More stories

  • in

    Virgin Orbit files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S.

    Virgin Orbit on Tuesday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. after failing to secure a funding lifeline.
    It comes days after CNBC obtained audio of Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart telling employees during an all-hands meeting that the company was ceasing operations “for the foreseeable future.”
    The company’s last mission suffered a mid-flight failure, with an issue during the launch causing the rocket to not reach orbit and crash into the ocean.

    The company’s modified 747 jet “Cosmic Girl” in Mojave, California.
    Virgin Orbit

    Virgin Orbit on Tuesday filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. after failing to secure a funding lifeline.
    The California-based satellite launch company lodged the filing in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the District of Delaware and is looking to sell its assets.

    It comes after CNBC obtained audio of Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart telling employees during an all-hands meeting last week that the company was ceasing operations “for the foreseeable future.” The firm also said it would lay off nearly all of its workforce.
    “While we have taken great efforts to address our financial position and secure additional financing, we ultimately must do what is best for the business,” Hart said in a statement Tuesday.
    “We believe that the cutting-edge launch technology that this team has created will have wide appeal to buyers as we continue in the process to sell the Company. At this stage, we believe that the Chapter 11 process represents the best path forward to identify and finalize an efficient and value-maximizing sale,” he added.
    Virgin Orbit said it was focused on a swift conclusion to its sale process to provide clarity on the future of the firm.
    Virgin Orbit said a commitment from Virgin Investments had allowed the company to secure $31.6 million in new money through “debtor-in-possession” financing. This process, sometimes known as DIP financing, refers to funding for businesses that have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection to allow them to keep operating.

    What happened?

    Virgin Orbit developed a system that uses a modified 747 jet to send satellites into space by dropping a rocket from under the aircraft’s wing mid-flight.
    The company’s last mission suffered a mid-flight failure, with an issue during the launch preventing the rocket from reaching orbit. It crashed into the ocean.
    Virgin Orbit is among a select few U.S. rocket companies to successfully achieve orbit with a privately developed launch vehicle. It has launched six missions since 2020, counting four successes and two failures.
    It has been looking for new funds for several months, with majority owner Richard Branson unwilling to fund the company further.
    Branson founded the company in 2017 and owns a 75% interest. Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala holds the second-largest stake at 18%.
    The company began commercial services in 2021 and began publicly trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange after a so-called SPAC merger. The deal saw the company valued at nearly $4 billion at the time.
    It is a markedly different picture at present. Virgin Orbit had a market value of roughly $65 million, according to the Monday closing price.
    “Today my thoughts and concerns are with the many talented teammates and friends now finding their way forward who have been committed to the mission and promise of all that Virgin Orbit represents,” CEO Dan Hart said.
    “I am confident of what we have built and hopeful to achieve a transaction that positions our Company and our technology for future opportunities and missions,” he added.
    — CNBC’s Michael Sheetz contributed to this report. More

  • in

    As retail gets choppy, Walmart flexes its grocery muscle, deep pockets and huge reach

    Walmart will hold an investor event in Tampa, Florida, on Tuesday and Wednesday.
    As sales get tougher, the retailer is using its low-price reputation, large grocery business and massive store footprint to break into new businesses and attract higher-income shoppers.
    The company is also a bellwether for the retail industry and U.S. economy.

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    As shoppers get thrifty, Walmart is flexing its muscles.
    Like other retailers, the company faces slowing sales as the boom of pandemic-fueled spending fades and inflation hits shoppers’ wallets.

    Yet, unlike many competitors, Walmart has a few key factors that could work in its favor: Most of its sales come from food, a category that shoppers need in any economy. It has built its reputation on offering low prices. And its huge reach allows Walmart to make money in other ways, including selling ads, offering delivery services and fulfilling online orders for third-party sellers.
    Walmart CEO Doug McMillon acknowledged the challenging retail backdrop on the company’s earnings call in February. Yet he said its business is “naturally hedged.”
    “If customers want more of something and less of something else, we shift our inventory,” he said. “If the economy is strong, our customers have more money and that’s great. If things are tougher, they come to us for value.”
    The retailer’s top leaders will share the company’s strategy for the year Tuesday and Wednesday at an investor event in Tampa, Florida.
    Here’s a closer look at some key themes for Walmart that could emerge at the investor event:

