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    Bernstein increasingly convinced Bitcoin price is heading towards $150,000

    As the cryptocurrency continues to rally, currently trading above the $72,000 mark, the firm recalled the words of Satoshi Nakamoto, who told another forum member debating Bitcoin in 2010, “If you don’t get it, I don’t have the time to try to convince you.”According to analysts at Bernstein, Bitcoin miners remain the best equity proxy to participate in the rally. “We are now more convinced about our $150K price for Bitcoin,” they said. “Bitcoin today is at $71K, we expected this to break out post halving. We built Bitcoin institutional flows in our estimates to arrive at Bitcoin price. We estimated $10Bn inflows for 2024 and another $60Bn for 2025. In the last 40 trading days since ETF launch on Jan 10, Bitcoin ETF inflows have crossed $9.5Bn already.”Analysts believe these are still the early days of Bitcoin’s integration into traditional asset portfolios.When it comes to miners, the firm prefers Riot Platforms (NASDAQ:RIOT) and CleanSpark (NASDAQ:CLSK) based on the fact they are the “largest ‘self-mining’ miners,” growing hash rate capacity into halving, they have the lowest cost of production within Bernstein’s listed universe, and as Bitcoin is held on their balance sheets with no debt. “Investors merely look at daily correlation of Bitcoin miners, only during days when they see Bitcoin rallying,” they added. “This selective periodic view is incomplete. Through cycle Bitcoin miners almost always outperform Bitcoin during bull-markets and almost always underperform Bitcoin during bear markets.” “Investors have to take a through-cycle view, and for us, we are still mid-way into the 2024-25 cycle and see every window of miner weakness as a buying opportunity,” the analysts added.Bernstein also believes that Bitcoin prices and transaction fees provide a cushion to miners into the halving event, while Bitcoin mining stocks are cheap. More

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    Ault Alliance’s Sentinum Mined 103 BTC in February 2024

    William B. Horne, Chief Executive Officer of Ault Alliance, stated, “Sentinum continues to work on improving operations and will begin transferring machines from its Michigan site to its Montana site, which is expected to occur this month. A shift of machines to our Montana site will allow us to focus on expansion at our Michigan site. This expansion is expected to support the rapid growth of High-Performance Computing and Artificial Intelligence use cases. Obviously, if the recent uptick in Bitcoin prices holds, Sentinum expects to achieve a new monthly run rate record for March 2024.”Ault Alliance notes that all estimates and other projections are subject to the volatility in Bitcoin market price, the fluctuation in the mining difficulty level, the ability to build out and provide the necessary power for miners, and other factors that may impact the results of Bitcoin mining production or operations. The Company also notes the upcoming halving of Bitcoin and with that, the halving of the block reward for miners. The Company makes no prediction on the price of Bitcoin prior to or after the upcoming halving but is prepared to adjust its mining operations accordingly.For more information on Ault Alliance and its subsidiaries, Ault Alliance recommends that stockholders, investors, and any other interested parties read Ault Alliance’s public filings and press releases available under the Investor Relations section at www.Ault.com or at www.sec.gov. More

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    China has little choice but stimulus

