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Why Is T-Mobile Asking You to Talk About Mental Health?

The telecom company launched a new text line for access to mental health resources.

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The telecom company launched a new text line for access to mental health resources.

Concern for mental health has, for the last several years, been a lucrative marketing opportunity for many brands — big names in everything from entertainment to technology have been sharing resources for tackling mental illness, releasing statements of concern, and donating to all manner of mental health awareness causes both for full-time employees and even customers.

While the authenticity (and, more to the point, usefulness) of such campaigns frequently comes under scrutiny, it has gotten to the point that you're not a company of a certain size if you haven't spent a lot of money on a high-profile mental health campaign.

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What Is T-Mobile Doing in This Domain?

The latest corporation to announce a mental health program is telecommunications provider T-Mobile  (TMUS) - Get T-Mobile US Inc. Report.

While the American subsidiary of Deutsche Telekom already had a hotline for getting mental health resources that customers could access by dialing 988, the wireless network provider has now launched a similar program for those who'd rather text than call.

The text hotline functions similarly to the phone crisis line — texting to 988 will get one access to a counselor at one of 200 National Suicide Prevention Hotline locations across the country at any time of day or night.

The goal is to reach those who may be dealing with a wide spectrum of mental health problems but feel uncomfortable talking about it by voice. The counselors are trained to deal with everything from everyday anxiety to someone who is contemplating suicide.

"The simple act of instilling hope through a call or text can potentially help save lives, and we laud the FCC for their efforts to guide the wireless industry on this important, people-first effort," T-Mobile CEO Mike Sievert said in a statement.

To keep it free for those in North America, calls to the hotline are rerouted to a 1-800 number while texts are also generated in a way that prevents users from being charged for them.

What's the Limit of What Brands Can Do for Mental Health?

The reason mental health awareness has become such a trending topic is, in large part, the scope of the problem — incidences of anxiety and depression alone increased by more than 25% since the start of lockdowns related to the covid-19 pandemic.

But while the pandemic made certain issues impossible to ignore, the discussion around corporations' role in raising mental health awareness dates back more than a decade truly started gaining speed in the early 2010s with the rise of short-term campaigns drawing awareness to problems like teenage bullying or depression.

The specific ways companies invest in this area changes depending on current social norms — from suicide prevention campaigns following the deaths of high-profile celebrities like Robin Williams or Kate Spade to giving employees paid time off as the discussion centered around burnout at the height of the pandemic.

"Our senior leaders are all sending a clear message: take the time to unwind, destress and spend time with your loved ones," Nike  (NKE) - Get Nike Inc. Report manager Matt Marrazzo wrote on his LinkedIn page in 2021. "Do not work."

For both big and small companies, not participating in these discussions can sometimes come off as out of touch with the times — a recent Harvard Business Review survey found that 91% of respondents believed that they want companies' culture to support mental health in 2022. This number rose from 86% in 2019.

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Worsening Treasury Liquidity Keeping Fixed-Income Vol Elevated

Worsening Treasury Liquidity Keeping Fixed-Income Vol Elevated

Authored by Simon White, Bloomberg macro strategist,

Poor liquidity in the…

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Worsening Treasury Liquidity Keeping Fixed-Income Vol Elevated

Authored by Simon White, Bloomberg macro strategist,

Poor liquidity in the Treasury market is contributing to a rise in implied and realized fixed-income volatility. A re-increase in inflation volatility means this dynamic is likely to persist.

Despite being one of the deepest markets in the world, the market for Treasuries has seen liquidity deteriorate in the years since the pandemic. On several measures – bid/offer spread, order-book depth, price impact of a trade – the Treasury market has shown marked signs of a decline in liquidity in recent years.

Bloomberg’s US Treasury Liquidity Index measures liquidity by comparing where yields are to where they “should” be based off a fitted curve. The greater the average of the yield errors across the curve, the worse liquidity is likely to be.

As the chart below shows, the Liquidity Index infers liquidity has markedly weakened over the last two years, and after showing an improvement over the last six months, it has started to worsen again.

Fixed-income volatility, using the MOVE index, intuitively rises and falls as liquidity worsens and improves respectively.

Bond volatility has been notably higher in this cycle than other assets’ volatility, such as equities and FX. Indeed, the recent rise in the MOVE index, i.e. implied volatility, has taken it to a level above realized volatility it has rarely exceeded in the last 30-plus years.

The immediate catalyst for the rise in bond volatility has been the Federal Reserve’s rate-hiking cycle. But this was itself triggered by the rise in inflation. It is the inherent increase in uncertainty that goes with elevated inflation that is the ultimate source of rising volatility.

Higher inflation volatility goes hand in hand with higher market volatility, especially in rates and fixed-income markets. Inflation is very likely to be persistent, and soon to begin re-accelerating. Inflation volatility has moderated somewhat from its recent highs, but is picking up again.

As long as inflation volatility remains elevated, bond vol will remain likewise. This is even more so the case as the yield curve continues to rise, with steeper curves an inherent source of yield volatility.

Tyler Durden Mon, 10/16/2023 - 08:45

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How we’re using evidence to tackle net zero, slow economy and new hybrid working – sign up for Conversation partnership events and reports

With its IPPO partners, The Conversation is addressing some of the biggest policy challenges.

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Civil servants around the world are wrestling with a vast web of incredibly complex social problems.

From meeting net zero targets in cash-strapped economies, with often low levels of political support, to managing ageing populations, sluggish productivity levels and handling the repercussions of soaring inequality, there are no easy answers.

But a growing body of detailed academic research can help. The biggest challenge is assessing and then effectively communicating this research to governments so they can use it to inform and shape policy.

