More stories

  • in

    Stop panicking about inflation, BlackRock CEO tells investors — 'We're going to get through this'

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    The economic headwinds currently roiling the U.S. economy are fixable in the long-run, meaning investors can afford to relax a bit, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday.
    “A really famous person called me up, panicking, ‘what should I do, I’ve got to get out, I can’t stand it, I can’t stand it.’ And I said, ‘go on vacation,'” Fink said in an interview on “Mad Money.”

    The economic headwinds currently roiling the U.S. economy are fixable in the long-run, meaning investors can afford to relax a bit, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday.
    “A really famous person called me up, panicking, ‘what should I do, I’ve got to get out, I can’t stand it, I can’t stand it.’ And I said, ‘go on vacation,'” Fink said in an interview on “Mad Money.”

    “If you really can’t stand it, then sell it. … But the reality is, we’ve seen this. Inflation is going to be fixed over time,” he added, pointing to falling commodity prices as a sign of deflation.
    All the major averages gained on Wednesday, buoyed by a rally in tech stocks. The market’s gains follow its recovery on Tuesday, when investors betting that the market is bottoming picked up riskier assets like tech stocks. These stocks have seen massive sell-offs this year after the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates to tamp down inflation.
    When Cramer asked whether persistent inflation, the Fed’s rate increases and the Russia-Ukraine war is a threat to the overall health of the U.S. economy, Fink said that the headwinds are “business as usual” for long-term investors.
    “When I started my career, when you started your career, we had much higher inflation, much more problems in our country. We’re going to get through this,” he said.
    “Is there risk of a recession? Sure, but even if we’re in one, it’s going to be quite mild. The financial foundation of America is as strong today as ever,” he added.

    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.
    Disclaimer

    Questions for Cramer?Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC
    Want to take a deep dive into Cramer’s world? Hit him up!Mad Money Twitter – Jim Cramer Twitter – Facebook – Instagram
    Questions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected]

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    United Airlines posts profit on travel surge but holds back on flight growth

    United Airlines on Wednesday notched a key profit milestone in its pandemic recovery.
    It said it will scale back its growth plans through 2023.
    Airlines have reported strong demand as well as high costs for fuel and other expenses.

    United Airlines on Wednesday notched a key profit milestone in its pandemic recovery, but said it will scale back its growth plans through 2023.
    United reported its first quarterly profit — $329 million — since the Covid-19 pandemic began without the help of federal payroll aid, which expired almost a year ago.

    Unit revenues in the second quarter surged 24% over 2019 thanks to strong travel demand, even at sky-high fares, while unit costs, excluding fuel, rose 17% over the April-June period of three years ago. Fuel costs also soared.
    “It’s nice to return to profitability — but we must confront three risks that could grow over the next 6-18 months,” United CEO Scott Kirby said in an earnings release. “Industry-wide operational challenges that limit the system’s capacity, record fuel prices and the increasing possibility of a global recession are each real challenges that we are already addressing.”

    An aircraft takes off from O’Hare International Airport on January 18, 2022 in Chicago, Illinois.
    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    The Chicago-based airline estimated its third-quarter capacity would be 85% of the same quarter of 2019 and fourth-quarter capacity would be 90% restored compared with three years ago, before the pandemic hamstrung travel — a relatively conservative plan as it seeks to trim flying in order to become more reliable.
    Rival airlines Delta, Southwest, JetBlue and others, have also trimmed their schedules recently.
    Next year, United said it plans to expand flying no more than 8% over 2019, down from an earlier forecast for 20% growth.

    Shares were down nearly 7% in after-hours trading after the airline reported results.
    Here’s how United performed in the second quarter compared with what Wall Street expected, based on average estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

    Adjusted loss per share: $1.43 versus an expected $1.95.
    Total revenue: $12.11 billion versus expected $12.16 billion.

