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Klarna losses triple after aggressive U.S. growth and mass layoffs

The logo of Swedish payment provider Klarna.

Thomas Trutschel | photo library | Getty Images

Klarna on Wednesday reported a dramatic jump in losses in the first half, adding to a deluge of negative news for the “buy now, pay later” pioneer.

The Swedish payments firm generated revenues of 9.1 billion Swedish krona ($950 million) in the period spanning January to the end of June 2022. That was up 24% from a year ago.

But the company also racked up hefty losses. Klarna’s pre-tax loss soared more than threefold year-on-year to nearly 6.2 billion krona. In the first half of 2021, Klarna lost around 1.8 billion Swedish krona.

The company, which allows users to spread the cost of purchases over interest-free installations, saw a jump in operating expenses and defaults. Operating expenses before credit losses came in at 10.8 billion Swedish krona, up from 6.3 billion krona year-over-year, driven by administrative costs related to its rapid international expansion in countries like the US credit losses, meanwhile, rose more than 50% to 2.9 billion swedish krona.

Klarna had previously been profitable for most of its existence — that is up until 2019, when the firm dipped into the red for the first time after a hike in investments aimed at growing the business globally.

The company’s ballooning losses highlight the price of its rapid expansion after the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. Klarna has entered 11 new markets since the start of 2020, and took a number of costly gambits to extend its foothold in the US and Britain.

In the US, Klarna has spent heavily on marketing and user acquisition in an effort to chip away at Affirm, its main rival stateside. In the UK, meanwhile, the firm acquired PriceRunner, a price comparison site, in April. It has also engaged in a charm offensive with British politicians and regulators ahead of incoming regulations.

More recently, Klarna has been forced to cut back. In May, the company slashed about 10% of its global workforce in a swift round of job cuts. The company subsequently raised funds at a $6.7 billion valuation — an 85% drop from its previous valuation — in an $800 million investment deal that defined the capitulation from high-growth tech firms as investors grew wary of a possible recession.

The sharp discount reflects grim sentiment among investors in fintech in both the public and private markets, with publicly-listed fintech Affirm having lost about three quarters of its market value since the start of 2022.

“We’ve had to make some tough decisions, ensuring we have the right people, in the right place, focused on business priorities that will accelerate us back to profitability while supporting consumers and retailers through a more difficult economic period,” said Sebastian Siemiatkowski , CEO and co-founder of Klarna.

“We needed to take immediate and pre-emptive action, which I think was misunderstood at the time, but now sadly we have seen many other companies follow suit.”

Klarna said it plans to tighten its approach to lending, particularly with new customers, to factor in the worsening cost-of-living situation. However, Siemiatkowski said, “You won’t see the impact of this on our financials in this report yet.”

“We have a very agile balance sheet, especially in comparison to traditional banks due to the short-term nature of our products, but even for Klarna it takes a little while for the impact of decisions to flow through.”

Fintech companies are cutting expenses and delaying listing plans amid a worsening macroeconomic backdrop. Meanwhile, consumer-oriented services are losing their appeal among investors while so-called “business-to-business” fintechs attract the limelight.

Klarna says it is now used by over 150 million people, while the company counts 450,000 merchants on its network. Klarna mainly generates income from retailers, not users, taking a small slice of each transaction processed through its platform.

“Ultimately they’ve proven there can be a profitable business there but have doubled down on growing in the US market which is expensive,” Simon Taylor, head of strategy at fintech startup Sardine.ai, told CNBC.

“Market share there will be meaningful for long-term revenue. But it takes time and the funding taps aren’t what they used to be.”

But the company faces stiff competition, with titans in the realms of both tech and finance seeking to capitalize on growth in the buy now, pay later industry. Apple is set to launch its own BNPL product, Apple Pay Later, this case, which will allow users to split the cost of their purchases over four equal monthly payments.

Meanwhile, proposals are afoot to bring the BNPL market under regulatory supervision. In the UK, the government has announced plans to enforce tighter affordability checks and a crackdown on misleading advertisements. Stateside, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau opened a market-monitoring probe into BNPL companies.

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World News

Shares rally for a second day, Dow jumps greater than 200 factors to recoup Monday’s losses

US stocks rose higher on Wednesday as stocks continued their recovery from a one-day loss earlier in the week.

Better-than-expected earnings reports from Dow members Coca-Cola and Johnson & Johnson added to the bullish mood.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 286.01 points, or 0.83%, to 34,798 points. It sits less than 1% from a record. The S&P 500 was up 0.82% to 4,358.65. The Nasdaq Composite climbed 0.92% to 14,631.95.

The 30-share index rose nearly 550 points on Tuesday after falling 725 points on Monday for its worst session in eight months. The successive rallies have now completely wiped out the losses from the beginning of the week for all three indices.

“Tuesday was an oversold course in the textbook after the collapse on Monday,” Thomas Essaye of Sevens Report Research said in a report on Wednesday. “However, aside from short-term swings, we need to see returns hit rock bottom and economic growth beat estimates (two things we think will happen) for value and cyclicals to regain leadership.”

The bond market, particularly the 10-year government bond yield, is driving the equity markets. On Wednesday, the 10-year yield rose 8 basis points to 1.293% (1 basis point equals 0.01%). The yield fell to a new 5-month low on Monday before stabilizing on Tuesday. The collapse in interest rates unsettled equity investors by signaling a possible slowdown in the economy due to the spread of Covid variants or a possible error by the Federal Reserve.

