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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Pinterest, First Citizens, Caterpillar & more

    Jim Umpleby, CEO of Caterpillar Inc.
    Adam Jeffery | CNBC

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell.
    Pinterest — Pinterest gained 4.3% after UBS upgraded the social media stock to buy and said shares could pop more than 25% as the company improves its advertising strategy.

    related investing news

    an hour ago

    First Citizens BancShares — Shares popped 40% on news that First Citizens will buy around $72 billion of Silicon Valley Bank assets at a discount of $16.5 billion.
    First Republic, PacWest — Regional bank stocks were moving higher on Monday following a report from Bloomberg News that U.S. authorities were considering expanding government support for banks to provide additional liquidity. Shares of First Republic jumped 23% in premarket trading, while PacWest Bancorp rose about 9%, and Western Alliance gained 5%.
    Caterpillar — Shares dropped 1.2% after Baird downgraded the machinery company to underperform, citing potential headwinds driven by a “meaningful slowdown” in new small- and medium-sized nonresidential projects in 2024 due to ongoing turmoil with regional bank lenders. 
    KeyCorp — KeyCorp gained 6.8% after Citi upgraded the stock to buy from neutral. Citi analyst Keith Horowitz gave KeyCorp a price target of $20, suggesting the stock stands to gain 68.6% since Friday’s close.
    Dish Network — The satellite company’s shares fell 2.5% after a class-action lawsuit was announced against the company by Dish investors who purchased the stock between Feb. 22, 2023 and Feb. 27, 2023. The lawsuit alleges that Dish overstated its efficiency and infrastructure capabilities as it experienced a widespread network outage due to a cybersecurity breach last month. Shares are down almost 38% year to date.

    Ollie’s Bargain Outlet Holdings — The stock shed 3.5% after Citi downgraded the retailer to sell from neutral, saying it has a “difficult model to scale” and has seen weaker productivity with its new stores in the past several years.
    Corning — Shares advanced 2.3% after Deutsche Bank upgraded Corning to buy from hold. Analyst Matthew Niknam said the tech firm specializing in glass and ceramics is “turning a corner” on revenues and earnings per share.
    — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Hakyung Kim, and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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    Saudi National Bank chair resigns just days after Credit Suisse comments sparked sell-off

    Saudi National Bank Chairman Ammar al-Khudairy has resigned his post.
    He will be replaced by SNB Managing Director and group CEO Mohammed al-Ghamdi.
    Al-Khudairy’s resignation comes within days of his mid-March comments that SNB was unlikely to increase its stake in Credit Suisse, at a time when the European lender battled a crisis of investor confidence that plunged its shares.

    The Saudi National Bank (SNB) headquarters beyond the King Abdullah Financial District Conference Center in the King Abdullah Financial District (KAFD) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2022.
    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Saudi National Bank Chairman Ammar al-Khudairy resigned his post on Monday, days after his comments exacerbated the share collapse of troubled bank Credit Suisse.
    He will be replaced by SNB Managing Director and Group CEO Mohammed al-Ghamdi, with former deputy Talal Ahmed al-Khereiji now the new SNB acting CEO, according to a SNB statement to the Saudi Stock Exchange (Tadawul).

    Al-Khudairy is stepping down “due to personal reasons,” the bank said.
    Al-Khudairy’s resignation comes within days of his mid-March comments to Bloomberg that SNB was unlikely to increase its stake in Credit Suisse, at a time when the European lender battled a crisis of investor confidence that plunged its shares. The then-SNB chairman said the Saudi bank would not intercede “for many reasons outside the simplest reason, which is regulatory and statutory.”
    The comments fueled investor panic, sinking Credit Suisse shares 24% during that session, despite effectively reiterating SNB’s previous position that it did not intend to expand its holdings beyond its then 9.9% interest as Credit Suisse’s largest shareholder.

    The Swiss bank was acquired by Zurich rival UBS on March 19 for 3 billion Swiss francs ($3.2 billion), in a late-weekend union brokered by the Swiss government. SNB lost roughly 80% of its investment in Credit Suisse — over $1 billion — during the takeover, as UBS paid shareholders a sharply discounted price of just 0.76 francs per share under the terms of the rescue agreement.
    The largest commercial bank in Saudi Arabia, SNB is the young product of a 2021 union between the National Commercial Bank and the Samba Financial Group.

    Saudi Arabia has encouraged the consolidation of its financial entities amid Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s broader Vision 2030 push to diversify the kingdom’s revenues and economic growth prospects away from hydrocarbon earnings.
    — CNBC’s Hadley Gamble contributed to this article.

