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The next recession, Mark Zuckerberg's security chief, and UnitedHealth Group's $100 billion goal

Jun 2, 2019, 19:37 IST

Michael Loccisano/Getty Images

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It was a rough week for the market, with Donald Trump's decree on Thursday that the US will impose tariffs of 5% on Mexican imports starting June 10, sending stocks into a spin.

Morgan Stanley strategists think the economy looks far worse under the surface than most realize, even before the tariffs, with the Wall Street firm highlighting weak durable goods and capital spending in April and a decline in the Markit Purchasing Managers' Index.

A proprietary economic indicator maintained by Morgan Stanley has now fallen to its lowest level since the most recent recession more than a decade ago.

"We think this means the US economic slowdown and rising recession risk is happening regardless of the trade outcome," the strategists said.

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And the trade outcome isn't look great right now. There's little sign of a breakthrough with China, and the latest tariffs have the potential to push Mexico and the US towards a recession, given the inter-connectedness of the two economies post NAFTA, according to experts.

Separately, the Fed just sounded the alarm on companies stockpiling debt and using it for all the wrong reasons, a reminder that the economy's in a potentially vulnerable position should a slowdown arrive.

Despite the tough environment, there are those investors who continue to prosper. Akin Oyedele talked to five of the top-rated US equity fund managers to learn about their strategies, strongest convictions in the market, and advice for other investors looking to replicate their success.

Here are some other highlights from BI's investing team this week:

As a reminder, Business Insider is hosting a finance event at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday, June 10, from 8:00 - 9:30 a.m. IGNITION: Transforming Finance will feature top Wall Street executives and innovators who are disrupting from within.

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Interested in attending? Admission is free but space is limited. Please complete this form to be considered for our invitation list.

As always, you can contact me at mturner@businessinsider.com if you have any ideas or suggestions.

-- Matt

Quote of the week

"Cable has a giant reach in tens of millions of homes, which was quite tantalizing to us, but we all know the world is going towards streaming and so it felt necessary that we be there as well." - Sam Dolnick, the assistant managing editor at the New York Times, explains the publication's push into TV.

In conversation

Finance and Investing

JPMorgan says it's poaching Google tech whizzes for its new equity-trading bot as Wall Street ramps up its automation revolution

JPMorgan says it's ramping up the electronic revolution at the firm, accelerating the integration of traders and tech with a new global equity-trading bot that is at the forefront of a three-year initiative.

A Wall Street firm crunched the numbers around how much Apple will make from its new credit card with Goldman Sachs

This summer, Apple is launching its much-ballyhooed credit-card, in collaboration with Goldman Sachs. Within a few years, the card could reap as much as $1 billion in annual profits for the tech giant, with little downside risk.

Citigroup spends $8 billion a year on tech, and it's finally starting to see a hefty pile of savings from the massive investments

Big banks are spending massive sums of money to up their technology games.

Tech, Media, Telecoms

Mark Zuckerberg's personal security chief accused of sexual harassment and making racist remarks about Priscilla Chan by 2 former staffers

Mark Zuckerberg's personal head of security has been accused of sexual harassment and making racist and homophobic comments by two former members of the Facebook CEO's private staff, Business Insider has learned.

POWER BROKERS OF TECH: HR chiefs reveal how to get hired at Microsoft, Facebook, Netflix, and other top companies

For many, working at a top tech company like Hulu or Twitter would be nothing short of a dream job.

7 investors and founders reveal 6 reasons Europe has never produced its own Facebook, Google, or Amazon

Ask a room full of European investors and founders "Where's the European Google?" and you're likely to elicit groans.

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Healthcare, Retail, Transportation

UnitedHealth is already the biggest US health insurer. Now it wants to make going to the doctor its next $100 billion business.

UnitedHealth Group is a healthcare giant, and it's only getting bigger.

The cofounder of Groupon launched a cancer-data startup after his wife's diagnosis. Now it's worth $3.1 billion after less than 4 years.

In 2015, the world was just starting to get outraged about drug pricing, Jimmy Carter announced a cancer diagnosis, and the latest venture from Groupon cofounder Eric Lefkofsky was just getting off the ground.

NOW WATCH: Incredible animation shows just how big supermassive black holes can get

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