Bloomberg

Brookfield to Target $25 Billion for Biggest Infrastructure Fund

(Bloomberg) — Brookfield Asset Management is seeking to raise $25 billion for its fifth flagship infrastructure fund, its largest on record. 

The firm has already begun marketing the fund, which may exceed the target, according to a person familiar with the matter. A spokesman for the Toronto-based Brookfield declined to comment.

Brookfield’s $20 billion fourth infrastructure fund has committed about 75% of its capital for investment, the company said in a statement earlier this month. Brookfield Infrastructure Partners, the firm’s publicly traded subsidiary, made several acquisitions in recent months, including Australia’s AusNet Services Ltd. and Inter Pipeline Ltd., which operates assets across Western Canada. 

Investors continue to pour money into infrastructure funds, lured by the promise of stable, recurring returns. Adebayo Ogunlesi’s Global Infrastructure Partners also plans to raise $25 billion for a new flagship fund, Bloomberg reported last week.

Read more: GIP Is Said to Target $25 Billion for Record Infrastructure Fund 

The amount of capital targeting the sector is forecast to grow to $1.87 trillion by 2026, up from $864 billion at the end of 2021, according to data provider Preqin. 

Brookfield Infrastructure, which oversees $112 billion of assets, is seeking to invest in utilities that can benefit as the world moves toward a carbon-free environment, and also sees opportunities in data centers, fiber optics and telecom towers.

Big Money Refines Its Climate Pledge: Don’t Divest From Energy

The firm is raising money for other strategies.

Brookfield Super-Core Infrastructure Partners, a perpetual fund that invests in low-risk assets, will grow to $10 billion from $6 billion this year, the person said. The firm also started raising money for its third infrastructure credit fund, which is expected to bring in as much as $5 billion.

Separately, Brookfield plans to deploy its own capital for an infrastructure secondaries business that eventually will be open to institutional investors, the person said.

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Ford’s CEO Is Exploring Ways to Separate Its EV Business to Unlock Tesla-Like Value

(Bloomberg) — Ford Motor Co. is looking at ways to separate its electric-vehicle operation from its century-old legacy business, hoping to earn the sort of investor respect enjoyed by Tesla Inc. and other pure-play EV makers.

Chief Executive Officer Jim Farley wants to wall off Ford’s electric operations from its internal combustion engine business and has even considered spinning off one or the other, people familiar with the effort said. A spinoff could generate the kind of earnings multiples that have given Tesla a market value approaching $1 trillion.

But splitting the company, which Ford says it isn’t planning, may prove too difficult, so Farley instead may simply separate the EV business internally as its own unit as part of a broad reorganization that seeks to give Ford an edge in the electric age.

A spinoff could be a tough sell to the Ford family. They control the automaker through a special class of stock and are leery of losing influence over the 118-year-old company, said the people, who didn’t want to be identified revealing internal deliberations. The founding family, led by Executive Chair Bill Ford, has three seats on the board.

The company faces pressure from Wall Street to spin off its nascent EV business to boost value by shedding legacy costs and to gain greater access to capital markets. Investors have awarded immense value to pure EV makers, such as Rivian Automotive Inc., whose market value briefly topped Ford’s late last year despite producing relatively few vehicles.

Ford’s stock jumped after Bloomberg News reported on the company’s plans. The shares pared the gain as the broader market slumped, rising 2.9% to close at $18.04 in New York.

“We are focused on our Ford+ plan to transform the company and thrive in this new era of electric and connected vehicles,” the company said by email when asked about a potential spinoff. “We have no plans to spin off our battery electric-vehicle business or our traditional ICE business.”

Early this month, however, Farley didn’t reject the possibility of spinning off either operation when queried on the subject during the company’s earnings call.

“Running a successful ICE business and a successful BEV business are not the same,” Farley said. “I’m really excited about the company’s commitment to operate the businesses as they should be.” The EV business is “fundamentally different” in the customers it attracts, the way its products are built and the engineering and design talent that must be hired.

