Tech Stocks, Zuckerberg’s Meta AI Push | Daybreak: Europe 04/25/2024

    Good morning.
    This is Bloomberg Daybreak Europe.
    I’m Tom Mackenzie in London and these
    are the stories that set your agenda.
    Stocks in asia follow Wall street along
    with big tech making and taking a big
    hit as matters earnings report spooks
    investors.
    The yen extends declines beyond 155 per
    dollar as the DOJ meets.
    Mining giant BHP approaches rival Anglo
    American with a takeover offer in a move
    that could spark the biggest shake up in
    the industry in a decade.
    Plus.
    The avalanche of earnings begins in
    Europe, with much of the focus on this
    morning’s data around the banks,
    starting with Deutsche Bank.
    And it is a redhead crossing the screen
    on that lender, Germany’s largest
    lender, coming in with a beat for its
    fixed income trading team.
    There had been an expectation they would
    do well and they have outstripped that
    US peers with the fixed income trading
    sales and trading revenue coming in
    above the estimates, €2.52 billion above
    the estimates of 2.41 billion in terms
    of revenue.
    The bank saying 2024 revenue slightly
    higher year on year.
    So it’s a beat on the revenue front and
    importantly, it’s the fixed income
    trading team at Deutsche Bank that’s
    doing the heavy lifting in the latest
    quarter with that beat in terms of sales
    and trading revenue, in terms of the
    fourth in terms of 2024, the private
    bank revenue is essentially flat year on
    year.
    And in terms of their expectations, 2024
    around FICA.
    So fixed income and currency trading
    revenue slightly higher year on year is
    the expectation.
    The bank sees the full year CET1 ratio
    to remain essentially flat as well year
    on year.
    Again, in terms of the net revenue,
    €7.78 billion net revenue in the first
    quarter for Deutsche Bank, the estimates
    had been for 7.73 billion.
    So it’s a small beat in terms of revenue
    as well.
    But again, the importance of the focused
    on the fixed income trading part of the
    business adjusted costs as well.
    We know that was in focus around this €5
    billion in the first quarter.
    Later this hour, we are going to be
    hearing from James from Deutsche Bank’s
    CFO that conversation at 6:30 a.m.
    staying on the banking space, but
    switching to the French bank BNP
    Paribas, the redhead on this one.
    And it’s a different story for BNP
    Paribas versus that counterpart at
    Deutsche Bank, because the first quarter
    at fixed income currencies and commodity
    sales and trading revenue coming in
    below the estimates is a mess for BNP
    Paribas on that front, revenue coming in
    at €1.6 billion.
    In terms of ICC sales and trading, the
    estimates have been for 1.74 billion.
    So a miss on that front.
    In terms of the revenue for BNP in the
    first quarter coming in at 12.4, 8
    billion slightly above the estimates.
    So on the revenue front, in the first
    quarter, it was a beat for BNP Paribas.
    But again, there will be some concern
    around the softness in the fixed income
    trading part of that business.
    Not a huge surprise.
    It had been a concern for him, this
    leading up to this earnings drop.
    But we’re going to get more detail again
    with the CFO of that French lender on
    the markets today.
    Show that interview.
    7:15 a.m.
    UK time.
    We’re also going to bring you the
    earnings coming through from Nestlé as
    well, a focus on volumes, a focus on
    prices for this business.
    The stock has been struggling and the
    details as well coming through from
    this, of course, provider globally, of
    course, of all things from nutrition
    ingredients to food sources as well.
    Those results are coming through.
    We’re expecting, in fact, Nestlé first
    quarter organic revenue, the numbers
    coming in up 1.4%.
    The estimates had been for an increase
    of just shy of 3%.
    So it’s a big miss in terms of first
    quarter organic revenue for Nestlé, in
    terms of the full year organic revenue
    forecast for the full year, they still
    see an increase of about 4%.
    The estimates have been for 4.1%.
    So a modest, modest miss in terms of the
    organic revenue outlook there for
    Nestlé, they still say a strong rebound
    in terms of the second quarter,
    potentially first quarter sales coming
    in just below the estimates as well for
    Nestlé.
    Meanwhile, it comes to semiconductors as
    the micro.
    We know there’s been focus on the
    inventories around some of the chips in
    the industrial space and autos as well.
    They see full year net revenue of 14 to
    $15 billion below the estimates of 16.2
    billion.
    So there’ll be some disappointment that
    you would expect from some investors in
    terms of the expectations around full
    year net revenue coming from SD, micro
    gross margins coming in below the
    estimates as well, 40% versus 42.4% was
    the estimates.
    Second quarter net revenue coming in at
    3.2 billion.
    Also a mess versus the estimates.
    So that concern continues around the
    inventory build up around some of these
    industrial and auto chips, it seems.
    SD Micro Now let’s check in on these
    markets briefly.
    There’s a focus in the currency space on
    the yen.
    We’ll get the details on that shortly.
    But of course, there was disappointment
    around the metal results.
    The.
    Quarterly earnings actually pretty
    decent, but it was the outlook coming
    through from Mark Zuckerberg and the
    uptick in spend, particularly around AI
    that caused that after our slump in the
    stock.
    We continue to unpack that story for
    you.
    So the ripple across across the tech
    space and you’re feeling that in Europe
    as well.
    European futures pointing lower by just
    shy of 2/10 of footsie, 100 futures
    currently flat.
    S&P futures pointing lower by 7/10 of a
    percent.
    NASDAQ futures looking at a drop.
    A look at that, a 1.2%.
    Let’s split the board across that set.
