More stories

  • in

    Wells Fargo lays off mortgage bankers days after rewarding some with California retreat

    Wells Fargo laid off hundreds of mortgage bankers this week as part of a sweeping round of cuts triggered by the bank’s recent strategic shift, CNBC has learned.
    The layoffs were announced Tuesday and ensnared some top producers, including a few bankers who surpassed $100 million in loan volumes last year and who recently attended an internal sales conference for high achievers.
    The company cut bankers who operated in areas outside of its branch footprint and who therefore didn’t fit in the new strategy of catering to existing customers, according to people with knowledge of the situation.

    Palm Spring Deserts, California
    Lonely Planet

    Wells Fargo laid off hundreds of mortgage bankers this week as part of a sweeping round of cuts triggered by the bank’s recent strategic shift, CNBC has learned.
    The layoffs were announced Tuesday and ensnared some top producers, including a few bankers who surpassed $100 million in loan volumes last year and who recently attended an internal sales conference for high achievers, according to people with knowledge of the situation.  

    Under CEO Charlie Scharf, Wells Fargo is pulling back from parts of the U.S. mortgage market, an arena it once dominated. Instead of seeking to maximize its share of American home loans, the bank is focusing mostly on serving existing customers and minority communities. The shift comes after sharply higher interest rates led to a collapse in loan volumes, forcing Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase and other firms to cut thousands of mortgage positions in the past year.
    Those cut this week at Wells Fargo included mortgage bankers and home loan consultants, a workforce spread around the country, who are compensated mostly on sales volume, according to the people, who declined to be identified speaking about personnel matters.
    The company cut bankers who operated in areas outside of its branch footprint and who therefore didn’t fit in the new strategy of catering to existing customers, the people said. Those cuts include bankers across the Midwest and the East Coast, one of the people said.

    Palm Desert resort

    Some of those people were successful enough last year to be flown to a resort in Palm Desert, California, for a company-sponsored conference earlier this month. Palm Desert is a luxury enclave known for its warm weather, golf courses and proximity to Palm Springs.
    It’s common practice in finance to reward top salespeople with multiday events held in swanky resorts that combine recognition, recreation and educational sessions. For instance, JPMorgan’s mortgage division is holding a sales conference in April.

    A Wells Fargo spokeswoman said the bank has communicated with affected employees, provided severance and career guidance, and tried to retain as many workers as possible.
    “We announced in January strategic plans to create a more focused home-lending business,” she said. “As part of these efforts, we have made displacements across our home-lending business in alignment with this strategy and in response to significant decreases in mortgage volume.”
    The bank will also continue to serve customers “in any market in the United States” through its centralized sales channel, she added.

    Hitting your numbers

    While this latest round of cuts wasn’t based on employees’ performance, Wells Fargo has also been cutting mortgage workers who don’t meet minimum standards of production.
    In areas with expensive housing, that could be a minimum of at least $10 million worth of loans over the past 12 months, said one of the sources.
    Last month, the bank said that mortgage volumes continued to shrink in the fourth quarter, falling 70% to $14.6 billion. Wells Fargo said it almost 11,000 fewer employees at the end of 2022 than in 2021.
    The January mortgage announcement, reported first by CNBC, led recruiters to swarm top performers in the hopes of poaching them, according to one of the people.
    Scharf addressed employees in a Jan. 25 town hall meeting in which he reiterated his rationale for the mortgage retrenchment.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Nvidia, Etsy, Lucid, Bumble, Moderna and more

    Workers marry the body structure with the battery pack and the front and rear sub frames as they assemble electric vehicles at the Lucid Motors plant in Casa Grande, Arizona, September 28, 2021.
    Caitlin O’Hara | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in extended trading.
    Etsy — Shares of the e-commerce company jumped 5% after hours following the company’s quarterly results. Etsy posted revenue of $807 million, smashing estimates of $752 million, according to Refinitiv. The company also forecast current quarter revenue of $600 million and $640 million, compared to estimates of $622 million.

