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    Tencent 'exploring' a financial holding company for WeChat Pay if Chinese regulators require it

    Chinese giant Tencent is exploring whether regulators will require it to create a financial holding company to house is fintech business.
    The comments come after Bloomberg reported last week that Chinese authorities are considering requiring Tencent to include WeChat Pay in a new financial holding company.
    Setting up a financial holding company would “involve some organizational changes” but Tencent would be able to comply and it should not impact the business, President Martin Lau said.

    An image of WeChat Pay in action.
    Zhang Peng | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Chinese tech giant Tencent is exploring whether regulators will require it to create a financial holding company to house is fintech business, a top executive said on Wednesday.
    The comments come after Bloomberg reported last week that Chinese authorities are considering requiring Tencent to include WeChat Pay, its ubiquitous mobile payments service, in a new financial holding company.

    “We have been continuously exploring the establishment of the financial holding company and looking at the regulation with respect to that and whether there is a requirement for that,” Tencent President Martin Lau said on an earnings call with media Wednesday, after the firm posted its slowest revenue growth on record.
    Bloomberg, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that Tencent needs to place its banking, securities, insurance and credit-scoring services into a financial holding company that can be regulated like a traditional bank.
    The People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, has long been concerned about technology companies operating banking-like services and the perceived risks that come with that to financial stability. Tencent, via messaging app WeChat, offers services from payments to microloans. WeChat has over 1.2 billion monthly active users.

    In November, regulators suspended the public listing of Ant Group, which would have been the world’s largest, over regulatory concerns. The PBOC has asked Ant Group, which is the financial technology affiliate of e-commerce giant Alibaba, to restructure as a financial holding company.
    This month, the Chinese central bank approved the establishment of two financial holding companies.

    Tencent’s Lau said the internet giant was watching this development closely for guidance.
    “Recently there have been two financial holding company licenses that have been issued. We felt after that we should have a clearer picture on what are the criteria for inclusion into financial holding company and whether we qualify or not,” Lau said. “We are proactively engaging in that discussion.”
    The Tencent president said that the regulators are trying to “guide a healthier and more sustainable development” of the financial industry.
    Setting up a financial holding company would “involve some organizational changes” but Tencent would be able to comply and it should not impact the business, Lau added.

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    Watch UK Finance Minister Rishi Sunak's budget announcement

    [The stream is slated to start at 08:30 ET. Please refresh the page if you do not see a player above at that time.]
    U.K. Finance Minister Rishi Sunak is announcing a new government budget in his Spring Statement.

    A planned 10% increase to National Insurance (a tax on earnings) kicks in for many workers in April, while at the same time the U.K.’s energy price cap soars 54% to accommodate higher costs of oil and gas, exacerbating the squeeze on household income as consumer prices continue to head north.
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    Black box found from Boeing passenger jet that crashed in China, state media says

    The black boxes are the technical equipment on airplanes that could reveal reasons for the crash.
    Rescue workers haven’t found any survivors from this week’s crash, authorities said late Tuesday.

    Paramilitary police officers conduct a search at the site of a China Eastern Airlines plane crash in March 2022 in Tengxian county, Wuzhou city, in China’s southern Guangxi region.
    AFP | Getty Images

    BEIJING — One of the two black boxes containing data from Monday’s China Eastern Airlines plane crash has been found, Chinese state media said Wednesday.
    The black boxes are the technical equipment on airplanes that could reveal reasons for the crash.

    The box found was “heavily damaged,” state media said, noting that it was not immediately clear whether it was the one that recorded flight data or cockpit communications with air traffic controllers.
    A Boeing 737-800 flight carrying 132 people nosedived Monday afternoon in a rural, mountainous part of the southern region of Guangxi. Authorities haven’t confirmed any fatalities or shared why the crash happened.
    Rescue workers haven’t found any survivors from this week’s crash, authorities said late Tuesday.
    The plane was cruising at 29,100 feet Monday afternoon, before beginning a sharp descent that was briefly broken up by a 1,000-foot climb, according to FlightRadar24 data. In all, the plane plunged more than 25,000 feet in about two minutes.

    Within hours after the crash, Chinese President Xi Jinping ordered top officials to investigate the matter.

