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Energy Profits Surge, Ocado Earnings Held Back: The London Rush

(Bloomberg) — Here’s the key business news from London-listed companies this morning:

BP Plc: Higher oil and gas prices delivered a big increase to the company’s fourth-quarter profit, meaning they’ll buy back a further $1.5 billion in shares, following big-oil peers including Shell Plc.

SSE Plc: The electricity provider boosted its full-year outlook as higher power prices made up for a shortfall in output from its renewables division.

  • SSE now expects full-year adjusted earnings per share of at least 90 pence, from at least 83 pence previously

Ocado Group Plc: Growth in orders for the company’s joint venture with Marks and Spencer, although positive, were impacted by labor market constraints in the second half of the year, which in turn hit the unit’s margins. 

  • Ocado says there’s “strong underlying demand for online grocery in the U.K.,” despite the average basket size falling by nearly 6 percent

Outside The City

Labour Leader Keir Starmer was chased by a group of protesters accusing him of “protecting pedophiles” yesterday, putting the Prime Minister under pressure to retract his claim Starmer was responsible for not prosecuting serial child-sex abuser Jimmy Savile. 

The Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany would be stopped if President Vladimir Putin orders an invasion of Ukraine, U.S. President Joe Biden said last night. Moscow has repeatedly denied it plans to attack Ukraine, but Western countries say Russia has built up a military presence close to the border. 

In Case You Missed It

Watch Vodafone Plc this morning after Coast Capital revealed to Bloomberg News it has built a stake in the telecoms company, the second activist investor that’s emerged in recent weeks. Seperately, people with knowledge of the matter said Iliad SA made an offer to buy for Vodafone’s Italian unit last week.

SoftBank Group Corp. plans to list British chip designer Arm Ltd, after Nvidia Corp.’s deal to buy the unit faced fierce opposition from regulators and customers.

Looking Ahead

Pharma-giant GlaxoSmithKline Plc reports its full-year results tomorrow, amid a tricky separation of its consumer business and a reckoning with activist shareholder Elliott Investment Management. 

Later today, Clinigen Group Plc’s shareholders will vote on a revised takeover bid from Triton Investment Management Ltd. Elliott also has a nearly 15 percent stake in Clinigen, which could be decisive in the vote.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

New Arm CEO Haas Steps Into Center of Chip Industry Turmoil

(Bloomberg) — Arm Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas has a formidable to-do list to go with his new job. 

Haas, 59, was promoted to the top post at the U.K.’s biggest tech company early Tuesday after its owner, Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp., announced that its proposed sale to Nvidia Corp. has been abandoned. His predecessor, Simon Segars, is resigning for personal reasons. 

SoftBank said Arm will now proceed with an initial public offering instead of the sale. Arm is currently planning to go public in the U.S., according to people familiar with the matter, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

Ending a troubled sale process that’s kept the chip designer mired in uncertainty will help refocus the company, Haas said in an interview. While Arm has financially never performed better, his first challenge is to fire up its employees. 

“It’s going to be taking a company that’s been in stall mode because of the Nvidia acquisition and getting us reinvigorated to move forward,” Haas said in the interview. “It’s been hard for employees at many companies and then you layer on the uncertainty we’ve had.”

Haas finds himself atop one of the most important firms in the $500 billion semiconductor industry. Arm’s designs and technology are ubiquitous, playing key roles in everything from the most powerful datacenter chips to Apple Inc. iPhones and right down to tiny sensors used in home appliances. Silicon demand surged during the pandemic, triggering supply shocks that have shaken various industries and emphasized the need for governments to secure the vital electronic components that power manufacturing, communications and trade.

The Nvidia takeover, which would have been the biggest acquisition in the chip industry’s history, was terminated after both sides decided that growing regulator opposition around the world would make it difficult to get approval. Much of that government pressure was stoked by Arm’s powerful customers, a group that includes the likes of Qualcomm Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google, Apple and Samsung Electronics Co., who were concerned that Nvidia would restrict their access to technology they regard as crucial.

“The deal has been the subject of nothing but complaints from almost the instant it was announced with numerous regulators voicing opposition as well as howls from many other Arm licensees,” Stacy Rasgon of Bernstein wrote in an investor note.

