Spain’s Pedro Sánchez calls on EU to ‘reconsider’ Chinese EV tariffs
Beijing has stepped up lobbying ahead of Brussels vote in escalating trade war
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has said the country is “reconsidering” its position on EU tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles amid concerns that escalating trade tensions could hit domestic exporters.
Speaking at a press conference in Kunshan, near Shanghai, on Wednesday, Sánchez said it was important to find a “compromise” between the EU and China ahead of a vote expected in October to approve the new tariffs on Chinese EVs.
“I have to be blunt and frank . . . I think we need to reconsider, all of us, not only member states, but also the [European] Commission, our position towards this movement,” he said, in response to a question on the tariff vote. “We don’t need another war, in this case a trade war.”
The comments, delivered during Sanchez’s second trip to China since the end of the pandemic, represent a significant intervention in a trade dispute between China and the EU in recent months and signal a change in Spain’s own position.
The EU last year undertook a months-long investigation into suspected unfair subsidies in China’s automobile industry, amid concern that lower-cost Chinese EVs would undercut member states’ politically important carmakers at a time when China is booking huge trade surpluses.
At the conclusion of the probe, the 27-member bloc in June proposed sharply increasing tariffs by up to 37.6 per cent on Chinese EVs, which would bring tariff levels to nearly 50 per cent and mirror similar measures from the US. The new levies will be approved unless 15 member states — amounting to 65 per cent of the EU population — vote against.
Spain was one of 11 countries that voted in favour of increasing the tariffs in an advisory poll in July. Only four countries voted against the measure, and nine abstained.
China has responded by strongly lobbying against the tariffs and launching a series of countermeasures, including an investigation into pork imports from Europe that stands to affect Spanish producers. China imported $1.5bn in pork products from Spain last year, more than any other EU country.
Beijing has also opened an anti-dumping probe into European dairy products and filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization over the EU’s planned EV tariffs.
Chinese President Xi Jinping on Monday encouraged Sánchez to play a “constructive role” in building ties between China and the EU, while the Spanish prime minister called for “closer, richer and more balanced” relations.
“I think that we need to build bridges between the European Union and China,” Sánchez said.
The trade tensions are part of a wider deterioration in relations between Beijing and western governments, which have pushed companies to “de-risk” their exposure to supply chains in the world’s second-largest economy.
China’s trade surplus with the EU was $162.13bn in the first eight months of this year, up nearly 6 per cent year on year. China’s trade surplus with Spain was $17.99bn in the seven months to July, which was virtually unchanged from a year earlier.
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>>> Initiation
>>> Initiation
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Asian stocks slipped Wednesday on growth concerns ahead of a US inflation report and as traders weighed the impact of the presidential debate. The yen rose after a Bank of Japan official signaled more interest rate increases. A gauge for the region’s equities fell for a third session, with benchmarks in Japan and Hong Kong leading declines. Futures for US stocks dropped. Global growth worries resurfaced as oil steadied below $70 and Treasury yields fell in the run-up to the US consumer price index later Wednesday and the Federal Reserve policy meeting next week. The yen gained to its strongest level against the greenback since January after BOJ policy member Junko Nakagawa said the central bank will continue to adjust the degree of easing. Most economists surveyed expected the central bank to wait until December or January before raising rates again, with the next decision scheduled for next week. Emerging market currencies gained against a weaker greenback. The match-up between between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump ranged from their plans for the economy to US-China relations and immigration. As the debate closed, the odds for victory for Harris climbed to around 55% on PredictIt. Markets continued to look for cues on the future direction of US-China relations during the debate, with defense, biotechnology and banking companies in the region under the microscope. Trump’s support of the crypto sector saw Bitcoin slip as the former president’s odds for victory briefly dipped on PredictIt. The Japanese currency rallied to 141.51 versus the greenback, the strongest level since Jan. 2. Nakagawa’s comments underpin the BOJ’s message that it will raise rates further if conditions are right, a stance signaled recently by BOJ board members including Governor Kazuo Ueda. The central bank announced an interest-rate hike and a reduction in bond purchases in its previous meeting on July 31. Nakagawa’s comments on real rates “make markets think the BOJ may hike rates earlier and faster, possibly this year,” pushing up the yen, said Shoki Omori, chief desk strategist at Mizuho Securities Co. “The presidential debate adds to uncertainty” over the market and contributing to the yen’s volatility, he said Traders in the US interest-rate options market are still betting on at least one super-sized Fed interest-rate cut this year — just probably not before the Nov. 5 US election. Forecasters expect a monthly report on consumer prices to show another month of muted increases, possibly playing into a Fed debate over how much to cut interest rates. Crude has tumbled by almost a fifth so far this quarter on concerns that slowing growth in the US and China, the leading consumers, will crimp demand at a time of robust and expanding supplies. West Texas Intermediate crude rebounded in early trading after plummeting as much as 5% in its previous session. Copper and aluminum also fell after Chinese trade data offered evidence of weakening domestic demand for metals. Back in the US, the S&P 500 rose 0.4% with a Bloomberg gauge of the “Magnificent Seven” megacaps jumping 1.5%. Tesla Inc. led gains in Wall Street megacaps on Tuesday and Oracle Corp. hit an all-time high. JPMorgan Chase & Co. sank more than 5% after tempering its earnings optimism and Bank of America Corp. said investment-banking results will come in lower than some expected. US After Hours PLAY +11.8% higher on earnings; GME -7.5%, CTLP -3.6% lower on earnings.
