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    How our NFT auction went

    “DOWN THE rabbit hole”, were the words on our cover on decentralised finance in September. To illustrate it Justin Metz, a visual artist, looked to the first edition of “Alice in Wonderland” for inspiration. On 25th October we put a non-fungible token (NFT) of that cover up for sale. A little over a day later, after a late flurry of bids, it sold for 99.9 ether (around $420,000).Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    Business for Wyndham Hotels & Resorts is 'absolutely stronger' than pre-Covid, CEO says

    The CEO of Wyndham Hotels & Resorts told CNBC on Thursday that strong travel demand in the U.S. has helped the company shake off its pandemic-related slowdown.
    Business at Wyndham is “absolutely stronger than before the pandemic,” CEO Geoff Ballotti said.
    Wyndham beat Wall Street expectations in its quarterly results Thursday and raised guidance for the rest of the year.

    The CEO of Wyndham Hotels & Resorts told CNBC on Thursday that strong travel demand in the U.S. has helped the company shake off its pandemic-related slowdown.
    While some industries have had trouble bouncing back after Covid pandemic disruptions, business at Wyndham is “absolutely stronger than before the pandemic,” CEO Geoff Ballotti said in an interview on “The Exchange.”

    “The intent to travel, to get into your car and drive some place and get out of your attic, get out of your basement, with your family and friends is spectacular,” Ballotti said. “It’s off the charts, it’s unprecedented, and I think we’re going to continue to see that into the fall.”
    Wyndham’s hotel brands include Days Inn, La Quinta and Baymont. Business for the hotel franchisor is not only picking up at its U.S. hotels, but internationally too as the number of outgoing flights slowly bounce back. “We’re seeing international airlift continue to increase to destinations like Mexico, where we have a new Wyndham Alltra Cancun and a new Wynhdam Alltra Playa Del Carmen,” Ballotti said.
    “People are looking to get away and have a safe and a very flexible and easy vacation, and that’s what we’re seeing,” Ballotti said.
    Business travel is coming back at a slower pace than leisure travel, according to the CEO. “Big cities like San Francisco are now just beginning to pick up, it’s those group meeting urban destinations that have been lagging.”
    Despite the lag in business travel, Ballotti and other hotel CEOs expect to get a lift beginning next month as the Biden administration lifts international travel restrictions on Nov. 8 that were imposed last year in the early days of the Covid pandemic.

    “We think there will be certainly increasing demand in the United States of America. … One thing we need to see pick up is visa applications, we need emergency funding for those visas to be processed,” Ballotti said.
    In the U.S., cities like Boston, New York, and San Francisco will continue to see an influx and increase in business and leisure travel for the rest of the year, “which is great news for the travel industry,” according to Ballotti.
    Wyndham beat Wall Street expectations in its quarterly results Thursday and raised guidance for the rest of the year. The stock closed up 4.33% Thursday afternoon and trading at $85.84 a share.

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    S&P 500 futures dip as Apple, Amazon shares drop after disappointing earnings

    Stock futures dipped in overnight trading Thursday as shares of major technology companies suffered following disappointing earnings reports.
    S&P 500 futures fell 0.3% and Nasdaq 100 futures traded 0.6% lower. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average were flat.

    Amazon shares dropped more than 3% in extended trading after the e-commerce giant badly missed earnings and revenue expectations for the third quarter. The company also issued disappointing guidance for the critical holiday period.
    Apple stock fell 4% after the tech giant’s quarterly revenue fell short of expectations amid larger-than-expected supply constraints on iPhones, iPads and Macs.   
    The overnight action came after the S&P 500 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite closed Thursday’s session at record highs as investors shrugged off disappointing economic data.
    The U.S. economy grew at a 2% annualized pace in the third quarter, its slowest increase since the end of the 2020 recession and missing expectations of 2.8% growth.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    “GDP told us what we already knew, the economy slowed down considerably in the third quarter,” said Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at LPL Financial. “The good news is we see the next few quarters more than making up for the slowdown, as COVID trends continue to improve.”

    The stock market has been raking in records amid solid earnings. About half of the S&P 500 have reported quarterly results and more than 80% of them beat earnings estimates from Wall Street analysts. S&P 500 companies are expected to grow profit by 38.6% year over year.
    All three major averages are on track to post a winning week, their fourth positive week in a row. Month to date, the S&P 500 is up 6.7%, on pace for its best monthly performance since November 2020. The blue-chip Dow has gained 5.6% in October, while the Nasdaq has rallied 6.9%.

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    Lawyers say involuntary manslaughter charges could be filed in Alec Baldwin set shooting case

    The accidental shooting death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of “Rust” will likely lead to civil action, lawyers said.
    It is unclear, though, whether criminal charges will be brought against the two crew members who inspected the prop gun fired by Alec Baldwin.
    New Mexico authorities are investigating the incident, and prosecutors are researching potential criminal charges.