    United’s report comes a week after Delta reported a jump in second-quarter sales and forecast continued travel demand through the end of the peak summer season. American Airlines reports its second-quarter results and third-quarter forecast before the market opens on Thursday.
    Costs, including a jump in fuel prices over last year, continue to weigh on airlines’ bottom lines as they try to dig their way out of the pandemic.
    United said it expects unit costs excluding fuel to remain elevated through this year, up 16% to 17% in the third quarter and up about 14% in the fourth from three years earlier.
    United executives will hold an earnings call with analysts and media at 10:30 a.m. ET on Thursday.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Chipotle union files complaint with labor board after chain shutters Maine restaurant seeking to organize

    A union seeking to organize Chipotle workers filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board after the burrito chain said it would permanently close a unionizing location.
    Chipotle said it’s closing the Augusta, Maine, location because it could not fix staffing issues.

    A Chipotle Mexican Grill sign is seen in the Park Slope neighborhood in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.
    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    A union pushing to organize workers at Chipotle Mexican Grill has filed a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board after the burrito chain said it would permanently close a location that was seeking to unionize.
    In late June, an Augusta, Maine, Chipotle restaurant became the chain’s first outlet to file for a union election, seeking to organize under Chipotle United, which is not affiliated with any larger unions. The petition came after employees walked out of the restaurant earlier in the month in protest of working conditions and understaffing.

    Chipotle said the location has been closed to the public since June 17. Spokesperson Laurie Schalow denied that the permanent closure of the restaurant was due to the union petition. Instead, she said the company was unable to provide enough staffing for the location.
    “Our operational management reviewed this situation as it would any other restaurant with these unique staffing challenges. Chipotle respects our employees’ rights to organize under the National Labor Relations Act,” Schalow said in a statement to CNBC.
    But Chipotle United workers seeking to organize feel the move is retaliatory and held a rally on Tuesday evening to protest the store’s closure. Organizer Brandi McNease told CNBC the closure will only energize efforts.
    “All they are doing is fueling us,” McNease said.
    McNease said Chipotle United, which filed its complaint Tuesday, is mainly concerned with crew safety, food safety and short staffing.

    Jeffrey Neil Young, the attorney representing Chipotle United, told CNBC this is “union-busting 101.”
    “The closing was targeted not just at the Maine workers, but at Chipotle workers around the country who are contemplating forming a union. Organizing drives are currently underway in Michigan, New York, and elsewhere. Closing the store signals to other Chipotle workers that if they organize, they could be out of a job,” Young said in a written statement. He added that the union has asked the NLRB to seek an injunction to compel Chipotle to reopen the store and pay the workers back pay until the store reopens.
    Employees at a second Chipotle outlet filed for a union election in early July. Workers in that restaurant, which is located in Lansing, Michigan, are seeking to unionize under the International Brotherhood of Teamsters.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Marriott opens new Ritz Carlton in Manhattan as NYC tourism roars back

    Marriott this week will open its 108th Ritz Carlton property, a swanky new 500-foot hotel in the NoMad neighborhood of Manhattan.
    It’s a bet on the surge in luxury travel and the hopeful return of business travelers this fall.
    The Ritz’s debut comes as New York City sees a resurgence in tourists.

    The Ritz-Carlton in the NoMad neighborhood of New York City.
    Seema Mody | CNBC

    Marriott next week will open a swanky new Ritz Carlton hotel in Manhattan, marking a bet on the surge in luxury travel and the hopeful return of business travelers this fall.
    “It’s got 10,000 square feet of meeting space, a 7,000-square-foot spa, and four food and beverage outlets. I think it’s uniquely positioned to take care of that pivot from leisure travel to business travel,” Marriott CEO Tony Capuano told CNBC on Tuesday.

    The debut of the 108th Ritz Carlton comes as New York City is seeing a resurgence in tourists. The city saw tourism all but dry up in the early days of the pandemic when New York became one of the first epicenters of the outbreak. Now travelers are flocking back, and more developers are signing new deals.
    “2019 was the best year in New York’s history. You had over 66 million visitors to New York. There’s a sense we’ll get back to about 85% of that this year,” said Capuano.
    New York City hotel occupancy rates are currently the country’s third-strongest, at 83%, according to STR, a provider of hospitality analytics. The top two markets are Portland, Maine, and San Diego, California, with 85% and 84% occupancy levels, respectively.
    New York’s rebound marks a strong reversal from the past two years when beach destinations won out.
    “People just stayed away from downtown areas. They didn’t want to be around a lot of other people due to Covid … but that has reversed and I think we’re ready for the city vacation,” said Jan Frietag, Costar Group’s national director for hospitality analytics.

