tv Boom Bust RT September 30, 2017 1:29pm-2:01pm EDT
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time lindsay francis is broadcasting around the world from washington d.c. tonight to talk hit on trade any time soon e.u. commission president john paul younger says it will take a miracle on september thirtieth one thousand nine hundred sixty seven the first commercial operations kicked off in the oil sands of canada fifty years later scientists look to the future how long will they actually hold out and my gas breaks down the intelligence part of artificial intelligence he says human hedge fund managers are going out of business to stand by to bust on right now.
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even though president donald trump has talked of renominating federal reserve chair janet yellen to her post when her term expires at the beginning of next year he is meeting and interviewing others and one white house official who spoke to the media on the condition of anonymity and nobody reports that a former fed governor kevin wars is under consideration for the job according to the source the president met with warsh along with treasury secretary steve nugent now is seen as hawkish and less accommodating to quantitative easing and future interest rate hikes than yellen trump has said previously that he would consider renominating yellen but he also is looking at other candidates including kerry collins the head of trump's national economic council. in case capital is said to be shuttered chief whitney tilson says that high prices and complacency it's currently prevailing in the market and he does not want any part of it on
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sunday he wrote to clients historically i have invested in high quality safe stocks at good prices as well as lower quality ones of distressed prices however my favorite safe stocks like berkshire hathaway and monta lees don't feel cheap and my favorite cheap stocks like hertz and spirit airlines don't feel safe hence my decision to shut down other notable funds that have gone out of business this year including part capital management and passport capital tilson says investors capital will be returned to them at its peak case handled one hundred eighty million dollars. if the era of the data portfolio selling data to feed hedge fund computers is one of the hottest areas of finance computers trade completely on their own at funds large and small now it could put humans out of jobs but let's talk about the nature
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of this information how it's collected and used please welcome a rumor gone he's co-founder and c.e.o. of x. earned thank you so much for talking with me about this listen daters one of the hottest commodities in the world right now you and i both know this and quantitative hedge funds are eating it up primarily interested in this automated measurable data they're the biggest buyers of it what exactly are they looking to mine. so it kind of varies pretty much what we're doing so a lot of kwanzaa trends are coming to us for news and blog but they want to apply different types of analytics on these types of news and blog did and plug this into their automated strategies so they can build different types of models and then trade off of this so pretty much where mining the entire internet so about three hundred million websites we're getting in real time every day including the entire twitter feed so every day we're processing about seven million articles one hundred
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fifty million tweets and we are using a algos to figure out which of these tweets or these articles are actually relevant to a specific asset classes these quantitative hedge funds are trading and then we just see it in our analytics. for models and then they're basically doing automated trading based off it just to generate more alpha ok so you throw in the algorithms you get the data how do you actually discern what's important because you're on a like you said circle millions and millions of these sites so how do you look at what's important what's not. yeah for a basic example so let's see there's an article on apple laying off a few different employees so we have it i'll go to the table to look at all these types of articles and identify which companies are mentioned in these articles and does the article mention a financial type of event and so we filter the entire data for the specific financial related company related articles and then we started arriving different types of news analytics so these news analytics that we're derive they are pretty
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much helping these quantities hedge funds figure out which of these articles are actually actionable so for an article we're able to let them know is this article very positive or negative towards a company using semantic analysis and we're also able to let know what's the potential impact an article could have on a certain company's stock price and there's a lot of different types of analytics we're able to derive from each article and they're using these types of analytics to make the most accurate trading decision without having any human intervention in the loop itself ok well let's talk that makes sense let's talk about the alternative data like the payment bell or the purchasing of a book from amazon it's very valuable for these hedge funds take a look at the rate now that hedge funds over traditional asset managers favor spending big money on best type of information seventy four percent to the hedge funds to be forty percent of the actual asset managers if alternative data is so
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valuable why are asset managers not grabbing hold of this. so it's still very early i would say so pretty much when we started. a lot of quantity of hedge funds weren't actually looking into alternative data about three years ago but now the space is starting to get very very hot and a lot of quanta the trends are always coming at us asking us for different types of data sets that we have and we're seeing in the industry it's a lot of players are actually creating their own alternative data so there is like satellite imagery data where they have satellites up in the air and they're counting the parking lot retail stores and trying to predict sales revenue source retail stores and then there's all the other types of like data where there is like employment prediction. there people are scraping the websites of companies posting and if a lot of companies are posting jobs it shows that there are companies potentially going to grow even higher and higher so it's all these types of alternative data that's that's being created and