    Since the crash involved a U.S.-made plane, U.S. agencies and companies will also participate in the probe.
    The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it has appointed a senior air safety investigator to the China-led investigation, and that representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing and CFM will serve as technical advisors. CFM is a joint venture between U.S.-based General Electric and France-based Safran that manufactured the engines on the crashed plane, the safety board said.

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    Chinese stocks may start exiting the U.S. in two years, warns Asian Corporate Governance Association

    The delisting of U.S.-listed Chinese stocks may come in the next two to three years, according to Jamie Allen of the Asian Corporate Governance Association.
    Dual-listed Chinese stocks were recently in the spotlight after delisting fears reemerged following a U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission announcement that U.S.-listed securities for five Chinese companies are at risk of delisting.
    Following an initial plunge, the shares later saw a sharp reversal after Chinese state media reported that regulators from the U.S. and China are progressing toward a cooperation plan on U.S.-listed Chinese stocks.

    The delisting of U.S.-listed Chinese stocks may come in the next two to three years, according to Jamie Allen of the Asian Corporate Governance Association.
    “There doesn’t seem to be a huge incentive … for China to compromise, nor does the U.S. seem to want to compromise,” the secretary general at the non-profit organization told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday.

    With both sides appearing to dig in their heels, Allen said delisting for U.S.-listed Chinese firms is set to start in a few years.
    “There are some discussions ongoing at the moment between the two sides, but these discussions have been going around in circles for quite a long time,” he said. “Unless there is some change in the geopolitical relationship between these two countries, it does seem to us that in two or three years you will start to see delisting.”

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    Beijing’s tolerance of VIE structure

    Many Chinese firms have used the variable interest entity (VIE) structure to list stateside. That’s done by creating a listing through a shell company, often based in the Cayman Islands, in effect preventing investors in the U.S.-listed shares from having majority voting rights over the Chinese company.
    For now, the Chinese government appears “willing to live” with the VIE structure despite it existing in a “very gray area” that does not technically comply with China’s national policy on foreign ownership of sensitive sectors, Allen said.
    In December, Chinese regulators released new rules for overseas listings, with no ban being placed on the popular VIE structure.
    “It’s a sort of convenient way for the Chinese state to allow private companies to list overseas without affecting, strictly speaking, the sort of ownership restrictions in China on tech firms and value-added telecom services,” he said.

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    China Boeing 737 plane crash: No survivors found; search for black box continues

    A Boeing 737-800 flight carrying 132 people nosedived Monday afternoon in the southern region of Guangxi.
    No survivors have been found, and the Ministry of Public Security has closed off the crash site, Zhu Tao, director of the aviation safety office at the Civil Aviation Administration of China, said at a press conference Tuesday night.
    Workers are still looking for the black boxes, Zhu said, referring to the technical equipment on airplanes that could reveal reasons for the crash.

    Rescuers head to the site of a plane crash in Tengxian county, Wuzhou city, in China’s southern Guangxi region on March 22, 2022.
    Str | Afp | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Rescue workers haven’t found any survivors from this week’s China Eastern Airlines crash and the hunt for the black box continues, authorities said late Tuesday.
    A Boeing 737-800 flight carrying 132 people nosedived Monday afternoon in a rural, mountainous part of the southern region of Guangxi. Authorities haven’t confirmed any fatalities or shared why the crash happened.

    No survivors have been found, and the Ministry of Public Security has closed off the crash site, Zhu Tao, director of the aviation safety office at the Civil Aviation Administration of China, said at a press conference Tuesday night.
    Workers are still looking for the black boxes, Zhu said, referring to the technical equipment on airplanes that could reveal reasons for the crash.
    Search and rescue workers face additional challenges from a sharp temperature drop and torrential rain that began Tuesday night, according to a local weather forecast.

    Since the crash involved a U.S.-made plane, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it has appointed a senior air safety investigator to the China-led investigation.
    The board added that representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration, Boeing and CFM will serve as technical advisors. CFM is a joint venture between U.S.-based General Electric and France-based Safran that manufactured the engines on the crashed plane, according to the safety board.

    The nine crew members and the aircraft met flight requirements before take-off, Sun Shiying, chairman of China Eastern’s company in Yunnan province — where the flight departed from — said during Tuesday’s press conference.
    China Eastern Airlines shares rose slightly in Hong Kong trading on Wednesday morning. Boeing shares gained about 2.8% overnight.

