Electrek : Tesla lays off ‘more than 10%’ of its global workforce

Tesla lays off ‘more than 10%’ of its global workforce

Tesla has announced layoffs of “more than 10%” of its global workforce in an internal company-wide email.

For the last few months, it has looked like Tesla might be preparing for a round of layoffs. Tesla told managers to identify critical team members, and paused some stock rewards while canceling some employees’ annual reviews. It also reduced production at Gigafactory Shanghai.

Then, over the weekend, we heard rumors that these layoffs were about to happen, which came to us from multiple independent sources, as we reported on yesterday. The rumors indicated that layoffs could be as high as 20%, and in addition we heard that Tesla would shorten Cybertruck production shifts at Gigafactory Texas (despite CEO Elon Musk’s recent insistence that Cybertruck is currently production constrained).

Now those rumors have been confirmed – though with a lower number – in a company-wide email sent by Musk, which leaked soon after it was sent. The full text of the email is below:

Over the years, we have grown rapidly with multiple factories scaling around the globe. With this rapid growth there has been duplication of roles and job functions in certain areas. As we prepare the company for our next phase of growth, it is extremely important to look at every aspect of the company for cost reductions and increasing productivity.

As part of this effort, we have done a thorough review of the organization and made the difficult decision to reduce our headcount by more than 10% globally. There is nothing I hate more, but it must be done. This will enable us to be lean, innovative and hungry for the next growth phase cycle.

I would like to thank everyone who is departing Tesla for their hard work over the years. I’m deeply grateful for your many contributions to our mission and we wish you well in your future opportunities. It is very difficult to say goodbye.

For those remaining, I would like to thank you in advance for the difficult job that remains ahead. We are developing some of the most revolutionary technologies in auto, energy and artificial intelligence. As we prepare the company for the next phase of growth, your resolve will make a huge difference in getting us there.

Thanks,
Elon

Additionally there are reports that some employees have already been locked out of system access.

While we don’t have an exact percentage, “more than 10%” means at least 14,000 employees will be laid off, as Tesla’s employee headcount is somewhere on the order of 140,000 total employees (Notably, Tesla’s headcount has not experienced as much “rapid growth” in recent years as it has in the past, making that line of the email ring somewhat hollow).


And we don’t know which specific teams will be most or least affected by Tesla’s layoffs, but two well-known Tesla executives are now missing the “Tesla-affiliated” badge on twitter – Drew Baglino and Rohan Patel.

Baglino is still listed as Senior VP of Powertrain and Energy on Tesla’s website, and Patel is Tesla’s Policy chair who has also served as an impromptu Tesla PR arm on twitter, commenting on news in the place of Tesla’s still incomprehensibly-nonexistent PR department.

While this may not mean anything, the badge does still exist and is shown on Franz von Holzhausen’s profile, so it is conspicuous that it is missing from the aforementioned executives.

The news follows a bad quarterly delivery report in which Tesla significantly missed delivery estimates, and had a rare year-over-year reduction in sales. While Tesla does not break out sales by geographical region, the main dip seems to have come from China, where Chinese EV makers are ramping quickly both in the domestic and export market.

Tesla will deliver its quarterly profits report next Tuesday, April 23. Analysts estimate that Tesla will still turn a profit of around 50 cents a share, down from 85 cents a share in Q1 2023.

In previous quarters, Tesla has guided for a “pause” inbetween growth phases, expecting that sales growth would be more modest until the release of next-gen vehicles like the ~$25,000 Model 2 (though Reuters recently reported that Musk wants to shift Tesla’s focus to a robotaxi model, which Musk denied just hours before announcing the robotaxi unveiling event).

Tesla’s layoffs come at a time when many other companies in the tech industry are laying off staff, in an apparent game of follow-the-leader while industry profits are still high.

Electrek’s Take
One issue I’ve always had with Tesla is that, if anything, it feels like headcount in the company is too low, not too high. There are so many issues that seem to fall through the cracks, and I think the reason for this is because Tesla employees are often overworked. This leads to burnout and turnover, a lack of institutional memory, and a lack of ownership for certain problems that don’t get solved.

Tesla owes a lot of its success to its “startup mentality,” where it’s all hands on deck to grow the company that is shaking up a couple of the largest entire sectors on earth – automotive and energy. The fact that it has shaken up these sectors so successfully is proof that this approach has been effective.


