Saturday, August 12, 2023

SCI-FI-TEK-ILLUSION
Carbon Capture Could Be the Key to the Energy Transition


By Julio Friedmann
Aug. 11, 2023 

Workers inside the Carbon Engineering Innovation Centre, a Direct Air Capture research and development facility, in Squamish, Canada
James MacDonald/Bloomberg

About the author: Julio Friedmann is chief scientist at Carbon Direct.

Amid all the grim news about wildfires and other disasters exacerbated by a warming climate, there is room for optimism. Today, there are dozens of companies across the globe willing to build systems to capture carbon from and permanently store it. Their rise has been hastened by the passage of new laws in the U.S., Canada, Europe, China, and elsewhere. Carbon capture may be unfamiliar to many people, but that probably won’t be true for long.

Carbon capture is a set of technologies with the sole purpose of mitigating climate change. These technologies harness chemical and physical processes to capture CO2 from the air itself or at the source of emission, such as from industry, energy, and other sectors. It can then be safely stored in geological formations, permanently keeping it out of the atmosphere, or used in other applications like making concrete, or fuel. Though deployment of carbon capture incurs additional costs, it directly reduces greenhouse gas emissions. In some cases, carbon capture can also be used to remove CO2 from the atmosphere and oceans.

The concept has been around for almost a century. The first project began operation in 1938, and the first large-scale project to inject CO2 into the ground launched in 1972 at the Sharon Ridge oilfield in Texas. About 24 years later, Norway launched the world’s first integrated carbon capture and storage project (Sleipner) in the North Sea, strictly to reduce climate impacts.

The most recent reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the International Energy Agency highlight the urgent need for rapid deployment of carbon capture technologies. Net-zero emissions must be met by the early 2050s to limit global warming to 1.5°C, a level that will prevent catastrophic damage. To achieve this, these technologies will need to be used to capture over one billion tonnes from existing facilities and another billion from the atmosphere by 2030, with roughly four to eight billion tonnes per year captured from existing infrastructure and an additional three to 20 billion tonnes removed from the air and oceans by 2050. These are enormous volumes, equal in size and scale to today’s oil and gas sector. Significant investments will be required for this effort to succeed.

As a climate mitigation tool, carbon capture is versatile, scalable, and relatively low-risk and low cost. Carbon-capture technologies can serve in many sectors: electricity generation, heavy industry, agriculture, transportation, hydrogen production, and more. Carbon capture also offers a wide range of utility. It can be used, among others, to reduce emissions in hard-to-abate industries such as existing cement and steel mills, and potentially to remove CO2 from the air and oceans at an accelerated pace. Because it requires only earth-abundant materials, carbon capture can scale quickly and be used across a wide variety of geographies.

With this long history, builders and operators of carbon-capture projects also view the risks of deployment as generally low. This means, in many markets and sectors like heavy industry, aviation, and maritime, carbon capture is also the lowest-cost option for climate abatement. A single project can be very large, representing over five million tons per year of CO2 reduced or removed. Policy is playing a big role in the advancement of carbon capture. Several recent laws are providing significant support for innovation and investment. The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, passed in 2021, provided support for CO2 infrastructure, including $500 million a year to assess geological storage sites for safety, quality, and effectiveness. The Law also created a $3.5 billion program to create direct air capture hubs, which the Department of Energy just awarded. It also gives new loan authorities to the Department of Transportation to build CO2 pipelines. And it provides millions to the EPA to hire and train CO2 storage regulators.

In 2022, the Inflation Reduction Act included major provisions for carbon capture, recognizing its critical role in climate mitigation. These provisions include a tax credit of $85 a tonne for capturing and permanently storing CO2 from a point source, such as a power plant. A higher tax credit, $180 a tonne, is available for direct air capture and storage. These tax credits provide 12 years of projective benefits for companies, making carbon capture a viable business in the U.S. These incentives make all the difference. Specifically, they make it more profitable to capture and store CO2 than to release it, with huge benefits to investors and the climate.

Studies from Princeton University and others find that provisions of these two laws could boost carbon capture in the U.S. to the tune of 100 million tonnes per year by 2030 and 400 million tonnes per year by 2035. Most of the reduction will come from heavy industry, with some also coming from electricity generation. That level would be ten times the abatement of all the carbon capture and storage plants operating worldwide today. Since the passage of the IRA, more than 150 projects have been announced worldwide, with 70 new projects in the U.S. alone bringing the U.S. total to 175. If all U.S. projects are built, their climate abatement could exceed an astonishing 162 million tonnes of CO2 reduction per year.

When done well, carbon capture is elegant, returning extracted carbon to the earth’s crust. Controversy around carbon capture comes from questions about doing it well.

