David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Technology

    Grayscale Wins Case Against SEC. It's a Huge Victory for Bitcoin and Coinbase

    This article from Barron’s may be of interest. Here is a section:

    GBTC had been trading at a significant discount to the value of the Bitcoin it holds. That gap is likely to close as traders anticipate an ETF approval.

    The judges' decision won't allow GBTC to convert into an ETF automatically. The federal government can appeal the decision to the Supreme Court or the SEC could attempt to deny the application to convert to an ETF for another reason.

    Still, the decision makes it an uphill battle for the SEC to keep spot Bitcoin ETFs from coming to market. In addition to Grayscale, BlackRock (BLK), Fidelity and other companies have also applied to launch a spot Bitcoin ETF.

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    Startup extinction season is going to kick into high gear - and there's likely going to be a bloodbath soon for some of the 50,000 VC-backed startups

    This article from Business Insider may be of interest. Here is a section:

    Venture capital funding was overly abundant in the latter half of 2020 and all of 2021. There were nearly 19,000 deals done that year, according to PitchBook, until things started to taper off in 2022.

    Stanford points out that the average time between funding rounds is now around 1.5 years. – basically what it was before the pandemic boom times. So, hypothetically, if a company last raised capital in the first quarter of 2022 (one of the most active in terms of deal count, PitchBook data shows), many startups will be on the hunt for new capital in the fourth quarter of 2023.

    Every company's situation is a little different based on their operating expenses and whether they've gotten fresh funding already. Though, unless you're an AI startup, the chance of a VC check has been slim to none. So what are their options? Likely a sale or shutting down.

    But it's not just VCs who are being stingy. All those crossover firms that wanted to get in on the action like Tiger Global (which by the way, did 335 deals in 2021, according to Crunchbase) and Coatue, aren't doing the kind of deals that they used to. Participation has dropped from more than 550 deals and a quarterly peak of nearly $50 billion in 2021 to fewer than 200 deals and a quarterly peak of around $15 billion in 2023, Stanford wrote.

    "We believe that a large portion of the supply-side deficit is derived from the crossover and other nontraditional investors that have pulled back from VC to more traditional strategies," he wrote.

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    Danaher Is Said to Be in the Lead to Acquire Abcam

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section:

    Danaher Corp. has emerged as the leading bidder for biotechnology supplier Abcam Plc, according to people familiar with the matter. 

    Danaher has pulled ahead of other bidders and is negotiating with the Cambridge, England-based company to reach a deal, the people said, asking not to be identified because the matter is private.

    Nothing is finalized and talks could still fall apart. It’s still possible another bidder could prevail, the people said.

    A representative for Abcam declined to comment. A representative for Danaher couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. 

    Bloomberg reported in June that Abcam had attracted initial interest from US life sciences company Danaher and Agilent Technologies Inc.

    Abcam said in June that it was starting a process to explore strategic options including a sale after receiving interest from multiple parties.

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    Pencils down

    Thanks to a subscriber for this edition of Jim Grant’s free letter. Here is a section:  

    Arm’s prospective transition to the public realm is no small development, as Wall Street impatiently awaits the return of capital markets activity. Conventional IPO fundraising (i.e., excluding special purpose acquisition companies) stands at $10.2 billion in the year-to-date per Dealogic, double the full-year tally logged last year but a fraction of the $39.7 billion and $105.5 billion outputs seen during 2020 and 2021, respectively. “Recent summer weakness is clearly pushing [SoftBank] to list Arm sooner rather than later,” Susannah Streeter, head of money and markets at Hargreaves Lansdown, tells Reuters.

    On the bright side for SoftBank and its teeming roster of 28 investment banks leading the offering, recent events in the IPO market suggest that risk appetite remains robust despite the August selloff.  Last Tuesday, shares in Sacks Parente Golf, Inc. vaulted 624% in their Nasdaq debut, briefly conferring a $400 million market cap on the micro-cap manufacturer of putting equipment, which lost $3.5 million on $190,000 in net revenues a year ago.