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a lot of hedge funds are trying to take advantage of it right but he was kind of like a crapshoot because you see cars in a parking lot but one of the conversion rates inside the store you see a lot of job postings how do you know they're not internally hiring interesting you know that but with the alternative data like utility bill payments and purchasing books from amazon isn't there a privacy issue here as well even satellite imaging. in terms of. there is also these terms of service agreements with the website and that's where they get it ok i know where you're going. i understand why do you see more companies actually marketing themselves. as using this as a feature more and more because you know it seems like there was a time when something like this was perceived maybe negatively like people there aren't good enough to analyze this and bring in the information themselves but a lot of times we see out there are these these companies talk about the
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consistency of their automated data do you see this trend increasing. so i mean a lot of these companies now they're just trying to create their own and so that's why i mentioned like previously they're putting all these terms of service agreements there just so when school when someone clicks agree they automatically can use all those three the and start selling those data to hedge funds or any companies just to generate additional revenues and i think right now in our in our time i think a lot of people are comfortable giving their information. on less it's like very very critical information of them might think twice but i think right now people are fine with clicking i agree to get most of these terms and service agreements right so browsing data versus equifax data before and the. do you see that there sort of a glut in interest you know you're talking about scraping these websites for. articles there's a lot of companies out there who hire copywriters to push out little articles that
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mean nothing even bots sometimes do you think that there's going to come a point when you're really going to have to look at this and say this information the money we're spending on it just isn't getting us anywhere a lot of this is fake information. oh i see so i mean right now we're tracking every single public pretty much like the popular news sites that. are speciality is actually tracking the entire internet so these are very local news and block so it's out there and so we're able to get these information ahead of time but the difficult the challenge here is that a lot of these blog site or even on twitter anyone can post false information or fake news that's out there so we don't want to serve our. users with fake news and have them trade bill and the dollars on it so this is why we created the reliability algo and this reliability elgood it basically identifies which twitter user or which blogs sites is actually reliable or releasing certain
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types of financial event based on historical analysis ok so you check out if it's legit or not real question before we go data like there's an eggcorn and some estimates about it at something like two hundred million dollars conservative if you think it's going to go up do you think oh yeah definitely so a lot of so every single day we're having quantity of hedge funds come at us asking us for our data and they're willing to pay a lot of money for it so at the moment the call of this two hundred million dollars for the data market but i can see that tripling probably in the next year or so just because the data space is so hot right now and there's a lot of venture capital investment in fin tax pacifically data i can definitely see tripling in about a year or so wow will bring and for that thank you so much for this very interesting information coup mash renew our route scuse me go getter and action that's a tough one thank you so much for. yeah. well
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pricing at eighteen million dollars share offering at fourteen dollars per share stock video streaming gadget. take a roku sword past twenty nine dollars by ten am today just one day after its debut on the nasdaq we saw a sixty eight percent jump on thursday alone roku closed that day at a peak of twenty three dollars fifty cents raising two hundred nineteen million dollars. this is a company known for its early development of successful streaming players that lead users watch netflix hulu and a very large swath of growing streaming video options on their t.v.'s it has the biggest share of the streaming gadget market still it's up against deep pocketed competitors like amazon google and apple most of rocas revenue comes from sales of those streaming players but the company is seeking to capitalize on its platform by
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building its business of showing ads to users whether it's on the home screens of people in their homes or inside video apps the los gatos california based company had three hundred ninety eight point six million dollars in revenue last year up twenty five percent from the year before. but the company did have debt in the millions this looks set to change very soon. time now for a quick break stick around though when we get back said negotiators say that if we want to hear updates on the topic of trade in divorce talk anytime soon we'd better start praying and it's the fiftieth anniversary of the start of operations as canada's oil sands celebrate this big anniversary we take a look at what the future holds for the powerful stores of need in energy we go to break here in the numbers the closing bell.
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back skies or financial survival. housing bubble. oh you mean there's a downside artificially low mortgage rates don't get carried away that's cause a report. in the us a child can choose a school. with. teachers we don't. recruit we'll sisters if the cadet is interested in going in the military but we don't recruit ourselves and see. the pentagon is funding a program to boost interest in the military among teenagers. so that. with yourself. things you can't go wrong with the military it's a great stepping stone for whatever career you want to do but some veterans are
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willing to tell enthusiastic children a little more they ask me call of duty is very popular first year video game. it's play and that's because the military like call of duty to turn off call of duty oh yeah well you can't turn off more than a lot of these kids just don't hear. the darker side does the pentagon allow them to be told does it just need more recruits. i. leaders from the u.k. and the e.u. ended another round of talks this week with the same result yet again we still don't know what drugs and negotiations will look like or what we should expect in its aftermath to talk more about this we're joined now by. bianca what did both sides have to say about these latest talks well both sides have acknowledged that they've made some progress which is good but the e.u. remains very skeptical about how far they can get after the u.k.