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    ‘The first bank crisis of the Twitter generation’: The pressure on banks is very different from 2008

    This is “the first bank crisis of the Twitter generation,” Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management told CNBC.
    Social media, mobile banking and enhanced regulations mean that a financial crisis today would look very different from 2008.
    Social media not only allows rumors to spread more easily, but also much faster.

    It is “unlikely” that European banks will undergo anything as serious as in 2008, according to economists.
    Peter Macdiarmid / Staff / Getty Images

    LONDON — Turbulence across the banking sector has prompted the question of whether we are teetering on the edge of another financial crash, 2008-style. But a banking crisis today would look very different from 15 years ago thanks to social media, online banking, and huge shifts in regulation.
    This is “the first bank crisis of the Twitter generation,” Paul Donovan, chief economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, told CNBC earlier this month, in reference to the collapse of Credit Suisse.

    related investing news

    9 hours ago

    Shares of Credit Suisse dropped on March 14 after “material weaknesses” were found in its financial reporting. The news started a tumultuous five days for the lender, which culminated in rival Swiss bank UBS agreeing to take over the beleaguered firm.
    “What social media has done is increase the importance of reputation, perhaps exponentially, and that’s part of this problem I think,” Donavan added.
    Social media gives “more scope for damaging rumours to spread” compared to 2008, Jon Danielsson, director of the Systemic Risk Centre at the London School of Economics, told CNBC in an email.
    “The increased use of the Internet and social media, digital banking and the like, all work to make the financial system more fragile than it otherwise would be,” Danielsson said.
    Social media not only allows rumors to spread more easily, but also much faster.

    “It’s a complete gamechanger,” Jane Fraser, Citi CEO, said at an event hosted by The Economic Club of Washington, D.C., last week.
    “There are a couple of tweets and then this thing [the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank] went down much faster than has happened in history,” Fraser added.

    Regulators shuttered Silicon Valley Bank on March 10 in what was the biggest U.S. bank collapse since the global financial crisis in 2008.
    While information can spread within seconds, money can now be withdrawn just as quickly. Mobile banking has changed the fundamental behavior of bank users, as well as the optics of a financial collapse.
    “There were no queues outside banks in the way there were with Northern Rock in the U.K. back in [the financial crisis] — that didn’t happen this time — because you just go online and click a couple of buttons and off you go,” Paul Donavan told CNBC. 
    This combination of quick information dissemination and access to funds can make banks more vulnerable, according to Stefan Legge, head of tax and trade policy at the University of St. Gallen’s IFF Institute for Financial Studies.
    “While back in the day, the view of people lining up in front of bank branches caused panic, today we have social media … In a way, bank runs can happen much faster today,” Legge told CNBC in an email.
    Stronger balance sheets
    The European Union made huge efforts to shore up the zone’s economic situation in the aftermath of the financial crisis, including the founding of new financial oversight institutions and implementing stress testing to try to foresee any difficult scenarios and prevent market meltdown.

    Risk in the banking system today is significantly less than it has been at any time over the last 20 or 30 years.

    Bob Parker
    Senior Advisor at International Capital Markets Association

    This makes it “unlikely” that European banks will undergo anything as serious as in 2008, Danielsson told CNBC. 
    “[Bank] funding is more stable, the regulators are much more attuned to the dangers and the capital levels are higher,” Danielsson said.

    Today banks are expected to have much more capital as a buffer, and a good metric for measuring the difference between today’s financial situation and 2008 is bank leverage ratios, Bob Parker, senior advisor at International Capital Markets Association, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” last week.
    “If you actually look at the top 30 or 40 global banks … leverage is low, liquidity is high. Risk in the banking system today is significantly less than it has been at any time over the last 20 or 30 years,” Parker said.
    The European Banking Authority, which was founded in 2011 in response to the financial crisis as part of the European System of Financial Supervision, highlighted this in a statement about the Swiss authorities stepping in to help Credit Suisse.
    “The European banking sector is resilient, with robust levels of capital and liquidity,” the statement said.

    Problematic pockets within the sector

    Individual players can still run into difficulties however, no matter how resilient the sector is as a whole. 
    Parker described this as “pockets of quite serious problems” rather than issues that are ingrained across the entire industry.
    “I actually don’t buy the argument that we have major systemic risk building up in the banking system,” he told CNBC.
    Fraser made similar observations when comparing the current banking system with what happened in 2008. 
    “This isn’t like it was last time, this is not a credit crisis,” Fraser said. “This is a situation where it’s a few banks that have some problems, and it’s better to make sure we nip that in the bud.”

