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Thursday, April 13, 2023

Goldman Thesis On Weight Watchers 'Absurd,' Fund Manager on Why He's Short

 Shares of WW International Inc 

, the parent company of diet and fitness platform Weight Watchers, jumped almost 60% on Tuesday after a Goldman Sachs  analyst upgraded the stock and substantially raised its price target from $3.80 to $13.

The upgrade came after WW confirmed the purchase of Sequence, a telehealth provider that connects patients with doctors who can prescribe weight-loss drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy.

Yet one influential fund manager does not agree with Goldman Sachs.

Gary Black, managing partner of The Future Fund — the firm behind the Future Fund Active ETF 

 — said that Goldman Sachs' thesis implied Weight Watchers members will pay Sequence $90 a month to get access to drugs such as Wegovy and Mounjaro, when the average member today pays a monthly $23.
"The flaw with the thesis: most insurance plans won't cover the cost of these drugs," wrote Black on Twitter.

Without insurance coverage, these drugs cost patients between $840 and 1,200 a month, says Black, and only 20% of insurers cover them for the clinically obese.

The fund manager said his firm would take a completely opposite stance, shorting WW stock, an action done when fund managers expect the price of a stock to decline over time.

Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs analyst Jason English said if WW can grab just 3% of the total addressable market for weight loss drugs in the U.S., it could add $2 in earnings per share.

Black called the WW rally a deja-vu. On March 7, WW stock climbed 70% in one day, to later quickly return to their original price.

https://www.benzinga.com/analyst-ratings/analyst-color/23/04/31773649/goldman-sachs-thesis-on-weight-watchers-is-absurd-fund-manager-says-why-hed-short-t

Ironwood gains amid takeover talk

 

Ironwood Pharmaceuticals (IRWD) rose 3.4% amid speculation about an activist investor in the gastro intestinal drug company.

Pfizer signs strategic cooperation pact with China's Sinopharm

 Pfizer said on Thursday it has signed a strategic cooperation agreement with China's Sinopharm Group, and plans to seek approval to market 12 innovative drugs in China through 2025.

Sinopharm's president Liu Yong said during the signing event in Shanghai on Wednesday that the cooperation will involve accelerating the delivery of Pfizer's new drugs to patients, according to a statement from Pfizer.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pfizer-signs-strategic-cooperation-pact-125152399.html

Joe Rogan Issues Warning After AI-Generated Version Of His Podcast Surfaces

 by Katabella Roberts via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

Joe Rogan has warned of the growing threats posed by artificial intelligence (AI) after a version of his podcast, “The Joe Rogan Experience,” was created entirely through the use of AI technology, sparking concern among listeners.

This is going to get very slippery, kids,” Rogan wrote on Twitter on April 11 in response to a video of the fake show shared on the social media platform by content creator Farzad Mesbahi.

The fake video is titled “Joe Rogan AI Experience Episode #001” and features “guest” Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, the creator of the artificial intelligence system ChatGPT.

A disclaimer on the video noted that the contents depict a “fictional” podcast between Rogan and Altman, with all content generated using AI language models.

“The ideas and opinions expressed in the podcast are not reflective of the thoughts of Joe Rogan or Sam Altman,” the disclaimer reads.

It adds that the use of AI technology to generate the video is “solely intended as an exploration of the capabilities of language models and should not be misconstrued as a genuine conversation between the individuals depicted.”

Fake Guest Talks Elon Musk

Throughout the fake podcast, the AI-generated host “Rogan” and AI-generated guest “Altman” discuss various subjects including the future of AI, ethical issues surrounding such advanced technology, whether or not advanced AI could take jobs away from American workers, and, rather ironically, concerns regarding fake AI content, among other issues.

At one point, “Altman” even discusses his work with Elon Musk.

Musk founded OpenAI with Altman in 2015 but has in recent months led calls for AI labs to immediately pause training systems that are more powerful than Chat GPT-4 for at least six months, citing concerns over their possible “risks to society and humanity.”

“I’m curious to know what it’s like to work with Elon Musk,” the fake Rogan asks Altman on the show. “He’s such a controversial and influential figure in the tech world and I’m sure it must be an interesting experience to work with him. Can you tell me a bit about your experience working with Elon and your thoughts on him as a person and a leader?”