    Then we had another treasury auction
    yesterday, relatively well absorbed, not
    as well as the two you earlier on in the
    week, the US ten year currently at 464
    the Japanese yen crossing below that 155
    level, the biggest drop you’ve seen in
    three decades against most of the other
    major G7 currencies, $88 a barrel on
    Brent, up 2/10 of a percent.
    Let’s get the detail on the yen story
    then and intervention.
    Watch with April Hong standing by in
    Singapore.
    April
    Yeah, the way that US yields moves
    overnight little wonder why we saw the
    dollar yen at those levels we haven’t
    seen since June 1990.
    And back then when it bridged 155 it was
    a matter of a couple of days before then
    breach 160.
    Now we’re seeing a seemingly that pace
    of depreciation of the Japanese currency
    picking up as to whether it meets the
    Finance Ministry’s criteria for
    intervention of rapid moves, that’s
    another question.
    The finance minister, for his part,
    speaking in Parliament today saying he
    cannot comment on the Forex moves,
    although they are watching it very
    closely and why he can’t say much.
    Well, it’s got to do with the BOJ, that
    meeting under way of the board.
    Let’s take a look at what we’re seeing
    on the yen, not just against the
    greenback but also against the Aussie
    and the euro.
    That weakness coming through there.
    So some actually see this as yet another
    reason why the finance ministry might
    have to step in.
    Indeed, they see this coming in post
    bulge where the central banks not
    expected to move on rates, but could
    send more hawkish signals just because
    of the yen depreciation and the timing
    of it all as well.
    Because don’t forget, we have the US PC
    numbers coming in late Friday night Asia
    time and then on Monday, a holiday in
    Japan.
    So it would be, as some analysts say,
    perilous for the finance ministry not to
    move us on the board.
    I want to take you to what we’re seeing
    in Asia.
    Stocks.
    There is a divergence, but what stands
    out is how quickly sentiment can turn
    today.
    The losses on the Nikkei on the Cosby
    Hour, no thanks to what we heard from
    Mehta, but we’re seeing Chinese stocks
    pull ahead, Tom.
    April Hong in Singapore, thank you very
    much indeed.
    With the Asian market check and the
    focus, of course, on the intervention.
    Meanwhile, a big day in terms of
    dealmaking, potential dealmaking.
    BHP then making an unsolicited takeover
    bid for Anglo American in what could be
    the biggest shake up of the global
    mining industry in over a decade.
    For more on this Bloomberg scoop, let’s
    bring in commodities reporter Martin
    Ritchie.
    Martin, how potentially significant
    would this tie up be?
    Yes, it is a very big deal for the
    mining industry and it could be one of
    the biggest many deals transactions this
    year, as you said, Tom.
    And look, this deal, I would say the top
    line is it’s all about copper.
    The company BHP that is bidding for
    Anglo is one of the world’s biggest
    copper producers.
    And in fact, if this deal goes ahead, it
    will become the world’s biggest by a
    clear margin.
    I think so
    If you’ve been following the commodities
    space, you find a lot of miners trying
    to muscle in on copper because they see
    this decade of demand booming ahead of
    us.
    You’ve seen Rio Tinto try and build its
    copper assets.
    You’ve seen Glencore, the big
    international trader and miner, try to
    take over Teck resources trying to get
    copper.
    And now this is set to be one of the
    biggest transactions in the mining space
    in many years.
    Okay.
    Bloomberg’s Martin Ritchie with some of
    the detail around that potential tie up
    between BHP making that bid for Anglo
    American.
    We continue to watch that story, of
    course, at IS as it evolves.
    Thank you, Martin.
    Now, disappointing earnings from matter
    have investors on edge ahead of results,
    of course, from Alphabet and Microsoft
    later today matter plunging 15%,
    post-market after its second quarter.
    Sales forecasts missed estimates and it
    announced plans to spend billions more
    than expected on a developing that’s
    bringing markets today.
    Anchor Kristie Gupta for the details.
    Pretty what stood out to you, the
    disappointment around the spending
    plans?
    I’m having deja vu when it comes to
    media platforms because this is
    something that they talk about over and
    over again.
    These big projects that media platforms
    chooses to take on.
    They put all this money behind it with a
    time horizon that becomes very hazy.
    And that’s where you’re starting to see
    investors very shaky because they’ve
    seen this movie before.
    They saw it with the metaverse.
    They saw it as well.
    When it comes to kind of virtual reality
    for for media as well, not to mention
    simply the rebranding and trying to
    tackle on a a more youthful demographic.
    Apparently, no one uses Facebook
    anymore, someone tell me.
    But I think what’s important about this
    as well is that they’re doing that yet
    again when it comes to the air space.
    And that’s really where you’re seeing a
    lot of this.
    What’s interesting, though, it’s coming
    amid a background where a lot of these
    big tech names are rallying on that air
    phrase matter, not getting in on that.
    And I think it’s that’s a really
    interesting precedent for some of the
    other big tech names as well that have
    very different businesses that are
    perhaps more adjusted and more kind of
    vulnerable to the air space, which
    brings to the forefront the Microsoft
    and Alphabet story.
    They’re reporting after the bell today.
    Microsoft specifically when it comes to
    that cloud revenue growth, remember that
    Azure business is significant, not to
    mention their 49% stake in open air as
    well.
    So it’s really about the growth there
    for Alphabet.
    It’s a little bit of a different story
    in that they need to reclaim that market
    share.
    Microsoft was they are the major
    players.
    They’re the dominant players in the
    cloud space, only getting bigger by
    that.
    I spent in a way and able to capitalize
    on it in a way that media has not.
    Now Alphabet has to kind of prove its
    own worth and say it can do the same.
    And that’s why that cloud market share
    is so important.