In December 2020, as the UK was about to enter its third pandemic lockdown, The Conversation partnered on the £2 million, ESRC-funded International Public Policy Observatory (IPPO), a collaboration of UK academic institutions – including UCL, the Welsh Centre for Public Policy (WCPP), Queen’s University Belfast, and the University of Glasgow – and the International Network for Government Science Advice (INGSA) to help make sense of the flood of COVID-related evidence and then report it usefully to policymakers across the UK.

Three years later, IPPO is now a third of the way through its second two-year phase, and has extended its focus to include the challenges of net zero, socio-economic inequalities, place and spatial inequality and COVID-19 recovery.

It has also been engaging with national and local policymakers to find out what kinds of evidence would be of most use to them. After all, to provide impactful answers, researchers need to know what questions people are asking.

What’s coming up?

Since June 2023, our team has been reviewing the new normal of hybrid and remote work, and how these changes are affecting workers with disabilities and long-term health conditions. In our next report, we’ll look at what policymakers can do to ensure that potential gains from more flexible working conditions are embedded into work spaces.


Read more: Sunak should be wary of backtracking on net zero – what history tells us about flip-flopping on the environment


IPPO has also focused its attention on the challenges posed by net zero goals, and highlighted the pathways and barriers to change when it comes to people making their homes more energy efficient. It has also suggested the novel idea of home upgrade agencies to offer bespoke, data-driven advice to households and help everyone make a positive difference.

This month, the team is holding a public event on the best ways to engage society in how we meet net zero goals, as countries across the world face increased opposition to green policies.

In Northern Ireland and Scotland, the team has also been exploring policy interventions to reduce high levels of economic inactivity. It now intends to expand this research to look at what different geographic areas around the UK can learn from one another.

Innovations in evidence

As part of its remit to challenge and improve how evidence is gathered and used, IPPO recently launched a new series of public, online events on new methods for mobilising evidence for greatest impact, to guide researchers, policymakers and intermediaries.

Our next events on “How to Commission Rapid Evidence Assessments for Policy” and “Systems Mapping: Best Approaches and What Works for Policy Design” will bring together experts in evidence and policy to discuss best practice for evidence-informed decision making.


Read more: The UK's four-day working week pilot was a success – here's what should happen next


We’ll also be welcoming David Halpern, chief executive of the behavioural insights team at Nesta, to discuss how to gauge whether an approach that works in one place and time, will work in others, during a public, online event.

Unlocking potential in a crisis

On November 21, IPPO will launch its first evidence review of 2023 looking at how local authorities can accelerate policy change under pressure.

Over the last four months, IPPO and its partner RREAL have looked at the COVID-19 recovery plans developed by local authorities across the country.

During our launch event, the report’s authors will discuss key takeaways from their research, reveal what mechanisms help unlock and deliver progressive policies, and share in-depth case studies of the experiences of those involved in the design and implementation of recovery plans at the local authority level. You can sign up here.

For more information about IPPO, its events and upcoming work, please click here.

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New Zealand Ousts Leftist Lockdown Loons After Conservative Wins Election

New Zealand Ousts Leftist Lockdown Loons After Conservative Wins Election

Voters in New Zealand on Saturday ousted the party once led by Jacinda…

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New Zealand Ousts Leftist Lockdown Loons After Conservative Wins Election

Voters in New Zealand on Saturday ousted the party once led by Jacinda Ardern, and have instead elected the country's most conservative government in decades.

New Zealand's new Prime Minister elect Christopher Luxon

Turns out forcing your citizens to take vaccines, decreeing state news the only 'truth,' and locking up peaceful protesters opposed pandemic authoritarianism did not go over well.

On Saturday, conservative Christopher Luxon was elected New Zealand's next prime minister. While the exact makeup of Luxon's government has yet to be determined, his center-right National party looks set to form a coalition government with one or two minor parties.

The National Party will likely combine its indicated 50 seats with the ACT party (11 seats), to give them 61 seats, providing a slim majority in the 121-seat New Zealand parliament. As Goldman notes, the results are largely in line with pre-election polling, with the incumbent Labour party on track to lose their outright majority in parliament for the first time since 2017.

"You have reached for hope and you have voted for change," Luxon told supporters to rapturous applause at an event in Auckland, alongside his wife Amanda and their children.

Outgoing Prime Mininster Chris Hipkins, who's held the job for nine months following the abrupt resignation of Jacinda Ardern, told supporters late Saturday that he'd called Luxon to concede.

Outgoing New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins

Hipkins said that while the result wasn't his desired outcome, "I want you to be proud of what we achieved over the last six years," he told supporters in Wellington.

On the economic front, Goldman notes that Luxon's party has vowed to reduce effective tax rates on incomes and investment parties. And while National has pledged to offset the fiscal impact of tax cuts with savings elsewhere, Goldman sees the risks as "skewed to more stimulatory fiscal policy in 2024" vs New Zealand's current fiscal projections.

The proposed tax cuts and new spending amounts to around 0.8% of annual GDP, which would boost household disposable income by around 1.5% and also provide a tailwind to house prices in 2024. While National has pledged to offset the new spending and lower taxes with a reduction in spending and new taxes, overall we view the risks as skewed to more fiscal stimulus (compared to the current fiscal projections) and additional rate hikes from the RBNZ (GSe: base case on hold at 5.5%).

Luxon has also addressed crime in New Zealand, telling supporters that it's "out of control," adding "And we are going to restore law and order, and we are going to restore personal responsibility."

He's also vowed to fix the capital's traffic woes with a new tunnel project.

Tyler Durden Sun, 10/15/2023 - 14:00

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