UK shares: 2 quality stocks I’d buy for 2022

I’ve been looking at quality UK shares to add to my portfolio for 2022. These two companies updated the market this week and their share prices have risen. In a week when stock markets have generally fallen, this is a good sign that the businesses are trading well.

Let’s take a look to see if these stocks are buys for my portfolio.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic… and with so many great companies trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool UK analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global upheaval…

We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. And if you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio.

Click here to claim your free copy now!

A UK share to profit from the booming housing market

The first company I’m looking at is Belvoir (LSE: BLV). It’s a property franchise group specialising in residential lettings and property sales. The share price has had an unbelievable run since the pandemic low at around 90p in March 2020. As I write, the share price is 260p which marks a near 200% return since then. There’s been some weakness lately though as the shares have dropped around 20%.

On Thursday, Belvoir released a trading statement for the 10 months to October saying that the company has performed ahead of the board’s expectations. Income grew across the group, with notable strength in property sales that the company said was “mainly a result of the strongest market for property transactions seen since 2007”.

I normally look out for franchise groups as an investor as they can achieve fantastic business economics. It’s up to the franchisee to invest any upfront costs, leaving the franchisor to collect an income from the potential profit. Indeed, Belvoir’s cash generation is excellent, and the business requires little cash investment itself. Last year’s operating margin was a stellar 31% too.

I have to keep in mind that Belvoir’s business is dependent on the housing market staying strong. Any slowdown in property sales or lettings and profits will fall. But I see this as a quality stock to keep in my portfolio as we head into next year.

A quality investment management company

I’ve also been looking at Liontrust Asset Management (LSE: LIO). It’s an investment management company offering a range of funds across various asset classes.

Liontrust released its half-year report to 30 September on Wednesday and it was very impressive, in my view. Adjusted profit before tax was £43.1m, which increased from £22.3m in the same period during 2020.

A key metric for an investment management company is assets under management and advice (AuMA) as this figure determines its income generation. Liontrust’s AuMA increased by 73% over the 12 months to £35.7bn.

One of the reasons I think Liontrust is a quality business is its operating margin. It’s able to generate double-digit operating margins consistently, and last year it was an impressive 37%. Not only this, but its return on capital is also consistently in double-digits.

A risk to consider before I buy the shares is that stock markets may crash next year. This would lower Liontrust’s AuMA, and therefore income would fall. But on balance, I still think this is a quality UK share for me to own for the long term.

This could also be worth a look…

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Dan Appleby owns shares of Belvoir. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

The Abrdn share price just fell 10%. Should I start buying?

FTSE 100 fund manager Abrdn (LSE: ABDN) has just agreed a £1.5bn deal to buy DIY investment platform Interactive Investor. However, shareholders don’t seem too keen. The Abrdn share price has fallen by 10% since the deal was first reported on 8 November.

This latest slide means that Abrdn stock has fallen by 20% over the last year. I’m wondering if this could be a good opportunity for me to start buying the stock. After all, Abrdn shares now offer a 6% dividend yield. If the Interactive Investor deal is successful, growth could accelerate over the next few years, too.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic… and with so many great companies trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool UK analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global upheaval…

We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. And if you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio.

Click here to claim your free copy now!

Why buy it?

Abrdn has been struggling with growth since the business was created in 2017 through the merger of Aberdeen Asset Management and Standard Life. Shares in the combined company have fallen by 45% since 2017, reflecting the market’s downbeat view of this business.

Chief executive Stephen Bird is betting that one way to solve this problem is to tap into the growing demand from investors who want to manage their own cash. The deal to buy Interactive Investor means that Abrdn will become the number two player in the UK direct investing market.

Interactive Investor has 400,000 customers with an average of £135,000 under management each. That gives it a total of around £55bn of assets — enough to give the business a 20% share of the UK market, just behind Hargreaves Lansdown.

Like Hargreaves, it’s also very profitable. Last year, a 34% profit margin allowed the business to generate a pre-tax profit of £46m. That would have increased Abrdn’s 2020 profits by almost 10%.