At its best, carbon capture reduces the local environmental impacts and could save billions of dollars in health costs. If poorly executed, carbon capture could add to the environmental burdens already disproportionately shouldered by frontline and disinvested communities. Ultimately, these projects must be managed carefully to succeed and earn trust.

Controversy also stems from distrust of energy companies that hope to use the technology to decarbonize their operations and produce low-carbon fuels. There are concerns that carbon capture will, though reducing emissions, extend the use of fossil fuels. Oil and gas companies, industrial facilities, and utilities will need to work hard to gain the confidence of communities, environmental groups, and investors. Otherwise, deployment in these sectors will be slow, expensive, and difficult.

Finally, carbon capture technologies face a narrative challenge. Many people are not as familiar with them as they are with windmills, solar panels, or nuclear plants—things they’ve seen in action.

Despite the challenges, as carbon capture technology extends its reach it will become more visible and familiar, leading to more acceptance. With support from new laws, carbon capture may come to be seen as commonplace and essential for the energy transition.

Guest commentaries like this one are written by authors outside the Barron’s and MarketWatch newsroom. They reflect the perspective and opinions of the authors. 

Chinese tech giant Huawei reports sales, profit up despite US sanctions
END THE SANCTIONS

AP Finance
Fri, August 11, 2023 

 People visit a Huawei franchise store in Beijing on April 28, 2023. Chinese tech giant Huawei on Friday, Aug. 11, reported its revenue rose 3% over a year earlier in the first half of 2023 and its profit margin widened despite sanctions that block access to U.S. processor chips and other technology.
(AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File) (ASSOCIATED PRESS)


BEIJING (AP) — Chinese tech giant Huawei on Friday reported its revenue rose 3% over a year earlier in the first half of 2023 and its profit margin widened despite sanctions that block access to U.S. processor chips and other technology.

China's first global tech brand has responded to U.S. curbs that devastated its smartphone brand by increasing emphasis on selling network gear to hospitals, ports, electric car brands and other industrial customers it believes will be less vulnerable to sanctions.

Revenue in the six months ending in June rose 3.1% to 310.9 billion yuan ($43.1 billion), Huawei Technologies Ltd. said. It gave no profit figure but said its profit margin was 15%, which would be about 45 billion yuan ($6.5 billion) and an increase over the 4.3% margin in the first quarter of this year.

Sales by its infrastructure unit were 167.2 billion yuan ($23.2 billion), according to Huawei. Consumer sales were 103.5 billion yuan ($14.3 billion). Sales by the fledgling automotive unit, which supplies network and other technology for electric cars, were 1 billion yuan ($138.6 billion).

Huawei struggled after then-President Donald Trump cut off access to U.S. processor chips and other technology in a feud with Beijing over technology and security. American officials say the company is a security risk and might facilitate Chinese spying, which Huawei denies.

In 2020, then-chairman Eric Xu said the company was “back to business as usual” despite sanctions.

The company is the biggest global maker of network equipment for phone and internet companies. It sold its lower-priced Honor smartphone brand in 2020. It still sells handsets under its Huawei brand but focuses on the China market while sales abroad have plunged.

Huawei reported earlier 2022 profit fell 70% to 35.6 billion yuan ($5.2 billion) while sales rose 0.9% to 642.3 billion yuan ($93.5 billion).

Half of Huawei’s 207,000 employees work in research and development. The company says it has been able to develop replacements for U.S. components. Huawei says it has made breakthroughs in developing its own design tools for processor chips.
FORDISM IS GLOBALIZATION
Changan Ford Motor to set up electric car JV with Chongqing Changan Auto

Reuters
Fri, August 11, 2023 

Workers assemble vehicles at a plant of Changan Ford in Harbin

BEIJING (Reuters) -Changan Ford Motor plans to set up a new-energy passenger car joint venture with state-owned Chongqing Changan Automobile, a document published by China's market regulator on Friday showed.

Changan Ford Motor will own a 60% stake and Chongqing Changan Automobile the remaining 40% stake. Changan Ford is a 50-50 joint venture between Ford Motor Co and Changan Automobile, meaning Chongqing Changan will own more than 50% of the new venture.

In the future, the joint venture plans to engage in the "supply business of mainstream brand new energy passenger vehicles and the distribution business of Ford brand models that Changan Ford has invested in," the statement said. Ford said in a later statement the new venture also will sell existing Ford-brand gas-powered vehicles.

Ford said the venture was being formed "to better grasp the development trend of electrification and intelligence in the auto industry."

Asked whether this new venture means Ford is minimizing its exposure in China, spokesman Anderson Chan said it was aligned with CEO Jim Farley's strategy that includes leaning into the strength of the company's partners in China. The company said it would provide further details later.