    Trust is key

    One parallel between the 2008 crisis and the current financial scene is the importance of confidence, with “a lack of trust” having played a big part in the recent European banking turmoil, according to Thomas Jordan, chairman of the Swiss National Bank.
    “I do not believe that [mobile banking] was the source of the problem. I think it was a lack of trust, of confidence in different banks, and that then contributed to this situation,” Jordan said at a press conference Thursday.

    If trust is lost, then anything can happen.

    Stefano Ramelli
    Assistant professor in corporate finance at the University of St. Gallen

    Even as banks have enhanced their capital and liquidity positions, and improved regulation and supervision, “failures and lack of confidence” can still occur, José Manuel Campa, the chairperson of the European Banking Authority, said last week.
    “We need to remain vigilant and not be complacent,” Campa told the European Parliament during a discussion on the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.
    Trust and confidence in the system is a “fundamental law of finance,” according to Stefano Ramelli, assistant professor in corporate finance at the University of St. Gallen.
    “The most important capital for banks is the trust of depositors and investors. If trust is lost, then anything can happen,” Ramelli said.

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    Pfizer signs agreement with China on improving health coverage in the country

    U.S. pharma giant Pfizer has signed an agreement with China to cooperate on improving the country’s health coverage, according to the company.
    “We are aligned very much with the China ‘Healthy 2030’ [initiative] and we are trying to contribute as much as we can,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CNBC’s Eunice Yoon on Saturday.
    Pfizer’s memorandum of understanding with the Health China Research Center is set to support public health research and improve the health of rural populations, according to details released by Chinese state media.

    Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla speaks during the China Development Forum in Beijing on March 25, 2023.
    Lintao Zhang | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    BEIJING — U.S. pharma giant Pfizer has signed an agreement with China to cooperate on improving the country’s health coverage, according to the company.
    “We are aligned very much with the China ‘Healthy 2030’ [initiative] and we are trying to contribute as much as we can,” Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla told CNBC’s Eunice Yoon on Saturday.

    He declined to share further details, including dollar amounts.
    China in 2016 announced a “Healthy China 2030” plan for improving the country’s public health services, medical industry and food and drug safety. The Covid-19 pandemic also highlighted shortfalls in China’s still-developing public health system.
    Pfizer’s memorandum of understanding with the Health China Research Center is set to support public health research and improve the health of rural populations, according to details released by Chinese state media.

    “Any individuals and citizens from China would have the same access to our innovative product,” Pfizer China President Jean-Christophe Pointeau said in the report.
    He said the company has around 600 staff dedicated to rural areas “to educate the health care professionals on our breakthrough innovation Oncology, Anti-infectives and Inflammation & Immunology.”

    The weekend comments did not discuss the Paxlovid drug for treating Covid.
    In January, Bourla said Pfizer had signed an agreement with a local partner to manufacture Paxlovid in China, which production could begin in as soon as three or four months.

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    China’s debt-heavy local governments look for new ways to raise cash

    Local governments’ direct debt exceeded 120% of revenue in 2022, S&P Global Ratings analysts said, noting that’s more than what Beijing has unofficially said was an acceptable debt level.
    In the annual government work report released this month, an entire section was dedicated to preventing and defusing major risks in real estate and local government debt.
    A few local governments are trying other ways to generate extra income — at the cost of fair market access for bike-sharing businesses. That’s according to two reports in the last half year from China’s National Development and Reform Commission, which oversees economic planning.

    Pictured here is a large residential community in Nanjing, Jiangsu province, Jan. 16, 2023.
    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Debt-heavy local governments in China need new ways to raise money under a central regime that’s made clear its priority is to reduce financial risks.
    Local governments’ direct debt exceeded 120% of revenue in 2022, S&P Global Ratings analysts said, noting that’s more than what Beijing has unofficially said was an acceptable debt level.

    “The country’s provinces and municipalities have relied heavily on expanded bond issuance to carry them through a COVID-triggered economic slowdown and collapsed land-sale revenues,” the S&P analysts said in a report last month.
    International Monetary Fund data show China’s explicit local government debt nearly doubled over five years to the equivalent of $5.14 trillion — or 35.34 trillion yuan — last year. That doesn’t include several other categories of related, rapidly growing debt such as that of “local government financing vehicles” (LGFV) — which allowed regional authorities to tap bank loans for infrastructure projects.
    China’s central government is paying attention.