Are Abrdn shares cheap?

The big problem for Abrdn is that it keeps losing funds under management. In 2019, the net outflow from its funds was £58.4bn. In 2020, the outflow was £29.4bn. During the first half of 2021, it was £8.3bn.

When assets under management are falling, revenue also tends to fall. To offset these losses, Abrdn has been cutting costs and gradually selling its stake in Indian insurer HDFC. These measures have provided support for the group’s dividend, but they aren’t a long-term solution.

I think this is why Abrdn shares do look quite cheap. The stock’s 6% dividend yield is nearly twice the FTSE 100 average. Abrdn’s share price of 227p is also below the company’s book value of 307p per share — a commonly used value indicator.

Would I buy Abrdn shares now?

Sometimes shares are cheap for a good reason. I think that might be the case here. Although I’m encouraged by the potential of Interactive Investor, I’m also aware that big mergers and takeovers don’t always have a great record of success. Abrdn itself is an example of this, in my view.

For now, the 6% yield looks safe enough to me. I might consider the stock for as a high-yield investment. But I’d want to keep a close eye on the company’s progress. If this business doesn’t return to growth soon, then I think the share price could fall even lower.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic…

And with so many great companies still trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool is here to help: our UK Chief Investment Officer and his analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global lock-down…

You see, here at The Motley Fool we don’t believe “over-trading” is the right path to financial freedom in retirement; instead, we advocate buying and holding (for AT LEAST three to five years) 15 or more quality companies, with shareholder-focused management teams at the helm.

That’s why we’re sharing the names of all five of these companies in a special investing report that you can download today for FREE. If you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio, and that you can consider building a position in all five right away.

Click here to claim your free copy of this special investing report now!


Roland Head has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Hargreaves Lansdown. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

What might happen to the Lloyds share price in 2022?

This year has been good to shareholders of Lloyds Banking Group (LSE: LLOY). With the economy bouncing back strongly from 2020’s lows, it has seen its loan losses plummet and earnings rebound. Hence, the Lloyds share price has surged from its January low. But what might 2022 hold for the UK’s largest lender?

The fall and rise of the Lloyds share price

Before Covid-19 crashed global markets, the Lloyds share price was doing fine. On 16 December 2019, it hit its 2019 closing high of 67.25p, before ending the year at 62.5p. Then along came coronavirus to spoil the fun. During the London market meltdown of spring 2020, Lloyds closed at 27.73p on 3 April. But the worst was yet to come, with the shares bottoming out at 23.58p on 22 September 2020. At the time, I thought this was crazy, so I said so.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic… and with so many great companies trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool UK analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global upheaval…

We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. And if you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio.

Click here to claim your free copy now!

Lloyds stock duly rebounded, closing out 2020 at 36.44p. It then lost ground, hitting its 2021 closing low of 33p on 29 January 2021. But it’s been largely uphill since then, with LLOY hitting its 2021 intra-day high a month ago, peaking at 51.58p on 2 November. On Thursday, the shares closed at 46.96p, down 4.62p (-9%) from this recent high.

I see Lloyds as a binary bet on the UK for 2022

As we’ve seen since last Friday, worries about new virus variants can still send stocks steeply southwards. Hence, if we fail to conquer Covid-19, then I suspect that the Lloyds share price next year will be driven by FUD (fear, uncertainty and doubt). However, if it appears that we’re winning the war on coronavirus, then optimism, hope and even euphoria could drive this stock steeply higher. That’s why I see Lloyds as a binary bet on UK economic recovery next year, where two extremes might emerge. 

Scenario 1: Hurrah!

In this Pollyanna plot, everything is golden. As 2022 wears on, coronavirus takes a beating and the global economy rebounds strongly. As a result, consumer spending soars, asset prices keep rising, and company earnings surge. In other words, it’ll be like the Roaring Twenties, when the world bounced back from the 1918 flu pandemic. In this outcome, I could see Lloyds’ earnings and dividends rise steeply, dragging up its share price with them. In this best of all possible worlds, I could see the Lloyds share price hitting 60p to 65p next year.