And that helps in recruiting as well – there are a lot of jobs that claim they are changing the world, but Tesla can really claim that it legitimately is on the vanguard of the changing transportation industry. That’s a great way to recruit the best and brightest, and as a result, the company hasn’t had to worry much about losing talent since it has such a recruitment advantage and can take its pick of the brightest minds out there (though that recruitment advantage could be changing, given Musk’s increasingly distasteful behavior).

However, Tesla is 20 years old now. It’s an enormous and established company. It needs to mature and have more established processes, less turnover, and more security for its employees. These sorts of things help reduce errors and increase morale.

While these layoffs are a reaction to a reduction in sales (but not a loss of money if analysts are to be believed – Tesla is likely still profitable, though we’ll hear more next Tuesday), they can’t be helping with morale.

Remaining employees will wake up to an email from a CEO who is increasingly absent as he spends all of his time addicted to an app he wasted $44 billion on (yet demands more stock while firing 10% of the company), see their already-large workloads get larger, and wonder if the feeling of changing the world is really worth all these newly-apparent downsides. Maybe they’ll wonder if getting poached by the new tech buzzword wouldn’t be so bad.

Which is a shame, because we do need Tesla to keep pushing things forward, and to keep attracting the best and brightest. While Pandora’s box is open and EVs are here to stay at this point, regardless Tesla’s ups and comparatively-rare downs, the rest of the industry is still trying hard to pump the brakes on the transition, even if it means America will be less competitive if they get their way.

Tesla is one of the few entities that is large enough and committed enough to dragging those timelines forward, whether the rest of the industry likes it or not. We need a healthy Tesla, and for that, we need good employee morale.

FT : Samsung boosts Joe Biden’s chipmaking ambitions with major Texas plant upgr

Samsung boosts Joe Biden’s chipmaking ambitions with major Texas plant upgrade
South Korean group set to outdo rival TSMC with cutting-edge 2nm chip production in US by 2026 as part of $40bn investment

Samsung Electronics will produce the latest generation of semiconductors in the US two years ahead of its rival Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, in a further boost to President Joe Biden’s efforts to bring advanced chip production on to home soil.

US commerce secretary Gina Raimondo announced on Monday that the South Korean chipmaker was set to produce chips at the 2 nanometre level of miniaturisation at a new fabrication plant, or fab, it was building in the city of Taylor in Texas. It will be part of a $40bn investment in capabilities ranging from the manufacturing of microprocessors to advanced chip packaging and research and development work.

Samsung will receive up to $6.4bn in direct funding under the US Chips and Science Act, a week after the US government announced that TSMC would receive up to $6.6bn from the flagship subsidy programme to support its chip expansion plans in Arizona.

The first of Samsung’s new Taylor fabs will start making 2nm chips in 2026, according to a senior US official. TSMC is set to produce 2nm chips at an Arizona facility from 2028.

The Biden administration aims to increase domestic production of advanced chips from zero to 20 per cent of the world’s supply by the end of the decade, amid concerns that they could be cut off by a natural disaster or possible future conflict in east Asia.

“Much of the semiconductor supply chain . . . is concentrated in a couple of Asian locations, and that leaves the US supply chain incredibly vulnerable to disruption,” said Raimondo, adding that the new Samsung investment “puts us on track to hit our [20 per cent] goal”.

“We are now making these investments which will allow the United States to once again lead the world, not just in semiconductor design . . . but also in manufacturing, advanced packaging and research and development.”

An initial $17bn investment, part of a planned $40bn in total, was announced by Samsung in 2021 to build its first fab in Taylor, which will now make 2nm and 4nm chips.

The new capital spending adds a second fab that will also make 2nm and 4nm chips, as well as the construction of an advanced chip packaging facility for “2.5D packaging” of processor and memory chips.

Advanced packaging is a crucial stage in the production of artificial intelligence chips like Nvidia’s H100, which is used to train generative AI systems such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

TSMC, the world’s biggest contract chipmaker, carries out 2.5D packaging for Nvidia’s most powerful chips. But it currently has no plans for such an advanced packaging facility in the US.

“Right now, even chips that are made in the US are still shipped in many cases to Taiwan to be packaged, including the chips used in defence systems,” said Raimondo.

With its new plans for Taylor, Samsung will be able to combine the latest graphics processing units and its own high-bandwidth memory chips in advanced AI products packaged at its US facility.

Last month, Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang wrote “JENSEN APPROVED” on a Samsung HBM3E chip on display at a developer conference in California, prompting speculation that Samsung was on course to secure the leading AI chip vendor as a customer.