    Can Alphabet then compete with the big
    boys, quote unquote, with Microsoft and
    us?
    Okay.
    Kristie Gupta, anchor.
    Of course, the market is breaking down
    the details around the matter story and
    of course, the investor disappointment
    around their spending plans and setting
    us up as well for another big day of
    tech earnings Kristie.
    Thank you.
    Talking of tech coming up, unicorns and
    things, it unveils its new generation of
    a AI avatars.
    The company’s CEO joining me next for an
    exclusive conversation.
    Stay with us later as well.
    And as opt out, the Aquanaut CEO joins
    me as the energy giant reports a
    revenue.
    Be that interview at 6:40 a.m.
    we’ll get his views, of course, on gas
    and oil prices as well.
    Stay with us.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Welcome back to Bloomberg Daybreak.
    Europe Now unicorns and thieves here is
    unveiling its new generation of alien
    avatars.
    Today, the UK based company says
    so-called expressive avatars and you can
    see them on the screen now can react
    emotionally to whatever they are
    required to say, resulting in ever more
    human like.
    Digital twin so-called digital twins.
    The video back company saw its valuation
    hit $1 billion last year when it raised
    $90 million in its latest funding round.
    Joining me now, I’m very pleased to say,
    is CEO and founder of Synthesis, Victor
    Reppert.
    Barely.
    Victor, good morning.
    Thanks for joining us on set.
    Really appreciate it.
    Bright and early.
    Another update.
    It’s a major upgrade for you and for the
    business.
    What are the what are the applications?
    What are the use cases for this and what
    have your customers clients been saying
    so far?
    It’s early days, I know, but what do you
    expect the response?
    And what does it tell us about the
    ambitions of synthesis?
    So.
    Well, so what we’re seeing so far and we
    have seen for the last four years after
    we released the first version of these
    Avatar technologies that found an
    initial great use case for them.
    I think most people that saw those
    videos, I think we’ve had an amazing
    avatar for you as well and say that
    they’re great, but they’re not.
    It’s not 1 to 1 with a real video yet.
    Right.
    But as we approach that, we unlock more
    and more use cases through the beta
    testing we’ve done so far with these
    avatars that can show emotion.
    They can support empathetic, they can be
    friendly, they can be upbeat.
    We are not a lot of new use cases.
    Health care is a huge one.
    It’s a lot of interest in companies
    wanting to build more personalized
    patient messaging, for example.
    But this type of technology is really,
    really useful.
    We’re seeing sales and marketing really
    begin to open up as these avatars are
    able to be a bit more excited and have a
    bit more energy than what they have had
    before.
    So it’s a big step for us.
    It’s the first version of this.
    Technology is based on our Express one
    model, which is such as a model that
    have sort of decoded the relationship
    between what we say and how we say it
    about tone of voice, facial expressions,
    so on and so forth.
    And I think by the end of this year,
    we’ll be much, much closer to being able
    to generate more advanced types of
    videos that have someone just talking at
    the screen, actors walking around room
    sort of conversations.
    And the more we go down that path, the
    more use cases ultimately will unlock
    with with a video.
    And that can happen as soon as this, as
    soon as the end of this year.
    So we’re going to listen in now, take a
    little bit of a sound bite for what some
    of your video, at least some of these
    avatars can do just to give the the view
    as an example.
    So let’s take a listen then I’ll follow
    up with the question.
    I am very happy.
    I am so upset.
    I am frustrated.
    Okay.
    So you can see you can see the emotion
    going through.
    So you see these avatars text and they
    react emotionally to that.
    This is something we’ve talked about
    before.
    I know this is a question you get all
    the time, but we get this we get this
    wow factor when we see this that we saw
    that in the newsroom and we revealed
    these yesterday.
    So some of the producers, the wow factor
    and then it’s followed by the fear
    factor.
    Is society ready for this kind of
    technology, do you think, Victor?
    I think it is.
    But I think, you know, roll this out in
    a responsible manner is incredibly
    important.
    And for us, it’s really important to
    actually be the leading company in terms
    of responsible AI around video, which is
    what’s come out set.
    All right.
    So we treat safety as a product inside
    us enthusiasts around 10% of the head
    count that works just on this.
    It is automatic systems and algorithms,
    but it’s also humans who essentially
    make sure that our systems are not
    misused.
    So I think, as we’ve talked about
    before, right, these technologies will
    be used by bad people and they will do
    bad things with them.
    And we need to do what we can to make
    sure that that they don’t.
    And for us, it’s important to take
    leadership in this.
    I think if you look at the general
    industry, there are some players who
    take this very seriously.
    There are other players to take it
    seriously.
    I hope we can set a great example so
    that everyone who’s commercially
    developing these technologies and have
    the state of the art of these
    technologies truly care about making
    sure that.
    Okay, so 10% of the workforce focused on
    some of these risk issues and these
    safety issues.
    It’s a it’s a big year, of course, for
    elections here in the UK, in the US and
    also India as well, presumably.
    Is there anything you’re doing
    specifically around around potential
    misuse in this big election year?
    So, I mean, custom operation is a
    continuous evolving product for us,
    right?
    One of things we’ve done in the last 6
    to 9 months is take a restrictive
    approach to news like content, which
    means that if you’re creating current
    events or news like content, you need to
    be an enterprise customer, which means
    that we know who you are.
    We know you are a reputable company and
    that is to some extent, you know, trade
    off that, that also have negative
    impacts.
    There’s lots of like a great people who
    do journalism where it doesn’t sell work
    at a big company, but we think it’s the
    right thing to do to be a bit
    restrictive on these technologies until
    society is kind of adapted to it
    properly.
    Right.