Scenario 2: Doom and gloom!

In this ultra-pessimistic scenario, Covid-19 runs rampart in 2022, leading to more social restrictions and lockdowns. Consumer spending plummets, international trade nosedives, company earnings collapse, and asset prices take a beating. In this setting, Lloyds’ lending losses explode, its earnings per share plummet, and the bank cancels its dividend to preserve cash. In this horrible outcome (comparable to spring 2020), I could see the Lloyds share price crashing back to, say, 25p to 30p.

I’d buy at the current Lloyds share price

Of course, we could also see something between the two. Regardless, I don’t own Lloyds shares today, but they look attractive to me on fundamentals. The stock trades on a lowly rating of 7.2 times earnings and an earning yield of 14%. The dividend yield of 2.6% a year is lower than the FTSE 100‘s 4.1% yield, but has room to rise. These numbers appeal to me as a veteran value investor. Hence, as an optimist, I’d buy Lloyds at current prices and hope for the best!

Cliffdarcy has no position in any of the shares mentioned. The Motley Fool UK has recommended Lloyds Banking Group. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services, such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool, we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

2 dirt-cheap UK shares (including a 6.4% dividend yield) I’d buy today!

I’m searching for the best cheap UK shares to buy for my shares portfolio. Here are two bargains I’m thinking of buying right now.

Playing the online retail boom

The spread of Omicron poses a threat to stacks of UK shares as we move into 2022. Urban Logistics REIT (LSE: SHED), on the other hand, is a stock that could benefit as e-commerce growth rates might receive an additional boost. Analysts at courier Parcel Hero reckon online Christmas spending by Britons will likely match last year’s £35.3bn as people grow more cautious about visiting shops. It’s even possible that new restrictions (or even lockdowns) in the weeks ahead could propel expenditure well past these levels.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic… and with so many great companies trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool UK analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global upheaval…

We’re sharing the names in a special FREE investing report that you can download today. And if you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio.

Click here to claim your free copy now!

Urban Logistics provides the essential warehouse and distribution properties that keep e-commerce moving. So it’s well placed to benefit from any rise to online shopping activity. Rents are soaring in this part of the property market as supply fails to keep up with demand. I’d buy Urban Logistics even though weak consumer spending levels could pose a threat to profits growth.

At a current price of 172p per share, Urban Logistics trades on a forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of 22.2 times. I don’t think this is an excessive valuation as rapid e-commerce growth appears to be here to stay. Besides, a chunky 4.4% dividend yield for this financial year (to March 2022) helps to take the sting out.

6.4% dividend yields

I haven’t stopped championing the wisdom of buying housebuilding stocks like Taylor Wimpey (LSE: TW). Fresh housing data this week revealed how strong trading conditions remain for such businesses.

According to Nationwide, average property prices in the UK rose 0.9% in November from the prior month. This was up from growth of 0.7% reported in October. A perfect blend of low interest rates, massive competition in the mortgage market and financial support from Help to Buy is keeping housebuyer activity ticking along nicely. And I see no end to this trend either. It’s why I already own shares in this particular homebuilder (along with Barratt Developments).

Indeed, Taylor Wimpey has continued hiking its profits forecasts in recent months in light of this bright industry outlook.Demand for homes in the UK continues to outstrip supply by a wide margin, a phenomenon I think will take many years and much hard work by government to solve.

City analysts think Taylor Wimpey’s earnings will rise 7% next year. This leaves the builder trading on a P/E ratio of just 8.5 times. Furthermore, at current prices of 162p Taylor Wimpey carries a mighty 6.4% dividend yield. 

There are risks. Concerns over the strength of the housing market have grown following the full restoration of Stamp Duty. Shocking HMRC data, for example, showed home sales more than halved month-on-month in October as people’s tax liabilities rose. But I feel Taylor Wimpey’s value is hard to ignore. It’s why I’m thinking of increasing my holdings in the business today.