“To meet the expected surge in demand from US customers for future products like AI chips, our [Taylor] fabs will be equipped for cutting-edge process technologies and help advance the security of the US semiconductor supply chain,” said Kye Hyun Kyung, president and chief executive of Samsung’s chip division, on Monday.

Lael Brainard, the White House economic adviser, said Samsung had also made a “series of commitments to enable it to manufacture chips directly for the Department of Defense”.

The senior US official also noted that Samsung’s R&D fab for developing future generations of chips would be only the fourth such facility in the world and the first built in the US by a non-US company.

Monday’s announcement was the sixth and final disbursement from the first round of Chips Act grants. US chipmaker Intel has received the largest sum, up to $8.5bn, while GlobalFoundries, Microchip Technology and BAE Systems have also received funding.

WSJ : Samsung Overtakes Apple as Smartphone Leader, IDC Says

Samsung Overtakes Apple as Smartphone Leader, IDC Says
The smartphone market’s recovery “is well underway,” the research firm says

Samsung 005930 -1.79%decrease; red down pointing triangle Electronics has overtaken Apple AAPL 0.86%increase; green up pointing triangle as the top smartphone provider in the first quarter, while Chinese companies took a bigger slice of the global market, according to preliminary data from research firm International Data Corporation.

Global shipments of Apple smartphones fell 9.6% on year to 50.1 million units in the quarter, IDC said late Sunday in its quarterly tracking of smartphone shipments. Samsung’s shipments fell 0.7% to 60.1 million units, making it the number one seller of smartphones worldwide.

Total smartphone shipments expanded for the third straight quarter, rising 7.8% on year to 289.4 million units, IDC said. Apple’s market share fell to 17.3% from 20.7% a year ago, while Samsung’s fell to 20.8% from 22.5% amid rising sales of Chinese companies Xiaomi and Transsion.

Xiaomi, the third largest smartphone shipper in the quarter, saw sales rise almost 34% on year to 40.8 million units, while Transsion shipments jumped 85% to 28.5 million. Oppo overtook Vivo to claim the fifth spot in the first quarter.

IDC said overall growth showed that the smartphone market’s recovery “is well underway” despite challenging macroeconomic conditions, and highlighted a trend of higher prices as consumers opt for more expensive smartphones knowing they will hold on to their devices longer.

Apple’s slip in rankings comes after it claimed the top spot in global shipments in the fourth quarter of 2023, when it was helped by the rising popularity of premium devices and the company’s aggressive trade-in offers and interest-free financing plans.

WSJ : How the U.S. Forged a Fragile Middle Eastern Alliance to Repel Iran’s Isra

How the U.S. Forged a Fragile Middle Eastern Alliance to Repel Iran’s Israel Attack
American-led effort was years in the making and hadn’t been battle-tested when Tehran launched missile and drone barrage against Israel

TEL AVIV—As hundreds of Iranian drones and missiles winged across the Middle East Saturday night, a defensive line of radars, jet fighters, warships and air-defense batteries from Israel, the U.S. and a half dozen other countries was already activated against the long-feared attack from Iran.

Almost nothing got through to Israel.

The formidable display of collective defense was the culmination of a decades-old but elusive U.S. goal to forge closer military ties between Israel and its longtime Arab adversaries in an effort to counter a growing common threat from Iran.

But the U.S.-led effort to protect Israel in the days and hours before the Iranian attack had to overcome numerous obstacles, including fears by Gulf countries at being seen as coming to Israel’s aid at a time when relations are badly strained by the war in Gaza.

Much of the cooperation Saturday night that led to the shooting down of the Iranian-directed barrage needed to be forged on the fly, and many details about the role played by Saudi Arabia and other key Arab governments are being closely held.

Israeli and the U.S. forces intercepted most of the Iranian drones and missiles. But they were able to do so in part because Arab countries quietly passed along intelligence about Tehran’s attack plans, opened their airspace to warplanes, shared radar tracking information or, in some cases, supplied their own forces to help, officials said.

The operation was the culmination of years of U.S. effort to break down political and technical barriers that thwarted military cooperation between Israel and the Sunni Arab governments, officials said. Instead of a Middle East version of the NATO alliance, the U.S. has focused on less formal regionwide air-defense cooperation to blunt Tehran’s growing arsenal of drones and missiles—the very weapons that threatened Israel Saturday.

Efforts to build an integrated air-defense system for the region date back decades. After years of false starts and minimal progress, the initiative gained momentum after the 2020 Abraham Accords brokered by the Trump administration, which established formal ties between Israel and the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain.

