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    NBA unveils Kobe Bryant All-Star Game trophy, two years after death of basketball icon

    The NBA on Thursday revealed the new Kobe Bryant trophy, which will be awarded to the most valuable player of the All-Star Game later this month.
    Bryant, along with his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, and seven others, died in a helicopter crash in January 2020.
    “His presence, innovation and his boldness needed to be represented in the trophy,” said Victor Solomon, the artist who created it.

    NBA Kobe Bryant trophies
    Source: NBA

    The National Basketball Association has redesigned its All-Star Game’s most valuable player trophy to honor the legendary Kobe Bryant, two years after his death.
    The NBA had already named the MVP award after the 18-time All-Star, who won a record-tying four MVPs in the annual exhibition game. Bryant, along with his 13-year-old daughter, Gianna, and seven others, died in January 2020 in a helicopter crash in Calabasas, California.

    Top NBA players will meet in Cleveland on Feb. 20 for the 2022 All-Star Game. The starters have already been declared, and the reserves will be announced Thursday night.
    While the new MVP trophy was revealed for the first time on Thursday, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver had announced the renaming of the award in Bryant’s honor shortly after his death.
    “Kobe Bryant is synonymous with NBA All-Star and embodies the spirit of this global celebration of our game,” Silver said in a February 2020 statement. Kawhi Leonard of the Los Angeles Clippers won the inaugural Kobe Bryant MVP award that year.
    In addition to the new MVP prize, the NBA also just unveiled redesigned trophies for the Slam Dunk Contest, Skills Challenge, Rising Stars competition and celebrity game.
    The league teamed up with artist Victor Solomon, known for his $30,000 hand-crafted basketball hoops. Solomon told CNBC the new trophy designs were an opportunity to “push myself creatively, and push the envelope of what the team and I could create.”

    Kobe Bryant #8 of the Western Conference All Stars talks with Michael Jordan #23 of the Eastern conference All Stars during the 2003 NBA All-Star Game at the Phillips Arena on February 9, 2003 in Atlanta, Georgia.
    Andrew D. Bernstein NBAE | Getty Images

    A trophy that honors Kobe

    Solomon was approached by the NBA in March 2020 about a redesign.
    The Kobe Bryant trophy he created has an eight-sided base that serves as a tribute to Bryant’s All-Star appearances and honors his original No. 8 jersey that he started wearing in high school.
    It also honors Bryant’s All-Star Game MVP performances, most notably his first in 2002. That year, Bryant scored a game-high 31 points in front of a raucous crowd in Philadelphia, near where Bryant grew up.
    The trophy weighs 15 pounds and has four levels for accolades. They pay tribute to his No. 24 Los Angeles Lakers jersey and the No. 10 he wore for Team USA. The trophy also highlights Bryant’s five NBA championships and two NBA MVP awards. 
    “His presence, innovation and his boldness needed to be represented in the trophy,” Solomon said. “It was very serendipitous that once we started moving down the road in this creative direction for it, there were some really poignant story moments that organically came out of it.”  
    Solomon’s work was relatively unknown in basketball circles until 2016. That’s when Nike called.
    According to a 2018 article in Sports Illustrated, Solomon said Nike requested one of his 24-karat-gold-and-stained-glass basketball hoops to celebrate Kevin Durant’s arrival in California and his joining the Golden State Warriors. Solomon customized a $30,000 hoop for Durant that included a crystal net.
    Celebrities in basketball and the music industry took note. Solomon created pieces for hip-hop star Rick Ross and former NBA player Paul Pierce.
    “My real dream is that I want to redesign the trophies for the NBA,” Solomon told Sports Illustrated. “We’ve got to get new trophies.”  

    NBA Dunk Trophies
    Source: NBA

    Solomon remembers the quote and said the experience since then has been “crazy.” He said his partnership with the NBA started “organically” in 2019, when the NBA requested his eye for a new trophy design for its G League operation. 
    “It was not lost on me that that was my opportunity to make an impression, to set the stage for a bigger vision that I’ve had,” Solomon said.
    Since 1986, the NBA’s All-Star trophy has mostly looked the same — a plaque of a basketball with the NBA logo in the middle. But the trophy has been redesigned more than 10 times.
    The NBA isn’t saying how much it spent on the new Kobe Bryant trophy. The Larry O’Brien trophy, awarded annually to the winner of the NBA finals, is made by Tiffany & Co and has reportedly been valued at $13,000. Industry sources say that figure is closer to $60,000.
    Asked if the Kobe Bryant trophy costs as much as one of his $30,000 hoops, Solomon said, “There’s no stained glass in this one, but definitely some luxurious materials that are appropriate for the honor that we’re celebrating.”

