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Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Ex-Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn’s escape leaves 5 big questions - Los Angeles Times

Carlos Ghosn has confirmed that he arrived in his home country of Lebanon, fleeing what he called “injustice and political persecution” in Japan. The stunning escape was achieved while the former Nissan chairman was under strict bail conditions and daily surveillance by police and prosecutors as he awaited trial to defend himself against charges of financial misconduct. Here are the key questions:

1) How did he escape?

When the full details finally emerge, Ghosn’s escape may rank as one of the great vanishing acts of all time. How, exactly, could one of the most recognized faces in Japan, whose every move outside his apartment was tracked by the authorities, and whose three passports are still in his lawyers’ possession, slip through all of these obstacles and make it from central Tokyo to Beirut?

Speculation in diplomatic and legal circles has already produced several theories about how the escape was engineered, some wild, some sober. He evaded his police tail and used a small rural Japanese airport where his face was less well known; he left Japan by ferry and crossed to South Korea; he had a new French passport.

A detailed report in the French daily Le Monde, citing unidentified sources, said Ghosn’s wife, Carole, organized the escape with the help of her brothers and their contacts in Turkey. After leaving Tokyo, Ghosn took a private jet from a small airport in Japan to Turkey, and from there entered Lebanon with an ID card, landing in Beirut with Carole. He may have decided to flee because of new information Japanese authorities could have obtained from a Swiss bank and from offshore centers including Dubai, the newspaper reported.

One Lebanese media outlet reported that he left Japan hidden in some sort of container, possibly the case for a large musical instrument. The Lebanese newspaper Annahar reported that Ghosn entered the country with a French passport. The former industry heavyweight has Lebanese, French and Brazilian citizenship, though all his passports had been taken from him. Meanwhile, a report that Ghosn met with Lebanese President Michel Aoun was denied by an official at the presidency.

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Most theories land on the idea that Ghosn could not have engineered such a daring exit without a false passport and a significant level of organizational assistance at all stages. A growing chorus of people Tuesday professed dumbfounded amazement at the escape but it seems unlikely, said one diplomat who has dealt with a similar issue in Japan, that the 65-year-old could have done this alone.

Junichiro Hironaka, who heads Ghosn’s legal team in Japan, said his flight to Lebanon “came out of the blue” and he was unaware of how his client managed to leave Japan. But he suggested a bigger force was at play in organizing his escape, saying “a very large organization must have acted to pull this off.”

Lebanon’s General Security Directorate said that Ghosn entered the country legally and that there was no reason to take legal proceedings against him, state news agency NNA reported. A spokesperson for Beirut’s Rafic Hariri International Airport declined to comment.

2) What is the reaction in Japan?

Official Japanese reaction has so far been muted to Ghosn’s flight, which came just a week after a visit to Beirut by Keisuke Suzuki, minister of state for foreign affairs who spent time with the Lebanese president and other officials. Japanese foreign ministry officials say that the possibility of Ghosn traveling to Lebanon was not discussed during the meeting.

Some in Japan, meanwhile, have questioned just how enraged the Japanese prosecutors will be that their highest profile suspect for many years is now very unlikely to stand trial. In theory they will be furious that Ghosn humiliated them, say legal experts. But privately they may feel they have dodged a potentially greater blow to their pride from a trial that would have also put their conduct under intense and protracted global scrutiny.

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Japanese prosecutors, under immense pressure to maintain their 99% conviction record, tend to take on the cases they know they can win: In many instances, they are comfortable heading into court only when they already have a confession. They did not have one from Ghosn and, according to some legal experts, were anticipating a knife-edge trial at which Ghosn’s lawyers were explicitly planning to attack the way that the prosecutors built their case and the alleged political motivations behind it.

The Tokyo District Public Prosecutors Office and the Immigration Services Agency of Japan, which are closed ahead of the new year holiday, could not be reached for comment Tuesday.

A police officer guards the entrance of the Tokyo Detention Center where former Nissan chairman Carl

A police officer guards the entrance of the Tokyo Detention Center where former Nissan chairman Carlos Ghosn was being detained in Tokyo a year ago.

(Eugene Hoshiko / Associated Press)

3) What can Ghosn do now? Can he travel? Can he work?

