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пятница, 1 сентября 2017 г.

Once again, how goods flow from manufacturers to consumers is about to change. Over the next decade, prompted by new technologies and business processes, this transformation will reduce supply chain costs and reorder its components.

Logistics real estate is at the center of this shift. The traditional warehouse was once an afterthought-- an out-of-the-way box to store things. As e-commerce grows, however, modern distribution centers that can quickly move goods to consumers are rising to prominence. For companies looking to outpace the competition, logistics real estate is a business-critical decision that favors high-quality space in the best locations near urban centers.

On the production end of the supply chain, the upstream part that feeds factories, not much changes unless businesses move manufacturing to capture lower labor costs. Companies must still deliver supplies and materials to plants for manufacturing and assembly. Yet once goods leave the factory doors and begin the downstream journey to the end consumer, everything is changing. This is where we see the most dramatic transformation in the future flow of goods. While supply chains must continue to serve brick-and-mortar stores, e-commerce is disrupting retail markets and urbanization is concentrating growth in major population centers. That's why demand is set to soar for distribution centers that are the last touch on goods before they reach the consumer.

The supply chain of the future, while more complex, will be less expensive and more efficient. How money is spent across the four key variables of the supply chain--energy for transportation, labor, inventory carry, and rent--will undergo notable change. Energy/transportation is poised for the biggest savings. At more than half of total supply chain costs, this is the largest expense. Advances in autonomous driving, electrification, solar power, and energy storage will literally drive costs out of the system. More intelligent use of infrastructure, such as autonomous electric vehicles that run silently through the night and algorithms that dictate efficient routes, will also increase the capacity of roads. What now comprises over half of supply chain outlays will someday cost virtually nothing.

Next is labor: the cost to employ people in trucking and moving goods in and out of warehouses. Today, labor accounts for just under a third of supply chain costs. As warehousing jobs and wages grow, autonomous vehicles will address looming shortages of truck drivers, causing overall labor costs to fall as a portion of total supply chain costs.

Third, inventory carry costs, currently about a quarter of the total, should rise with consumption growth as companies store more volume and a broader selection of goods to meet consumer expectations for availability, variety, and speed of delivery.

 

The fourth variable, rent, which today is less than 5% of the total, will increase faster than many people might expect. Here's why: While location has always mattered, companies used to optimize solely for costs. They did this by building warehouses in remote locations, a strategy that worked as long as they had easy access to highways and other major transport hubs. Now, time and distance to concentrated populations of consumers is the imperative. Next-day delivery is evolving into same-day and one-hour delivery. In this environment, consumers have put manufacturers and retailers on notice. They will no longer settle for the basics. Instead, they want product offerings in multiple sizes, colors, and configurations and at the best price. Sellers of goods will have no choice but to compete with service and selection. Proximity to large, dense population centers and broad product offerings will be the name of the game.

As a result, companies will have to operate from high-quality buildings in prime locations that enable efficiency and rapid delivery. To fit in these landscapes, logistics facilities must become more sophisticated--even converting to multistory structures. The Internet may be the virtual platform for e-commerce, but logistics is the physical platform. Just as e-commerce infrastructure must boost productivity and provide an always-on, highly functional user experience to ensure the future flow of goods, so must logistics real estate.

Hamid Moghadam is chairman and CEO of Prologis, Inc. Roughly $1.3 trillion in goods pass through Prologis' buildings each year.



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Waiting for your Uber just got a lot more swanky.

If you're in Century City, that is. Uber has teamed up with Westfield, the shopping center company, to create an "Uber Lounge" at Westfield Century City. The lounge will include "ultra-modern design, sleek seating, and unexpected customer amenities," according to the release. The lounge is intended to be used by shoppers as they wait for their Uber ride.

Read: Why the Dismissed Uber 'Hell' Program Lawsuit Could Come Back

The rest of Westfield's 33 centers across the U.S. might not have dedicated lounges, but customers at those locations are not totally out of luck. The centers are getting designated drop-off and pick-up areas that will help shoppers find their Uber drivers more easily. The special areas will be clearly marked, in a way that resembles taxi stands. A mall could have up to ten drop-off and pick-up points. Some of the designated areas will feature a kiosk with Uber customer service employees or brand ambassadors, who will be "trained to engage with customers and facilitate their Uber experience," according to the company’s statement.

Read: 'Opportunity of a Lifetime.' Uber's New CEO Opens Up About Company's Future



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Uber has hired Blake Ross, the co-creator of the Firefox browser and Facebook’s former product chief, to work on its product strategy.

Ross announced the move on Facebook and Twitter late Thursday, saying he would spend part of his time at the ride-hailing firm working on product strategy and growth, “and the rest on non-tech projects.”

In his Facebook post, Ross quipped that part of his job would be to “rally the troops and improve my passenger rating.”

Ross was the lead architect on Mozilla’s Firefox browser, which was once the primary challenger to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer--these days it has around 6% share of the global browser market, which is dominated by Google’s Chrome.

Perhaps more relevantly to his new post, Ross worked for Facebook between 2007 and 2013, starting as an engineer who was brought in when Facebook bought his “web operating system” company Parakey. He went on to co-found the company’s growth team and worked his way up to director of product.

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The news of Ross’s hiring comes days after Uber unveiled former Expedia chief Dara Khosrowshahi as its new CEO, replacing Travis Kalanick, who was ousted after a series of company scandals and a family tragedy.

