Bloomberg Daybreak: Australia 04/23/2024

    Welcome to DAYBREAK Australia.
    I’m Paul Allen in Sydney.
    We’re counting down to Asia’s major
    market opens.
    And that of old rulers in Hong Kong.
    The top stories this hour.
    A stock rebound set to extend into Asia
    as investors hope strong earnings can
    quell worries over geopolitics and high
    interest rates.
    Treasuries waver ahead of a flurry of
    bond auctions
    by Time’s digging in for a legal battle
    over us moves to force a tick tock sale.
    The case shaping up as a test of resolve
    for officials in Washington and Beijing.
    Plus, how Tesla’s China price cuts could
    wipe out its entire operating profit in
    the world’s biggest EV market.
    All right.
    Right out of the gate.
    We’ve got some breaking news for you out
    of Australia.
    It is due to Bank PMIERS.
    That’s a partial reading for the month
    of April.
    We’re seeing a modest improvement here
    in the composite number of 53.6.
    That’s from the 53.3 that we had back in
    March.
    A reasonable rebound in manufacturing as
    well, 49.9 just a shade below that
    crucial 50 level.
    And the PMI services, the read that’s
    backing off of that, but still in
    positive territory, 54.2.
    We are, of course, counting down to the
    major data event of the week here in
    Australia.
    That’s going to be Wednesday’s first
    quarter CPI numbers that’s seen holding
    steady at 3.4, but some encouraging
    partial readings there from those due to
    bank PMI.
    As let’s take a look at how we’re
    shaping up in terms of trading for this
    Tuesday in the Asia Pacific.
    As you can see there, we’ve got futures
    pointing higher by about a quarter of 1%
    for Australia.
    And we did have a broad based rally on
    the ASX on Monday, up 1%, pretty much
    every sector apart from energy, was in
    positive territory and it was a similar
    story for the Nikkei and the cost be as
    well, the cost be its it was almost up
    by about one and a half per cent we
    might see a bit more of the same today.
    A Nikkei futures looking kind of flat at
    the moment.
    New Zealand showing a little bit of
    softness off by a quarter of 1%, but it
    was a pretty good day for equities in
    the US.
    We’ll get to that in a moment, but we’re
    going to have a bit of data out later as
    well.
    PMIs for Japan are watching out for
    those CPI, for Singapore for the month
    of March.
    That’s coming up too.
    And of course there’s going to be a
    flood of earnings out of the US and all.
    Yeah, that’s right.
    I mean, as you said, we did see us dogs
    turning a little bit higher overnight.
    But the sustainability of the rebound,
    that’s really the key question here.
    You’ve got U.S.
    futures is coming online this morning,
    fairly flat, in fact, a little movement
    across the screen overall, but it is
    that countdown to key numbers that are
    coming out.
    The Magnificent Seven very much in
    focus.
    We’ve got key numbers from that group of
    stocks and the expectations as well.
    Extremely high because at Bloomberg
    Intelligence team seeing around a 40%
    jump in earnings growth.
    So whether they can deliver on that,
    that’s really the key question.
    And strategists are very much split on
    the expectations for numbers.
    Bonds wise, we actually saw them falling
    oil as well, sort of slipping a little
    bit higher this morning, but slipping
    overnight.
    It does seem that the the geopolitical
    tensions, Middle Eastern risks, they do
    seem a little bit contained for now.
    And, Paul, that’s certainly playing into
    that dynamics that we’ve seen not just
    for crude, but also a gold in turn.
    In.
    Our next guest is cautious on both crude
    prices and gold as well.
    So let’s discuss this and more with
    Chris Wisdom, a head of research at
    Pepper Stone Group.
    Chris, I’m just wondering if your
    position on oil and gold is informed by
    that sort of easing of the geopolitical
    tension we’ve seen in the Middle East,
    or is it something else?
    Is it maybe a supply and demand dynamic
    that you’re looking at?
    Well, think in terms of the gold one.
    I mean, it’s obviously had a significant
    run, but 22% in recent months.
    And, you know, some of the optionality
    it got a little bit too stretched, which
    seen, you know, in very, very short
    dated calls.
    Well, one week Coles and gold trading
    about a three volt premium to puts put
    sort of traditionally been a level where
    sentiment got a little bit stretched a
    lot of this the correlation we’ve been
    seeing in gold had to do with what we’ve
    been seeing in crude and of course so
    people have been using this
    predominately as a portfolio hedge
    against geopolitical headlines.
    It does seem now that Israel is firmly
    focusing their attention on Hamas as
    opposed to sort of Iran and the broader
    region.
    So I think people are seeing a very high
    probability now that this is going to be
    contained and which is rolling off a few
    of those geopolitical hedges.
    I think there’s probably some further
    downside scope just from a positioning
    perspective to get down into, say, 20 to
    60, where I think you probably offer
    some a chance to flip the positions and
    look to go long.
    But yeah, it’s a very extended
    geopolitical hedge that’s coming through
    markets.
    We’ve seen them manage money
    optionality.
    As I say, I think there’s a little bit
    more downside there.
    Yeah, the crude price, if we if we look
    at that, I mean, we traded from 91 bucks
    down to 85, 70 or so just holding the 50
    day and Brent and yeah, if you look at
    two term premiums they’ve sort of moved
    in alignment and I just say there’s
    probably a little bit more downside
    there.
    But certainly gold, you know, would be
    looking for a better bid to come through
    back in sort of 20 to 60.
    Okay.
    So does this mean
    you’re looking at opportunities in
    equities?
    And I’m thinking, particularly as Bill
    was mentioning, we are counting down to
    some pretty big earnings in the US side,
    changing some of your positions ahead of
    that, especially in some of those big
    tech names.
    Not at the moment.
    I don’t think we’re out of the woods
    just yet.
    You know, if we have a look at the price
    action in S&P futures, for example, and
    NASDAQ futures, we were S&P futures
    trading down to the 50 day 100 day.
    Sorry, bounced off that, but we just
    couldn’t quite close above the Friday
    high.
    And that would have been a sort of a
    signal for me that we could see further
    positioning coming through.
    Obviously, Tesla is very much in the
    doghouse for seven days in a row.