Farley said last month during the company's earnings conference call that the U.S. automaker may have to use its local partners' vehicle platforms more "in certain segments," excluding pickups and large SUVs.

Changan officials could not be reached for further comment.

Sales of Ford with Changan fell 12.6% in the first half form the year-ago period, China Association of Automobile Manufacturers data showed.

More than 40 brands have cut prices in China since January after an initial move by Tesla in a fight for market share in the world's biggest auto market, as car demand slumps, with ripples spreading through the wider industry.

(Reporting by Farah Master and Twinnie Siu in Hong Kong, Zhang Yan in Shanghai, the Beijing Newsroom, and Ben Klayman in Detroit; Editing by Louise Heavens, Susan Fenton and Richard Chang)


Ford reaches deal to move industrial unit to Brazil's Bahia state

Reuters
Fri, August 11, 2023



SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Ford's Brazilian unit on Friday said it reached a transfer agreement with the government of Bahia state to give it ownership of a factory complex closed since 2021.

The automaker said the agreement will provide it with "compensation in amounts compatible with the market," but did not disclose an amount.


Chinese electric vehicle manufacturer BYD has shown interest in the complex, located in the Camacari industrial park. The automaker has since at least mid-2022 been trying to reach a deal with Ford and the Bahia government to acquire the asset.

BYD said in a statement that it "continues with the planning to invest in the Camacari industrial park, maintaining the necessary negotiations with the Bahia government."

It was not immediately clear whether the industrial unit mentioned by the company involves the Ford area.

(Reporting by Alberto Alerigi Jr.; Editing by Sandra Maler)


EV Maker VinFast to List on Nasdaq in Rare SPAC Venue Switch

Nguyen Kieu Giang
Thu, August 10, 2023 



(Bloomberg) -- Vietnam’s electric-vehicle maker VinFast Auto Ltd. plans to start trading on the Nasdaq next week after a NYSE American-listed special-purpose acquisition company approved their merger.

Black Spade Acquisition Co. shareholders on Thursday signed off on the combination with the manufacturer. VinFast expects to debut on the Nasdaq on or around Aug. 15 under the symbol VFS. The deal values the company at about $23 billion, a statement last month showed.

Shares of the SPAC spiked as much as 76% in New York to trade as high as $18.80. The jump came as more than 700,000 shares changed hands, triggering at least one volatility-related halt.

The planned Nasdaq listing, confirming an earlier Bloomberg News report, caps VinFast’s years-long efforts to become a publicly traded company. The manufacturer is selling made-in-Vietnam electric cars and is currently building a factory in the US.

VinFast still has a long way to go though. The company has been held back by operational problems, hobbling its ambition to gain market share in the competitive EV space. In May, VinFast recalled all the electric sport utility vehicles shipped to the US over a software malfunction, and its losses have been widening due to the cost of its expansion.

It’s somewhat unusual for VinFast to list on a different exchange than the one its blank-check company is traded on. In a typical SPAC merger, the blank-check company’s backers receive new stock in the combined firm in exchange for their old SPAC shares, which are canceled and delisted. The new shares begin trading immediately after the closing of the deal, nearly always on the exchange where the SPAC was approved.

Although Black Spade is NYSE American-listed, VinFast’s prospectus ahead of the vote said the company intended to apply to list on either the NYSE, NYSE American or the Nasdaq.

An equity valuation of $23 billion, or $27 billion including debt, would mean VinFast will trade at a premium to most peers including Rivian Automotive Inc. and Nikola Corp., according to Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Ken Foong and Siti Nur Fairuz Khalil.

Black Spade raised $169 million in a US IPO on the NYSE in 2021, and shifted its listing to the NYSE American in June. About 84% of Black Spade shareholders opted to redeem their stock for cash when approving a deadline extension for the SPAC merger. The redemptions left less than $30 million in the SPAC’s trust.

Around 99.99% of Thursday’s votes were cast in favor of the merger. VinFast and Black Spade expect to close the combination on Aug. 14.

VinFast last month broke ground at its North Carolina factory. The plant is expected to have an initial capacity to make 150,000 vehicles a year, and the company plans to begin production in 2025.

--With assistance from Bailey Lipschultz.
CRIMINAL CAPITALI$M
Billionaire Sarmiento’s Companies to Pay $60 Million in US Graft Probe

Daniel Cancel
Fri, August 11, 2023 



(Bloomberg) -- Firms controlled by the billionaire Sarmiento family of Colombia agreed to pay fines of about $60 million to the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the Justice Department for bribes paid by one of its units for a highway project dating back nearly a decade.