    Nvidia – Shares of the chip giant leapt more than 7% after Nvidia posted beats on the top and bottom lines for its latest quarter. The company posted adjusted earnings per share of 88 cents on revenue of $6.05 billion. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv anticipated earnings of 81 cents per share and revenue of $6.01 billion.
    eBay — The online auction platform reported fourth quarter earnings of $1.07 per share excluding items, on revenues of $2.51 billion. Those figures topped analysts’ estimates of $1.06 per share in earnings and revenue of $2.47 billion, according to Refinitiv. The shares rose as much as 3% after hours before retreating.
    Lucid — The electric vehicle maker saw shares slide 8% in extended trading after reporting fourth-quarter revenue fell short of expectations after building just 7,000 of its Air luxury sedans last year amid manufacturing challenges. The company said it expects to make between 10,000 and 14,000 vehicles in 2023.
    Bumble — The online dating site jumped nearly 5% after it reported better-than-expected fourth quarter earnings and revenue. Bumble posted revenue of $191 million, above the $186 million estimated by analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue also exceeded analysts’ expectations, at $242 million versus analysts’ estimates of $236 million.
    Mosaic — Shares of the fertilizer maker fell 3% after it reported weaker than expected earnings of $1.74 a share for the fourth quarter. Analysts were looking for $2.13 per share, according to FactSet. Revenue topped estimates.

    Moderna — The drug maker announced with Merck that the Food and Drug Administration has granted them breakthrough status for a personalized cancer vaccine for patients with high-risk Melanoma. Moderna rose more than 2% after hours, while Merck rose less than 1%.
    —CNBC’s Darla Mercado and Hakyung Kim contributed reporting.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    FedEx pilot union inches closer to strike with unanimous approval for authorization vote

    FedEx pilot leaders passed a resolution approving a strike authorization vote.
    FedEx pilots have been in negotiations with company management since May 2021.
    The resolution comes after the approval of similar strike authorization votes at Southwest Airlines and Delta Air Lines.

    FedEx Express pilots picket outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, on Monday, Sept. 26, 2022.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The union representing FedEx pilots unanimously approved a strike authorization vote last week, according to a Wednesday press release.
    Contract negotiations between FedEx management and the FedEx Express Master Executive Council of the Air Line Pilots Association International have stalled, with no future talks scheduled, the release said.

    “The decision to move closer to a strike authorization vote is the result of nearly six months of federally mediated negotiations that has led to our disappointment with FedEx management’s actions at the bargaining table,” said FedEx MEC chair Captain Chris Norman.
    FedEx pilots have been in negotiations with management since May 2021. According to a statement on the FedEx pilots’ website, pilot leaders allege the company has failed to “acknowledge pilot contributions.”
    “ALPA leadership’s approval to possibly conduct a strike authorization vote at some future time has no impact on our service as we continue delivering for our customers around the world,” FedEx said in a statement.
    Tensions have been high as the airline industry rebounds from the Covid-19 pandemic, leading to record losses of around $35 billion in 2020. Contract talks with pilots and flight attendants were further derailed by the pandemic, all while the industry faces a pilot shortage and rising costs.
    A strike would occur only if negotiations break down and the federal government authorizes a walkout following required procedures of the Railway Labor Act. Both sides would have to be released from mediation by the National Mediation Board, which was brought in to assist with contract negotiations in October.

    After 30 days, pilots and management could exercise self-help, which could include a union strike or a company lockout.
    “FedEx pilots are committed to reaching a deal with management, but we will not waiver in our commitment to deliver a contract that rewards pilots for their sacrifices to build FedEx into the global leader it is today,” Norman said. “Although a strike authorization vote has not been called at this time, our customers and shareholders should be aware that the pilots may be headed in that direction shortly.”
    A statement by pilot leaders says FedEx customers should plan alternative means in the event of a pilot strike. Only a few items for negotiation remain, the statement says.
    The update comes a month after the Southwest Airlines pilots’ union called a vote to authorize a potential strike after souring contract negotiations. Delta Air Lines pilots also voted to authorize a potential strike in November.
    Unions representing about 30,000 pilots combined at American Airlines and United Airlines rejected potential contracts in November.
    — CNBC’s Leslie Josephs contributed to this report.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Terran Orbital surges 71% after winning $2.4 billion contract to build satellites for Rivada

    Terran Orbital announced a $2.4 billion contract to build communications satellites for Rivada Space Networks.
    The spacecraft builder will design, manufacture and deploy 288 satellites for Rivada, as well as 12 spare satellites, for a total contract of 300 satellites.
    “I believe this is the largest small [satellite] deal in the history of small sats – I don’t know any deal that is larger,” Terran cofounder, chairman and CEO Marc Bell told CNBC.

