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    Coinbase to slow hiring amid plunge in cryptocurrencies and tech stocks

    Coinbase told staff Tuesday it would slow hiring and reevaluate its headcount, reversing earlier plans to triple its workforce in 2022.
    The crypto exchange’s share price has plunged 74% year-to-date amid a slide in both tech stocks and digital currency prices.
    The move makes Coinbase the latest tech company to commit to reducing investment in hiring.

    Coinbase reported a 27% decline in revenues in the first quarter as usage of the platform dipped.
    Chesnot | Getty Images

    Coinbase has become the latest tech company to warn of a slowdown in hiring.
    The crypto exchange told staff Tuesday it would slow hiring and reevaluate its headcount, reversing earlier plans to triple its workforce in 2022.

    “Given current market conditions, we feel it’s prudent to slow hiring and reassess our headcount needs against our highest-priority business goals,” Emilie Choi, Coinbase’s chief operating officer, said in a blog post.
    “Headcount growth is a key input to our financial model, and this is an important action to ensure we manage our business to the scenarios we planned for.”
    With once high-flying tech stocks in the doldrums, companies are reassessing their plans in a bid to convince investors they can weather the storm. The Nasdaq Composite has lost around a quarter of its value since the start of the year amid concerns around rising inflation and aggressive interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve.

    Coinbase has been especially hit, with its shares plunging 74% year-to-date, amid a slide in the prices of bitcoin and other digital currencies. Bitcoin briefly tumbled below $26,000 on Thursday, its lowest level since December 2020, after the collapse of Terra, a controversial stablecoin project.
    Coinbase shares were up about 7% Tuesday.

    Coinbase, which makes most of its revenue from trading fees, reported a 27% decline in revenues in the first quarter as usage of the platform dipped. In a call with analysts, Coinbase management said the company is investing “pretty heavily” in compliance but hinted at slowing hiring as one of the “levers” it could use to cut down on costs.
    “We know this is a confusing time and that market downturns can feel scary,” Choi said Tuesday. “But … we plan for all market scenarios, and now we are starting to put some of those plans into practice.”
    She added: “We’re in a strong position — we have a solid balance sheet and we’ve been through several market downturns before, and we’ve emerged stronger every time.”
    The move makes Coinbase the latest tech firm to commit to reducing investment in hiring. Uber and Facebook parent company Meta have taken similar steps, while Robinhood is cutting its headcount by about 9%.

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    Mastercard launches tech that lets you pay with your face or hand

    Mastercard on Tuesday launched a program that allows retailers to offer biometric payment methods, like facial recognition and fingerprint scanning.
    Users can authenticate a payment by showing their face or the palm of their hand instead of swiping their card.
    The technology could one day help with the development of payments infrastructure for the “metaverse,” an executive said.

    Mastercard’s biometric checkout technology lets users pay by scanning their face or palm.
    Mastercard

    Mastercard is piloting new technology that lets shoppers make payments with just their face or hand.
    The company on Tuesday launched a program for retailers to offer biometric payment methods, like facial recognition and fingerprint scanning. At checkout, users will be able to authenticate their payment by showing their face or the palm of their hand instead of swiping their card.

    The program has already gone live in five St Marche grocery stores in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Mastercard says it plans to roll it out globally later this year.
    “All the research that we’ve done has told us that consumers love biometrics,” Ajay Bhalla, Mastercard’s president of cyber and intelligence, told CNBC.
    “They want making a payment at a store to be as convenient as opening their phone.”
    About 1.4 billion people are expected to use facial recognition technology to authenticate a payment by 2025, more than doubling from 671 million in 2020, according to a forecast from Juniper Research.

    How does it work?

    To sign up on Mastercard, you take a picture of your face or scan your fingerprint to register it with an app. This is done either on your smartphone or at a payment terminal. You can then add a credit card, which gets linked to your biometric data.

    It’s similar to tech that’s being trialed by Amazon in the U.S.
    Mastercard says it plans to bring the program to the U.S., Europe, the Middle East and Asia at a later date.
    In the long run, Mastercard’s vision is to make the tech “globally interoperable,” Bhalla said. “So once you’ve stored your credentials, you could use this anywhere.”
    The feature could integrate with loyalty schemes and make personalized recommendations based on previous purchases, Mastercard said.

    Is it safe?