5 Stocks For Trying To Build Wealth After 50

Markets around the world are reeling from the coronavirus pandemic…

And with so many great companies still trading at what look to be ‘discount-bin’ prices, now could be the time for savvy investors to snap up some potential bargains.

But whether you’re a newbie investor or a seasoned pro, deciding which stocks to add to your shopping list can be a daunting prospect during such unprecedented times.

Fortunately, The Motley Fool is here to help: our UK Chief Investment Officer and his analyst team have short-listed five companies that they believe STILL boast significant long-term growth prospects despite the global lock-down…

You see, here at The Motley Fool we don’t believe “over-trading” is the right path to financial freedom in retirement; instead, we advocate buying and holding (for AT LEAST three to five years) 15 or more quality companies, with shareholder-focused management teams at the helm.

That’s why we’re sharing the names of all five of these companies in a special investing report that you can download today for FREE. If you’re 50 or over, we believe these stocks could be a great fit for any well-diversified portfolio, and that you can consider building a position in all five right away.

Click here to claim your free copy of this special investing report now!


Royston Wild owns shares of Barratt Developments and Taylor Wimpey. The Motley Fool UK has no position in any of the shares mentioned. Views expressed on the companies mentioned in this article are those of the writer and therefore may differ from the official recommendations we make in our subscription services such as Share Advisor, Hidden Winners and Pro. Here at The Motley Fool we believe that considering a diverse range of insights makes us better investors.

The Moneyist: My father desperately begged me, ‘Son, get a lawyer. That woman is going to take away your inheritance!’ My stepmother kept $1 million after he died

Dear Moneyist,

I am the only son of parents who divorced when I was 4 years old. My father remarried soon after that, but had no more children. 

Though he and I had some conflicts over the years, in the last several decades of his life we got closer and had a good relationship. Dad died in 2014. In the years before his death, he told me on several occasions — with great delight — that I would inherit a substantial amount of money. 

The last time he said this was in the presence of my wife and my stepmother. He said I would get $1 million, and that I should not worry about my stepmom. 

She did not say a word, but she was clearly not in agreement. I am sure Dad was aware of this, but he felt he had things well under control in the family trust he had set up.

I was able to visit Dad a few weeks before he died. He had had a leg amputated and was aware that he was likely to go soon, but he was still in reasonably good spirits. 

At that point, Dad had suddenly changed and became upset. My father desperately begged me, “Son, get a lawyer. That woman is going to take away your inheritance!” My stepmother was nearby at the time, and I am sure she heard every word. 

I tried to calm Dad down, briefly thinking that he might be raving. Time was short, and I had to leave.

He died a couple of weeks later without my being able to speak to him again.

‘Dad was right’

I would eventually learn that Dad was right. In the trust, he had somehow named his wife as “settlor,” which my lawyer tells me meant she had complete control of the trust after he died. She simply rewrote it to her liking, which meant that not a dime came to me. I believe that Dad’s sudden change of mood and his warning to me were because my stepmother had told him about this change.

Unfortunately, I did not follow Dad’s advice, preferring the soft touch. I simply could not believe my stepmother would betray my dad’s plans and cut me off without provocation. And my relationship with her, while never warm, was quite friendly — or so I thought. I received nothing after Dad’s death but a small IRA and a small insurance policy of $6,000.

I did check with the county clerk, where I found a copy of Dad’s will. It left everything to the trust. I made a special effort to keep relations cordial, phoning my stepmom every Sunday evening. Finally, after six years of naïvely pretending that things were as I hoped, my stepmother started mentioning in our phone conversations how she was spending large amounts of money.

She took first-class plane flights, inviting her family (siblings and nieces and nephews) on vacation, and set up $10,000 scholarships at the local community college for nurses and firemen. My stepmother said her lawyer would modify “her” trust. (I now believe her lawyer had told her to keep mum until the statute of limitations for fraud — six years in Oregon — had passed.) 