    NBA 3 Point and Rising Star trophies
    Source: NBA

    High stakes

    The Kobe Bryant trophy and other new awards coincide with the NBA’s 75th anniversary season.
    “We agreed that All-Star was the first place to start to really attack this and reimagine these [trophies],” said Christopher Arena, the NBA’s head of on-court and brand partnerships. “We knew we could do better. We could respect the past but innovate.”
    Outside of the Kobe Bryant trophy, the most noticeable redesigns are for the AT&T-sponsored Slam Dunk trophy and the Mountain Dew-sponsored three-point contest crown. Each trophy features a 14-inch crystal star-shaped column and has a 24-karat-gold basketball embedded inside.
    Solomon said the creative process involved taking “that classic gold ball on the wooden base and using that imagery to spin forward what the new version of it is.”
    “It was not lost on us how high the stakes were,” Solomon said.
    WATCH: Legendary Super Bowl champion Tom Brady announces retirement from NFL

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    What investors should know ahead of Ford’s fourth-quarter earnings Thursday

    Wall Street analysts estimate Ford will post a profit of 45 cents per share in adjusted earnings and $35.5 billion in revenue, according to Refinitiv estimates.
    While investors will be monitoring Ford’s quarterly results, they’re more interested in the automaker’s guidance for this year as well as any progress or setbacks in Farley’s Ford+ turnaround plan.

    A 2022 Ford Motor Co. Maverick compact pickup truck during the Washington Auto Show in Washington, D.C., on Friday, Jan. 21, 2022.
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    DETROIT – Shares of Ford Motor led the automotive sector in growth last year, soaring by about 140% thanks to a restructuring plan led by CEO Jim Farley. But the stock has stalled so far this year, down by less than 1%.
    Investors will decide Thursday whether Ford can get any of that momentum back when the Detroit automaker reports its fourth-quarter results and gives guidance for this year after the markets close.

    Wall Street analysts estimate Ford will post a profit of 45 cents a share in adjusted earnings and a 6% rise in revenue from the previous year to $35.5 billion, according to Refinitiv estimates.

    While investors will be monitoring Ford’s quarterly results, they’re more interested in the automaker’s guidance for this year as well as any progress or setbacks in Farley’s Ford+ turnaround plan.
    Here’s more on those issues and other things investors should know about ahead of Ford’s fourth-quarter results after the markets close Thursday.

    Outlook

    Much of Wall Street’s focus for Ford, like other automakers, will be on the company’s guidance for 2022.
    Automakers continue to manage through a global shortage of semiconductor chips, which some experts don’t expect to return to normal levels until late this year, if not 2023. Ford and other automakers were forced to sporadically shutter plants and depleted vehicle inventories due to the lack of chips.

    Ford’s crosstown rival General Motors surprised Wall Street by saying it expects its global production to increase by 25% to 30% in 2022 over last year. In October, Ford said it expected an increase in wholesale volumes, which are closely correlated with production, of just 10% in 2022.

    Ford has started initial pre-production of its electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck at a new plant in Dearborn, Mich.
    Michael Wayland | CNBC

    GM reported full-year adjusted earnings of $14.3 billion, or $7.07 earnings per share, on revenue of $127 billion in 2021. 
    Analysts estimate Ford this year will earn between $1.54 and $2.35 earnings per share on revenue of $147.5 billion, according to Refinitiv. That compares with expectations of between $1.72 and $2.05 EPS and revenue of $126.3 billion in 2021.

    Rivian

    Ford announced several special items and financing adjustments last month for the fourth quarter that could skew earnings if analysts didn’t adjust their forecasts.
    The most notable item was a fourth-quarter gain of $8.2 billion on Ford’s equity investment when EV start-up Rivian went public.
    The company also reclassified a $900 million profit on its equity investment in Rivian to a special item that will impact the company’s full-year adjusted earnings guidance. It was previously between $10.5 billion and $11.5 billion. Excluding that gain, the company’s 2021 guidance would be between $9.6 billion and $10.6 billion.

    Ford owns about 12% of Rivian. It also bought $415 million in Rivian’s convertible notes in July that become common stock in June 2022.
    Ford has not announced plans to sell its stake in Rivian. It’s something being closely monitored by Wall Street.

    No more upside?

    Several analysts downgraded the shares ahead of the earnings release.
    RBC Capital Markets analyst Joseph Spak said it would be “more challenging” for the shares after the significant runup last year when he downgraded the stock from outperform to sector perform on Jan. 14.
    Jefferies analyst Philippe Houchois also downgraded the stock in mid-January with similar comments.
    “Ford is back, with strong earnings and a repaired balance sheet. Shares have also rerated on recovered earnings that now approach cyclical highs,” Houchois wrote in an investor note, adding “all that leaves limited scope for positive surprises.”
    Ford is rated at overweight with a price target of $22.62 a share, according to average analyst ratings compiled by FactSet.

