BHP Targets Rival Anglo American, Meta Earnings Spook Investors | Bloomberg Markets Today 04/25/2024

    Give boning from London.
    This is Bloomberg Markets.
    Today I’m on alongside Guy Johnson and
    Chrissie Gibson with the cash tray just
    less than an hour away.
    Here’s what you need to know.
    Stocks in Asia followed Wall Street
    lower with big tech taking a hit as
    matters earnings report spooks
    investors.
    Mining giant BHP approaches rival Anglo
    American with a takeover offer in a move
    that could spark the biggest shakeup in
    the industry in a decade.
    Plus, European earnings ramp up, with
    Deutsche Bank reporting fixed income
    trading revenue ahead of estimates.
    We will speak to top executives from
    Barclays, BNP Paribas and AstraZeneca
    this hour.
    In the meantime, quick check on these
    markets here.
    When you look at the futures picture, it
    is a negative tone, but you are seeing
    massive underperformance over in the
    states.
    Your stoxx 50 futures down 2/10 of 1%.
    Again, the tech underperformance not
    seeping through yet.
    You’re seeing it more than nasdaq 100
    down 1.4%.
    However, positivity in euro dollar 107
    12 is what you’re seeing there.
    And of course we are on currency
    intervention.
    Watch dollar yen one 5568 marcus today
    starts right now.
    Thursday, the 25th of April.
    Good morning, everybody.
    Buckle up.
    It is a busy morning for corporate
    earnings.
    We’ve already had a slew net net.
    I would say you’ve probably got more big
    misses this morning than big beats, but
    the game is still being played.
    Barclays is out over the last couple of
    minutes.
    You got IMAX numbers as well, hitting
    the screens as well.
    That looks like we can maybe add it to
    the beat side of the equation.
    Yeah, absolutely.
    Omar, as first quarter sales, then up by
    17%, the estimate was up by 14%.
    And we spent a lot of time so far this
    earnings season talking about how much
    you could read across from Gucci in
    China to other parts of the luxury
    space.
    Well, maybe there are limitations to
    that argument.
    Absolutely.
    The idea that the US consumer may be
    kind of be able to make up the gap.
    It’s the exact flip story at Hermes.
    You’re seeing the Americas revenue
    coming in a little bit lighter than the
    estimate.
    The outperformance is actually Asia.
    So Ana, to your point, the exact
    opposite of what we’re seeing carrying,
    as I mentioned, lots of earnings stories
    coming out this morning, AstraZeneca,
    Unilever, plenty from the banking
    sector.
    We’ve already had numbers out from BNP
    Paribas and from Deutsche Bank.
    Let’s focus now on numbers out of
    Barclays.
    The first quarter investment banking
    revenue coming in at 3.3, £3 billion.
    That is broadly similar to the estimate
    of 3.35 billion.
    The net interest income entirely in line
    with the estimates.
    Let’s dive into a bit more detail,
    though.
    I’m very pleased to say that.
    Joining us now is Ben Carter Krishnan,
    the CEO of Barclays.
    Venkat, a real pleasure to have you with
    us today.
    Thank you so much for joining us.
    We want to talk about net interest
    margin, want to talk about the
    investment banking part of the business.
    I’ll go to the net interest margin story
    first, if I could entirely in line with
    estimates.
    That number this morning, yesterday, we
    saw Lloyds reporting something a little
    different under a bit of pressure as
    consumers shop around for higher rates
    of interest on savings products.
    How should we look at net interest
    margin with all the volatility around
    rate expectations?
    What’s your sensitivity to the rate
    environment there?
    Yeah,
    well, Anna, thank you very much for
    having me.
    And as you say, these results are
    entirely in line with our expectations
    and with what we put out on our Investor
    Day about ten weeks ago.
    At that point, we said that we had a
    target for 2026 returns of 12%, 10% and
    24.
    Our first quarter growth is 12.3%, which
    is entirely in line.
    Our income numbers are in line, our
    costs are in line and our capitalisation
    is in the middle of our range at 13.5%
    on C 81.
    As far as net interest income goes, you
    know, the rates markets have been
    volatile.
    There’s been a round trip approximately
    of 90 basis points, down 90 basis points
    back up in the ten year gilt in the UK
    and roughly the same numbers in the US.
    And so it is very early.
    Our numbers are in line with what we
    said.
    We’ve seen deposit growth, we’ve seen
    lending growth in mortgages and in
    credit and so we’re pleased with that.
    But it’s one quarter in a longer journey
    of three years.
    Yes, it is.
    I mean, some of the talk at the margin
    has been a little bit more on the
    hawkish side, the higher for longer
    arguments producing that 90 basis points
    roundtrip to the upside at most most
    recently when that as you mentioned.
    So so where does that leave us then as
    we go through the rest of the year and
    we look at what happens to rates?
    What does that do to net interest
    margin?
    Give us a sense of the sensitivity.
    Well, I think net interest margin,
    obviously, as when you have higher
    rates, you have a better lending
    difference.
    You pay more in deposits, but you get
    more in lending.
    And there’s a firmness in the markets.
    But, you know, rates are very, very
    volatile.
    So I would shy away from predicting a
    number in just the first quarter of the
    year.
    Venkat.
    Good morning.
    It’s Guy.
    As you say, the rates market is very
    volatile, yet Q1 FICC revenue looks a
    little light.
    Why is that and why are we seeing big
    differences beginning to emerge between
    banks in terms of the way they’re
    performing in that space?
    Yeah.
    So I think, first of all, within the
    Barclays investment banking revenue
    complex, as in any quarter, you will
    have some ups and downs.
    When we look at our own FICC business,
    one part of it, which is one of our
    strategic areas securitized products,
    has done very well on the rate side in
    Europe is a little weaker.
    And then on equities, and we were
    talking from our equities floor here at
    Barclays, we’ve done extremely well.
    So on FICC, I think it’s a bit of the
    complexion of the business and it’s a
    bit about where the movement has been.
    But I think it’s hard to read into any
    one bank in any one quarter.
    You’ve got to see the trend over a
    longer time.
    Okay.
    Do you think do you think the US fake
    environment is more conducive to
    profitability than the European fake
    environment?
    It’s interesting.
    We’re going to be talking to BNP Paribas
    in just a moment, and I’m kind of
    interested in the compare and contrast
    between the way that European banks are
    performing in that space and U.S.
    banks are performing in that space.
    Yeah.
    I think, you know, for instance,
    Berkeley, we have a fairly big U.S.
    presence, as you know.
    I think what you’ve seen in the US
    market is more active positioning.
    The market is, of course, broader across
    the full range of credit and the food
    and includes securitized products.
    So I think there’s a greater and richer
    opportunity in the product set in the
    US, which lends itself to greater
    performance by those with bigger US
    exposures.
    It’s Kriti in London.
    Thank you again for joining us this
    morning.
    To offset, though, some of that kind of
    depression that you’re seeing in the
    FICC area.
    Talk to us a little bit how you’re
    viewing kind of the capital markets, the
    deal flow as well.
    Is there enough momentum there or early
    signs of momentum there to offset some
    of the pain perhaps in the bond
    business?
    Yeah.
    So I think deal flow and the equity
    markets themselves have been starting to
    show some buoyancy.
    As I said, we on our equity floor here
    and then our own numbers in equities
    have shown an uptick for this quarter
    versus the same quarter last year.
    I think deal flow is increasing, you
    know, in our own energy business or our
    sustainability business and the
    transition business.
    We’ve seen nine deals in the last
    quarter and a bit.
    And so I do think that there is a deal
    flow happening.
    I think, though it’s very early, you’ve
    got to give it a quarter or two to
    cement.
    Is Barclays prepared to capitalize on
    that when it does ultimately come to
    fruition, when it does actually see a
    little bit more momentum?
    Is Barclays positioned to capitalize on
    that, given a little bit of an exodus in
    terms of your bankers as well as lower
    advisory fees relative to your American
    peers?
    How do you tackle that?
    Yeah, well, it has been and it is a
    very, very important area of focus for
    us.
    It’s we want to increase what we do in
    M&A.
    We want to do increase what we do in
    equities.
    We have hired a lot of very talented
    bankers.
    We are focused on the energy transition.
    We are focused across the important
    sectors of technology and healthcare.
    And so we absolutely are positioned to
    capitalize on it.
    And you should see the results over the
    coming quarters.
    It’s not something that’s one in days,
    weeks and months, but over a longer
    period of time.
    And we’ve put the sustained investment
    and skills behind it and we will
    continue to do so.
    Can I ask you about M&A within the UK
    market?
    We’ve got a bit of M&A taking place.
    Barclays, you yourselves in the process
    of acquiring Tesco’s retail bank
    offering, we also have consolidation
    with nationwide buying virgin money, the
    building society space.
    We see consolidation there as well.
    Is this a sector where we’ll see more
    and are you going to play more of a role
    in that?
    Well, I think at any time you have an
    inflection in the interest rate cycle,
    as we have had with changing capital
    models and changing consumer regulation,
    it stresses business models and it
    therefore drives some amount of M&A.
    I think our own acquisition of Tesco
    Bank is something that’s a win win for
    Tesco and for us.
    We were looking to grow our unsecured
    lending and I think you will see other
    institutions look at that.
    We have been very, very clear.
    Our plan for growth is predicated on as
    an organic one.
    Obviously in our areas of focus, which
    are largely UK centred, our UK consumer
    bank, which has had strong earnings this
    quarter.
    Our UK corporate banking, our private
    banking and wealth, if we see some
    attractive opportunities which are
    tractable and reasonably integrated, we
    will look at them.
    But that’s not the focus and thrust of
    our plan.
    Hmm.
    I’m talking about the UK then.
    Cap, what are you seeing in terms of
    credit impairments in the UK?
    Any areas of concern or any areas that
    are performing stronger than you would
    have anticipated?
    But I think the UK continues to show
    strength in the economy.
    You know, there are minor tick ups in
    unemployment and so on, but in the broad
    scheme of things, growth is strong,
    employment is strong.
    Productivity has to grow.
    But that’s a great focus of both of both
    sides of the House in the UK.
    Our our credit stats are very, very
    strong.
    We continue in the UK to outperform
    estimates quarter after quarter in a
    row, and so we feel very strong.
    We feel good about the strength of the
    UK consumer and UK credit and that’s
    part of our growth strategy.
    UK lending.
    Venkat Just picking up on that, then.
    Hey, do you think this is a is a country
    that needs rate cuts right now?
    Is that your sense?
    You sound quite positive, if I’m being
    honest about what you’re saying in the
    U.K.,
    use the word strength a lot.
    So do we need rate cuts?
    And the second thing is, it is likely we
    are going to see a change of government.
    What do you think the change of
    government implications are for
    Barclays?
    And do you think you are looking at a
    higher tax regime going forward post
    that election?
    Yeah.
    So first of all, I think one of the most
    attractive things about the UK in this
    year in which there are elections all
    around the world is that there is
    relatively little difference in economic
    policy between Labour and Conservative.
    So as far as industry goes, as far as
    the financial sector goes, indeed as far
    as the economy goes, I think that’s a
    great source of strength because
    political change I think is unlikely to
    introduce a volatility, certainly
    nowhere compared to what it was ten, 20,
    30 years ago in the UK and differences
    between the two parties.
    So I think that’s a great strength of
    the UK, the commitment of both sides to
    growth, to productivity and to business.
    And so I do feel strongly about the UK
    and I feel strongly about the momentum
    of the country.
    Do you think?
    Okay.
    We’ll come on to the rights question
    just to say, do you think, though, that
    the there is a greater likelihood that
    the financial sector in particular,
    which has had a raised tax burden of
    late, even under the current
    administration, will see that penalty
    going higher?