It’s definitely been an interesting experience working with Elon, he’s definitely a very intelligent and driven person and he has a lot of great ideas and insights, he’s definitely someone who is always thinking about the future and how to make the world a better place and I really respect that about him,” the fake Altman responds.

“At the same time, he’s also someone who is very passionate about his beliefs and ideals and he’s not afraid to speak his mind and challenge the status quo. That can definitely be both a strength and a weakness depending on the situation,” the AI-generated Altman continues.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/joe-rogan-issues-warning-after-ai-generated-version-his-podcast-surfaces

French Pension Protesters Storm LVMH Building In Downtown Paris

 On the same day that LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, the world's largest maker of luxury goods, reported better-than-expected first-quarter sales, led by Fashion & Leather Goods, and share price jumped to a record high, French pension protesters stormed the headquarters of the company in Paris. 

Dramatic videos posted on Twitter shows protesters storming the headquarters of LVMH. This sort of behavior from protesters holding strikes against President Emmanuel Macron's pension reform was seen last week when they stormed offices of BlackRock

C'mon Man!

 By Michael Every of Rabobank

Common good, prosperity, and thinking

US CPI was weaker than expected by the smallest possible rounding down margin, but still uncomfortably high for anyone who focuses on inflation rather than asset prices. Headline was 0.1% m-o-m, driven by falling energy, and 5.0% y-o-y; core was 0.4% m-o-m and 5.6% y-o-y. Nothing in the report suggested the Fed will refrain from hiking a further 25bps in May.

Neither did the Fed minutes from the March meeting where rates were raised 25bps. While some doves favored pausing due to rumbles in the banking sector, some wanted to go 50bps without it. The Fed is keeping an eye on credit conditions, but said it was not going to stop hiking, or pivot, just because the economy wobbles - which looking at trucking around US ports could tell you is happening to some degree. Fed presidents Harker and Daly both said the same after the minutes. Rabobank’s Philip Marey also concludes (in ‘Credit Americain’), that the March CPI report: “underlines the importance of staying the course, because core inflation remains persistent at a high level. In fact, now that the FOMC is outsourcing the final leg of the hiking cycle to credit tightening by banks, we cannot rule out the possibility that the Committee may have to resume the hiking cycle later this year, if credit tightening fails to finish the job.”

Not unrelated, oil also closed up over 2% on the day, with Brent back over $87, and up 18% month-to-date. Headline CPI will need to find something else to drag it lower again in April or May, and core CPI is already sticky – as ECB speakers made clear too. Meanwhile:

  • The US announced a one-month budget deficit of $378bn(!)

  • Germany may reverse its decision to allow China’s COSCO to buy a controlling stake in the port of Hamburg following a government split; perhaps partly because in a leaked government report states it is going to fail to meet its commitments to NATO in both 2025 and 2027.

  • President Macron, whose diplomatic staff just spent days walking back everything he had said, reiterated France will not be a US “vassal”. As I noted, pray France doesn’t need Fed swaplines.

  • Russia is again suggesting that the Black Sea Grains Deal may not last much longer.

  • China is to close Taiwan’s northern airspace from April 16-18, which will affect 60%-70% of flights going between Northeast Asia and Southeast Asia, as well as flights between Taiwan and South Korea, Japan and North America.

  • Brazil’s president is in China to talk business, and new world orders and the flow of agri goods.

On which note, the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook flags deglobalisation risks yet also expects the world will be back in the New Normal of ultra-low rates and QE from 2025. Does it think 24 months from now the Ukraine War and geopolitical tensions will have been resolved? That’s the underlying assumption – or they are assuming there is no politics in economics.

Moreover, if we end up in the New Normal again, will politicians shrug and say “Let’s push up house prices, stocks, and bonds?”

C’mon man! You don’t think they will lean on fiscal stimulus, protectionism, and populism, more than now? After all, they just learned such policies generate a rapid demand response: they just create inflation if you don’t add supply too. The logic will therefore be to boost supply and demand, which involves more control over the economy than just slashing rates and hoping for the best.

