Elon Muskâs Tesla plan falls flat, Credit Suisse lures clients with higher deposit rates and the crypto fallout ensnares a US bank. â Kristi
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Elon Muskâs Tesla plan falls flat, Credit Suisse lures clients with higher deposit rates and the crypto fallout ensnares a US bank. â [Kristine Aquino]( To catch up on the trading day in the UK and Europe, [check out Markets Today](. Musk falls flat [Elon Muskâs much-hyped third Master Plan for Tesla fell flat](after failing to offer any firm detail on the companyâs long-awaited next generation of electric cars â especially a cheaper EV like the $25,000 model flagged more than two years ago. While Musk confirmed a [new plant]( in Monterrey, Mexico will build the next generation of vehicles, he offered no details on timing, saying a âproper product eventâ will be held later. Lars Moravy, Teslaâs vice-president of vehicle engineering, was similarly vague, answering an analystâs question with only: âWeâre gonna go as fast as we can.â
Credit Suisse rates [Credit Suisse is escalating efforts to win back clients](with deposit rates that are significantly higher than rivals. The Zurich-based lender has raised three-month rates to as much as about 6.5% for new money of $5 million and above in Asia, according to people familiar with the matter. Thatâs close to 100 basis points more than what it offered in December, and is a premium over rivals including UBS, JPMorgan and Citigroup in the region, the people said. The Swiss bank is also offering deposit rates that are a step above rivals in Switzerland, one of the people said. Crypto ripples [Shares of Silvergate Capital, a US bank catering to the crypto sector](, plunged as much as 33% after the close of regular trading after it said it needs more time to assess the extent of damage to its finances stemming from last yearâs crypto rout â including whether it can remain viable. Such an admission by a lender will add to a debate among US lawmakers and regulators over whether banks can manage the risks associated with digital assets. âIf this bank fails, itâs going to be held up as an example of why banks should be extremely conservative in dealing with crypto companies,â said Todd Baker, a senior fellow at Columbia Universityâs Richman Center for Business, Law and Public Policy. Futures retreat S&P 500 futures fell 0.5% as of 5:35 a.m. in New York, while Nasdaq 100 contracts slid 0.8%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index traded near the dayâs highs, pressuring all Group-of-10 currencies. Treasuries edged lower, mirroring moves in the euro-area. Oil climbed, while gold and Bitcoin fell. Coming up⦠At 8:30 a.m., weâll get initial jobless claims data. Federal Reserve Governor Chris Waller speaks at 2 p.m., while Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari will deliver remarks at a separate event at 6 p.m. The US will sell $75 billion of four-week and $40 billion of eight-week bills at 11:30 a.m. What weâve been reading Hereâs what caught our eye over the past 24 hours: - [China sends jets near Taiwan](as US approves $619 million arms sale
- [Leonardo DiCaprio, Kim Kardashian]( were questioned over 1MDB scandal
- More Americans are [falling behind on their car debt payments](
- [$92 billion of office mortgages are at risk]( in the shift to remote work
- Recent shootings push [Apple to abruptly shut one of its Charlotte stores](
- China tells bankers to [clean up their âhedonisticâ lifestyles](
- American Girl dolls are [bringing back the â90s]( And finally, hereâs what Joeâs interested in this morning Evidence continues to grow that the housing market has stabilized, despite the surge in mortgage rates. Speaking of housing, [on today's episode of the Odd Lots podcast](, we speak with Chase Emmerson, the Co-CEO of Emmerson Enterprises, an investor and brokerage of land in Arizona. Basically turning empty land and selling it to homeowners. There are a few really interesting themes in this episode. One is the fact that, as Chase confirms, there are already signs of improvement in 2023 vs. late 2022. In 2022, Emmerson had homebuilders walking away from land purchase agreements, and sacrificing their escrow to break the deal. Now some are starting to come back. There's a much bigger longer-term story here. Amid the Great Financial Crisis, publicly traded homebuilders got clobbered for having too much undeveloped land on their balance sheet that had no prospect of being monetized. That creates the incentive, driven by shareholders, to let some third party warehouse that risk. Basically let some other entity hold the land on their balance sheet, and then pay a premium to acquire it just when you need it. There's also a water story here, and every state in the Southwest is dealing with drought, and claiming a share of Colorado River water. So hearing Chase discuss real estate expansion (and other expansion in Arizona, such as semiconductor factories) is also interesting. Anyway, this one touches on a lot of timely themes, both short and long term about how the economy works. Find it on [Apple](, [Spotify]( or elsewhere. Follow Bloomberg's Joe Weisenthal on Twitter [@TheStalwart](. Follow Us You received this message because you are subscribed to Bloomberg's Five Things to Start Your Day: Americas Edition newsletter. If a friend forwarded you this message, [sign up here]( to get it in your inbox.
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