Even if bonds move up, the trend is still down compared to five months ago when the 10-year price was above 1.7.

“The catalyst for why investors have become familiar with risk assets in the past two days is admittedly difficult to pin down,” said Chris Hussey of Goldman Sachs on Wednesday. “Perhaps investors have just embraced the notion that the response function to a new wave of the virus is unlikely to be the same as the response function deployed in spring 2020.”

Stocks, which would benefit most from a sustained rapid economic reopening, rose on Wednesday after recovering from Monday’s sell-off in the previous session. Carnival’s shares rose more than 9%. Las Vegas Sands was up 3%.

Energy stocks led the ongoing rally as oil continued to rebound after falling below $ 70 a barrel on Monday. The Energy Select SPDR is 3.5% higher that day.

Dow member Coca-Cola gave market sentiment an early boost after it reported quarterly sales surpassing pre-pandemic 2019 levels and raised its guidance for the full year. Coca-Cola shares gained more than 1%.

Dow member Johnson & Johnson’s stock traded almost unchanged even after the drug maker reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue for the second quarter and also raised its guidance for 2021.

Moderna has joined the S&P 500, giving the stock a 20% gain from when it was announced a week ago. The shares have gained 4.5%.

Verizon’s stocks rose slightly after reporting better-than-expected revenue and subscriber growth and raising their outlook for the full year.

Chipotle’s shares surged more than 11.5% as the Mexican fast food chain reported quarterly sales ahead of pre-pandemic levels as diners returned to their restaurants for dinner.

Netflix reported disappointing subscriber forecasts for the third quarter after the bell on Tuesday. The streaming giant expects 3.5 million net subscribers in the third quarter, nearly 2 million below analyst estimates. The company also reported results that fell short of expectations.

Netflix shares recently lost 3.2%.

According to FactSet, about 85% of the S&P 500 companies that have reported to date have beat estimates.

On Tuesday, reopening stocks rallied sharply from Monday’s sell-off sparked by a Covid-inspired global growth fear. American Airlines was up 4% and Norwegian Cruise Line was up 10%.

Some strategists see the market heading for a volatile phase in which there could be a deeper pullback. Investors juggle inflation concerns as well as new Covid cases that are recovering in the US when the delta variant spreads.

“I think what we’ve seen here are the early warning shots of a correction that we’re likely to see … in late August, September, October,” said Matt Maley, equity strategist at Miller Tabak.

However, data shows that spikes in the number of Covid cases don’t typically keep the stock market down for long. In the 14 months since the April average daily cases peak last year, case numbers in the US have risen four times while the S&P 500 remained positive.

Goldman’s Hussey said knowing better about Covid and the vaccines available to mitigate its effects could help build market confidence that U.S. economic activity is unlikely to freeze again with another wave of virus cases.

“We should expect the whiplash behavior of investors to continue”,

Rich Steinberg, chief marketing strategist at The Colony Group, told CNBC that he expects “whiplash behavior from investors to continue.”

“We will follow the rally as investors have been conditioned to buy the dip,” he said. “You’ve also been negatively conditioned to worry about the economy and the virus out of last year’s stressful world. I would describe the environment as fearful, but we’re not seeing high levels of short-termism.”

– with reports from CNBC’s Patti Domm and Michael Bloom

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World News

Dow ends day flat as financial comeback performs offset losses in tech

Trader on the New York Stock Exchange, June 2, 2021.

Source: NYSE

Cyclical stocks lifted the Dow Jones Industrial Average from its lows on Thursday and closed the session near the downside, while better-than-expected job data supported sentiment.

The blue-chip Dow closed just 23.34 points, or less than 0.1%, at 34,577.04 after losing 265 points from its session low. The S&P 500 lost 0.4% to 4,192.85 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 1% to 13,614.51.

The S&P 500 benchmark is about 1% off its all-time high hit early last month, but it has remained at that level for about two weeks. The S&P 500 is up more than 11% so far this year.

Merck and Dow Inc. were the top two performers in the 30-stock benchmark, both up more than 2%. Consumer staples and utilities were the biggest winners among the 11 S&P 500 sectors, while consumer discretionary and technology weighed on the broader market, falling 1.2% and 0.9% respectively.

General Motors shares rose nearly 6.4% after the company announced it would hit its results for the first half of 2021 “significantly better” than its previous projections.

On the data front, private employment growth accelerated the fastest in nearly a year in May, as companies hired nearly a million workers, according to a report by payroll firm ADP on Thursday.

The total new hire was 978,000 for the month, a huge jump from 654,000 in April and the largest increase since June 2020. Economists polled by Dow Jones had searched for 680,000.

Meanwhile, initial jobless claims for the week ending May 29 were 385,000, up from a Dow Jones estimate of 393,000. It was also the first time jobless claims fell below 400,000 since the early days of the pandemic.

“With ADP kicking it out of the park and jobless claims breaking the 400,000 mark – a pandemic low – all eyes will be on the bigger picture of jobs tomorrow,” said Mike Loewengart, a managing director at E-Trade. “With all systems seemingly working on the job front, the economy is showing some very real signs that this is not just a comeback – a mode of expansion could be on the horizon.”

