Good morning, Quartz readers!
What to watch for today
… and Obamacare makes another appearance before the Supreme Court. Republicans looking to undo the president’s healthcare reforms will try to argue that one short phrase in the 900-page law bans the federal government from subsidizing health insurance for the poor, even though that was the whole point. A decision isn’t expected until June.
Abercrombie & Fitch loses its cool. The preppy fashion brand is likely to report disappointing fourth-quarter results, on the back of a strong dollar and discounted holiday-period sales. Investors will want to know how it intends to fight off increasing pressure from fast-fashion competitors.
While you were sleeping
Standard Chartered’s profit fell 25%. The British-based Asia-focused bank said it will cut $1.8 billion in costs over the next two years after reporting an underlying pretax profit of $5.2 billion for 2014, from $7 billion a year earlier. A 32% rise in bad loans hindered the bank, which last week replaced its CEO and many other top executives.
Toyota diversified at the top. The world’s biggest auto maker by sales promoted three Western executives, a notable move for a company with only seven non-Japanese managers in its top 57 positions. Didier Leroy, Toyota’s European chief, will become one of six executive vice presidents, and the first foreigner to hold such a role.
Australia’s GDP slowed. The economy matched expectations by growing by 2.5% in 2014, down from 2.7% the previous year. Household spending rose modestly, as consumers were buoyed by higher home prices and cheaper oil. The central bank held off on further interest rates reductions yesterday, but there may still be more cuts to come.
China’s services sector ticked up while Japan’s crashed. The HSBC/Markit purchasing managers’ index for China’s service sector was 52 in February, from 51.8 in January, showing an acceleration in the expansion of sector activity. Low demand and subsequent job cuts caused Japan’s service PMI, measured by Markit/JMMA, to drop sharply to 48.5 in February from 51.3 in January.
Quartz obsession interlude
Bobby Ghosh on Iran’s real firepower. “Netanyahu’s Ahab-like fixation with his white whale—Iran’s nuclear program—draws attention away from the many other ways that the regime in Tehran represents a clear and present danger to the world. He is right that sanctions relief will empower that regime, but it’s hardly a given that the billions of dollars unlocked ($1.6 billion a month in oil income, by some estimates) will be poured into a clandestine program to build The Bomb.” Read more here.
Matters of debate
Netanyanhu was all mouth and no action. The Israeli prime minister’s speech to the US congress sounded tough but proposed nothing.
Surprising discoveries
Air pollution is bad for kids’ brains. Memories of children in high-pollution areas develop more slowly.
Correction: In yesterday’s brief we incorrectly told you that Barclays’ pretax profit of £5.5 billion ($8.5 billion) included money set aside for potential fines. In fact, it did not include such funds.
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