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Strategies & Market Trends : 2026 TeoTwawKi ... 2032 Darkest Interregnum -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: sense who wrote (185435)3/16/2022 4:46:34 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217648
 
A few items

Gold 'meme-d', a possibility that excites the senses ...

- Michael Saylor tee-ed up Micro Strategies to do bitcoins

- Adam Aron tees up AMC to do gold



bloomberg.com

AMC’s Gold Miner Investment Makes Perfect Sense to the Investing Faithful

Mudrick called in AMC CEO Adam Aron to sell deal to Hycroft Retail traders see upside in troubled penny-stock gold miner

Eliza Ronalds-Hannon
16 March 2022, 05:44 GMT+8



An AMC movie theater in New York.

Photographer: Amir Hamja/BloombergFaithful investors who helped pull AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc. back from the financial brink are cheering its unorthodox investment in Hycroft Mining Holding Corp., a troubled gold and silver mining company.

The investment follows a challenging run for Hycroft, which went public in early 2020 through a merger with a special purpose acquisition company backed by hedge fund manager Jason Mudrick. It had lost around 80% of its value since its debut, and the company asked its lenders to grant it some breathing room on its debt last month.

Hycroft’s largest shareholder, Mudrick Capital, has experienced this phenomenon before. Mudrick was an architect of AMC’s narrow escape from bankruptcy last year. When AMC’s shares jumped in early 2021, Mudrick encouraged the theater operator to capitalize on the rally. The company issued about $400 million worth of new shares and used the proceeds to pay down debt.

This time around, Mudrick’s role was more involved.

Mudrick’s GambitAfter rushing AMC management to a remote Nevada location to visit the mine before finalizing the decision, Mudrick, AMC’s Chief Executive Officer Adam Aron and a handful of lawyers hashed out the details via Zoom.



Jason Mudrick

Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

From the jump, time was short. Hycroft had only six days to put together its deal in order to preserve a low price for AMC’s stock purchases; Nasdaq requirements meant they would price at the average of the past several days of trading, and delay would include post-rally prices in that average.

Representatives from Mudrick Capital, AMC, and Hycroft did not provide comment.

Reddit investors started talking about Hycroft and drove its stock up to a high of $1.88 on March 11, the stock’s highest price since August. Social media activity preceded a surge in the shares last Tuesday that caught the attention of stakeholders, according to a person with knowledge of the dealmaking over the past week.

Read More: Hycroft Options, Stock Trading Volume Went Crazy Before AMC Deal

Jason Mudrick recognized a familiar opportunity and called on an old partner -- AMC’s Aron, who had become a skilled Reddit-whisperer -- to help him sell Hycroft on the idea, according to the person familiar. Instead, it also led to a surprise investment offer from the AMC CEO.

Today, Hycroft said it would sell up to $500 million of additional shares in a future at-the-market issuance. It may use proceeds from that and the AMC investment to help finance new technology to better process its reserves, according to the person familiar.

From Crypto to GoldAron has attracted retail investor support due to what they say is his willingness to listen to individuals and solicit their ideas on Twitter.

AMC has spent months touting a move into crypto, with plans to create its own token and accept cryptocurrencies as payment, which investors had pushed for amid a broader movement positioning crypto as a new safe haven investment.

But that thesis has come into question in recent weeks after a sell-off in the stock market and concerns about inflation and the war in Ukraine. Gold -- the traditional safe haven -- has soared to record highs this year.

“That seemed like a pretty good move to me anyways, before I even read the release,” said Jolene Roderick, 37, who bought shares in AMC and Hycroft on Tuesday after the announcement. “Gold is supposed to be considered a relatively safe investment for companies to be adding to their portfolios.”

AMC Buying 22% Stake in Mining Company

07:22AMC Buying 22% Stake in Mining Company

Bloomberg News’ Bailey Lipschultz and Bloomberg Intelligence’s Mike McGlone discuss the reasoning, and calculation, behind AMC’s 22% investment in a small mining company.

