FT : SpaceX’s valuation soars to $350bn in employee share deal

SpaceX’s valuation soars to $350bn in employee share deal
Musk’s space company capitalises on ‘Trump bump’ fuelling investor demand

Elon Musk’s SpaceX has been valued at $350bn in a new deal to purchase employees’ shares, making the rocket and satellite maker the world’s most valuable private start-up.

SpaceX and its investors will purchase $1.25bn of the company’s existing common shares at $185 a share, said four people with knowledge of the transaction. That marks a 65 per cent leap in its share price since its most recent deal in September, when employees sold shares for $112 apiece.

SpaceX will purchase about $500mn of the shares with the rest of the capital provided by outside investors, the people said. The deal was first reported by Bloomberg.

SpaceX had proposed pricing its shares at roughly $125 as recently as mid-November, which would have valued the company at more than $250bn, but bumped that up by an eye-watering $100bn amid extremely high investor appetite.

Musk helped deliver the US election for Donald Trump last month, spending more than $250mn on his campaign, and has become a close confidant of the president-elect, advising him on senior government appointments and attending his calls with world leaders. Trump has also appointed Musk to co-lead a new ‘department of government efficiency’.

That proximity to the incoming administration has led to a “Trump bump” in the fortunes of the world’s richest man as investors have raced to back his sprawling business interests.

Musk’s artificial intelligence start-up, xAI, raised $6bn earlier this month at a valuation of $50bn, roughly double its valuation six months earlier. Tesla’s share price has soared 60 per cent since the November 5 election, giving the electric-car maker that Musk runs as chief executive a record capitalisation of $1.26tn.

The new valuation means SpaceX has pushed ahead of ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, which was valued at about $300bn in a share buyback programme last month.

FT : BP and Shell rein in electricity ambitions to escape ‘valley of death’

BP and Shell rein in electricity ambitions to escape ‘valley of death’
Oil majors caught between pro-fossil fuel and pro-climate investors scale back $18bn power generation push

BP and Shell spent a combined $18bn over five years to become major players in electricity. Now the oil majors are scaling back their ambitions in power generation after poor progress and widespread scepticism.

In 2019, Shell set a goal of becoming the world’s largest electricity company, with Maarten Wetselaar, director of gas and new energies at the time, forecasting that power revenues would equal those from oil and gas by the 2030s.

BP set out its own bold transition plan the following year under then chief executive Bernard Looney, promising to raise green energy spending tenfold to $5bn annually by 2030 and expand its renewable power generation business by 20 times in the same timeframe to about 50GW of capacity.

Both companies shrugged off questions over whether they had a competitive advantage in renewable energy. “We build and operate some of the biggest projects in the world,” Looney told the Financial Times in 2020. “I wouldn’t underestimate just how relevant some of those skills are.” 

The two men have moved on, and after a few years of heavy spending, BP and Shell’s current management teams have conceded they may not possess such an advantage, or a deep enough balance sheet, to meet some of their hopes for renewable electricity.

Meanwhile BP’s share price is down more than 16 per cent this year, with Shell nearly 2 per cent lower. One energy chief executive remarked that the companies were caught in the “valley of death” between their traditional pro-fossil fuel shareholders and a new set of pro-climate investors.


Shell, which has invested roughly $11.8bn on its power business since 2019, according to research group Accela, has sold its electricity retail business in the UK, the Netherlands and Germany, withdrawn from the Chinese electricity market and told its staff last week it would not seek out any new offshore wind projects. 

BP, which Accela estimated to have spent $6.8bn on low carbon power, this week said it had placed its offshore wind assets in a joint venture with Japanese partner Jera, allowing it to halve its expected capital expenditure on offshore wind by the end of the decade and move any future debt off its balance sheet.

Analysts expect it to drop or scale back its target for 50GW of renewable capacity by 2030 at its capital markets day in February. Rohan Bowater, an Accela analyst, said its $3bn-$5bn target for renewable spending next year was also under threat.

Both BP and Shell are, so far, still committed to their solar, electric vehicle charging and power trading businesses. At the same time as pulling back from offshore wind, Shell said it had split its power division into two units, one focused on generation and the other on trading.

