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  • Morning News: September 26, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 26th, 2023 at 7:05 am

    Who’s Afraid of $100 Oil?

    Can the U.S. Make Solar Panels? This Company Thinks So.

    Slowing, Graying and in Debt, Can China’s Industrial Heartland Be Revived?

    Ford Tried to Sell the Electric Mustang to China the Tesla Way—It Didn’t Work

    Teetering China Property Giants Undercut Xi’s Revival Push

    World’s Mega-Rich Are Betting on US Renters to Grow Their Billions

    The Very Rich Are Often Bad Investors. Here’s Why

    Only Richest 20% of Americans Still Have Excess Pandemic Savings

    Banks in EU Largely Comply with ‘Basel Endgame’, Says Watchdog

    Bond Traders Roiled by Fed See US Shutdown as Next Big Wild Card

    Shutdown Would Blindfold Fed in Piloting Course on Rates

    Dimon Warns World Not Ready for 7% Fed Rate

    Wall Street Echoes Fed’s View on Growth, Higher-for-Longer Rates

    UAW Fight Against Billions in Buybacks Forces Investor Rethink

    Why Biden and Trump Are Courting Striking Autoworkers

    Auto CEOs Make 300 Times What Workers Make. How That Stacks Up

    Why Ford Has Been More Willing to Work With the UAW Than GM or Stellantis

    Corporate America Promised to Hire a Lot More People of Color. It Actually Did

    Cisco’s $28 Billion Splunk Deal May Ignite Software Deal Frenzy

    As Its U.S. Shop Opens, TikTok’s Chinese Merchants Struggle to Sell Their Mops and Soap Dispensers

    Sam Bankman-Fried’s Trial to Test Dueling Explanations for FTX’s Collapse

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 25, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 25th, 2023 at 7:05 am

    Greece, Battered a Decade Ago, Is Booming

    China Developers Drop Most in 9 Months on Evergrande Woes

    Hedge Fund Boom Turns Into Hangover on Brazil Rate Surge

    Britain Grapples for Agreement Over Listing Rules Overhaul

    Private Equity’s Slow Carnage Unleashes a Wave of Zombies

    Ermotti Sees Good Momentum in Recovering Credit Suisse Funds

    Why Traders Aren’t Buying the Fed’s ‘Higher-for-Longer’ Vision

    Wall Street Is Hoping $100 Oil Ain’t What It Used to Be

    Shutdowns Cost Billions as US Federal Workers Paid to Stay Home

    Railroads to Receive $1.4 Billion for Fixes and Upgrades

    Ex-Wall Streeters Help Washington Divvy Up $100 Billion to Win the Global Chip Race

    Broadcom’s AI Business Won’t Be Easy to Chip Away

    Amazon to Invest Up to $4 Billion in AI Startup Anthropic

    Apple’s Cheapest iPhone 15 Is Winning Buyers After Upgrades

    Booking’s €1.6 Billion Etraveli Deal Blocked by EU

    Tata Steel Raised to Investment Grade by Moody’s

    Lego’s Latest Effort to Avoid Oil-Based Plastic Hits Brick Wall

    Where Did All the Dark-Suited Japanese Businessmen Go?

    Why America Has a Long-Term Labor Crisis in Six Charts

    Hollywood Screenwriters Reach Tentative Deal to End Strike

    How a Storied National Airline Became Reviled in Its Own Country

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 22, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 22nd, 2023 at 7:03 am

    Higher Rates Are Supercharging Japan’s Banks

    Real Estate Crisis Triggers New Alarms Over China’s Shadow Banks

    China’s Ultra-Rich Gen Zs Flock Home as Global Tensions Rise

    Shein Shifts Shipping Strategy to Bring China-Made Goods Closer to US Shoppers

    To Beat Starbucks in China, Homegrown Chains Open a New Cafe Every Hour

    The Hidden Threat to US Energy Security

    Supply Chain Hurdles Complicate Food Companies’ Climate Pledges

    UAW Expected to Announce More Auto-Plant Strikes on Friday

    Auto Industry Finance Chiefs Watch for Ripple Effects From UAW Strike

    Did Poverty Soar Last Year? It Depends How You Measure It

    When Rates Drop, They Usually Plunge. The Fed Thinks Different

    Fed Is Cutting Staff After More than a Decade of Payroll Growth

    Wall Street Strategists Turn Ever Bullish Just as Stocks Slump

    What C.E.O.s Mean When They Talk About ‘Moats’

