Berkshire Hathaway Sold U.S. Bancorp, Bank of New York Stock. Here’s What It Bought.
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Berkshire Hathaway Sold U.S. Bancorp, Bank of New York Stock. Here’s What It Bought.
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,
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,
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.
Walmart, Alibaba, Target, and More Stocks to Watch This Week
The numbers: The University of Michigan’s gauge of consumer sentiment fell to a preliminary May reading of 57.7 from an April reading of 63.5. That is the lowest level since November last year.
Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had expected a May reading of 63.
Americans view on near-term inflation moderated slightly in May. They now expect the inflation rate in the next year to average about 4.5%. Inflation expectations had surged to 4.6% in April from 3.6 in March.
Inflation expectations over the next five years rose to 3.2% from 3% in April. That’s the highest reading since 2011.
Key details: A gauge that measures what consumers think about their financial situation — and the current health of the economy — fell to 64.5 from 68.2 in April.
Another measure that asks about expectations for the next six months moved down to 53.4 in May from 60.5 in the prior month.
Big picture: Consumer spending is the engine of the economy. If households grow concerned about the outlook and pull back, it could push the economy into recession.
And Federal Reserve officials won’t be pleased to see expectations of inflation over the long-term increase. They view expectations as a key source of future inflation pressure.
What UMich said: “Consumers’ worries about the economy escalated in May alongside the proliferation of negative news about the economy, including the debt crisis standoff,” the press release said. In the most serious debt-ceiling standoff in 2011 consumer sentiment plummeted to recession levels but recovered quickly when the crisis was averted.
What are they saying? “While we don’t place too much weight on the relationship, if sustained, the latest plunge in consumer sentiment would be consistent with falling consumption in the second quarter. That would be alongside the probable hit to consumption from tightening credit conditions,” said Olivia Cross, assistant economist at Capital Economics.
Market reaction: Stocks
DJIA,
SPX,
were lower in volatile trading on Friday while the yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
rose to 3.41%.
The numbers: The cost of U.S. imported goods rose 0.4% in April, the Labor Department said Friday. This was the first increase this year.
Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast a 0.3% gain.
Over the past 12 months, the costs of imports has dropped 4.8%. That followed a 12.5% gain in the prior year.
Key details: The cost of imported fuel rose 4.5% in April after a 3.9% drop in the prior month. This was the first increase since last June.
The cost of imports excluding fuel were flat in April after a 0.5% decline in the prior month. Over the past year, nonfuel import prices are down 1.9%.
Exports prices rose 0.2% in April. They are down 5.9% over the past year.
Big picture: The stronger dollar last year dampened import prices and was a source of disinflation, but with the dollar softer this year, prices are firming.
One sign perhaps of the weaker dollar is that consumer goods prices ex-autos rose 0.2% in April and are up 1.1% annualized over the past three months, said Michael Gapen, U.S. economist at Bank of America Securities.
What are they saying? “Perhaps imported inflation is the first early signal of how brutal the fight against inflation will be in the coming months. Investors and traders should remember that the Fed’s target is 2%,” said Alex Kuptsikevich, senior market analyst at FXPro.
Market reaction: Stocks
DJIA,
SPX,
were lower in volatile morning trading on Friday. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note
TMUBMUSD10Y,
rose to 3.45%.

Millions of Yeezy brand shoes worth $1.3bn are in storage as their sale was halted when Adidas cut ties with Kanye West.
Adidas will sell some of the merchandise from its defunct Yeezy partnership with rapper Kanye West and donate part of the proceeds to international organisations, CEO Bjoern Gulden has said.
The German sportswear giant has been in a predicament over the Yeezy stock since it cut ties with West over his anti-Semitic comments late last year, with the controversy weighing on its stock and hitting its bottom line.
Millions of Yeezy brand shoes with a retail value of 1.2 billion euros ($1.3bn) are sitting in storage after their sale was put on hold.
Their value in the resale market has rocketed since Adidas stopped producing them, with some models more than doubling in price.