“We’re not seeking half measures,” Farley said on the call. “We’re done with incremental change. We have a clear plan, a bias for action and a whatever-it-takes mindset.”

Late last year, Ford had talks with financial advisers to explore some options for the EV operation, including a potential reorganization and raising private capital for it, according to two people familiar with the matter.

As Farley sought to maximize the value of Ford’s EV operations, his vision evolved over time, from initially considering a smaller spinoff, to contemplating a full breakup, to now looking at an internal split, the people familiar with the effort said.

Even an internal split would be complicated. Splicing up engineering and operations at a carmaker, where some engineers and factories create and build both types of vehicles, is no easy task, one of the people said. Even if everyone favors a true split, it would be heavy work to manage the complexity, the person said.

Ford has committed $30 billion to its EV strategy through 2025 and is said to be spending another $10 billion to $20 billion by the end of the decade to convert factories to build plug-in models. Farley has tripled production of the electric Mustang Mach-E and doubled output of its F-150 Lightning plug-in pickup, which goes on sale this spring. The company plans to produce 600,000 EVs annually in two years and generate as much as half its sales from battery-powered vehicles by 2030.

In its current structure, the automaker lacks access to the financing available to Tesla and other EV makers that are viewed more favorably by banks and investors. Creating a pure plug-in play could provide Ford access to cheaper capital and give investors the opportunity to assign a value to its EV business, the people said. 

Farley is working closely on the effort with Doug Field, the former head of Apple Inc.’s car project, whom Ford hired in September as advanced technology chief, the people said. Field, who previously worked as Tesla’s chief engineer, would have a senior role in any new entity, the people said.

Field and Farley would have their work cut out for them if they chose to pursue a full spinoff.

Aside from having to win over the founding family, car dealers and the United Auto Workers union also would have to be convinced that they wouldn’t get left behind.

Analysts have said Ford needs to shed its legacy business model to achieve the profit margins that Tesla commands, which Farley has estimated top $10,000 a car. To offset the higher cost of electric vehicles, analysts say, automakers need a direct sales model, like at Tesla and Rivian, that bypasses dealers and the cut of revenue they receive. Carmakers also need to lower labor costs.

“Ford is making great progress in electric,” Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said in a November note to investors. Old-line carmakers “face serious challenges from EVs and, in our view, will require ‘non-traditional’ actions to address them.”

Ford already builds the Mustang Mach-E in Mexico, where wages are a small fraction of what they are in the U.S. The automaker also is building its first all-new assembly plant in a half century, to manufacture electric F-Series trucks in Tennessee, and the UAW has no assurance it will represent those workers.

There is precedent for what Farley and Field are considering. In 2017, auto supplier Delphi Technologies Plc spun off its combustion-engine powertrain business and renamed the remaining company Aptiv Plc, which focuses on electronics and software for EVs and autonomous cars. Aptiv began trading at greater multiples.

As a full-scale automaker, Ford has a bigger lift, though Farley appears eager to shake things up.

“This is a culture change at Ford,” he said on the earnings call. “This is part of the rhythm change.”

(Updates stock in sixth paragraph)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

California Should Pause ID.me Software Deal, Adviser Says

(Bloomberg) — California should “pause and consider” whether to continue contracting with identity-verification software vendor ID.me, the state’s nonpartisan legislative adviser recommended Tuesday, noting concerns about the company’s use of facial recognition software. 

The California Legislative Analyst’s Office, providing advice on Governor Gavin Newsom’s proposal of six new deals with vendors to prevent unemployment insurance fraud, recommended withholding action on the ID.me contract. The state began working with ID.me on an automated  verification service during a pandemic boom in unemployment and increased fraud in temporary federal benefits. 

“Now that this critical period has passed, we recommend the Legislature pause and consider the implications of using third-party facial recognition software that has come under scrutiny in recent days,” wrote the office in an emailed summary of recent actions.

