HERE’S WHAT’S HAPPENING
Markets brace for Friday’s jobs report. Economists forecast that employers added
about 165,000 jobs last month, down slightly from the average for the previous three months, and that the unemployment rate remained at 4.2 percent. Anything hotter than that could add volatility to trading on Friday as rising inflation and elevated interest rates weigh on investors. The report is due at 8:30 a.m. Eastern.
The Supreme Court denies Donald Trump a reprieve in his hush-money case. A
five-justice majority rejected the president-elect’s last-minute bid to halt his sentencing in the New York case, noting that he doesn’t face jail time and he could appeal his conviction. The proceeding is set to take place this morning and will formalize Trump’s status as the first felon to occupy the Oval Office.
China’s central bank pauses purchases of government bonds. The
unexpected move is intended to slow a wave of buying of sovereign debt, which has helped drive down interest rates, at the expense of riskier assets such as real estate and stock. It comes just days after the People’s Bank of China said it would adopt a looser monetary policy to stimulate growth.
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BlackRock leaves a climate change advocacy group for financial institutions. The exit of the world’s biggest money manager from the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative followed years of attacks from Republican officials. (The firm has adopted what it calls a
more pragmatic approach.) BlackRock’s decision coincided with news that global temperatures
crept above a key threshold set by governments and climate scientists.
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Gaming out TikTok’s deal odds
TikTok’s big day in court is here: The Supreme Court is
set to hear oral arguments on Friday on a law, enacted by President Biden with
wide bipartisan support, requiring ByteDance to sell the video app to non-Chinese buyers — or face a ban.
TikTok is seeking to
block the law. And President-elect Donald Trump has asked the high court to
delay the ban, set to take place the day before his inauguration, arguing that he alone “possesses the consummate deal-making expertise” to resolve the matter. It’s not clear that he’ll get that chance — but DealBook’s Lauren Hirsch breaks down the likelihood of a sale if he does.
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ByteDance has pointed to the significant challenges in selling TikTok. Beijing has indicated its unwillingness to part with the algorithm that made TikTok a multibillion-dollar business.
Any deal for TikTok that includes its algorithm would be expensive. The research firm CB Insights recently estimated ByteDance’s valuation was $225 billion, though it’s unclear how much the U.S. version of TikTok would cost on its own.
At least one suitor is interested in buying TikTok without its algorithm: the billionaire Frank McCourt, who is leading an investor group that includes the Canadian entrepreneur Kevin O’Leary. McCourt told DealBook that he’s valuing TikTok without its algorithm at around $20 billion, or roughly the market value of Snap, the parent company of Snapchat.
McCourt said he had spoken with nearly “all the investors” in ByteDance about the bid (though he declined to specify which ones): “They’re as in the dark as we are” about ByteDance’s plans. Among ByteDance’s largest U.S. backers are the investment firms General Atlantic, Susquehanna and Sequoia Capital.
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Things will get interesting if China does allow ByteDance to sell TikTok’s algorithm. During the first Trump administration, ByteDance
nearly finalized a deal to sell the app to Oracle and Walmart.
TikTok continues to store U.S. data on Oracle’s servers as a way to address national security concerns. The software giant’s co-founder, Larry Ellison, is a longtime supporter of Mr. Trump, potentially bolstering any sale talks.
Other large technology and media companies may want to take a swing. Historically, such deals raised eyebrows from regulators on antitrust grounds — but any suitors could appeal to Trump’s desire to get a deal done.
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Exclusive: A new home for Manhattan’s former top federal prosecutor
Damian Williams, the former U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York during the Biden administration, is joining the prominent law firm Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison.
Williams will be a partner in the litigation department, The Times’s Benjamin Weiser is first to report for DealBook.
Williams oversaw a slew of high-profile cases since taking office. Among them were the convictions of cryptocurrency executives including
Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder of the crypto exchange FTX;
Bill Hwang, a financier accused of masterminding a multibillion-dollar stock-manipulation scheme; and
Robert Menendez, the former Democratic senator from New Jersey.
The Southern District has also been prosecuting
Mayor Eric Adams of New York, also a Democrat, and the hip-hop mogul
Sean Combs, known as Diddy. Both men have pleaded not guilty.
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Williams, appointed by President Biden in October 2021, was the
first Black U.S. attorney in the Southern District, one of the most prominent and powerful Justice Department offices. It oversees major Wall Street cases, and has earned the nickname the “Sovereign District” because of its history of independence from Washington.
It will be the second time Paul, Weiss has hired Williams. He was a litigation associate at the firm from 2009 to 2012. “It does feel like a full-circle moment,” Williams told DealBook in an interview.
The firm said Williams will represent clients “in high-stakes federal and state government investigations, white-collar matters and sensitive internal investigations.”
In a statement, the Paul, Weiss chairman Brad Karp called Williams “a transcendently talented lawyer who has led many of the government’s highest-profile prosecutions and investigations.”
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Paul, Weiss has recruited a number of former government officials, including Loretta Lynch, who served two stints as U.S. attorney in Brooklyn and later was attorney general under President Barack Obama; and Jeh Johnson, a former secretary of homeland security.
In November, President Trump said he would
select Jay Clayton to replace Williams as the new top Southern District prosecutor. Clayton, a corporate lawyer, was chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission during the first Trump administration.
“I can see tipping culture in the U.S. cracking.”
— Jenni Emmons, a server at an upscale Chicago restaurant. Tipping at restaurants hit a six-year low last year, according to The Wall Street Journal, with rising menu prices and increasing demands for gratuities being blamed.
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Work-from-home is far from dead
JPMorgan Chase is expected to join
Amazon and
AT&T in ordering
employees back to the office five days a week.
Such mandates, combined with prominent executives voicing their displeasure with workplace flexibility, have led some to conclude that this will be the year that the work-from-home movement, which began in the early days of the Covid pandemic, will
come to an end.
Researchers who study the issue aren’t so convinced. Economists at Stanford, the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México business school have been polling workers about their work-site routine since 2020.
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The survey asks: how many days per week they work from home and how many days their employers plan for them to do so. About two years ago, both sets of responses converged at about two days.
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Despite signs of a “a slight downward trend,” that convergence looks like it largely will continue, the researchers wrote this week. “Absent a huge, unexpected event (another pandemic?) work from home rates in early 2026 will likely be close to what we see now,” they concluded.
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THE SPEED READ
Deals
- Constellation Energy agreed to buy Calpine, another major generator of electricity, for $16.4 billion, in a bet on increased demand for power by tech companies. (NYT)
- Bonuses for top-performing investment bankers and traders at Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase are said to average at least 10 percent, as Wall Street seeks to reward its rainmakers after years of restraint. (Bloomberg)
Politics and policy
Best of the rest