Sabtu, 13 April 2019

Facebook spends more than $22m on CEO Zuckerberg's safety - Aljazeera.com

Facebook more than doubled the money it spent on Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg's security in 2018 to $22.6m, a regulatory filing showed on Friday.

Zuckerberg has drawn a base salary of $1 for the past three years, and his "other" compensation was listed at $22.6m, most of which was for his personal security.

Nearly $20m went towards security for Zuckerberg and his family, up from about $9m the year prior. Zuckerberg also received $2.6m for personal use of private jets, which the company said was part of his overall security programme.

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Facebook has in the past few years faced public outcry over its role in Russia's alleged influence on the 2016 United States presidential election and has come under fire following revelations that Cambridge Analytica obtained personal data from millions of Facebook profiles without consent. 

Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg took home $23.7m in 2018 compared with $25.2m last year.

Separately, Facebook said Netflix Chief Executive Officer Reed Hastings would vacate his seat on the social media company's board and not be nominated for re-election.

Hastings' departure comes as the Menlo Park-based company beefs up its push into videos. Hastings has served on Facebook's board since 2011.

The company also said it would nominate PayPal's senior vice president of core markets, Peggy Alford, to its board in place of University of North Carolina President Emeritus Erskine Bowles, who will also not be renominated. 

SOURCE: Reuters news agency

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2019-04-13 12:25:00Z
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Mark Zuckerberg's security costs rocket after Facebook's hellish year - INSIDER

  • Mark Zuckerberg's security costs hit $20 million in 2018 after a disastrous year for Facebook, in which it became a lightning rod for the techlash.
  • By way of comparison, Amazon and Uber spent $1.6 million and $2 million respectively on protecting their CEOs, Jeff Bezos and Dara Khosrowshahi, last year.
  • Facebook said "negative sentiment regarding our company is directly associated with, and often transferred to" Zuckerberg.
  • It follows a Business Insider investigation, which revealed how Facebook's 6,000-person security army quietly protects Zuckerberg and the firm's 80,000 employees.
  • Visit BusinessInsider.com for more stories.

The cost of keeping Mark Zuckerberg safe got a whole lot more expensive after Facebook's year from hell.

In a Securities and Exchange Commission filing on Friday, the social network revealed its CEO's total compensation package for the 12 months ended 31 December 2018.

Despite only drawing a salary of $1, Zuckerberg's pay more than doubled to $22.6 million last year, up from $9.1 million in 2017. The main reason for this: Zuckerberg's security costs.

In a tumultuous year for his company, in which Zuckerberg had to conduct an apology tour for disasters including the massive Cambridge Analytica data breach, fake news, and election interference by bad actors on his platform.

As such, Facebook spent nearly $10 million on personal protection for the billionaire, both at his home and on his travels. This was up nearly $2.5 million on 2017 and nearly double what the company spent in 2016.

Read more: Car-bomb fears and stolen prototypes: Inside Facebook's efforts to protect its 80,000 workers around the globe

What's more, Zuckerberg's security bill included a "pre-tax allowance" of $10 million to "cover additional costs" associated with keeping not just the CEO safe, but also his family. Zuckerberg is married to Priscilla Chan and they have two children together.

Amazon only spent $1.6 million on Jeff Bezos' security.
Alex Wong/Getty Images

By way of comparison, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos was paid just $1.6 million for security reasons, according to a filing this week. Uber CEO Dara Khosrowshahi's compensation included $2 million for protection, the firm's IPO filing revealed.

In the SEC filing, Facebook admitted that Zuckerberg is often a lightning rod for anger at Facebook. He is the face of the company, and when its 2 billion users feel aggrieved, Zuckerberg is targeted.

"He is synonymous with Facebook, and as a result, negative sentiment regarding our company is directly associated with, and often transferred to, Mr. Zuckerberg," Facebook said.

In a statement sent to the Financial Times, the company added: "Mr Zuckerberg is one of the most-recognised executives in the world, in large part as a result of the size of our user base and our continued exposure to global media, legislative and regulatory attention."

A 24-hour guard, bullet-proof glass, and a permanent driver

Business Insider's Rob Price published in March an investigation on Facebook's 6,000-person security army, which quietly protects Zuckerberg and the firm's 80,000 employees worldwide.

