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    Home prices suddenly jump after several months of declines

    Home prices suddenly turned higher as mortgage rates slipped.
    Prices nationally rose 0.16% in February, when seasonally adjusted, according to Black Knight.
    In December and January, mortgage rates began pulling back, and homebuyers surged ahead.

    Unexpectedly strong home sales at the start of this year reversed a sharp, several-month decline in home prices. Mortgage rates are behind the swing.
    Home prices nationally rose 0.16% in February, when seasonally adjusted, according to Black Knight. That is the strongest one-month gain since May of last year. Home prices are now 2.6% below their peak last June.

    Of the 50 largest U.S. markets, 39 saw home prices rise in February. That’s a quick turnaround from November, when prices were falling in 48 of 50 markets.
    Behind the quick change are wide swings in mortgage rates. The average rate on the 30-year fixed began rising off of a record low at the start of 2022. By June it had gone from around 4% to just over 6%. Sales slowed down, and prices followed. By fall, the rate shot over 7%, and home prices began cooling more quickly.
    In December and January, however, mortgage rates began pulling back, and homebuyers were quick to take advantage. Closed sales of existing homes in February, which represented contracts signed in December and January, shot a remarkable 14.5% higher, according to the National Association of Realtors.
    “Conscious of changing mortgage rates, home buyers are taking advantage of any rate declines,” Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said in the February sales release.
    As with all real estate, however, the price dynamics differ depending on location. Miami continues to see the largest price gains, along with more affordable markets in the Midwest, like Cincinnati, Columbus, Ohio, and Cleveland, according to Black Knight. Meanwhile, prices are still falling in some of the markets which saw the greatest price inflation over the last several years. Those include Austin, Texas, Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, Seattle and San Francisco.

    While mortgage rates were the driving factor for the price turnaround nationally, tight supply is adding to the upward pressure, especially with new spring demand from buyers.
    “The unfortunate reality is that the scarce supply of inventory that’s the source of so much market gridlock isn’t getting any better,” said Andy Walden, Black Knight’s vice president of enterprise research strategy, in the release.
    The number of homes available for sale fell in February for the fifth straight month to the lowest level since May of last year, according to Black Knight. New listings were 27% lower than their pre-Covid pandemic levels.
    “While some price increases – most notably in Miami, which saw the largest of the month – can be chalked up to people moving to the area, we’re seeing stronger price gains more generally in those areas with better affordability and larger inventory deficits,” Walden added.
    Mortgage rates began rising again in February and then fell back slightly in March due to market fears over the U.S. banking system, amid several bank collapses.
    Demand for homes, however, appears not to have been swayed by the crisis, with real estate agents anecdotally still reporting busy open houses. Black Knight is still predicting prices to move lower again throughout the rest of this year, but if supply continues to drop, keeping the competition strong, prices may not have far to fall. More

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    Investing app Acorns acquires kid-focused fintech GoHenry to expand in Europe

    Micro-investing fintech Acorns has acquired child and teen-focused digital banking startup GoHenry to fuel an expansion into Europe.
    Acorns said it now has a combined 6 million subscribers after its acquisition of GoHenry.
    The deal marks a major growth bet for Acorns, which has up until now only been available in the U.S.

    Noah Kerner, CEO of Acorns.
    Adam Jeffery | CNBC

    LONDON — American micro-investing platform Acorns acquired GoHenry, a digital banking startup focused on educating kids about money, for an undisclosed sum.
    The company told CNBC exclusively that it agreed an all-stock deal with GoHenry that will see the firm become a wholly owned subsidiary of Acorns, with employees and backers of GoHenry rolling over their equity.