    An aerial view of the film set on Bonanza Creek Ranch where Hollywood actor Alec Baldwin fatally shot cinematographer Halyna Hutchins and wounded a director when he discharged a prop gun on the movie set of the film “Rust” in Santa Fe, New Mexico, U.S., in this frame grab taken from October 21, 2021 television footage. Footage taken October 21, 2021.
    KOB TV NEWS | Reuters

    The accidental death of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of “Rust” will likely lead to civil suits, lawyers said, but it is unclear whether criminal charges will be brought against the two crew members who inspected the prop gun fired by Alec Baldwin.
    “It will go to civil court 100%,” said Richard Kaplan, a criminal defense attorney. “There was someone who was killed on a movie set because of negligence. The family, of course, will do that and have the right to do that, and everyone expects that.”

    New Mexico authorities have not ruled out criminal charges. But even with solid evidence of negligence, prosecutors may choose not to file charges against members of the “Rust” crew, Kaplan said.
    The investigation is ongoing, Santa Fe County Sheriff Adan Mendoza said Wednesday during a joint news conference with New Mexico First Judicial District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies.
    Investigators disclosed that 500 rounds were located on the set, which were a mix of blank ammunition, dummy rounds and, possibly, live rounds. This evidence will be submitted to the Federal Bureau of Investigation crime lab in Quantico, Virginia, for analysis, Mendoza said.
    Authorities told reporters Wednesday that they believe they found the lead projectile that killed Hutchins. They said it was removed from the shoulder of injured director Joel Souza.

    ‘Totally preventable’

    “I think there’s all kinds of scenarios that can play out here,” Mendoza told NBC’s Miguel Almaguer in an interview Thursday. “We need to make a determination of who was responsible for bringing the rounds onto set and why they were there, and then ultimately who was responsible for the safety of that firearm, and up until the firing of the firearm.”

    Mendoza said there wasn’t any clear organization of ammunition on set and called the tragedy “totally preventable.”
    Carmack-Altwies said in a separate interview with Almaguer that New Mexico does not have a negligent homicide charge and that an involuntary manslaughter charge would be used instead.
    Involuntary manslaughter, in this case, occurs when a person or persons is engaging in a lawful act but unintentionally kills someone by being negligent or not exercising due care. Involuntary manslaughter is a fourth-degree felony and carries a sentence of up to 18 months in prison and probation.
    “We have started researching and started looking into potential charges,” Carmack-Altwies said, “not because we are looking at charging someone but because that’s what we have to do as prosecutors.”
    This research is important because criminal cases are held to a higher standard than civil cases and the district attorney will need to be confident that she can prove beyond a reasonable doubt that individuals on set were reckless, Kaplan said.

    Stunts gone wrong

    Authorities have previously had a difficult time prosecuting Hollywood cases like this, Kaplan added.
    One of the most well-known on-set fatalities due to a stunt gone wrong happened in 1982 on the set of the “Twilight Zone” movie. Actor Vic Morrow and two children, ages six and seven, were filming a Vietnam War battle scene in which they were supposed to be running from a pursuing helicopter.
    However, special effects explosions too close to the low-flying helicopter damaged one of the rotor blades, according to reports, causing the pilot to lose control and crash into the three actors.
    It was determined that the accident occurred because of failed communications between the pilot and the film director.
    In 1987, director John Landis was acquitted of involuntary manslaughter in the three deaths. Three other filmmakers and the pilot were also acquitted. The production team was found responsible for several labor violations, which led to stricter child actor laws as well as harsher penalties for violations of safety protocols.
    Lawyers have speculated that Baldwin will not face charges for firing the prop gun. But as one of the producers of “Rust” he could be liable if the film’s producers are deemed to have been negligent.

    Launching a defense

    However, Kaplan said, a history of on-set mishaps and a clear breach in safety protocol could lead to involuntary manslaughter charges against assistant director David Halls and armorer Hannah Gutierrez Reed.

    On Tuesday, the producers of “Rust” hired a high-profile law firm to interview cast and crew about the on-set shooting, a move that personal injury lawyer Miguel Custodio sees as the start of an aggressive defense.
    “They will try to show that the producers are not liable, that the shooting comes down to aberrations or uncommon behavior displayed by individuals such as the assistant director or armorer,” he said. “They will also try to show that the film production did nothing wrong in hiring these two individuals.”
    “That’s very important because the plaintiffs are going to go after these people to show that their careers clearly demonstrate they were not fit to be on this set,” he said.
    Custodio said the law firm will try to gather evidence that shows that the production company didn’t know there were live rounds on set.

