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    Early Revolut backer Lakestar leads $40 million investment in French fintech startup Swan

    French embedded finance startup Swan raised 37 million euros ($39.6 million) in a series B investment led by European venture capital giant Lakestar.
    The latest fundraise takes Swan’s total money raised to 58 million euros. Accel, another venture capital firm, previously led Swan’s series A round in 2021.
    Swan will initially use the money to expand its operations in the Netherlands in the coming months, before later expanding its operations in the Italian market in 2024.

    Swan co-founder and CEO Nicolas Benady.

    European venture capital giant Lakestar, an early supporter of fintech unicorn Revolut, has emerged as a prominent backer of French fintech startup Swan.
    Swan raised the funds in a series B investment led by European venture capital giant Lakestar. The latest fundraise takes Swan’s total money raised to 58 million euros. Accel, another venture capital firm, previously led Swan’s series A round in 2021.

    Swan CEO and co-founder Nicolas Benady said that, when he started out, it was “incredibly complex” to integrate banking and other financial services into existing platforms that didn’t have any financial components.
    “What we had in mind with our co-founders was that it shouldn’t be that complex,” he told CNBC. “If it’s easy to accept payments — like the Stripes the Adyens, the Mollies of this world enable — it should be as easy to set up banking.”
    “If you develop a big idea … at 2 a.m., it should be possible to come onto our website and have something up and running in the morning,” Benady added.
    Swan will initially use the money to expand its operations in the Netherlands in the coming months, before later expanding its operations in the Italian market in 2024.
    Benady said the Dutch market has unique features that set it apart from other European countries, making it more complex as a country to launch digital banking and payment capabilities in for its customers.

    For example, the Netherlands has its own payments system, called iDEAL, which lets consumers pay online through their own bank and is supported by all the country’s major lenders including ABN Amro and ING Group.
    Georgia Watson, a principal at Lakestar based in the firm’s London office, said the firm had been tracking Swan “for about a year.”
    “We really like that they’re giving their clients the ability to create new product lines, new revenue lines, with attention for their end users,” she told CNBC.
    She added that Swan’s clients “don’t have to think about the regulatory aspects when they want to add on new products, which can be very time consuming and create additional risk for the company.”
    Swan is able to set up embedded financial solutions with businesses in as little as two weeks compared to many months for other competitors, according to Watson, who was previously with Goldman Sachs as a vice president managing the investment bank’s growth and venture deals.

    Plans to forge partnerships

    Luca Bocchio, partner at Accel, said Swan had proven its model was more scalable than competitors in the embedded finance world, such as Railsr and Solarisbank, which have faced struggles in their mission to plug payments and other financial products directly into companies’ platforms. Railsr earlier this year entered bankruptcy protection via a sale to a consortium of investors led by D Squared Capital.
    Swan is able to handle large volumes of payments and run know-your-customer (KYC) checks with “very few people,” Bocchio told CNBC.
    “Banking-as-a-service providers usually need to take care of many of their customers, who piggyback on their licenses. They need to take care of anti-money laundering, KYC and compliance costs for their customers.”
    “Depending on what they’re serving, it means a high volume of requests if you’ve not created a fully automated platform,” Bocchio said. “It requires you to have lots of manual processes.”
    Bocchio said that, where Swan differed to competitors was with its ability to process lots of tractions with more automated compliance processes. Railsr, he said, struggled to allocate the right number of people to figure out the challenge of developing an embedded finance experience while also considering how to scale it with compliance in mind.
    Railsr, at the time of its restructuring announcement, said that it had “best-in-class technology” and would “get back to basics and manage the business methodically and constructively.”
    Swan will also look to forge partnerships with more large, multinational corporates with an aggressive sales strategy following the fundraise. The company already works with the French retail chain Carrefour, which used its technology to develop a cashback project.
    Swan plans to broaden its product offering out to include more payment collection methods such as direct debit and card payments, as well as new lending capabilities. As it rolls out these new products, Swan anticipates it’ll begin to serve new industries like travel, insurance and business-to-business marketplaces.
    The proportion of payments that are embedded in platforms is expected to grow to 40% in the next few years, according to a note from Bain Capital Ventures. Embedded finance is expected to become a $384.8 billion market by 2029, according to data from Reportlinker. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Oracle, WestRock, Apple, Advance Auto Parts and more

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, July 12, 2023.
    Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Oracle — Shares dipped 13.5% a day after the software company posted disappointing earnings and revenue guidance for its fiscal second quarter. Oracle’s revenue, which came in at $12.45 billion, was weaker than the $12.47 billion forecast by analysts. Its forward guidance of 5% to 7% revenue growth in the second quarter also fell short of the 8% implied growth expected by analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv.

