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Tanzania Debt Tops $37 Billion as It Increases Transport Spend

(Bloomberg) —

Tanzania’s national debt climbed by almost 20% last year as the East African nation ramped up borrowing to fund its infrastructure projects.

Public debt increased by $6.1 billion to $37.1 billion in 2021, the Bank of Tanzania said in a statement on its website.

Transport and telecommunication activities accounted for the biggest share of external debt, according to the report. Social welfare and education, and energy and mining followed.

Tanzania has increased public investment in rail links, roads, ports and power plants as it looks to develop a regional trade and manufacturing hub. The government plans to increase spending by 7.4% in 2022-23, while keeping the budget deficit below 3% of gross domestic product.

The nation’s earnings from gold exports, its biggest source of foreign currency, fell 7.2% to $2.7 billion last year. Other foreign earnings, however, climbed; exports of manufactured goods such as sisal and sisal products jumped 33.5% to $1.2 billion, while travel receipts almost doubled to $1.4 billion as international tourist arrivals rebounded.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

ASML Warns Chinese Rival May Be Infringing its Trade Secrets

(Bloomberg) — ASML Holding NV has warned that an affiliate of a China company it previously accused of stealing its trade secrets has begun marketing products that could infringe on its intellectual property rights. 

“Early in 2021, we became aware of reports that a company associated with XTAL Inc., against which ASML had obtained a damage award for trade secret misappropriation in 2019 in the USA, was actively marketing products in China that could potentially infringe on ASML’s IP rights,” the Dutch company said in its latest annual report released on Wednesday. 

ASML has requested certain customers not to aid the associated firm Dongfang Jingyuan Electron Ltd. — a corporation that has received Beijing’s stamp of approval under a program known as “little giants” — and informed the Chinese authorities of its concerns. The company said it is “monitoring the situation closely and is ready to take legal action if appropriate.”

An inquiry sent to the official email listed on XTAL’s website could not be delivered, and calls to Dongfang Jingyuan’s headquarters in Beijing went unanswered.  

ASML occupies a pivotal role in the global chip supply chain. It has a monopoly on advanced extreme ultraviolet, or EUV, lithography systems that are indispensable to producing the most cutting-edge chips in the world, and it also supplies deep ultraviolet lithography machines needed to make more mature semiconductors. 

China is reliant on ASML’s technology as it tries to build a domestic chip ecosystem that will reduce its dependence on foreign imports. But that effort has been thwarted, with the U.S. government reportedly pressuring Dutch officials not to allow ASML to sell its EUV systems to China in 2019. 

To this day, ASML still has not obtained an export license to ship its most advanced machines to China. 

Chinese companies racing to build up their technological prowess have often been accused of stealing trade secrets from foreign firms. While Beijing has categorically denied such practices, IP theft has long been a sticking point in China’s relations with other countries, particularly with the U.S. 

In 2019, a U.S. court awarded ASML $845 million in damages in a trade secrets theft lawsuit against XTAL, although the Dutch company denied it was a victim of Chinese espionage. 

“The suggestion that we were somehow victim of a national conspiracy is wrong,” ASML Chief Executive Officer Peter Wennink said then. 

In May 2021, Dongfang Jingyuan received the title of “little giant,” a designation for startups that have been selected under an ambitious government program aimed at fostering a tech industry that can compete with Silicon Valley. 

The little giants label has become a valued measure of government endorsement, a signal for investors and employees that the companies are insulated from regulatory punishment. President Xi Jinping has given his personal blessing to the program.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Musk’s Sensitive Side Emerges in Emails With Crash Victim’s Dad

(Bloomberg) — Billionaire Elon Musk is known for many things — like his revolutionary ideas, brash management style and controversial tweets. Being a man of empathy is not among them.

But buried in court records, a gentler, grieving father has emerged. In emails exchanged with the father of a teen who died in a fiery Tesla crash in 2018, Musk says “there’s nothing worse than losing a child.”

The thread of messages spanning almost seven weeks offers a rare glimpse into Musk’s personal involvement in customer relations around a horrific accident. He even brings up his own loss, one he has rarely discussed in public. 

“My firstborn son died in my arms. I felt his last heartbeat,” Musk wrote, referring to his son Nevada Alexander Musk who died when he was 10 weeks old. 

He was addressing James Riley, whose son, Barrett, was at the wheel of a Tesla Model S on May 8, 2018, when he lost control at 116 miles per hour and crashed into a concrete wall of a house in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. The car was engulfed in flames. Barrett Riley and his friend sitting in the passenger seat were both killed. 

