Spanish police seize hundreds of archaeological artifacts from two homes

Written by Maija Ehlinger, CNNOscar Holland, CNN

Spanish police have recovered hundreds of archaeological artifacts, including marine fossils, Bronze Age ceramics and 18th-century weapons, from two houses in the southeastern province of Alicante.

More than 200 human bone fragments, some of which are between 4,000 and 5,000 years old, were also seized from the homes, the Spanish Civil Guard said in a statement Friday.

The discovery follows a weeks-long investigation, known as Operation Osarium, that led police to what they called “one of the largest illegal private collections” in Alicante. Two men are currently under investigation for the misappropriation of goods with artistic, historical, cultural or scientific value, the statement added.

Roman mosaic tiles, paleolithic flint tools and historical weaponry, including cannonballs and an iron grenade, were among the 350 archaeological artifacts recovered.

Artifacts including marine fossils, Bronze Age ceramics and 18th-century weapons were found.

Artifacts including marine fossils, Bronze Age ceramics and 18th-century weapons were found. Credit: Guardia Civil

After the initial discovery was made at a house in the village of Gata de Gorgos, the homeowner cooperated with police and led them to a larger collection at a property in the nearby city of Dénia.

The occupant at the second home claimed that the archaeological items discovered there had been inherited from a deceased relative, though police found no documentation “that would justify his possession” of the artifacts, the statement added. Investigators did, however, find notebooks containing handwritten notes from the late relative pinpointing where the items originated from.

The discoveries were made from two houses in the province of Alicante.

The discoveries were made from two houses in the province of Alicante. Credit: Guardia Civil

More than 200 human bone fragments were also recovered.

More than 200 human bone fragments were also recovered. Credit: Guardia Civil

The Spanish Civil Guard said it is seeking to collaborate with culture department officials to research and catalog the items.

“The study by specialists could help to date the origin and context of the pieces, thereby increasing their value, and even facilitating the location of new archaeological sites,” the police statement added.

The discovery comes a year after 36 stolen antiquities, also recovered by the Spanish Civil Guard, were returned to Egypt. The objects, which included figurines of goddesses and ancient jars, were seized at the Spanish port of Valencia after being smuggled out of archaeological sites in 2014, according to Reuters.

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'It's like a constant gamble:' Ukrainian couple await birth of twins in wartime Kyiv



CNN
 — 

Kateryna and her husband Oleg endure what every citizen of Kyiv must – long blackouts, hours without any internet connection and constant apprehension about the next missile barrage.

But as they begin 2023, they are also preparing for the arrival of twin boys. Kateryna, who is 34, is eight months pregnant. CNN agreed to use only first names for her and Oleg as they fear for their privacy.

She’s not getting much rest ahead of the big day. The air-raid sirens blare almost every day, the crump of explosions is all too familiar. Their lives are shaped by the scheduled power cuts, as electricity is shared among the regions to mitigate the impact of Russia’s strikes on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure.

“On New Year’s Eve, I tried to take a nap,” she told CNN from her house in the Kyiv suburbs. “But I woke to the sound of explosions, and they went on through the night. The sirens were on for much of the night, until 4:30 a.m.,” she said.

It’s difficult for residents to distinguish between the sound of air defenses in operation and the impact of Russian cruise missiles and drones.

“I don’t mind the blackouts,” Kateryna said, “but we worry about the next wave of Russian missiles. Will it be us? It’s like a constant gamble.”

A nearby district – Vyshhorod – was hit a month ago, and the indiscriminate nature of the strikes means that residential districts are as much at risk as power plants and railway lines. Dozens of heath facilities across Ukraine, including maternity and children’s hospitals, have been struck since the beginning of the conflict.

Kateryna and Oleg sit by the Christmas tree at their home in the Kyiv suburbs.

When the sirens aren’t wailing, Kateryna said, there is another noise that is new to her neighborhood: the chattering of generators as homes and businesses try to compensate for being without electricity for as much as 12 hours a day.

“They are the jingle bells of this Christmas,” she said.

Despite the risk and the imminent arrival of the twins, Kateryna still travels into central Kyiv twice a week to use one of the co-working spaces that have popped up across the Ukrainian capital.