It reveals how thousands of people try to gain access to Facebook's Menlo Park headquarters every week to, among other things, meet Zuckerberg. There's a persistent rumour he also has a secret "panic chute" so he can evacuate the building quickly, although the truth of this is unclear.

Here's some insight into how Zuckerberg's security operation works from Business Insider's investigation in March (it has been edited lightly for clarity):

"Armed executive-protection officers stand on constant guard outside his gated homes in the Bay Area (at least one of which also has a panic room). If he goes to a bar, his team will sweep through ahead of time to make sure it's safe. They will vet any new doctors or trainers if he wants to take up a new hobby. He is driven everywhere.

"During company all-hands meetings, members of Zuckerberg's Praetorian Guard sit at the front of the room and are dotted throughout the crowd, just in case an employee tries to rush him. They wear civilian clothes to blend in with nonsecurity employees.

"Facebook's offices are built above an employee parking lot, but it's impossible to park directly beneath Zuckerberg's desk, because of concerns about the risk of car bombs.

"He also has access to a large glass-walled conference room in the middle of the space near his desk, which features bullet-resistant windows and a panic button."

Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg.
Reuters

Elsewhere in the Facebook SEC filing, it was revealed that Sheryl Sandberg's security costs also increased marginally from $2.7 million in 2017 to $2.9 million last year. Facebook also spent nearly $1 million on a private aircraft for its chief operating officer.

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2019-04-13 08:39:32Z
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Jumat, 12 April 2019

Chevron leaps to 'ultramajor' oil status with US$33B Anadarko deal - BNNBloomberg.ca

Chevron Corp. (CVX.N) agreed to buy Anadarko Petroleum Corp. in a US$33 billion deal that adds U.S. shale oil and African liquefied natural gas and puts it in the top ranks of the world’s largest energy companies.

The takeover puts Chevron neck-and-neck with the oil and gas production of Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc, both of which have dominated Big Oil over the past decade. The combined company’s cash flow last year, US$36.5 billion, would have exceeded Exxon’s.

“Chevron now joins the ranks of the ultramajors,” Roy Martin, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie Ltd., said in a note.

The US$65 per-share stock-and-cash deal announced Friday sees Chevron doubling down on its expansion into the fast-expanding Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico, while also increasing its exposure to liquefied natural gas with Anadarko’s project in Mozambique. The new company will sell US$15 billion to US$20 billion of assets from 2020 to 2022 to reduce debt and return cash to investors.

Occidental Petroleum Corp. had made a US$70-per-share bid for Anadarko and it’s now weighing whether to move forward with a counter offer, according to a person familiar with the matter. CNBC reported Occidental’s bid earlier.

Anadarko rose 32 per cent to US$61.78 in New York, but didn’t trade above the offer price, implying investors don’t expect a bidding war. Chevron fell 4.9 per cent, the biggest drop since February last year.

The transaction is the biggest strategic move yet for Michael Wirth, the 58-year-old chemical engineer who became Chevron’s chief executive officer just 14 months ago. He has quickly shaken up the company by announcing an aggressive expansion plan for the Permian.

For more on Chevron’s Permian position, click here

"We will now see Chevron emerging as the clear leader among all Permian players, both in terms of production growth and as a cost leader," said Per Magnus Nysveen, head of research at consultant Rystad Energy AS in Oslo.

Anadarko, which is based in The Woodlands, Texas, has long been rumored as a takeover target for the world’s largest oil companies, offering a suite of assets including a massive LNG facility in Mozambique that’s racing against Exxon’s project to be the first operating in the country.

The deal is the biggest takeover in the oil and gas industry since Shell’s 47 billion pound (US$61 billion) purchase of BG Group in 2015, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Widening the measure to include chemicals and state-owned companies, both would be eclipsed by Saudi Aramco’s US$69 billion acquisition of a majority stake in local petrochemical company Sabic this year.