    EVs

    Ford’s EV plans could come with some surprises for investors in 2022.
    Ford is reportedly spending an additional $10 billion to $20 billion over the next five to 10 years converting factories worldwide to electric-vehicle production from making gasoline-powered cars, Bloomberg News wrote Tuesday.
    Adding another $10 billion to $20 billion over the next decade wouldn’t be outlandish given automakers across the globe are pledging billions of dollars for such efforts through 2025.

    Order bank

    An increasingly important number being watched by Wall Street is Ford’s vehicle order bank, which was at 139,454 orders when the company reported its third-quarter earnings in October. That does not include its popular Bronco SUV, which has reservations in the tens of thousands, an official told CNBC last month.

    2022 Ford Bronco Raptor

    Farley has said the company plans to move more toward an order-based system rather than the traditional buying process of dealers having large inventories of vehicles that customers choose from and drive off the lot.
    Farley has said the change assists Ford’s profits, reduces costs and ensures customers get the vehicle they want.
    — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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    Citigroup CEO Jane Fraser faces disgruntled employees, regulators’ demands in difficult first year

    Workers from junior salespeople to senior executives have been ensnared in monthslong reviews stemming from an anonymous complaint portal for employees, according to sources.
    The bank freezes bonuses and performance reviews for staff under investigation, even if claims are baseless, according to the people, who asked for anonymity out of fear of reprisals.
    Jane Fraser, the first female chief of a major U.S. bank, finds herself in a tricky balancing act: To overhaul a company that has deeply underperformed U.S. rivals for years, she has to improve returns and grow businesses while keeping a lid on expenses and plowing money into appeasing regulators.

    Citi CEO Jane Fraser makes brief remarks during a meeting with U.S. President Joe Biden and fellow chief executives to discuss the looming federal debt limit in the South Court Auditorium in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on October 06, 2021 in Washington, DC.
    Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

    Frustration has been building within parts of Citigroup over delayed bonuses and tight budgets, two impacts of the bank’s response to its regulatory oversight, according to people with direct knowledge of the situation.
    Workers from junior salespeople to senior executives have been ensnared in monthslong reviews stemming from an anonymous complaint portal for employees, according to the sources. The bank freezes bonuses and performance reviews for staff under investigation, even if claims are baseless, according to the people, who asked for anonymity out of fear of reprisals.

    The cumbersome internal reviews are a surprising fact of life at Citigroup, where CEO Jane Fraser has garnered headlines for talking about work-life balance and other ways to get a recruiting edge versus competitors. They illustrate how regulatory scrutiny has weighed on employee morale, making the already-difficult task of turning around Citigroup even harder as Fraser, 54, approaches her one-year anniversary leading the firm.
    Fraser, the first female chief of a major U.S. bank, finds herself in a tricky balancing act: To overhaul a company that has deeply underperformed U.S. rivals for years, she has to improve returns and grow businesses while keeping a lid on expenses and plowing money into appeasing regulators.
    Investors have been skeptical so far. While 2021 was the best year for the banking industry in more than two decades because of rising interest rates, Citigroup didn’t participate in the rally. Since Fraser took over in March 2021, the bank’s stock has climbed 2.7%, while Bank of America jumped 38% and Wells Fargo, also a turnaround project, rose 56% in that period.
    Fraser, a former McKinsey partner who took over after predecessor Mike Corbat accelerated his retirement timeline, kicked off her tenure with a bang: In April, she announced that the bank was exiting 13 markets in Asia and Europe. The strategy was to simplify the bank and focus on its strengths in global corporate cash management and U.S. credit cards, and to grow in wealth management.
    The exits, including the announcement last month that Citigroup was leaving retail banking in Mexico, were applauded by analysts, who saw it as a sign that Fraser would leave no stone unturned in her quest to remake Citigroup. After all, her predecessors had resisted calls to shrink the bank’s global footprint, and Fraser herself had managed some of the operations being pruned.