    WestRock — The stock rose 2.8% following news that the paper and packaging company will go through with a merger with Smurfit Kappa. Shares of Smurfit Kappa traded on the FTSE 100 tumbled 9.8%.
    Apple — Shares lost more than 1.8% during midday trading as the technology giant is expected to unveil a new iPhone at its launch event kicking off at 1 p.m. ET.
    Casey’s General Stores — The retailer added 11.2% on the heels of an earnings beat. The company reported an adjusted $4.52 per share on revenue of $3.87 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet forecast an adjusted $3.36 and $3.9 billion, respectively. Executives also reiterated forward guidance and forecast an increase to 2024 same-store sales by 3% to 5%.
    Beauty Health — The HydraFacial parent company’s shares surged 23.6% after it announced a cost-cutting program. The first phase of the program is forecast to generate $20 million in annualized cost savings during the first quarter of 2024. Beauty Health’s board of directors also authorized a $100 million share repurchase program.
    Advance Auto Parts — Shares fell 8.1% to a 12-year low after S&P Global downgraded the auto parts provider’s credit rating to BB+, the highest level of “junk,” or speculative, status, from BBB-.

    CVS — The drug store chain climbed 2.6% following an upgrade to outperform from peer perform by Wolfe. The firm said the business could inflect over the next six to 12 months.
    Block — Shares of the payments company advcned 0.7% after Baird reiterated an outperform rating on the stock and designated shares as a bullish fresh pick. The Wall Street firm said shares may be oversold after the company experienced a temporary outage on its payment processor Square.
    Cintas — The stock gained 2.8% after Bank of America upgraded Cintas to buy from neutral, calling the corporate apparel maker a “best-in-breed company” that can benefit as recession risks wane. The firm attributed the new rating to its growing confidence in a potential soft landing for the U.S. economy.
    Geron — Stock in the biotechnology firm added roughly 1.7% following an upgrade to buy from Goldman Sachs earlier Tuesday. Analyst Corinne Jenkins noted optimism over recent U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for myelodysplastic syndromes treatment imetelstat.
    Exxon Mobil — Shares of the energy giant rose 2.9% as the price of oil continued to climb. Futures for U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude hit their highest level since November. Elsewhere, Morgan Stanley reiterated its overweight call on Exxon, saying the company was a top pick in its category.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh and Brian Evans contributed reporting. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Oracle, WestRock, Apple and more

    Safra Catz, CEO of Oracle Corporation, rings the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., July 12, 2023. 
    Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell
    Oracle – Shares fell 10% before the opening bell after the company posted weaker-than-expected revenue and revenue guidance for the second fiscal quarter. For the recent quarter, the software company reported adjusted earnings of $1.19 per share, versus the $1.15 expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Revenue came in at $12.45 billion, lighter than the $12.47 billion expected.

    WestRock – Shares popped more than 6% before the bell on news that the paper and packaging company is going forward with its merger with Smurfit Kappa. Shares of Dublin-based Smurfit Kappa sank more than 8% on the news.
    Apple – The stock inched higher before the bell ahead of the technology giant’s eagerly anticipated iPhone launch event beginning at 1 p.m. ET.
    Cintas – Shares rose 1% in premarket trading after Bank of America upgraded the stock to a buy rating as the odds of a soft landing economic scenario mount.
    Casey’s General Stores – The retail stock added more than 4% in the premarket after topping earnings expectations for the recent quarter. Casey’s General Stores reported earnings of $4.52 per share, topping the $3.36 expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Revenue came in at $3.87 billion, slightly behind the $3.9 billion expected.
    Geron – The stock jumped nearly 5% before the bell after Goldman Sachs upgraded the blood cancer treatment firm to a buy from neutral rating ahead of its 2024 drug launch and indicated shares could rise as much as 70%. More