    And I think that that is happening
    rapidly, but we believe that’s still the
    right thing.
    And you touched on some of your
    competitors.
    Who do you see as your main competitors
    right now?
    I think there’s a bunch of companies.
    There are some startups, there are some.
    The bigger companies like this is
    clearly I think everyone understands now
    that this technology is very valuable.
    It’s going to be a huge market built
    around that and people are approaching
    it from different sides.
    There are some some companies going more
    for like the bottom end of the market,
    which generally means more focus on
    social media content.
    They have a lot less safeguards and
    we’re more focused on the enterprise
    market.
    But we’re also beginning to see big tech
    companies beginning to begin to showcase
    early iteration of this tech, right.
    So yeah, I think that’s great.
    What advantages do you see that some
    things you has versus for example, open.
    Saw, which is a text or video product
    that they have.
    So in general, we don’t see ourselves as
    a research company building foundational
    models.
    Opening, I think, wants to be the
    company that provides the infrastructure
    for other companies to build on top of.
    We said it applied layer.
    We’re very focused on a very specific
    use case which is talking Head Start
    content for enterprise use cases.
    So, you know, something like a star is
    like, give me a video of a dog running
    on the beach, the paraglider in the
    background.
    That’s not really what we operate in.
    We operate much more in building a
    product for the enterprise.
    We can create fantastic videos for
    patient communications or training or
    sales and so on.
    So I think as long as we focus on our
    kind of sliver of the world, we can be
    the best at that.
    And that is goes much further just off
    the air models.
    Ultimately, people buy products, not
    just access to air models.
    And that’s where we play, right?
    Like that.
    The models are a big component of the
    product.
    But I think what we’ll see this year is
    that the companies that win out are the
    companies that build real products, that
    solve real problems.
    And I think we’ll move away from this
    very model centric view of the world,
    which the last 12 months have been this
    model, that model, this model.
    Yeah, I think I think ultimately, you
    know, when the dust settles, people buy
    products.
    People want to solve problems in the
    business.
    They don’t just want to buy technology
    for the sake of technology.
    Well, and look, you allude to this you
    guys set up in 2017.
    You’ve been around doing this for a long
    time.
    But before all this froth arguably kind
    of came to the fore, the sugar rush, the
    funding into A.I..
    You look at companies like Mistral over
    in France, they’re at a $5 billion
    valuation now off to like, what, 12
    months or something?
    Is this are we are we in a way, in a
    bubble at this point?
    I think you could say they’re bubble
    tendencies.
    I think, you know, what what we’re
    seeing right now is that traditional
    SaaS has become for investors very
    boring, not very attractive multiples.
    It’s like basically any other business,
    right?
    AM focuses down I, I think to some
    extent, you know investors have found as
    a part of kind of redoing some of the
    things that led to what happened in
    2021.
    But the bubble kind of burst, I think is
    a very real shift in technology.
    I’ll give you one example of this.
    Last year, I think was a year of
    experimentation.
    Lots of companies, everybody was piling
    in to try out these things.
    Right.
    Which they also did with, you know, VR
    and all the kind of previous crypto and
    other kind of bubbles we’ve been
    through.
    And this is going to be the year of
    letdowns.
    But I’m seeing the enterprises that even
    though people have done pilot.
    A lot of them have not lived up to the
    expectations.
    People are running more pilot projects.
    That was not the case with VR and
    crypto, where people sort of let it
    down.
    So I think the value is definitely
    there.
    Valuations maybe a little bit out of
    whack, but I think over the long term
    it’s going to be truly, really, really
    interesting.
    Victor Republica Synthese, thank you
    very much indeed.
    The last time I spoke to you said I had
    about a two year timeline before I was
    replaced by one of your avatars.
    It sounds like that time frame is short.
    And Victor, thank you very much indeed.
    With the latest generation of their AI
    avatars, plenty more coming up.
    We continue to keep across all these
    earnings for you.
    This is Grim Bay.
    Welcome back.
    Happy Thursday.
    Welcome back to Bloomberg Daybreak.
    We have a big day, of course, on the
    earnings front.
    We’re going to get the latest lines for
    you crossed in the last couple of
    minutes from Puerto Rico.
    Of course, the company behind the likes
    of Absolut Beefeater and Malibu, the
    drinks and liquor maker.
    And it’s a sizeable mess in terms of
    third quarter organic sales from this
    company coming in flat 0% in terms of
    third quarter organic sales, the
    estimates had been that they’d see a
    pickup, an increase of 2.8%.
    That did not happen.
    In terms of what’s happening regionally,
    we know there’s a focus on the Americas.
    LatAm, of course, within that mix, third
    quarter Americas organic sales
    contracting by 7%.
    The estimates had been that it would
    contract by just shy of 4%.
    Third quarter sales overall for Puerto
    Rico coming in at €2.35 billion below
    the estimates of 2.48.
    We know there’s a challenge as well in
    terms of the draw down from some of that
    customers.
    The build of inventories, particularly
    in the US and the Chinese market, have
    been in focus as well.
    The interim dividend per share at €2.35.
    Coming up, Deutsche Bank’s first quarter
    FDC sales and trading revenue beating
    estimates.
    Our interview with James von Malka
    Deutsche Bank CFO, is next.
    Do not miss that.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Good morning.
    This is Bloomberg Daybreak Europe on Tom
    Mackenzie in London.
    These are the stories that set your
    agenda.
    Stocks in Asia follow Wall Street lower
    with big tech taking a big hit as
    matters earnings report spooks
    investors.
    The yen, meanwhile, extends declines
    beyond 155 per dollar as the DOJ meets.