In a brief statement on Tuesday, Ghosn appeared to make an immediate start on shaping his image beyond Japan, the indignity of his arrest and the trial he will now likely avoid.

He is not, according to this narrative, a fugitive from justice, but from an unjust system — language that seems calculated to secure him a quick rehabilitation in some circles. Could the once famous embodiment of “Davos Man” make a surprise return to the World Economic Forum in (neutral) Switzerland next month?

Probably not. Friends of Ghosn say it is likely that he will base himself exclusively in Lebanon in coming months. But the travel restrictions he faces may not hold him there indefinitely since Japan has an extradition treaty only with South Korea and the U.S.

Hassan Diab, Lebanon’s new prime minister-designate, is trying to assemble a Cabinet to deal with Lebanon’s worst financial and economic crisis in decades. Some in Beirut speculate that Ghosn, still lauded for his business savvy in Lebanon, might be called up.

His job prospects in the U.S., however, are already grim. In September, Ghosn agreed to pay $1 million to settle fraud charges with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over allegations the former Nissan boss hid more than $140 million of his pay package. Ghosn neither admitted nor denied any of the charges made by the SEC, but the settlement bans him from senior positions in any U.S. company for a decade.

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One thing is certain — more than a year after his initial arrest, Ghosn remains defiant.

“If you want to escape and run away for the rest of your life, you don’t say where you are,” says one person who knows him well. “I don’t think this is over.”

4) Where does this leave the trial?

Ghosn’s escape is likely to upset the entire judicial proceedings surrounding the four charges the car industry executive faces, all of which he denies. Two of those allegations relate to understating his pay by more than $80 million in Nissan’s financial statements.

The trial for these two charges would also involve Nissan, which is accused of falsifying its former boss’ pay, and Greg Kelly, who is charged with conspiring with Ghosn to understate his pay. Kelly, who denies the charges, remains in Tokyo awaiting trial. People close to Nissan, which co-operated with Tokyo prosecutors in building their case against Ghosn, were baffled by his flight to Lebanon, questioning how the trial can proceed without the key defendant.

Ghosn also faces a separate trial for breach of trust charges. If he does not appear on the first day of trial, which was expected to be as early as April 2020, court proceedings are likely to be suspended.

Prosecutors had argued he was a flight risk during the most recent round of bail negotiations in April. If the court determines that he breached his bail conditions, it would also confiscate $14 million in bail posted by Ghosn.

JAPAN-GHOSN-RENAULT-NISSAN-JUSTICE-AUTOMOBILE

Junichiro Hironaka, lawyer for Ghosn, on Feb. 13.

(Behrouz Mehri / AFP / Getty Images)

5) What does Ghosn mean by ‘injustice’ in Japan? How bad is this for the prosecutors?

Ghosn’s arrest in November 2018 has shone a spotlight on Japan’s justice system and the extreme pressure applied to extract confessions from suspects. His lawyers had earlier demanded the dismissal of charges against Ghosn, arguing that Japanese prosecutors, government officials and executives at Nissan “unlawfully colluded” to bring him down.

While denouncing Ghosn’s escape as “unforgivable,” Hironaka, his lawyer, expressed some understanding for why his client felt that he would not be able to receive a fair trial in Japan.

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Still, analysts say Ghosn is expected to face hard questions on his decision to ignore Japan’s judicial system and flee to a country where it does not have an extradition treaty. “At this point, Ghosn has turned from a defendant to fugitive,” said Koji Endo, head of equity research at SBI Securities. “If the trial in Japan is not going to be carried out, he has willingly abandoned a chance to fight for his legitimacy.”

Bloomberg contributed to this report.

The Financial Times Ltd. 2019. All rights reserved. FT and Financial Times are trademarks of the Financial Times Ltd. Not to be redistributed, copied or modified in any way.

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Big Tech Leads Decline in Core Earnings - Forbes

How Big is Star Wars for Disney? - Motley Fool

Disney (NYSE:DIS) recently released Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker film, which was one of the most anticipated films of the year and has already earned $500 million worldwide.

But ticket sales are only half of the story. Disney will benefit from the movie long after the film has left the theaters.

In this video from our YouTube channel, we take a look at how important the Star Wars franchise is for Disney and why the characters and stories will continue to generate huge sales for the company for years to come. 