Two years later, the Pentagon shifted Israel from its European Command to Central Command, which includes the rest of the Middle East, a move that enabled greater military cooperation with Arab governments under U.S. auspices.

“Israel’s move into Centcom was a game changer,” making it easier to share intelligence and provide early warning across countries, said Dana Stroul, who until December was the most senior civilian official at the Pentagon with responsibility for the Middle East.

In March 2022, Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie, then the top U.S. commander in the region, convened a secret meeting of top military officials from Israel and Arab countries to explore how they could coordinate against Iran’s growing missile and drone capabilities. The talks, held at Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, marked the first time that such a range of ranking Israeli and Arab officers met under U.S. military auspices to discuss countering Iran.

“The Abraham Accords made the Middle East look different…because we could do things not just under the surface but above it,” a senior Israeli official said. Joining Central Command enabled even more technical cooperation with Arab governments. “That’s what created this alliance,” the official said.

Despite the progress made, the U.S. goal of having Israel and the Arab states seamlessly share tracking data on Iranian threats in real time has never been fully realized because of political concerns, officials said.

Bilal Saab, a former Pentagon official who worked on security cooperation in the Middle East, said it was premature to speak of security integration in the region. “It was always going to be gradual, and [Saturday] was an important real-world first step,” said Saab, now a fellow at the London-based Chatham House think tank.

But cooperation between Israel and Arab government on air defense with the U.S. as an intermediary has become common, even with Saudi Arabia, which still hasn’t established diplomatic relations with Israel, Israeli and U.S. officials say.

This nascent air-defense alliance had never been battle tested when on April 1, a missile strike in Damascus, Syria, killed several Iranian officers, including Gen. Mohammad Reza Zahedi, who according to Iranian state media and U.S. officials, managed Iranian paramilitary operations in Syria and Lebanon. Israel hasn’t claimed responsibility for the attack.

Tehran quickly vowed to respond, and senior U.S. officials began pressing Arab government to share intelligence about Iran’s plans to strike Israel and to assist with intercepting drones and missiles launched from Iran and other countries toward Israel, according to Saudi and Egyptian officials.

Israel’s multilayered aerial-defense system has shown itself capable of defending the country against individual or small volleys of incoming drones and missiles. But officials and analysts say it could potentially be overwhelmed by a sufficiently large swarm of drones or a massive missile barrage.

The initial response from several Arab governments was wary, fearing that assistance to Israel could involve them directly in the conflict and risk reprisals from Tehran. After further talks with the U.S., the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia agreed privately to share intelligence, while Jordan said it would allow use of its airspace by U.S. and other countries’ warplanes and use its own aircraft to assist in intercepting Iranian missiles and drones, the officials said.

Two days before the attack, Iranian officials briefed counterparts from Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries on the outlines and timing of their plan for the large-scale strikes on Israel so that those countries could safeguard airspace, the officials said. The information was passed along to the U.S., giving Washington and Israel crucial advance warning.

With an Iranian attack all but certain, the White House ordered the Pentagon to reposition aircraft and missile-defense resources to the region and took the lead in coordinating defensive measures between Israel and Arab governments, according to the senior Israeli official.

“The challenge was to bring all those countries around Israel” at a time when Israel is isolated in the region, the official said. “It was a diplomatic issue.”

Arab countries offered help in defending against the Iranian attacks because they saw the benefits of cooperating with the U.S. and Israel, as long as it remained low profile, said Yasmine Farouk, a nonresident fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a Washington-based think tank.

“Gulf countries know they still don’t have the same level of support that Israel gets from the United States and see what they did [Saturday] as a way of getting it in the future,” she said.

The Iranian missiles and drones were tracked from the moment they launched by early warning radars in Persian Gulf countries linked to the U.S. operations center in Qatar, which transmitted the information to fighters jets from several countries in the airspace over Jordan and other countries, as well as to warships at sea and missile-defense batteries in Israel, officials said.

When the slow-moving Iranian drones came within range, they were shot down, mostly by fighters from Israel and the U.S. and in smaller numbers by British, French and Jordanian warplanes, officials said.

At one point, more than 100 ballistic Iranian missiles were in the air at one time heading toward Israel. The overwhelming majority were shot down by Israeli air-defense systems in Israeli airspace and outside it, a U.S. official said.

U.S. aircraft shot down more than 70 drones, and two U.S. guided-missile destroyers in the eastern Mediterranean intercepted as many as six missiles. A U.S. Patriot air-defense system near Erbil, Iraq, shot down an Iranian ballistic missile on its way to Israel, the official said.