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Macro :
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The World’s Biggest Construction Project Is a Magnet for Executives Behaving Badly
Saudi Arabia’s Neom project contends with corruption, worker deaths, racism and misogyny
Neom executives were summoned to the office to manage a crisis: Three workers had recently died toiling on the world’s biggest construction project.
Wayne Borg, a former Hollywood executive hired to run Neom’s media division, expressed frustration over the interruption to his evening.
“A whole bunch of people die so we’ve got to have a meeting on a Sunday night,” he said on a phone call, according to a recording heard by The Wall Street Journal. He said the project’s blue-collar workers from the Indian subcontinent had been “f—ing morons” and “that is why white people are at the top of the pecking order.”
The Australian is among thousands of expatriates hired to turn the monumental visions of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman into reality. Neom, his signature initiative, markets itself as “the land of the future, where the greatest minds and best talents are empowered to embody pioneering ideas.”
In practice, the project has become a magnet for executives with checkered pasts and inappropriate workplace behavior, according to current and former executives and documents, emails and recordings reviewed by the Journal.
Borg, 59, has been recorded making racist and misogynistic comments. Another top manager has a corruption conviction in his home country and remains under investigation there. Neom has investigated other star executives for embezzlement. Subordinates say Neom’s chief executive berates and belittles employees.
The workplace issues illustrate a broader problem for Mohammed. He has made Neom the symbol of his ambitious reform program and is investing hundreds of billions of dollars of oil money building it, with plans to host the Asian Winter Games and the FIFA World Cup there. If Neom fails, the 39-year-old de facto ruler risks squandering his country’s wealth, and his reputation as a reformer.
In a meeting about the worker fatalities last summer, Neom’s chief executive, Nadhmi al-Nasr, demanded to know what had gone wrong, according to current and former employees. A falling pipe killed one worker; a wall collapsed on another; and one person died after mishandling explosives, the current and former employees said.
Even as Neom sought to limit fatalities, Borg demonstrated a casual disregard for worker safety. “You can’t train for stupidity,” Borg said in a later conversation about the deaths. “The white blokes are at the top of the tree.”
Neom said its top priority is protecting the welfare of employees, who are encouraged to anonymously voice concerns. Neom has a code of conduct and promotes a set of values that include being respectful, embracing cultural differences and acting responsibly.
Neom in a statement said it has a culturally diverse workforce of roughly 5,000 employees from more than 100 countries and has a zero-tolerance approach to inappropriate workplace behavior. The project said it investigates every health-and-safety incident.
“Any allegations of wrongdoing and misconduct are thoroughly investigated,” Neom said. It added: “If any wrongdoing is substantiated, we take appropriate action.”
The Saudi government referred a request for comment to Neom. A representative for Borg didn’t respond to a request for comment.
Egalitarian environment
Mohammed launched Neom to fast-track his kingdom into the modern world. He sectioned off a Massachusetts-sized parcel with plans for its own laws and a liberal, egalitarian environment to attract smart foreigners and businesses.
From Neom’s earliest conception, Mohammed was willing to back controversial executives to translate his bold ideas into reality.
These include a multitrillion-dollar pair of skyscrapers taller than the Empire State Building, designed to run 105 miles long and known as the Line. Neom is meant to be a logistics hub, a tourism destination and a world leader in health, media and renewable energy.