    A breach in protocol

    “If the normal procedures were not followed, then that puts the person who wasn’t following it in some kind of legal jeopardy,” Kaplan said.
    Hollywood productions have adhered to strict safety measures for stunt work for decades. The Industry-Wide Labor-Management Safety Committee has written and distributed safety bulletins on best practices for television and movie productions.
    Many of these guidelines were created after the on-set shooting deaths of actors Jon-Erik Hexum in 1984 and Brandon Lee in 1993. Hexum accidentally shot himself while playing with a prop revolver loaded with blank rounds, and Lee was fatally struck after a bullet became lodged in a gun barrel and was discharged by blank rounds.
    “The procedure is long established safety protocols that have been in effect for decades in the film industry, and it’s very simple,” Clay Van Sickle, an armorer with nearly 20 years of experience, told MSNBC on Thursday.
    “The armorer is the ultimate responsibility for the weapons on the set,” he said, explaining that it is their job to ensure a weapon is “cold,” meaning it has no live rounds in it, and to show it to the cast and other crew members.
    “There’s at least three, and often many more, checks of any weapon that comes on a set, whether it’s going hot with blanks or whether it’s cold,” Van Sickle said.
    He said scripted shows shouldn’t have live ammo “at all.” Van Sickle has worked on reality programs such as “MythBusters” and “Top Shot” as well as dozens of scripted programs. He said there are limited circumstances where live ammo is used on set and that it is usually reserved for special effects shots.
    “But on a scripted show like this, live ammo should never, ever be on set, and it’s very clear that it was,” he said.

    There were also reports that the gun that killed Hutchins was used by crew members for live-ammunition target practice. Authorities have not confirmed this detail.
    “I frankly think that if you have a movie set where you’ve got live ammunition that is intermingled with dummy ammunition and intermingled with blanks, that’s the kind of activity that rises to the level of gross negligence, and I do believe that someone, ultimately, is going to be charged with at least criminal negligence in this case,” Jeff Harris, a trial attorney, said on CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” on Wednesday.
    Assistant director Halls admitted to investigators he did not inspect all the rounds in the handgun before giving it to Baldwin prior to last Thursday’s shooting, a warrant filed Wednesday said.
    Halls was fired from the set of “Freedom’s Path” in 2019 after a crew member incurred a minor and temporary injury when a gun unexpectedly discharged, a producer on the project told NBC News.
    Gutierrez Reed, too, reportedly had a history of not adhering to safety measures. The Wrap reported that the young armorer was the subject of numerous complaints on her previous film just two months earlier after she discharged weapons without warning.
    “Ultimately, it’s the armorer and the assistant director that have to atone for this,” said Kevin Williams, the prop department supervisor at the UCLA School of Theater, Film and Television. “There were obvious breaches in protocol.”

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    Shell vs. Dan Loeb: It's open season for the market on Big Oil's future

    Dan Loeb’s Third Point Management has begun another high-profile activist campaign this time against Big Oil, calling for the breakup of Royal Dutch Shell into a legacy oil and gas company and separate business for renewable energy, among other units.
    The Shell battle is at the heart of how an energy giant of the future shapes its business model during the energy transition and balances higher return fossil fuel projects with clean energy investment.
    Former BP CEO John Browne said at the CNBC ESG Impact summit on Thursday that oil companies are now speaking the right language about carbon reduction, but the plans have no real meaning yet.

    (GERMANY OUT) Germany Berlin – Shell petrol station with solar plant (Photo by Schöning/ullstein bild via Getty Images)
    ullstein bild | ullstein bild | Getty Images

    The surprise win earlier this year by activist firm Engine No. 1 of board seats at Exxon Mobil was a watershed event in Big Oil’s ability to control the climate narrative as investors push for change. But the stake revealed this week in Royal Dutch Shell by Dan Loeb’s Third Point Management activist investor firm may say more about how energy giants balance business models in the future to hang on to higher return, cash-generating legacy fossil fuel projects while investing in renewable energy.
    Loeb’s idea is simple: just break up the company. Put the oil and gas assets into a separate firm focused on returning cash to shareholders while setting up a renewable energy company to succeed on its own.

    Is the sum of the parts going to be worth more than the whole in the future of the oil and gas business?
    Loeb’s investor letter comments on Shell were not highly specific on how many companies would result from separating units like renewables, liquified natural gas and marketing from legacy exploration and production. But he made the case that Shell’s current approach of “do it all” ends up making it more difficult to attract shareholders.
    In an earnings miss reported on Thursday morning, Shell said it, “welcomes open dialogue with all shareholders, including Third Point.”

    Climate investing experts say this turn in the activist attention to oil is big.
    “This is a significant development, because it will force Shell to answer a question that has been on the minds of investors for some time: do legacy oil companies like Shell actually add any value to the low-carbon transition? Is Shell becoming like an old-style conglomerate, where the whole is worth less than the sum of the parts?” said Andrew Logan, senior director, oil and gas, at climate shareholder advocacy group Ceres.

    The opposite may be proven true: combining the cash flow of oil and gas assets under the same corporate roof as a high growth, investment intensive clean energy business Shell is actually building a stronger business than either of the two standing alone.
    But no one knows the answer and at least Loeb has posed it.
    “If nothing else, the move by Third Point signals that Shell has not convinced the investment community that there is value in keeping all of these businesses in house,” Logan said.

