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iliekgold · 1 year
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It's been pretty rare when I've uploaded art here in the past few years, but hey, might as well throw a thing or two in here since there's a couple new faces here. These two were from 2020 and 2021~
One cannot escape the hands of fate - as Meo learns with the resident Fate that governs over her. Don't worry, Tycho is a benevolent chap and just as curious with her.
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mastcomm · 4 years
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DealBook: How Amazon Keeps Defying Gravity
Good morning. Weekend playlist: This new dance number by Elon Musk, if that’s your thing. (Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here.)
Why is this man laughing?
It’s because Amazon reported another knockout quarter yesterday, sending its shares up 10 percent in after-hours trading, writes David Streitfeld of the NYT. The performance showed the power of Jeff Bezos’ internet juggernaut.
The company handily beat expectations, with quarterly profit coming in at $6.47 a share. Analysts had expected $4.04 a share, with profit weighed down by increased spending to build out Amazon Prime shipping services.
Amazon is now an even stronger powerhouse in e-commerce, online video and cloud computing. (A rare blemish was physical stores, including Whole Foods Market, whose sales dropped 1 percent.)
More highlights from Amazon’s report:
• Its third-party marketplace showed a 31 percent jump in revenue in the quarter, to $17.4 billion.
• Its advertising business helped push revenue for “other” operations up 39 percent.
• Amazon’s willingness to pay for faster package shipping may already be generating an uptick in goods sold, our new colleague Shira Ovide tweets.
A useful summary: “Amazon ads for Amazon products delivered in Amazon trucks to Amazon households, where Amazon cameras alert residents that their new toys have already arrived,” Mr. Streitfeld writes.
All that was great for Mr. Bezos’ wallet. The surge in Amazon shares yesterday grew his net worth by $13.2 billion in about 15 minutes.
What to watch for: Whether Amazon rejoins the $1 trillion market value club — and stays there.
____________________________
Today’s DealBook Briefing was written by Andrew Ross Sorkin in New York and Michael J. de la Merced in London.
____________________________
Ginni Rometty is leaving IBM with work to do
Ms. Rometty announced yesterday that she will step down as the embattled tech icon’s C.E.O. this spring. She became one of Corporate America’s top women leaders — but couldn’t finish turning around her own company’s fortunes.
Since becoming C.E.O. in 2012, she pushed IBM further into businesses like cloud computing and A.I., buying up plenty of companies to help with that. Last year, she oversaw the $34 billion takeover of the Linux distributor Red Hat, IBM’s biggest deal ever.
Ms. Rometty was also one of the longest-serving female C.E.O.s in America and a role model for many executives. And she was outspoken on issues like whether companies should focus on more than shareholders.
But she struggled to make IBM more relevant:
• The company still relies more on slow-growing hardware and software businesses than cloud computing, A.I. and data analysis.
• Shares in IBM fell 25 percent during her tenure, while those in Microsoft jumped 500 percent.
Her successor will be Arvind Krishna, an IBM lifer who runs its cloud division and helped spearhead the Red Hat deal.
It’ll be up to him whether IBM enjoys a Microsoft-type revival — or a Nokia-type slide into irrelevance, write Jennifer Saba and Antony Currie of Breakingviews.
Wuhan coronavirus is officially a global emergency
The Wuhan virus outbreak is growing in scale and seriousness, as governments and companies alike struggle to figure out how to contain its spread.
Here’s the latest:
• The World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a global emergency yesterday, though it said it had confidence in China’s ability to respond.
• The State Department warned travelers to avoid China after the declaration.
• The death toll as of today is 213, while the total number of cases is around 9,800 worldwide.
Facebook plans to remove posts with misinformation about the coronavirus, writes Kurt Wagner of Bloomberg. He adds, “The step of actually removing misleading content and not just labeling it as such is a significant one for a company that’s said it won’t fact-check political advertising.”
The Chinese billionaire Jack Ma said he would donate $14 million to help speed development of a coronavirus vaccine.
U.S. stock futures are down modestly this morning, following in the footsteps of Asian and European markets.
What’s left out of the latest debate on capitalism
From boardrooms to Davos, the corporate world is debating whether companies should focus just on shareholders or on a broader group of “stakeholders.” Peter Orszag writes in Bloomberg Opinion that some things are being omitted from that discussion.
• Governments once controlled markets more tightly, writes Mr. Orszag, a former Obama administration official who is now head of financial advisory at Lazard. So it mattered less what companies did, because government constrained the consequences.
• “An extreme definition of capitalism has become dominant,” where the only capitalist markets are perfectly competitive ones, with hands-off governments and shareholder-focused companies. “It’s a strange argument,” Mr. Orszag writes.
• “The dominant paradigm of the past several decades has plausibly produced a dramatic rise in inequality and polarization, and that polarization in turn has made the government unable to function effectively.”