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    Walter Isaacson’s new Elon Musk biography is already taking off in China

    Walter Isaacson’s new biography of Elon Musk hit the Chinese market Tuesday.
    Publisher Citic Press Group raised the book’s selling price to 79 yuan ($10.84) on Monday, up from 59 yuan previously, according to Chris Sun, lead translator of Isaacson’s book into Chinese.
    On online retailer JD.com’s app Tuesday, versions of the new Elon Musk biography in Chinese held the top three spots in the category of most popular finance and economics biographies.

    A Citic Press book stand advertises for the release of the Chinese version of Walter Isaacson’s new Elon Musk biography.
    CNBC | Evelyn Cheng

    BEIJING — Walter Isaacson’s new biography of Elon Musk hit the Chinese market Tuesday, several hours ahead of the U.S. release due to a time difference that puts Beijing 12 hours ahead of New York.
    A day earlier, publisher Citic Press Group raised the book’s selling price to 79 Chinese yuan ($10.84), up from 59 yuan previously, according to Chris Sun, lead translator of Isaacson’s book into Chinese.

    Citing conversations with the publisher, Sun said a rare, urgent additional printing was done during the pre-sale period and that the work was Citic Press’ “highest-level confidential project” of the year. That’s according to a CNBC translation of the Chinese comments.
    Citic did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment. The Shenzhen-listed company reported revenue from operations of 872.65 million yuan for the first half of the year, up 2.9% from a year ago.

    Sun said Citic was unable to provide sales figures of the new biography as of Tuesday.
    On the online retailer JD.com’s app Tuesday, versions of the new Elon Musk biography in Chinese held the top three spots in the category of most popular finance and economics biographies.
    In fourth place was Isaacson’s biography of Steve Jobs in Chinese.

    About a decade ago, copies of the Jobs’ biography could be found at numerous street-side stands in China. They were almost always knockoffs, but the distinctive black-and-white cover stood out.
    Sun pointed out that much has changed between the U.S. and China since then, as well as ordinary Chinese people’s awareness of such tech entrepreneurs.
    When Jobs died in 2011, he was better known among China’s elites, while ordinary people were still learning about Apple’s products, Sun said.
    Today, “ordinary people [in China] have a very high opinion of Musk,” Sun said, noting some people are proud to be Tesla owners. Ashlee Vance’s earlier biography of Musk has been popular in China as well.
    Read excerpts from Isaacson’s new Musk biography here: More

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    Britain’s $4.5 billion digital bank Monzo debuts investments feature

    British digital bank Monzo has launched a feature that lets users invest with as little as £1.
    The feature, called Investments, will allow Monzo’s customers to invest in a number of funds managed by BlackRock.
    It’s the latest drive from the company to push into new parts of financial services and generate new revenue sources as it seeks to edge toward full-year profitability.

    Monzo CEO TS Anil.

    Monzo, the $4.5 billion digital challenger bank, launched a feature that lets users make investments —marking its first foray into the massive financial investment market.
    The feature, called Investments, will allow Monzo’s customers to invest in a number of funds managed by asset management giant BlackRock. CNBC got an early look at the product in Monzo’s headquarters last week. It’s set to start rolling out Tuesday, and will allow users to invest with as little as £1.

    The move will put Monzo into competition with large established banks like Chase, which offers online investment management through its Nutmeg subsidiary; asset management firms; and younger startup competitors such as Chip, Moneybox, and Plum.
    Monzo already lets its customers put their money into interest-yielding savings pots. But this is the first time the company is making a move into the world of investing.
    The application process is pretty straightforward. Customers will be invited to a waitlist to access the product. Eligible users who’ve joined the waitlist will then get invited to create an investment pot.
    After that, they’ll be taken through to a set of screens where they learn about the product and get to choose from three funds handpicked by BlackRock based on different risk levels.

    Monzo Investments will allow users to start investing with as little as £1.

