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Tag: mergers

  • Why Holding Groups Won’t Work for New Marketing and Media Giants | Entrepreneur

    Why Holding Groups Won’t Work for New Marketing and Media Giants | Entrepreneur

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    Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

    Change comes. It may be glacial, or it may come at the speed of a raging forest fire. But it is inevitable.

    And it could be that such an accelerated upheaval is headed for big marketing and media organizations that service global clients — what we commonly call the holding groups.

    While I’d never label the existing “big six” holding groups as out-of-touch dinosaurs as there’s much they do very well and admittedly much we can learn from them, whether they’re a template for the future is up for grabs.

    And the question is certainly one for now, given that there’s a hungry new cohort of expanding marketing and media companies on the horizon. These “underdogs” are busy building up their talent, resources and focus. Oh, and they’re also landing impressive clients and fees.

    A changing of the guard may very well be underway

    The huge amount of M&A activity in the past few years reflects this potential “changing of the guard.” While M&A activity in marketing and media has slowed somewhat this year thanks to uncertainty caused by inflation and the war in Europe, among other things, in the first quarter of 2022, M&A transaction volume rose 19% quarter-over-quarter. It reached a peak in value over the past five quarters.

    Stunning numbers, yes. But this also means that the acquisition groundwork has been done for independent agencies, particularly within digital and performance, to prepare to springboard into the big leagues… as long as they called the right shots, of course. I’d number S4Capital, Stagwell Group and PMG among the frontrunners, and I, for one, am excited to see what 2023 brings for each of them.

    But if the new breed is going to come to the fore (and coming soon), how will they structure and organize themselves in a way which works best for clients, as opposed to what might work best for their own objectives? Because it’s most assuredly the client-centric agencies that will win the work and the applause, as time and experience have shown.

    Related: How to Find International Customers and Partners as Your Expand Your Market

    For starters, clients don’t want to deal with complexity

    Yes, clients will always want sophisticated solutions to address the multiple challenges of a complex world, but they want to be able to access agency thinking, tools and talent quickly. These wishes won’t be served by navigating numerous agency brands within a holding group and figuring out what each one “stands for” and its area of expertise. There’s a saying about moving an oil tanker instead of a speed boat… nimble and light wins the speed race.

    Clients will want one-stop shops that can quickly organize specialist teams to work on their specific solutions without any politics or internal siloes creating an obstruction.

    To be fair, the holding groups have recognized this new reality. Consolidation has been a trend within the big groups, including WPP, Publicis and Omnicom, while S4Capital wasted no time folding all its acquisitions under the Media.Monks name in 2021.

    But in the short term, these mergers — as absolutely no one likes to call them — disrupt operations as senior directors vie for top jobs, people look to their earn-outs, offices are relocated and maybe most importantly, different cultures try to align. All this distracts from servicing the client — no ifs, ands or buts about it.

    Furthermore, the established networks also have the challenge of wrestling with departments set up to service legacy media, with teams and individuals often managing steady decline. Newer media businesses, on the other hand, can focus solely on digital solutions or build robust omnichannel teams from the start.

    Read More: AI Is Considered the “Wild West” — Here’s How Marketers Can Rein It In and Ensure Ethical Use

    Herald the super-adaptoid

    The future looks increasingly like one super-adaptive, agile agency that can operate at scale and is simultaneously equipped with best-in-breed tech stacks, an agency that can dial resources up and down as needed with flexibility woven into its fabric. The new generation will also wield the power of complementary AI and Machine Learning tools that remove a lot of the repetitive “grunt work” from operational implementation.

    Certainly, size, as measured by staff numbers or by “buying power,” is no barrier to winning the biggest client accounts. Just look at how independent media agency PMG outpaced holding company agency brands to carry off Nike’s North American prize, ultimately being named integrated media agency of record and global digital capabilities partner. Big news. Big shoes (to fill).

    Automation will give us the ability to increase particular efficiencies. Still, it’s important to remember that we’re service- and people- companies rather than tech businesses (perhaps the ones that adopt a tech mindset will flourish). All agencies contain valuable talent — it’s just a question of how best to deploy that talent. Perhaps it’s a matter of pulling talent from across departments and even locations to answer a brief or allowing talent — the freedom, even — to jump in and out of projects. Making the best use of employee expertise will be a challenge for all agencies, but as an industry, we’re always finding new ways to stretch and excite our teams.