Source: Bloomberg

To some AMC investors, the Hycroft investment is a much-needed pivot away from the movie chain’s traditional business. Zack Dillon, 23, bought more AMC shares after Tuesday’s announcement and is taking a look at Hycroft.

Hycroft potentially has precious metal reserves that could be very beneficial for AMC, he said. “I think that will be a positive outlook for the future for AMC’s revenue.”

Gerardo Maya, 28, owns both AMC and Hycroft shares. He bought Hycroft shares about a year ago and sold last week at a profit amid a Reddit-spurred rally, before quickly buying back in. Hycroft could benefit from a strong retail investor community like AMC’s, he said in an interview, and he plans to buy more shares if there’s a sell-off.

“Everyone who invests in AMC is all about holding, and they see the CEO investing in another company that’s having trouble financially, like Hycroft,” he said. “I can see that helping Hycroft itself.”

Ironic RescueObservers may see some irony in AMC’s newfound role as a rescuer. The theater chain itself was itself on the brink of bankruptcy just over a year ago until it, too, caught the sight of rally-happy Redditors.

In a matter of months, AMC’s fate turned dramatically, albeit without much clarity on how the company was going to actually remedy the business. The company discussed creating commemorative nonfungible tokens, or NFTs, related to major films.

More immediately important was the seemingly self-perpetuating narrative in which stock surge begat stock surge, without much consideration for fundamentals.

Aron acknowledged the likeness between the fates of the two companies in AMC’s press release Tuesday. Hycroft “appears to be just like AMC of a year ago,” with “rock-solid assets” but “facing a severe and immediate liquidity issue,” he said. “We are confident that our involvement can greatly help it to surmount its challenges -- to its benefit, and to ours.”

Hycroft, which filed for and exited bankruptcy in 2015, rallied as much as 95% Tuesday after AMC said it was taking a 22% equity stake in the company.



To: sense who wrote (185435)3/16/2022 4:49:45 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 217648
 
Giggles about nickels and dimes

bloomberg.com

LME Halts Nickel Again on Technical Issue as Price Plunges

Jack Farchy
16 March 2022, 16:30 GMT+8
The London Metal Exchange halted nickel trading minutes after it started, citing a technical issue with its new daily limit, as prices plunged immediately when trading resumed after a week-long suspension.

Trading in nickel ended almost as soon as it had begun. Only 206 lots, or 1,236 tons of nickel, changed hands before the market stopped trading within seconds on Wednesday morning. Most of those trades took place at the limit price of $45,590 a ton. Several trades appeared to be at prices below the 5% limit, suggesting they may later be canceled by the exchange.

“Following re-open, the market moved to its limit down pricing band,” the LME said in a statement. “We have now halted the market to investigate a potential technical issue with the limit down band, and will update as soon as possible.”

The slump is a sign that last week’s historic short squeeze is easing. It narrows the gap between nickel contracts on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which have continued trading during the suspension. Last Tuesday’s historic decision to halt trading came after spiraling prices left some brokers scrambling to pay huge margin calls against bearish positions held by top producer Tsingshan Group Holding Co.

More than 8,600 contracts, or 51,600 tons of nickel, were offered for sale in the electronic order book as the market opened, versus 3 contracts bid.

The slump is a sign that last week’s historic short squeeze is easing, after Tsingshan secured a standstill agreement with its banks. Commodities markets have been hit by a wave of selling since the LME halted trading to defuse the unprecedented rally that it said posed a systemic threat to its market, although other metals regained some ground on Wednesday.

Shanghai Futures Exchange contracts closed up 8.6% at 235,200 yuan ($37,048) a ton, but remained below LME prices before the London market opened.

Related Coverage
Nickel Trade to Reopen After ‘Big Shot’ Gets Lifeline From Banks The 18 Minutes of Trading Chaos That Broke the Nickel Market Limit Up or Limit Down? Nickel Traders Brace for Wild Ride

(Updates with details on trades.)



To: sense who wrote (185435)3/16/2022 5:05:12 AM
From: TobagoJack1 Recommendation

Recommended By
sense

  Respond to of 217648
 
'they' think Russia is in the market to sell gold ...