According to economists polled by Dow Jones, the market could be on hold ahead of the job report released on Friday, which is expected to show an additional 671,000 non-agricultural payrolls in May. The economy created 266,000 jobs in April.

Investors continued to watch the wild action in meme stocks, particularly theater chain AMC Entertainment. The stock plunged up to 30% after practically doubling in the previous session, but the stock reduced its losses after the cinema chain said it closed a stock offering a few hours ago that raised $ 587 million. The stock ended the day around 18% lower.

Other meme stocks also came under pressure on Thursday. Bed Bath & Beyond fell more than 27%. The SoFi Social 50 ETF (SFYF), which tracks the 50 most widely used US publicly traded stocks on SoFi’s retail brokerage platform, slumped more than 6%.

In memory of what happened earlier this year, the joint rally of retailers on Reddit sparked a short squeeze on AMC earlier this week. S3 Partners said short sellers betting against the stock lost $ 2.8 billion on Wednesday as stocks rose. So their losses since the beginning of the year amount to more than 5 billion US dollars, according to S3. If it continues to recover, short sellers are forced to buy back the stock to reduce their losses.

GameStop’s meme stock bubble earlier this year weighed a little on the market as investors feared there was too much speculative activity in the stock market. As losses in hedge funds, which bet against the stock increased, worries mounted about a decline in risk appetite on Wall Street that could hit the broader market. AMC’s recent surge so far didn’t seem to raise any similar concerns.

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Business

Boeing Sees Restoration Forward Regardless of Persevering with Losses: Dwell Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Elaine Thompson/Associated Press

Boeing said Wednesday that it lost $561 million in the first three months of the year as it emerged from its prolonged 737 Max crisis and contended with new problems related to the 787 Dreamliner jet. Revenue fell 10 percent to $15.2 billion compared with the same period last year.

But, like his counterparts at major airlines, Dave Calhoun, Boeing’s chief executive, struck an optimistic tone.

“While the global pandemic continues to challenge the overall market environment, we view 2021 as a key inflection point for our industry as vaccine distribution accelerates and we work together across government and industry to help enable a robust recovery,” he said in a statement.

In an investor presentation, Boeing said it continued to expect the recovery to take years to unfold, with passenger traffic unlikely to return to 2019 levels until 2023 or 2024. It also said its financial results for this year “hinge” on a recovery in the commercial airplane market.

At the end of March, the company had a backlog of more than 4,000 commercial airplane orders, valued at $283 billion. Its defense and space backlog was valued at $61 billion.

The company’s results were weighed down by quality concerns with the 787, though deliveries of the plane resumed at the end of the quarter “following comprehensive reviews,” Boeing said in a statement. The company also suffered a $318 million charge related to development of the next Air Force One, which was affected by a pandemic slowdown and problems with a key supplier, which Boeing recently sued.

It was also the first full quarter since the Federal Aviation Administration’s decision in November to lift its ban on the 737 Max, which had been grounded globally nearly two years following two fatal crashes in which hundreds were killed.

Since the ban was lifted, Boeing has delivered more than 85 Max’s to customers worldwide. It also reported that it sold more planes than were canceled in February and March, its first months of positive sales in more than year. Nearly two dozen airlines have put the plane back into service on more than 26,000 flights, Boeing said.

Mr. Calhoun also provided an update on an electrical concern with some Max planes that was disclosed this month. The F.A.A. has said the issue could affect the operation of a backup power control unit in 106 planes worldwide, all of which have been grounded. Boeing is working with the agency on a fix that should take a “few days per airplane” once approved, Mr. Calhoun said in a letter to staff.

An Allbirds store in Manhattan.Credit…Jeenah Moon for The New York Times

Silicon Valley’s favorite shoe brand is headed to Wall Street. Allbirds is interviewing banks over the next few weeks to help it make a market debut, people familiar with the matter told the DealBook newsletter, requesting anonymity because the process is confidential. The direct-to-consumer company was last valued at around $1.7 billion.

The talks come as consumer brands that were founded with a heavy (if not exclusive) internet presence, including Honest Company and Warby Parker, are taking advantage of a pandemic-driven boom in online shopping to see if investor enthusiasm for tech offerings extends to them as well. Many of those companies, including Allbirds, have since opened some retail stores, which has proved an easier transition than the legacy retailers trying to build digital operations after making their names in the offline world.

Allbirds was founded by the New Zealand soccer star Tim Brown and Joey Zwillinger, a renewables expert. Its mantra is to “create better things in a better way,” and the company advertises that the merino wool in its shoes uses 60 percent less energy than typical synthetic materials.

“One of the worst offenders of the environment from a consumer product standpoint is shoes,” Mr. Zwillinger told The New York Times in 2017. “It’s not the making; it’s the materials.”

The brand’s flashy-but-logo-free shoes are popular among techies, celebrities (Leonardo DiCaprio is an investor) and former President Barack Obama. The company has raised more than $200 million since 2016.

Allbirds is a B Corp, a certification earned by focusing on social good as well as profit. (Mr. Zwillinger joined a DealBook Debrief call last year to talk about the purpose of business.) Wall Street hasn’t always taken kindly to such companies: Etsy had to drop the status after taking a beating from the public markets following its I.P.O. Allbirds, though, said the $100 million funding round it announced last September was “indication of investors’ continued enthusiasm for its stakeholder-centric business model.”