    Uber competitive

    But while rival banks saw their stocks surge last year and fintech players like Block’s Cash App gained millions of users, Citigroup struggled. The company’s revenue sagged 5% to $71.9 billion in 2021 while expenses jumped 9% to $48 billion – a dynamic analysts call “negative operating leverage” and the exact opposite of what banks typically aim to accomplish.
    Part of the leap in expenses came from addressing its consent orders. Regulators hit the bank with a $400 million fine and a pair of consent orders in late 2020, demanding sweeping improvements to risk management and controls after the bank accidentally wired $900 million to Revlon creditors. One of the edicts in the orders was for Citigroup to enhance the way it tracks and addresses employee complaints.
    “Executing on the plan while working on the consent order, that’s the hard part,” said Glenn Schorr, banking analyst at Evercore. “Every business they’re in is uber competitive, every one of them has neobanks and fintechs and other banks and private credit managers all nipping on their heels. It’s hard to execute on all those fronts at the same time.”
    Making matters worse, large investor ValueAct, which had played a role in accelerating Corbat’s decision to leave, seemed to lose conviction in its wager, trimming its position over the course of the year. Then, in December, the bank revealed that it would pause share buybacks for months to boost capital for international standards, the only major U.S. bank to do so.
    Citigroup’s low stock price means it is the only bank among the six biggest U.S. institutions that trades for below its tangible book value, a key metric in the banking world that essentially means that the bank is seen as destroying shareholder value rather than creating it. Rivals JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America trade at more than twice their tangible book value.
    The developments last year, including a tone-deaf compensation plan that critics say rewards executives for merely doing their jobs, prompted bank analyst Mike Mayo of Wells Fargo to pen a scathing report in October titled “Will Citi Reach Book Value in our Lifetime?”
    “Coming into this year, Citigroup was the most-hated bank stock by a wide margin,” said Mayo, who admitted in a phone interview that he’d been “long and wrong” on the company after naming it a buy. “Hopefully I won’t be on my deathbed and still waiting for Citi to get to book value.”
    In response to this article, Citigroup spokeswoman Jennifer Lowney had this statement:
    “We believe our stakeholders understand there aren’t any quick fixes and want to see us create real value over time,” Lowney said in an email. “We’re proud of the early progress we’ve made, and are committed to putting in the hard work needed to get the right results.”

    Structural disadvantages

    Many of Fraser’s challenges stem from structural disadvantages she inherited from Citigroup’s genesis as the original megabank two decades ago.
    The bank owes its current design to former Chairman and CEO Sandy Weill, who led Citicorp into a merger with Travelers in 1998 to create the world’s biggest financial services company. His vision: a financial supermarket that spanned the globe, cobbled together though countless acquisitions.
    The three men who succeeded Weill over the next two decades at Citigroup — Chuck Prince, Vikram Pandit and Mike Corbat — all struggled to make the disparate parts of the sprawling enterprise work.
    A pivotal moment in the bank’s history happened during the 2008 financial crisis, when a massive reordering of the financial hierarchy resulted in winners and losers. Stronger institutions like JPMorgan swallowed the weaker ones, growing by leaps and bounds.
    At first, Citigroup looked like one of the former: It had a potential deal, brokered by regulators, to acquire the retail banking operations of Wachovia, which was the fourth-biggest U.S. bank by assets at the time. But it lost out to Wells Fargo, which offered to buy all of Wachovia for a far larger price.
    As the crisis dragged on, Citigroup’s soured assets and risky bets forced it to take the biggest public bailout among U.S. banks. To raise money, it heavily diluted shareholders by raising new stock and sold its retail brokerage Smith Barney, with its massive army of financial advisors, to Morgan Stanley. The move would haunt Citigroup as Morgan Stanley’s focus on wealth management won plaudits from investors.

    Small big bank

    While Citigroup muddled through the decade after the crisis, it never gained the traction in U.S. retail banking that the Wachovia deal would’ve given it.
    The bank has just 689 branches in the U.S., compared with well over 4,000 each for JPMorgan, Bank of America and Wells Fargo. As a result, Citigroup doesn’t soak up low-cost deposits from U.S. customers like competitors do, making its funding costs the highest among rivals.
    One by one, as formerly battered banks like Bank of America and Morgan Stanley began to turn into high performers after the crisis, only Citigroup was left behind. Its stock, currently at around $66, is a far cry from its all-time high of $588.80 from August 2000.
    Meanwhile, the synergies from the bank’s global sprawl after Weill acquired companies from Sao Paulo to Tokyo never materialized. Instead, overseas operations suffered from poor oversight and underinvestment, according to a former senior Citigroup executive.
    “Citi missed its chance to be big in the U.S. retail market,” the former leader said. “They wasted a lot of money pursuing a global strategy, when fundamentally it’s a wholesale bank, which has lower returns than retail banking.”
    The executive called the non-U.S. businesses “melting ice cubes” because as Citigroup underinvested in far-flung markets like Taiwan or Malaysia, local competitors continued to get sharper, leaving the bank further behind.
    For instance, Banamex, a storied name in Mexico, was the country’s No. 2 bank when it was acquired by Citigroup for $12.5 billion in 2001. By the time Citigroup announced it was exiting retail banking in the country this year, the unit’s market share had fallen by nearly half.
    Fraser has said that she’s completed her pruning of Citigroup and will present investors with a new strategic vision and multiyear plan on March 2, the bank’s first investor day in years. Analysts expect her to give medium- and long-term targets for return on tangible common equity — a key industry metric calculated by dividing a bank’s earnings with its shareholders’ equity.