    And do you think if we do see increased
    taxation in the UK, that that will be
    compensated for by lower rates
    potentially on on the monetary side?
    I’m kind of wanting what the balance
    looks like.
    Yeah.
    So.
    Well, it’s hard to say what the balance
    looks like because the rate policy comes
    from one side, which is the Bank of
    England.
    And the fiscal policy comes from
    Treasury.
    So
    I think as far as fiscal policy goes in
    the UK, growth is the most important
    thing.
    That is the way that we can fund the
    future of the economy.
    And as far as taxation goes, look, I
    think the government and the government
    today and the Labour Party both
    understand the importance of growth and
    the importance of balanced taxation.
    So I’m again quite hopeful and the
    country.
    Venkat Let’s let’s build on that a
    little bit.
    When people talk about how they approach
    the UK, there seems to be a lot of
    questions about why the IPO market,
    specifically in London, isn’t catching
    up to some of the strength that at least
    you’re talking about.
    Is there some sort of rebound in the
    London IPO market in the near future?
    And if if not, what does it need to get
    there?
    Yeah, I think that’s a very, very good
    question.
    I think the equity market in the UK, an
    equity risk culture needs a shot in the
    arm, to be frank.
    I think that it’s important for
    companies to list in the UK, especially
    for life sciences technology companies,
    and it needs many things which are
    slowly coming together.
    There’s a part of it which is
    regulation.
    There’s a part of it which is equity
    investment and people buying more
    stocks, pension funds buying more
    stocks.
    And we think that some of the
    initiatives, for instance, the public
    flotation of the government share of
    NatWest should be important aspects of
    that.
    And then the entire ecosystem of the UK
    and innovation in the UK coming to
    fruition in the IPO market is really
    important.
    And Barclays is trying to play a
    critical and positive role in that.
    It will take time.
    It will take time to undo what has been
    happening over 20 to 30 years.
    Thank you.
    Thank you very much.
    Thank you for your time.
    We appreciate it.
    She has been kind of question out the
    CEO of Barclays.
    Coming up, plenty more earnings
    conversations to come as AstraZeneca
    reports.
    A beat on core EPS.
    Don’t miss our interview with the CFO of
    the pharma giant.
    That’s at 7:30 a.m.
    UK time.
    Plus, mining giant BHP approaches rival
    Anglo American with a takeover offer.
    It is all about copper, a move that
    could spark the biggest shake up in the
    industry in over a decade could benefit
    investment bankers, as we just been
    talking about in terms of deal flow.
    We’ll bring you that Bloomberg scoop,
    the confirmation of that pulling back a
    little bit later on in the program.
    But up next, we’ll be back to the bank
    earnings stories.
    BNP Paribas fixed income traders trail
    the large Wall Street banks in the first
    quarter.
    We’ve got some insight into that from
    Vancamp.
    We’ll speak to the CFO of France’s
    biggest bank.
    That conversation coming up very
    shortly, please.
    You get in touch.
    There’s a lot to talk about this
    morning.
    I’ve got to go.
    Is the functions use on the Bloomberg
    domino.
    This is Bloomberg.
    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.
    James on Mulkey there, the Deutsche Bank
    CFO, speaking to our very own Oliver
    Crook over in Frankfurt.
    We want to stick with the bank earnings
    story and go over to another major
    European bank.
    Fixed income traders over a BNP Paribas
    trailed all of the large Wall Street
    lenders in the first quarter, taking the
    shine a little bit of a strong
    performance in other parts of the
    investment bank.
    We’re joined now this morning by the
    CFO, Lars McNeill.
    Thank you so much for joining us this
    morning.
    We’ll start off with that fixed income
    revenue numbers.
    It looks like you’re coming in, seeing a
    little bit of weakness.
    You saw it in Barclays.
    You’ve seen in some of the other banks,
    Deutsche Bank, the notable exception.
    Walk us through how you’re thinking
    about FICC revenue given the exposure to
    Europe.
    I can appreciate that puts be a little
    bit of a disadvantage given the lower
    volatility story there.
    How do you recover?
    Yeah, listen, it’s not recovering.
    Basically the bank is doing fine.
    If you look at CIB as a whole, let’s not
    forget we’re basically a flowback.
    Yeah, we are accompanying the flows.
    And if you look at the parts of CIB, if
    you look at global banking record levels
    of 6%, if you look at security services
    up 7%, look at equities, equities, prime
    services up 11%.
    And so your question is what’s what’s on
    FICC and on?
    Basically, we have a very high base a
    year ago.
    I remind you that a year ago, given all
    the uncertainty, there was there was a
    very high demand in Europe for FICC, and
    particularly if you look at commodities
    and currencies, remember in the energy
    crisis and BNP Paribas, we are mainly a
    European bank, 60%, six 0% of the
    revenues of our FICC stems from Europe.
    And that is way above what you have in
    the overall banking system.
    And so we had that high base which has
    returned to normal.
    This is basically what we see.
    So really, if you look at the longer
    term, you clearly see that we are up on
    market shares and that is basically the
    base we will go forward.
    So our activity with the clients is very
    solid and we will continue to ramp up
    our market shares in all of the domains,
    including FICC.
    Certainly an argument that I’m sure your
    peers over Deutsche Bank are watching
    very closely as well.
    Talking about ramping up, though.
    I’m curious about the ramp up in capital
    market activity in particular that deal
    flow that we’re talking about.
    There’s early signs that perhaps you are
    going to see a little bit more deal flow
    coming up in the next couple of
    quarters.
    We just talked to the CEO over at
    Barclays about that as well.
    Where does BNP fall in that?
    Does this actually is that a bet just on
    volume or is that a bet on advisory
    fees?
    Where do you stand?
    Listen, if you look at our first
    quarter, so our capital markets activity
    is basically lodged in a department we
    call global banking.
    And if you look at global banking, as I
    said, a record level up 6% compared to a
    year ago.
    And capital markets is mainly a driver
    for that.
    So, again, if you compare against a year
    ago, you needed the magnifying glasses
    to see those activities.
    What you clearly see is now there is a
    pickup.
    And if you look at the Eurozone with
    what is ahead of us, what we anticipate,
    how we see inflation evolving, what we
    anticipate on on that from the ECB.
    You clearly see that there is a positive
    trend on this.
    Love.
    Good morning it’s guy.
    That’s talk about the ECB.
    The rates market is all over the place.
    We’ve we’ve expected rate cuts.
    A lot of those have now been priced out.
    How much visibility do you have on net
    interest income going forward?
    What do you think the margin is going to
    look like?
    How easy is it to make a prediction on
    what those kinds of figures are going to
    be looking like?
    That is basically guy, if you look at
    it, there’s two things.
    So the first question is what is the ECB
    going to do?
    And so my read whatever, I don’t have a
    crystal ball, right?
    But my read is that you see in the
    eurozone, you see inflation tapering
    off.
    So I anticipate that the ECB will lower
    interest rates.
    That will create a positive momentum.
    That positive momentum will then trigger
    growth, which will it and so on.
    So this is a virtuous circle that is
    probably going to come.
    So that is the first thing that we see.
    And as you know, we had BNP Paribas.
    We stand to benefit from this
    environment.
    And then the question is what will be
    the overall environment on the pricing?
    And so what we see is that several of
    the banks we are competing with are
    somewhat in dire straits.
    And so we anticipate that the overall
    pricing will basically hold well.
    So we believe that the anticipation of
    lowering interest rates in the eurozone
    will be a stimulus for a bank like BNP
    Paribas.
    LA’s investors have been buying European
    banks this year and it’s the best
    performing sector year to date because
    there is this big anticipation that we
    are going to be seeing significant
    capital returns to investors.
    Do you think that.
    Do you think that belief is
    well-founded?
    Do you think the market is going too far
    in its expectation given the uncertain
    economic environment that we now live
    in?
    Do you think that capital return story
    is actually going to be delivered upon?
    Listen, before we we will look at
    capital return.
    Let’s look at the overall environment.
    So does one believe that the banking
    system will continue to do well and
    basically pick up?
    And if you look at that, well, you you
    need to take to take a geopolitical
    view.
    I’ll let you guys decide on that.
    But then you have to look at what is the
    overall environment, the regulatory
    environment.
    So if this one is kind of stabilizing,
    which is something you see in Europe,
    you might have some kind of questions of
    where do us is going.
    But on Europe, you see some stability on
    that.
    And so that could you could imagine that
    the banking environment should be well
    positioned into that.
    But then the question is, what is the
    overall position going forward for a
    bank?
    And that’s where things might be
    different.
    So if you are a bank that is positioned
    in zones and with products and with
    services that can fuel growth, that will
    be the case.
    So my message is overall, the
    environment should allow that.
    But then there should be differences
    between the levers that bank have to
    continue their kind of profitability.
    Last.
    Good morning.
    You said a little earlier on this year
    that this year’s profit would surpass
    €11.2 billion.
    If there are analysts out there who
    can’t make the numbers work.
    What do you say on the back of today’s
    numbers to convince them that you can
    meet those goals?
    Listen,
    not wanting to say anything bad, but we
    thought when we guided that our results
    would be higher than that of last year
    and that we also said that we would
    operate at positive goals and that our
    cost of risk would remain below 40.
    We would have assumed mathematically
    that that basically leads to assumptions
    on what the top line will do.
    And so what we’ve done is if you look at
    the first quarter results, again, if you
    look through the exceptionally high base
    a year ago, you’ll see that the top line
    evolved by 3%.
    And so what we’ve now added towards our
    guidance is that basically saying that
    we are confident that the top line will
    evolve by at least 2% over the year.
    So that’s basically the kind of elements
    we now give and we give guidance on the
    top line, on the cost.
    On the cost of risk.
    And therefore, we clocked in a first
    quarter that basically supports that
    evolution.
    Okay.
    So the first quarter supports the
    evolution that you’ve previously
    described in profit.
    Thanks a lot.
    Thanks so much for joining as well as
    Mary Neal, the BNP Paribas CFO with us
    as as he often does make time for us to
    talk to us about the earnings stories
    and the wider banking landscape.
    But we will turn to another sector after
    a short break.
    Talking about the drug space coming up,
    as AstraZeneca reports, a based on core
    EPS.
    Don’t miss our interview with the pharma
    giant’s CFO.
    That conversation coming up next.
    They’ve got an Investor Day coming up in
    in the next month or so.
    So a lot of key information and key
    assumptions, I suppose, will rest on
    what we hear from that Investor Day.
    What insights can we get from the CFO
    today?
    Also, US pricing very much in focus.
    A lot to talk about.
    We’ll return with that conversation
    shortly.
    This is going back.
    20 folks.
    Welcome back.
    About half an hour to go until the start
    of actually trading here in Europe.
    You’ve got a lot to digest.
    You’ve got a lot of pieces to put
    together to try and figure out exactly
    what’s going to be happening here.
    The picture is quite mixed at the
    moment.
    The current, at least at the get go,
    looks like it’s going to be potentially
    where we’re going to see the weakness.
    This morning, though, immense numbers
    look quite strong, But my understanding
    is they’re going to trade fairly kind of
    flattish at the open.
    Net net, it feels and this is a very
    basic assumption assessment, sorry, of
    what we’re seeing here this morning.
    There are 40 wall misses out there this
    morning than there are beats.
    Does that add up to a negative market?
    One company that is not on the miss side
    of the ledger this morning and is very
    much firmly on the beat side of the
    ledger this morning is AstraZeneca.
    It is out with numbers.
    Core EPS comes through at 2.06.
    The estimate there, 1.89
    key one revenue, 12.6.
    They estimate that 11.8 cents.
    These are these are fairly decent beats.
    And it’s worth kind of asking the
    question about kind of how sustainable
    some of these numbers are and what
    happens next for these businesses.