    The choice is split between three funds managed by BlackRock: Careful, Balanced and Adventurous. At the “careful” end of the scale is a low-risk, low-return fund; the “balanced” fund has medium high risk and reward; while the “adventurous” one is about higher-risk allocations with much larger potential returns.

    Lack of investing knowledge among Brits

    TS Anil, Monzo’s co-founder and CEO, said the company had worked to bring about an investment feature to tackle a lack of knowledge from Brits when it comes to investing.
    “There’s many, many barriers customers have in getting started … and the aim of our product is to banish those barriers,” Anil told CNBC in an interview ahead of the product launch. “One of the biggest barriers is the idea that investing isn’t affordable so people can’t get started. With Monzo Investments, you can start from £1.”
    “Another of these is that they feel overwhelmed as they don’t have the knowledge they need to get started, so we’ve embedded the knowledge and tools to make good decisions,” Anil added. “Another is that it doesn’t feel personalised, so we’re offering three simple options based on individual risk preferences to ensure it’s tailored to them.”
    According to YouGov research commissioned by Monzo, 69% of the U.K. population aren’t sure where to go for an accessible and simple-to-use investing product, while 60% of adults say they’d be inclined to invest if the minimum investment amount is low. Meanwhile, 24% of U.K. adults who invest admitted to “winging it.”
    The figures are based on a sample of 2,035 adults in Britain. Fieldwork for the research was undertaken between July 27 and July 28.

    YouGov research commissioned by Monzo shows that 69% of Brits don’t know where to turn when it comes to investing.

    The investments pots feature will appear in a new part of the home screen on Monzo called Savings & Investments. The product will be rolled out to all eligible customers over the coming weeks, Monzo said.
    But if Monzo’s data shows a customer is in financial difficulty — for example, if they’re falling behind on debt repayments — the ability to open new investments won’t show up at all.
    The feature also gives users flexibility to amend, cancel or withdraw their investments at any time, meaning they can pull out of their investment even if they’ve already decided on it.
    Monzo now counts more than 8 million customers in the U.K., a milestone the bank hit only eight months after hitting the 7 million user milestone.
    The company is looking to push into new parts of financial services and generate new revenue sources as it seeks to edge toward full-year profitability. Monzo reported its first two months of profitability in 2023, a milestone the bank won off the back of surging lending income, thanks to higher interest rates in the U.K.

    The feature shows users educational content on the nature of investing.

    Monzo said it would charge a flat 0.59% fee on customers’ investments each month, which comprises a 0.14% fund fee and a 0.45% platform fee to provide the service. For a customer with £1,000 ($1,250) invested with Monzo, that would translate to roughly 48 pence a month in fees they’d have to pay.

    First mover?

    Executives at Monzo said during a briefing with CNBC last week that they wanted to launch a product that gives people the ability to invest within an ecosystem of financial services including budgeting, spending, transferring money, and borrowing.
    Monzo sees itself as more of a “financial control center” where banking customers go to manage their financial lives, as opposed to a “super app” that offers lots of different services adjacent to banking and financial services.
    One of the company’s biggest competitors, Revolut, has frequently touted its aim to become a financial super app encompassing banking, trading, insurance, travel and other services.
    Monzo is something of a first mover among licensed neobanks in the U.K. when it comes to offering investments. Competitors like Starling Bank and Zopa don’t yet offer investing features. 
    Still, several fintech platforms, including Revolut and Freetrade, already offer users the ability to trade stocks. Wise also offers an investment management service.
    When asked whether Monzo was late to the party, Anil said: “I don’t think we’re late at all.”
    “You could argue we were 500 years late to banking,” he added. “As the country has navigated through a cost of living crisis in the last 24 months, we’ve heard from our customers that now more than ever people want to make good long-term decisions with their money, so the product is well timed from that perspective.”
    Gautam Pillai, head of fintech research at the investment bank Peel Hunt, said Monzo’s new investments feature could increase customer “stickiness.”
    “The opportunity that Monzo has is going after the greenfield opportunity. They don’t need to worry about the brownfield. They don’t really need it,” Pillai told CNBC.
    Monzo is one of many British fintechs on investors’ radar as a potential candidate for an initial public offering in the year ahead.
    Anil said the company sees an IPO as another milestone on is journey as a business rather than a target in the near term, adding that the company has no immediate plans for a public listing.
    WATCH: Shift4 Payments CEO talks pressure on the payments sector and consumer resilience More