    Noting that the Sacks Parente priced its offering at $4 per share, the bottom of its indicated $4 to $5 per share range, while reducing the allotment to 3 million shares from 4.4 million, Renaissance Capital senior strategist Matt Kennedy marveled to Bloomberg that “in a typical IPO, it would be bizarre for a company to price at the low end of its range and then pop 600%. . . There’s still a sub-segment of the IPO market where the casino is open.”  Sacks Parente’s hot streak soon abated however, as the stock finished today south of $3, completing a round trip and then some.

    Then there’s VinFast Auto Ltd., which also began trading on the Nasdaq last Tuesday via a merger with blank-check firm Black Spade Acquisition Co. The Vietnam-based electric vehicle maker has since enjoyed a hotter ignition, with shares ripping higher by 109% today, building on a 280% rally in its first trading day one week ago. VinFast, which remains under 99% control by its founder Pham Nhat Vuong and which posted a $599 million net loss in the first quarter on $84 million in sales, ended the day with a market cap of roughly $85 billion, nearly equivalent to that of Ford and General Motors combined.

    The water’s warm, Masa and Co."

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    Cybertruck employee deliveries 'imminent' with dual-motor or tri-motor options as Tesla films launch ad

    This article from Notebookcheck may be of interest. Here is a section:

    The source mentions that the launch is "imminent" and only a few weeks away which jibes with Elon Musk's "end of Q3" Cybertruck release date promise back in April. There are a few other signs that point towards a Cybertruck launch in September, too.

    For one, Tesla has been filmed loading multiple units on trailers and shipping them out of Giga Texas just this past week alone, as the parking lot there seemingly gets new production batches every few days. They seem heading to the Fremont factory while some stop for crash tests on the way.

    Moreover, Tesla has reportedly been filming what could turn out to be the first Cybertruck launch ad up in the glaciers of Iceland. Locals have taped the Cybertruck surrounded by camera equipment there, or doing laps on the glacier fronted by a black Land Rover with its tailgate open as if for capturing footage.

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    Bitcoin Calm Shatters With Sudden Tumble, Mass Liquidations

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section:

    Crypto traders are now focusing on the $25,000 level for Bitcoin, below which options positioning suggests another cascade of liquidations could hit. 

    “With limited catalysts to push Bitcoin higher in the short term, a fall below $25,000 could put bears in charge, and if the rout in global risk assets continues, Bitcoin could face further downside,” said Josh Gilbert, market analyst at trading and investing firm eToro.

    A Wall Street Journal report citing documents that Elon Musk’s SpaceX has sold off its Bitcoin holdings after writing down $373 million also weighed on sentiment. It wasn’t clear from the Journal report when SpaceX had sold its Bitcoin.

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    Email of the day on a third industrial revolution, doing more with less and a nuclear revival from David Brown:

    It was a memorable 3 days with you last week. It gave us time to discuss several things in depth, including our new industrial revolution. Thank you for capturing some of the key points in your recent writings. I gave a lengthy presentation on our new 3rd Industrial Revolution at David Fuller's Markets Now meeting in London, February 2015, and Forbes interviewed me a few weeks later. Here is an extract from the article:

    "We clearly have the new communication system, the internet, and I suggest we can reasonably date the beginning of this industrial revolution to the mid 1990s when desktop PCs became linked for the first time by Tim Berners-Lee’s World Wide Web and Marc Andreesen’s Mosaic/ Netscape system. The internet is well ahead of the other two factors."

    This was some years before Klaus Schwab and the World Economic Forum took up the theme. And yes, I do rank it as the 3rd, not 4th as Schwab does: the development of computer tech in the 1970s-1980s hardly constituted a revolution. It did not drive a massive increase in productivity because it lacked most of the key factors required for an industrial revolution.

    Back then, we did not have the internet, the first of the 3 new factors required, and which more recently has given a massive change in communication and in distribution of information and goods. That became feasible from 1994 when Netscape appeared and especially from 2007 with the first iPhone followed by other smartphones.

    However, the other two required breakthroughs are still missing today. Our new industrial revolution has stalled with just 1 of the 3 essential factors in place. Our financial system is completely unreformed and inefficient; and we have not rolled-out a viable new energy source.