    And I pointed out just a moment ago, I
    think it’s on May the 21st, we’ve got a
    we’ve got an Investor Day taking place
    up in Cambridge.
    I think you could join virtually.
    But if you want to go up there, I think
    it will probably be excellent.
    Aaron Hannah Sarin is the CFO of the
    company and joins us this morning on
    set.
    Good morning.
    Thanks for coming actually to see us on
    a such a on such a busy day.
    So we really appreciate that.
    These are good numbers.
    The market clearly has underestimated
    what you are going to deliver this
    quarter.
    And I’m wondering therefore, kind of is
    everything good?
    Are there some standouts?
    It looks like oncology has been very
    strong, two or three really key drugs in
    that space of really performed.
    Is it consistent across the business are
    the areas you need to focus on or is
    this a business that is firing on all
    cylinders kind of across the piece?
    I think the revenue and EPS that you see
    is really performance across the board.
    So this was the first quarter that both
    our biopharma business and our oncology
    business exceeded 5 billion in revenue
    and our rare disease business was over 2
    billion in revenue.
    And when you look at the growth rates,
    oncology growing at 26%, cardiovascular
    medicines, business growing at 23%,
    respiratory business growing at 17% and
    rare disease at 16%.
    So I think one of the key strengths of
    AstraZeneca is this diversity of
    portfolio.
    So it’s not one or two medicines that’s
    really driving the growth.
    It’s a very broad base of, you know, 12
    plus blockbuster medicines that’s
    driving the growth.
    If you look from a geographic standpoint
    as well, it’s again, emerging markets
    have been going really strong.
    The U.S.
    is really strong.
    Europe is really strong.
    So it’s really across the board that we
    see the strength in the performance.
    But what’s really exciting, you
    mentioned the investor event.
    Yep.
    Is the portfolio that we have.
    So it’s really the pipeline and how that
    pipeline is coming to maturity and we’re
    continuing to invest in that pipeline.
    And I think that’s what’s really
    exciting.
    Okay, so everything’s doing quite well.
    The Investor Day is going to be worth
    turning up for August so far.
    What you are doing is is also a series
    of bolt on acquisitions.
    So again, I come back to the business.
    I look at kind of where you’re
    performing and you’re telling me you’re
    performing really well across the board.
    If you think about further bolt on
    acquisitions, therefore,
    are you agnostic as to which area of the
    business you would be bolting those bolt
    ons to?
    Or are there specific areas you think
    that actually could do with bulking up
    with those Boltons?
    So we have done multiple bolt ons, As
    you mentioned, over the last 18 months,
    we’ve spent about 6.7 billion in capital
    and across multiple acquisitions and BD
    transactions.
    We have defined our core therapeutic
    areas as oncology, cardiovascular
    medicines, respiratory and rare
    diseases.
    So those are the core areas within which
    we will look to license products or add
    products, but process carries on.
    I think the I’m not sure it carries on.
    I think we’ve been very active in the
    last 6 to 8 months, probably 12 months.
    But before that, for last two or three
    years, we weren’t really active.
    So I think it’s maybe the nature of the
    market and being able to find certain
    opportunities and also how they
    strategically fit with our vision.
    So for example, we acquired a company
    called Grey Cell, which is in the cell
    therapy space, and cell therapy is
    starting is is a technology that is
    starting to come to maturity and
    probably will have implications not only
    in blood cancers, which is where it’s
    now being used, but also solid tumors as
    well as autoimmune diseases.
    So so I think as technologies mature, we
    look at where are things which, you
    know, when we can think of the next ten
    years and the ten years beyond that,
    that where we invest around the.
    Good morning.
    I want to ask about the margin story at
    AstraZeneca, because clearly these
    numbers will please the market.
    And you’ve talked about the growth rates
    that you’re seeing A lot of this growth,
    a lot of this pipeline, though, needs
    quite a lot of R&D, at least a lot of
    spending on it.
    And they do seem to be some investors a
    bit concerned about how you keep keep
    your margins.
    And what can you tell us about how you
    protect those margins?
    What’s what’s front of mind?
    Yeah, So when we look at our margins, we
    really think about are we getting
    operating leverage and the business.
    So is our revenue growth higher than our
    expense growth?
    And that is clearly the case.
    So for example, this quarter we saw 19%
    growth in revenue and a 13% growth in
    ACG.
    And obviously you need to invest to
    drive that top line.
    We also invest about 21, 22% of our
    revenue in R&D.
    So when you think of the breadth of our
    portfolio 120, you know, phase three,
    phase two studies, late stage studies,
    that requires obviously a lot of
    capital.
    And so we do invest in R&D and not
    everything will work for sure because it
    is science, But we’re investing for,
    again, the next ten years.
    So this growth continues not just this
    quarter or next quarter, but for the
    very long term.
    And of course, pricing will be important
    in what you’re able to turn these
    products into.
    Over in the United States, you had a
    lawsuit against the in the Inflation
    Reduction Act and drug pricing program,
    but that was dismissed.
    What’s next for you on U.S.
    pricing?
    You know, pricing is is clearly an
    important factor.
    And I think there are many elements when
    you think about pricing.
    First and foremost, price is.
    Very correlated to value.
    So when we think of innovative drugs,
    you have to bring true innovation to the
    market, not just incremental innovation
    to the market.
    And that real innovation will allow for,
    you know, to justify the prices that we
    look for.
    Secondly, we’re very focused on access.
    And the great thing about the Inflation
    Reduction Act that is in the US is
    actually it provides access to a much
    broader set of patients and also that
    allows for patients to stay on drug
    longer and reduces in some ways the
    amount of free drug that we provide
    because now you have broader access as a
    result of the limitations on Part D, So
    so I think we’ll continue to work with,
    you know, with governments across the
    across the globe.
    But both those elements bringing value
    through innovation as well as access are
    important to us.
    Sticking with the US legislation theme
    as well, and I love the about the access
    point of it.
    There’s another piece of legislation
    coming through in the House, the Senate,
    the Bio Secure Act, which I’m sure
    you’re familiar with for global
    audience.
    It basically means that it kind of puts
    prohibit prohibitions on contracts with
    companies headquartered in other
    jurisdictions, like China, for example,
    citing national security.
    AstraZeneca has about a 12% exposure to
    China, about a 42% exposure to the US.
    Do you see a trade off there?
    Is there one in the future that may
    impede your ability to bring that access
    story to China?
    Yeah, we do have a large business in
    China, a large commercial business in
    China, and we also are doing research
    and innovation in China relating to the
    bio secure act, I think are when we look
    at how we supply drugs and our supply
    chains are actually very resilient.
    And that was proven out during the
    pandemic where not only did we supply,
    you know, billions of doses for the
    pandemic, but we also did not miss a
    single dose of our own drugs, whether it
    was cancer drugs or heart disease drugs
    and so forth.
    So we have built very resilient supply
    chains and we have a very global
    network, both internal as well as with
    partners.
    So our ability to manage supply from
    different manufacturing sites is it
    gives us a lot of flexibility.
    That being said, we obviously will
    comply with whatever regulations there
    are, but I think we we have we have very
    resilient supply chain and probably will
    not have much impact as say so very,
    very quickly here.
    Just comply.
    I mean, limiting the exposure with China
    if the US imposes that.
    So the bio secure act is more focused on
    manufacturing supply itself, where we
    already have our own manufacturing in
    different places.
    But you know, we have a commercial
    business and a research business there,
    all right around us there.
    And we, the CFO of AstraZeneca, we thank
    you so much for bringing the headlines
    us on the AstraZeneca earnings.
    In the meantime, we are getting some
    numbers coming out of BHP.
    We know that the potential acquisition
    offer being made for Anglo here, BHP
    group saying that Anglo would receive a
    0.7097 BHP shares for each share of
    Anglo and that the offer would value the
    company at about £31.1 billion.
    We’re going to bring you more analysis,
    of course, after the break.
    In the meantime, stick with us.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Welcome back to markets today.
    We have 17 minutes to go until the
    sounds of cash equities trading.
    There’s so many earnings stories to
    factor in here.
    The net result of all of them is that
    the stoxx 600 perhaps won’t move
    anywhere in a hurry, but we could be
    flat.
    But some really interesting moves
    expected at the stock level.
    Let’s go macro though, and think about
    all the themes in these markets.
    We’re joined now by markets I’ve
    executive editor Mark Cutmore to give us
    2 minutes on the markets.
    And Mark, let’s start with the BOJ.
    We’re looking ahead to the big day
    tomorrow.
    We, of course, have been through 155.
    We’re still through 155 on dollar yen.
    What’s the game plan?
    What are you hearing people saying is
    the game plan as you head into tomorrow?
    So I think the vast majority of the
    macro discretionary market are not short
    gen and are looking to for intervention
    tomorrow.
    And there are a lot of a lot of the
    market is buying short term short dated
    downside dollar yen puts on this idea
    that hey we might get a U.S.
    data surprise tonight U.S.
    GDP tonight might come in strong.
    Atlanta GDP now is reading 2.7% for a
    2.5% expectations.
    So you might get a hot print there.
    Higher yields, higher dollar yen into
    DOJ.
    BOJ obviously disappoints tomorrow.
    And then what we see is the IMF has to
    come in on Friday afternoon to intervene
    when it will have max power.
    And we’ve got precedent for that, of
    course, happening before only a couple
    of years ago and therefore dollar yen
    will come much lower.
    But ultimately most of the macro
    discretionary market probably wants to
    sell yen again, if we do get that
    intervention.
    For myself, all this narrative makes
    sense, except I’m slightly worried we
    may not even get the intervention.
    I just I think that it’s very, very hard
    for the IMF to come in when the US
    narrative has not yet turned.
    And so I think that’s where there might
    be disappointment in that narrative.
    Okay.
    There could be disappointment there
    then.
    What about the chances that they don’t
    do intervention but they do a rate hike
    instead?
    Look, I think the if the risk reward is
    to bet on a hawkish surprise because
    there’s nothing priced.
    And, you know, look, our colleague Simon
    French has done this excellent analysis
    saying, look, they really should be
    hiking now by everything kind of the all
    the analytical thinking or the economic
    thinking.
    The problem is, everyone tells me, knows
    the DOJ is it’s too political.
    Without the communication, without the
    guidance, they cannot hike tomorrow.
    So it’s likely that, you know, they will
    probably disappoint on this.
    People are betting on a rate hike.
    And really what we’re going to get on
    the guidance of whether it’s a hawkish,
    dovish surprise will depend on their
    forecast.
    It’ll depend on their long term
    inflation forecasts, what level they
    come in at.
    Do they show sustainable inflation or do
    they show they’re still worried that
    they need to provide more easing to this
    economy?
    Mark, thanks very much.
    Bloomberg Markets Live executive editor
    Mark Cudmore with the latest on these
    markets.
    Remember, you can get more from the
    team, the whole me live team available
    to you.
    That’s the function MLA You go on the
    Bloomberg terminal let’s talk tech
    Mesoblast 50% post-market.
    Also the company’s second quarter sales
    forecast missed estimates.
    The tech giant also announcing plans to
    spend billions more than expected on ai
    developments.
    CEO mark zuckerberg touched on this in
    the earnings call.
    As we’re scaling CapEx and energy
    expenses for A.I., 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, AI
    will still grow our investment envelope
    meaningfully before we make much revenue
    from some of these new products.
    Robert Lee is a senior analyst for
    Bloomberg Intelligence and joins us now.
    Robert, the markets took a dim view of
    what we heard here.
    What do you think was driving that?
    What was that?
    I’ve seen three things listed as
    possibly driving the negativity.
    What stood out to you?
    Yeah, well, I was going to say what a
    difference a quarter makes.