“Allbirds has always been focused on building a great company, and as a B Corp and Public Benefit Corporation, doing what is best for our stakeholders (planet, people, investors) at the right time and in a way that helps the business grow in a sustainable fashion,” a company spokeswoman said in a statement.

Deutsche Bank’s best quarter in seven years was a vindication for Christian Sewing, the chief executive who took over in 2018.Credit…Ralph Orlowski/Reuters

Deutsche Bank reported its best quarterly profit in seven years Wednesday as it benefited from lively financial markets and avoided losses from the investment firm Archegos Capital that has battered rivals.

The first-quarter profit of 900 million euros, or $1.1 billion, was better than expected and suggested that Deutsche Bank may be emerging from a decade of scandals and disasters that earned it a reputation as Europe’s most troubled lender.

James von Moltke, the chief financial officer of Deutsche Bank, said in response to a question about Archegos during an interview with Bloomberg News that the bank had been able to exit its involvement without a loss.

That is in contrast to rivals like Credit Suisse, which lost $4.7 billion it had lent to Archegos after the firm collapsed in March. Swiss bank UBS disclosed Tuesday that it lost $774 million from its involvement with Archegos.

Deutsche Bank, like most big corporations, is assessing how the pandemic may have permanently changed the way employees do their jobs. Mr. von Moltke said the bank was working on a plan that would allow employees to work from home two or three days a week.

Like many of its peers, Deutsche Bank has benefited from frenetic activity on financial markets, earning fees as it helped governments issue debt to finance stimulus programs or sell shares in blank-check investment vehicles known as SPACs.

The bank said it had also benefited from a European Central Bank stimulus program that effectively pays commercial lenders to provide credit to businesses and consumers in the eurozone. In addition, Deutsche Bank slashed the amount of money it set aside for bad loans.

The financial results are a vindication for Christian Sewing, the bank’s chief executive, who has been trying to show large shareholders like the private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management that he can generate consistent profits. Deutsche Bank shares rose 9 percent in Frankfurt trading Wednesday and are up more than 20 percent since the end of January.

“Our first quarter is further evidence that Deutsche Bank is on the right path,” Mr. Sewing said in a statement.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.Credit…Pool photo by Susan Walsh

When Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, speaks to reporters in a webcast news conference on Wednesday afternoon, he’s likely to face questions about a simmering topic: inflation.

Prices are expected to pop in the coming months, both as inflation indexes lap very weak 2020 readings and as supply chains experience short-term reopening bottlenecks. The unknowns facing the Fed, and the investment world, are how big the jump will be and how long it will last.

Most forecasters and the Fed itself expect the increases to be only temporary. But some economists have warned that they could be significant enough to become a problem as businesses reopen, consumers start to spend their savings and the government pumps stimulus money into the economy.

If the increases are big enough and sustained, the Fed could find itself in a tough spot, forced to choose between letting prices rise or raising interest rates before the labor market is fully recovered.

Inflation also worries stock investors: If the Fed lifts interest rates to cool off the economy, it could make investing in bonds more attractive and corporate borrowing more expensive, both bad news for equities.

The Fed wants inflation to average 2 percent annually over time, and it defines that goal using the Commerce Department’s headline personal consumption expenditure index. But officials look at a variety of indicators to gauge conditions. Here’s where a handful of critical inflation measures stand and, when it’s relevant, where economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect them to go in the coming months:

  • P.C.E., the Fed’s preferred gauge: 1.6 percent in February, and expected at 2.3 percent in March and 2.2 percent for the full year.

  • Core P.C.E., which strips out volatile food and energy prices: 1.4 percent in February, and expected at 1.8 percent in March and 1.9 percent for the full year.

  • Consumer Price Index, an important Labor Department gauge: 2.6 percent in March and expected at 2.6 percent for the full year.

  • Producer Price Index, a measure of wholesale prices: 4.2 percent in March, the highest since 2011.

  • University of Michigan consumer inflation expectation for next year: 3.7 percent as of this month, up from 3 percent at the start of the year.

  • University of Michigan consumer inflation expectation for five years from now: 2.7 percent as of this month, little changed from start of the year.

  • Five-year, five-year forward inflation expectation rate, a market-based measure: 2.25 percent in recent days, roughly matching 2018 levels.

Fed officials regularly point out that inflation has been too tepid in recent years, not too high, and they don’t expect that to change quickly. To raise rates, they say, they would need to see that inflation was going to remain higher sustainably — for instance, if it came alongside heftier wage increases.

Part of the Fed’s comfort with a period of faster price gains is that consumer and business expectations have remained relatively low, despite some recent increases. If people aren’t anticipating higher prices, it’s likely to put a lid on how much more companies can charge.

Google’s logo on a building in Zurich, Switzerland. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, reported a strong increase in revenue last quarter.Credit…Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters

Government bond yields jumped on Wednesday ahead of the latest Federal Reserve policy meeting.

Economists expect Fed officials to keep interest rates near zero and continue their bond-buying program, but central bank watchers will be looking for clues for how much longer the support will last as the U.S. economy improves. Higher yields on government bonds may reflect expectations that the Fed is inching closer signaling that it will change its policy, including raising its benchmark rate, even if that’s still years in the future.

Jerome H. Powell, the Fed chair, will speak to reporters Wednesday afternoon. Fed officials have said they would telegraph any changes well in advance and expected the current rise in inflation to be temporary, which would diminish the need for a monetary policy reaction.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes as high as 1.65 percent on Wednesday. Yields on British and German government bonds also climbed.