    As hotel demand rebounds and inflation hovers at a four-decade high, per-night pricing has skyrocketed. The average cost to check in to a hotel in New York City is nearly $300 a night, up 20% from 2019 levels, according to STR.

    Capuano said the higher rates are a sign that hotels are commanding pricing power — so long as they can navigate a challenging labor market.
    “I think it’s sustainable if we deliver on that service. Obviously, one of the big challenges that the entire travel and tourism sector faces is a labor challenge. We continue to do everything in our power to make sure our hotels are staffed, our teams are trained. If we’re going to continue to experience this strong pricing power, we’ve got to deliver on service,” Capuano said.
    The Ritz Carlton joins 11 other hotels that have opened in New York this year. Another 60 projects are in the pipeline with scheduled opening dates for 2022, according to STR.
    “That is the highest pipeline in the country for any market,” Freitag said.
    But hotel development continues to get tripped up by supply chain delays. The Ritz Carlton broke ground four years ago and is only now opening its doors, due in part to the pandemic and ongoing supply constraints that slowed down construction.
    “It’s really hard to open when you want to open due to the ongoing challenges related to supply chain issues,” Freitag said.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    The 53 fragile emerging economies

    For a fleeting moment, the protesters seemed to be having a good time. On July 9th some of the thousands of Sri Lankans who had taken to the streets to express frustration at the country’s economic crisis stormed into the president’s residence, where they cooked, took selfies and swam in the pool. Not long after, word came that the president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, had fled and would resign. His successor, Ranil Wickremesinghe, until recently the prime minister, inherits a mess. In April Sri Lanka declared that it could no longer service its foreign debt. Its government has sought aid from India and Russia to pay for essential imports. The economy is likely to shrink dramatically this year. In June annual inflation climbed to 55%. If the government is unable to stabilise the situation, the country may yet succumb to hyperinflation and further political chaos. The scenes in Sri Lanka may be a sign of things to come elsewhere. Debt loads across poorer countries stand at the highest levels in decades. Squeezed by the high cost of food and energy, a slowing global economy and a sharp increase in interest rates around the world, emerging economies are entering an era of intense macroeconomic pain. Some countries face years of difficult budget choices and weak growth. Others may sink into economic and political crisis. All told, 53 countries look most vulnerable: they either are judged by the imf to have unsustainable debts (or to be at high risk of having them); have defaulted on some debts already; or have bonds trading at distressed levels.Today’s bleak situation has an analogue in the desperate years of the 1980s and 1990s. Then, as now, a long period of robust growth and easy financial conditions was followed by leaner times and rising debt burdens. Macroeconomic shocks, rising inflation and, eventually, soaring interest rates in the rich world pushed many heavily indebted poor economies over the fiscal cliff. In August 1982 Mexico’s government announced that it could no longer service its foreign debt. More than three dozen countries fell behind on their debts before the year was out. By 1990 roughly 6% of the world’s public debt was in default.Much has changed since. Many governments opened up to trade, liberalised their economies and pursued more disciplined macroeconomic policy. Faster growth and better policy led to broad improvements in the fiscal health of emerging economies. By 2008, as rich countries sank into an intense financial crisis of their own, the level of public debt across poorer economies stood at just 33% of gdp.This allowed them to engage with the global financial system in a manner more like the rich world. Most emerging-market governments hoping to tap global capital used to have little choice but to borrow in a foreign currency, a risky step that could quickly transform home-currency depreciation into a full-blown crisis. Around the turn of the millennium, about 85% of new debt issued outside America, Europe and Japan was not denominated in the borrower’s currency. But by 2019 roughly 80% of outstanding bonds across the emerging world were denominated in local currency.As emerging economies’ financial systems matured, their governments became better able to tap domestic capital markets. The crises of the 1980s and 1990s also taught them the value of stockpiling foreign-exchange reserves; global reserves rose from less than 10% of world gdp in 2005 to 15% in 2020. It was thanks largely to these adjustments that