    I felt people just going to be selling
    into any kind of strength there.
    Nvidia is trading a little bit better.
    Yeah, obviously Microsoft’s going to be
    a really important one later in the
    week, but I just think the price action
    at the moment is pretty unconvincing at
    this stage.
    Yeah, well, I think sentiment has got a
    little bit beaten out.
    We’ve been oversold, but I was hoping
    for a little bit more of a bounce from
    some of the risk assets to give me that
    sort of buy signal.
    It hasn’t happened.
    So yeah, just just to still a little bit
    cautious and I still feel people are
    probably going to sell into this rally
    in the short term.
    I really like that.
    That turn of phrase that heads are in
    the dog castle.
    That’s absolutely true when you look at
    the stock slide this year, but what will
    come out of the earnings call tend to
    make you turn a little bit more
    positive, do you think?
    Well, I’m going to be in.
    I’m going to be looked at.
    I’m going to be following the price
    action.
    If you if you start seeing some some
    volume coming back into the name, you
    know, then we can look at, you know,
    looking for a counter move and perhaps
    some of the shorts that have been coming
    in there can push this higher.
    And that’s what I’ll be looking at.
    And obviously, look, looking at the
    volume, I don’t think we’ve ever seen a
    situation where the stock’s down eight
    days in a row.
    Yeah.
    We’ve had for over occasions where it’s
    been down seven days in a row and each
    time it’s sat back.
    But obviously we haven’t had this prior
    to earnings.
    That’s the key point of differential and
    sentiment towards Tesla.
    And the whole EV space is is shot to
    pieces at the moment.
    So I think there’s there’s opportunities
    in heavy names, but probably not so much
    in Tesla at the moment.
    You know, people are looking at those
    deliveries.
    The reasons why some people bought into
    Elon Musk’s reasons recently.
    But I think when you when they cut 10%
    of their workforce, I think most people
    now realize that this is actually a
    demand story and not just a supply issue
    that’s coming through.
    And yeah, so I feel so there’s there’s a
    lot to play out in the stock and there’s
    still some downside in the in the price.
    I think any kind of short covering rally
    from this
    is an opportunity to to look to get
    shorts into this.
    I think there’s still a lot more
    negativity to play out on the stock.
    And Nvidia, as you mentioned, another
    key earnings.
    And really we’ve seen so much sort of a
    focus on that and and concentration risk
    perhaps in the market.
    But what price action are you also going
    to be monitoring there?
    Well, I think the problem is in the
    video, I mean, they don’t report until
    until May.
    But yeah, we need to get that back above
    800 bucks and then you start seeing the
    optionality coming through.
    You know, the short position, some
    dealers that they have to hedge when the
    price goes up and, you know, obviously
    that means buying the underlying, which
    is perpetuates the price.
    We haven’t seen that dynamic.
    And yeah, it’s just works really well as
    it’s just a pure momentum based and and
    then some as you know is a stall or two
    factor is is is underperforming at the
    moment people want quality you know
    defensive areas of the markets have been
    outperforming and I still feel like
    that’s a place that I think a lot of
    people are wanting to gravitate towards
    and know until we see momentum showing
    momentum, then then I think NVIDIA is
    that trading vehicle.
    It just needs some more buying to come
    through.
    It needs to sort of trend a little bit
    higher the rate of change to move
    higher.
    And then yeah, I think you can use it as
    a momentum vehicle similar to what you’d
    see in something like a Bitcoin for
    example.
    Everyone starts chasing it higher, but
    you know, an actual catalyst so far for
    NVIDIA from the earnings call isn’t
    going to come for a for some time.
    And so yeah, obviously watching the
    chips, watching the semi’s, they’ve been
    trading poorly but I think we need that
    momentum to come in then I think you can
    start chasing it again.
    You mentioned Bitcoin and we just had
    the halving, of course, taking place.
    It seems to have gone off without a
    hitch mostly, but post halving.
    It does seem like the token is lacking a
    big narrative perhaps.
    What are you watching with that
    cryptocurrency in particular?
    Well, she said, look, it’s a slow moving
    ship, obviously, and everyone’s done the
    numbers.
    And and we all know that, you know,
    Bitcoin’s price in the three prior
    halvings didn’t do a huge amount over
    the the month afterwards.
    Not a lot of supply does come out of the
    market.
    And we know that that’s the issue.
    But of course, we’ve got to focus on
    demand.
    I think in the short term, yeah, we will
    chase the price if it starts going
    higher.
    I think the a lot of FOMO capital comes
    in, but I think yeah, we watching these
    ETF flows really very, very, very
    sharply and there’s been a decent
    correlation between the performance of
    Bitcoin and you know the percentage of
    inflows that you’re seeing into the sort
    of ten ETF ETF flows, ex grayscale,
    which is obviously seen some big
    outflows.
    But
    I think on Friday we did see a little
    bit of buying a start coming back into
    the ETF.
    We’ll be watching that one very closely.
    If we do start seeing some flows coming
    through, then I think this idea of
    demand picking up again could be quite
    an interesting one.
    So yeah, well supply does come out of
    the bitcoin scene or the ecosystem,
    certainly from the miners.
    It’s the demand side of the equation,
    which I think really we’ve got to be
    focused on what’s going to be the big,
    big kicker from that.
    I think in the short term, you know,
    it’s going to be around the ETF flows
    that I think are driving that price
    action.
    But I’m encouraged by what I’ve seen in
    the last 48 hours, and I’ve also been
    quite encouraged by what I’ve seen from
    the Bitcoin miners who obviously are
    obviously a negative effect affected by
    the rewards that they’re going to get
    the Bitcoin subsidy.
    And if you have a look at the price
    action overnight, riot absolutely
    smashed it last night about 20%.
    Yeah, that the whole mining scene the
    listed miners had well over six to
    double digit percentage moves.
    So pretty encouraged by what I saw there
    as well.
    Yeah.