“We think risks around this meeting are firmly skewed toward higher rates,” analysts at ING said of bond yields. “This is particularly true if the Fed breaks with its cautious tone of late, or simply decides to hedge its bets by saying it will react as appropriate if the economy overheats.”

  • The S&P 500 was slightly higher on Wednesday.

  • Deutsche Bank rose nearly 11 percent after the German bank reported its best quarterly profit in seven years. The bank also avoided losses from the collapse of Archegos Capital Management that were a blow to some of its European rivals.

  • Alphabet rose 4 percent after the tech company said revenue in its most recent quarter increased sharply from the same period a year ago, supported by strong demand for online advertising.

  • Pinterest shares dropped more than 13 percent after the company said the growth in its number of users would probably slow down as pandemic restrictions were lifted.

  • On Wednesday, Boeing, Apple, Facebook and Ford report earnings.

  • A group that monitors risk in the eurozone warned on Wednesday that corporate bankruptcies could surge after government support measures for businesses expire. “More than a year of restrictions on economic activity has so far not resulted in financial instability,” the European Systemic Risk Board said in a statement. “However, the threat of a wave of insolvencies looms large.”

  • The risk board, led by Christine Lagarde, the president of the European Central Bank, said that governments needed to continue supporting businesses even after the economic effects of the pandemic fade.

Credit…Hiroko Masuike/The New York Times

  • Google’s parent company, Alphabet, said on Tuesday that it posted revenue of $55.31 billion in the first three months of the year, up 34 percent from a year earlier, and net profit more than doubled to $17.93 billion in the first quarter. It was the third straight quarter of record profit for the company. Advertising revenue rose 32 percent in the quarter spurred by strong demand for search marketing. Alphabet also generated $6 billion in YouTube ads, an increase of 49 percent.

  • Microsoft on Tuesday reported that its quarterly sales grew at one of its strongest rates in years, as the company was poised to cross $2 trillion in market value. Revenue rose to $41.7 billion for the fiscal third quarter, up 19 percent from a year earlier, its biggest quarterly increase since 2018. Profits jumped 44 percent to $15.5 billion. Gaming revenue grew 50 percent, fueled by spending on the new Xbox gaming console, which was launched late last year, as well as on Xbox content and services.

  • The coffee giant Starbucks said that its sales in the United States made a “full recovery” in the first three months of the year. Same-store sales in the U.S. climbed 9 percent in the company’s second quarter compared with the same period last year, while global revenues climbed 11 percent to $6.7 billion. Starbucks made a profit of $659 million in the quarter.

California is expecting a roughly $15 billion budget surplus next fiscal year, which runs from July through June, according to its most recent forecast. The state is so flush that it is now running its own stimulus program, writing one-time checks of $600 or $1,200 to poorer households and spending some $2 billion on aid for small businesses.

Less than a year ago, the state was facing a $54 billion shortfall, Matt Phillips reports for The New York Times. Here’s how the state’s fortunes were turned around:

  • Almost half of the personal income taxes that California collects comes from the top 1 percent of the state’s earners. Since much of that group’s income comes from stock holdings and stock-based compensation, their fortunes are tied to the performance of the stock market. After hitting a bottom in March 2020, the S&P 500 is up nearly 90 percent, creating close to $17 trillion in paper gains.

  • Last year, 457 companies sent public, raising $167.8 billion, both records, according to Dealogic. Almost a quarter of those dollars were destined for the 100 California companies that made the jump — the most of any state.

  • The governor’s office projects that revenue from capital gains taxes next fiscal year will top $18 billion, a key driver of the state’s surplus. “With Silicon Valley, when entrepreneurs get stock grants that they exercise, or stock options, California makes out very well,” said David Hitchcock, the primary analyst on California for bond-rating firm S&P Global.

  • California’s budget rebound was aided by larger-than-expected federal government spending that kept people afloat and the economy from complete collapse. When California’s governor revises his most recent budget next month as required by law, analysts expect it will show an additional $26 billion in federal funding to California as a result of President Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan passed last month.

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World News

India shares lead losses in Asia-Pacific; Alibaba shares in Hong Kong surge

SINGAPORE – Stocks in India fell as stocks in Asia Pacific traded lower on Monday.

Both the Nifty 50 and BSE Sensex in India fell more than 2% each on Monday morning.

The losses came when the Covid-19 situation in the country remained severe. Reuters reported that the hardest-hit state of Maharashtra is considering a lockdown.

Meanwhile, stocks in mainland China also fell as the Shanghai compound fell 0.81% while the Shenzhen component fell 1.72%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index fell 0.98%.

In Japan, the Nikkei 225 fell 0.52% while the Topix index was below the flatline. South Korea’s Kospi bucked the trend, rising 0.03%.

Australian stocks were down as the S & P / ASX 200 lost 0.45%.

The broadest MSCI index for stocks in the Asia-Pacific region outside Japan fell 1.19%.

Stocks in motion

Currencies and oil

The US dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a basket of its peers, stood at 92.251 after falling above 92.8 earlier this month.

The Japanese yen was trading at 109.54 per dollar, stronger than above 110.5 against the greenback last week. The Australian dollar changed hands at $ 0.7608 after last week’s turbulent trading as it rose from over $ 0.765 to around $ 0.759.