    Undoubtedly, we’ll continue to witness disruption in the agency landscape over the next few years, and there is a race to see whether the agency holding groups can evolve quicker before the underdogs can muscle up enough to grab more of their lunch.

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    Kristopher Tait

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  • Cummins spinoff Atmus Filtration’s stock soars 14% in trading debut

    Cummins spinoff Atmus Filtration’s stock soars 14% in trading debut

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    Atmus Filtration Technologies Inc.’s stock soared 14% Friday in its trading debut, after the Cummins Inc. spinoff priced its initial public offering in the middle of its proposed price range.

    The Nashville, Tenn.-based company sold 14.1 million shares priced at $19.50 each to raise $275 million. With 83.3 million shares to be outstanding after the deal, the company’s valuation is $1.6 billion.

    The stock
    ATMU,
    +11.90%

    is trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker ATMU. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase were lead book-running managers on the deal, with 10 other banks acting as co-managers.

    Although the company is issuing primary shares, Atmus will not receive any of the IPO proceeds; all of the proceeds will go to debt-for-equity exchange parties, namely underwriters Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan, and will indirectly pay down parent Cummins’
    CMI,
    +1.03%

    debt, according to the filing documents.

    Atmus makes products for on-highway commercial vehicles and off-highway agriculture, construction, mining and power-generation vehicles and equipment, mostly under the Fleetguard brand. The company had pro forma net income of $34.9 million in the first quarter on sales of $418.6 million.

    About 16% of its 2022 sales went to original-equipment manufacturers, where its filters are used for new vehicles and equipment, and about 84% were aftermarket sales.

    The company was created by Cummins, a maker of diesel and natural-gas engines, in 1958.

    The IPO comes in a thin year for deals. There have been just 44 IPOs this year to raise $7.3 billion in proceeds, according to Renaissance Capital, a provider of IPO exchange-traded funds and institutional research.

    That’s up 29.4% from the same period in 2022, when deal flow slowed to its lightest in decades.

    “Deal flow started at a decent pace but failed to pick back up after the February lull, as hawkish signals from the Fed, renewed recession fears, and turmoil within the banking industry caused a spike in volatility,” Renaissance wrote in April commentary.

    The biggest deal of the year to date was that of Kenvue Inc.
    KVUE,
    -0.11%
    ,
    a spinoff from Johnson & Johnson
    JNJ,
    +0.14%
    ,
    which is parent to a number of household brands, including Tylenol, Band-Aid, Listerine and Benadryl.

    For more, see: Kenvue stock cheered in Wall Street debut, as Tylenol and Band-Aid brand parent is valued at $48 billion

    Kenvue raised $3.8 billion after pricing above range and achieving a valuation of $41 billion.

    The Renaissance IPO ETF
    IPO,
    +2.06%

    has gained 18% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +1.34%

    has gained 9%.

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  • Silence speaks volumes as Switzerland still reels from bank meltdown

    Silence speaks volumes as Switzerland still reels from bank meltdown

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    Voiced by artificial intelligence.

    ZURICH — In one of Europe’s wealthiest squares, overlooked by the looming headquarters of a huge international bank that disintegrated just weeks ago, the impeccably dressed men and women who shuffle in and out of gleaming offices are in the grip of a Mafia-like omertà.

    “You won’t get anything from anyone,” one of them says with a firmness that’s meant to draw a line under any conversation before it’s even begun. The informal code of silence dominates. His friend drags him away, through the doors of a second global bank — the one that rescued the first for 3 billion Swiss francs.

    This is Paradeplatz in Zurich, Switzerland’s biggest city. Home to Credit Suisse, whose collapse in March after 167 years could have triggered a full-on global crisis had UBS not been forced to step in and take it over. The recriminations started almost immediately. Now, amid its rattling trams and luxury chocolate shops, this 17th-century square could rival the Vatican for the way the fog of secrecy has descended.

    Stay there long enough and an occasional whisper about the demise of the once-great bank might be overheard. Speculation, nothing more. Gossip about political repercussions or what could happen to bonuses — exchanged over strong coffee and furtive early-morning glances at the Financial Times or Neue Züricher Zeitung. But not with outsiders of course, and certainly not with those who approach with journalist notebook in hand.

