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Yellen sees 'resilience' in US economy even as it cools

By - Aug 12,2023 - Last updated at Aug 12,2023

WASHINGTON — US economic growth and wage gains should "serve as a source of resilience" moving forward even if the economy continues to cool, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in remarks released on Friday.

"I still believe that there is a path to continue reducing inflation while maintaining a healthy labor market," she said, in excerpts of a speech to be delivered in Nevada next week.

"While there are risks, the evidence we've seen so far suggests that we are on such a path," Yellen added.

The world's biggest economy has defied expectations of a slowdown, picking up pace in the second quarter of the year, supported by business investment and consumer spending. Its labor market has remained robust as well.

The strength comes despite policymakers' efforts to ease demand and rein in inflation, fueling hope that the central bank's aggressive campaign of interest rate hikes will lower price increases without triggering a major recession.

Yellen noted in prepared remarks that annual inflation is now nearly six percentage points below its 9.1 per cent peak in June 2022, while the economy continues to expand.

Real average hourly earnings have increased over the past year as well, reversing some wage inequality that has accumulated in recent decades, she added.

"I expect the important gains that we've made over the past two-and-a-half years to serve as a source of resilience in the weeks and months to come, even if we see further cooling in our economy," Yellen said.

In July, consumer inflation inched up for the first time in around a year, keeping pressure on the central bank as officials mull further interest rate hikes.

But the inflation figure remains moderate compared with last year's numbers.

 

Huawei shows rebound in H1, despite sanctions

By - Aug 12,2023 - Last updated at Aug 12,2023

This photo taken on July 8, 2022 shows the Huawei logo at the company's flagship store in Shenzhen, China's southern Guangdong province (AFP photo)

BEIJING  — Chinese telecoms titan Huawei on Friday announced a pick-up in sales in January-June, the first increase since 2020, as the sanctions-battered firm works to diversify its business operations.

The Shenzhen-based company has for several years been at the centre of an intense tech standoff between China and the United States, with Washington warning its equipment could be used for state espionage, an allegation Huawei disputes.

Since 2019, sanctions have cut the company off from global supply chains that gave it access to US-made components and technologies, significantly weakening its smartphone division and forcing it to seek other sources of growth.

In the face of these challenges, Huawei said it recorded first-half revenue of 310.9 billion yuan ($43.3 billion), up 3.1 per cent on-year.

Huawei's revenue fell 5.9 per cent in the same period last year and 29.4 per cent the year before as the pandemic paralysed economic activity and consumption around the world.

Huawei's profit margin reached 15 per cent in the first half, according to the group, which did not provide other financial results.

The firm's profit margin was 5 per cent during the same period last year.

Huawei is a private, unlisted company, and is therefore not subject to the same obligations as other major firms to publish detailed results.

It was once one of the top three smartphone manufacturers in the world, along with South Korea's Samsung and US giant Apple.

Huawei's consumer products business, which oversees smartphones, saw its sales rise 2.2 per cent on-year to 103.5 billion yuan in the first half.

The firm is also the world's leading supplier of 5G communications equipment.

The United States has urged its allies to ban 5G products made by Huawei, arguing that Beijing could use them to monitor communications and data traffic overseas.

US sanctions have forced Huawei to strategically refocus on sectors such as software, connected devices, business computing and smart vehicles.

According to media reports that Huawei has declined to comment on, the company may begin producing its own chips for 5G phones this year, despite its lack of access to US technologies.

 

Alibaba announces unexpected 14% increase in quarterly revenue

By - Aug 10,2023 - Last updated at Aug 10,2023

An Alibaba sign is seen outside the company's office in Beijing on April 13, 2021 (AFP photo)

BEIJING — Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba announced an unexpected 14 per cent on-year increase in quarterly sales on Thursday, despite an economic slowdown in the country fuelled by sluggish consumption.

In the first quarter of its financial year starting on April 1, the group's revenue amounted to 234.1 billion yuan ($32.5 billion), higher than analyst forecasts.