    In China’s annual government work report released this month, an entire section was dedicated to preventing and defusing major risks — primarily in real estate and local government debt. “We should … prevent a build-up of new debts while working to reduce existing ones,” the report said regarding local governments’ situation.
    The topic didn’t get such prominence in last year’s report, pointed out Ting Lu, chief China economist at Nomura.

    “Coupled with the conservative growth target [of around 5%], this may signal a potential shift in focus to tackling financial risks and hidden debt from local governments at some point this year, particularly in H2, after the economic recovery has largely stabilised,” Lu said.
    Recent key speeches from Chinese President Xi Jinping have used similar language in calling on officials to address systemic risks. New Premier Li Qiang this month also named policies for “preventing and defusing risks” as one of the government’s near-term priorities.
    Xi has also emphasized tackling corruption, an issue that has been prevalent in China — including at a local level.

    Covid, real estate impact

    Over the last three years, Covid and the real estate slump have cut into local government revenue, although it’s unclear exactly to what extent.
    Official data provide some insight. The Ministry of Finance said the country’s spending on health climbed by nearly 18% last year to 2.25 trillion yuan, after barely growing in 2021.
    A budget category called local government funds saw revenue from land sales drop by 23.3% to 6.69 trillion yuan — a loss of about $288 billion. S&P and other analysts estimate land sales account for about a quarter of local governments’ total revenue.
    In China, land is owned by the government and sold to companies for development — usage agreements last for 70 years if the project is residential.
    Property-related revenue will likely remain under stress as homebuyer sentiment has yet to fully recover, said Sherry Zhao, director of international public finance, Fitch Ratings.
    She said local governments will likely turn to three other channels to boost revenue:

    Taxes — reduce the level of tax cuts announced during the pandemic
    Asset sales — generate mostly one-off income from the sale or rent of state-owned assets
    Transfers — draw more on central government funds

    China’s central government increased its transfers to local governments by a whopping 17.1% in 2022, and plans to boost support by another 3.6% this year with 10.06 trillion yuan in transfers, according to the Ministry of Finance.
    “Transfers to local governments accounted for about 60% of the increase in the central government deficit,” S&P analysts said in a separate report last week.

    The long-term trend is clear: Beijing wants to ease the country off a reliance on investment-driven growth.

    S&P Global Ratings

    They don’t expect local governments to fall back on off-balance sheet debt. “Even in fiscally weak regions, it is unlikely that governments will resume the use of hidden debt financing, e.g. through local government financing vehicles (LGFVs),” S&P said.
    “The long-term trend is clear: Beijing wants to ease the country off a reliance on investment-driven growth.”
    But local governments still have bills and public services to pay for.
    Historically, local governments were responsible for more than 85% of expenditure but only received about 60% of tax revenue, Rhodium Group said in 2021.

    Looking for new revenue sources

    A few local governments are trying other ways to generate extra income — at the cost of fair market access for bike-sharing companies.
    That’s according to lists of market access violations published in two reports in the last half year from China’s National Development and Reform Commission, which oversees economic planning.
    The bike-sharing industry exploded in China several years ago, attracting a flood of companies from tiny players to giants such as Alibaba-backed Hello Bike and Mobike, acquired by Chinese food delivery giant Meituan.
    Limited regulation often meant swaths of bikes crowded sidewalks.
    Now, some local authorities are trying to restrict industry players to a handful of bike share quotas, sold for a multi-year period.
    Among the cases the central government addressed, China’s NDRC economic planner said Zhangjiajie city sold a few five-year quotas for more than 45 million yuan ($6.6 million) — more than 10 times the starting price.
    Most of the other cases mentioned did not list the total transaction amount.
    Another bike-sharing quota auction in May last year reportedly raised 189 million yuan in Shijiazhuang, capital of Hebei province near Beijing. The city only disclosed the starting bids for what it called “public resources,” which totaled 17.3 million yuan.
    Reports from the economic planner didn’t include the Shijiazhuang case, and the city did not respond to a request for comment.
    While Alibaba-backed Hello Bike and local players won a bid, Meituan’s Mobike did not, according to a city release. The two companies did not respond to requests for comment.

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    Shrinking food stamp benefits for families mean yet another challenge for retailers

    Pandemic-related emergency funding from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, ended this month in most states.
    For retailers like Kroger, Walmart and Dollar General, the decline in SNAP dollars will put pressure on discretionary sales.
    Add in lower tax refunds on average this year, and shoppers have fewer dollars to spread around.