Alon Carmel, head of offshore wind at PA Consulting, said the pullback in the sector followed some “bold bets” from oil companies in areas “where the risks have turned out to be greater than perceived”. In particular, BP paid a high price to lease a swath of seabed off the German coast, while both companies have projects in the US, where Donald Trump’s incoming administration has signalled its opposition to offshore wind.

A senior energy investment banker also noted the hubris that permeated the offshore wind industry, which has been hit by higher interest rates and inflation in its supply chain.


“They wrongly got into a mindset of saying [they would not face] cost inflation in our supply chain, there’s not going to be cyclicality and the government’s always going to be supporting and underwriting us. All three of those have come home to roost in a negative way,” said the investment banker.

The oil majors are unlikely to be missed by the wider industry.

“They had a negative impact,” said Jérôme Guillet, managing director at Snow, a renewable energy advisory boutique, saying they lacked the cost discipline of utilities and smaller developers, overpaid for assets and tried to squeeze the supply chain in an effort to succeed.

“Then they complained loudly that the economics did not work and gave the sector a bad name.”

Other European oil companies are also rethinking their plans. Equinor, Norway’s state oil and gas company, has slowed its buildout of renewables and instead bought a stake in Danish wind power specialist Ørsted. Analysts at RBC Capital Markets suggested that this may be a less capital intensive path to decarbonisation in the medium term.

Italy’s Eni has combined low-carbon growth businesses such as biofuels with cash-generating units such as service stations, and sold stakes in the spin-offs. KKR, the private equity firm, bought a quarter of its Enilive division at a $13bn valuation.

The changing strategies reflect the challenge for listed oil companies to steer a path through the energy transition, with the company chief saying it would be “very hard, almost impossible” for them to transform.

“These companies are owned by investors who like to own fossil fuel companies, and if they were 50 per cent green they’d be owned by a totally different group of shareholders. There’s almost no overlap” he explained. 

He continued: “Your current shareholders will sell when you get to 20 per cent green, but the new shareholders will not buy until you are 50 per cent green. So there’s a valley of death in between.”

In Europe, only TotalEnergies has shown success in bridging the gap. Moody’s this week upgraded the French company’s credit rating, noting the “improved quality” of its business, after TotalEnergies cut the cost of its oil production and built a power business that included 14.5GW of renewables.   

Meanwhile, almost all other oil companies have slowed spending on low carbon. RBC Capital Markets said that across its basket of nine US and European oil companies, low carbon spending fell to 10 per cent of capital expenditure in 2024, “well below what expectations may have been a few years ago”. It estimated that low carbon businesses will account for 7 per cent of BP’s earnings by 2030, falling to 5 per cent at Shell.

The energy investment banker said that while Shell had pulled back firmly from electricity businesses such as offshore wind, BP’s move suggested it was still trying to find a way forward with its plans, but preferably off its debt-heavy balance sheet and with external partners.

“Shell is saying it’s probably going to do less, while BP is going to try to do the same but with a certain capital frame,” they said. 

“They’re looking to find someone to share the valley of death with,” they added. “And when they come out of the other side, they hopefully have a chunk of cash flow at the end of the decade.”

FT : Tether is drawing heat from law enforcement. But it has a new friend in the

Tether is drawing heat from law enforcement. But it has a new friend in the White House
Howard Lutnick has defended the stablecoin company which has been used by gangs and US adversaries

In July, Howard Lutnick, the pugnacious boss of broker Cantor Fitzgerald, regaled an audience of crypto devotees in Nashville with tales of his early days exploring the world of digital currencies.

“I met every criminal who’s now in prison,” the 63-year-old joked, referring to his encounters with various youthful crypto executives now serving lengthy jail sentences for fraud. “And then,” he said, “I met the people who owned Tether.”

In contrast to other industry players, Lutnick said, Tether’s co-founder Giancarlo Devasini, an Italian-born former plastic surgeon, was able to prove he was running a legitimate business.