Alibaba is a key player in China's expansive digital economy and the operator of a major online shopping platform.

The Hangzhou-based group's performance is therefore considered a barometer of domestic consumption.

Alibaba's net profit is up 51 per cent on-year, reaching 34.3 billion yuan ($4.8 billion) during the April-June period.

The latest financial results come as Alibaba embarks on the biggest restructuring in its history.

Announced in late March, the plan involves splitting the group into six distinct entities that will be able to separately pursue funding through public listings.

Recent decisions have also seen the replacement of Alibaba CEO Daniel Zhang, a key figure in the company's early development.

The executive will remain in the group, however, to lead its lucrative cloud computing branch, on which Alibaba is betting heavily.

These changes will take effect on September 10.

Zhang has been at the helm of the Alibaba empire since the 2019 departure of its founder, Jack Ma.

In addition to cloud computing and e-commerce, the group is a heavyweight in the broader Chinese tech ecosystem, with major operations across logistics, media, entertainment and artificial intelligence.

China entered deflation Wednesday for the first time since 2021, the latest sign in a long string of indicators reflecting a slowdown in the world's second-largest economy.

'Unsettled' Moscow residents tighten belts as ruble tanks

By - Aug 09,2023 - Last updated at Aug 09,2023

MOSCOW — In central Moscow, retired businessman Igor Inkin is preparing to turn down simple pleasures like dessert as the value of the ruble in his pocket continues to slide.

At 63 years old, he has seen the highs and lows of Russia's turbulent economy, but 17 months into the Kremlin's Ukraine offensive, Inkin is concerned about how to make ends meet.

The ruble has been trading around 97 against the dollar in recent days — its lowest level since March 2022, weeks after Moscow unleashed full-scale hostilities in Ukraine.

"Prices in the shops are going up and we're having to adjust our expenditures. It's very unsettling," Inkin told AFP.

"We are denying ourselves many, many things... sweets and so on."

Coupled with a year-and-a-half of unprecedented Western sanctions and a sharp drop in oil revenues, Russians are starting to feel the pinch.

Inflation has been on the rise since spring, forcing the central bank to hike its key rate to a greater-than-expected 8.5 per cent to rein in prices. 

"The situation with the ruble is especially worrying for us pensioners," Inkin said. 

For young Russians, who now face the kind of isolation their Soviet peers remember, the outlook is bleak.

President Vladimir Putin insists Moscow will weather the storm, presenting it as a historic opportunity to bolster Russia's domestic businesses and create jobs for the country's youth.

Many Muscovites echoed Putin's hope that isolation from the West would lead to a renaissance for Russian-made companies and businesses.

But, far from what is shown on Kremlin-controlled television screens, many are struggling.

Dmitry Bobrov, a 19-year-old freelance IT fixer and bicycle courier, cannot always afford spare computer parts.

"Video cards, processors... after the ruble fell their prices have gone up a lot," he said, weighed down by a large courier bag.

Western sanctions have made it harder for Russian businesses to buy goods and parts from abroad, forcing them to rely on parallel imports — goods transported via another country.

The United Kingdom on Tuesday introduced new sanctions targeting Russia's access to military equipment, adding to a long list of restrictions designed to isolate the country.

"The special military operation is also having a big impact, I think," Bobrov said, using the Kremlin term for its offensive in Ukraine. 

Around him, billboards of Western brands have largely disappeared, replaced by huge portraits of Russian soldiers.

While many Russians appear publicly stoic and receptive to the Kremlin's narrative, data show they are increasingly worried about their livelihoods.

Fearing for their savings, Russians withdrew 1 billion rubles in cash ($10.3 million) in the three days after the Wagner mercenary group staged a mutiny, according to central bank figures.

The number is some five times higher than the average of a normal three-day period in Russia.

Sofya Donets, chief economist for Russia at Renaissance Capital, said the weakening of the ruble presented no risk to the country's financial stability.

Analyst Arnaud Dubien meanwhile said the drop in the rouble was expected, reflecting the country's foreign trade.