    Checking the consumer’s health

    As the nation’s largest retailer, Walmart is a bellwether. Investors are hungry for any fresh clues about the health of the sector and the U.S. economy
    “You always start a Walmart meeting by asking how the consumer is doing because they really have the best pulse on what is going on with the American consumer and how they are spending,” said David Silverman, a retail analyst at Fitch Ratings.
    Walmart has already noticed changes in buying patterns. In the past few quarters, Chief Financial Officer John David Rainey told CNBC that its shoppers have bought more private-label products and opted for cheaper proteins like peanut butter and hot dogs. Plus, he said as customers spend more on groceries and other essentials, they are buying less general merchandise — a shift that’s shaking up Walmart’s sales mix and hitting sales at other retailers, including Target.
    Walmart shared a cautious outlook for the year, factoring in economic uncertainty and shoppers’ more discerning approach. It said it expects same-store sales for Walmart U.S. will increase between 2% and 2.5% excluding fuel, in the fiscal year ahead. The company projects that adjusted earnings per share for the fiscal year will range from $5.90 to $6.05, excluding fuel.
    That would be a decline from the past fiscal year, when same-store sales grew 6.6% for Walmart U.S. and adjusted earnings per share were $6.29, excluding fuel.

    Side hustle progress report

    Advertising. Delivery services. Picking and packing items for third-party sellers.
    Walmart has taken a page from its chief rival, Amazon, as it sells services and technology, along with socks and gallons of milk. It is expected to provide a progress report at the investor event.
    The company has a growing number of side hustles, including Walmart Connect, its advertising business; Walmart Luminate, its data and analytics tool; Walmart+, its membership program and answer to Amazon Prime; GoLocal, its delivery service for other retailers; and Walmart Fulfillment Services, its picking, packing and shipping service for sellers in its third-party marketplace.
    The aggressive push has gained importance over the past year, as Walmart’s profit margins are under pressure. Like other companies, the big-box retailer is coping with higher labor, supply chain and material costs. All of its newer businesses, such as advertising, have higher profit margins than its bread-and-butter retail business.
    Walmart has been flashier in spreading the word about its new businesses, too. Two years ago, it tapped Seth Dallaire, an Amazon veteran and former Instacart chief revenue officer, to oversee the newer businesses as Walmart’s chief revenue officer.
    At industry conferences, it has thrown parties, handed out tote bags and other branded swag, and paid for large showroom booths. It has reversed roles with suppliers, too, as it knocks on doors to try to sell to them.

    E-commerce growth plans

    One part of the investor event’s agenda? Offering a glimpse of Walmart’s e-commerce future.
    The retailer will likely showcase how it is growing online sales and trying to make them profitable.
    Thanks to a push from the Covid pandemic, e-commerce has become a larger part of Walmart’s business. Online sales accounted for about $53.4 billion — or nearly 13% — of Walmart U.S.′ total net sales in the past fiscal year, which ended in late January, according to company filings. That’s a jump from $15.7 billion, or roughly 5% of Walmart U.S.′ total net sales, in 2019.
    Walmart has leaned into e-commerce in other ways, too. Just this week, the retailer rolled out a new look for its website and app. Some of the key perks of Walmart+, its membership program, are free shipping and free home deliveries of online orders.
    The ease of online shopping coupled with lower-priced popular products has given Walmart a way to outmatch regional grocers and smaller stores, said Silverman of Fitch Ratings.
    “”Historically, there was a tradeoff,” he said. “You paid less at Walmart, but you got a weaker customer experience.”
    Yet when shopping online, he added, customers ultimately get the same brand of ketchup, laundry detergent or paper towels in a similar brown box. And from Walmart, it is often cheaper.
    “The value focus can resonate more with Walmart,” he said. “You are giving up less in terms of the customer experience over time.”