    You think last set of results, there was
    all the euphoria on the share buybacks,
    on dividends and obviously the benefit
    they were gaining from the earlier cost
    cuts.
    But I think, you know, what we heard
    last night is perhaps reality bites that
    whilst most people agree, you know,
    generative AI in general is an
    interesting secular trend that’s going
    to last many, many years to come.
    The reality is the software companies
    are a bit caught in the middle at the
    moment because they’re spending billions
    and even tens of billions out on the
    CapEx side at a time when the
    monetization efforts are very early
    stage in a very immature stage.
    So they’re nowhere near covering this,
    they’re nowhere near breaking even yet
    breaking into profit on their side.
    And one key attribute, positive
    attribute the Magnificent Seven has,
    including better, is its free cash flow
    generation.
    So again, there are concerns in the
    market that the very heavy and
    increasing CapEx burden is beginning to
    eat into their free cash flow again at a
    time when they’re not really properly
    monetizing it at the moment.
    So the year of savings feels like it’s
    over.
    So that’s in the rear view mirror when
    we remember what is happening right now.
    Do you think we’ll look back on this
    moment as peaky?
    Wow.
    Yes.
    Set myself up for a full year.
    I think we are.
    You know, we’re potentially at that
    point.
    This is going on in the blooper videos
    in years to come.
    But, yeah, I mean, the tech sector is
    notorious for hype cycle, isn’t it?
    We’ve you know, we’ve we’ve had all the
    hype around Bitcoin and the initial wave
    of euphoria on that.
    And we’ve met a metaverse.
    You know, it’s I kind of follow a
    similar cycle.
    I think, you know, it comes down to
    human behavior, human psychology and the
    way that markets work, this sort of
    trade straight ahead, priced things in
    ahead.
    But I think, again, the reality is it’s
    going to be a bit of a struggle for all
    the companies, not just matter to
    properly monetize this.
    It’s a multi quarter multi-decade oh,
    sorry, multi year challenge for them.
    So, you know, yes, I would agree.
    Arguably the market has got better had
    given the multiples these stocks have
    been trading on recently.
    Well, Robert, it just feels like even
    though every company is investing in a
    really big way, Metta has done this and
    thrown their weight behind so many
    different projects with very little
    return.
    But compared to, say, like the Alphabet
    and Microsoft, where they have actually
    been able to gain a little bit more of
    that market share.
    Walk us through the numbers that matter
    when those two companies report later
    today.
    Yeah.
    Key difference with Alphabet or Google
    and Microsoft is they’ve got sizeable
    cloud computing businesses which are
    both large in scale and highly cash
    generative.
    So you’ve got this cash cow business.
    Well, I call it cash cow, the growth
    businesses as well underpinning their
    earnings and matter really doesn’t have
    that.
    So that is one key difference between
    them.
    I would say in terms of Internet stocks,
    not just in the US, but globally, there
    are three things that matter.
    One is the AI monetization and we’ve
    just talked about that.
    The second, though is the reality is
    advertising, which is a very cynical
    business again underpins their earnings.
    So in a slowing economic environment, we
    need to watch that closely and we’ll see
    what Alphabet says tonight.
    And then I think the third area to focus
    on is really shareholder returns.
    So again, back in last quarter, we saw
    share buybacks or enhanced share
    buybacks announced.
    There were some questions as to whether
    Google could announce a new dividend
    tonight.
    So we’ll have to wait and see.
    So I think enhanced shareholder returns,
    again, is is an area the market will
    definitely be focused on.
    All right.
    Shareholder returns, cloud market share,
    and of course, our business investment.
    Robert Lee, senior analyst for Bloomberg
    Intelligence, we thank you so much for
    walking us through that.
    I should mention those results, by the
    way, pressuring Nasdaq 100 futures this
    morning, really taking a beating.
    Let’s stick with the equity picture and
    get our stocks to watch.
    Joe Easton from our equities team is
    standing by Joe.
    Morning.
    We got potentially huge overnight news
    in the UK.
    Here’s Anglo American receives a
    takeover proposal from BHP over in
    Australia.
    Now we’re just getting a potential
    price.
    It could be around £31.1 billion.
    Now, the last time we had a deal of a
    similar size was when Sky was taken over
    by Comcast back in 2018, just telling us
    that we don’t get many deals as big as
    this in the UK in terms of why they’re
    doing it.
    It would give BHP a 10% share of the
    global copper supply market and also
    more growth over in other metals like
    nickel and also some iron ore as well.
    The thing with the deal is that Anglo is
    also the majority holder of De Beers and
    a couple of South American units as
    well.
    South African unit sorry.
    And in terms of BHP, one in this deal to
    go through, they say they would have to
    sell those units in order for them to
    complete the deal.
    Now, in terms of valuations, which is
    why they’ve been attracted to the stock,
    we can see UK miners trade a very big
    discount to the global mining sector.
    We can see trading on around 12 times
    price earnings versus 16 for the broader
    global market.
    That has spurred some worries that a
    couple of the big commodities firms
    could actually delist in London.
    This is adding to those concerns this
    morning.
    Here’s the chart.
    In terms of some other peers, Glencore,
    Anglo and Rio’s.
    While not having a great one year
    period, the thing is, could they extend
    shine the light on other firms that
    could then become targets or could there
    even be rival bids for Anglo?
    That’s what some analysts are talking
    about today.
    But massive news in terms of UK M&A.
    Then in terms of the chips, we got a
    sales warning.
    This one coming from SD micro sales for
    the year.
    It could be as low as 5 billion.
    The market was looking for 16.
    It is a big slow down in terms of the
    auto chip space according to the
    company.
    And interestingly, it comes just a day
    after SD might create a massive gain
    following some reports from SMI, Texas
    Instruments over in the US.
    And it wasn’t just that stocks again, we
    saw gains across the chip space
    yesterday.
    So this could potentially be -18.
    Analysts have buy ratings on SD Micro.
    And another point to note, so we’ve also
    got a bit of a warning out today from
    that B semi over in Amsterdam.
    That one is giving us a negative rate as
    well, saying some sharp calls lower and
    that bears the buy ratings are nice.
    You might 18 on that one.
    Finally, Nestlé getting a negative
    reaction today.
    They are seeing some weakness over in
    North America, according to analysts.
    Analysts over at Jefferies, pointing to
    a frozen food decline mix and also
    weakness in some of the coffee.
    And also the pet care market says a
    quote from Jefferies, calling that a
    very weak report, citing the consumer
    demand, particularly in North America.
    It has had a bad one year already and
    potentially we could see that continuing
    today.
    There it is, over one year.
    Next slide, down 19% in Switzerland,
    potentially that could continue.
    Keep an eye on Nestlé this morning.
    Joe.
    Thanks very much indeed.
    Unilever’s probably worth throwing in
    here as well, which I think is an
    interesting set of numbers, too.
    Joe’s bringing up Nestlé Verve,
    certainly having a very tough morning
    this morning, but the Unilever numbers
    are really strong and there’s talk of
    kind of them being so strong that
    actually could could see a series of
    rerating on that stock to the upside,
    Very big compared controls within that
    space.
    Yeah, absolutely.
    And another thing Joe points out, I
    think really interesting talking about
    weakness in the North American consumer.
    I saw that in the piano numbers as well,
    that organic sales numbers dropping and
    dropping more than expected in that
    North American market.
    It’s a funny guys talking about the
    numbers.
    The headline for me was Ben Jerry’s said
    that the sale would not affect their
    business.
    And that to me is what I really latched
    onto on the consumer sector.
    Really dive into more ice cream and of
    course all the corporate stories coming
    up.
    It is the market open, futures pointing
    just marginally higher.
    Stick with us.
    This is Bloomberg.
    The 25th, 2 minutes to go until the
    start of equity trading here in Europe.
    I have got a list of stocks that are
    going to move this morning.
    As long as my arm, it is going to be a
    very busy morning.
    Net net, what is it going to produce at
    the moment?
    Futures kind of pointing us to a
    actually fairly flattish open.
    But maybe as we start to digest some of
    these figures, we’ll get a little bit
    more clarity.
    There’s also M&A we need to talk about
    as well this morning.
    Is this the precursor to a big round of
    consolidation within the the mining
    space as we see potentially BHP and
    Anglo getting together now?
    A lot of premium in there, though.
    Yeah, certainly not a lot of premium.
    This feels very 15 years ago, doesn’t
    it, these big deals in the mining sector
    and after that they didn’t deliver in
    some cases didn’t deliver what people
    thought they might and then the sector
    went through a whole period of we won’t
    do that anymore, we’ll return cash to
    shareholders.
    Well, now the pursuit of copper gives us
    something different to talk about.
    Well, I think the copper story so
    interesting, cause in the short term
    it’s a really kind of scary place to be
    right now with all the shortages.
    We of course, the Anglo American
    downgraded their forecasts or production
    forecast.
    I think this was Monday as well.
    On top of that, they’re also downgrading
    their DeBeers division as well.
    They’re saying that they’re starting to
    see shortages in that piece as well.
    But in the long term, this kind of
    energy transition creates this
    underpinning for the copper story.
    So is this a short term supply story or
    a longer term?
    I think this is a management mess up
    story.
    Oh, okay.
    Anglo is not Anglo, to your point.
    I’ve had a series of downgrades in terms
    of what they’ve been able to deliver
    that has pushed the share price lower.
    They’re listed in London.
    Anglo is now looking very cheap.
    And what you say about the copper is
    right, but Anglo has got very cheap
    relative to the rest of the space.
    And I’m just wondering therefore this is
    a kind of isolated opportunity.
    Yeah, we want to see where this one goes
    at the open.
    Not a huge amount of premia, as we said,
    so we might well probably get some
    upside.
    But how much will others come in to bid
    for this asset?
    We’ll see if there’s any other interest
    here.
    So many others reporting today.
    As Guy said, I wonder if these markets
    are just little stunned in the face of
    so many Cup corporate earnings stories.
    Plus, the tech themes of yesterday
    coming out the United States, plus the
    M&A.
    There’s a lot to deal with.
    European equity markets then opening the
    5100 is up by 2/10 of 1%.
    So we see a little bit of a move higher
    there.
    The DAX is flat so far, so net net so
    far, moving nowhere on the Stoxx 600,
    but it’s early days.
    We’ll wait for some movement.
    We haven’t talked about all the stocks
    reporting this morning.
    It’s just not possible.
    I was drawn to the BASF news earlier on
    as well because chemicals are no go.
    We often talk about how you you want to
    keep across that story.
    The numbers beating estimates, it seems,
    but saying that they can’t confirm turn
    turnaround in the chemicals industry
    just yet.
    You wonder where that sector goes during
    this earnings season.
    That was a wacker also quite good, but
    they have beaten expectations.
    But they are still if you take a look at
    what the lens, they’re not great
    numbers.
    So that kind of relative to what we
    thought they would be, yes, they look
    good.
    But actually in the kind of the big
    scheme of things, as you say, the
    turnaround in maybe that sector has yet
    to appear.
    Nestle is getting hit pretty hard this
    morning.
    ASML is down pretty hard as well.
    I wonder if that’s a read across from
    SDM and BP.
    So that’s coming into that space you are
    seeing.
    That’s the kind of the tech sector
    broadly across Europe under pressure.
    The real standout story, AstraZeneca.
    AstraZeneca is lifting the Footsie 100
    this morning.
    It is a the biggest points gain on the
    Stoxx 600 it’s up by five and a half
    nearly 6% this morning.
    Unilever hot on its heels.
    Barclays as well higher by about 2.2%
    this morning.
    We had of course had been earlier on the
    show.
    We are watching BHP and Anglo as well.
    Doesn’t look like Anglo is open just
    yet, but BHP is under some pressure this
    morning.