    A worker carries bananas inside the Walmart SuperCenter in North Bergen, New Jersey.
    Eduardo Munoz Alvarez | AP

    For some shoppers who already struggle to cover grocery bills, the budget is getting tighter.
    This month, pandemic-related emergency funding from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, is ending in most states, leaving many low-income families with less to spend on food.

    More than 41 million Americans receive funding for food through the federal program. For those households, it will amount to at least $95 less per month to spend on groceries. Yet for many families, the drop will be even steeper since the government assistance scales up to adjust for household size and income.
    For grocers like Kroger, big-box players like Walmart and discounters like Dollar General, the drop in SNAP dollars adds to an already long list of worries about the year ahead. It’s likely to pressure a weakening part of retailers’ business: sales of discretionary merchandise, which are crucial categories for retailers, as they tend to drive higher profits.
    Major companies, including Best Buy, Macy’s and Target, have shared cautious outlooks for the year, saying shoppers across incomes have become more careful about spending on items such as clothing or consumer electronics as they pay more for necessities such as housing and food.
    Food, in particular, has emerged as one of the hardest-hit inflation categories, up 10.2% year-over-year as of February, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
    “You still have to feed the same number of mouths, but you have to make choices,” said Karen Short, a retail analyst for Credit Suisse.

    “So what you’re doing is you’re definitely having to cut back on discretionary,” she said.
    The stretch has made it impossible for some to afford even basic items. It’s still too early to see the full impact of the reduced SNAP benefits, said North Texas Food Bank CEO Trisha Cunningham, but food pantries in the Dallas-Fort Worth area have started to see more first-time guests. The nonprofit helps stock shelves at pantries that serve 13 counties.
    Demand for meals has ballooned, even from pandemic levels, she said. The nonprofit used to provide about 7 million meals per month before the pandemic and now provides between 11 million and 12 millions meals per month.
    “We knew these [extra SNAP funds] were going away and they were going to be sunsetted,” she said. “But what we didn’t know is that we were going to have the impact of inflation to deal with on top of this.”

    Shifting market share

    So far, retail sales in the first two months of the year have proven resilient, even as consumers contend with inflation and follow a stimulus-fueled boom in spending in the early years of the pandemic. On a year-over-year basis, retail spending was up 17.6% in February, according to the Commerce Department.
    Some of those higher sales have come from higher prices. The annual inflation rate is at 6% as of February, according to the Labor Department’s tracking of the consumer price index, which measures a broad mix of goods and services. That index has also gotten a lift from restaurant and bar spending, which has bounced back from earlier in the pandemic and begun to compete more with money spent on goods.
    Yet retailers themselves have pointed out cracks in consumer health, noting rising credit card balances, more sales of lower-priced private label brands and shoppers’ heightened response to discounts and promotions.
    Some retailers mentioned the SNAP funding decrease on earnings calls, too.
    Kroger CEO Rodney McMullen called it “a meaningful headwind for the balance of the year.”
    “We’re hopeful that everybody will work together to continue or find additional money,” he said on the company’s earnings call with investors earlier this month. “But as you know, because of inflation, there’s a lot of people whose budget is under strain.”
    Credit Suisse’s Short said for lower-income families, the food cost squeeze comes on top of climbing expenses for nearly everything else, whether that’s paying the electric bill or filling up the gas tank.
    “I don’t think I could tell you what a tailwind is for the consumer,” she said. “There just isn’t a single tailwind in my view.”
    Emergency allotments of SNAP benefits previously ended in 18 states, which could preview the effect of the decreased funding nationwide. In a research note for Credit Suisse, Short found an average decline in SNAP spending of 28% across several retailers from the date the additional funding ended.
    Some grocers and big-box retailers could feel the impact more than others. According to an analysis by Credit Suisse, Grocery Outlet has the highest exposure to SNAP with an estimated 13% of its 2021 sales coming from the program. That’s followed by BJ’s Wholesale with about 9%, Dollar General at about 9%, Dollar Tree at about 7%, Walmart’s U.S. business with 5.5% and Kroger with about 5%, according to the bank’s estimates, which were based on company filings and government data.
    Retailers that draw a higher-income customer base, such as Target and Costco, should feel comparatively less effect, Short said. If nothing else, the dwindling SNAP dollars could shift shoppers from one retailer to another, she said, as major players seek to grab up market share and undercut on prices.