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    Standard Chartered-owned crypto firm Zodia launches in Singapore

    Zodia Custody, a subsidiary of Standard Chartered, has expanded its presence in Singapore for the first time, the company told CNBC exclusively.
    The development makes Zodia the first entity that’s owned by and partnered with banks to provide crypto custody services for financial institutions in Singapore, the firm said.
    Singapore is “getting to that next level of maturity” when it comes to crypto regulation and development of central bank digital currencies, Zodia CEO Julian Sawyer told CNBC.

    A view of the Standard Chartered bank in Singapore, May 3, 2023.
    Caroline Chia | Reuters

    Zodia Custody, a company that helps large institutions store their crypto, launched in Singapore on Tuesday in a bid to tap into the country’s rapidly growing digital asset market.
    The development makes Zodia the first entity that is owned by and partnered with banks to provide digital asset custody services for financial institutions in Singapore, Zodia said in a news release.

    Zodia is a subsidiary of Standard Chartered, the British bank with a presence largely in emerging markets, such as Asia, Africa and the Middle East. StanChart launched Zodia in 2021 alongside Northern Trust, in a move that highlighted curiosity from big institutions in interacting with digital currencies. Zodia is also part-owned by SBI Digital Asset Holdings, the crypto division of Japanese bank SBI. As part of that deal, SBI also agreed to launch its custody business in Japan.
    Zodia said it wants to expand across Asia-Pacific to cater to growing demand from institutions for bank-grade custody of digital assets, as well as demand from existing clients in the region, the company said. 
    Singapore is “getting to that next level of maturity” in terms of forming rules for cryptoassets and the development of central bank digital currencies, Zodia CEO Julian Sawyer told CNBC in a phone call. Sawyer was previously a co-founder of Starling Bank.
    “Singapore is a market that has been no stranger to the crypto world for a long time,” Sawyer said. “We want to be part of it. We think that the market of a bank owned custodian is actually what the market is wanting.”
    Zodia works with clients ranging from hedge funds and high frequency traders to prime brokers, exchanges, and asset managers.

    Standard Chartered has a “fantastic brand” in Singapore, Sawyer said, adding that the backing of such a large institution has helped boost its conversations with major financial firms. “Being part of Standard Chartered comes up in every single conversation,” he told CNBC. “It’s absolutely critical.”
    “We adopt their risk their compliance frameworks, information security, resilience, [and] people managing,” he added.
    Singapore has seen rapid growth when it comes to digital asset adoption. The city-state’s crypto ownership rate stands at 19%, according to market research firm Statista, higher than the global average of 15%.
    Funding for crypto companies in Singapore has also remained strong despite a bear market the industry endured in the wake of the collapse of FTX, Three Arrows Capital, Terra, and various other previously prominent names.
    Crypto or blockchain was the top area of fintech investment in Singapore in 2022, pulling in $1.2 billion of funding in 2022, according to KPMG’s Pulse of Fintech report for the second half of 2022. Crypto-related funding did still fall by 21%, however. Globally, crypto startups raised $23.1 billion in 2022, down 23% year-over-year.
    Zodia’s move into Singapore comes on the heels of an expansion into Abu Dhabi. The company secured in-principle regulatory approval in Abu Dhabi earlier this month in a bid to take advantage of the United Arab Emirates capital’s crypto-friendly regulatory environment and status as a financial center.
    WATCH: Coinbase ‘committed to India’ despite stopping new user sign ups on exchange: CNBC Crypto World More

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    How to avoid a green-metals crunch