    It’s easy to spot the bankers in the Swiss financial capital: a perfectly tailored blue suit, single-breasted trench coat, hand-held briefcase (leather, preferably). And what about the demise of Credit Suisse, then? “We can’t talk about it,” says one of them over an espresso with a colleague.

    Turn the corner, to where a younger man is smoking, behind the dead bank’s HQ that still stands at Paradeplatz’s northern end. He dismisses all questions too: “For that, we have corporate comms.”

    Nobody’s responsible

    There’s a reason for all this silence. The Alpine nation, known for its utmost discretion in its role as banker to the world’s rich, is still trying to process exactly what went wrong — and what to do about the people who took Credit Suisse to the brink.

    The public is “very angry,” according to Tobias Straumann, professor of modern and economic history at the University of Zurich, especially as it’s been just 15 years since UBS’ own public bailout.

    “The taxpayer has to save a bank, where people earned a lot of money, and nobody’s responsible now,” he said. “That’s the feeling.”

    With national elections coming up in October, the question turns to who will be on the receiving end of that feeling. Just the bankers themselves? The regulators who watched it go up in flames? The politicians who set the rules in the first place? All of the above?

    The Swiss parliament has started exerting its authority — rejecting the government’s request to approve an emergency credit line underpinning the takeover. But that was largely symbolic. It will decide in June whether to launch a parliamentary commission — which would then be able to summon those involved for questioning.

    The Swiss parliament has started exerting its authority — rejecting the government’s request to approve an emergency credit line underpinning the takeover | Fabrice Coffrini/AFP via Getty Images

    “My prediction would be that in the short run, not much is going to happen,” Straumann said. “But probably after the elections, then you’re going to see a bigger coalition that really does something,”

    Pig market

    It won’t help the public mood that some Credit Suisse bankers plan to sue over lost bonuses. A few hundred years ago Paradeplatz was known as Säumärt — pig market, and now accusations of snouts in troughs have become ever more common in public discourse.

    Céline Widmer, a Swiss Social Democrat lawmaker, has called for a ban on bankers’ bonuses, as well as for higher capital requirements for lenders to make them safer. In her view, Switzerland’s financial watchdog should also get stronger sanctioning powers.

    “It was the behavior of the banks, which [demonstrated] they are not accountable,” she said of what went wrong at Credit Suisse.

    The Swiss authorities find themselves under intense scrutiny. Although they stopped the bank’s collapse from triggering broader financial contagion, the government and regulators face questions over why they didn’t step in earlier.

    As it was, Credit Suisse had problems for years, but over a few days in March, it rapidly lost the trust of financial markets amid broader panic over bank failures in the U.S.

    According to Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter, the bank would have run out of money without the hasty takeover by UBS, as clients pulled their deposits and its shares and bond prices tanked.

    The government promised to swallow up to 9 billion francs of losses if needed and the Swiss central bank offered 100 billion francs of liquidity.

    Legal cases are underway contesting the decisions taken over that pivotal weekend of the merger — including the Swiss financial watchdog’s wipeout of 16 billion francs of Credit Suisse bonds, reversing the usual hierarchy of losses in a collapse.

    Those investors, whose bonds are now worth nothing, have won an early victory by forcing the release of a contested emergency decree.

    A banking monster

    And life might get harder for the other bank with its headquarters in Paradeplatz now that it’s gobbled up its rival.

    “We created a monster with UBS,” said Thomas Borer, a former Swiss ambassador to Germany, who is involved in representing the interests of Credit Suisse bondholders wiped out in the takeover.

    “[It’s now] one of the biggest banks in the world when it comes to wealth management. We are not one of the biggest countries in the world. How should we regulate that? That’s now where the debate is focusing on.”

    According to Finance Minister Karin Keller-Sutter, the bank would have run out of money without the hasty takeover by UBS | François Walschaerts/AFP via Getty Images

    The parliamentary investigation could lead that debate — and even Switzerland’s tight-lipped bankers are keen.

    “We are supporting that there be an independent and complete and open-minded review of these events,” said August Benz, deputy chief executive of the Swiss Bankers Association.

    Credit Suisse’s failure had triggered “certain emotions,” Benz said, but hoped an inquiry would help Switzerland pick “the right measures” in response to the bank’s failure. He pushed back against the idea that a global bank like UBS could be too big for the country.