Since then the business has boomed. Profits at Tether, which now administers the most traded cryptocurrency in the world, surged to $5.2bn in the first half of this year.

Despite only having around 100 employees, those earnings put Tether on a similar scale to some of the world’s largest banks — a billion more than Barclays and a billion less than Morgan Stanley — largely derived from interest on its reserves accumulated by taking in dollars in exchange for tokens.

But at the same time, according to enforcement officials, prosecutors and information from multiple current and recent indictments, Tether has cemented its place as the go-to cryptocurrency for international criminals.

The eye-popping constellation of gangsters and sanctions evaders using Tether includes cocaine cartels, North Korean hackers, Iranian and Russian spies, and fentanyl smugglers.

Lutnick, meanwhile, who over three decades built Cantor Fitzgerald into one of the biggest dealers of US government debt, is about to join the US government as one of Donald Trump’s top lieutenants.

On the way back from Nashville, Lutnick was given the role of co-chair of the Trump transition team, giving him influence over critical positions, including some that oversee crypto regulation, such as the head of the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Trump has since nominated crypto advocate Paul Atkins to run the SEC.

Under Lutnick’s leadership, Cantor Fitzgerald has taken a stake in Tether of an undisclosed size, while also taking on the responsibility of managing a significant portion of Tether’s reserves, now primarily held in US Treasury bills. In part bolstered by Lutnick’s support, the amount of tether in issuance has grown from $83bn in the middle of last year to more than $138bn this month.

Lutnick recently launched an initiative with Tether to lend clients dollars secured against Bitcoin. In October, he told the FT that he expected to increase its size in increments of $2bn. “I expect it to be very large over time — tens and tens and tens of billions,” he said.

He also recently boasted about handling $10bn in tether redemptions in 2022, describing it “as no big deal for us” because Cantor dealt with trillions of dollars of Treasuries.

Yet Tether also continues to feature regularly in international criminal cases. Its main advantage is that its token tether is a so-called stablecoin, pegged to the US dollar, meaning customers do not have to worry about the value of the crypto changing in the middle of a transaction.

Earlier this month, a UK-led criminal investigation revealed a multibillion-dollar money laundering ring based out of Moscow, London and Dubai that had allowed villains ranging from European cocaine kingpins, Russian spies and sanctioned oligarchs to move assets around the world using tether.

“It used to be that bitcoin was the crypto du jour; it’s now stablecoins and US dollar-tether,” said Sal Melki, head of illicit finance threats at the UK’s National Crime Agency. 

Recent law enforcement operations in the US, EU and UK have also shown tether being also used by the US-sanctioned Irish crime family the Kinahan cartel — which has been linked to multiple contract killings — as well as by Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Hamas and Hizbollah.

Tether has strongly defended itself against accusations that it facilitates global criminal activity, pointing out that its use by criminals is so-called secondary market activity where bad actors trade its tokens between themselves. It also says that it collaborates with 195 law enforcement agencies across 48 countries to root out abuses.

When news of the multibillion-dollar Russian money laundering scheme broke, it said that it “unequivocally condemns the illegal use of stablecoins and is fully committed to combating illicit activity”.

“With tether, every action is online, every transaction is traceable, every asset can be seized, and every criminal can be caught,” Tether said in a statement. “The fact that this operation was shut down is testament to the traceability and apprehension of criminals and their illicit use of [tether]”.

For Tether’s critics, however, the stablecoin supported by Lutnick is simply a tool for criminal actors and geopolitical enemies of the US and its allies to circumvent money laundering controls.

“There’s no reason to have stablecoins but for engaging in illegal activity,” said one former US federal prosecutor. Criminals are “a large segment of the market [Tether] is trying to hit, the same way there are all those sketchy banks who claim to do KYC”.

Tether was the stablecoin most used for illicit activity globally last year, according to a report by TRM Labs, blockchain intelligence company and commercial partner of Tether, with an estimated $19.3bn worth of its trades — or 1.63 per cent of total transactions — used for illicit means. 

“It is the most used crypto token in the world, supported by every exchange, and it is pegged to the US dollar, so there is no price volatility,” said Snir Levi, founder and chief executive of Nominis, a crypto wallet intelligence platform. “The volumes traded are huge, so it is easy to move large amounts of money without standing out.”