Mr. Orszag’s proposed solution: increased government intervention — with more focus on where people actually live and work, rather than blanket generalizations about how business should work.
Brexit happens tonight. What next?
At 11 p.m. London time (midnight Brussels time and 6 p.m. Eastern), Britain will formally leave the E.U. It was a struggle to get to this point, but now the really hard part begins.
• “This is the moment when the dawn breaks and the curtain goes up on a new act,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson will say in an address tonight.
• But Britain needs to hash out a trade deal with the E.U. and the U.S., both of which promise to be difficult. (One example: Britain’s former ambassador to Washington warned that President Trump will want the British National Health Service to pay higher prices for American drugs.)
• Just yesterday, the Bank of England downgraded the economic outlook for the country.
“For the next 11 months, Britain will continue to abide by the European Union’s rules and regulations, while it decides what sort of Brexit it wants for itself,” Mark Landler of the NYT writes.
So for those weary of years of Brexit deliberations: Sorry, but they’re not done yet.
Revolving door
J. Crew hired Jan Singer, a former C.E.O. of Victoria’s Secret, as its new chief.
Renault named Luca de Meo, a former Volkswagen executive, as its new C.E.O.
JPMorgan Chase has hired William Vereker, who was a top business adviser to former Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain, as vice chairman of investment banking for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Adel Aslani-Far, a top M.&A. lawyer, left the law firm Latham & Watkins to join Greenberg Traurig.
The speed read
Deals
• Altria wrote down its stake in the vaping company Juul by an additional $4.1 billion, valuing its holdings down 67 percent from when it struck the deal in 2018. (NYT)
• Unilever is weighing a sale of its tea business, which includes the Lipton brand and could fetch billions. (WSJ)
• The parent company of One Medical, the health clinic operator, priced its I.P.O. at $14, the bottom of its expected range. (CNBC)
• The analyst Craig Moffett thinks AT&T will eventually need to break up, because combining telecom and media businesses isn’t working. (CNBC)
Politics and policy
• The U.S. economy grew 2.1 percent last quarter, its slowest pace since 2016. (NYT)
• When President Trump called Jay Powell, the Fed chairman, an “enemy” of America, the central bank’s vice chair responded in an internal email, “Ugh.” (NYT)
• A schism has opened up on the right over eroding tech giants’ legal protections, with conservatives like the Mercers squaring off against libertarians like the Kochs. (Bloomberg)
Tech
• The F.B.I. is reportedly investigating NSO, the Israeli cyberespionage company whose products were said to have been used in the hack of Jeff Bezos, over illegal hacking of U.S. citizens. (Reuters)
• An associate of Peter Thiel is working on a subscription-based social network called Column that will focus on business and tech leaders. (MIT Technology Review)
• A.I. won’t necessarily eliminate jobs. But it needs to be regulated to make future jobs fairer. (NYT)
Best of the rest
• Deutsche Bank lost $1.6 billion in the fourth quarter, underlining the depths of the German lender’s troubles. (NYT)
• A Transportation Department report is said to criticize Southwest Airlines for flying 17 million passengers on planes with unconfirmed maintenance records over two years. (WSJ)
• Members of The Omaha World-Herald’s union expressed dismay at Warren Buffett’s sale of their newspaper to Lee Enterprises. (Business Insider)
Thanks for reading! We’ll see you next week.
We’d love your feedback. Please email thoughts and suggestions to [email protected].
from WordPress https://mastcomm.com/dealbook-how-amazon-keeps-defying-gravity/
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iliekgold · 1 year
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Some more semi-oldish stuff (late 2020), but since Tycho seemed pretty well-received, have some more~
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iliekgold · 1 year
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This is a requiem for the harlequin The great pretender crashin' down with style.. Here's to the fall of man Fade to dust, fortune to sand The great surrender finally arrived..
--
Aaand my last piece of 2022, because of course I end it with Meo herself. Also I adore Poets of the Fall, and like a good chunk of their songs, "Requiem for my Harlequin" fits her an awful lot.
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iliekgold · 7 years
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Still horribly behind, but Inktober pt. 2. Got more in reserve, but just uploading some of these in chunks. Also as for the mini-comic - true story from when I stopped at Wegman’s for some groceries. They have free samples there, and one was for Grey Goose ales. Now, for me, I HAAATE alcoholic drinks, but my curiosity got the better of me and I wanted to try some. The first two samples were bitter, but not terrible. Then came the third, which was a very hop-laden beer. ...needless to say, one sip of that was a bit stronger than I expected. Rubliax is © Ankama Aggressive Retsuko / Hippatricia / Lucille is © Sanrio. Train Ghost is © Studio MDHR.