Grupo Aval Acciones y Valores SA and its subsidiary Corporacion Financiera Colombiana SA, known as Corficolombiana, agreed to pay $40 million to the SEC to settle investigations and another $20 million to the DOJ to settle criminal charges, according to an SEC statement.

Aval’s American depositary receipts fell 3.79% in New York while Corficolombiana slid 0.645% in Bogota.

The probe is linked to wide-ranging corruption around disgraced Brazilian construction firm Odebrecht SA (now known as Novonor) which admitted to bribing officials across Latin America to obtain contracts for projects. Corficolombiana, which had a minority stake in a highway project known as Ruta del Sol II, was accused, along with its partner, of bribing Colombian officials between 2012 and 2015 with more than $23 million to secure a contract to extend the road, according to the DOJ.

“Illicit payments were paid with the knowledge, approval, and assistance of Corficolombiana’s former president,” the SEC said. “According to the SEC’s order, Corficolombiana caused Grupo Aval’s violations and provided Grupo Aval with an improper financial benefit totaling approximately $32 million.”

Credicorp Capital Research analysts expect the fine to negatively impact Aval’s third quarter financial results. “The news is negative, and we expect to see a negative reaction on both stocks,” analysts Steffanía Mosquera and Daniel Mora wrote on Friday.

Aval shares have slumped more than 45% since Dec. 2018 when the conglomerate said the US opened the investigation, compared to a 15% decline for the benchmark Colcap index. The company has a market capitalization of $3 billion.

Luis Carlos Sarmiento Angulo, the 90-year-old patriarch of the family, built the Aval empire which includes Banco de Bogota, the third-biggest bank in Colombia by assets; Porvenir, the largest pension fund manager; investment-holding company Corficolombiana and a brokerage. The group also has investments in soybean oil, cattle, fisheries, and rubber.

Sarmiento has a fortune of $6.7 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. His son, Luis Carlos Sarmiento Gutierrez, is chief executive officer at Aval and chairman of Corficolombiana.

“Today’s resolution – the first-ever coordinated with Colombian authorities in a foreign bribery case – reflects the Justice Department’s commitment to working shoulder-to-shoulder with our foreign partners to combat transnational corruption and hold accountable companies that brazenly pay bribes for economic gain,” the DOJ said.

The settlement is the most significant in Colombia linked to the Odebrecht scandal. In 2017, Odebrecht was ordered to pay a $2.6 billion fine in Brazil, the US and Switzerland to settle investigations and admitted to making secret payments of about $788 million to foreign government officials around the world. That was the biggest penalty levied by global authorities in a bribery case.

The scandal also affected Brazilian oil giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA as part of an investigation known as Operation Carwash. And the illicit payments hit firms — and politicians — from Peru to Mexico.

The DOJ said that Corficolombiana cooperated extensively with the probe, providing facts obtained through an internal company investigation, producing documents, providing sworn testimony from Colombian criminal and administrative proceedings of relevant witnesses, and identifying information previously unknown to the government.

“The DOJ and SEC recognized Corficolombiana’s and Grupo Aval’s extensive cooperation with the investigations,” Aval said in a statement. “Corficolombiana and Grupo Aval consider this painful chapter closed.”

Grupo Aval declined to comment beyond the statements.

Bloomberg Businessweek
Amazon wants to ship your orders without a box. Shoppers worry it will boost package theft, but psychology shows it could actually deter it


Paige Hagy
Fri, August 11, 2023 

Robert Alexander—Getty Images

Amazon is considering a new way to deliver your packages—without a box.


The e-commerce titan’s latest effort to improve delivery speed and efficiency is by reducing packaging, including the conventional cardboard box that most of its orders come in. Eventually, more deliveries will arrive on doorsteps in the manufacturer’s packaging only. But while some worry this change will mean increased package theft, perhaps eliminating the box could actually deter it.

In the past year, Amazon has cut down on packaging in order to reduce costs, make faster deliveries, and reach its sustainability goals. In 2022, about 11% of items the company delivered were shipped without the signature Amazon-branded box and instead came in their original containers, according to Amazon’s sustainability report.

“The recognition by a number of senior leaders was just that this is becoming more and more important,” Amazon vice president of packaging and innovation Pat Lindner told the Wall Street Journal. “There’s a significant need for our company to take the next step in innovation around packaging.”

Users will always have the option to add Amazon packaging to their order for no extra charge at checkout, but the default is boxless shipping, Amazon told Fortune. Still, some consumers worry this change will lead to more of their packages being stolen.

