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Hi John, here's what you need to know for April 6th in 3:09 minutes.

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Today's big stories

  1. The oil price shot up as Saudi Arabia and Russia’s price war showed signs of ending soon
  2. Tesla’s latest figures were surprisingly good, proving there are companies finding ways around the virus – Read Now
  3. The number of jobs in the US fell by over 700,000 last month, but there’s much worse to come
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Cautious Optimism

Cautious Optimism

What’s Going On Here?

The price of oil had one of its best two-day climbs on record late last week, as Russia and Saudi Arabia shuffled closer to elbow-shaking on an end to their price war.

What Does This Mean?

Both Russia and Saudi Arabia have been producing more oil than anyone needed, and with supply massively outweighing demand, its price fell. Couple that with falling global economic growth – which played its own part pushing demand even lower – and the commodity’s price hit lows not seen for almost 20 years.

But on Thursday, the US president tweeted that there’d soon be an agreement between Russia and Saudi Arabia to cut between 10% and 15% of global oil production. A day later, the world’s major oil-producing countries scheduled a (virtual) meeting to discuss the possibility of lowering global oil output in the coming days. That better balance between supply and demand should push oil’s price up, but even the prospect of it had the same effect: oil’s price rose by more than 20% on Thursday, and another 10% on Friday.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Flakey friends.
Skeptical investors have raised questions over how soon those fabled production cuts will actually come into force after an agreement’s reached, as well as how big they’ll be. Historically, the group of oil-producing countries known as OPEC and its allies haven't cut as much as they've promised. With that in mind, there’s an even higher risk that non-OPEC countries invited to the meeting will renege on a deal – and that last week’s oil price boost will prove short-lived.

For markets: It’s a refine line. 
Most oil companies benefit from higher oil prices: oil producers, for instance, make more money from selling the oil they find and extract. Even refiners – which generally prefer to buy oil at a lower price – see the value of their end-products fall when oil’s too cheap, and therefore might struggle to make a profit.

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2/3 Premium

Positively Shocking

Tesla’s stock price jolted up 5% on Friday after the electric carmaker published stronger-than-expected quarterly production numbers – while shares of US-listed but Chinese-based Luckin Coffee continued to tumble. So what are the companies doing differently?

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3/3

Troubled Waters

Troubled Waters

What’s Going On Here?

Data out on Friday showed the number of workers in the US fell by more than 700,000 last month – much more than the 100,000 drop economists predicted. And there are a lot more coronavirus-shaped hazards still to come…

What Does This Mean?

March was the first time the number of American jobs had fallen since September 2010, and the drop was the biggest since March 2009. And with almost seven million workers newly filing for unemployment benefits last week – double the previous week’s record – the unemployment rate rose to 4.4% from an estimated 3.8%.

The leisure and hospitality industry alone lost 450,000 jobs, which hit states with lots of restaurants and hotels – like California and Nevada – the hardest. But since those businesses were among the first to shut their doors and furlough their workers, other industries will probably see their job losses spike in future data. And that’s the good news…

Why Should I Care?

For markets: Now for the bad news.
Investors seemed to shrug off Friday’s data, and here’s why: it counted Americans still working in mid-March – before much of the country was locked down – as employed, making this already worse-than-expected report look better than the current reality. Economists reckon the unemployment rate right now is actually closer to 10%, and will rise to 15% – or 20 million jobs lost – by the end of this month (tweet this). That’s a level of unemployment not seen since the Great Depression. And based on the relationship between unemployment and economic growth, economists reckon the US economy as a whole could shrink by 12-15%.

Zooming out: More of the same in Europe.
Similarly devastating unemployment figures are likely to come out of the eurozone. Data on Friday showed Spanish and Italian economic activity declining by the most of any country ever recorded, meaning job losses are sure to follow. Overall, economists predict the eurozone economy is likely to shrink by as much as 10%.

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💬 Quote of the day

“Live life when you have it. Life is a splendid gift: there is nothing small about it.”

– Florence Nightingale (a British social reformer and statistician, and the founder of modern nursing)
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🤔 Q&A · RE: Under New Management

“What happens if a stock’s price falls to zero? Can it?”

Chaitanya in California

“A stock’s price can drop to zero in theory, Chaitanya – though stock exchanges generally have rules in place to remove said stock before that actually happens. A share price of zero doesn’t necessarily mean the company stops running altogether: shareholders’ investments would be worth nothing, sure, but debt-holders may still have some claim to the company’s assets. They’re the ones who decide whether to allow the business to keep operating in some form, or whether to recoup as much as possible of what they’re owed by selling off its constituent parts.”

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📚 What we're reading

  • April Fools’, AI style (AV Club)
  • He went the way he would’ve wanted (Gizmodo)
  • Marriage is no more (Aeon)

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