    That question of whether we’re going to
    see Bitcoin mining consolidation.
    But that was Chris Weston, head of
    research at Pappas Stone Group.
    Thanks very much for your time this
    morning.
    And as we’re discussing with Chris
    there, the big focus on Tesla numbers
    said to report first quarter earnings
    later Tuesday.
    Investors really watching margins
    guidance as well.
    J.
    L Warren Capital shares their outlook
    amid an EV price war later in the hour.
    But first, tick tock.
    Bracing for a court battle as US
    lawmakers move closer to a sale or ban
    order for the Chinese owned app.
    Details next.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Spring season is here.
    I think we’re all asking the same
    question just how much earnings growth
    you’re expecting.
    Bloomberg is first to break the numbers.
    EYLEA just coming out right now.
    We have take a numbers shares of
    Pinterest lucid group coming out with
    its earnings all eyes right now on
    nvidia.
    A lot still to come with the smartest
    insights.
    How much better could profit and revenue
    have been better than what the street
    was expecting saying in line with
    estimates.
    We will have full and instant analysis.
    Continuing coverage on Bloomberg Context
    changes everything.
    Tick tock.
    Chinese parent company Bytedance has
    made it clear it has no intention of
    selling the short video app that says
    the US Government moves ahead with its
    threat to shut down the platform if it’s
    not divested.
    For more, let’s bring in tech reporter
    Alex Brinker and Alex.
    Tik Tok has a lot of reasons to fight,
    but also it’s made it clear that it is
    not going to be backing down quietly.
    Absolutely.
    And this bill is looking like it’s
    inevitable that it becomes law.
    The Senate is meant to take up this bill
    as soon as tomorrow.
    But certainly this week, President Joe
    Biden said he would sign it into law as
    soon as it passes both chambers.
    So the fast track to reality is kicked
    off facing this divestiture ban
    legislation is here.
    Now, bytedance to talk to Chinese parent
    company, the company that the U.S.
    government has taken issue with has also
    expected that it’s going to fight this
    tooth and nail through the U.S.
    legal system.
    If this bill goes into law with the
    current language, Bytedance would have
    nine months with the potential three
    month extension to divest the app.
    But that seems to be an action that
    would be the case of last resort for
    Bytedance who does intend to draw this
    out and wage a legal battle that could
    last more than a year, according to
    people familiar with the matter.
    Alex, what’s the plan here?
    Is it to weather the storm and hope for
    a better administration somewhere down
    the track?
    And also, in terms of what’s worse.
    Is it a ban or is it divestment?
    Well, if you do the math here on that
    timeline that they would have let’s say
    it passes this week, then that would put
    us right around January, which is
    inauguration time here in the US as it
    is a presidential election year.
    So certainly we’ve seen tick tock in the
    past try to kind of lean into the idea
    of patience and looking for a more
    amenable administration.
    Donald Trump has changed his tune on
    Tick Tock, the man who was the first
    president to try to ban the app by
    executive order is now saying that it
    should, in fact, stay here in the U.S..
    So at the moment, if this bill does get
    signed into law, Bloomberg intelligence
    puts that a 90% chance of happening,
    then that might be their best recourse
    is wait for an administration if Donald
    Trump gets voted in, who is either going
    to drag out enforcement or might be a
    little bit more amenable while they do
    try to fight this on both First
    Amendment arguments and otherwise in the
    American judicial system?
    Ali says the risk of this has a domino
    effect as well.
    I mean, are there.
    Could the US also be looking to ban
    other Chinese tech platforms?
    I think a team move, for instance, sort
    of seen as an Amazon competitor that’s
    had a lot of success in the US comes to
    mind.
    Yeah, and any kind of connection to
    China has been one that has gotten
    intense scrutiny.
    The way this legislation is written is
    about about basically social media
    companies who are owned or majority
    owned by a foreign entity.
    So that scrutiny around that Chinese
    ownership has come into play because
    U.S.
    lawmakers are worried that because of
    the regulations in China and how they
    can request data from companies in that
    domicile, that there could be some kind
    of risk to Americans.
    So there are certainly a number of
    companies.
    T-Mo is a great one that comes to mind
    that might be concerned not only from
    what the precedent could be set from
    this current legislation, but also
    certainly how other countries might
    react.
    You have America, who is the home to the
    biggest social media companies that
    aren’t tech talk now be saying, Hey,
    look, this needs to be a company that’s
    not owned by one of our foreign
    adversaries and potentially a company
    that owned by instead American
    investors.
    Alex Batons also are fighting a battle
    on two fronts across the Atlantic.
    There’s trouble in the EU as well.
    What’s going on there?
    Staring down the barrel of a fine,
    right?
    They are.
    And it’s not the first time.
    This is actually the second kind of
    major moment.
    Tick Tock.
    Lt was an app that was launched in both
    France and Spain within the EU bloc.
    It rewards users.
    The report points system and the EU
    regulator opened a new probe on Monday
    into whether Bytedance violated its
    content law because they’re worried that
    this point system might have an
    addictive effect on users.
    They have 24 hours to deliver a risk
    assessment.
    So we should see potentially some news
    on this in the coming days, but it’s not
    the first time the EU has gotten
    involved.
    The EU has previously announced an
    investigation under the Digital Services
    Act around the app’s addictive design
    around screen time limits, privacy
    settings, age verification.
    So all that to say Tik Tok is waging
    battles not just on the American front,
    but certainly in other domiciles where
    there are either privacy legislation
    already in place or similar concerns
    about its ownership and its connection
    to the Chinese government.
    All right, Tech reporter Alex Brink of
    there on the difficulties currently
    being faced by Bytedance and Tik Tok.
    And on the topic of difficulties, we’ve