If California doesn’t continue with ID.me it would represent the end of one of the software vendor’s earliest and most significant state deals. California represented a quarter of all unemployment funds paid out in pandemic and was one of ID.me’s first five contracts. And the company’s software did help weed out fraud during the pandemic — state officials have said California actually stopped $125 billion in fraudulent claims during the pandemic, or more than six times the $20 billion in fraud it succumbed to. 

But a log of complaints for California’s Employment Development Department (EDD), which signed up with ID.me in September 2020, details issues ranging from a transgender person being blocked from accessing benefits because the gender on their driver’s license didn’t match their passport to an applicant who went through ID.me’s verification process only to find their claim still on hold six weeks later. And the contract had faced scrutiny from state legislators who complained they were inundated with complaints from constituents who were unfairly flagged for fraud or unable to verify their identities using ID.me. 

Read More:  How Did ID.me Get Between You and Your Identity?

ID.me has faced criticism for reports that legitimate unemployment insurance applicants were tied up by its software, delaying much needed payments for weeks and months. More recently, after being awarded a contract with the Internal Revenue Service, ID.me has had to correct previous statements about its use of facial recognition software and the IRS has said it will look for alternatives. 

The company has previously deflected questions about its use of facial recognition technology by saying it only uses so-called one-to-one technology. That process compares a selfie taken by a user to their likeness on a driver’s license or passport. The company disclosed last month that it actually also used much more controversial one-to-many technology to compare selfies to a bigger database of images that it collected. Research has shown that AI-driven facial recognition software often makes mistakes with darker-skinned people. That identified bias in the technology has prompted activists to call for law enforcement agencies to abandon using it altogether. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs is also considering dropping ID.me.

The Legislative Analyst’s Office recommended against all but one of the governor’s proposed contracts, amounting to $29.8 million in spending. That’s because the fraud California saw largely targeted the special pandemic federal unemployment insurance programs, which the group said lacked fraud safeguards that California’s regular programs have. The targeted federal program ended in 2021, making this spending unnecessary, the group said, except for one contract with Akamai that deals with preventing attacks by automated bots. 

“Going forward with these proposals would prioritize fraud elimination at the expense of prompt and straightforward payments,” the group wrote. 

(Corrects first paragraph of story published Feb. 15 to clarify that California was advised to “pause and consider” whether to keep contracting with ID.me.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Novogratz’s Galaxy Accelerates Hiring as Bankers Turn to Crypto

(Bloomberg) — Galaxy Digital Holdings Ltd., the crypto platform run by billionaire Mike Novogratz, is accelerating its pace of hiring to capitalize on a boom of talent moving into digital assets.

The company’s headcount expanded more than 200% last year to almost 285 people, said Jen Lee, Galaxy’s chief people officer who joined in recent months from BlackRock Inc. That number doesn’t include the staff of BitGo, the custodian firm it agreed to acquire in 2021. Galaxy has expanded headcount by another 45 people this year.

“The pace isn’t stopping,” Lee said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.

Galaxy’s new hires have come from from banks such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to people who have learned much of the trade from other crypto firms. The firm also announced a new entry-level hiring program this week that includes a plan to add more than 30 analysts in a “first-of-its-kind hiring sprint,” according to a memo sent to staff.

“There’s no traditional path when it comes to crypto,” said Lee. “We would love to see people who are self taught in crypto, but we would also like to see people who have a traditional background from a bank, or even a tech firm.”

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EU Is Open to Cryptocurrency But With Regulation, Top Official Says

(Bloomberg) — The European Union is open to cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin or a digital euro but regulations must first be strengthened to prevent fraud, EU Commissioner for Home Affairs Ylva Johansson said at the Munich Security Conference Friday.

“I’m not uncomfortable with digital currencies but we need to regulate them in a proper way” so criminal organizations and terrorists can’t exploit the anonymity allowed by some networks, Johansson said.

Her statement made clear that Europe is more receptive than China, which recently moved to ban all cryptocurrency transactions. 