    “Germany has one [globally systemic bank], Italy has one, Spain has one, [the Netherlands has one] and Switzerland looks like it’ll have one,” he said.

    Stable no more

    Back on the streets of Zurich, Credit Suisse’s HQ is a visible reminder of the uncertainty brought about by its failure, peering over at UBS across Paradeplatz.

    “It’s a huge institution that suddenly disappears,” says Reinhard Berger, a 36-year-old chemist, waiting for the tram.

    A few blocks away, Eliane Christen, a patent engineer, 35, is wistful. The failure makes her “unsure about the stability we always say Switzerland has,” she says. The stability seemed to vanish in one weekend.

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    Hannah Brenton

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  • PacWest sells its real-estate lending business to Roc360

    PacWest sells its real-estate lending business to Roc360

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    PacWest Bancorp will sell its real-estate lending arm to Roc360, as the beleaguered regional bank moves to refocus on its core business.

    The deal, first reported late Tuesday by the Wall Street Journal, comes a day after Los Angeles-based PacWest
    PACW,
    +7.74%

    unveiled a plan to sell a $2.6 billion portfolio of real-estate construction loans.

    In a statement Tuesday night, Roc360 said it will buy PacWest’s Civic Financial Services unit for an undisclosed sum. Roc360 will take on the unit’s business operations, but not its previously extended loans or loan-servicing operations.

    “In the face of market difficulties, we continue to expand and develop more products and services for real-estate investors,” Roc360 Chief Executive Arvind Raghunathan said in a statement. “We believe that America’s housing stock is severely undersupplied, with more than 50% of homes in deferred maintenance, lacking the modern-day energy efficiencies that our clients install with each loan they take from us. We will continue to prudently expand and invest for long-term solutions to these structural problems.”

    New York-based Roc360 is a financial services platform for residential real-estate investors, and includes the brands Roc Capital, Finance of America Commercial, ElmSure, Wimba Title and Tamarisk Appraisals.

    On Tuesday, PacWest shares jumped 8% on news of Monday’s loan sale, which also fueled gains among other regional-bank stocks.

    PacWest shares have sunk nearly 70% year to date, amid a wider downturn by regional banks following the failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank and First Republic Bank.

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  • Shutterstock to buy Giphy from Meta Platforms for $53 million in cash

    Shutterstock to buy Giphy from Meta Platforms for $53 million in cash

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    Shares of Shutterstock Inc.
    SSTK,
    +3.46%

    rallied 4.4% in premarket trading Tuesday, after the digital media and marketing company announced an agreement to buy GIF and stickers company Giphy Inc. from Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    -0.29%

    for $53 million in cash. Meta shares slipped 0.2% ahead of the open. As part of the deal, Meta has entered into an application programming interface (API) agreement with Shutterstock, to ensure continued access to Giphy’s content across Meta’s social-media platforms. Shutterstock said the deal, which is expected to close in June, should add “minimal revenue” in 2023. The company will fund the deal with cash-on-hand and with its revolving credit facility. The stock has tumbled 28.9% over the past three months through Monday while Meta shares of soared 44.3% and the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.39%

    has gained 4.5%.

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  • Altice UK Buys 650 Mln Shares in BT; Says It Won’t Make Bid for the Company

    Altice UK Buys 650 Mln Shares in BT; Says It Won’t Make Bid for the Company

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    By Joe Hoppe

    Altice UK said Tuesday that it has purchased a further 650 million shares in BT Group for around 961 million pounds ($1.20 billion), bringing its ownership up to around 24.5% of the company’s issued share capital.

    The telecommunications and mass media company said it has restated its position to the board of BT that it doesn’t plan to make an offer for the company and will be bound by that statement under U.K. takeover rules.

    Based on BT’s closing share price of 147.85 pence on Monday, this implies Altice’s new purchase is worth around GBP961 million. Its full stake is now worth around GBP3.60 billion.

    Write to Joe Hoppe at joseph.hoppe@wsj.com

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  • PacWest’s stock jumps 5% premarket on news bank to sell real estate  loans worth $2.6 billion

    PacWest’s stock jumps 5% premarket on news bank to sell real estate loans worth $2.6 billion

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    PacWest Bancorp.’s stock jumped 3% premarket Monday, after the bank announced asset sales that would allow it to focus on its core community banking business.

