1.Venture Capital Raised for Firms That Are Not Profitable
Second Highest Ever.
• Venture
capital and private equity funds have been selling. Of the $42 billion raised
via offerings, $29 billion of it was for firms that were not profitable. This
is the second-highest in at least 25 years. The only year that showed a greater
percentage was 86% in 2000. If they are unloading losing companies, that tells
us that they do not want to hold such companies during tough times. Cycles Research Early Warning
Serviceby Cycles Research
1. Amazon Stock..Cost of Shipping Jumps 46% Year Over Year….Stock Never Made New Highs From 2018
Amazon earnings fall for first time in more
than two years, stock drops in late trading
Amazon’s spending on
one-day delivery and other initiatives sends profit down year-over-year for
first time since 2017, forecast calls for even more spending in holiday quarter
Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images
Amazon.com Inc. has
spent more than $1 billion this year to reduce the amount of time it takes to
deliver packages to Prime customers, and expects a $1.5 billion hit in the
holiday season.
Olsavsky
said in the call that the fourth quarter will see even larger costs from
one-day delivery efforts.
“So, as
we head into Q4 we’ve added what’s just nearly $1.5 billion penalty in Q4
year-over-year for the cost of shipping, which essentially is transportation
costs, the cost of expanding our transportation capacity, things like adding
additional roles and shifts in our warehouses,” the Amazon CFO said.
Amazon’s worldwide
spending on shipping jumped 46% year-over-year in the third quarter to a record
$9.6 billion, more than a half-billion dollars over what Amazon spent in the
busier holiday season a year ago. The company, which cut back on hiring a year
ago after absorbing the Whole Foods workforce and hiring quickly in 2017, also
increased its total employee count by 22% to 750,000 people. Amazon added
nearly 100,000 employees just in the third quarter, according to Thursday’s
release, which Baird analyst Sebastian deemed the “most surprising metric” in
the report.