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iliekgold · 7 years
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More spatterings of Inktober stuff - I have several still on the backburner that I’ve yet to post, but I still feebly attempt despite being a week or so behind. If anything this turned into an experiment with me using my greyscale markers (and digital greyscale too), so hey, it works either way. <3
Drawing traditionally feels so much harder than I remember because my art comes out 10x more wonky.
Gengar and Banette is © Nintendo / GAMEFREAK Inc. All other chars are mine.
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iliekgold · 7 years
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Sampling of some of the Inktober stuff I’ve been doing - some traditional, some digital, ‘cause I’m a rebel and like mixing things up. I’m still a tad behind, but to be fair, there’s some stuff I hadn’t posted up yet. All chars are mine, outside of the Cuphead fanart; Cuphead belongs to Studio MDHR.
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mastcomm · 4 years
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DealBook: How Amazon Keeps Defying Gravity
Good morning. Weekend playlist: This new dance number by Elon Musk, if that’s your thing. (Was this email forwarded to you? Sign up here.)
Why is this man laughing?
It’s because Amazon reported another knockout quarter yesterday, sending its shares up 10 percent in after-hours trading, writes David Streitfeld of the NYT. The performance showed the power of Jeff Bezos’ internet juggernaut.
The company handily beat expectations, with quarterly profit coming in at $6.47 a share. Analysts had expected $4.04 a share, with profit weighed down by increased spending to build out Amazon Prime shipping services.
Amazon is now an even stronger powerhouse in e-commerce, online video and cloud computing. (A rare blemish was physical stores, including Whole Foods Market, whose sales dropped 1 percent.)
More highlights from Amazon’s report:
• Its third-party marketplace showed a 31 percent jump in revenue in the quarter, to $17.4 billion.
• Its advertising business helped push revenue for “other” operations up 39 percent.
• Amazon’s willingness to pay for faster package shipping may already be generating an uptick in goods sold, our new colleague Shira Ovide tweets.
A useful summary: “Amazon ads for Amazon products delivered in Amazon trucks to Amazon households, where Amazon cameras alert residents that their new toys have already arrived,” Mr. Streitfeld writes.
All that was great for Mr. Bezos’ wallet. The surge in Amazon shares yesterday grew his net worth by $13.2 billion in about 15 minutes.
What to watch for: Whether Amazon rejoins the $1 trillion market value club — and stays there.
____________________________
Today’s DealBook Briefing was written by Andrew Ross Sorkin in New York and Michael J. de la Merced in London.
____________________________
Ginni Rometty is leaving IBM with work to do
Ms. Rometty announced yesterday that she will step down as the embattled tech icon’s C.E.O. this spring. She became one of Corporate America’s top women leaders — but couldn’t finish turning around her own company’s fortunes.
Since becoming C.E.O. in 2012, she pushed IBM further into businesses like cloud computing and A.I., buying up plenty of companies to help with that. Last year, she oversaw the $34 billion takeover of the Linux distributor Red Hat, IBM’s biggest deal ever.
Ms. Rometty was also one of the longest-serving female C.E.O.s in America and a role model for many executives. And she was outspoken on issues like whether companies should focus on more than shareholders.
But she struggled to make IBM more relevant:
• The company still relies more on slow-growing hardware and software businesses than cloud computing, A.I. and data analysis.
• Shares in IBM fell 25 percent during her tenure, while those in Microsoft jumped 500 percent.
Her successor will be Arvind Krishna, an IBM lifer who runs its cloud division and helped spearhead the Red Hat deal.
It’ll be up to him whether IBM enjoys a Microsoft-type revival — or a Nokia-type slide into irrelevance, write Jennifer Saba and Antony Currie of Breakingviews.
Wuhan coronavirus is officially a global emergency
The Wuhan virus outbreak is growing in scale and seriousness, as governments and companies alike struggle to figure out how to contain its spread.
Here’s the latest:
• The World Health Organization declared the coronavirus a global emergency yesterday, though it said it had confidence in China’s ability to respond.
• The State Department warned travelers to avoid China after the declaration.
• The death toll as of today is 213, while the total number of cases is around 9,800 worldwide.
Facebook plans to remove posts with misinformation about the coronavirus, writes Kurt Wagner of Bloomberg. He adds, “The step of actually removing misleading content and not just labeling it as such is a significant one for a company that’s said it won’t fact-check political advertising.”
The Chinese billionaire Jack Ma said he would donate $14 million to help speed development of a coronavirus vaccine.
U.S. stock futures are down modestly this morning, following in the footsteps of Asian and European markets.
What’s left out of the latest debate on capitalism
From boardrooms to Davos, the corporate world is debating whether companies should focus just on shareholders or on a broader group of “stakeholders.” Peter Orszag writes in Bloomberg Opinion that some things are being omitted from that discussion.
• Governments once controlled markets more tightly, writes Mr. Orszag, a former Obama administration official who is now head of financial advisory at Lazard. So it mattered less what companies did, because government constrained the consequences.
