flávia Galvão |Nicholas Hallmark |Andrej Sokol |Bjorn van Roye | +1 more
(Bloomberg) -- Economic analysis for a market audience is in the midst of a revolution. In the old world, economists waited for lagging official data, worked without robust objective measures as a support for subjective judgments and struggled to bridge the gap between economic theory and market behavior. Perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise, then, that the major economic events of the past 20 years—the Great Recession of 2007-09 and 2021’s inflation surge—took most forecasters by surprise.
-
Nov 6, 2023 |
bloomberg.com | Martin Ademmer |Ana B. Galvao |Ana Flávia Galvão |Andrej Sokol |Bjorn van Roye |Anna Wong | +1 more
Economic analysis for a market audience is in the midst of a revolution. In the old world, economists waited for lagging official data, worked without robust objective measures as a support for subjective judgments and struggled to bridge the gap between economic theory and market behavior. Perhaps it shouldn’t be a surprise, then, that the major economic events of the past 20 years—the Great Recession of 2007-09 and 2021’s inflation surge—took most forecasters by surprise.
-
Nov 6, 2023 |
advisorperspectives.com | Jamie Rush |Martin Ademmer |Maeva Cousin |Tom Orlik
What’s the most important price in the global economy? The price of oil? The price of semiconductors? The price of a Big Mac? More important than any of these is the price of money. For more than three decades it was falling. Now it’s going up. Ask most people how the price of money is set, and they’ll say central banks. True, when it comes to direct control of US interest rates, the Federal Reserve calls the shots. But there’s a deeper logic at work.