The email exchange is contained in a court filing submitted this month in a wrongful death lawsuit involving a different Tesla crash. The lawyer in that case is trying to persuade a judge to order Musk to submit to questioning about Tesla’s Autopilot assisted-driving feature. 

Read More: Musk, Autopilot Critic Sought as Tesla Crash Trial Witnesses

Musk goes as far as fulfilling Riley’s request that the car company tweak a computerized feature to make it easier for parents to control the maximum speed a Tesla will go.

In June 2018, Tesla sent out a software update to its speed limit feature that would let drivers set the maximum speed between 50 mph and 90 mph through the car’s smartphone app or user interface through a four-digit PIN. Language in the owner’s manual was updated to say the feature was dedicated in the memory of Barrett Riley. 

“I’ve never asked for acknowledgment for anything in my life, but it would be nice to acknowledge that Barrett and Edgar’s loss led to the enhanced safety of others,” Riley wrote to Musk on May 31, 2018.

Two days prior, Musk told Riley that Tesla “is doing everything we can to improve safety. My friends, family and I all drive Teslas, and even if they didn’t I would still do everything I could.” 

Almost two years after the email exchange, Riley filed a product liability suit against Tesla in a Florida federal court. His Tesla vehicle’s lithium-ion batteries “burst into an uncontrollable and fatal fire” after the crash, according to the complaint. “Barrett Riley was killed by the battery fire, not by the accident,” he said. 

Riley asked Tesla two months before the accident to install a speed limiter device in its car for his son’s safety, but it was removed without permission when the car was taken to Tesla to be serviced, according to the complaint. 

If not for Tesla’s negligence, the limiter would have prevented the accident and “Barrett Riley would be alive today,” according to the complaint. 

Tesla didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In its response to the suit, Tesla denied that its battery was defectively designed. The company also said Barrett Riley himself returned to the service center “with a concern about the vehicle’s acceleration performance”and asked that the speed limiter be removed.

The case is set to go to trial this year.

The case is Riley v. Tesla Inc., 20-cv-60517, U.S. District Court, Southern District of Florida (Fort Lauderdale).

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Bitcoin Chart Signals a Break Higher, If History Is Any Guide

(Bloomberg) — Bitcoin could be set to build on its recent rally. The world’s largest digital token posted a six-day winning streak through Tuesday, the 20th time it has achieved such a run since the pandemic roiled markets. The mean return over over three days, five days and 20 days is 4.1%, 5.3% and 18.5% respectively after such stretches, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. 

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Dutch Payments Firm Adyen Rules Out Mergers, Acquisitions

(Bloomberg) — Adyen NV’s top executives ruled out acquisitions or a merger for the payment-processing company as they vowed to focus on organic growth.

“We have the ambition to build a global company ourselves without acquisitions,”  Chief Executive Officer Pieter van der Does said in an interview on Tuesday. 

The Amsterdam-based business, which handles transactions for companies such as Uber Technologies Inc. and McDonald’s Corp., has seen its value drop this year amid a tech-stock selloff. The stock is still up about 130% since the start of 2020, helped by growth in online shopping during coronavirus lockdowns.

“We have more than 40% of our business outside of EMEA region, so we not only have that ambition, but we’re delivering on it,” van der Does said. The company isn’t interested in selling a stake to a bigger competitor, he added. 

“If you look at the balance sheet, the stability of our company and our size, I don’t think there would be any benefit for us to be part of something bigger,” he said. “We are very much fans of organic growth.”

Chief Financial Officer Ingo Uytdehaage said the company is opening up two new hubs in Madrid and Chicago to help with that growth. 

“The pandemic has basically accelerated a few trends that were already there,” he said in the same interview. “These are helping us big time in gaining market share.” he said.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

A Meteorite Auction Takes Off, Thanks to Crypto

(Bloomberg) — Thanks in large part to crypto-rich collectors, an online-only auction of meteorites at Christie’s is set to break through the stratosphere. 

Running Feb. 9–23, the sale, Deep Impact: Martian, Lunar, and Other Rare Meteorites, follows a string of record-making meteorite auctions in 2021.

The sale’s precursor, held at this time last year, was a so-called “white glove” sale, meaning that every single lot sold, “and 72 out of 75 lots sold above their high estimate,” adds James Hyslop, head of Science and Natural History at Christie’s. “It really was a record sale.”