Narrator: Star Wars and its seemingly unending list of characters and storylines has captured the attention of fans for more than 40 years. 

And over this time, the stories originally created by George Lucas have spawned 11 feature films, a growing list of TV shows, and more Star Wars toys than Endor has forests. 

There may be no other entertainment franchise in the U.S. that's enjoyed the same long-term success as Star Wars, and that's why in this episode of The Bottom Line we're taking a closer look at how the space opera about a moisture farmer from Tatooine has become an out of this world success for Disney. 

Disney hasn't always owned Star Wars of course. The company acquired the franchise from George Lucas back in 2012 for just over $4 billion.  

That may seem like a huge sum, but Disney has earned back its initial investment, and plenty more, since then. 

Take, for example, the latest films in the Star Wars saga. Since Disney's purchase, there have been four new Star Wars films, and the fifth one -- the last installment of the newest trilogy -- is about to be released. 

These four films have grossed combined worldwide ticket sales of more $4.8 billion. This makes Star Wars the No. 2 top-grossing film franchise, second only to the Marvel Cinematic Universe franchise, which is also owned by Disney. 

Each one of the Star Wars films released under Disney has brought in $1 billion or more in ticket sales, save for Solo, which was only made $450 million. The Force Awakens, the first film of the latest trilogy, earned more than $2 billion in worldwide ticket sales alone.

And Episode IX: The Rise of Skywalker film is likely to be Death Star-sized success for Disney as the film will be the final conclusion to the original Star Wars story that began back in 1977.

But aside from making money hand over fist from blockbuster Star Wars films, Disney is also using the franchise to launch its new video streaming service into hyperspace.

One of the biggest draws to the company's new streaming service, called Disney+, has been the first live-action Star Wars show called The Mandalorian

Disney+ boasted more than 10 million subscribers just a few weeks after it launched and while it's not clear that The Mandalorian is the biggest contributing factor to these sign-ups because well, it's easier to steal plans for the Death Star than it is to get video figures from Disney, it's likely that the new show has had a significant positive impact on Disney+'s early success. 

Bob Iger, Walt Disney's CEO, said on the company's recent earnings call that,

"The first live-action Star Wars series is unlike anything audiences have seen before on any platform and it's a strong indication of the quality in the storytelling that will define Disney+." 

It appears that this move is already paying off for Disney, because according to some third-party data, The Mandalorian is one of the most in-demand TV shows right now, outpacing Netflix's Stranger Things, based on streaming data, social media engagement, and other online research metrics.

And in true Disney fashion, the company is poised to capitalize on this Star Wars interest to the fullest degree. 

Disney already has an Obi-Wan live-action show, starring Ewan McGregor reprising his role from the prequel trilogy, that will debut on Disney+ some time in 2021. 

Additionally, Disney will also release another live-action show based on Rogue One character, Cassian Andor, that will be a prequel to the 2016 movie.

The combination of classic Star Wars films and brand new shows means that Disney has an unprecedented potential to benefit from Star Wars on its new streaming service. 

But there's two more ways that Disney is benefiting from its Star Wars purchase: an it involves turnstiles and toys -- lots and lots of toys

Just before The Force Awakens hit theaters theaters in 2015, Disney launched a massive Force Friday event where coordinated unboxing videos of new Star Wars merchandise were shown on YouTube, just as the merchandise was hitting store shelves and online stores worldwide. 

Force Friday was a massive success for Disney and spurred an estimated $1 billion in sales in just one day.

Of course, that wasn't the extent of sales. The estimated 12-month sales of Star Wars merchandise in the year following the The Force Awakens' release is between $3 billion to $5 billion. 

And last, but certainly not least, Disney is just beginning to benefit from Star Wars through its new Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge lands that recently opened at both Disneyland and Walt Disney World. 

Each park came with a price tag of about $1 billion and while some reports indicated that initial demand wasn't strong for Galaxy's Edge, Disney has pushed back on the suggestion.

The chairman of Disney's Parks, Experiences and Consumer Experiences, Bob Chapek, has said that "I will tell you that Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge has exceeded every expectation we've had."