most emerging markets weathered the slow growth of the 2010s and the shock of the pandemic. Only six governments defaulted in 2020—including Argentina (for the ninth time), Ecuador and Lebanon—equivalent to only 0.5% of outstanding global public debt. But this greater resilience also allowed governments to rack up more debt. By 2019 public debt stood at 54% of gdp across the emerging world. The pandemic then led to an explosion in borrowing. In 2020 emerging economies ran an average budget deficit of 9.3% of gdp, not far off the average deficit of 10.5% run by rich economies. In that year alone, the emerging-world debt ratio rose by ten percentage points. Borrowing stabilised in 2021 as economies rebounded. But the picture has grown darker this year. The jump in food and energy prices that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine is depressing growth across most of the world, increasing debt burdens. Rising import bills have drained hard currency from many vulnerable places—including Sri Lanka—eroding their capacity to service foreign debts. Conditions will probably deteriorate as rich-world central banks continue to raise interest rates. Hawkish turns by the Federal Reserve tend to diminish risk appetite and draw capital out of the emerging world, leaving overextended borrowers high and dry.And Fed policy has not been this hawkish for some time. The federal-funds rate is expected to approach 3.5% by the end of this year, which, along with the unwinding of some recent asset purchases, would constitute the Fed’s sharpest tightening since the early 1980s. The emerging world has thus experienced net capital outflows every month since March, according to the Institute of International Finance, an industry group. The dollar has risen by over 12% against a basket of currencies since the start of the year, and is up by far more against many emerging-market currencies. As funding conditions have worsened, borrowing costs for some governments have soared. About a quarter of the low- and middle-income issuers of debt face yield spreads over American Treasuries of ten percentage points or more—a level considered distressed (see chart 1).The combination of heavy debt burdens, slowing global growth and tightening financial conditions will be more than some governments can bear. One set of potential victims comprises the poorest economies, which have been less able to borrow in relatively safe ways (in their own currencies, for example) and which, because of the pandemic, were already near the brink. Among 73 low-income countries eligible for debt relief under a g20 initiative, eight carry public-debt loads which the imf has deemed to be unsustainable, and another 30 are at high risk of falling into such a situation. Debt problems in these countries pose little threat to the global economy; together, their gdp is roughly equivalent to that of Belgium. Yet they are home to nearly 500m people, whose fates depend on whether their governments can afford to invest in basic infrastructure and public services.Then there are the troubled middle-income economies in the mould of Sri Lanka, which are more integrated into the global financial system, and which through policy missteps and bad luck have found themselves exposed. Overall, 15 countries are either in default or have sovereign bonds trading at distressed levels. They include Egypt, El Salvador, Pakistan and Tunisia. More middle-income countries may be better insulated against deteriorating global conditions than they were in the past. Still, the imf reckons that about 16% of emerging-market public debt is denominated in foreign currencies. And the places that are more insulated have in many cases become so by funding borrowing through local banks. That, however, raises the possibility that any credit stress experienced by a government also feeds through to its banking system, which could in turn impair lending or even lead to outright crisis. Across the emerging world, reckons the imf, the share of public debt held by domestic banks has climbed over the past two decades to about 17% of gdp, more than twice the level in rich economies. Sovereign-debt holdings as a share of total bank assets stand at 26% in Brazil and 29% in India, and above 40% in Egypt and Pakistan.Just how big this group eventually gets, and how serious the spillovers to the rest of the world, depends on whether bigger economies, like Brazil and Turkey, are ensnared by crisis. Both have muddled through so far, despite some vulnerabilities, but poor policy could push them towards the brink.As a commodity exporter, Brazil has benefited from higher food and energy prices. Its hefty pile of foreign-exchange reserves has so far reassured markets. The president, Jair Bolsonaro, trails in the polls ahead of an election due in October, though, and has loosened the country’s purse strings in an attempt to win support, adding to the country’s heavy debt load. He has also suggested that he may not obey voters should