Oil prices barely changed on the morning of trading hours in Asia. The international reference Brent crude oil futures rose slightly to $ 62.99 per barrel. The US crude oil futures were slightly higher at $ 59.37 a barrel.

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Business

Banks Face Billions in Losses as a Guess on ViacomCBS and Different Shares Goes Awry

Mr. Hwang had worked under billionaire hedge fund titan Julian Robertson at Tiger Management and made him one of the company’s famous alumni, or “cubs,” when he started his own fund, Tiger Asia. However, in 2012 he faced an inside investigation. Securities regulators said Tiger Asia used confidential information to bet against shares in Chinese stocks and manipulated other stocks.

Mr. Hwang pleaded guilty to remittance fraud on behalf of Tiger Asia, paid millions in fines, while accepting a five-year public money management ban following the settlement with the SEC. He reorganized the company as a family office, meaning it no longer manages external money and has renamed it Archegos Capital Management; Archegos is a Greek word for leader or founding father and is used in the Bible to refer to Jesus.

“It’s not just about money, it’s about the long term,” Hwang said in a 2018 video in which he talked about his beliefs and work. “God certainly has a long-term perspective.”

According to four people familiar with the matter, Mr. Hwang had recently built large holdings in a small number of stocks, including ViacomCBS and Discovery, which also operate the TLC cable channels and the Food Network, as well as Chinese companies RLX Technology and GSX Techedu. Those bets resolved spectacularly in just a few days last week.

Last Monday, shares of RLX Technology, an e-cigarette company, fell sharply after Chinese regulators tabled potential new regulations for the industry. In the US listed RLX securities, so-called American Depositary Receipts, fell 48 percent. The next day, GSX Techedu, a tutoring company that has been a target for short sellers in recent years who claimed the company’s sales were overvalued, fell 12.4 percent.

On Wednesday, ViacomCBS sold a number of shares in the open market to raise money to fund its new streaming business, exacerbating Mr Hwang’s situation. His company began responding to inquiries from concerned banks. Goldman Sachs lenders urged Archegos to cut back on its disclosure, said two people familiar with those conversations. But Archegos pushed back, saying the troubled stocks would rebound, one of the people said.

By Friday morning, when Archegos failed to post an additional “margin”, Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse, two of Archegos’ main lenders, had declared the fund defaulted, four people said. Your action paved the way for Goldman Sachs and others to do the same. Huge blocks of shares were soon offered.

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Health

Disenfranchised Grief in a Yr of Pandemic Losses

Lockdowns had an immediate financial impact on Annabelle Gurwitch, a Los Angeles writer who lost assignments and lectures. The advertisement for her new book “You go when ?: Adventure in downward mobility” has become virtual. But when her kid’s graduation from Bard College went online, she cried in her backyard. Her child had worked hard and even started a sobriety club on campus.

“I was so proud of them that they graduated from college in four years,” she said. “David Byrne should be the speaker. There is so much suffering going on and I felt like such a terrible person, upset that I couldn’t go to graduate school and see David Byrne. That is low on the level of suffering. But damn it, we got our kid through four years. The child sobered up while studying. May I say we were disappointed? “

Around the same time as graduation, Ms. Gurwitch developed a cough. She received a coronavirus test and a chest x-ray, which eventually led to a diagnosis of stage 4 lung cancer. After being diagnosed with cancer, Ms. Gurwitch noticed that her friends were starting to downplay their own struggles and grief. A friend was diagnosed with breast cancer and had a double mastectomy, but didn’t want to tell her because she felt that breast cancer wasn’t as bad as lung cancer.

“I had her from cancer,” said Ms. Gurwitch. “It’s terrible not to feel that your suffering has a place.”

38-year-old Erin, who asked that her full name not be used to protect her privacy, said she lost another year of fertility during the pandemic lockdowns. After miscarriage a few years ago, she tried to conceive, but her husband did not think it useful to start a pregnancy during a pandemic. “Mother’s Day came and I was close to my 38th birthday and it became clear that I didn’t have much time,” she said. “This biological clock – The tick is very noisy and it’s a very real thing. “

Erin said that their marriage was starting to fall apart and she realized that she would probably have to do it alone if she wanted to become a mother. She and her husband are now getting divorced, she is taking steps to freeze her eggs, and she is investigating adoption and promoting parenting. She said grief over infertility and miscarriages was only compounded by living in a pandemic as she gains insight into people’s family lives through video calls.

“A staff member, every time we talk, she talks about the Lamaze class,” she said. “This is great for her, but it’s not OK for me to say that I’m struggling with it. I lost a child. I’ve lost my fertile years. This is one area where I am really having trouble. As a society, we don’t talk about it openly. “

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Business

Whitney Lays Off 15 Staff Amid Mounting Monetary Losses

Another round of coronavirus downsizing was carried out at the Whitney Museum of American Art when 15 employees across 11 departments were told they would be laid off, the museum’s director Adam Weinberg said in an email to staff last week .

The move was taken as part of an ongoing effort to address the severe financial impact of the coronavirus pandemic. The layoffs were first reported by Artnet News.

The Whitney closed in March last year, as did other museums and cultural institutions in New York City because of the pandemic.

Since the reopening in August, ticket sales have declined by 80 percent compared to the same period last year, Weinberg wrote.

“As many of you have seen firsthand, our visit remains extremely low,” wrote Weinberg, adding, “Cuts to our on-site events and programs have significantly reduced sales.”