‘She was clearly provoking me’

She was clearly provoking me, and I finally asked her point-blank if I was going to inherit anything. She said, “Yes, but not much,” and that she was going to leave a lot to “her” family. I finally hired a lawyer. He suggested asking her for a copy of the trust as it had been at the end of Dad’s life, to see if it was true that he had intended for me to inherit a lot of money. 

When I did this, she told me it was “none of my business” and that she could do “whatever she pleased” with the money. This was exactly what I had been fearing. I felt like the worst kind of fool. I threatened to sue my stepmother for access to the trust documents, and eventually her lawyer sent an affidavit affirming that my stepmother was “settlor” of the trust. 

My own lawyer told me that if it was true, she would have no responsibility to comply with my dad’s wishes, and I had no case. He also said it was extremely unlikely that her lawyer would lie in the affidavit, as it would mean professional suicide if found out. 

If I continued my case, I would probably lose and have to pay her legal fees and court costs. My lawyer also suggested writing her a conciliatory email, as I still might inherit something (possibly based on an unofficial hint her lawyer gave him). 

I did write the email, and since then I have neither heard from her, nor have I tried to contact her. I would find it very difficult to speak to her now in a civil manner.

The Stepson 

Dear Stepson,

I’m sorry you went through this, and that you lost an inheritance your late father had intended for you. He may not have fully understood his and his wife’s role in setting up a trust, and made several major mistakes — among them effectively handing over the trust to your stepmother who, as your father realized late in the day, had no intention of fulfilling his wishes. A trustee manages a trust and carries out the terms of the trust. But your stepmother was in a far more central — and powerful — position.

“What is unusual about these facts is that the father appears to have left his property to a trust of which the stepmother was the ‘settlor,’” says Neil V. Carbone, trusts and estates partner at Farrell Fritz PC. “The settlor of a trust is the person who creates it and is also, in most cases, the one who funds it. One would have to review the specific trust agreement to see whether the father was also a settlor of the trust and whether there were any limitations or restrictions on the stepmother’s power to modify the trust after the father’s death.”

Believing the best in people is not an estate plan. People are notoriously unpredictable, never more so in the aftermath of a death and when there are large sums of money involved. In fact, people can be equally capricious and untrustworthy when there are small sums of money involved. As well as being motivated by greed, they are also motivated by hidden resentments and their own belief that they are entitled to the entire kit and kaboodle. 

Missed opportunities to take action

It’s critical to act decisively and early. “There appear to be missed opportunities to take action,” Carbone says. “First, when the father discussed the son’s anticipated inheritance during his lifetime — especially when the son detected that his stepmother was ‘clearly not in agreement’ — the son could have suggested that they all review the documents and the plan together to make sure that it reflected the father’s wishes and would be carried out as written.”

“Then, when the father was in the hospital and begged the son to get a lawyer, the son could have made arrangements for the father’s lawyer to meet with the father alone, even if the meeting had to take place in the hospital,” he adds. “If the father was concerned that the stepmother would not administer the trust according to his wishes, he could have made a new plan. The fact that several weeks went by without this happening is truly unfortunate.”

Yours is a cautionary tale. “The son could have obtained a copy of the trust agreement itself (not just an affidavit from an attorney) to see what his rights may be and to consider his options to enforce those rights,” Carbone says. “For example, he may have been entitled to an accounting of the trustee’s actions in administering the trust. He also may have had equitable remedies available to him such as, for example, the imposition of a ‘constructive trust.’”

What can we learn from these unfortunate events? Sometimes, these issues are best ironed out in a prenuptial agreement, especially when there are children involved. Your father was either misguided or bamboozled by his wife when he attempted to set up a trust for you. It may have been that he felt unable to stand up to the demands of his second wife, and belatedly alerted you to his anguish that his wishes would not be upheld after his death. 

As you point out in your letter, the statute of limitations in your state appears to have passed, and the law does vary from state to state. Your story may help others out there in similar situations, and points to the perils of managing an estate when there is a second marriage. I urge you to seek a second opinion from an independent estate attorney. He or she may merely repeat what you have already been told, but it will at least settle the matter once and for all. 