Johansson said she appeared to be the “party pooper” on the security conference’s panel by stressing regulation and fraud prevention. The panel was also attended by Sam Bankman-Fried, chief executive officer and co-founder of cryptocurrency exchange FTX, and German entrepreneur Christian Angermayer, who co-founded asset manager Cryptology Asset Group.

Bankman-Fried acknowledged the risks of criminals using cryptocurrencies but said that platforms have greatly strengthened oversight mechanisms. 

Angermayer said “financial institutions often protect their own interests” while billions around the world without bank accounts are cut off from the financial system. He said that situation can be fixed by the proliferation of blockchain technologies embedded in cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and the opportunity to digitize currencies like the U.S. dollar and the euro.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Gold Price Pushes Above $1,900 as Ukraine Crisis Spurs Haven Demand

(Bloomberg) — Gold was little changed near an eight-month high as traders assessed heightened tensions over Ukraine ahead of an expected meeting next week between Russia and the U.S.  The U.S. said Russia has massed as many as 190,000 personnel – including troops, National Guard units and Russian-backed separatists – in and around Ukraine in …

Gold Price Pushes Above $1,900 as Ukraine Crisis Spurs Haven Demand Read More »

Delay in AT&T’s 3G Shutdown Is Sought to Keep Home Alarms Working

(Bloomberg) — The home-alarm industry has asked regulators to delay AT&T Inc.’s planned shutdown of an old wireless network on Tuesday, saying time is needed to implement a roaming agreement so T-Mobile US Inc. can temporarily serve customer traffic and avoid service disruptions.

The wireless industry has been shutting down the old 3G network as it transitions to newer and faster ones, such as 5G. That means some equipment, such as burglar alarms and medical alerts built for the old system may no longer work.

T-Mobile, which plans to keep its 3G network working until July 1, has struck a roaming agreement under which AT&T service can be temporarily routed onto T-Mobile’s network, according to a filing with the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.

In roaming arrangements wireless companies agree to carry each other’s traffic. Neither AT&T nor T-Mobile immediately responded for a request for comment. AT&T has in the past opposed delays. 

The Alarm Industry Communications Committee said in a filing posted Friday by the FCC that more time is needed to work out details. A delay of at least 60 to 70 days could help some customers who have relied on AT&T’s 3G network, although arrangements remain to be negotiated, the group said. 

“It would be tragic and illogical for the tens of millions of citizens being protected by 3G alarm radios and other devices to be put at risk of death or serious injury, when the commission was able to broker a possible solution but inadequate time exists to implement that solution,” the group said.

The FCC has worked with AT&T on roaming options, the agency’s chairwoman, Jessica Rosenworcel, said in a news conference Friday.

“I think we’ve made terrific progress and I think we are on course for this transition to take place with limited disruption,” Rosenworcel said.

AT&T announced the 3G network shutdown three years ago. The company said in a Feb. 15 statement that it was using a roaming option at the FCC’s urging. It didn’t provide details.

AT&T said that less than 1% of its mobile data traffic runs on 3G and it wants to reallocate the spectrum to help improve coverage by fast 5G networks.

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Fed Adopts Sweeping Trading Curbs After Ethics Scandal

(Bloomberg) — The Federal Reserve formally adopted tough, sweeping restrictions on officials’ investing and trading, aiming to prevent a repeat of the ethics scandal that engulfed the U.S. central bank last year.

The changes codify new guidelines announced in October to restrict active trading, prohibit the purchase of individual securities and boost disclosure requirements among policy makers and senior staff members. The measures follow revelations of unusual trading activity by three top officials in 2020 — as the Fed intervened aggressively to shield the economy from Covid-19 — who subsequently resigned.

The new rules “aim to support public confidence in the impartiality and integrity of the Committee’s work by guarding against even the appearance of any conflict of interest,” the Fed said in a statement Friday.