    The company’s banner above the New York Stock Exchange on March 28, 2022.
    Terran Orbital

    Terran Orbital shares surged on Wednesday after the company announced a $2.4 billion contract to build communications satellites for Rivada Space Networks.
    “I believe this is the largest small [satellite] deal in the history of small sats – I don’t know any deal that is larger,” Terran cofounder, chairman and CEO Marc Bell told CNBC.

    The spacecraft builder will design, manufacture and deploy 288 satellites for Rivada out of Terran’s Tyvak subsidiary based in Irvine, California. It will also build 12 spare satellites, for a total contract of 300 satellites, and develop portions of the ground support for the constellation.
    “It solidifies our place as the manufacturer of small sats of choice … we’ve been doing a lot of work for the government and the intelligence community, and now we’re doing it for the commercial side as well,” Bell said. “I think people can now draw a very confident line on our path to profitability, our path to growth and they could see how we’re gonna get there.”
    Rivada Space Networks Executive Chairman Declan Ganley declined to specify how much his company has in financial commitments from investors, but told CNBC the amount is “sufficient to meet our obligations for the foreseeable future.”

    Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

    Terran stock jumped as much as 101% on Wednesday, before paring those gains to finish up 71% at $2.93 a share. The stock has slid steadily since its debut just over a year ago, when it finished its first day of trading at $11.80 a share.
    “We are, in my opinion, still dramatically undervalued. The stock has moved up a little bit, compared to where it was, but it’s way down off its highs,” Bell said.

    Rivada’s business plan

    Rivada Space Networks Executive Chairman Declan Ganley speaks at the 2022 World Satellite Business Week in Paris, France.
    Euroconsult Summits

    Rivada aims to begin launching the satellites as early as 2025.
    The company said that it can begin commercial service once 100 satellite are in orbit, with plans to increase its network to the 300 — and eventually 600 — satellites to improve global coverage and redundancy.
    The company wants to build an interconnected global satellite network, with emphasis on high-speed and security. Rivada’s Chief Strategy Officer Diederik Kelder told CNBC that the difference between his company’s planned network and those like SpaceX’s Starlink is that the latter are “specifically designed for broadband.”
    “We have designed our system from the get-go to cater to enterprise and government customers,” Kelder said. “You can use the system for other purposes, but it gives us a very specific edge in those markets.”

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Palo Alto Networks, Coinbase, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Amazon and more

    Coinbase shares are down more than 83% this year
    Chesnot | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Coinbase — Shares of the cryptocurrency exchange fell 1.4% even after Coinbase reported a smaller-than-expected loss for the fourth quarter. Coinbase lost $2.46 per share on $629 million of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting a loss of $2.55 per share on $590 million of revenue. Subscription and services revenue rose 34% quarter over quarter but trading volumes declined.

    Palo Alto Networks — The software company’s stock gained more than 12% after its fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue beat analysts’ estimates. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $1.05, versus the 78 cents expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.
    Dick’s Sporting Goods — The sports retailer’s stock finished flat after rising briefly on news that it’s buying e-commerce outdoor retailer Moosejaw from Walmart. Shares of Walmart dipped about 2%.
    CoStar Group — The commercial real estate stock fell more than 5% after the company issued guidance for the current quarter that fell short of analysts’ estimates, according to StreetAccount.
    Amazon — Shares of the e-commerce giant rose 1.3% after the company closed a deal to buy primary care provider One Medical. Amazon agreed to acquire One Medical in July as part of its efforts to deepen its presence in health care.
    La-Z-Boy — Shares gained 15.1% after its adjusted earnings per share for the fiscal third quarter came in at 91 cents, topping analysts’ estimates of 66 cents, according to FactSet. The furniture maker’s revenue came out to $572.7 million, higher than the expected $529.6 million.