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    Stock futures are steady as investors juggle Fed comments and policy

    Traders on the floor of the NYSE, March 17, 2022.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    U.S. stock futures were little changed in overnight trading on Tuesday as investors continue to digest revelations from the Federal Reserve on inflation and interest rates.
    Dow futures rose just 30 points. S&P 500 futures advanced 0.1% and Nasdaq 100 futures were flat.

    On Tuesday, the major averages rose as investors evaluated recent comments from Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell. Last week, the Fed raised interest rates for the first time since 2018 and forecast a plan to hike rates by a quarter point at each of the remaining six meetings of 2022.
    But then Powell appeared to up the rhetoric even more on Monday, when he promised to take tough action on inflation.
    “The labor market is very strong, and inflation is much too high,” the central bank chief told the National Association for Business Economics. “If we conclude that it is appropriate to move more aggressively by raising the federal funds rate by more than 25 basis points at a meeting or meetings, we will do so.”
    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose more than 250 points on Tuesday, helped by a 2.2% jump in Nike’s stock from strong earnings. The S&P 500 climbed 1.1%.
    The Nasdaq Composite was the relative outperformer, rising 2% as Meta Platforms, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google-parent Alphabet all closed higher.

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    The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury yield on Tuesday hit 2.39% at the highs of the session, its highest level since May 2019.
    “Investor attitudes are being bolstered by the fact that the stock market seems little concerned about bond yields surging higher or a Federal Reserve which is getting more hawkish by the day,” said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist for the Leuthold Group.
    The S&P 500 is only 5% off its record and has surpassed both its 50-day and 200-day moving averages.
    Still, famed activist investor Carl Icahn said Tuesday an economic downturn could be coming.
    “I think there could very well could be a recession or even worse,” Icahn, founder and chairman of Icahn Enterprises, said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell Overtime” to Scott Wapner.
    On the economic front, new homes sales data from February will be released at 10 a.m. on Wednesday.
    Generals Mills, Cintas and Tencent Holdings will report quarterly earnings before the bell on Wednesday. KB Home reports after the bell.

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    Carl Icahn says there 'very well could be a recession or even worse'

    Famed investor Carl Icahn said Tuesday an economic downturn could be on the horizon and he is loaded on protection against a steep sell-off in the market.
    “I think there very well could be a recession or even worse,” Icahn said on CNBC’s “Closing Bell Overtime” to Scott Wapner. “I have kept everything hedged for the last few years. We have a strong hedge on against the long positions and we try to be activist to get that edge… I am negative as you can hear. Short term I don’t even predict.”

    The founder and chairman of Icahn Enterprises said surging inflation is a major threat to the economy, while the Russia-Ukraine war only added more uncertainty to his outlook.
    The Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the first time in more than three years in an attempt to battle inflation that is running at its highest level in 40 years. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell this week vowed tough action on soaring prices, indicating he’s open to rate hikes more than the traditional 25 basis points.
    “I really don’t know if they can engineer a soft landing,” Icahn said. “I think there is going to be a rough landing… Inflation is a terrible thing when it gets going.”

    Icahn, a longtime activist investor and so-called corporate raider, said he believes the system of company boards needs to be fixed and weak management could lead to disasters.
    “There’s no accountability in Corporate America. You have some very fine companies, some very fine CEOs, but far too many that are not up to the task,” the longtime activist investor said.
    To position for a recession in America, Icahn said he’s betting against malls and commercial real estate.

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    Crypto investor Katie Haun raises $1.5 billion, the largest debut fund ever by a female VC

    Watch Daily: Monday – Friday, 3 PM ET

    Crypto investor Katie Haun has raised $1.5 billion for her new firm after a surprise departure from Andreessen Horowitz last year.
    It’s the largest initial fund ever raised by a solo female founding partner, Pitchbook says.
    “It feels, honestly, like a lot of pressure. But I think that motivates everyone on the team,” Haun says. “Web3 is the new era of the internet and it deserves a new era of investors.”

    Crypto investor Katie Haun has raised $1.5 billion for her new fund after leaving Andreessen Horowitz, and shattered a record in the process.
    Haun Ventures’ kickoff marks the largest debut venture fund ever raised by a solo female founding partner, according to Pitchbook. Former investment banker Mary Meeker held the prior record with a $1.3 billion fund after spinning out from Kleiner Perkins.

