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Bitcoin Miner Crusoe Energy Seeks Loan to Expand Operations

(Bloomberg) — Data center company Crusoe Energy Systems Inc. is sounding out investor interest in a potential debt deal that would help grow the firm’s Bitcoin mining business, according to people with knowledge of the mater.

Crusoe is seeking a $100 million to $125 million loan, said the people, who asked not to be identified because talks are private. The potential financing would be backed by Crusoe’s Bitcoin mining and generation equipment, and deal discussions are in the early stages and could change, the people added.

Crusoe, which is working with investment bank Ducera Partners LLC on the capital raising process, aims to ink a deal by year-end to take advantage of cryptocurrency’s recent momentum, the people said.

A representative for Crusoe didn’t respond to requests for comment. A representative for Ducera didn’t provide comment.

Denver-based Crusoe works with oil and gas companies to capture surplus gas tied to energy production, and converts those byproducts into electricity to power data centers and crypto-mining operations.

The company’s projects are designed to alleviate flaring, a long-standing issue in the shale industry. Oil producers deliberately burn off unwanted natural gas — a byproduct of oil drilling — because it’s often more cost-effective than selling it.

Regulators and investors are increasingly scrutinizing such practice, as it releases carbon dioxide and causes air pollution. New Mexico’s oil regulator approved stricter rules in March that will end routine natural gas flaring, and BP Plc said it’s targeting zero routine flaring in its U.S. onshore operations by 2025.

Energy Clients

The company, founded in 2018, counts Devon Energy Corp., Kraken Oil & Gas LLC and Enerplus Corp. as clients. Its operations span across Wyoming’s Powder River Basin, Colorado’s DJ Basin, and North Dakota and Montana’s Bakken oilfield.

In April, Crusoe received $128 million in equity financing led by Valor Equity Partners, along with a $40 million project financing facility. Venture capital firms including Bain Capital Ventures, Coinbase Ventures and Winklevoss Capital also participated in the round. The company said at the time that it planned to operate more than 100 data centers — up from 40 — in new and existing markets with flaring practices, as well as areas with excess wind or solar power.

While Crusoe’s potential debt deal has piqued the interest of certain private lenders, the financing cost could come in the double-digits, the people said. Most of the company’s revenue stems from Bitcoin, which is volatile and difficult to hedge, they added. Bitcoin prices have swung from around $9,000 to more than $63,000 in the past year.

Enthusiasm for the cryptocurrency has cooled since Bitcoin topped $63,000 in April. The change in sentiment comes amid a regulatory crackdown in China and criticism over crypto’s environmental impact. After months of slumping prices, Bitcoin briefly rose above $40,000 on Monday, buoyed by short-covering and speculation over Amazon.com Inc.’s involvement in the crypto industry.

(Updates comment line in fourth paragraph and company description in sixth paragraph.)

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Amazon Job Posting Hints at Plan to Accept Cryptocurrency

(Bloomberg) — Amazon.com Inc.’s payments team is exploring letting customers use cryptocurrencies to pay for their orders — a development that’s roiling digital currency markets.

An Amazon job posting published online last week seeks a “Digital Currency and Blockchain Product Lead.” After Insider reported the existence of the posting earlier, Bitcoin surged to about $40,000. Amazon shares gained about 1% in New York.

Read more: Bitcoin Nears $40,000 as Shorts Fuel Rally on Amazon Speculation

“You will leverage your domain expertise in Blockchain, Distributed Ledger, Central Bank Digital Currencies and Cryptocurrency to develop the case for the capabilities which should be developed,” the posting says. “You will work closely with teams across Amazon including AWS to develop the roadmap including the customer experience, technical strategy and capabilities as well as the launch strategy.”

(AWS, or Amazon Web Services, is the company’s cloud-computing group, which builds software and other technology products for other companies.)

Amazon is a sprawling company that backs a broad range of experiments, meaning initiatives cited in job postings don’t always become new products.

But news of the posting spawned all manner of speculation about Amazon’s cybercurrency ambitions. Citing a company “insider,” U.K. financial publication City A.M. reported that Amazon was planning to accept Bitcoin payments by the end of the year and introduce its own crypto coin in 2022.

The company denied the report.

“Notwithstanding our interest in the space, the speculation that has ensued around our specific plans for cryptocurrencies is not true,” an Amazon spokesperson said in an email. “We remain focused on exploring what this could look like for customers shopping on Amazon.”

The company did, however, earlier confirm interest in cryptocurrencies, digital tokens popular with younger and tech-savvy shoppers.