    Toll Brothers — Shares of the homebuilding company added more than 3% after it beat Wall Street’s revenue and earnings expectations for the recent quarter, according to Refinitiv. Toll Brothers also said that it has seen a rise in demand since the start of 2023.
    Charles River Laboratories International — Shares lost 10% after the pharmaceutical company said it suspended shipments of Cambodian non-human primates (NHP) it used in research due to a Justice Department investigation into the supply chain. Those supply constraints will weigh on its 2023 revenue growth, the company said.
    Wingstop — Wingstop shares jumped 7.7% after topping analysts’ estimates for the recent quarter, according to FactSet. The fast-food chain also reaffirmed its same-store sales growth expectations for the next three to five years.
    TJX — The off-price retailer’s stock slipped 1.7% after TJX it reported a mixed quarter and shared earnings guidance for the current period that fell short of analysts’ expectations, according to StreetAccount.
    Baidu — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese tech company fell 2.6%, despite Baidu topping revenue estimates for the recent quarter. The company also revealed a $5 billion buyback program and provided an update on its conversational chatbot to rival ChatGPT.
    Alcoa — Alcoa shared rose 1.9% following after Citi upgraded the aluminum producer to a buy from a neutral rating, saying should benefit from China’s economic reopening.
    Garmin — Shares of the fitness tracker maker gained 4.1% after Garmin reported fourth-quarter earnings that beat consensus estimates. The company posted consolidated revenue of $1.31 billion and adjusted earnings per share of $1.35. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected $1.30 billion in revenue and earnings per share of $1.19.
    Wix.com — Shares of the website developer company surged nearly 12.4% after beating analysts’ estimates for the fourth quarter, according to FactSet.
    Intel — The chip stock fell more than 2% after Intel cut its quarterly dividend by more than 65%.
    Keysight Technologies — Shares of the electronics testing and measurement company plunged nearly13% after the firm issued a weaker-than-expected outlook for the fiscal second quarter. Keysight’s adjusted earnings per share and revenue for the latest quarter beat expectations, however, according to FactSet.
    Stellantis — The auto stock gained nearly 4% after Stellantis posted results for the full year that surpassed analysts’ expectations, according to FactSet. Stellantis also announced a 1.5 billion euro share repurchase program.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound and Yun Li contributed reporting

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Fed minutes show members resolved to keep fighting inflation with rate hikes

    While the Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting concluded with a smaller rate hike than most of those implemented since early 2022, officials stressed that their concern over inflation is high.
    Inflation “remained well above” the Fed’s 2% target, the minutes said. That came with labor markets that “remained very tight, contributing to continuing upward pressures on wages and prices.”

    WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve officials at their most recent meeting indicated that there are signs inflation is coming down, but not enough to counter the need for more interest rate increases, meeting minutes released Wednesday showed.While the Jan. 31-Feb. 1 meeting concluded with a smaller rate hike than most of those implemented since early 2022, officials stressed that their concern over inflation is high.Inflation “remained well above” the Fed’s 2% target, the minutes stated. That came with labor markets that “remained very tight, contributing to continuing upward pressures on wages and prices.”Consequently, the Fed approved a 0.25 percentage point rate increase that was the smallest hike since the first of this tightening cycle in March 2022. The move brought the fed funds rate to a target range of 4.5%-4.75%. But the minutes said that the reduced pace came with a high level of concern that inflation was still a threat.
    “Participants noted that inflation data received over the past three months showed a welcome reduction in the monthly pace of price increases but stressed that substantially more evidence of progress across a broader range of prices would be required to be confident that inflation was on a sustained downward path,” the minutes said.The summary repeated that members believe “ongoing” rate hikes will be necessary.