Note well that even The Heritage Foundation sees it the same way. That influential conservative think tank just released an intellectual shift titled ‘Free Enterprise and the Common Good: Economic Science and Political–Economic Art as Complements’. In it, economics is now openly political-economy, and conservatism reaching for a new “-ism” beyond tax and rate cuts and deregulation. (As predicted in 2020.) A new national conservatism is proposed based on Catholic Social Thought (CST): theology as glue to replace what (neo)liberalism dissolves - i.e., only one in five young Americans declare themselves as patriots. As mentioned in a past Global Daily, Schumpeter was a late convert to CST’s emphasis on ‘the common good’ as the only framework in which we should allow free markets to work, which leans on Quadragesimo Anno, a Papal edit discussing the ethical implications of the social and economic order.

I am sure I just lost many readers here because I haven’t said ‘basis points’ or ‘pivot’ for a few sentences. However, such intellectual shifts in think tanks matter, in the same way the one to Thatcherism and Reaganism did in the 1970s, before both assumed power and swept old institutional thinking away. The Tweet of the Heritage report is: “Conservatives are rethinking the relationship between free enterprise & the common good. The question isn't whether to jettison free enterprise in favour of the common good, but rather how to orient free enterprise in support of the common good.”

The full document stresses: “most American conservatives have held for several decades that protecting markets from government was essential for human flourishing. But that consensus is quickly changing as many elements of classical liberalism are now being challenged.” This means rejecting neoclassical economics, mathematical economists, and traditional Reaganite tropes like tax cuts, rate cuts, deregulation, and free trade. Rather, it says, “Free enterprise is necessary for true liberty, but it is not sufficient…. Combating monopolies, redistributing income, and even guiding production in essential industries are all valid public policy options.” As is “social justice” - but economically, not in terms of DEI identity. Overall, the report contains as many interesting questions as answers, which stimulates my brain more than noting CPI was 0.1% not 0.2%. Indeed, it concludes that a common-good capitalism policy agenda should answer five questions:

  • What is the external social or political cost to market resource allocation?

  • What is the proposed corrective policy?

  • What are the costs and benefits one may reasonably expect from implementing that policy?

  • How does the policy affect the scale and scope of government, social cohesion, and family formation?

  • Retrospectively, how can society know the policy is working as intended?

Ask yourself if the answers are “Pivot! Pivot! Pivot! QE! QE! QE!

(Certainly not in Australia, where the latest jobs numbers were +53K, with full-time jobs up 73K, and unemployment at 3.5%. Why did we get the RBA pause in April? The same reason as we got one in Canada again this week: housing prices – which are seen as the ‘common good’ for those with property, and as the common point of contention for those without.)

Of course, there is a more pointed target to this conversation. Tellingly, the Heritage report first asks you if your primary concern is China: if you click ‘No’, you can read it; if you click ‘Yes’, you are redirected to ‘Winning the New Cold War: A Plan for Countering China’, with a comprehensive set of policy recommendations financial markets won’t like either.

In short, it seems like a possible future of ‘common good’ far more regulated Western markets vs. China’s common prosperity, with all that entails. That matters far more than the market’s all-too-common thinking that a 0.1% US CPI print either matters, or will last as a trend.

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/cmon-man

ViewRay Updated Fiscal Year 2023 Financial Guidance; to Explore Strategic Alternatives

 ViewRay, Inc. (Nasdaq: VRAY) (the "Company") today provided a business update and announced preliminary financial results for the quarter ended March 31, 2023. The preliminary results have not been audited and are subject to change.

First Quarter 2023 Preliminary Results and Key Points (Unaudited)

  • Received 13 new orders for MRIdian systems totaling approximately $68 million, compared to seven new orders totaling approximately $41 million in the first quarter of 2022.

  • Total backlog increased to approximately $411 million as of March 31, 2023, compared to approximately $331 million as of March 31, 2022.

  • Total revenue for the first quarter 2023 was approximately $23 million, primarily from three revenue units, compared to approximately $19 million, primarily from three revenue units in the first quarter of 2022.

  • Net loss for the first quarter 2023 was approximately $29 million, compared to a net loss of approximately $26 million in the first quarter of 2022.

  • Adjusted EBITDA was a loss of approximately $25 million in the first quarter 2023 compared to an adjusted EBITDA loss of approximately $21 million in the first quarter 2022.

  • The Company's Board of Directors has retained Goldman Sachs and Co. LLC as a financial advisor to undertake an evaluation of strategic alternatives, including a corporate sale, merger, or business combination.