    The use of biometric information for payments raises a host of concerns around privacy and how the data gets collected
    For its part, Mastercard says all the data customers enter into its system is encrypted in such a way that ensures their privacy isn’t compromised.
    When you enrol, your face or fingerprint scan is replaced with a “token” — a random string of alphanumeric characters — and then linked to your payment card. 
    Mastercard said it has created a set of standards to ensure users’ data is protected. The company is working with several other firms to launch the feature, including Fujitsu, NEC, Payface, Aurus, PaybyFace and PopID.

    Preparing for the ‘metaverse’

    Mastercard’s biometric tools could one day help with the development of payments infrastructure for the “metaverse,” according to Bhalla.
    “What we are working towards is the metaverse,” he said.
    The metaverse refers to a hypothetical virtual world where users can work, trade or socialize. The term has attracted lots of buzz in Silicon Valley thanks to Facebook’s rebrand to Meta last year.
    At a media briefing in London, Mastercard showed off an augmented reality headset that warns the wearer if they’re on a potentially fraudulent e-commerce site. Another feature the firm is experimenting with allows users to select and buy items at a virtual store using nothing but their eyes.
    These products are farther from reality than Mastercard’s biometric checkout service, but give a flavor of what to expect in the future.
    Bhalla said people could eventually try on some clothes virtually before buying, or link their non-fungible tokens — digital assets that record ownership of a virtual item on the blockchain — with their biometric identity.

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    Investor interest in equity and crypto-focused funds picking up despite the sell-off, Tifin CEO says

    Despite the recent sell-off in stocks, search activity continues to grow on Tifin’s Magnifi service.
    “People are looking for more things. We’ve seen an uptick from both consumers and advisors who are searching and asking more questions,” CEO Vinay Nair said.
    Tifin, which was founded in 2018, announced last week that it raised $109 million in a series D funding round.

    A Wall Street subway station near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, on Monday, Jan. 3, 2022.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Search interest for stock funds remains strong despite the recent market sell-off, even in areas of the market that have cooled off significantly, according to trends seen by Tifin.
    Tifin is a financial information platform founded by Vinay Nair, a fintech investor and entrepreneur. One of Tifin’s offerings is Magnifi, a search engine product for financial advisors and individual investors to more easily find and compare stock funds.

    Nair told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Tuesday that, despite the recent sell-off in stocks, search activity continues to grow on Magnifi.
    “People are looking for more things. We’ve seen an uptick from both consumers and advisors who are searching and asking more questions,” Nair said.

    The recent searches seem to be focused on three topics, Nair said: funds with exposure to crypto, climate and ESG-focused funds, and funds with strong returns.
    The crypto market has been hit particularly hard in the recent drop for risk assets, and there are no pure-play bitcoin ETFs on the market in the U.S. However, Nair said that investors seem to be interested in how fund managers who were previously bullish on crypto have responded to the sell-off.
    “It seems that from the searches, there is interest in funds and fund managers that hold significant crypto-related holdings, Coinbase being an example. And in particular, there are searches that are asking are fund managers increasing the holdings of Coinbase, or increasing the holdings of crypto,” Nair said.

    The data could be seen as evidence of investor resilience in the face of a brutal sell-off that’s pushed the Nasdaq 28% off its record.
    Tifin, which was founded in 2018, announced last week that it raised $109 million in a series D funding round despite the tough environment for funding given the Nasdaq bear market. The company counts Franklin Templeton, J.P. Morgan and Hamilton Lane as investors. The series D valued the company at more than $800 million.
    Even though search interest has seen continued strength, follow-through purchases have grown more slowly, Nair said. However, investors and advisors can use Magnifi for window-shopping while then actually making trades on a different platform.

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    Investors withdraw over $7 billion from tether, raising fresh fears about stablecoin's backing

    Tether’s circulating supply has slipped from about $83 billion a week ago to less than $76 billion on Tuesday, according to data from CoinGecko.
    The so-called stablecoin slipped below its intended $1 peg Thursday amid panic over the collapse of rival token terraUSD.
    The situation has once again placed the subject of the reserves behind tether under the spotlight.

    Tether has faced repeated calls for a full audit of its reserves.
    Justin Tallis | AFP via Getty Images

    Investors have withdrawn more than $7 billion from tether since it briefly dropped from its dollar peg, raising fresh questions about the reserves underpinning the world’s largest stablecoin.
    Tether’s circulating supply has slipped from about $83 billion a week ago to less than $76 billion on Tuesday, according to data from CoinGecko.

