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Todayâs Agenda
- Elizabeth [Warrenâs real threat to Wall Street](Â may not be what you think.
- Economic [models calling for a Trump re-election]( may overstate the case.
- A trade truce canât stop [the new economic Cold War](.
- Uber [still isnât making a long-term case]( for itself.
This Is What It Sounds Like When Wall Street Cries
There was a brief moment this summer when Wall Streetâs long-time loathing of Senator Elizabeth Warren seemed to ebb. It was â[warming]( to her,â however [reluctantly](, we were told. The honeymoon didnât last long: Financiers are now openly [weeping]( on television over the idea of her in the White House.
Warrenâs wealth-tax and Medicare for All plans draw the most ire, threatening tax hikes that Wall Street types say will wreck the economy and markets. But a President Warren would probably end up like most other presidents, with little direct influence over GDP or the S&P 500, writes Nir Kaissar. Barring an unlikely filibuster-proof Democratic majority in the Senate, Warren probably couldnât pass big, politically divisive tax plans. Her [plan to clamp down on private equity](, on the other hand â subtly dubbed the âStop Wall Street Looting Actâ â could be a much easier political sell, particularly if the economy keeps struggling, Nir writes. As highly leveraged buyouts sour, layoffs will mount and calls for change will increase, along with Wall Streetâs tears.
But another Warren idea with some popular support could cut in the other direction for finance: her call to cancel much of the nearly $1.5 trillion in outstanding student-loan debt. This could [free up more than $1 trillion in debt relief](, amounting to a big tax cut, writes Brian Chappatta. Some critics suggest this would mainly benefit the wealthy, but to Wall Street types that would seem to be a feature, not a bug.
Handicapping Trumpâs Election ChancesÂ
All of this talk about what Warren will and wonât do as president may well be moot; a bunch of election-forecasting models based on economic data predict an easy re-election for President Donald Trump. But these models are based mainly on national data and [ignore regional differences that could swing the Electoral College](, writes Karl Smith. In some manufacturing-heavy swing states, the outlook for Trump is much less rosy, thanks partly to his own trade war.
Further Election Reading: Our political system is [not ready for more foreign attacks]( in 2020. â James StavridisÂ
Free Trade Is Still an Endangered Species
Anxiety about the political cost of a manufacturing slowdown gives Trump incentive to end that trade war. Thus the White House has lately made a bunch of [stock-boosting](Â
happy talk about how close it is to a [truce]( with China. But an interim trade deal wonât be nearly enough to reverse a clear macro trend toward less free trade, warns David Fickling. The latest example is the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership in Asia. India declined to join, which is a boon for the U.S., but [another step backward for Indiaâs economy](, writes Mihir Sharma. And the RCEP carves out another trading sphere dominated by China, to go along with the Trans-Pacific Partnership, David writes. The world is [increasingly splitting into competing economic camps](, in an unhappy repeat of the Cold War.
Further New Cold War Reading:Â
- Chinese and Indian immigrants are [typically the most skilled and upwardly mobile]( immigrants, and we are admitting too few of them. â Noah SmithÂ
- Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. will be [forced to choose between China and the U.S.]( â Tim CulpanÂ
Telltale Charts
Uber Technologies Inc. got back to growth in the latest quarter, but in [a way that may limit its future growth](, writes Shira Ovide, adding to questions about the companyâs long-term viability.
OPECâs grim new outlook helps explain why [Saudi Aramco is selling itself more like a bond]( than a stock, writes Liam Denning.Â
Further Reading
The Trump administration, led by Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, is [gutting rules that hold for-profit colleges accountable]( and keep them from bilking students and taxpayers. â Bloombergâs editorial board
Central bankers canât ignore climate change, but they [shouldnât make climate policy](. Thatâs what politicians should be doing. â Ferdinando GiuglianoÂ
The new Speaker of the House of Commons should probably [avoid channeling predecessor John Bercow](, who bent the course of Brexit a little more than the role would dictate. â Therese RaphaelÂ
Emerson Electric Co. has staved off an activist challenge, but [fundamental problems arenât so easily fixed](. â Brooke SutherlandÂ
[Glass-bottomed tourist bridges]( are the latest example of China pumping too much money into a shoddy product. â Adam MinterÂ
Robinhood Markets Inc. users figured out how to [give themselves infinite leverage](, which seems wrong. â Matt LevineÂ
ICYMI
Gordon Sondland said [there was a Ukraine quid pro quo]( after all.
UnitedHealth Group Inc. is [housing the homeless]( to cut medical bills.
The return of [Popeyeâs spicy chicken sandwich]( turned deadly.
Kickers
More than 11,000 climate scientists [declared a global climate emergency](.
Legoâs [new braille bricks](Â help kids learn braille.
[Separating gifted kids]( doesnât help kids.
The streaming-TV [âbinge releaseâ is slowly dying](.
Note: Please send chicken sandwiches and complaints to Mark Gongloff at mgongloff1@bloomberg.net.
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