“We’re inspired by the innovation happening in the cryptocurrency space and are exploring what this could look like on Amazon. We believe the future will be built on new technologies that enable modern, fast and inexpensive payments, and hope to bring that future to Amazon customers as soon as possible,” the company said in a statement after reporters spotted the posting.

Amazon doesn’t currently let customers pay with any cryptocurrencies. But AWS sells a blockchain technology infrastructure product.

Other technology companies have recently pushed further into the cryptocurrency space. In April, PayPal Holdings Inc. began letting select customers of its Venmo app buy, sell and hold digital currencies. After adding cryptocurrency transactions to the PayPal app, the company said people who use the feature logged on twice as often as they did before the change.

Tesla Inc., led by billionaire Elon Musk, has waffled on cryptocurrencies. The company earlier accepted Bitcoin for purchases but pulled back in May, citing concerns about the use of fossil fuels in crypto mining. Musk said this month that the electric carmaker would likely resume accepting cryptocurrencies as Bitcoin mining shifts toward more renewable energy.

At an event a few years ago, Amazon Chief Executive Officer Andy Jassy said the company was closely watching blockchain developments but struck a skeptical tone about the technology.

“We don’t yet see a lot of practical use cases for blockchain that are much broader than using a distributed ledger,” Jassy, said at a press conference at a company event in 2017, when he led AWS. “We don’t build technology because we think the technology is cool, we only build it if we think we can solve a customer problem and building that service is the best way to solve it.”

(Updates with Amazon denial of City A.M. report in seventh paragraph.)

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Uniswap Restricts Fake-Stock Tokens as Regulatory Scrutiny Grows

(Bloomberg) — The regulatory pushback against recent innovation in the decentralized finance space is starting to leave a mark.

Uniswap Labs said late Friday that it was restricting access to dozens of tokens on its trading interface app, including synthetic assets meant to mirror the prices of stock-market giants like Facebook Inc. and Tesla Inc., as well exchange-traded funds such as Invesco’s so-called QQQ that tracks the Nasdaq 100 Index.

Uniswap said it monitors “the evolving regulatory landscape” and the restrictions were “consistent with actions taken by other DeFi interfaces.” However, the firm pointed out that the decision does not affect the underlying Uniswap Protocol that allows such assets to trade, or other interfaces used to access it. That means that the synthetic equities and other tokens can still be traded via other interfaces.

The move follows remarks by U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler on July 21 that served as a warning to crypto projects meant to mimic the value of securities and skirt regulations governing exchanges and brokerages.

“Make no mistake: It doesn’t matter whether it’s a stock token, a stable-value token backed by securities, or any other virtual product that provides synthetic exposure to underlying securities,” Gensler said in the speech to an American Bar Association committee meeting. “These platforms — whether in the decentralized or centralized finance space — are implicated by the securities laws and must work within our securities regime.”

Read More: Fake Tesla, Apple Stocks Have Started Trading on Blockchains

Other tokens restricted by Uniswap include those meant to track the value of gold and oil futures, the Japanese yen and Korean won, and synthetic versions of cryptocurrencies such as Litecoin and Bitcoin.

Uniswap’s move comes a week after centralized cryptocurrency exchange Binance Holdings announced that it was phasing out support for tokenized versions of stocks like Apple Inc., Tesla and Coinbase Global Inc. Hong Kong’s Securities and Futures Commission said it considered the tokens securities and that no Binance affiliates are licensed or registered to conduct “regulated activity” in Hong Kong.

Also this month, New Jersey ordered BlockFi Inc. to stop offering interest-bearing accounts, saying the financial services company is funding its crypto lending operations and proprietary trading in part through the sale of unregistered securities.

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©2021 Bloomberg L.P.

Boeing’s Turnaround After 737 Max Crisis Threatened by Talent Exodus

(Bloomberg) — Boeing Co. will put its battered engineering reputation on the line again this week when its Starliner spacecraft blasts off from Florida with a load of supplies for the International Space Station.

The mission is a do-over of a 2019 trip that almost ended in calamity, and a dress rehearsal for the Boeing capsule’s first flight with astronauts later this year. If successful, it would narrow the gap with an ascendant rival, SpaceX, and answer the latest space-faring feats by the billionaire founders of Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic. 

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A tour de force by Starliner might also help distract from a potential problem Boeing is facing back on earth: An exodus of some of the company’s most experienced engineers that threatens its rebound from a bruising run that includes the grounding of its 737 Max jets after two fatal crashes and the plunge in global air travel amid the spread of Covid-19.

