Categories
Business

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Feb. 23, 2021

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis investors need to get their trading day started:

1. Nasdaq will fall again while Big Tech will slide again

Traders work on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

NYSE

US stock futures were mostly lower on Tuesday, pointing to a 1.8% decline in the Nasdaq, a day after the index fell nearly 2.5% in its worst one-day decline in nearly a month . Tech stocks continued to decline in the premarket on Tuesday, with Apple falling 2% after falling nearly 3% on Monday.

Dow’s Home Depot share fell 2% in premarket trading amid fears that sales growth in the Covid pandemic will not last. A share decline of this magnitude would severely detract from modest year-to-date earnings.

The S&P 500 fell nearly 0.8% on Monday, a fifth straight decline, its worst in nearly a year. The Dow Jones Industrial Averaged bucked the downtrend on Monday and closed a little higher. It’s that time again on Tuesday morning. All three equity benchmarks remained stronger over the month.

2. Bond yields rose this week ahead of Powell’s statement

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a virtual press conference in Tiskilwa, Illinois, United States on Wednesday, December 16, 2020.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell travels to Capitol Hill twice this week to appear before the Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday and the House Financial Services Committee on Wednesday. Rising bond yields and accompanying inflation fears are adding to the growing concern about Powell’s remarks. The yield on 10-year government bonds, which is reversing the price, was a little lower on Tuesday morning. But it’s been up lately, trading around 1.36%. On Monday it was 1.39%, the highest level in about a year.

3. Bitcoin drops below $ 50,000; Tesla stocks are falling again

Costfoto | Barcroft Media | Getty Images

Bitcoin fell 9% on Tuesday morning and fell below $ 50,000. The world’s largest digital currency, which is still up 60% this year, hit an all-time high of over $ 58,000 on Sunday. Price fluctuations of more than 10% are not uncommon in crypto markets. Bitcoin soared to nearly $ 20,000 once in 2017 before losing 80% the following year. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned of these wild swings on Monday.

Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, speaks at a delivery ceremony for the Tesla China-made Model 3 in Shanghai, east China, on Jan. 7, 2020.

Ding Ting | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

Tesla shares, which revealed an investment in Bitcoin earlier this month, fell another 4.5% on the Tuesday ahead of the IPO. The stock fell more than 8.5% on Monday, the biggest drop since late September. Of course, other tech stocks also suffered heavy losses on Monday. Elon Musk’s electric car maker shares rose just 1.25% this year ahead of Tuesday’s trading. However, in the past 12 months, Tesla rose nearly 300%.

4. Home Depot, Macy’s Report Better Than Expected Quarterly Results

A Home Depot store can be seen in Washington, DC on August 18, 2020.

NICHOLAS COMB | AFP | Getty Images

Home Depot’s profits and sales rose above expectations in the fourth quarter as consumers poured more money into home improvement due to the pandemic and strength of the real estate market. However, shares fell on comments from Home Depot’s CFO asking how long the pandemic would last and how that could affect consumer spending.

People wear face masks as they walk through Herald Square in New York City on January 8, 2021.

Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

Macy’s shares rose more than 1% in the pre-market after the retailer reported its first quarterly profit in a year. Fourth quarter sales also beat estimates as the company’s efforts to reduce inventory levels during the holiday quarter and rely less on deep discounting pay off. Ahead of Tuesday’s trading, Macy’s shares rose 35% this year despite struggling for the past 12 months.

5. Electric car manufacturer led by a former Tesla engineer to go public

The Lucid Air sedan, which is slated to go into production at a facility in Arizona next year.

Clear

Electric vehicle maker Lucid Motors plans to bring a combined equity valuation of $ 11.75 billion to the stock market through a reverse merger with a blank check company. The deal between Lucid of California and Churchill Capital Corp IV is the largest in a series of such collaborations involving EV companies and special-purpose acquisition companies. CCIV’s shares fell more than 30% in the pre-market. Speculation about the deal drove SPAC shares up 470% this year alone. Lucid is run by ex-Tesla engineer and automotive veteran Peter Rawlinson.

– Follow all developments on Wall Street in real time with CNBC Pro’s live market blog. Find out about the latest pandemics on our coronavirus blog.

Categories
Business

Inventory Market Drops as Bond Yields Rise on Inflation Expectations: Dwell Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Aiming to steer more federal aid to the smallest and most vulnerable businesses, the Biden administration is altering the Paycheck Protection Program’s rules, increasing the amount sole proprietors are eligible to receive and imposing a 14-day freeze on loans to companies with 20 or more employees.

The freeze will take effect on Wednesday, the Small Business Administration planned to announce on Monday. Also, President Biden is expected to speak shortly after noon on Monday to make an announcement about small businesses.

In December’s economic relief package, Congress allocated $284 billion to restart the aid program. Banks and other financiers, which make the government-backed loans, have disbursed $134 billion to 1.8 million businesses since lending resumed last month. The money is intended to be forgiven if recipients comply with the program’s rules.

Companies with up to 500 workers are generally eligible for the loans, although second-draw loans — available to those whose sales dropped 25 percent or more in at least one quarter since the coronavirus pandemic began — are limited to companies with 300 or fewer employees. The 14-day moratorium is intended to focus lenders’ attention on the tiniest businesses, according to administration officials, who spoke to reporters at a news briefing on Sunday on the condition that they not be named.

Most small businesses are solo ventures, employing just the owner. For such companies, including sole proprietorships and independent contractors, one major impediment to getting relief money was a program rule that based their loan size on the annual profit they reported on their taxes. That made unprofitable businesses ineligible for aid, and left thousands of applicants with tiny loans — some as small as $1.

The new formula, which Small Business Administration officials said would be released soon, will focus instead on gross income. That calculation, which is done before many expenses are deducted, will let unprofitable businesses qualify for loans.

The agency is also changing several other program rules to expand eligibility. Those with recent felony convictions not tied to fraud will now be able to apply, as will those who are delinquent or in default on federal student loan debt. The agency also updated its guidance to clarify that business owners who are not United States citizens but lawful residents are eligible for loans.

Stocks on Wall Street dropped on Monday, following European and Asian indexes lower. U.S. government bond yields continued to climb as investors anticipated faster economic growth and inflation.

Yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose as high as 1.36 percent, the highest in a year, before pulling back. The yield has risen each of the past three weeks, about 30 basis points so far this month.

The sharp rise in yields and inflation expectations in markets has led to a debate about whether the Federal Reserve will respond by pulling back some monetary stimulus, reducing the easy-money policies that have helped keep stock markets buoyant for much of the pandemic.

“Investors are increasingly confident of a ‘V’ shape global recovery, so much so that the emerging concern is not growth, but inflation,” analysts at ING Bank wrote. “Increasingly, parallels are being drawn to similar events in 2013,” they wrote, when traders panicked in a “taper tantrum” about the easing of asset purchases by the central bank, sending yields surging higher.

Fed policymakers have indicated they will look past a short-term rise in inflation and keep monetary policy loose. But not everyone is buying this message, especially as the Biden administration is pushing a $1.9 trillion economic relief package.

“The bond market continues to telegraph an increasingly confident message on the global economy and skepticism of Fed guidance,” analysts at JPMorgan Chase wrote in a note over the weekend.

  • The S&P 500 index fell 0.5 percent in early trading.

  • Boeing’s shares recovered from early losses to climb slightly. The plane maker said 128 of its 777 jetliners should be grounded worldwide until they can be inspected following an engine failure on a United Airlines flight over Colorado. Boeing has only recently emerged from an 18-month ban of the 737 MAX.

  • European stock indexes also slipped, with the Stoxx Europe 600 down 0.4 percent.

  • Oil prices rose on Monday. Futures of West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, climbed more than 2 percent to over $60 a barrel after last week’s volatility when a winter storm disrupted oil production in Texas.

  • Natural gas futures for March delivery dropped 3.8 percent. The price of natural gas jumped a week ago when the storm hit as demand for surged. Natural gas is the largest source of electricity in Texas.

The price of Bitcoin set another record over the weekend, briefly rising above $58,000. And Elon Musk tweeted about it, cementing his status as one of crypto’s most prominent backers.

Tesla is set to make more profit from buying Bitcoin than selling electric cars, according to a research note by Daniel Ives at Wedbush Securities. A few weeks ago, the company said it had bought $1.5 billion in Bitcoin to diversify its balance sheet. The rapid rise in Bitcoin since then implies a gain, on paper at least, of roughly $1 billion; that’s more than Tesla earned from selling cars last year, the first time it turned a full-year profit. (Tesla also made more from another tangential business, selling renewable energy credits to other automakers.)

Will more companies now follow Tesla’s lead? Gaudy numbers like this might make finance chiefs think twice about the cash and low-yielding bonds on their balance sheets.

“It’s clearly been a good initial investment and a trend we expect could have a ripple impact for other public companies over the next 12 to 18 months,” Mr. Ives wrote. He expects less than 5 percent of public companies will shift corporate cash into cryptocurrency, which would still be a big jump.

Skepticism of the Bitcoin rally abounds, including from the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston and Citadel’s chief executive, Kenneth C. Griffin. And even as he tweeted approvingly of cryptocurrencies, Mr. Musk noted that prices “do seem high.” Last May, he said the same of Tesla’s shares (“too high”) — they have since risen more than 400 percent.

The U.S. economy remains mired in a pandemic winter of shuttered storefronts, high unemployment and sluggish job growth. But on Wall Street and in Washington, attention is shifting to an intriguing if indistinct prospect: a post-Covid boom.

In recent weeks, economists have begun to talk of a supercharged rebound that brings down unemployment, drives up wages and may foster years of stronger growth, Ben Casselman reports for The Times.

There are hints that the economy has turned a corner: Retail sales jumped last month. New unemployment claims have declined from early January, though they remain high. Measures of business investment have picked up.

Economists surveyed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia this month predicted that U.S. output will increase 4.5 percent this year, which would make it the best year since 1999. Economists at Goldman Sachs forecast that the economy will grow 6.8 percent this year and that the unemployment rate will drop to 4.1 percent by December, a level that took eight years to achieve after the last recession.

The growing optimism stems from several factors. Coronavirus cases are falling. The vaccine rollout is gaining steam. And largely because of trillions of dollars in federal help, the economy appears to have made it through last year with less structural damage — in the form of business failures, home foreclosures and personal bankruptcies — than many people feared last spring.

Lastly, consumers are sitting on a trillion-dollar mountain of cash, a result of months of lockdown-induced saving and successive rounds of stimulus payments.

“There will be this big boom as pent-up demand comes through and the economy is opening,” said Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist for Morgan Stanley. “There is an awful lot of buying power that we’ve transferred to households to fuel that pent-up demand.”

It’s the first day of the DealBook DC Policy Project, in which top policymakers and business leaders gather to debate the priorities for moving the country — and the world — forward. Today, speakers consider the shape of the economic recovery, how to hold power to account, the future of travel and where to focus stimulus funds. Register here to attend, free of charge from anywhere in the world.

Today’s lineup (all times Eastern):

9 a.m. – 9:25 a.m.

On top of the $1.9 trillion economic aid plan that is working its way through Congress, the White House is raising the prospect of another big spending package focused on infrastructure. Although the economy is recovering faster than expected, it remains fragile and uneven. Navigating this path is Janet Yellen, the former Federal Reserve chair who took over as Treasury secretary last month.

2:30 P.m. – 3 P.m.

Letitia James has more prominent cases and investigations on her plate today than most lawyers will manage in a lifetime. The way she uses her power — from suing Amazon over worker safety to uncovering the underreporting of nursing home deaths, investigating former President Donald J. Trump’s business dealings and many other actions — also highlights how states can shape national policy.

3:30 P.m. – 4 P.m.

Last year was “the toughest year in Delta’s history,” according to Ed Bastian, the airline’s chief executive. The carrier reported a loss of more than $12 billion as travel ground to a halt during the pandemic. In addition to feeling the pandemic’s economic effects, the airline industry is at the center of health policy debates, like whether to make masks mandatory and require coronavirus tests before travel.