Of more than 300 drones and cruise and ballistic missiles fired by Iran toward Israel, only a small number of missiles landed in Israel, causing minor damage to a military base in the southern part of the country, Israel’s military said.

An Israeli official involved in regional security cooperation efforts said that while there had been frequent sharing of intelligence on air-defense threats in the past, Iran’s attack Saturday “was the first time that we saw the alliance work at full power.”

WSJ : CVC Confirms Amsterdam IPO Plan, to Raise EUR250 Mln in New Funds

CVC Confirms Amsterdam IPO Plan, to Raise EUR250 Mln in New Funds

CVC Holdings said it plans to float on Euronext Amsterdam, confirming a Wall Street Journal report on Sunday.

The global buyout firm said Monday that it plans to raise 250 million euros ($266 million) in new money as part of the initial public offering, which also includes the sale of shares by some existing shareholders, taking the offering to a minimum of EUR1.25 billion.

CVC will use the new money raised toward growth, including acquisitions, it said.

The IPO is expected to take place in the coming weeks, subject to market conditions and other relevant considerations, CVC said.

“We believe an IPO of CVC provides an enduring long-term institutional structure to support further growth; we remain completely focused on the continued success of CVC,” Chief Executive Rob Lucas said.

On Sunday, The Wall Street Journal reported that CVC, which is planning to change its name to CVC Capital Partners, was planning the Amsterdam share sale in the latest sign of a pickup in IPOs.

CVC manages about EUR186 billion in assets under management and had 1,154 employees as of Dec. 31.

The company generated revenue of EUR1.09 billion in 2023 and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization of EUR650 million.

It plans to pay EUR225 million in dividends this year. Dividends will be paid twice a year.

The firm pulled a previous IPO attempt in November, as the outbreak of war in the Middle East weighed on an already jittery market. Conditions have since improved, with rallying stock markets helping fuel a rebound in new listings in Europe and the U.S., from companies such as social-media firm Reddit and Swiss skin-care specialist Galderma.

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 15th of April 2024 V2(+)

>>> Up
* Adidas Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley; PT 235 euros
* BASF Raised to Buy at Kepler Cheuvreux (+)
* BRF ADRs Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan
* Eiffage Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 125 euros
* Elia Group Raised to Neutral at Oddo BHF; PT 103 euros
* ISS Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT 160 kroner
* Klepierre Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 28 euros
* Leonardo PT Raised to 28.60 euros from 16.80 euros at Citi
* SSP Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 265 pence
* XXL Raised to Hold at Pareto Securities; PT 0.80 kroner (+)

>>> Down
* Air Liquide Cut to Reduce at Kepler Cheuvreux (+)
* Bakkafrost Cut to Neutral at SpareBank; PT 680 kroner
* BASF Cut to Underperform at BNPP Exane; PT 44 euros
* Beijer REF Cut to Hold at ABG; PT 165 kronor
* Elior Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Ferrovial Cut to Hold at Stifel; PT 36.50 euros
* Ferrovial Cut to Underweight at JB Capital Markets
* Haypp Group Cut to Hold at Carnegie; PT 82 kronor (+)
* Hochtief Cut to Hold at Stifel; PT 107 eurosok
* Logitech Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley
* Merck KGaA Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Peab Cut to Sell at DNB Markets; PT 58 kronor (+)
* Solvay Cut to Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 31 euros (+)
* Troax Cut to Hold at Nordea
* Wulff-Group Cut to Reduce at Inderes; PT 2.80 euros

>>> Initiation
* Avanza Rated New Neutral at BNPP Exane; PT 240 kronor (+)
* Coty Rated New Buy at Canaccord; PT $14
* Hella Resumed Hold at Deutsche Bank (+)
* Hensoldt Resumed Hold at Deutsche Bank; PT 41 euros (+)
* Hilton Grand Vacations Rated New Overweight at JPMorgan; PT $59
* Las Vegas Sands Rated New Buy at Seaport Global Securities
* MGM Resorts Rated New Buy at Seaport Global Securities; PT $56
* Nordnet Rated New Underperform at BNPP Exane; PT 160 kronor (+)
* Reddit Rated New Buy at Roth MKM; PT $50
* Reddit Rated New Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; PT $45
* Saipem Rated New Outperform at RBC; PT 3 euros
* Stif Rated New Buy at Euroland Corporate; PT 14.90 euros (+)
* Unity Software Rated New Buy at SPDB Intl HK; PT $31
* Wynn Resorts Rated New Neutral at Seaport Global Securities

