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Hi John, here's what you need to know for February 11th in 3:01 minutes.

⚡️ Didn’t make it to Davos? Get your ticket to the next best thing: our event in London, The Big Shift To Renewables. We’ll be chatting to the UK’s leading experts on the transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewables. Join us, Saudi Aramco Energy Ventures, Boston Consulting Group, and RenewableUK on February 19th. Get your ticket here

Today's big stories

  1. Sweden's Volvo and China's Geely are in talks to merge their businesses and take on the auto industry together
  2. Bond fund giant Pimco warns investors not to get “sidetracked” after every US election headline – Read Now
  3. French insurance firm Covea is in talks to buy, er, reinsurance firm PartnerRe for $9 billion
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Mean Machine

Mean Machine

What’s Going On Here?

On Monday, Swedish carmaker Volvo announced it’s in talks with China’s Geely Automobile to combine the two businesses into one all-powerful auto giant.

What Does This Mean?

Geely actually bought Volvo back in 2010, but the two continued to operate independently. Now, however, they want to merge into a single company, in hopes their combined size and expertise will help them better compete against other major carmakers. It’ll also give Volvo extra manufacturing capacity in China, as well as help Geely expand its own brands in Europe.

If the move goes ahead, the combined company – whose shares will be listed on both the Swedish and Chinese stock exchanges – is expected to be worth around $30 billion. Not too shabby – especially considering Geely had to abandon its plan to take Volvo public in 2018 amid trade tensions and a downturn in the auto sector.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Survival of the biggest.
Dealmaking in the global auto industry has picked up significantly in the last year. Volkswagen and Ford, for example, have launched their own alliance, while Fiat Chrysler has agreed to combine with Peugeot-owner PSA Group. That trend is largely in response to the transformation of the industry, as the need for big investments in electric vehicles and self-driving technology continues to climb. Volvo knows what’s up: the carmaker’s announced it’ll only manufacture electric vehicles by 2040.

Zooming out: Nǐ hǎo, Europe.
Geely’s plan to expand in Europe might be a sensible strategy: data out on Monday showed Chinese inflation – the rate at which the prices of goods and services increase – soared to an eight-year high, as the deadly coronavirus outbreak causes anxious consumers to stock up on household goods, pushing up their prices (tweet this). That, in turn, lowers consumers’ purchasing power and makes them less likely to fork out big sums for cars and the like.

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2/3 Premium Story

Primary Numbers

When professional investors published their 2020 outlooks a couple of months ago, one event loomed large across them all: November’s US election. But bond fund giant Pimco argues it could be some time yet before we even know who’ll be the Democratic Party’s candidate – and investors should avoid getting “sidetracked” chasing every headline.

Get the full story in the Finimize app

💰 Step one: get on top of your finances

If you have a habit of avoiding all things money management, you’re not alone. We all get that overwhelming “so little time, so much to do” feeling every now and then. Every now, mostly.

But here’s the thing: all you really need to do is break things down into a few easy steps. And that’s exactly what the second blog in our eight-part guide – created in partnership with Klarna’s Mindful Money initiative – is here to help you do. Check out the guide

This sponsored section is feeling very mindful indeed
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Unsurance

Unsurance

What’s Going On Here?

With its once-trusty money-spinners coming up short, Covea is done umming and ahhing: the French insurer announced on Monday it’s in talks to buy reinsurer PartnerRe for a reported $9 billion.

What Does This Mean?

When insurance firms insure people and companies, they’re taking on a lot of risk – so much so, in fact, that they take out their own insurance with reinsurers. That way, if an insurer has a high number of hefty payouts to manage after, say, a natural disaster, the reinsurer will cover some of it for them.

One such reinsurer is PartnerRe, which is owned by Italian holding company Exor. But perhaps not for much longer: Covea has its eye on PartnerRe, and it’s apparently willing to pay $9 billion to take it off Exor’s hands. That'd be the holding company’s second huge deal in recent months.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Merge and turn.
Investors seemed keen on the big PartnerRe payout, and Exor’s stock shot up 5% on the news. That could be because the holding company now has a bit of extra cash to spend on its more glamorous businesses: namely sportscar brand Ferrari, and swish soccer club Juventus.

The bigger picture: Spread your wings.
Funnily enough, insurers often make a loss on selling insurance policies. They actually make most of their money from investing the money those policies bring in. It makes sense: a customer might not claim on a policy for years, which gives the insurer plenty of time to make a return on it elsewhere. But with interest rates so low at the moment, those firms aren't making as much on relatively safe investments (like bonds) as they used to. That means their profits are coming under pressure – which might explain why firms like Covea are trying to grow and diversify.

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💬 Quote of the day

“It is the greatest of all mistakes to do nothing because you can only do little.”

– Sydney Smith (an English clergyman, critic, and philosopher)
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💪 Show your money who’s boss

Money management can overwhelm the best of us – which is why it’s one of those things we tend to keep putting off. But it’s nowhere near as complicated as it might seem. In fact, there are a few simple steps you can take to get things in order, like…

  1. Taking a not-so lazy Sunday to lay out exactly how much you have and where
  2. Sorting yourself out a budget: a proper one, with a spreadsheet and everything
  3. Or maybe just reading part two of our eight-part guide – created in partnership with Klarna’s Mindful Money initiative – for everything you need to know


Check out our guide

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🇪🇸 Madrid: How to Invest Using Big Data, February 13th
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⚡️ Lightning insights

Before you invest in a company, there are always a few questions you should ask first:

  • What sets it apart from other businesses in its industry?
  • How are the company’s costs looking? And its profit?
  • How many customers does it have, and how successfully is it hanging onto them?

And that’s just the start: there are plenty more small details that separate the winners from the losers. Check out our Stock Picking Pack for everything else you’ll want to know – as well as where exactly you can find the answers. Spoiler: they’re easier to spot than you’d think.

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