    Breaking the cycle

    To win, the bank needs to break a cycle of underinvestment that leads to subpar returns.
    Citigroup is picking its spots, adding 500 front office workers in its wealth business, 200 corporate and investment bankers, and working to digitize parts of its flagship corporate cash management business, CFO Mark Mason said in October.
    But some managers at the retail bank claim that while the mandate is for growth, resources are limited because of the attention and money pouring into addressing the firm’s consent orders. Citigroup has dedicated more than 4,000 workers spread over six projects to the sweeping mandate to fix risk management systems while pouring billions of dollars into technology upgrades.
    That has left some frustrated that both traditional and fintech competitors have a funding advantage, giving them an edge in hyper-competitive markets. Venture capital investors poured $134 billion into fintech start-ups last year, prompting traditional players including JPMorgan to pump up their investment budget to compete.
    Lacking the physical network of its peers, Citigroup has been boxed into a strategy that emphasized partnerships, which can be an efficient way to boost a bank’s reach. However, it also leaves the bank exposed to the whims of its partners: Its deal with Google to offer bank accounts to users – a move that initially had sent waves of elation through Citi – ended up nowhere after the tech giant killed the project.

    Bonus limbo

    Few things have frustrated employees, however, as much as the internal investigations, which can stretch for months as the bank works through a backlog of complaints lodged by its own workforce.
    Complaints can be made to the internal employee relations portal anonymously, forcing human resources staff and lawyers to deal with a deluge of issues ranging from legitimate allegations of wrongdoing to petty disagreements or opinions on business strategy. (One person likened the complaint line to New York’s 311 service.) One of the more common complaints is tied to the bank’s Covid vaccine policy, said this person.
    Another person familiar with the program said that the complaint line and bonus policy was viewed as necessary after the bank’s employees were involved in ethical failures like the Libor and foreign exchange trading scandals.
    While this person said that not all complaints result in withholding bonuses, only those that cross a threshold of seriousness, others said that they’ve been instructed to withhold year-end performance reviews and compensation discussions for anyone under investigation.
    Citigroup declined to say how many internal complaints it gathers or what percentage of investigations results in vindicated employees.
    The policy to withhold bonuses, which began about three years ago, has tripped up employees. For senior workers, incentive compensation can make up the majority of their annual compensation. One employee had a review held up for longer than a year before ultimately getting paid. Another threatened to depart unless their case was fast-tracked.
    “I asked HR, ‘Why does it take so long?'” one of the people said. “They said ‘We have so many complaints, we can’t get ahead of this.'”
    The dynamic contributes to an atmosphere of second-guessing and a resistance to change, said the people. The bank also takes too long to approve new products and sometimes fails to communicate changes to key internal stakeholders before announcements are made public, the people said.
    These factors may contribute to defections as competitors across finance dangle pay raises to leave Citigroup, according to the people. In the past few months, the bank’s U.S. retail banking chief and chief marketing officer have left for competitors.

    ‘She’s the one’

    Still, Fraser has also managed to lure her share of outside talent, picking up a former Treasury official as general counsel and hiring Goldman’s chief diversity officer and JPMorgan’s chief data officer for key positions.
    This year may not be much smoother than last for Citigroup. Last month, the bank’s CFO conceded that the bank’s returns — already the lowest among the top six U.S. banks — are likely to decline this year as Wall Street revenue slows down and the benefit from reserve releases recedes.
    Just one year into her tenure, however, nobody is counting Fraser out. If her March investor day plan is seen as credible and she starts to make progress toward her goals, the stock should recover, according to analysts. If anything, the extreme pessimism embedded in the stock means shares can’t fall much lower.
    “It’s a tough job, I don’t envy her,” said a former executive. “If there’s someone who can do it, she’s the one.”

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    Ken Griffin’s Citadel flagship hedge fund gains nearly 5% during January's tech rout

    Billionaire investor Ken Griffin’s Citadel hedge funds scored gains in January despite the tech rout that crushed the market.
    The spike in volatility and steep sell-off in growth stocks created an ideal environment for fast-money traders.
    Citadel’s global fixed income fund increased 4.91% and the flagship fund added 4.71%.

    Ken Griffin, Founder and CEO, Citadel
    Mike Blake | Reuters

    Billionaire investor Ken Griffin’s hedge funds scored gains in January despite the tech rout that crushed the market, as the spike in volatility and steep sell-off in growth stocks created an ideal environment for fast-money traders.
    Citadel’s multistrategy flagship fund Wellington increased 4.71% last month, according to a person familiar with the returns.

