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    The world's biggest stablecoin has dropped below its $1 peg

    Watch Daily: Monday – Friday, 3 PM ET

    Tether sank to as low as 95 cents on some crypto exchanges Thursday morning.
    It’s meant to be pegged 1-to-1 to the U.S. dollar.
    Tether’s decline came after terraUSD, a different stablecoin, plummeted below 30 cents.

    Crypto firm Tether has been reducing the amount of commercial paper in its reserves.
    Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Tether, the world’s largest stablecoin, broke below its $1 peg Thursday amid panic in the crypto market.
    The token sank to as low as 95 cents on some exchanges at around 3:15 a.m. ET. It’s meant to be pegged 1-to-1 to the U.S. dollar. In the afternoon it traded at $0.998, according to Coin Metrics.

    Tether’s initial decline came after terraUSD, another stablecoin, plummeted below 30 cents Wednesday, which led to fears of a possible market contagion. TerraUSD, or USD is different to tether in that it relies on code rather than funds held in a reserve to support its supposed peg to the greenback.
    Vijay Ayyar, head of international at crypto exchange Luno, said the move by tether was likely “speculation-driven fear” resulting from the fallout of UST’s plunge.
    “The environment is ripe for such news events to cause ripples through the markets as we can see,” he told CNBC.

    Nicolas Bonnet, crypto operations manager at French broker Aplo, said some traders were exploiting the drop in tether through arbitrage plays — essentially buying the token for less than $1 and then redeeming it for a dollar.
    “Early this morning, liquidity pools allowing you to swap tether for other things were almost empty,” he said.

    “That might have created a spiral effect of short-term panic by people seeing that tether was trading below the peg and having no quick way to exit tether.”
    Stablecoins are kind of like the bank accounts of the crypto world, designed to serve as a sound store of value investors can turn to in times of market volatility. Tether and USDC, the two biggest stablecoins, are meant to be backed by a sufficient amount of money held in a reserve to ensure depositors can receive their dollars when they want to make a withdrawal.

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    But there have long been concerns about whether tether actually has enough assets to back up its intended $1 peg. Tether, the company of the same name, previously said all its tokens were backed 1-to-1 by dollars held in a reserve.
    However, after a settlement with the New York attorney general, it was revealed that Tether relied on a range of other assets including commercial paper, a form of short-term, unsecured debt, to back its token. Tether has since reduced the amount of commercial paper in its reserves and says it plans to lower its holdings further over time.
    Earlier Thursday, Tether Chief Technology Officer Paolo Ardoino insisted tether holders would always receive $1 when redeeming their tokens.
    Around 300 million tether tokens were withdrawn in the last 24 hours “without a sweat drop,” he tweeted.
    Tether later issued a statement saying it had returned to “business as usual amid some expected market panic.” The company said it is on track to process more than $2 billion in redemptions Thursday.
    “Tether has maintained its stability through multiple black swan events and highly volatile market conditions,” the firm said.
    “Even in its darkest days Tether has never once failed to honor a redemption request from any of its verified customers. Tether will continue to do so which has always been its practice.”
    Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies took another dive on Thursday as investors reacted to fears around rising inflation and a deteriorating economic outlook, as well as tether decoupling from its dollar peg. More

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    More than $200 billion erased from entire crypto market in a day as sell-off intensifies

    Watch Daily: Monday – Friday, 3 PM ET

    The price of bitcoin plunged below $26,000 on Thursday, hitting its lowest level in 16 months.
    Ether, the second-biggest digital currency, tanked below $2,000 per coin.
    The collapse of stablecoin terraUSD has led to fears of a broader market contagion.

    Bitcoin fell below $26,000 for the first time in 16 months, amid a broader sell-off in cryptocurrencies that erased more than $200 billion from the entire market in a single day.
    The price of bitcoin plunged as low as $25,401.29 on Thursday, according to Coin Metrics. That marks the first time the cryptocurrency has sunk below the $26,000 level since Dec. 26, 2020.