4 P.m. – 4:30 P.m.

Since stepping down as Microsoft’s chief executive in 2014, Steve Ballmer has kept busy as an National Basketball Association team owner and founder of USAFacts, a nonprofit group dedicated to presenting data about the United States in easy-to-read formats. The group aims, in his words, to “figure out what the government really does” with taxpayers’ money, and highlight the areas where spending may have the greatest effect.

  • The House is expected to pass President Biden’s $1.9 trillion stimulus bill at the end of the week, probably in a party-line vote. The Senate may take it up shortly after.

  • The Federal Reserve chair, Jay Powell, testifies before Congress on Tuesday and Wednesday, and is likely to emphasize the need for more economic stimulus.

  • On Tuesday, HSBC reports earnings, and the bank may also announce steps to move top executives from London to Hong Kong, The Financial Times reports.

  • Other earnings highlights include Home Depot on Tuesday, Nvidia on Wednesday, Airbnb and Salesforce on Thursday, and Berkshire Hathaway on Saturday, when Warren Buffett’s widely followed annual letter on the state of business, markets and politics is also expected.

Olivier Véran, the French health minister, second from right, in Nice on Saturday. He said the consulting giant McKinsey & Company had helped with the vaccine rollout but played no role in policy decisions.Credit…Valery Hache/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

McKinsey & Company has become a magnet for controversy in France after the public learned of millions of euros worth of contracts to help plan vaccine distribution that has been derided for being far too slow, Liz Alderman reports for The New York Times.

The contracts — totaling 11 million euros ($13.3 million), of which €4 million went to McKinsey — were confirmed by a parliamentary committee last week. The government of President Emmanuel Macron, which has been under fire for months for stumbling in its handling of the pandemic, was forced to admit it had turned to outside consulting firms for help managing the response.

called for McKinsey to help define distribution routes for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which must be kept as cold as minus 80 degrees Celsius during transport and storage. The company would benchmark France’s performance against other European countries. McKinsey experts would also help coordinate a vaccination task force comprising officials from numerous agencies, with some decision chains involving up to 50 authorities.

In early January, France had vaccinated only “several thousand people,” according to the health minister, compared with 230,000 in Germany and more than 110,000 in Italy.

Other contracts provided for Accenture, the global information technology consultancy, to roll out the campaign’s monitoring systems, and for two French consultancies, Citwell and ILL, to help with “logistical support and vaccine distribution.”

The government’s strategy focused on delivering the vaccines to 1,000 distribution points in France, from which the doses would be sent in supercooled trucks to nursing homes, clinics and local mayors’ offices. In Germany, the program was simpler: Authorities decided to administer the vaccine in 400 regional centers.

By the first week of January, France had one million vaccine doses in hand, but the delay in getting them into peoples’ arms was becoming public knowledge. The pace has recently picked up. But with 4.7 doses administered per 100 people, according to a New York Times database, France still trails neighbors like Germany and Italy.

Categories
Business

Elon Musk says bitcoin appears excessive after surpassing $1 trillion market cap

SpaceX Founder and Chief Engineer Elon Musk speaks during the Satellite 2020 conference on March 9, 2020 in Washington, DC, United States.

Yasin Ozturk | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

Elon Musk, Tesla CEO, said on Saturday that bitcoin prices appear “high” after the cryptocurrency rose to another record high this week.

The price of Bitcoin, the world’s most popular cryptocurrency, passed a major milestone on Friday after its market value hit more than $ 1 trillion, surprising some large financiers. Ethereum, the second largest cryptocurrency, also hit record highs.

“Money is just data we can use to avoid the inconvenience of bartering,” tweeted Musk, a major advocate of digital currencies. “This data, like all data, is subject to latency and errors. The system will evolve to minimize both.”

In a subsequent post, Musk added, “that is, BTC & ETH seem high” in response to a user who said gold is better than bitcoin and cash.

Bitcoin was trading at less than $ 54,000 per coin on Friday when it hit the new level and rose above $ 55,000 later in the session, according to Coin Metrics. The cryptocurrency traded above $ 57,000 on Saturday. Bitcoin price has increased by around 350% in the past six months.

Ethereum also hit a record $ 2,040.62, which translates into a weekly gain of around 12%. It was trading at $ 1,996 on Saturday.

The Bitcoin surge was partly due to increased adoption by major investors and corporations. The Bank of New York Mellon said this month it would be moving into the room.

Tesla also converted some of its balance sheet money to Bitcoin earlier this year and announced it would accept the digital currency as a means of payment, sparking even more interest in the currency.

– CNBC’s Jesse Pound contributed to the coverage

Categories
World News

Bitcoin hits $1 trillion in market worth as cryptocurrency surge continues

Yuriko Nakao | Getty Images

Bitcoin price passed another major milestone on Friday as the cryptocurrency’s market value surpassed $ 1 trillion, according to Coindesk.

The digital currency was trading at just under $ 54,000 per coin on Friday as it hit new levels, up more than 3% in the past 24 hours. The price of Bitcoin has increased by around 350% in the past six months. Before its recent surge, the digital asset never traded above $ 20,000.

The move was driven in part by the increased adoption of cryptocurrency by major investors and corporations. The oldest bank in the United States, the Bank of New York Mellon, announced earlier this month that it would be moving into space. Elon Musk’s Tesla converted part of its balance sheet money into Bitcoin earlier this year and announced that it would accept the digital tokens as a means of payment.

Bitcoin “has started to get so big that it is arguably creating its own demand as companies and institutions begin to move into an area they would not have touched a few months earlier,” said Deutsche Bank research strategist Jim Reid , in a note. “Ironically, it is turning into a credible asset class for many by rebounding so much lately and also increasing institutional buy-in.”

The market value is calculated by multiplying the Bitcoin price by the number created. While this is not a perfect comparison, its market value of $ 1 trillion would make Bitcoin’s value higher than all but a handful of stocks in the world. For example, Tesla has a market capitalization of around $ 700 billion, while Apple is valued at more than $ 2 trillion.

Pro-Bitcoin investors and entrepreneurs celebrated the milestone on social media.

“From the white paper to $ 1 trillion. #Bitcoin eats gold alive,” Gemini’s Cameron Winklevoss said on Twitter.

“RIP bears,” tweeted Anthony Pompliano, co-founder of Morgan Creek Digital Assets.