    Citadel’s global fixed income fund did even better with a 4.91% return, while its equities fund added 0.89% and its tactical trading strategy fund rose 1.79%, according to the source.
    The firm’s stellar performance came when wild price swings, driven in part by the Federal Reserve’s hawkish policy pivot, gripped Wall Street. The S&P 500 dropped more than 5% for its worst month since March 2020, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dipped into correction territory, falling more than 10% from its record high.
    In fact, the hedge fund industry as a whole fared well in the volatile January. All major hedge fund categories outperformed the overall market last month, with funds least correlated with the market delivering the strongest returns, according to data from Bank of America.
    At the beginning of 2022, surging bond yields triggered hedge funds to sell growth-focused technology shares at a speed not seen in the past decade, according to Goldman Sachs’ prime brokerage data.
    Tech stocks are seen as sensitive to rising yields because increased debt costs can hinder their growth and can make their future cash flows appear less valuable.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

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    Merck expects to sell $5 billion to $6 billion of its new Covid treatment pill in 2022

    CEO Rob Davis said Merck is on track to fulfill its commitment in the coming days of delivering 3.1 million courses of its Covid treatment pill nationwide.
    Merck delivered 1.4 million courses after the Food and Drug Administration in December authorized the pill in December.
    The drugmaker beat analysts’ expectations on both its top line and bottom line in its fourth-quarter earnings report.

    Merck sold $952 million of its Covid-19 treatment pill molnupiravir in the fourth quarter, and said it’s on track for an additional $5 billion to $6 billion in sales in 2022.
    Most sales so far have been concentrated in the U.S., the U.K. and Japan, the company said in releasing earnings results that beat Wall Street revenue and profit forecasts. Merck delivered 1.4 million courses across the U.S. after the federal Food and Drug Administration authorized the pill in December.

    CEO Rob Davis said Merck is expected to fulfill its commitment in the coming days of delivering 3.1 million courses nationwide. The company also will ship 4 million courses to 25 countries worldwide soon, Davis said. Merck and partner Ridgeback Biotherapeutics share profits derived from molnupiravar equally.
    “We’ve shown that molnupiravir works against omicron, which is important against that variant,” Davis told CNBC’s Meg Tirrell Thursday morning. “And obviously we’ll have to see how this plays out and what is the initial uptake, but right now we feel we’re off to a good start.”
    Here’s how the company performed compared with what Wall Street expected, based on analysts’ average estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

    Adjusted EPS: $1.80 per share vs. $1.53 per share expected

    Revenue: $13.52 billion vs. $13.16 billion expected

    Merck swung to a $3.82 billion profit in the fourth quarter from a loss of $2.62 billion during the year-earlier period.
    In clinical trials, molnupiravir reduced the risk of hospitalization or death in Covid patients by 30%, but slashed the risk of dying by 90%. Davis said the U.K. government is conducting a real world study looking at the drug’s performance, and Merck is tracking its impact during the worldwide rollout.

    Though new infections are declining, the U.S. is currently reporting an average of more than 2,400 deaths from Covid a day, a 6% increase over the previous week, according to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University. Davis said molnupiravir can play an important role in helping to reduce mortality from the virus.
    “The fact that molnupiravir does reduce the risk of death by 90%, we could have a meaningful impact in helping patients,” he said.
    Molnupiravir is authorized for use in adults 18 and over. The FDA has limited use of the pill to situations where other authorized treatments are not accessible to people at high risk of severe disease from Covid. The agency’s advisory committee narrowly endorsed the drug in November due to concerns about its safety and effectiveness.
    Merck and Ridgeback released data from lab studies last week that found molnupirvavir was active against the omicron variant. Davis, during the company’s earnings call Thursday, said he believes the pill will prove effective against future variants of the virus.
    The head of Merck’s research labs, Dean Li, said the company would consider pairing molnupiravir with other therapies in the future. Li said Merck is trying to find has other ways the pill can work.
    “I do think it’s important that we have an arsenal of multiple mechanism of action, because every viral disease that I know, the virus is pretty good at evading different mechanisms of action,” Li said during the earnings call.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Merck’s $13.52 billion in fourth-quarter sales increased 24% over the year-earlier period. The revenue was driven by its HPV vaccine Gardasil that prevents cervical cancer and Keytruda, a treatement that fights melanoma, lung cancer and Hodgkin’s lymphoma.
    Keytruda sales jumped 15% to $4.58 billion, while Gardasil sales soared 53% to $1.53 billion. Davis said Gardasil has seen tremendous growth in China, which has one of the highest burdens of HPV in the world.
    Davis told CNBC that mergers and acquisitions remains an important part of Merck’s strategy, pointing to its purchase of Acceleron last year as an example of the types of deals the company plans to pursue in the future. That $11.5 billion acquisition added Acceleron’s drug sotatercept, which treats a cardiovascular disease called pulmonary arterial hypertension.
    “I do think there could be some opportunities, but it’s going to take some time to see how it actually evolves,” Davis said.