    Bitcoin has since pared its losses and was last trading at $28,569.25, down 2.9%.
    Ether, the second-biggest digital currency, tanked to as low as $1,704.05 per coin. It’s the first time the token has fallen beneath the $2,000 mark since June 2021. Ether was last down 8.8% at a price of $1,937.88.
    Investors are fleeing from cryptocurrencies at a time when stock markets have plunged from the highs of the coronavirus pandemic on fears over soaring prices and a deteriorating economic outlook. U.S. inflation data out Wednesday showed prices for goods and services jumping 8.3% in April, higher than expected by analysts and close to the highest level in 40 years.

    Also weighing on traders’ minds is the downfall of embattled stablecoin protocol Terra. TerraUSD, or UST, is supposed to mirror the value of the dollar. But it plummeted to less than 30 cents Wednesday, shaking investors’ confidence in the so-called decentralized finance space.
    Stablecoins are like the bank accounts of the barely regulated crypto world. Digital currency investors often turn to them for safety in times of volatility in the markets. But UST, an “algorithmic” stablecoin that’s underpinned by code rather than cash held in a reserve, has struggled to maintain a stable value as holders bolted for the exits en masse.

    On Thursday, UST was trading at about 41 cents, still well below its intended $1 peg. Luna, another Terra token that has a floating price and is meant to absorb UST price shocks, erased 99% of its value and was last worth just 4 cents.

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    Investors are scared about the implications for bitcoin. Luna Foundation Guard — a fund set up by Terra creator Do Kwon — had amassed a multibillion-dollar pile of bitcoin to help support UST in times of crisis. The fear is that Luna Foundation Guard sells a large portion of its bitcoin holdings to shore up its ailing stablecoin. That’s a risky gamble — not least because bitcoin is itself an incredibly volatile asset.
    The fallout from Terra’s collapse led to fears of a market contagion. Tether, the world’s biggest stablecoin, also dropped below its $1 peg Thursday, at one point sinking to 95 cents. Economists have long feared that tether may not have the required amount of reserves to bolster its dollar peg in the event of mass withdrawals. More

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    Powell says he can't guarantee a 'soft landing' as the Fed looks to control inflation

    Fed Chairman Jerome Powell cautioned Thursday that getting inflation under control won’t be easy.
    “Nonetheless, we think there are pathways … for us to get there,” he said in an interview with Marketplace published Thursday.

    US Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference in Washington, DC, on May 4, 2022.
    Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

    Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warned Thursday that getting inflation under control could cause some economic pain but remains his top priority.
    Powell said he couldn’t promise a so-called soft landing for the economy as the Fed raises interest rates to tamp down price increases running near their fastest pace in more than 40 years.

    “So a soft landing is, is really just getting back to 2% inflation while keeping the labor market strong. And it’s quite challenging to accomplish that right now, for a couple of reasons,” the central bank chief said in an interview with Marketplace.
    He noted that with a tight labor market pushing up wages, avoiding a recession that often follows aggressive policy tightening will be a challenge.
    “So it will be challenging, it won’t be easy. No one here thinks that it will be easy,” he said. “Nonetheless, we think there are pathways … for us to get there.”
    The remarks were published the same day the Senate overwhelmingly confirmed Powell for a second term, a move that came nearly seven months after President Joe Biden first submitted the nomination.

    On top of the list for his second-term priorities will be to control price inflation that in April ran at an 8.3% annual rate, just off a more than 40-year high posted in March.

    The Fed last week approved a half percentage point interest rate increase that followed a quarter-point hike in March. Markets expect the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee to hike another half-point in June and to keep increasing benchmark rates through the end of the year.

    For his part, Powell said he understands the added pain that higher rates may cause, but said the Fed needs to act aggressively.
    “Our goal, of course, is to get inflation back down to 2% without having the economy go into recession, or, to put it this way, with the labor market remaining fairly strong,” he said. “That’s what we’re trying to achieve. I think the one thing we really cannot do is to fail to restore price stability, though. Nothing in the economy works, the economy doesn’t work for anybody without price stability.”