    Apple’s iPhone 15 Goes on Sale in Test of Holiday Resurgence

    Microsoft’s Activision Deal Set to Clear Final UK Hurdle

    Once Silicon Valley’s Star, Cisco Looks to Splunk for Fresh Mojo

    Lachlan Murdoch Inherits Media Empire and Daunting Task as Rupert Retires

    Amazon Prime Video Content to Include Ads Starting Next Year

    Holy Fish and Chips, Batman! DC Studios Moves Hub to England

    Deion Sanders Is Writing College Football’s New Playbook

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 21, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 21st, 2023 at 7:04 am

    Russia Temporarily Limits Diesel and Gasoline Exports

    Trudeau’s Mega Pipeline Promises to Redraw Global Oil Flows

    Chevron Agrees to Regulator’s Plan to End Australia LNG Strikes

    Hong Kong Says It Calls the Shots, Not Beijing. Investors Are Wary

    Naira Plunges Toward 1,000 on Street Amid ‘Stampede’ for Dollars

    Pound Slides to Six Month Low as BOE Rate Hikes Grind to Halt

    Sweden’s Central Bank Raises Rates to 4%, In Line with Expectations

    Higher Interest Rates Not Just for Longer, but Maybe Forever

    Fed Signals Higher-for-Longer Rates With Hikes Almost Finished

    What Fed Rate Moves Mean for Mortgages, Credit Cards and More

    Klaviyo Shares Soar in Debut, Pointing to IPO Resurgence

    Ex-Goldman Bankers Make a Fortune With Controversial Bet on Coal

    BlackRock, State Street Among Money Managers Closing ESG Funds

    Corporate America Brings Its New Skinny Look to Stock Market

    Defense Department Awards Chip Funding to Fuel Domestic Research

    GPUs Transformed AI. Now They’re Here for Quantum

    Cisco to Buy Splunk for $157-a-Share in $28 Billion Deal

    Toshiba Shareholders Approve $13.5 Billion Deal to Take Company Private

    FedEx Earnings Rise Despite Weakened Demand

    The United Auto Workers Is Overplaying Its Hand, Risking Our Economy and the Election

    The Newest Addition to the Office Wardrobe? Serious Athletic Sneakers

    The Lawyers Sam Bankman-Fried Once Trusted Are Drawing Criticism

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 20, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 20th, 2023 at 7:05 am

    German Industry Defies Rising Pressure to Limit China Exposure

    U.K. Inflation Rate Slips Lower for Third Straight Month

    Naira Crashes to Record Low on Street as Dollar Supply Dries Up

    Dollar Rally Is Crushing One of the Most Popular Trades of 2023

    Fed Set to Pause Rate Hikes, But Don’t Count Out Another Increase

    Gas Prices Have Crept Higher This Summer, a Challenge for the Fed

    How $100 Oil Could Scramble the Fed’s Fight Against Inflation

    Instacart Rally Set to Fade on Second Day After $660 Million IPO

    Instacart Founder Exits With $1.1 Billion Fortune After IPO

    JIP Says $14 Billion Tender Offer for Toshiba Set to Succeed

    FedEx Wins Over Wall Street With $6 Billion Cuts, Gains on UPS

    California’s Zero-Emissions Rule Triggers a Run on Diesel Rigs

    Unions Fight in the States to Make Biden’s Climate Agenda Work for Workers

    UAW Eyes Next Strike Targets as Parts Shortages Begin to Hit

    Ford Averts Second Strike, Secures New Labor Contract in Canada

    American Labor’s Real Problem: It Isn’t Productive Enough

    Why US Hotels Are Missing More Than 238,000 Employees

    Nearly Half of All Young Adults Live With Mom and Dad — and They Like It

    Weekly Mortgage Demand Increases, Driven by a Strange Surge in Refinancing

    Fed-Up Consumers Are Increasingly Going After Food Companies for Misleading Claims