    Everyone wants more metals. In recent months Britain has inked a deal with Zambia, Japan has sealed one with Namibia and the eu has shaken hands with Chile. The bloc’s negotiators also started talks with the Democratic Republic of Congo; America’s, meanwhile, visited Mongolia. This scattershot campaign, which is also targeting the Philippines and Saudi Arabia, has a single aim: obtaining the minerals required for rapid decarbonisation.Seventy-two countries, accounting for four-fifths of global emissions, have committed themselves to net-zero targets. According to the Energy Transitions Commission (etc), a think-tank, hitting them by 2050 will require 15 times today’s wind-power capacity, 25 times more solar, a tripling of the grid’s size and a 60-fold increase in the fleet of electric vehicles (evs). By 2030 copper and nickel demand could rise by 50-70%, cobalt and neodymium by 150%, and graphite and lithium six- to seven-fold. All told, a carbon-neutral world in 2050 will require 35m tonnes of green metals a year, predicts the International Energy Agency, an official forecaster. Adding aluminium and steel to the mix, the etc forecasts that demand between now and then will hit 6.5bn tonnes.Hence why analysts and policymakers worry about an almighty supply crunch towards the end of the decade. The etc expects shortages of market-breaking magnitudes by 2030: some 10-15% for copper and nickel, and 30-45% for other battery metals. When dwindling stocks cause prices to rise, producers will crank up output and customers use scarce materials more efficiently or turn to cheaper alternatives. What demand remains unmet after this will be destroyed, however, as would-be buyers that cannot or will not pay higher prices are forced out of the market. Too much of such demand destruction will kill the green transition. The question, then, is simple. Can the crunch be minimised?Start by considering the metals in question. Three are already widely used in industry: aluminium and steel are the backbone of panels and turbines, and copper is vital for everything from cables to cars. Then come those powering electric vehicles (evs): cobalt, lithium and nickel, which make up battery cathodes, and graphite, the main anode element. Except for nickel, which is also an ingredient in stainless steel, all these have only niche applications. The last group features magnetic rare earths like neodymium, found in ev motors and turbine generators. These are required only in minuscule amounts.image: The EconomistThe search for such metals is made slightly less urgent by a discomforting fact: climate policies are unlikely to restrain global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, as assumed by most forecasts. Moreover, many future-gazers also assume demand for green gear, and thus metals, will rise in a linear fashion, even though some countries will no doubt start to sprint only in the final yards. Net-zero projections may therefore be more credible about 2050 than 2030. Steel, for which green uses will remain a drop in the ocean, will probably stay abundant. The supply of cobalt, a byproduct of other sought-after metals, may outpace demand for ever.Yet plenty of difficulties remain. Industry oracles canvassed by The Economist predict copper-supply gaps of 2-4m tonnes, or 6-12% of potential demand, by 2030. They also foresee a shortfall of lithium of 50,000-100,000 tonnes, a 2-4% deficit. Nickel and graphite—plentiful in theory—could cause problems because batteries require a purity of material that is elusive. There are too few smelters to refine bauxite into aluminium. Next to no one produces neodymium outside of China.These will be hard problems to overcome. Yet we find that three levers may lower the pressure without wrecking the transition. First, producers may extract more supply from existing sources, which can be done straight away but will produce limited quantities of metal. Second, firms may open new mines, which could solve the problem entirely but will take time. The limitations of these two levers make a third the most important of all, at least over the course of the next decade: finding ways to circumvent green bottlenecks.Full metal racketQuick wins could come from reusing more material. Such gains will be greatest for aluminium, copper and nickel. All are widely recycled, but higher prices will motivate spending in an unglamorous, fragmented industry. Some of this is already happening. bhp, a big miner, has backed a nickel-recycling upstart in Tanzania. Huw McKay, the firm’s chief economist, reckons that scrap could represent 50% of the total copper supply in a decade, up from 35% now. Rio Tinto, another mining giant, is investing in aluminium recycling centres. Last year startups focused on battery-metal recycling raised $500m, a record.More could come from restarting idle mines. There are not many of them: a post-covid surge in demand has already reduced slack. Even if prices double, cost curves for copper and nickel indicate that just a few mines would reopen. But aluminium is an important exception. Since December 2021 soaring energy costs have caused 1.4m tonnes in annual smelting capacity (2% of the world’s) to shut in Europe. A 25% rise in prices would lure much of that back, reckons Graeme Train of Trafigura, a trader.The greatest hope lies in technologies that squeeze supply from tricky deposits. New firms are developing chemical processes, known as “tail leaching”, that extract copper from ores with low metal content, making waste worth exploiting. Using the tech at scale could yield an extra 1m tonnes of copper a year without costing much, says Daniel Malchuk of Jetti Resources, one such firm. Meanwhile, in Indonesia, the world’s largest nickel producer, miners are using “high-pressure acid leaching” to turn low-grade ores into material fit for electric cars. Three billion-dollar plants have been built already, and nearly $20bn-worth of additional projects have been announced. Daria Efanova of Sucden, a trader, reckons that Indonesia could produce some 400,000 