Further coverage of the deal Chevron-Anadarko Deal Shows Why Gas Is Big Oil’s Future Chevron Reaps Treasure, Trouble in Rebel-Hit Mozambique Gas Area Chevron’s Anadarko Bid Seen Heralding Permian Shale Deals Shell Risks Shale FOMO as Chevron Vaults Higher With Megadeal Anadarko CEO Could Get US$64 Million Payout After Chevron Takeover  

The premium is high compared with most other acquisitions of oil companies valued at more than US$1 billion. The average premium in such transactions was 11 per cent last year and 22 per cent in 2017, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Consolidation in deep water and the shales makes complete industrial sense,” said Christyan Malek, the head of EMEA oil and gas research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “It gives the combined entity the ability to high-grade its assets and focus on where the best cash returns are.”

Details of the deal: Chevron will acquire all outstanding Anadarko shares for US$65 each, paying a mixture of cash and stock. That’s a premium of 39 per cent to the closing price on Thursday. The transaction has a break-up fee equivalent to about 3 per cent of the deal value, according to a person familiar with the matter. Chevron said the combined entity would have had daily output of 3.596 million barrels equivalent of oil last year, compared with Shell’s 3.666 million. Exxon had average production last year of 3.833 million. Investors will receive 0.3869 shares of Chevron and US$16.25 in cash for each Anadarko share. Chevron will issue 200 million shares and pay US$8 billion in cash. The company will also assume about US$15 billion of net debt, giving Anadarko an enterprise value of US$50 billion. Chevron is increasing its annual stock buybacks to US$5 billion from US$1 billion. That means all the shares issued to buy Anadarko will be retired in less than five years. Chevron expects the deal to add to free cash flow and earnings per share one year after closing, at US$60-a-barrel Brent. It also expects run-rate cost synergies of US$1 billion before tax and capital spending cuts of US$1 billion. The deal is seen closing in the second half of the year, subject to Anadarko shareholder and regulatory approvals. Credit Suisse Group AG was financial adviser to Chevron while Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP was legal adviser. Evercore Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. advised Anadarko alongside law firms Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Vinson & Elkins LLP.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

"Chevron’s deal for Anadarko escalates the race with Exxon Mobil for the Permian and delivery of synergies and efficiencies will be critical in narrowing or overtaking its peer’s returns."-- Fernando Valle, industry analyst, and Jonathan Mardini, associate analyst Click here to view the research

The deal may put pressure on Shell to seek assets in the Permian, where the Anglo-Dutch company has said it wants to grow. Oil executives and bankers had in the past speculated that Shell may buy Anadarko because they have adjacent acreage. Shell has in the past several months held talks with Endeavor Energy Resources LP, the largest privately-owned company in the Permian that bankers say might be valued at US$10 billion to US$15 billion.



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April 12, 2019 at 05:24PM

Fisher-Price recalls millions of baby sleepers after fatalities - BBC News

5G is coming and Trump is helping make it happen - Washington Examiner

President Trump has made clear that a quick roll out of next-generation wireless networks, known as 5G, is a priority. On Friday, the Trump administration is set to back that push with real investment. As confirmed by several news outlets, the Federal Communications Commission is set to announce that both new slices of airwaves will be up for auction and that the administration will set up a “Rural Digital Opportunity Fund” that will put $20.4 billion over 10 years toward boosting connectivity.

That’s exactly what the administration should be doing. Investing in wireless infrastructure is key to facilitating the next generation of innovation that is likely to be the basis of future economic growth.

For an idea of how important that investment is, it’s worth considering Uber. Car sharing is not a novel idea (taxis have been around for quite some time), but allowing individual users with access to high-speed internet on their phones to connect and purchase rides is. That was only possible because of advancements in wireless technology. Even faster and better-connected networks are likely to yield similarly disruptive and economically beneficial innovations.

Trump is right to want the U.S. to be a leader in those innovations as the country as well as individual companies and consumers are likely to reap huge benefits. Building out networks to under-served areas and making available more airwaves which will underpin 5G capabilities are important steps and the Trump administration is right to invest in them.

[Related: State Department admits US can't compete with China's 5G]

That being said, these investments do little to push back on U.S. concerns about Chinese telecommunications giant Huawei. That’s because despite putting money into infrastructure, no U.S. company currently manufactures the equipment needed for 5G networks. This is where Huawei has emerged as a major player and is well positioned to dominate the industry. Although other foreign companies such as Nokia, Ericsson, and Samsung, have also been focused on 5G equipment and benefited from government investments, the U.S. has not prioritized our own domestic development of 5G equipment.