>>> Call
* Adidas Double-Upgraded at Morgan Stanley as Sentiment Improves
* JPMorgan Strategists Say 1Q Earnings Beats May Not Be Rewarded (+)
* Lilly, Novo Euphoria Risks Disappointing Investors, Goldman Says
* Leonardo PT Boosted to Street-High at Citi as Growth Accelerates (+)
* Logitech Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley on Slower Growth
* Saipem New Outperform at RBC on Support From Strong Backlog
* SocGen Reiterates Call to Long S&P 500 and Avoid Russell 2000

>>> Stoxx 600 Pre-Market Indications

  • BAE (BSP TH) +2.4%
    • Iran’s Attack on Israel Sparks Race to Avert a Full-Blown War (1)
  • Galp (GZ5 TH) +2.3%
    • Galp 1Q Refining Margin Beats Estimates
  • Saab (SDV TH) +2.2%
    • Iran’s Attack on Israel Sparks Race to Avert a Full-Blown War (1)
  • Anglo American (NGLB TH) +1.9%
    • Watch European Miners as Aluminum, Nickel and Iron Ore Rise
  • Dassault Aviation (DAU0 TH) +1.9%
    • Iran’s Attack on Israel Sparks Race to Avert a Full-Blown War (1)
  • Amadeus (AI3A TH) +1.6%
  • Adidas (ADS TH) +1.5%
    • Adidas Double-Upgraded at Morgan Stanley as Sentiment Improves
  • Neste (NEF TH) +1.4%
  • Rio Tinto (RIO1 TH) +1.3%
    • Watch European Miners as Aluminum, Nickel and Iron Ore Rise
  • Imperial Brands (ITB TH) +1.3%
  • Delivery Hero (DHER TH) -1.5%
  • CaixaBank (48CA TH) -1.5%
  • GSK (GS71 TH) -1.6%
  • Siemens Energy (ENR TH) -1.6%
  • Rolls-Royce (RRU TH) -1.7%
  • TUI (TUI1 TH) -2.1%
  • EasyJet (EJT1 TH) -2.3%
  • Prysmian (AEU TH) -2.7%
    • Prysmian Buys Encore Wire for €3.9 Billion to Boost US Presence
  • Hochtief (HOT TH) -3.2%
    • Hochtief Cut to Hold at Stifel; PT 107 euros
  • HelloFresh (HFG TH) -3.3%

>>> TradeGate Pre-Market Indications

DAX:
  • Adidas (ADS TH) +1.9%
    • Adidas Double-Upgraded at Morgan Stanley as Sentiment Improves
  • Rheinmetall (RHM TH) +1.3%
    • Iran’s Attack on Israel Sparks Race to Avert a Full-Blown War
    • Arming Ukraine Turns Soviet Tank Refitter Into a Billionaire
  • Siemens (SIE TH) +1.1%
  • Siemens Energy (ENR TH) -1%
  • Zalando (ZAL TH) -1.1%
    • ANALYSE-FLASH: JPMorgan leaves Zalando at ‘Neutral’ - Ziel 27 Euro= APA
MDAX:
  • Jenoptik (JEN TH) +1.2%
  • Aroundtown (AT1 TH) -1.5%
  • Jungheinrich (JUN3 TH) -1.5%
  • HelloFresh (HFG TH) -2.4%
SDAX:
  • Patrizia (PAT TH) +1.1%
  • Wacker Neuson (WAC TH) +1%
  • Mutares (MUX TH) +1%
  • Deutsche Wohnen (DWNI TH) -1.7%
  • Norma (NOEJ TH) -1.7%
  • SAF-Holland SE (SFQ TH) -2%
  • PVA TePla (TPE TH) -2.4%
  • Schott Pharma AG & Co KGaA (1SXP TH) -2.8%