With Uber facing many challenges beyond its internal turmoil, from increasingly strong international rivals to the ongoing threat of regulation, its management team has a lot of work cut out for it ahead of a potential IPO in the next few years.



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Good morning.

Hundreds of chief executives--including Apple's Tim Cook, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Cisco's Chuck Robbins, GM's Mary Barra, HP Enterprise’s Meg Whitman, Marriott's Arne Sorenson, Microsoft's Satya Nadella, Salesforce's Marc Benioff, and Warren Buffett--published an open letter late yesterday urging President Trump not to end the program known as "Dreamers" that prevents the deportation of people who were brought to the U.S. illegally as children.

In the letter (which you can read here), they point out that all the affected people "grew up in America, registered with our government, submitted to extensive background checks, and are diligently giving back to our communities and paying income taxes. More than 97 percent are in school or in the workforce, 5 percent started their own business, 65 percent have purchased a vehicle and 16 percent have purchased a home. At least 75 percent of the top 25 Fortune 500 companies count DACA recipients as their employees." It says deporting those workers would cost the U.S. economy $460 billion.

The unusual public letter marks a new stage in the battle between big business and the president. Earlier this year, before Trump pulled out of the Paris climate accord, CEOs like Cook registered their concerns in private phone conversations with the president. But now, they've either lost that access, or concluded that private appeals don't work.

So instead, they are making their concerns public. That's a tactic aimed more at putting their opposition on record--and showing public support for their employees--than actually attempting to influence the decision. If the last six months are any guide, their public protest will only deepen the president's determination to undo the program.

Alan Murray
@alansmurray
alan.murray@fortune.com

Top News

[bs_bullet_primary] Wells Fargo Scandal Mushrooms

Wells Fargo said an outside review of its fake accounts scandal found an additional 1.4 million potentially unauthorized deposit and credit card accounts--65% more than the bank initially owned up to. The review looked two years further back (to 2009) than Wells had initially done, which raises more questions about the efforts of ex-CEO John Stumpf and his board to clear up the issue. Either way, the bank is right back in Congress's crosshairs in the short run. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2iLAD7H" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] The First Federal Aid for Harvey Is On Its Way

The White House has prepared a request to Congress for an initial $5.9 billion in recovery aid in response to Hurricane Harvey, according to CBS. Much larger, future installments will be required, but the initial funds will replenish Federal Emergency Management Agency disaster coffers through Sept. 30, it said. Estimates of the total damage from Harvey rose towards $150 billion, while the death toll reportedly hit 44 and a chemicals plant owned by France's Arkema exploded after losing power to its refrigeration systems. President Trump, meanwhile, pledged $1 million of his own money to disaster relief. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2wo3XG1" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] Apple Sets Date for Its Big iPhone Reveal

Apple said it will hold a long-awaited press reveal for the new iPhone (or iPhones) on September 12. Reports indicate the company will launch two new minor upgrades to the iPhone 7 along with a new flagship iPhone 8. Elsehwere, Apple urged the Federal Communications Commission not to abandon the principle of Net Neutrality, arguing that "providers of online goods and services need assurance that they will be able to reliably reach their customers without interference from the underlying broadband provider."[bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2x9qask" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] Macron Divides and Rules on Labor Reform

Emmanuel Macron's government unveiled detailed proposals to liberalize France's labor market and end the country's chronic unemployment problem. The new rules give smaller companies in particular much more scope to settle labor issues directly with workers, and cap their liability related to appeals against layoffs. The freshness and size of Macron's mandate has meant that the country's traditionally militant labor unions have only offered muted resistance. Only one of the three biggest unions has announced strikes to protest the measures. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2gszf9b" source="Fortune"]

Around the Water Cooler

[bs_bullet_primary] Verizon's Due Diligence to be Tested

A judge said Yahoo must face nationwide litigation brought on behalf of well over 1 billion users who said their personal information was compromised in three massive data breaches. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose, Calif., ruled that the users all now face heightened risk of identity theft. The decision is a setback for Verizon, which paid $4.76 billion for Yahoo's Internet business in June, and which now has the associated liability. Verizon had cut its offer for Yahoo as the scope of the breach became clear. Whether it applied enough of a discount will now be sternly tested. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2elYSV6" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] VW Plots a Way Back Into U.S. Market

Volkswagen executives set out their hopes for restoring the company's fortunes in the U.S. market. VW's namesake brand has only recently addressed the lack of a competitive offering in the key SUV sector. It expects to double output of Atlas SUVs in Chattanooga to around 100,000 a year. Back home in Germany, the company won an important legal victory as a district court rejected a test case in which VW diesel buyers were seeking compensation for being misled. VW has escaped financial penalties in the EU because of the many loopholes in German and EU law, which effectively rendered its engine management software legal. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2wWeoSY" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] Samsung Joins the Autonomous Driving Game

Samsung said it has received a permit to test self-driving vehicles in California. The company is planning to develop a self-driving car algorithm capable of driving in adverse weather. Earlier this year, Samsung had bought car audio maker Harman International Industries for $8 billion in another move aimed at strengthening its presence in connected car technologies. [bs_link link="http://ift.tt/2wm95dX" source="Fortune"]