    The so-called stablecoin is meant to always be worth $1. But on Thursday, its price slipped as low as 95 cents amid panic over the collapse of a rival token called terraUSD.
    Most stablecoins are backed by fiat reserves, the idea being that they have enough collateral in case users decide to withdraw their funds. But a new breed of “algorithmic” stablecoins like terraUSD, or UST, attempt to base their dollar peg on code. That’s been put to the test lately as investors have soured on cryptocurrencies.
    Previously, Tether claimed all its tokens were backed 1-to-1 by dollars stored in a bank. However, after a settlement with the New York attorney general, the company revealed it relied on a range of other assets — including commercial paper, a form of short-term, unsecured debt issued by companies — to support its token.
    The situation has once again placed the subject of the reserves behind tether under the spotlight. When Tether last disclosed its reserve breakdown, cash made up around $4.2 billion of its assets. The vast majority — $34.5 billion — consisted of unidentified Treasury bills with a maturity of less than three months, while $24.2 billion of its holdings was in commercial paper.
    These “attestations” produced by Tether each quarter are signed off by MHA Cayman, a Cayman Islands-based firm which has only three employees, according to its LinkedIn profile.

    Tether has faced repeated calls for a full audit of its reserves. In July 2021, the company told CNBC it would produce one in a matter of “months.” It has still not done so.

    Tether was not immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC for this article.
    Responding to a Twitter user who urged Tether to release a full audit, Paolo Ardoino, the company’s chief technology officer, insisted its token was “fully backed” and had redeemed $7 billion in the past 48 hours.
    “We can keep going if the market wants, we have all the liquidity to handle big redemptions and pay all 1-to-1,” he said.
    In a further tweet, Ardoino said Tether is still working on an audit. “Hopefully regulators will push more auditing firms to be more crypto friendly,” he said.
    The destabilization of tokens which have the sole purpose of maintaining a stable price has rattled regulators on either side of the Atlantic. Last week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned of the risks posed to financial stability if stablecoins are left to grow unfettered by regulation, and urged lawmakers to approve regulation of the sector by the end of 2022.
    In Europe, Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said the turmoil in crypto markets recently should be taken as a “wake-up call” for global regulators. Cryptocurrencies could disrupt the financial system if left unregulated, Villeroy said — particularly stablecoins, which he added were “somewhat misnamed.”
    Meanwhile, European Central Bank Executive Board Member Fabio Panetta said stablecoins like tether are “vulnerable to runs,” referring to “bank runs” where clients flee a financial institution en masse. The European Union is planning to bring stablecoins under strict regulatory oversight with new rules known as the Markets in Crypto-assets Regulation, or MiCA for short.
    Frances Coppola, an independent economist, explained it’s crypto exchanges — not retail investors — that are pulling billions of dollars out of Tether in wholesale transactions. To redeem tethers for dollars on Tether, clients must make a minimum withdrawal of $100,000, according to the company’s website.
    “Its customers really are the exchanges,” Coppola said. “Then the exchanges sell tokens to traders, dabblers and small investors.”
    Tether is a crucial part of the crypto market, facilitating billions of dollars worth of trades every day. Investors often park their cash with the token in times of heightened volatility in cryptocurrencies.
    Monsur Hussain, head of financial institutions research at Fitch Ratings, said Tether would have “few difficulties” in selling down its Treasury holdings.
    But the source of those holdings is unclear. In a recent interview with the Financial Times, Tether’s technology chief refused to provide details on its Treasury holdings, saying the company doesn’t “want to give our secret sauce.”
    Anxiety surrounding tether appears to have boosted demand for rival tokens like Circle’s USDC and Binance’s BUSD, whose respective market values have increased around 8% and 4% in the past week. Experts said that’s because these tokens are deemed “safer” than tether.
    While not yet large enough to cause disruption in U.S. money markets, Tether could eventually reach a size where its owning of U.S. Treasurys becomes “really scary,” Carol Alexander, a professor of finance at Sussex University, said.
    “Suppose you go down the line and, instead of $80 billion, we’ve got $200 billion, and most of that is in liquid U.S. government securities,” she said. “Then a crash in tether would have a substantial impact on U.S. money markets and would just tip the whole world into recession.”

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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Walmart, Home Depot, Citigroup and more

    Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:
    Walmart (WMT) – Walmart slumped 7% in premarket trading after missing bottom-line expectations for the first quarter. The retail giant earned $1.30 per share, 18 cents a share below estimates as inflationary pressures offset the positive impact of better-than-expected sales.