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    Powell has come under some criticism for the Fed’s delay in raising rates and halting its bond-buying program even as inflation mounted. Moreover, at his post-meeting news conference last week, he made remarks that were interpreted as taking more aggressive steps, like a 75 basis point increase, off the table.
    He said in the Marketplace interview that he’s “not sure how much difference it would have made” to act more quickly, adding, “we did the best we could.”
    “Now, we see the picture clearly and we’re determined to use our tools to get us back to price stability,” Powell said.

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    Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell confirmed by Senate for a second term

    The Senate voted overwhelmingly Thursday to give Jerome Powell a second term as Federal Reserve chairperson.
    A 69-year-old former investment banker, Powell faced two major crises in his first term, the Covid pandemic and the 40-year high in inflation.

    Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at a news conference following a Federal Open Market Committee meeting on May 04, 2022 in Washington, DC. Powell announced the Federal Reserve is raising interest rates by a half-percentage point to combat record high inflation. 
    Win Mcnamee | Getty Images

    As he and his colleagues engage in a bruising inflation battle, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell found out Thursday that he will be serving another term.
    The Senate voted 80-19 to give Powell a second four-year run at the central bank’s helm, ending a long-delayed vote that has been stewing since President Joe Biden nominated the 69-year-old former investment banker back in November.

    Delays had come as senators deliberated over other nominees Biden had made for the central bank. Sarah Bloom Raskin withdrew her name following controversy over her appointment, while Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson were only recently confirmed as governors.
    “Chairman Powell’s leadership has helped spur economic growth while preserving the best capitalized banking system in American history,” Sen. Patrick Toomey, the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, said in a statement.

    In choosing Powell, Biden picks a policymaker first put in the position by President Donald Trump, who proceeded to mock the chair and his fellow policymakers as “boneheads” when they increased interest rates.
    Powell then found himself in the middle of one of the nation’s gravest crises when Covid-19 raged into a global pandemic in March 2020.
    He orchestrated a series of maneuvers aimed at pulling the nation out of its steepest downturn in history, using a blend of lending and market-boosting programs combined with slashing interest rates to near-zero and instituting a bond-buying program that would explode the Fed’s holdings to $9 trillion.

    More recently, Powell and the Fed have faced another crisis — the worst inflation surge since the early 1980s, with price increases running at more than 8% annually for the past two months. Powell has faced some criticism for moving too slowly to address the threat, though the Fed last week raised benchmark rates by half a percentage point, the most aggressive move in 22 years.
    In a rare digression last week, Powell addressed the public directly and said the Fed is deeply committed to bringing prices down and will use all the tools at its disposal to do so.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Carvana, GameStop, AMC, General Motors and more

    Source: NYSE

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Thursday.
    Carvana — Shares of the online used-car retailer popped 25%, alongside other heavily shorted stocks. Nearly 29% of Carvana shares available for trading are sold short, according to FactSet. The company has faced negative sentiment on Wall Street recently, with downgrades this month from Stifel, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

    Tapestry — Shares soared 15.5% after the luxury company behind Coach and Kate Spade reported that it expects Covid-related shutdowns in China to ease in June. Tapestry also reported an adjusted quarterly profit of 51 cents per share, which topped a consensus estimate from Refinitiv.
    GameStop, AMC Entertainment — Two of the main players in last year’s meme trade were surging again on Thursday. Shares of GameStop and AMC were up 10% and 8%, respectively, and had been up significantly more earlier in the session. There was no obvious news driving the moves, which may have been due in part to traders who were short the stocks covering their positions.
    General Motors, Ford — The legacy auto stocks were under pressure on Thursday after Wells Fargo downgraded both to underweight from overweight, warning that the high costs of producing electric vehicles would hurt profits in the years ahead. Ford lost 3%, while GM dropped 4.6%.
    WeWork — Shares jumped 10.4% after the coworking space company posted its first-quarter results. WeWork reported an adjusted earnings per share loss of 57 cents on revenue of $765 million. That loss was 37% lower than in the previous quarter.
    Rivian, Lucid — Shares of several electric vehicle companies surged in midday trading in unexplained trading. Rivian’s stock price soared 18% after the electric vehicle maker on Wednesday said it’s on track to build 25,000 vehicles this year, as well as a first-quarter loss that was slightly less than analysts were expecting. Lucid’s stock price jumped 13.2%.