These spaces have become quite professional, with furniture, heat, lighting and reliable internet, provided through Starlink terminals, bought from the company owned by Elon Musk.

Kateryna works in logistics, helping to import large containers into Ukraine. It’s more than just a livelihood. It’s also a way to contribute to the war effort.

A co-working space in Kyiv, where Kateryna goes to work, offers heating and reliable internet access.

Kateryna and Oleg are luckier than most Ukrainians in that they have a small generator at home, but they use it sparingly. There is always the risk of running out of diesel to power it – it uses a liter of fuel every hour and needs to cool down every four hours. They have to choose which appliances to run: it’s lights or laundry, they said.

They fully expect to need it long after the twins are born.

Living in Kyiv during Russia’s war on Ukraine is about being prepared. Kateryna and Oleg have cupboards full of batteries, power banks and flashlights. If the Russian missile campaign against Ukrainian infrastructure continues, as most expect it will, the scheduled power outages may become less predictable, with more emergency cuts.

There is enough food in the stores “but sometimes I have to shop with a flashlight,” Kateryna says. They keep about two months’ worth of food supplies stacked in the house, just in case the situation goes from bad to worse.

Kateryna takes a picture lit by a portable lamp that sticks to the wall.

Like many people from Kyiv, Kateryna and Oleg moved away from the capital to a safer area in western Ukraine when the invasion began last February. But they never wanted to leave the country. And soon they felt the draw of home pulling them back to the city.

“I have a job here; Oleg has a job here and he cannot work remotely. We have many friends here, our home. For me it’s a nightmare to move somewhere else,” Kateryna said.

Kateryna feels they are both involved in the effort to secure Ukraine’s future. In the early months of her pregnancy, she helped Ukrainian volunteer organizations with fundraising for warm clothes and equipment for the Ukrainian army, she said.

“The company my husband works for has a fund and they help the Ukrainian fighters who are on the front line with equipment like drones and pick-up trucks. We helped collect money for such equipment,” she said.

Kateryna stands in front of the fuel supply for their small, diesel-powered generator.

Kateryna's husband has put together  cots for the twin babies they are expecting.

Like many other Ukrainians, they helped a family that had fled the frontlines earlier in the war. The mother had given birth in the midst of Russian shelling of their hometown of Kreminna in eastern Luhansk region. When the family settled in a Kyiv suburb, Oleg and Kateryna helped them out with warm clothes and food.

Kateryna says she is not afraid of becoming a wartime mother. She and Oleg want their sons to grow up in an environment that would be the polar opposite of what life would be under Russian occupation.

“I really want my children to live in a free Ukraine, I want them to be safe. They have the right to safety and protection just like all other children in the world. I don’t want them to live in fear of dying from a Russian rocket, they should be happy and carefree,” she said.

Her one concern – beyond giving birth to healthy children – is that she might find herself lying in the hospital amid another wave of missile attacks. At that point, she will pray very hard, she said.

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Jeremy Renner is in ICU recovering from 2 surgeries after being injured in snow plowing incident



CNN
 — 

“Hawkeye” actor Jeremy Renner is recovering from surgery after suffering “blunt chest trauma and orthopedic injuries” in a New Year’s Day snow plowing accident in Nevada, a spokesperson for the actor said.

As of Monday evening, Renner was in the intensive care unit in “critical but stable condition,” the spokesperson said.

The 51-year-old actor has so far undergone two surgeries to address injuries he sustained in the accident, a source close to the actor previously told CNN.

Renner was hospitalized on Sunday after a “weather related accident” while plowing snow, his representative Sam Mast confirmed to CNN earlier on Monday.

The Washoe County Sheriff’s Office said its deputies responded to a “traumatic injury” involving Renner in the area of Mount Rose Highway in Reno.

Deputies found Renner injured and coordinated his transport to an area hospital, the Sheriff’s Office said in a news release, adding that the actor was the only person involved in the accident.

The Sheriff’s Office did not provide details on how the snow plow accident happened but said its Major Accident Investigation Team is looking into the circumstances of the incident.

