A woman wears ‘2021’ numeral glasses in advance of New Year’s eve in Times Square amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Manhattan borough of New York City, New York, U.S., December 21, 2020.
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NEW YORK, Dec 30 (Reuters Breakingviews) – Breakingviews readers displayed eclectic financial curiosity in 2021. As the pandemic ran into its second year, our most-read agenda-setting financial insights spanned mergers and acquisitions, Wall Street, cryptocurrencies, airlines, meme stocks and a decent sampling of Chinese companies.
On Breakingviews.com, dealmaking was at the forefront of readers’ minds. Our best-read story of the year was about U.S. telecommunications giant AT&T’s (T.N) clumsy $16 billion spinoff of its pay-TV business read more. Next came our take on pharmaceutical giant Sinopharm’s (1099.HK) attempt to take private herbal supplements company China Traditional Chinese Medicine (0570.HK) via a consortium read more. Third was a peek at British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline’s (GSK.L) troubles read more. Embattled People’s Republic property developer Evergrande’s (3333.HK) downward spiral also appeared in the top 10 read more, as did the GameStop (GME.N) meme-stock whodunnit read more .
Over on Refinitiv’s Eikon platform, Morgan Stanley’s (MS.N) brush with the failure of Archegos Capital Management took top billing read more . Coinbase Global’s (COIN.O) listing came second, highlighting crypto’s paradoxical moment read more. Archegos featured in third spot, too, with a look at how the mess highlighted Wall Street’s weak spots read more.
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Meanwhile clicks on Reuters.com, which showcases a selection of Breakingviews articles, emphasized U.S. news. The possibility of an American airline going bust read more – something that has yet to transpire – made the top spot. The top 10 also encompassed the challenges President Joe Biden’s economic dream team faced in his first year in office read more . Even here, though, China featured: The second most-read item was about Chinese consumer-credit default risks read more . Meme stocks and crypto inevitably made the list, too.
Our readers still major on Western financial markets, especially America’s. But in comparison with recent years, they were less likely in 2021 to be spooked by Covid-19 and more likely to scrutinize Chinese companies and trends. As the pandemic evolves into something endemic, that may be the way the world is going, too.
BREAKINGVIEWS.COM TOP 10
AT&T clumsily cuts the cord on DirecTV read more
Sinopharm inhales invigorating Chinese herbs read more
GSK CEO’s best defence is a graceful exit read more
Evergrande’s downward spiral runs off the page read more
Bumble IPO is less alluring than its profile pic read more
McKinsey’s public problem may have public solution read more
Bolloré and Ackman will beat the Vivendi activists read more
Breakdown: GameStop, a financial markets whodunnit read more
Chinese developer undercuts Wall Street’s ESG push read more
Credit Suisse’s spring clean has barely started read more
REFINITIV EIKON TOP 10
Morgan Stanley picked good time to back bad client read more
Coinbase float is crypto’s paradoxical moment read more
Archegos mess revisits Wall Street weak spots read more
Short squeezers could end up strangling themselves read more
Banks’ prime broking blowup reveals lurking danger read more
Morgan Stanley serves up best of two weird worlds read more
Tesla will give up pole position in China read more
AT&T shows breaking up can be worth it read more
Running Wells Fargo just got even more thankless read more
How to pick the hydrogen industry’s future Amazon read more
REUTERS.COM TOP 10
“Big Four” U.S. airlines may go down to three read more
China creates a bigger consumer credit mess read more
White supremacy dies hard on the grocery shelf read more
America’s safe-haven status gets violent test read more
AMC’s valuation is a date with derangement read more
Chancellor: Was I totally wrong about bitcoin? read more
Robinhood free lunch was never really free read more
Big U.S. banks keep their powder a bit too dry read more
Biden’s SEC pick is ominous sign for Wall St read more
Biden’s dream team faces a nightmare read more
Follow @alpgomez and @sharonlamhk on Twitter
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Column by Amanda Gomez in New York and Sharon Lam in Toronto. Editing by Richard Beales and Karen Kwok
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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