If the Trump administration is serious about winning the race to deploy 5G while keeping the technology firmly in U.S. control, their next focus should be on ensuring that China’s Huawei faces real competition in the equipment market. For now though, Trump should be applauded for his announcement on Friday that will help lay the foundations for 5G capabilities in the U.S.



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April 12, 2019 at 10:19PM

Canopy Growth is about to become the first pot stock to join S&P/TSX 60 index - Financial Post

TORONTO — Canopy Growth Corp. will soon join the S&P/TSX 60, making it the first cannabis company to be added to the index of Canada’s large-cap stocks.

S&P Dow Jones Indices says Canopy’s stock will replace Goldcorp Inc. and the change will take effect before trading on April 18.

Goldcorp is set to be delisted once its merger with Newmont Mining Corp. is complete, and the combined company will apply for a listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Canopy’s co-CEO Bruce Linton says its addition to the S&P/TSX 60 index marks “another major accomplishment” for the cannabis company, based in Smiths Falls, Ont.

Canopy Growth was first went public on the TSX Venture exchange in 2014, and graduated to the main TSX board in 2016.

The company changed its stock symbol on the TSX to WEED in February 2017, and was added to the S&P/TSX composite index later that year.



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April 12, 2019 at 09:06PM

Ride-hailing giant Uber files for US initial public offering - BNNBloomberg.ca

Uber Technologies Inc., the current era’s archetypal startup, moved toward becoming a public company Thursday, revealing that it racked up a US$3 billion operating loss last year and hoping potential investors will look beyond that.

Less than two years after being tapped to take Uber to its initial public offering destination, Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowshahi’s stamp on the company has been branding it as a “platform” -- a word that appears more than 700 times in its IPO prospectus.

Khosrowshahi, who quit his CEO job at Expedia Group Inc. to join Uber, is pitching the ride-hailing giant as an interconnected web of promising businesses. Most notably, Uber’s food-delivery business grew 149 per cent year-on-year to US$1.5 billion in revenue in 2018.

“Our continued success will come from stellar execution and the strength of the platform we have worked so hard to build,” Khosrowshahi said in a letter to investors included in the filing.

To make that case, Uber cites a preferred metric: monthly active platform consumers, otherwise known as people who touch one of its services at least once a month. Uber says it has 91 million MAPCs, more than double the number in 2016.

Khosrowshahi isn’t just trying to look past ride-hailing, he’s also trying to move beyond his predecessor, Travis Kalanick, whose brash leadership frequently landed the company in court or under the microscope, or both.

Uber’s ‘Missteps’

“Some of the attributes that made Uber a wildly successful startup -- a fierce sense of entrepreneurialism, our willingness to take risks that others might not, and that famous Uber hustle -- led to missteps along the way,” Khosrowshahi said in his letter. Nonetheless, Kalanick remains on Uber’s board with an 8.6 per cent ownership stake, according to the filing.

Uber’s biggest challenge in its IPO, in which it seeks to raise about US$10 billion, according to people familiar with its plans, may be simultaneously explaining to investors why the company is immature enough to justify losing billions of dollars, while proving it’s mature enough to be a publicly traded company worth somewhere in the range of US$100 billion.

That’s where the case for the platform comes in.

Uber, 10 years old and easily the world’s biggest ride-hailing company, holds a market share in that category of more than 65 percent in the U.S., Canada, Latin America, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, the filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchanges Commission shows. But growth in its core business is decelerating. While ride-hailing revenue grew 95 percent in 2017 from the previous year, that rate slowed to 33 percent last year, Uber said in the filing.

Amazon.com Comparison

Its solution is to cast itself as a still-fledgling character in the broader transportation landscape. Uber is just at the very beginning, it argues, asserting that its share of the entire global transportation business is less than 1 per cent.

Drawing an implicit comparison to Amazon.com Inc.’s push to become the universal retailer, Uber contends its platform positions it to become all-things transportation, encompassing everything from scooters and bicycles to freight delivery, driverless vehicles and even flying cars.

“It sort of reminds me a little bit about the internet era when it was about ‘so many eyeballs are hitting our site,’” said Reena Aggarwal, director of the Georgetown Center for Financial Markets and Policy.