You can email The Moneyist with any financial and ethical questions related to coronavirus at qfottrell@marketwatch.com, and follow Quentin Fottrell on Twitter.

Check out the Moneyist private Facebook group, where we look for answers to life’s thorniest money issues. Readers write in to me with all sorts of dilemmas. Post your questions, tell me what you want to know more about, or weigh in on the latest Moneyist columns.

The Moneyist regrets he cannot reply to questions individually.

More from Quentin Fottrell:

• Please help! My brother took out $20,000 in student loans in my father’s name without his consent. My parents refuse to take action
• ‘My uncle accessed my father’s bank accounts while he was dying’: He also took his house keys, truck, wallet and personal papers. What can we do?
• I sold my home to move into my husband’s fixer-upper. Now he won’t even put my name on the deed. What options do I have?
• ‘I’m a proud, unvaccinated Trump supporter. Two of my siblings have not spoken to me in a decade. Should I cut them out of my $7 million estate?’

: Elon Musk exercises more options, sells another $1 billion of Tesla stock

After a weeklong lull, Elon Musk has sold another $1 billion worth of Tesla Inc. stock, continuing a nearly monthlong selloff that is expected to continue.

According to filings with the Securities and Exchanges Commission on Thursday, Musk exercised options to buy 2.1 million shares at $6.24 each and immediately sold more than 934,000 of them at prices ranging from $1,058 to $1,112, making about $1.01 billion.

The sale was the first for the Tesla chief executive since Nov. 23, following a flurry of sales in the previous weeks.

Subscribe: Want intel on all the news moving markets? Sign up for our daily Need to Know newsletter.

Musk has sold about 10.1 million shares worth about $10.86 billion since Nov. 8,  a day after Musk’s Twitter poll decided he should sell 10% of his Tesla stake. Some of the stock sales had been put into motion well before the poll was posted.

Assuming Musk intends to sell 10% of his shares, he’s more than halfway there. Before the sales began, his 10% stake amounted to about 17 million shares — so after Thursday’s sales, he has about 6.9 million shares to go.

Musk, the world’s wealthiest man, has millions of stock options that he needs to exercise by August 2022, and Musk said in September that he intended on selling a large chunk of stock in the fourth quarter. CNBC reported last month that Musk faces about a $15 billion tax bill on those options.

Tesla shares
TSLA,
-0.95%

are down more than 10% over the past 30 days, but are still up 48% year to date, and up 54% over the past 12 months.

Can’t Keep Up? 4 Best Practices to Simplify Your Small Business

As a small-business owner, the demands on your time are constant. Even if you don’t have a family to consider outside of work hours, you wear multiple hats at all times. You’re responsible for the vision of the company and may have to shoulder most or all of the execution, as well. And, if your business is in its early days, you also may have to roll up your sleeves and do the dirty work yourself.

No matter where you are in your entrepreneurial journey, there are several ways to buy back your time, including these four mental shifts that can change how you manage your business.

1. Protect your focus and vision above all else

As the head of your business, you’re responsible for communicating the company’s vision to your employees and clients.

Yet entrepreneurs often fall into the trap of “wake up and work,” says Atlanta-based Alzay Calhoun, an advisor to small-business owners, who says his clients are used to beginning each morning in a “mental scramble” of activity instead of taking the time to effectively set their goals for the day.

“Your brain is an incredibly powerful tool, but it needs rest to function best,” Calhoun says. “Your daily routine should optimize your thinking, not your work.”

To reset poor habits, Calhoun advises business owners to prioritize time for intentional reflection and meditation each morning, then establish their most important goals for that day.

Project management software such as Asana or Trello can be customized to help you track your priorities or break down big projects into more manageable steps. And if you’re working with a team, these tools allow you to assign tasks to different members of a collaborative project and communicate throughout the process.

2. Sell your value, not your time

Calhoun emphasizes to his clients the importance of selling solutions, not their time. When entrepreneurs offer their services based on hourly rates, they limit their ability to scale the business, he says.