Earlier this year, the UN’s office on drugs and crime said that Tether has become an integral part of the exploding global industry of scams known as “pig butchering”, or confidence tricksters that often cultivate fake online romantic relationships to lure victims into transferring away their savings.

In April Wally Adeyemo, US deputy Treasury Secretary in the Biden administration, warned that cryptocurrencies were allowing North Korean hackers “to acquire, launder, and store illicit revenue”.

Russia, he added, was “increasingly turning to alternative payment mechanisms — including the stablecoin tether — to try to circumvent our sanctions and continue to finance its war machine”.

Emails leaked by Iranian opposition groups provided evidence of how US-sanctioned companies have embraced tether as a way to continue doing business. In March 2023, for example, an employee at Safiran Airport Services, a Tehran-based airline transportation company, received a sensitive request from Moscow. 

Alexander Lukashenko, the dictator of Belarus, was preparing a state visit to Iran. A woman named Elena wanted to know if Safiran could arrange diplomatic clearance for the presidential plane, book five-star hotel rooms for his entourage, and handle other logistics.

The Safiran employee said they could help. The only problem would be how the Belarusians would pay. The Iranian company was cut off from the international banking system, having been sanctioned by Washington in 2022 for transporting Iranian-made drones to Russia for its war in Ukraine.

The Iranian company, however, had a solution to offer. “Dear Elena,” the Safiran employee asked, “Please check if you can pay tether.”


In March, the US Treasury sanctioned a Lebanon-based Syrian money launderer called Tawfiq Muhammad Sa’id al-Law, who it said had provided digital wallets to Hizbollah, the Lebanese militant group designated as a terrorist organisation by the US. 

These wallets, the Treasury said, had received funds from the Iranian Revolutionary Guards-Quds Force. Chainalysis, a blockchain analysis company, later published research that showed all of the funds that moved through al-Law’s cryptocurrency wallet were in tether.

The growing ability of investigators to track tether transactions like those of al-Law may eventually lead to global criminals moving towards different methods to launder their money. Last year Hamas’ Al-Qassam Brigades stopped accepting donations in cryptocurrency, saying that it had become too easy for governments to find and prosecute donors.

“The FBI and other law enforcement has vastly improved its ability to figure these things out,” said Josh Naftalis, a former US federal prosecutor. “The reality is that law enforcement is able to look at the blockchain and generally figure out who’s transacting.”

None of these concerns appear to have dented Lutnick’s evangelising for Tether’s potential to transform global finance. He has strongly defended Tether in a similar manner to the scrappy style that defined his rise in both American finance and now politics.

According to multiple sources familiar with his career, Lutnick’s trajectory has been fuelled by a relentless desire to prove his critics wrong — a characteristic that appears to have drawn him towards Tether.

“He’s got a huge chip on his shoulder,” said a person who has dealt with him over decades.

These qualities, combined with his early support for Donald Trump during a period when most financiers distanced themselves from the former president, have cemented Lutnick’s role as a trusted figure in Trump’s inner circle.

He has known Trump for years, and in 2008 appeared on his NBC show The Celebrity Apprentice. Last month Trump nominated him as commerce secretary. Lutnick’s relationship with Trump stems from their shared outsider status in New York’s financial and real estate spheres.

“That anti-establishment reputation has certainly brought them closer,” said a former Trump administration official. “Trump knows that Howard is 1,000 per cent a good soldier and loves that.”

While he has plenty of critics, Lutnick is also respected in the industry for rebuilding Cantor Fitzgerald after the catastrophic loss of 658 employees in the 9/11 attacks.

Lutnick, whose brother died in the Twin Tower attacks, has railed against the idea that Tether is responsible for financing terrorism. “We would never ever be associated with a company that had anything to do with jihad,” he told the audience in Nashville.