Disney's parks are an extremely important part of the company's overall business. For the full fiscal 2019 year, revenue from its parks, experiences, and products segment increased by 6% to more than $26 billion.

With the new Star Wars lands just getting started, there's plenty of time for Disney to reap the rewards from future travelers to the outer rim. 

Disney has perfected the system of creating massive box-office hits that become vehicles for selling merchandise and theme park tickets long after the films leave theaters. 

With Star Wars, Disney is plugging in an extremely popular story and characters into its lucrative formula, to generate billions of dollars for years to come. 

And with the company benefiting from Star Wars in entirely new ways through its new video streaming service, there's virtually no end to how valuable this interstellar franchise will be for Disney.

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Options trader makes big bet on gold into 2020 - CNBC

Gold is about to end the decade on a high note, and will close out this year with its best performance since 2010. Bullion has bounced 19% this year, even as stocks have soared to all-time highs.

This has been great news for the gold miners, and the GDX ETF that tracks the space, which has gained 40% this year. Against the broader market, that represents significant outperformance, and one trader in the options market is betting on even bigger gains to come for one name in the group.

"We saw two times the average daily call volume in Newmont Goldcorp today, and the trade that I was taking a look at was somebody betting ... that the stock is breaking out here." Optimize Advisors President Michael Khouw said Monday on "Fast Money."

Newmont is up 26% in 2019, which isn't too shabby, but it is still underperforming its peer group by about 14 percentage points. However, if gold keeps shining brighter, this trader is betting that Newmont could start to catch up.

"They were buying the January 45.5 calls. Seven hundred and fifteen of those traded for about 21 cents, and the buyer of those calls is obviously betting that the stock is going to finish above that strike price by January expiration, which is two weeks from this coming Friday," said Khouw, "And that would represent a 5% increase from where the stock finished the day today."

Betting on a 5% rally from here over the next two weeks might not be unreasonable, either. Newmont has surged about 14% in the last month, making it one of the groups best performers in that time period. If the stock can extend that pace for two more weeks, this bet would pay off.

Newmont was trading slightly lower Tuesday morning.

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Treasury yields end the year off the lows, but still down big for 2019 - CNBC

The 10-year Treasury yield is still poised to have the biggest decline in six years despite a year-end rebound that's softened the decline.

The yield on the benchmark Treasury note has risen about 11 basis points in December to about 1.9%, but it's still down 78 basis points on the year, on pace for its biggest annual drop since 2013. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

On Tuesday, the last trading day of the year, the yield on the 10-year Treasury note climbed about 2 basis points, while the yield on the 30-year Treasury note rose nearly 3basis point to about 2.37%. The bond market will close at 2 p.m. ET.

U.S. rates started 2019 in a downward spiral as investors fled risk assets and flocked to safety amid an escalated U.S.-China trade war and deteriorating economic data. Adding to rates' downward pressure was the anticipation that the Federal Reserve will lower borrowing costs to combat a slowing economy.

The central bank embarked on what it characterized as a "mid-cycle adjustment," cutting borrowing costs three straight times, which further pushed rates down.

Over the summer, the yield on 10-year Treasuries dipped below those on two-year securities for the first time since before the financial crisis in 2007, an unusual phenomenon called yield-curve inversion that preceded previous recessions.

"Phase one" trade deal

U.S. government debt yields started to rise across the board in September after the U.S. and China agreed on a truce in their tit-for-tat tariff war and started to negotiate a deal.

Investors began taking on more risk on the back of the optimism over U.S.-China trade relations. At the same time, economic data in the U.S. and overseas showed signs of improvement, which sparked a rally in yields.

Treasury yields are on pace for the biggest monthly climb since September after the world's two largest economies agreed earlier this month to a so-called "phase one" trade deal. President Donald Trump said Tuesday he will sign the deal with high-level Chinese representatives at the White House on Jan. 15.

For 2020, many expect rates continue to rebound amid an improving economic outlook.

"We're anticipating a bearish start to 2020 in Treasuries as economic optimism inspires a backup in rates and the hope that the Fed is able to avoid a recession lifts yields to begin the year," Ian Lyngen, BMO's head of U.S. rates, said in a note.