• “An extreme definition of capitalism has become dominant,” where the only capitalist markets are perfectly competitive ones, with hands-off governments and shareholder-focused companies. “It’s a strange argument,” Mr. Orszag writes.
• “The dominant paradigm of the past several decades has plausibly produced a dramatic rise in inequality and polarization, and that polarization in turn has made the government unable to function effectively.”
Mr. Orszag’s proposed solution: increased government intervention — with more focus on where people actually live and work, rather than blanket generalizations about how business should work.
Brexit happens tonight. What next?
At 11 p.m. London time (midnight Brussels time and 6 p.m. Eastern), Britain will formally leave the E.U. It was a struggle to get to this point, but now the really hard part begins.
• “This is the moment when the dawn breaks and the curtain goes up on a new act,” Prime Minister Boris Johnson will say in an address tonight.
• But Britain needs to hash out a trade deal with the E.U. and the U.S., both of which promise to be difficult. (One example: Britain’s former ambassador to Washington warned that President Trump will want the British National Health Service to pay higher prices for American drugs.)
• Just yesterday, the Bank of England downgraded the economic outlook for the country.
“For the next 11 months, Britain will continue to abide by the European Union’s rules and regulations, while it decides what sort of Brexit it wants for itself,” Mark Landler of the NYT writes.
So for those weary of years of Brexit deliberations: Sorry, but they’re not done yet.
Revolving door
J. Crew hired Jan Singer, a former C.E.O. of Victoria’s Secret, as its new chief.
Renault named Luca de Meo, a former Volkswagen executive, as its new C.E.O.
JPMorgan Chase has hired William Vereker, who was a top business adviser to former Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain, as vice chairman of investment banking for Europe, the Middle East and Africa.
Adel Aslani-Far, a top M.&A. lawyer, left the law firm Latham & Watkins to join Greenberg Traurig.
The speed read
Deals
• Altria wrote down its stake in the vaping company Juul by an additional $4.1 billion, valuing its holdings down 67 percent from when it struck the deal in 2018. (NYT)
• Unilever is weighing a sale of its tea business, which includes the Lipton brand and could fetch billions. (WSJ)
• The parent company of One Medical, the health clinic operator, priced its I.P.O. at $14, the bottom of its expected range. (CNBC)
• The analyst Craig Moffett thinks AT&T will eventually need to break up, because combining telecom and media businesses isn’t working. (CNBC)
Politics and policy
• The U.S. economy grew 2.1 percent last quarter, its slowest pace since 2016. (NYT)
• When President Trump called Jay Powell, the Fed chairman, an “enemy” of America, the central bank’s vice chair responded in an internal email, “Ugh.” (NYT)
• A schism has opened up on the right over eroding tech giants’ legal protections, with conservatives like the Mercers squaring off against libertarians like the Kochs. (Bloomberg)
Tech
• The F.B.I. is reportedly investigating NSO, the Israeli cyberespionage company whose products were said to have been used in the hack of Jeff Bezos, over illegal hacking of U.S. citizens. (Reuters)
• An associate of Peter Thiel is working on a subscription-based social network called Column that will focus on business and tech leaders. (MIT Technology Review)
• A.I. won’t necessarily eliminate jobs. But it needs to be regulated to make future jobs fairer. (NYT)
Best of the rest
• Deutsche Bank lost $1.6 billion in the fourth quarter, underlining the depths of the German lender’s troubles. (NYT)
• A Transportation Department report is said to criticize Southwest Airlines for flying 17 million passengers on planes with unconfirmed maintenance records over two years. (WSJ)
• Members of The Omaha World-Herald’s union expressed dismay at Warren Buffett’s sale of their newspaper to Lee Enterprises. (Business Insider)
Thanks for reading! We’ll see you next week.
We’d love your feedback. Please email thoughts and suggestions to [email protected].
from WordPress https://mastcomm.com/dealbook-how-amazon-keeps-defying-gravity/
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iliekgold · 9 years
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Thoughts can be like a plague... and they have ways of clamping on like a VICE.
Drew this last week sometime as vent art and it’s still pretty applicable.
Been in an on-off rut for a few weeks, and it’s been nothing short of an emotional rollercoaster. Funny thing with memories is that they have ways of turning up like bad pennies. And it’s the ones involving ex-friends that serve as a painful reminder to my shortcomings... and will stick with me for days.
Anxiety sucks. :|
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iliekgold · 10 years
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"Having luck... doesn't always mean it's GOOD."
Some vent art. On top of a nasty lethargic rut from this past weekend, one of my cats also died yesterday. Being racked with both fatigue and feels is pretty draining.
It's all too fitting my persona's based around the element of luck.. 'cause when bad luck strikes, it slams with the force of a wrecking ball.
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