    Marlboro Maker Hits Reset on $2 Billion Bet on Medicine

    ‘Million Dollar Listing’ Star Co-Founds Media Business About Real Estate

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • CWS Market Review – September 19, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 19th, 2023 at 10:19 pm

    (This is the free version of CWS Market Review. If you like what you see, then please sign up for the premium newsletter for $20 per month or $200 for the whole year. If you sign up today, you can see our two reports, “Your Handy Guide to Stock Orders” and “How Not to Get Screwed on Your Mortgage.”)

    Expect the Fed to Pause

    The Federal Reserve began its two-day meeting today. The policy statement will be out tomorrow afternoon at 2 p.m. ET. Don’t expect any hikes from the Fed tomorrow. They’ll almost certainly keep their target range for interest rates at 5.25% to 5.50%.

    For November, I suspect that the Fed is leaning towards another pause, but that’s far from certain. There’s a lot of data due out between now and then. The financial world will be paying close attention to what Jerome Powell says tomorrow.

    The Fed will also update its Summary of Economic Projections (SEP). In the last batch, a majority of the Fed saw the need for a rate hike before the end of the year, but futures traders aren’t so sure. In fact, the futures market doesn’t see the Fed making any moves for the next 10 months. There’s a very real chance that this is the highest the Fed will go.

    While there’s been encouraging news on inflation, there are still some trouble spots. In particular, energy prices have been rising rapidly in recent weeks. Later on, I’ll discuss the dizzying rally in orange juice.

    The bond market is sensing some pressure. Earlier today, the yield on the two-year Treasury reached its highest close in 17 years. The 10-year touched its highest close in 16 years.

    There’s some talk on Wall Street that tomorrow, the Fed will offer a “hawkish hold,” meaning that the Fed will try to sound tough even though its actions may not back that up.

    At one point today, the S&P 500 dropped as low as 4,416. That was the index’s lowest intra-day level since August 28. For the third day in a row, the S&P 500 closed below its 50-day moving average.

    Instacart Goes Public

    Shares of Instacart (CART) went public today. Today’s offering has received a lot of attention on Wall Street. The ticker symbol is CART.

    For the first time in two years, there’s some buzz in the IPO market. The target range for CART was originally $26 to $28 per share. The underwriters then raised it to $28 to $30 per share. Last night, the shares were priced at $30, and the stock started trading today at $42 per share.

    Investors are finally interested again in new issues. I’m not surprised that it’s taken some time. Many of the companies that went to the market two or three years ago were complete duds. There are few things as scary as a market hungry for anything new. To give you an example, in 2021, there was even talk of Instacart being worth $40 billion. At its height, DoorDash was worth $72 billion. (!!!)

    Instacart’s underwriters sold 22 million shares for $30 a pop. That raised $660 million for Instacart. Instacart now has a market value of $10 billion.

    You might think that’s a lot of money for a company that delivers groceries, and I would agree. The issue, however, is that Instacart isn’t in the business of delivering groceries.

    Instead, it’s in the data business, and there are a lot of numbers to be gleaned from tracking how CART’s customers shop.

    So technically, yes, Instacart will deliver groceries, but that’s merely a front for getting data which is hugely important to advertisers.

    Advertising now makes up 30% of Instacart’s revenue. The company had sales of $740 million that didn’t come from shopping.

    Making a service that’s a front for advertiser dollars isn’t something new. That’s largely the idea behind companies like Google and Facebook (sorry, Alphabet and Meta). Another company that’s worked to profit off data is our very own Intercontinental Exchange. The company has expanded into mortgage analytics, which is a field ripe for disruption. They want to own all the numbers.

    Instacart was a big hit during the pandemic, but I’m not sure how long-lasting its success will be. According to the company, online shopping only makes up about one-eighth of grocery sales. The industry still has some problems it needs to work out.

    Instacart had wanted to IPO several months ago, but a soggy IPO market and an active Fed helped put that on hold.