Repairing relationships with those customers and dissuading them from exploring alternatives — such as RISC-V, which is gaining ground in China — will be close to the top of the list of Haas’s priorities as Arm and SoftBank move toward a public share sale next year. SoftBank shifted its strategy for cashing in on its 2016 acquisition of Arm back to an IPO, reverting to a plan that existed before Nvidia’s September 2020 agreement.

Silicon Valley’s Next Revolution Is Open Source Semiconductors

Haas, the first American to run the Cambridge-based company, joined from Nvidia in 2013 as vice president for strategic alliances before being promoted to president and head of its intellectual property business in 2017. He also spent time in China for Arm, giving him first-hand experience of another thorny issue for the company’s leadership.

The chip designer started a joint venture with Chinese investors to help spread the use of its technology in the largest market for semiconductors. The head of the resulting Arm China, Chairman and CEO Allen Wu, was fired by the board in 2020 for conflict of interest. But he’s refused to leave and continues to run day-to-day operations. Wu and Arm are now involved in lawsuits over Arm appointees that he fired as well as an attempt to assert his legal right to continue in his position.

“Now that the Nvidia acquisition has been dropped, it gives us a little bit of clear air to resolve that situation,” said Haas. “We will get a result because China is a very important market.”

Haas said despite the drama surrounding Wu, the joint venture has performed well, increasing revenue and profits.

Arm’s technology is essential to China’s effort to make itself less reliant on overseas technology. That has made the firm, along with other chip technology providers, a target for the U.S. government in the trade war between the world’s two largest economies. Arm has design teams in the U.S., where Haas is based, making it subject to export controls despite its status as a U.K. company owned by a Japanese corporation.

Departing CEO Segars was one of Arm’s first employees and worked his way up through the ranks to take the top job in 2013. His mandate from SoftBank chief Masayoshi Son was to grow Arm as quickly as possible, focusing on hiring and adding new capabilities rather than on the bottom line. That gave him license to report losses that would have incurred the wrath of public investors focused on quarterly reports. 

Now, as Arm gears up for an IPO early next year, Haas will have to chart a more careful balance between spending for growth and improving profitability. Many of his CEO peers have complained about wage inflation amid a war for talent among not only traditional chipmakers but companies such as Apple and Google that are ramping up their internal custom silicon efforts. 

Haas said that he’s already been making decisions — such as cutting less important business lines — that are consistent with the discipline shown by a publicly-traded company. Despite the uncertainties around its future that have been lurking for the past year and a half, the company is much bigger and more successful than it was when it was bought by SoftBank. 

“I think our growth prospects have never been better,” he said. “The business has never been healthier.”

Arm provides designs that are the basis of the main chips that run the majority of the world’s smartphones. It’s increasingly being used by companies such as Amazon.com Inc. to create bespoke datacenter processors and many of the chips powering the electrification and connectivity of modern cars also rely on it.

Beyond selling designs to the likes of Qualcomm to use as the basis of their products, Arm also licenses the right to use its instruction set, the fundamental code used by software to communicate with hardware, to companies who design their own chips. The Apple Silicon division, which creates the semiconductors powering iPhones and Mac computers, uses Arm’s technology.

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Musk Blasts Media for ‘Relentless Hatestream’ of Bad News

(Bloomberg) — Elon Musk took to Twitter Tuesday morning in Asia to criticize traditional media for pumping out a “relentless hatestream” of bad news.

In a string of tweets and replies to other posts, the Tesla Inc. CEO lamented that it was “so hard to find out what’s going on in the world without being bombarded with news that makes one sad & angry!”

Musk lashed out at the media for “focusing relentlessly” on bad news, saying it doesn’t give an accurate representation of reality. In a reply to another user, the billionaire said “careless negativity (destruction) is much harder than thoughtful positivity (creation).” 

The tweets came a few hours after Brett Winton, director of research at Ark Investment Management LLC, tweeted “it is deeply weird that the internet tried to bully, threaten, extort and browbeat us into giving up on Tesla,” the electric-car pioneer that sold more than 936,000 cars last year, up 87% on 2020 figures.

To which Musk replied “the insane tweet FUD campaign & press hatestream of 2017-2019 is still easily found,” using the shorthand for fear, uncertainty and doubt.