“It’s hard to overestimate the significance of it,” said Andrew Aldrin, director of the Aldrin Space Institute at the Florida Institute of Technology.

More than 3,200 engineers and technical workers have left the company’s Seattle airplane manufacturing hub since the start of last year, about 18% of the union that represents them, with only a scant number added behind. In all, Boeing is aiming to cut 23,000 employees — from its executive committee to the factory floor — through layoffs, buyouts and retirement initiatives it launched last year as it racked up record financial losses.

The engineers departed an employer that had shifted away from the bet-the-company ethos that gave the world the 747 jumbo jet and the Apollo era’s Saturn rocket. Over the past decade, cost-obsessed Boeing executives wowed Wall Street by plowing more than $40 billion into share buybacks. The strategy made Boeing the best performer in the Dow Jones Industrial Average for a span, but left the manufacturer ill-prepared for leaner times and new competitive threats. 

Now, with a new space age beckoning and aviation beginning to tentatively recover from the pandemic, the century-old company’s standing as the preeminent American aerospace champion is in question.

Boeing’s new chief executive officer, Dave Calhoun, has pledged to return the aviation titan to its roots as an engineering-centric company as he reboots its strategy for an era of loosened pandemic restrictions. There has been a step-up in hiring to offset the lost talent and address software shortfalls, but a spate of production defects in the crown-jewel 787 Dreamliner have overshadowed that initiative.

“We wonder if Boeing is suffering from an engineering brain drain, as potentially too many senior engineers have left the company in recent years and recent hiring trends have not filled the gap,” cautioned Ron Epstein, an analyst with Bank of America, who was a Boeing scientist early in his career.

The manufacturer shielded its government-funded space and defense units from the payroll purge, and continued to hire through the worst of last year’s downturn, including engineers. As the 737 Max was cleared to fly again and air travel rebounded in the U.S., the Chicago-based company pared its job-cut targets by at least 3,000 positions — targets that could narrow again as business conditions improve. It held a virtual career fair this month to recruit production and airplane systems engineers to its Seattle facilities.

“Engineering excellence is core to Boeing’s culture,” a Boeing spokesman said in a statement. “Over the past two years, we have methodically strengthened our engineering function, including establishing a unified organization of 50,000 talented and accomplished engineers across our commercial, defense, and space portfolio.”

Still, Boeing faces a years-long turnaround and intensified competition in its commercial jet business from arch-rival Airbus SE, which has built up a commanding sales lead. With aircraft sales snapping back faster than expected and pressure building to launch a new midrange jetliner, Boeing will soon find out: Did it cut too deeply?

 

The Pull of Competitors

Boeing has lost scores of workers to younger businesses, such as Amazon.com Inc. and SpaceX, that are pushing technological advances at breakneck speed. About 1,100 Boeing alumni now work for the Seattle-based e-commerce giant, an analysis of LinkedIn data show, and at least 200 former Boeing workers are at Elon Musk’s space venture. Microsoft Corp., Northrop Grumman Corp. and Lockheed Martin Corp. are also popular landing spots.

Those who join SpaceX and endure its grueling, 20-hour work days are often driven by idealism, said Aldrin. After all, Musk founded the company with the grandiose goal of establishing interplanetary travel that one day might save the human race.

With Amazon, the lure is often money. Boeing professionals in the Seattle area can potentially get a significant pay bump without uprooting their families by joining the online retailer, say two people familiar with the matter. No wonder: Amazon, like SpaceX, is a new-economy wunderkind. 

Amazon has been hiring Boeing workers with deep operations expertise for the side of its business where humans and robots toil together in giant warehouses. Walt Odisho, for example, had spearheaded efforts to make Boeing’s 737 factory more efficient. He retired from Boeing in March and joined Amazon weeks later as a vice president, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Another Boeing veteran, David Carbon, led that company’s South Carolina operations and introduced the largest 787 Dreamliner model to the world. These days, he’s overseeing the Amazon unit that’s creating a fleet of drones to whisk orders to shoppers.

Carbon cheered when a former colleague, Bob Whittington, signed on as Prime Air’s vice president of technology and engineering in November. Whittington, who had been the chief engineer for the 787 program, was among the first wave of workers to depart Boeing last year as the pandemic decimated sales. He didn’t stay retired for long, joining Amazon months later, LinkedIn shows. “Bob is a legend in the aviation world,” Carbon gushed online of the 33-year Boeing veteran.