    Founded in 2012, GoHenry offers a spending card for children aged six to 18, linked to an accompanying money management app. Parents can track their kids’ transactions in real time and set spending limits or savings goals.
    The deal’s timing is noteworthy. The fintech sector is enduring a tough environment characterized by high inflation and rising interest rates. That’s dented sentiment around the market, with many publicly-listed companies’ share prices dropping. This has, in turn, had a knock-on effect for privately-held fintechs, with many late-stage firms seeing their valuations drop sharply.
    However, Noah Kerner, Acorns’ CEO and co-founder, insisted market conditions had no effect on the timing of the acquisition as talks between the two companies started as early as 2021.
    Acorns’ interest in financial wellbeing for families “goes back many years,” he said, starting in 2020 with the launch of Acorns Early — an investment account for kids.
    Acorns looked at more than 100 deals globally before landing on GoHenry, Kerner said, adding a $55 million cash infusion into GoHenry last year and its buyout of rival firm PixPay in France made the deal more attractive.

    “We pioneered kids and teens with GoHenry, and Acorns very much pioneered investing and saving and bringing mental wellness to the up and coming, to everyday America,” Louise Hill, co-founder and chief operating officer of GoHenry, told CNBC in an interview.

    Louise Hill, co-founder of GoHenry, at IFGS 2022 summit at the Guildhall in London, U.K., on Monday, April 4, 2022.
    Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    “But both of us had ambitions to stretch beyond that in terms of customer demographics, so that we could start to serve people throughout their lifecycle, through all life stages.”
    Rather than offering a free service and making money from interchange fees, GoHenry charges parents a monthly subscription, which it says pays for features like the ability to set up paid chores and parental controls.
    Acorns, meanwhile, focuses on investments, letting customers automatically invest spare change from card payments into index funds.

    Acorns also charges a monthly subscription fee. The company said it now has a combined 6 million subscribers after its acquisition of GoHenry.
    Despite this, Acorns’ acquisition of GoHenry signals a major growth bet for the company, which has up until now only been available in the U.S. By buying GoHenry, it will now be able to access Europe, a market that is less advanced when it comes to retail investing.
    GoHenry has operations in the U.K., France, Spain and the U.S. In the U.S., GoHenry’s app will be renamed GoHenry by Acorns. GoHenry will still be named GoHenry in the U.K., while its name in France and Spain, where it is known as PixPay, will also remain the same.
    Kerner and Hill wouldn’t comment on the price of the transaction, however Kerner said it represented a good deal for GoHenry and its shareholders.
    Acorns was valued at $1.9 billion last year in a $300 million funding round after scrapping plans to go public via merger with a special purpose acquisition company or SPAC due to volatile market conditions.
    It is unclear what the company’s latest valuation is following the GoHenry deal.
    Prior to its acquisition by Acorns, GoHenry raised a total of $121.2 million from investors including Edison Partners, Gaia Capital Partners, Citi Ventures, and Muse Capital. 
    The company has faced stiff competition from rival firms with their own child-focused offerings, including Revolut which launched its own account for kids in 2020, and established banks like NatWest.
    GoHenry has also struggled to book a profit, and posted a £30.9 million ($38 million) loss on £30.6 million of revenue in 2021, according to a Companies House filing. Acorns, too, is losing money, however Kerner said its goal is to become a profitable company.
    WATCH: Why retail investing has taken off in the U.S. — but not Europe More

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    WWE agrees to merge with UFC to create a new company run by Ari Emanuel and Vince McMahon

    WWE agreed to merge with UFC as part of a deal with Endeavor Group.
    Ari Emanuel’s Endeavor owns UFC and would control a majority stake in the new company.
    Vince McMahon’s WWE has sought a buyer for months.

    World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Chairman Vince McMahon (L) and wrestler Triple H appear in the ring during the WWE Monday Night Raw show at the Thomas & Mack Center August 24, 2009
    Ethan Miller | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment has agreed to merge with UFC to form a new publicly traded company controlled by Endeavor Group, the companies announced Monday morning.
    Endeavor will own a 51% stake in the new combat sports and entertainment company, while WWE shareholders will have the remaining 49%, according to the terms of the agreement. The deal values WWE at $9.3 billion and UFC, which is owned by Endeavor, at $12.1 billion, the companies said in a press release.

