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The author of “Bad Blood” isn’t finished telling the Theranos story.

Three years since the release of his bestselling book, John Carreyrou is debuting a new podcast to uncover the final chapter of former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes. “Bad Blood: The Final Chapter” will follow the upcoming trial of Holmes.

In an interview with CNBC, Carreyrou shared his bold predictions on her criminal fraud trial, which is set to begin in August after several delays due to the coronavirus pandemic and her unexpected pregnancy. Despite the postponements, Carreyrou predicts Holmes will be convicted of wire fraud, and said that a guilty verdict in her trial will be a “major shot across the bow to entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley.”

“The message will be that you can’t really do anything you want, you can’t completely ignore rules and regulations. You can’t thumb your nose at regulators and authorities,” Carreyrou said.

He warns a not guilty verdict will set a dangerous precedent among start-up CEOs. “Young entrepreneurs will say ‘look what Elizabeth Holmes got away with, and she didn’t go to prison for it.'” Carreyrou adds, “it’s going to take a guilty verdict in this case to course-correct.”

Holmes and Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani ran the now-defunct blood-testing start-up Theranos together as CEO and president — and for a time, as girlfriend and boyfriend.

The two will face separate criminal jury trials over charges they lied to patients and doctors while bilking investors out of hundreds of millions of dollars. Holmes and Balwani have both pleaded not guilty.

Carreyrou tells CNBC a large part of Holmes’ defense strategy may be to blame Balwani. He predicts Holmes will take the stand and tell the jury that Balwani “held her in his psychological grip, that he was an abusive boyfriend.”

CNBC reached out to attorneys for Holmes and Balwani. They did not return calls for comment.

Holmes plans to call a psychologist who specializes in relationship trauma as a witness. Carreyrou, who spent years reporting on Holmes and what went on inside Theranos, says he doesn’t buy the defense.

“Based on all the interviews I did for my book and additional ones I’ve done for the podcast, it’s clear they ran this company and allegedly perpetrated this fraud together as a couple,” he said. 

“When they didn’t agree on something she had the final word,” Carreyrou said. “So it makes it hard for me to believe she was under his psychological grip and that she had no volition of her own.”

Watch the video to hear more from Carreyrou on his trial predictions, new evidence he’s obtained and his upcoming podcast.

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British neobank Monzo boosts funding round to $610 million to crack U.S. market, launch pensions

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British neobank Monzo boosts funding round to 0 million to crack U.S. market, launch pensions

Monzo CEO TS Anil.

Monzo

British neobank Monzo said Wednesday that it’s raised another $190 million, lifting the total it’s raised so far this year to $610 million.

The company told CNBC it raised the cash from new investors including Hedosophia, a backer of top European fintechs including N26 and Qonto. CapitalG, Alphabet’s independent growth fund, also participated in the round.

Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC also participated in Monzo’s latest fundraise, a source familiar with the matter told CNBC. The source spoke on the condition of anonymity as details of GIC’s involvement aren’t yet public.

The latest funding values Monzo at roughly $5.2 billion, an increase on the $5 billion valuation it attained in March when it raised $430 million. The total $610 million round marks the single-biggest funding round for a European fintech in the past year, according to Dealroom data.

TS Anil, CEO and co-founder of Monzo, told CNBC his firm plans to use the cash to build new products and accelerate its international expansion plans.

“At the heart of it we are a mission-oriented company that’s looking to build the single place where people can meet all of their financial needs,” Anil told CNBC in an exclusive interview.

“What’s exciting to me is that, as we pursue that mission of changing people’s relationship with money, we’ve built a business model that is congruent with that as well, with this model that is built entirely around the customer.”

Walmart-backed fintech One introduces buy now, pay later

Monzo entered the black for the first time last year, reporting two consecutive months of profitability at the end of its 2023 fiscal year. Anil said Monzo’s looking to ramp up profits with diversification into other income generators, like lending and savings.

Notably, Anil said that Monzo’s planning to launch its first pensions product in the next six to nine months.

That would put it in competition with traditional lenders including Barclays and NatWest. Last year, NatWest acquired 85% of U.K. workplace pension services provider Cushon for £144 million ($180 million).

Global expansion plans

Monzo’s funding expansion caps off a busy year for the nine-year-old firm, which now counts more than 9 million retail customers in the U.K. — 2 million of whom joined Monzo last year alone — and over 400,000 business customers.

Last year saw Monzo make its first foray into investments with a feature allowing customers to invest in funds managed by BlackRock.