    Stocks fell following the release of the minutes while Treasury yields shed most of their losses from earlier in the session.
    Though the quarter-point hike received unanimous approval, the minutes noted that not everyone was on board.A “few” members said they wanted a half-point, or 50 basis point, increase that would show even greater resolve to get inflation down. A basis point is equal to 0.01%.Since the meeting, regional Presidents James Bullard of St. Louis and Loretta Mester of Cleveland have said they were among the group that wanted the more aggressive move. The minutes, however did not elaborate on how many a “few” were nor which Federal Open Market Committee members wanted the half-point increase.”The participants favoring a 50-basis point increase noted that a larger increase would more quickly bring the target range close to the levels they believed would achieve a sufficiently restrictive stance, taking into account their views of the risks to achieving price stability in a timely way,” the minutes said.
    Though the summary noted the discussion about larger increases, there was “no effort in the minutes to flag the possibility of stepping back up to a 50bp pace of hikes,” wrote Krishna Guha, head of global policy and central bank strategy at Evercore ISI.Since the meeting, Fed officials have emphasized the need to stay vigilant even while expressing optimism that recent inflation data has been encouraging.In a CNBC interview Wednesday, Bullard repeated his belief that going higher sooner would be more effective. But even with his push for more aggressive near-term policy, he said he thinks the peak, or terminal, rate should be around 5.375%, about in line with market pricing.Economic data from January showed inflation running at a lower pace than its summer 2022 peak but still percolating.The consumer price index rose 0.5% from December and is up 6.4% from the same point last year. The producer price index, which measures input costs at the wholesale level, rose 0.7% on the month and 6% annually. Both readings were above Wall Street expectations.The labor market also is hot, indicating that Fed hikes, while hitting the housing market and some other rate-sensitive areas, have yet to seep through to much of the economy.Even with the comments from Mester and Bullard, market pricing still indicates the strong likelihood of another quarter-point increase in March, followed by a couple more to bring the funds rate to a peak of 5.25%-5.5%. If the rate would land around the midpoint of that target, it would be the highest funds rate since 2001.Markets are concerned that if the Fed moves too quickly or too far, it could tip the economy into a recession.The minutes noted that “some” members see the risk of recession as “elevated.” Other officials publicly have said they think the Fed can avoid a recession and achieve a “soft landing” for the economy that sees growth slowing considerably but not contracting.”Participants observed that the uncertainty associated with their outlooks for economic activity, the labor market, and inflation was high,” the minutes said.Among the risk factors cited were the war in Ukraine, the economic reopening in China and the possibility that the labor market could remain tighter for longer than expected.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Xi Jinping’s next overseas-lending revolution