    Sonos — Shares jumped 14.3% after the of high-end audio products maker reported better-than-expected revenue for its most recent quarter amid continued high demand. Revenue for the quarter came in at $399 million, compared to a Refinitiv forecast of $350 million.
    Synchrony Financial — Synchrony Financial’s stock price came under pressure following a downgrade from Wolfe Research. The research firm downgraded shares to underperform from peer perform, saying credit card stocks will see continued pressure from recession risks. Shares dropped 6.5%.
    Bumble — The dating app operator’s shares jumped 26.8% after the company reported $211.2 million in revenue for the first quarter, which exceeded analysts’ estimates of $208.3 million, according to Refinitiv. The company also said it saw a 7.2% increase in paying users for the quarter.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Hannah Miao and Jesse Pound contributed reporting.

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    Hedge fund winners and losers emerge in brutal tech-driven sell-off

    Visit cnbcevents.com/delivering-alpha to register for this year’s conference on September 28, 2022.

    The stock market is going through a period of uncertainty and volatility, but some sectors could benefit from that.
    Timothy A. Clary | AFP | Getty Images

    (Click here to subscribe to the Delivering Alpha newsletter.)
    A wide divergence of performance has formed in the hedge fund industry amid the stock rout on Wall Street this year.

    Tech-focused investors like Brad Gerstner and Tiger Global are getting crushed as growth stocks became the epicenter of the market carnage in the face of rising rates. Meanwhile, some value, macro and international oriented players are reaping sizable gains despite the market bloodbath.
    Macro funds were a standout winner in April with a 5% surge, extending its 2020 rally to 15.5% thanks to strong performance in commodity, fundamental discretionary and trend-following strategies, according to data from HFR. On the flip side, technology-heavy hedge funds were among the biggest losers last month with a near 5% loss overall, HFR data said.
    “If you owned growth stocks this year – like we did at Altimeter – you got your face ripped off,” Altimeter Capital’s CEO Gerstner said in a Twitter post Thursday. “As a hedge fund we expect to lose less than the indexes on the way down – this year we have lost more… Markets moved fast- we moved too slow.”
    Altimeter’s four biggest holdings — Snowflake, Meta, Microsoft and Uber — are all down from 20% to as much as 60% year to date. The technology sector, especially unprofitable firms and richly valued software names, have been hit the hardest as of late. The Nasdaq Composite slid more than 13% in April, dropping almost 30% from its all-time high.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Chase Coleman’s growth-focused flagship fund at Tiger Global tumbled 15% last month, pushing its 2022 rout to 44% and wiping out nearly all of its gains since 2019, according to Bloomberg News. Its biggest holdings as of the end of 2021 included JD.com, Microsoft and Sea Ltd, which are all down double digits this year.

    Still, many players managed to dodge the brutal sell-off and overcome the extreme volatility on Wall Street.
    Citadel’s multistrategy flagship fund Wellington rallied 7.5% last month, bringing its year-to-date performance to 12.7%.
    New York-based activist and event-driven hedge fund manager Coast Capital is also beating the market this year as they looked for out-of-favor value names in Europe. Its Engaged fund is up 4% in April, advancing over 15% in 2022, according to a person familiar with the returns.
    “Some of these companies we buy have lower valuations and lower share prices than they did in March 2009,” said James Rasteh, CIO of Coast. “When we turn our companies around, there’s often an important improvement in the margins and profitability of the companies. We make money even in declining markets.”
    The overall hedge fund community dipped 0.9% in April, compared to the S&P 500’s near 9% loss for its worst month since March 2020, according to HFR. The S&P 500 is edging closer to bear market territory, down 18% from its record high, as the Federal Reserve’s aggressive tightening spurred recession worries. More

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    Franklin Templeton CEO Jenny Johnson says active management pays off during extreme volatility

    Visit cnbcevents.com/delivering-alpha to register for this year’s conference on September 28, 2022.