    So of course, one to watch and see if
    it’s that class of M&A trade, how Anglo
    responds to it, how close you get to
    that.
    It does seem as if all of these things
    are adding up to a better London
    outperformance today.
    There’s AstraZeneca hitting the drug
    sector, there’s Barclays with a bit more
    US exposure, helping the trading side
    that helps it stand out from the banking
    space.
    Maybe the Unilever numbers, the M&A in
    the mining space, all of these things
    coming together in London and we are up
    by 6/10 of 1% on the Footsie 100.
    Where is the rest of Europe does look a
    little flatter
    in terms of the luxury sector.
    It looks like the the mass numbers have
    been well received.
    We’ll talk about these in a moment.
    That is giving a little bit of a boost
    to the likes of LVMH this morning.
    It’s interesting to see L’Oreal also
    kind of picking up on the back of that.
    The other bank I would just mention is
    Sabadell.
    That’s looks like it’s had a fairly
    solid set of numbers.
    That stock is up by over 7%.
    So it’s a mixed performance is coming
    through in the banking space this
    morning.
    But broadly in aggregate, probably a
    little bit more positive there.
    So some real differences emerging in
    terms of what we’re seeing here.
    Chips are definitely down.
    Tech is under pressure this morning.
    You’ve got some some kind of real
    divergence within the consumer space
    between Unilever, Nestlé.
    Nestlé is down 3.2%.
    That’s the biggest drag in Europe.
    Unilever up by 3.86.
    That’s the second biggest gainer in
    terms of points here in you still
    waiting for Anglo American to open up,
    even though even without that basic
    resources is the best performing sector
    in in Europe today.
    So we’ll see where that one goes.
    But it’s mostly the paper companies at
    the moment.
    Certainly something to watch.
    Remember, going back to what I was time
    out with the banks because you’re seeing
    some real divergence in terms of how
    things, for example, Deutsche Bank
    versus being.
    He, for example, has actually approached
    their fixed income business.
    We actually asked the CEO of Barclays as
    well how the rate volatility is
    affecting their bottom line.
    Take a listen to what he had to say.
    As far as net interest income goes.
    You know, the rates markets have been
    volatile.
    There’s been a round trip APR of 90
    basis points, down 90 basis points back
    up in the ten year gilt in the U.K.
    and roughly the same numbers in the US.
    And so it is very early.
    Our numbers are in line with what we
    said.
    We’ve seen deposit growth, we’ve seen
    lending growth in mortgages and in
    credit.
    And so we’re pleased with that.
    But it’s one quarter in a longer journey
    of three years.
    The CEO of Barclays.
    They’re talking to us a little bit about
    that rate volatility.
    Let’s get more on that.
    Tom Metcalf, Army of Finance Investing
    managing editor, joins us this morning.
    The key theme seems to be this rate
    story, weakness in FICC results except
    for Deutsche Bank.
    Is this a one off?
    Yeah, I think it’s really interesting as
    you look across between Deutsche Bank,
    Barclays like Deutsche Bank’s fixed rate
    traders did very, very well.
    I think up something like 7% as bank.
    I was just saying that it was sort of a
    bit of a middling quarter, I suppose,
    for the rates traders at Barclays.
    But for me, the interesting thing is you
    look at the Barclays share price up a
    couple of percent, as you were saying.
    And I think that speaks to what
    investors are looking out for for
    Barclays, the investment banks,
    obviously the big piece of this, but
    it’s not the be all and end all.
    And they’re probably pretty happy with
    what the bank I was saying it looks like
    a delivery on those expectations they
    set out structurally.
    I think
    one of the differences between the
    European banks that are obvious from
    this set of numbers.
    Can I can I aggregate them together?
    This is a sector that’s done really well
    so far this year.
    It’s the big outperforming sector so
    far.
    But but are there where’s the nuance
    within this set of numbers from Sabadell
    to Barclays to what we’re seeing this
    morning from BNP to Deutsche Wet?
    Where does the if I’m stock picking
    within the sector, what am I looking for
    this morning to determine kind of how I
    see the differences between the banks?
    Well, I think in some ways you just look
    at the domestic markets, right, Like,
    you know, Barclays versus a Deutsche
    Bank.
    And ultimately maybe the difference
    there is your view on each of those
    countries.
    But and that’s the fascinating thing is,
    you know, within Europe, there is such a
    divergence sometimes between the banks,
    like, you know, as I say, Deutsche Bank,
    Puerto Rican home very Mary, But they’ve
    got this particular strategy they’re
    trying to execute on house bank.
    Kim Yeah, exactly.
    So so it’s always the way I guess in
    Europe and so so it’s geography rather
    than business model that is determining
    kind of how how the market sees these
    stocks.
    I think sometimes because obviously name
    is such a big, big part of what
    everyone’s thinking about it.
    So yeah, and that’s the tricky thing
    with an investment bank, you know,
    trying to sort of value that as a
    shareholder is really hard because, you
    know, it’s a bit of a black box.
    Why did Deutsche Bank do so well this
    quarter compared to Barclays?
    You don’t know.
    And as a bank, I was saying it is very
    difficult on a quarter by quarter basis
    to judge an investment bank.
    It’s sort of that longer term view.
    But obviously when you see the ups and
    downs per quarter, it’s easy to get
    caught up in that, which is why you have
    that pressure on Barclays to be like, we
    actually don’t want you to be viewed as
    an investment bank heavy institution.
    We really want that risk weighted assets
    to come down.
    He could be pleased then with the amount
    of time we spent talking about net
    interest margin and we heard him there
    referencing the the round trip we’ve
    been on in the UK rates and how that
    might play out for the business.
    It’s interesting to think about, you
    know, we heard from Lloyd’s yesterday,
    which their story was one of Nim coming
    under pressure because customers were
    shopping around and looking for better
    deals on their savings.
    And, you know, the longer we’re in a
    higher rates environment, the more that
    might happen.
    Want to see?
    Yeah, exactly.
    You know, it comes down on the retail
    side, just execution on that retail side
    of thing, which is, you know, often
    doesn’t get the headlines.
    But can you deliver that customer
    experience?
    Can you sort of stand out from the pack
    without necessarily just relying on a
    higher interest rate to bring people in?
    But yeah, I mean, that is going to be
    the big thing in this rate environment
    is how much of that margin can the bank
    sustain.
    And also, you know, who is kind of
    getting more of a market share than
    others.
    Hmm.
    Deals Also in Focus this morning,
    something we also talked to Van Zandt
    about, something the bankers might be
    pleased to see with this big mining deal
    perhaps going through at home.
    Thank you very much.
    Thanks for joining us, soul mate.
    COMPERE With the latest on the banking
    sector and talking of those deals, Anglo
    American shares then on the rise this
    morning, jumping 11% out of the gate
    this morning, reflecting that BHP, that
    BHP offer that we’ve seen for the
    business jumping to 2460, so perhaps a
    little bit of execution risk being
    priced in there as they offer.
    Around 25, though it seems is a little
    softer this morning.
    It’s kind of the bottom end of the CAC,
    not bottom end of the CAC, but it’s in
    terms of points, a third leading loss in
    terms of what we’re seeing from the
    luxury sectors.
    Interesting.
    The other names are actually doing
    slightly better in terms of what the
    company has come out.
    Actually, the sales story in China
    doesn’t look quite so bad.
    It does look as if there maybe has been
    a little bit of trading down.
    But it’s also talking about the fact
    that it’s not finding further price
    hikes for the rest of 2020 for sure.
    He says something about how maybe the
    the market is evolving here.
    How should we be reading this?
    Well, let’s get a take from our luxury
    correspondent, Angelina Rescuer, who
    joins us from Paris.
    Talk me through what is happening.
    The top line numbers, the sales line,
    the revenue line looks really strong.
    The market’s taking a more cautious
    approach.
    So so why are we seeing the cautious
    approach when we’ve seen such a strong
    top line here?
    Hi, guy.
    Yes, indeed.
    I mean, if you look at the all the
    geographies, they grew by double digits
    in in in all the regions and crucially
    in the Asia Pacific, excluding Japan,
    they grew by 14%.
    However, the CFO in a call with a report
    says that he said that traffic was a
    little bit softer after the Chinese New
    Year.
    So that was in March.
    But he said that this softer traffic was
    compensated by basically higher
    average baskets, so the customers would
    typically have missed be purchased More
    affordable products like silk scarves or
    beauty and perfume weren’t so present.
    However, they seem to have done really
    well with the customers who were buying
    more expensive items, you know, leather
    goods ready to wear and jewelry.
    So so that compensated potentially the
    softer,
    softer demand in the sort of more entry
    level categories there.
    Hmm.
    And talk to us a bit more about China
    then, because we spent a lot of time
    over recent weeks talking about the
    weakness of Gucci at carrying and their
    struggles in China.
    What’s the difference in the stories
    here?
    I mean, China has been a tricky market
    so far this year.
    And it’s really
    we see a divergence of polarization
    between the more and the more the more
    exclusive brands and the and the less
    so.
    And that’s what the caring CFO told us
    this week.
    She says that
    the Gucci, the label, unfortunately, is
    located in the middle.
    So it’s not benefiting from this
    polarization in the markets.
    And and on the other side, you have a
    label like Hamas, which is, you know, at
    the top of the luxury pyramid, maybe,
    you know, up there with with with Rolex
    and they have this supply constrained
    model.
    So.
    So that’s what we’re seeing right now
    that those who control their their the
    their supply and therefore their pricing
    are in the better position than then
    perhaps brands like Gucci who are
    perceived to be more in the middle.
    I want to be in the middle.
    Angelina, thank you very much indeed for
    joining us on what we’ve seen out of
    Mars this morning.
    Let’s talk about what we’re seeing in
    the core six this morning, some
    divergence.
    It’s really interesting.
    You’ve had a series of numbers out this
    morning.
    Look at Schneider doing very well as the
    markets marks that stock up by over.
    Look at Nestlé.
    Nestlé is getting hit hard in Vevey this
    morning.
    ASML is also coming out of weakness.
    There’s chip weakness this morning.
    More broadly, Novo also showing signs of
    weakness.
    LVMH turning around a little bit.
    So LVMH now a little softer, down by
    4/10 of 1%.
    Schneider’s Schneider, it’s an
    interesting story and the numbers this
    morning may be confirming its place in
    the kind of the narrative as well.
    There are many stocks this morning that
    you want to be paying attention to.
    I don’t know how Joe Easton’s whittling
    it down, but he has done or maybe he’s
    just going to take the rest of the show
    and kind of talk about all the names.
    Joe, what are you up?
    So it’s going to be a tough one guy, but
    we’re going to start with Anglo American
    because that move there, 13%, it’s a
    huge move.
    The biggest move we’ve got today.
    As Anna mentioned earlier, though, it is
    trading below the potential offer price.
    Now, the other thing to note is as a
    good note from buy this morning.
    So there would be antitrust concerns
    around this given these two copper
    giants potentially merging.
    Is that bid coming from BHP overnight
    that pre-Olympic limpid?
    We’ve actually bought up the secondary
    listing of BHP in London.
    The main listing is on Australia, but we
    can see that declining 3.7% at the
    moment.
    But the big move is Anglo American, up
    13%, not seeing a huge read across in
    the papers at the moment, but we’re
    keeping an eye.
    Could there be a rival bid, Could it
    then shine the light on some lower
    valuations of these UK miners was really
    much cheaper than their global peers at
    the moment that we’re going to move over
    to chips.
    It is it’s it is a nasty day over there.
    SD Micro coming down 4%.
    B sent me down 6% as well and all the
    peers moving lower, Infineon, ASML and
    SMI as well.
    That one down 1%.
    SD Micro and B sent me both giving sales
    warnings on the same day.