'they' might not have thought it through and through

'they' might be correct about 'selling'

can be wrong about 'selling' pricing

bloomberg.com

The $140 Billion Question: Can Russia Sell Its Huge Gold Pile?

Russia spent years building world’s fifth-biggest gold reserve Selling that metal to shore up the ruble will be difficult
Eddie Spence16 March 2022, 16:44 GMT+8
Russia spent years building a giant stash of gold, an asset that central banks can turn to during a crisis. But any attempt to sell it will now be a challenge just when it’s needed most.

Bank of Russia expanded its gold reserves almost sixfold since the mid-2000s, creating the world’s fifth-biggest stockpile that’s valued at about $140 billion. It’s the type of asset it could sell to shore up the ruble, which has plunged as global economies isolate Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.

Doing so will be difficult. Sanctions forbid U.S., U.K. and European Union institutions from doing business with Russia’s central bank. Traders and banks are wary of buying the country’s bullion indirectly or using other currencies out of fear of reputational damage or falling foul of penalties. And senators in Washington want secondary sanctions on anyone buying or selling Russian gold.

“This is why they bought their gold, it was for a situation just like this,” said Fergal O’Connor, a lecturer at Cork University Business School. “But if no one will trade it with you, it doesn’t matter.”



Moscow may need to look east to central banks in nations like India or China to sell gold or secure loans using it, according to CPM Group Managing Partner Jeff Christian, who has followed precious metals since the 1970s.

“They could pick it up at a discount to the market,” Christian said in an interview from New York. Russia could also sell via the Shanghai Gold Exchange, where it has commercial banks as members, though any sales would likely be small, he said.

Still, a move by a bipartisan group of U.S. senators to further hinder gold transactions may deter banks in places like China and India from buying or lending against Russia’s bullion -- and Beijing wants to avoid being impacted by U.S. sanctions over the war. That’s further reducing Russia’s options.

The Bank of Russia didn’t reply to a request for comment.

Gold AttemptsIn another example of how the West is targeting Russia’s gold trade, the London Bullion Market Association and the CME Group Inc. suspended the country’s refineries from their accredited lists, amounting to a ban on new Russian bars entering the key London and U.S. markets.

The LBMA’s suspension of refineries has restricted countries’ access to the market before. After it suspended Kyrgyzstan’s state refinery last year, the country had to ask Switzerland if one of its refineries could process Kyrgyz gold for its central bank so that it could be accepted on the global market, said people familiar with the matter who asked not to be identified.

At least one Swiss refinery declined to do so on worries of being penalized by the LBMA, one of the people said. The Kyrgyz central bank didn’t specifically comment on the matter.

Other countries have also turned to gold, or tried to, when facing sanctions. Dictator Moammar Qaddafi sold a share of Libya’s reserves to pay troops during an uprising, according to former central bank Governor Farhat Bengdara. And a U.S. indictment against Turkey’s Halkbank in 2019 described how Iranian funds there were converted to gold, exported to Dubai and then sold for cash.

Venezuela has fought to access its gold stored in the Bank of England’s vaults as the U.K. recognized opposition leader Juan Guaido as president. The BOE is a popular place for central banks to keep their bullion due to its location within the London market.

Former President Hugo Chavez had already repatriated much of Venezuela’s gold. Bank of Russia’s gold is stored domestically, according to its 2020 annual report.



Read More: Russians Buy Up Gold to Salvage Savings After Ruble Collapse

If Russia gets desperate, it could sell bullion domestically to buy rubles, Citigroup Inc. said. If done at a fixed price, that would be tantamount to an internal gold standard.

“If things get worse, you could basically re-anchor to a pile of gold,” Credit Suisse Group AG strategist Zoltan Pozsar said on Bloomberg’s Odd Lots podcast. “You need an anchor in situations like this.”