Addressing investors on Thursday in the southern German town of Fuerth after the debacle contributed to the company’s first annual loss in 31 years, Gulden said it had yet to be determined when and how the planned sale would proceed.
“What we are trying to do now over time is to sell some of this merchandise … burning the goods would not be a solution,” he said, adding the proceeds would be donated to international organisations that West, who changed his name to Ye in 2021, had harmed with his comments.
Gulden said the company had decided against donating the sneakers to avoid them reaching the market in a roundabout way.
Shares in Adidas were up 2 percent at 1245 GMT.
“It’s a smart and responsible move,” said Ed Stoner, a sportswear industry consultant who previously worked at Adidas, adding it “not only preserves the brand’s integrity but avoids a sustainability crisis”.
By selling some of the stock, the company is potentially minimising a $700m loss this year, but it is unclear how much stock will be sold and what proportion of the proceeds will be donated.
If the goods are sold, Ye will be entitled to previously-agreed commissions – 15 percent of turnover, according to media reports. Adidas has declined to comment on this.
Gulden defended Adidas’s years-long collaboration with the rapper, saying that “as difficult as he was, he is perhaps the most creative mind in our industry”.
Gulden said recently that he envied Adidas for the collaboration when he still served as CEO at Puma.
Also on Thursday, Adidas chief financial officer Harm Ohlmeyer said an internal investigation into alleged misconduct by Ye – including showing pornographic material, making anti-Semitic remarks and harassing female employees – had not substantiated the allegations.
However, the investigation also concluded that the rapper’s erratic and sometimes inappropriate behaviour made for a challenging work environment at Adidas, Ohlmeyer said, adding that the company was now in the process of implementing measures to prevent such problems from occurring in the future.
A lawsuit in a German arbitration court in which Adidas is seeking damages from Ye is still in the early stages and no financial sum has been determined, Ohlmeyer said.
Ye did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Facebook.
First-quarter results showed a decline in sales to 5.27 billion euros ($5.75bn), down from 5.3 billion euros ($5.79bn) a year ago.
But investors have high hopes Gulden can turn Adidas around. The stock has gained around 65 percent since November 4, when Gulden was first floated as a successor to former CEO Kasper Rorsted.
“We will do everything to bring Adidas back to where it belongs,” Gulden, wearing a red tracksuit, told investors.
The numbers: U.S. producer prices rose 0.2% in April, the Labor Department said Thursday.
Economists polled by the Wall Street Journal had forecast the PPI would rise 0.3%.
In the 12 months through April, the PPI increased 2.3%. It follows a 2.7% gain in March. This is the lowest rate since January 2021.
Key…

A popular burger restaurant and bar in Sydney’s CBD is shutting its doors after nine years.
Mary’s is a chain of burger joints around Sydney, with venues in Circular Quay, Newtown, the Entertainment Quarter, Castle Hill and until recently the CBD.
The CBD venue, near Town Hall, has recently closed with a sign posted on its front door to announce the news.
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“R.I.P Mary’s CBD,” the sign reads.
“Thank you to every one of you, love from the CBD team.”
The venue is also listed on Google as “permanently closed”.
Sydneysiders have taken the news to heart, expressing their disappointment via social media.
“A shame, it was a cool atmosphere,” one person said.
“Damn, this is sad,” another added.
It comes after a pub in Sydney’s inner west closed its doors last month, as the management announced its lease had ended and would not be renewed.
The Oxford Tavern, a popular spot nestled in the heart of Petersham, was known for its dance parties, Sunday roasts, trivia nights and a greenery-filled beer garden.
However, the group behind the beloved venue, the Odd Culture crew, announced the pub was shutting its doors.
“It’s with a heavy heart that we announce our lease is up at the Oxford Tavern,” it said.
“This pub has always held a special place in our heart — a space for our people to march to the beat of their own drum,…
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TikTok loves a good thrift haul, but New Yorkers have long known the euphoric feeling of snagging a designer deal off-the-rack.