    Higher-income shoppers

    For Walmart, a pandemic-related migration to the suburbs and sticker shock from inflation have created an opportunity: attracting customers with larger salaries and more disposable income.
    Wealthier shoppers are increasingly turning to to Walmart for groceries, CFO Rainey told CNBC. He said about 75% of its market share gains in food came from households that make more than $100,000 a year in both the second fiscal quarter and third fiscal quarter.
    About half of the market share gains came from high-income consumers in the quarter that ended in late January, he said at a conference in March.
    Investors want to hear how Walmart not only plans to attract those more financially insulated customers, but also keep them. Doing that could help the retailer, particularly as food stamp benefits shrink and tax refunds come in light.
    The company has tinkered with in-store elements that could appeal to more upscale shoppers. For instance, it has rolled out new store designs in some parts of the country that play up trendier offerings, such as more fashion-forward exclusive apparel and home decor brands.
    It has also expanded convenient online options, including curbside pickup, faster home delivery and its direct-to-fridge InHome delivery service.
    As inflation cools, Walmart may have to fight some affluent shoppers’ tendency to go to other websites and stores, according to Rick Watson, CEO of e-commerce consulting firm RMW Commerce Consulting.
    But, he said, grocery habits formed due to inflation could stick around, too, “If prices are good, why would you go back?” More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Etsy, Boeing, Virgin Orbit and more

    The Etsy website
    Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Etsy — The e-commerce company’s shares rose 3.9% after Piper Sandler upgraded them to overweight from neutral. The firm said that it thinks Etsy’s marketplace strengths will “help reaccelerate active buyer growth.” Shares are down 9.6% in 2023. 
    Virgin Orbit —  The satellite launch company sank 14% in the premarket after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Virgin Orbit also said it would lay off nearly all of its workforce.

    Boeing — The aerospace manufacturer’s stock dropped 0.8% after Northcoast Research downgraded shares to a sell rating. The research firm cited expected changes to commercial aircraft production, resetting of consensus forecasts and volume headwinds ahead for Boeing this quarter after communicating with its contacts in the sector. 
    Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle maker ticked up nearly 1% in premarket trading. Tesla stock declined 6.1% a day earlier, with investors seemingly responding to the company’s vehicle delivery report from the weekend. Concerns remain that Tesla could slash prices yet again in order to stoke sales at the cost of smaller margins. The company’s first quarter deliveries were below Wall Street expectations, but largely met the outlook that Tesla itself compiled.
    Burlington Stores — The apparel retailer’s shares rose 1.6% after Loop Capital upgraded the stock to buy from hold. Analyst Laura Champine wrote in a note that “improved values and brands in stores” will likely result in market share gains for the company. 
    Comcast — Shares were up 1.5% after KeyBanc upgraded the telecom giant to overweight. “We are above [consensus] on Cable EBITDA on strong ARPUs and operating efficiency drives our adj. EBITDA margins higher,” KeyBanc said. The firm’s price target implies upside of 16% for Comcast. The media company’s shares have jumped 7.8% year to date.
    Prudential Financial — The financial services company rose 2.6% after JPMorgan upgraded the stock to overweight. The firm said that although its long-term fundamental outlook for the life insurance industry is negative, it expects healthy near-term results for lower-risk stocks with strong balance sheets.  

    Sarepta Therapeutics — Sarepta gained 2.5% after Citi initiated coverage of the biotechnology stock at a buy rating. The firm said the recent selloff may be overdone.
    — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Brian Evans and Michelle Fox contributed reporting
    Disclosure: Comcast owns NBCUniversal, the parent company of CNBC. More

  • in

    Women’s soccer expands into the Bay Area with a new team and record investment

    The National Women’s Soccer League has awarded a 14th franchise to an investor group in California’s Bay Area for a record $53 million fee.
    The group includes investment firm Sixth Street, along with Sheryl Sandberg, sports executive Rick Welts and former national team stars Brandi Chastain, Leslie Osborne, Danielle Slaton and Aly Wagner.
    The league’s third team from California will begin play in the 2024 season.

    Former USWNT stars Brandi Chastain, Leslie Osbourne, Aly Wagner and Danielle Slaton are part of the Bay Area ownership team
    Source: Allison+Partners Studio

    The National Women’s Soccer League announced on Tuesday it’s awarding a 14th franchise to an investor group in California’s Bay Area for a record $53 million franchise fee and a total investment of $125 million — the largest institutional investment ever made in a professional women’s sports franchise, according to the investing group. 
    Previously, franchise fees for NWSL teams ranged from $2 million to $5 million.