At the time of the accident, parts of western Nevada were covered with snow. The Reno area received around 6-12 inches of snow at elevations below 5,000 feet between New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day, and up to 18 inches at higher elevations, according to the National Weather Service in Reno.

Renner has shared multiple videos and photos on his verified social media accounts showing him in snowy conditions, including one Instagram video posted two weeks ago in which the actor appears to be driving a snowplow.

Renner’s family released a statement Monday evening thanking hospital staff and first responders as the actor remained hospitalized.

“Jeremy’s family would like to express their gratitude to the incredible doctors and nurses looking after him, Truckee Meadows Fire and Rescue, Washoe County Sheriff, Reno City Mayor Hillary Schieve and the Carano and Murdock families,” a statement from his spokesperson read. “They are also tremendously overwhelmed and appreciative of the outpouring of love and support from his fans.”

Renner stars in the Paramount+ series “Mayor of Kingstown” and is best known for his role as Hawkeye in several Marvel Cinematic Universe films.


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Stocks in 2023: Many strategists think prices will be higher but earnings lower

US Top News and Analysis 

I noted last week that there is an unusual divergence in thinking among Wall Street strategists for earnings and prices in 2023. Prices and earnings normally tend to move in the same direction. This is understandable, since anyone who watches stocks for any length of time can see that there is usually a relationship between earnings trends and stock prices. When earnings trends are rising, stocks tend to be rising as well, and vice-versa. Yet, in 2023, strategists do not seem to agree on this. A survey of 22 strategists indicated the average price target for the S & P 500 for year-end 2023 was 4,078. That would be about 7% higher than where the S & P is now. The same survey indicated the current estimate for S & P 500 earnings in 2023 was $210, a drop of 4.5% from the current $220 estimate for 2022. Prices up 7%, with earnings down about 5%? That is a bit unusual. Julian Emanuel at Evercore ISI is one of those strategists that has that same forecast. He has a price target of 4,150 for year-end 2023, an 8% increase, but is expecting S & P 500 earnings to decline by about 7%. In his first note to clients for the new year, Emanuel goes to some lengths to explain this oddity. Noting that 2022 was a year “when The Impossible became Commonplace,” he says 2023 “is likely to be a year when different ‘Impossibles’ occur — 4,150 SPX PT [Price Target] along with earnings/econ recession among them.” Acknowledging that prices up/earnings down seems incongruous, he notes “there is a long history of earnings down/stocks up years,” (noting that 1998, 2009, 2016, and 2020 fall into this category), “and also a tendency for strong stock/bond return years to follow historically forceful tightening cycles (1982, 1985) and years (1995) following weak 60/40 portfolio returns such as 2022’s declines.” True, but not very common. The core message: there will be a certain amount of “Suspension of Disbelief” necessary to (again) navigate through the new year. What does that mean for stocks? It means “patient accumulation” of what seems like odd choices, including China ADRs and what Emanuel calls “Misperceived Value” stocks. He is expecting consumer staples, energy and health care to continue to outperform, and specifically what he calls “Misperceived Value” stocks in those sectors, including Pepsi, Archer-Daniels Midland and Hershey in consumer staples, Exxon Mobil and Halliburton in energy, and McKesson and Vertex Pharmaceuticals in health care. “Value is likely to continue to outperform Growth into 2023 as the Fed is expected to maintain benchmark rates higher for longer, pressuring valuations,” Emanuel said.

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Piper Sandler upgrades Coty, says China exposure could boost beauty stock in 2023