“There are a lot of smart people who work here who could choose to make money doing something else. But they love airplanes,” Whittington said in a 2013 profile by a company magazine. “When an airplane flies over, they all look up.”

No fewer than 32 Boeing engineers have landed at Amazon’s Prime Air cargo drone service, most of them hired within the past two years. In fact, Amazon overtook Boeing as Washington’s largest employer last year as its sales surged, state data show.

“There are a tremendous number of opportunities for aerospace, science, robotics, and engineering experts at Prime Air that involve cutting-edge innovations,” a spokesperson for the online retailer said in a statement. Amazon declined to make former Boeing executives available for an interview. 

The competition for talent is heating up as the industry adjusts to a pandemic-altered world. Aerospace is heading into “a major hiring phase,” said Paul Smith, senior vice president of business development at PEAK Technical Staffing, a headhunting firm that specializes in engineering. “We’re spending more time recruiting for engineering now than we have done previously in those marketplaces because they’re really starting to want to steal people.”

Boeing has notched some wins in the talent wars. In November, it created a new vice president role for Jinnah Hosein, a veteran of SpaceX, Tesla Inc., Google, and most recently Aurora, a self-driving vehicle company.

Software design and coding errors have repeatedly led to performance shortfalls, like the faulty system that commanded the 737 Max to dive, KC-46 tanker’s fueling glitches and delays to the 777X jet’s debut. They also caused the Starliner capsule to miss a rendezvous with the International Space Station on its first flight in 2019. In his new role, Hosein charts strategy and leads a new centralized engineering unit that helps Boeing’s three main divisions develop software embedded in the manufacturer’s products.

The turmoil has also been something of a boon for those angling to join Boeing’s top engineering ranks. The company has given 264 employees the sought-after designation of technical fellow this year, an honor that marks them as a top-caliber expert and often means a bump in pay. Some years only a dozen or so people make the grade. The planemaker lost 275 of those specialists in last year’s exodus.

“I had no qualms when I left Boeing this past December after 35-plus years with the company,” said Todd Zarfos, a retired engineering vice president. “I considered our engineering talent pipeline very robust and something in which I and fellow leaders invested to ensure continuity with the next generation of leaders.”

Not everyone shares his optimism. The turnover inevitably has meant the loss of some of the knowledge gained through decades of designing and building highly complicated jetliners.

“I assume they think they have plans in place to ensure that knowledge isn’t lost,” said Ray Goforth, executive director of the union representing Boeing’s engineers. “I don’t have the same confidence.”

Boeing still has a pipeline into the nation’s top engineering schools, and the company’s name on a resume can open doors. Even with its recent travails, the planemaker is among the 10 largest employers of 2021 Washington State University graduates. The number-one destination for this year’s class: Amazon.

Done With Moon Shots

Boeing’s talent predicament has been years in the making. The Boeing engineering union’s membership peaked at 22,985 early last decade as the planemaker tackled 787 production snarls, while developing new models including the 737 Max. It has since tumbled by 38% as management shifted work to Florida and California. Back in 2014, while Musk’s SpaceX was setting its sights on Mars, Boeing focused on cash after then-CEO Jim McNerney declared the company was done pursuing the once-in-a-generation “moon shots” that had long been its hallmark.

The planemaker ramped up production of its most-profitable jets at factories strained almost to the breaking point, resulting in record sales. The strategy worked until two 737 Max jets fell out of the sky within a five-month span. The fatal crashes, linked to flawed flight-control software, created a massive hole in Boeing’s revenue and a public-relations nightmare. The following year, the Covid-19 pandemic wiped out demand for the company’s other cash-cow jet, the 787 Dreamliner. 

All told, those two crises sapped $30 billion in cash and precipitated the largest internal upheaval since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks roiled its jetliner business. The exodus in Seattle has included around 6,000 mechanics, according to their union, the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers.

While analysts warn about the impact of engineering departures, it is too early to know how they might affect Boeing’s long-term prospects, including its showdown with European rival Airbus. That company didn’t cut workers as deeply and is now working to speed output in its factories to exceed pre-pandemic levels. The France-based manufacturer holds about 50% more single-aisle jet orders compared to Boeing’s backlog, giving it a rare opportunity to take command of the jetliner duopoly.

While Boeing ramped up its share buybacks last decade, Airbus was outspending the U.S. manufacturer on research as a percentage of sales every year but one. Airbus shares are up about 117% over the last five years, compared to a 66% gain for Boeing.

Tough Decisions

Boeing has cut deeply into its workforce over the years to survive industry shocks. It has often recalled workers and rehired retirees as consultants when the subsequent recovery left it short-handed.