tonnes of top-grade nickel by 2030, filling part of the 900,000-tonne supply gap she projects.Yet these new techniques are uncertain, and in some cases come with drawbacks such as pollution. The resulting supply cannot be taken for granted. Starting new mines, the second lever, would bring larger gains, even if slowly. McKinsey, a consultancy, calculates that if the 382 projects in cobalt, copper, lithium and nickel that have at least commenced a pre-feasibility study were to be completed by 2030, it would keep markets just about balanced. These projects would represent a huge increase in production: there are around 500 cobalt, copper, lithium and nickel mines operating worldwide at present. To open on time, they will have to overcome a number of difficulties.image: The EconomistThe first is a shortage of money. McKinsey estimates that to fill supply gaps predicted by 2030 annual capital expenditure in mining has to double to $300bn. cru, another consultancy, reckons that spending on copper alone must hit $22bn in 2027, compared with an average of $15bn in 2016-21. Although not yet by fast enough, investment by big miners is rising. Customers are entering the fray, too. General Motors, a carmaker, is investing $650m in Lithium Americas, a miner in Nevada. catl, a Chinese battery firm, is spending billions to source cobalt and lithium. Since the start of the year pension and sovereign funds have invested $3.7bn in private mining assets, the most since 2013. And about $21bn in capital raised by private-equity firms since 2010 is also chasing deals.This will take time to make a difference, however, since digging new mines takes ages—from 4-7 years for lithium to an average of 17 for copper—and delays have been worsened by a paucity of permits. Egged on by activists, governments and regulators are increasingly blocking projects on environmental grounds. Between 2017 and 2021 it took an average of 311 days for new mines in Chile to gain approval, compared with 139 in 2002-06. Meanwhile, the metal content of copper ores mined in placid countries is falling, forcing miners to look to dicier locations. Two-thirds of the new supply planned by 2030 sits in countries that in 2020 ranked below 50th in the World Bank’s “ease of doing business” index. Reko Diq, a project led by Barrick Gold, a Canadian firm, containing one of the world’s largest untapped copper deposits, sits between Iran and Pakistan.All this means new supply can only be a solution in the long run, perhaps after a spell of high prices. Thus the lion’s share of adjustment in the next decade will come down to demand—our third lever. This side of the equation, which is more difficult to model than future production, is poorly understood. But it is probably more flexible than commonly realised.Auto- and battery-makers are a type of buyer the metals market has never seen before. Fiercely innovative, price-sensitive and risk-averse, such firms work around problems at the first sign of a squeeze in supply. They have already achieved a lot through “thrifting”—the continuous discovery of small ways to use less metal. The typical electric-car battery now contains just 69kg of copper, down from 80kg in 2020. Simon Morris of cru reckons that the next generation may need just 21-50kg, saving up to 2m tonnes of copper a year by 2035. He thinks that the lithium intensity of batteries may halve by 2027.More can be achieved through substitution. Nickel-manganese-cobalt chemistries that contain as much cobalt as nickel, known as nmc 111, are being phased out in favour of nmc 721 and 811, which contain more nickel but little cobalt. These account for a quarter of ev-battery cathodes, up from zero in 2017. Meanwhile, the cheaper but less energy-dense lithium-iron phosphate (lfp) mix is now conquering the booming Chinese market, where city dwellers are less concerned by a shorter driving range. Indeed, lfp now represents 30% of ev cathodes worldwide.Graphite anodes are also being doped with silicon, which is hyperabundant. In March Tesla, an ev-maker, said it would build a motor that did not need rare earths. Sodium-ion batteries, which replace lithium with sodium, the sixth most abundant element on Earth, may in time triumph. Because of their low energy density, they will first be used for stationary storage, where volume is less of a constraint.Customer preferences will play a part. Today people want to be able to drive their ev for 600km on a single charge—but few travel such distances often. As lithium runs scarce, carmakers may design shorter-range vehicles that can be augmented by bolting on a portable battery, radically reducing the size of the standard pack. At the right price, adoption could be fast.Copper, which cannot easily be engineered out of grids, is the chief problem. But here, too, consumption shifts could help. cru estimates that green demand as a share of total copper demand will rise from 7% now to 21% in 2030—a bigger chunk, but still a fraction. That leaves many grams of copper that could be transferred to green applications when supply gaps emerge. As the cost of metal rises, sales of phones and washing machines, which also contain copper, will probably decline sooner than those of wires and solar panels—especially if the clean-tech market is propped up by subsidies and government orders.By the late 2030s there will probably be enough new mines and recycling for the transition to proceed as planned. The question is how much disturbance there will be in the interim. Things will be tight. Since supply will be concentrated in a few countries, local unrest, geopolitical conflict or even bad weather could hit markets: simulations by Liberum Capital, a bank, suggest a miners’ strike in Peru, or three months of droughts in Indonesia, would tip the copper or nickel markets in 2028 into 5-15% supply deficits. But with nimble buyers, steadfast governments and a dash of luck, the green-metal bump need not cause an electric-car crash. ■ More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Tesla, Qualcomm, Meta, Moderna and more