    been hearing plenty about them from
    Tesla.
    Let’s take a look at how Tesla closed in
    the US.
    Not another great day for that stock as
    we await what is expected to be a fairly
    brutal earnings report.
    We’ll get more on that in just a moment.
    But it’s an ebbing tide that sinks all
    boats in the space.
    We’ve got vinfast down by about three
    and a half percent as well.
    Worth noting, though, the performance of
    General Motors and Ford, the internal
    combustion engine, not quite ready to
    join the horse and the steam engine on
    history’s scrap heap still seems to be a
    place for conventional powered vehicles
    as well.
    Both those stocks, GM and Ford, also
    going to be reporting earnings this
    week, having a pretty good day.
    Ford up by more than 6%.
    Well, for more on the Tesla story, let’s
    bring in our global business editor,
    Peter Vercoe.
    And, Peter, we are eagerly counting down
    to this Tesla earnings report.
    It’s going to be a very, very
    interesting day.
    What are analysts looking for?
    Yeah, obviously there’s expectations
    that earnings are going to fall.
    We’ve already seen that big 8.5% drop in
    vehicle deliveries in the first quarter
    year on year.
    So the numbers aren’t expected to be
    good.
    But I think what investors and analysts
    are looking for is be on the numbers
    this time and they’re really looking for
    some coherent strategy from Tesla and
    whether Musk is going to take the
    concerns seriously.
    We’ve seen in these previous earnings
    calls it Musk can be kind of flippant or
    disinterested.
    He can sort of be dismissive of
    questions, sort of treat the whole thing
    as a chore.
    He’d rather be doing something else.
    And I think in previous times, investors
    have sort of excuse that a little bit
    when Tesla’s flying, you know, sales up
    50/% year on year, the stock surging to
    record highs, that sort of stuff.
    This time it’s a bit different.
    I think there’s going to be a real focus
    on on Tesla and on Musk in particular to
    outline that coherent strategy.
    As long time Tesla watcher Dan, I said
    who’s going to be the adult in the room
    this time?
    We saw that chaos continue on Monday in
    the US when Tesla dismissed its about 40
    employees in its marketing team that was
    only formed about a year ago.
    And then Musk this year work on X.
    He’s formerly Twitter saying the ads
    were too generic and they could have
    been any car.
    So we just seem to be getting like these
    shift in strategy made at the whims of
    Musk, who we know is a pretty mercurial
    character at best
    that he had seemed to now stake the the
    company’s growth outlook on a robotaxi
    that he says will be unveiled in August.
    So there really need to be clarity on
    that and whether that’s going to come at
    the expense of what was widely
    anticipated to be a more affordable mass
    market car around the $25,000 mark.
    And we know that Tesla hasn’t nailed
    full self-driving or autonomous driving
    yet.
    What it calls full self-driving still
    needs constant human supervision.
    Peter, we’ve seen Tesla resorting to
    sort of a familiar strategy, and that’s
    price cuts to try and boost sales.
    But how much further can it continue to
    do that?
    I mean, there’s some reporting out.
    For instance, Evercore ISI is saying
    that price cuts in China, for instance,
    could cost that the entirety of its
    operating profit there.
    Yeah, that was a really interesting
    report that came out yesterday after the
    we saw the latest round of price cuts on
    the weekend.
    And it does seem to have been Tesla’s
    strategy, you know, sales down, cut
    prices sales down, cut prices.
    But what’s really happening now, you
    know, particularly in China, it’s faced
    with this whole suite of new competitors
    from, you know, Bhiwadi to even Zhao
    Mei, which has unveiled its first EVA.
    And these are cars that Chinese
    consumers want.
    They’re across all price points.
    They’re really sort of tech heavy.
    And also the cool gadgets like, you
    know, convert into beds, they roll out
    kitchens and all this kind of stuff.
    And Tesla really does relies on its
    Model three and its model Y for the bulk
    of its sales, not just in China but
    globally.
    And without, say, that mass market
    so-called model two $25,000 car, how are
    they going to fill that growth hole?
    They can’t just keep cutting prices.
    That was our global business editor,
    Peter Vercoe.
    As we look ahead to those very crucial
    earnings, and I’ll actually have more
    analysis on them coming up this hour on
    the outlook for the firm in China in
    Focus with the CEO of JL Warren Capital.
    That’s just ahead.
    You’re watching DAYBREAK, Australia.
    Here’s the latest in geopolitics.
    The Israeli military intelligence chief
    has quit for failing to prevent the
    October seven invasion by Hamas.
    Aharon Halevy is the first senior
    Israeli official to step down over the
    assault that killed about 1200 people.
    He accepted blame shortly after the
    Hamas attacks, but stayed in his role as
    Israel launched its war in Gaza.
    The EU has agreed to impose new
    sanctions on Iran over its attack on
    Israel.
    The deal will further expand
    restrictions already imposed for
    supplying Russia with drones.
    The measures also target weapons
    transfers to Iranian proxies in the
    Middle East, including Hezbollah.
    Countries including Germany and Sweden.
    Pushing to add Iran’s Islamic
    Revolutionary Guard Corps to the EU’s
    terrorism list, President Biden has told
    his Ukrainian counterpart the US will
    move quickly to deliver weapons if the
    Senate votes this week to approve an aid
    package.
    In a phone call, Biden told Vladimir
    Zelensky the US aims to swiftly ship the
    battlefield and air defence equipment.
    Meanwhile, the UK is sending more
    missiles to Ukraine, including long
    range guided weapons and a package worth
    $620 million.
    All right.
    We have plenty more to come on DAYBREAK,
    Australia.
    Stay with us.
    This is Bloomberg.
    This is DAYBREAK.
    Asia just taking a quick check on what
    we’re seeing in the Boeing space this
    morning.
    A little bit of a retreat for yields and
    the antipodean so very much tracking
    what came through with treasuries
    overnight in the session.
    It is that changing expectation around
    tensions in the Middle East.
    They do appear contained for now.
    And also bond traders are looking ahead
    to a record auction for signals perhaps
    that 5% yield is the peak.
    But certainly that is going to be a
    really a key test and a very tricky,