    Alan Waxman, founder of global investment firm Sixth Street, leads the group, which also includes former Meta executive Sheryl Sandberg, NBA and WNBA executive Rick Welts, and U.S. women’s national team legends Brandi Chastain, Leslie Osborne, Danielle Slaton and Aly Wagner.
    The league’s third team from California will begin play in the 2024 season.
    “Sixth Street has the incredible know-how, experience and bandwidth to devote to the league,” NWSL Commissioner Jessica Berman told CNBC. “We think that they’re just going to be an incredible asset, not just locally, but for other teams and for the league.”
    Waxman, a former Goldman Sachs executive, founded Sixth Street in 2009, and the firm currently has more than $65 billion in assets under management. This is the company’s first foray into women’s sports, following investments in Spanish soccer teams Real Madrid and FC Barcelona and the NBA’s San Antonio Spurs. It also holds a stake, alongside the New York Yankees and Dallas Cowboys, in Legends, the stadium hospitality company.
    Waxman said his wife and soccer star Wagner first brought the investment opportunity to his attention. He said he had his team run the research and “every single indicator of what makes a good investment flashed green.”

    “I kept asking, ‘What are we missing?’ It’s literally the most undervalued thing we’re seeing not only within the sports landscape, but just across everything,” Waxman said.
    The four former national team players will be represented on the board and will work alongside Sixth Street in setting the team’s strategic direction, he said.
    Sandberg, founder of Lean In — an organization dedicated to the inclusion and advancement of women — will join the club as a board member and strategic investor, along with her husband Tom Bernthal.
    Sandberg will partner with the club to create leadership programs that empower women and girls in underserved Bay Area communities.  
    “There is a very clear link between playing sports and becoming a leader,” Sandberg told CNBC.

    Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook speaks onstage during ‘Putting a Best Facebook Forward’ at Vanity Fair’s 6th Annual New Establishment Summit.
    Matt Winkelmeyer | Getty Images

    She pointed to the fact that while women hold 5% of the CEO jobs around the world, 80% of those women played sports.
    “We’re hopefully going to win lots of games and bring this amazing business to the Bay Area, but we’re also going to train leaders,” Sandberg said.

    Health of the league

    Berman said the transaction marks an inflection point for the league.
    “I don’t think there’s a single better indictor on the health of the league than this purchase price of $53 million” the league’s commissioner said. “That will reset the minimum standards of what we expect from the investors in how they approach the NWSL and our growth.”
    Berman also touted the Northern California market, calling the area a “soccer hotbed,” noting the prevalence of Fortune 500 and growth companies in the region.
    “We see how the market craves and is thirsty for this level of women’s soccer. When the U.S. women’s national team comes to town, they sell out in a second,” she said.
    Berman, a labor attorney and sports executive, stepped in as commissioner a year ago tasked with not only growing the business but also restoring faith in women’s soccer after a tumultuous couple of years that were plagued with abuse, sexism and a lack of confidence in the league.
    “That was one of our concerns going in,” Waxman said, “but I think the way that Jessica hit it head on, addressing it with the right protocols, the checks and balances, she’s brought in institutionalization of the league, and that ended up being a positive for us in our overall investment thesis.”
    Berman has also super-sized the business in nearly every metric. Attendance, sponsorships and franchise values are all seeing massive upticks.
    The league’s $4.5 million media rights deal with Paramount Global, owner of CBS, is up at the end of the year, and that will be another key indicator of the health of the league. Berman characterized conversations over media rights as being robust, saying there are many interested parties as the league eyes global growth.
    “The whole landscape has changed in such a short period of time, and we’re actually seeing it translate into bottom-line results much quicker I think than anybody expected,” she said. More

  • in

    China’s homebuyers are starting to come back

    The share of respondents planning to buy a home in the next three months rose to 17.5% in the first quarter, up from 16% in the fourth quarter, according to a People’s Bank of China survey.
    The increase follows the end of China’s Covid controls. Central and local governments have also rolled out support for property purchases and developers in the last year.
    Other data signal a coming turnaround in China’s property market slump.

    A real estate project under construction in Shanghai’s newer Pudong district on Feb. 23, 2023.
    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    BEIJING — More people in China want to buy houses again, according to a first quarter survey released Monday by the People’s Bank of China.
    The share of respondents planning to buy a home in the next three months rose to 17.5% in the first quarter. That’s up from 16% in the fourth quarter survey and the highest since the first quarter of 2022, survey data showed.