    SD Micro mostly related to the auto
    space, auto chips, EVs, that kind of
    thing.
    B Semi is a chip manufacturing firm.
    These really coming out of the blue and
    weighing on the tech space.
    This morning, we’re going to look at a
    couple of those consumer health stocks
    that we’ve got.
    So we got Unilever.
    Those ones are rising around 4% at the
    moment.
    All the focus is on the ice cream, the
    merger potential IPO.
    Is that will that go?
    Will it be London?
    Will it be Amsterdam?
    But for the moment, the sales looking
    pretty strong across the space.
    Nestlé, though, the big decline in North
    American consumers not buying enough,
    but potentially not buying enough.
    Nespresso all the other products from
    them as well.
    And it does look like North America is
    the weak one over them.
    We’ve got another drinks warning.
    This one again is Pernod Ricard warning
    on sales.
    This is relates mostly to their China
    sales in cognac.
    However, we have had a number of
    warnings out of those recently,
    including Diageo, Remy, all of those
    peers potentially that Price said only
    down $0.01.
    But take a look at AstraZeneca up 5%, a
    big move for that stock.
    The oncology powerhouse here in the UK
    continuing to push on showing strength
    in their cancer drugs this morning.
    And that is a big mover in terms of that
    one.
    We’ll just flip over and look at the
    banks was expecting to see some
    volatility in the Spanish ones given up
    potentially.
    Pedro Sanchez looking to maybe resign
    that breaking news last night.
    But the other thing is we had strong
    numbers out of Banco Sabadell last night
    and they are this morning as well.
    Some analysts say that potentially the
    net interest margins over there are
    better than expected at the moment.
    Barclays getting a decent gain following
    strength in their trading business.
    But the weak one is Deutsche Bank, down
    two and a half percent.
    Analysts are saying the capital and also
    the names the net interest margin
    potentially not as strong as expected.
    Not too much movement in BNP.
    A little going for that one in Paris.
    Deutsche Bank, those standing out down
    2.5% over in Germany following that weak
    capital and net interest margins from
    the German lender.
    All right, Joe Easton from our equities
    team, we thank you so much for walking
    us through those crucial stories.
    Coming up, we continue the market
    conversation with LJ, IBM’s chief
    investment officer, Sonia Loud.
    The conversation next.
    This is Bloomberg.
    This is a more of a fundamentals play
    because you look at the balance sheets,
    the profit statements of these
    companies, they are attractive
    companies.
    You know, they should you know, you
    probably don’t want to own 30% of them
    in your index.
    Right.
    But owning all of them, I think, is a
    good idea.
    As Quinn, CIO for Equity Strategies at
    Research Affiliates, speaking to this
    program just yesterday, talking about
    tech names, big tech names and the
    extent to which you want exposure to
    those.
    Let’s get another view.
    Sunil joins us, CIO of Legal and General
    Investment Management with us on set
    this morning.
    Sonia, very good morning.
    So we’ll get to some of the European
    earnings themes, if you like, in a bit.
    But in terms of the stateside mood, of
    course we had a weakness after I was in
    the matter numbers.
    I see the Nasdaq futures down by 1.2%
    right now.
    So it seems as if that’s going to be
    something of a theme as we work through
    the day.
    There were specifics around one
    business, but broadly speaking, your
    thoughts on the tech earnings story that
    we’ve had so far?
    I probably would phrase it slightly
    differently, not just on tech earnings,
    but just taking a step back to make sure
    that we are, you know, capturing the
    signal versus the noise.
    Because on a day like this, you can get
    drowned in the headlines.
    And we are.
    Yes,
    that’s where we are.
    And so it’s always important to
    understand what’s been the run up to the
    earnings season, what’s been the
    expectation built into the earnings
    season?
    And it’s very clear for tech stocks in
    particular.
    Look, on the one year performance, it’s
    been a huge run up based obviously on
    the wonderful expectation.
    How I will change the business
    environment will obviously drive tech
    earnings.
    And don’t get me wrong, the earnings
    profile has been strong.
    But if you then look at the valuation
    level, you see that we’ve probably gone
    quite a bit ahead on extrapolating that
    this will be a very smooth line going
    forward and that there’s no bump in the
    road.
    And I think we’re just hitting a little
    bit of a reality reality check.
    This doesn’t take away the excitement
    around the potential for going forward,
    but it’s probably valuation coming back
    to a more realistic pathway forward.
    Okay.
    So we’re looking for a reality check on
    tech over in the United States here in
    Europe.
    But we’ve got so many things going on
    with the earnings stories, as you
    mentioned.
    So let’s take the take take one one at a
    time.
    I suppose.
    I was looking at numbers out of the
    chemical sector.
    Big players, they’re saying you can’t
    turn the corner, you can’t call that
    we’ve turned a corner on the chemicals
    in the chemical sector just yet.
    What are you looking for from that kind
    of sector?
    Because it’s often watched as really
    crucial to telling us about the broader
    industry.
    But a lot of the growth out of Europe,
    any recovery has been in services, not
    manufacturing of late.
    So what signal do you get that?
    Yes.
    And this is where you really want to
    have the reality check with it, with the
    fundamentals.
    Where are we in terms of our expectation
    for the economic growth?
    You rightly pointed out we’ve had more
    positive news from the services sector
    rather than manufacturing.
    This was reconfirmed with a PMI story in
    Europe yesterday.
    And so not necessarily surprising that
    the news flow out of companies would
    match this.
    And now for the large global
    manufacturing companies and chemicals in
    particular, you would look towards China
    as well.
    And again, looking at fundamentals,
    what’s the story there?
    And as such, you know, you have to look
    really regionally and fundamentally
    what’s driving the relevant pieces of
    the jigsaw.
    Sonia, is it too early to price an
    election risk in the US?
    We are always very mindful to price in
    any election recipes.
    At the end of the day you will have
    noise, you will have volatility, you
    will have loads of emotive headlines.
    That’s a given.
    But at the end of the day for investors,
    what is it really that influences the
    trajectory of growth, inflation,
    monetary policy?
    Because that really gives you that the
    trajectory that you really should focus
    on.
    And I don’t think if you really look
    back in history, ignore the noise.
    There will be lots on the day and
    clearly in the run up.
    But what really is influencing is more
    the themes we would look at fiscal in
    particular because this clearly is an
    area that has helped the US economy a
    lot over the past year or two.
    And the question really is how much
    wiggle room is there, How much can the
    two parties and hence the president do
    after the after the election.
    So you see you priced that in.
    What does it actually look like?
    Is there a specific asset you’re
    watching?
    Yeah, of course.
    You would definitely watch the long end
    of the curve, right?
    Because if you consider fiscal
    sustainability and where we are, where
    the fiscal deficit right now is, you
    look at some of the expectations, some
    of the headlines and we haven’t got all
    the details yet, but you will we will
    expect that the market will take note.
    There’s no term premium whatsoever right
    now.
    So you have to wonder whether there is a
    steepening of the curve in the in the
    run up and potentially afterwards simply
    because of the dynamics in the fiscal
    policy.
    The Footsie 100 is trying to catch up
    with its peers.
    It started.
    Does it carry on?
    Is it something that is sustainable?
    What gets it there?
    I would look at the individual companies
    rather than the Footsie.
    We know that.
    Yes, we look at it from a country
    backdrop, but at the end of the day, you
    knew it as well as I this is this is the
    individual companies, their positioning
    globally that drives the earnings.
    And I think today’s news really, really
    well, let’s talk about let’s talk about
    today’s news.
    Does is it a reflection of what’s
    happening at Anglo?
    Is it a reflection of cheap valuations
    in London?
    Is this something that we could see
    replicated?
    How many companies could leave, how many
    companies could be taken over?
    If you just look at the stories today,
    it’s clearly strength of earnings and a
    take of Astra.
    Astra looks really strong, but Astra is
    is a.
    All the company, the strength of their
    portfolios, obviously, and what’s
    driving this and their customer base is
    global.
    And as such, you know, this is not
    related to the UK fundamentals and
    that’s been a story we’ve had for a long
    period of time, right?
    The attractiveness of a marketplace is
    is a you know, is a set of input
    factors.
    And a company will always look at all
    the factors before deciding whether this
    is the best location for them to to set
    up headquarter and to strive.
    And clearly a company like Astra, you
    know, with with a global customer base
    seems to be striving here.
    But that has to be the ambition that you
    have the best backdrop to enable
    companies to do exactly this.
    Yeah.
    And that’s one CEO is usually quite
    vocal about what he wants to see in
    terms of regulatory backdrop and tax and
    all the rest.
    I mean, M&A, another big theme in London
    today within the mining sector, those
    long memories will remember we’ve been
    through big waves of M&A 15, ten, 15
    years ago in the mining sector.
    And the lesson from that was investors
    said, no, we don’t want to do that
    anymore.
    We want you to stop doing that.
    We want you to throw off cash.
    And that we are we are we ready our
    investors ready to go back to another
    period of M&A in the mining space.
    I don’t think those episodes
    unnecessarily comparable because the
    narrative has changed completely.
    Right.
    And we know that the rationale for why
    we might see the approach today has very
    much to do with the way how and how
    metals and mining are used.
    And electrification is the big one here,
    right?
    And we know that the demand for copper
    in particular is very much linked to the
    electrification story.
    And I think this is why I’m always
    mindful.
    Yes, history is a good guide, but the
    logic and the narrative is a very
    different one and probably will be
    looked at differently in that context
    because you’re looking at the mining
    companies and the assets they own
    differently in the context of a very
    change demand pattern compared to ten.
    So copper is not what it was then in a
    way, because if you consider the demand
    and we have all studies pointing towards
    the incredible demand that will arise
    for these metals, it is a different
    story.
    Can I just just before we wrap this up,
    is is Anglo attractive because it’s
    listed in London and therefore trades at
    a discount?
    No, it’s attractive because of its
    assets and the potential you have in
    using these in a context with massive
    demand for.
    Okay.
    All right.
    So no out.
    No, it’s okay.
    It’s an important question.
    CEO of legal and general of US
    Management, we thank you so much for
    that crucial context.
    It’s a really interesting dynamic as we
    talk about the deal flow in the mining
    space, not just for Anglo American of
    BHP, but is this, to your point, a one
    off or a sector run story?
    Nobody’s going to want copper.
    That seems to be the narrative, if
    that’s what Sonia’s saying as well.
    Yeah, it’s going to be it’s where do you
    get it?
    You have to dig it out of the ground
    that’s hot.
    Or are you gonna buy it on the stock
    market?
    Yeah, it’s easier.
    Antofagasta Another stock was trading
    higher this morning.
    There’s another sort of read across from
    this M&A story and there are the macro
    themes aren’t that there’s the what’s
    going on in Japan as well.
    Also in focus coming up plenty of focus
    on the weak yen but back 3155 again,
    folks, as we look ahead to tomorrow’s
    Bank of Japan decision, the expectation
    is we don’t get any change in rates from
    the Bank of Japan, although some
    analysts pointing out that that would be
    something that might support the
    currency.
    They are very concerned about that.
    A lot of verbal intervention still.
    But will we actually see some some
    intervention once again from the central
    bank, from the Ministry of Finance?
    We’ll get to that Japanese conversation
    shortly.
    This is back.
    Look back 30 minutes into the day here
    in Europe, we are facing something of a
    signal to noise challenge this morning.
    So many corporate results.
    How do we digestible to be honest?
    Equity markets aren’t going anywhere in
    a hurry.
    We are down broadly across Europe with
    the exception of the Footsie 100, which
    seems to be doing a little bit better.
    Interestingly enough, the IBEX is
    actually positive this morning.
    I think that probably got to do with
    Sabadell and less maybe to do with what
    we’re seeing in terms of the politics.
