11/06/24 - The News

Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Tesla Shares Hit Record—Soaring 12%—And Elon Musk Becomes $15 Billion Richer With Trump Victory

November 06, 2024 0

 Tesla’s shares rose to over $280 as of around 10:10 a.m. EST, pacing what would be a new record for the stock, eclipsing a previous high of $273.54 set on Oct. 27.



Trump praised Tesla’s chief executive as a “super genius” and a “new star” during his victory speech early Wednesday, after Musk spent weeks campaigning for Trump throughout Pennsylvania before Election Day.

Wedbush Securities analyst Dan Ives wrote earlier this year a second Trump presidency would be an “overall negative for the EV industry,” though the financial services firm also viewed it as a “huge positive for Tesla” because the company has the “scale and scope that is unmatched” in the industry.

Trump’s plan to implement tariffs on Chinese imports would also deter Tesla’s Chinese competitors BYD—which Ives noted overtook Tesla as the world’s largest EV maker at the time—and NIO from “flooding the U.S. market over the coming years,” Ives said.

Musk was among the more prominent supporters of Trump during his election campaign. The Tesla CEO poured at least $118 million into his America PAC to help support Trump, meaning Musk was Trump’s second largest backer behind Timothy Mellon. Musk’s America PAC also awarded $1 million to voters in swing states through a giveaway that was briefly paused by a Philadelphia court. In September, Trump said he would create a “government efficiency commission” first proposed by Musk, who has indicated he would lead the agency. During the election cycle, Musk appeared alongside Trump at multiple rallies and supported his campaign on social media. Trump has said he was a “big fan” of electric vehicles, though he said at an earlier rally to not “bother with the electric” and claimed in a March interview that the vehicles “cost too much” and all will “be made in China.”

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Trump victory to reverberate through global economy

November 06, 2024 0

 Donald Trump’s victory in the race to become the next U.S. president will have economic consequences for the rest of the world that are likely to be deep and quite immediate.



If Trump enacts just a fraction of his pledges – from higher trade tariffs to deregulation, more oil drilling and more demands on America’s NATO partners – the strain on government finances, inflation, economic growth and interest rates will be felt in every corner of the world.

Trump recaptured the White House on Wednesday by securing more than the 270 Electoral College votes needed to win the presidency, Edison Research projected.

His Republican Party also secured the Senate and may even win the House of Representatives, which would make it easier for the president to legislate his proposals and push through key appointments.

“Trump’s fiscal pledges are seriously troublesome – for the U.S. economy and for global financial markets – as they promise to vastly expand an already excessive deficit at the same time as he threatens to undermine key institutions,” Erik Nielsen, UniCredit’s Group Chief Economics Advisor, said.

“One must conclude that Trump poses a serious – and so far vastly under-appreciated – threat to the U.S. Treasury market and thereby to global financial stability,” Nielsen said.

Import duties, including a 10 per cent universal tariff on imports from all foreign countries and a 60 per cent tariff on imports from China, are a key plank of Trump’s policies and likely to have the biggest global impact.

Tariffs inhibit global trade, lower growth for exporters, and weigh on public finances for all parties involved. They are likely to raise inflation in the United States, forcing the U.S. Federal Reserve to act with tighter monetary policy.

The International Monetary Fund has already characterized global growth as weak, with most nations producing “feeble” expansion. A further hit to global trade is likely to present a downside risk to its 3.2 per cent GDP growth projection for next year.

Firms mostly pass import costs onto the customer, so tariffs are likely to be inflationary for U.S. buyers, forcing the Fed to keep interest rates high for longer or to even reverse course and hike borrowing costs once again.

This will be even more likely if Trump keeps his spending and tax pledges, which could increase the U.S. debt by $7.75 trillion through 2035, according to the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

“Most damage would be done under a universal import tariff,” ABN Amro’s Rogier Quaedvlieg said. “If the ultimate implementation is non-universal, the hit to the global economy would be significantly weaker.

“The full Trump package, including a universal package, would likely hit the global economy hard.”

For emerging markets relying on dollar funding, such a policy mix will make borrowing more expensive, dealing a double blow on top of the lost exports.

The same forces that could push up U.S. inflation could weigh on prices elsewhere, especially if Trump slaps oversized duties on China as he has promised.

As the world’s largest exporter, China is desperate to resurrect growth, so it may seek new markets for goods squeezed out of the U.S. and dump products elsewhere, especially Europe.

Central banks are likely to react quickly as business sentiment, especially for trade-reliant open economies, will deteriorate quickly.

“Even before a fall in the surveys, the ECB could be tempted to accelerate its rate cuts to a 2 per cent neutral rate and, once the U.S. tariff policies become clearer, it would be reasonable to cut rates to below neutral,” JP Morgan’s Greg Fuzesi said.

Governments are also likely to retaliate against any U.S. import duty, inhibiting trade further and cutting deeper into global growth.

High Fed rates and lower borrowing costs elsewhere would also boost the dollar - as evidenced by the 1.5 per cent drop in the value of the euro and the yen overnight - dealing even more pain to emerging markets since over 60 per cent of international debt is denominated in dollars.

Mexico could be the hardest hit given Trump’s rhetoric on closing the border, which comes against an already deteriorating domestic outlook.

“Mexico is most at risk,” TS Lombard’s Jon Harrison said as the Mexican peso fell 3 per cent against the dollar.

Mexico is especially vulnerable because trade tensions and threats of deportations could exacerbate domestic problems like cartel activity and the government’s failure to curb violence, Harrison added.

Among potential winners, Brazil might enjoy greater trade with China given that Beijing replaced all its U.S. soybean imports with Brazilian ones when trade tensions flared during Trump’s first presidency.

But Europe could also suffer the added blow of increased defence costs if Trump reduces support for NATO.

The continent has relied on a U.S. military presence since the end of World War Two and with no end in sight to Russia’s war in Ukraine, Europe will be forced to fill any gap left by a U.S. retreat.

But government debt in Europe is already close to 90 per cent of GDP, so finances are stretched and governments will struggle to stimulate an economy suffering from trade barriers while funding military spending at the same time.

Trump’s deregulation efforts are likely to play out over a longer period but internationally-agreed proposals aimed at making banks more resilient, commonly known as Basel III, could be a first casualty.

The new rules are set to apply from Jan. 1 and policymakers are already debating whether they should go ahead even if the U.S. pulls out.

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Trump’s Biggest Advocates—Joe Rogan, Bill Ackman, Dave Portnoy—Celebrate Election Win

November 06, 2024 0

 Elon Musk, who was praised by Trump in his election speech, wrote “game, set and match” late on Tuesday and later posted—in addition to several other pro-Trump messages—an image of himself speaking with Trump at an election night party.



Fellow tech billionaire Palmer Luckey, the founder of Oculus VR, said “GG,” an acronym for good game, in a similar post, to which Musk responded “yup.”

Joe Rogan, host of the most listened-to podcast in the U.S., responded to Fox News declaring Trump’s victory before the Associated Press called the election: “WHOLE. LEE. S—.”

In a lengthy post on X, billionaire Bill Ackman said the election result was “as I expected” and criticized the Democratic party as “fundamentally undemocratic.

Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy said Trump “won for fun,” claiming Democrats gave voters like himself “no choice” to vote and support Trump.

Actor Zachary Levi wrote he was “incredibly proud” of everyone who voted for Trump, adding to other celebratory messages from InfoWars host Alex JonesRosanne Barr and Jake Paul, who said, “truth won in this election.”

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