Of course, not everyone on Wall Street was convinced of Bitcoin’s future prospects. Citadel Securities founder Ken Griffin said Friday he was not interested in cryptocurrency while researchers at JPMorgan said Bitcoin’s rally was unsustainable.

Categories
Health

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Feb. 18, 2021

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis investors need to get their trading day started:

1. Dow to fall as Walmart slips on disappointing earnings

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

Source: The New York Stock Exchange

US stock futures fell Thursday after Dow stock Walmart fell more than 4.5% in the pre-market on disappointing gains. Wednesday’s Dow Jones Industrial Average offset a loss of 180 points and ended up 90 points higher, which is another record close. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq closed slightly lower for the second year in a row. The S&P 500 reduced losses after minutes from the Fed’s last meeting, signaling longer monetary policy as the economy was nowhere near pre-coronavirus levels.

The Department of Labor reported 861,000 new jobless claims for the past week Thursday morning, nearly 90,000 more than expected. The previous week’s initial unemployment claims display has been increased by 55,000 to 848,000. The four-week moving average was 833,250.

2. Walmart Misses Revenue, Beats Revenue; CEO to increase wages

A worker wearing a protective mask arranges shopping carts outside a Walmart store in Duarte, California, the United States, on Thursday, November 12, 2020.

David Swanson | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Walmart reported adjusted earnings of $ 1.39 per share for the fourth quarter, which was below estimates. Revenue rose 7.3% to a better than expected $ 152.1 billion. The big box retailer’s US e-commerce sales increased 69% and sales in the same store in the US increased 8.6%. Doug McMillon, CEO of Walmart, said the company will raise US workers’ wages and raise the average hourly employee to over $ 15 an hour.

3. What to Expect from the GameStop Hearing with Robinhood, Citadel and Reddit CEOs

Jakub Porzycki / NurPhoto via Getty Images

The heads of Robinhood, Reddit, Citadel and Melvin Capital will be in Washington for the highly anticipated GameStop hearing on Thursday, scheduled to begin on the House Financial Services Committee at 12 p.m. ET. In prepared remarks, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman said that no significant activity at WallStreetBets was carried out by bots or foreign agents in the past month. Keith Gill, the Reddit and YouTube trading star known as “Roaring Kitty,” plans to defend his social media posts that helped spark a mania in GameStop stocks.

4. How the Texas power grid went down and what could stop it from happening again

Pike Electric Service Trucks line up in Fort Worth, Texas, after a snow storm on February 16, 2021. Winter Storm Uri has historically brought cold weather and power outages to Texas as storms with a mixture of freezing temperatures and precipitation swept across 26 states.

Ron Jenkins | Getty Images

More than 500,000 households in Texas are still without power on Thursday morning after the historic Sunday night cold and snow that caused the state’s worst blackouts in decades, according to poweroutage.us. Millions of people have been in the dark at the height of the crisis caused by a confluence of factors. Officials are already calling for an investigation. Experts said Texas can take a number of steps to combat future problems, including weathering equipment and increasing the oversupply needed to meet peak electricity needs.

5. US life expectancy falls by a year in a pandemic, worst since World War II

Cemetery worker Keith Yatcko was preparing a grave for a burial at State Veterans Cemetery when the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak broke out in Middletown, Connecticut, United States on May 13, 2020.

Brian Snyder | Reuters

Life expectancy in the US dropped an amazing year in the first half of 2020 as the pandemic caused the first wave of coronavirus deaths. The minorities had the greatest influence, with black Americans losing nearly three years and Hispanics nearly two years on Thursday, according to preliminary CDC estimates. “You have to go back to World War II, the 1940s, to find such a drop,” said Robert Anderson, who oversees the numbers for the CDC. It is already known that 2020 was the deadliest year in US history. For the first time, more than 3 million people were killed.

– The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow all developments on Wall Street in real time with CNBC Pro’s live market blog. Find out about the latest pandemics on our coronavirus blog.

Categories
Health

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Feb 17, 2021

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis investors need to get their trading day started:

1. Stocks open flat after Dow closed on another record

The Wall Street sign can be seen in front of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on February 16, 2021.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

US stock futures remained stable on Wednesday as Wall Street remained on track for its best monthly performance since November. In a mixed session on Tuesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average closed with another record. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq broke their two-day winning streak with small losses and fell from the record closings of the previous session.

On Wednesday’s economic calendar, the Department of Commerce’s January retail sales report showed a 5.3% increase, defeating estimates of a 1.2% increase. A month after Congress approved an additional $ 900 billion Covid stimulus package on top of the $ 2.2 trillion it approved in early 2020, buyers were armed with $ 600 checks to give them a Variety of goods bought.

Regardless of this, the labor ministry’s producer price index rose by 1.3% in January, again well above the estimates that had called for an increase of 0.4%.

The 10-year government bond yield rose over 1.3% on Wednesday after strong retail sales and January PPI heightened fears of possible inflation during the post-Covid economic recovery.

2. Bitcoin hits a new high, topping $ 51,000 for the first time

Omar Marques | LightRocket | Getty Images

Bitcoin cracked $ 51,000 to hit a new all-time high on Wednesday. Big financial companies seem to be getting excited about Bitcoin after Tesla and other companies showed support for the cryptocurrency. Bitcoin’s recent rally recalls its massive surge to nearly $ 20,000 in 2017, which was followed by an 80% plunge the following year. However, the world’s largest cryptocurrency has since seen a violent comeback, more than quadrupling in 2020 and gaining over 70% this year.

3. Here are Warren Buffett-led Berkshire stock moves for the past quarter

Warren Buffett

Gerry Miller | CNBC

Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway bought $ 4.1 billion in Chevron and $ 8.6 billion in Verizon shares in the fourth quarter, according to the conglomerate’s most recent 13-F filing with the SEC . Berkshire also sold its stakes in drug companies Pfizer and JPMorgan Chase, while reducing its position in Wells Fargo. Apple is still the largest holding, but Berkshire has further scaled back its lucrative position in the company, slashing it by about 6%.

4. Elon Musk’s SpaceX valuation jumps to around $ 74 billion

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk stands at the base of a prototype Starship rocket at the company’s facility in Boca Chica, Texas.