    Home Depot (HD) – Home Depot added 2.7% in the premarket after the home improvement retailer reported better-than-expected profit, revenue and comparable sales for the first quarter, while also raising its full-year forecast. Home Depot earned $4.09 per share for the quarter, compared to a consensus estimate of $3.68 a share.
    Citigroup (C) – Citi rallied 5.4% in the premarket following news that Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) took a nearly $3 billion stake in the bank during the first quarter. Berkshire’s latest 13-F filing also showed that the company sold nearly all of an $8.3 billion stake in Verizon (VZ), whose shares fell 1%.
    United Airlines (UAL) – United Airlines shares rallied 4.6% in premarket action after the airline raised its current-quarter revenue forecast, saying it expects its busiest summer since before the pandemic began.
    Twitter (TWTR) – Twitter fell 1% in the premarket as Tesla CEO Elon Musk continues to cast doubt on whether his deal to buy Twitter for $54.20 per share will be completed. Musk is suggesting that he could seek a lower price, saying there could be at least four times the number of spam or fake accounts than the company has said.
    Take-Two Interactive (TTWO) – Take-Two jumped 4.9% in the premarket despite a quarterly miss in its key bookings metric as well as weaker-than-expected guidance. Analysts have pointed to a history of conservative guidance from the video game maker, and are also expecting a more upbeat outlook once its pending acquisition of Zynga (ZNGA) closes.

    JD.com (JD) – JD.com surged 9% after beating top-line and bottom-line estimates for its latest quarter, as the China-based e-commerce giant saw increased demand amid new Covid-related lockdowns. JD.com is also among tech stocks benefiting from hopes for relaxed regulatory curbs on tech companies, along with Pinduoduo (PDD), up 8.6%, and Baidu (BIDU), gaining 4.1%.
    Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) – Tencent Music shares jumped 6.5% in premarket trading, despite a 15% slide in quarterly revenue. Tencent Music shares are also benefiting from those hopes for looser regulatory curbs.
    Lordstown Motors (RIDE) – Lordstown CFO Adam Kroll said doubts about the electric vehicle maker’s ability to stay in business will remain in place until it secures more funding. Lordstown originally issued a “going concern” warning in June 2021. The stock fell 1.8% in premarket trading.

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    22. Tala

    The 2022 CNBC Disruptors are 50 private companies growing and innovating through a challenging market and changed world, while inspiring change in their larger, incumbent competitors.

    Founder: Shivani Siroya (CEO)Launched: 2014Headquarters: Santa Monica, CaliforniaFunding: $362.1 millionValuation: $800 million (PitchBook)Key technologies: Machine learningIndustry: FintechPrevious appearances on Disruptor 50 List: 2 (No. 20 in 2021)

    Persephone Kavallines

    Fintech start-up Tala is continuing its mission to improve the financial health of underserved and underbanked populations.

    Founded in 2011 by Shivani Siroya, the Santa Monica-based company uses its mobile platform to provide access to loans ranging from $10 to $500 to people in India, Mexico, the Philippines, and India. Using its Android app to create a credit profile for a user by looking at their texts, merchant transactions and other behavioral data to create a risk profile, Tala looks to approve loans within minutes compared to legacy banks or online lenders, who often rely on a credit score or a financial history check to determine eligibility.
    In October, Tala closed a $145 million Series E funding round to further expand its borrowing, savings and money management options. At that time, Tala said it had lent more than $2.7 billion to more than six million people.
    The company has raised more than $350 million in venture funding from investors including PayPal Ventures, GV, and Revolution Growth.

    More coverage of the 2022 CNBC Disruptor 50

    “From the very beginning we’ve been very intentionally focused on building a global platform that’s truly scalable across these regions, but that also has the ability to be localized,” Siroya said during a CNBC “TechCheck” livestream last October.
    That new funding round is aiding Tala in a crypto push. In May 2021, it partnered with Visa to build a platform where users could buy cryptocurrencies, starting with digital currency USDC. Tala is now allowing users to send money across borders using the cryptocurrency.

    It also furthers Tala’s overall goal of becoming the primary financial account for the global underbanked, a path that Siroya says isn’t about competing with banks but rather creating a financial system that works for everyone.
    “There’s a lot of leakage around the financial system, especially for the underserved. They have to spend a lot of time going to physical locations, there’s money being spent on transportation, and then there’s additional fees to actually go get their money and use it,” Siroya said.
    “So we’re really looking to ensure that they have a safe place to more efficiently use their money, and that’s what we’re thinking about when it comes to crypto: how can we use this technology to really ensure that we’re supporting the essential movement of money.”