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.This article is an on-site version of our Unhedged newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter sent straight to your inbox every weekdayGood morning and happy CPI day. Everyone wants to know if inflation is stabilising closer to 3 per cent or 2 per cent. One annoying possibility is if the data resembles last Friday’s indecisive jobs report. Down with ambiguity! We demand that the Bureau of Labor Statistics only release numbers that make us unequivocally happy or sad! Email us: [email protected] and [email protected] China be forced to stimulate?The near universal reaction in the west to China’s refreshed 5 per cent gross domestic product growth target: good luck with that. Growth in 2023 — if you believe the data — was 5.2 per cent, and more than two-thirds of that came from a modest consumer bounceback from zero-Covid. Now that tailwind is gone, and consumer confidence remains terrible. New problems are cropping up: local government deleveraging, industrial overcapacity, capital outflows. And current fiscal and monetary stimulus efforts have been halfhearted. “There is little evidence that Beijing has the policies to achieve the growth target it has declared,” the Financial Times editorial board summed up.The old growth drivers — property, infrastructure and manufacturing — all face major constraints. Property’s structural decline is well known; home prices and sales keep falling. Meanwhile, infrastructure is running into the limit of high debt levels. Chinese officials were dispatched last year to prod local governments to delever. It began with easy cost cuts: withholding wages from civil servants, delaying payments to vendors, slashing city services. But more recently, the deleveraging drive has been hitting infrastructure projects already under way, as Reuters reported in January:Increasing its efforts to manage $13 trillion in municipal debt, the State Council in recent weeks issued a directive to local governments and state banks to delay or halt construction on projects with less than half the planned investment completed in 12 regions across the country, the sources said.Also, over the weekend in the FT:In south-western Yunnan, 1,153 government-funded infrastructure projects such as highways and theme parks have been suspended and new construction halted to limit expenditures and focus on debt resolution, according to a document seen by the Financial Times.It is hard to see how this doesn’t hold back growth in the near term.Lastly, manufacturing. Since about 2020, the credit that once flowed to the property sector has been redirected to manufacturing, especially in politically favoured sectors such as solar and electric vehicles. The year-over-year growth rate of loans to Chinese industry has risen steadily, though the level is now declining (see the chart from Clocktower Group below). In contrast, credit growth is decelerating overall, and outright shrinking in the property sector:This pivot back to manufacturing is “radical”, says Adam Wolfe of Absolute Strategy Research, and it has generated important victories for China. Most notably, BYD is now the world’s biggest EV maker, and China the biggest auto exporter. But it has also created an enormous oversupply of manufactured goods, which, when combined with limp demand at home, is crushing industrial margins and fuelling deflation (Wolfe’s chart):China could deal with this, as it has in the past, through some combination of state-directed industrial consolidation and higher exports. But China’s manufacturing trade surplus is already huge, perhaps 2 per cent of world GDP. As Gavekal’s Yanmei Xie wrote in the FT last month, western countries sensibly fear China dumping cheap goods into export markets. A cheap renminbi heightens the threat; trade retaliation is widely anticipated. If that is right, export-led growth probably can’t be China’s escape valve.This glum picture suggests that China may soon be forced into stimulus. Assuming the GDP target is at least somewhat binding, no sector of the Chinese economy stands ready to get growth to 5 per cent. A pick-up in consumption could do it, but we’ve heard no convincing story for why anxious consumers would suddenly become gripped by animal spirits. As Michael Pettis, the well-known China watcher, wrote on Friday:Although so far Beijing has been extremely reluctant to do so, there seems to be a rising consensus among Chinese economists and economic policy advisers that Beijing should direct fiscal expansion not into boosting the supply side of the economy but rather to funding a one-off increase in household income—perhaps through consumption vouchers—to encourage Chinese households to expand consumption…If neither [a rise in net exports or sudden rise in consumption] happens [over the next quarter], I would be surprised if Beijing didn’t turn to more direct support for consumption. In that case, we can expect some time in the third quarter, or perhaps by the end of the second quarter, that Beijing will seriously consider the possibility of a fiscal boost—perhaps of as much as RMB 2-3 trillion—directed at delivering income to the household sector.Even if Beijing chooses to accept below-target growth, ASR’s Wolfe sees China coming up against a more fundamental constraint: the labour market. Leaving aside the chronic issue of high youth unemployment, the official unemployment rate has been stable and alternative private-sector data looks calm enough. But Wolfe argues that could soon change:So from [Chinese authorities’] view, these are just transition pains to a new growth model. They don’t want to do more stimulus, because they don’t want the economy to revert to the old growth model. They want to see the real estate sector shrink as a share of GDP. And as long as people have jobs, [officials can tell themselves that] things are fine; just quit complaining!But you could see a continued contraction in real estate this year. Completions are now running well ahead of housing starts, so actual construction work is going to come down soon. If the government also starts to pull in infrastructure spending, then the construction sector is going to start shedding labour at a much faster pace. A deteriorating labour market would be “a real constraint on the government’s ability to just muddle through”, likely forcing it to enlarge its stimulus plans, he says.Where does this leave China-curious global investors? We’ve argued that picking the inflection point in Chinese markets will be very hard, boiling down to a call on opaque Chinese politics. Recent developments illustrate the point. The unclear stimulus outlook has left the bulk of investors nervous, but equity outflows have at least stopped. The stock market has rallied 14 per cent since early February, but only because of ample support from the state. Value trade or value trap?What keeps us sceptical is the fact that Chinese stocks are not loads cheaper than global stocks. After the rally, the CSI 300 trades at 13x forward earnings, versus 14x for the MSCI all-country world ex-US index. To us the risks in China stocks are much clearer than the reward. (Ethan Wu)One good readAmazon’s foray into nuclear energy, from FT inductee Lee Harris.FT Unhedged podcastCan’t get enough of Unhedged? Listen to our new podcast, hosted by Ethan Wu and Katie Martin, for a 15-minute dive into the latest markets news and financial headlines, twice a week. Catch up on past editions of the newsletter here.Recommended newsletters for youSwamp Notes — Expert insight on the intersection of money and power in US politics. Sign up hereDue Diligence — Top stories from the world of corporate finance. Sign up here More