[bs_bullet_primary] Pot-Committed to Nuclear in Georgia

Georgia Power, part of Southern Company, threw nuclear power a lifeline, recommending that the troubled new-generation Vogtle plant should be completed, despite running years late and billions of dollars over budget. The move is a surprise after Santee Cooper and South Carolina Electric & Gas Company pulled the plug on the VC Sumner project a month ago. Georgia Power said it needs another $1.4 billion to complete Vogtle, which will have cost a total of $19 billion by the time it comes online in (fingers crossed) 2021. [bs_link link=" http://ift.tt/2emnJYN" source="FT, metered access"]

Summaries by Geoffrey Smith; geoffrey.smith@fortune.com

@geoffreytsmith



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A decade ago, memory card manufacturers were crowing that they’d managed to squeeze eight gigabytes of data storage into a fingernail-sized microSD card. Now, Western Digital has unveiled a SanDisk microSD card that can hold a record-breaking 400GB.

It is already possible to get larger SD cards that take up to a full terabyte (1024GB) of data, but until now the limit for microSD cards--the kind you can insert in most smartphones--has been 256GB. The SDXC technology that underpins today’s memory cards can support sizes of up to 2TB, so there is still room to grow before requiring a new generation.

The 400GB Sandisk Ultra microSDXC card certainly won’t come cheap at a recommended retail price of $250. However, it will be able to hold about as much information as most laptops.

“Mobile devices have become the epicenter of our lives, and consumers are now accustomed to using their smartphones for anything from entertainment to business. We are collecting and sharing massive amounts of data on smartphones, drones, tablets, PCs, laptops and more,” International Data Corporation vice president Jeff Janukowicz, an outside analyst, said in a Western Digital statement.

Get Data Sheet, Fortune's technology newsletter.

Hard-drive maker Western Digital bought Sandisk, which makes flash memory chips, in 2016 for just under $16 billion. The deal gave Western Digital a stake in a chip-production joint venture with Toshiba that is currently causing great tension between the two companies.

Toshiba wants to sell its share to offset massive losses in its Westinghouse nuclear power business, and Western Digital is leading a consortium that’s bidding for that share, while at the same time engaging in a legal fight to stop the sale from going ahead unless it gets first refusal. Bain Capital has reportedly recruited Apple to join its rival bid, and Taiwan’s Foxconn is heading up a third bid.



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The song of the summer is helping to line the pockets of German media group Bertelsmann.

Sales from the song Despacito, along with contributions from Netflix series 13 Reasons Why and TV series American Gods, generated record first-half profits for Bertelsmann, according to the Guardian. The company's profits topped 500 million euros (approximately $595 million)--a 4.1 per cent increase over the same period in 2016.

Bertelsmann’s operations include RTL Group (broadcaster of American Gods and the largest private TV group in Europe), BMG (music publishing group responsible for Despacito), and Penguin Random House, the world's largest book publishing company.

Read: Pearson to Cut Another 3,000 Jobs Following Sustained Losses

Profits at Penguin Random House--owned in conjunction with Pearson--grew from 185 million euro ($220 million) to 206 million euro ($245 million) from revenues of 1.5 billion euro ($1.78 billion) in the first half of the year. Bertelsmann is increasing its stake in Penguin from 47% to 75%, in a $1 billion deal with Pearson due to close in the fourth quarter.

But even with the help from its Netflix hits, Bertelsmann’s TV operations couldn’t escape the pressures faced by all traditional TV companies as online platforms increasingly encroach on their turf. RTL's revenue grew, but profits fell from 676 million euro ($804 million) to 624 million euro ($742 million). Earlier this week, its biggest rival in Germany, ProSieben, saw its shares fall 13% after a poor set of results, while France’s Vivendi was, like Bertelsmann, dependent on a strong performance from its music arm (Universal Music Group) to offset weakness at its Canal Plus TV unit.



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The White House has reportedly prepared a request to Congress for an initial $5.9 billion in aid to fund recovery efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Harvey.

The request for funding may be sent to Congress as early as today, with votes expected next week. The Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), responsible for coordinating emergency response to natural disasters, is reportedly already spending existing disaster aid reserves--currently valued at $2.1 billion--at a high rate.

Read: White House Vows Quick Action as Harvey Aid Estimates Soar

According to White House homeland security advisor Tom Bossert, the initial proposed aid money would be a "down payment" for immediate efforts, with larger packages to follow. White House officials and Congress have reportedly discussed putting $5.5 billion of the proposed aid toward the Disaster Relief Fund, which is run by FEMA. An additional $450 million may be used for the Small Business Administration's Disaster Loan Program, according to the Washington Post.

Read: Donald Trump Pledges $1 Million of His Own Money to Help Hurricane Harvey Victims

It is expected that the eventual Harvey recovery package could rival the more than $100 billion used in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Representative Sheila Jackson Lee from Houston has drafted legislation for $150 billion in emergency funding and Texas Governor Greg Abbott said that the state may need more than $125 billion.



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четверг, 31 августа 2017 г.

In a new interview with LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg talked about what men can do to help the fight for gender equality. In short: they need to care enough about it to actually take action. Quartz has a run-down of Sandberg’s major points, but one in particular caught my attention. Rather than assuming that they know what women want, men should ask them instead.