    tricky week as well, because we’re
    looking at the market absorbing nearly
    eight, $185 billion a calendar of two,
    five and seven year note sales.
    So certainly selling could be tracking
    very closely here for.
    Well, let’s take a look at some of the
    morning calls ahead of the Asia trading
    day.
    BlackRock’s Rick Reid says bond
    investors are facing a painful run up in
    yields may soon find relief.
    The firm’s CIO of Global fixed income
    sees two rate cuts by the Fed this year.
    As inflation moderates in the months
    ahead.
    For now, he says, BlackRock has cut its
    own interest rate exposure, weighting
    investments more towards shorter
    maturities.
    I think the beauty of this for calling
    for an investor going into it is we’re
    trying to we’re you know, we’re trying
    to manage our interest rate exposure and
    in if if we think, you know, which I
    think will be the case this year, we’re
    going to get to a place where the data
    and we anticipate the data improving.
    And I do think over the next month or
    so, you’re going to get better inflation
    data.
    Meanwhile, JPMorgan’s Marco Colonna says
    the three week rout in US equities, it’s
    not done yet.
    The bank’s chief market strategist says
    rising bond yields, elevated oil prices
    and high stock market concentration are
    among a lengthy list of reasons.
    Which adds he’s concerned about
    complacency in equity valuations,
    inflation, a further repricing of right
    kind of expectations and overall rosy
    profit outlooks.
    And ahead of this week’s earnings, UBS
    Group’s Jonathan Golub is cutting their
    sector recommendation on the Big Six
    tech stocks from neutral to neutral from
    overweight.
    Golub says earnings momentum is turning
    negative after a surge in profit growth.
    UBS calculates that growth in earnings
    per share of the Big Six is expected to
    slow down to 42% in the first quarter,
    and that’s down from 68% growth in the
    previous period.
    Bell.
    Oh, Paul, of course, focus on earnings
    kicking off with Tesla and taking a look
    at this chart here.
    The slide that we’ve seen in Tesla stock
    over the past five sessions are down
    nearly 10%.
    But the losses this year, totaling more
    than 40% of a drop.
    The maker, of course, we know, is set to
    report its first quarter earnings and
    price cuts.
    Very much the focus as well, the
    ramifications of those.
    And we had more being announced over the
    weekend in countries including in China,
    where everybody is of course are also
    awaiting a stimulus program that could
    encourage or include incentives that aim
    to encourage businesses and households
    to adopt cleaner technologies.
    So let’s discuss more of this with Joan
    Huang Li.
    She’s founder and CEO at J.L.
    Warren Capital.
    And I’m interested for your views, John
    hang we can get to to Beijing’s sort of
    trading plan in just a moment.
    But these price cuts in China, are they
    going to be something that’s really
    substantial enough to try and boost
    demand there?
    In the case of Tesla, probably not,
    because I think the core issue was
    Tesla.
    Not selling well in China is its aging
    lock design.
    Tesla has not had a new product for the
    last three or four years.
    Model three came to the market in 2017,
    Model Y 2020.
    But meanwhile there’s many, many made in
    China home grown brands.
    Ladies, that has been show me and a
    while ago a few months ago while we car
    and before that BYOB a number of models
    and Z GV Z cars had a few successful
    models all targeting at a price range of
    at around a 250,000 renminbi.
    So this price range has become extremely
    competitive and the Tesla is not able to
    launch any new product in the last few
    years.
    Definitely slowed down its momentum in
    China.
    Yeah, I was actually in China, mainland
    China over the weekend and I was just
    astonished at the number of different EV
    makes over there on mainland China.
    But the price cuts there.
    Do you think Tesla is sort of shooting
    itself in the foot?
    Well, I mean, it doesn’t really have
    alternatives
    because everyone else is cutting price.
    And in fact, Tesla has been doing
    promotion consistently over the past six
    months, either through the insurance
    rebate or zero financing.
    And they actually raised their model Y
    price by a couple of thousand dollars, a
    couple of thousand renminbi, effectively
    on April 1st, but then only two weeks
    later it slashed price again.
    So, I mean, you see this as a general
    pattern, not just in China, but also in
    the US as well.
    Not only just hardware software as well.
    At best, the subscription was $199 a few
    weeks ago and adoption was poor, so they
    immediately cut the price by half.
    So I think this is going to be a really
    tough year for Tesla.
    I mean, I think the problem can be just
    the total addressable market isn’t as
    big as people had thought.
    It does really well in particular
    markets like California and like China,
    where there’s a lot of administrative
    incentives.
    But when that slows, where the
    competition catches up, the momentum
    just automatically very naturally comes
    from.
    John, hang on your analysis.
    You point to an oversupply of vehicles
    that are coming out of Tesla’s
    Gigafactory in Shanghai.
    Even with price cuts, is China’s market
    able to soak all that up or are there
    other markets in the region that might
    have to do that?
    I think when Elon Musk decided to build
    and expand GFC outside of Shanghai in
    2018, you had this in mind that that
    made in China.
    Cars can be exported to a certain
    markets, particularly in Europe.
    But over the past five years we see
    escalation in geopolitics, cancer.
    So and
    obviously U.S.
    the access to US market is is not
    possible and potentially in the future
    in the market is not quite possible.
    And then right now, Europe is the
    largest export destination for made in
    China cars, but that can change going
    forward.
    The with the tariffs or
    maybe some outright ban in the future if
    the geopolitics continue to escalate.
    So it is it’s possible that we see this
    oversupply is not at its worst.
    The it could go from bad to worse in the
    next couple of years.
    So right now, 50% of the cars made in
    China are for domestic deliveries and
    50% were exported away in 2023.
    But the European market is muted as
    well.
    So
    that’s why we see 25% year over year
    decline in the JF three production.
    And right now they are making about 2000
    cars a day versus its capacity at 3000
    cars a day.