    Fewer dollars to go around

    Another factor could make for a bumpier start to retailers’ fiscal year, which typically kicks off in late January or early February: Tax refunds are trending smaller this year.
    The average refund amount was $2,972, down 11% from an average payment of $3,352 as of the same point in last year’s filing season, according to IRS data as of the week of March 10. That average payout could still change over time, though, as the IRS continues to process millions of Americans’ returns ahead of the mid-April deadline.
    Dollar General Chief Financial Officer John Garratt said on an earnings call this month that the discounter is monitoring how its shoppers respond to the winding down of emergency SNAP benefits and lower tax refunds.
    He said stores did not see a change in sales patterns when emergency SNAP funds previously ended in some states, but he added that “the customer is in a different place now.”
    Tax refunds can act as a cash infusion for retailers, as some people spring for big-ticket items like a pair of brand-name sneakers or a sleek new TV, said Marshal Cohen, chief industry advisor for The NPD Group, a market research company.
    This year, though, even if people get their regular refund, they may use it to pay bills or whittle down debt, he said.
    One bright spot for retailers could be an 8.7% cost-of-living increase in Social Security payments. Starting in January, recipients received on average $140 more per month.
    However, Cohen said, the cash influx might not be enough to offset pressure on younger consumers, particularly those between ages 18 and 24, who have just started jobs and face milestone expenses like signing a lease or buying a car.
    “Everything’s costing them so much more for the early, big spends of their consumer career,” he said.

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    The digital media rollup dream is dead for the moment — now it’s all about core brand strength

    Digital media companies including BuzzFeed, Vice, Vox and Bustle Digital Group are sharpening their focus on core strengths.
    The smaller media companies’ emphasis on differentiation echoes a larger media movement to cut costs and focus on brands.
    Executives are split on whether the digital media industry will have another wave of significant consolidation, especially as companies look increasingly different from one another.

    BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti stands in front of the Nasdaq market site in Times Square as the company goes public through a merger with a special-purpose acquisition company on December 06, 2021 in New York City.
    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    When a marriage or an engagement fails, it’s common for the participants to take time to work on themselves.
    That’s where the digital media industry finds itself today.

    After years of focusing on consolidating to better compete with Google and Facebook for digital advertising dollars, many of the most well-known digital media companies have abandoned consolidation efforts to concentrate on differentiation.
    “What you’re finding is companies are trying to find a non-substitutable core,” said Jonathan Miller, the CEO of Integrated Media, which specializes in digital media investments. “The era of trying to put these companies together is over, and I don’t think it’s coming back.”
    A 90% decline in BuzzFeed shares since the company went public in 2021, a failed sales process from Vice, the collapse of special purpose acquisition companies, and a choppy advertising market have made digital media executives rethink their companies’ futures. For the moment, executives have decided that more concentrated investment is better than attempts to gain scale.
    “Right now, everyone’s trying to get through a tougher market by focusing on their strengths,” BuzzFeed CEO Jonah Peretti said in an interview with CNBC. “We’re in this period now where we should just focus on innovating for the future and building more efficient, stronger, better companies.”
    What’s happening in the digital media space echoes trends from the biggest media companies, including Netflix, Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery. After losing nearly half their market values, or more, in 2022, those companies have emphasized what makes them different, whether it be distribution, brand or quality of programming, after years of global expansion and mega-mergers. Disney CEO Bob Iger said the word “brand” more than 25 times at a Morgan Stanley media conference this month.

    “I think brands matter,” Iger said. “The more choice people have, the more important brands become because of what they convey to consumers.”
    Making strategic decisions based on consumer demand rather than investor pressure is a pivot for the industry, said Bryan Goldberg, CEO of Bustle Digital Group, which has acquired and developed a number of brands and sites aimed at women, including Nylon, Scary Mommy, Romper and Elite Daily.
    “Too many of the mergers were driven by investor needs as opposed to consumer needs,” Goldberg said in an interview.