What is not expected, he said, is that "the ruble is weakening even as the price of oil increases again". The Russian economy relies heavily on oil and gas exports.

He warned that the government must be careful not to let the ruble slip past 100 dollars to 1 ruble.

"This could fuel speculation in society that the country has fallen by the wayside," he added.

Fyodor Tikhonov, a 37-year-old working in the film industry, said putting food on the table for his family has become far pricier. 

He used to be able to buy dinner in the supermarket for around 1,000 rubles ($10).

"Now, it's minimum 2,000," the video editor said as he took his son to the shop. 

"This cannot go on forever," he said.

UAE's ADNOC awards $3.6b contract to expand gas infrastructure

By - Aug 09,2023 - Last updated at Aug 09,2023

Sea front promenade in the Emirati capital Abu Dhabi with the ADNOC headquarters (Abu Dhabi National Oil Company) office complex (centre) in the foreground (AFP file photo)

DUBAI — The United Arab Emirates' ADNOC Gas on Wednesday said it awarded a $3.6 billion contract to expand its gas processing infrastructure, including the commissioning of new processing facilities.

The contract was awarded to a joint venture between the UAE's National Petroleum Construction Company and Tecnicas Reunidas, a Spanish general contractor, according to a statement carried by the official WAM news agency.

"The scope of the contract includes the commissioning of new gas processing facilities which will enable an optimised supply to the Ruwais Industrial Complex" in the western Al Dhafra region, the statement said. 

The contract coincides with a larger plan "to enable increased gas recovery from existing fields and develop untapped resources", the statement said. 

ADNOC Gas, estimated to have the seventh largest gas reserves globally, is a subsidiary of state energy giant Abu Dhabi National Oil Company (ADNOC).

ADNOC, the UAE's key revenue-earner, retains a 90 per cent stake.

Last month, the energy giant said it had accelerated its emission reduction goal to achieve carbon neutrality by 2045 instead of 2050.

It said it intends to "increase its investments and redouble efforts in de-carbonisation", relying on an initial financing of $15 billion for "low-carbon solutions" and achieving zero methane emissions by 2030.

The UAE, one of the world's leading oil exporters, is set to host the United Nations climate summit in November and December.

Gas is being touted as cleaner than other fossil fuels as countries around the world strive to reduce their emissions.

In 2021, the UAE produced 57 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas, or about 1.4 per cent of global output, according to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy.

That same year, the Emirates exported 8.8bcm of LNG, 1.7 per cent of world LNG exports, the Statistical Review said.

 

Italy bank shares fall on gov't's surprise windfall tax

Gov’t approves 40% windfall tax on ‘surplus profits’

By - Aug 08,2023 - Last updated at Aug 08,2023

MILAN — Italy's right-wing government has unveiled a surprise 40 per cent windfall tax on "surplus profits" generated by the rise in interest rates, sending shares in the country's banks plunging on Tuesday.

Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's ministers agreed the move at a cabinet meeting late Monday, vowing to invest the funds raised into helping households and businesses struggling with the cost of borrowing.

Deputy Prime Minister Matteo Salvini told reporters the tax would be levied on banks' "surplus profits" generated by the European Central Bank's (ECB's) interest rate hikes.

The hikes by the ECB — the central bank for the 20 countries that use the euro, including Italy — has boosted banks' profits by "billions", he said, but increased costs for their customers.

The government was "using part of the banks' billion-dollar profits to help families and businesses affected by rising interest rates", Salvini added on X, formerly known as Twitter. 

Shares in Italian banks plunged on the news, which neither the sector nor analysts had expected. 

Around 1:00pm (1100 GMT), shares in the two biggest Italian banks, Intesa Sanpaolo and Unicredit, fell 8.6 per cent and seven per cent respectively. 

Shares in Monte dei Paschi di Siena fell by 10.2 per cent, Bper Banca by 10 per cent and Banco Bpm by 8 per cent.

