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By Matthew Gutierrez, Shawn O'Malley, and Weronika Pycek · September 15, 2023
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?? The EV race is reaching a breakthrough pace.
Consider this: It took a decade to sell the first million EVs, two years to reach the second million, and just another year to reach three million.
If dramatic declines in the price of batteries and other materials continue, EVs could outsell gasoline and diesel vehicles by 2040.
— Weronika, Shawn, and Matthew
Here’s today’s rundown:
POP QUIZ
Tesla is in the EV driver's seat. What percentage of all EVs ever sold in the U.S. are Teslas? (Scroll to the bottom to find the answer!)
Today, we'll discuss the three biggest stories in markets:
All this, and more, in just 5 minutes to read.
CHART(S) OF THE DAY
IN THE NEWS
?? The IPO Market Is Back in Action (Maybe!)
All of a sudden, the IPO market isn’t looking too bad.
Instacart plans to increase the target price for its initial public offering (IPO) after the successful IPO debut of Arm, a British computer chip design company valued at a steep premium. Shares in Arm soared about 25% on its first day of trading, a jolt to an otherwise sluggish IPO market in 2023.
Instacart’s IPO is important because it signals a potential resurgence in the IPO market, which has been subdued due to higher interest rates and lackluster performances for many companies that went public earlier this year and in 2022. Just ask Bird, whose valuation has cratered from $2.5 billion to $11 million. Or ask WeWork, which has fallen from $40 billion to about $270 million, in another cautionary tale.
For many, Instacart provides a breath of fresh air in the form of delivered groceries. No need to drive to the store, shop around, or wait in line. Just order with a few clicks on your phone from your favorite local grocery store. Founded in 2012, it had raised over $2 billion in venture capital funding.
Why it matters:
Instacart and advertising tech company Klaviyo are expected to go public next week in what could be continued boosts for the entire tech industry. They’ll look to ride off Arm’s momentum as the fourth quarter of 2023 approaches.
All eyes were on Arm's performance this week, from investors to tech executives to bankers and founders. If the stock had a rough first couple of days, they could infer that the IPO market would likely stay sleepy. But this week's share boost could bode well for other companies going public into year-end, perhaps ending the cold spell.
VENTURE CAPITAL MEETS AI
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?? Goldman Sachs Says AI Stocks Aren’t in a Bubble
It’s no secret that an explosion in AI optimism has fueled the stock market’s rally this year despite the Fed hiking interest rates (which is supposed to be bad for stocks, at least in theory.)
领英推荐
The early AI winners in stocks have been firms most directly tied to the AI industry, like computer chip makers — such as Nvidia — and cloud service providers. These “near-term AI beneficiaries,” as Goldman Sachs puts it, have returned some 60% in 2023’s first eight months.
Past bubbles: While it’s easy to call the surge a bubble and compare the rally with Wall Street’s internet-tech euphoria in the late ‘90s, which collapsed in 2000, Goldman’s chief global equity strategist, Peter Oppenheimer, doesn’t think it’s so simple.
While Fed rate hikes are, as mentioned, supposed to weigh on stocks (hence the expression “don’t fight the Fed!”), the S&P 500 has continued higher.
The explanation? Investors expect much higher future growth rates for these businesses, with help from AI, more than offsetting Fed-related headwinds.
Why it matters:
Still, the rally is very concentrated — just 15 stocks accounted for over 90% of the S&P 500’s rally through the first half of this year.
Big picture: Tech stocks are ‘expensive,’ but Oppenheimer doesn’t think AI optimism has sparked the same market-wide euphoria as the internet did two decades ago.
MORE HEADLINES
?? Meme Stock Mania is now a movie — here’s what happened to GameStop and AMC
??? Oil rally keeps going, putting $100 a barrel into sharper focus
?? Rockefeller Foundation to devote $1 billion to climate change
?? ‘Oldest start-up on earth': Birkenstock's IPO filing went exactly as you'd expect
?? TikTok fined $300 million for failing to protect child users in Europe
?? U.S. Auto Workers Hold First Simultaneous Strike
Some are spending their September sipping pumpkin-spiced lattes and eating apple cider doughnuts. Others are joining the picket line — The United Auto Workers (UAW) union initiated coordinated walkouts at three manufacturing plants owned by General Motors, Ford, and Stellantis (the parent company of Chrysler.)
The strike marks the most extensive labor movement in the U.S. industrial sector in years.
Halting production: The labor stoppages at the three Detroit-based automakers will cease production of key models, including the Ford Bronco, Jeep Wrangler, and Chevy Colorado pickup truck.
Focused strikes allow the union to minimize how much it compensates workers for strikes. While the UAW has an $825 million strike fund, it's small compared to the billions in cash reserves automakers have accumulated to sweat them out potentially.
Strike demands: The walkouts come after weeks of disagreements between union leaders and car company execs. The union wants a bigger share of the money from selling traditional trucks and job security as the companies focus more on electric vehicles.
Why it matters:?
The strikes will involve 12,700 workers at Ford's plant in Wayne, Michigan, GM's plant in Wentzville, Missouri, and Stellantis' Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio. These plants make some of the companies' most?profitable vehicles.
Automakers fear cost hikes: Gerald Johnson, GM's senior executive for manufacturing, said the UAW's demands for wages and benefits would amount to a $100 billion cost for the company.
Political pressure: The deadlock has turned political, leading President Joe Biden, seeking re-election next year, to call for a settlement.
TRIVIA ANSWER
?About 61% of all EVs ever sold in the U.S. are made by Tesla, still the market leader.
SEE YOU NEXT TIME!
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