    (Click here to subscribe to the Delivering Alpha newsletter.)
    With $1.5 trillion in assets, Franklin Templeton is among America’s top 10 asset managers, and growing. Over the last few years, the firm has acquired asset manager Legg Mason, custom index provider O’Shaughnessy Asset Management, and secondary private equity investor Lexington Partners, among others. President and CEO Jenny Johnson says it doesn’t end there. She’s focused on bolt-on acquisitions in technology and alternatives to fill product gaps in Franklin Templeton’s business. 

    Johnson sat down with CNBC’s Delivering Alpha newsletter in an exclusive interview where she also discussed the firm’s active management strategy and made the case for implementing blockchain technology. 
     (The below has been edited for length and clarity. See above for full video.)
    Leslie Picker: I want to kick things off on the macro front, because there are a lot of questions out there. With such an inflection point for inflation and for monetary policy for factor-based investing, volatility, what are you seeing within your vast, diverse portfolio right now?
    Jenny Johnson: It’s no question, it’s a difficult time. And I would say the good news is, in times of great volatility, active management pays off. And we’re really an active management – 1.5 trillion – really an active management. So, it’s times like these that you find value. I think the challenge is, there is a lot of mixed signals. You have the obvious headwinds of inflation. The 50 basis points Fed raise has been the highest in 20 years and we’re looking at a couple of more coming up. I think they indicated today that we’re probably [looking at] two more increases, maybe even three, and then take a pause. So, you’re going to have this great rise in rates, you have with the war in Ukraine. I was at the Milken conference last week and sort of the scary part of that was kind of the message was the best-case scenario is almost a frozen war, which means you’re going to have an impact on energy prices for a long period of time. Food supply is going to be another headwind. And then of course, we have China’s lock down and the zero COVID policy which is affecting supply chain. So those are your big kind of headwinds. 
    And then the tailwinds is [the] consumer’s still pretty flush, probably more flushed than they were pre-COVID. So that’s good. You’ve got the big tailwinds of the demographics in Asia, you have technological innovation. And so, to be honest, what I say to people is it’s easier to swim with the tide, the way it’s flowing. So, find areas where there’s opportunity, things like as people are doing nearshoring of supply chain, trying to figure out where there’s opportunities there. I think that the technological innovation, I think things around genomics is really impressive. I think things around precision farming, as people are trying to take more control over their food supply chain, as we see it. Now, those are not in the immediate term. It’s going to take some investment, but I think you want to get behind where the opportunities are. I think Web 3.0 is another big opportunity.