FT : Qatar’s $500bn wealth fund targets bigger deals as LNG windfall looms

Qatar’s $500bn wealth fund targets bigger deals as LNG windfall looms
New chief says QIA will deploy cash ‘more aggressively’ as it conducts investment review ahead of huge influx

Qatar’s $500bn sovereign wealth fund is preparing to deploy its cash more aggressively ahead of a petrodollar windfall that could ultimately double its size.

Mohammed Al-Sowaidi, the Qatar Investment Authority’s new chief executive, told the Financial Times the fund expected to “do bigger-ticket deals” and invest with “more frequency” as it embarks on a review of its investment strategy.

“We have to be more aggressively deploying and finding ways where we could actually achieve more returns than the perceived risk,” Sowaidi said. “You review overall your allocation policies, you look into global trends and you make some calls on the future forecasts and you see how you optimise deployment.”

The fund typically conducts a review of its investment strategy every five years, with the last one taking place in 2019. Sowaidi takes over with the QIA having doubled its workforce since 2018 ahead of an expected windfall as Qatar’s vast expansion of liquefied natural gas production begins to come online.

As the fund prepares to step up its deal flow, the QIA is bullish on the US, where it has increased its exposure significantly over the past decade, as well as in the UK and Asia, Sowaidi said, with a focus on technology, artificial intelligence, healthcare, real estate and infrastructure.

“You can see the US is spending time on . . . creating more efficient fiscal policies, regulation and regulatory environment. The market perceives that it will be accelerated under the Trump administration,” Sowaidi said. “The UK, from what we’ve heard and what you’ve seen, is thinking the same.

“The second thing is the availability of talent . . . and the third is that they are free markets, so those are markets where you can invest, can get in and there is very good governance.”

The QIA has built a portfolio of high-profile assets, including UK department store Harrods as well as significant stakes in Canary Wharf and Heathrow airport. It is also a shareholder in German carmaker Volkswagen and Spanish energy group Iberdrola.

Qatar, one of the world’s top LNG exporters and wealthiest nations in per capita terms, has spent almost $30bn to increase production capacity at its vast North Field gasfield from 77mn to 126mn tonnes a year by 2027.

State producer QatarEnergy announced further expansion plans in February, meaning overall production capacity is forecast to rise almost 85 per cent from current levels before the end of the decade.

Its Golden Pass joint venture in the US with ExxonMobil, which is expected to add another 16mn to 18mn tonnes of LNG a year to the market, will come online late next year.

The IMF estimated in a report two years ago that by 2027 the expansion was expected to raise the small Gulf state’s real GDP by 5.7 per cent and add roughly 3.5 per cent of GDP in export receipts a year.

The QIA will be the main recipient of the LNG revenues, and Sowaidi said the inflows had the potential to double its size over five years.

The fund has recruited heavily in preparation for the windfall, with staff numbers doubling to more than 700 since 2018. Kevin Zhu, who was hired in July as acting chief of investment strategy from Canadian pension fund manager OPTrust, will oversee the investment review.

Sowaidi, who was the fund’s chief investment officer for the Americas before being appointed chief last month, said the QIA was also looking to build up its offices in the US and Singapore, and while it manages the majority of its funds internally, it was also “scaling up with third-party managers”.

“The size of the QIA will grow in terms of people and there will be a deep revision in terms of whether we need to include new strategies as well as approaches to getting into the market. We are just starting to think of those questions,” he said. “It’s basically sharpening the edges of the organisation to be able to grow more and to achieve better returns.”

He added that the QIA did not have plans to be a majority shareholder or operator of the companies in which it invests, but that it would achieve “bigger ticket deals and more frequency”.

Asked if the QIA had held discussions with Elon Musk and Sam Altman at Open AI, both of whom have courted Gulf sovereign wealth funds to finance their AI projects, Sowaidi said: “We are quite active with everyone.”

“We’ve been an ongoing investor with [Musk] on multiple kinds of ventures,” he added. The QIA was among investors who participated in the recent fundraising by Musk’s xAI, and invested in the venture’s first capital raising. It is also an investor in X, Musk’s social media platform, and Starlink, his satellite communications venture.

Yet while positive on the US market, Sowaidi said he was “concerned” about trade wars and inflationary risks as president-elect Donald Trump prepares to re-enter the White House.