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U.S. Tariffs on French Goods Could Be a Big Opportunity for Italian Winemakers - Fortune

Italian Winemakers Could Find Big Opportunities in U.S. Tariffs on French Wine | Fortune

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Premier League preview: Man United play well against big teams, but does that count Arsenal? - ESPN

Everything you need to know about this weekend's Premier League action, all in one place.

Jump to: Can Liverpool keep this up? | Can Saints threaten Spurs? | Can Ancelotti pick up a big win? | Man to watch | Match to watch | Stats of the weekend | Team that needs some luck | One thing that will definitely happen | Predictions

The weekend's big questions

Can Liverpool really keep this up?

You would hesitate to call a team who have taken 82 from the last available 84 points lucky in any respect, but there was an element of fortune to Liverpool's win over Wolves at the weekend, even ignoring the intervention of VAR. They're brilliant, but there's a seat-of-the-pants element to Liverpool's play that a) makes games pretty exciting and not quite the inevitable processions that Pep Guardiola oversaw at Manchester City's peak last season, but also b) leaves you with the nagging feeling that it might all go wrong soon.

If it's going to go wrong against anyone, it might be Sheffield United, Chris Wilder's insanely well-drilled and dynamic side that have stunned many big teams this season. And they nearly did that to Liverpool in October too; that game only ended in victory for the league leaders after a calamitous error by Blades keeper Dean Henderson. So with all of that in mind, it won't be the most colossal shock if the Blades got something from this game.

Will Saints pose a significant threat to Spurs?

Now this is a tricky game to call. The nine places separating the teams in the table would suggest only one result, but Southampton have looked revitalised in recent weeks. Their past three results -- wins at Aston Villa and Chelsea, a solid point against Crystal Palace -- suggest a team that have turned a corner. And then there's Tottenham, not entirely convincing against Brighton and not in the least convincing against Norwich, performances disjointed and defence uncertain.

On form, you would probably be better putting your money on Saints, which feels like an odd thing to write given the deep problems their team have suffered this season. And if Spurs lose, one wonders if that will a) cause some deep introspection from Jose Mourinho and b) change any of their plans going into the January transfer window.

Will Ancelotti turn his gravitas into a big win for Everton?

Who knows whether Carlo Ancelotti is what Everton need in the long run, but his immediate impact has been clear: they look much better, and what's more they look like a team managed by a grown-up. But now for a real test of how much better they are under him: a trip to Manchester City, who might not be the impregnable force we thought they were last season, but they're still a significant foe. Everton are now managed by someone with real gravitas, but that's all ephemeral until he converts that into real points and performances. And what better way to prove that than by beating City and Guardiola.

Man to watch

David Moyes

The thought process behind bringing manager David Moyes back to West Ham is an interesting one. He did a good job in keeping them in the Premier League in 2017-18, was justified in thinking he deserved a longer contract than the six months he was initially awarded, and in ultimately walking away when no such contract materialised. So is this a mea culpa from West Ham, a recognition that they got things wrong in allowing Moyes to go? Did they actually get it wrong, or was it just the identity of the replacement that was the error?

And how will Moyes approach this? One of the reasons they went elsewhere 18 months ago was his style of play, with games at the London Stadium grim affairs, which was possibly because they had to be in the circumstances, but they were unenjoyable all the same. Will he change that, or will he simply view them returning, cap in hand, as a sign that he was right all along?

play

0:40

David Moyes says he hopes to pick up where he left off with West Ham.

The game you're not planning to watch, but should

West Ham vs. Bournemouth

Quite apart from the Moyes factor, this is a game between two floundering teams who are desperate for a result, who are both very much in the relegation scrap. That might be enough to hold your interest on its own, but it will also be interesting to see what changes about both sides: Moyes will obviously have a different approach than Manuel Pellegrini, and Bournemouth's results and performances recently surely mean that Eddie Howe will have to alter something. Tune in -- this one could be grimly fascinating.

Stats of the weekend

- Chelsea have won all nine of their league meetings with Brighton -- the best such record in English football league history.

- Leicester have won 42 points from their opening 20 Premier League games this season (W13 D3 L4) -- two more than they had after 20 games in 2015-16, when they won the league.

- Tottenham haven't lost their first league game of a calendar year since 2009 (0-1 at Wigan), winning eight and drawing two since then. They have also won their last six Premier League matches played on New Year's Day.

