Wednesday, August 2, 2017

HEDGE FUND BILLIONAIRE DAVID EINHORN: Tesla currently has enough cash for the next 3 quarters

HEDGE FUND BILLIONAIRE DAVID EINHORN: Tesla currently has enough cash for the next 3 quarters

David EinhornDavid EinhornBloomberg TV
TSLA Tesla
 315.25 -4.33 (-1.40 %)
DisclaimerGet real-time TSLA charts here »
(Reuters) - Billionaire investor David Einhorn, who has been hurt by his bet against Tesla, said on Tuesday that the electric car maker is over-valued and that the company is not adequately capitalized.
"The company is expected to burn over $2 billion this year as it begins production of its Model 3," Einhorn said on an earnings call for his reinsurance company Greenlight Capital Re. "It is currently only capitalized for the next three quarters," he added.
Performance at Einhorn's Greenlight Capital has been hurt by bets against high-flying stocks like Tesla, Amazon.com Inc and Athenahealth Inc which he calls his bubble basket stocks. But he is sticking with those short bets.
Tesla's share price has surged 50 percent to $319.82 since January and Einhorn said the rise weighed on his fund's performance between April and June.
This week Tesla's share price has dropped after Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk warned that the company would face "manufacturing hell" as it ramps up production of its new mass-market Model 3 sedan.
In July Einhorn's Greenlight Capital performed better when a 2.1 percent gain helped wipe away almost all losses for the year. On the call Einhorn discussed only second-quarter performance. During those three months the fund lost 4 percent, leaving the firm with a 2.8 percent loss in the first half.
Greenlight Capital, like most hedge funds, is trailing the broader stock market Standard & Poor's index 11.6 percent gain in the first seven months of 2017.
Einhorn also said the fund lost money on its bets against Amazon and Athenahealth. But he is not making changes, saying "I like the composition of the portfolio."
His winners during the quarter included a bet on Bayer AG where he said a planned $66 billion takeover of U.S. agrochemicals group Monsanto Co would be enhancing. Also a bet against oil exploration company Continental Resources Inc was a winner Einhorn said.

(Reporting by Svea Herbst-Bayliss; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
Get the latest Tesla stock price here.
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2017. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

This mysterious billionaire just beat out Jeff Bezos to become the second-richest man in the world

This mysterious billionaire just beat out Jeff Bezos to become the second-richest man in the world

Amancio OrtegaAmancio Ortega is the second-richest man in the world.Getty Images / Xurxo Lobato
The mysterious founder of Zara just beat out Jeff Bezos to become the second-richest person in the world. 
Amancio Ortega claimed the No. 2 spot on the list of the world's richest people on Tuesday, Forbes reported. Amazon founder and CEO Jeff Bezos — who just last week beat out Bill Gates to briefly claim the title of the richest man in the world — dropped to the No. 3 position.
Bezos' drop is due to Amazon stock fluctuations, as the ecommerce company's stock has fallen nearly 5% since last Thursday. As of Tuesday afternoon, Forbes estimates Ortega's net worth to be $85.5 billion, compared to Bezos' estimated net worth of $84.6 billion.
Despite Ortega's enormous wealth, many people have never heard of him. Ortega is an incredibly private man, is rarely seen in public, and has given just a handful of interviews throughout his incredibly successful career.
That career began when Ortega founded fast-fashion giant Zara with his then-wife Rosalia in 1975. Today, his retail company Inditex SA — which owns Zara, Massimo Dutti, and Pull&Bear — has 7,385 outposts around the world.
While Ortega is immensely private, we do know a fair amount about him. Here's everything you need to know about the richest man in fashion. 
Ashley Lutz and Mallory Schlossberg contributed reporting to an earlier version of this article.

View As: One Page Slides


Amancio Ortega is the second-richest man in the world, with a net worth estimated at $85.5 billion.

Source: Forbes

Only one person in the world is richer than Ortega: Bill Gates.