In 2022, an estimated 260 million packages were stolen from all merchants, roughly a 50 million increase from the year prior, CNBC reported. And although sales growth for online shopping is slowing from pandemic-driven highs, it will account for nearly half of retail growth by 2027, according to Forbes.
‘Porch pirate’ psychology

Package thieves, or “porch pirates,” often commit crimes of opportunity, hoping that small boxes might contain expensive items that could be resold, like phones, video game consoles, or computers, according to ADT Security Services. Meanwhile, some criminals simply have a compulsion and steal for the thrill of it.

Psychological research shows that our brains release dopamine in anticipation of a reward, and the unpredictability of that reward actually increases anticipation and thereby the amount of dopamine released.

“Many people think that dopamine is released when the brain receives a reward, but dopamine is actually released in anticipation of a reward,” according to Psychology Today.


The likelihood of a porch pirate stealing a box that actually contains a valuable item is unpredictable, especially when the item is hidden in a cardboard box. But that unpredictability only makes the thief’s “reward”—both the dopamine released in the brain and the perceived value of the item itself—that much greater. If a thief can see that a shipped item isn’t worth much at the outset, perhaps they’ll be deterred from stealing it.

To be sure, people will continue to steal packages nonetheless, and it remains to be seen if Amazon’s change will increase or decrease theft. Either way, leaving an expensive product, like a brand new pair of Apple AirPods, sitting on a doorstep in the manufacturer’s packaging is probably never a good idea.

“The vast majority of deliveries make it to customers without issue,” Amazon said in an emailed statement. “If something occurs, we work with customers directly to make it right. We have a variety of ways we work with customers to provide visibility and options to their package delivery. Amazon’s customer service is also available 24/7 to help customers with any matters related to their package delivery.”
Opting back in to boxes

Amazon is hoping to create goodwill with its customers who have asked for such changes by reducing the number of boxes they receive and discard every week. The company—which built its success on ease of use and practicality—saw its overall customer satisfaction drop in 2022, according to the Wall Street Journal.

This change is the latest update to the company’s program, which has existed in various iterations since 2008, Amazon said.

And the company isn’t going boxless for all products, Amazon added. Items that could be dangerous, such as those with sharp edges, are not included in the program for safety, nor are collectibles or intimate items, like sexual wellness products, for privacy.

Whether other items can be shipped without a box is determined by tests that involve compressing items, vibrations, and drops from different angles.

In tandem with incentivizing its vendors to improve their own packaging, the company is helping its suppliers develop packaging that is “both sturdy enough to ship on its own while not adding extra material to undercut its whole purpose of doing away with packaging,” the Journal reported.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Court blocks PwC Australia from removing partner over tax leak scandal

Lewis Jackson
Thu, August 10, 2023 

PwC sign is seen in the lobby of their offices in Barangaroo

SYDNEY (Reuters) - PwC Australia's attempt to remove a partner after an internal investigation into the leak of confidential government tax plans hit a roadblock on Friday after an Australian court ruled the professional services firm failed to follow due process.

The decision complicates PwC Australia's efforts to move past a national scandal which has cost the firm its local chief executive, forced a fire sale of its lucrative government consulting business and embroiled clients Google, Uber and Facebook.

The "big four" firm in July named eight partners and announced publicly they had left or would soon leave the firm following an internal investigation into the leak of confidential tax documents by a former partner advising government.

One of the partners named, Richard Gregg, filed suit and claimed PwC did not provide him with sufficient reasons to remove him from the partnership. In the media release, PwC said his actions failed to meet professional responsibilities without elaborating.

The Australian Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favour of Gregg and ordered PwC to pay legal costs. Justice David Hammerschlag said PwC's notice to Gregg did not "disclose any path of reasoning by which Management reached its view that the outcome should be that Gregg should be required to retire."

Lawyers for Gregg claim the firm's media release defamed him and in July began the first steps of a possible defamation suit, according to court documents reviewed by Reuters. Two former partners named by the firm over the scandal have also pushed back against allegations any wrongdoing.

A solicitor representing Gregg declined to comment.

PwC Australia was "committed to taking the appropriate action against those we believe have failed to live up to the firm’s professional, ethical or leadership standards" and was considering next steps in relation to Gregg, a spokesperson said in an emailed statement.

According to court documents reviewed by Reuters, PwC told Gregg the decision to remove him was not based on a finding he misused confidential government information.

The firm instead referenced several other issues, including a failure to "discharge his supervisory functions" for which he was fined A$100,000 in the 2021 financial year.


"Neither the occasions upon which he is said to have failed nor the way in which he is said to have failed is identified," Hammerschlag said.