>>> What to look at today - 15th of April 2024

Global markets showed signs of stability, as traders awaited further developments in the Middle East following Iran’s unprecedented attack on Israel over the weekend.  The dollar was little changed against its Group-of-10 peers, while Treasuries edged lower after yields slipped in the previous session. Oil prices eased on speculation that the conflict would remain contained after Iran said “the matter can be deemed concluded,” and President Joe Biden reportedly told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that the US won’t support an Israeli counterattack.  Shares in Asia slipped to a six-week low, tracking Friday’s drop in US stocks, on escalating geopolitical risks, disappointing bank earnings and the prospect of the Federal Reserve keeping interest rates higher for longer. Futures for US equities edged higher in Asia after the S&P 500 suffered its worst session since January on Friday amid a flight to safety.  Chinese stocks were an outlier, as renewed regulatory support from Beijing. The State Council on Friday pledged to tighten stock listing criteria, crack down on illegal share sales and strengthen the supervision of dividend payouts.  Elsewhere, developer China Vanke Co. said it’s making plans to resolve liquidity pressure and short-term operational difficulties as China’s top leaders have grown increasingly alarmed about the country’s protracted real estate crisis and its effect on the sluggish economy. In other currencies, Malaysia’s central bank reaffirmed it’s ready to support the ringgit, which is hovering close to the lowest level since 1998. Meantime, Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki said officials are watching the yen closely as it extended last week’s weakness against the dollar. Aluminum and nickel surged following new US and UK sanctions that banned deliveries of any Russian supplies after midnight on Friday. Gold aslo gained. With investors already rattled by sticky inflation and the prospect of higher-for-longer interest rates, the escalation of the Middle East crisis may inject fresh volatility into markets. As the conflict widens, many say oil could surpass $100 a barrel and expect a flight to Treasuries, gold and the dollar, along with further stock-market losses. Bitcoin rallied after it sank almost 9% in the wake of the attacks. Stock markets in Saudi Arabia and Qatar posted modest losses under thin trading volumes on Sunday. Israel’s equity benchmark fluctuated between gains and losses at least nine times before closing with a small gain. As Wall Street’s earnings season kicked off, big banks’ results offered the latest window into how the US economy is faring amid an interest-rate trajectory muddied by persistent inflation.  JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Wells Fargo & Co. both reported net interest income — the earnings they generate from lending — that missed estimates amid increasing funding costs. Citigroup Inc.’s profit topped analysts’ estimates as corporations tapped markets for financing and consumers leaned on credit cards — signs that a prolonged period of elevated interest rates will benefit big banks. Traders will soon shift to looming economic data as they refine bets on central bank easing cycles, as well as the International Monetary Fund and World Bank spring meetings in Washington. This week, Chinese growth data and Japan, Eurozone and UK inflation readings are due.

Nikkei -0.92% Hang Seng -0.60% CSI +2.13% Shanghai +1.31% Shenzen -0.09%

Eur$ 1.0653 CNH 7.2584 CNY 7.2386 JPY 153.78 GBP 1.2462 CHF 0.9142 RUB 93.3003 TRY 32.3579 WTI$ 85.37 -0.34% Gold 2,355 +0.49% BTC 65,050 +1.86% ETH 3,140 +1.88%

S&P +0.36% Nasdaq +0.37% EuroStoxx +0.35% FTSE -0.49% Dax +0.21% SMI +0.10%

Macro :
- Goldman Says Rally in Energy Stocks to Stall With Oil Below $100
- Scholz Heads to China on a Mission to Dial Down Trade Tensions