Instead, Calhoun stresses the importance of pitching clients a completed outcome, then pricing out the time required accordingly. “I encourage my clients to highlight the problem being solved, not the amount of time it takes to solve it,” he says. “Eventually, you will get faster at delivering the solution,” which, in turn, will win back your time.

3. Track how you spend time each day

As the head of your company, you can lead more effectively when you’re mindful of how and where you allocate your time.

St. Louis-based business consultant Mike Swigunski is sympathetic to the temptation to focus on urgent tasks that seem important in the moment. To help business owners identify how they’re spending their time, Swigunski recommends performing a time audit of weekly activities.

Swigunski suggests logging each major chunk of time you spend on the business each day, then grouping your actions into five to 10 different tasks. After that, score each task based on several metrics, including importance to business success, enjoyment and ease of execution.

4. Shorten or eliminate unnecessary meetings

Swigunski recommends evaluating meetings to see if they’re truly necessary. “Every meeting should have a clear-set agenda, and there shouldn’t be any sort of mandatory recurring meeting unless it’s really productive,” he says.

Even with required meetings, you may be able to reclaim some time for everyone by scheduling shorter gatherings. Microsoft Outlook and Google Calendar both offer settings that allow you to shorten standard 30- or 60-minute meetings by various durations.

“Time is the only resource you cannot re-create,” Calhoun says. “Once you begin to see that you cannot get this time back, this moment back, you begin to do things that maximize the moments you have left.”

MarketWatch First Take: Nvidia’s deal for ARM is dead — how long until CEO Jensen Huang admits it?

The Federal Trade Commission drove a nail into the coffin of Nvidia Corp.’s proposed $40 billion acquisition of Arm Holdings Plc., but Nvidia’s headstrong chief executive is unlikely to accept its fate.

The FTC announced it had filed a lawsuit against Nvidia
NVDA,
+2.20%

to block the deal on Thursday, saying its completion “would distort Arm’s incentives in chip markets and allow the combined firm to unfairly undermine Nvidia’s rivals.” The deal — the largest in semiconductor history — was already under scrutiny in Arm’s home country, the U.K., as well as by European Union regulators, and Nvidia had been pushing back the timeline for approval while dealing with several different agencies worldwide.

“Nobody thinks this is going to close,” Bernstein Research analyst Stacy Rasgon told MarketWatch on Thursday. “The stock didn’t even bobble when the news came out.”

Indeed, Nvidia shares were up about 2% when the FTC announced its suit late in the trading session, and shares closed with a 2.2% gain. While analysts were optimistic about the potential of the deal to bring a major competitive force to the data center — where Intel Corp.’s
INTC,
+1.85%

dominant position has only recently been challenged by Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
AMD,
+1.05%

— they have predicted regulatory pushback since the deal was struck in September 2020.

Arm, currently owned by Softbank Group Corp.
9984,
+0.34%

of Japan, is a chip designer and licenses its designs for low-powered processors that currently dominate the mobile phone market. ARM designs have made slower progress is getting into the data-center and corporate server markets, which is where Nvidia sees a huge opportunity for ARM processors, in combination with its graphics processors.

Competitors and regulators, though, voiced concerns about Nvidia owning an entity that contracts with its competitors in the chip space. A host of rivals have reportedly complained to government regulators around the world, including Alphabet Inc.’s
GOOG,
+1.52%

 
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+1.36%

Google, Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
-0.18%

and communications chip designer Qualcomm Inc.
QCOM,
+0.80%
.

Software developers, chip designers and server makers are nervous that Nvidia would have access to their product plans and roadmaps if they continued to license designs from ARM. The FTC’s complaint is not yet publicly available, but a spokeswoman said the agency alleges that “the combined firm would have the means and incentive to stifle innovative next-generation technologies, including those used to run data centers and driver-assistance systems in cars.” 

With all of that standing in the way, investors are not betting on Nvidia owning Arm. Any who were likely gave up after Nvidia’s earnings call last month, when company executives — who had been predicting that the mega-merger would eventually close — did not voice the same certainty.

