Wednesday, August 19, 2020

Apple becomes first US firm to hit $2 trillion in market value

Apple becomes first US firm to hit $2 trillion
Apple has become the first US company to reach a $2 trillion market value, a testament to how tech giants have gained from the upheaval of the coronavirus pandemic.

The iPhone maker attained the distinction in mid-morning trading and was up 1.1% at $467.18 near 1545 GMT. The company had previously become the first giant to hit $1 trillion in market value in March 2018.

Apple is followed by other technology companies, including Amazon, Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet, all of which now have more than $1 trillion in market value.

Shares in Apple have roughly doubled from March lows, an astonishing performance which has lifted chief executive Tim Cook´s net worth to $1 billion for the first time, according to a Bloomberg Billionaires Index calculation.

Even as other large tech firms have shot higher on robust demand during lockdowns, Apple has outpaced its rivals by delivering strong sales of gadgetry including wearables and tablets, along with new apps and services which have gained ground during the global health crisis.

"Apple has been wildly successful in building out its platforms, mitigating the fact that iPhone sales had peaked, by building products that surround it and services that enhance it," said Avi Greengart, analyst with the consultancy Techsponential.

"It all feeds back into the cycle for Apple."

In the past quarter ending in June, Apple reported profits climbed eight percent to $11.2 billion and revenues jumped 11% to $59.7 billion.

Work-from-home

A major factor in Apple's success has been leadership from Cook, who took over just ahead of the death of Steve Jobs in 2011.

"He didn't invent anything, but what he has done is keep a firm hand on the tiller, steering the ship and keeping the culture intact," said analyst Laura Martin at Needham & Company.

"He deserves a lot of credit for making the most out of Steve Jobs's inventions."

Apple's rise comes amid a broader rally in technology shares as employees around the country shift to working at home amid the coronavirus pandemic and social distancing protocols.

The tech-rich Nasdaq has hit records more than 30 times in 2020, including on Tuesday.

In the most recent quarter, Apple enjoyed a modest rise in smartphone revenue and robust increases in sales of iPads and Mac computers amid elevated demand for remote education and work-from-home buyers.

The company also benefited from services such as digital payments and streaming and from increased sales in smartwatches as interest in health and fitness applications rises.

Success brings scrutiny

The ascendancy of Apple and other tech giants has prompted increased oversight from regulators and lawmakers, including on Capitol Hill, where Cook and the CEOs from Amazon, Facebook and Google all were grilled at a high-profile July 29 hearing.

"Simply put, they have too much power," said Representative David Cicilline, a Democrat from Rhode Island who chairs the panel that convened the hearing.

During the session, Cook faced tough questioning over the market power of the company's App Store and its treatment of developers.

Analysts expect more scrutiny ahead for Apple and the other giants, but it isn't clear yet whether the questioning will lead to meaningful change.

Some analysts believe efforts to break up tech giants or otherwise reign them in could gain momentum if Democrats sweep the 2020 elections.

Another wildcard for Apple involves risks from heightened tensions between the United States and China, since Apple not only manufactures iPhones and other products there, but also relies on that market for a large chunk of sales, Greengart noted.

US President Donald Trump has been ratcheting up pressure on Beijing through restrictions on leading Chinese tech firms. Any retaliation against Washington by China could cause troubles for Apple, analysts say.



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Run for Kashmir Tele-marathon Cellphone App launched in Paris

Indian military siege and its status has unilaterally been changed
The Embassy of Pakistan to France, in Paris has launched Run for Kashmir Tele-marathon Cellphone application and Roshan Digital Account.

Addressing the launching ceremony the Embassy of Pakistan in Paris, Pakistan Charge d'Affaires, M. Amjad Aziz Qazi explained the concept behind the app saying that virtual Run for Kashmir is a global humanitarian effort aimed at creating awareness about the atrocities being committed by the Indian occupation forces in the Indian Illegally Occupied Jammu and Kashmir.

He said IIOJK has been under the Indian military siege and its status has unilaterally been changed by the Indian government.

While introducing the Roshan Digital Account, the Charge d'Affaires said that this would usher a new era in banking sector in Pakistan.