“That’s just the tendency, to lay off too many, too soon,” said Tom McCarty, a retired engineer and former president of the Society of Professional Engineering Employees in Aerospace, an engineers union.

Aerospace analyst Seth Seifman says the company is still in the “early-to-mid stages” of a transition under CEO Calhoun, who took the top job in January 2020 after predecessor Dennis Muilenburg was pushed out over the 737 Max debacle. Brian West, a long-time Calhoun lieutenant, is replacing the recently-retired Greg Smith as chief financial officer and key architect of Boeing’s makeover.

Boeing’s talent exodus and production shortfalls, particularly with the 787, will be in focus when the manufacturer reports earnings on Wednesday. “We continue to question how engineering excellence fits into Boeing’s business transformation,” Epstein, the Bank of America analyst, wrote in a July 21 report.

Calhoun, a former GE executive who more recently ran Blackstone’s private-equity portfolio, has vowed to get the basics right — core engineering, safety and manufacturing quality. He has made some tough decisions, including closing a Seattle-area manufacturing line for the 787 Dreamliner and shifting work to a non-unionized plant in South Carolina.

As the crisis worsened last year, Calhoun also jettisoned Boeing’s futuristic forays. First to go was a midrange jet known as the NMA, followed by Boeing’s $4.2 billion takeover of Embraer SA. Boeing later shut down units that had dabbled in venture capital. It opted against propping up now-defunct supersonic jet-maker Aerion Corp., after spending around $300 million for an equity stake, according to a person familiar with the matter.

But it wasn’t just tangential projects that fell to cost cuts. Boeing slashed its overall research and development spending 23% last year from a year earlier. For a company so heavily dependent on innovation, that was the equivalent of a farmer dining on the seed corn needed to plant next year’s crop, said Richard Aboulafia, an aerospace analyst with Teal Group.

Boeing says it has poured more than $60 billion into research and development, capital expenditures and strategic investments such as digital engineering tools that helped move the T-7A military training jet from a design on a computer screen to first flight in 36 months. “These investments in our people and our products empower our teams to drive innovation, quality and performance as they work on challenging programs that change the world,” the company said.

Lure of Complicated Machines

Starliner is set to dock at the space station for several days before returning to Earth with a landing in the western U.S. A drama-free voyage could help restore some of the swagger to a Boeing division that pioneered human spaceflight. For now, SpaceX continues to captivate the next generation of rocket scientists. Aldrin, who is the son of astronaut Buzz Aldrin, estimates that over half of the engineering students he teaches near Florida’s Space Coast have their sights set on Musk’s venture.

The talent Boeing has lost may come into sharper focus if the planemaker moves ahead with its first all-new jetliner since the 787 Dreamliner debuted nearly two decades ago. The prospect of creating one of the most complicated machines on the planet was a reliable lure to engineers in the past. 

Then again, Boeing was sketching out concepts for this type of jetliner back in 2014, when McNerney backed away from moon shots. That was weeks after SpaceX first flew a rocket booster back from the edge of space to a soft, watery landing, redefining American industrial innovation and establishing itself as a glittery star in a constellation where the leading legacy player was starting to fade.

 

(Updated to include reference to Wednesday earnings report and analyst quote. A previous version was corrected to remove reference to B-52 designer Bob Withington.)

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Kaseya Says It Didn’t Pay a Ransom To Hackers

(Bloomberg) — Kaseya Ltd. said it didn’t pay to obtain decryption keys for its customers’ networks after they were hit in a large ransomware attack earlier this month.

“While each company must make its own decision on whether to pay the ransom, Kaseya decided after consultation with experts to not negotiate with the criminals who perpetrated this attack and we have not wavered from that commitment,” the company said in a statement. “We are confirming in no uncertain terms that Kaseya did not pay a ransom – either directly or indirectly through a third party – to obtain the decryptor.”

Ransomware group REvil, which is believed by cybersecurity firms and U.S. officials to operate out of Russia, claimed credit for the attack and had at one point demanded $70 million for the keys to unlock the networks of Kaseya’s customers. Revil seemingly vanished following the attack on Kaseya.

The ransomware attack was unusual because hackers targeted Kaseya, which develops software used by managed service providers, in order to access hundreds of its clients. Managed service providers handle the operations of other companies’ computer networks.

Kaseya said last week that it obtained a decryptor from a third party without saying whether it had paid a ransom or how the decryption keys were acquired.

The Miami-based company is requiring its customers to sign a non-disclosure agreement in order to obtain decryption keys, CNN reported last week.