“One thing [that] could be potentially a risk with the US administration’s direction is the potential pressure on inflation,” he said. “When you think of the deglobalisation globally, the supply chain reconfiguration . . . this is a global phenomenon. Inflation is the biggest enemy to economies so that’s something that we are watching very closely.”

He added that trade wars were also “changing in nature”, saying they not only affected goods “but also services, and IT services, which is quite complicated to unfold”.

The QIA has been expanding its investments in China, and continued to look to invest in the Asian powerhouse, Sowaidi said, while “also respecting the regulations”.

He said the fund was “trying to be out of this sensitive technology space that could potentially have issues with global regulators”.

“We reviewed areas where we think there could be potential complications with the US or with Europe, and we tried to reduce exposure,” Sowaidi added. “We have a sizeable exposure in Asia and we are ramping it up. We think east Asia presents a great opportunity, in Japan, for example, and South Korea.”

FT : Qatar’s sovereign fund plans to deploy cash ‘aggressively’

FT : Qatar’s sovereign fund plans to deploy cash ‘aggressively’

What are its plans? The Qatar Investment Authority’s new chief executive told the Financial Times it expected to “do bigger-ticket deals” and invest with “more frequency”. Mohammed Al-Sowaidi said the QIA was bullish on the US, where it has increased its exposure significantly over the past decade, as well as in the UK and Asia, with a focus on technology, artificial intelligence, healthcare, real estate and infrastructure. The fund also plans to build up its offices in the US and Singapore and is “scaling up with third-party managers”.

What’s prompting the moves? An expected petrodollar windfall. Qatar is one of the world’s top liquefied natural gas producers, and overall production capacity is forecast to rise almost 85 per cent by the end of the decade. The IMF estimated in a 2022 report that the expansion would raise the Gulf state’s real GDP by 5.7 per cent by 2027 and add roughly 3.5 per cent of GDP in export receipts a year. The main recipient of the LNG revenues will be the QIA, and Sowaidi said the inflows had the potential to double its size over five years. Here’s more from Sowaidi, including his take on Donald Trump’s tariff plans and Elon Musk.

>>> US After Hours Summary: GM +3.2% to no longer fund Cruise's robotaxi develop

After Hours Summary: GM +3.2% to no longer fund Cruise's robotaxi development work; SFIX +20.4%, GME +2% higher on earnings; PLAY -9.8%, GEV -2.8% lower on earnings/guidance

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: FEIM +27.1%, SFIX +20.4%, SKIL +16.2%, GME +2%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news: GM +3.2% (will no longer fund Cruise's robotaxi development work), SATL +3% (files for $150 mln offering; also files for offering by selling shareholder), MRVL +1% (announces several product enhancements), NAMS +0.6% (commences $300 mln offering of shares and warrants), O +0.5% (increases dividend), LMT +0.4% (Sikorsky awarded $376 mln U.S. Army contract modification), MU +0.4% (awarded grants from Commerce Dept for construction of fab facilities), BA +0.2% (awarded $450 mln U.S. Air Force contract), EXP +0.1% (to acquire Bullskin Stone & Lime)

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance: PLAY -9.8% (also CEO resigns), GEV -2.8% (provides guidance; also approves initial $6 bln share repurchase authorization), SNV -1.6%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news: QTTB -66.5% (provides Bempikibart update), IBRX -17% (stock offering), SLRN -16.7% (Phase 2b/3 trial of izokibep did not meet primary endpoint), JOBY -9.4% (enters into Equity Distribution Agreement, may sell up to $300 mln of shares), SIGA -8.5% (interim results from STOMP study), RCKT -6.4% ($150 mln share offering), ROG -1.9% (names new CFO), NTNX -1.8% (files for $750 mln convertible notes offering), CCB -0.9% (stock offering), UBER -0.7% (Mexico's Lower House of Congress approves gig worker reform, according to Bloomberg), MAA -0.6% (names new CEO, raises dividend), AMGN -0.3% (increases dividend), CUZ -0.2% (commences 9.5 mln share offering), ACMR -0.2% (announces qualification of PEALD Furnace tool)