    So it’s at about like a 65% utilization
    for capacity utilization.
    So that’s going to be it’s going to do
    some damage to its gross margin.
    Well, I’ve been hearing from Elon Musk
    over the past few days is increasingly
    going all in on full self-driving, on
    robo taxis as well.
    But in terms of China, what’s the
    consumer demand like for those sorts of
    products and what’s the regulatory
    environment like as well?
    I think ABC is primarily a U.S.
    story because that requires to access to
    a map data and map data in China.
    I mean, I believe they use a Baidu map,
    but they have access to Baidu map, but
    they don’t have access to it.
    But they left behind a map.
    So that’s a handicap to number one.
    Number two, all the data cannot leave.
    I’m sure data cannot leave China.
    So they have to process and trend that
    they are unsure.
    But obviously, you know, the and vedere
    GP hardware software are have just
    export ban leaving USA.
    So that’s a handicap handicap number
    two.
    So I think FSD is not a China centric
    story.
    I don’t think a consumer demand bad, not
    especially where you have to pay 8000
    U.S.
    dollars for that subscription.
    So and on the U.S.
    side that if you read the stories out
    there and there are lots of them and
    lots of those stories are detailing
    their journey on a Tesla drive using
    FSD are very accurate and very good, the
    both a positive and negative.
    So the picture is rather mixed.
    But I just think it’s too early to ask
    people to pay for a product that
    requires steel, requires, you know, a
    pretty frequent human intervention and
    still requires hands on the wheel.
    But most importantly, I don’t believe
    that there’s a demand for, you know,
    autonomous driving for a short commute
    of roughly an average of 20 minutes each
    way from home to work.
    I mean, I just don’t think the demand is
    there even in the U.S..
    And Jin Hong.
    I’m interested what you’re seeing more
    broadly in terms of luxury demand in
    China.
    We have seen sort of a pickup perhaps,
    but but spending levels do seem to be a
    little bit lower still.
    Yeah, consumption.
    Consumption dipped again after the
    Chinese New Year in the middle of
    February.
    We are pretty diligent with our store
    surveys and what we see is the first two
    months of the year,
    the consumption kind of came back a
    little bit, but then immediately after
    the Chinese New Year gift again, you
    know, obviously each brand has its own
    stories.
    They are tier one luxury brands such as
    and the Louis, the Paul and the Chanel.
    They can now up or down the supply to
    manipulate the demand.
    Then the the outcome, the financial
    outcome.
    But when it comes to sort of a secondary
    luxury brands such as Gucci, it’s a
    little bit tough because in the case of
    Gucci specifically, they have this like
    a change of designer and and the new
    designer is supposed to launch its debut
    that’s going to hit the stores globally
    in Q2 and Q3.
    But in a down market, when the economy
    is weak, what we see is the
    receptiveness and the you know, the
    reception of newness is rather muted.
    So in a tough economy, people embrace or
    clinked towards the old design, the logo
    and the leather fashion that preserves
    value as opposed to the fresh new
    design.
    So I think that’s the having the brand
    that needs to embrace in the next few
    quarters.
    All right.
    John Hinckley, founder and CEO of Jail
    Worm Capital.
    Thank you so much for joining us with
    your insights.
    Still to come, US climate adviser John
    Podesta weighs in on China’s
    overcapacity and green tech.
    A look at how trade tensions are playing
    into the energy transition up next.
    This is Bloomberg.
    The senior White House climate adviser
    says the US needs to ramp up the speed
    and scale of its shift away from fossil
    fuels.
    Speaking at the Bloomberg NRF summit,
    New York, John Podesta also joined the
    chorus of complaint coming from
    Washington about China’s overcapacity.
    Concerned about overcapacity in China,
    across the
    so-called green technologies, batteries,
    electric vehicles, the solar supply
    chain there, the
    particularly the shift of the economic
    focus of the of Beijing has been on
    trying to get out of the stagnation they
    were in by over and investing in
    capacity in some of these technologies.
    But that is not good for the United
    States.
    It’s not good for workers and it’s not
    good for the world because we need a
    level competitive playing field across
    the globe so that everybody has a fair
    chance to compete, build the products
    that are necessary.
    I think American auto companies and and
    auto workers can compete with anybody
    across the globe.
    So we’re going to do what we need to do
    to protect the investments we’re making
    as we’re decarbonizing.
    You know, the first goal we have is to
    cut our emissions in half by 2030.
    That’s what the IRA was all about.
    It was to invest in these new
    technologies to spur innovation.
    And we’re not going to let those be
    undercut by unfair trade practices.
    But do tariffs hurt climate change in
    the sense that you wake up every day and
    you think about decarbonizing?
    What we need to do is to have a system
    that’s and I think, by the way, I you
    know, I’m now traveling around the world
    and people
    were first critical of the IRA.
    And I think what’s happened,
    particularly with our with our partners
    and allies in Europe, in Japan, in Korea
    and in other places is they’ve responded
    by saying, you know, this investment led
    strategy is a smart strategy.
    It helps us spread the benefits of green
    energy across communities.
    You know, we’ve been very mindful of
    trying to ensure that every community,
    including traditional energy
    communities, feel the positive effects
    of the investments that we’re making.
    We’re seeing the emissions profile and
    emissions reductions happening, and we
    need to protect that overall effort and
    we’ll do what we need to do to do that.
    That was the White House senior climate
    adviser John Podesta with Bloomberg’s
    Annmarie Horden and staying on those
    efforts to reduce emissions.
    Bloomberg and its latest annual
    assessment shows that G20 countries have
    made limited progress on
    decarbonisation, improving their average
    score from last year by just one
    percentage point.
    That’s finding worries among consumers,
    industry and investors.
    Let’s bring in BNSF head of API
    research, Ali Zaidi for more.
    And Ali,
    why is it that the scores aren’t