    The $7 billion Shell decision that explains a lot

    A recent sale by Shell of lucrative oil and gas assets in the Permian Basin highlights the issue.
    The sale to ConocoPhillips fetched $9 billion — and where did the proceeds go? About $7 billion was returned to shareholders and an undisclosed part of the remainder would be included in overall spending and initiatives that include energy transition.
    Shell told CNBC at the time of the deal that investors should not read too much into the majority of the deal proceeds going back to shareholders rather than into renewable energy. “This sale was a one-off event and thus the decision on proceeds was also treated as such,” a Shell spokeswoman stated in an email. And she stressed that the company has outlined a capital spending plan that increases focus on its renewable energy business. But she also alluded to an issue about investor returns that remains tricky: “We are steadfast on disciplined capital deployment and going after investments that will have the highest value and returns.” 
    To date, and especially with oil prices rising back to a decade-high, it’s the legacy fossil fuels business which generates the highest returns. 
    It was not long ago that headlines in the press highlighted the market cap of utility company NextEra Energy, which has aggressively invested in renewables, surpassing that of ExxonMobil. With the oil cycle turning back to a boom, that’s no longer the case.
    Energy in the future will be a much broader potential business model than the narrow model of exploring for liquid fuels and producing them, but delivering energy in the power sector is a different business than fossil fuels. 

    Renewable energy returns aren’t high

    This past summer, Norse energy giant Equinor, which has been at the forefront of the transition to renewables, lowered its expected rate of return from its offshore wind projects from between 6% and 10% to between 4% and 8%, while projecting an internal rate of return of 30% for oil and gas. Still, the company has said it will reach over 50% of spending on renewables and carbon capture by 2030, up from 5% last year.
    High prices paid in recent years for renewable projects are among reasons return expectations have come down.
    “Throwing money right away into the alts space may not be the right answer for Shell,” said Peter McNally, global sector lead covering energy at Third Bridge. “Today, the outlook is more money in hydrocarbons than in renewables,” McNally said. “It’s the Exxon argument. You still make more money, whether you like it or not, than selling power from wind.”
    A recent survey of investors by Reuters showed that as oil prices have risen sharply, investors have said, “drill, baby, drill” rather than spend on wind and solar.  
    “Returns for low carbon businesses may not be that good in the next five to ten years,” said Axel Dalman, associate analyst on oil, gas and mining at Carbon Tracker. “BP has said don’t expect strong returns until 2030 and that’s a bitter pill to swallow for some investors,” even if longer term, the big risk is a stranded asset and losing a lot more if energy transition isn’t successful.
    Former BP CEO John Browne said at the CNBC ESG Impact summit on Thursday that society will need to spend over $2 trillion more per year to reach carbon reduction goals. And for the oil and gas companies, he said it is a difficult “balancing act” to satisfy all shareholder interests, though he also said the plans announced to date to reduce carbon don’t “really have meaning.”

    Energy investors only have so much patience

    The energy business has always been cyclical and high oil prices today won’t necessarily remain that way, and while renewable energy projects may have lower internal rates of return, the exponential growth opportunity from the sector may be more attractive to many investors than the cash-generating core carbon legacy business of an oil and gas major. Few expect energy to ever overtake technology ever again in sector representation in the S&P 500, or even come close, though it has come up from its oil bear market low of 4% of the U.S. market, which some had taken as a permanent bottoming related to climate change.
    The $7 billion that Shell recently returned to shareholders from the $9 billion Permian sale was not an enormous amount of money in the context of its business and shareholder expectations, according to Alisa Lukash, vice president of shale research at Rystad Energy. Pre-pandemic shareholder return annual levels, for example, were as high as $19 billion in 2019, and an oil company has to keep returning money to shareholders to keep them from turning to other sectors or other peers within the energy space. From the angle of purely getting some liquidity and maintaining investors for the next few years, she said that it’s a smart strategy.
    But if the company’s stated strategy is energy transition, which it is in Shell’s case, “As an investor, you want to see them use the cash to reinvest and look for new business streams for cash generation,” such as solar. “Taking out $7 billion for investors, burning cash, that’s why that balance is important,” Lukash said. “Many investors would have preferred use of cash for decarbonization efforts and other aspects of environmental impact, like water impact.”
    After an energy bear market and Covid year which saw oil companies cutting back on spending and shareholder reward programs, it is hard to make investors wait longer as the energy market soars.
    But that approach becomes disconnected for a company claiming it wants to transition and become a new energy company which requires massive investments in new technology. “It’s perhaps a missed opportunity,” Dalman said. “Didn’t get the strong sense from Shell, didn’t give specific message of what they will spend for energy transition. … still a strong smell of business as usual here.”
    The traditional ethos of the oil and gas investor is to hold the stock with the expectation that you will suffer through bad years in the cycle when oil prices are low but when things go back up you will be rewarded and compensated for the additional volatility risk. And because of that, “it’s hard to say we won’t be able to compensate you now, you have to be patient,” Dalman added.