    China has plastered slogans on its loans for as long as it has lent overseas. The “Going Out” strategy in 1999 gave way to the “Community of Common Destiny” in 2011, which was swiftly overshadowed by Xi Jinping’s “Belt and Road” vision two years later. Throughout this period, even as the slogans changed, one type of project dominated: overseas infrastructure funded by Chinese loans. The country’s banks have financed everything from the Mecca Metro, a railway in Saudi Arabia being built at a cost of $16.5bn, by the same construction firm that once laid tracks for Mao; to the start of Bandar, a shiny new development in the Malaysian state of Johor, an attempt to establish a rival to Singapore.By the time the covid-19 pandemic struck, and lending dried up, China’s approach had begun to seem unsatisfactory. According to our estimates, the world owed China’s eight biggest state-owned banks at least $1.8trn, equivalent to more than 2% of global gdp. Critics accused China of luring poor countries into debt traps to advance geopolitical aims. Technocrats worried about how to fit China into structures the rich world used to relieve poor countries’ debt. Chinese officials, meanwhile, were growing concerned that they would fail to get a return on an uncomfortable number of projects. As lending ticks up once again, China is changing tack. The system that is emerging is leaner and more sophisticated, but just as determined to reshape the world to Beijing’s advantage.It is not the institutions that have changed. Poor countries borrow from the West via multilateral outfits, aid agencies, banks and bond markets. China’s overseas lenders, including the two biggest, Exim and China Development Bank, are state-owned, blurring the lines between lending for profit and aid. Whereas Western lenders entrust loans to borrowers, or charities in recipient countries, almost all of China’s lending funds infrastructure built by the country’s state-owned firms, meaning money may never leave the country. In its earliest days, the system seemed to benefit everyone. In China, weak demand for construction left the industry’s state-owned giants at a loose end. State-run banks had an overflow of dollars from rocketing exports. The bosses of both not only won valuable business by looking abroad—they also scored points with officials. In return, these officials acquired diplomatic pull over borrowers. Loans flowed to Africa, in particular, which was home to receptive governments and a wealth of untapped resources. But the eight big state-owned banks lent everywhere. The stock of worldwide loans owed to China grew from $390bn at the end of 2010 to $1.5trn in 2017. Cracks began to emerge towards the end of this period, however. Mr Xi’s orders, to focus on a “road” of global shipping lanes and a “belt” of land routes connecting remote China to the farthest tips of Africa and Europe, failed to transform lending. Belt-and-Road loans continued to flow to countries too hostile or far away to be useful. Poor countries struggled with repayments, meaning more and more projects were abandoned. State-owned construction companies, the part of the lending system that dealt most with borrowers, had little skin in the game. If a loan turned sour, banks lost money and officials were embarrassed, but the builders still got their cut. According to the American Enterprise Institute (aei), a think-tank which keeps tabs on China’s lending, new construction projects began to dry up even before the pandemic, suggesting officials were finally reining in lenders. Western observers expected the brake applied at the start of the pandemic to last until China dealt with the restructurings left behind by earlier profligacy. Instead, policymakers are now instructing lenders to head overseas again, and senior diplomats are going with them to smooth the process. China never acknowledged the pandemic halt, which was only visible in figures from recipient countries. But these figures are now on the rise. Meanwhile, data from fdi Markets, a consultancy, show announcements of new projects, which indicate forthcoming loans, ticked up in the latter half of 2022. The characteristics of this new era are starting to emerge. In 2020 officials told construction firms that future Belt-and-Road projects should resemble “meticulous drawings”. In a speech in 2021 Mr Xi reminded them that “small is beautiful”. Sinosure, a state-run insurer, now refuses to allow loans to countries already heavily indebted to China. Construction firms also have to take a small stake in projects they work on. According to the aei, the value of the average construction project fell from $459m in 2018 to $407m in 2022. Another database, maintained by researchers at Boston University, shows that footprints are also shrinking, from an average of 90km2 in 2013-17 to 16km2 in 2018-2021.Chinese policymakers are taking greater control over disbursement, too. Before the pandemic, equity funds owned by ministries, policy banks and other parts of officialdom were the fastest-growing source of overseas finance, according to Boston University’s data. These help officials to direct state money to where they want it, without having to go through state-owned construction firms. Some funds are partnerships between China and Gulf countries; others act in a manner akin to private-equity outfits. Fund managers make the big decisions. So far they have chosen to invest in fintech and green tech. In time, China could even use these channels to make investments in rich countries that have little desire for debt.Many of the new generation of projects are in commodity hotspots that are crucial to the green transition. China’s manufacturing industry used to demand oil and iron ore. Now it makes more electric vehicles than anywhere else in the world, and seeks enormous quantities of cobalt, copper and lithium. From 2018 to 2021, even as state-owned banks stopped lending elsewhere, they sent billions of dollars to partnerships between Chinese state-owned enterprises and local metal-mining operations in Latin America. This spurred a buying spree by state-owned enterprises and equity funds, three of which are dedicated specifically to the region. Lend your money, lose your friendIn this leaner, more centralised system, money goes to two kinds of borrowers: those with a good chance of repaying (either because projects are likely to turn a profit or governments are sufficiently rich) or those for which any lost money represents a price worth paying for diplomatic or military advantage. Loans to friendly countries with limited geopolitical use, such as Angola and Venezuela, have dried up. But the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a label for $60bn-worth of megaprojects in a country that already owes more than 30% of its external debt to China, appears to be an exception to Sinosure’s new lending rule. The Centre for Research on Energy and Clean Air, a think-tank, reckons that there are at least four power plants in Pakistan which would have been scrapped had officials stuck to recently adopted climate policies. Thus the map of Chinese overseas finance is being redrawn. Banks are offering fewer loans to Africa. Instead, they are going to nearer countries, fresh commodity sources and places where Chinese firms are able to dodge Western trade tariffs. Malaysia and Indonesia have benefitted because of their proximity; Latin America owing to its minerals. A small but growing number of state-owned manufacturers are heading to countries that get on with both Beijing and Washington, making use of loans from state-run banks to set up shop with local governments and firms. One such arrangement is Kuantan industrial park in Malaysia, the infrastructure for which cost at least $3.5bn and was financed by a joint venture between the countries and their state-owned enterprises. The Middle East, where Oman and Saudi Arabia host Chinese manufacturing clusters, offers similar access to Europe. The new era presents unknowns. One is about the scale of investment. Money from equity funds passes through places like Hong Kong and the British Virgin Islands, making it difficult to track. Although loans from state-owned banks are shrinking, they are also being doled out faster. Another unknown concerns decoupling. In the earlier era, China’s overwhelming ambition was to plug itself into the global economy. Now it also wants to insulate itself from America’s economic warfare. If relations continue to deteriorate, China may ramp up efforts to dodge tariffs, lock-in allies and secure global supply chains. A final unknown is whether such efforts will be hindered by the country’s desire for a more sustainable approach to debt. Some question whether China’s behaviour has truly changed. In time, will it return to building and financing megaprojects, on top of its various new activities?Previously Chinese banks lent to poor countries for massive, useless projects. But the same banks also lent for massive, useful projects, such as dams and roads, in countries that could not borrow from anyone else, because they could not really repay anyone. Oxford Economics, a consultancy, estimates that from now to 2040 there will be a $15trn global “infrastructure investment gap”, between the funding for construction that economies require and that which will actually be available to them. With its change of approach, China seems unlikely to step in, and other countries are no keener. China’s new era of lending will be more focused, and better for its own public finances. Some countries, particularly in Africa, will nevertheless miss the old way of doing things. ■ More

