| In today’s edition, scoops on Trump’s Davos plans and the US Steel takeover fight, plus Bill Ackman ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ |
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| Liz Hoffman |
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Hi, and welcome back to Semafor Business. Big companies have always sought to curry favor in Washington. They quietly funneled money through trade groups and lobbyists and spun up ad campaigns that recast carried interest as a reward for Horatio Alger bootstrapping. But Donald Trump is not subtle, and neither are the appeals from CEOs now seeking his favor. “If you want to tell Trump you love him, you write a multimillion-dollar check to Melania Trump to make a documentary or you appoint Dana White to your board,” Semafor’s editor-in-chief, Ben Smith, said in Friday’s episode of our Mixed Signals podcast. “It’s just so literal.” Yesterday, a steel executive trying to enlist Trump’s support to buy US Steel held a press conference in Butler, Pennsylvania, the site of this summer’s assassination attempt. For good measure, Lourenco Goncalves, CEO of Cleveland-Cliffs, made what Semafor’s Rohan Goswami, reporting from the ground, called a “loving caress” of an American flag onstage next to him. Steel executives hugging flags, Amazon producing Melania’s biopic, Comcast and JPMorgan bankrolling inauguration parades, pharma companies holding offsites at Mar-a-Lago — there’s no subtlety here. BlackRock quit a climate initiative and immediately got consideration from Texas officials to be unblacklisted from doing business in the state. An open-air bazaar has replaced a black market of influence-peddling. It’s unsettling to reporters who are used to having to dig around for evidence of pay-to-play, but it’s fascinating to watch everyone say the quiet part out loud. In today’s newsletter: Scoops on the steel saga and Trump’s Davos plans, all eyes on tomorrow’s US inflation report, and Bill Ackman is still chasing his idol. Plus: Semafor is heading to Davos next week. I’ll be sitting down with Tal Cohen, President of Nasdaq, and Doug Sieg, CEO of Lord Abbett, to discuss how global finance is adapting to economic uncertainty, technological advancements, and shifting geopolitical dynamics. If you’re in the village, you can request an invitation here. And if you want updates from the ground, sign up for our pop-up newsletter, publishing each day next week from the Promenade. ➚ BUY: Tea leaves. Signs point to a still-hot economy, leading analysts to now openly wonder whether the Fed will pivot to a rate hike rather than holding steady or continue cutting. (More below on expectations for tomorrow’s inflation reading.) ➘ SELL: Mixed messages. JPMorgan elevated Jennifer Piepszak to COO, making her Jamie Dimon’s obvious successor — for about 15 minutes, before a bank spokesman told Bloomberg that Piepszak “does not want to be considered for the CEO position at this time.” |
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Shealah Craighead/The Trump White House Archived Donald Trump is expected to dial in via videoconference to the World Economic Forum in Davos next week, Semafor scoops. The conference, which kicks off on Inauguration Day, is a watering hole for the global elite that MAGA world, broadly speaking, disdains. But it’s also a key hub for global CEOs, who are keen to get on the President-elect’s good side and decipher an unpredictable Washington. Trump used his two past in-person appearances at Davos, in 2018 and 2020, to shill for his international trade deals and defend his America First policies. |
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Introducing The CEO Signal from Semafor Business, an exclusive, invitation-only membership for chief executives of the world’s largest companies. Andrew Edgecliffe-Johnson helps global bosses connect, learn, and navigate an uncertain world, offering candid, practical insights, and interviews for leaders who are short on time and seeking actionable intelligence. |
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US Department of Labor/Flickr Cleveland-Cliffs CEO Lourenco Goncalves has lined up financing for a multi-part US Steel bid in the $8 billion range, he told Semafor’s Rohan Goswami in an interview. Goncalves declined to specify which banks had committed to the bid. But he’s been working with advisers from Moelis, JPMorgan, UBS, Truist, and Wells Fargo on strategy and structure for a bid in the high $30s, people familiar with the matter said. CNBC first reported the discussions. The company has been working with Nucor on a bid that would carve up US Steel, whose sale to Japan’s Nippon is on life support after the Biden administration blocked it on national security grounds, some of the people said. Cleveland-Cliffs would make an all-cash bid for US Steel “when, not if, the Nippon deal collapses,” Goncalves said in an interview Monday in Butler, Pennsylvania, next to Cliffs’ most profitable steel mill. |
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Jared Siskin/Patrick McMullan via Getty Images A new Baby Berkshire? Bill Ackman wants to turn real-estate developer Howard Hughes, which he offered to buy for $1 billion this week, into the foundation of a corporate empire modeled by Warren Buffett. It’s classic Ackman, whose ideas can be overly clever and unworkably ambitious. He said he believes that Howard Hughes, which has never paid a dividend, will soon start generating enough cash to make it an acquisition vehicle — similar to the Massachusetts textile mill Buffett used to build Berkshire. Ackman has long admired Buffett and teamed up with the billionaire on a wildly profitable deal for Burger King in 2010. He tried to liken his firm, Pershing Square, to Berkshire last year during a failed IPO. He re-upped the comparison in his letter to Howard Hughes’ board: “With apologies to Mr. Buffett, HHH would become a modern-day Berkshire Hathaway that would acquire controlling interests in operating companies.” Efforts to emulate Buffett over the years have mostly failed. Leucadia — which seeded Pershing Square back in 2004 — once modeled itself as a “Baby Berkshire,” right down to the spartan corporate website and holdings, from mining to meatpacking to investment banking, before shedding everything but the investment bank and rebranding as Jefferies. The truth is that conglomerates are wildly out of fashion, and Berkshire is grandfathered in by decades of outperformance and Buffett’s own star power. |
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“If you are a craftsman in the industry, if you’re crew, why would you rebuild here?” “Wouldn’t you go to where the work is?”
— Terry Press, former CBS Films president, on the wildfires’ long-term effects on Hollywood |
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Tomorrow’s US inflation numbers will be even more closely watched after last week’s strong jobs report. With signs piling up that the economy is still running hot, investors have abandoned any hope of significant rate cuts this year, and analysts are starting to openly wonder whether the Federal Reserve’s next move on interest rates is up, not down. Apollo’s chief economist puts the odds at 40%. Fed Chair Jay Powell has always said he’ll go where the data points. But the central bank switching direction this quickly — its first cut was less than four months ago — would be unnerving, like watching a driver ride the brakes. Economists expect consumer prices to rise 2.8% in December, the fastest inflation since July. |
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Carlos Barria/File Photo/Reuters OpenAI published a list of policy proposals on Monday, outlining how US federal and state governments can catalyze the artificial intelligence industry and keep China from taking the lead, Semafor’s Reed Albergotti reported. The document argues the US should invest heavily in energy and other infrastructure to spur investment in American AI, calling for a closer relationship between AI companies and the US national security community. |
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