The email message was shared by Whitney with the New York Times.

The audited annual financial statements of the museum for the fiscal year ending June 2020 seem to show the beginning of the effect described by Weinberg. Total approval revenue for that year was reported as $ 5.8 million compared to $ 13.5 million last year.

The museum’s website lists three current exhibitions that have opened since August. These include “Nothing is so humble: prints of everyday objects”; “Collaboration: The Photographers of the Kamoinge Workshop,” a chronicle of a collective of black photographers founded in New York City in 1963; and oil paintings by Salman Toor.

Several other large museums were also affected by the pandemic last year. The Neues Museum has put some employees on leave and laid off others, union members said. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation turned to vacation and wage cuts. And the Metropolitan Museum of Art has shrunk its ranks through layoffs, vacations, and voluntary retirements.

Last year, the Whitney reportedly laid off 76 employees while preparing to lose at least $ 7 million to the shutdown.

In his email message last week, Weinberg said the toll was much higher and wrote, “Unfortunately, the pandemic is prolonging Whitney’s financial losses, which to date total $ 23 million.”

Weinberg acknowledged the recent positive news regarding vaccines and was cautious. He said the economic recovery in the cultural sector and elsewhere would be gradual and potentially unpredictable, noting that the New York tourism agency had forecast that it could be until 2025 for visitors to arrive in the same numbers as before the pandemic to return to New York.

“We don’t know how long this period of extreme trouble will last,” he added. “And we anticipate further significant sales losses.”

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World News

Dow futures prolong losses after J&J says vaccine much less efficient in opposition to some Covid variants

U.S. stock futures were significantly lower in early Friday trading after Johnson & Johnson said its one-off coronavirus vaccine showed less effectiveness in some regions.

The average Dow Jones Industrial futures lost 160 points, or 0.5%. S&P 500 futures lost 0.3%. Nasdaq 100 futures were down 1.5%.

Futures accelerated losses after JNJ said its single-dose vaccine had shown an overall 66% effectiveness in protecting against Covid-19. The vaccine was 72% effective in the US, 66% in Latin America, and 57% in South Africa at four weeks. The vaccine provided full protection against hospital stays related to Covid. JNJ’s shares fell 3.7% in the pre-market.

Stocks had rebounded to hit record highs in hopes that vaccines against Covid would be effective to allow for a smooth economic reopening before the end of the year. New mutations that are more resistant to vaccines could improve the bright outlook for investors.

Increased speculative trading by private investors also continued to worry the market. GameStop’s shares doubled in premarket trading after Robinhood announced it would restrict purchases of the stock and other heavily shortened names after restricting access the previous day. Robinhood raised more than $ 1 billion overnight from its existing investors and also used the banks’ credit lines to ensure that the capital was in place to start trading the volatile stocks again.

Investors are concerned that if GameStop continues to rise in such volatility, it could penetrate financial markets and cause losses at brokers like Robinhood and force hedge funds that bet against the stock to sell other stocks to raise cash.

There are also fears that the GameStop mania is a sign of a bigger bubble in the market, and that its dissolution could also create turmoil and hit retail investors hard. Several e-brokers took steps Thursday to curb intentional buying of highly speculative names. A number of lawmakers also called for an investigation into the chaotic trade.

“Between calling for hearings and reports in Washington, Robinhood was forced to not only draw on its credit lines but also raise $ 1 billion from existing investors. The whole situation continues to undermine market confidence,” said Adam Crisafulli, founder of Vital Knowledge, note in a Friday.

It’s been a volatile week on Wall Street. The Dow lost more than 600 points on Wednesday and suffered its worst sell-off in three months. Then the blue chip benchmark rallied 300 points on Thursday amid a broad market rally. All three major averages have lost at least 1% this week.

The market also saw its highest trading volume in years as the mania heated up. On Wednesday, the total market volume reached more than 23.7 billion shares, surpassing the level at the height of the financial crisis in 2008. On Thursday, there was also extremely strong trading with more than 19 billion shares that changed hands.

A wave of retailers motivated each other on the red-hot WallStreetBets Reddit forum to pile into the most hated names of hedge funds, resulting in massive short-bruising of stocks. GameStop is up more than 900% in January, while AMC Entertainment is up over 300% this month.

“This smaller capitalization rally would likely destabilize and lead to inefficiencies,” Christopher Harvey, senior equity analyst at Wells Fargo, said in a note. “Stocks are ultimately fundamentals – and reversals can be very painful, both up and down.”

However, some believe that the impact on the overall market should be limited as the retail crowd is focused on only a handful of names.

“While we believe there will be more pain, we remain optimistic that it will likely stay local,” said Maneesh Deshpande, head of equity derivatives strategy at Barclays. “Long-short hedge funds have relatively little market exposure, which indicates little impact on the overall market due to deleveraging.”

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Business

Why Some States Are Seeing Greater Income Than Anticipated Amid Job Losses

While Congress has debated aid to state and local governments for the past few weeks, some states have announced surprising news: Their finances are no longer looking quite as bad as they feared in the uncertain early days of the pandemic.

The states are still largely suffering from the economic crisis. But California now expects a one-time slump this fiscal year. Wisconsin said it might still be able to throw away some revenue in its rainy day fund. Maryland increased its forecast earnings for the second time this fall. And Minnesota is now forecasting a surplus.