    The regional bank
    PACW,
    -1.88%

    said it has entered an agreement to sell a portfolio of 74 real estate construction loans with a principal balance of about $2.6 billion to a unit of real-estate investment company Kennedy Wilson Holdings.

    “Kennedy Wilson or its designees will also assume all remaining future funding obligations under the acquired loans of approximately $2.7 billion,” PacWest said in a regulatory filing.

    The bank has also agreed to sell an additional six real estate construction loans to Kennedy Wilson with a principal balance of about $363 million.

    The sale of the loans is subject to Kennedy Wilson’s satisfactory due diligence. The company will place $20 million into a third-party escrow account that will be refundable.

    The deal is expected to close in several tranches in the second and third quarters. “There can be no assurance that the transaction will be completed in part or at all,” said the filing.

    See also: FDIC set to levy big banks to pay for $15.8 billion bailout of Silicon Valley, Signature Banks

    PacWest shares are down 75% in the year to date, after being caught up in the regional-bank stock rout that followed the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in March.

    The bank said it lost 9.5% of deposits during the week ending May 5 amid market volatility following JPMorgan’s
    JPM,
    -0.23%

    rescue of First Republic Bank.

    See: Here’s why people are still worried about regional banks and commercial real estate

    Other regional banks were also rising premarket. Western Alliance Bancorp. was up 0.4% and KeyCorp. was up 1.7%.

    The S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.14%

    has gained 9% in the year to date.

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  • UK Government Sells Shares Worth GBP1.26 Bln in NatWest Group

    UK Government Sells Shares Worth GBP1.26 Bln in NatWest Group

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    By Anthony O. Goriainoff

    The U.K. government said Monday that it had disposed of its shareholding in NatWest Group through an off-market purchase by the company of 469.2 million ordinary shares for a total consideration of 1.26 billion pounds ($1.57 billion).

    The government said it sold the shares at 268.4 pence a share and that this was the closing price on Friday. It added that the purchase is expected to settle on Wednesday.

    As a result of the transaction the U.K. Treasury’s participation in the company will fall to around 38.6% from a previous 41.4%.

    NatWest said it will cancel 336.2 million of the purchased shares and hold the rest in treasury.

    The government said that it “will keep other disposal options under active consideration, including by way of accelerated bookbuilds, when market conditions permit.”

    Write to Anthony O. Goriainoff at anthony.orunagoriainoff@dowjones.com

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  • GE CFO Leaving Because Soon There Will Be No GE

    GE CFO Leaving Because Soon There Will Be No GE

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    General Electric


    is getting a new finance chief. Given what’s coming at the company, it makes sense.


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  • Regional banks slump after report Yellen told bank leaders more mergers may be needed

    Regional banks slump after report Yellen told bank leaders more mergers may be needed

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    The KBW Regional Bank index
    KRX,
    -2.62%

    slumped over 3%, after a report from CNN that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told bank chief executives than more mergers may be necessary. The CNN report, citing two people familiar with the matter, raises the prospect that more regional banks would have to be bought by larger too-big-to-fail firms. The Treasury Department confirmed the meeting on Thursday but its readout did not include the point about the possible need for further mergers.

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  • Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway switched stakes in two banks, and the stocks head in opposite directions

    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway switched stakes in two banks, and the stocks head in opposite directions

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    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. made a change in banking targets for investment, sending two banks’ shares in opposite directions Monday afternoon.

    Capital One Financial
    COF,
    +3.22%

    shares rallied more than 5% in after-hours trading while Bank of New York Mellon Corp.
    BK,
    +1.37%

    sold off in the extended session Monday after filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission showed Berkshire
    BRK.B,
    +0.32%

    BRK.A,
    +0.96%

    switched its position. The quarterly filing showed a new stake of 9.9 million shares in Capital One as Berkshire sold off its 25.1 million-share stake in Bank of New York Mellon.

    At Berkshire’s annual meeting, Buffett weighed in on recent scares for regional banks.

    “In terms of owning banks, events will determine their future and you’ve got politicians involved, you’ve got a whole lot of people who don’t really understand how the system works,” he said.

    Other changes included an increased stake in HP Inc.
    HPQ,
    +2.32%
    ,
    which grew by 16% to about 121 million shares. That growth was part of a combination of the holdings of General Re Corp., which Berkshire has owned since 1998 but had previously reported its holdings separately as part of New England Asset Management Inc.