    The rollup dream’s rise and fall

    From late 2018 to early 2022, the digital media industry had a shared goal. Pushed by venture capitalist and private equity investors who had made sizeable investments in the industry during the 2010s, companies such as BuzzFeed, Vice, Vox Media, Group Nine, and Bustle Digital Group, or BDG, were talking to each other, in various combinations, about merging to gain scale.
    “If BuzzFeed and five of the other biggest companies were combined into a bigger digital media company, you would probably be able to get paid more money,” Peretti told The New York Times in November 2018, kicking off a multiyear effort to consolidate.
    The rationale was twofold. First, digital media companies needed more scale to compete with Facebook and Google for digital advertising dollars. Adding sites and brands under one corporate umbrella would boost overall eyeballs for advertisers. Cost-cutting from M&A synergies was an added benefit for investors.
    Second, longtime shareholders wanted to exit their investments. Large legacy media companies such as Disney and Comcast’s NBCUniversal invested hundreds of millions in digital media in the early and mid-2010s. Disney invested more than $400 million in Vice. NBCUniversal put a similar amount into BuzzFeed. By the end of the decade, after seeing the value of those investments fall, legacy media companies made it clear to digital media executives that they weren’t interested in being acquirers.

    Vice Media offices display the Vice logo in Venice, California.
    Mario Tama | Getty Images

    With no strategic buyer available, merging with each other using publicly traded stock could give VC and PE shareholders a chance to cash out of investments that were well past the standard hold time of seven years. Digital media companies eyed special purpose acquisition companies — also known as SPACs or blank-check companies — as a way to go public quickly. The popularity of SPACs picked up steam in 2020 and peaked in 2021.
    Deal flow accelerated. Vox acquired New York Magazine in September 2019. About a week later, Vice announced it had acquired Refinery29, a digital media company focused on younger women. BuzzFeed bought news aggregator and blog HuffPost in 2020 and then acquired digital publisher Complex Networks in 2021 as part of a SPAC transaction to go public. Vox and Group Nine agreed to a merger later that year.
    BuzzFeed, generally thought by industry executives at the time to have the strongest balance sheet with the best growth narrative, successfully went public via SPAC in December 2021. Shares immediately tanked, falling 24% in their first week of trading. The coming weeks and months were even worse. BuzzFeed opened at $10 per share. The stock currently trades at about $1 — a 90% loss of value.
    BuzzFeed’s underwhelming performance coincided with the implosion of the SPAC market in early 2022 as interest rates rose. Other companies that planned to follow BuzzFeed shut down their efforts to go public completely. Vice tried and failed. Now it’s trying for the second time in two years to find a buyer. BDG and Vox, meanwhile, abandoned considerations to go public. Vox instead sold a 20% stake in itself in February to Penske Media, which owns Rolling Stone and Variety.

    The industry turns inward

    Consolidation was always a flawed strategy because digital media could never become big enough to compete with Facebook and Google, said Integrated Media’s Miller.
    “You have to have sufficient amount of scale to matter, but that’s not a winning formula by itself,” Miller said.
    Vice’s deal for Refinery29 is a prime example of a deal motivated by scale that lacked consumer rationale, said BDG’s Goldberg.
    “The digital media rollup has proven successful only when assets are thoughtfully combined with an eye toward consumers,” Goldberg said. “In what world did Vice and Refinery29 make sense in combination?” 
    Vice is engaged in sale talks with a number of buyers that fall outside the digital media landscape, CNBC previously reported. It’s also considering selling itself in pieces if there’s more interest in parts of the company, such as its TV production assets and its ad agency, Virtue.
    Vice is a cautionary tale of what happens to a digital media company when its brand loses luster, Miller said. Valued at $5.7 billion in 2017, Vice is now considering selling itself for around $500 million, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the sale discussions are private.
    A Vice spokesperson declined to comment.
    “In the old days of media, with TV networks, if you were down, you could revive yourself with a hit,” said Miller. “In the internet age, everything is so easily substitutable. If Vice goes down, the audience just moves on to something else.”
    Companies such as BuzzFeed, Vox and BDG are now trying to find an enduring relevancy amid a myriad of information and entertainment options. BuzzFeed has chosen to lean in to artificial intelligence, touting new AI-generated quizzes and other content that fuses the work of staff writers with AI databases.
    BDG has chosen to primarily target female audiences across lifestyle categories.
    Vox has focused on journalism and information across a number of different verticals. That’s a strategy that hasn’t really changed even as the market has turned against digital media, allowing Vox CEO Jim Bankoff the opportunity to continue to hunt for deals. Just don’t expect the partners to be Vice, BDG or BuzzFeed.
    “We want to be the leading modern media company with the strongest portfolio of brands that serve their audiences on modern platforms — websites, podcasts, streaming services — while building franchises through multiple revenue streams,” Bankoff said. “There’s no doubt M&A is part of our playbook, and we expect it will continue to be in the future.”

