Market Morning: Huawei Fumes, Volkswagen Feuds, Novartis Wins, Farage Threatens

In This Article:

Huawei Fumes at FedEx as Packages Allegedly Diverted

The trade war is bleeding into new areas in the global economy. Huawei is now mad at FedEx (NYSE:FDX) for allegedy rerouting packages addressed to Huawei from Japan, to the United States without authorization. Huawei says that the parcel delivery company also attempted to divert two more packages addressed to Huawei from Vietnam to the US as well. To prove this, Huawei took screenshots of FedEx tracking data, the veracity of which could not be confirmed by Reuters. FedEx, questioned by Reuters, declined to comment, saying it could not divulge information related to clients. “The recent experiences where important commercial documents sent via FedEx were not delivered to their destination, and instead were either diverted to, or were requested to be diverted to, FedEx in the United States, undermines our confidence,” Joe Kelly, a spokesman for Huawei, told Reuters.

SEE: Aurora Cannabis to Conduct CBD Research for Athlete Wellness

However, this all may be being blown way out of proportion, as one of the packages was received, Huawei admits, and the other is on its way. FedEx later commented that the packages were diverted in error. Take a Mulligan on that one.

Volkswagen Samsung Battery Deal At Risk

Volkswagen (OTCMKTS:VLKAY) says that it is making changes to a $56B battery purchase plan from Samsung because a deal made with them previously is starting to unravel. The two companies agreed on enough batteries to power 200,000 cars with 100kwh each but as discussion went into the nitty gritty in terms of production and delivery schedules, the two companies started disagreeing, and Samsung cut its pledge to about 20% of what it had previously offered, according to Bloomberg. “VW ultimately needs 300 gigawatt hours of annual battery cell supply and without robust global multi-sourcing contracts this will be impossible,” Evercore ISI analyst Arndt Ellinghorst said. “It’s one thing talking up electric vehicle volume numbers, building the necessary value chain remains a major challenge.” China’s implicit threat to ban exports of rare earth metals to the United States is not helping the situation either.

Back to Huawei, CEO Signals Conciliatory Tone Towards Apple

It’s not all bad though on the trade front. Huawei CEO Ren Zhengei has said that he would oppose any move by the Chinese government to ban competitor Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) from doing business in China, as the United States has already banned Huawei from doing business in America. “That will not happen, first of all,” he said, referring to a possible ban of Apple by Beijing, “and second of all, if that happens, I’ll be the first to protest,” Ren told Bloomberg. “Apple is my teacher, it’s in the lead. As a student, why go against my teacher? Never.” Qualcomm (NASDAQ:QCOM) has suspended chip shipments to the Chinese telecom, and Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOGL) has banned it from using Android, and Microsoft (NASDAQ:MSFT) has banned Huawei laptops from its online store, as all must fall in line with the US administration’s anti-trade stance or face sanctions, or other consequences.0