    Hard to know how much climate plans will cost

    Energy companies have so far failed to make the case — or at least try to make a detailed case — on project spending levels and returns from renewables.
    “It’s hard to know if $1 billion or $2 billion or $3 billion makes a difference,” Lukash said. “It’s hard to say on decarbonization unless they tell us what projects and how much. For investors, it’s easier to say $7 billion, dividends and share repurchases.” 
    Meanwhile, prices on legacy assets may not get better the longer these companies wait.
    The $9 billion price tag on the recent Permian deal shows legacy assets can still generate high values, and shale is among the most exposed types of drilling to future stranded asset risk. That implies value for this type of asset will go down over time, and climate-minded investors can make the case that the capital raised today from sales is even more critical for transition investments. “Because in ten years when you try to sell you have to assume they will be fetching lower prices,” Dalman said. Selling oil and gas assets to a peer like ConocoPhillips, in the end, “It’s more barrels burned in the end,” Dalman added, in a world that needs less of the underlying product.

    Activist investing and the long-term

    The history of activist investing, and its own motivations, are mixed. Spinoffs are nothing new in the energy sector or as an activist approach. Refiners have been spun off by both ConocoPhillips and Marathon Oil and Marathon Petroleum, and while an imperfect comparison to a new type of energy break-up involving renewables, the history does show that all the resulting companies don’t end up equal winners.
    The easiest comparison is Conoco separating from Phillips 66 in mid-2012. Since that deal, ConocoPhillips stock is essentially flat, while Phillips 66 is up over 125%.
    “At least on that one it’s pretty clear who won,” said Stewart Glickman, energy equity analyst at CFRA Research.
    “It didn’t work out for the exploration and production companies,” McNally said.
    But it is hard to generalize because most of that time period had been a crude oil price regime that has “ranged from mediocre to awful,” Glickman added.
    In the future, it may not necessarily work out for the refiners, which are seen as being at high risk in the energy transition and which Shell has heavily divested from, a strategy that Loeb applauded in his investor letter.

    There are benefits of being an integrated energy company with a big balance sheet, possibly even more so during the energy transition. With higher oil prices the situation is now very different than it was a year ago when investors and management thought there may not e enough money to invest in anything. “Now they’re debating what to do with all this money,” McNally said. 
    For an activist like Third Point, Shell is a safe target in the sense that it is a big liquid stock and so even if the plan doesn’t work, there is an exit strategy that is not that many days of volume in Shell trading.
    But an analysis of the benefits versus the risks of the proposed transaction is hard to make at this point, according to Maurizio Carulli, senior corporate research analyst at Carbon Tracker. Companies can benefit from being split up when it allows the management teams to truly focus on their goals without divided attention, and that can make each business more investable to various shareholder groups, including those who want the cash returned for income needs and those looking for the exponential growth in a new industry.

    “You can’t be all things to all people.”

    There are investors that will continue to want the cash flow production of a mature legacy company, and there will be equity growth investors who focus more on the decades of growth to come in a historic transition rather than the rate of return right now from renewables.
    But the picture isn’t clear in this case, especially if the idea is to include liquified natural gas with renewables in one new company because it is seen as a “transitional fuel.” For many climate-motivated shareholders that is a non-starter as a strategic combination. And for investors in the legacy company, right now the timing is favorable with oil prices at a level they had not seen since 2014, and with increasing shareholder return programs and divestitures likely. But if oil prices collapse again, those legacy company investors may find themselves in the worse situation than if they had stayed part of the whole.
    Carulli said the biggest risk of all, though, is breaking up an engineering company which has been around for a long time as part of a century-old industry, with hundreds of PhDs. who create innovation in technology that could be used across the value chain. “If you separate completely, then that well of human knowledge can collapse,” he said.
    Yet similar deals to the recent Shell Permian deal are likely to happen again in the near-term after the beating energy shareholders had to take in recent years, compounded by the pandemic, and appeasing shareholders is only made more difficult when some other shareholders will only be appeased by real progress on energy transition.
    Kirsten Spalding, head of the Ceres Investor Network, said it is a hard question to answer as to whether Shell has the right structure and the right people in place in management. But the problem with Shell’s $9 billion Permian sale to ConocoPhillips, from her point of view, wasn’t about how the proceeds were spent but that it accomplished nothing for climate change when the same production merely changes hands. A planned downsizing of fossil fuel assets is what will reduce risk of climate change, and that’s a hard case to make to an oil company — that it is their job to not only maximize value for shareholders, but to do so in a way that does not allow them to sell any existing fossil fuel assets to other companies that may pursue exploration and production.
    “I think there is diversity among investors, but at least investors I am working with have one voice about systemic risk and the need to get on a transition plan,” Spalding said. “The most important thing is investing in renewables and making the transition and becoming a diversified energy company and not a fossil fuels company. What happens on that clean energy side, if we see them ramp up and get good at it and start pouring money into it and doing a better job of really running a renewable energy business, then we would be enthusiastic.” 
    Many of those investors see only two choices: an oil and gas company either diversifies and does it fast so they become an energy company, or they go out of business in an orderly way. “So far, nobody has taken us up on that option,” Spalding said. 
    If a company says they will transition by being a supplier of clean energy, they need to show it in the capital they invest in new technologies.
    “You have a massive shift and it requires all the force you have,” Dalman said. “But if you say ‘I don’t think we can become a renewables company and just need to sell and close up shop,’ then it’s fine. There’s nothing wrong with an oil and gas company selling assets and returning cash to shareholders over time, basically taking a harvest strategy approach to transition,” Dalman said.
    “Shell has too many competing stakeholders pushing it in too many different directions, resulting in an incoherent, conflicting set of strategies attempting to appease multiple interests but satisfying none,” Loeb wrote in his Q3 letter to investors. “Some shareholders want Shell to invest aggressively in renewable energy. Other shareholders want it to prioritize return of capital and enjoy the exposure to legacy oil and gas.”
    The activist investor broke down the existential question for Big Oil in very simple terms: “As the saying goes, you can’t be all things to all people.” More