    Market expectations also improved. The survey found that 18.5% of respondents anticipated an increase in house prices, up sharply from 14% in the fourth quarter and the highest since the third quarter of 2021.
    The increase follows the end of China’s Covid controls. Central and local governments have also rolled out support for property purchases and developers in the last year.
    In the summer of 2022, a number of homebuyers decided not to pay their mortgages after Covid and financial difficulties kept developers from delivering apartments on time. Houses are typically purchased ahead of completion in China.

    Signs of a real estate turnaround

    Other reports indicate a coming turnaround in China’s property market slump.
    In March, home prices rose for the first time in more than seven months.
    That’s according to a study of 100 cities that found the average price per square meter for a new apartment rose month-on-month by 0.02% to 16,178 yuan ($219 per square foot) released over the weekend by the China Real Estate Index System (CREIS), a consultancy.
    Market trends varied across the country.
    In terms of floor space, the CREIS study found that transaction volume in the cities of Hangzhou and Tianjin doubled in the first quarter from a year ago, compared to China’s largest cities which only saw a 0.2% increase.
    Separately, property manager JLL said the high-end residential market in Beijing saw transaction volume climb by 20% in the first quarter from the prior quarter.

    Most people still prefer to save

    The PBOC survey found that most people were still inclined to save, despite China ending its stringent Covid controls in December.
    In the first three months of the year, the share of respondents saying they preferred to save fell by 3.8 percentage points from the prior quarter to a still relatively high 58%.
    During the pandemic, people’s penchant to save soared to record highs, the central bank survey showed.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    The share of respondents saying they preferred to spend rose by 0.5 percentage points to 23.2%, the first quarter survey found.
    Education and healthcare remained by far the most popular spending categories, while travel saw a significant jump from the fourth quarter.
    The central bank’s quarterly survey covers about 20,000 people with savings deposits, spread across 50 cities in China. More

  • in

    Manhattan real estate sales plunge 38%, but cash deals hit all-time record

    The drop in sales and prices follows a 29% decline in the fourth quarter, and suggests that the nation’s largest real estate market is correcting after a post-pandemic boom in prices and demand.
    The big question for brokers, buyers and sellers is where the new “bottom” will be in Manhattan.
    Brokers say the biggest challenge for deals is the wide gap between buyer and seller price expectations.

    Guests attend a pool party in a penthouse apartment in New York.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Manhattan real estate sales fell 38% in the first quarter, as buyers and sellers battled over prices and mortgage rates remained volatile, according to new reports.
    Total sales volume fell to $4.4 billion in the quarter, with 2,242 apartments and townhouses sold, compared to 2,546 sales in the first quarter of 2022, according to a report from Douglas Elliman and Miller Samuel. The average sales price fell 5% to $1.95 million and the median sales price fell 10% to $1.075 million, according to the report.

    The drop in sales and prices follows a 29% decline in the fourth quarter, and suggests that the nation’s largest real estate market is correcting after a post-pandemic boom in prices and demand. The big question for brokers, buyers and sellers is where the new “bottom” will be in Manhattan.
    “I think we’ll see a seasonal uptick in the spring,” said Jonathan Miller, CEO of Miller Samuel, the appraisal and research firm. “But some of it depends on whether the [Federal Reserve] holds rates where they are.”
    Brokers say the biggest challenge for deals is the wide gap between buyer and seller price expectations. Relatively low levels of inventory, or unsold listings, means that buyers still don’t have much choice in Manhattan. There were 6,996 homes on the market in the first quarter, slightly lower than the five-year average of around 7,200, according to Miller Samuel.
    “There still is a disconnect between buyers and sellers,” said Jason Haber at Compass. “Sellers are not slashing prices left and right to get deals done. They have confidence. They feel like ‘if I lose a buyer there’s another one down the road waiting.’ There is a no panic selling, or thinking they have to get out now.”
    Sellers have trimmed prices, but not enough for today’s bargain-hunting buyers. The average discount from the initial list price to sales price in the first quarter price was 7%, up from 5% in the fourth quarter, according to Serhant. “Weary buyers were still in a strong position to negotiate,” according to Coury Napier, director of research at Serhant.