    In its filings, Instacart said its revenues were up 31% to $1.5 billion during the first half of this year. CART had a new profit of $242 million compared with a net loss of $74 million last year. In my opinion, CART’s valuation is pricey but not outrageous.

    Buying groceries online may prove to be different from shopping via Amazon. I suspect that there’s something people simply prefer about going to a store and seeing the items on display, especially something they’re going to eat.

    There are more IPOs on the way. Birkenstock is looking to go public next month. Next year could be a big year for IPOs.

    The Great Orange Juice Rally

    While the stock market’s been fairly calm lately, the real action is going on in the commodity pits, especially orange juice futures. The price for OJ just hit a new all-time high.

    On Wall Street, they trade just about anything, and that includes frozen concentrated orange juice, and in recent months, the price for OJ futures has soared.

    Orange is apparently no longer the new black – it’s the new gold.

    In the last year, OJ futures are up about 60%. The rally’s been spurred on by a combination of lousy weather and a nasty citrus disease. I hate to use the cliché “a perfect storm,” but that’s what’s happening. There’s simply not enough supply to go around.

    Florida is the heartland of America’s citrus crop, and the Sunshine State was hit hard last year by Hurricanes Ian and Nicole. The Department of Agriculture said that Florida has its smallest orange harvest in over 100 years. Some farmers are selling their land, believing that they can get more for it than by growing oranges.

    Originally, the USDA said that Florida was expected to produce 20 million boxes of oranges. That’s less than half the amount of the year before. Now they say it will be closer to 16 million boxes. Twenty years ago, they did 240 million boxes.

    To meet demand, America has been turning to oranges from Brazil and Mexico, but the orange crops in those countries have been suffering as well. The free market has a nice little tool that it uses when supply forecasts fall short of demands — prices rise.

    Shoppers are already seeing the effect in the supermarket. This could lead to long-term lower demand for OJ especially since consumers have been sensitive to higher prices thanks to the recent bout of inflation.

    The orange juice rally is interesting to me because that’s the backdrop of Trading Places, which is probably the best movie about trading and financial markets.

    In the film, the Duke brothers crookedly get early access to the government’s crop report. That leads them to corner the market for orange juice. Instead, Louis Winthorpe (Dan Aykroyd) and Reggie Valentine (Eddie Murphy) have switched the report with a phony version.

    During the famous trading scene, once the market opens, the Dukes frantically buy orange juice. Other brokers see what’s happening and they start buying. The price for OJ skyrockets.

    As the price soars, Winthorpe and Valentine start massively shorting. The trading floor becomes a frenzy. Then trading comes to a halt as the crop report is read on the air. The report says that the year’s crop will be normal. The Dukes realize they’ve been double-crossed.

    The frantic selling continues and the price for orange juice plunges. In one trading day, the Duke brothers are wiped out and Winthorpe and Valentine have made a fortune.

    The Duke brothers are loosely based on the Hunt brothers. These were two Texas brothers, Herbert and Nelson Bunker Hunt, who tried to corner the market for silver.

    When they started their plan, silver was around $6 per ounce. By early 1980, it rose to $50 per ounce. Time Magazine estimated they made between $2 billion and $4 billion in just nine months. At one point, it was estimated that they held one-third of the world’s silver. Tiffany took out a full-page article to denounce them.

    The Hunts were convinced that the Establishment was out to crush them, and they were pretty much right. The exchange changed the margin requirement which forced the brothers to put up much more collateral. One of my first jobs in this industry was making margin calls. That’s not a metaphor. I had to actually call people to tell them they had to sell or put up more money.

    On March 27, 1980, the bottom fell out of the silver market. This is now known as “Silver Thursday.” The Hunts had to put up more money, but they couldn’t reach their margin requirement. The government was worried that Wall Street banks were so much in debt to the Hunts that if the Hunts went under, so would the banks. In other words, a silver panic could start a banking panic.

    The Hunts had finally been broken, and even today, silver is still less than half its peak from 1980.

    That’s all for now. I’ll have more for you in the next issue of CWS Market Review.

    – Eddy

    P.S. If you want more info on our ETF, you can check out the ETF’s website.