"Don't have private conversations where a woman's pregnant and you say, 'We're not going to offer her that job, she's pregnant.' Ask her," Sandberg told Hoffman. "She might decide she doesn't want to travel more, but she might decide she wants to do it. So often, we take opportunities away from women, because we assume we know what they want, rather than giving them the full opportunities they deserve."

We talk a lot about sexist stereotyping in terms of gender roles--women portrayed as cooks, cleaners, and caregivers, for instance. But the example Sandberg gives--men making assumptions about what a woman wants based on her life stage or career progress--is just another, slightly more nuanced version of it.

--@clairezillman

EUROPE/MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA

[bs-title]Asked and answered[/bs-title][bs-content]Foreign Policy looks into President Donald Trump's firing of Alice Wells, the former ambassador to Jordan, that seemed to come at the request of King Abdullah II. The king had reportedly griped about Wells to Trump's predecessor, but President Barack Obama, who appointed Wells to the job in 2014, rebuffed requests for her removal. Former colleagues refer to Wells as a talented diplomat but say her gender was a disadvantage in a part of the world where political leaders are not accustomed to having women sit at the table.[/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2vHLhyu" source="Foreign Policy"][bs-seperator]

[bs-title]Keeping an appointment[/bs-title][bs-content]Rwanda President Paul Kagame, who won re-election with 99% of the vote earlier this month, has appointed 11 female ministers in his 20-person Cabinet, making good on a campaign promise. Meanwhile, the whereabouts of one of his most vocal critics, Diane Rwigara, and members of her family were unknown yesterday as another relative accused authorities of arresting them. Rwigara's disappearance is fueling concerns about Kagame's increasing authoritarianism. [/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2wrFtdB" source="East African"][bs-seperator]

[bs-title]The Netflix effect[/bs-title][bs-content]Growing up, Ana Ro? never wanted to be a chef and never studied cooking, yet she was named the World's Best Female Chef this year. Her fascinating journey to the title started when her husband's parents--owners of restaurant Hi?a Franko, which now belongs to Ro?--decided to retire. Her biggest break, however, came via Netflix.[/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2vH6YPd" source="Bloomberg"]

THE AMERICAS

[bs-title]Calm in the storm[/bs-title][bs-content]For a week now, CBS News anchor Norah O'Donnell has been covering Hurricane Harvey. The veteran journalist has reported on presidential campaigns, tornadoes, even 9/11, but this was her first time covering a hurricane. She talked to Elle about the experience: "Relaying that the most basic human needs are [unmet]--I think that tells a story. It's important for viewers to see that."[/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2wrPDe2" source="Elle"][bs-seperator]

[bs-title]Money trouble[/bs-title][bs-content]Last year, the U.S. Treasury Department announced plans to put abolitionist Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill instead of President Andrew Jackson. In an interview yesterday, current Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin wouldn't commit to the plan, saying he'd review it: "[T]he number-one issue why we change the currency is to stop counterfeiting, so the issues of why we change it will be primarily related to what we need to do for security purposes." Mnuchin's comments follow President Trump's suggestion on the campaign trail that he didn't want Tubman to replace Jackson--a slave owner and, rather ironically, an opponent of centralized banking--calling the plan "pure political correctness."[/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2vwEWK7" source="Fortune"][bs-seperator]

ASIA-PACIFIC

[bs-title]'Jacindamania'[/bs-title][bs-content]The month-old tenure of Jacinda Ardern as Labour leader in New Zealand continues to boost--to an extraordinary degree--the popularity of the party. When she took over on Aug. 1, Labour was at an all-time low in the polls. Now it's at a 10-year high, surging ahead of the National party led by Prime Minister Bill English for the first time leading up to next month's general election. [/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2gliLMn" source="Guardian"][bs-seperator]

[bs-title]Inside India[/bs-title][bs-content]In the latest episode of the Longform podcast, The New York Times' Ellen Barry--who was, until recently, the paper's south Asia bureau chief--talks about her latest story "How To Get Away With Murder in Small-Town India" and why she focused much of her coverage in India on the nation's women. [/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/1QGLkzF" source="Longform"][bs-seperator]

[bs-title]What's in a name?[/bs-title][bs-content]Actress Chloe Bennet, who stars in the TV series Marvel's Agents of SHIELD, recently opened up about changing her last name from Wang--a move she says helped her career almost immediately. "Changing my last name doesn't change the fact that my BLOOD is half Chinese, that I lived in China, speak Mandarin or that I was culturally raised both American and Chinese... It means I had to pay my rent...I'm doing everything I can, with the platform I have, to make sure no one has to change their name again, just so they can get work."[/bs-content][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2wkNoej" source="BBC"]

IN BRIEF

[bs-title size="small"]Her ancestors were Georgetown's slaves. Now, at age 63, she's enrolled there--as a college freshman[/bs-title][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2vwBVtk" source="Washington Post"]

[bs-title size="small"]What Lena Waithe wants from Hollywood[/bs-title][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2iKIeUc" source="Atlantic"]

[bs-title size="small"]Miss U.K. hands back her crown after being told to lose weight[/bs-title][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2wl0oR2" source="Mashable"]

[bs-title size="small"]Kim Kardashian backtracks on her anti-feminism comments[/bs-title][bs-link link="http://ift.tt/2x9achY" source="Cosmopolitan"]

PARTING WORDS

[bs-quote link="http://ift.tt/2wrKTVR" author="--Joseph Khan, director of Taylor Swift's 'Look What You Made Me Do' video on criticism of it."]"If I plan something as a man I'm a 'genius.' If Taylor as a woman plans something she is 'manipulative.' Double standards. This is wrong."[/bs-quote]



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The Brazilian government had decreed it would open up an area of the Amazon roughly the size of Denmark to mining has repealed the act in light of the stark controversy that was sparked in wake of the decision. Brazil’s government announced late Thursday they intended to suspend any action on the decree, backtracking due to activist criticism as well as legal challenge.