Century 21 Department Store, once downtown Manhattan’s designer discount Mecca, is reopening its flagship at 22 Cortland Ave. across from the World Trade Center on May 16. The news was first reported by Crains New York.
After being in business for 60 years, Century 21 filed for bankruptcy in 2020, even though the company made $747 million in 2019, per Gothamist. Court filings indicate that pandemic-related diminished foot traffic in lower Manhattan and the e-commerce business, in general, hurt the company. Century 21 closed all 13 stores in Florida, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania during the restructuring.
“Since 1961, when Al and Sonny Gindi opened what was then a small store in Downtown Manhattan, we have been proud to provide shoppers with unmatched access to designer brands at amazing prices,” Century 21 co-CEO IG Gindi said at the time of the closing. “While we wish that Century 21 could continue to be a must-see shopping destination for so many, we are proud of the pioneering role it has played in off-price retail and the iconic brand it has become.”
Reports say the store will be half the size of the original.
It’s official: Century 21’s flagship store is reopening on May 16th. Downtown at 22 Cortlandt St.
Great to see a NYC icon coming back to life.https://t.co/M58pwLl5lk pic.twitter.com/B5wiLnZxHJ
— Mark D. Levine (@MarkLevineNYC) May 1, 2023
Entrepreneur Staff
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As part of increasing caution amidst growing macro-economic uncertainties and bank collapses in the US and Europe, India’s central bank is asking banks back home to be watchful over their retail portfolios, particularly the unsecured loans. These include personal loans, credit cards, small business loans and micro finance loans.
The overall share of unsecured loans as an average across private banks has increased by over 300 basis points since June 2020 and this hasn’t gone down well with the central bank.
“As a measure of prudence, the RBI has asked banks to stay within the limits seen in FY23 with respect to unsecured loans,” said a CEO of a private bank.
To be sure, as per the latest credit deployment data published by the RBI, unsecured loans lent between February 2022 to February 2023 stood at ₹2.2-lakh crore, higher than the deployment towards large corporates at ₹1.18-lakh crore.
The size of the home loan market during this period was ₹2.49-lakh crore just marginally larger than the unsecured loans market. A report by CARE Ratings pegs the unsecured loans market at ₹13.2-lakh crore, almost equal to the total exposure of the banking sector towards NBFCs (at ₹13.1-lakh crore).
In 2019, the risk weight on unsecured loans excluding credit cards was reduced from 125 per cent to 100 per cent to place them at par with other retail loans. It was also done to harmonise the risk weights to Basel-III requirements.
“Despite repeated warning to banks, especially private banks, these loans growing faster than the secured retail loans. If the trend continues for longer, the regulator may once again increase the risk weights,” said a senior executive of a leading private bank.
With sachetisation of personal loans and 30-minutes sanctioning becoming a common practice among banks, the regulator is of the view that adequate credit checks may not be in place.
“Right now with rapid growth in this space, at a micro level it is becoming difficult to assess the exact asset quality of these loans,” said a highly placed source. “The best way to avert a systemic risk is to reduce the pace of growth in the unsecured space,” said another top executive of a private bank.
Apparently, even on the micro finance side banks have been sounded off informally not to overdo growth.
“Even though demand for MFI loans and collection efficiencies have improved since mid-2022, it warrants for caution given the increasing from small finance banks and NBFCs,” said a person aware of the matter.
The Republican-run House of Representatives approved a debt-ceiling bill in a 217-215 vote on Wednesday evening, marking one step in a process that’s getting closely watched by traders worried about a possible U.S. default.
The bill, dubbed the Limit, Save, Grow Act, aims to raise the limit on federal borrowing for a year while also cutting spending. President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats have said the lift should be made without spending cuts or other conditions, but House Speaker Kevin McCarthy and his fellow Republicans…
Bed Bath & Beyond went from homeware powerhouse to the retail doghouse over the course of the last decade.
