Thursday Jun.02, 2022

🌎 The ESG reset

Green, washed (Mike Kemp/Getty Images)
Green, washed (Mike Kemp/Getty Images)

Hey Snackers,

Vegas chapels are all shook up after Authentic Brands, the licensing company that controls Elvis’ name and likeness, ordered them to stop using Elvis impersonators in ceremonies — a major hit to Sin City’s $2B/year wedding biz. Less “Burning Love,” more “Crying in the Chapel.”

Stocks ticked down to kick off the month, as investors keep rate-driven recession fears top of mind. US job openings dropped by 455K in April, but there’s still a massive gap between open positions and available workers (nearly 5.5M more jobs).

Red

Deutsche Bank’s under investigation over greenwashing allegations as the ESG investing boom implodes

Green-washed up… More trouble at Germany’s biggest bank: for the second time in a month, authorities raided scandal-plagued Deutsche Bank’s Frankfurt HQ. This time it was to investigate allegations that DWS, an asset-management subsidiary of DB, has been “greenwashing” (aka: misleading investors about its environmental, social, and corporate governance — or ESG). In the fall-out, the CEO of DWS said he’d step down.

  • ESG, meet SEC: The Securities and Exchange Commission began investigating DWS last year after an ex-employee said it fudged ESG info to woo investors (last week the SEC fined BNY Mellon $1.5M for misleading ESG claims).

Sustainable investment, unsustainable pace... ESG investing has exploded as investors demand socially responsible investment options. But ESG claims are unregulated and have been criticized as arbitrary. One example: the S&P’s ESG index includes oil giant Exxon, but not EV pioneer Tesla. Some have dismissed ESG investing as a “virtue bubble.” Now it may be bursting:

  • Going (less) green: BlackRock, an ESG pioneer (and the world’s biggest money manager), backtracked and said it would support fewer “constraining” climate proposals.
  • The rise of “anti-ESG”: Billionaires Peter Thiel and Bill Ackman recently backed Strive, an asset management firm that specifically avoids politics.

This could be a Great Green Reset… the ESG strategy seems to be falling out of favor: after outperforming the S&P 500 in last year’s bull market, ESG funds are underperforming the S&P in this year’s downturn. But sustainable investment as a concept isn’t going anywhere: investors have already parked $41T in ESG funds. Instead, future ESG investors might seek more realistic forecasts — and play by stricter rules. Meanwhile, the SEC plans to keep cracking down on misleading ESG claims, though it still hasn’t standardized ESG criteria.

Room-bot

iRobot updates the Roomba’s “brain,” betting its OS can be a differentiator in the crowded smart-home space

Sounds like a sci-fi thriller... actually a vacuum company. iRobot is the publicly traded consumer robot biz famous for Roomba (aka: the popular self-driving vacuum). Its sales soared for a while during the pandemic as homebound and hygiene-conscious adults ordered smart vacuums to clean up after their kids. But iRobot's US revenue growth has been slowing. Now:

  • New brain: iRobot just revamped its robo-vacuum operating system to lay the foundation for a more sophisticated understanding of your home life. iRobot Genius, its AI platform for smart vacuums and mops, is now iRobot OS.
  • Features include the ability to identify and dodge phone chargers, stray T-shirts, and dog poop. With computer vision iRobot’s newest vac can also understand specific commands like "clean under kitchen table." Also: preferences like extra sweeps during pet-shedding season and fewer sweeps for the guest room.

Competing for Fluffy's approval... Roomba isn't the only one: last year Amazon rolled out a $1K Alexa-powered robot named Astro (aka: a 10-inch tablet on wheels). Smart-device adoption has surged thanks to speakers from Amazon and Google, along with thermostats, security cams, and light dimmers. iRobot's vacuums work with Alexa, Google Assistant, and Siri voice commands — but it may not be enough to win in the increasingly crowded market.

Intelligence is useless without context… at least in the smart-home space. iRobot’s CEO told The Verge that the primary differentiator of a home robot is intelligence (aka: software brain vs. hardware body). Key to that is context — a deep understanding of your home and habits. Think: air purifiers understanding when a room is empty before going into noisy turbo mode (iRobot’s working on it). In the future, we’re picturing showers that turn on at your preferred temp when you wake.