they opt to toss him out. If he spooks markets, an outflow of capital could at the very least leave the economy facing a severe fiscal crunch and recession.Turkey has a dynamic economy and a modest level of public debt. But it owes a lot to foreigners relative to its available currency reserves. And its president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, insists that the central bank keeps interest rates unduly low in the face of soaring inflation—which has climbed to near 80%. The lira has crashed in value over the past four years. Without a policy change, the government could face a balance-of-payments crisis.Neither of the world’s largest emerging markets, China and India, is at high risk of an external crisis. Both have intimidating piles of foreign-exchange reserves. China’s government wields close control over both capital flows and the domestic financial system, which should allow it to contain panic, while India’s is only minimally reliant on foreign funding. Both, however, carry enormous public-debt loads by historical standards. And both matter enough to the global economy that a period of deleveraging that depressed growth and investment could have big knock-on effects.Taken together, then, 53 low- and middle-income countries are already experiencing debt troubles, or are at high risk of doing so. Their economic size is modest—their combined output amounts to 5% of world gdp—but they are home to 1.4bn people, or 18% of the world’s population (see chart 2). And worryingly, there are few options available to ward off crisis. An end to the war in Ukraine would help most, but that seems a distant prospect. A growth rebound in China or elsewhere would be a double-edged sword: it would boost growth but also contribute to inflation, leading to further rich-world rate rises. Debt relief would help. Roughly a third of the massive debts owed by middle-income economies in the 1980s was forgiven under a plan put together by Nicholas Brady, then America’s Treasury secretary, in 1989. Additional relief was provided to 37 very poor countries through an initiative organised by the imf and World Bank in 1996. The g20 took similar steps during the pandemic, first with the Debt Service Suspension Initiative, through which more than 70 countries were eligible to defer debt payments, and then through the Common Framework, which was intended to provide a blueprint for broader relief.Yet the framework has failed to gain traction. Only three countries have so far sought help under it, and none has completed the process. Prospects for improving the scheme, or for reaching agreement on debt relief, have been dimmed by the fact that lending by Paris Club countries—rich economies that have agreed to co-operate in dealing with unsustainable debts—has become less important, while loans from private creditors and big emerging markets, China in particular, have become more so. In 2006 Paris Club economies and multilateral bodies accounted for more than 80% of poor countries’ foreign obligations. Today they account for less than 60% of poor-country debt. Nearly a fifth is owed to China alone.Indeed, work by Sebastian Horn and Christoph Trebesch of the Kiel Institute and Carmen Reinhart of Harvard University helps illustrate how massive and murky a force Chinese lending has become. They reckon that almost half of China’s lending abroad is unreported, such that their estimates of China’s claims on foreign governments probably understate the true figures. Even so, they reckon that from 1998 to 2018 China’s foreign lending, the bulk of which has gone to low- and middle-income economies, rose from almost nothing to the equivalent of nearly 2% of world gdp. And among the 50 economies most in hock to China, obligations to Chinese institutions amount to 15% of gdp on average, or about 40% of external debt.But more than a third of the world’s most debt-distressed countries also number among those most indebted to Chinese lenders. As of 2017, the debt owed to China by Kenya amounted to 10% of the latter’s gdp, and by Laos a staggering 28%. China is also a big creditor of Sri Lanka (which owed it the equivalent of 8% of gdp in 2017) and Pakistan (9%). Many indebted economies are loth to ask for debt relief from China, fearing the wrath of its leadership or a loss of access to future funding, and Chinese institutions have tended to prefer reprofiling debts to outright relief. Deteriorating relations between China and the West, meanwhile, have reduced the scope for co-operation in handling debt problems. In the 1980s, emerging-market defaults on loans owed to American banks pushed some financial institutions to the brink of insolvency. Residents of rich economies may take some comfort from the fact that their lenders are less exposed today. But for the billion or so people living in countries at risk of distress, the pain will be only too drawn out, both as fiscal woes infect local banks and as negotiations over external debt prove intractable. ■ More