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    Risks grow for investors as a new economic framework emerges

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for freeRoula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.The writer is managing director and head of economic research for global fixed income and macro at CitadelIssues such as climate change, energy independence and national security plans are piling up for investors — and no one is certain where the pieces will fall.Before the global financial crisis of 2008, the economic policy framework was largely more transparent and predictable: manage demand by stabilising inflation while controlling public debt. It required fewer policy instruments and benefited from expanding globalisation and growing capital flows. It was a strategy that blossomed under the World Trade Organization’s rules-based system.But faced with a plethora of monetary, fiscal, regulatory, trade and industrial policies, that framework is now under pressure and it is on a collision course with the forces of rising nationalism and regionalised interests. As Mario Draghi warned during a speech in February, the disjointed policies emerging as a result could have unexpected and dire consequences.“The transitions that our societies are undertaking, whether dictated by our choice to protect the climate or the threats of nostalgic autocrats, or by our indifference to the social consequences of globalisation, are profound. And differences between possible outcomes have never been so stark,” said the former prime minister of Italy and president of the European Central Bank.Over the medium term, investors will have to deal with vast and sustained uncertainty driven by three critical factors. First, the haphazard grouping of multiple policy objectives into one strategy. For example, the White House has invested heavily in initiatives such as the Inflation Reduction Act and the Chips and Science Act to support domestic production and create jobs, directly promoting the linkage between the US’s domestic prowess and its international competitiveness.This transformation towards blended policymaking is one we see unfolding in many countries. But the aggregate result for investors has the potential for prolonged macroeconomic and financial volatility.Take Germany’s recent “debt brake” fiasco, for example. Its rigidity in imposing limits on budget deficits halted existing plans to modernise the domestic economy, including addressing climate change. And in the US, the IRA showcases the potentially unbridled reach of an expansive policy. While admirable in concept, such unwieldy and multi-faceted programmes can often have unproductive results.The second big overall risk is that a myriad of such policy measures — from trade tariffs to tax to asset purchases — are deployed together without a comprehensive assessment. A lack of synergy can lead to unexpected outcomes. For instance, the subsidies and public investment associated with climate transition and energy independence may require greater tolerance for inflation and higher public debt.The impact of blended policy is not always negative. In the past year, subsidies and price caps were used to protect households and businesses from energy price increases — but they also unwittingly helped central banks anchor inflation expectations. Conversely, the cost of sanctions and trade restrictions is probably underestimated, and it is a problem that could grow despite the US’s “small yard, high fence” strategy to keep only a small swath of the technology landscape walled off from competition, namely China.Finally, the third overall big risk is that citing defence as the focus and foundation for monetary and fiscal strategies opens the door to over-reach and unpredictability. Rerouting supply chains to allied countries, for instance, may avoid disruption from political and economic shock, but it is short-sighted in its approach, if not inconsistent and disorienting. Uncertainty is further introduced into global supply chains with the growing use of tariffs to gain leverage on non-trade related issues such as human or labour rights. Considering this, it’s not hard to imagine companies exercising excessive caution when making investment decisions in such a pervasively volatile environment.Notwithstanding these transformations, the global economy has shown resilience, even when tested further by a pandemic and jolting energy prices. However, it is far from clear how much more uncertainty the system can bear.We confront these challenges against the headwinds of still-elevated inflation and record-high public debt, conditions that lower the tolerance for mis-steps. Now more than ever, the importance of solid policy frameworks and stable institutions cannot be overstated. More

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    Gold’s mystery rally baffles analysts