    Shares of WWE fell in premarket trading, while Endeavor shares rose.
    Ari Emanuel will act as chief executive of both Endeavor and the new company, the companies said. McMahon, likewise, will be executive chairman, while Endeavor President and COO Mark Shapiro will also work in the same roles at the new company. Dana White will remain as president of UFC, and WWE CEO Nick Khan will stay on as president of the wrestling business.
    The board will consist of 11 people, six appointed by Endeavor and five by WWE. The merged company’s name will be announced at a later time.

    Ari Emanuel speaks onstage during the 2017 LACMA Art + Film Gala Honoring Mark Bradford and George Lucas presented by Gucci at LACMA on November 4, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. 
    Stefanie Keenan | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    The announcement confirmed an earlier CNBC report. It also came a day after WWE wrapped up its flagship live event, WrestleMania, in California. The company has spent the past several months looking for a buyer. McMahon returned to the company as chairman in January to oversee the process. Shares of WWE are up more than 33% this year as of Friday’s closing bell, giving it a market value of more than $6.79 billion.
    The agreement would pair two of the biggest sports entertainment brands in the world. Despite notable differences – WWE features scripted matches and soap opera-like storylines, while UFC showcases authentically brutal mixed martial arts fighting – the organizations look like a good fit in terms of content and culture. Several UFC fighters, including Ronda Rousey and Brock Lesnar, have already wrestled for WWE.

    UFC champion and superstar Conor McGregor lauded news of the pending deal Sunday evening. “Incredible. What a powerhouse!” he said in one tweet, following up with another tweet displaying an image of him brandishing UFC and WWE championship belts.
    A merger will also conclude WWE’s decades-long run as a family business. McMahon’s father founded WWE in its original incarnation during the middle of the 20th century. McMahon, who bought the company from his father in 1982, is the controlling shareholder. Over the past four decades, WWE has grown into a global phenomenon, spawning breakout stars such as Hulk Hogan, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Dave Bautista and John Cena.
    McMahon, 77, retired from the company in July following a string of revelations that he paid several women millions of dollars over the years to keep them quiet about alleged affairs and misconduct. His daughter, Stephanie McMahon, became co-CEO alongside Khan. Paul Levesque, who’s both Stephanie McMahon’s husband and the wrestler known as Triple H, took over creative duties from Vince McMahon.

    Dana White appears at the UFC 282 post-fight press conference on December 10, 2022, at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, NV.
    Amy Kaplan | Icon Sportswire | Getty Images

    After Vince McMahon came back in January, Stephanie McMahon stepped down and Khan fully assumed the CEO role. The elder McMahon recently locked in a two-year employment contract, according to a securities filing.
    Khan in recent weeks has been making the media rounds to discuss the potential sale. He told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan on Thursday that it’s been a robust process and it’s drawn many interested buyers.
    WWE offers Endeavor’s shareholders a muscular media and live events business, as well as decades worth of intellectual property. The company generated $1.29 billion in revenue last year, driven mainly by its $1 billion media unit.
    UFC, meanwhile, has paid off for Endeavor. Last year, the MMA league helped its parent company’s sports business make $1.3 billion in revenue. Endeavor’s market cap stood at about $10.53 billion as of Friday’s close.
    WWE also fits well with the cultures of Endeavor and UFC, which also reflect their leaders’ hard-edged styles. McMahon, Emanuel and White are known for their outsized personalities, and each has their share of devoted allies and and harsh critics.
    White is no stranger to scandal, either. Earlier this year, video emerged showing the UFC boss slapping his wife during a public argument at a New Year’s Eve party in Mexico. He later apologized.
    Disclosure: Peacock, the streaming service owned by CNBC parent NBCUniversal, carries WWE events such as WrestleMania. More

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    Walmart rolls out fresh look for its website and app

    Walmart’s website and mobile app have a new look.
    The redesign comes as shoppers spend less on discretionary purchases, such as clothes and TVs.
    Online sales now drive more of Walmart’s business after a Covid pandemic-fueled push.

