Good morning.
A major protest erupted at a Tesla plant in Germany.
Actually what happened was an extremist organization calling itself “Volcano Group” set fire to a transmission tower that cut off power to the factory near Berlin on Tuesday. In a letter sent to the German news site Kontrapolis, Volcano Group said they “sabotaged” the plant because it “consumes earth, resources, people, labor and spits out 6,000 SUVs, killer cars, and monster trucks per week.” Workers at the factory were evacuated, and production may be offline for a week. We can’t think of the last time something that wasn’t an Elon Musk tweet burned Tesla this much.
China Shoots for 5% Growth in 2024, But It Won’t Be Easy

Beijing is feeling good about the Chinese economy. Should we?
The Chinese government has set a growth target of 5% for 2024, the same forecast as last year. It’s a figure some analysts view as ambitious given that the country’s post-Covid economy has felt like an indefinite hospital stay.
Last Year is in the Past
Last year was no fun at all for China. Its formerly red-hot property market began spiraling out of control — developer Evergrande was recently forced to liquidate and Country Garden could be next. Local government debt ballooned to more than $12.5 trillion. More young people than ever were out of work. And geopolitical tensions combined with restrictive security policies caused Western investment to diminish.
The government nevertheless insisted that GDP grew 5.2% last year, although questions swirl around those numbers, which is to say hardly anyone thinks it was that high. This year looks to be paved with the same jagged boulders, possibly even more of them. Even Premier Li Qiang thinks growth won’t come easy. “We need to maintain policy focus, work harder, and mobilize the concerted efforts of all sides,” Li said in a report this week. “The foundation for China’s sustained economic recovery and growth is not solid enough.” The world appears to concur:
- The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund expect China’s 2024 growth to reach just 4.5% and 4.6%, respectively. Moody’s Heron Lim told The Wall Street Journal, “While I disagree with the notion that China is in a broad economic crisis for now, I do agree it would take time for China to complete its economic restructuring while managing its current risks and turmoil in the property market.”
- The possible ace up China’s sleeve to achieve the desired growth is issuing special treasury bonds valued at roughly $140 billion that won’t be included in the fiscal deficit. It’s a move China has only done three other times in the past few decades, all coinciding with major economic emergencies in 1998, 2007, and 2020.
Human Rights Softball: The fixes for China’s deteriorating relations with the West are less obvious. The European Union this week agreed to ban and even destroy products made with forced labor, a move that could sow tension with Beijing, which has been accused of forcing Uyghur ethnic minorities in the country’s Xinjiang region to work in detention centers creating solar panels, producing clothes, and even building a Volkswagen factory. However, Politico reported the EU requires sufficient evidence before investigating suspected forced labor whereas in the US, which cut off imports from Xinjiang in 2022, just a reasonably credible suspicion will do.
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Temasek May Be Circling an OpenAI Investment
Laugh all you want, Jensen Huang. Your buddy Sam Altman just may get that $7 trillion yet.
Huang, CEO of high-flying Nvidia, was dismissive when asked about OpenAI’s Altman targeting that eye-grabbing sum for his mother-of-all semiconductor projects. But Sam’s off and running. Temasek, the $287 billion Singapore state-backed investment fund, has held multiple meetings with founder Altman in recent months, according to a Financial Times report on Tuesday.
Buy-Robot
Building AI infrastructure is expensive — at least Altman, forever embracing the role of a fundraising Silicon Valley founder, seems to think so. Last month, The Wall Street Journal reported that the once briefly ousted CEO had been pitching investors — including the United Arab Emirates government, in particular — on a massive initiative to boost AI infrastructure and increase semiconductor production. The project would require as much as $5 trillion to $7 trillion, Altman reportedly told the potential investors, with a goal of reducing dependence on Nvidia, the fast-growing supernova in the suddenly all-important chip industry.
Altman can afford to think big. In December, Microsoft-backed OpenAI announced annualized revenue of over $2 billion — a level of stratospheric early success seen only by future name-brand companies like Google and Meta. Employees also recently participated in a stock sale that valued the company at $86 billion, more than triple its previous valuation from less than a year prior, Bloomberg reported. It’s no wonder then that Altman is going big-game hunting with an investor class whose pockets run even deeper than Silicon Valley’s A-list venture capitalists:
- Temasek’s massive portfolio includes Stripe, Tencent, and Alibaba. It also has investments in California-based AI chip designer d-Matrix and South Korean chipmaker Rebellions.
- In addition to Temasek, Altman has reportedly held recent talks with Nvidia rival TSMC, as well as with Sheikh Tahnoon bin Zayed al-Nahyan, a powerful figure in the UAE who chairs the $800 billion Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, among other massive state-backed entities.
New York Crimes: Investors don’t seem too worried about OpenAi’s myriad ongoing legal troubles, including a somewhat nebulous lawsuit brought by Elon Musk, who alleges the company is “refining an [artificial general intelligence] to maximize profits for Microsoft, rather than for the benefit of humanity.” The SEC is simultaneously investigating whether Altman misled investors, the WSJ reported last week. The company also is battling The New York Times, which alleges copyright infringement of its published materials to help build the chatbot. Microsoft filed a motion on Tuesday to dismiss the NYT’s lawsuit, likening its complaints to Hollywood fighting against the birth of the VCR in the 1980s. Of course, we don’t remember VCR executives warning that videotapes present a “risk of extinction” to humanity.
Target Follows the Amazon Prime Playbook
If you can’t beat ‘em — and you’re not anywhere close to beating ‘em — copy ‘em.
Target said Tuesday it’s launching an Amazon Prime-esque (and Walmart+-esque) membership program called Target Circle 360. The firm is presumably hoping the program will help its slagging sales do a 180.
Let’s Circle Back Around
Perhaps it was only a matter of time. Investors have long valued the recurring revenue boon provided by subscription services. And while Walmart, which launched Walmart+ in 2020, still doesn’t report total membership figures, its CFO said on a recent earnings call that the program is still seeing double-digit growth and that members spend nearly double that of a typical non-member on an annualized basis.
Target Circle 360 will launch in about a month, at a rate of $99 per year (though a promotion through May 18 will price it at $49), and will offer customers unlimited free same-day shipping for orders over $35, and free two-day shipping, among other perks. It may just be the jolt the big-box retailer needs:
- Comparable sales fell for the third quarter in a row, the company announced in its earnings call Tuesday, while overall annual sales declined for the first time since 2016.
- Its e-commerce unit is just as sluggish. Digital sales fell by almost 1% year-over-year in the fourth quarter, completing a year-long streak of declining e-commerce business.
Right on Target: Still, Target posted an overall revenue beat above analyst expectations, generating nearly $32 billion over the holiday season. While that’s roughly flat compared to results from a year ago, the company is still riding a pandemic-era boom, with recent fourth-quarter sales around 35% higher than 2019 levels. All of which was enough to send Target’s share price soaring over 12% on Tuesday. In other words, investors seem to think they’re right on… well, you know.
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