    improving so much?
    So one of the main challenges is is
    policy uncertainty.
    Even the Inflation Reduction Act, which
    is now seen as a success.
    If you look at the process to getting
    that act passed, it created a lot of
    policy uncertainty throughout our
    process.
    So overall, over the last couple of
    years, we have seen our policies around
    decarbonization face a lot of
    uncertainties and in some cases we have
    seen actually G-20 members roll back
    initial measures that they have put in
    place in parallel.
    We have not seen G-20 members fulfill
    their commitments to reduce incentives
    for fossil fuels annually.
    G-20 members are still spend hundreds of
    billions of dollars subsidizing fossil
    fuels, which is, of course, not helping
    with emission reduction.
    Of the Asia-Pacific.
    Members of the G20 are largely clustered
    around the middle of this ranking.
    So what’s driving the scores for Japan,
    Korea, Australia, India and Indonesia as
    well?
    So indeed, as you pointed out, if you
    look at the APEX members of G20,
    compared to the European members, they
    do relatively worse.
    Part of this is a reflection that
    European members have had longer
    consistence measures towards
    decarbonisation, particularly when it
    comes to their power sectors.
    So on average they score better on that
    front.
    They also all have the European members
    have very stringent robust carbon
    pricing mechanism in place across Asia
    Pacific, while markets such as China and
    South Korea do have national emission
    trading schemes, still they have a lower
    level of carbon pricing in these
    countries is not enough to drive
    decarbonisation overall.
    Among the pack members, we see Japan and
    Korea do relatively better, partly
    because they have policies across all
    sectors.
    So not just for air power and road
    transport, but looking at areas such as
    industry as well as circular economy.
    But still, overall, when we compare them
    to European members, they’re lagging
    behind.
    And so how would a pack countries then
    lift their scores in turn?
    What are the best sort of policies to do
    that?
    So there are two fundamental areas.
    One, clean power is really important.
    And while you’ve seen improvements,
    particularly in markets such as China
    and India, still the power market design
    of a poor countries compared to European
    members is not in a way that provides
    incentives for acceleration of
    renewables deployment, where those
    market designs have improved, for
    example, China, India, as well as
    Australia.
    We have seen deployment accelerate.
    But if you look at, for example, Japan
    and Korea, if you’ve seen annual
    renewable deployment actually decelerate
    in recent years because of the lack of
    the right policy market design.
    The other area, as I mentioned earlier,
    is around carbon pricing.
    So when we look at the level of pricing
    of emissions today across the regions,
    the pricing levels are simply too low or
    actually non-existent without pricing
    the emissions.
    We will not see an accelerated trend
    towards decarbonisation, particularly in
    hard to abate sectors.
    All right.
    Bloomberg NF, head of APAC Research.
    He is not either.
    Still to come, fresh signs of stress
    emerging in Korea’s shadow banking
    sector.
    Why it’s being seen as a weak link in a
    $63 trillion chain.
    That story up next.
    This is bloomberg
    one.
    South Korea is emerging as a weak link
    in the world of shadow banking, with its
    real estate exposure quadrupling over
    the past decade to more than $670
    billion.
    For more, let’s bring in our Asia credit
    editor, Finbarr Flynn.
    And, Finbarr, this is something that
    certainly spooking a lot of global
    investors.
    But what’s the problem of the stress in
    Korea?
    Exactly.
    Good morning.
    Yes, indeed.
    And so the root problem goes back to
    that flush of cheap cash that was around
    the globe after the global financial
    crisis.
    So in in Korea, as in many other parts
    of the world.
    And low interest rates near zero or
    less.
    And that cash had to go somewhere.
    And it went in in Korea in many
    respects, in these more riskier projects
    in and outside of Seoul.
    And it’s come a little bit undone as
    rates in Korea, like much of the world,
    have gone up.
    So as serious are these issues and what
    are the market participants expecting
    here?
    So to date, the government has done a
    pretty good job of keeping stuff intact.
    And but the worry is that in the second
    half, now that elections are out of the
    way, that we’ll have to take a stricter
    sort of stance on all of these issues.
    So the baseline is that people are
    hoping expecting a soft landing, but the
    seriousness of the situation can’t be
    underestimated because this could force
    the Bank of Korea to cut its rates more
    than it would wish, and it could also
    impinge on growth in the second half.
    So we have to keep an eye out.
    We’ve seen policymakers managing to sort
    of stem the contagion risk so far.
    But would this be the case this time
    around?
    And if not, what are the sort of
    milestones to look out for in
    particular?
    So we have one coming up.
    Actually this month, a company called
    Taking a surprise Market at the end of
    last year when it said it had to
    restructure its debt.
    So there’s a vote at the end of this
    month for banks, including a KDB, a
    state lender, to sign off to actually
    give their approval to this
    restructuring.
    And our reporting has shown that 50% of
    the debt on iTunes books there may be
    converted into equity in a huge equity
    for debt swap,
    but we need to keep an eye on that
    because all to the plan, to be honest.
    All right, Finbarr, thanks for joining
    us.
    That’s Asia credit editor Finbarr Flynn
    there.
    Okay.
    Here are some of the stocks that we’re
    going to be watching when trade opens in
    Korea, Japan and Australia just a few
    minutes away now.
    And keep an eye on Asian Tesla supplies.
    Of course.
    The EV maker is set to report its first
    quarter results after cutting the price
    of its cars in key markets, including
    China.
    Woodside Energy’s going to be in focus
    as well and this is after one of
    Australia’s largest pension funds Aware
    super voted against its climate plan and
    re-election of chairman Richard Goyder.
    Aussie miners might move as well.
    Gold taking a tumble haven, demand
    easing along with easing tensions in the
    Middle East.
    Those market opens in Sydney, Seoul and
    Tokyo next.
    This is Bloomberg.