Musk’s anti-media tweets came just as Tesla said a California agency informed the electric automaker that it has grounds for a civil complaint, following an investigation into racial harassment. And making a bad day worse, Tesla received another subpoena from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission about Musk’s tweeting back in 2018 that he was considering taking the EV maker private.

Read more: Tesla Subpoenaed by SEC About Complying With Musk Settlement

Musk was particularly active in replying to other users in his latest Twitter tirade. In one exchange he suggested that “maybe part of why traditional media outlets are so negative is because old habits die hard? They so rarely even try to be positive that said censorship isn’t the answer.”

(Adds detail of SEC subpoena, California civil complaint. An earlier version corrected the spelling of Tesla in second paragraph.)

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

Singapore Crypto Investment Jumped to a Record in 2021, KPMG Says

(Bloomberg) — Investment in the cryptocurrency and blockchain sector in Singapore jumped more than 10 times last year to a record, according to a report, cementing the city-state’s status as a crypto hub even as it remains wary of speculative digital assets. 

Last year saw 82 deals worth a combined $1.48 billion, according to KPMG’s Pulse of Fintech report published Tuesday. That’s up from $110 million in 2020. 

KPMG expects crypto investment in Singapore to remain robust this year, even as authorities impose more oversight. In one move that sent chills through the industry, the central bank last month told cryptocurrency companies to refrain from advertising their services to the public. A licensing process for permits to operate a regulated cryptocurrency business in Singapore has seen most applicants falter. 

“Cryptocurrencies and blockchain are expected to remain very hot areas of investment in 2022, with more crypto firms looking to regulators to provide clear guidance on activities in order to help foster and develop the space,” said Singapore-based Anton Ruddenklau, global fintech leader at KPMG International, in an emailed statement.

Read more: Singapore’s Wary Crypto Embrace Leaves Top Mogul in the Cold 

Most of the cryptocurrency and blockchain deals last year targeted software and underlying infrastructure, rather than services, according to the report. The sector accounted for a third of overall investment in Singapore’s fintech industry, which hit a five-year high of $3.94 billion, KPMG said.

 

 

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Cathie Wood Dumps $142 Million of Twitter Stock Before Earnings

(Bloomberg) — Cathie Wood stepped up selling of social media platform Twitter Inc. shares days before its earnings. 

Wood’s firm ARK Investment Management LLC sold nearly 4 million Twitter shares on Monday, the most in one day since at least May, according to trading data from ARK compiled by Bloomberg. The social-media company is set to announce its earnings on Thursday.

Wood’s flagship ARK Innovation ETF dumped 3.66 million shares of Twitter on Monday, while the ARK Next Generation Internet ETF sold more than 280,000 shares, according to the asset manager’s daily trading updates. That amounted to about $142 million based on Monday’s closing level. 

The selling comes amid a mixed set of results from its social-media peers. Facebook’s parent Meta Platforms Inc. suffered biggest one-day crash in stock-market history last week as its user base stopped growing while Snap Inc. jumped most ever after giving a quarterly sales forecast that topped Wall Street’s projections.  

ARK has been selling Twitter shares almost every week since late December and its sales have picked up pace this month. Apart from Monday, ARK sold more than 2 million shares of Twitter on Feb. 3 and more than 700,000 shares on Feb. 2.

The firm’s daily trading updates show only active decisions by the management team and do not include creation or redemption activity caused by investor flows. Wood’s oft-repeated mantra is that ARK invests with at least a five-year time horizon, and that volatility in their equity picks is expected.

ARK’s flagship fund has struggled in the past year after advancing nearly 150% in 2020, after investors started dumping pricey tech stocks and switching to cyclical firms expected to be bigger beneficiaries of an economic recovery.  

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WTA Calls for Private Meeting with Chinese Tennis Player Peng Shuai

(Bloomberg) — The Women’s Tennis Association has said it wants to speak privately with tennis player Peng Shuai after she gave an interview to a French news outlet that was overseen by a Chinese sports official.