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leaves next month leaders from each nation will meet and discuss how much progress has been made in negotiations and on thursday commission president younker gave some insight into his thoughts on where they're headed. to such. as we saw. younger did say that they've made some headway in u.k. prime minister theresa may said she was pleased with the way discussions are going but beyond the details of the u.k.'s exit sorting out other key issues like trade or a whole other dilemma irish prime minister leo varadkar told reporters that on that front there is much more work to be done. i think it's just for the better for you but it better be going to the negotiations between you and the baby was pretty good
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still very evident. there's more work to do and we're not yet at the stage that we can say that but you are seeing me to talk about your relationship to treat. it with it which means. so much. based on those comments it remains unclear if leaders will actually be able to discuss trade after the october meeting in fact trade talks could be pushed back to december or even next year earlier this week michel barnier who acts as the negotiator said we could see a stalemate until the u.k. agrees to honor all e.u. financial commitments but leaders do have a few weeks left to change their minds and perspectives on how to approach next month's meeting. their perspectives i mean british prime minister theresa may try to reset the tone on bret's that talks in italy last week any success there whatsoever well so she was in florence a week before this week's talks right so she was really there to sort of talk up
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the talks and during her speech she really tried to make it seem like the u.k. was you know in this for both sides she wants to make it easy for both sides they don't want to pick any fights you know they just want this to be an easy transition but one of the more significant comments she made during that speech was basically hinting that the u.k. might walk back on their demands about basically taking the european court of justice out of the. big statement during the transition and even after the u.k. leaves so again this is not in writing but she made it seem like that would be up for negotiation does anyone actually believe that well but see you i know you and i don't really know we really you know immediately after so many you leaders really will wait until we see it in writing but chancellor merkel of germany was just reelected said. but she saw that as a very positive development and said that we should take it as a constructive movement in the whole talk negotiations so again
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once we see it in writing i think would really move mountains but right now you know considering younkers comments which were also less positive you know he's saying we need america very well and that to get yes he was very honest about how he feels about talks but until we see it in writing he was candid merkel is an excellent diplomat. and u.k. economy though there's been major changes since the vote last year the need to be addressed so the u.k. economy has had its ups and downs since but it didn't exactly were react the way that many antibiotics it activists expected i mean in two thousand and sixteen when the vote happened and from the vote and throughout the rest of the year it was fair pretty well you know wasn't a possum little bit old pretty well yeah it held well that's a better way of putting it in twenty seventeen is when they started seeing slower growth and you know for several different industries were hit especially when we learned that some countries or excuse me some companies were thinking of leaving the u.k. and putting their headquarters elsewhere in the e.u.
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and we saw the competition for finance capital and so on but to circle back to to trade for a second. we saw with the bharti a and boeing deal that was basically two recent days first lesson learned about dealing with trade issues without having the backing of the rest of the e.u. in fact that's how a lot of other e.u. leaders referred to that they said take this as your first lesson in learning how to deal with an international trade problem without us so you know it's one thing if one industry is impacted or not there but trade is really really the biggest deal here and i think that's why we saw theresa may in that speech last week say you know maybe there's maybe we can negotiate on things that would impact trade because that's really the crux of what's you know their economy and what could really. hurt them in the short term and the long term. thank you so much for that.