US Top News and Analysis 

Beauty stock Coty could have a strong 2023, according to Piper Sandler. Analyst Korinne Wolfmeyer upgraded shares of Coty to overweight from neutral, saying in her 2023 beauty and wellness outlook that the stock is poised to benefit from several macro developments. “Since launching on COTY roughly six months ago, we’ve seen a number of developments transpire and seen the macro environment move in a direction that we think both position COTY well for the next 12+ months and give us greater comfort in pushing this name than we did back in June,” Wolfmeyer wrote in a Tuesday note. Shares of Coty declined 18.5% last year. However, the analyst expects that increasing exposure to China and travel retail will help the stock recover, while doubling down on luxury skincare and fragrance will boost margins for the company. Meanwhile, diversifying the portfolio should protect the firm should consumers start trading down in a recessionary environment. “At a ~5-turn discount to peers and ~3.5-turn discount to 2021 average, and the progress we’re seeing (see scorecard on page 10), we think a narrower valuation gap vs. peers is warranted,” read the note. The analyst’s $10 price target, up from $8, implies the stock can rise more than 16% from Friday’s closing price. Shares of Coty are up more than 2% in Tuesday premarket trading. —CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake



CNN
 — 

Scott Stallings arrived at his condo on Georgia’s Saint Simons Island to find a package holding the most prestigious letter in golf.

He’d been invited to play in the Masters tournament in April. The only problem was this Scott Stallings is a realtor in Atlanta, not the the world’s 54th ranked golfer who is also a three-time PGA Tour winner.

“I’m (emoji 100) sure this is NOT for me,” the realtor Stallings wrote in a direct message to the pro-golfer Stallings. “I play but wow! No where near your level.”

The pro-golfer Stallings – who is in Hawaii – tweeted he was “checking the mailbox five times a day” for an invitation to return to the Masters for the first time since 2014. Instead he got a direct message on Instagram from the realtor saying he had received the invitation by mistake. CNN has reached out to Augusta National for comment on the mishap.

The realtor Stallings told CNN at first the pro-golfer thought that it was a prank, but he was convinced after seeing a photo of the invitation that the realtor also posted on Instagram.

“Trust me! I was thinking of showing up with my clubs and the invite,” the realtor said in an Instagram post, adding that his wife convinced him to reach out to the other Stallings.

Interestingly enough, both Stallings have a wife named Jennifer.

The situation was rectified when the realtor took the invitation to a local shipping store and mailed it to its rightful recipient.


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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Tesla, Coty, PayPal and more

US Top News and Analysis 

A Tesla vehicle is displayed in a Manhattan dealership on January 30, 2020 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images

Check out the companies making the biggest moves in the premarket:

Tesla — Shares fell 5% after reporting a record 40% growth in deliveries. However, the numbers missed analyst expectations. JPMorgan analyst Ryan Brinkman cut his price target on the stock Tuesday, saying he sees more downside ahead.

Coty — The stock rose 2.7% after being upgraded by Piper Sandler to overweight from neutral. Coty is increasing exposure to China and travel retail, which should allow for recovery tailwinds, analyst Korinne Wolfmeyer said.

PayPal — Shares gained nearly 3% premarket following an upgrade to a buy from a hold rating by Truist. The bank lifted its price target on the digital payments stock, saying that estimates now look reasonable.

Wynn Resorts, Las Vegas Sands — Shares of Wynn Resorts jumped 3% in premarket trading after Wells Fargo upgraded the casino stock to overweight from equal weight on Macau reopening optimism. Other Macau-exposed casinos rose in tandem, with Las Vegas Sands up 2% and MGM Resorts up over 1%.

Molson Coors Beverage — Molson Coors Beverage dipped 1% after being downgraded to underweight from equal weight by Wells Fargo, which said it sees significant downside to street estimates in 2023.

Linde — The stock dropped nearly 3% after Reuters reported that Russia froze almost $500 million of assets of the German industrial gas company. Linde had a contract with Russian companies for a new gas complex but notified its partners it had suspended its work due to European Union sanctions imposed after Russia invaded Ukraine.

— CNBC’s Yun Li and Samantha Subin contributed reporting

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Tom Zhu: China boss is now highest-profile Tesla executive after Elon Musk


Hong Kong
Reuters
 — 

Tesla Inc’s China chief Tom Zhu has been promoted to take charge of the electric carmaker’s US assembly plants as well as sales operations in North America and Europe, according to an internal posting of reporting lines reviewed by Reuters.

The Tesla

(TSLA)
posting showed that Zhu’s title of vice president for Greater China had not changed and that he also retained his responsibilities as Tesla

(TSLA)
’s most senior executive for sales in the rest of Asia as of Tuesday.

