Tuesday, December 13, 2022

☕ U-turn

Sam Bankman-Fried goes from hero to zero...
December 13, 2022 View Online | Sign Up | Shop 10% Off

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Matty Merritt, Abby Rubenstein, Neal Freyman, Sam Klebanov

MARKETS

Nasdaq

11,143.74

S&P

3,990.56

Dow

34,005.04

10-Year

3.601%

Bitcoin

$17,148.98

Tesla

$167.82

*Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 4:00am ET. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Markets: Investors started pregaming early ahead of a back-to-back economic extravaganza. Today, the government will drop the latest inflation report, which is expected to show that price growth continued its decline last month. Then, tomorrow, the Fed will announce its interest rate decision—another hike, certainly, but one that's smaller than the previous bump, likely. One of the few stocks not joining in on the party was Tesla, which has taken a hosing since CEO Elon Musk turned his attention to Twitter.
 

CRYPTO

SBF won't be able to talk himself out of this one

Sam Bankman-Fried Tom Williams/Getty Images

"I don't think I will be arrested," Sam Bankman-Fried said on Twitter Spaces yesterday, hours before he was arrested.

The attorney general for the Bahamas announced last night that the former CEO of FTX had been arrested in the island nation, and American authorities explained that it came at their request. The US criminal charges against SBF won't be unsealed until this morning, but, according to the NYT, they will include wire fraud, wire fraud conspiracy, securities fraud, securities fraud conspiracy, and money laundering.

This alleged fraud stems from the shocking collapse of SBF's crypto empire just over a month ago. Once worth $32 billion, FTX experienced a rapid wave of withdrawals, putting the company $8 billion short of remaining viable. The sudden implosion sparked investigations by regulators and the media, who discovered that SBF's hedge fund, Alameda Research, had used billions in customer assets from FTX to fund high-risk bets of its own. For many, the question of SBF getting handcuffs was a matter of when, not if.

But the timing of the arrest was curious

It came just one day before SBF was set to testify virtually before the House Financial Services Committee about FTX's collapse.

Not that he hasn't said his piece already. Since his company filed for bankruptcy on Nov. 11, SBF had been talking to seemingly every media outlet that requested an interview, which is…highly unusual and inadvisable for someone being investigated by dozens of authorities around the globe. During these interviews, SBF acknowledged that his management of FTX was quite awful, but claimed he never intentionally committed fraud. Prosecutors obviously believe otherwise.

From hero to zero: If we told you six months ago that SBF would be arrested for alleged fraud before Christmas, you probably wouldn't have believed us. For a time, he was the golden child of the crypto industry, bringing on the biggest superstars on the planet (including Tom Brady) to endorse his product. He had also become a force in the political world through tens of millions in campaign contributions.

Not too long ago, when he was bailing out failing blockchain companies, SBF was being hailed as crypto's Warren Buffett. Now, he's being compared to Bernie Madoff.—NF

        

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With Origin Investments' IncomePlus Fund, accredited investors can join a diversified private real estate fund focused on delivering passive income and appreciation—all while minimizing the impact on your taxes.

Oh, and those who invest in the Origin IncomePlus Fund between now and December 31 will not be charged a one-time administrative fee, which will save you thousands.

Put your money in the (multi)family with Origin.

WORLD

Tour de headlines

Jessie saying Breaking Bad/AMC via Giphy

Scientists had a nuclear breakthrough. The Department of Energy is expected to announce today that scientists at California's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory successfully produced a nuclear fusion reaction with a net energy gain (meaning it produced more energy than it used). Scientists and governments have been trying to make that happen for decades because nuclear fusion, as opposed to the nuclear fission that current nuclear plants use, has the potential to create energy to power the world without producing carbon or radioactive waste. Still, it will be a long time before nuclear fusion becomes commercially viable as a source for energy.

A new Qatar bribery scandal has dropped. Qatar has long faced accusations that it bribed its way to becoming host of the World Cup, and now there are claims that it has since paid off EU Parliament officials to try to influence important votes. After ~20 raids in Belgium and the seizure of over $1 million in cash, four people were charged by Belgian prosecutors Sunday with corruption, money laundering, and other crimes involving bribes from "a Gulf State" (that's been widely reported to be Qatar). The most high-profile official arrested was Eva Kaili, one of the European Parliament's vice presidents. Qatar has denied any involvement.

Menthols won't be available in California much longer. The Supreme Court rejected a bid by major tobacco companies to block a statewide ban on flavored tobacco products that was voted in by Californians last month. The companies, including Newport maker RJ Reynolds, told the court that menthol cigarettes account for around one-third of the state's cigarette sales, and argued that the ban ran afoul of federal law. The ban is scheduled to take effect next week, making California the second state to outlaw such products (after Massachusetts).

COVID

China's Covid U-turn unleashes viral wave

A health worker prepares to take a swab sample from a woman to test for the Covid-19 coronavirus in the Jing'an district in Shanghai Hector Retamal/AFP/Getty Images

For the nearly three years that the world has been grappling with Covid, China has stood out from the pack for its "zero Covid" policies that locked down residents for months at a time, stoking public anger and hammering its economy.