Only one person in the world is richer than Ortega: Bill Gates.
Jeff Vinick/Getty Images

Apple stock surges to all-time high as forecast hints at strong sales boost

Apple stock surges to all-time high as forecast hints at strong sales boost

Tim Cook baseballApple CEO Tim Cook at a Red Sox game this summer.AP
AAPL Apple
 156.89 -0.92 (-0.60 %)
DisclaimerGet real-time AAPL charts here »
Apple stock is surging after it beat Wall Street's expectations for earnings per share and revenue, and the stock is up over 5% after-hours. 
Apple also issued strong revenue guidance for its fourth fiscal quarter, suggesting strong sales growth year-over-year.
The strong guidance also hinted at the launch of a redesigned iPhone in September, which is expected to sell briskly. 
Although CEO Tim Cook had warned that iPhone sales might see a "pause" ahead of the expected September launch of the new iPhone, iPhone unit sales were in line with Wall Street expectations and in line with last year's performance.
Notably, Apple sold 14% more iPads than it did a year ago, breaking a 13-quarter streak of year-over-year declines. However, revenue was only up 2% on an annual basis, suggesting that many of these sales were of the less expensive $329 iPad Apple introduced during the quarter.  
One trouble spot in the earnings was Apple's performance in China, which was down 10% year-over-year. 
Apple also announced a cash dividend of $0.63 cents per share, payable on August 17.  
Here are the key results:  
Q3 EPS (GAAP): $1.67, up 17% year-over-year, vs expectations of $1.57
Q3 revenue: $45.4 billion, up 7% year-over-year, vs expectations of $44.95 billion 
Gross margin: 38.5%, up 1% year-over-year, vs expectations of 38.2%
iPhone unit sales: 41.0 million, up 1% year-over-year, vs expectations of 41.1 million
iPad unit sales: 11.42 million, up 14% year-over-year
Mac unit sales: 4.292 million, flat year-over-year
Q4 revenue guidance: $49 billion - $52 billion vs expectations of $49.21 billion 
Click here to refresh the post. 

Notes from the call 

[5:00] Hold music has started. We're expecting CFO Luca Maestri and CEO Tim Cook today. 
[5:02] And we're off. Tim Cook calls the results "very strong" and predicts that Apple will "extend" its competitive lead this fall, potentially hinting at a big iPhone launch this fall. 
[5:04] Cook says there was a lot of demand at the high end of the iPhone lineup. "One decade after the iPhone launch, we have passed 1.2 billion cumulative iPhones sold." 
[5:05] Cook says that its services business is the size of a Fortune 100 company, which is faster than the company had predicted. (Apple predicted it would happen this year.)
[5:06] Apple is doing it for the kids — Cook is spending a long time talking about its software to teach students how to code. 
[5:07] Sales of Apple watch were up over 50% in the June quarter, Cook says. 
[5:09] Cook highlights Apple's $1 billion fund that invested in Corning and is "laying a foundation for a new era of technology-driven manufacturing" in the US. 
[5:11] "It's still early in the beta period, but it's clear that ARKit has captured the imagination of our developer community." Cook says that Apple will have the largest augmented reality platform this fall. 
[5:14] Tim Cook talking about HomePod, the speaker Apple previewed earlier this summer. Says listeners were blown away by sound quality. 
[5:15] Now CFO Luca Maestri is giving his prepared remarks. 
[5:18] Maestri says that 3 out of 4 Apple Pay transactions take place outside the US. 
[5:21] Walmart will use iPads for employee training. Deloitte and other enterprise customers are also going great, Maestri says. 
[5:25] Apple issued $10 billion in debt last quarter, Maestri says.
[5:27] It's question and answer time. First up is Katy Huberty from Morgan Stanley, who asked about gross margin. 
[5:30] Shannon Cross asks about China. Cook says iPhone was flat year-over-year. He also blamed Hong Kong for dragging the segment down. "We're at the trough of that, which is nice," Cook said. 
[5:34] Tim Cook: "We do think about the rumors and the volume of them that there is a pause in our current numbers" of people waiting for the next iPhone.
[5:35] Cook is asked about President Trump and his claim that Apple plans to build three big factories. Cook dodges and answers a question about increasing jobs in the United States. "We've already deployed $200 million to Corning in Kentucky to expand the plant to make innovative glass." 
[5:39] "There's probably several plants that can benefit from some investment to grow or expand or set up shop in the US for the first time, we're very excited about that."
[5:40] Cook says that China requires VPN apps to have a license from the government, and Apple was required by the Chinese government to remove VPN apps from the App Store. "There's still 100s of VPN apps on the App Store," Cook said. Cook says they're hopeful the Chinese government loosens the regulations. 
[5:45] Channel inventory question getting at when Apple will launch the next iPhone. Maestri: "We do not guide on channel inventory, we've never done that."
[5:47] Question about TV and self-driving cars. "We have done some original content, it's focused on Apple Music currently, we have some more that's launching in a week or so," Cook said. Says it's about learning, Apple is new in the space. Also to give Apple Music subcribers some original content. 
[5:50] Autonomy is the "mother of all AI projects," Cook says. 
[5:52] ARKit question. "Just take a look at what's already on the web, what people are doing. It's all over the place. From entertainment to gaming. More small business solutions ... I think AR is big and profound and it's one of those huge things and we'll marvel on the start of it. Customers are going to see it in a variety of ways. ... We'll start to see some applications there as well ... Feels great to get this thing going," Cook said. 
[5:57] Tim Cook: "We have no comment on anything that's not announced."
[6:00] We're done here. Thanks for tuning in! 