The move makes Zhu the highest-profile executive at Tesla after Elon Musk, with oversight for deliveries in all of its major markets and all of its production outside the still-ramping Tesla plant in Germany.

Tesla did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Reuters reviewed the organizational chart that had been posted internally by Tesla and confirmed the change with two people who had seen it. They asked not to be named because they were not authorized to discuss the matter.

Zhu and a team of his reports were brought in by Tesla late last year to troubleshoot production issues in the United States, driving an expectation among his colleagues then that he was being groomed for a bigger role.

Zhu’s appointment to a global role comes at a time when Musk has been distracted by his acquisition of Twitter

(TWTR)
and Tesla analysts and investors have urged action that would deepen the senior executive bench and allow him to focus on Tesla.

Under Zhu, Tesla’s Shanghai plant rebounded strongly from Covid lockdowns in China.

Tesla said on Monday that it had delivered 405,278 vehicles in the fourth quarter, short of Wall Street estimates, according to data compiled by Refinitiv. The company had delivered 308,600 vehicles in the same period a year earlier.

The Tesla managers reporting to Zhu include: Jason Shawhan, director of manufacturing at the Gigafactory in Texas; Hrushikesh Sagar, senior director of manufacturing at Tesla’s Fremont factory; Joe Ward, vice president in charge of Europe, the Middle East and Africa; and Troy Jones, vice president of North America sales and service, according to the Tesla notice on reporting lines reviewed by Reuters.

Tesla country managers in China, Japan, Australia and New Zealand continued to report to Zhu, the notice showed.

Zhu, who was born in China but now holds a New Zealand passport, joined Tesla in 2014. Before that he was a project manager at a company established by his MBA classmates at Duke University, advising Chinese contractors working on infrastructure projects in Africa.

During Shanghai’s two-month Covid lockdown, Zhu was among the first batch of employees sleeping in the factory as they sought to keep it running, people who work with him have said.

Zhu, a no-fuss manager who sports a buzz cut, favors Tesla-branded fleece jackets and has lived in a government-subsidized apartment that is a 10-minute drive from the Shanghai Gigafactory. It was not immediately clear whether he would move after his promotion.

He takes charge of Tesla’s main production hubs at a time when the company is readying the launch of Cybertruck and a revamped version of its Model 3 sedan.

When Tesla posted a picture on Twitter last month to celebrate its Austin, Texas plant hitting a production milestone for its Model Y, Zhu was among hundreds of workers smiling on the factory floor.

Allan Wang, who was promoted to vice president in charge of sales in China in July, was listed as the legal representative for the operation in registration papers filed with Chinese regulators in a change by the company last month.

Tesla board member James Murdoch said in November the company had recently identified a potential successor to Musk without naming the person. Murdoch did not respond to a request for comment.

Elecktrek previously reported that Zhu would take responsibility for US sales, delivery and service.

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Chilling video of Damar Hamlin talking about Bills teammate Dane Jackson surfaces

Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

As the sports world held out hope for the recovery of Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin, a video of him talking about his teammate and friend Dane Jackson who suffered a scary neck injury earlier in the season.

Hamlin appeared on “One Bills Live” a few weeks ago and talked about Jackson’s injury. The video was shared by Bills legend Andre Reed among other NFL fans across social media.

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“I can’t even describe it, but I cherish it every second that I can,” Hamlin says in the clip. “Every second of every day. We just had our prayer, our DB prayer we do every Wednesday. He was next to me and I just grabbed his hand a little bit harder just because you know you never know when your last day could be that you get to experience something like this. I’m cherishing every moment that I can.”

Hamlin and Jackson were teammates at Pittsburgh before both players turned pro. Jackson joined the Bills first in 2020 and Hamlin followed in 2021. Jackson suffered a neck injury in a game in September that caused him to get taken off the field in an ambulance.

DAMAR HAMLIN’S CHARITY RECEIVES MILLIONS IN DONATIONS AFTER HE COLLAPSES ON FIELD

Reed was among those who offered their condolences to Hamlin after he collapsed on the field.