    Buyers still fear overpaying in the face of a potential recession, volatile stock market and banking crisis. Many brokers say buyers have been calling for months with expectations of price cuts of 20% or more — only to be disappointed.
    “Buyers for the last three quarters have been sitting back, waiting for massive reductions and they’re not coming,” said Noble Black of Douglas Elliman. “And I don’t think those big reductions will come.”
    As Frederick Warburg Peters, president of Coldwell Banker Warburg, said in his first-quarter report, “The big price decreases seem behind us, and property costs have plateaued.”
    Bidding and interest has remained especially strong at the high end. The share of luxury sales — or deals in the top 10% of the market by price — that resulted in bidding wars rose to a record high of over 11% in the quarter, Miller said. Brokers say wealthy buyers usually prefer to pay cash and therefore are less affected by higher mortgage rates.
    Overall, cash deals rose to a record 57% of all sales in the quarter, Miller said. At the high end of the market, three-quarters of all sales over $5 million were all cash.
    Brokers say they’re seeing signs that the second quarter will be stronger — especially since the higher-end market improved over the course of the first quarter. Sales contracts for properties priced at $4 million or more increased from an average of 16 deals a week in January to 32 deals a week in March, according to the Olshan Report.
    Still, a lot depends on the future of interest rates and the overall economy. Because New York City is home to so many buyers and sellers tied to finance, the performance of the stock market could also shape Manhattan’s housing market this spring and summer.
    “Based on what I see now, we’re getting to a healthier place in the spring,” Black said. “It’s not by any stretch a seller’s market, but it’s getting busier each month.” More

  • in

    Disney CEO Bob Iger rips Ron DeSantis over ‘anti-Florida’ retaliation

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has asked the state’s inspector general to investigate whether an agreement signed by the previous Disney-backed board of the Reedy Creek district is legal.
    Before DeSantis could replace the Reedy Creek Improvement District board of supervisors, the Disney-allied panel signed an agreement that drastically limits his control.
    “The governor got very angry about the position Disney took and seems like he’s decided to retaliate against us,” Disney CEO Bob Iger said.

    Bob Iger on Monday called Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ actions against The Walt Disney Co. retaliatory, “anti-business” and “anti-Florida.”
    The feud between DeSantis and the company escalated earlier Monday, when the governor asked the state’s inspector general to determine whether the House of Mouse’s sly move to retain control over the outer limits of Orange and Osceola counties is legal – and whether any of the company’s executives were involved in the scheme.

    During the company’s annual shareholder meeting Monday, Disney CEO Iger addressed investor inquiries about the ongoing dispute between the company and Florida legislators. He noted that Disney has more than 75,000 employees in the state, and has created thousands of indirect jobs, as well as brings around 50 million visitors to Florida every year and is the state’s largest taxpayer
    “A year ago, the company took a position on pending Florida legislation,” Iger said, apparently referring to what critics called the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. “And while the company may have not handled the position that it took very well, a company has a right to freedom of speech just like individuals do.”

    Bob Iger, CEO, Disney, during CNBC interview, Feb. 9, 2023.
    Randy Shropshire | CNBC

    He added: “The governor got very angry about the position Disney took and seems like he’s decided to retaliate against us, including the naming of a new board to oversee the property and the business. In effect, to seek to punish a company for its exercise of a constitutional right. And that just seems really wrong to me.”

    Iger said Disney plans to spend more than $17 billion in investments at Walt Disney World over the next decade, which would create around 13,000 jobs at the company and generate even more taxes for Florida.
    “Our point on this is that any action that supports those efforts simply to retaliate for a position the company took sounds not just anti-business, but it sounds anti-Florida,” he said. “And I’ll just leave it at that.”

    Last week, DeSantis’ newly appointed board of the Reedy Creek district, now named the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, revealed that the previous Disney-allied board signed a long-lasting agreement that drastically limits the control that can be exercised over the company and its district.