Now that it's loosened many of those rules, the country is getting hit with a Covid wave that, for the rest of us, brings back memories of 2020.

While official case counts have been falling in Chinese cities, that drop reflects a significant rollback of testing. Reports suggest that Covid is ripping through the population right now, forcing businesses to close and straining a medical system that's not equipped to handle a surge in Covid patients. Visits to fever clinics yesterday spiked 16x from the previous week.

An advisor on China's Covid task force recently predicted that the upcoming Covid wave could infect 60% of residents. Given that China has a population of 1.4 billion, that means 840 million people could get Covid in the coming weeks.

Why will Covid spread so quickly? China's population has low immunity to the virus. Due to Beijing's Covid clampdown, many people haven't been infected at all. And the government has refused to import effective mRNA vaccines from Western countries, instead relying on domestic jabs. The country's elderly are especially susceptible: One-third of citizens 60 and over haven't gotten a third, Omicron-specific shot.—NF

        

TECHNOLOGY

AM radio era might be ending with a crackle

AM radio no signal in EV Hannah Minn

Apparently electric cars and AM radio don't mix well. The New York Times reports that many EV manufacturers are booting AM radio from their vehicles, citing electromagnetic interference that causes pesky noise and static.

Tesla, Volvo, Porsche, Audi and some Volkswagen EVs already come without AM radio. Drivers of Ford's 2023 F-150 Lightning electric pickup will also have to make due without ideologically charged hot takes from their favorite talk show host on their morning commute.

Technological solutions to make EVs and AM radio compatible do exist, but car manufacturers might not bother to accommodate a minority of radio listeners. Just 20% of US radio audiences listen to AM radio—and they tend to be older.

If the trend continues, growing EV adoption might spell the end of AM radio. Many AM stations are reliant on rush-hour listeners, and while FM waves are more resistant to electromagnetic interference, switching could be too costly for many radio stations, especially those that serve a niche audience.

There's hope for AM aficionados: Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) recently requested that automakers avoid depriving drivers of AM radio. And it's not nostalgia for crackle-filled ballgame broadcasts that's influencing the 76-year-old politician's stance. Markey claims that AM waves help government officials communicate with the public, particularly during emergencies.—SK

        

GRAB BAG

Key performance indicators

An oil pipeline dripping Francis Scialabba

Stat: The Keystone oil pipeline leaked more than 14,000 barrels of oil in Kansas last week—almost enough to fill an Olympic-size swimming pool, according to the AP. It's the largest spill in the pipeline's history, but it's not the only one. Counting this latest snafu, the pipeline has leaked more crude onto US land than any other pipeline since 2010 (nearly 26,000 barrels total), per Bloomberg. But it's still an important conduit for oil, and it's not clear when its operator, TC Energy, will be able to get it back up and running again after shutting it down when the spill started.

Quote: "A masterpiece."

The New York Times ran an ad on Sunday for the Showtime series George & Tammy that was full of glowing quotes from major news outlets calling the show "enlightening" and the "best series of the year." That wouldn't be noteworthy except for one thing: The quotes were all fake. Turns out the paper accidentally went to print with a dummy ad mocked up by the network's marketing department that featured placeholder quotes—though the error was caught in time to stick a correction in the same edition's front section, which gets put together later.

Read: Why the US is great at invention, but not at what comes next. (The Atlantic)

WHAT ELSE IS BREWING

  • Merger Monday roundup: Amgen said it will buy biotech Horizon Therapeutics for ~$28 billion. Private equity firm Thoma Bravo will acquire management software company Coupa for $8 billion. And grillmaker Weber is going private through a $3.7 billion deal with BDT Capital Partners.
  • Ticketmaster is giving some Taylor Swift fans another chance to buy tickets to see the singer's Eras Tour after botching the sales rollout.
  • Elon Musk was booed by a crowd in San Francisco after being brought onstage during a Dave Chappelle show.
  • The Golden Globes nominations were announced yesterday. The Banshees of Inisherin got the most nods, followed by Everything Everywhere all at Once.

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GAMES

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AROUND THE BREW

Preparing for a recession

Preparing for a recession

Is your business recession ready? This CFO Brew report details how to find your competitive edge.

On Business Casual, Nora speaks with gender-fluid fashion designer Harris Reed, who was recently tapped by global communications firm Edelman to lead its new "Gen Z Lab."

Join us for a free workshop on December 20 as we discuss the power of analytics with Karla Starr, coauthor of Making Numbers Count. Register today.

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Disclosure: Facet Wealth is an SEC Registered Investment Advisor headquartered in Baltimore, Maryland. This is not an offer to sell securities or the solicitation of an offer to purchase securities. This is not investment, financial, legal, or tax advice. *Two months free offer is only valid for an annual fee paid at the time of signing. Offer expires December 31, 2022.

         

Written by Neal Freyman, Abigail Rubenstein, Sam Klebanov, and Matty Merritt

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