    Finding an exit

    While executives may be making strategy decisions with a sharper eye toward the consumer, the problem of finding an exit for investors remains. Differentiation may open up the pool of potential buyers beyond the media industry. BuzzFeed’s emphasis on artificial intelligence could attract interest from technology platforms, for instance.
    It’s also possible that there will be an eventual second wave of peer-to-peer mergers. While Integrated Media’s Miller doesn’t expect a future industry rollup, BuzzFeed’s Peretti hasn’t closed the door on the concept if market conditions improve. As executives invest in fewer ideas and verticals, the end result could be healthier companies that are more attractive merger partners, he said.
    “If everyone invests in what they’re best at, if you put them back together, you’d have that diversified digital media company with real scale,” Peretti said. “That helps drive commerce for all parts of a unified company. I think it’s still possible.”
    Disclosure: Comcast’s NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.
    WATCH: Axios’ Sara Fischer on BuzzFeed’s continuing struggles

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    Historic UAW election picks reform leader who vows more aggressive approach to auto negotiations

    United Auto Workers members have ousted their president in the union’s first direct election, ushering in a new era for the labor group.
    The union’s new leader will be Shawn Fain, a member of the “UAW Members United” reform group and local leader for a Stellantis parts plant in Indiana.
    The union will enter negotiations with Detroit automakers later this year.

    Supporters wave signs during an address at the Time Warner Cable Arena in Charlotte, North Carolina, on September 5, 2012 on the second day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC).
    Mladin Antonov | AFP | Getty Images

    DETROIT – United Auto Workers members have ousted their president in the union’s first direct election, ushering in a new era for the prominent organized labor group ahead of negotiations later this year with the Detroit automakers.
    The union’s new leader will be Shawn Fain, a member of the “UAW Members United” reform group and local leader for a Stellantis parts plant in Indiana. He came out ahead in a runoff election by hundreds of votes over incumbent Ray Curry, who was appointed president by union leaders in 2021.

    Fain, in a statement Saturday, thanked UAW members who voted in the election. He also hailed the results as a historic change in direction for the embattled union, which he says will take a “more aggressive approach” with its employers.
    “This election was not just a race between two candidates, it was a referendum on the direction of the UAW. For too long, the UAW has been controlled by leadership with a top-down, company union philosophy who have been unwilling to confront management, and as a result, we’ve seen nothing but concessions, corruption, and plant closures,” Fain said.
    Curry, who previously protested the narrow election results, said in a statement that Fain will be sworn in on Sunday and that he is “committed to ensuring that this transition is smooth and without disruptions.”
    “I want to express my deep gratitude to all UAW staff, clerical support, leaders and most of all, our union’s active and retired members for the many years of support and solidarity. It has been the honor of my life to serve our great union,” Curry said.
    More than 141,500 ballots were cast in the runoff election that also included two other board positions, a 33% increase from last year’s direct election in which neither of the presidential candidates received 50% or more of the votes.

    The election was overseen by a federal monitor, who confirmed the results Saturday night. The results had been delayed several weeks due to a run-off election as well as the close final count.

    Shawn Fain, candidate for UAW president, is in a run-off election with incumbent Ray Curry for the union’s highest-ranking position.
    Jim West for UAW Members United

    Fain’s election adds to the UAW’s largest upheaval in leadership in decades, as a majority of the union’ s International Executive Board will be made up of first-time directors who are not part of the “Administration Caucus” that has controlled the union for more than 70 years.
    Fain and other members of his leadership slate ran on the promise of “No corruption. No concessions. No tiers.” The last being a reference to a tiered pay system implemented by the automakers during recent negotiations that members have asked to be removed.
    The shuffle follows a yearslong federal investigation that uncovered systemic corruption involving bribery, embezzlement, and other crimes among the top ranks of the UAW.
    Thirteen UAW officials were convicted as part of the probe, including two past presidents. As part of a settlement with the union in late 2020, a federal monitor was appointed to oversee the union and the organization held a direct election where each member has a vote, doing away with a weighted delegate process.
    For investors, UAW negotiations with the Detroit automakers are typically a short-term headwind every four years that result in higher costs. But this year’s negotiations are anticipated to be among the most contentious and important in recent memory.
    Fain has said the union will seek benefit gains for members, advocating for the return of a cost-of-living adjustment, or COLA, as well as raises and job security.
    The change in the UAW comes against the backdrop of a broader organized labor movement across the country, a pro-union president and an industry in the transition to all-electric vehicles.

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