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    Here’s how Biden's Build Back Better framework would tax the rich

    President Joe Biden issued a $1.75 trillion social and climate spending plan on Thursday. About $1 trillion would be financed by higher taxes on wealthy Americans.
    The Build Back Better proposal would levy a tax surcharge on Americans who earn more than $10 million, invest in more IRS enforcement and raise taxes for some business owners.
    It’s unclear whether the plan has the full backing of Democrats in the House and Senate.

    President Joe Biden delivers remarks on his proposed Build Back Better social spending bill in the White House on Oct. 28, 2021
    Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The White House issued a framework for a $1.75 trillion social and climate spending bill on Thursday — and would finance more than half of it from tax reforms aimed at wealthy Americans.
    The plan would raise revenue by levying a tax surcharge on those making more than $10 million a year, raising taxes for some high-income business owners and strengthening IRS tax enforcement, according to the outline.

    The framework was the product of several months of negotiations between moderate and progressive Democrats. Together, proposals targeting wealthy taxpayers would raise about $1 trillion of the nearly $2 trillion of total revenue being raised. (The rest would come from new taxes on corporations and stock buybacks, for example.)
    President Joe Biden said the legislation was fully paid for and would help reduce the federal budget deficit.
    More from Personal Finance:Enhanced child tax credit will continue for 1 more yearFamily caregivers may have to choose between jobs an at-home dutiesMiddle-class Americans face retirement insecurity
    “I don’t want to punish anyone’s success; I’m a capitalist,” President Biden said in a speech Thursday. “All I’m asking is, pay your fair share.”
    Biden reiterated that households earning less than $400,000 a year wouldn’t “pay a penny more” in federal taxes and would likely get a tax cut from the proposal, via elements like the enhanced child tax credit, and reduced costs on child care and health care.

    The framework omits specifics beyond high-level detail. But it seems to abandon many tax proposals issued last month by the House Ways and Means Committee, even while the overarching policy goal of targeting the wealthy is the same.
    For example, the framework doesn’t raise the current top 37% income tax rate or 20% top rate on investment income (with the exception of multimillionaires subject to the proposed surtax). It also wouldn’t impose new required distributions from big retirement accounts or alter rules around estate taxes and trusts, for example.

    “It’s far slimmed down,” said Kyle Pomerleau, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a right-leaning think tank. “It forgoes a lot of things they’d proposed in the House bill.”
    Of course, the proposal needs near-unanimous backing from Democrats in the House and Senate, given their razor-thin majorities, and it’s unclear whether it has the party’s full support.
    Here are some of the major provisions in the Build Back Better framework.

    Millionaire and billionaire surtax

    The plan would impose a new surcharge on the top 0.02% of Americans, according to the White House.
    There would be a 5% surtax on modified adjusted gross income of more than $10 million, and an additional 3% (or, a total 8% surtax) on income of more than $25 million, according to a summary of provisions released Thursday.
    The surtax is estimated to raise $230 billion over 10 years. It would kick in after Dec. 31.
    “This is one of the main provisions in here that directly taxes the wealthy,” said Garrett Watson, senior policy analyst at the Tax Foundation.
    It would affect a much larger number of people than another tax floated by Senate Democrats earlier this week on the wealth of billionaires. That tax would have affected about 700 people. There were 22,112 tax returns reporting income of more than $10 million in 2018, according to most recent IRS data.