One year 

 

Analysts at Banca Akros said the market was responding negatively to "this unexpected bad news", estimating that banks' earnings per share would fall by an average of 7 per cent. 

The new levy will focus on the 2022 or 2023 financial years, a governmental source told AFP.

Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani told the Corriere della Sera newspaper it would "only last one year".

"We have been saying for months that the ECB was mistaken in raising interest rates, and this is the inevitable consequence," he said.

"It is not a measure against them [the banks], but a measure to protect families" and those struggling to pay mortgages, he insisted.

Meloni is thus using the tax to raise funds for the draft budget for 2024, after a surprise 0.3 per cent decline in gross domestic product (GDP) in the second quarter of 2023.

The new levy could bring in more than 2 billion euros, according to initial estimates quoted in the Italian media.

 

Soaring profits

 

Italian banks, like their European counterparts, saw their net interest income soar in the wake of the rise in interest rates.

Intesa Sanpaolo saw its net profit jump 80 per cent to 4.2 billion euros in the first half, while UniCredit posted a half-yearly net profit of 4.4 billion euros.

Spain's left-wing government has also introduced a similar tax on banks scheduled for 2023 and 2024, drawing criticism from the ECB.

Salvini, whose far-right League Party is a junior coalition partner to Meloni's far-right Brothers of Italy, said the levy was "common sense".

The CISL trade union said it was a "fair" measure that should be extended to multinational companies in the energy, digital or even logistics sectors.

But Francesco Galietti, from the Policy Sonar consultancy, said it was a "hugely controversial tax", also describing it as a "typical populist move". 

Parliament now has two months to convert the Cabinet's decree into law, during which time it can be significantly changed.

PayPal debuts US dollar-backed stablecoin for payments

Stablecoin payments come as cryptocurrency industry suffers

By - Aug 08,2023 - Last updated at Aug 08,2023

The logo of online payment company PayPal is pictured during LeWeb 2013 event in Saint-Denis near Paris, on December 10, 2013 (AFP photo)

SAN FRANCISCO — PayPal on Monday launched a stablecoin digital currency backed by US dollars to be used for transactions at its global online payments platform.

PayPal USD is issued by Paxos Trust Company and backed by dollar deposits and similar cash holdings, the online payments giant said in a release.

It comes as the cryptocurrency industry is suffering hard times after the spectacular collapse of FTX and various legal cases against the sector's biggest players.

As the biggest cryptocurrencies are famously volatile, entrepreneurs invented a theoretically more reliable alternative known as stablecoins.

These coins are pegged to the US dollar or other fiat currencies, but still come with concerns their value can tank.

"The shift toward digital currencies requires a stable instrument that is both digitally native and easily connected to fiat currency like the US dollar," said PayPal Chief Executive Dan Schulman.

PayPal USD is designed to make payments on across the global platform easier and open a door to more big brands getting involved with digital assets, according to the Silicon Valley-based company.

PayPal planned to soon make the stablecoin available at Venmo, its peer-to-peer payment service.

PayPal's decision to accept bitcoin in late 2020 helped kick off a precipitous rise in the value of crypto assets, driven partly by a sense that the digital tokens could potentially function like currencies one day.

However, scandals have rocked the cryptocurrency market and made regulators wary.

Financial regulators in the United States have argued that cryptocurrencies are securities and should face strict rules.

The debut of PayPal USD came two weeks after OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman and other co-founders unveiled a Worldcoin crypto project that relies on an eye scan to verify a user's identity.

Worldcoin said it will provide users with a private digital identity — a "World ID" — after they register in person using an "Orb" imaging device that scans their eye's unique iris pattern.

This was to help solve one of the main challenges facing the crypto industry that largely relies on pseudonyms to operate, leaving it vulnerable to spam bots and scams.

The company also launched its Worldcoin token, a cryptocurrency now tradable in certain locations and platforms, to millions of users who participated in early tests, the statement said.

In a sign of increased caution by regulators in treating crypto, Worldcoin wasn't available to trade in the US, where enthusiasm for the sector is significant, because of restrictions.