    Mining giant BHP approaches rival Anglo
    American with a takeover offer in a move
    that could spark the biggest shake up in
    the industry in a decade.
    Plus.
    The avalanche of earnings begins in
    Europe with a tale of two lenders
    Deutsche Bank’s fixed income trading
    revenue base.
    But at BNP F ICC traders Trail for a
    fourth straight quarter.
    Let’s recap those Deutsche Bank earnings
    then, because the key one that jumped
    out, as we said in the headlines the
    first quarter, fixed income sales and
    trading revenue coming in at a pretty
    solid beat for the team over at Deutsche
    Bank, €2.52 billion, the estimates now
    being for €2.41 billion.
    Don’t forget, in terms of the stock
    performance as well, the stock is up
    well around close to 62% in the last 12
    months.
    The broader picture when it comes to
    Deutsche Bank, first quarter net revenue
    coming in at 7.7, €8 billion, again
    above the estimates modestly above, but
    still a beat.
    The estimates happy for 7.73 billion.
    And in terms of their outlook for 2024,
    they’re seeing revenue slightly higher
    for 2024 year on year.
    But again, it’s the fixed income team
    that did the heavy lifting is the
    lending part of the business was a
    little softer and Deutsche Bank
    outperforming many of their US rivals as
    well.
    First quarter adjusted cost by €5
    billion.
    We’ve been speaking to Deutsche Bank CFO
    James Smolka.
    Take a listen.
    The market tends to focus on the
    investment bank.
    We’re pleased.
    We’re very pleased with the results
    there.
    13% up year on year, our FIC business
    and also within that, the financing
    business doing very well at origination
    advisory for the corporate finance
    products for us also quite well at 54%
    up year on year.
    So we see very strong momentum and
    client engagement there.
    We’ve we’re also seeing resilience and
    growth across the other three
    businesses.
    And so it’s nice to have a shining star.
    But but seeing resilience on the more
    balance sheet, sensitive businesses of
    our corporate bank and private bank is
    encouraging.
    And there’s also fee and commission
    income growth there and assets under
    management and revenues in our asset
    management business also growing
    strongly.
    So we’re encouraged by the momentum
    we’re seeing across the business and
    casting us a little bit into the future,
    I should say the recent past in April.
    What have you seen in terms of fees and
    trading there?
    Look, I think the trends from Q1 have
    continued into into April in our and our
    fixed income and currencies businesses.
    That would really be a slower macro
    environment.
    Volatility has been relatively low, but
    but continued momentum in in credit
    trading and emerging markets.
    And so that’s been a an okay mix for us.
    We do think that the recovery in the
    wallet in corporate finance will
    continue across the year.
    Q1 was obviously very strong in debt
    products, so investment grade and a
    recovery in non-investment grade.
    We do expect that to continue and
    hopefully see see a further recovery in
    M&A and equity activity.
    And to take us to M&A and IPOs and the
    animal spirits within Europe, obviously,
    we have the rate story sort of
    percolating.
    Here Are the animal spirits back in
    Europe last time we spoke, you’re very
    optimistic on M&A.
    Has that come through?
    You’re coming back?
    Yeah.
    If you look at announced volume in the
    first quarter that that has recovered,
    obviously the fee revenue that that
    generates is always delayed.
    But but we’re that trend is there.
    To be fair, it’s been more reticent than
    than I would have expected, especially
    with equity markets sort of sort of at
    all time highs.
    So I think there’s a degree of
    uncertainty still out there.
    As you mentioned, path of rates and and
    geopolitical uncertainties.
    So there are some things still holding
    the animal spirits back a little bit.
    But but the momentum is there.
    And before we get to rates, I want to
    talk quickly about just trading, given
    how you’ve outperform and FICC
    particularly versus the US peers, are
    you looking to build that business out
    further, perhaps doing more on U.S.
    rates?
    We’ve been investing steadily over the
    years.
    So so no dramatic change, but I think a
    continued targeted investment around
    Nayak and his team have been very
    deliberate in in just filling in gaps
    that we have.
    We’ve talked about flow credit, for
    example, where we’ve we’ve made
    investments around the globe and that
    that is showing through.
    We we have and continue to invest, as
    you say, in U.S.
    rates and we’ve built our business
    there.
    So it’s been it’s been filling in, if
    you like, the white or wider spaces.
    And we’re very encouraged by by the
    platform We now have not just people but
    also technology and connectivity with
    clients.
    And in terms of the ECB, what are you
    expecting from the ECB this year?
    And I’m trying to get a sense of how
    that works itself through the business.
    We saw a little bit of weakness, a
    little misses on the private bank, the
    commercial bank, AIB outperforming.
    Is that the story now, net interest
    income dead?
    We’re going to.
    Well, no, I mean, so so there was
    certainly and we talked about this with
    investors on the 1st of February, a year
    on year decline in net interest income.
    Absolutely.
    We called for and we’re seeing that
    pressure roll through those businesses.
    Interestingly, the the the performance
    there is better than we had anticipated.
    And so so deposits, particularly in the
    private bank, by the way, in here in
    Germany, deposit margins have held up
    better than we thought.
    There’s been some volatility in sort of
    what I’ll call non-repeating elements of
    non-interest income.
    But the underlying performance has been
    quite stable in the banking book
    business at about 3.3 billion of
    revenues on a quarterly basis.
    And so the path that we think we’ll now
    walk from here is a little bit further
    down in Q2 and then a recovery in the in
    the back half of the year and interest
    income in those two business.
    And so what are you expecting from the
    ECB?
    Do you feel that inflation is under
    control in Europe?
    We would align with the market sentiment
    that June is is the beginning of the
    sort of cut and cutting rate cycle.