    Walmart has redesigned its website and app to try to encourage shoppers to browse and buy more.

    Walmart’s digital store has a new look.
    Starting this week, all customers who browse the company’s website and app will see bigger and glossier photos, videos and social media-inspired content that Walmart hopes will nudge more purchases.

    Tom Ward, Walmart’s chief e-commerce officer, said the goal is to make shopping online easier and more engaging.
    “When you walk into a store, you get inspired and excited by what you see,” he said. “And so we thought, ‘How do you drive that same inspiration and excitement in our closest store — in our app?'”
    The big-box retailer’s online makeover comes as consumers become more reluctant to buy discretionary merchandise, such as clothing and consumer electronics, while paying higher prices for necessities like food and housing. Sales of discretionary general merchandise in the U.S. have fallen 4% in dollars and 5% in units year over year as of February, according to Circana, the merged market research firms formerly known as The NPD Group and IRI.
    Walmart has felt that, too. Its sales have increasingly come from groceries, rather than general merchandise, in recent quarters. Walmart CFO John David Rainey told CNBC in February that consumers’ more budget-conscious mentality factored into the company’s outlook for this year.
    Walmart expects weaker sales in the months ahead. It anticipates 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 represent a drop 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.
    Ward acknowledged that “there’s lots of wants and needs conversations going around right now.” He said along with offering low prices, Walmart wants to catch customers’ attention by putting fresh, trendy and seasonal items in front of them, such as spring dresses, patio furniture and toys for Easter baskets.
    He said the website and app’s new look could also lift sales for third-party sellers that have joined or could join Walmart’s marketplace. Along with selling its own merchandise, Walmart has riffed off the playbook of Amazon by using a third-party marketplace to expand its assortment of items online and to make money by selling fulfillment services.

    E-commerce has become a more significant part of Walmart’s business, especially after a Covid pandemic-fueled push. 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.
    Online sales for Walmart U.S. rose by 17% year over year in the most recent holiday quarter and 12% year over year for the past full fiscal year.
    The retailer is expected to share its latest forecast and strategy at an investor day this week in Tampa, Florida. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Marathon Oil, Macy’s, WWE and more

    A road is closed after an oil leak at Marathon Galveston Bay Refinery on October 6, 2021 in Texas City, Texas.
    Go Nakamura | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell.
    Energy stocks — Energy stocks rose broadly Monday after OPEC surprised the market by announcing a production cut. This led some analysts to warn oil prices could reach $100 per barrel. Marathon Oil rose more than 7%, while Halliburton, APA and Occidental Petroleum each gained more than 6%.

    Marqeta — The payment services stock dropped 4.2% after Morgan Stanley downgraded Marqeta to equal weight from overweight. The firm said the company faces a “multitude of headwinds” in the next year.
    Extra Space Storage, Life Storage — Extra Space Storage said it would acquire Life Storage in an all-stock transaction for $145.82 per share, an 11.2% premium to where the stock closed Friday. The deal would create a storage unit operator with a pro forma equity market capitalization of about $36 billion and a total enterprise value of roughly $47 billion. The transaction is expected to close in the second half of 2023. Extra Space shares dropped 4.9% following the announcement; Life Storage shares climbed about 1.7%.
    Sunnova Energy — The solar energy company’s shares were up by more than 5%. Morgan Stanley initiated Sunnova with an overweight rating, noting the stock could more than double in value. Sunnova shares have dropped 13.3% in 2023.
    Vulcan Materials — The construction stock could move in early trading on the back of a Goldman Sachs upgrade to buy from neutral. Goldman said the company should see a better year ahead as inflation cools.
    World Wrestling Entertainment — Shares of WWE lost 6% on the news that Endeavor Group, the parent company of UFC, would spin off UFC and merge it with WWE in a deal valued at $21 billion. CNBC first reported news of the potential deal on Sunday.