Saudi Aramco Q2 profits drop 38% on lower prices — statement

Aramco announces profits of $30.08b for Q2

By - Aug 07,2023 - Last updated at Aug 07,2023

This file photo taken on January 16, 2019 shows Aramco’s Fadhili Gas Plant Project, located 30 km west of the city of Jubail in the eastern province of Saudi Arabia (AFP file photo)

RIYADH — Oil firm Saudi Aramco on Monday announced profits of $30.08 billion for the second quarter, a sharp fall from the same period last year when prices surged after Russia invaded Ukraine.

The 38-per cent year-on-year decline "mainly reflected the impact of lower crude oil prices and weakening refining and chemicals margins", the largely state-owned company said in a statement published on the Saudi stock exchange.

The decline followed a drop of 19.25 per cent in first-quarter net profit.

Aramco's CEO Amin Nasser said in a separate statement that "our strong results reflect our resilience and ability to adapt through market cycles".

The firm's "mid to long-term view remains unchanged", he added.

"With a recovery anticipated in the broader global economy, along with increased activity in the aviation sector, ongoing investments in energy projects will be necessary to safeguard energy security."

Production from the world's biggest crude exporter was down after Riyadh in April announced cuts of 500,000 barrels per day, part of a coordinated move with other oil powers to slash supply by more than one million bpd in a bid to prop up prices.

In June, the Saudi energy ministry announced a further voluntary cut of 1 million bpd which took effect in July and has been extended through September.

The kingdom's daily production is now approximately 9 million bpd, far below its reported daily capacity of 12 million bpd.

Aramco is the main source of revenue for Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman's sweeping economic and social reform programme known as Vision 2030, which aims to shift the economy away from fossil fuels.

Analysts say the kingdom needs oil to be priced at around $80 per barrel to balance its budget.

Prices are now above that threshold, a sign that the recent supply cuts are starting to have the desired effect.

The US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude for September delivery traded on Monday at $82.54 and European benchmark Brent crude futures were just below $86.

Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, oil peaked at more than $130 dollars per barrel.

 

'Phenomenal figures' 

 

The cuts "show the lengths to which the kingdom will go to defend oil prices, as a slumping market for its lifeblood commodity is damaging to its ambitious economic diversification efforts", said Herman Wang, associate director for oil news at S&P Global Commodity Insights.

Aramco is undertaking investments to ramp up national production capacity to 13 million bpd by 2027.

"It's an expensive proposition for Aramco to hold production capacity offline in the name of OPEC+ cuts, but the hope is that the sacrifice being made now will pay off in the end with higher prices," Wang said, referring to the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, headed by Riyadh and their 10 allies led by Moscow.

Aramco reported record profits totalling $161.1 billion last year, allowing the kingdom to notch up its first annual budget surplus in nearly a decade. 

Yet, those "were phenomenal figures driven by a very particular set of geopolitical factors and Saudi Arabia's leadership can't have been predicating Vision 2030 spending on such results", said Jamie Ingram, senior editor at the Middle East Economic Survey.

"Higher revenues would of course be favoured by officials, but Saudi Arabia still has very low debt levels and strong reserves that it can tap into," Ingram added.

Nasser told reporters on Monday that global demand was "expected to grow by about 2.4 million barrels [per day] in the third quarter 2023 compared to the same period last year", an increase mainly led by China where demand has been "stronger than expected".

Saudi Arabia owns 90 per cent of Aramco's shares.

Aramco's base dividend for the second quarter will be $19.5 billion, the same as for the first quarter, the firm said.

It will also distribute a new performance-linked dividend of $9.9 billion in the third quarter, and expects to make similar dividend payments over the next six quarters, it said.

 

Pakistan's economic woes leave textile industry in tatters

By - Aug 06,2023 - Last updated at Aug 06,2023

In this photo taken on July 20, a textile worker arranges thread rolls at Kohinoor Mills in Lahore (AFP photo)

LAHORE — Factory worker Lubna Babar was made redundant at the beginning of the year, a victim of a crisis in the Pakistan textile industry that has seen it lose ground to more nimble Asian competitors.