    Paul Allen in Sydney and Annabelle Droulers in Hong Kong drive to the Asia, Australia and New Zealand market opens while wrapping the biggest stories of the previous day on Wall Street.
    ——–
    More on Bloomberg Television and Markets

    Like this video? Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don’t miss any videos from Bloomberg Markets & Finance: https://tinyurl.com/ysu5b8a9
    Visit http://www.bloomberg.com for business news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more.

    Connect with Bloomberg Television on:
    X: https://twitter.com/BloombergTV
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BloombergTelevision
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergtv/

    Connect with Bloomberg Business on:
    X: https://twitter.com/business
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergbusiness/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bloombergbusiness?lang=en
    Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/bloomberg/
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/bloomberg-news/

    More from Bloomberg:
    Bloomberg Radio: https://twitter.com/BloombergRadio

    Bloomberg Surveillance: https://twitter.com/bsurveillance
    Bloomberg Politics: https://twitter.com/bpolitics
    Bloomberg Originals: https://twitter.com/bbgoriginals

    Watch more on YouTube:
    Bloomberg Technology: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergTechnology
    Bloomberg Originals: https://www.youtube.com/@business
    Bloomberg Quicktake: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergQuicktake
    Bloomberg Espanol: https://www.youtube.com/@bloomberg_espanol
    Bloomberg Podcasts: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergPodcasts
    ——–
    More on Bloomberg Television and Markets

    Like this video? Subscribe and turn on notifications so you don’t miss any videos from Bloomberg Markets & Finance: https://tinyurl.com/ysu5b8a9
    Visit http://www.bloomberg.com for business news & analysis, up-to-the-minute market data, features, profiles and more.

    Connect with Bloomberg Television on:
    X: https://twitter.com/BloombergTV
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BloombergTelevision
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergtv/

    Connect with Bloomberg Business on:
    X: https://twitter.com/business
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/bloombergbusiness
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bloombergbusiness/
    TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bloombergbusiness?lang=en
    Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/bloomberg/
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/bloomberg-news/

    More from Bloomberg:
    Bloomberg Radio: https://twitter.com/BloombergRadio

    Bloomberg Surveillance: https://twitter.com/bsurveillance
    Bloomberg Politics: https://twitter.com/bpolitics
    Bloomberg Originals: https://twitter.com/bbgoriginals

    Watch more on YouTube:
    Bloomberg Technology: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergTechnology
    Bloomberg Originals: https://www.youtube.com/@business
    Bloomberg Quicktake: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergQuicktake
    Bloomberg Espanol: https://www.youtube.com/@bloomberg_espanol
    Bloomberg Podcasts: https://www.youtube.com/@BloombergPodcasts

    2 Comments

    Leave A Reply
    Share via