WTA Chairman Steve Simon said in a statement that the “in-person interview does not alleviate any of our concerns about her initial post,” which detailed a rocky affair with a retired Chinese official. He called for “an opportunity for the WTA to meet with Peng — privately — to discuss her situation,” and reiterated the organization wants China to investigate her situation.

Peng was in the stands with International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach on Tuesday at the women’s big air competition, the Associated Press reported. Eileen Gu, an 18-year-old who was born and raised in the U.S. and decided to compete for China, won her first ever Olympic gold medal.

When asked about Peng at a press conference later, Gu said she was grateful the tennis player was “happy and healthy.”

Peng told the sports daily L’Equipe over the weekend that her November post about Zhang Gaoli had caused a “huge misunderstanding” and that she didn’t disappear after writing it. Peng was accompanied to the interview in a Beijing hotel by a person the news outlet identified as Chinese Olympic Committee chief of staff Wang Kan. The tennis player also said she had a “nice discussion” with Bach on the sidelines of the games on Saturday.

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Peng vanished from public view after posting the 1,500-character essay on social media alleging an affair with Zhang — once the ruling Communist Party’s No. 7 official — that raised concern she was coerced into sex. Worries about her safety and freedom of movement grew when the post was removed from the internet and state media published an email allegedly sent by Peng assuring everyone she was fine.

The episode highlighted international concern about China’s human rights practices just months before it was set to host the Winter Olympics. The U.S. is leading a diplomatic boycott of the games, citing “ongoing genocide and crimes against humanity in Xinjiang, and other human rights abuses,” — allegations that China denies.

Late last month, Zhang was mentioned in Chinese state media for the first time since Peng’s essay appeared online. He was included in a long list of former party officials who received Lunar New Year wishes from President Xi Jinping and other state leaders by phone, according to CCTV.

(Updates with Peng Shuai attending Olympic event.)

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China Hails One of Its U.S.-Born Olympians as It Rebukes Another

(Bloomberg) — Chinese social media erupted with delight Tuesday after Eileen Gu, the U.S.-born skier who decided to represent China at the Winter Olympics, won her first gold medal of the games at the Women’s Freestyle Skiing Big Air event in Beijing.  

At one point after her victory, hashtags related to Gu’s performance were simultaneously the first, second, fourth, sixth and seventh most-popular topics on China’s Twitter-like Weibo platform. One hashtag, which translated to #Eileen Gu Gold#, accumulated more than 370 million views in less than two hours after her win.

China’s state-owned media were just as quick to trumpet the gold medal, with the official Xinhua News Agency publishing a headline that described it as a “historic” victory. The People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s flagship newspaper, posted pictures of Gu spinning in the air with the headline “Champion! Eileen Gu Makes History!”

The accolades for Gu, who has a Chinese mother and an American father, stood in stark contrast to the vitriol that flooded Chinese social media after Zhu Yi, a U.S.-born figure skater who like Gu choose to represent China, performed poorly in her debut. In an interview with Xinhua, Zhu attributed falling during a subsequent routine Monday to the online criticism, some of which questioned why she’d been selected for the team ahead of Chinese-born athletes.

Speaking to reporters after her event, Gu said she had just met Zhu a few days earlier, calling the skater “incredible.” “We all need to have some sporting spirit,” Gu said. “Sometimes we cannot bring the best. She is one who wants to bring her A-game. I hope everybody understands her situation.” 

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U.S.-Born Skater Zhu Yi Says Online Abuse Affected Performance

(Bloomberg) — China’s U.S.-born figure skater Zhu Yi said that online abuse heaped upon her after she fell during her Olympics debut affected her performance, a rare acknowledgement of the negative impact of nationalistic fervor on athletes.

Zhu told the official Xinhua News Agency Monday that she felt pressure after reading disparaging comments on Chinese social media. “I wanted to prove myself, because I didn’t do so well yesterday, and what everyone said on the internet really affected me,” she said. “I have trained very hard. The problem now is psychological. I will try not to be affected by the outside world.”

Nationalistic voices have become louder on Chinese social media in recent years amid President Xi Jinping’s mantra of “national rejuvenation,” and particularly as relations with Western countries sour. Athletes that naturalize to compete for the Chinese team are under even greater scrutiny as the public are more likely to highlight their dual national identities, particularly in moments of under-performance.