  • Morning News: September 19, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 19th, 2023 at 7:10 am

    Crisis and Bailout: The Tortuous Cycle Stalking Nations in Debt

    Global Economy Poised to Slow as Rate Hikes Bite, OECD Says

    ECB Done Hiking Rates But Cut Not Expected Until at Least July

    Once A Global Ideal, Germany’s Economy Struggles With An Energy Shock That’s Exposing Longtime Flaws

    Housing Investors Are Getting Flushed Out as Canada’s Rates Rise

    Janet Yellen Is Running Out of Time to Make a Difference on Climate

    Companies Stall Climate Action Despite Earlier Promises

    Corporations Are Picking Sides in the New Era of Economic Upheaval

    U.S. National Debt Tops $33 Trillion for First Time

    Fed Creeps Toward Next Phase in Its Fight Against Inflation

    The Most Popular Options Trade Turns a $1 Investment Into a $1,000 Stock Bet

    UBS CEO: “Momentum Is Pretty Positive”

    UAW Strike Collides With Biden’s Manufacturing Agenda

    Strike Is a High-Stakes Gamble for Autoworkers and the Labor Movement

    UAW Warns It Will Expand Strikes If No Serious Progress Is Made by Friday

    Instacart’s IPO Puts Spotlight on Its Evolution Into Ad Seller

    Google Adds ChatGPT Rival Bard to Gmail, YouTube, Docs and More

    Elon Musk Floats Charging Users for X

    Hollywood Strikes Send a Chill Through Britain’s Film Industry

    How a Squiggly Line on a Map Got ‘Barbie’ Banned in Vietnam

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 18, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 18th, 2023 at 7:04 am

    Chinese Economists Disagree With Xi Jinping. But Xi Is Right

    China’s Cash-Squeezed Country Garden Faces Another Dollar Coupon Deadline

    Xi’s Security Obsession Turns Ordinary Citizens Into Spy Hunters

    This China Trade War Isn’t About Semiconductors

    How Long Can The World’s Borrowers Hold on As Higher Rates Bite?

    Americans Can Barely Afford Homes — and That’s a Problem for Biden

    How Auto Executives Misread the UAW Ahead of Historic Strike

    Unions Keep Up Their Hardball Tactics

    Why a Soft Landing Could Prove Elusive

    Hedge Funds Just Turned Bullish on Dollar Before Key Fed Meeting

    Trillion-Dollar Industry Powering Chicago Is at Risk of Leaving

    Banks Kick Start $2.9 Billion Bond Sale for Worldpay Buyout

    Instacart’s Long-Awaited IPO to Test CEO’s Pivot, Market Rebound

    A Key Question in Google’s Trial: How Formidable Is Its Data Advantage?

    Disney India Sale Talks Draw Firms Including Reliance

    Tesla Factory Wanted in Turkey. Country’s President Calls on Musk

    Tesla, Saudi Arabia in Early Talks for EV Factory

    Clorox Says Cyberattack Is Hurting Product Availability, Will Weigh on Quarter

    Some Businesses Make ‘Woke Free’ a Selling Point

    Want to Write a Best-Selling Cookbook? Get on TikTok.

    How Prime-Time TV Will Look Different This Fall

    The Real-Life Inspiration Behind Bonfire of the Vanities

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: September 15, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 15th, 2023 at 7:04 am

    China’s Property Market Crisis Is Trouble for the Whole World

    China Economy Shows More Signs of Stability on Policy Boost

    Russia Struggles to Contain Resurgent Inflation

    Russian Central Bank Hikes Rates to 13%, Issues Hawkish Guidance

    Ireland’s Latest Fiscal Headache: What to Do With 10 Billion Euros

    IRS Shuts Door on New Pandemic Tax Credit Claims Until at Least 2024

    Dow Industrials Paying Price for Leaving Out Amazon and Alphabet

    Cathie Wood, Boaz Weinstein Among Winners From Bitcoin Fund Bet

    Biggest Hedge Funds Have Doubled Footprint in US Stocks Since 2014, Goldman Sachs Says