- Carlo Ancelotti is looking to become only the second Everton manager to win each of his first three Premier League games in charge of the club, after Joe Royle in 1994.

- No team has won more Premier League games on New Year's Day than Arsenal (9). The Gunners are unbeaten in their past three Premier League meetings against Man Utd (W1 D2) -- they've not gone four without defeat against them since February 1999 (W3 D1).

The team that needs a bit of luck

Arsenal

For 30 minutes against Chelsea, we saw sparks of what this Arsenal could be. Then of course they collapsed in entirely predictable fashion and we remembered what they actually are, and have been for a while. The trick for Mikel Arteta is to imbue his team with more of the former and less of the latter, which is obviously easier said than done and will take time. But a useful shortcut would be victory over Manchester United, by any means necessary, and outright fortune very much counts. That would boost confidence, and if there's anyone in the Gunners' dressing room doubting Arteta, then victory here might solve that.

One thing that will definitely happen

Man United are playing a big team, so they will play well

This game will be an interesting test of Manchester United's odd habit of playing well against the big teams but struggling more often than they should against the strugglers. Which are Arsenal? Technically a big team, but one in 12th place, closer to the relegation zone than the Champions League places and who have won only one in their past 12 league games. What is it that United seem to respond to: the actual quality of their opposition or the occasion? On a more tangible level, victory in this one could take United within a point of the top four, which is pretty decent going for a team who haven't actually looked any good for most of the season.

Predictions

Brighton 0-2 Chelsea
Burnley 1-0 Aston Villa
Newcastle United 1-3 Leicester City
Southampton 2-1 Tottenham
Watford 1-1 Wolverhampton Wanderers
Norwich City 1-1 Crystal Palace
West Ham United 0-0 Bournemouth
Manchester City 3-2 Everton
Arsenal 1-2 Manchester United
Liverpool 3-1 Sheffield United

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This decade saw Warren Buffett finally turn his back on IBM and jump big time into Apple - CNBC

As we get ready to say goodbye to the 2010s, CNBC.com is taking a look back at the key players, events and transformations from Wall Street to Silicon Valley to corporate America to the White House that shaped a "Decade of Disruption." In the lead-up to New Year's Day 2020, CNBC's online journalists will be exploring the moments that defined the past 10 years for your money and set the table for the next decade and beyond.

One of Warren Buffett's biggest investment mistakes, IBM, played out over an agonizing seven-year stretch this decade, which saw the stock plummet along with the company's fortunes. However, the Berkshire Hathaway chief was undaunted by his misstep in technology, a sector he generally avoided as a self-admitted Luddite. While fully exiting IBM in the early part of 2018, Buffett simultaneously revealed to CNBC that Berkshire Hathaway amassed an even bigger stake in Apple, which by late 2019 would become his most valuable holding.

Berkshire's transition out of IBM and in to Apple marked a changing of the guard in technology. IBM and Apple, rival computer-makers in the 1980s, took very different paths over the years, with IBM struggling to capitalize on its focus on enterprise and Apple emerging and thriving as a dominant force in consumer electronics with the iPhone.

Berkshire started buying IBM shares in 2011

Buffett's IBM debacle began in November 2011 when he said on "Squawk Box" that Berkshire Hathaway bought 64 million shares at an average price of $170 each, valuing the stake at the time at $10.7 billion. Buffett said he went against his no-tech-company-rule because he'd been "hit between the eyes" by how IBM finds and keeps clients. "It's a company that helps IT departments do their job better," he added. "There is a lot of continuity to it."

However, by the time he told CNBC's Becky Quick in May 2018 that Berkshire Hathaway no longer owned any IBM stock, the tech company had suffered nearly six years of declining revenue and a share price sinking into the mid-$140 range.

Wasting no time licking his wounds, Buffett said, in that same May 2018 CNBC interview, that Berkshire Hathaway bought 75 million more Apple shares, adding to its already huge stake at the time of 165.3 million shares.

In a statement to CNBC then, Apple CEO Tim Cook said the company is "thrilled to have Warren and Berkshire Hathaway as a major investor." Cook added, "On a personal level, I've always greatly admired Warren and have always been grateful for his insight and advice."

