| Fastest UK shrinkage ever | Maersk is having a 'mare |
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Hi John, here's what you need to know for May 14th in 3:11 minutes.

šŸ™‰ That moment when you hit send too quickly on an email. Weā€˜ve all been there. Sorry about that, hereā€˜s the proper email for today.

Today's big stories

  1. The worldā€™s biggest shipping company sees rough waters ahead as the pandemic savages global trade
  2. One money manager is warning investors not to get lured in by the high returns of one its former favorite investments ā€“ Read Now
  3. The coronavirus lockdown caused the UK economy to shrink at its fastest monthly pace on record in March
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Oh Ship

Oh Ship

Whatā€™s Going On Here?

Maersk warned on Wednesday that sea freight might drop off by 25% this quarter, and investors had a few choice words for the worldā€™s biggest shipping company.

What Does This Mean?

The Danish firm ā€“ which handles a fifth of containers shipped globally ā€“ managed to post increased profit in the first quarter, but its shares still fell 6% as investors focused instead on its demoralizing forecast. With stores and factories across the world shuttered in the fight against COVID, thereā€™s less need to transport, say, sneakers from Vietnamese production lines to US malls, or brake pads from German suppliers to UK assembly plants. And as that demand disappears, Maersk is canceling voyages in an effort to bring down supply and prop up shipping rates. The company already shelved more than 90 trips in the first quarter ā€“ 3.5% of its total capacity ā€“ and it expects to cancel another 140 this quarter.

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Ring the bellwether.Ā 
Given that itā€™s on the front line of global commerce, bad news for Maersk is a bad sign for the economy ā€“ and vice versa. Its stock hit a 10-year low back in March, and the company sounded far from optimistic in Wednesdayā€™s update, saying the future will be hard to predict if the global economy languishes near the bottom of a U-shaped economic recovery. That chimed with a warning from the Federal Reserve on Wednesday that the US government will probably have to take additional steps to support its own economy.

The bigger picture: Financial shortcuts.
The outlook for shipping operators isnā€™t all bad: at least the economy is slowing faster than oil producers can turn off their taps, causing the cost of fuel to tumble. Cheaper fuel is even allowing some ships to take the long way around Africa ā€“ skipping the hefty fees involved in passing through the Suez Canal andĀ saving up to $700,000 per vessel.

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2/3 Premium

Donā€™t Look Down

Whatā€™s Going On Here?

Amid worrying signs that investors arenā€™t focused enough on the economy disappearing beneath their feet, money manager Invesco is now warning them off one of its former favorite high-returners entirely.

Get the full story with Finimize Premium

šŸ” The ā€œShould I buy that house?ā€ starter kit

As coronavirus-hit housing markets start to reopen across the world, here are some questions you ought to ask yourselfā€¦

ā° Is now the right time to rent or to buy?

There are pros and cons to both, so first things first, decide which oneā€™s right for you.

šŸ˜Ÿ What exactly would I be getting myself into?

Everything from interest rates to eventual recoveries will affect your purchase: get an overview of them all.

šŸ“‰ How will rock-bottom interest rates impact my mortgage?

Speaking of rates, theyā€™ll influence the interest you pay on your mortgage, so make sure to do your homework on those too.

šŸ’° And how will a recession impact me and my money?

Recessions are all the rage, but they affect everyone differently: find out what a recession means for you.

Psst, these links go to our app ā€“ check them out on your phone.

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Profound Shrinkage

Profound Shrinkage

Whatā€™s Going On Here?

The UK economy contracted at its fastest monthly pace on record in March, and itā€™ll need all the professional help it can get to pull itself together again.

What Does This Mean?

Even though the country's lockdown only kicked off in the last week of March, the UK economy shrank almost 6% that month compared to the previous one. That brings its total contraction in the first quarter of 2020 to 2% versus a quarter ago ā€“ the biggest fall since the 2008 financial crisis (tweet this). And it was the usual suspects of travel, accommodation, and air transport that were hit the hardest, with economic activity across those sectors almost halving.

The bleak numbers were actually better than expected, but the Bank of England had yet more gloomy forecasts to pile on: namely that it expects the UK economy to shrink by 25% this quarter. Itā€™s perhaps no wonder, then, that the central bank is thinking about new economy-boosting measures, like lowering interest rates further and buying up even more bonds.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Remember Brexit?
Months of political uncertainty and now the outbreak mean the UK economyā€™s failed to grow for three of the previous four quarters. But the most recent of them still outperformed Europeā€™s latest, with the economy shrinking at roughly half the pace. And with data out on Wednesday showing output from Europeā€™s crucial manufacturing sector falling at its fastest pace on record in March, that diverging economic performance may well continue for the rest of 2020.

For markets: Bleepbleepā€“eeeeeeeeā€“chkchkchkā€“shhhhhhh.
Other data out on Wednesday showed UK retail sales plunging almost 20% in April compared to a year ago, as physical stores closed their doors and shoppers booted up the world wide web. That probably explains why online sales were up 60% from a year ago. Not to say online retailers are now swimming in profit, mind you: Amazon, for example, doesnā€™t expect to make much of one at all given the $4 billion itā€™s spending on additional coronavirus expenses.

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šŸ’¬ Quote of the day

ā€œBy the work one knows the workman.ā€

ā€“ Jean de la Fontaine (a French fabulist)
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šŸ‡¬šŸ‡§ UK: Investing in Brands During COVID-19 ā€“ 3pm UK Time, May 15th
šŸ‡¦šŸ‡Ŗ UAE: Future-Proof Your Finances, Funding, & Accelerating ā€“ 5pm Dubai Time, May 17th
šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡ø USA: Raising Capital During a Pandemic ā€“ 1pm EST, May 20th

šŸ“š What we're reading

  • So a misguided belief walked into a barā€¦ (National Geographic)
  • Who needs a theater when you can make your own? (Popular Mechanics)
  • Itā€™s hard to see the forest for the COVID-grown trees (NBC)
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