    Macy’s — The department store popped 3.8% after being upgraded by JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. The Wall Street firm, which raised its price target on the retailer, said it has confidence in Macy’s bottom-line plan and expects to see multiyear EBITDA margins in the low double digits. Shares of Macy’s have declined about 13.1% so far this year, driven by selloffs in February and March.
    SL Green Realty — Shares of the real estate investment trust rose more than 3% premarket after BMO upgraded them to outperform, saying the third-most heavily shorted U.S. REIT is oversold given its historically low valuation and several catalysts are “on the horizon.”
    Tesla — The stock was down 3.1% after Tesla reported on Sunday that it delivered 422,875 vehicles for the first quarter of 2023, falling short of Wall Street’s expectations. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected the EV maker to report deliveries around 432,000 vehicles for the quarter. Estimates included in the FactSet analysis ranged from an expected 410,000 to 451,000 deliveries.
    — CNBC’s Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox Theobald, Tanaya Macheel and Samantha Subin contributed reporting. More

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    London’s priciest townhouse just listed for $74 million. Here’s what’s hidden beneath it

    London’s most expensive townhouse for sale just listed for the equivalent of about $74 million.
    The residence, in the Belgravia neighborhood, spans over 14,700 square feet across six levels, including two floors that are underground.
    The home is located in the Chelsea Barracks development, a 13-acre parcel of land that sold for $1.3 billion in 2008.

    A row of townhouse residences at Chelsea Barracks. The residence pictured at the center just listed for about $74 million.
    Will Pryce

    One of the most expensive townhouses in London listed Monday for 60 million pounds (about $74 million).
    The amenity-packed residence spans six levels, including two that are underground. There, you’ll find a pool that spans 39 feet, a spa, and parking that connects to a hidden roadway.

    The home’s subterranean level includes a swimming pool that spans 39 feet and a pool deck furnished with daybeds.  
    Will Pryce

    The eight-bedroom, eight-bath home spans over 14,700 square feet and is in a new residential development called the Chelsea Barracks, located in Belgravia, one of London’s most expensive neighborhoods.  
    The development is named after the land it sits upon, a 13-acre site which for 150 years housed regiments from the British Royal Army. The parcel was sold in 2008 by the British Ministry of Defence for $1.3 billion, or a whopping $100 million an acre. The sale price made it one of the largest land transfers in British history and one of the biggest residential real estate transactions in the world.

    Whistler Square at the Chelsea Barracks.
    Will Pryce

    The site was purchased by the sovereign wealth fund of the State of Qatar in partnership with the Candy Brothers, British developers who later sold their share to the sovereign state’s Qatari Diar Real Estate Company. The company oversaw the development of 290 luxury residences and 130 units of affordable housing on the site.
    The mega-development is located less than two miles from Buckingham Palace and a little more than a quarter mile from the River Thames.
    According to Richard Oakes, Qatari Diar’s chief sales and marketing officer, the land’s proximity to the river and high water tables underneath required the developer to construct an underground barrier around the construction zone’s perimeter to prevent water from breaching the site.

    It’s a pricey feat of engineering that took two years to complete. Oakes told CNBC it was worth the time and money because it unlocked the ability to build downward.
    Now the development contains a subterranean world that spans two levels of each of the 13 townhomes. It includes parking spaces interconnected by an underground roadway that leads to a nearby parking garage, creating a stealthy way to enter and exit the homes by car. There is no curbside parking, according to Oakes, so the concealed parking areas are a boon. 

    Below the townhouse residences are subterranean parking spots that eliminate the need for on-street parking.
    Will Pryce

    Oakes would not reveal the total cost of the development, but he did tell CNBC the project stands two-thirds complete and has already topped $1.2 billion in residential sales since 2015. And the residences are commanding an impressive price per square foot that averages almost $5,600. 
    “We’re absolutely trading on a premium,” said Oakes. “I reckon we’re up 30% premium on local area [residences].”