"When you lose your job, your life comes to a close," the 43-year-old from Lahore told AFP.

"We've been working in factories for years... the day you get sacked, the story ends there."

Pakistan's industrial manufacturing sector — like elsewhere in the world — has suffered from the slowdown in global consumption and the rise in energy costs following the outbreak of war in Ukraine.

But the difficulties of the textile sector, which accounts for 60 per cent of Pakistan's exports, are compounded by the critical state of the economy and months of political chaos.

In Pakistan, the industry was buoyed at the tail end of the coronavirus pandemic, when it was freed of restrictions earlier than regional rivals India and Bangladesh and benefited from government financial aid, including slashed energy rates.

In 2022-2023, however, textile exports fell by 15 per cent to $16.5 billion.

"Two years ago, we were on a very high growth trajectory... we were confident that our exports this year would go to $25 billion," said Hamid Zaman, managing director of Sarena Textile Industries.

"Unfortunately, when you have political instability and things are not clear, and the policies of the government are reversed, this whole thing has gone into a tailspin," he told AFP.

The political chaos started in April last year, when Imran Khan was dismissed as prime minister by a vote of no-confidence.

His attempts to parlay popular public support into a movement to force an early election saw him arrested in May, leading to violence that only ended with a massive crackdown on his party and its supporters.

He was convicted of graft on Saturday and sentenced to three years in jail.

 

Factories shutting down 

 

The textile and clothing sector employs around 40 per cent of the country's 20 million-strong industrial workforce.

The main export markets are the US, EU, the UK, Turkey, and the UAE, supplying cotton fabrics, knitwear, bed linen, towels, and ready-made garments to global brands such as Zara, H&M, Adidas, John Lewis, Target and Macy's.

But many factories have closed in recent months — at least temporarily — or are no longer running at full capacity.

"Perhaps 25 to 30 per cent of all textile factories have closed. It is estimated that perhaps 700,000 jobs have been lost in the last year or year-and-a-half," said Zaman.

Babar felt this keenly, having looked for work at other factories — but they were also laying off employees.

"They said they were no longer receiving orders from abroad," she said. 

After devastating floods in the summer of 2022, cotton production in Pakistan fell to an all-time low.

The textile industry was unable to compensate by buying from abroad because of a freeze on imports imposed by the government to preserve its forex reserves.

Thousands of containers filled with raw materials and machinery essential for the country's industries were held up for months in the southern port of Karachi.

Textile companies also saw the cost of capital rise significantly, contending with interest rates of more than 20 per cent as the central bank sought to curb record-breaking inflation.

 

'Not a solution' 

 

Pakistan finally managed to consolidate its foreign exchange reserves with the approval in mid-July of a $3 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and additional assistance from China, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

"But that's not a solution, it's just getting deeper and deeper into debt," said Kamran Arshad, managing director of Ghazi Fabrics International.

"The only way forward is enhancing Pakistan's exports and creating an environment that is investor-friendly that would incentivise industrial production and activity," he added.

One of the conditions of the IMF bailout was an end to subsidies on energy, leading to a sharp rise in the cost of electricity, which affects the competitiveness of textile companies.

"Our biggest challenge going forward is having energy prices that are substantially higher than those of India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Vietnam and China," said Arshad.

"We're not asking for subsidies. Realistically we are asking for regionally competitive energy prices."

In the face of these challenges, the country's textile manufacturers have lost customers globally.

"Pakistan's overall market share in the textile and garment industry was nearly 2.25 per cent about two years ago. Now it's down to around 1.7 per cent," said Aamir Fayyaz Sheikh, CEO of Kohinoor Mills.

Sheikh sees some hope if the political situation settles following an election due before the end of the year.

"After the elections there will be more political clarity and that will help bring more economic stability," he said.

But for ordinary workers like Babar, there is little light at the end of the tunnel.