    “Beginning with the Form 13F to be filed later today, the holdings of Gen Re will be included in Berkshire’s 13F filing,” Berkshire said in a news release earlier Monday. “The NEAM Form 13F filings will no longer include Gen Re’s holdings but they will continue to include NEAM client holdings where NEAM is acting as an investment manager.”

    Other holdings affected by that change included Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    -0.29%
    ,
    Bank of America Inc.
    BAC,
    +2.07%

    and Chevron Corp.
    CVX,
    +0.37%
    ,
    Berkshire said in its news release.

    Other stocks that Berkshire made moves with during the first three months of the year included the former Restoration Hardware — RH
    RH,
    +1.89%

    shares fell 3% after Berkshire disclosed selling off its 2.4 million stake. Berkshire also officially reported selling of its 8.3 million stake in Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
    TSM,
    +2.67%
    .

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  • Newmont Strikes Gold With $17.5 Billion Takeover

    Newmont Strikes Gold With $17.5 Billion Takeover

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    Newmont


    has agreed to buy Australian gold and copper miner


    Newcrest


    for $17.5 billion in what would be the largest ever gold-mining deal.


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  • Fanatics to buy PointsBet’s U.S. sports-betting business for $150 million

    Fanatics to buy PointsBet’s U.S. sports-betting business for $150 million

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    Fanatics Inc. will buy the U.S. operations of Australia’s PointsBet for about $150 million, in the company’s largest foray yet into sports betting.

    PointsBet
    PBH,
    -18.70%

    announced the deal Sunday night, specifying that the acquisition only applies to PointsBet’s U.S. assets, not its businesses in Australia and Canada. CNBC first reported the deal. Fanatics did not immediately reply to MarketWatch’s request for comment Sunday night.

    PointsBet is an online sportsbook that launched in the U.S. in 2019, and operates in 15 states, including New Jersey, Iowa, Illinois and Colorado.

    “Despite the strategic success building a valuable asset in the U.S., the costs of operating in a state-by-state environment, together with the requirement to build significant scale to compete against well capitalized operators, led us to explore a number of options,” PointsBet Chief Executive Sam Swanell said in a statement. “The sale of the U.S. Business to Fanatics Betting and Gaming delivers the most attractive risk-adjusted value outcome for shareholders compared to the risks and benefits of other options including the status quo.”

    PointsBet shareholders are expected to vote on the sale at their annual meeting in late June.

    The deal should increase pressure on U.S. sports-gambling companies such as DraftKings Inc.
    DKNG,
    -1.96%

    and FanDuel. In late April, Fanatics launched sportsbook wagering for its customers in Ohio and Tennessee, and the Wall Street Journal reported at the time that the company pans to invest about $1 billion in its new sports-betting division.

    In an interview, Fanatics CEO Michael Rubin told the Journal he wants Fanatics to be the world’s top sports-betting company within the next 10 years, and expects its betting operations to be profitable by 2025 or 2026.

    In December, Florida-based Fanatics — which got its start in sports apparel and collectibles — closed a $700 million funding round, valuing it at about $31 billion, the Wall Street Journal reported. The privately held company is expected to eventually launch an IPO.

    Last year, Fanatics acquired trading-card company Topps.

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  • $14 Billion Deal to Create Mega-Pipeline Company

    $14 Billion Deal to Create Mega-Pipeline Company

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    $14 Billion Deal to Create Mega-Pipeline Company

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  • First Solar Stock Surges on Deal for European Solar Tech Firm

    First Solar Stock Surges on Deal for European Solar Tech Firm

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    First Solar


    stock rose sharply Friday as the company disclosed a deal it said would bolster its technological position in the solar energy space. 


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  • Icahn stock renews skid as Hindenburg says latest company disclosure raises more questions about company debt, losses

    Icahn stock renews skid as Hindenburg says latest company disclosure raises more questions about company debt, losses

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    Icahn Enterprises LP’s stock was trading down 0.7% Thursday, after short seller Hindenburg Research intensified his bearish bet on Carl Icahn’s investing arm, and said he’s now taking aim at its bonds.