“This quarter they did not offer such an optimistic outlook,” Christopher Rolland, a Susquehanna Financial Group analyst, wrote in a note last month.

But analysts are not that concerned about the deal falling through, as they expect that Nvidia can accomplish just as much by continuing to work with Arm as a customer as it could if it owned the firm, only with smaller rewards. Nvidia wants to own the company so that it can invest in creating a software ecosystem to encourage developers to write for ARM-based products in the data center. Nvidia has shown it has the industry leadership and funds to create such an ecosystem with its CUDA software development platform for its GPUs.

“They can definitely do (near) as much by licensing ARM server IP [intellectual property], but they would not capture all the same economics,’” Susquehanna’s Rolland said in an email to MarketWatch on Thursday.

With all of Wall Street expecting the deal to fall through, and regulators standing in the way, the biggest question is how long Nvidia Chief Executive Jensen Huang will continue to fight for the deal. The FTC set an administrative trial for August 2022, just a month before a deadline that will allow SoftBank to keep a $1.25 billion down payment as a breakup fee, as Nvidia confirmed to MarketWatch last summer.

Will Nvidia keep fighting through next summer to try to avoid losing that fee, despite the long odds of defeating the FTC, not to mention the other regulators who are expected to stand in the way?

“It’s like eight weeks of free cash flow, so who cares,” Rasgon said, referring to the breakup fee. Rasgon said he expects Huang will continue to fight, based on his vocal determination to get the deal done.

“Jensen is not known for backing down,” he said.

In this case, Huang’s legendary stubbornness may end up costing Nvidia even more in legal fees and time. It looks like the outcome is already determined, and Nvidia is not going to own Arm. Nvidia should instead begin working on its own solutions to help Arm further penetrate the data center, instead of fighting a losing battle.

: Google puts off January return to offices as omicron concerns grow

Google employees will not be returning to their offices as planned in January, as the threat of COVID-19 lingers.

Alphabet Inc.’s
GOOGL,
+1.36%

GOOG,
+1.52%

Google sent an email to employees Thursday, CNBC first reported, saying that the Jan. 10 target date has been delayed again, until the tech giant can be more confident of a “stable, long-term working environment.” A new return date was not mentioned. The email reportedly did not specifically mention the omicron variant.

Under Google’s hybrid working plan, workers will be expected to work in the office at least three days a week once it’s safe to do so. In an email to MarketWatch, a Google spokesperson confirmed the contents of the email, and said the company will wait until the new year to determine the implementation of its hybrid plan based on local conditions, which can vary widely.

According to the Google spokesperson, 90% of Google’s U.S. offices are open, and about 40% of Google workers have come back to the office on a voluntary basis.

Separately, Business Insider reported earlier Thursday that Google’s return-to-the-office plans for its workers in Europe, the Middle East and Africa have also been delayed, due to omicron and new travel restrictions.

The delays come as concern mounts over the newly discovered omicron variant of COVID-19. While not enough is known about the variant, some experts worry it may be more contagious and more resistant to vaccines than previous COVID variants. On Thursday, the Biden administration announced beefed-up COVID testing this winter, and extended the mask mandate on airplanes and public transit.

Tech companies led the way in closing their offices when the pandemic ramped up in March 2020, and are seen as a bellwether as to when other companies will similarly require their workers to come into the office.

Google and other major companies had hoped to fully return to the office this past fall, but the spread of the delta variant pushed many to delay that date until January.

Last month, before the omicron variant was discovered, Apple Inc.
AAPL,
-0.61%

pushed back its return date from January to Feb. 1. Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc.
FB,
-0.07%

said earlier this week it still plans on returning to the office in January. Amazon.com Inc.
AMZN,
-0.18%
,
DoorDash Inc.
DASH,
+2.78%
,
Salesforce.com Inc.
CRM,
+3.86%

and Uber Technology Inc.
UBER,
+5.83%

also plan to return in January — at least for now.

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