A statement was released stating the mining ministry would suspend any procedures related to mining rights within the recently abolished mineral reserve for 120 days in the interests of collecting public feedback on the matter. This standpoint was decided upon post consultation with President Michel Temer, who was the instigator of the initial abolishment of the reserve known as Renca (National Reserve of Copper and Associates). Renca protects the area which is approximately 17,800 square miles (46,000 square km), and has done so since 1984.

“Starting now, the ministry will initiate a wide debate with society about alternatives for protecting the region,” the statement released by Reuters said.

“(This) includes proposing short-term measures that will curb illegal activities in progress,” it said.

The criticism experience by the government was so overwhelming it required the convening of a stream of news conferences and even went so far as reissuing the decree with additional explanation. This resulted in the blocking of the decree with a temporary injunction by a judge, though the attorney general pledged to appeal against the decision.



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Britain’s exit from the European Union has sent bankers scurrying for Frankfurt, Dublin, and Paris -- and opened up new space for savvy commercial real-estate investors, Bloomberg reports.

Australia's largest pension fund AustralianSuper is looking to acquire more overseas assets and part of its revamped portfolio could come from British infrastructure and real estate investments according to Mark Delaney, the fund’s chief investment officer.

"Brexit may present an opportunity for us, but we will need to be patient," Delaney told Bloomberg late August. "There are likely to be some good quality assets that become available that will be worth looking at."

He explained that as international banks hedge against Brexit by scoping office space in other European capitals, and risk adverse capital looks elsewhere, long-term buyers could snap up the freed up assets. London’s older buildings, in particular, have seen prices push down.

For more on Brexit, watch Fortune’s video:

But its not only Brexit-flight that has opened up space in London. According to Delaney, Chinese investment -- which has traditionally been "the price setter" in markets like commercial real estate -- is starting to dry up.

That’s down to new capital controls Beijing has imposed to prevent Chinese firms from making large investments abroad. Under the new rules, Chinese buyers are not allowed to make “irrational" acquisitions of assets in industries ranging from real estate to hotels and entertainment, Bloomberg reports -- and that’s opening up opportunities for everyone else.



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If current tensions between North Korea and its neighbors in Northeast Asia devolve into conflict, the world’s oil markets would be “severely affected,” a leading energy consultancy warns.

Wood Mackenzie warned in a report published Wednesday that a third of the world’s seaborne oil traffic and two thirds of Asia’s refining capacity could be at stake in case of open warfare in the region, according to CNBC.

Crude oil imports to Japan, China and South Korea could be halted as a result of military action, the report said, forcing all three to turn to their respective stockpiles. The three nations account for 34% of the world’s oil trade by sea.

Japan and South Korea have emergency reserves sufficient for 90 days’ demand, while China started building its strategic reserves three or four years ago, CNBC reports.

For more on North Korea, watch Fortune’s video:

China has domestic oil production to fall back on, but up to 58% of its capacity -- involving oil fields in the country’s northeast, close to the North Korean border -- could be disrupted if any conflict involving North Korea escalates, according to Wood Mackenzie’s report.

Tension in the region heightened this week after Pyongyang test-fired a mid-range ballistic missile Tuesday, which flew over Japan into the Pacific. Leader Kim Jong-un called it “a meaningful prelude to containing Guam,” where the U.S. has a major military presence.



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The National Labor Relations Board said in a complaint filed Thursday that it is investigating Tesla tsla for unfair labor practices.

Workers and the United Auto Workers Union filed complaints with the federal agency in April that make an array of allegations, including that employees at its factory in Fremont, Calif. were interrogated over union activities. They claimed management tried to prevent them from discussing these along with worker safety concerns.

The NLRB has consolidated these into one complaint and has opened an investigation.

For more on Tesla, see Fortune’s video:

An effort has been underway for years to unionize Tesla’s Fremont factory. The United Auto Workers has been working with employees since at least last year.

In response, Tesla said in a statement that the UAW has strayed from its original mission, used “every tool in its playbook” in its campaign against the company. Tesla’s complete statement is posted below.

“As we approach Labor Day weekend, there's a certain irony in just how far the UAW has strayed from the original mission of the American labor movement, which once advocated so nobly for the rights of workers and is the reason we recognize this important holiday.

Faced with declining membership, an overwhelming loss at a Nissan plant earlier this month, corruption charges that were recently leveled against union leaders who misused UAW funds, and failure to gain traction with our employees, it's no surprise the union is feeling pressured to continue its publicity campaign against Tesla.

For seven years, the UAW has used every tool in its playbook: misleading and outright false communications, unsolicited and unwelcomed visits to the homes of our employees, attempts to discredit Tesla publicly in the media, and now another tactic that has been used in every union campaign since the beginning of time-baseless ULP filings that are meant only to generate headlines. These allegations, which have been filed by the same contingent of union organizers who have been so outspoken with media, are entirely without merit. We will obviously be responding as part of the NLRB process."