But its final push into Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection Sunday resulted from a mix of bad decisions and forces beyond its control, the company explained in a new court filing. In the 93-page document, Holly Etlin, chief restructuring officer and chief financial officer of Bed Bath & Beyond BBBY, tried to explain how things went so wrong. Here are the top five choices and moments that ultimately spelled the retailer’s…

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LONDON — A new system of border checks on goods arriving from Europe is expected to force rocketing U.K. food prices even higher as businesses grapple with hundreds of millions of pounds in extra fees.
British business groups last week got sight of the U.K. government’s long-awaited post-Brexit border plans, via a series of consultations. One person in attendance said the proposals will “substantially increase food costs” for consumers from January.
That could spell trouble in a country which imports nearly 30 percent of all its food from the EU, according to 2020 figures from the British Retail Consortium, and where the annual rate of food and drink inflation just hit 19.2 percent — its highest level in 45 years.
Government officials told business reps at one consultation that firms will be hit with £400 million in extra costs as a result of long-deferred new checks at the U.K. border for goods entering from the EU.
Ministers have argued that the full implementation of the new post-Brexit procedures — which will eventually include full digitization of paperwork and a “trusted trader scheme” for major importers in order to reduce border checks — will more than offset these costs in the long-run as they will also be rolled out for imports coming from non-EU countries as well.
Supply-chain disruption caused by the Ukraine war, poor weather and new trade barriers due to Brexit have all been blamed for the U.K.’s surge in food prices.
A member of a major British business group, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that incoming post-Brexit red tape will mean “some producers on the EU side will find it is no longer possible to trade with the U.K.” and that “some small businesses will find themselves shut out.”
“It will add to the costs, and probably inflation, but I think we need to go through this so we can work with the EU to find advantageous improvements,” they said.
“We can’t keep running away from the fact we need to implement our own border checks.”
Britain has delayed the implementation of full post-Brexit border checks multiple times, while the EU began its own more than two years ago.
The government’s new “target operating model,” published last month, will see the phased implementation of new border and customs checks for EU imports from October.
This will include a new fee that must be paid from January for all goods that are eligible for border checks, including items like chilled meat, dairy products and vegetables.
Each batch of goods that could be subject to checks, even if they are ultimately not chosen by border staff for inspection, will be hit with a fee of between £23 to £43 at inland ports.
The first business figure quoted above said the scale of the new fees came as a surprise, after firms had been previously assured by the government that these costs would be dependent on whether goods had actually been checked.
“[Former minister] Jacob Rees-Mogg said there would be minimal costs. Initially we thought it was business as usual, but it’s not,” they said.
“There were people at this [consultation] saying that this is not a massive increase, but it will substantially increase food costs.”
William Bain, trade expert at the British Chambers of Commerce, said there is a “strong prospect” of higher inflation due to the new Brexit checks.
“EU suppliers may be less willing to trade with British based companies, because of increased costs and paperwork. The costs of imported goods would almost certainly increase,” he said.
But he added: “We knew this day was coming and that inbound controls on goods would be applied. It’s a part of having a functional border and complying with the U.K.’s international commitments.”
The U.K. has seen trade flows with the EU disrupted since leaving the bloc’s single market and customs union.
Recent analysis by the Financial Times found that Britain’s goods exports are dropping at a faster rate than in any other G7 country.
Recent figures from the Office for National Statistics meanwhile show that U.K. trade in goods with EU countries fell at a much faster rate than from non-EU countries in January.
Conservative MP Tobias Ellwood told POLITICO that he fears his party will pay a price at the next general election, due to be held by January 2025, if the government does not seek better trading arrangements with the EU.
“There’s certainly a revision across the nation when it comes to Brexit — people are realising that what we have today isn’t what they imagined, whether you voted for Remain or for Brexit,” he said.
“The reality check is that it has become tougher economically to do business with the Continent and quite rightly there’s an expectation that we fix this.”
A government spokesperson said: “The target operating model implements important border controls which will help protect consumers and our environment and assure our trade partners about the quality of our exports.
“It implements these important controls in a way which minimises costs for businesses and prevents delays at the border.”