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Jaguar Sets Up Mission Control Center Over Chips Spurring Losses

(Bloomberg) — Jaguar Land Rover is working seven days a week trying to limit the damage from the chip shortage that dragged its owner into the red last quarter and is about to cost it even more.

The British luxury-car maker has set up a “full-time mission control center” to manage the issue, Chief Financial Officer Adrian Mardell said on a call Monday. Parent Tata Motors Ltd. posted a net loss of 44.5 billion rupees ($598 million) for the quarter ended in June, a bigger deficit than any analyst estimate compiled by Bloomberg.

The supply chain issues derailed a short-lived run of positive earnings for Tata Motors. In addition to the dearth of semiconductors, results last quarter were plagued by commodity price inflation: raw material costs almost quadrupled from a year ago to 373.1 billion rupees.

“We’re expecting the worst of chip crisis to come in the second quarter,” P.B. Balaji, Tata Motors’s chief financial officer, told reporters during an earlier briefing. “We’re working very strenuously to mitigate the impact,” he said, by reducing consumption where possible, redesigning products and making long-term arrangements with semiconductor suppliers.

JLR reported a pretax loss of 110 million pounds ($152 million) last quarter on revenue of 4.97 billion pounds. This quarter, the company expects a negative pretax earnings margin and free cash outflow of less than 1 billion pounds. It’s anticipating the semiconductor situation will start to improve in the second half of its financial year.

JLR’s performance is crucial for Mumbai-based conglomerate Tata Group, after a devastating wave of Covid infections and government-imposed lockdowns crimped demand in its home market. The unit is staging board-level reviews of the chip issue twice a week.

Supplier Blame

One of JLR’s suppliers of critical parts was “by far the biggest component” of shortages last quarter, Mardell said on the call. He didn’t identify the company but did say the dispute could lead to litigation.

“It would be very sad if this actually went to the point of a legal action, of course, but we expect an equal entitlement and we don’t feel that in the first quarter we received that,” Mardell said. “Those are the discussions were having with them.”

Demand for JLR is extremely strong, with an order book of about 110,000 units, Tata’s Balaji said. The division expects to wholesale about 65,000 vehicles this quarter, reiterating that this is about half of its earlier plan. The chip crisis has forced the carmaker to idle production at several plants.

Under CEO Thierry Bollore, the former Renault SA chief who joined the U.K. carmaker in September, Jaguar Land Rover is planning to electrify its lineup, ditching combustion engines at the smaller of its two brands completely in four years. The Land Rover line will get its first fully electric model in 2024, and by the following year, all Jaguars will be entirely powered by batteries.

Tata Motors shares closed 0.8% lower in Monday trading before the earnings were released. The stock is up almost 60% this year.

(Updates with JLR CFO’s comments in headline and throughout.)

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Anne Dias Returns to Money Management With New Long-Short Fund

(Bloomberg) — Hedge fund veteran Anne Dias is planning to manage outside money again.

Dias, 50, began fundraising last month for a long-short strategy to be managed by her Aragon Global Management. The New York-based firm, with roots dating back two decades, has been operating as a family office for her personal wealth in recent years.

Aragon, which invests in internet, technology and consumer stocks, also seeks companies with “improving long-term business prospects at attractive valuations,” the firm said in a May regulatory filing. It tries to identify mega-trends that will result in “disruptive innovation” over three to five years, creating value for some companies and destroying it for others. It will buy shares of the former and sell short the latter.

Chris Chung, Aragon’s chief financial officer, declined to comment and said Dias wasn’t available.

Dias’s career has taken several turns since she started out at as a financial analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. She subsequently worked as a portfolio manager for industry heavyweights including George Soros and Andreas Halvorsen before starting her own firm in 2001 with seeding from another billionaire, Julian Robertson.

Just two years later, Dias, a native of France, was married to Citadel founder Ken Griffin. She decided to return Aragon’s client money about a decade ago.

Griffin filed for divorce in 2014 and the couple reached a settlement a year later. Dias continued her philanthropic pursuits and began teaching a course at Georgetown University, her alma mater, on how to manage a hedge fund.

Dias has been running her current long-short strategy, using her own capital since 2017, according to a person familiar with the firm. By 2019, she had reportedly begun considering raising outside money.

Nevertheless, it wasn’t until May that Aragon filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to become a registered money manager, a status that permits the firm to accept outside capital. The registration took effect in June, when Aragon Partners, the onshore version of the long-short fund, also began raising money.