Steve Jurvetson on flickr

SpaceX closed another large round of equity financing last week for $ 850 million, the financing people told CNBC. The company’s valuation rose 60% from the previous round in August to around $ 74 billion. Elon Musk, who also co-founded Tesla, saw insiders and existing investors in his commercial space company selling an additional $ 750 million in a secondary transaction, one respondent said. SpaceX did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.

5. Millions in Texas are still without power as new storms strike

Pike Electric Service Trucks line up after a snow storm in Fort Worth, Texas on February 16, 2021. Winter Storm Uri has historically brought cold weather and power outages to Texas as storms with a mixture of freezing temperatures and precipitation swept across 26 states.

Ron Jenkins | Getty Images

Millions of Texas residents were still in the dark Wednesday with no indication of when their service might return when another winter storm hit the southern portion of the nation. A total of 2 to 3 million customers in the US energy capital were without electricity two days after the historic snowfall, and the single-digit temperatures led to an increase in the demand for electricity for heating.

The wholesale prices for electricity and natural gas have risen in the last few days. However, natural gas futures fell early Wednesday. U.S. oil prices continued their spike on Wednesday, gaining more than 1%, rising to over $ 61 a barrel, a level not seen since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

– The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow all developments on Wall Street in real time with CNBC Pro’s live market blog. Find out about the latest pandemics on our coronavirus blog.

Categories
World News

Dow rises 80 factors as market tries to construct on February’s rally

US stocks cut gains in volatile trading Tuesday, hovering near record levels as rising bond yields kept sentiment in check.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average recently rose 85 points. The 30-share ad briefly put out a 150-point gain to fall into negative territory. The S&P 500 has been flat and has been pressured by declines in healthcare and real estate. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 0.2%. All three major averages hit record highs earlier in the day.

Some on Wall Street became increasingly concerned about rising interest rates and the potential for a surge in inflation that could pose a threat to certain sectors and general confidence. On Tuesday, the yield on 10-year government bonds was above 1.25% for the first time since March and rose 8 basis points to a new one-year high of 1.28%.

“While higher yields are good for banks, they hit the bond replacement sectors like REITs, utilities and staples,” said Art Hogan, chief strategist at National Securities. “The market can digest rising returns, especially if they are rising for the right reason, but not if they are rising linearly.”

The benchmark yield on 10-year government bonds, used as a barometer for mortgages, student loans, and annual percentages for credit cards, hovered around 0.6% for much of 2020. Many fear that a rebound in interest rates could hinder economic recovery from the pandemic-induced disability recession as businesses may find it increasingly expensive to borrow. Others wonder if a flood of fiscal stimulus could trigger prices to rise after a decade of dormant inflation.

Energy was the top performing sector, up 2.2% as a deep freeze in the south sparked a rally in oil prices and West Texas Intermediate crude futures topped $ 60 a barrel for the first time in over a year.

The market has seen solid gains this month thanks to the launch of the Covid-19 vaccine, the economic reopening, and the expectation of further fiscal stimulus. The Dow gained around 5% in February, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq rose 5.8% and 7.4%, respectively. The S&P 500 achieved ten record deals in 2021.

The previous Tuesday, major averages hit new highs after a market volatility measure fell below an important threshold, paving the way for more quant fund purchases.

The Cboe Volatility Index, widely believed to be Wall Street’s top fear indicator, fell below 20 on Friday to hit 19.97. This was the first significant breach of the threshold since the pandemic-triggered sell-off began in February 2020. However, stocks fell as the VIX pushed higher again. The meter recently rose more than 1 point over 21.

The crack of level 20 is viewed by some on Wall Street as a big “risk-in” signal that could trigger buying by algorithmic traders and other big players. The meter last rose one point to 21 on Tuesday morning.

“We believe that a sustained move below 20 will be positive for risk markets,” said Tom Lee, FundStrat co-founder and head of research. “It will be a sign that the systemic fear that gripped markets in 2020 is finally easing.”

Lee, a CNBC employee, added that the easing of fear in the market is usually followed by a buy between systematic and quantitative funds. Should quantitative funds announce a retreating VIX as a positive sign, Lee believes the buy could prolong the current rally.

Elsewhere, Bitcoin briefly topped $ 50,000 for the first time on Tuesday and continued its dizzying rally as more companies warmed up in the crypto space.

Subscribe to CNBC PRO for exclusive insights and analysis as well as live business day programs from around the world.

Categories
Business

U.S. Vitality Costs Soar After Winter Storm: Stay Inventory Market Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press

Automakers have been forced to idle factories or suspend shifts because of the winter storm that has disrupted the energy system across much of the country this week.

Ford Motor closed a plant near Kansas City, Mo., this week because of the extreme cold and a shortage of natural gas in the Midwest. The plant produces the F-150, Ford’s popular pickup truck, which is one of the industry’s best-selling vehicles.

Nissan closed its four U.S. plants on Monday and canceled the morning and afternoon shifts on Tuesday, a spokeswoman said. Two of the plants, in Canton, Miss., and Smyrna, Tenn., make cars and other two, both in Decherd, Tenn., make engines. The company is monitoring the situation to see if it can resume production Tuesday night.

General Motors said Tuesday that it was not affected by the natural gas shortage but that it was still suspending the first shift at four plants in Tennessee, Indiana, Kentucky and Texas because of “the significant winter weather conditions.”

And Toyota Motor canceled the first of its two shifts at its pickup truck plant in San Antonio, Texas, because of the winter storm and energy disruptions it caused.

Managers of the electricity grid in Texas and elsewhere have had to order rolling blackouts after many power plants were forced offline because they could not get natural gas. Some wind turbines also shut down. At the same time, demand for electricity and natural gas has shot up because of the cold weather. In addition, icy conditions have made it difficult for people to get around.

“To ensure we minimize our use of natural gas that is critical to people’s homes, we decided to cancel operations for a week, beginning Saturday, Feb. 13,” a Ford spokeswoman said in a statement on Monday.

The company doesn’t plan to resume normal operations at the shuttered plant, which is in Claycomo, Mo., until Monday, Feb. 22. The plant employs about 7,300 people. Union workers will be paid 75 percent of their gross pay for the week.