    Picker: I’m curious what you’re seeing with regard to flows right now, given all of those confounding factors affecting investing right now. Are you seeing greater interest in the active products or do you see more interest in passive where people just kind of want to ride out the tide, pay a lower fee and then kind of turn back to the market maybe in a couple years or so and see how it’s done?
    Johnson: I think flows are down across the board. I think what we’ve seen is active outperforming more. Part of that is you just look at the shift to it. I mean, the NASDAQ is down more than twice as much as the Dow, so, sort of your value growth switch…but I think across the board, people are nervous. And so, you see people holding back on the fixed income side. You see people doing bank loans, floating rate, short duration, because they know rates are going to go up and obviously that’s a really difficult time for fixed income. So, to the extent they can stay, keep flexibility. Credit really matters now. Companies that have good balance sheets, good cash flow. Again, that’s why I think you don’t see the Dow down as much because they tend to be more value stocks.
    Picker: Franklin has also been quite acquisitive, recently buying Legg Mason, a large asset manager buying other alternative asset managers, a quant fund recently. How do you think about deal making in the current environment versus building out certain capacities? And do you plan to do more acquisitions in the future?
    Johnson: We’ve been very clear about our acquisition strategy, which is to really find products that fill in particular product niches that we needed to have. Now, we are very focused on the alternatives markets. They project that about 15% or 16% of the assets in the next couple of years in the asset management business will come from alternatives, but yet 46% of revenues. So, it’s an important place for us to be and today we have $210 billion, we’re a top 10 alternatives manager. But the challenge there is, you need global products. So, if you have, for example, a real estate manager that’s just focused on the U.S., it’s hard to sell that in Europe. So, if there’s product gaps we’ll fill in. We’ve already been very clear that we want to continue to grow our wealth business, fiduciary trust. And so, as we have bolt-on acquisitions, that’ll make sense there. And then finally, Fintech is very much disrupting our business and so we make investments, sometimes just investments, sometimes acquisitions in technology products. O’Shaughnessy Asset Management has a product called Canvas, which is really tax efficient, direct indexing. We think there’s a lot of growth there. And so, we really made that acquisition for that technology platform.
    Picker: I want to home in on what you’re doing in the alternative space right now because much of Franklin Templeton’s, 75 or so year history has been in the mutual fund space, serving the retail investor. And now you have over $200 billion in alternatives, which is just broadly looking to penetrate the retail space but hasn’t quite done so on a large scale yet. Do you see that as the future? Is that something that you’re looking to do with alternatives, as you as you look to grow out that part of your business?
    Johnson:  I say that my grandfather got in the business of mutual funds because the average person couldn’t participate in the equity markets. You’re talking in the 20s. And they couldn’t participate in the equity markets, so people got this idea of pooling money and allowing them to invest. Well, today, we have half the number of public equities that we did from 2000 and there are five times the number of private equity-backed companies. So, that number has gone from about 1,700 to 8,500 and the public equities has gone from about 6,500 to 3,300. So, just from an investable universe, it’s really, really important to be able to have access to alternatives and I don’t think that trend changes. And then I – if you actually look at it, companies are waiting much longer to go public, which means much of that growth opportunity in those early years is only captured in the private markets. 
    We actually got in the venture capital business because our Franklin growth equity team was looking at deals and watching as companies waited so much longer to go public, that they can allocate up to 15% of a mutual fund in illiquid assets. So, they started to get into late-stage venture and then ultimately said, well, actually, we’re located in the heart of Silicon Valley, we should actually launch our own venture funds. So, we’re in this space, because we think – and by the way, credit is the same. You don’t see banks lending in the same way as there’s been more and more regulation around capital that is tied to their loan portfolio. So, you see this great proliferation, not only of kind of commercial and corporate loans that are done on the private credit markets, but you’re actually seeing on the direct lending consumer loans. So, you have to be able – we have to think of ourselves as finding all investment opportunities and bringing those responsibly to our clients. The fact is, alternative products have a great – they’re very illiquid, so you have to responsibly figure out how you’re going to deliver those to the alternatives channel.
    Picker: In a recent interview, you said that if you were 20, and could start fresh in any business, you would build something that leverages the blockchain ecosystem. I found this fascinating, and I just want to ask you why that is. And given that you’ve already kind of made it to the pinnacle of one of the world’s largest asset managers, how you kind of see blockchain working its way and functioning within the traditional asset management space. 
    Johnson: I like to say that Bitcoin is the greatest distraction from the greatest disruption that’s happening to financial services and other industries. Because it’s – so many of the conversations go down [is this] currency like Bitcoin, going to have a place or not? And that’s – there’s great discussion to be had there but actually, the much more interesting [question] is, what can this technology do? And if you think about what blockchain is doing is, it is creating trust. If you think about what financial services is, transactions between people are transactions that require intermediaries to prove trust, a title company that, say, you actually have ownership of this. Well, blockchain can eliminate a lot of those intermediaries, and bring buyers and sellers together, and reduce the cost of a transaction. As soon as you can reduce the cost of transaction, you can fractionalize assets at a much greater level. So, for example, you can imagine taking the Empire State Building, selling it to a million people, everybody has a token. And if I want to sell to you, Leslie, I don’t have to go to the title company. It’s all built into that smart contract. So, I think blockchain will unleash a lot of the kind of locked up illiquidity in different types of assets. 
    Secondly, I think that this kind of ownership – there are people who are using it – once you have the token, you actually can create a loyalty program. So, you already see sports teams, where they’re selling off, say, a piece of the team and really what it’s doing is it’s creating a loyalty. Imagine, you could have special coaches’ meetings, or in the NFT market, artists leveraging the token to one, validate that this piece of art is actually original and authentic, but they’re also leveraging it where only those who own the token can then have these individual meetings with artists. So, it really is an interesting way. I think it dramatically reduces some of the costs in the business, but it also unlocks this desire for kind of a social connection. More