That was followed by the July sale at Christie’s London of a slice of the Fukang meteorite, which sold for £525,000 ($722,925), setting a public auction record for a single lot. 

Driving this growth, Hyslop says, are newly wealthy crypto investors.

“Anecdotally, it’s becoming the case, more and more, that the age of the average buyer was much lower than our last [meteorite] sale, and one of the reasons for that is that there are a lot more people who’ve made their money in crypto and they tend to be younger,” says Hyslop. “They self-identify as crypto-wealthy; some who were bidding in the last sale realized for the first time that they could actually buy meteorites, and they were extremely enthusiastic.”

One bidder who got outbid, he continues, “was extremely frustrated, and said: ‘I have to cash out some Bitcoin before the next one.’”

Understanding Value

This year’s 66 lots range from an exquisite cross section of a meteorite, which appears to have a latticework design and carries an estimate of $400 to $800, to what Christie’s says is the third-largest piece of Mars on Earth, estimated from $500,000 to $800,000, and said to have been dislodged from Mars’s surface by another meteorite.

Price can be understood via what Hyslop calls “the four Ses”: size, shape, science, and story.

“First, all things being equal, a meteorite that’s double the size will be worth double,” he explains, but notes that at a certain point “anything really big becomes a logistical nightmare,” meaning that the size rule eventually peters out. (The Hoba meteorite in Namibia weighs about 60 tons, while the Willamette meteorite in New York’s American Museum of Natural History weighs a mere 15.5 tons.)

Shape, Hyslop continues, “for me is the most interesting. Most meteorites just look like a pebble you found in your driveway—they’re not engaging or beautiful.” One in a thousand, though, “has something magical.”

He points to Lot 62 in his sale, a piece of iron that formed around 4.5 billion years ago inside the molten core of an asteroid. Estimated from $200,000 to $300,000, “you’d assume it was a Henry Moore or a Giacometti,” Hyslop says. “It’s just breathtakingly beautiful, and the sculptural forces which shaped it just so happened to be extraterrestrial.”

Next is the science: A slice of the moon, Hyslop says, is invariably more valuable that something that came from a huge asteroid belt, which is at least part of the reason the auction’s massive piece of Mars is so expensive.

The 20-pound chunk, which Hyslop says was thrown into orbit when a meteorite hit the Red Planet at a glancing angle, matches the chemical signature of Mars exactly, says Hyslop. “It’s one of the few specimens of Mars we have on Earth at the moment.” The final quality—story—is obviously the most fun, and the Christie’s auction has some excellent contenders.

Most notable is a lot consisting of a Costa Rican dog house.

“You have the puncture hole, and the meteorite that caused it,” Hyslop says. The dog, a German Shepherd named Roky, was unscathed. (“That was my first question,” says Hyslop.) The doghouse tableau (Lot 4) is estimated from $200,000 and $300,000, while the offending meteorite (Lot 8) is being sold separately, carrying an estimate of $40,000 to $60,000.

A (Mostly) Global Market

Hyslop says bidders are now spread around the world. “Historically, most of the buyers for this material would have been in the U.S.,” simply because for years Americans were the most committed—and deep pocketed—collectors of extraterrestrial ephemera in the field. “But it’s becoming a more and more global market.”

Last year’s sale had buyers in 23 countries, he continues, “although there are some geographic black spots, where they just don’t buy meteorites.” (Russia, apparently, is one such demand void.)

The majority of lots are offered with no reserve, meaning that despite their estimates, a lucky bidder could potentially walk away paying a few hundred dollars.

“There’s another piece of Mars estimated at $120,000 to $180,000,” Hyslop says. “It will be starting at $100.”

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

VC Cyberstarts Nets 300% Returns for Backers Including Sequoia

(Bloomberg) — Israeli venture capital investor Cyberstarts has generated top returns by betting on cybersecurity entrepreneurs at the early stages of their companies, reflecting the exploding demand for digital protection.

Founded in 2018 by Gili Raanan, Cyberstarts has posted a 300% internal rate of return in its first $54 million fund since inception, according to a company statement. That would place Cyberstarts among the top 5% of venture funds for the past 26 years, Cyberstarts said, citing data from investment firm Cambridge Associates. 

The 13 companies across Cyberstarts’s portfolio — also partly financed by a separate $100 million fund — garnered $2 billion of investment last year. Several were valued above $1 billion, such as cloud cybersecurity startup Wiz and crypto asset management platform Fireblocks. 