    There are some big names out there that
    you want to be watching in terms of the
    numbers that we’ve seen, though, so far
    this morning.
    Broadly, actually, though, you would
    probably say the net story is quite
    positive.
    Some of this is emanate to Anglos up by
    10%.
    You’ve got AstraZeneca on the back of
    its numbers.
    We saw the CFO on assets a little bit
    earlier on broad brush story that
    Unilever’s having a good day.
    Barclays is having a good day.
    It’s interesting to see what is
    happening with the chip space though.
    On the right hand side of your screen,
    the banks that the banks are doing okay,
    the pharma space is doing, it’s more
    mixed.
    But the chip space, the tech sector
    today is where the weak, the center is
    coming through on both sides of the
    Atlantic.
    The Nasdaq is kind of pitch to be quite
    a lot lower this morning.
    Yeah, absolutely.
    So looking is looking to pick up on that
    theme stateside later on today.
    Nasdaq futures down by one and a quarter
    percent.
    One of the big macro things we are also
    watching closely this week and this time
    tomorrow, we’ll have the answers to the
    questions we’re about to ask is all
    around the BMJ and Japanese response to
    weak currency.
    Japanese stocks are lower today with the
    yen extending losses in the lead up to
    tomorrow’s big decision.
    They say after the currency weakened
    beyond 155 per dollar for the first time
    in more than three decades.
    It happened yesterday.
    It keeps happening this morning, keeps
    getting weaker.
    I think this is the first time since
    1990 we’ve been to these 155 levels.
    Let’s get to you Bamba, who joins us
    now, head of active investments for
    Japan at BlackRock.
    So very nice to have have you with us.
    Let me ask you you about what you were
    expecting then in terms of intervention.
    If we deal with that first, how to maybe
    have a conversation in isolation about
    intervention without thinking about what
    the the BOJ does in its in its meeting.
    But what are your thoughts on what will
    trigger intervention this time around?
    Yeah.
    Nice to be here.
    What will trigger intervention this time
    around?
    I do.
    I do think you take the intervention
    question separately from the DOJ.
    What the DOJ does is going to be
    separate from any one time intervention
    that the government may or may not
    decide to do.
    We don’t have particular insights on on,
    you know, whether or not the government
    will do intervention.
    We think it’s entirely possible, but I
    do think it’s important to separate that
    from what the BMJ is going to focus on
    doing tomorrow and in, you know, their
    monetary policy decisions, which is to
    support the Japanese economy and to make
    sure that
    the exit from deflation sustains itself.
    So we think that that’s the focus and
    not so much the currency
    just supporting the Japanese economy.
    Does that rely on sorry, supporting the
    economy?
    Does it rely on supporting the currency?
    Is the yen weakness so, so weak that,
    you know, maybe we consider a surprise
    hike from the BOJ, for example,
    tomorrow.
    That would be one way to support the
    currency.
    Yeah.
    No, no, absolutely.
    I think I think supporting the Japanese
    economy is going to entail primarily
    maintaining accommodative monetary
    policy, monetary policy conditions.
    So the BOJ, we know, is on a path
    towards normalizing interest rates or
    monetary policy.
    They have the big meeting back in March
    to pull out of a lot of the
    extraordinary policies that they put in
    place, like negative interest rates and,
    you know, yield curve control.
    And they’re on a path towards
    normalizing things, but they just want
    to make sure that they’re doing that in
    a gradual fashion and not rush into
    things to tighten monetary conditions
    too much, to slow down this the momentum
    that we’re seeing in the economy.
    And I think that that’s their first
    priority.
    And addressing the situation on the FX
    market is at best secondary.
    Who’s in control of what is happening
    with the yen right now?
    Is it the BJP, the Ministry of Finance,
    or is it the Federal Reserve in the
    United States?
    Yeah, that’s a great question.
    I think that, you know, the the the end
    the effects ultimately is going to be
    driven by interest rate differentials.
    The government can come in and do
    intervention, and that will move the
    market.
    You know, for a little while.
    But that’s not really going to be the
    determinant of the facts.
    So longer term, as you know, the Bank of
    Japan normalizes interest rates and
    interest rates go up in Japan.
    And, you know, as the Fed hopefully at
    some point starts to cut interest rates,
    the interest rate differentials start to
    normalize.
    And without the effects should, you
    know, begin to stabilize and turn.
    You, which is the most important cross
    rate that we should look at for the
    Japanese economy.
    We always focus on the yen.
    But is it dollar yuan?
    Is that the key things that we should be
    watching here?
    And we should think about how the
    Chinese are watching what is happening
    here, too?
    Is it what’s happening with Korea?
    How do we think about this?
    Globally and regionally?
    And the effects of these various kind of
    cross rates have in terms of the overall
    basket?
    Yeah, I think I think Dollar yen is the
    right one to look at and to focus on
    from a fundamental perspective.
    The majority of the the trades that that
    happens in Japan is going to be
    denominated or teed off of the dollar.
    So so fundamentally that is the right
    right pair to look at.
    And also from a markets perspective, you
    know it’s absolutely the dollar yen that
    that that gets the attention of markets
    and controls sentiment.
    So yeah I think I was just look at
    dollar yen and that’s that’s the
    appropriate one to look at.
    You said that for the BOJ, the currency
    should be a secondary consideration and
    they shouldn’t want to tighten
    conditions too much too prematurely.
    Slow down the economy.
    What are you at in terms of what does
    trigger any intervention then?
    If we go back to that conversation, you
    won’t be level.
    They like to say it’s not about the
    level, it’s maybe about the speed of
    change.
    So what do you think would trigger
    intervention?
    Yeah, it’s the level, it’s the speed of
    change.
    It’s the build up of speculative
    positions.
    I think, I think, you know, from a level
    and, and
    speed of change perspective, you know,
    we may already be at.
    You know, areas that they justify or
    that motivates the government to come in
    and intervene.
    So I think it’s entirely possible.
    And then also I would add that alarms,
    you know, feeling of alarm and anxiety
    over the effects is starting to mount
    gradually within Japan as well, impacts
    the cost of living and and so on and so
    forth.
    So it wouldn’t be a surprise at all to
    us if the government chooses to come in
    and intervene.
    But, you know, again, you know, like, I
    don’t think that that’s necessarily what
    the Bank of Japan is focused on right
    now.
    Bank of Japan is focused on,
    you know, the economy and the fact that
    they implemented some big changes to
    monetary policy at last meeting and the
    fact that that was taken, you know,
    quite well by the markets, there were no
    major disruptions or, you know,
    liquidity events or evolve ends in the
    markets.
    So they must be pleased about that.
    And they must also be pleased about, you
    know, the progress in wage growth and,
    you know, momentum within the domestic
    economy.
    And so I think that’s what they see and
    that’s what they’re focused on.
    That calls for, you know, gradual
    normalization of monetary policy of of,
    you know, interest rate hikes, which is
    positive.
    That’s positive for savers, It’s
    positive for the financial economy.
    So I think that’s that’s where most of
    the focus will be.
    And if he were going to intervene, when
    would you do it?
    We’ve got key data out of the United
    States.
    So we’ve got, you know, GDP data, PCE
    data.
    These are all threatened to move dollar
    yen, could move them in a direction that
    weakens the currency even further.
    And of course, we have the BOJ.
    What would be the thinking about when
    that intervention would take place?
    Yeah, I’m not necessarily in the heads
    of, you know, the government officials
    that may make these decisions.
    I think they just obviously want to do
    it when it’s, you know, most effective
    and they can do it over, you know, a
    number of times as well.
    It’s not a one and done thing.
    Yeah.
    I mean, again, I don’t think it needs to
    be tied at all around the DOJ event.
    So I would I would, you know, sort of
    separate the two.
    How much political pressure is there for
    a stronger currency?
    We were talking to
    an analyst the other day who was kind of
    joking how cheap a beer is in Tokyo
    versus a bear in Mayfair here in London.
    And that does seem to be the sense that
    you see a lot of foreigners turning up
    in Japan, spending a lot of money.
    And the local community, there’s a
    certain amount of resentment around
    this.
    Is there pressure, domestic pressure, to
    have a stronger currency at this point?
    How strong do you think that pressure
    is?
    I’m trying to understand, as you say,
    the motivation to generate that
    intervention.
    Yeah, I don’t necessarily think that
    there’s a ton of resentment in the
    tourism that that we’re getting.
    We think it’s great.
    You know, hotel prices have gone up and
    restaurant prices have gone up as a
    result of tourists.
    But but I think, you know, like the
    general mood in Japan is quite positive.
    It’s quite positive about, you know, the
    stock market doing so well, is quite
    positive about wage growth being so
    strong, It’s quite positive about CapEx
    being at all time highs.
    And and, you know, just generally the
    the exit from from deflation has been a
    big positive for sentiment.
    So.
    So I think that, you know, generally
    we’re feeling good about things and we
    are feeling hopeful about where things
    are headed.
    Is there some political pressure about
    the around the currency?
    Yeah, there may be some.
    And I think we would all like, you know,
    the government as well as the private
    sector would like to see the yen
    stabilize and be a little bit stronger.
    But I don’t think that that should sort
    of take away from all the positives that
    are going on in Japan, and that’s more
    of the dominant theme in the business
    community as well as, you know, the
    government, I think.
    Yeah.
    Great to catch up.
    We’re going to wait.
    We’re going to watch next 24 hours.
    Going to be absolutely fascinating.
    Bamber, head of Active investments for
    Japan, joining us from BlackRock.
    Coming up, going to get back to that big
    mining story.
    BHP making that unsolicited takeover bid
    to rival Anglo American.
    We’re going to discuss what could be the
    biggest shake up in the mining industry
    in over a decade.
    It’s a big deal.
    Will it happen?
    That’s next.
    This is Bloomberg.
    Welcome back.
    This is markets today, 844 in London.
    So 44 minutes into a European equity
    markets session that sets London apart
    to some degree.
    The footsie 100 up by half a percent.
    A lot of the earnings stories and some
    of the M&A news playing in London’s
    favour this morning.
    Elsewhere, we have some weakness on the
    on the DAX, both of those down now the
    world’s largest mining company talking
    of M&A.
    BHP has made a takeover approach for
    rival Anglo American.
    Anglo American confirmed the proposal
    after Bloomberg first reported that the
    bid was in the works.
    If successful, the takeover would
    represent the first mega-deal among the
    world’s biggest miners in over a decade.
    Let’s get more on this story now.
    Bloomberg senior executive editor for
    energy and Commodities.
    Will Kennedy joins us now.
    Will, thanks so much for joining us.
    We’ve talked quite a bit about why this
    deal is happening and why now.
    We spoke to Sonia Loud over at LGM
    earlier on and she was saying this isn’t
    because it’s London, it’s not because
    it’s cheap.
    This is because of energy transition and
    the copper access.
    Is that the driving force here?
    I think that’s right.
    Everyone would like to get their hands
    on more copper.
    And BHP is among the companies that
    would like to do this if they got this
    deal done.
    And it’s a complicated deal with many
    hurdles, but if they got it done, they
    would control about 10% of the global
    copper supply and be the biggest,
    biggest supplier in that position and a
    very well for a world in which the
    expectation is the electrification of
    everything, all those wires and cables
    that we’re going to need, all those
    electric cars means that copper demand
    is going to keep rising at a time when
    supply is likely to remain constrained.
    Well, you said it’s complicated, and I
    think you’re being polite.
    There is a significant South African
    problem that is built into this.
    Amplats is one part of it.
    The unions in South Africa are another
    part of it.
    The pension funds, another part of it,
    the government’s another part of it.
    This is a complicated deal.
    Is that why the premium is maybe as low
    as it is?
    Yes.
    I mean, I think that people have always
    seen that Anglo’s cultural assets are an
    attractive target.