He said the Roshan Digital Account will fully integrate the Pakistani diaspora into the Pakistani banking and digital payments system providing them access to all conventional account services, including funds transfer, bill payments for their families, e-commerce and investment in stock market and fixed deposit.



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Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445, recovery rate rose to 272,128

Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445
The number of confirmed Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445 on Wednesday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

Total: 290,445

• Sindh: 126,743

• Punjab: 95,742

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 35,401

• Balochistan: 12,370

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 15,412

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 2,565

• AJK: 2,212

Deaths: 6,201

• Punjab: 2,186

• Sindh: 2,336

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 1,242

• Balochistan: 139

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 175

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 62

• AJK: 61

RECOVERED: 272,128



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Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445, recovery rate rose to 272,128

Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445
The number of confirmed Corona cases in Pakistan rose to 290,445 on Wednesday after new infections were confirmed in the country.

Total: 290,445

• Sindh: 126,743

• Punjab: 95,742

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 35,401

• Balochistan: 12,370

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 15,412

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 2,565

• AJK: 2,212

Deaths: 6,201

• Punjab: 2,186

• Sindh: 2,336

• Khyber Pakhtunkhwa: 1,242

• Balochistan: 139

• Islamabad Capital Territory: 175

• Gilgit-Baltistan: 62

• AJK: 61

RECOVERED: 272,128



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Adil Rashid still "aspires" to be a Test bowler: Ed Smith

Adil Rashid can still make Test return
England's national selector Ed Smith on Tuesday said that England believes that leg-spinner Adil Rashid still "aspires" to be a Test bowler.

The 32-year-old leg-spinner last played the most recent of his 19 Tests in January of last year and he has not featured for Yorkshire in the first-class County Championship during the past two seasons.

Earlier this year he signed a white-ball only contract with Yorkshire and so is not featuring in the Bob Willis Trophy, the replacement competition for the Championship in a season disrupted by COVID-19.

Rashid, however, was a key member of England´s World Cup-winning side last year and is their top-ranked Twenty20 bowler.

Although his 60 Test wickets have come at an expensive average of nearly 40 apiece, Smith would like to see him prove his fitness following a shoulder injury and make a challenge for a place in England´s red-ball set-up, with none of his current spin rivals having nailed down a position in Joe Root´s team.

"Adil´s still coming back from a reasonably serious injury," Smith told reporters on Tuesday after Rashid was included in England´s Twenty20 squad for an upcoming three-match series against Pakistan at Old Trafford.

"He´s still working on that physical side, but in the long term I think Adil still has aspirations to play for England in all forms."

Former England batsman Smith added: "His form is really good in white-ball cricket. We´ve all seen the skill and the mastery that he´s displaying at the moment in that form and we´ll work closely with Adil and with Yorkshire in the future to see if he´s ready to play four-day and five-day cricket.

"There is a jump required. There´s a difference between bowling 10 overs and bowling 100 overs or whatever a very heavy workload would be in a two or three-game spell in four-day cricket.

"But the main thing with Adil is he´s made really good strides and he´s developed really well in recovery from that injury."

Meanwhile James Vince´s England career looks to be in the balance after he was omitted from the Twenty20 squad.

The Hampshire batsman has appeared more than 10 times each in the three international formats, Tests, one-day internationals and Twenty20s, but has a modest average of under 30 in all of them.

Vince failed to impress during England´s recent one-day series win over Ireland and Smith said: "I think James is a very talented player and at his best we all know has the skill to look absolutely at home in international cricket.

"But I´m not saying anything different here than I said to James on the phone: it´s just a question of him grabbing his opportunities. He´s not been selected for this series against Pakistan. That was as far as the conversation went.

"One thing he´d be the first to say, and I think he has said it publicly, that for someone of his talent and his class he probably hasn´t grabbed his opportunities in the way he would have liked to have done."



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CM Punjab visits Panagah in Rawalpindi

Usman Buzdar visited Panagah
Punjab Chief Minister Usman Buzdar visited a Panagah in Rawalpindi today and reviewed the arrangements there.

The provincial chief minister directed the administration to further improve the arrangements at the Panagah.

Usman Buzdar announced to establish another Panagah in Rawalpindi.



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Mali's president announces resignation after 'attempted coup'

 Mali's president announces resignation
Mali’s president has announced his resignation and the dissolution of the national assembly on state television, shortly after he and the prime minister were arrested by mutinous soldiers in what the European Union described as an attempted coup.

The president, Ibrahim Boubacar Keïta, and the prime minister, Boubou Cissé, were seized on Tuesday evening after a day of confusion and chaos in a country already facing a jihadist insurgency and mass protests.

Speaking on national broadcaster ORTM just before midnight, a distressed Keita, wearing a mask amid the coronavirus pandemic, said his resignation three years before his final term was effective immediately. “I wish no blood to be shed to keep me in power,” Keita said. “I have decided to step down from office.”
His departure was met with jubilation by anti-government demonstrators in Bamako, the capital of the unstable west African country. “All the Malian people are tired we have had enough,” one demonstrator said.

The UN security council has scheduled a closed meeting for Wednesday to discuss the unfolding situation in Mali, where the UN has a 15,600-strong peacekeeping mission.

Earlier, a soldier was quoted as telling Agence France-Presse: “We are able to tell you that the president and the prime minister are under our control. We have arrested them at his [the president’s] home.” The statement was confirmed by at least two security sources in Bamako.

The EU described the mutiny as an “attempted coup” and warned that it could destabilise “not only Mali, but the whole region”. UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres called for the officials’ release and “the immediate restoration of constitutional order and rule of law”.

But by Tuesday night, troops were moving freely through the streets of Bamako, making it increasingly clear that they were in control.

The unrest began in the garrison town of Kati, about nine miles outside Bamako, where gunfire broke out as soldiers detained senior officers.

The reports of violence at the base immediately prompted fears of a replay of a 2012 mutiny that led to a coup d’etat which opened the way for Islamic extremists and ethnic separatists to exploit the chaos by seizing swaths of territory in the north of the country.

These concerns appear to have been justified. But the scale of the mutiny was not immediately clear, nor the exact intent of those responsible. A European diplomat said a relatively small number of members of the national guard, apparently angered by a pay dispute, had seized a munitions depot, while a French military source said discussions were taking place between Mali’s army command and the mutineers.

Keïta came to power in 2013 and won a second term as president in 2018. But there has been rising anger at government incompetence, endemic corruption and a deteriorating economy. Protesters took to the streets last month when the constitutional court overturned the provisional results of parliamentary elections held in March and April after Keïta’s party had performed poorly.

Keïta had hoped that concessions to opponents and recommendations from a mediating delegation of regional leaders would help stem the tide of dissatisfaction, but the protest leaders have rejected proposals to join a power-sharing government.

There are widespread concerns that any instability will benefit extremists in Mali affiliated with al-Qaida and Islamic State. The insurgents have proved tenacious, growing in strength across the Sahel region despite the intervention of thousands of French forces, teams of US special forces, regional armies and one of the biggest UN peacekeeping deployments in the world.

A coup would be a major setback to French diplomacy in the region. Mali is seen as a linchpin of efforts to secure the Sahel, and Paris has invested heavily there despite the increasing domestic unpopularity of the French military commitment.

An opposition politician in Bamako said Tuesday’s events had come as a complete surprise to him and his colleagues. “This is not some kind of thing organised with us,” he said.

Alexandre Raymakers, a senior Africa analyst at the risk consultancy Verisk Maplecroft, said it was unlikely that the mutiny was planned by political leaders close to the opposition, but that their supporters might welcome any decision to remove Keïta.

“This remains a fast-moving situation, but initial indications point to the mutiny being within the national guard, with significant elements of the army still loyal to Keïta … The mutiny is likely driven by a range of factors closely tied to the deteriorating military situation in central and northern Mali, rather than the ongoing political crisis,” he said.

The French and Norwegian embassies in Bamako urged their citizens to stay at home. “Because of serious unrest this morning, August 18, in the city of Bamako, it is immediately recommended to remain at home,” the French embassy said.

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Islamabad court dismisses Gill’s bail plea in sedition case

A District and Sessions court of Islamabad dismissed the post arrest bail petition of PTI leader Shahbaz Gill on Tuesday. Additional Dist...