In 2017, Mohammed appointed Klaus Kleinfeld to run Neom, months after the German lost his job as chief executive of Arconic, the aluminum maker. Kleinfeld had sent a letter that included a vague threat toward the billionaire whose hedge fund campaigned for Kleinfeld’s ouster. Kleinfeld resigned after Arconic’s board said he showed bad judgment in sending the letter.
A year later, Mohammed replaced Kleinfeld with Nasr, the current chief executive, who has a reputation for a difficult management style. At Neom, staff have complained that he rails at employees, the Journal has previously reported.
“I drive everybody like a slave,” Nasr said in one meeting, according to a recording heard by the Journal.
Recruiters and former employees say Neom’s ability to draw talent has been hurt by Nasr’s decision to move staff to the project’s remote location in the kingdom’s desert northwest. There, more than 100,000 white-collar and blue-collar construction workers live in temporary trailer parks, a hundred miles from a major city. Alcohol is banned and there are few social diversions. The murder in 2018 of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi spooked some would-be workers.
White-collar employees from companies such as GE, Amazon and Cisco Systems have joined, encouraged by paychecks that average $1.1 million for Neom’s senior leaders and the chance to create an industry or company in a country that until recently was closed off to the outside world.
Current and former employees say the culture at the project follows the hard-charging style of Mohammed, the son of 88-year-old King Salman. He allows what many consider bad behavior as long as an executive delivers on his vision, according to former Neom employees.
Public-malfeasance charges
One of those who has impressed the prince is Antoni Vives, an executive who has helped lead development of the Line.
In 2021, some inside Neom pushed for the ouster of Vives, 59, after a Spanish court convicted him of corruption in his previous role in Barcelona’s city hall, former employees said.
He pleaded guilty to public-malfeasance charges that he gave a friend a no-show job worth around $165,000 over four years. He agreed with prosecutors to a two-year suspended prison sentence.
Vives resigned from Neom but was soon back after Mohammed told Nasr to convince him to return, some of the former employees said. As long as Vives didn’t commit the crime in Saudi Arabia, he didn’t care, the royal told executives working on Neom.
He has overcome questions about his past by building a bond with Mohammed as one of the few people who understand his desire to build a development that leaves a physical legacy, some of the former employees added.
“Vives is the Line, the Line is Vives,” Nasr has told associates, according to one of the former employees who heard the remark.
Tensions have risen between Vives and construction project managers to deliver. In one incident, the tall and broad-shouldered Vives argued with a construction manager and the two men physically wrestled. Vives then demanded his dismissal, according to a former employee and a person familiar with the altercation. The executive stayed, backed by another executive who threatened to quit should his colleague be forced out, these people said.
In October 2022, Spanish prosecutors again accused Vives of corruption during his time in office in Barcelona. This time the case related to construction contracts awarded for the redevelopment of a well-known city square, according to an indictment.
Prosecutors are seeking a six-year prison term for Vives, who is accused of criminal conspiracy, fraud and perversion of justice. Vives and a lawyer who represented him in his first case didn’t respond to requests for comment.
Brightest minds
A series of videos Neom produced in 2020, dubbed “Brightest Minds,” featured two senior Neom executives—Melvin Samsom and Maliha Hashmi.
Samsom, who is Dutch, had moved to Neom after resigning as chief executive of the Swedish hospital affiliated with the institute that awards the Nobel Prize in Medicine. Hashmi has a law degree and a master’s from Harvard.
In the video, Samsom explained how Neom was designing a healthcare system from scratch. Inside Neom’s real-estate projects, the crown prince wants to create a home for industries such as healthcare to employ Saudi Arabia’s burgeoning generation of young people and drive economic growth.
In 2021, Neom officials found that Samsom and Hashmi had awarded contracts worth hundreds of thousands of dollars to a consulting firm founded by one of Hashmi’s relatives, according to current and former Neom employees and corporate records. The firm, Boston-based Myriad Consulting, also employed Samsom’s son, these people said.
Samsom and Hashimi contracted Myriad to help develop a genetics center in 2020 without a competitive tender, even though Myriad had been founded only a year before with few employees and had only a limited online presence.
A “discussion with industry professionals and regional network has identified the vendor as the best provider for the expert skills for this unique project,” Hashmi wrote, according to a document viewed by the Journal.
When Samsom heard in the spring of 2021 that Neom executives were investigating the contract, he drove to the airport and left his keys in the car as he fled, according to some of the current and former employees. Both he and Hashmi were fired.