The firm reported about $120 million of gross assets under management, including Dias’s own money, as of late May. In addition to Aragon Partners, the firm runs several funds that invest with third party managers. Those fund-of-funds are closed to new investors.

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Reflation Trade’s Last Bright Spot Shines On in Canadian Dollar

(Bloomberg) — The Canadian dollar, one of the best-performing major currencies this year, may be poised to get a sustained second wind.

That’s in large part because many of the fundamentals — elevated prices for raw materials and accommodative central bank policies — that have buttressed the reflation trade this year remain intact even as jitters and stretched positioning have prompted some to pull back a bit from the currency. Many of these same dynamics are also undermining the yen, a key counterpart for the trade.

The loonie suffered setbacks over the past month as asset managers scaled back long reflation bets amid concern over surging virus cases from the delta variant. But speculators remained sanguine on the outlook, with leveraged funds increasing their holdings in the second week of July, data from the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.

In the options market, while investors have hedged short-term event risks, the inverted shape of the currency’s volatility curve suggests they remain confident in the outlook that calm will prevail. And for those still upbeat about reflation, the Canadian dollar could prove to be a key part of the trading toolkit.

“Generally when the market doubts the global recovery, my inclination is to go the other way,” said Alan Ruskin, chief international strategist at Deutsche Bank. “The recovery is plainly being hurt by the delta variant especially in countries with low vaccination rates, but even allowing for this asynchronous recovery, the global economy in aggregate will remain robust.”

Ruskin is recommending a basket of the loonie, New Zealand dollar and Norwegian krone going long against the yen, “that is essentially consistent with the reflation trade.”

Commodity prices, after withstanding sharp setbacks over the past month, climbed to a fresh six-year high on Monday. The Canadian dollar’s sharp downturn in the past month, along with other resource-linked currencies, suggests upside potential in a return to the long-term trend.

On the flip side of the reflation trade, both speculative and real money accounts have been building short yen positions since January, reflecting a deteriorating terms of trade position for a country that imports resources. While asset managers scaled back bearish bets amid the recent market upheaval, they remain near the lowest level more than two years reached last month.

For traders that were long loonie-yen at the start of the year, they would be up more than 8% this year as the Canadian currency is the best in the developed market and Japan’s is the worst.

CFTC data suggests speculative yen shorts may start fearing losses dollar-yen drops below 107 in the spot market, a level Japanese corporates are also sensitive to. Canadian dollar longs are watching C$1.28 per greenback, a pivot point reached in December when positioning flipped bullish the loonie. Combining these levels for the loonie-yen pair equates to a cross rate of 83.50 yen per Canadian dollar, about 5% below the current level of 88.

The loonie strengthened 0.2% to C$1.25 per dollar on Monday, while the yen traded around 110 against the greenback.

Long positions in the loonie and shorts in the yen are underpinned by expectations low real rates will keep monetary policy loose, stimulating economic recovery and boosting commodity prices. And while reflation bets, in general, have been under pressure since major central banks began signaling balance sheet tapering, recent comments suggest policy makers are likely to remain cautiously accommodative in the coming months.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told Congress this month that the U.S. economic recovery has not progressed enough to begin scaling back asset purchases. European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde pledged last week not to derail the recovery by tightening too soon.

While the backdrop remains supportive for the reflation trade, traders will have to be nimble should concerns like variant risks and soft economic data resurface, further pressuring the growth outlook. But for now, the options market and cash positions signal optimism, with shifts in terms of trade delineating between the winners and losers.

NOTE: Robert Fullem is an FX and rates strategist who writes for Bloomberg. The observations he makes are his own and are not intended as investment advice.

(Updates market prices throughout.)

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Ethereum Co-Founder Says Safety Concern Has Him Quitting Crypto

(Bloomberg) — Anthony Di Iorio, a co-founder of the Ethereum network, says he’s done with the cryptocurrency world, partially because of personal safety concerns.

Di Iorio, 46, has had a security team since 2017, with someone traveling with or meeting him wherever he goes. In coming weeks, he plans to sell Decentral Inc., and refocus on philanthropy and other ventures not related to crypto. The Canadian expects to sever ties in time with other startups he is involved with, and doesn’t plan on funding any more blockchain projects.

“It’s got a risk profile that I am not too enthused about,” said Di Iorio, who declined to disclose his cryptocurrency holdings or net worth. “I don’t feel necessarily safe in this space. If I was focused on larger problems, I think I’d be safer.”