(Reporting by Lewis Jackson; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
A real estate billionaire said Fridays are ‘dead forever’ for offices and remote work guru Nick Bloom says he’s right—it’s part of a new 3-part week 4 WHITE COLLAR WORKERS

Paolo Confino, Jane Thier
Fri, August 11, 2023 

Masafumi Nakanishi


In June, Steven Roth, the billionaire chairman of Vornado, one of New York City’s biggest commercial landlords, said that as far as in-office work is concerned, Fridays are “dead forever.” He added that Mondays weren’t far behind (“touch and go,” as he phrased it).

Now, Nick Bloom, Stanford economics professor and head of WFH Research—a group that has been digging into remote work data since before the pandemic—has officially deemed Roth correct.

“Friday has become the day to #wfh,” Bloom tweeted on Friday, adding that it “looks like [Steven Roth] was right.” But as always with Bloom and his vaunted remote work research, there is more to the story.

Despite the fact that offices have been completely desolate on Fridays for over three years now, Bloom told Fortune that he was nonetheless surprised that Roth’s prediction has ended up bearing out. “I thought this would be more stable, but I guess…Friday [is] increasingly winning out in the WFH stakes,” Bloom told Fortune by email on Friday. “I think it’s part of the bigger push towards coordinated hybrid, whereby we have firms pushing for folks to come in on the same days.”

In-person socializing and collaboration, as always, is the main appeal for office work. As a result, Bloom said, it makes sense to coordinate with one’s coworkers, among whom the consensus has been made clear: “That includes coordinating to be home on Friday.” Indeed, coordinating in-office days among teams is the best way to pull off “organized hybrid,” the term Bloom uses to describe the gold standard working arrangement.

The new Friday calculus shows Bloom that there is now a “three-part week,” he tweeted. Mondays through Thursday are one thing, the weekend, when offices are closed, is another—and then there’s Friday.

Back-to-work mandates rarely include Friday

While it’s certainly unlikely that cubicles will ever be populated on Saturdays and Sundays, Fridays may still have a fighting chance—especially given how many major corporations have finally put their foot down about returning to the office. For years, many high-profile companies have faced fierce resistance from employees they’ve ordered back to work.

Amazon instituted a three-day minimum for in-person work back in February. The policy faced its latest snafu earlier this week when some employees got a disciplinary email even though they’d been complying with the new rules. Google also has a policy of a mandatory three days in the office, and will reportedly only consider full-time remote work in exceptional circumstances.

Meanwhile, Salesforce upped the ante even further, with an obligatory four days in-person for some teams. Based on Bloom’s research one might suspect the lone work-from-home day for Salesforce employees might naturally be Friday.

Bloom also has data to back up that employers and employees don’t see eye to eye on the number of days they’re meant to be in the office. On average, there’s about half a workday’s difference between the number of days workers would like to be in the office compared with what their bosses expect—or require, WFH Research has found.

Per a recent report from real estate consulting firm JLL, bosses have mandated a return (at least some days per week) for 1.5 million workers, and another million are set to be given the same threat in the back half of this year.

Even though more and more companies are beginning to formalize exactly when employees are allowed to work from home, the practice remains widespread. An estimated 58% of workers—a figure that when extrapolated to the entire U.S. workforce would be equal to 92 million people—can work remotely some days of the week, per June research from McKinsey. Naturally, the fact that at least one of those days will be Friday is all but a given.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com



1933




UH OH
Adani Ports Auditor Deloitte to Resign After Flagging Concerns


P R Sanjai, Hemal Savai and Advait Palepu
Fri, August 11, 2023 


(Bloomberg) -- The auditor of billionaire Gautam Adani’s ports business is planning to resign, people familiar with the matter said, a move that may heighten concerns about accounting quality at the Indian conglomerate targeted by short seller Hindenburg Research.

Deloitte Haskins & Sells LLP has communicated to Adani Ports & Special Economic Zone Ltd. its resignation plans and a formal announcement is expected in coming days, one of the people said, asking not to be identified discussing a sensitive matter.

The Indian unit of the global accounting giant in May raised concerns over transactions between Adani Ports and three entities that Adani said were unrelated parties. The auditor said at the time it couldn’t verify Adani’s claims and couldn’t determine if the business was fully compliant with local laws.

The planned resignation puts a fresh spotlight on governance of Adani’s empire just days before the Securities and Exchange Board of India is due to submit the results of a probe into Hindenburg’s wide-ranging allegations of accounting fraud and market manipulation. Adani has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing and a panel appointed by India’s Supreme Court found no regulatory failure or signs of stock price manipulation.

BDO India LLP’s audit arm MSKA & Associates may replace Deloitte Haskins & Sells, one of the people said.

An email and calls to the Adani group were unanswered. Representatives for Deloitte Haskins & Sells and BDO declined to comment.

