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Virus? What Virus? [Brexit’s impact, equities, coronavirus, etc.]

Brexit’s impact on the Sterling and tech stocks at nosebleed-highs are the subject of the day’s market discussion with Tony Nash, Founder and CEO of Complete Intelligence.

 

You forecasted that any loss in trade to be modest at best. Why do you say that?

 

“The nation tariff rate for non-EU member is something like 2.3%–2% on the price of anything is not going make a major difference. The trickier issue is the non-tariff barriers that Europe has. The UK has to navigate around those non-tariff barriers,” said Nash.

 

“In terms of country partners, the US is actually the largest trade partner of the UK. It’s around $67-68 billion a year. The second largest export partner in Germany at about $45 billion dollars. The EU as an aggregate partner is, of course, larger than the US. But the EU as a trade partner is stagnant. It’s not growing from the UK. It hasn’t grown noticeably since 2015/16. Meanwhile, the US is growing at a billion dollars per year.”

 

Where do you see the Pound this year?

 

“We’re seeing the Pound continuing to strengthen until about April. And once April hits, we see some of its strength tail off just a bit,” said Nash.

 

Listen to the Brexit’s impact podcast at BFM: The Business Station.

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Business and Market Discussion Podcast: Coronavirus and its impact to economy

Tony Nash, founder, CEO and Chief Economist of Complete Intelligence is a guest in RTHK’s Business and Market Discussion podcast. He says that the lockdown of major Chinese cities could make foreign enterprises re-think their supply chain strategy.

 

Some notes below:

 

Do you see this in the US purely as a China problem or is it a global problem?

 

People here are taking precautions. A lot of airlines have stopped direct flights to China. People are concerned about it, but that’s not an overwhelming worry. The preparations that are happening around Asia, but we had this drill before. From a western perspective, it looks like these preparations are being mode and it’s a panic mode. I think Asian governments are doing the right thing by ramping up and preparing for the worst. Best case, it’s not really that bad, but we’ve done all these preparations just in case.

 

How this is hitting tourism, retail sales, trade, commerce because Wuhan is a logistics center. The whole country is virtually shut down. People are not traveling at the moment. You can imagine China will take a big economic hit. One think tank saying economic growth could drop below 5 percent.

 

I would argue that it’s already below 5% for about a year. The magnitude of the response is enough for anyone to get nervous. I think the response is the right response, but it has made people nervous. It’s a difficult balance to strike for the Chinese government. Yes, it will have a hit to the economy. But there may be a sharp rebound.

 

It’s happening over the new year season. But in terms of manufacturing and exports, if these things can be contained before the end of new year, it can be rebound.

 

And that’s because there will be a lot of demands once this is over.

 

How about the impacts on commodities? Copper? Ag products?

 

These are all the typical fear plays when people are worried or when China is in crisis. Traders are shorting because the trade deal may not be implemented. My hope is for the government to turn this around in a couple of weeks.

 

I think that it’s oversold like Gold is overplayed. People are still learning the magnitude of the impact.

 

Do you think this could derail the Phase 1 deal?

 

There are two years for that. This is a relatively short impact like 1 to 2 months. I don’t think the demands will change that much. Because there will be a spike on buying. If this is a medium impact, then this will change.

 

This maybe the event that pushes some manufacturers over the end, and may start moving their production capacity to other areas.

 

And that’s the thing that there’ll be a long impact on the Chinese economy.

 

Absolutely, and that’s where the economy will be stagnant. That’s the main worry.

 

Do you think there will be a big equities sell-off?

 

It’s possible but I don’t think it will happen until we have evidence about the cases or intensity of the impact. We have to wait a little bit of time to see if these are properly reported cases.

 

Listen to the podcast at RTHK.HK’s Money Talk Podcast. 

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Podcasts

Huawei chief fights extradition to the US

Huawei chief operating officer appears in a Canadian court to fight extradition to the United States on charges of fraud and breaching sanctions on Iran.

 

The United States Census for 2020 is launched in Alaska, an important exercise for economic planning – we hear from Gabriel Layman, the Chief Operating Officer of Cook Inlet Housing Authority, about the quirks of gathering such huge amounts of information.

 

And baseball is hit by a cheating scandal which could prompt advertisers to walk. And in Japan, a major restaurant chain is feeling the effects of the country’s ageing population.

 

We discuss all this with live guests Sushma Ramachandran, an independent business journalist for The Tribune newspaper in Delhi, and Tony Nash, chief economist at Complete Intelligence in Houston, Texas.

 

Listen to the podcast at BBC Business Matters.

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US-China Phase One Trade Deal Signed

Tony Nash, CEO and Founder of Complete Intelligence gives his analysis on the main takeaway from the US-China phase one trade deal and when could a phase two deal takes place.

 

Tony is a guest commentator in Singapore’s Money FM 89.3.

 

Listen to the podcast at Money FM 89.3.

 

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Iran VS US: What will Iran do next?

In this episode of BBC’s Business Matters, Tony Nash comments on Iran vs the US and what the former will likely do next. 

 

The NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said members were united in their concerns about what he called Iran’s destabilising operations in the region and in their resolve that Iran should never acquire nuclear weapons. 

 

But he said it was a US, not a NATO, decision to kill the senior Iranian general Qasim Soleimani in Iraq last week. After Iranian threats of retaliation, the world awaits. Who will make the next move? 

 

Listen to the podcast here

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Tony Nash in Money MBA Podcast

Money MBA Podcast

 

Tony Nash joins Jon Kutsmeda of Money MBA Podcast for a deep discussion on AI, enterprise computing, procurement & supply chains, automation, markets, the future of work, and the rise of the machines.

 

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What is the Future of Investing?

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8 July  2019 | Money FM 89.3

Tony Nash, CEO of Complete Intelligence shares what is the future of investing and how investors can deal with recent economic concerns including the US-China trade war, and how they can position themselves to come out on top.

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Trade Wars

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26 May  2019

The trade war between the US and China is boiling up again. David takes a closer look at what’s happening between these two economic powerhouses with Tony Nash, founder of “Complete Intelligence.” David and Tony discuss ongoing government subsidies to Chinese companies and if the US has a “Plan B” for imports. Get more acquainted with the trade war and find out what it means for your portfolio.

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Final US Presidential Debate

Final US Presidential Debate: Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton go head-to-head in the last TV debate before America decides who it wants in the White House.
In a special programme in the run-up to the debate, we consider what each candidate needs to do, in front of millions of viewers across the country, to improve their chances of winning.
All this with live guests throughout the programme. From Washington, Alexis Goldstein, activist and financial reform advocate, Peter Morici, Professor of International Business at the University of Maryland and from Singapore, Tony Nash, Chief Economist and Managing Partner at Complete Intelligence.