Zhu’s performance during the women’s free-skate team event Monday, in which she fell for a second day, was denounced as a “disgrace” by users on the Twitter-like Weibo platform, who questioned why the 19-year-old was selected over a Chinese-born athlete. The hashtags “Zhu Yi’s consecutive mistakes” and “Zhu Yi tears up again on the ice” were trending, with some commenting that the games weren’t a platform for practice. 

However, in a sign that authorities want to maintain positive messaging around the Olympics, censors stepped in to make the hashtag “Zhu Yi has fallen” unsearchable over the weekend when the skater fell twice on her Olympics debut and finished last in the women’s short program team event. China finished fifth overall. 

“There were some mistakes, but it has already passed. I hope I can adjust myself and compete well,” Zhu told state-run China News Service after her competition Monday. “I’ve been very moved and excited. Even during the program, I was moved and wanted to cry. I couldn’t hold it back, so I cried. Of course, there were also regrets.”

The vitriol directed at Zhu stood in contrast to the response to Eileen Gu, the 18-year-old freestyle skier, who like Zhu was born and raised in the U.S. but competes for China. Gu, who models for some of the world’s biggest brands and whose face can be seen all around China in advertisements, is in contention to win three gold medals in the Olympics.

On Tuesday, Gu clinched her first Olympic gold during the women’s freestyle skiing big air event, with Xinhua calling the win “historic.” Following the competition, over half of the top ten trending topics on Weibo were related to Gu’s performance.

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Paytm’s Rising Buy Ratings Signal Bottom in Wake of IPO Disaster

(Bloomberg) — India’s pioneering digital payments startup Paytm is gradually regaining the confidence of some analysts after it had one of the worst debuts by a major technology company less than three months ago. 

Buy recommendations on One 97 Communications Ltd., the operator of Paytm, climbed to four this week, up from just two at the start of the year, while sell ratings have remained unchanged at three, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It’s the first time bulls outnumbered bears since the company’s disastrous initial public offering in Mumbai during November. 

In the most-recent vote of confidence, Goldman Sachs analysts led by Manish Adukia raised their rating to buy from neutral, after Paytm’s December quarter revenue surprised the market. The investment bank’s target price of 1,460 rupees implies a gain of more than 50% from Monday’s close.

Still, the shift in analyst sentiment may provide little comfort to investors who have seen Paytm shares lose more than half of their value since listing. The stock is this year’s worst performer on the S&P BSE’s index for new shares, after online food delivery platform Zomato Ltd. 

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GLP Weighs Raising $500 Million for China Data Centers

(Bloomberg) — GLP Pte is considering raising fresh funds to help expand its data centers platform in China amid increasing investor demand for digital infrastructure assets, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Singapore-based investment manager is seeking to raise about $500 million from investors in exchange for a minority stake in the platform, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private. A deal could give the China data centers a valuation of about $4 billion to $5 billion, they said. 

GLP has started sounding out potential interest from other digital industry players and other investment funds, the people said.

GLP is one of the largest independent data center operators in China and its assets, including those under construction, will help deliver about 1,400 megawatts of IT capacity upon completion, according to its website.

The proceeds from the fundraising could help expand GLP’s data centers platform both organically and via acquisitions, the people said. Considerations are preliminary and details such as the size could still change, the people said.

Representatives for GLP didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment made via phone and email.

Digital infrastructure assets such as data centers have become hot assets during the coronavirus pandemic as platforms supporting everything from video streaming to online gaming surged in popularity. That’s led to increasing interest from financial investors and industry players seeking to gain scale through consolidation. 

Chinese data center company GDS Holdings Ltd. had weighed a combination of its business with GLP’s data centers in China, although talks have stalled over valuation, Bloomberg News has reported. Among deals that materialized last year, DigitalBridge Group Inc., a digital infrastructure investment firm, acquired the data-center assets of Hong Kong-based telecommunications provider PCCW Ltd. for $750 million.

GLP was founded in 2009 as a global investment manager, developer and operator of logistics real estate, according to its website. The firm has expanded into areas including data infrastructure, renewable energy and related technologies. It is present in 17 countries and counts about $120 billion in assets under management.

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©2022 Bloomberg L.P.

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