Cyberstarts’s returns — so far mostly unrealized and difficult to compare with most venture firms that do not make their performance publicly available — jumped after a torrid of inflows into cybersecurity companies of the growing frequency and sophistication of devastating hacks. Targets for investments have proven bountiful given Israel’s rise to an industry powerhouse. Of the record $17.7 billion raised by firms worldwide last year, 36% went to startups founded in the country of 9.4 million, according to a Pitchbook report in October.

Cyberstarts, backed by investors such as Sequoia Capital, has started the process of raising another fund, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked for anonymity because the discussions are private. Raanan declined to comment on those talks.

While thus far lucrative, bankrolling early-stage companies also carries higher risk. Industry veterans like Gil Shwed, the billionaire chief executive officer of Check Point Software Technologies Ltd., have said the investment frenzy has reached the point of a bubble.

Read more: Billionaire Cyber CEO Rejects Race for Growth, Calls a Bubble

Island, which builds secure web browsers for businesses and got funding from Cyberstarts, was recently valued at roughly $500 million before it had any sales, Bloomberg News reported. Building up clientele in distant markets has long been the “Achilles heel” of Israeli startups, a problem Cyberstarts addresses by connecting its companies to global security executives, said Doug Leone, managing partner at Sequoia.

“We are really open to any idea,” Raanan said in an interview. “We’ve invested in teams that didn’t have an idea at the time. Our role as investors is to become the platform for amazing entrepreneurs to fulfill their destiny.”

Lately, investors have begun to anticipate that the latest plunge in technology stocks will translate into a slowdown in private markets. Cyberstarts partner Lior Simon said that the firm’s portfolio companies have enough cushion to ride out a potential downturn.

“They have enough capital in the bank for years to come,” she said. “So for whatever scenario that awaits us months from now, our companies are well equipped to deal with that.”

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Alibaba Jumps as SoftBank Denies Involvement in Stock Filing

(Bloomberg) — Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. shares jumped in Hong Kong as SoftBank Group Corp. said it wasn’t involved in the Chinese tech giant’s filing of additional American depositary shares, allaying investor fears that the firm’s largest shareholder might be looking to cash out. 

Shares in Alibaba had fallen earlier this week after the firm filed to register an additional one billion ADSs with the Securities and Exchange Commission. That triggered analyst speculation that SoftBank might look to dispose of some of its shares, particularly as it is seen to need cash to fund buybacks. 

SoftBank executives told analysts during a private post-results briefing Tuesday that they weren’t responsible for the share registration.

“The registration of the ADR conversion facility (F6 filing, which was filed by Alibaba), including its size, is not tied to any specific future transaction by SBG,” SoftBank said in an emailed statement on Wednesday. 

Alibaba shares traded in Hong Kong rose as much as 7%, the most this year, while SoftBank added as much as 5.9%. 

Softbank founder Masayoshi Son said that he and his firm “were as surprised as everybody else” by the filing, Jefferies analyst Atul Goyal earlier told Bloomberg TV in an interview Wednesday morning. 

Asked about a separate cash settlement on Alibaba forward exchange contracts that was disclosed in its earnings filing, Son said that the firm continues “to hold just under 25% of Alibaba having converted a tiny amount to cash,” Son said at a briefing on Tuesday. “We still hold 90-something-percent of our Alibaba stock.” 

The registration with the SEC will facilitate investors who want to convert Hong Kong shares into ADSs in the future, Citigroup Inc. analysts including Alicia Yap said in a note on Wednesday. 

SoftBank sold roughly $13.7 billion of Alibaba stock in 2020 in complex collar contracts as part of a move to pay down debt and buy back its own shares. While that buyback helped lifted SoftBank shares to a record in 2021, a 1 trillion yen repurchase announced late last year has done little to boost its shares, with Satoru Kikuchi, an analyst at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc., pointing to “confusion” in the market due to a lack of asset sales to fund it. 

(Adds detail on previous Alibaba sales in ninth paragraph.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Panda Frenzy Sees Fans Pay $500 for Must-Have Olympic Mascot

(Bloomberg) — A chubby round panda decked out in a suit of ice has become a national sensation in China, with shoppers in Beijing lining up in freezing temperatures overnight for the chance to buy stuffed versions of the Winter Olympics mascot.