    But the reason that it’s never happened
    is because of the complicated structure
    of Anglo and the rather hodgepodge
    nature of its assets.
    You mentioned South Africa.
    That’s the big one.
    And it’s important to note that BHP have
    made investments
    in iron ore, but the condition of this
    deal proceeding now the biggest
    shareholder is the Public Investment
    Corporation of South Africa, a state
    investment firm.
    They will be very protective of South
    Africa’s interests in any deal.
    And another complicating factor is that
    the bears of the diamond business, which
    is probably not only for BHP, but is
    also partly controlled by the state of
    Botswana.
    So there are lots of hurdles.
    The final one I would mention is
    anti-trust.
    Now China has in the past intervened in
    mining deals.
    They buy half the world’s copper or are
    very interested in the map of the global
    copper industry and they will probably
    think that this would give BHP too much
    control.
    So there is an angle, but there’s also
    an antitrust angle that we need to be
    aware of here as well.
    Okay.
    So a couple of reasons why this could be
    complicated.
    Well, what about all the patents to
    those factors just puts off others?
    Would it make more sense for others to
    take on this asset, given that BHP often
    seems to be conditional on selling lots
    of things?
    Well, I think the other bidders will
    have the same problems with Anglo
    American that BHP have.
    But there’s no doubt the Anglo American
    copper business centered on some world
    class assets in Chile would also be of
    interest to Rio Tinto and perhaps even
    Glencore, where Glencore has its own
    deal going on with its bid for some of
    its assets.
    Now
    again that would be difficult, but once
    Anglo was in play, I think it is going
    to set off a bit of a frenzy within the
    industry about how it ultimately shakes
    out and what the shape of the industry
    is going to be from here.
    Thanks.
    Well, thanks for the update.
    Bloomberg senior executive editor for
    energy and Commodities on hand for us at
    just the right moment to talk history.
    The BHP approach for Anglo American.
    So certainly M&A is something we’re
    watching today.
    A host of earnings stories as well.
    Here’s what else we’re watching.
    12 p.m.
    UK time Ukraine and Turkey have reached
    decisions.
    1:30 p.m.
    London time.
    US GDP and first quarter jump at sorry
    for the first quarter.
    We’ll also get jobless claims.
    We have an international auto show
    taking place in Beijing.
    So keep an eye on the auto sector.
    With that in mind, Anthony Blinken is
    also in china.
    We have BP in caring at GM’s.
    Those could show some shareholder
    activity.
    And later we get earnings from the likes
    of Microsoft, Alphabet, Airbus and
    Intel.
    So quite a big tech representation.
    Also the aviation scenes.
    We’re going to talk tech in a moment,
    But but aviation also on on the list for
    today at ANA.
    Yeah, I’m going to be an A points to me
    kind of basically I said I said earlier
    she basically kind of puts I mean guys
    playing sports so you go now young I
    took the game for you a little bit later
    on which should be interesting.
    So in the likes of the Boeing numbers
    yesterday, obviously we need to see that
    it see what we’re going to see from my
    boss in the context of that.
    But Airbus, I think is interesting.
    And as much as it doesn’t have the same
    challenges, maybe the Boeing does right
    now, but it does have its own challenges
    and the supply chain remains really a
    key area.
    How far can they ramp up?
    They’ve got all this demand that they’re
    seeing at the moment, but they’re
    struggling to ramp up.
    They’ve got a Pratt Whitney engine issue
    on the 320 platform, which they’ve got
    to deal with as well.
    So it’s it’s really interesting that
    everybody’s struggling at the moment to
    meet the demand that is out there at the
    moment.
    I spoke to Michael O’Leary yesterday.
    I he’s he’s capacity constrained right
    now.
    We’re going to see higher airfares this
    summer because there aren’t enough air
    and this And so the Boeing travails,
    they matter to Boeing customers.
    They even matter to non Boeing customers
    as well as we’ve discussed with other
    airlines around Europe, because, you
    know, if the whole industry is then just
    affected by a lack of Boeing planes,
    then that has a knock on impact on the
    availability of others.
    I’ve read Airbus Tech then very much in
    Focus.
    We talked a little about the metal
    numbers.
    Let’s do that in a bit more detail.
    We’ve had tech earnings coming through
    from, well, for matter in particular a
    host of reasons as to why this stock
    really tanked after hours.
    Let’s get more then on these tech
    earnings with Bloomberg’s Alex Webb.
    He’s with us this morning.
    And Alex, I’ve seen three reasons cited,
    the sales guidance for the second
    quarter.
    Underwhelming CapEx went higher,
    spending on the metaverse going higher.
    All of these three added up to a real
    selloff in mass.
    Do you think that was overdone?
    Well, I think it’s pretty clear that if
    you say that you’re going to be spending
    more money and your revenue is going to
    be lower, investors are probably going
    to not take that very well.
    And yet the stock has really been bid up
    quite a bit this year.
    It’s made.
    Mark Zuckerberg, I think second or third
    richest person in the world again, as a
    consequence.
    But the key thing here is that there is
    less appetite for long duration stocks
    right now.
    And essentially the message here was,
    well, this is actually slightly longer
    duration than you thought.
    We are pushing out some earnings because
    we expect to deliver in a few years
    time.
    In the current higher interest rate
    environment, investors are more willing
    to go well, in fact, than we don’t
    necessarily need you as much as we
    thought we did.
    So the year of savings, the year of
    economy is firmly over.
    Is this.
    Is this message a struggle with the idea
    of saving money and not kind of
    splurging money on on the next big shiny
    thing?
    Is that the take away as well here?
    I mean, it’s very hard not to be tempted
    as Facebook management when you’ve got
    something like $50 billion in free cash
    flow to go, well, I’d like to spend some
    of that money.
    The thing is, the thing will be
    fascinating this year is when they had
    the prior expansion into reality labs.
    They call it the metaverse.
    There was an overexpansion that you
    really saw average revenue per employee
    all significantly.
    They corrected that to a large extent
    last year.
    It’s really tough for all the people
    that hired and of course, that they had
    essentially over hired.
    Now, if they’re expanding into this new
    space now, it’ll be a real test of
    management to see whether they can do so
    efficiently because, you know, sometimes
    you do need to add headcount.
    The question is getting it right, making
    sure you don’t have too much headcount
    given what your needs might be.
    Hmm.
    Tell us what benefit he brings to a
    business like matter then, Alex.
    I was reading a nice opinion piece
    earlier on today by one of our
    colleagues, Dave Lee.
    He was suggesting that sometimes, you
    know, it’s not entirely clear what these
    big tech businesses should be best doing
    with some of these AI technology.
    Yeah.
    I mean, there is a very, very broad
    church in terms of what the technology
    means.
    And of course, matter has been using AI
    for a very long time and it’s
    advertising business and it has been
    progressing some of that recently,
    adding New age led advertising features.
    It also has LAMDA, its large language
    model.
    Increasingly, some of these companies
    are seeing large language models as
    gateways, essentially new platforms, new
    ways of accessing the Internet so that
    you all your future use.
    The internet becomes a conversation,
    whether with a chat bot of sorts that
    then directs you towards the things you
    need to go to.
    Facebook clearly wants to be part of
    that game and that also then provides an
    opportunity for licensing, whether you
    can license that technology elsewhere.
    Now it seems very clear that Facebook is
    playing in the first space, it’s playing
    in the advertising space.
    There is a suspicion that it really
    wants to play in that second space.
    What happened?
    The third one, you know, essentially
    remains to be seen, but it’s partly
    about ensuring that you are well-placed
    to capitalize on any opportunities that
    might come.
    A microsoft and Alphabet’s, if they
    outperform, going to be enough to
    compensate for Tesla, a matter.
    I think probably, yes.
    You know, this is what we saw in the
    last earnings cycle was that we had
    quite often people tend to think of
    these sort of magnificent seven, the
    tech stocks, whatever you want to call
    them, as sort of a monolith.
    They’re not.
    They’re all very different companies.
    We saw last time around, Facebook did
    pretty well.
    Google didn’t do very well.
    And actually we didn’t see sort of a
    catastrophic fall out in the broader
    market because that was a mixed picture.
    So, you know, Microsoft and Google, they
    have far bigger market capitalizations
    and those are the two companies.
    So you would expect then that if they do
    well, they outperform or they meet
    expectations, then it should be enough
    to assuage any concerns.
    With Facebook, the big challenge really
    is going to be Apple looking a bit
    further ahead given the challenges that
    they are facing in China.
    Alex, thanks so much.
    Maybank’s Alex Webb joining us with the
    latest on Masser and the the wider tech
    space.
    This really stood out to me in this
    piece from Bloomberg Opinion Guy.
    This was all about, you know, what do
    these apps exactly do with A.I.?
    And one of our authors saying that when
    he was searching for an old message on
    WhatsApp, the I asked whether he would
    like to take a moment to generate a
    humorous illustration of a cat.
    He didn’t.
    So he got that said.
    I mean, if that’s where we are, if
    that’s my journey, there’s a long way to
    go.
    Yes.
    That doesn’t feel like it’s
    productivity.
    In fact, it feels like that’s anti
    productivity actually taking us in the
    wrong direction.
    So let’s we come to the end of the show.
    We started the show asking the question,
    kind of where’s the signal in the noise
    this morning?
    We’ve got an awful lot of noise.
    Where is the signal this morning?
    And I’m still trying to work that one
    out for my kind of takeaway this morning
    is that actually Footsie 100 stocks are
    doing relatively well here.
    Yeah, Maybe this catch up story on the
    Footsie 100 maybe therefore has a little
    bit of momentum this morning.
    Astra’s up Unilever’s up angle, Anglos
    up on its own kind of story, kind of
    whatever it’s doing.
    The oil stocks are doing relatively well
    as well.
    So there’s an interesting kind of
    footsie outperformance narrative, which
    I think is worth maybe looking at.
    There is absolutely up by 4/10 of 1% on
    the footsie as the Stoxx 600 is down by
    3/10 of a percent and some of those are
    UK UK specific a little I mean you could
    say that about some of the Barclays
    numbers, but there is a global story on
    Barclays and there’s certainly a global
    story around the other names that you
    mentioned.
    So that’s a that’s interesting to note.
    I think it is apt that we actually ended
    on that conversation about techs because
    although we’ve been distracted rightly
    by all these European earnings, if we
    look ahead to the US session, that’s
    still ahead of US.
    Nasdaq futures down by 1.1%.
    And that is the metal story and that is
    the concern around this earnings season.
    And we’re building up to the Fed.
    That’s going to be a big story as well.
    The earnings are going to continue.
    The noise will certainly be with you
    throughout the rest of the day, but
    we’re going to cut through it.
    Norse Hydro’s CEO is going to be joining
    us a little later on.
    I’m going to be speaking to the Airbus
    CEO.
    Looking forward to all of that.
    That wraps things up for us.
    It’s been a busy morning.
    I hope you’ve taken some signal away
    from the noise.
    Francine is going to carry on the
    conversation next.
    The pulse is up next.
    This is Bloomberg.

    Mining giant BHP approaches rival Anglo American with a takeover offer in a move that could spark the biggest shakeup in the industry in a decade. Plus, European earnings ramp up, with Deutsche Bank reporting fixed income trading revenue ahead of estimates. We speak to top executives from Barclays, BNP Paribas and AstraZeneca. With analysis you won’t find anywhere else, we break down the biggest stories of the day and speak to top guests who have skin in the game. Hosted by Anna Edwards, Kriti Gupta and Guy Johnson.

    ——–
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    1 Comment

    1. I like finance and i had to learn English, propose me if someone know and investor who share his buy/sell on youtube, I search an youtuber not famous who dont sell anything to his comunity

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