Berkshire buys small Apple stake in 2016, then goes big

Berkshire Hathaway, through one of Buffett's lieutenants, bought its first 10 million Apple shares in May 2016. In February 2017, Buffett, who didn't even personally own an iPhone, told CNBC that Berkshire added almost 76 million Apple shares to its holdings the prior month. "Apple strikes me as having quite a sticky product, and an enormously useful product to people that use it," Buffett told CNBC.

Buffett also said in February 2017 that he was more certain about Apple's future than that of IBM. Five months later, he said he lost confidence in IBM. "When it got above $180 we actually sold a reasonable amount of stock," he said at the time. About a year later, he was out of IBM completely.

Apple is Berkshire's most valuable holding at $72 billion

As of Sept. 30, 2019, Berkshire Hathaway held nearly 249 million shares of Apple. Based on Apple's $291.52 closing share price Monday, Berkshire's Apple stake was worth more than $72 billion. Apple stock hit an all-time, intraday high of $293.97 on Friday. On a closing basis in 2019, Apple is up a stunning 85% as of Monday, far and away the best performing component this year of the 30 stocks that comprise the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Berkshire owns all or parts of over 60 companies including Geico auto insurance, Nebraska Furniture Mart, running-shoe maker Brooks and NetJets. It also buys stocks in blue chip companies and tends to hold them over a number of years.

After Apple, rounding out Berkshire's top five holdings by market value are Bank of America, Coca-Cola, Wells Fargo and American Express. Berkshire also has major stakes in dozens of other household names such as Kraft Heinz, J.P. Morgan Chase, General Motors and Amazon.

Buffett said in the past that he admired what Jeff Bezos did with Amazon but was too late to the buy stock. Earlier this year, however, one of his lieutenants started buying Amazon, building up a stake worth nearly $1 billion based on Amazon's $1,846.89 close on Monday. (Buffett's Berkshire, Bezos' Amazon, and J.P. Morgan, run by Jamie Dimon, all work together in a joint venture called Haven, which aims to figure out how to reduce health-care costs.)

How Buffett become one of the richest in the world

Buffett, who bought his first stock at age 11, has become one of the most successful and celebrated investors of all time and earned the nickname The Oracle of Omaha. He built Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire Hathaway into an investment powerhouse. Berkshire's annual shareholders meeting, which has been called the Woodstock of Capitalism, draws tens of thousands of the Buffett-faithful to Omaha every year.

As of Monday, according to Forbes, Buffett is the third richest person in the world, with a net worth of nearly $90 billion. He has promised to give nearly all of his fortune away to charity. He started The Giving Pledge with Bill and Melinda Gates in 2010, which gets other billionaires to commit to giving a majority their money away to "address some of society's most pressing problems." More than 200 of the world's wealthiest people have made the pledge.

While a wildly successful investor and a generous philanthropist, Buffett is also known for his frugality. He likes eating at McDonald's and drinking Coke. He still lives in the same house he bought in 1958.

With Berkshire's 2019 annual meeting in the books, users can revisit the highlights in CNBC's Warren Buffett Archive, which houses searchable video from 25 full annual meetings, going back to 1994, synchronized to 2,600 pages of transcripts. The Warren Buffett Archive also includes 500 shorter-form videos arranged by topic, CNBC interviews, a Buffett Timeline and a Berkshire Portfolio Tracker.

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田中みな実「大きい胸がコンプレックスで」 転機は“美乳特集”? - ananweb

アンアンの表紙は私の転機になりました。

23

――芸人さんたちにツッコまれてもうまくかわしながら、ちゃんと答える姿がかっこいいと思っていました。元カレのことも、普通に答えているのはすごい!

