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Cell phone data shows Trump's trade policies are hurting more than just Canadian tourism - Business Insider

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4 minute min
Cristina Preda
The economic effects of President Donald Trump's disruptive approach to foreign policy are coming into sharper focus with a year's worth of data.As expected, a range of numbers like border crossings and hotel bookings show how Trump's trade war has killed off a large segment of Canadian tourism.But new analysis from the University of Toronto's School of Cities now shows that other areas of the economy have taken a major hit as well.Using cell phone data, researchers Karen Chapple, Yihoi Jung, and Jeff Allen documented an average year-over-year decline in Canadian visits to US cities of approximately 42%. That's a much larger hit than the 25% drop previously estimated based on border crossing data."The top 20 cities were a number of big metros that aren't exactly known as, you know, big tourist areas," Chapple told Business Insider.While the drop-offs in Las Vegas and Orlando could reasonably be attributed to less tourism, major commercial hubs like New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Dallas, and Houston also saw significant declines. The researchers attribute the change to fewer tech and finance employees making work trips."I fly to San Francisco all the time," Chapple said. "It's a tech flight to San Francisco — that's who's with me on the flight."Chapple said her team was particularly surprised by mid-sized cities like Grand Rapids and Flint, Michigan, which have robust automotive industry relationships that are increasingly complicated by the White House's changing tariff policy."High-tech and financial centres like San Francisco and Houston appear to be experiencing reductions not only in tourists but also in business-related travel, reflecting changing travel preferences due to broader economic uncertainties on both sides of the border," the researchers wrote. "As another example, Grand Rapids, which has close ties to the automotive industry in Ontario, has experienced the second largest drop in visitation, likely due to the tariffs."The findings underscore how the ties between Canada and the US are under strain: Of the 267 cities included in the analysis, only three saw increased Canadian visits last year compared to the year before.It took about three years for Canadian visits to largely recover the plunge that followed the COVID-19 pandemic, and it's still too early to tell how long this latest dip will last.
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Economie

'Big Short' investor Michael Burry sells GameStop stake, shorts Palantir stock - Business Insider

Michael Burry says he's given up on GameStop — and ramped up his bet against Palantir."I sold my entire GME position," the investor of "The Big Short" fame wrote in a Monday post on his Substack, adding that it was the first full position he's exited since he pivoted from running a hedge fund to writing online late last year."Any which way I sliced it, the Instant Berkshire thesis was never compatible with >5x Debt/EBITDA, never ok with interest coverage under 4.0x," he wrote."Instant Berkshire" is Burry's idea for GameStop CEO Ryan Cohen to emulate Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway by "creating a portfolio of great companies that generate excess capital or float for additional investment beyond what is required for their growth."Burry wrote in a late April post that GameStop, JD.com, and Molina Healthcare were his three largest positions, and together made up well over a third of his personal stock portfolio.In his late-Monday post, Burry laid out in a graphic why Cohen's $56 billion cash-and-stock offer for eBay is a far cry from the deal he envisioned for GameStop.He estimated the proposed acquisition would burden the combined business with a net-debt-to-profit ratio of 5.2 times, and its yearly profits would only be 2.5 times its annual interest expense.Moreover, he projected that if eBay pushes back and demands $65 billion, then the business could wind up with 7.7 times leverage and a profit-to-interest ratio of 1.2 to 1.5 times.Burry said in an earlier post on Monday that leverage above 5 times was a "knife edge," and 7.7 times was "a level of debt that borders on distressed."In his late-Monday post, Burry said that he "opened an outright short" on Palantir ahead of its Monday earnings, adding that he's "shorting the company because it is worth low double digits at best."Burry said he's not only betting against Palantir because he believes it's overvalued: "I am shorting the business model. I am shorting the entire premise upon which the company rests.

Economie

Apple's diplomatic tariff refund strategy shows why Tim Cook is called the Trump whisperer - Business Insider

Tim Cook is positioning Apple to take advantage of tariff refunds as Donald Trump watches closely.The outgoing Apple CEO said on Thursday during the company's Q2 earnings call that Apple is "following the established processes" to apply for tariff refunds and plans to reinvest any money it recoups into US innovation and manufacturing. Those investments, he added, would be "in addition to our prior commitments in the US."Cook's comments show how Apple is navigating tariffs that have become both a cost issue and a political one — and underscore why he's earned a reputation as the Trump whisperer.Trump raised the stakes around those refunds in an April 21 appearance on CNBC's "Squawk Box." Asked about companies like Apple and Amazon, which had not yet announced plans to pursue refunds, Trump said the companies were "brilliant" if they didn't seek reimbursement, and their decision not to pursue tariff refunds served as evidence that they "got to know me very well.""I'll remember them," Trump added, signaling that the decision could carry political weight.Cook has maintained a notably close working relationship with Trump across both of his administrations, previously securing tariff exemptions for Apple products while pairing those efforts with high-profile US investment commitments.That relationship has helped Cook stand out among tech executives for his ability to navigate Trump's orbit without the same level of public friction, maintaining his direct line of communication with the White House while other tech leaders clashed more openly with the administration, Business Insider has reported.Apple's strategy — securing refunds while emphasizing domestic reinvestment — reflects Cook's careful balancing act between cost management and political optics.Other major companies are already cashing in on their refunds.

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