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis speaks during ‘The Florida Blueprint’ event on Long Island, New York, United States on April 1, 2023. Ron DeSantis made comments on the Grand Jury’s indictment of Donald J. Trump, 45th President of the United States in Manhattan, New York. 
    Kyle Mazza | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    The agreement was signed on Feb. 8, the day before the Florida House voted to put DeSantis in charge. DeSantis replaced all of the Disney-allied board members with five Republicans on Feb. 27. It was only then that Disney’s new binding agreement was discovered.
    The agreement includes a clause that dates back to 1692 in Britain. The “Declaration shall continue in effect until 21 years after the death of the last survivor of the descendants of King Charles III, King of England, living as of the date of this declaration,” the document said.
    The governor’s letter calls the board’s agreement an attempt to “usurp the authority of the CFTOD board” and “nullify the recently passed legislation, undercut Florida’s legislative process, and defy the will of Floridians.”
    He said at the agreement also has “legal infirmities” including inadequate notice, improper delegation of authority and ethical violations.
    Disney, however, has said that all of the board’s maneuvers were completely legal — the agreement was discussed and approved in open, noticed public forums, in compliance with Florida’s Sunshine law.
    The development in DeSantis’ conflict with Disney marks just the latest move in one of several partisan battles being waged by the Republican governor.
    DeSantis is widely believed to be laying the groundwork to launch a 2024 presidential campaign. That move is expected to come not long after the current Florida legislative session ends in early May. Polls show that DeSantis is the most competitive of the potential opponents for former President Donald Trump in a GOP primary.
    The Florida governor took aim at Disney after the company publicly balked at Florida’s HB 1557 law early last year. HB 1557, which critics called the “Don’t Say Gay” bill, limits early education teachings on sexual orientation or gender identity.
    Republican state Rep. Randy Fine told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” last April that the bill dissolving Reedy Creek wasn’t retaliatory, but then said “when Disney kicked the hornet’s nest, we looked at special districts.”
    Until recently, there had been no major public discussion about dissolving Disney’s long-established special district, which it’s occupied for 55 years, leading DeSantis’ critics to question its timing and the speed at which the governor acted against the company.
    The fight between DeSantis and Disney shows no signs of slowing down. During a book tour stop in Georgia last week, DeSantis told attendees “You ain’t seen nothing yet.” More

  • in

    Dogecoin jumps more than 30% after Musk changes Twitter logo to image of shiba inu

    Dogecoin rose over 30% after Twitter changed its logo to an image of a shiba inu dog, the digital coin’s symbol.
    Twitter CEO Elon Musk has touted the token for years.
    On Friday, Musk asked a judge to dismiss a $258 billion racketeering lawsuit accusing him of pumping the cryptocurrency.

    The crypto ecosystem has expanded significantly in recent years. While institutions such as the IMF are starting to embrace its innovation, they are also calling for investors to exercise caution.
    Jakub Porzycki | NurPhoto via Getty Images

    Niche cryptocurrency dogecoin spiked more than 30% on Monday after Twitter CEO Elon Musk replaced the blue bird on his company’s website with an image of a shiba inu, the digital coin’s logo.
    On Friday, attorneys for Twitter and Musk asked a federal judge to toss out a $258 billion lawsuit from 2022 that accused the billionaire of manipulating dogecoin’s price and driving it up over 36,000%.

    After the Twitter logo was altered to a shiba inu image, Musk shared a meme about the change to his 133.5 million followers on Twitter. The dog appeared only for some users of Twitter, including those on its website.
    Twitter did not respond to a request for comment.
    Musk started touting dogecoin years ago. He periodically tweets about the token, which was created as a joke in 2013, predictably causing volatility each time. According to CoinMarketCap.com, dogecoin is the eighth-most valuable cryptocurrency, with a market cap of over $13 billion.
    Musk’s lawyers described his public statements about the coin as “innocuous and often silly tweets,” in a court filing Friday.
    But Musk’s public endorsement of the coin goes further than social media messages. Two of Musk’s other companies, Tesla and the Boring Company, are named in the lawsuit.

    In December 2021, Tesla announced it would accept dogecoin for some merchandise. At the time, Musk said on Twitter that Tesla would “see how it goes.”
    Dogecoin rose more than 20% following that tweet. In January 2022, when Musk announced on Twitter that dogecoin payments were live, the cryptocurrency jumped as much as 15%.
    Tesla does have digital assets on its books, including bitcoin, and still accepts dogecoin as payment for some merchandise.
    “We have not sold any of our dogecoin,” Musk said on an earnings call last year. “We still have it.”
    Musk has indicated that he personally holds dogecoin as well.
    In a recent tweet, responding to a photograph of himself next to News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch, Musk simply wrote: “Dogecoin.”
    WATCH: Dogecoin soars on Musk tweet More