The shutdowns come as Ford, G.M. and other automakers have separately had to idle plants because of a global semiconductor shortage. The chip shortage is expected to reduce the profit of automakers by billions of dollars this year.

The winter storm that battered the Midwest left businesses digging out from under piles of snow on Tuesday.Credit…Joshua A. Bickel/The Columbus Dispatch, via Associated Press

The winter storm that barreled across Texas and other states this weekend has severely disrupted business across much of the country, including those that Americans are deeply reliant on for the basic necessities, like retail stores and package delivery services.

Walmart has closed 500 stores in the Midwest, according to a map that was being updated in real time on the company’s website. “The safety of our associates and customers is our top priority,” the company said in a statement.

The storm has caused delays across the vast package delivery networks that many people now rely on as shopping has shifted online.

FedEx said winter weather had caused “substantial disruptions” at its Memphis hub, which is the company’s largest center, occupying 800 acres, and is normally capable of sorting nearly half a million documents and packages an hour. FedEx added that delays were possible across the United States for Tuesday deliveries.

UPS said weather could cause delays in areas not directly hit by the storms. Packages may take longer to get from one place to another, and many delivery services have big sorting hubs in the middle of the country to serve both the east and west coasts. Two of UPS’s main air hubs are in Louisville, Ky., and Dallas, for example.

The winter storm prompted the United States Postal Service to close post offices, processing hubs and other facilities in Texas and Mississippi, according to its website. Power outages had suspended service at the main post office in Dallas and a processing office in Beaumont, which is east of Houston, near the Louisiana state line.

The storm has also affected Amazon, which operates its own large delivery network that includes planes, hubs and delivery vans. The company’s delivery locations in San Antonio, Texas, had been closed because of bad weather, it told a local TV station.

Arne Sorenson, the chief executive of Marriott International, in 2019. Credit…Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call, via Associated Press

Arne Sorenson, the president and chief executive of Marriott International, died on Monday at the age of 62. He had been undergoing treatment for pancreatic cancer.

Mr. Sorenson became the third chief executive of Marriott in 2012, and the first without the Marriott surname. Mr. Sorenson led the expansion of the company’s presence worldwide, including the $13 billion acquisition of Starwood Hotels & Resorts in 2015.

“Arne was an exceptional executive — but more than that — he was an exceptional human being,” J.W. Marriott Jr., the company’s executive chairman, said in a statement. “Arne loved every aspect of this business and relished time spent touring our hotels and meeting associates around the world.”

In May 2019, the hotel chain announced that Mr. Sorenson learned had cancer, and earlier this month said that he would be reducing his schedule because of more demanding treatment.

When Mr. Sorenson stepped back from full-time management, the company appointed two Marriott executives, Stephanie Linnartz and Tony Capuano, to temporarily fill the role. The company expects to appoint a new chief executive within the next two weeks.

Filling a pickup truck and gas cans in Tomball, Texas, on Monday. A winter storm has disrupted energy supplies and caused widespread power outages.Credit…Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle, via Associated Press

Energy prices in the United States rose on Tuesday after a huge winter storm hit the southern and central parts of the country, with 150 million people under storm warnings. Millions of people have been left without power in freezing temperatures.

Natural gas futures for March delivery rose as much as 6.3 percent, the biggest jump since Feb. 1, when a storm hit the Northeast. Demand for natural gas has risen, but disruption from the storm means gas production has plummeted.

The energy regulator in Texas said on Saturday that it was aware local natural gas distributors “may be required to pay extraordinarily high prices in the market for natural gas, and may be subjected to other extraordinary expenses” in responding to the storm.

For oil, futures jumped more than 5 percent over the weekend as the coldest weather in three decades interrupted road transportation and some wells had to shut down. On Tuesday, West Texas Intermediate, the U.S. benchmark, rose 0.6 percent to $59.81 a barrel, the highest in 13 months. Futures for Brent crude, the European benchmark, fell 0.5 percent. The largest refineries in the country, including Port Arthur in Texas, closed on Monday because the weather had led to power outages across the state.

“Some producers, especially in the Permian Basin and Panhandle, are experiencing unprecedented freezing conditions which caused concerns for employee safety and affected production,” the Texas energy regulator said Monday.

Markets in the United States were closed on Monday for the Presidents’ Day holiday.

  • U.S. stocks pushed higher on Tuesday, building on recent gains as investor were optimistic that the vaccination rollout would spur an economic recovery. The S&P 500, which reached a record high last week, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq were mostly unchanged by midday.

  • The Biden administration on Tuesday announced additional relief for American homeowners struggling with payments, saying the pandemic had “triggered a housing affordability crisis.”

  • The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 0.1 percent. In Germany, the ZEW survey of investor sentiment recorded a big jump in future expectations for the economy, but the view of the current situation worsened.

  • In Britain, the government reached its target of vaccinating 15 million people, the most vulnerable in the country, by mid-February but now the prime minister, Boris Johnson, is under increasing pressure to lay out a clear plan for the end of the long lockdown. The central bank has forecast a relatively strong economic rebound later in the year, but business leaders have warned that companies need to prepare to reopen and the recovery could be impeded if they are given enough support. The pound rose above $1.39 this week, the strongest against the U.S. dollar since early 2018.

  • Indexes in Asia rose, with the Nikkei 225 in Japan up 1.3 percent; on Monday, it climbed above 30,000 for the first time since 1990. The Hang Seng in Hong Kong closed 1.9 percent higher.

  • Softbank’s shares closed at a record high. Last week, the Japanese company recorded huge profits in its tech investment fund amid a flurry of public offerings by companies it backs.

One in five renters have fallen behind on rent and more than 10 million homeowners are behind on mortgage payments, according to the White House statement.Credit…Ruth Fremson/The New York Times

The Biden administration on Tuesday announced additional relief for American homeowners struggling with payments, saying the pandemic had “triggered a housing affordability crisis.”

The actions include:

  • extending a moratorium on foreclosures through June 30;

  • extending an enrollment window for mortgage payment forbearance requests until June 30; and

  • providing up to six months of additional mortgage payment forbearance for borrowers who entered forbearance on or before June 30.