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A top executive of German automaker Volkswagen AG vlkay said Thursday the company expects to boost its sport-utility vehicle sales sharply by 2020 and will move to add electric vehicle offerings in the wake of its diesel emissions cheating scandal.

Herbert Diess, who heads the mass market Volkswagen brand, said the world’s largest carmaker by sales expects SUVs to account for 40 percent of its global sales, up from less than 15 percent today.

Volkswagen is building about 400 Atlas SUVs a day at its Chattanooga, Tennessee, plant, or a pace of about 100,000 per year, but will eventually be able to build 800 a day, the plant manager, Antonio Pinto, said.

Volkswagen has been shifting its focus in the United States from marketing compact cars and midsize sedans to promoting larger, U.S.-built SUVs such as the Atlas.

“SUVs will drive our business worldwide because SUVs are becoming very important worldwide,” Diess said.

He said the Chattanooga plant has room to grow and suggested the company could eventually add electric vehicle production in Tennessee.

The VW brand in the United States currently has just a 1.9 percent market share, and Diess would like to eventually get to 5 percent market share or more.

“We can’t win America over in two years time,” he said. “It’s a 10-year plan.”

VW U.S. brand sales are up about 6 percent through July to 188,000 vehicles.

VW in 2009 vowed to more than triple U.S. brand sales by 2018 to 800,000 vehicles a year but abandoned that goal after sales setbacks and a scandal over diesel emissions cheating.

As part of its diesel emissions settlement, Volkswagen has agreed to add at least three additional electric vehicles, including an SUV, in California by 2020 and must sell an average of 5,000 electric vehicles annually there through 2025.

Diess said VW plans a completely new electronic architecture for its electric vehicles that will be upgradable, connected to the mobile web and more competitive with electric vehicle market leader Tesla Inc.

“We have to take them very seriously,” Diess said.

As for the diesel scandal, Diess said, “We are recovering.” Volkswagen pleaded guilty in March to rigging emissions tests, and agreed to spend up to $25 billion to address claims from U.S. owners, environmental regulators, states and dealers, and buy back about 500,000 polluting U.S. vehicles.



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Facebook’s latest engineering conference for techies on Thursday covered a lot of ground.

Facebook described how it overhauled the underlying software for its social network. Meanwhile, Google and Microsoft revealed their latest advancements in hot areas of data crunching involving artificial intelligence technologies like machine learning.

Some of the discussions at the event, held in San Jose, seemed like science fiction such as storing digital data in DNA. Other topics like the problems of diversity in tech were more practical amid recent discrimination and harassment allegations in Silicon Valley at companies like Uber.

Here’s a roundup of some of the most fascinating items from Facebook’s Scale conference.

1. Storage drives of the future may be built with DNA

It turns out there may be another use for DNA besides serving as blueprints for humans.

University of Washington computer science professor and Microsoft researcher Luis Ceze discussed how experts are looking into how DNA could be used to store huge amounts of digital data, more so than any current technology like spinning discs or flash drives.

Ceze explained the progress his university and Microsoft msft have made in storing things like music videos, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and literature from the Project Gutenberg archive initiative into manufactured DNA. Some of DNA's advantages over conventional storage are that it won't become obsolete, like the old floppy discs of the past, he said.

However, researchers have a lot more work to do. As of now, it takes about a week to transfer 10 megabits of data from DNA, which Ceze said is the equivalent of the speed of old modems from the 1970's.

2. It takes a lot of computing power to make Netflix run

Millions of people visit Netflix nflx daily to binge watch House of Cards and Daredevil. But it takes a lot of computing power to make sure that those videos don't stutter or crash.

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Netflix senior software engineer Frank San Miguel said that on a "good day," the video streaming service is powered by roughly 300,000 CPUs running in Amazon's data centers. Those thousands of servers are not only responsible for delivering video to people, but they also power the 100 apps Netflix built that handle tasks like audio processing, subtitles, and other post-production services.

3. Google's big efforts to translate languages

Google's interest in using artificial intelligence to quickly translate languages became clearer. Barak Turovsky, a Google goog executive overseeing machine learning and language translation, said that 95% of people using Google to translate text are not based in the U.S. In fact, residents in Brazil, India, Thailand, and Indonesia are the biggest users.

One reason for its popularity overseas is that half of all Internet content is written in English, Turovsky said, a consequence of the English-speaking world being able to afford the computers to access the Internet. But the rise of smartphones and increasingly improved wireless infrastructure in developing countries has led to non-English speakers getting online--and needing to use Google's translation service to read online content.

"There's a huge population of people who speak Indian languages, but they can't find content created in their language," Turovsky said.

4. Nest and Slack executives talk hiring and diversity

Although Facebook’s conference focused on cutting-edge technology, several executives from companies like workplace messaging service Slack and Google's Nest home automation business talked about the challenges of hiring workers. You can't build technology without a savvy workforce, after all.

Julia Grace, Slack's head of infrastructure engineering, discussed the problems companies with diversity problems (ie. most tech companies) face when recruiting. For instance, if someone walks into a job interview and only sees people who look the same in terms of gender and ethnicity or some other characteristic, they may question their chances of succeeding at the company.