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according to the world economic forum's twenty seventeen twenty eight hundred competitiveness report switzerland is on top as the world's most competitive economy the forum bases its rankings on dozens of drivers such as trust in politicians property rights and rule of law just to name a few and also gathers the opinions of some pretty high powered business leaders who say that the swiss mix of infrastructure institutions and education pushes it to the top but what shoots it through the roof is how the nation uses that mix to boost talent however according to the report the nation is at risk of complacency its aging population could undermine innovation there besides what's for lent. the united states remains in second place followed by singapore the netherlands and then germany the report though has a dire warning for us regarding artificial intelligence saying that global
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economies are ill prepared as it says for the coming wave of ai to take over. and fifty years ago if the first major commercial operation opened its doors in canada's oil sands at the time many thought it was a losing gamble and it took decades to shake off that reputation well today the oil sands are one of the world's top producers of fossil fuels as well as one of the most controversial areas for oil extraction also known as the tar sands there is no doubt that the resource sources found here have brought great wealth to canada and the province specifically of alberta the question is how long will this good fortune last are highly which is in toronto with the story on this alex it's been half a century since a canadian oil sands entered the world stage tell us a little bit about the evolution of this resource. i think back to nine hundred sixty seven when everything was black and white and you got this guy the premier
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ernest manning. flew up with a guy named john howard a few from the pew i should say they flew up to fort mcmurray with a whole delegation of oil execs accept and speak in front of six hundred people because they just built the biggest facility of its kind in alberta to extract oil now the company the sun oil which pugh was the chairman of they're based out of philadelphia there was one of the the biggest companies around at that time especially they got into this game knowing that there was a big risk in alongside them one hundred thousand albertans invested also at fifteen hundred dollars a pop in bonds so people were going all in thinking that this is the future of alberta and to a point they were right but it took a long time to get there there were many difficulties including just the whole fact of the facilities not being able to work where they were here's a map did suggest to show you i mean this is far north comparatively speaking when you have you know edmonton and calgary further south this was sort of a no man's land and you know you have the challenges of first of all getting the
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bitchin out of the se and so they have there's a whole process of trying to extract this and to make this tar into actually or oil that you can use it automobiles except also that was what part of the challenge the other part of the challenge was what do you do with all this waste that was coming out of there so you know that both sides of the things weren't really going that well you saw the opec crisis and it happened in the seventy's and canada was you know all and they were thinking pierre trudeau who is a prime minister at the time said you know we need to keep this thing going some companies were pulling out well the canadian government went in investing about fifteen percent ten percent the government ten percent they alberta government but much of this was nationalized in the sense that because they knew there was a make it or break it thing for canada in the sense that canada didn't want to be reliant on somebody else's oil so up till the one nine hundred ninety s. . very iffy and then we saw things kick in and here's a bit of a graph to show you where canada stand so venezuela saudi arabia canada those are
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the three big reserves in the world today are the prove proven reserves and obviously canada is a big player in that game well what is the future hold for the oil sands is it all roses or what. well you know some will tell you roy roses and those that's going to be coming from the oil industry of course are others will say that not so much i mean obviously billions of the been invested two thousand and eighteen they want to be able to pump three million barrels a day or they want to double that because that's why but what we're doing right now those three million barrels is about three point two million going out a day three million of those go to the states that's our biggest market and we are when you're bigger biggest supplier of oil so they want to double that by the end of next year and then they want to increase that even more by two thousand and thirty a double that so you know when you're looking at these numbers the oil industry saying well we're all in we've invested billions of dollars in this we're thinking of sticking around some core saying and that's actually
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a company that came out of back from pews days they're saying we're in this for the next hundred to two hundred years well reality might say something very different because there's things like electric cars now and consumers don't really want to be a part of this oil mass a lot of people are thinking you know it's time to pull out of that so alberta can keep pushing doesn't mean you're going to get too far especially when people are going to other resources and then there's problems environmentally speaking i mean everything from the tailing ponds the tailing ponds are where this water goes this awful water that's full of all kinds of waste and bits talk sick and let me just give a name you just threw off a couple of numbers that's it's eighty five square miles that have been collected of this stuff since the past fifty years that's about two hundred twenty square kilometers three hundred seventeen billion gallons of this contaminated water one point two trillion leaders that's a lot of water. that's a huge part of the course greenhouse gases the canadian government saying by two
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thousand and thirty that greenhouse gases if they continue with the plant will double so good luck oil industry. markets good riddance if it really does happen because we can move on to better things and chemicals ready for this is called well field without oil well it's true and no economy in the world should have to fail without oil specially now as you say with the green energy and those environmental activists had to have a very strong voice in canada thank you so much for this alex coming out us from toronto thank you. star trek called it the final frontier it's space and you on moscow set a timeline to colonize it but he's in a race with a few others the space obsessed mosque is hoping to launch his first mars mission in two thousand and twenty two hauling cargo followed by a second manned mission in two thousand and twenty four if it goes according to plan mosque will beat out nasa is own mars mission by a good ten years but there is a space race here with fellow americans amazon's founder jeff bezos has his blue
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origin space adventure working on a space vehicle also aiming to go to mars even lockheed martin it's announced its own separate plans to mars complete with an orbiting space station and landing craft. thanks for watching be sure to catch on directv you can find us on the art teacher at all three two one and if you miss us on direct t.v. be sure to catch us on youtube youtube dot com slash our team thanks for watching see you next time. in america a college degree requires a great deal. paying a decades long dead. studying so hard it requires transfers. going through humiliation to enter an elite society. and parching to death
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. for a better life. i . sunday's independence referendum approaches police reinforcements right boss alona council an official said the vote could be postponed if madrid agrees to compromise. take john's take center stage in the scandal on the lead's russia meddling in u.s. elections as google joined facebook on twitter declaring it will testifying to congress. that.
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