— With assistance by Greg Ritchie, Yvonne Yue Li, Tracy Alloway, Joe Weisenthal, Nariman Gizitdinov, and Aine Quinn



To: sense who wrote (185435)3/16/2022 5:13:25 AM
From: TobagoJack  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 217648
 
'they' think pushing a nuclear power, the 6th largest (PPP) economy towards and through a default is a good idea :0)

'they' might be quite wrong, and

should they be proven wrong, then ... I best stop here ... too graphic

bloomberg.com

Russia Is Spiraling Toward a $150 Billion Default Nightmare

What happens with bond payments due Wednesday could kickstart Russia's first foreign-currency default since the 1917 revolution

Sydney Maki
15 March 2022, 12:01 GMT+8



Russian Police officers run to detain a man holding a poster that reads “No to war,” during a protest outside the Kremlin on March 13.

Photographer: Getty Images

Russia’s economy is fraying, its currency has collapsed, and its debt is junk. Next up is a potential default that could cost investors billions and shut the country out of most funding markets.

Warning lights are flashing as the government kickstarts the process of paying $117 million in interest on dollar bonds Wednesday, a key moment for debt holders who’ve already seen the value of their investments plunge since Russia invaded Ukraine last month.

The government says that all debt will be serviced, though it will happen in rubles as long as sanctions — imposed because of the war — don’t allow dollar settlements. Failure to pay, or paying in local currency instead of dollars, would start the clock ticking on a potential wave of defaults on about $150 billion in foreign-currency debt owed by both the government and Russian companies including Gazprom, Lukoil and Sberbank.

Such an event will revive memories of previous crises, including Russia in 1998, when it defaulted on some ruble-denominated debt, and Argentina three years later.

Signs of looming financial damage are becoming apparent at many of the world's biggest money managers, including BlackRock Inc. and Pacific Investment Management Co. But it’s not likely to be limited to these giant funds. Because much of Russia’s debt was rated investment grade just weeks ago, the securities were pervasive across global fixed-income portfolios and benchmarks, meaning the impact could ripple across pension funds, endowments and foundations.

“This will be a monumental default,” said Jonathan Prin, a portfolio manager at Greylock Capital Associates. “In dollar terms, it will be the most impactful emerging-market default since Argentina’s. In terms of broader market impact, it’s probably the most broadly felt emerging-market default since Russia itself in 1998.”

What Russia OwesCompanies are on the hook for about $105 billion in foreign-currency debt

Source: Bloomberg



On the Bloomberg Terminal, click here for a full list of foreign-currency bonds

Russia is already a commercial pariah, crippled by sanctions and the exodus of foreign firms such as Coca-Cola Co. and Volkswagen AG since the war started. The government has responded with capital controls, restricting outflows of money to protect the economy and the ruble.

Businesses and households are facing a double-digit economic slump and inflation accelerating toward 20%. About half of the country’s foreign-exchange reserves — some $300 billion — have been frozen, according to the finance minister. Regardless of the Kremlin's policy on foreign debt payments, companies will find it harder to service their obligations as falling demand hits sales and profits.

Because of the sanctions, and various decrees Russia introduced in response, a default appears all-but inevitable. Swaps markets put about a 70% chance on it happening this year. Fitch Ratings says it’s “imminent.” Indicative pricing on the country’s bonds values some of them near 20 cents on the dollar. Just days before the invasion, those same notes traded above par.

Bond DeadlineRussian bonds with interest due March 16 have slumped

Source: Bloomberg



In addition to bonds crumbling to distressed levels, the conflict has left its mark on multiple markets. The ruble has plunged about 35% against the dollar this year, and local stock trading has been shut for two weeks.

Russia’s late-1990s default was on domestic debt, so a foreign-currency default would be the first since the aftermath of the 1917 Revolution, when the Bolsheviks refused to recognize the czar’s debts.

What Would a Russia Bond Default Look Like?

01:30

WATCH: What Would a Russia Bond Default Look Like?

On Monday, Russia’s Finance Ministry issued an order to pay the $117 million, although it didn’t specify the currency. Using rubles isn’t an option for this week’s coupons, based on the terms of those bonds.

If Russia doesn’t meet its obligations, there’s technically a 30-day grace period that gives it until April 15 to make good.



Russians stockpiled electronics and durable goods during the 1998 economic crisis in anticipation of rising prices and the falling value of the ruble.