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- AAPL US : Tech Industry’s New AI Devices Aren’t iPhone Killers: Power On
- AAPL US : Apple’s iPhone Shipments Drop 10% as Android Rivals Rise
- BA US : Boeing on Longest Losing Streak Since 2018 as Crisis Rages
- BNP FP : BNP Paribas Agrees to Buy Fosun’s Stake in Belgian Insurer Ageas
- BN US : *BROOKFIELD READIES DIVESTMENT OF SPAIN'S LIVENSA: CINCO DIAS
- BYS SW : Bystronic 1Q Orders CHF159M Vs. CHF217.8M Y/y
- CATX US : Nuclear Medicine Is Pharma’s New Target in Cancer Race
- CVC IPO : Buyout Giant CVC Seeking More Than €1 Billion in Amsterdam IPO
- AM FP : Serbia to buy French fighter jets in pivot away from Russia
- INFA US : Salesforce in Talks to Buy Informatica, Wall Street Journal Says
- IPH FP : Innate Pharma Gets €4M Milestone as Sanofi Advances SAR443579
- BAER SW : Julius Baer Names Sim as Group Head Greater China in Singapore
- KESKOB FH : Kesko March Comparable Sales -11.8%
- MYTIL GA : Mytilineos Hires Banks to Explore Listing in London: Sky
- NTGY SM : *CRITERIA WORKS TO RESHAPE NATURGY'S SHAREHOLDING: LA VANGUARDIA
- NKE US : Nike Starts Speeding Out New Sneakers That Will Shape Its Future
- NOVOB DC : Lilly, Novo Euphoria Risks Disappointing Investors, Goldman Says
- PARA US : Mario Gabelli Says He’s Against Paramount, Skydance Merger: NYP
- PARA US : *PARAMOUNT ASKED BY BARINGTON CAPITAL TO ENGAGE APOLLO ON OFFER
- PSM GY : Berlusconi family group calls for European media consolidation amid ProSieben boardroom battle
- PRY IM : Prysmian to Buy Encore Wire for $290/Share in Cash (1)
- PUIG IPO : Spanish Beauty Group Puig Targets $15 Billion Valuation in IPO -- WSJ
- ROG SW : Adaptimmune Underperforms After Roche Ends Collaboration
- ROG SW : Roche’s Columvi Meets Primary Endpoint in STARGLO Phase 3 Trial
- Rubrik IPO : Rubrik Is Said to Be Seeking IPO of as Much as $713 Million
- SHEL LN : Shell Climate Appeal Sees Dutch Group Push for Tougher Rules
- SMDS LN : Elliott Increases DS Smith Position, Shorts in Possible Suitors
- LOCAL FP : Solocal Signs Restructuring Deal With Ycor, Creditors, Holders
- LOCAL FP : *SOLOCAL SHARES TO RESUME TRADING ON APRIL 15
- STVN US : Italy’s Frugal Pharma Billionaire Eyes Drug Injection Leadership
- SUN SW : Sulzer 1Q Orders CHF1.02B
- TIT IM : Telecom Italia and Trade Unions Ratify Agreement
- TIT IM : Telecom Italia May Launch €8.5B Bond Exchange Offer: Corriere
- TEL NO : Telenor CFO Tone Hegland Bachke to Leave Telecommunications Firm
- TEMN SW : Temenos Chairman ‘Hopeful’ Can Introduce New CEO at May 7 AGM
- TSLA US : Tesla Lowers Price of Basic FSD Subscription in US to $99/Month
- X US : US Steel Shareholders Approve Nippon Steel’s Takeover Offer
- ZTS US : Zoetis Slumps on Report on Drug Side Effects: Health Wrap

>>> Europe : Brokers Upgrades & Downgrades - 15th of April 2024

>>> Up
* Adidas Raised to Overweight at Morgan Stanley; PT 235 euros
* BRF ADRs Raised to Overweight at JPMorgan
* Eiffage Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 125 euros
* Elia Group Raised to Neutral at Oddo BHF; PT 103 euros
* ISS Raised to Buy at Goldman; PT 160 kroner
* Klepierre Raised to Buy at Jefferies; PT 28 euros
* Leonardo PT Raised to 28.60 euros from 16.80 euros at Citi
* SSP Raised to Buy at Stifel; PT 265 pence

>>> Down
* Bakkafrost Cut to Neutral at SpareBank; PT 680 kroner
* BASF Cut to Underperform at BNPP Exane; PT 44 euros
* Beijer REF Cut to Hold at ABG; PT 165 kronor
* Elior Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Ferrovial Cut to Hold at Stifel; PT 36.50 euros
* Ferrovial Cut to Underweight at JB Capital Markets
* Hochtief Cut to Hold at Stifel; PT 107 eurosok
* Logitech Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley
* Merck KGaA Cut to Add at AlphaValue/Baader
* Troax Cut to Hold at Nordea
* Wulff-Group Cut to Reduce at Inderes; PT 2.80 euros

>>> Initiation
* Coty Rated New Buy at Canaccord; PT $14
* Hilton Grand Vacations Rated New Overweight at JPMorgan; PT $59
* Las Vegas Sands Rated New Buy at Seaport Global Securities
* MGM Resorts Rated New Buy at Seaport Global Securities; PT $56
* Reddit Rated New Buy at Roth MKM; PT $50
* Reddit Rated New Equal-Weight at Morgan Stanley; PT $45
* Saipem Rated New Outperform at RBC; PT 3 euros
* Unity Software Rated New Buy at SPDB Intl HK; PT $31
* Wynn Resorts Rated New Neutral at Seaport Global Securities

>>> Call
* Adidas Double-Upgraded at Morgan Stanley as Sentiment Improves
* Lilly, Novo Euphoria Risks Disappointing Investors, Goldman Says
* Logitech Cut to Underweight at Morgan Stanley on Slower Growth
* Saipem New Outperform at RBC on Support From Strong Backlog
* SocGen Reiterates Call to Long S&P 500 and Avoid Russell 2000