    Essentially, an 8% surtax would mean the highest earners pay a top 45% federal marginal income tax rate on wages and business income. (They currently pay 37%.)
    They’d also pay a top 28% top federal rate on long-term capital gains and dividends, plus the existing 3.8% net investment income tax on high earners. (Taxes on long-term capital gains apply to growth on stocks and other assets sold after one year of ownership. The top tax rate is currently 20%.)
    That the tax applies to “modified adjusted gross income” and not “taxable income” is significant, Watson said.
    That’s because the AGI measure reflects income before it’s reduced by charitable contributions and other tax breaks — meaning the surtax would encompass more taxpayers.
    apply to taxable years beginning after December 31, 2021

    IRS enforcement

    SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Democrats’ plan would give $79 billion in new funding to the IRS to help close the so-called tax gap.
    The top 1% evade more than $160 billion per year in taxes, according to the White House.
    Relative to other taxpayers, they get a bigger share of income from opaque sources, such as certain business arrangements that aren’t as readily subject to tax reporting or withholding, according to Watson.
    The IRS would hire enforcement agents trained to pursue wealthy tax evaders, overhaul 1960s-era technology and invest in taxpayer services to help ordinary Americans, according to the White House.
    It estimates these measures would raise $400 billion over 10 years — the single-biggest revenue raiser in the proposal.
    However, some question how lawmakers arrived at that revenue figure. The Treasury Department estimated last month that an $80 billion IRS investment would generate $320 billion in revenue over a decade.

    Business income

    There are two provisions in the Build Back Better framework related to business income.
    One would apply a 3.8% Medicare surtax to all income from pass-through businesses and another would limit a tax break on business losses for the wealthy.
    The reforms would raise $250 billion and $170 billion, respectively, over a decade, according to estimates.

    Currently, the owners of most pass-through businesses are subject to a 3.8% self-employment tax or net investment income tax. (Such businesses, like sole proprietorships and partnerships, pass their earnings to owners’ individual tax returns.)
    However, some profits (namely, those of S corporations) aren’t subject to the 3.8% net investment income tax, which was created by the Affordable Care Act to fund Medicare expansion. The proposal would close this loophole for wealthy business owners.
    It would apply to single taxpayers with more than $400,000 in taxable income or married couples filing a joint return with more than $500,000 in taxable income.
    The second proposal is also somewhat vague on business losses. But the House tax proposal last month, which contained a similar measure, may offer a clue; it would permanently disallow excess business losses (meaning, net tax deductions that exceed their business income).
    This applies to businesses that aren’t structured as a corporation.
    Both provisions would kick in after Dec. 31.
    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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    Global numbers of Covid cases and deaths rise for the first time in 2 months, WHO says

    After weeks of decline, the number of Covid infections in Europe has risen for three consecutive weeks, even as cases fall in every other region in the world, the World Health Organization said.
    Nearly 3 million new Covid cases were reported worldwide for the week ended Sunday, an increase of 4% from the previous seven days, the WHO said. Cases in Europe surged by 18% over the last week alone.
    “It’s another reminder that the Covid-19 pandemic is far from over,” WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

    World Health Organization (WHO) Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus attends a ceremony to launch a multiyear partnership with Qatar on making FIFA Football World Cup 2022 and mega sporting events healthy and safe at the WHO headquarters in Geneva on October 18, 2021.
    Fabrice Coffrini | AFP | Getty Images

    Global numbers of Covid-19 cases and deaths are increasing for the first time in two months as the virus surges across Europe, World Health Organization officials said at a briefing Thursday.
    After weeks of decline, the number of infections in Europe has risen over the last three consecutive weeks, even as cases fall in every other region across the world, according to the WHO. Nearly 3 million new Covid cases were reported worldwide for the week ended Sunday, an increase of 4% from the previous seven days, according to the WHO’s most recent epidemiological update.

    Globally, Covid cases had fallen 4% the week before, despite a 7% increase across Europe over that same period. Cases in Europe surged by 18% over the last week alone, WHO data shows.

    “The global number of reported cases and deaths from Covid-19 is now increasing for the first time in two months, driven by an ongoing rise in Europe that outweighs declines in other regions,” WHO Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “It’s another reminder that the Covid-19 pandemic is far from over.”
    Covid has surged sharply in Czechia and Hungary, where the seven-day average of cases swelled more than 100% from the previous week as of Wednesday, according to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University. Croatia, Denmark, Norway and Poland each recorded weekly average case increases of more than 70% on Wednesday, JHU found.
    Russia reported a record-high seven-day average of more than 35,800 new cases on Tuesday, 10% higher than the week before, according to JHU. Ukraine’s seven-day average of over 21,900 new cases — a 43% jump from the previous week — represented a pandemic high as well.
    Both countries also tallied record-high deaths over that period, JHU calculated.