On his first day in office, President Biden issued orders extending federal moratoriums on some foreclosures and evictions through the end of March. But the expiration of those protections would leave “many at risk of falling further into debt and losing their homes,” White House officials said in a statement.

One in five renters have fallen behind on rent and more than 10 million homeowners are behind on mortgage payments, according to the White House statement. People of color, who face greater hardship in the pandemic, are at greater risk of eviction and foreclosure.

Homeowners can find out who owns their mortgage by entering their address on various government websites.

The relief programs are part of a coordinated effort by the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Department of Veterans Affairs and Department of Agriculture.

Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla, which announced last week that it invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin.Credit…Mike Blake/Reuters

The cryptocurrency Bitcoin, which has been rising meteorically of late, hit $50,000 on Tuesday morning, a new high, before dipping to about $49,500.

The digital currency is minting new millionaires as excitement grows around Bitcoin’s prospects for mainstream acceptance. Tesla announced last week that it invested $1.5 billion in Bitcoin, followed by news that institutional investors, like BNY Mellon, the oldest bank in the United States, were making the jump into Bitcoin.

Now, corporations can’t avoid the question of whether they will also invest. MicroStrategy’s chief executive, Michael Saylor, is recruiting companies to follow MicroStrategy’s path and invest in Bitcoin to guard against deflation of the dollar. But not everyone shares his certainty: Uber may take payments in crypto but won’t invest its cash in Bitcoin, the company’s chief executive, Dara Khosrowshahi, said.

Celebrity investors, like Tesla’s chief executive, Elon Musk, appear intent on cultivating mainstream crypto curiosity. Mr. Musk recently added Bitcoin to his Twitter bio, which pushed the asset’s price higher. On Monday, the Mexican billionaire Ricardo Salinas Pliego also added Bitcoin to his Twitter bio; he has been an enthusiast since 2013 and paid $200 for his first Bitcoin. The move follows exhortations from famous crypto fans, like Russell Okung of the Carolina Panthers National Football League team, who last month urged people on Twitter to “plant the flag and show you’re ready for the future.”

The business interest has prompted politicians to push for Bitcoin’s acceptance. Last week, Mayor Francis Suarez of Miami proposed that the city pay municipal workers and accept fees for city services in Bitcoin, and the city voted to study the suggestion. Andrew Yang, a New York mayoral candidate, promised to make the Big Apple the best place for crypto businesses. Senator Cynthia Lummis, Republican of Wyoming, has been boasting about her state’s fintech-friendly regulations and is hoping that Mr. Musk accepts her invitation to bring his business there.

Bitcoin critics warn, however, that investors should be wary. “Elon Musk may be buying it, but that doesn’t mean everyone else should follow suit,” the New York University economist Nouriel Roubini said last week.

Not everyone is a fan. Nassim Nicholas Taleb, a mathematical statistician — an expert on randomness, probability and uncertainty — is now dumping his Bitcoin. “I’ve been getting rid of my BTC. Why? A currency is never supposed to be more volatile than what you buy and sell with it,” he recently wrote.

Niki Christoff speaking at a news conference about the anti-discrimination Equality Act in 2019 in Washington.Credit…Kevin Wolf/Associated Press for Human Rights Campaign

When Niki Christoff, a senior Salesforce executive, received an offer to join the board of a publicly traded company, she saw it as a signal that she was poised to break into a club long dominated by men. But what happened next revealed one of the biggest challenges facing companies’ efforts to diversify their boards, writes our columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin.

Many companies, like Salesforce, don’t allow employees to join external boards alongside their day jobs, and especially not those below the senior-most ranks, where women and ethnic and racial minorities tend to be better represented. When Ms. Christoff asked for permission, she was rebuffed, and when she accepted the directorship, she was fired.

Mr. Sorkin describes the obstacle this presents:

With so many employees trying to overcome barriers to promotions at their own employers, this creates a kind of systemic impediment to diversifying boardrooms.

And with companies facing growing calls from investors and society to diversify their boards, a new fault line is being exposed in corporate America: Should companies let their managers spread their wings?

Ms. Christoff is eager to bring attention to the issue. “People don’t know that these policies exist, and it’s not just Salesforce that has this policy,” she said. “It’s not uncommon to restrict board service to senior management. And so highlighting that issue to me feels important both from an equity perspective, but also from a business perspective.”

More than 10 suits echoing government antitrust cases have been filed against Google, Facebook or both in recent months.Credit…Jeff Chiu/Associated Press

Private lawsuits are adding to the mounting legal pressure on Big Tech companies.

Already, more than 10 suits echoing government antitrust cases have been filed against Google, Facebook or both in recent months. Many of them lean on evidence unearthed by the government investigations, writes David McCabe for The New York Times.

If successful, the lawsuits could be costly for Facebook and Google. The companies work with millions of advertisers and publishers every year, and Google hosts apps from scores of developers, meaning there are many potential litigants. After the United States sued Microsoft for antitrust violations a generation ago, the company paid $750 million to settle with AOL, at that point the owner of the browser Netscape, which was at the core of the government’s case.

“There’s a fair amount of scrambling going on and folks trying to figure out what private suits might be successful and how to bring them,” said Joshua Davis, a professor at the University of San Francisco’s law school.

Facebook declined to comment about the lawsuits. Julie Tarallo McAlister, a spokeswoman for Google, said in a statement that the company would defend itself against the claims.

“Like other claims courts have rejected in the past, these complaints try to substitute litigation for competition on the merits,” she said.

The private suits follow similar ones from the government for a simple reason: Regulators have distinct advantages when it comes to obtaining evidence. Federal and state investigators can collect internal documents and interview executives before filing a suit. As a result, their complaints are filled with insider knowledge about the companies. Private individuals can seek that kind of evidence only after they file lawsuits.

If the government cases succeed against Google or Facebook at trial, it is likely to bolster the case for private lawsuits, experts said. Lawyers could point to those victories as evidence the company broke the law and move quickly to their primary aim: obtaining monetary damages.