Uber’s diversification push is worth noting, Aggarwal said, citing Uber Eats as a start.

“Uber Eats is a pretty big chunk of the company right now,” she said. “We think of it as just a ride-sharing company. I wonder in five years, what is it going to look like.”

First Look

The long-awaited IPO filing gives potential investors their first look at hundreds of pages of detailed information about Uber. The San Francisco-based company plans to kick off a road show to market shares to potential investors this month and begin trading publicly in May, the people familiar with the details said.

The IPO comes amid an expected surge of listings by Silicon Valley unicorns -- startups valued at more than $1 billion -- and is likely to be the largest U.S. listing this year and among the 10 largest of all time on U.S. exchanges.

Uber’s filing follows rival Lyft Inc.’s US$2.34 billion listing in March, which is the biggest U.S. IPO so far this year. Pinterest Inc. and Zoom Video Communications Inc. are set to price their IPOs next week. Other high-profile companies considering going public include Slack Technologies Inc., Postmates Inc., Palantir Technologies Inc. and Airbnb Inc.

Details of Uber’s proposed offering, including the targeted price range and the number of shares for sale, will be disclosed in a later filing.

Operating Losses

Uber lost $3.04 billion on an operating basis in 2018 on revenue of US$11.3 billion, bringing total operating losses over the past three years to more than US$10 billion, Thursday’s filing shows.

The company, which has previously made public some of its financial results, disclosed further details in its filing -- including a net income of $997 million for 2018. That profit was driven primarily by the sales of assets in Southeast Asia and Russia, as well as an increase in the estimated value of its stock in China’s largest ride-hailing company, Didi Chuxing. Those deals contributed to almost US$5 billion in what Uber called “other income.”

More Uber coverage Uber’s Executives Have Big Payouts Riding on US$120 Billion Target Morgan Stanley Leads Cadre of Banks Lining Up on Uber IPO  Uber Touts Benefits of Scale Over Competition: IPO Tearsheet  Uber Tops US$1 Billion in Spending to Develop Driverless Autos 

Uber’s reliance on ride-sharing for the vast majority of its revenue is evident from its filing. In the fourth quarter, the company generated $2.54 billion in adjusted net revenue, with US$2.31 billion of that coming from ride sharing. Only US$165 million in adjusted net revenue came from Uber Eats.

Uber filed with an initial offering amount of US$1 billion, typically a placeholder amount used to calculate fees that will change. The company applied to list on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker UBER. Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. are leading the offering.

IPO Pass

Investors are traditionally willing to look past losses in an IPO, especially such a significant one, said Barrett Daniels, a Deloitte partner who advises companies on going public.

“There’s so much around this to make it an interesting and compelling transaction,” Daniels said. “The brand recognition makes this company so valuable.”

The growth of Uber Eats, from about US$100 million in revenue to about US$1.5 billion over three years, is particularly exciting, he said.

“If that was a stand-alone business, Uber Eats by itself would make it an incredibly compelling story,” he said.

Lyft Slips

Lyft’s performance since its March debut may signal caution to some investors. Lyft, which operates in the U.S. and Canada, increased the size of its share sale, and then priced its shares at US$72 each, at the top of an elevated range. The stock then leaped 21 per cent at the opening bell, only to sink since then, closing at US$61.01 on Thursday.

Uber’s sheer size may set it apart from Lyft, said David Erickson, a finance professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

“The punchline is this the largest high-growth tech company that’s going to be going to the public markets,” he said. “This is where everyone is going to focus when they think about where they want to allocate dollars from an investor standpoint.”

Here are some of the other key numbers in Uber’s 285-page IPO filing, which included dozens more pages of financial statements:

Uber has spent more than US$1 billion on autonomous vehicle technology to compete with Alphabet Inc., Apple Inc. and General Motors Co. The company’s primary user number is called MAPC -- monthly active platform consumers. That number stood at 91 million in the fourth quarter of 2018, up from 68 million in the same period of 2017 A roster of 29 banks in total signed on to underwrite Uber’s IPO Uber is putting aside $300 million to make a one-time cash payout to 1.1 million qualifying drivers Khosrowshahi’s compensation will be in part tied to Uber maintaining a full diluted equity value of $120 billion



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April 12, 2019 at 04:44AM