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    Some factories might leave China, but in the grand scheme of things it doesn't matter much

    China’s tight Covid controls have reignited conversations about moving supply chains out of the country.
    “From China’s perspective, the movement out of local manufacturing is not going to be significant enough to really alter the nature of China’s role in the overall supply chain,” Vishrut Rana, Singapore-based economist at S&P Global Ratings, said in a phone interview.
    For the first four months of the year, foreign direct investment into China rose by 26.1% year-on-year to $74.47 billion, China’s Ministry of Commerce said, with that from the U.S. up by more than 50%.

    China still holds the cards for global supply chains, whether or not Covid lockdowns frustrate businesses in the near term. An employee works on the production line of the screens for 5G smartphones at a factory on May 13, 2022 in Ganzhou, Jiangxi Province of China.
    Zhu Haipeng | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    BEIJING — China still holds the cards for global supply chains, whether or not Covid lockdowns frustrate businesses in the near term.
    Companies and analysts have discussed moving factories out of China for years, especially since labor costs have climbed and U.S.-China trade tensions worsened.

    The pandemic has reignited those conversations. Foreign businesses talk about how executives can easily travel to Southeast Asia factories, but not China. Some point to surging exports from Vietnam as an indicator that supply chains are leaving China.
    “Supply chain diversification is quite tricky because people always talk about it, and boardrooms love to discuss it, but often at the end of the day people find it’s difficult to implement,” said Nick Marro, global trade leader at The Economist Intelligence Unit.
    When businesses had those discussions in 2020, it turned out that “China was able to remain open, while Malaysia, Vietnam were going offline,” Marro said. “Really, the critical factor right now is how China plans on maintaining these [Covid] controls as the rest of the world opens up.”

    China’s so-called zero-Covid strategy of swift lockdowns helped the country quickly return to growth in 2020. However, implementation of those measures has since tightened, especially this year as China faces a resurgence of Covid in Shanghai and other parts of the country.

    ‘Significant’ interest in Vietnam

    By the numbers, China’s exports rose by 3.9% in April from a year earlier, the slowest pace since a 0.18% increase in June 2020, according to official data accessed through Wind Information.

    Vietnam in contrast saw exports jump by 30.4% in April from a year ago, following a nearly 19.1% year-on-year increase in March, Wind showed.
    The level of manufacturing interest in Vietnam is “very significant,” Vishrut Rana, Singapore-based economist at S&P Global Ratings, said in a phone interview. “Vietnam has emerged as a very key supply chain node for consumer electronics.”

    China still remains at the very center of the electronics network in APAC.

    Vishrut Rana
    Economist, S&P Global Ratings

    But Vietnam’s exports totaled $33.26 billion in April, or about one-eighth of China’s $273.62 billion in global exports that month, according to Wind.
    “From China’s perspective, the movement out of local manufacturing is not going to be significant enough to really alter the nature of China’s role in the overall supply chain,” Rana said. “China still remains at the very center of the electronics network in APAC.”

    Businesses still invest in China

    For the first four months of the year, foreign direct investment into China rose by 26.1% year-on-year to $74.47 billion, China’s Ministry of Commerce said Thursday. During that time, investment from Germany jumped by 80.4%, while that from the U.S. rose by 53.2%.
    In contrast, Vietnam saw a 56% year-on-year drop in foreign direct investment to $3.7 billion in the first four months of the year, Wind data showed. Foreign direct investment from the U.S. fell by 14%.

    The latest Covid lockdowns in China have slowed the ability of trucks to transport goods throughout China, while keeping many factories in the Shanghai region at limited or no production for weeks. Pictured here is a textile company’s workshop in the nearby Jiangsu province.
    CFOTO | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    “It is very difficult to match the scale and scope of China’s supply chains outside China at the moment,” Rana said. Only supply chains for very specific products — like semiconductors or electric vehicle parts —might be moving to Vietnam, Malaysia or other countries, he added.
    China’s supply chain dominance, built up over the years, is also supporting new business models.
    One of the better known is Shein. Backed by funds such as Sequoia Capital China, the company has combined big data analytics and its supply chain network in China to become an international e-commerce giant in low-cost fast fashion.
    “China’s supply chain advantage is not just based on labor cost,” James Liang, managing partner at Skyline Ventures, said in Mandarin translated by CNBC.

