Oil's year gets worse and worse | BT snubs 20 billion dollars |

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Hi John, here's what you need to know for August 25th in 3:08 minutes.

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Today's big stories

  1. A major climate-focused investor has ditched several big oil stocks
  2. Our analysts have spotted the ideal asset to complement your US stocks – Read Now
  3. Telecoms giant BT is looking for ways to avoid a $20 billion takeover
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Kitchen Nightmares

Kitchen Nightmares

What’s Going On Here?

If oil companies can’t stand the heat of climate change, Norwegian mega investor Storebrand wants them to GTFO of its portfolio.

What Does This Mean?

Like most insurers, Storebrand invests the premiums it collects from its, erm, insurees. And at the moment, that’s about $91 billion worth – which means the company is worth paying attention to when it does something big. Like, say, when it sells off its investments in US oil giants Exxon and Chevron, in German chemicals firm BASF, and in mining titan Rio Tinto.

One reason Storebrand gave is that those companies – along with plenty of others – have lobbied against the Paris Agreement, as well as climate change-related regulation more broadly. And while Exxon and Chevron have said they support the agreement’s goals and that they're investing in emission-reduction technology, their detractors might argue it’s nothing but hot air: neither company has set official emissions targets, even as European rivals like BP do just that.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Go green, make green.
Storebrand’s newfangled investment philosophy shows how investors are adapting to rising environmental, social, and governance concerns, and in turn putting pressure on fossil fuel producers. They aren’t necessarily doing it out of the goodness of their hearts, mind you: according to a recent report by Morningstar, 60% of sustainable investment funds reported higher returns than equivalent “normal” funds in the last decade.

The bigger picture: Moving the coalposts.
Storebrand’s updated policy also bans investing in companies that generate more than 5% of their revenues from another pollutant, coal. BHP, the world’s biggest miner, is ahead of the game there: it announced last week that it’d adapt to a low-carbon future by shrinking its coal businesses. That should help keep its environmentally-conscious investors happy, including Norway’s $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund.

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The Art Of Building A Portfolio

What’s Going On Here?

With American bond returns gone through the floor, those looking to build a balanced portfolio may want to check out China…

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Running Scared

Running Scared

What’s Going On Here?

BT’s being pursued by an unwanted $20 billion acquisition, and the telecoms giant isn’t taking it lying down.

What Does This Mean?

BT’s had a rough few years, what with the ever-increasing costs involved in upgrading its broadband infrastructure. And once the pandemic was added to the mix, the company had little choice but to admit its earnings were at risk – as well as to cut its dividend for the first time ever. That’s now reportedly encouraged a few private equity firms to consider bids to take over BT, perhaps in hopes it’ll be able to modernize more successfully away from public eyes.

BT isn’t okay with these potential bids, and it’s asked investment bank Goldman Sachs to help fend them off using so-called “raid defense” tactics. Those might include a “poison pill” – which keeps the would-be buyer from taking full control of the company – or even a “white knight”, which involves finding a different buyer BT wouldn’t mind pairing up with.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Ja, BT!
Some investors reckon private buyers would pay double BT’s current valuation of $13 billion, and some analysts think it’s worth even more – which might be why BT’s stock rose 5% on Monday (tweet this). It may even end up going higher if other potential buyers – like Germany’s Deutsche Telekom, which already owns 12% of BT – start sniffing round. Of course, they’ll have to decide if they want to cover BT’s expensive pension first, not to mention the UK’s telecoms regulator’s serious costs…

The bigger picture: Politicking timebomb.
It gets trickier: any buyer would likely be held to BT’s commitment to spend $16 billion on a UK-wide superfast broadband rollout, and may also be forced to promise not to cut jobs. And even then, the country’s government might not take kindly to potential foreign ownership: you just need to look at the Huawei ban to see telecoms at the forefront of its national security agenda.

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“I think I deserve something beautiful.”

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🇩🇪 One for our German-speakers…

Our next German event, The Rise of Sustainable Investment, will actually be in German. So if you speak “ein bisschen Deutsch”, you’ll have a chance to learn about how sustainable investments could impact “die Wirtschaft” for the better. And if you didn’t before, you do now.

🇨🇦 Canada: Navigating Post Pandemic Markets – 11am Pacific Time, August 26th
🇬🇧 UK: Create your Financial Fitness Plan – 2.30pm UK Time, August 26th
🇩🇪 Germany: The Rise of Sustainable Investment – 11am Berlin Time, August 27th
🇬🇧 UK: Build Your Own Investment Portfolio – 11am UK Time, August 28th
🇺🇸 USA: Improve Your Financial Literacy – 12.30pm Miami Time, September 1st

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