    The family room at 3 Whistler Square.
    Will Pryce

    At about $74 million, the asking price for the townhome amounts to about $5,000 a square foot. Oakes told CNBC he’s “absolutely confident” in the pricing, adding that an apartment unit in the development has already sold for more.
    “The release of pent-up demand following the uncertainty of Brexit and the frustration of Covid travel restrictions has boosted activity in London’s 10 million [pound]-plus property market over the last year,” said Tom Bill, head of U.K. residential research at Knight Frank. And even with mortgage rates notably higher, he told CNBC, cash-rich buyers are in a comparatively strong position and the price of 10 million pound-plus inventory has dropped about 12% since its last peak – September 2015 – which will also support demand.

    The $74 million townhome’s study.
    Will Pryce

    For context, in 2022 London’s 10 million pound-plus super-prime market saw 162 transactions recorded, two more than in 2021, according to data provided by Bill. The number is likely to rise, though, due to a lag in data.
    Meanwhile, over the last 12 months since February, the prime central London market saw 560 sales of 5 million pounds plus, with 60 of those transactions occurring in Belgravia. In that same date and price range, the district saw an average price per square foot topping $3,300, compared with just over $3,100 a square foot for prime central London, according to Bill.
    Oakes attributes the significant premium achieved at the Chelsea Barracks to a couple of factors, including that the units are all-new construction, which is rare in Belgravia.

    The pool inside the Chelsea Barracks’ Garrison Club.
    Alexander James

    He said there’s also value added by concierge services, security, and the community’s residents-only health and wellness center, called the Garrison Club. The club delivers 12,700 square feet of luxe amenities, including a 66-foot swimming pool, gym, steam and sauna rooms, and private training studios.

    Inside the 12,700-square-foot wellness-focused Garrison Club.
    Will Pryce

    And high net worth buyers are drawn to a Chelsea Barracks convenience he calls “lock up and leave.”
    “Here you can throw the keys at the concierge, go away for a couple of months and come back and your house is warmed,” said Oakes. “You know everything can be done for you.”
    Here’s a closer look around — and under — London’s newest $74 million listing, which is being sold fully furnished.

    The formal reception room.
    Will Pryce

    On the first floor of the six-story home, at 3 Whistler Square, is an over 30-foot-long grand reception room. The room has floor-to-ceiling windows with bespoke iron balustrades, which are intricately designed for each townhome.

    The primary bedroom.
    Will Pryce

    The entire second floor of the residence is devoted to the primary suite. The 1,600-square-foot area, which can be accessed by a grand staircase or a lift, includes a lobby, handbag wardrobe, two baths and two walk-in closets/dressing rooms.

    One of the primary suite’s two baths.
    Will Pryce

    One floor above the primary suite are four en suite guest bedrooms, and one floor higher is a rooftop terrace.

    One of four en suite bedrooms located on the residence’s third floor.
    Will Pryce

    Now for what’s down below. The first of two lower levels includes a family kitchen and dining area with walk-out access to the garden at the back of the home. This can be achieved on a subterranean level because the rear garden is one level below street grade. Also on this level are two more bedrooms, for staff, and access to a pair of elevators, one for residents, the other for service.

    Lower-level family area and views of the rear garden.
    Will Pryce

    One level deeper is the second underground level, which is the home’s most expansive floor, spanning over 4,700 square feet. This level features a cinema and a wine room plus a separate wine vault.

    Cinema room on the homes second subterranean level.
    Will Pryce

    There’s also a health and wellness area that includes a private 39-foot indoor swimming pool, gym, changing rooms, steam and sauna rooms, plus spa treatment areas. This level also features a 30-foot-wide garage with secured access to an underground roadway for entry and exit.

    One of the townhome’s subterranean spa treatment rooms.
    Will Pryce

    Across the backyard is a structure called The Mews. The name is a historical reference to stables that were once built behind large city homes to house horses before they were replaced by cars in the early 20th century.