The new rules were approved unanimously by the Federal Open Market Committee this week, Fed officials said during a briefing call with reporters. Any violations will be reviewed on a case-by-case basis, according to officials on the call, who didn’t provide details on what sanctions might be applied.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s request for the new rules was an admission that the Fed’s old ethics standards were not sufficient. He was also responding to demands for change by lawmakers, with Senator Elizabeth Warren calling out a “culture of corruption” at the central bank after the activity came to light.

A probe of Fed trading is under way by the central bank’s inspector general.

Rosengren, Kaplan

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren and his Dallas counterpart Robert Kaplan resigned last year after their trading records raised questions about adherence to ethical guidelines. Rosengren cited ill health in announcing his early retirement.

Disclosures by Vice Chair Richard Clarida showed he sold at least $1 million of shares in a U.S. stock fund in February 2020 before buying a similar amount of the same fund a few days later, on the eve of a major Fed announcement that signaled its readiness to buffer the economy from the coronavirus. Clarida stepped down on Jan. 14 ahead of the expiration of his term as a governor on Jan. 31.

Rosengren’s 2020 financial disclosure showed multiple transactions in real estate investment trusts, even as the Fed was intervening in that sector of the economy via massive purchases of mortgage-backed securities. Kaplan, a former senior Goldman Sachs Group Inc. executive, disclosed multiple $1 million-plus transactions that year.

The new rules essentially force senior Fed personnel to limit their investments to highly diversified investment vehicles, like mutual funds and exchange-traded funds, an official said on the briefing call Friday.

Some questions still surround the full extent of Kaplan’s trading. The Dallas Fed has denied a request by Bloomberg News to provide the dates of the trades. Asked at a January press conference for the dates, Powell said that the Fed’s Washington-based Board didn’t have that information.

Congress Rules

The ethics scandal at the Fed has helped fuel momentum for stricter rules for members of Congress. Progressive Democrats and conservative Republicans alike have joined in proposals that run the gamut from requiring securities be held in a blind trust to complete bans on individual stock ownership.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer has endorsed the idea, though no specific proposal, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has said she is open to restricting trading after initially opposing limits. Numerous questions have been raised by some lawmakers, including whether the restrictions or bans would apply to spouses and dependent children.

Current law, known as the Stock Act, prohibits members of Congress from using nonpublic information gleaned in the course of their duties for personal benefit and requires disclosure of securities trades by members, spouses or dependent children of more than $1,000. Critics say the law is too easily skirted, the disclosure requirements too loosely enforced and the penalties too lenient.

President Joe Biden has nominated Fed Governor Lael Brainard to succeed Clarida as vice chair, and she awaits Senate confirmation for the post. The Boston Fed last week announced that economist Susan Collins will be the bank’s new president.

Under the the new Fed ethics rules:

  • Officials are prohibited from holding individual stocks, sector funds, agency securities, bonds, commodities, cryptocurrencies, foreign currencies and derivatives contracts, and from engaging in short sales or buying securities on margin
  • Officials must provide 45-day non-retractable notice for transactions, receive pre-approval for purchases and sales and hold investments for at least one year
  • The time periods straddling FOMC meetings during which transactions are prohibited were extended by one day to align with the Fed’s communications blackout period
  • Transactions will be prohibited during periods of heightened financial market stress
  • Regional presidents will be required to disclose transactions within 30 days, as officials and staff of the Board of Governors already do
  • The rules will apply to all members of the FOMC, regional bank first vice presidents, FOMC staff officers, the manager and deputy manager of the Fed’s System Open Market Account, Fed Board division directors and other individuals designated by the chair, as well as the spouses and minor children of all affected individuals
  • The rules take effect May 1, with the pre-clearance requirement taking effect July 1
  • Affected individuals will have 12 months to dispose of prohibited holdings and new employees will have six months

(Adds background on Kaplan trades, congressional debate starting in 11th paragraph.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

‘Horizon Forbidden West’ Looms Large in Sony’s PlayStation Strategy

(Bloomberg) — Sony Group Corp. releases the highly anticipated new entry in its Horizon video game franchise on Friday, and early reviews suggest it’s primed to be another big PlayStation hit.