    Hindenburg, run by Nate Anderson, said the latest disclosures made Wednesday by IEP raised more questions about Icahn’s personal margin loans, or debt, from the company as well as portfolio losses at IEP. The short seller also said disclosures, intended to counter Hindenburg’s May 2 report, failed to address the issues raised.

    The original report raised questions about asset valuations and Icahn’s own borrowing from the company using his units as collateral.

    Hindenburg Research, which typically aims to profit from the decline in value of the shares of companies that it writes negative reports about, kicked off such a bet against Icahn Enterprise earlier this month but has now also set its sights on the company’s debt.

    For more, see: Icahn calls Hindenburg short-seller report self-serving, as market value of his company’s stock plunges by $4 billion

    “As noted in our earlier report, Icahn had not disclosed “basic metrics around his margin loans like loan to value (LTV), maintenance thresholds, principal amount, or interest rates.” This is still the case,” said Hindenburg.

    IEP has not said why Icahn had borrowed against his holdings. The company didn’t respond to a request for comment on Thursday’s report.

    On Wednesday, IEP disclosed a federal probe into its corporate governance and other issues. It is unclear if that investigation by the Southern District of New York is related to Hindenburg’s report and allegations, but the news put further pressure on the stock.

    The bonds, which have been more active than usual since the first report, took another leg down on Thursday, as the attached charts from market-data company BondCliQ show, as Hindenburg said it has taken a short position in them.

    The longest-dated bonds, the 4.375% notes that mature in February of 2029, were trading at around 75 cents on the dollar, as of midmorning.


    IEP corporate bond prices. Source: BondCliQ


    IEP bond volumes. Source: BondCliQ

    Icahn owns 84% of IEP shares and disclosed in a 2022 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission that he had pledged more than 181 million units, or 60% of his holdings, for margin loans.

    On Wednesday, IEP
    IEP,
    -1.77%

    said that pledge had increased to 202 million units, which Hindenburg estimates was valued at $6.5 billion as of Wednesday’s close, based on his calculations.

    The battle between the iconic activist investor and the short seller has clobbered IEP’s stock, which has fallen 39% in the month to date at a cost of more than $6 billion of market cap.

    Also read: What we know about Carl Icahn’s margin loan

    IEP posted an unexpected loss on Wednesday of $270 million, or 75 cents per depositary unit, for the first quarter, after income of $323 million, or $1.06 a unit, in the year-earlier period. The FactSet consensus was for income of 19 cents.

    Revenue fell to $2.758 billion from $2.968 billion a year ago, ahead of the $2.559 billion FactSet consensus. Analysts on its conference call didn’t pose any question of executives who briefly outlined the quarterly numbers.

    The company on Wednesday also issued a rebuttal of the May 2 report from Hindenburg and said it would “take all appropriate steps to protect our unit holders and fight back.”

    Icahn acknowledged that the investment segment has underperformed in recent years, which he blamed on its bearish view of the market and large net short position, which it has now scaled back.

    IEP offers exposure to Icahn’s personal portfolio of public and private companies, including petroleum refineries, car-parts makers, food-packaging companies and real estate. Its unit holders are mostly individual investors, which means the market-cap loss prompted by the report has hurt those individual investors, said Icahn.

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  • Swedish Orphan Biovitrum to acquire CTI BioPharma in a deal valued at $1.7 billion

    Swedish Orphan Biovitrum to acquire CTI BioPharma in a deal valued at $1.7 billion

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    Swedish Orphan Biovitrum AB SE:SOBI on Wednesday announced that it has entered into an agreement to acquire U.S.-based CTI BioPharma Corp. CTIC in a deal valued at $1.7 billion. The Stockholm-based drugmaker said it will offer $9.10 for each share of CTI, which focuses on blood-related cancers and rare diseases. The offer represents a premium of 88.8% over CTI’s the Tuesday closing price of $4.82 per share. “CTI represents a perfect fit for Sobi’s haematology franchise today, adding a powerful and highly differentiated new product that will make a significant difference for patients”, said Guido Oelkers, president and…

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  • Apple earnings show surprise jump in iPhone sales and a 4% dividend hike

    Apple earnings show surprise jump in iPhone sales and a 4% dividend hike

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    Apple Inc. on Thursday revealed surprise growth in its iPhone business during the first three months of the year, overcoming a shortfall in Mac revenue as the company promised investors billions more in dividends and stock repurchases.

