The UK and Israel are rapidly inoculating against Covid-19, while France lags. Final success is likely to hinge on a disciplined rollout from a centralised hub to a receptive populace. Israel appears to have all three; investors may soon see that France, Britain and peers do not.
The $36 bln Swiss cement maker’s 2015 merger hasn’t really worked. Branching out into roofing by acquiring the U.S. division of Japan’s Bridgestone for $3.4 bln could pay off if a stateside stimulus spurs infrastructure spending. But LafargeHolcim’s bet looks relatively pricey.
Woolworths pared manager bonuses so that over 100,000 employees could get a little slice of equity in the Aussie supermarket chain. More companies should follow suit. What’s good for Silicon Valley and Wall Street is good for everyone, starting with frontline pandemic workers.
Covid-19 rang the bell for virtual-school investment. Outfits like Byju’s in India and China’s Yuanfudao are raising money while Citi reckons edtech spending may double to $360 bln by 2024. Fierce competition should spark consolidation in 2021, leaving only the best in class.