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 10th of December 2024 V3(++)

>>> Up
* Airbus Raised to Buy at CIC; PT 180 euros (++)
* Avacta Group Raised to Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 40 pence (++)
* British Land Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT 500 pence
* DWS Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan; PT 48 euros
* Hershey PT Raised to $190 from $166 at TD Cowen
* Hikma Raised to Outperform at RBC
* Interpublic Raised to Equal-Weight at Wells Fargo; PT $34
* Norwegian Cruise Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT $35
* Oracle PT Raised to $210 from $185 at Piper Sandler (++)
* Qiagen Raised to Buy at Jefferies
* Swissquote Raised to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Telecom Italia Raised to Overweight at Barclays
* Unite Group Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan; PT 1,070 pence
* UPS Raised to Outperform at BMO; PT $150

>>> Down
* Aker Solutions Cut to Hold at Pareto Securities; PT 33 kroner (++)
* Allfunds Cut to Underperform at Oddo BHF; PT 4.60 euros
* Ashtead Cut to Hold at Peel Hunt; PT 6,000 pence (++)
* BT Cut to Equal-Weight at Barclays; PT 190 pence
* Cofinimmo Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 63 euros
* CompuGroup Cut to Hold at Berenberg; PT 22 euros
* EDP SA Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 3.80 euros
* EDP Renovaveis Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 11.70 euros
* FCC Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Gecina Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 110 euros
* J. Martins Cut to Hold at Trigon Dom Maklerski; PT 20.50 euros (++)
* Kojamo Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 10.50 euros
* Klepierre Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 30 euros
* KPN Cut to Equal-Weight at Barclays; PT 4.20 euros
* LondonMetric Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 226 pence
* Ninety One Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 159 pence
* Schroders Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 353 pence
* Snam Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 4.90 euros

>>> Initiation
* AT&T Rated New Outperform at Bernstein; PT $28
* Birkenstock Assumed Overweight at Piper Sandler; PT $65 (++)
* Cambi Rated New Buy at Pareto Securities; PT 19 kroner (+)
* Carbios SACA Rated New Buy at Stifel; PT 19 euros
* DSV Rated New Outperform at Wolfe; PT 1,900 kroner
* Embla Medical HF Rated New Buy at Intron Health; PT 56 kroner
* Jubilee Metals Group Reinstated Outperform at RBC; PT 8.30 pence
* Schneider Electric Rated New Equal-Weight a=t Oxcap
* SOL Rated New Buy at Equita; PT 46 euros (+)
* SSP Reinstated Buy at Kepler Cheuvreux; PT 235 pence (++)
* T-Mobile Rated New Market Perform at Bernstein; PT $265
* Truecaller Rated New Buy at Nordea; PT 62 kronor

>>> Call
* Buy Europe Stocks in 2025 as Pessimism Peaking: Citi’s Manthey
* French Stocks Aren’t Attractive Yet, Say Goldman Strategists (++)
* JPMorgan Sees Opportunities in Property, Yields a Challenge (++)
* Volatility to Again Impact European Financials in 2025: JPMorgan
* Embla Medical Has Multiple Upside Drivers, New Buy at Intron
* Hikma Upgraded at RBC, Offers Attractive, Diversified Growth
* JPMorgan Sees Opportunities in Property, Yields Remain Challenge
* Melia Hotels Rallies to Five-Month High as Exane Upgrades (++)
* SOL Rises to Record as Equita Starts Coverage With Buy (++)
* UPS Rises as BMO Upgrades to Outperform on Favorable Valuation (++)

>>> White House issues statement from Vice President Kamala Harris on CHIPS and

White House issues statement from Vice President Kamala Harris on CHIPS and Science Act investments in Micron Technology

"Today, thanks to our historic legislation, the Department of Commerce has finalized one of its largest awards to date with Micron Technology, the only U.S. based manufacturer of memory chips. This more than $6.1 billion investment in Clay, NY and Boise, ID supports the construction of several state-of-the-art memory chips facilities as part of Micron's total $125 billion investment over the next few decades, creating at least 20,000 jobs by the end of the decade. These investments will help the U.S. grow its share of advanced memory manufacturing from nearly 0% today to 10% over the next decade."