Charts

Apple Q3Apple
 bii apple iphone sales and yoy growth 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii apple iphone sales 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii apple ipad sales and yoy growth 2q17BI Intelligence
bii apple ipad sales 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii apple mac sales and yoy growth 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii apple mac sales 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii apple product ASP growth yoy 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii iphone ipad mac ASP 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
bii iphone ipad ASP 2q17Business Insider Intelligence
More: Apple 1 aapl Apple

Bitcoin might split again — here's what you need to know

Bitcoin might split again — here's what you need to know

Bitcoin power brokers were unable to come behind a single solution that would have preserved a unified cryptocurrency by Tuesday morning's deadline.
As such, the digital currency has officially forked and split in two: bitcoin cash and bitcoin.
Bitcoin cash is a fork of the bitcoin system: It's a new software that has all the history of the old platform, but instead of 1-megabyte blocks, it will have 8-megabyte blocks.
Miners have been able to mine for bitcoin cash since Tuesday morning, but the first mine was at about 2:20 p.m., according to CoinDesk.
But some bitcoin enthusiasts think this is only the first split of the cryptocurrency.
To recap, bitcoin power brokers have been squabbling over the rules that should guide the cryptocurrency's blockchain network.
On one side are the so-called core developers. They are in favor of smaller bitcoin blocks to protect it against hacks. On the other side are the miners, who want to increase the size of blocks to make the network faster and more scalable.
Until last week, the solution known as SegWit2x, which would double the size of bitcoin blocks to 2 megabytes, had nearly universal support. Those miners who did not participate in the fork began implementing part of SegWit2x on Tuesday.
According to Charles Morris, a chief investment officer of NextBlock Global, an investment firm with digital assets, since SegWit2x is not fully implemented — the block-size increase isn't expected to happen for months — another fork is on the horizon.
"Hardliners who don't want to see the size of blocks increase could spark another fork down the line," he said.
Peter Borovykh of Blockchain Driven, a blockchain technology company, told Business Insider that Tuesday's split set a precedent.
"Bitcoin is no longer immutable," he said. "If one fork happens, then it could trigger an avalanche."
Arthur Hayes, the CEO of BitMex, a bitcoin derivatives exchange, told Business Insider that there could be up to four iterations of bitcoin, and that one version could rise above the rest and possibly reach $5,000 a coin.
"There are people with billions of dollars of skin in the game, and they will ultimately go with the superior bitcoin network, and then the market will follow," Hayes said.
Get the latest Bitcoin price here.

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600