Coinbase CEO Says SEC Changed ‘Tone’ Last Year: Bloomberg Invest

The Bloomberg Invest conference kicked off Wednesday, with some of the most influential leaders in finance gathering in New York for conversations on a wide range of topics, including artificial intelligence, cryptocurrencies and global trends in wealth management.

(Bloomberg) — The Bloomberg Invest conference kicked off Wednesday, with some of the most influential leaders in finance gathering in New York for conversations on a wide range of topics, including artificial intelligence, cryptocurrencies and global trends in wealth management.

For the full agenda, click here.

Coinbase CEO Says SEC Started to Change ‘Tone’ Last Year (11:55 a.m. ET)

Coinbase Global Inc. Chief Executive Officer Brian Armstrong said the US Securities and Exchange Commission started to change its “tone” in its questioning of the company last year, before filing its lawsuit against the crypto exchange this week. 

“They started to come to us with more questions about the business, so we were very forthcoming,” Armstrong said at the conference. “Unfortunately we were met with silence.” 

Coinbase trades more than 200 assets on its platform, and the SEC complaint mentioned just 13 of them as securities, Armstrong said, “so a relatively small percentage of the assets we trade.”

The company is also facing scrutiny from state regulators who are demanding that Coinbase halt its staking service. “We are not going to wind down our staking services,” Armstrong said. “As these court cases play out, it’s really business as usual.” 

Two Sigma Co-Founder Siegel Calls AI Hype ‘Remarkable’ (11:25 a.m. ET)

Two Sigma Investments co-founder David Siegel said the excitement surrounding artificial intelligence may be overblown.

“The hype is absolutely remarkable,” Siegel said at the conference. “I’ve never seen anything quite like it.”

When ChatGPT became broadly available late last year, it roused anxiety and spurred debate about how AI tools could upend industries including finance. Siegel — also co-chairman of Two Sigma, one of Wall Street’s most prominent quantitative hedge funds — said the main change that’s occurred recently with AI technology “is the awareness.”

Although large-language models such as ChatGPT have practical uses, their vast power in the public imagination doesn’t yet match the reality of their usefulness, he said.

Soros CIO Fitzpatrick Says Agency Mortgage Bonds Are Cheap (11 a.m. ET)

Dawn Fitzpatrick, chief investment officer of Soros Fund Management, called agency mortgage-backed securities a uniquely interesting investing opportunity.

“Two-thirds of your current holders — it’s central banks and banks — have turned into sellers,” said Fitzpatrick, who’s also chief executive officer of George Soros’s family office, said at the conference. “The valuations in that space have gotten disproportionately cheap relative to other asset classes.” 

On Tuesday, Pacific Investment Management Co. CIO Dan Ivascyn said agency mortgage-backed securities are the “most attractive asset.”

The recent failures of several US regional banks resulted in regulators auctioning off sizable portfolios, which is “adding to the technical backdrop,” Fitzpatrick said. She added that she expects more banks to implode and that smaller lenders are particularly vulnerable. 

TIAA Chief Duckett Predicts ‘Mild Recession’ by Year-End (10:40 a.m. ET)

Thasunda Brown Duckett, the chief executive officer of asset manager TIAA, said she expects an economic slowdown in the US by the end of the year.

“We do anticipate a mild recession in the latter part of the year going into the first quarter,” Duckett said at the conference, citing accelerating inflation and rising interest rates.

The economic climate has led more Americans to reduce contributions to their retirement funds or dip into those savings — decisions that will have severe long-term consequences, she said.

Duckett joined the Jacksonville, Florida-based retirement provider and investment firm in 2021 after a 17-year career at JPMorgan Chase & Co., where she ran the company’s consumer-banking division. Closely held TIAA, founded more than a century ago by Andrew Carnegie, had $1.2 trillion of assets under management as of March 31.

KKR Co-Founder Kravis Praises PGA Tour-LIV Golf Deal (9:55 a.m. ET)

KKR & Co.’s Henry Kravis said the proposed partnership between the PGA Tour and LIV Golf is the best thing for the sport, bringing an end to the acrimony between the traditional tour and the Saudi Arabia-backed upstart tournament.

“Getting together is the best thing for golf,” the private equity firm’s co-founder and co-executive chairman said in an interview. The legal battle between both sides was “not constructive for the game,” Kravis said.

PGA Tour board members, including co-chairman Ed Herlihy and vice chair Jimmy Dunne, are dealmakers who “know how to get things done,” Kravis said.

Nasdaq’s Friedman Says SEC in Spotlight Over Crypto (9:35 a.m. ET)

Regulators are the first line of defense to ensure companies such as Coinbase Global Inc. abide by securities-trading rules, Nasdaq Inc. Chief Executive Officer Adena Friedman said at the conference. 

Nasdaq works with the US Securities and Exchange Commission and the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority to aid their enforcement efforts, she said. 

On Tuesday, the SEC sued Coinbase, a Nasdaq-listed company, alleging the firm runs an illegal exchange. A lawyer for the firm has said Coinbase has a “demonstrated commitment to compliance.” 

Friedman said that before a company goes public on the New York-based exchange, the SEC and Nasdaq evaluate it, and take a keen look at its risk factors among other items. In this “particular case,” Friedman said, there may have been some changes in the company’s risk factors.

Druckenmiller Expects to Own AI Giant Nvidia for Years (9 a.m. ET)

Billionaire Stan Druckenmiller said he expects that artificial intelligence is here to stay and that he anticipates owning Nvidia Corp. for several more years.  

“AI could be as innovative as the internet,” Druckenmiller, the founder of Duquesne Family Office, said in an interview. “If I’m right on AI, I could own Nvidia for two or three more years.” 

Druckenmiller, who managed money for George Soros for more than a decade, called the current investing landscape challenging. 

“I don’t see any fat pitches,” said Druckenmiller, who’s never had a losing year managing money.  

JPMorgan’s Kelly Sees US Inflation at 2% Next Year (8:35 a.m. ET)

JPMorgan Asset Management chief global strategist David Kelly is betting that inflation will ease back toward the Federal Reserve’s 2% target by the end of next year.

“The Fed is trying to fight a battle it’s already won,” Kelly said during a panel discussion. 

Although his biggest worry is pressure brewing in the commercial real estate market, he noted that concerns about a severe downdraft in the US economy may be overblown. 

“There’s still a risk of a recession,” he said. “But we’re just not there yet.”

CreditSights’ Cisar Touts High-Yield Bonds (8 a.m. ET)

Winnie Cisar, global head of strategy at CreditSights, said she sees opportunities in the US high-yield bond market. 

In particular, Cisar likes single-B rated credits trading in the range of 8% to 9%, which “feels like a really great opportunity,” she said during a panel discussion, in which she was joined by Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B. Riley Wealth Management.

As Wall Street nervously weighs the Federal Reserve’s aggressive anti-inflation campaign against the threat of an economic downturn, questions are swirling about the best ways to position. To Hogan, one thing is clear: The “biggest mistake” investors can make is preparing too much for the short term while failing to focus on the long term, he said.

–With assistance from Allison Nicole Smith, Jessica Menton, Katherine Burton, Paige Smith, Allison McNeely, Tanaz Meghjani, Hema Parmar and Annie Massa.

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