"What happens if you never see anyone who looks like you?" Grace asked the audience of techies. "You, from day one, will ask 'do I belong here? Can I be successful here?'"

Nest senior director of e-commerce and security Julie Pearl explained that because Nest builds technology for everyday consumers, it must also ensure that those web-connected thermostats and other gadgets are built to accommodate people from diverse backgrounds. For this, Nest needs more workers with different cultural backgrounds to build its products, she explained.

"We talk about certain types of diversity with hiring," said Pearl. "Now I'm really starting to think about how does that come out in the products that we are building."



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American retail, restaurant and agriculture groups have weighed in against proposals regarding fresh produce put forward by U.S. negotiators as part of an effort to renegotiate NAFTA, according to letters sent to U.S. officials.

Talks to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agreement resume this weekend in Mexico, the second round after U.S. President Donald Trump’s renewed threats to withdraw from one of the world’s biggest trade blocs.

In one letter seen by Reuters, sent to U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer on Thursday, retailers argue that the U.S. proposal to allow more complaints about the dumping of perishable produce would have “dangerous implications for U.S. businesses and consumers.”

The retailers and food industry groups argue that American producers could be left open to retaliatory measures if more complaints were to be filed, for instance, against avocados, tomatoes and other produce imported from Mexico.

The letter was signed by large trade groups including the National Council of Chain Restaurants, National Restaurant Association, National Retail Federation, Retail Industry Leaders Association and the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas.

A separate letter was sent on Wednesday by 26 U.S. agriculture groups – addressing Ross, Lighthizer, Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue and Gary Cohn, the top White House economic adviser. It too urged American negotiators to abandon the fresh produce proposal because it risks damaging U.S. producers.

“Once seasonal tariffs were put in place for tomatoes, for example, Mexico or Canada may initiate trade cases of their own on any of a wide range of U.S. agricultural products, beginning a tit-for-tat cycle that could broadly limit agricultural trade,” the letter states. “At a time of low commodity prices in much of the United States, US agriculture can hardly afford to see a primary market disrupted.”

The letter was signed by several large agriculture groups, including the U.S. Grains Council, National Association of Wheat Growers, National Cattleman's Beef Association, National Corn Growers Association, National Cotton Council of America and Ocean Spray Cranberries.



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Estimates of the size of a Hurricane Harvey aid package for Texas and Louisiana rose on Thursday, with one proposal being drafted for $150 billion, while the White House promised to make a request for funding soon to Congress.

The Trump administration will make a request to the U.S. Congress shortly for funds to help recovery efforts from Harvey, which caused devastating flooding, White House homeland security adviser Tom Bossert said.

He told reporters that an aid funding request will likely come in stages as more is known about the storm’s impact.

While the details are still unknown, U.S. taxpayers are likely to face a bill for Harvey near the $110.2 billion for 2005’s Hurricane Katrina. Exact estimates on the size of this aid package varied widely.

Representative Sheila Jackson Lee, a Democrat from Houston, was crafting legislation for $150 billion in emergency funding through nearly two-dozen government agencies and departments.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott said on Wednesday the state could need more than $125 billion.

Figures of $50 billion to $80 billion were cited by Republican Representatives Pete Sessions of Texas and Leonard Lance of New Jersey on Fox Business Network.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s disaster relief fund had only $3.3 billion when the storm struck.

A Republican leadership source said Congress was expected to consider and vote on an initial allocation of Harvey aid in the first half of September.

Impact on broader government funding issue

The urgency of aiding areas hit by Harvey may also complicate a broader fiscal policy showdown that is coming in late September.

When Harvey plowed into the Texas coast this week, Congress and President Donald Trump were already struggling to deal with the debt ceiling, which is a cap on how much money the federal government can borrow, and the need to approve a temporary federal budget bill by Oct. 1 to prevent a government shutdown.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told broadcaster CNBC on Thursday that the impact of Hurricane Harvey spending could bring forward the deadline by which the nation’s debt ceiling needs to be raised by “a couple of days.” He repeated that the limit needs to be raised by Sept. 29

Financial markets have been anxious about the possibility of the debt ceiling not being raised, which could cause a U.S. credit default and send economic shockwaves worldwide.

A Trump administration official and a prominent House of Representatives conservative both said on Thursday that hurricane aid funding should not be tied to the debt limit.

Bossert said the administration wants a “clean” disaster relief supplemental measure, free of unrelated measures, including any effort to raise the federal debt ceiling.

Representative Mark Meadows, the Republican chairman of the conservative House Freedom Caucus, told the Washington Post that attaching Harvey aid to a debt-ceiling increase would be a "terrible idea … conflating two very different issues."

Meadows told the Post, “We're going to fund Harvey relief without a doubt, but I think it just sends the wrong message when you start attaching it to the debt ceiling."

That left open the possibility that the aid package could be linked to a broad, short-term budget measure that must pass by Oct. 1 to prevent a government shutdown.

The prospect of that linkage was seen as making a government shutdown less likely because of the urgency of getting aid to hurricane-hit areas, and that has been reassuring to financial markets.

Asked if there was still a chance of a shutdown, House tax committee Chairman Kevin Brady told Fox News Channel on Thursday, “We are going to keep this government open, we are going to pay our debts on time.”