    According to his analysis, at least 20% of the selling price of apparel and furniture producers go into labor costs, versus just 5% for electronics producers.
    China’s advantage is the benefit of having supply chain hubs, which in Liang’s view pave the way for businesses to boost efficiency by integrating all their suppliers onto one digital system.
    He said his firm invested $5 million in October into a furniture company called Povison, which is trying to replicate Shein’s model for clothing. Additional investment plans have been delayed due to Covid-related travel restrictions, he said.

    ‘A story of hesitation’

    The latest Covid lockdowns have also slowed the ability of trucks to transport goods throughout China, while keeping many factories in the Shanghai region at limited or no production for weeks. That’s on top of Beijing’s policy since 2020 requiring two- or three-week quarantine upon arrival in China — if the traveler can book one of the few flights in.
    Shifting operations out of China is difficult, but “what our survey is indicating is there will be less investment into China and more investment into Southeast Asia,” Joerg Wuttke, president of the EU Chamber of Commerce in China, said during a webinar.

    He noted how it is now far easier to fly executives to Singapore or other countries in the region, than to China.
    As a result of the latest Covid controls, nearly a quarter of 372 respondents to the EU Chamber of Commerce in China’s survey in late April said they were considering shifting current or planned investments to other markets.
    But 77% said they didn’t have such plans. A survey of U.S. businesses in China found similar trends.
    Those survey results indicate that “companies don’t want to quit the market, but they don’t know what to do,” said the EIU’s Marro. “Right now it’s more a story of hesitation.”
    “Foreign companies are going to be upset about these [zero-Covid] policies, but at the end of the day there’s not many companies that are going to jeopardize their position in a decades-long market based on a temporary shock,” he said.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    Even companies like Starbucks, which suspended guidance due to Covid unpredictability, said it still expects its China business will become bigger than the U.S. in the long term.
    Many analysts expect China may begin to relax its zero-Covid policy after a political reshuffle in the fall.
    When asked Thursday about the EU Chamber’s survey findings, China’s Ministry of Commerce only noted the global impact of the pandemic to supply chains. The ministry also said China would improve its foreign investment services and increase opportunities for foreign businesses.
    “Reconfiguring supply chains is not as easy as flipping a light switch on and off,” said Stephen Olson, senior research fellow at the Hinrich Foundation.
    “Of course, the chessboard would be reconfigured if lockdowns drag on indefinitely,” he said. “In that case, pressure will build on companies to consider shifting supply patterns, and the economic and commercial implications of doing so will look a lot more favorable.”

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    Home affordability at 2007 bubble levels, but crash is unlikely: Blackstone's Joe Zidle

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    A major Wall Street firm is drawing a striking parallel to the housing bubble.
    Blackstone’s Joe Zidle calls homes almost as unaffordable as the 2007 peak. Yet, he believes a crash is unlikely due to a major difference: Most owners aren’t using their homes like an ATM.

    “That caused so many people to go upside down,” the firm’s chief investment strategist told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Monday. “The value of what they owed was greater than the value of their home.”
    Unlike the housing bust, Zidle adds home equity is at an all-time high and household balance sheets are strong.
    “You haven’t had overbuilding. You haven’t had a drop in credit or lending standards,” he noted.
    Blackstone is known for buying scores of distressed residential properties tied to the 2008 financial crisis. It’s still a major player in real estate, with investments in rentals, the rent-to-buy market and student housing.
    “Because you have very little excess in housing, I think you end up having less risk,” he said.

    Plus, Zidle cites a strong jobs market.
    “Historically, housing ends up being more highly correlated to labor markets than it is to mortgage rates,” he said. “As long as the jobs market remains relatively healthy, I think housing will as well.”
    His forecast comes as Wall Street gets ready for key reports this week on the consumer and housing. Investors will get earnings from major retailers including Walmart, Home Depot, Lowe’s and Target. Plus, numbers on homebuilder sentiment and home sales are due.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Zidle’s call reflects a 12-month time frame. Within that horizon, he sees the Federal Reserve hiking interest rates deeper into next year than the Street anticipates due to persistent inflation.
    “Ultimately, the Fed is going to have to hike interest rates until something breaks,” added Zidle. “When we do get to a point where something breaks, I don’t think it’s housing.”
    He expects the benchmark 10-year Treasury Note yield to hit 3.5%. It’s a level he expects the housing market to handle. On Monday, it was around 2.8%, up 90% so far this year.
    “You might see home prices generally flatten out. You may have pockets of weakness where home prices in some regions might fall,” Zidle said. “But the idea of having a national and a prolonged drop in housing as the economy eventually rolls over, I think is still a relatively low probability.”
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