Photographer: Pascal Le Segretain/Sygma/Getty Images

An official default declaration could also kick off claims on credit default swaps, insurance-like instruments designed to cover losses if a country or company fails to meet its debt obligations.

Will Russia Bonds Default? There’s Debate About That: QuickTake

According to Siobhan Morden, a fixed-income strategist at Amherst Pierpont, Russia’s dramatic, and sudden, plunge from investment-grade to a financial no-go area will worsen losses for debt holders.

“When a default is a slow train wreck due to policy mismanagement, you can reduce the economic impact and contain losses by gradually selling assets,” she said. “What makes this unique is this is a very sudden shock that catches everyone off guard.”

Debt TroublesKey sovereign debt events since Russia in 1998

Source: Moody's Investors Service

Criteria for default events include missed payments, distressed exchanges, restructurings



At Franklin Resources Inc., one fund marked down its Russia bond holdings by more than half to $194 million as of Feb. 28. BlackRock funds exposed to Russia fell by more than 90% after the invasion, and clients now have less than $1 billion invested, down from about $18 billion at the end of January. The decline probably reflects a range of factors, from writedowns to client redemptions since the war began.

Others with major exposure to Russia include Ashmore Group, an emerging-markets specialist, while Capital Group and Fidelity are among the top holders of Russia’s dollar bonds, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

About $120 billion of the current outstanding government and company debt is denominated in dollars, with the bulk of the remainder in euros, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Roughly $25 billion was issued by Gazprom, the state-owned natural-gas giant.

While the debt is substantial, it’s probably not enough to cause a systemic problem for financial markets. That’s the view of International Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva, who said last weekend that banks’ exposure is “not systemically relevant.”

Bad DebtsSource: Bank of Canada/Bank of England (Updated 2021)

Criteria for database can be found at bankofcanada.ca



A handful of the sovereign eurobonds do have contractual language allowing payments in local currency, and some companies issued their debt via foreign subsidiaries and have dollars offshore. Yet there’s still huge uncertainty, especially as clearing houses including Clearstream and Euroclear have stopped accepting the ruble as a settlement currency and have barred Russian entities from most transactions.

If bondholders don't get paid in dollars on Wednesday, it would be the start of a very long, complicated process. History is an imperfect guide, but according to World Bank Chief Economist Carmen Reinhart, Russia already holds the record for the longest time between a default and some form of resolution with creditors, the near seven-decade gap to 1986.

As for Russian companies, even before a single one misses a payment on its obligations, another challenge is emerging: finding lawyers and advisers willing to take their business. Last week, JPMorgan Chase & Co. declined to advisesearch engine Yandex NV on a potential debt restructuring.

Possible Default Scenarios

In the meantime, multiple deadlines are looming. Steel and mining company Severstal has a coupon due Wednesday, and both Evraz and Tinkoff Bank have interest payments due Sunday. Gazprom has payments next week, with issuers including Sibur and Polyus to follow.

Creditors of companies that fail to pay their debts will likely have limited recourse in the near term, according to Tuck Hardie, a managing director in Houlihan Lokey’s financial restructuring group.

“As a practical matter, people may have to just stare at each other for a little bit,” Hardie said. “If the business is located in Russian sovereign territory, you can’t go after its assets. If it’s not, you might see the companies proactively file for court protection to prevent foreclosures, or you might see them enter into forbearance arrangements with debtholders.”

Lee Buchheit, one of the world’s most prominent debt-restructuring experts, says investors should get ready for a long haul. He suggests creditors may also be particularly tough with Russia for moral, as well as financial, reasons.

“There is nearly universal support for Ukraine, even among normally hard-bitten institutional investors. Some of those investors might want to strike a blow for the cause,” said Buchheit. “One way to do that would be to vote to accelerate Russian external bonds once the grace periods run out and pursue legal enforcement of the instruments. I would not be surprised if some bondholders decide to do this with greater alacrity than we normally see following a sovereign bond default.”

— With assistance by Maria Elena Vizcaino, Laura Benitez, and Srinivasan Sivabalan