    Across the backyard lawn is a second structure that houses a duplex guest house called The Mews.
    Will Pryce

    This modern version houses a duplex one-bedroom guest house. While on the surface this second house is separated from the main residence by about 40 feet, hidden deep below the lawn the two homes are very much connected. The subterranean pool level, which is buried two stories directly below the lawn, spans the length of the yard, joining the lowest level of the main house to the lowest level of the guest house.

    Interior view of the guest house dining area.
    Will Pryce

    Oakes told CNBC the sale would be subject to a 15% stamp duty, which would add another $11.1 million in fees. And the buyer should expect to pay a homeowner’s fee, which amounts to about $164,000 per year. More

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    WWE near deal to be sold to UFC parent Endeavor, sources say

    Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment is in advanced talks to be sold to Ari Emanuel’s Endeavor Group, the parent of UFC.
    The deal would combine UFC and WWE into one publicly traded company.
    WWE has spent the past several months looking for a buyer.

    World Wrestling Entertainment Inc. Chairman Vince McMahon appears in the ring during the WWE Monday Night Raw show at the Thomas & Mack Center August 24, 2009 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
    Ethan Miller | Getty Images

    Vince McMahon’s World Wrestling Entertainment is in advanced talks to be sold to Ari Emanuel’s Endeavor Group, the parent company of UFC, according to people familiar with the matter.
    A deal could be announced as soon as Monday. UFC and WWE are expected to form a new publicly traded company as part of the agreement, according to the people, who declined to be named due to the confidential nature of the discussions.

    Endeavor is slated to own 51% of the new combat sports and entertainment company, while WWE shareholders would get 49%, according to the people. The Endeavor deal gives WWE an enterprise value of $9.3 billion, they said.
    Emanuel is expected to act as chief executive of both Endeavor and the new company. McMahon, likewise, is expected to be executive chairman, while Endeavor President Mark Shapiro will also work in the same role at the new company. Dana White will remain as president of UFC, while WWE CEO Nick Khan will serve as president of the wrestling business.
    The development comes during the same weekend WWE hosts its flagship live event, WrestleMania, in California. The company has spent the past several months looking for a buyer. McMahon returned to the company as chairman in January to oversee the process. Shares of WWE are up more than 33% so far this year, giving it a market value of more than $6.79 billion.
    The deal will effectively end WWE’s decades-old status as a family-run business. McMahon’s father founded WWE in its original incarnation during the middle of the 20th century, and McMahon is the controlling shareholder in the company. McMahon bought the company from his father in 1982. Since then, the company has grown into a global phenomenon, spawing stars suck as Hulk Hogan, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Dave Bautista and John Cena.
    McMahon, 77, retired from the company in July following a string of revelations that he paid several women millions of dollars over the years to keep them quiet about alleged affairs and misconduct. His daughter, Stephanie McMahon, became co-CEO alongside Khan. Paul Levesque, who’s both Stephanie McMahon’s husband and the wrestler known as Triple H, took over creative duties from Vince McMahon.

    When Vince McMahon came back in January, Stephanie McMahon stepped down and Khan fully assumed the CEO role. The elder McMahon recently locked in a two-year employment contract, according to a securities filing.
    Khan in recent weeks has been making the media rounds to discuss the potential sale. He told CNBC’s Morgan Brennan on Thursday that it’s been a robust sale process, drawing many interested buyers.

    WWE brings with it a robust media and live events business, along with its decades worth of intellectual property. The company generated $1.29 billion in revenue last year, driven mainly by its $1 billion media unit.
    UFC has paid off for Endeavor. Last year, the MMA league helped Endeavor’s sports business make $1.3 billion in revenue. Endeavor’s market cap stood at about $10.53 billion as of Friday’s close. The Endeavor-WWE deal values UFC at more than $12 billion.
    WWE, at least at a glance, would also fit well with the cultures at Endeavor and UFC. McMahon has a brash public persona, making him an apparently good match for Emanuel and White, who are also known for their outsized personalities.
    White, like McMahon, is no stranger to scandal, either. Earlier this year, video emerged showing the UFC boss slapping his wife during a public argument at a New Year’s Eve party in Mexico. White apologized.
    Disclosure: Peacock, the streaming service owned by CNBC parent NBCUniversal, carries WWE events such as WrestleMania. More