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One of the hottest technology topics this year is the growing financial firepower, social influence and sheer ubiquity of America’s five tech superpower companies. It’s so typically American, though, to only see as far as the country’s borders.

It’s time for a less myopic gathering of technology’s muscular monsters. Let’s get cozy with the Enormous Eight.

That would be the five U.S. giants--Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google parent company Alphabet and Microsoft--plus three superstars from Asia: Alibaba and Tencent of China, and South Korea’s Samsung. The three are all-powerful in their home countries, and increasingly ambitious elsewhere in the world--arguably even more so than their U.S. counterparts.

And they’ve been climbing the ranks of the world’s biggest companies. The five American tech superpowers plus the Asian giants grab eight of the 13 top spots of the world’s most valuable public companies. Two years ago, only one of these Asian tech titans squeaked into the top 30, Bloomberg data show. Right now, Alibaba is potentially one good market day away from passing Amazon.com as the world’s biggest e-commerce company by market capitalization.

Some of the Elite Eight--is that a better sobriquet?--operate in different corners of the world from one another. But each wields immense influence in at least one major consumer market, and has its sights on reshaping global technology habits.

Alibaba and Tencent in particular have grown big and powerful more quickly than U.S. tech giants did. To offer just one example: Shares of Alphabet Inc. are 22 times the price at which the company (then called Google) first sold shares to the public in August 2004. The stock price of Tencent, which held its initial public offering in Hong Kong a couple months before Google, is 441 times the IPO price.

Both Alibaba Group and Tencent rode the wave of rapid adoption of the internet in China, from 10.5% of the population in 2006 to more than 50% last year, according to the China Internet Network Information Center. Samsung is already a global company and while Tencent and Alibaba generate the vast majority of their sales in China, the two have quickly pushed into places like India, Southeast Asia and other hot spots considered to be technology growth markets. Alibaba and Tencent are making investments in seemingly every corner of tech from Tencent’s stake in Tesla in the U.S. to Alibaba’s interest in an online grocery company in India.

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It’s fair to think the future of technology use and resulting effects on economies and labor markets will be in the hands of these eight titans, and perhaps other wannabe elites such as SoftBank or Uber.

As my Bloomberg News colleague Brad Stone wrote earlier this week, the stunning conviction of the heir to Samsung’s empire spotlighted how popular sentiment in South Korea has turned against the conglomerate and other corporate titans known as chaebols. America’s tech giants have lately become lightning rods for criticism in the U.S. from both the left and the right ends of the political spectrum.

The backlash against the chaebols should be a warning for all members of the Enormous Eight as they expand. Facebook’s stumbles in India proved that when powerful tech companies go abroad they aren’t always met with open arms. Tencent and other Chinese companies go along with government mandates to censor the internet. That may not go over well when Tencent travels the globe with its users. And it may not take much for germs of dissatisfaction to turn into a tsunami that hits all the superpowers.



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Amazon has unveiled the first child-focused apps for its connected home Echo devices along with a way for parents to give kids permission to use them.

The new apps, or skills in Amazon lingo, include Nickelodeon’s SpongeBob Challenge and Sesame Workshops’ Sesame Street.

Devices like Amazon amzn Echo and rival Google Home have proven wildly popular. But they have also face criticism for how much information they gather on children.

The Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (or COPPA) makes it illegal for online service providers to gather data on children under 13 without parental consent. If connected devices “listen” to children’s commands and learn about their preferences, they could technically be violating that law, as The Guardian reported last year.

People in their 20s and 30s have proven willing to forego privacy in favor of convenience. The issue here is that kids under 13 aren’t seen as experienced enough to make that choice on their own.

Related: Disney Sued Over Gaming Apps

Echos are Internet connected speakers that respond to voice command using Amazon’s Alexa voice assistant to order takeout food, shop, check the weather, and tune into specific radio stations.

The new permission process will require parents to verify their identities before their children can access the apps.. Once the permission is set by the parents, they can review it and revoke it later as needed.

Amazon is hoping that the permission system will encourage more outside developers to build child-focused Echo apps, making the device more desirable.

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Echoes are a huge success for Amazon, which is now facing a challenge from Google Home along with planned products due from Apple aapl and Microsoft msft this fall.



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Samsung said on Thursday it has received a permit to test self-driving vehicles in California, marking the entry of the world’s largest smart phone maker four months after iPhone maker and arch rival Apple received a permit.

Its parent company in May secured permission from South Korean authorities to test a self-driving car fitted with its own sensors and software systems. At that time, South Korean officials said the company planned to use the car to develop a self-driving car algorithm that could drive in adverse weather.

In a statement to Reuters, Samsung did not say what precisely what it planned to test in the United States but said it secured the permit “in pursuit of a smarter, safer transportation future.”

The company, part of a massive conglomerate that makes everything from washing machines to heavy machinery, said it has “no plans to enter the car-manufacturing business.”

With the foray into the U.S. self-driving car landscape, Samsung ssnlf will jostle with its friends and foes. Besides Apple aapl , it will join Waymo, a division of Alphabet goog , which supplies the Android operating system that runs on Samsung’s phones.

Samsung has a range of other opportunities for growth in the self-driving car business. Earlier this year, the company closed its $8 billion purchase of car audio maker Harman International Industries har , giving it a wide foot print in so-called connected car technologies.



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