"Life is getting harder every day," said the mother of three.

"We cook once and make it last for two days. And if we don't have any food, we make do, without complaining."

Amazon and Apple beat earnings forecasts as they polish AI skills

Profits for Apple's third fiscal quarter were $19.9b

By - Aug 05,2023 - Last updated at Aug 05,2023

A customer shops for Apple products at an Apple Store on August 04, 2023 in Berkeley, California (AFP photo)

SAN FRANCISCO — Amazon and Apple on Thursday reported earnings that topped market expectations, aiming for even better days ahead with the help of artificial intelligence (AI).

"Inside Amazon, every one of our teams is working on building generative AI applications that reinvent and enhance their customers' experience," chief executive Andy Jassy said during an earnings call.

Apple views AI and machine learning as "core fundamental technologies that are integral to virtually every product that we build," company boss Tim Cook told analysts while discussing the iPhone maker's quarterly earnings.

"It's absolutely critical to us," Cook said of AI.

He cited crash detection and other iPhone features as technologies that "wouldn't be possible without AI and machine learning". Crash detection presents a user with a prompt for an emergency call if a handset senses a collision.

"We've been doing research across a wide range of AI technologies, including generative AI for years," Cook said.

"We're going to continue investing and innovating and responsibly advancing our products with these technologies."

Apple reported modestly higher profits in the recently ended quarter despite another dip in revenues, as a record performance in services offset lower iPhone sales.

Executives spotlighted increased sales in China and several key emerging markets that helped to compensate for declines in the United States where the iPhone sales have ebbed in a saturated smartphone environment.

Profits for Apple's third fiscal quarter were $19.9 billion, up 2.3 per cent from the year-ago period. Revenues again declined, this time by 1.4 per cent to $81.8 billion, the third straight quarter with a year-over-year decline.

Bright spots for the tech giant included an "all-time high" in services revenue, comprised of the App store, Apple pay and Apple TV and other subscription services.

 

AI for all? 

 

Amazon reported a quarterly profit that trounced market expectations, driven by strong sales helped by its annual prime discount event.

The e-commerce giant said it made a profit of $6.7 billion in the recently ended quarter, eclipsing earnings forecasts.

"It was another strong quarter of progress for Amazon," the company's chief executive Andy Jassy said in an earnings release.

The e-commerce colossus boasted of having its "biggest Prime Day event ever" in July, with subscribers to the Amazon service worldwide ordering more than 375 million items.

Order delivery speeds in the US were the fastest ever, with Amazon continuing to work on optimising efficiency and lowering costs at fulfillment centres, according to the company.

Jassy in March laid out a plan to cut 9,000 more jobs from the online retail giant's workforce, following the 18,000 that were axed in January.

Jassy told his workers at the time that the extra layoffs were necessary as the company seeks a way to downsize after years of sustained hiring by the Seattle-based company.

"The upturn in Amazon's commerce business is an encouraging sign for the back half of the year," said Insider Intelligence principal analyst Andrew Lipsman.

Revenue taken in by the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud computing unit increased to $22 billion in a year-over-year comparison, but costs climbed as well, resulting in a lower operating income than in the same period in 2022.

"Our AWS growth stabilised as customers started shifting from cost optimisation to new workload deployment," Jassy said.

"AWS has continued to add to its meaningful leadership position in the cloud with a slew of generative AI releases."

AWS remains a concern, however, and pressure is on to show growth as the broader economy recovers and companies invest in cloud-based computing power, according to analyst Lipsman.

Amazon is seeing more businesses focus on shifting systems to the cloud, where they can save money and tap into AI capabilities, Jassy said on the earnings call.

AWS is investing heavily in being a place where AI models are trained and put to work for businesses, according to Jassy.

"What we're doing is democratising access to generative AI; lowering the cost of training and running models," Jassy said.

"We think AWS is poised to be the longterm partner of choice in general AI."

Amazon shares were up more than eight per cent to $140.25 in after market trades.

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