    You know, Europe has been, if not in
    recession, in a much slower growth mode.
    I think the transmission mechanisms vary
    across the countries here, but have been
    felt in the economy of of interest
    rates.
    And so, you know, we think that that
    second cyclical sort of point has been
    reached and which is actually
    encouraging for growth.
    As I look to the back half of this year
    and into 25 and as you’ve seen more
    recently in some of the numbers in
    Germany have started to to increase as
    well, manufacturing activity, what have
    you.
    So that seems like an encouraging
    outlook to us.
    So when you when you speak to clients,
    what’s driving their decisions right
    now?
    Is it the fact.
    We get that first cut in June, isn’t the
    fact that we’re actually going to get
    fewer cuts than anticipated or is it the
    Fed?
    I think it’s the general outlook for the
    global economy.
    So so our clients, especially corporate
    clients, you know, manufacturers are
    looking at growth in their in their
    sales markets and how they’re positioned
    to to meet demand.
    You know, one indicator for us is going
    to be loan growth, which is has also
    been slower to start to build than we’d
    anticipated.
    We’ve been running flat essentially in
    the past couple of quarters and have
    been anticipating some some some
    increase in demand.
    Now, there’s a variety of factors at
    work there as well, but we do think that
    momentum is there and will begin to make
    itself felt.
    Do interest rates play a role?
    Sure, they play a role, but I think the
    general outlook and confidence in the
    economic direction is is more more
    powerful.
    And you think that that is going to be
    there’s gonna be a catalyst for growth
    in Europe in the back half of the year
    because I think a lot of people are very
    reticent to give that forecast.
    I think the catalyst, the general
    environment and catalysts are there
    again in a move away from interest
    rates, although a declining interest
    rate environment will be supportive of
    growth.
    I think just as you as you go through
    the back end of a cycle, I mean, take
    real estate as an example in the
    construction trades here in Germany,
    that’s been through a really a two year
    decline and eventually it finds a floor
    and a point from which, you know,
    developers and and builders, you know,
    find confidence with the the prices in
    the in the real estate market, you know,
    help find a floor and we grow from
    there.
    James Mendonca, Deutsche Bank’s CFO,
    speaking to Bloomberg’s Oliver Crook on
    the back of that beat for the earnings
    coming through from Deutsche Bank with a
    particular focus on the fixed income
    trade team and the trading and sales
    upside that came through that.
    Staying on the earnings story, Athos,
    the French I.T.
    company, of course, it struggled with a
    number of accounting issues and of
    course downgrades coming out with its
    latest earnings.
    And it’s a mess in terms of the first
    quarter revenue, €2.48 billion.
    The estimates had been for around €2.8
    billion year on year.
    They have seen a little bit of holding
    back in terms of some of their clients
    not signing on to new contracts and
    important as well, delaying a deadline
    for some of these new creditor proposals
    as well, pushing that deadline back from
    Friday of this week to May the third,
    and saying they may need to raise fresh
    funds and cut more debt as well.
    So those are some of the key lines
    coming through from that French I.T.
    company and first quarter revenue coming
    in with a drop, a contraction of 11%
    year on year switching focus from tech
    to the drug space.
    And it’s a different story coming
    through for Sanofi.
    It’s a beat, in fact, particularly when
    you look at the sales numbers for this
    French drugs maker sales at 10.4, €6
    billion, the estimates have been for
    €10.3 billion.
    So beat that in terms of the sales for a
    business.
    That again is also trying to try to
    restructure and focus on some of its key
    drugs, trying to carve off other parts
    of the business, less well-performing
    parts of the business.
    And in terms of the new drugs in its
    pipeline, one really standing out, which
    is focused on its hemophilia products
    and one of its hemophilia medicines
    getting strong pick up in the US as
    well.
    So investors will no doubt be
    scrutinizing that.
    We know there was going to be a lens on
    some of their new drugs within that
    pipeline.
    The stock, by the way, down about 11% in
    the last 12 months.
    They have reaffirmed their financial
    guidance, Sanofi for 2024.
    They’ve reiterated that EPS guidance for
    the year and again, first quarter EPS
    beating the estimates for Sanofi.
    There’s plenty more coming up, including
    more earnings of course in the banking
    space.
    We’ve had BNP Paribas, we’ve had
    Deutsche Bank, a beat from Deutsche
    Bank, analyst from BNP here in the UK,
    Barclays earnings dropping 7 a.m.
    UK time.
    Really interesting given the
    restructuring happening at that lender
    as well.
    Meanwhile, at 4:45 p.m., Boeing West
    yesterday, their key rival Airbus
    reporting earnings 4:45 p.m.
    later today, Boeing earnings as well.
    So think about whether or not they get
    an uplift from the challenges of Boeing
    getting more aircraft out to, of course,
    their clients is a key challenge for
    them as well.
    Meanwhile, US earnings, big tech, of
    course, still in focus.
    The disappointment, the concern around
    matter, well, it switches the focus to
    alphabet.
    Of course, Google apparently today and
    Microsoft, Amazon and Intel.
    To what extent is the story proving a
    drag in terms of costs for those
    companies or in fact, coming through
    with a bit of a lift?
    Those details out later today.
    Coming up on the energy front and is up
    and up the Aquanaut CEO joining me as
    the energy giant reports a revenue beat.
    That is next.
    His views on the outlook for oil and gas
    and how they’re shifting to renewables.
    This is bloomberg.
    Welcome back to Bloomberg Daybreak
    Europe.
    Now, Ecuador has reported a decline in
    first quarter earnings as a result of
    lower gas prices, but the Norwegian
    energy giant’s numbers were better than
    the previous quarter, with higher
    liquids output offsetting some of that
    weak natural gas demand that we’ve seen
    in Europe.