Those who don’t want to queue are paying as much as 17-times the retail price for toys featuring the panda named Bing Dwen Dwen. Prices have surged so much on the secondary market — stuffed toys are selling for more than $500 online — that police in Beijing have issued public warnings against buying the mascot from scalpers, and as of Wednesday punished three people in a crackdown over price gouging.

The start of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, which kicked off Feb. 4, has helped fuel the frenzy, as have social media memes of the mascot dancing at the opening ceremony and struggling to squeeze through doors. A clip of Chinese President Xi Jinping suggesting Prince Albert II of Monaco bring two of the toys home for his twins has further propelled Bing Dwen Dwen’s popularity.

Exacerbating the situation has been a shortfall in supplies. Because the opening ceremony fell in the middle of the Lunar New Year holiday this year, many of the factories producing Bing Dwen Dwen toys were closed just as demand for the mascot surged. 

Zhao Weidong, a spokesperson for the Beijing Winter Olympics, pledged at a Feb. 6 briefing that officials were taking steps to remedy the situation. “We’re now making efforts to coordinate the production and supply of Bing Dwen Dwen,” Zhao said.

Shares of Beijing Yuanlong Yato Culture Dissemination Co., one of several licensed manufacturers of Olympic products, surged by the 10% daily limit for a third day in Shenzhen on Wednesday. The company, whose products include Bing Dwen Dwen fluffy toys and badges, has said production is back in full swing. Shanghai-listed Cultural Investment Holdings Co., another licensed product maker, has also seen its stock soar by the daily limit for three straight days.

But back in Beijing, 54-year-old Dong Yanxue has queued up outside the official Olympics souvenir store in the city’s Wangfujing shopping district, equipped with a chair, food and beer. Dong says he had earlier waited two nights in line to be able to buy just one stuffed Bing Dwen Dwen for his niece. He was back to try his luck again Tuesday afternoon, even as a loudspeaker outside the store played a recorded message saying its Bing Dwen Dwen toys were out of stock and asking people not to wait in line.

“I would rather have some drinks at home at this hour,” Dong said, but “the kids want it badly.”

(Adds police crackdown in the second paragraph)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Olympics Panda Mascots Selling for Up to $500 Spark Police Warning

(Bloomberg) — A chubby round panda decked out in a suit of ice has become a national sensation in China, with shoppers in Beijing lining up in freezing temperatures overnight for the chance to buy stuffed versions of the Winter Olympics mascot.

Those who don’t want to queue are paying as much as 17-times the retail price for toys featuring the panda named Bing Dwen Dwen. Prices have surged so much on the secondary market — stuffed toys are selling for more than $500 online — that police in Beijing have issued public warnings against buying the mascot from scalpers, and as of Wednesday punished three people in a crackdown over price gouging.

The start of the Winter Olympics in Beijing, which kicked off Feb. 4, has helped fuel the frenzy, as have social media memes of the mascot dancing at the opening ceremony and struggling to squeeze through doors. A clip of Chinese President Xi Jinping suggesting Prince Albert II of Monaco bring two of the toys home for his twins has further propelled Bing Dwen Dwen’s popularity.

Exacerbating the situation has been a shortfall in supplies. Because the opening ceremony fell in the middle of the Lunar New Year holiday this year, many of the factories producing Bing Dwen Dwen toys were closed just as demand for the mascot surged. 

Zhao Weidong, a spokesperson for the Beijing Winter Olympics, pledged at a Feb. 6 briefing that officials were taking steps to remedy the situation. “We’re now making efforts to coordinate the production and supply of Bing Dwen Dwen,” Zhao said.

Shares of Beijing Yuanlong Yato Culture Dissemination Co., one of several licensed manufacturers of Olympic products, surged by the 10% daily limit for a third day in Shenzhen on Wednesday. The company, whose products include Bing Dwen Dwen fluffy toys and badges, has said production is back in full swing. Shanghai-listed Cultural Investment Holdings Co., another licensed product maker, has also seen its stock soar by the daily limit for three straight days.

But back in Beijing, 54-year-old Dong Yanxue has queued up outside the official Olympics souvenir store in the city’s Wangfujing shopping district, equipped with a chair, food and beer. Dong says he had earlier waited two nights in line to be able to buy just one stuffed Bing Dwen Dwen for his niece. He was back to try his luck again Tuesday afternoon, even as a loudspeaker outside the store played a recorded message saying its Bing Dwen Dwen toys were out of stock and asking people not to wait in line.

“I would rather have some drinks at home at this hour,” Dong said, but “the kids want it badly.”

(Adds police crackdown in the second paragraph)

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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