  • in

    Bath & Body Works lowers outlook, citing consumer caution during high inflation

    Bath & Body Works lowered its second-quarter and full-year sales guidance.
    The company cited inflation and a more difficult macroeconomic environment.
    Shares bounced back Wednesday afternoon after a sharp decline in the morning.

    Bath & and Body Works entrance.
    Jeff Greenberg | Getty Images

    Shares of Bath & Body Works initially fell Wednesday after the company lowered its sales and earnings outlook, citing a more challenging macroeconomic environment.
    But the stock clawed its way into positive territory later in the day, closing up 3% at $31.10.

    “Our data indicates that customers, particularly lower income customers, have become more cost conscious and are limiting purchases,” the company said in a statement.
    For the second quarter, the home fragrance and personal care retailer said it now expects sales to be down 6% to 7% from the same time last year. For the full year, it now expects sales to be down mid- to high-single digits from 2021.
    Previously, Bath & Body had forecast second-quarter and full-year sales to grow in the low single digits from a year ago.
    Bath & Body Works also said it now expect second-quarter earnings from continuing operations to be 40 to 42 cents per share, down from its previous forecast of 60 to 65 cents a share.
    The company said it sought to address the more cautious spending by increasing sales and promotions, but noted that the moves have impacted its margins.

    Bath & Body Works is scheduled to report its second-quarter earnings on August 17.
    Analysts at Raymond James said Wednesday they were remaining bullish on the stock.
    “We continue to rate shares Strong Buy as we believe they already reflect the impact of a more significant slowdown, while the company’s solid innovation pipeline and initiatives such as the loyalty program, as well as margin pressure alleviating, position the company well for medium- to long-term growth,” they wrote.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    FaZe Clan goes public in $725 million SPAC, but Gen Z creator economy stock sinks in debut

    EVOLVE GLOBAL SUMMIT 2022
    Evolve Events

    FaZe Clan is an online media company made up of 93 members, consisting primarily of esports competitors and content creators, plus a handful of celebrities like Snoop Dogg, who also serves on the company’s board of directors.
    FaZe Clan, which started in 2010 with gamers posting videos on Youtube, was ranked the fourth-most-valuable esports company by Forbes.
    Many planned SPAC deals remain on hold or were cancelled, and many companies that went public using a SPAC merger in the past few years have performed poorly for investors.
    FAZE shares sank in their debut on Wednesday, finishing down nearly 25%.

    Digital entertainment and esports brand FaZe Clan began trading on the Nasdaq Wednesday after completing a SPAC merger in a deal valued at $725 million, a big step for creator economy companies to be publicly traded.
    FaZe Clan is an online media company made up of 93 members, consisting primarily of esports competitors and content creators, plus a handful of celebrities like Snoop Dogg. FaZe Clan’s social creators have a combined following of over 500 million across multiple platforms such as YouTube, TikTok and Twitch. FaZe Clan was also ranked the fourth-most-valuable esports company by Forbes.

    The company began trading on the Nasdaq under the ticker FAZE. FAZE shares sank in their debut on Wednesday, finishing their first day of trading down nearly 25%.
    A SPAC, or special purpose acquisition company, purchases an existing private business and takes it to public markets. SPACs gained in popularity during the pandemic as an alternative to the traditional initial public offering. However, the SPAC market has dried up, many planned deals remain on hold or were canceled, and many companies that went public using a SPAC merger in the past few years have performed extremely poorly, losing over half their value in 2022 through the first half of the year.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Despite the current market conditions and the threat of new SPAC regulation, FaZe Clan CEO Lee Trink said he feels confident going public via a SPAC was the right decision for his company. 
    “I understand why other companies have been criticized for going public via the SPAC vehicle. But for us, it really fits,” Trink said.
    FaZe Clan was founded in 2010 by a group that started posting gameplay videos on YouTube. The company then grew in membership and engagement, branching off into new vehicles such as esports where players take part in video game competitions. Trink, who was previously president of Capitol Records, joined the company in 2018 seeing an opportunity in a brand focused on younger audiences.