    Let’s bring in and the CEO of Equinor
    and his update, of course.
    The Norwegian government is the largest
    shareholder in this company.
    And as your take on these results and
    what it tells us about how the business
    is positioned for the quarters ahead.
    And good morning.
    Yes, we are well positioned to the to
    the future.
    We had very strong results this quarter,
    as you mentioned, driven by production
    growth in in oil and gas and really
    solid operation, enabling a very strong
    cash flow from operations of 5.8 billion
    U.S.
    dollar.
    We have an active project portfolio both
    in renewables and also in oil and gas.
    So we are well positioned for future
    earnings as well.
    And of course, we focus on the European
    gas storage story, which is seeing what
    quite a remarkable turnaround, of
    course, in the last two years on this.
    What what is the investment case for
    Ecuador?
    Now, you were essential during the start
    of that conflict, Russia invading
    Ukraine and the gas challenges there.
    There’s an argument that you’re less
    essential now.
    What is the investment case for your
    business at a place and a time when the
    inventories and the stockpiles of gas
    here in Europe are full?
    You’re right.
    Of course, the gas prices are
    substantially lower prices now than they
    used to be, you know, pre-war and also
    just before the war and during the war.
    And it’s been so essential that we’ve
    been able to produce gas to Europe to to
    have energy security for Europe.
    But we’re still producing at an
    extremely high level for gas production
    from Norway.
    Remember, we can deliver a gas to all
    the liquids hubs in Europe and we can do
    it at a very low production and
    transportation costs.
    So we are very much well-positioned for
    future gas investments from the
    Norwegian Continental Shelf also to to
    gas, deliver a gas to Europe that will
    need it also in the future.
    And also, remember that the gas prices
    in Europe are now set by the LNG price.
    Before, it used to be set by the pipe
    gas
    costs and now it’s set by the LNG cost.
    So we see a very good investment case
    for gas also in the future towards
    Europe.
    What’s your outlook for gas prices then?
    Towards the end of this year,
    particularly when we think about the
    Middle East tensions as well and as.
    Yes.
    So what what you said earlier is Europe
    is in well position in terms of gas
    storage now.
    It’s been another mild winter in Europe.
    So Europe in a good position in terms of
    storage for next year and are able to
    fill up the storages.
    But we know that the weather, the energy
    supply, the demand increase in China,
    also some industry demand pickup in
    Europe will all affect the prices.
    We see the market is fairly well
    now balanced, but there are, you know,
    small changes in energy geopolitics and
    the supply chain disruption, you know,
    can have big changes in the into gas
    prices.
    So we are think it’s a slight upside
    risk to higher prices in not in the
    future.
    Okay.
    It’s interesting that you try in
    politics the Labour Party here in the
    UK, well positioned according to the
    polls to take over as the next leaders
    of the government here in the UK.
    The Opposition Labour Party saying that
    they would they would remove the current
    investment allowance for oil and gas
    projects in the North Sea.
    If that happens, will the economics of
    the Rosebank project that you have there
    still hold up?
    First of all, I would like to say that
    it is important for any government to
    make sure that we have stable frame
    conditions for this long term
    investment, both in renewables and also
    in in oil and gas.
    It’s a little bit too early to say the
    effect of a proposal that might come if
    they get into government.
    But of course we will have to look at
    this type of proposal and see what it
    means to our future business and then
    make kind of the necessary decisions.
    All kind of these changes and proposed
    changes create an additional risk that
    we need to bring into our risk
    management of the company.
    There were some unplanned maintenance
    issues for some of the projects last
    year.
    You had the strikes as well, the
    disruption there.
    You talk about some of these
    uncertainties and does what is your
    expectation around potential disruptions
    as we look to the summer season?
    Those disruptions.
    They were kind of one offs due to
    special cases we have seen over the
    first quarter solid operations, very
    high production efficiency.
    We are also also this year planning some
    maintenance, but this is planned
    maintenance and well communicated to the
    market.
    So our production guidance as we
    presented earlier, is stable and we
    expect good production from all from
    from EQUINOR also over the next quarters
    according to our guiding.
    You talk about the new projects that are
    coming online, there will be some some
    of your investors, some of the minority
    shareholders, the likes of Saracen and
    partners here in London, who would say
    that that runs counter to your targets
    around around the Paris Agreement on
    climate?
    Is that is there more that you can do
    specifically to address those concerns?
    And is.
    What we are focusing on is really to
    lower the emission, both on the methane
    and the CO2 emission while we’re
    producing oil and gas.
    And this oil and gas is definitely
    needed these days.
    I just visited the hall of a fair and
    talked to the German industry and they
    really need oil and gas for Norway while
    they are transitioning.
    At the same time, we are also building
    up our renewable portfolio,
    transportation and storage of CO2 for
    the heart based industry.
    So we are over time investing both in
    oil and gas, lowering our emissions, but
    at the same time also into new energies
    that will have a lower carbon emissions
    over time.
    You were recently in northern Norway
    talking about potential production
    increases out of out of Barents.
    What are the plans there, Anders?
    What can you bring online from from that
    part of the world?
    Well, in the northern Norway, we have
    the Hammerfest LNG, a really important
    LNG plant for energy security to to to
    Europe.
    We are taking this and using power from
    shore now so that we can actually
    produce energy from this plant from 2030
    and onwards without any CO2 emissions.
    And I think that is hard to compete
    with.
    In addition, this year we will start up
    the Casper field in this area and we are
    also focusing on see how we can come to
    our side of the twisting field.
    And we also have exploration activity in
    this area.