    The price of gold has surged 7 per cent in just over a week to hit record highs, leaving longtime market watchers struggling to explain what has been one of the yellow metal’s most curious rallies.The sudden price move has lifted the haven asset above its previous peak reached in December to hit nearly $2,195 per troy ounce on Friday, according to LSEG data. Some commentators have attributed the move to growing expectations of US interest rate cuts, which would make the non-yielding asset relatively more attractive. But several analysts say none of the factors that have driven gold’s bull run over the past 16 months are the likely catalyst for this recent rally. Those include record levels of central bank buying, Chinese households looking for havens for their money or the war in Ukraine and the Middle East.“It has been the quietest, most confusing rally,” said Nicky Shiels, precious metals analyst at MKS Pamp, a Swiss gold refinery and trading house. “What took it from $2,000 [last month] to above $2,150 is the head-scratching part.”The current rally kicked off when US manufacturing data at the beginning of the month showed a larger than expected contraction, strengthening investors’ conviction that the Federal Reserve could start to cut rates in June. But the size of the moves in Treasury yields and the dollar did not appear to wholly justify the rally in gold, say analysts. The rate-sensitive two-year yield has fallen 0.12 percentage points since the start of March to 4.5 per cent, still much higher than January’s low of 4.12 per cent, while the greenback is still higher against a basket of six currencies than it was at the start of the year.“Previously when we have had a rally of $70 to $80, it is usually accompanied by a new catalyst or risk event,” said Suki Cooper, analyst at Standard Chartered. “But this time there has been no significant shift in current events.”You are seeing a snapshot of an interactive graphic. This is most likely due to being offline or JavaScript being disabled in your browser.Gold on Monday was trading at $2,182 per troy ounce, after US jobs growth figures for December and January were downgraded sharply on Friday, adding further confidence to investors’ expectations of a rate cut in the first half of the year.The nominal high has come despite outflows from gold-backed exchange traded funds of 21mn ounces in the past year, according to Bloomberg. In contrast, bitcoin, which hit a fresh high above $72,000 on Monday, has been boosted by billions of dollars pouring into ETFs since they launched in the US two months ago. But Rhona O’Connell, analyst at commodities brokerage StoneX, said plenty of factors could justify a high gold price, such as China recently toughening its rhetoric on Taiwan, simmering banking tensions in the US and the elections coming in a number of countries this year. But she said none of those factors was behind last week’s move, and instead pointed to momentum traders — computer funds that latch on to rising prices — piling in after gold broke through a key price level.“There has been nothing specific or tangible we can point to apart from the done-to-death exercise of Fed watching,” O’Connell said.The lack of immediately available data on flows in the market has led to suggestions that over-the-counter purchases by stealth buyers of gold, which are hard to trace, have dragged prices up.Bernard Dahdah, senior commodities analyst at French bank Natixis, said the modest recent moves in the dollar and bond yields and continued outflows for ETFs had made it hard to pin gold’s rally on changing expectations of Fed rate cuts. Neither could he attribute it to renewed demand from Chinese retail investors, because the premium for gold in China over London has narrowed, nor renewed central bank buying, as official institutions tend to buy slowly and want to go unnoticed.“It’s the first time I’ve sat down discounting stuff rather than just saying what it is” that is moving the price, Dahdah said. “The ones who would be doing this would be a big hedge fund or asset manager” using derivatives.In a sign of higher investor activity, the number of outstanding gold futures contracts on Comex has jumped 30 per cent since February 28, while net long positions rose about 64,000 to 208,000 contracts last Tuesday, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.“That rings warning bells for a substantial correction,” O’Connell said. “Once the momentum stops there will be profit-taking.”Some believe the gold market’s rally is a symptom of investors running ahead of themselves on bets on rate cuts. “It’s not a foregone conclusion that the Fed is going to cut rates,” said Carsten Menke, head of next generation research at Julius Baer.But not everyone believes gold prices are heading for a fall. Prices are still some way below the inflation-adjusted record of well above $3,000 per troy ounce hit in 1980 and some analysts say the current rally shows there is a firm floor under the price. StanChart’s Cooper highlighted strong retail and central bank demand outside of the west, as well as the gold price’s jubilant reaction to marginal news supporting US rate cuts and its ability to hold up when data has pointed to rates staying higher for longer.“There are too many unknown events that investors want to hedge for,” she said, citing elections, risks of conflict escalation or the return of a banking crisis. “It does look like we have new appetite in the gold market.” More