田中:5年前の話なんですけどね(笑)。でもテレビに出る者同士がお付き合いしたら、他人の興味は一生ついてくるのは宿命だと知りました。

――その潔さが、さらに女性の支持を集める理由かも。特にここ数年は目覚ましい活躍をされていますが、転機はあったのでしょうか。

田中:2年前の美乳特集で表紙をやらせていただいたアンアンが大きなきっかけになったのかもしれません。大きい胸がコンプレックスで、中高は女子校だったからそこまで気にならなかったけど、大学に入るとそういう目で見られるのがイヤで、ぴったりしたニットなんて着られなかった。局アナ時代は、わざわざ胸を潰して服を着ていたぐらい。でもさらけ出してみたら世間の反応は意外なものでした。大きさは変えられない。だったら、少しでも美しく見えた方がいい。そう思ってスポブラやブラトップをやめ、将来のバストのことを考えたセミオーダーの自分の胸に合ったものを使うようになりました。おっぱいエステに行ったり、日々のケアで質感をよくしたり、今まで目を背けていたパーツを愛でてあげるようになってからは、ケアやトレーニングがますます楽しみになりました。

――田中さんの“肘ブラ”ポーズは、忘れられないです。しかもあの号はすぐに完売してしまい、編集部で恒例の完売パーティをしました(笑)。今では、すっかり美ボディの代表の一人ですよね。

田中:えー、完売パーティ行きたかった(笑)。とても大きく話題にしていただいて、そこからボディ系の撮影依頼が増えました。もともと2か月でやめようと思っていたトレーニングも、やめるにやめられなくなり、気付けば美ボディキャラなんて言われて。しばらくトレーニングは続けなきゃ。

――女性の憧れボディです!

田中:“ぶりっ子をやめてビューティキャラになった”なんて言われたりもしますが、周りが新しいキャラを決めてくれるのはある意味ありがたいこと。イメージというものは自分で作るのには限界があって、周囲が決めるものじゃないかなと思っていて。だからビューティキャラであろうが、闇深いキャラであろうが、そこに乗っかっておきます。私自身は変わっていないんだもの。今もぶりっ子を持ち合わせていると思うし。

――ぶりっ子は本性なんですか?

田中:はい、多分。みんな少なからず、そういう面があるんじゃないかな。女の子なら一度くらい好きな人の前でかわい子ぶったことありません? それをマイナスと捉えたことがないの。女である以上、持ち得る武器は全部使いたいと思っている派(笑)。男性と同等の権利を主張したいとも思わない。か弱くて守ってもらえるなら甘えていいよねって。考え方は様々だと思うけど、これもひとつの生き方として、間違ってはいない…かな? 少なくとも私はぶりっ子キャラともうまく共存していくつもりです。

――2020年の目標は決まっていますか?

田中:結婚かな(即答)。

――え! 本当ですか?

田中:え、はい。一般的な33歳独身女性の反応でしょ(笑)。写真集をやりきった今、とっても清々しい気分。たくさんの反響もいただいて、仕事的には大満足の2019年だったから、そろそろ結婚! …って何の見通しもないのですが、とりあえず言っておこうと思います。

田中みな実写真集『Sincerely yours…』(宝島社)が発売中。全カット、スペイン・バルセロナにて2019年秋に撮影。田舎町のガウディ建築の別宅や、中心地の旧市街、世界遺産、ビーチなど美しい景色や自然の中、すっぴんも公開。無邪気な笑顔、32歳(撮影当時)の色気を感じさせるショットまで、贅沢に詰まった一冊。撮影は伊藤彰紀さん。

たなか・みなみ 1986年11月23日生まれ、埼玉県出身。青山学院大学卒業後、TBSテレビへ入社し、アナウンサーに。『サンデージャポン』などの人気番組を担当した。2014年に同局を退社しフリーに転身。MCの仕事をしながら仕事のフィールドを広げ、女優としてドラマ『モトカレマニア』(フジテレビ系)にも出演するなど活躍中。

ワンピース¥22,000(エムエルエム レーベル) シューズ¥21,500(ソル サナ) 共にジャック・オブ・オール・トレーズ プレスルーム TEL:03・3401・5001

※『anan』2019年1月1日-8日合併号より。写真・小笠原真紀 スタイリスト・NIMU(まきうらオフィス) ヘア&メイク・AYA(LA DONNA) インタビュー、文・若山あや

(by anan編集部)

エンタメ-記事をもっと読む-_バナー

池田エライザさんのヘルシービューティのヒミツ

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"大きい" - Google ニュース
December 31, 2019 at 07:04PM
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田中みな実「大きい胸がコンプレックスで」 転機は“美乳特集”? - ananweb
"大きい" - Google ニュース
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