    “We think we’re the first Gen Z native brand to go public; we’re certainly the first creator-based brand to go public,” Trink said.
    FaZe Clan announced the plan for a SPAC merger last October, marking the deal at $1 billion. Nine months later, the deal is now worth $725 million.
    “The initial plan was to go public in the first quarter of this year. That obviously didn’t happen,” said Tobias Seck, business analyst with The Esports Observer. 
    In March, FaZe Clan received a $20 million bridge loan from B. Riley Principal Commercial Capital, the special purpose acquisition company with which it is merging.
    “​​It seems to be their best attempt at securing capital, especially in the rather rough economic times we’re currently in,” Seck said. “It’s obviously still nascent, and most of the organizations are still trying to figure out how to actually make money,” he added.
    In an amended June filing related to the deal, the company reported estimated 2021 revenue of roughly $50 million and a forecast for $90 million in revenue in 2022, but a wider adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) loss than it had previously forecast, of $19 million.
    FaZe Clan plans to bring on more creators and help them grow their own community, an alternative to reliance on advertising revenue from existing social media brands.
    “FaZe Clan will fund investments and we will create the product and we’ll own a bigger piece of the upside. That’s the future of the creator economy,” Trink said.
    Trink projects that the esports business will be a smaller part of FaZe Clan’s revenue in the future. Upcoming projects may include expanding a gambling business with DraftKings, a delivery-only dining option similar to fellow influencer MrBeast’s Burger, and play-to-earn gaming which allows streamers to be paid.
    FaZe Clan is expected to raise nearly $60 million in proceeds from the SPAC deal, according to market sources familiar with the deal, with current stockholders continuing to own 77% of the company after going public.
    The creator economy is a growing force in the markets. The global market size is estimated to be over $13 billion, according to Statista, and is primarily focused on a younger generation.
    FaZe Clan prides itself on capturing a younger audience, reporting that 80% is made up of 13 to 34-year-olds. 
    “Gen-Z is not about your parents’ brands. Gen-Z wants connectivity and proximity,” Trink said. “We are the translators and what we do know is how to reach this audience,” he added. More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Netflix, Las Vegas Sands, Bath & Body Works and more

    The Netflix logo is seen on their office in Hollywood, California.
    Lucy Nicholson | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Netflix — Shares of the streaming company popped 7.4% a day after Netflix posted a smaller-than-expected subscriber loss in the recent quarter. Netflix reported a beat on earnings but a miss on revenue.

    Casino stocks — Shares of Las Vegas Sands and Wynn Resorts rose 4.4% and 4%, respectively. The action followed a report from Reuters that Macau will reopen casinos on Saturday as it gradually eases back on Covid restrictions.
    Bath & Body Works — Bath & Body Works’ shares slipped more than 1% after the personal care retailer trimmed its guidance for the second quarter and full year. The company cited macroeconomic issues among the reason for the cut.
    Baker Hughes — Shares plunged more than 8% after the oilfield services company reported disappointing second-quarter earnings. Baker Hughes reported earnings of 11 cents per share, which is half of what analysts were expecting, according to consensus estimates from Refinitiv.
    Biogen —  Shares of the biopharmaceutical company fell 5.8% despite the company reporting a beat on quarterly earnings and revenue. Biogen said it faces increasing generic and biosimilar competition for its Tecfidera and Rituxan drugs.
    Merck — Merck shares slipped 2.9% after the company’s cancer therapy drug did not meet its goal in a late-stage trial in patients with head and neck cancer.

    Nasdaq — Shares of the exchange operator jumped 6.1% on the back of an earnings beat on the top and bottom lines. Nasdaq reported earnings of $2.07 per share on revenue of $893 million.
    J.B. Hunt Transport Services — Shares of J.B. Hunt dipped about 0.8% despite a stronger-than-expected report for the recent quarter. The company’s chief operating officer said that the labor and equipment markets remain “challenging.” The transportation company reported $2.42 in earnings per share on $3.84 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had penciled in $2.35 in earnings per share on $3.60 billion of revenue.
    Elevance Health — Elevance shares tumbled 7.6% despite a beat on earnings and revenue in the recent quarter. The company, formerly known as Anthem, also raised its full-year guidance.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More