Anil said Monzo identified that about a third of people using the service had never invested previously — and, more notably, 45% of the women investing via the Monzo app are first-time investors.

Another big priority for Monzo in the coming months is international expansion.

The company recently restarted its U.S. expansion efforts, hiring a long-time executive from Block’s Cash App as its new U.S. CEO after earlier abandoning a bid to acquire a banking license from U.S. regulators.

For now, Anil says, Monzo’s team in the U.S. is primarily focusing on product to ensure that the service it has there is of high enough quality that it can compete with major incumbents like JPMorgan and Citibank.

The U.S. has proven notoriously difficult for European neobanks to crack.

Berlin-based digital bank N26 notably withdrew from the U.S. in 2021.

Revolut, meanwhile, has failed to formally file an application for a U.S. bank charter yet despite having earlier said it intends to file a draft application for a U.S. bank license.

“What I like about how we’re approaching this is, at the heart of it, it’s not just words,” Anil told CNBC in an exclusive interview Tuesday.

“The necessary conditions for the U.S. for us is getting the product right. That’s what we’re spending our time and effort on there.”

European expansion is also on the cards, Anil said, although he didn’t commit to a date for when this will happen.

Mortgages are coming

Longer term, Monzo is also planning to launch a mortgages product, which would see it compete much more aggressively with U.K. retail banks in the world of lending.

Monzo currently offers monthly installment plans and consumer loans via its app.

It also has a “Mortgage Tracker” feature which lets users track how much they’ve paid toward their mortgage and how much equity they’ve built.

But it’s yet to officially roll out a service that would let people apply for mortgages directly within its app.

Anil said Monzo is in the early stages of exploring partnerships with lenders to offer this.

He declined to name any prospective partners.

One thing Monzo hasn’t got any immediate plans for is an initial public offering.

Although he thinks Monzo will make a “great public company one day,” Anil said it’s still too early to talk of an IPO. He says he’s focused on growing Monzo at scale before reaching that milestone.

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Big Tech is eating as much data as it can to win in AI — but it’s not ‘winner takes all,’ CEO says

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Big Tech is eating as much data as it can to win in AI — but it's not 'winner takes all,' CEO says

Just_super | E+ | Getty Images

Big technology companies are consuming as much data as possible to become winners in artificial intelligence — but that’s not necessarily what will define winners, according to the boss of software giant Appian.

Matt Calkins, CEO and co-founder of Appian, said that though internet giants like Microsoft, Amazon, and Google are spending billions on the tech, ensuring success in AI is “not just about money.”

“AI is not a place where money makes more money,” Calkins told CNBC in an interview at its London bureau on Tuesday.

Calkins was referring to the high-profile deals companies like Microsoft and Amazon are agreeing with ambitious and fast-growing foundational AI model makers, like OpenAI and Anthropic.

Microsoft has invested a total of $13 billion in OpenAI, a deal that entails Microsoft getting a stake in OpenAI and the latter adding its GPT language models to the Redmond, Washington-based technology giant’s Azure cloud computing platform.

Microsoft has struck a similar deal with Mistral, taking a 15 million euro ($16 million) stake in the French AI firm.

AI revolution being 'held up a little bit by fear,' Appian CEO says

In OpenAI’s case, Microsoft has a non-voting observer sitting on the firm’s board.

That happened after a shocking series of events last year that saw the CEO of OpenAI, Sam Altman, temporarily ousted, before later returning after hundreds of OpenAI employees threatened a coup to join Altman at Microsoft.

Separately, Amazon has invested a whopping $4 billion into U.S. AI firm Anthropic, which is behind the Claude AI system. Amazon holds a minority stake in Anthropic but no board seat.

Google, too, has committed billions of funding to Anthropic, agreeing last year to invest up to $2 billion.

Scrutiny from UK regulators

British regulators are assessing whether deals agreed by Microsoft and Amazon with foundation AI model startups may constitute effective mergers that could lead to a substantial reduction of competition.

Microsoft denies its deal with OpenAI and Mistral and hiring from Inflection constituted mergers. Amazon says its partnership with Anthropic constitutes a limited corporate investment, not a merger.

This is a market for the clever. The fact that you’ve got enough money to buy, or buy a piece of, Anthropic or Mistral or any of that, that’s impressive. But AI may not be a ‘winner take all’ market.

Matt Calkins

CEO, Appian

For Calkins, whether or not those deals qualify as mergers that threaten competition in AI, there will be room for innovators to thrive.