    CNBC Health & Science

    The evolving delta variant and the approaching winter season could also fuel outbreaks, said Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead on Covid. Van Kerkhove said the organization is tracking more than 30 delta sublineages, including the AY.4.2 subvariant, or delta plus, a mutation that’s gaining ground in the U.K. and could be even more contagious than the original variant.
    “Entering the winter months — where people tend to spend much more time indoors, in close proximity, perhaps in rooms where there is not good ventilation — cases will increase,” Van Kerkhove said.
    Delta plus has been detected in 42 countries, but 93% of cases sequenced with the subvariant are in the U.K., according to WHO data. Delta plus features two new adaptations to the spike protein, A222V and Y145H, that enable the virus to enter the body.

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    Sen. Richard Burr, brother-in-law spoke on phone just before stock sales that are under investigation, SEC says

    Sen. Richard Burr and his brother-in-law spoke on the phone shortly before both men sold off stocks weeks ahead of national Covid lockdowns in 2020, the SEC says in a court filing.
    The SEC’s probe is focused on the timing of trades in February 2020, after Burr and other members of Congress were briefed on the danger of the coronavirus pandemic spreading to the United States.
    Burr’s brother-in-law Gerald Fauth is chairman of the National Mediation Board.
    Burr announced in January that the Justice Department had informed him that it closed its investigation without filing criminal charges against him.

    Senator Richard Burr, a Republican from North Carolina and ranking member of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee, speaks during a confirmation hearing in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, April 29, 2021.
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Sen. Richard Burr of North Carolina and his brother-in-law, who is chairman of an independent federal agency, spoke on the phone shortly before both men sold off stocks weeks ahead of national Covid lockdowns in 2020, the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a civil court filing.
    The filing comes as the SEC continues to investigate whether Burr, a Republican, and his brother-in-law Gerald Fauth sold the stocks on the basis of material nonpublic information that Burr obtained as part of his job.

    Members of Congress are barred from trading on nonpublic information they receive as a result of their positions as lawmakers.
    As chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Burr was given access in January and February 2020 to classified intelligence reports that contained stark warnings about the coronavirus pandemic.
    The SEC’s probe is focused on the timing of trades in February 2020, after Burr and other lawmakers were briefed on the danger of the pandemic spreading to the United States.
    Fauth is chairman of the National Mediation Board, an agency that facilitates labor-management relations in the U.S. railroad and airline industries. He also is “the brother of Senator Burr’s wife, Brooke Burr,” the SEC filing notes.

    A week after the February stock sales by Burr and his brother-in-law, stock markets began plunging over fear that the pandemic would cripple the global economy. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 30% of its value in the weeks following Burr’s trades.

    Burr in March 2020 said, “I relied solely on public news reports to guide my decision regarding the sale of stocks.” He added: “Specifically, I closely followed CNBC’s daily health and science reporting out of its Asia bureaus at the time.”
    The FBI seized Burr’s phone in May 2020 as part of a criminal probe of the trades. That move led Burr to step aside as intelligence committee chairman. On Jan. 19, the day before Joe Biden was inaugurated as president, Burr announced that the Justice Department had informed him that it closed its investigation without filing criminal charges against him.
    The SEC, in a new filing in its civil case, said that Burr, at 8:45 a.m. on Feb. 13, 2020, called his stockbroker to sell more than $1.65 million worth of stock, “all but one of the equities in his and his wife’s joint individual retirement account … portfolio.”
    At 11:32 a.m. that day, Burr called Fauth’s cellphone, according to the filing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. “The call lasted 50 seconds.”

    Gerald Fauth
    Source: Wikipedia

    At 11:33 a.m., a minute or less later, Fauth called his primary stockbroker’s landline, the SEC said.
    After failing to reach his first broker, Fauth called a second broker within two minutes and “directed her to sell several stocks in his wife’s account,” the filing reveals.
    Fauth “sold between $97,000 and $280,000 worth of shares in six companies — including several that were hit particularly hard in the market swoon and economic downturn,” according to ProPublica, which first reported the court filing.
    Minutes after that, following Burr’s own instructions from earlier that morning, the senator’s broker “entered trades to sell equities in the IRA accounts of both Senator Burr and his wife,” according to the filing.
    The SEC’s filing seeks a judge’s order that would force Fauth to comply with an investigative subpoena that was issued in March 2020. The subpoena seeks documents, other evidence and Fauth’s testimony.
    Fauth and his lawyers have stonewalled that subpoena, the filing indicates.

    CNBC Politics

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    The SEC said in its filing that, “Among other things, the Commission is investigating whether Senator Richard Burr … sold stocks on the basis of material nonpublic information on February 13, 2020, in violation of the federal securities laws, including the STOCK Act, a statute passed by the U.S. Congress in 2012 to prohibit its members from using nonpublic information derived from their positions for their personal benefit.”
    “The Commission is also investigating whether [Fauth] and his wife, Mary Fauth, sold securities on the same day on the basis of material nonpublic information supplied to them by Senator Burr in violation of his duties.”
    A spokesman for Burr and a lawyer for Fauth did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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