>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 10th of December 2024 V2(+)

>>> Up
* British Land Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT 500 pence
* DWS Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan; PT 48 euros
* Hershey PT Raised to $190 from $166 at TD Cowen
* Hikma Raised to Outperform at RBC
* Interpublic Raised to Equal-Weight at Wells Fargo; PT $34
* Norwegian Cruise Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT $35
* Qiagen Raised to Buy at Jefferies
* Swissquote Raised to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Telecom Italia Raised to Overweight at Barclays
* Unite Group Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan; PT 1,070 pence
* UPS Raised to Outperform at BMO; PT $150

>>> Down
* Allfunds Cut to Underperform at Oddo BHF; PT 4.60 euros
* BT Cut to Equal-Weight at Barclays; PT 190 pence
* Cofinimmo Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 63 euros
* CompuGroup Cut to Hold at Berenberg; PT 22 euros
* EDP SA Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 3.80 euros
* EDP Renovaveis Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 11.70 euros
* FCC Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Gecina Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 110 euros
* Kojamo Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 10.50 euros
* Klepierre Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 30 euros
* KPN Cut to Equal-Weight at Barclays; PT 4.20 euros
* LondonMetric Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 226 pence
* Ninety One Cut to Underweight at JPMorgan; PT 159 pence
* Schroders Cut to Neutral at JPMorgan; PT 353 pence
* Snam Cut to Hold at HSBC; PT 4.90 euros

>>> Initiation
* AT&T Rated New Outperform at Bernstein; PT $28
* Cambi Rated New Buy at Pareto Securities; PT 19 kroner (+)
* Carbios SACA Rated New Buy at Stifel; PT 19 euros
* DSV Rated New Outperform at Wolfe; PT 1,900 kroner
* Embla Medical HF Rated New Buy at Intron Health; PT 56 kroner
* Jubilee Metals Group Reinstated Outperform at RBC; PT 8.30 pence
* Schneider Electric Rated New Equal-Weight a=t Oxcap
* SOL Rated New Buy at Equita; PT 46 euros (+)
* T-Mobile Rated New Market Perform at Bernstein; PT $265
* Truecaller Rated New Buy at Nordea; PT 62 kronor

>>> Call
* Buy Europe Stocks in 2025 as Pessimism Peaking: Citi’s Manthey
* Volatility to Again Impact European Financials in 2025: JPMorgan
* Embla Medical Has Multiple Upside Drivers, New Buy at Intron
* Hikma Upgraded at RBC, Offers Attractive, Diversified Growth
* JPMorgan Sees Opportunities in Property, Yields Remain Challenge

>>> Stoxx 600 Pre-Market Indications

  • Ashtead (0LC TH) +4.3%
    • *ASHTEAD TO CONSULT ON MOVING ITS PRIMARY LISTING TO THE US
  • Vestas (VWSB TH) +0.8%
    • Nordex Turbine Deliveries May Rebound in 2025 as Ebitda Expands
  • Voestalpine (VAS TH) +0.7%
    • Watch European Miners as China Optimism Sends Iron Ore Higher
  • Allianz (ALV TH) +0.4%
    • Allianz Lifts Profit Target as Baete Vows Higher Investor Payout
  • LVMH (MOH TH) -1.3%
  • Safran (SEJ1 TH) -1.3%
  • K+S (SDF TH) -1.3%
  • Kering (PPX TH) -1.4%
  • Hugo Boss (BOSS TH) -1.5%
  • NKT (NKT TH) -1.6%
  • Prosus (1TY TH) -1.7%
  • Cofinimmo (COF TH) -2.1%
    • JPMorgan Sees Opportunities in Property, Yields Remain Challenge
  • SAP (SAP TH) -2.1%
    • Oracle Posts Disappointing Growth, Denting Cloud Enthusiasm (2)
  • Delivery Hero (DHER TH) -3%
    • Talabat Rises in Dubai Debut After Gulf’s Biggest IPO for 2024