It’s not the first time an auditor has expressed reservations about Adani’s companies. S.R. Batliboi, a member firm of Ernst & Young, has also repeatedly issued qualified opinions on the financials of Adani Power Ltd., while a member of global accounting giant KPMG resigned as co-auditor of Adani Green Energy in 2021 and turned down a request by the conglomerate to audit some of its other companies amid heightened scrutiny of India’s accounting industry, Bloomberg News has previously reported.

The Adani Group has previously said it’s compliant with Indian laws and welcomes Sebi’s investigation. The Hindenburg broadside had at one point wiped more than $150 billion of market value from Adani’s listed companies. The group has in recent months disclosed fresh fundraising plans, raised billions from GQG Partners and Qatar Investment Authority and sought refinancing with international banks as it seeks to recover from the shortseller attack and return to business as usual.

Bloomberg Businessweek
CRIMINAL  CRYPTO CAPITALI$M
Judge sends FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried to jail, says crypto mogul tampered with witnesses
BUT TRUMP REMAINS ON THE LOOSE




NEW YORK (AP) — FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried left a federal courtroom in handcuffs Friday after a judge revoked his bail after concluding that the fallen cryptocurrency wiz had repeatedly tried to influence witnesses against him.

Bankman-Fried looked down at his hands as Judge Lewis A. Kaplan explained at length why he believed the California man had repeatedly pushed the boundaries of his $250 million bail package to a point that Kaplan could no longer ensure the protection of the community, including prosecutors' witnesses, unless the 31-year-old was behind bars.

At the conclusion of the hearing, Bankman-Fried took off his suit jacket and tie and turned his watch and other personal belongings over to his lawyers. The clanging of handcuffs could be heard as his hands were cuffed in front of him. He was then led out of the courtroom by U.S. marshals.

It was a spectacular fall for a man once viewed by many as a savvy crypto visionary who had testified before Congress and hired celebrities including Larry David, Tom Brady and Stephen Curry to promote his businesses.

Kaplan said there was probable cause to believe Bankman-Fried had tried to “tamper with witnesses at least twice” since his December arrest, most recently by showing a journalist the private writings of a former girlfriend and key witness against him and in January when he reached out to FTX's general counsel with an encrypted communication.

The judge said he concluded there was a probability that Bankman-Fried had tried to influence both anticipated trial witnesses “and quite likely others whose names we don't even know” to get them to “back off, to have them hedge their cooperation with the government.”

Bankman-Fried's lawyers insisted that their client's motives were innocent and he shouldn’t be jailed for trying to protect his reputation against a barrage of unfavorable news stories.

Attorney Mark Cohen asked the judge to suspend his incarceration order for an immediate appeal, but Kaplan rejected the request. Within an hour, defense lawyers had filed a notice of appeal.

Bankman-Fried had been under house arrest at his parents' home in Palo Alto, California, since his December extradition from the Bahamas on charges that he defrauded investors in his businesses and illegally diverted millions of dollars' worth of cryptocurrency from customers using his FTX exchange.

His bail package severely restricted his internet and phone usage.

The judge noted that the strict rules did not stop him from reaching out in January to a top FTX lawyer, saying he “would really love to reconnect and see if there’s a way for us to have a constructive relationship, use each other as resources when possible, or at least vet things with each other.”

At a February hearing, Kaplan said the communication “suggests to me that maybe he has committed or attempted to commit a federal felony while on release.”

On Friday, Kaplan said he was rejecting defense claims that the communication was benign.

Instead, he said, it seems to be an invitation for the FTX general counsel “to get together with Bankman-Fried” so that their recollections “are on the same page.”

Two weeks ago, prosecutors surprised Bankman-Fried's attorneys by demanding his incarceration, saying he violated those rules by showing The New York Times the private writings of Caroline Ellison, his former girlfriend and the ex-CEO of Alameda Research, a cryptocurrency trading hedge fund that was one of his businesses.

Prosecutors maintained he was trying to sully her reputation and influence prospective jurors who might be summoned for his October trial by sharing deep thoughts about her job and the romantic relationship she had with Bankman-Fried.

The judge said Friday that the excerpts of Ellison's communications that Bankman-Fried had shared with a reporter were the kinds of things that somebody who'd been in a relationship with somebody “would be very unlikely to share with anybody, lest The New York Times, except to hurt, discredit, and frighten the subject of the material.”

Ellison pleaded guilty in December to criminal charges carrying a potential penalty of 110 years in prison. She has agreed to testify against Bankman-Fried as part of a deal that could lead to a more lenient sentence.