Horizon Forbidden West, the sequel to 2017’s Horizon Zero Dawn, earned an 89 on the review aggregation website Metacritic. Bloomberg called it “fantastic” and a worthy successor that’s bigger, better and more beautiful than the original. The action-adventure game is set in a post-apocalyptic world full of warring tribes and robot dinosaurs.

This new Horizon is the first big PlayStation launch of 2022 and reflects Sony’s strategy of releasing blockbuster exclusives that can only be played on its consoles. While Microsoft Corp. has focused largely on its Game Pass subscription service and releases all of its games on multiple platforms, Sony has stuck to a traditional approach, relying on franchises like Horizon to help sell hardware like the PlayStation 5.

But this new game will be available for the latest generation PlayStation 5 and the previous PlayStation 4, an unusual move 16 months into the lifecycle of the new console that may have been prompted in part by the ongoing chip shortage. Sony has sold more than 17 million PS5s since the console launched in November 2020, but it has been difficult to find. Desperate fans have resorted to rapidly refreshing Twitter to see what stores get new supplies or paying large sums to scalpers.

Horizon is one of the newest franchises in Sony’s stable. The company’s Guerrilla Games studio, based in Amsterdam, first began conceiving Horizon’s world a decade ago while finishing up the latest entry in its Killzone series. Whereas the Killzone games were dark, grim shooters, Horizon is a vivid, colorful open-world role-playing game. The first installment was a massive critical success on PS4 and was released for PCs in 2020. A spinoff, Horizon Call of the Mountain, was announced earlier this year for PlayStation’s next-generation virtual reality headset.

In recent years, Sony has shown signs of releasing more titles that can be played on multiple platforms. It has released several older PlayStation hits on PCs and even put its baseball series, MLB The Show, on Microsoft’s Xbox and Nintendo Switch. Sony purchased Destiny maker Bungie Inc. earlier this month for $3.6 billion, promising that the company’s games would remain on a variety of devices. It also plans to put out a subscription platform, code-named Spartacus, to compete with Xbox’s Game Pass, Bloomberg has reported.

Earlier this week, Sony said that Horizon Zero Dawn sold more than 20 million copies, setting lofty expectations for Forbidden West. But Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Amine Bensaid said he’d be surprised if the game “doesn’t top its predecessor.”

Sony will also release another blockbuster, God of War Ragnarok, later this year. 

(Corrects spelling of Guerrilla in deck headline.)

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Deliveroo, Just Eat and Uber Restrict London Delivery Amid Storm

(Bloomberg) — Food delivery companies including Deliveroo Plc, Just Eat Takeaway.com NV and Uber Technologies Inc. limited their services for several hours in London on Friday as Storm Eunice battered the U.K. 

Once conditions eased in areas most affected by adverse weather, some deliveries began to be made available, although strong winds are expected to continue into the weekend.

“We will monitor the situation closely as riders safety is our absolute priority,” a spokesperson for Deliveroo said.

The Met Office issued a red warning for London and Southeast England on Friday, amid winds as high as 80 mph (129 kilometers). More than 250,000 homes in Britain were without power and hundreds of flights were canceled.

Most inner-city orders fulfilled by food delivery companies in the U.K. are done via bicycle, scooter or on foot, putting workers at risk of being knocked into the road by the wind or injured by debris.

Just Eat said it suspended delivery services in all areas with red weather warnings, while Uber said it had temporarily paused its Uber Eats app in those locations while beginning to open up where warnings have been downgraded. The company’s ride-hailing service remained active, with “surge” pricing inflating the cost of trips.

Rapid delivery companies also imposed restrictions, including Gorillas and Zapp.

“We have temporarily closed all U.K. warehouses until 4:00pm,” a Gorillas spokesperson said. “All scheduled riders will of course receive their hourly wage until the end of their regular shift.”

A Zapp spokesman said that the company had paused service in most locations, and that customers can check the startup’s app for live updates. 

Read more: London on Storm Red Alert as 250,000 U.K. Homes Lose Power 

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