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    Starbucks fired the employee responsible for igniting the Starbucks Workers United union campaign

    Starbucks fired Alexis Rizzo, the employee responsible for igniting the Starbucks Workers United union campaign, CNBC confirmed.
    Rizzo worked as a shift supervisor at Starbucks for 7 years and served as a leader at the Genesee St. store in Buffalo, New York, which was one of the first two stores in the country to win its union campaign.
    Starbucks Workers United announced Rizzo’s termination in a tweet Saturday and said in a corresponding GoFundMe page that “this is retaliation at its worst.”

    Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz testifies about the company’s labor and union practices during a Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, March 29, 2023.
    Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

    Starbucks fired Alexis Rizzo, the employee responsible for igniting the Starbucks Workers United union campaign, just days after the company’s former CEO Howard Schultz testified on Capitol Hill about the coffee chain’s alleged union-busting.
    Rizzo worked as a shift supervisor at Starbucks for seven years and served as a union leader at the Genesee St. store in Buffalo, New York, which was one of the first two stores in the country to win its union campaign.

    Starbucks Workers United announced Rizzo’s termination in a tweet Saturday and said in a corresponding GoFundMe page that “this is retaliation at its worst.”
    “I’m absolutely heartbroken. It wasn’t just a job for me. It was like my family,” Rizzo told CNBC in an interview. “It was like losing everything. I’ve been there since I was 17 years old. It’s like my entire support system, and I think that they knew that.”
    Rizzo said her store managers fired her after she finished working her shift Friday. She said they told her it was because she had been late on four occasions — two of which were instances where she had been one minute late.
    Starbucks told CNBC Rizzo had missed more than four hours of work over the course of those instances, and that she had been repeatedly issued write-ups for being late. 
    Starbucks spokesperson Rachel Wall said separations at the company only follow clear violations of policies. In this case, she said there were numerous attendance violations that were impacting other baristas at this store location.

    “We appreciate that our Genesee St. partners provided the Starbucks Experience to each other and our customers this morning, and that area stores continue to serve customers without interruption this weekend,” she told CNBC in a statement.
    Rizzo said suspects she was let go as a result of Wednesday’s Senate hearing.
    Schultz faced a volley of tough questions from Sen. Bernie Sanders Wednesday about Starbucks’ labor and union practices. Sanders, a pro-union independent representing Vermont, has been putting pressure on Starbucks for more than a year to recognize the union and negotiate contracts with unionized cafes.

    Sanders chairs the Senate’s Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee, which conducted the panel.
    During the hearing, Sanders said that Starbucks has engaged in the “most aggressive and illegal union-busting campaign in the modern history of our country.” He also accused the company of stalling on collective bargaining agreements, betting that workers will give up and leave the coffee chain.
    Schultz defended Starbucks’ approach to its negotiations, maintaining that a direct relationship with workers is what is best for the company. He also denied multiple times that the company ever broke federal labor law and said his focus during his time as interim CEO was 99% on operations, not battling the union.
    “I don’t think it’s a coincidence that two days after Howard Schultz had his ego bruised the way that he did that he started lashing out at Buffalo,” Rizzo said. She added that two other employees were also fired Friday.
    Nearly 300 Starbucks cafes have voted to unionize under Starbucks Workers United, according to data from the National Labor Relations Board. In total, the union has made more than 500 complaints of unfair labor practices related to Starbucks with the federal labor board. Starbucks has filed roughly 100 of its own complaints against the union. Judges have found that the company has broken federal labor law 130 times.
    None of the unionized stores have agreed on a contract yet with Starbucks.
    Rizzo said she is still “in shock” about being fired, but that she plans to fight for her position.
    “We’re going to keep fighting to make things right,” she said. “I’m going to fight for my job back and to get reinstated.”
    — CNBC’s Amelia Lucas contributed to this report. More