    “It feels, honestly, like a lot of pressure. But I think that motivates everyone on the team,” Haun told CNBC in her first broadcast interview since leaving Andreessen Horowitz. “Web3 is the new era of the internet, and it deserves a new era of investors.”
    The term Web3, or Web 3.0, loosely refers to general computing applications built on the blockchain — the same technology underlying bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Examples include NFTs, which are traceable ownership certificates attached to digital files such as art pieces or videos, and decentralized finance applications, in which self-executing “smart” contracts can be used to replace middlemen like lawyers and bankers in certain types of transactions. But overall, the space is still in a very early and experimental phase.
    Haun Ventures will invest in both start-up equity, and in some cases the cryptocurrencies issued by those start-ups, also known as tokens.
    “That’s something I’ve learned through being involved in deploying three other crypto funds: there’s still a ton of potential in crypto and Web3 equity business models, but also token business models,” she said. “I don’t think that you can really be a crypto investor without holding tokens.” 

    Katie Haun, Andreessen Horowitz General Partner
    Source: CNBC

    Haun’s fund will be divvied up into two segments: $500 million for early-stage companies and protocols, and $1 billion for “acceleration,” or later-stage projects.

    Haun, a former federal prosecutor, became Andreessen’s first female general partner in 2018 where she co-led its multiple cryptocurrency funds alongside Chris Dixon. Andreessen Horowitz will be a limited partner in Haun’s newest fund, while Marc Andreessen, the firm’s founder, and Dixon all personally contributed to her new endeavor.
    Her exit caught many in Silicon Valley off guard. While it was a “dream job,” Haun said the departure was about taking more of a risk, and “stepping out of her comfort zone.”
    “Obviously there’s a relationship there, and there are friendships there. We still intend to collaborate closely with Andreessen Horowitz,” she said. “One of the unique things about our fund size makes it so that we don’t have to lead every deal, we can play well with a lot of other crypto investors — founders don’t want a single investor on their cap table, even in the early rounds.”
    Haun Ventures’ nine-person team includes Chris Lehane, a former Airbnb executive and Clinton administration official, Tomicah Tillemann, a former staffer for President Joe Biden, and Rachael Horwitz, who led communications teams at Twitter, Google, Facebook and Coinbase. Multiple employees left Andreessen Horowitz with Haun for the new fund. She said the smaller team allows the firm to be more “nimble,” and act as “venture contributors” in addition to venture capitalists.
    “Gone are the days where founders just want capital,” she said. “One of the things that Haun Ventures will do for our founders is really actively contribute to the projects in which we invest.”
    The launch comes during a bear market for bitcoin. The world’s largest cryptocurrency is down roughly 40% from its peak in November, with smaller cryptocurrencies like ether seeing deeper losses. Haun, who has invested through past downturns or “crypto winters”, said there’s still plenty of developer activity and upside.
    “When I think back to deploying the first two crypto funds, that was during a period of immense volatility — it was definitely a crypto winter with prices down 70% and projects were still born that during that cycle,” she said, highlighting Solana and NFT exchange OpenSea. “One of the things I’ve learned as an investor with a long term view of the space, is that great products are going to be built and great protocols are going to be built, no matter what the prices are.”
    Crypto exchange Coinbase, which Haun is on the board of, has seen roughly 58% from drop its high last year. Still, Haun said private start-up valuations aren’t being affected, yet.
    “There’s a bit of a lag. We’re still seeing very high valuations in crypto projects. Last time this happened, with macro market corrections, it took a while for that to translate over into crypto. I think the same could be true here,” she said.
    While cryptocurrencies may be struggling to regain momentum, dollars flowing into private companies is at all-time highs. Blockchain start-ups brought in a record $25 billion in venture capital dollars last year, according to recent data from CB Insights. That figure is up eightfold from a year earlier.
    That flood of venture dollars has sparked some controversy on Twitter.
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey ⁠— two of the world’s best-known tech billionaires ⁠— have been among those questioning “Web3.” Dorsey argues VCs and their limited partners are the ones who will ultimately end up owning Web3 and it “will never escape their incentives,” he tweeted, calling it a “centralized entity with a different label.”
    “I look at it as Web3 finally getting some of the critics it deserves in the space,” Haun said. “If I could have the choice between Jack Dorsey offering some critiques versus some of the myths that we’ve heard perpetrated for so long in the space, I would certainly choose the former. So I think that debate is healthy.” More