This good news partly reflects poor economic expectations from six months ago; Even modest numbers look good now, compared to the worst fears written on national budgets this spring. And state officials say they will continue to need federal help as they expect the effects of the pandemic to drag on for years and hit local governments. After all, federal aid is part of what has spurred it on so far.

The states with rosier outlooks are also complicating Washington’s state aid political battle, which is likely to be pushed into the New Year after lawmakers dropped aid from a year-end stimulus agreement that is nearing completion. Republicans have called state aid a bailout for lavish blue states. But many states that look better now are among the most advanced tax structures in the country, and that’s part of what saved them this year.

This recession, unlike many before, has amassed its worst effects on low-wage workers. This means that national budgets, which depend most on wealthier residents to fund government, have not been so badly damaged by an economic crisis that left the wealthy largely unscathed.

“We have a recession for low-wage workers and we just have a strange situation for everyone else,” said Peter Franchot, the controller for Maryland, who last week saw an estimated revenue increase of $ 64 million for that fiscal year compared to September announced estimates (which are up $ 1.4 billion from May).

Forecasters and state officials said they didn’t see this in May and June when they drafted budgets envisioning a severe downturn that might more closely resemble the great recession – with widespread layoffs among manufacturing workers, with one collapsing Stock market and economic development The pain spread into employee offices and civic subdivisions.

In typical recessions in which unemployment rises sharply, government revenues also fall sharply. But the relationship between the two was much weaker this year. In fact, the inequality associated with the Covid recession has protected many states from worse fiscal ramifications.

But that doesn’t mean that everything is okay.

“Despite the progressive tax structure, despite the wealth we have in Maryland, despite the fact that we are back in a safe haven of tax revenue, the suffering is just totally unacceptable,” said Franchot, who has called Maryland to be next to that Congress to set its own incentive.

In California, where there is a progressive income tax, the state revenue generated through October this year was only marginally lower than the same period in 2019. Texas, which has no state income tax and is considered one of the least equitable tax systems in the country, has been in a more precarious position.

While Texas doesn’t rely on taxes from its volatile energy sector to fund its base budget, decreased oil and gas production and lower prices have also contributed to the decline in overall tax revenues.

Florida and Nevada, which are heavily dependent on tourism (which was hurt by the pandemic), also have no income tax. And Florida is one of the few states that never attempted to levy sales tax on online transactions following a 2018 Supreme Court ruling that expanded that power to states. (In Texas, the ability to tax e-commerce was a huge challenge at the moment, as it added about $ 1.3 billion last year.)

Since the pandemic began in March through October, tax revenues in 38 states have declined 5 percent or less year-on-year, according to the Urban Institute. When states made far more serious projections in the spring, they failed to fall back on previous experience and tried to be conservative in their estimates, said Lucy Dadayan, a senior research fellow at the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.

“To be fair, they didn’t have any information,” Ms. Dadayan said. “Yes, the revenues are higher than the original projections made in the spring immediately after the pandemic. But that doesn’t mean that earnings are doing well. “

In all of these states, federal incentives have played an important role. It’s not that the crisis was excessive; The fact is that federal aid really worked.

Stimulus checks and additional unemployment benefits increased the consumption of laid-off workers, which in turn supported sales tax revenues. Most states also levy income tax on unemployment benefits. And all that federal support eased the burden on states of providing a safety net for families in trouble, even as federal dollars helped cover many of the state’s Covid expenses.

States that rely on higher income taxpayers have been helped by other unexpected disparities in this recession. Consumption has shifted from services that are difficult to consume in person during a pandemic to goods that are much more taxed (for example, you pay taxes when you buy a lawnmower but usually don’t pay taxes when you pay someone who mows your lawn).

In California, forecasters in March never expected the stock market to rise as much as it has before. This has increased capital gains, which are taxed in the state as regular income. And a number of lucrative IPOs – another unexpected trend in the midst of the recession – have also contributed to government revenues.

From August through October, California’s personal income, sales, and corporate tax revenue increased 9 percent over the same window last year, according to the California Legislative Analyst’s Office. That shows how well the wealthy fared this year. The resulting budget damage is also due to the fact that the state planned a budget for bad times in June.

“This is really a temporary situation,” said Gabriel Petek, “ the state legislative analyst who prepared the latest budget outlook. The budget effects of this downturn have been pushed into the coming years when the state expects deficits that could further burden the services.

“It turns out a bit that the state is doing fine financially, and it’s true that our sales picture is better than we thought,” said Petek. “But the only reason we’re in a better budget position is because of this one-off difference between what we collect this year and what we have accepted in the budget that we would collect.”

Like other states, California still doesn’t know how bad the winter flood of the pandemic will be. In the near future, states will no longer be able to fall back on one-off pots such as rainy day money. When the public health emergency ends, the federal government will cut additional payments to states to cover Medicaid. And local governments will continue to have problems as they rely on even less stable sources of income such as parking fees, public transport charges and hotel taxes.

States are still facing both sides of the inequality of the pandemic – the wealthy residents who have been stuck, bought stocks and new cars, but also the low-wage workers who are struggling.

“Even states with lots of rich people often have lots of low-income people,” said Tracy Gordon, senior fellow of the Tax Policy Center. State and local governments will ultimately be responsible for the safety net, she added, “and they are not built to absorb that risk.”