Bankman-Fried's lawyers argued he probably failed in a quest to defend his reputation because the article cast Ellison in a sympathetic light. They also said prosecutors exaggerated the role Bankman-Fried had in the article.

They said prosecutors were trying to get their client locked up by offering evidence consisting of "innuendo, speculation, and scant facts."

Since prosecutors made their detention request, Kaplan had imposed a gag order barring public comments by people participating in the trial, including Bankman-Fried.

David McCraw, a lawyer for the Times, had written to the judge, noting the First Amendment implications of any blanket gag order, as well as public interest in Ellison and her cryptocurrency trading firm.

Ellison confessed to a central role in a scheme defrauding investors of billions of dollars that went undetected, McCraw said.

"It is not surprising that the public wants to know more about who she is and what she did and that news organizations would seek to provide to the public timely, pertinent, and fairly reported information about her, as The Times did in its story,” McCraw said.

Larry Neumeister, The Associated Press
Fri, August 11, 2023 
U.S. Senator Lummis, Crypto Lobbyists Urge Court to Dismiss SEC's Coinbase Lawsuit

Nikhilesh De
Fri, August 11, 2023


U.S. Senator Cynthia Lummis (R-Wy.), a number of crypto lobbying organizations and a group of professors called on a federal court to dismiss a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) lawsuit against crypto exchange Coinbase Friday.

Filing amicus – or friend of the court – briefs, the organizations and lawmaker alleged the SEC was trying to exceed its authority in bringing a lawsuit alleging crypto trading platforms like Coinbase are simultaneously unregistered securities exchanges, brokers and clearinghouses trading similarly unregistered securities in the form of crypto assets. The SEC brought lawsuits against Coinbase and fellow exchange Binance (and the latter's U.S. arm, Binance.US) in June this year.

The amicus briefs, addressed to Judge Katherine Polk Failla, of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, echo Coinbase’s own arguments in its motion for judgment dismissing the case.

In total, lobby organizations including the Blockchain Association, Crypto Council for Innovation, Chamber of Digital Commerce, DeFi Education Fund, Chamber of Progress, Consumer Technology Association, venture firms like Andreessen Horowitz and Paradigm and half a dozen academics filed a total of six briefs, not including the Senator’s.

Earlier this month, Coinbase argued in its motion for judgment that the transactions the SEC pointed to didn’t meet the definition of an investment contract and therefore weren’t a violation of securities law.

The amicus briefs come a day after the SEC settled similar charges with Bittrex, another global exchange with a U.S. arm. The U.S. arm is in bankruptcy proceedings.

“This is no run-of-the-mill enforcement case. Through this case the SEC seeks primary influence over economic, political, and legal questions under active consideration by Congress and multiple agencies,” the brief filed on behalf of Lummis said. “Amicus submits this brief to highlight: (i) the important questions implicated here, which are properly before Congress right now; and (ii) the fundamental separation-of-powers principles that weigh strongly in favor of deferring to Congress rather than adopting the SEC’s novel and expansive view of its own authority.”

Almost all of the briefs cited the recent Supreme Court case West Virginia vs. the Environment Protection Agency, which held that regulatory agencies couldn’t broadly exceed their mandate without Congressional approval.

The argument was recently rejected by another federal judge in the same court overseeing a different SEC case against a crypto platform. Judge Jed Rakoff, rejecting a motion to dismiss by Terraform Labs, wrote that the crypto industry isn't yet of a sufficient significance as to meet those Supreme Court precedents.


It's also unclear whether Congress will take any speedy action on broad crypto regulation. While the House Financial Services and Agriculture Committees recently advanced legislation that would address market structure and stablecoin issues, the film House has yet to take the bills up. The House seems likely to advance the bills, but the bills’ passage through an evenly divided Senate is uncertain.

Lummis's brief did note that lawmakers – including herself and Senator Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) – have introduced a number of bills in recent years that specifically lay out where the SEC’s jurisdiction lies, and where its sister regulator, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), may take over.

“Each of these bills recognizes that the crypto industry does not fit entirely within existing securities laws and transcends the current statutory powers of the SEC. The multitude of interests at stake require a holistic approach beyond the scope of a single agency, including approaches taken around the world. Congress is attuned to these important considerations,” the brief said.

SEC Chair Gary Gensler, who has overseen the regulator since 2021, told CoinDesk last year that in his view, many crypto tokens already meet the standards for securities regulation.

“It's about that common enterprise and that entrepreneurial effort which is the hallmark of investment contracts, which are securities. So I think that's where we are, that most of the tokens meet the traditional standards that our Supreme Court has laid out, and that we, the SEC, have a role to help protect investors and instill and enhance trust in these markets,” he said. “They don't just resemble securities, they are securities.”