Hashmi, Samsom and Myriad didn’t respond to requests for comment.
‘Million Dollar Island’
Borg, the media executive, was featured in the same “Brightest Minds” series, where he explained that Neom was going to redefine “how many parts of the media industry operate.”
He came to the project from Fox Corp. after nearly two decades working for movie studios in the U.S., the U.K. and Australia, according to his LinkedIn profile. Fox and Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.
He has worked with companies to produce movies and a reality-television series called “Million Dollar Island” filmed amid Neom’s rugged desert landscape.
Early in his tenure at Neom, Borg was hauled in front of human resources for calling a female subordinate, who is Black, a “Black shit,” according to some of the former employees.
In messages to his subordinate, Borg said “I miss you” and your “arse is better than Beyoncé’s,” alongside kiss emojis, according to a summary of the employee’s grievance, which added that Borg denied making the “Black shit” comment.
When the Western woman met with human resources, Neom’s male head of the department mistakenly asked her to explain the issue of “black tits,” before he came to understand that Borg had called his colleague a “Black shit,” according to some of the former employees and a recording of Borg discussing it.
In a later meeting, Borg laughed about the mistake, according to the recording, and referred to “that f—ing episode I had with that Black bitch.”
Neom’s human resources recommended that Borg receive six months of personal coaching, according to the summary of the employee’s grievance.
Since that issue, Borg has made statements in closed-door meetings that have demonstrated a disregard for the culture and religion of Saudi Arabia, according to audio heard by the Journal.
In one meeting, Borg referred to women from the Arabian Gulf as looking like “transvestites” and in another joked that certain sexual positions are forbidden in Islam, according to the audio.
“Do you wanna guess which ones?” he said. “Doggy-style, because it’s animalistic.”
Rightmove rejects £5.6bn offer from Australia’s REA
Property listings company rebuffs initial approach from company controlled by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp
Rightmove, Britain’s largest property listings company, has rejected an initial cash and shares bid from Australia’s REA Group that valued the UK business at £5.6bn.
The initial proposal by REA, which is controlled by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp, values Rightmove at 705 pence a share, a 27 per cent premium to the UK company’s share price prior to the Australian company’s interest being made public.
REA, which is working with Deutsche Bank, said last week it was considering a bid for Rightmove but had yet to approach the UK company. The indicative offer, made public on Tuesday, comprised 305p a share in cash and the rest in REA stock which, at the time of the offer, traded at A$205.51 (US$136.84).
REA said Rightmove shareholders would own 18.6 per cent of the combined company based on its indicative offer and that it intended to seek a secondary listing on the London Stock Exchange to allow UK investors to trade the shares.
“The proposal combines certainty of value, in cash, at a significant premium to recent trading while at the same time giving Rightmove shareholders the opportunity to benefit from the future value creation of the combined business,” REA said in a statement.
Rightmove rejected the offer on Tuesday, REA said. Under UK takeover laws, REA has until the end of September to make a formal offer or walk away.
Rightmove’s shares ended Tuesday at about 671p in London trading. The shares have risen by about a fifth since news of the potential takeover broke. The FTSE 100 group has a market capitalisation of about £5.2bn. REA shares dipped 2 per cent to A$198.99 on Tuesday.
REA said in its statement last week that it could “apply its globally leading capabilities and expertise” to improve both companies as a diversified group. Analysts have said synergies show little scope given that the two companies operate in different geographies.
Siraj Ahmed, an analyst with Citi, said in a research note this week that a premium of 40-50 per cent to the Rightmove price may be required to strike a deal.
Entcho Raykovski, an analyst with E&P, said REA could look to sweeten the cash component of the offer, but it was unlikely to raise the share component as this would potentially dilute News Corp’s holding in the Australian company below 50 per cent.
The UK platform has an 80 per cent market share in online property listings but has warned of slowing customer growth. Rival OnTheMarket was acquired last year by US real estate data group CoStar and has since launched an expansion push.
Rightmove’s chief Johan Svanstrom has looked for growth in areas beyond its core property listings business, including mortgage services and commercial property.
The activist investor Starboard Value put pressure on News Corp last year to separate its property businesses — including the group’s controlling stake in REA — from the media business.
Starboard has since submitted a non-binding proposal that would end Murdoch family control of News Corp, according to a letter sent to the company’s shareholders.
Rightmove declined to comment. The details of the REA offer were first reported by Bloomberg.