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    Goldman ‘deal guy’ behind Apple, GM cards leaves for fintech start-up iCreditWorks

    Scott Young, who was chief commercial officer of Goldman’s Marcus consumer business, will be joining the New Jersey-based start-up next month, according to iCreditWorks founder Stephen Sweeney.
    Young is credited with helping secure the bank’s Apple Card partnership in 2018 and oversaw a string of subsequent co-branding deals with companies including GM, JetBlue, AARP and Amazon.
    Before joining Goldman, Young helped Citigroup wrest the Costco card away from American Express in 2015.

    iCreditWorks CEO Scott Young, former chief commercial officer of Goldman Sachs Marcus.
    Courtesy: Goldman Sachs

    A Goldman Sachs executive known for securing some of the industry’s biggest credit card deals in recent years has left to join early stage start-up iCreditWorks, CNBC has learned.
    Scott Young, who was chief commercial officer of Goldman’s Marcus consumer business, will be joining the New Jersey-based company next month, according to iCreditWorks founder Stephen Sweeney.

    Young is the latest in a string of exits from Goldman’s consumer business sparked by the February 2021 defection of Omer Ismail, the former Marcus head who joined Walmart’s fintech start-up with a key deputy. Those departures include the former CFO and head of product for the business, and more recently the unit’s branding chief.
    Known informally at Goldman as the “deal guy,” Young joined in 2017 as its first head of partnerships, part of a wave of outside hires during the launch of the firm’s retail-banking division. He is credited with helping secure the bank’s Apple Card partnership in 2018 along with Ismail and former CEO Lloyd Blankfein, and oversaw a string of subsequent co-branding deals with the likes of GM, JetBlue, AARP and Amazon.
    Before joining Goldman, Young worked at GE, Barclays and then Citigroup, where he helped wrest the Costco card away from American Express in 2015. That was a seismic deal in the card industry, where the biggest contracts with companies including Costco, Amazon and American Airlines can make up a disproportionate share of an issuer’s business.
    At iCreditWorks, Young will be tasked with continuing to make deals.
    The start-up’s main product is a point of sale mobile app that handles the application, vetting and funding for personal loans. The initial target audience is health care and elective medicine, taking on industry leader CareCredit, a unit of Synchrony Bank.

    After that, they will move into other areas including auto and home-improvement loans, Sweeney said.
    “When you’re trying to build a disruptive platform that has wide commercial appeal, you need an executive who has the chops to make those deals happen,” Sweeney said. “As chief commercial officer at Goldman, he was at the nexus of all those transactions; sourcing, negotiating and securing deals.”
    Sweeney said that he and his partners, a group of serial entrepreneurs, have plowed more than $50 million into iCreditWorks since its founding three years ago. That influx of funds has helped Sweeney snap up banking veterans including Suresh Nair, who serves as chief information technology officer. Nair was a senior technology officer at Bank of America and helped engineer Merrill Lynch’s trading platform.
    The company recently hired Truist Financial to raise its first round of outside funding, seeking $50 million at a roughly $200 million valuation, Sweeney said.

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