  • in

    ‘Rust’ prosecutor said gun enhancement for charge was wrong, Alec Baldwin’s lawyers say

    A New Mexico prosecutor said Alec Baldwin was incorrectly charged with an extra penalty in the “Rust” movie set shooting case, according to the actor’s lawyers.
    Prosecutors have since dropped the firearm enhancement for the charge, which would have brought a potential five-year prison sentence.
    Baldwin still faces involuntary manslaughter charges with a possible 18-month prison sentence.

    An image of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins, who died after being shot by Alec Baldwin on the set of his movie “Rust”, is displayed at a vigil in her honour in Albuquerque, New Mexico, October 23, 2021.
    Kevin Mohatt | Reuters

    A New Mexico prosecutor in the fatal “Rust” shooting case admitted Alec Baldwin was incorrectly charged with an extra penalty that comes with a potential five-year prison sentence, the movie star’s attorneys said in a court filing this week.
    Baldwin’s lawyers had called the so-called firearm enhancement unconstitutional in a motion filed Feb. 10. They argued it was not applicable in Baldwin’s case because the law was changed in May 2022, seven months after the fatal on-set shooting of Halyna Hutchins in October 2021. Baldwin’s legal team withdrew their motion Monday.

    Baldwin, a producer on the movie, was holding the gun that fired the bullet that killed Hutchins. The actor, who also starred in “The Departed” and “Beetlejuice,” has denied he pulled the trigger. The film’s armorer, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, was also charged with two counts of manslaughter, one of which carried the gun enhancement. Gutierrez-Reed’s charges were also downgraded.
    Two days after Baldwin’s defense filed the Feb. 10 motion, special prosecutor Andrea Reeb wrote in an email: “We are a tad confused on your motion on the firearm enhancement.” A spokesperson for the prosecution had also spoken to CNBC, saying that the motion to reduce the charges was only an attempt to distract from the criminal case. Prosecutors have referred to Baldwin’s lawyers as “fancy attorneys.”
    But, according to the Baldwin team’s Monday filing, 22 minutes after Reeb sent that first email, she followed up: “Let me look at the specific numbers and sections and make sure we have it correct.”
    A couple hours later, Reeb sent a third email, admitting that the prosecutors were wrong and that she “100 percent” agreed with Baldwin’s lawyers’ evaluation of the firearm enhancement.
    “I will have our documents drafted to amend the criminal information to take off the firearm enhancement,” she wrote.

    Prosecutors did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
    The emails were sent on Feb. 12. Days later, the prosecutors officially downgraded the charges, removing the firearm enhancement that could have landed Baldwin more than five years in prison if convicted.
    Baldwin’s attorneys want Reeb off the case. They filed a motion on Feb. 7, arguing that she is not “constitutionally permitted” to serve as a prosecutor on the case given that she also serves in New Mexico’s legislature. Article III of New Mexico’s constitution prohibits anyone who serves in one government branch to perform duties for another branch.
    Baldwin still faces involuntary manslaughter charges with a possible 18-month prison sentence for his role in the fatal shooting of Hutchins, who was the cinematographer on the set of “Rust.”
    In addition to the criminal case, Hutchins’ mother, father and sister filed a civil suit against Baldwin and others involved in the production of “Rust.” Hutchins’ widower, Matthew Hutchins, settled his own civil lawsuit against Baldwin in October. He is now an executive producer on “Rust.”
    Producers announced earlier this month that “Rust” will resume filming this spring and that a documentary about Hutchins’ life and work will also begin production. The production will resume in Montana, producers said Wednesday.
    Baldwin and Gutierrez-Reed are slated to make their first court appearances Friday morning local time in a remote hearing.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More