“If coalitions won the AI race, Google would have won by now,” he said, calling out the U.S. tech giant’s $500 million takeover of British AI lab DeepMind.

Global Music Artist will.i.am: Over-regulating AI will stop innovation

Far from it, Calkins argues — instead, he thinks Google lost out to Microsoft early on when it comes to generative AI, which threatens to upend the fabric of Google’s search business.

It follows a blunder that saw Google’s Gemini text-to-image generator produce inaccuracies in historical pictures that went viral online. Google paused image generation of people to refine the tool. CEO Sundar Pichai called the debacle “unacceptable,” according to an internal memo obtained by CNBC in February.

Google was not immediately available for comment and contacted by CNBC.

“This is a market for the clever,” Calkins said. “The fact that you’ve got enough money to buy, or buy a piece of, Anthropic or Mistral or any of that, that’s impressive. But AI may not be a ‘winner take all’ market.”

“There’s going to be different AI algorithms for different purposes, and they are going to be much more or less valuable, depending on whether and how you’ve loaded your own data into it,” he added.

Calkins said that the only way for AI systems to become truly clever and useful is by being capable of understanding what we want from them for use in our everyday lives.

“The best AI will be the AI you put your data into, not whoever bought the biggest stack,” he said.

Europe has ‘head start’ with regulation

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U.S. revokes some export licenses to sell chips to Huawei in a bid to curb China’s tech power

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U.S. revokes some export licenses to sell chips to Huawei in a bid to curb China's tech power

BERLIN, GERMANY – SEPTEMBER 03: People arrive to attend the Huawei keynote address at the IFA 2020 Special Edition consumer electronics and appliances trade fair on the fair’s opening day on September 03, 2020 in Berlin, Germany. The fair is taking place despite the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, albeit in a reduced form and without personal access for the general public. The IFA 2020 Special Edition will take place from September 3-5. (Photo by Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Sean Gallup | Getty Images News | Getty Images

The U.S. has revoked certain licenses for chip exports to Chinese tech giant Huawei, the Commerce Department told CNBC on Tuesday, in its latest efforts to curb China’s tech power.

“We continuously assess how our controls can best protect our national security and foreign policy interests, taking into consideration a constantly changing threat environment and technological landscape,” a Commerce spokesperson said in a statement.

“As part of this process, as we have done in the past, we sometimes revoke export licenses,”  the spokesperson said, declining to comment on specific licenses. “But we can confirm that we have revoked certain licenses for exports to Huawei.”

Huawei was placed on a U.S. trade blacklist in 2019, which banned U.S. firms from selling technology – including 5G chips – to the Chinese tech giant over national security concerns. In 2020, the U.S. tightened chip restrictions on Huawei, requiring foreign manufacturers using American chipmaking equipment to obtain a license before they can sell semiconductors to Huawei.

Huawei’s consumer business, which includes smartphones and laptops, is seeing a resurgence after launching the Mate 60 Pro smartphone in August.

Biden administration reportedly revoking certain licenses for exports to Huawei

A TechInsights analysis of Huawei’s Mate 60 Pro smartphone revealed an advanced chip made by China’s top chip maker, SMIC. The smartphone is also said to be equipped with 5G connectivity – a feature which U.S. sanctions had sought to block.

U.S. chip firms Qualcomm and Intel are two of the companies that supply chips to Huawei. Qualcomm in an SEC filing earlier this month said it expects operations to be “further impacted” from its customers, such as Huawei, developing their own chips.

“While we have continued to sell integrated circuit products to Huawei under our licenses, we do not expect to receive product revenues from Huawei beyond the current calendar year,” Qualcomm said.

“Additionally, to the extent that Huawei’s 5G devices take share from Chinese original equipment manufacturers that utilize our 5G products or from non-Chinese OEMs that utilize our 5G products in devices they sell into China, our revenues, results of operations and cash flows could be further impacted,” Qualcomm said.

Last month, Huawei launched a fresh lineup of phones – the Pura 70 series – in a bid to challenge Apple in China.

Apple is facing pressure from Huawei in China as iPhone sales plunged 19.1% in the first quarter while Huawei’s smartphone sales soared 69.7%, according to Counterpoint Research.

Huawei’s net profit in 2023 grew by 144.5% from a year ago to 87 billion yuan (about $12 billion) partially helped by the sales of Mate 60 Pro in China, the firm revealed in March.

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