    So the activity level in the bar and sea
    is quite high at the moment.
    Before we let you go on this, I just
    want to get your view on on something
    that a lot of our guests talk about,
    which is this valuation gap between
    European oil and gas majors and their US
    US counterparts.
    Do you think that closes any anytime
    soon?
    Does it concern you?
    Do you expect that valuation gap to
    reduce in the quarters and years ahead?
    While it’s difficult to say, it’s really
    the investors that will decide on that.
    What I can focus on is to really ensure
    that we are delivering oil and gas, high
    production efficiency, making our
    business more resilient and
    demonstrating high value creation to our
    investors.
    And then I’m sure that we put the right
    price on our stock.
    And is up or down.
    Thank you very much indeed, the CEO of
    Aquila.
    We appreciate it on the back of those
    earnings.
    Now for some other stories making news
    this Thursday.
    Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez
    says he’s considering resigning due to
    the attacks that he and his wife have
    faced in recent weeks.
    This comes as a court launched an
    inquiry targeting Sanchez’s wife for
    alleged influence peddling.
    The Spanish PM has halted all public
    duties and says he will be announcing
    his decision on April 29th.
    US State Secretary Secretary of State
    Antony Blinken has raised concerns over
    unfair trade as he began talks in China.
    This comes amid a worsening rift between
    the world’s two biggest economies, with
    a threat of US sanctions over Beijing’s
    support of Russia.
    And President Biden has signed a $95
    billion national security package into
    law that includes fresh assistance to
    Ukraine.
    The move allows the US to quickly resume
    arms shipments to Kiev.
    Officials also acknowledging for the
    first time they will include a longer
    range ballistic missile system long
    sought by Ukraine.
    There’s plenty more coming up.
    Stay with us.
    This is Bloomberg.
    As we’re scaling CapEx and energy
    expenses for we, we’ll continue focusing
    on operating the rest of our company
    efficiently.
    But realistically, even with shifting
    many of our existing resources to focus
    on, I
    will still grow our investment envelope
    meaningfully before we make much revenue
    from some of these new products.
    Okay.
    Matter CEO Mark Zuckerberg trying to
    assuage those concerns about the uptick
    in spending and the slightly softer
    outlook coming through from Matt to the
    first quarter results.
    We’re actually pretty decent in terms of
    the revenue that came through in the
    quarter, actually up 27%.
    And you saw profit more than doubling to
    12.4 billion USD.
    None of that, though, really mattering
    as far as investors are concerned, even
    though smart investors, quote unquote,
    that matters CEO was alluding to because
    it is the outlook and it’s the spent a
    close to an up to 40 billion USD is what
    they planning to spend around A.I.
    and that increase calls that concern and
    you see that reflected after ads in
    terms of the move lower.
    And it is a sharp move lower for a
    stock, by the way, that, of course, has
    rallied year to date on the optimism
    around the AI bets and how that’s
    folding in to platforms like Instagram,
    Facebook and WhatsApp, which of course
    all fall under the matter, umbrella down
    15%.
    And so far, of course, those words from
    not really doing much or say those
    concerns, like smart investors see that
    the product is scaling well, they have
    questions, of course it spends and it
    takes a lot of money to build out that
    infrastructure.
    Let’s put the ball and see the read
    across to other big tech.
    You see the reports across the Asian
    markets, of course, and this then was
    that ripple to some of the other big
    names Amazon, Alphabet, Microsoft, by
    the way, those big companies, Amazon and
    Alphabet, Alphabet, I should say, and
    Microsoft reporting later today.
    So we’ll see if the A.I.
    story for them is slightly different.
    And Microsoft, of course, with that huge
    stake in open Air, Another story that
    we’re focused on today, above and beyond
    the tech story is what’s happening with
    the Japanese yen.
    Did they intervene before that decision
    from the DOJ?
    The DOJ is meeting right now, but
    volatility expected volatility at the
    highest level that we’ve seen.
    Oh, yeah.
    155 You’re at three decade loads for the
    Japanese yen.
    Do the interview.
    Intervene before the policy decision
    from the DOJ remains a key question.
    We get that decision on Friday.
    But also, of course, so much of this is
    about the US story and that key
    inflation gauge, the p e that comes out
    of course later on Friday and could be a
    factor as well in terms of how we think
    about the rate differential between the
    Federal Reserve and Japan.
    We’ve had comments from the finance
    minister over Japan saying that he is
    continuing to monitor what is happening
    with this currency.
    And again, one of the worst performers,
    if not the worst performer amongst the
    G7 currencies, one 5564 As we continue
    to watch potential intervention for that
    currency, the volatility as well, let’s
    flip the board and see that volatility
    story again, spiking kind of the levels
    that we haven’t seen all year around
    this potential intervention move from
    the authorities hasn’t happened yet.
    They’re on watch.
    Plenty more earnings interviews coming
    up here on Bloomberg, including
    exclusive conversation with C.S., then
    cancer of the CEO of Barclays.
    That’s in about 5 minutes.
    Plus interviews with the CFO of BNP
    Paribas and AstraZeneca, and later, the
    Airbus CEO speaking to us.
    That conversation.
    7:40 p.m.
    UK time Marcus today next.

    Bloomberg Daybreak Europe is your essential morning viewing to stay ahead. Live from London, we set the agenda for your day, catching you up with overnight markets news from the US and Asia. And we’ll tell you what matters for investors in Europe, giving you insight before trading begins.
    Today’s guests: Victor Riparbelli, CEO and Co-Founder of AI startup Synthesia, and Anders Opedal, CEO of energy company Equinor.
    ——–
    More on Bloomberg Television and Markets

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