“Rare but at a loss for words,” Reed wrote on Instagram. “Fans banding together in solidarity for #DamarHamlin , #StephonDiggs – a real one —going to the hospital , people donating to Damar’s toy drive …. this restores my faith in humanity. LET’S we be more like this in 2023. Remember what really matters in this lifetime.”

The Bills said Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest following a hit on Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver Tee Higgins. He got back up after the tackle but fell back down to the ground.

The Bills said Hamlin’s “heartbeat was restored on the field and he was transferred to the UC Medical Center for further testing and treatment.”

“He is currently sedated and listed in critical condition,” the team said.

The game between the Bills and Bengals were postponed.

 

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Some analysts see a buying opportunity in Tesla for 2023 despite persistent demand pressures

US Top News and Analysis 

Some Wall Street analysts see a buying opportunity in Tesla in 2023 — though others think the car maker’s recent deliveries miss spells trouble for the electric vehicle maker. Tesla reported deliveries of 405,278 vehicles in the final quarter of 2022 , less than the 427,000 deliveries expected by analysts, according to consensus estimates compiled on FactSet, as of Dec. 31. Still, that was an increase of 40% year over year — a record for Tesla. For some on Wall Street, the ramp up in production helped offset the deliveries miss. Baird analyst Ben Kallo, who recently named Tesla a top pick for 2023, reiterated an outperform rating and said he would remain a buyer of the stock ahead of the company’s earnings report on Jan. 25. “Q4 deliveries missed consensus but beat our estimates. Importantly, production increased ~20% q/q which we expect to continue into 2023 as gigafactories in Berlin and Austin continue to ramp,” Baird’s Kallo said in a Tuesday note. Kallo’s $252 price target implies the stock can more than double from Friday’s closing price of $123.18. Canaccord Genuity’s George Gianarikas had a similar view on the stock, saying that any demand pressures on Tesla will pass, especially after a reopening in China. The anayst reiterated a buy rating on Tesla, and maintained a $275 price target. “Tesla reported 4Q22 deliveries that were slightly below consensus but above CG estimates and, in our opinion, better than worst-case fears,” Gianarikas wrote in a Monday note. “[Our] conviction remains that current demand issues reflect cyclical pressures and that strong secular growth remains for years to come. We see Tesla sustaining multiple years of extraordinary growth as EV penetration continues to move higher, new vectors of growth open, and competitors begin to falter,” Gianarikas added. To be sure, not all analysts on Wall Street were as bullish on the stock. Shares of Tesla increasingly came under pressure last year from weakening demand of the firm’s vehicles, which are more expensive than similar offerings from competitors. Meanwhile, a rise of Covid cases in China caused Tesla to temporarily suspend and lower production at its Shanghai facility. The stock was down about 65% in 2022. JPMorgan analyst Ryan Brinkman lowered his price target on Tesla to $125, while remaining underweight on the stock, saying the need for more promotions to sell vehicles in the last quarter points to further downside ahead. “We are lowering our estimates and price target after Tesla on Monday reported 4Q deliveries which tracked modestly higher than our model but seemingly at the cost of higher incentives, suggesting lower pricing and margin,” JPMorgan’s Brinkman wrote in a Tuesday note. “[Moreover], 4Q deliveries were a miss vs. consensus expectations, which when combined with the drag from lower pricing in our view suggests potential downside to Bloomberg consensus EPS of $1.19 heading into the release,” Brinkman wrote. Bernstein’s Toni Sacconaghi also had an underperform rating on the stock, saying he expects that consensus estimates are too high, and that demand pressures will continue for Tesla. “We expect demand challenges to persist in 2023, particularly since *NO* Tesla models appear to currently qualify for any IRA rebates except the 7-seat Model Y (which is a $3000 option),” AllianceBernstein’s Sacconaghi Jr. wrote in a Monday note. “We believe Tesla will need to either reduce its growth targets (and run its factories below capacity) or sustain and potentially increase recent price cuts globally, pressuring margins. We see demand problems remaining until Tesla is able to introduce a lower priced offering in volume, which may only be in 2025.” His $150 price target represents roughly 22% upside for shares of Tesla. —CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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