    Visitors at the Tesla booth at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, July 6, 2023.
    Costfoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle maker jumped more than 10% after Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight. Analyst Adam Jones said the firm is on the verge of a major leap in autonomous driving.

    J.M. Smucker, Hostess — Smucker lost 7% after it agreed to buy Twinkies-maker Hostess Brands for $34.25 a share in a cash and stock transaction, valued at approximately $5.6 billion. hares of Hostess popped 19.1%, reaching a new 52-week high. 
    Tenable Holdings — The exposure management solutions provider added 3.1% on the back of an upgrade to overweight from neutral by JPMorgan. The firm said the company should see improved fundamentals going forward.
    Kenvue — Shares of the Band-Aid maker gained 3.6% after being upgraded by Deutsche Bank to buy from hold on Sunday. The Wall Street firm called Kenvue a high-quality company and believes the stock’s slide has created an attractive entry point. The J&J spinoff has lost 15% since going public in May.
    Alibaba — The Chinese tech company shed 1.5% on the news that outgoing CEO Daniel Zhang would unexpectedly quit its cloud business. In June, the company had announced Zhang was leaving as chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group to focus on the cloud intelligence unit. 
    Meta — The tech giant gained 3.2% after the Wall Street Journal reported Meta is developing a new AI system as capable as OpenAI’s most advanced model, and more powerful than the one it released two months ago called Llama 2. According to the report, Meta is aiming to launch the product by next year. 

    Nubank – The U.S.-traded shares of the Brazilian financial firm rose more than 8% after JPMorgan upgraded Nubank to overweight from neutral. JPMorgan said in a note to clients that Nubank should continue to gain market share in Brazil for multiple years and is trading at a “good entry point” after a recent stock price decline. 
    Qualcomm — The chip stock jumped 3.9% after the company announced that it will supply Apple with 5G modems for smartphones through 2026. The continued sales to Apple will boost Qualcomm’s handsets business, and could soften the blow of potentially losing a critical customer. 
    Media stocks — Shares of Disney and Charter Communications gained 1.1% and 3.2%, respectively, as both companies are nearing a deal that would end the blackout fight between the two companies. Shares of media peers Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount also traded 2.3% higher on the news.
    AstraZeneca — The pharmaceutical company’s shares lost 2.3% Monday. Per Reuters, the pullback comes after a Sunday report in the Mail saying Chief Executive Pascal Soriot privately discussed leaving the company as early as next year.
    Moderna — Shares of the drugmaker fell 1.7% after it announced it is partnering with German drug developer Immatics to further cancer vaccine developments. Moderna will give Immatics $120 million in upfront cash as part of the deal.
    — CNBC’s Alexander Harring, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting More