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    China’s ultra-fast economic recovery

    During China’s lunar-new-year holiday, which ran from January 21st to 27th, tourists flocked to the sprawling Taihao mausoleum in Henan province. Many enjoyed slapping a statue of Qin Hui, a scheming official in the Song dynasty who is notorious for having framed a military hero. One visitor got carried away, striking the statue with the lid of an incense burner. Feelings are running high after Qin’s villainy featured in a new film, “Full River Red”, which topped the box-office charts during the holiday.This enthusiastic movie-going, sightseeing and statue-slapping is evidence of a surprisingly speedy consumer revival in the world’s second-biggest economy. The mausoleum says it received 300,000 visitors in the festive period, the most in three years. Box-office revenues were not only better than last year, they were also higher than in the year before covid-19. China’s population, subject until recently to mass screening, is now massing at the screens.The recovery is arriving earlier than expected because the virus spread faster. Since China hastily abandoned its zero-covid regime, infections appear to have passed remarkably quickly. State epidemiologists estimate that at least 80% of the population has already caught the disease. According to official figures, hospital inpatient numbers peaked on January 5th. A second wave of infections was expected after holiday travel spread the disease from cities to villages. But the virus beat the festive rush. The much-feared second wave appears to have merged with the first, notes Airfinity, a life-sciences data firm. Although the death toll from all these infections is unknown, the economic aftermath is becoming clearer. As people have caught and recovered from the virus, China’s service economy is returning to life. An index of activity outside the manufacturing sector, based on monthly surveys of purchasing managers, jumped from 41.6 in December to 54.4 in January, the second-biggest leap on record. Xiaoqing Pi and Helen Qiao of Bank of America observe that activity in the service sectors “battered by the pandemic”, such as retail, accommodation and dining, has risen sharply.On Meituan, an e-commerce platform, some restaurants have amassed waiting lists 1,000 tables long. People used to queueing for pcr tests now wait to pray at popular temples. In Hangzhou, the capital of Zhejiang province, people gathered outside the Linshun temple at 4am to light incense for the God of Wealth. Others who reached the top of the spectacular Tianmen mountain in Hunan province, famous for its vertiginous glass walkways, had to wait until 9pm to catch a cable car back down, according to the National Business Daily, a state newspaper.Can this frenetic pace be sustained? Optimists point out that households are unusually liquid. Their bank deposits now exceed 120trn yuan ($18trn), over 100% of last year’s gdp, and 13trn yuan more than might have been expected given pre-pandemic trends, according to Citigroup, a bank. These deposits could provide ammunition for a bout of “revenge spending”.Yet the ammunition may be set aside for other purposes. Much is composed of cash that nervous households kept in the bank rather than using to buy property or ploughing into a mutual fund. They are unlikely now to lavish it on goods and services. More likely, reckons Citigroup, is a bout of “revenge risk-taking”, as households gain confidence to buy bonds and shares that are less safe but potentially more rewarding than a bank deposit. This would lift asset prices and give a much-needed boost to the housing market. Perhaps a more accurate way to assess the forthcoming spending boom is therefore to look at the gap between household income and consumer spending. In the three years before the pandemic, households saved 30% of their disposable income. During the pandemic they saved 33%. The cumulative result of this extra saving is about 4.9trn yuan. If consumers added that to their spending this year it would increase their consumption by 14% (before adjusting for inflation).The exact size of the spree will ultimately depend on broader economic conditions. Property prices have fallen and the job market is weak, with youth unemployment still above 16%. But China’s labour market has bounced back quickly after previous covid setbacks, and jobless youngsters count for only about 1% of the urban labour force. With luck, a bit of extra spending will result in higher sales and stronger hiring, in turn motivating additional spending. All this means consumption could account for the lion’s share of China’s growth this year: almost 80%, according to Citigroup, if government spending is included. This would be the highest share for more than two decades.China’s splurge will make a welcome contribution to global growth. According to the imf’s forecasts, released on January 30th, the country’s economy will grow by 5.2% this year, accounting for two-fifths of the expansion in the world economy. Together, America and the euro area will contribute less than a fifth.A recent study by economists at America’s Federal Reserve makes a basic point with its title: “What Happens in China Does Not Stay in China”. Their estimates suggest a policy-induced expansion in China’s gdp of 1% adds about 0.25% to the rest of the world’s gdp after a year or two. The authors do not examine spillovers from China’s reopening. But their results give some indication of the possible consequences. If China’s reopening lifts the domestic growth rate from 3% to 5-6% this year, the spillover effects may be 0.5-0.75% of the rest of the world’s gdp, or about $400bn-600bn at an annualised rate. An uptick in growth would not be an unalloyed good, however. Central banks still want to quash inflation. If higher Chinese demand adds to price pressures, policymakers may feel obliged to slow their economies by raising interest rates or delaying cuts. Lael Brainard, vice-chairwoman of the Fed, has noted that China’s exit from zero-covid has uncertain implications for global demand and inflation, especially in commodities. Christine Lagarde, head of the European Central Bank, has warned it will increase “inflationary pressure”, because China will consume more energy. According to Goldman Sachs, another bank, reopening could add $15-21 to a barrel of Brent crude oil, now trading at around $80.After the Asian financial crisis in 1997, the Chinese economy helped to stabilise the region. After the global financial crisis a decade later, China’s growth helped to stabilise the world. This year it will once again make the single biggest contribution to global growth. But whereas in the past China’s contribution came from investment spending, now consumption will take the lead. Chinese consumers have traditionally punched below their weight. This year they will hit harder. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, finance and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter. More

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    Inside the ‘Wormhole,’ Relativity Space’s monster factory 3D-printing reusable rockets

    CNBC recently toured “The Wormhole,” a more than 1-million-square-foot former Boeing facility, where Relativity Space is building its larger, reusable line of Terran R rockets.
    The aerospace startup continues to grow as it pursues a novel approach to manufacturing rockets out of mostly 3D-printed structures and parts, aiming for production in less than 60 days.
    Its fourth generation 3D printer is horizontally printing the main structures of the Terran R in a process that CEO Tim Ellis says can operate seven to twelve times faster than its previous technology.

    The exterior of “The Wormhole” factory.
    Relativity Space

    LONG BEACH, California – It was a few days into the new year yet Relativity Space’s factory was anything but quiet, a din of activity with massive 3D printers humming and the clanging of construction ringing out.
    Now about eight years on from its founding, Relativity continues to grow as it pursues a novel way of manufacturing rockets out of mostly 3D-printed structures and parts. Relativity believes that its approach will make building orbital-class rockets much faster than traditional methods, requiring thousands less parts and enabling changes to be made via software — aiming to create rockets from raw materials in as little as 60 days.

    The company has raised over $1.3 billion in capital to date and continues to expand its footprint, including the addition of more than 150 acres at NASA’s rocket engine testing center in Mississippi. Relativity was named to CNBC’s Disruptor 50 last year.

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    The company’s first rocket, known Terran 1, is currently in the final stages of preparation for its inaugural launch from Cape Canaveral in Florida. That rocket was built in “The Portal,” the 120,000-square-foot factory the company built in Long Beach.

    The inside of “The Wormhole” factory in Long Beach, California.
    Relativity Space

    But earlier this month CNBC took a look inside “The Wormhole:” The more than one-million square foot facility where Boeing previously built C-17 aircraft is where Relativity now is filling in with machinery and building its larger, reusable line of Terran R rockets.
    “I actually tried to kill this project several times,” Relativity CEO and co-founder Tim Ellis told CNBC, gesturing to one of the company’s newest additive manufacturing machines – this one given an internal codename “Reaper,” in reference to the StarCraft games — which marks the fourth generation of the company’s Stargate printers.

    A closeup look at one of the company’s “Reaper” printers at work.
    Relativity Space

    Unlike Relativity’s prior Stargate generations, which printed vertically, the fourth generation ones building the main structures of Terran R are printing horizontally. Ellis emphasized the change allows its printers to manufacture seven times faster than the third generation, and have been tested at speeds up to 12 times faster.

    The scale of one of the Stargate “Reaper” printers.
    Relativity Space

    “[Printing horizontally] seems very counterintuitive, but it ends up enabling a certain change in the physics of the printhead which is then much, much faster,” Ellis said.

    A pair of the company’s “Reaper” 3D-printers.
    Relativity Space

    So far, the company is utilizing about a third of the cavernous former Boeing facility, where Ellis said Relativity has room for about a dozen printers that can produce Terran R rockets at a pace of “several a year.”
    For 2023, Relativity is focused on getting Terran 1 to orbit, to prove its approach works, as well as demonstrate how “fast we can progress the additive technology,” Ellis said.
    “Given the overall economy, we’re obviously being very scrappy still, and making sure we’re delivering results,” he added.

    The company’s Terran 1 rocket stands on its launchpad at LC-16 in Cape Canaveral, Florida ahead of the inaugural launch attempt.
    Trevor Mahlmann / Relativity Space

    Correction: A previous of this story misstated the speed the company’s 3D-printers had been tested. More

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    U.S. plans to stop buying Covid shots for the public this fall. Here’s what that means for you

    The U.S. will transition the federal Covid vaccination program to the private market as soon as the fall.
    This means Pfizer and Moderna would sell the shots directly to health-care providers at a higher price.
    Americans who have health insurance would still get their Covid shots for free once the vaccine program goes commercial.
    But the uninsured may have to pay the full price of the shots after the current federal supply runs out.
    The federal vaccine program will not be affected by the end of the Covid public health emergency in May, the White House said.

    A pharmacist delivers a COVID-19 booster dose at a Chicago CVS store in October.
    Antonio Perez | Tribune News Service | Getty Images

    The U.S. will stop buying Covid shots at reduced price for the entire country and shift vaccine distribution to the private market as soon as early fall, shifting the cost to U.S. insurers and uninsured Americans who stand to lose access to the free vaccines.
    Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House Covid response coordinator, said in an an interview with UCSF Department of Medicine on Thursday that the shift to a private market will happen over the summer or early fall, though no exact date has been set.

    A senior official with the Health and Human Services Department told CNBC the fall would be a natural time to transition to a private market, particularly if the Food and Drug Administration selects a new Covid strain for the vaccines and asks the manufacturers to produce updated shots ahead of the respiratory virus season.
    For the past two years, the U.S. has bought the vaccines directly from Pfizer and Moderna at an average price of about $21 per dose, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation.
    The federal government has required pharmacies, doctor’s offices and hospitals to provide these shots for free to everyone regardless of their insurance status.

    If you have health insurance

    When the federal Covid vaccination program ends, the shots will remain free for people who have health insurance due to requirements under the Affordable Care Act.
    But uninsured adults may have to pay for their immunizations when Pfizer and Moderna start selling the shots on the private market and the current federal stockpile runs out. There is a federal program to provide free vaccines to children whose families or caretakers can’t afford the shots.

    Jha said on Tuesday the planned switch is not tied to the end of the Covid public health emergency in May.
    “The end of the PHE does NOT mean people will suddenly not be able to get the vaccines and treatments they need,” Jha wrote in a Twitter thread on Tuesday.

    When the federal government no longer buys vaccines at a discount for the entire nation, individual health-care providers will purchase the shots from the vaccine makers at a higher price.
    Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel told CNBC last month that the company is preparing to sell the vaccines on the private market as early as this fall. Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told investors during the company’s earnings call this week that he is preparing for the vaccines to go commercial in the second half of the year.
    Pfizer and Moderna have said they are considering hiking the price of the vaccines to somewhere around $110 to $130 per dose once the U.S. government pulls out of the vaccine program.

    If you’re uninsured

    “If you’re uninsured, then you might be faced with the full cost,” said Cynthia Cox, an expert on the Affordable Care Act at the Kaiser Family Foundation.
    But the U.S. still has a substantial stockpile of free vaccines left. The Biden administration ordered 171 million omicron boosters last year. About 51 million boosters have been administered so far, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    The uninsured will continue to have access to these 120 million doses for free, but it’s unclear how long the supply will last.
    “With the supply we have of vaccines and antivirals, we don’t think we’re going to be in a state of precipitous transition to drop this on market partners,” the HHS official said.
    Although the vaccine makers are preparing to sell shots on the private market later this year, it’s possible that the federal stockpile of free shots could last longer than that because booster uptake has been low, Cox said.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:

    “Everyone in the U.S. regardless of their citizenship status or their insurance status is able to get a free vaccine as long as this federal stockpile lasts,” Cox said.
    Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., slammed the vaccine price hike in a letter to Moderna’s CEO last month. Sanders, who chairs the Senate health committee, said the price hike would cost taxpayers billions via its impact on Medicaid and Medicare’s budgets.
    “Perhaps most significantly, the quadrupling of prices will make the vaccine unavailable for millions of uninsured and underinsured Americans who will not be able to afford it,” Sanders said. “How many of these Americans will die from Covid-19 as a result of limited access to these lifesaving vaccines?”
    Jha said this week that the Biden administration is committed to helping the uninsured access Covid shots and treatments.
    “We are creating a whole separate set of efforts for the uninsured because the uninsured, of course, will not be able to get vaccines for free and treatments for free under the regular insurance system by definition,” Jha said Thursday. “We are working on a plan on that.”
    The HHS official said one tool the federal government plans to use is a program called Section 317 that provides funding to procure and administer shots to uninsured adults at no cost.

    ACA requirements

    But for the overwhelming majority of people with private insurance, the Affordable Care Act will cover the cost of the vaccines. Under the ACA, private health insurance is required to cover all immunizations recommended by the CDC at no cost to the consumer.
    Medicare would cover the shots for seniors, who are the most vulnerable to the virus, and lower-income people could get the vaccine through Medicaid.
    There may be a small number of legacy private health insurance plans from before the ACA that are not required to cover Covid vaccines, Cox said. The HHS official said most of those plans will likely pay for the shots.
    In addition, some short-term insurance policies might not pay for the vaccines, Cox said. These plans were expanded during the Trump administration and aren’t required to comply with the ACA.
    The ACA also allows private insurance to limit vaccine coverage to in-network providers, Cox said. People who have grown accustomed to getting vaccinated at any pharmacy during the pandemic might have to go to a specific drugstore in the future to get a free shot, she said.
    Consumers could also see their health insurance premiums increase if Pfizer and Moderna hike the price of the shots, Cox said.

    Paxlovid may not be free

    Some patients, depending on their insurance policy, will also probably have to pay for Pfizer’s antiviral pill Paxlovid in the future. Unlike preventive services such as vaccines, the ACA does not require insurance to cover treatments.
    Bourla told market analysts this week that Pfizer expects to start selling Paxlovid through the private market at commercial prices in the second half of 2023.
    Pfizer has not announced how much the antiviral will cost once it goes commercial. The federal government is paying about $530 for a five-day treatment course. It’s unclear how much patients will have to pay out of pocket and how much of the price insurance will cover.
    Dawn O’Connell, who heads the federal office responsible for the U.S. stockpile, said last August that the Health and Human Services Department expected to run out of Paxlovid by mid-2023.
    Jha said on Tuesday that there are still millions of doses of Paxlovid and omicron boosters in the U.S. stockpile. “They will continue to be available for free to all Americans who need them,” Jha said of the remaining federal supply.

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    How Zelle is different from Venmo, PayPal and CashApp

    Zelle is owned and operated by Early Warning Services, LLC, which is co-owned by seven of the nation’s big banks.
    The payment app launched in 2017 as competition in the peer-to-peer space began heating up with PayPal’s Venmo and Block’s Cash App.

    More than half of smartphone users in the U.S. are sending money via some sort of peer-to-peer payment service to send money to friends, family and businesses.
    Stocks of payment services like PayPal, which owns Venmo, and Block, which owns Cash App, boomed in 2020 as more people began sending money digitally.

    Zelle, which launched in 2017, stands out from the pack in a few ways. It’s owned and operated by Early Warning Services, LLC, which is co-owned by seven of the big banks and it’s not publicly traded. The platform serves the banks beyond generating an independent revenue stream.
    “Zelle is not really a revenue-generating enterprise on a stand-alone basis,” said Mike Cashman, a partner at Bain & Co. “You should think of this really as a little bit of an accommodation, but also as an engagement tool versus a revenue-generating machine.”
    “If you’re already transacting with your bank and you trust your bank, then the fact that your bank offers Zelle as a means of payment is attractive to you,” said Terri Bradford, a payment specialist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
    One limitation of PayPal, Venmo and Cash App is that users must all be using the same service. Zelle, on the other hand, appeals to users because anyone with a bank account at one of the seven participating firms can make payments.
    “For banks, it’s a no-brainer to try to compete in that space,” said Jaime Toplin, senior analyst at Insider Intelligence. “Customers use their mobile-banking apps all the time, and no one wants to cede the opportunity from a space that people are already really active in to third-party competitors.”
    Watch the video above to learn more about why the banks created Zelle and where the service may be headed.

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    Cramer’s lightning round: Zoom Video needs a merger

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    It’s that time again! “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer rings the lightning round bell, which means he’s giving his answers to callers’ stock questions at rapid speed.

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    Cintas Corp: “It’s one of the greatest small business companies in the world.”

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    VF Corp: “I am very worried about VF.”

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    AST SpaceMobile Inc: “That’s a very tough one to own.”
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Pioneer Natural Resources.

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    Jim Cramer says strong January jobs report shows the economy can handle more rate hikes

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer said that the January jobs report shows that the economy will remain resilient, despite the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes.
    The U.S. economy added 517,000 jobs in January, crushing the Dow Jones estimate of a 187,000 gain.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday said that the January jobs report shows that the economy will remain resilient, despite the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes.
    “If the Fed Chief wants to raise interest rates quarter after quarter, this economy can actually handle it. And that’s the real takeaway from this amazing job growth number,” he said.

    The U.S. economy added 517,000 jobs in January, crushing the Dow Jones estimate of a 187,000 gain. That marks the biggest increase in nonfarm payrolls since July 2022.
    Stocks teetered on the news but ultimately slipped to end the trading session. The S&P 500 fell 1.04%, while the Nasdaq Composite declined 1.59%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 0.38%.
    Cramer said that while stocks fell because the market is in “good news is bad news” mode – the stronger the economy is, the more the Fed will likely have to raise interest rates – the market still held up, more or less.
    “My take is that the comeback from the initial negative reaction in the stock market today, before a move lower in the afternoon, has to do with faith. Faith in thinking that there won’t be a recession. Faith that if the Fed wants to hit us with one or two more rate hikes, we’ll be fine,” he said.
    The strong economic data comes after the Fed on Wednesday raised interest rates by a quarter percentage point. Chairman Jerome Powell signaled that the central bank isn’t done raising rates despite economic indications that inflation is cooling down.

    Cramer said that while the Fed still wants to tamp down inflation more, he believes a severe recession is “near impossible” with job growth being so strong.
    “Anyone who thinks the Fed will have to swiftly cut rates later this year because the economy’s too weak [is] clearly fooling themselves,” he said.

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    Cramer’s week ahead: Take advantage of the bull market by selling some shares

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer advised investors to ring the register on some of their positions to take advantage of the bull market. 
    Cramer also reviewed next week’s slate of earnings, which include Disney, Tyson Foods, PepsiCo and more.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday advised investors to ring the register on some of their positions to take advantage of the bull market. 
    “I don’t know if we can continue this week’s bizarrely bullish behavior, but it’s worth sticking around and … you can trim a bit of some stock that you’re up a lot,” he said

    Stocks fell on Friday after a strong January jobs report renewed fears that the Federal Reserve will continue hiking interest rates. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite still managed to end the week on the positive side, with the tech-heavy index notching its fifth consecutive winning week.
    Cramer also reviewed next week’s slate of earnings. All estimates for earnings, revenue and economic data are courtesy of FactSet.
    Monday: Tyson Foods, Simon Property Group
    Tyson Foods

    Q1 2023 earnings release at 7:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.31
    Projected revenue: $13.51 billion

    Cramer said the conference call should give insight into the state of food inflation at grocery stores.

    Simon Property Group

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $3.15
    Projected revenue: $1.29 billion

    “They may pull a rabbit out of a hat” despite it being a tough time for companies in the office property business, he said.
    Tuesday: Chipotle Mexican Grill, Enphase Energy
    Chipotle Mexican Grill

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:10 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $8.91
    Projected revenue: $2.23 billion

    Cramer said he expects the quarter to be phenomenal given the company’s plan to hire 15,000 restaurant workers ahead of the busy spring months.
    Enphase Energy

    Q4 2022 earnings at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.27
    Projected revenue: $707 million

    “I always say the same thing — if you believe that solar can be even bigger than it is now, then Enphase is the right stock for you,” he said.
    Wednesday: CVS Health, Disney
    CVS Health

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 6:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.92
    Projected revenue: $76.33 billion

    Cramer said that he’s curious why the company’s stock has become “a real bow-wow.”
    Disney

    Q1 2023 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: 79 cents
    Projected revenue: $23.44 billion

    He predicted that Disney’s performance will improve now that CEO Bob Iger is back at the company’s helm.
    Thursday: PepsiCo, PayPal
    PepsiCo

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 6 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:15 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.65
    Projected revenue: $26.84 billion

    “I actually think they will deliver good numbers on Thursday, but if we have a growth hangover it might not matter to the market,” he said.
    PayPal

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.20
    Projected revenue: $7.39 billion

    “Who needs PayPal when Apple Pay is built into your phone?” he said.
    Friday: Enbridge, Newell Brands
    Enbridge

    Q4 2022 earnings release before the opening bell; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: 54 cents
    Projected revenue: $10 billion

    Cramer said he wants to hear the company talk about where the price of natural gas is headed.
    Newell Brands

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 6 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: 11 cents
    Projected revenue: $2.23 billion

    The company had a “compelling” turnaround, according to Cramer.
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Apple and Disney.

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    Ford sold 91 million shares of EV startup Rivian last year

    Ford liquidated most of its ownership stake last year in electric vehicle maker Rivian Automotive, according to the Detroit automaker’s annual report.
    Ford sold 91 million shares of the EV startup in 2022.
    Ford’s sale was worth about $3 billion in total proceeds, a substantial gain on its $1.2 billion investment

    RJ Scaringe, Rivian founder and CEO, and Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford announce a $500 million Ford investment in Rivian.
    Source: Ford Motor Co.

    DETROIT – Ford Motor liquidated most of its ownership stake last year in electric vehicle maker Rivian Automotive, according to the Detroit automaker’s annual report submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday.
    Ford sold 91 million shares of the EV startup in 2022, according to the filing. Ford’s sale of the shares was worth about $3 billion in total proceeds, the company said, a substantial gain on its $1.2 billion investment in Rivian.

    related investing news

    Ford, as of the end of last year, still owned about 11 million of its initial 101.9 million shares of Rivian. The company declined to comment on plans for the remaining shares, which still made the automaker one of the company’s largest shareholders, according to FactSet. Rivian also declined to comment.
    Ford first invested in Rivian in 2019, before the EV maker went public. At the time, the two companies said that Ford would build an electric vehicle based on the “skateboard” platform that now underpins Rivian’s R1T pickup and R1S SUV. Despite former Ford CEO Jim Hackett’s enthusiasm for the deal, those plans never came to fruition.
    But as a result of that initial investment, Ford was among the largest stakeholders in the company upon Rivian’s blockbuster IPO in 2021, with a 12% stake.

    Ford vs. Rivian shares

    Ford said that it sold 25.2 million shares of Rivian in the second quarter, for about $700 million in total proceeds. It sold an additional 51.9 million shares during the third quarter for about $1.8 billion, according to earlier filings.
    Hackett’s successor, Jim Farley, had made it clear that Ford would likely sell its stake, but it was unclear when the automaker planned to sell the shares and exit Rivian.

    Ford unrealized gains/losses were $8.3 billion gain in 2021 and a $968 million loss in 2022, which damaged the automaker’s bottom-line last year.
    Shortly after Rivian’s blockbuster IPO in November 2021, shares of the company reached an all-time high of nearly $180 a share during Wall Street’s infatuation with EV startups that led to inflated valuations of early- or pre-revenue companies.
    Rivian’s stock is now trading around $20 a share, following several missed targets and a slower-than-expected increase in vehicle production at a plant in Normal, Illinois. The company is valued at about $18 billion.

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