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    Premixed cocktails steal share from beer and hard seltzer, propelling surging growth

    Premixed cocktails were the fastest-growing spirits category in 2021, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S.
    Sales of premixed cocktails surged 42.3% to $1.6 billion compared with a year earlier.
    The trade group said canned cocktails were stealing share from beer and hard seltzer.

    Anna Elias | Moment | Getty Images

    Premixed cocktails were the fastest-growing spirits category in 2021, stealing share from beer and hard seltzer.
    Sales of premixed cocktails surged 42.3% to $1.6 billion compared with a year earlier, according to the Distilled Spirits Council of the U.S. Ready-to-drink cocktails were second only to vodka in terms of volume consumption, beating American whiskey, tequila and mezcal and rum.

    “We do think that it’s coming from beer and hard seltzer, though consumers, as they’re going out more, are also liking the convenience of spirits-based RTDs,” DISCUS Chief of Public Policy Christine LoCascio said at the trade group’s annual economic briefing on Thursday.
    “I think it’s a combination of things, but with the off-premise sales remaining steady as well, I think people are still buying products to make cocktails at home,” she added.
    Beer consumption has been on a downward spiral for years as consumers opt to drink less alcohol or choose to drink cocktails or hard seltzer instead. And after several years of skyrocketing sales for hard seltzer, the category is seeing the pace of growth stabilize. Euromonitor International estimates that the U.S. hard seltzer sales category increased just 35.1% in 2021 after being up 64.1% in 2020 and 126.5% in 2019.

    Ready-to-drink vodka sodas or gin and tonics have appealed to consumers looking for a stronger taste or more alcoholic drink than hard seltzer. The category also has greater variety, ranging from palomas to whiskey sours to margaritas.
    The largest players in the alcohol industry have already invested in the category, either making their own brands or snapping up small labels. Anheuser-Busch InBev bought Cutwater Spirits, while Johnnie Walker distiller Diageo has launched offshoots of some of its top brands, like Ketel One Botanical and Crown Royal.

    Still, premixed cocktails are a small part of the overall spirits industry, accounting for less than 5% of its $35.8 billion revenue. They’re also a tiny fraction of the ready-to-drink category, which also includes hard seltzers, sodas and lemonades. According to market researcher IWSR, spirits-based canned cocktails account for 8% of market volume, dwarfed by flavored malt beverages’ 91% share.
    As canned cocktails grow more popular, the spirits industry has been pushing for states to lower their excise taxes on the spirits-based drinks. Excise taxes have been placed on alcohol dating back to the early days of the United States, but since the repeal of Prohibition, spirits have been taxed higher than other forms of alcohol by the federal government and states. Liquor’s high alcohol content carries a taboo that separates it from beer and wine in the eyes of some lawmakers and watchdogs.
    “If you reduce or make the tax rates on spirits-based RTDs more fair and more competitive, it will create greater consumer access to these products,” DISCUS CEO Chris Swonger said. “We’ve seen craft distilleries just getting into the market space see spirits-based RTDs as cost prohibitive, because of the tax rates.”

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    Satellite-imagery specialist ICEYE raises $136 million to better monitor catastrophes like floods

    Finnish satellite-imagery venture ICEYE closed an $136 million round of venture capital fundraising, led by U.K. fund Seraphim Space.
    The company plans to add to its spacecraft fleet in orbit and further develop its product line in natural catastrophe detection.
    “Flood monitoring is really the prime product right now … [but] we want to cover wildfire, we want to cover wind, we want to cover hail,” ICEYE CEO co-founder and CEO Rafal Modrzewski told CNBC.

    CEO Rafal Modrzewski inspects some of the company’s satellite hardware.

    Finnish satellite-imagery venture ICEYE has raised $136 million in new funds, the company announced on Thursday, as it looks to add to its spacecraft fleet in orbit and further develop its product line in natural catastrophe detection.
    The latest round of venture capital fundraising, led by U.K. fund Seraphim Space, brings the total to $304 million since ICEYE’s founding seven years ago.

    “This financing has really been built around the further growth of the natural catastrophe product line,” ICEYE CEO co-founder and CEO Rafal Modrzewski told CNBC, adding that “flood monitoring is really the prime product right now … [but] we want to cover wildfire, we want to cover wind, we want to cover hail.”
    Modrzewski declined to specify ICEYE’s new valuation after the fundraising, but said the increase “was comparable to the previous rounds” and that the company is “very pleased” with its growth.
    According to Pitchbook, ICEYE’s previous fundraising put its valuation at about $320 million, and makes for a new valuation at over $1 billion, given its historical growth rate.
    A host of prior investors contributed in ICEYE’s latest round – including Molten Ventures, OTB Ventures, True Ventures, C16 Ventures, Space Capital, Chione, Services Group of America, and the U.K.’s National Security Strategic Investment Fund – as well as two ICEYE customers, BAE Systems and Promus Ventures.
    ICEYE specializes in combining a special type of imagery, called synthetic aperture radar (or SAR), with a form factor the size of a suitcase – reducing the cost of launching multiple satellites to create a network that can image places on Earth multiple times a day. SAR satellites are able to capture images of the surface at night and through clouds, a key advantage over traditional imaging satellites.