Back in 2013, Di Iorio co-founded Ethereum, which has become the home of many of the hottest crypto projects, particularly in decentralized finance — which lets people borrow, lend and trade with each other without intermediaries like banks. Ether, the native token of the network, has a market value of about $225 billion.

He made a splash in 2018 when buying the largest and one of the most expensive condos in Canada, paying for it partly with digital money. Di Iorio purchased the three-story penthouse for C$28 million ($22 million) at the St. Regis Residences Toronto, the former Trump International Hotel & Tower in the downtown business district.

In recent years, Di Iorio jumped into venture-capital investing and startup advising. He was also for a time chief digital officer of the Toronto Stock Exchange. In February 2018, Forbes estimated his net worth was as high as $1 billion. Ether’s price has more than doubled since then.

Decentral is a Toronto-based innovation hub and software development company focused on decentralized technologies, and the maker of Jaxx, a digital asset wallet that garnered about 1 million customers this year.

Di Iorio said he has talked with a couple of potential investors, and believes the startup will be valued at “hundreds of millions.” He expects to sell the company for fiat, or equity in another company — not crypto.

“I want to diversify to not being a crypto guy, but being a guy tackling complex problems,” Di Iorio said. He is involved in Project Arrow, run by a high-school friend that’s building a zero-emission vehicle. He is also consulting a senator from Paraguay.

“I will incorporate crypto when needed, but a lot of times, it’s not,” he said. “It’s really a small percentage of what the world needs.”

(Corrects Di iorio’s age in second paragraph of story originally published July 16.)

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Lebanese President Names Billionaire Mikati to Form Cabinet

(Bloomberg) —

Lebanon’s president tasked Najib Mikati, a billionaire businessman and former premier, with forming a new government, the third attempt in less than a year as the country scrambles to escape a spiraling economic crisis.

Mikati received 72 of 115 votes during consultations between President Michel Aoun and lawmakers on Monday. He had already won the backing of a group of former Sunni Muslim heavyweight politicians. They included Saad Hariri, who ended his own efforts to build an administration last week after disagreements with Aoun.

Critically, the Shiite Iran-backed Hezbollah group and its allies also gave their support to Mikati. Lawmakers belonging to two major Christian factions were among 42 parliamentarians who refrained from nominating a premier.

Speaking to reporters, Mikati said he wouldn’t have accepted the role without “the needed international guarantees,” adding his first priority once a cabinet had been approved would be to pursue the so-called French initiative, a roadmap set by Paris to unlock billions of dollars in pledged donor funds. It’s time “for someone to stop the fire from spreading,” he said.

Lebanon has been under a caretaker cabinet since August when the government resigned in the aftermath of the massive port explosion that killed at least 200 people and destroyed swaths of the capital. The government, which defaulted on $30 billion in international debt over a year ago, has struggled to implement reforms given its limited authority and political backing. A collapse in the value of the pound has decimated the savings of millions of Lebanese, while shortages of fuel add to the misery.

Mikati, 65, is the co-founder along with his brother of investment firm M1 Group, and the two are Lebanon’s richest men with individual fortunes of around $2.5 billion. Their family-owned company has investments in sectors including telecommunications, real estate, aircraft financing, fashion and energy. M1 Group holds stakes in South African telecom firm MTN, fashion retailer Pepe Jeans and property in New York and London, according to Forbes magazine.

A two-time prime minister, he’s from the northern city of Tripoli, one of Lebanon’s poorest, and is considered to be a close friend of Bashar Al-Assad, the president of neighboring Syria and a former major power broker in Lebanon. Mikati entered politics in 1998 as a public works minister and is currently a lawmaker.

His most recent cabinet was in 2011 after Hezbollah and its allies toppled Saudi Arabia-backed Hariri and named him to form a government. Mikati resigned two years later over several disputes that pitted Hariri’s coalition against the Hezbollah-led camp.

Mikati has since re-aligned himself closer to Hariri, who also has ties France, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt.

The international community, primarily former colonial power France, has been pushing Lebanon’s fractious politicians to form a government quickly and begin implementing reforms that could unlock aid aid and revive stalled talks with the International Monetary Fund. Paris has threatened to sanction politicians who obstructed the formation of a government.

Nationwide protests erupted in October 2019 over falling living conditions with demonstrators demanding the removal of an entire political class that they accuse of rampant corruption, pillaging state coffers and pushing the country to the brink of collapse.

During the protest period, a state prosecutor accused Mikati and the country’s biggest bank of making illicit gains from a subsidized housing program. Both Mikati and the bank have denied any wrongdoing.

(Updates with Mikati’s comments.)

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