Categories
Health

5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens February 16, 2021

Here are the top news, trends, and analysis investors need to get their trading day started:

1. Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq aim to hit record highs

Traders work on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

NYSE

US stock futures rose Tuesday, adding to the record close on Friday for the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq. The US stock market was closed Monday for Presidents Day. All three stock benchmarks rose last week, continuing February’s strength. At the close of trading on Friday, the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq were up nearly 2.8%, 4.8% and 9.4%, respectively.

The 30-year Treasury yield was above 2% early Tuesday as investors responded to progress on President Joe Biden’s proposed $ 1.9 trillion Covid stimulus package on Capitol Hill and calls for a broader one Coronavirus vaccine spread in the US waited more than 1.26%.

CVS Health reported quarterly earnings of $ 1.30 per share, 6 cents above estimates. The revenue also exceeded Wall Street projections, aided in part by Covid-19 testing and vaccinations at pharmacies.

2. Bitcoin hits a new high of over $ 50,000

In this photo illustration, a visual representation of the digital cryptocurrency, Bitcoin can be seen in Paris, France on February 9, 2021, ahead of the Bitcoin rate graph.

Chesnot | Getty Images

Bitcoin hit a new record high on Tuesday, rising above $ 50,000 per unit for the first time before reducing some of those gains. Big companies announced support for digital currencies last week. Tesla announced that it had purchased $ 1.5 billion worth of Bitcoin. Mastercard announced on Thursday that it would support certain cryptocurrencies later this year, while BNY Mellon announced the following day that it would open its custody services to digital assets. Bitcoin more than quadrupled in 2020 and is up over 60% this year.

3. Freezing in Texas causes massive energy crisis

Cattle shelter from the cold wind on the side of a pump jack array Saturday February 13, 2021 in Midland, Texas.

Eli Hartman. | Odessa American | AP

More than 3.8 million households in Texas were in the dark Tuesday morning as record temperatures spiked electricity needs for heat, pushing the state’s power grid to its limits. Texas has imposed rolling power outages that typically occur on 100-degree summer days.

  • The power shortage was so great that spot prices for wholesale power in the Texas power grid rose by more than 10,000% on Monday.
  • Natural gas futures rose more than 6% on Tuesday morning. However, RBC analysts said, “Certain regional spot prices for natural gas have increased 10 to 100 times in a matter of days.”
  • U.S. oil prices also surged to a pandemic high of over $ 60 a barrel as wells and refineries shut down due to the cold.

The cold weather was part of a massive winter explosion that brought snow, sleet, and freezing rain to the southern plains across parts of the Ohio Valley and the northeast.

4th Congress to establish a Capitol Insurrection Commission

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) speaks about instigating the fatal attack on the U.S. Capitol in Washington during a press conference with the House’s impeachment managers on the fifth day of the impeachment trial of former U.S. President Donald Trump. USA, February 13, 2021.

Al Drago | Reuters

House spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi said Monday that Congress will set up an independent 9/11-style commission to deal with last month’s deadly riot in the U.S. Capitol. The investigation into the riots was already planned. The Senate hearings in the Regulatory Committee are scheduled for later this month.

The House impeachment officials, who spoke out in favor of Donald Trump’s conviction of inciting the attack, said Sunday they had proven their case. Democrats also railed against Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell and other Republicans, saying they tried “both” by finding the former president not guilty while acknowledging that he had instigated the insurgency.

5. Biden to make first official domestic trips

President Joe Biden speaks about his Covid-19 relief plan during a meeting with a non-partisan group of governors and mayors on February 12, 2021 in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC.

Almond Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

Biden is trying to move beyond Trump’s impeachment acquittal last week and plans to keep a busy coronavirus schedule for the coming week. Biden will make his first official domestic tours of his presidency, beginning at a CNN city hall in Wisconsin on Tuesday, to speak to Americans affected by the pandemic. Biden visits a Pfizer Covid vaccine facility in Michigan on Thursday as the drugmaker’s and Moderna’s two-shot regimen hit pharmacies across the country.

– Follow all developments on Wall Street in real time with CNBC Pro’s live market blog. Find out about the latest pandemics on our coronavirus blog.

Categories
Business

Electrical car market and shares

India’s push into electric vehicles opens up opportunities for companies in ancillary areas like battery manufacturing, according to an analyst at diversified financial services firm Motilal Oswal.

The move towards electric vehicles is “inevitable” both globally and in India, where higher fuel prices can make owning electricity-powered cars comparatively more affordable, Siddhartha Khemka, research director for retailers, told CNBCs on Monday “Street Signs Asia”. “”

“Adoption will increase once you have the infrastructure,” he said.

There are two basic types of electric vehicles: those based on batteries and hybrid vehicles that use both batteries and plug into an external power source such as a charging station.

See three stocks

Most of the excitement in India’s electric vehicle sector is in side rooms where companies partner with global players, many of whom are keen to enter the lucrative market, according to Khemka.

“On the one hand you have the battery manufacturers who want to develop the battery for the electric vehicles, and on the other hand companies like Motherson Sumi who are involved in the electric part of the vehicles,” he said, adding: “You are getting a growing share of the ( Electric vehicles). “

Khemka said Motilal Oswal prefers Motherson Sumi and Exide Industries, which are up 29% and 11% respectively since the close on Monday.

Motherson Sumi works with automakers around the world in areas such as wiring harnesses, rearview mirrors, cockpits, bumpers, and more. Exide sells lead-acid batteries for automotive and industrial applications.

On the first weekend of 2021 in Kolkata, West Bengal, a lot of traffic and crowds were observed outside the Alipore Zoological Gardens.

Jit Chattopadhyay | SOPA pictures | LightRocket | Getty Images

Boost from Tesla

The EV sector in South Asia’s largest economy should get a boost from Tesla.

The US company founded Tesla Motors India and Energy Private Limited last month with a registered office in the Bengaluru technology center in Karnataka, Reuters reported. The newscast reported on Sunday that a state government document claimed that Tesla would open an electric car manufacturing facility in Karnataka.

CEO Elon Musk previously said on Twitter that Tesla cars would be available in the country starting this year.

India, for its part, is trying to reduce its reliance on oil and also reduce air pollution. That can boost the thrust in electric vehicles. In the last annual budget, the finance minister announced a voluntary vehicle scrapping policy to remove old vehicles that contribute to the country’s poor air quality.