    The company has deployed 16 satellites in orbit to date, and plans to use the new funds to help launch as many as 10 additional ones this year.

    The Grand Bahama island seen before and during Hurricane Dorian, as severe flooding covered much of the island.
    ICEYE | gif by @thesheetztweetz

    The growth of that fleet is crucial to ICEYE expanding its Nature Catastrophe (NatCat) Insights and Solutions product line, because more eyes in the sky allow the company to visit points of interest more frequently.
    Modrzewski said the company’s largest customer groups for the NatCat unit are governments and insurance.
    “We see huge investments from entities like [the Federal Emergency Management Agency] or the European Space Agency to understand floods better and to respond quicker,” Modrzewski said. “But we also see a massive initiative coming from within the insurance industry – to bring new technology, given what’s happening to the climate.”
    ICEYE is based in Helsinki, Finland, but has established a U.S. presence in the past year with a manufacturing facility in Southern California. The company launched its first U.S.-built satellite in late 2021, and last month received a study contract from the National Reconnaissance Office, which is an anchor customer of the U.S. Earth intelligence market.
    For now, ICEYE does not have a timeline to go public, which Modrzewski called “a huge decision.” He said he does not think ICEYE will go public in a year or two, but added it “would like to have that option within that period of time.”

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    Offshore wind powerhouse Siemens Gamesa sees its value nearly halve in a year

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    Siemens Gamesa has cut its guidance for the coming year after a turbulent period that has seen its market capitalization nearly halve.
    The wind turbine manufacturer on Thursday said it continued to be “challenged by market dynamics,” as supply chain disruptions weighed on results.
    Performance has been affected by “supply chain disruptions in manufacturing” alongside project execution and challenges related to its onshore segment.
    Between October and December 2021, the company said revenue fell to 1.83 billion euros (around $2.06 billion) — a year-on-year decline of 20.3%.

    A Siemens Gamesa blade factory on the banks of the River Humber in Hull, England on October 11, 2021.
    PAUL ELLIS | AFP | Getty Images

    Siemens Gamesa Renewable Energy has cut its guidance for the coming year after a turbulent period that has seen its market capitalization nearly halve.
    The wind turbine manufacturer on Thursday said it continued to be “challenged by market dynamics,” as supply chain disruptions weighed on results.

    Between October and December 2021, the company said revenue fell to 1.83 billion euros (around $2.06 billion) — a year-on-year decline of 20.3%. The Spain-headquartered firm also reported an operating loss of 309 million euros and a net loss attributable to shareholders of 403 million euros.
    Performance had been affected by supply chain disruptions in manufacturing alongside challenges in project execution and its onshore segment, it said.
    “Considering the results in Q1 FY22 and the fact that the company does not expect supply conditions to normalize in the remainder of the year, Siemens Gamesa has adjusted its guidance for FY22,” the company added.
    It now expects revenue to shrink by between 9% and 2% year-over-year (it previously saw a contraction of between 7% and 2%).
    The results come after the company announced it was replacing CEO Andreas Nauen with Jochen Eickholt on March 1.

    Share price slide

    Siemens Gamesa’s shares were flat on Thursday morning, but have fallen over 45% in the last 12 months.
    As a result the company’s market capitalization has slid from 22.9 billion euros a year ago, to around 12.58 billion euros currently.
    Earlier this month the company — which the Global Wind Energy Council said was the world’s biggest supplier of offshore turbines in 2020 — said supply chain tensions had “resulted in higher than expected cost inflation, mainly affecting our Wind Turbine … segment.”
    The company also cited what it called “volatile market conditions” as having “impacted some of our customers’ investment decisions.” This had led to delays in some of its projects.

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    Siemens Gamesa’s travails come after Danish turbine maker Vestas acknowledged that the wind energy sector faced a rocky road ahead due to a multitude of factors.
    “The supply chain instability caused by the pandemic and leading to increasing transportation and logistics costs, is expected to continue to impact the wind power industry throughout 2022,” it said last Wednesday.
    “In addition, Vestas will experience increased impact from cost inflation within raw materials, wind turbine components and energy prices.”
    On Wednesday Miguel Angel López, chairman of Siemens Gamesa’s board of directors, said the company was “experiencing significant challenges in its Onshore business in a very difficult market.”
    The company, he said, had “appointed an executive with a strong track record in managing complex operational situations and in successfully turning around underperforming businesses.” More