    Billionaire Ray Dalio Pushes for Return to Hedge Fund in Succession Clash

    SoftBank Left Millions on the Table to Engineer a Win for Masayoshi Son

    Instacart Set to Raise IPO Price Target After Successful Arm Debut

    Texas Moved to Protect Its Fragile Grid. Then Prices Skyrocketed

    United Auto Workers Go On Strike After Contract Talks Break Down

    The High Stakes Behind the U.A.W.’s Strike

    The Car Shortage Is Finally Easing. The UAW Strike Could Change That

    How Lehman’s Collapse 15 Years Ago Changed the U.S. Mortgage Industry

    Flawed US Home-Loan System Neglects the Buyers Who Need It Most

    Apple Counts on Wireless Carriers to Avoid an iPhone Slump

    Every CEO Talks Like Elon Musk Now

    Disney Says It Hasn’t Made a Decision About ABC After Report of Sale Talks

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

  • Morning News: Sepember 14, 2023
    Posted by Eddy Elfenbein on September 14th, 2023 at 7:05 am

    Russian Elite Bring Back $50 Billion of Assets as Havens Dwindle

    Copper Rises as China Cuts Reserve Requirements to Boost Economy

    EU Opens Door to Revamping Its Landmark ESG Investing Rules

    Inside Exxon’s Strategy to Downplay Climate Change

    Oil Rally Gathers Pace as US Benchmark WTI Hits $90 a Barrel

    Fuel Prices Are Soaring. Who Is Feeling the Pinch?

    U.S. Inflation Accelerated in August as Gasoline Prices Jumped

    Betting Inflation Will Keep Falling Is Still a Risky Business

    Meet the Man Making Big Banks Tremble

    The Bond Market Has Never Sounded Recession Alarms for This Long

    The Stock Market Hopes for a Hit From the Year’s Biggest Initial Public Offering

    Ray Dalio Says He Doesn’t Want to Hold Bonds, Cash ‘Is Good’

    Deutsche Bank to Hold Crypto for Institutional Clients

    SoftBank’s Arm Set to Debut on Nasdaq After Biggest IPO Since 2021

    UAW Prepares to Strike at Detroit Three Automakers, Rejects New Offers

    Biden Probably Can’t Stop a Strike Against Big 3 Carmakers

    Cable TV Is on Life Support, but a New Bundle Is Coming Alive

    Instacart Was All About Grocery Delivery. No Longer

    Bernard Arnault Built a Luxury Empire on ‘Desirability.’ Who Will Inherit It?

    How Sam Bankman-Fried’s Elite Parents Enabled His Crypto Empire

    A Hidden Reason Cities Fall Apart

    Be sure to follow me on Twitter.

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  • Eddy ElfenbeinEddy Elfenbein is a Washington, DC-based speaker, portfolio manager and editor of the blog Crossing Wall Street. His Buy List has beaten the S&P 500 by 72% over the last 19 years. (more)

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    EddyElfenbein
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    18 Feb

    Does anyone have a suit of armor, jet skis and a blowtorch I can borrow/rent? There's an experiment I'm working on.

    Reply on Twitter 1891697493907321176 Retweet on Twitter 1891697493907321176 1 Like on Twitter 1891697493907321176 12 X 1891697493907321176
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    18 Feb

    This is pretty amazing. US elections combined since 1924:
    GOP: 1,058,301,749
    DEM: 1,057,846,951
    Oth: 88,548,252

    Reply on Twitter 1891691321405948037 Retweet on Twitter 1891691321405948037 11 Like on Twitter 1891691321405948037 70 X 1891691321405948037
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    17 Feb

    Unemployment spikes in Washington, DC

    Reply on Twitter 1891634658506375671 Retweet on Twitter 1891634658506375671 2 Like on Twitter 1891634658506375671 15 X 1891634658506375671
    eddyelfenbein Eddy Elfenbein @eddyelfenbein ·
    17 Feb

    Tracking ATH

    Eddy Elfenbein @EddyElfenbein

    Let's do this:

    Reply on Twitter 1891629145735447036 Retweet on Twitter 1891629145735447036 Like on Twitter 1891629145735447036 5 X 1891629145735447036
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