What else we’re Snackin’

  • Out: Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg, Zuck’s #2 and one of the most powerful people in tech, is leaving the company after 14 years. Sandberg helped turn Facebook into a multibillion-dollar biz.
  • Booked: Delta said sales have snapped back to pre-pandemic levels, which is helping to offset soaring fuel costs. The airline canceled 700 flights last weekend, previewing a turbulent summer for the flying public.
  • Hip: GM’s Buick unveiled a sleek "Wildcat" EV concept as it plans to go electric-only by 2030. Legacy automakers are trying to shake their old-school image with flashy electrified models for younger buyers.
  • $17: Seattle will be the first US city to set a minimum wage for app-based delivery drivers. The new "Pay Up Bill" is meant to stabilize income for gig workers with unpredictable schedules.
  • WFW: Elon Musk fired off an email to Tesla employees, demanding they either get back to the office or leave the company. Elon’s been letting some staff work remotely, but says the option is “no longer acceptable.”

Thursday

  • OPEC meeting. Weekly jobless claims. Platinum Jubilee weekend starts in the UK.
  • Earnings expected from: CrowdStrike, Hormel, Okta, Asana, The Duckhorn Portfolio, Samsara, Zumiez, Duluth Trading Co., and Lands’ End

Authors of this Snacks own shares of Exxon, GM, Google, Tesla, Delta, Amazon, and Apple

ID: 2227541

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Tangential remarks

Nicolai Tangen, the CEO who holds the purse strings of Norway’s $1.6 trillion sovereign wealth fund, thinks that his fellow Europeans don’t quite stack up to US employees when it comes to pure hustle, telling the Financial Times in a recent interview that there is a difference in “the general level of ambition” and thatthe Americans just work harder”. 

Tangen has clearly been putting his money — or more specifically Norway’s — where his mouth is: the sprawling Norwegian oil fund, now one of the largest investors on the planet, has been pumping more capital into its US holdings in the past decade, while decreasing its investment into European entities.

The troublesome news for our European readers? Tangen might be onto something. According to data from the OECD, American workers are putting in almost 60 hours a year more than the weighted average for OECD nations… a benchmark that workers from countries in the European Union are already ~180 hours shy of.

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Tangen has clearly been putting his money — or more specifically Norway’s — where his mouth is: the sprawling Norwegian oil fund, now one of the largest investors on the planet, has been pumping more capital into its US holdings in the past decade, while decreasing its investment into European entities.

The troublesome news for our European readers? Tangen might be onto something. According to data from the OECD, American workers are putting in almost 60 hours a year more than the weighted average for OECD nations… a benchmark that workers from countries in the European Union are already ~180 hours shy of.

Hours worked
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$70B

Alphabet shares are soaring in the after-market session, with a initial jump of more than 10% implying a gain of upwards of about $200B in market value when the stock opens tomorrow morning.

Google’s parent company crushed earnings expectations, initiated a cash dividend for the first time, and authorized a fresh $70B in share repurchases for good measure. The market likes it very much.

Business
Rani Molla
4/25/24

No, Apple hasn’t cut its Vision Pro production estimates in half

Quite a few news outlets are reporting that Apple thinks it’s only going to sell 400,000 to 450,000 Vision Pros in 2024, compared a “market consensus” of 700,000 to 800,000. They’re all citing a note from Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo.

Obviously there’s no question that Apple’s $3,500 face computer will have a limited audience and could be a huge flop, but this also doesn’t seem like accurate news.

The issue is that 1) this 400,000 number isn’t new. Back in July of 2023, the Financial Times reported that Apple planned to make fewer than 400,000 units in 2024, reducing its initial projections of 1M units, citing two people close to Apple and, the Chinese contract manufacturer assembling the device. 2) It's unclear who was estimating 700,000-800,000 Vision Pros in the first place, but it appears that it was Ming-Chi Kuo himself?

The issue is that 1) this 400,000 number isn’t new. Back in July of 2023, the Financial Times reported that Apple planned to make fewer than 400,000 units in 2024, reducing its initial projections of 1M units, citing two people close to Apple and, the Chinese contract manufacturer assembling the device. 2) It's unclear who was estimating 700,000-800,000 Vision Pros in the first place, but it appears that it was Ming-Chi Kuo himself?

 Max Holloway and Mark Zuckerberg

Meta exhaustingly tries to merge the metaverse and AI

Gonna have to rename the company... again

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