    Apple shares
    AAPL,
    -0.99%

    rose 2.5% in extended trading.

    The company reported fiscal second-quarter revenue of $94.8 billion, down from $97.3 billion a year before, while analysts had been expecting $92.9 billion. Revenue for the iPhone category rose to $51.3 billion from $50.6 billion, with analysts surveyed by FactSet expecting a decline to $48.7 billion.

    Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri said on the earnings call that the iPhone growth was driven by “strong performance in emerging markets from South Asia and India to Latin America and the Middle East.”

    The company recently opened its first two Apple stores in India, and Chief Executive Tim Cook noted opportunity in India.

    “What I do see in India is a lot of people entering the middle class, and I’m hopeful that we can convince some number of them to buy an iPhone,” he said.

    Apple logged net income of $24.2 billion, or $1.52 a share, compared with $25 billion, or $1.52 a share, in the year-prior quarter. Analysts were modeling $1.43 a share in earnings on average, according to FactSet.

    Apple’s results arrived amid concern about the state of consumer-electronics spending, given worrisome third-party data points and cautious signals from players like Qualcomm Inc.
    QCOM,
    -5.54%

    and DuPont de Nemours Inc.
    DD,
    -0.53%
    .

    See also: Qualcomm stock falls as backed up Apple iPhone inventory contributes to weak outlook

    The company saw steep revenue declines in both the iPad and Mac categories. Sales of iPads fell to $6.7 billion from $7.6 billion a year ago and matched the FactSet consensus. Mac revenue sank to $7.2 billion from $10.4 billion, while analysts were looking for $7.8 billion.

    The Mac segment was up against tough comparisons to a year-ago period that saw the “incredibly successful rollout of our M1 chips,” Cook noted. It’s “facing some macroeconomic and foreign exchange headwinds as well.”

    Apple’s wearables, home and accessories category was essentially flat, with sales of $8.8 billion. The FactSet consensus called for $8.4 billion. The services segment showed growth, with revenue up to $20.9 billion from $19.8 billion, roughly in line with the FactSet consensus of $21.0 billion.

    Maestri noted that “certain services offerings, such as digital advertising and mobile gaming, continue to be affected by the current macroeconomic environment,” though advertising, Apple Care and video set revenue records for the March quarter.

    Executives shared some very big-picture views on recent financial-services initiatives, though without any financial specifics. Apple’s recently launched savings account, which has a 4.15% yield, has had an “incredible” initial response, while Apple Pay Later, a buy-now-pay-later product, has received “really good” feedback as well, they said.

    Read: Apple Card savings account has an attractive 4.15% interest rate, but beware of these pitfalls before signing

    Apple also announced Thursday that it was boosting its buyback program by $90 billion while upping its quarterly dividend by 4% to 24 cents a share. That compares to a $90 billion increase to the share-repurchase authorization and 5% dividend hike a year ago.

    While Apple stopped giving traditional guidance at the start of the pandemic, Maestri said on the call that he expects June-quarter revenue growth to be similar to what was seen in the March quarter on a year-over-year basis, assuming a stable macroeconomic climate.

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  • Icahn Enterprises’ stock choppy as company moves earnings release to next week

    Icahn Enterprises’ stock choppy as company moves earnings release to next week

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    Trading in shares of Icahn Enterprises LP was choppy Thursday amid the continued fallout from a short seller’s report that was critical of the investment arm of activist investor Carl Icahn.

    The stock IEP was moving between gains and losses, but has lost 36% of its value and $6.5 billion of market cap this week in the wake of the report, which accused Icahn Enterprises of inflating its value. On Wednesday, the company said it is moving the release of first-quarter earnings to before market open on May 10. The earnings were…

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  • PacWest stock plummets more than 50% after report of potential sale; other bank stocks fall too

    PacWest stock plummets more than 50% after report of potential sale; other bank stocks fall too

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    PacWest Bancorp PACW shares tumbled more than 50% in after-hours trading Wednesday, taking other bank stocks with it after a report that the company’s executives were weighing a possible sale.

    The report, from Bloomberg News, adds to the concerns over the financial stability of regional banks, following the collapse in March of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank, and the sale of First Republic Bank to JPMorgan Chase & Co. JPM this week. PacWest’s shares have been diving this week in the wake of First Republic’s collapse….

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