    In fact, in my opinion, the Western world has gone seriously off-track in the eight years since I first presented on this in 2015. You captured the issue very succinctly when wrote "The basic assumption is technological innovation allows us to do more with less". "The challenge in the energy and financial sectors is the solutions being proposed do less with more." The current direction of travel on renewable energy is worrying. In addition to the gross inefficiency, unreliability, and cost-ineffectiveness, of wind and solar power, we have the bizarre belief in shipping wood chips across the Atlantic to fuel 'green' energy in the UK. Apparently, returning to the energy source that pre-dated our 1st and 2nd revolutions constitutes progress!

    I do not have much idea about the new financial system, but the new energy system is obvious and that is the topic of this note to you today, Eoin. From our discussions last week, I believe you are of the same view, and it would be good to pass this on to all subscribers of Fuller Treacy Money. I recommend this article. At last we are beginning to see writing by experts in the energy sector, real experts, with factual information. This article on nuclear power will (hopefully) be followed by many more.

    Here are some key points from the article:

    The only viable and scalable low-carbon power technology is nuclear. Today, more than 400 reactors generate about 10 per cent of world electricity. They are emissions free and reliable. Their only problem is that they are perceived to be dangerous and are violently opposed by some groups.

    Dangerous, nuclear is not. Per unit of energy generated, nuclear power has proved to be much safer than any other major power generating technology. Coal, gas and hydropower are respectively 4000, 100 and 35 times more dangerous.

    In the event of an accident where all power supply is lost, all modern reactors will shut down safely. Over the last 60 years the only nuclear powerplant accident with directly measurable health consequences has been at Chernobyl. The reactor there was operated in defiance of all safety principles and used obsolete technology without shielding: its failure has no relevance to a discussion of normal nuclear reactor safety.

    Many different designs of small modular reactors which are built on a production line basis are proposed and several are now under construction. None of them can melt down and release radiation.

    A rapid switch from expensive, impractical wind and solar power to reliable nuclear is the only way of meeting the net zero goal while keeping the lights on and society in general functioning.

    Nuclear power needs to be recognised as a low emissions source of electricity that is superior to wind and solar power. Subsidies, mandates and other enormously expensive policies intended to promote wind and solar power must be abandoned and the money switched to expediting nuclear power.

    Governments need to face the fact that wind and solar power can never deliver their net zero dreams of low cost, reliable, emissions free electricity. They have only two realistic options: switch to nuclear power, or abandon net zero.

    The article is referring to current fission technology, and - as you mentioned recently - we may soon have even more powerful and efficient fusion energy to follow.

    I am hoping that we are past peak nonsense about so-called 'green technologies' and that realism will begin to reassert itself. Eoin, it would be good if you can periodically update us on investment themes related to nuclear power. And let's return to the topic of what might constitute "doing more with less" in a much-needed new financial system.

    Thanks and best wishes to Aisling and family. It truly was wonderful to host you last week.

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    US Authorities to Probe Fatal Tesla Model Y Crash in Virginia

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section: 

    The probe comes as the US National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is in the midst of a series of investigations targeting Tesla, its products and its chief executive officer, Elon Musk. Federal regulators are looking into possible problems with the company’s seat belts, steering wheels and driver-assistance features. 


    The Florida collision is the 54th included in NHTSA’s Special Crash Investigation of advanced driver-assistance systems like Tesla’s Autopilot. The broader probe began in 2016 after a fatal accident in Florida involving a Model S that was being operated with its automated driving system activated.

    Tesla vehicles have been involved in all but nine of the incidents that have been added to NHTSA’s investigation. The automaker, which has disbanded its media relations department, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

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    Riot Platforms Reports Mixed Q2 2023 Financial Results, RIOT Shares Drop 4%

    This article from Coinspeaker may be of interest. Here is a section: 

    One of the leading crypto mining publicly traded companies Riot Platforms Inc (NASDAQ: RIOT) released its Q2 2023 earnings on Wednesday. According to the announcement, Riot Platforms produced 1,775 Bitcoins during the quarter that ended on June 30, compared to 1,395 Bitcoins that were generated during the same period last year. As a result, the company announced that its total revenue for the quarter came in at $76.7 million, compared to approximately $72.9 million for the same period last year. However, analysts surveyed by FactSet expected the crypto mining company to report revenue of about $84.6 million.

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