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    Anita Alvarez loses consciousness in pool at world championships in Budapest

    American artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez was saved from drowning by her coach Andrea Fuentes at the world championships in Budapest.
    Spaniard Fuentes, a four-time Olympic medalist in synchronized swimming, jumped into the pool after she saw Alvarez sink to the bottom at the end of her solo free final routine.
    She was given medical attention beside the pool before being taken away on a stretcher.

    A member of Team USA (R) swims to recover USA’s Anita Alvarez (L), from the bottom of the pool.
    Oli Scarff | Afp | Getty Images

    American artistic swimmer Anita Alvarez was in danger of drowning after losing consciousness in the pool at the world championships in Budapest before being rescued by her coach Andrea Fuentes.
    Spaniard Fuentes, a four-time Olympic medalist in synchronized swimming, jumped into the pool after she saw Alvarez sink to the bottom at the end of her solo free final routine.

    She was given medical attention beside the pool before being taken away on a stretcher.
    It was the second time Fuentes has had to rescue Alvarez after she leapt into the pool during an Olympic qualification event last year and pulled her to safety along with the American’s swim partner Lindi Schroeder.

    USA’s Anita Alvarez is recovered from the bottom of the pool by a team member after the incident.
    Oli Scarff | Afp | Getty Images

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    “Anita is much better, she is already at her best. It was a good scare, to be honest,” Fuentes told Spanish newspaper Marca.
    “I jumped into the water again because I saw that no one, no lifeguard, was jumping in. I got a little scared because she wasn’t breathing, but now she’s fine. She has to rest.”
    In a statement on the US Artistic Swimming Instagram page, Fuentes said 25-year-old Alvarez would be assessed by doctors on Thursday before a decision was made on her participation in Friday’s team event.

    She was given medical attention beside the pool before being taken away on a stretcher.
    Peter Kohalmi | Afp | Getty Images

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    United Airlines will cut 12% of domestic Newark flights to help tame delays

    United will cut about 50 flights a day out of Newark Liberty International Airport to help reduce delays.
    United has blamed the delays on airport construction and capacity constraints.
    The cuts are solely for domestic routes, starting July 1.

    A United Airlines passenger airplane is landing on Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, New Jersey, on January 19, 2022.
    Tayfun Coskun | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    United Airlines will cut about 50 daily flights from Newark Liberty International Airport next month in an effort to reduce delays that have disrupted travelers’ plans this year.
    The cuts amount to about 12% of United’s schedule in its New Jersey hub and apply solely to domestic flights, starting July 1.

    United executives have said the delays are the result of capacity constraints, airport construction and air traffic control — not airline staffing shortfalls.
    From the start of the year through mid-June, 31% of flights at Newark were delayed, the second-worst rate in the country behind Chicago Midway, according to flight-tracking site FlightAware.
    Jon Roitman, United’s executive vice president and COO told staff in a note Thursday that “after the last few weeks of irregular operations in Newark, caused by many factors including airport construction, we reached out to the FAA and received a waiver allowing us to temporarily adjust our schedule there for the remainder of the summer.”
    United said it is currently not ending service to any cities, but will reduce the number of flights it operates to certain markets.
    “Even though we have the planes, pilots, crews, and staff to support our Newark schedule, this waiver will allow us to remove about 50 daily departures which should help minimize excessive delays and improve on-time performance – not only for our customers, but for everyone flying through Newark,” he wrote.

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    Media executives say their companies can finally weather a recession

    Media executives are hopeful they’ve learned lessons and streamlined their businesses to weather a potential recession.
    Media job losses have spiked in each of the last three recessions.
    The scope of any advertising pullback is still unknown, although one executive told CNBC a 20% retreat is possible by year-end.

    Delegates wait in line at Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, Cannes, France, June 2019
    Cannes Lions

    While media executives are meeting with advertising leaders this week over glasses of rose at the annual Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity, they can’t help but talk about the disconnect between hanging out with celebrities on yachts and the creeping feeling that a recession is around the corner.
    “It feels like a party here,” NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shell said to CNBC’s Julia Boorstin from Cannes on Wednesday. “I don’t know if that’s because most of you are out for the first time in a long time or because we’re in the south of France in June, but no, it doesn’t feel like a down market.”

    But Shell did acknowledge there are warning signs, albeit complicated ones. “The scatter market has weakened a little bit,” he said, referring to the real-time cost of TV commercials, rather than the preset “upfront” market. “It’s very complicated because there’s so many things going on.”
    Macroeconomic downturns have historically led to a spike in layoffs throughout the media industry. With recession odds on the rise and executives preparing for an advertising revenue pullback in the second half of the year, media companies aren’t laying off people or furloughing employees — at least, not yet. Instead, industry leaders feel their companies are finally lean and balanced enough to weather an advertising downturn without sacrificing profit or contracting their businesses.
    “Our focus has been to build a really resilient, adaptable digital media company,” BuzzFeed Chief Executive Jonah Peretti said earlier this month. “We thrive amid volatility. We’ve built an agile, diversified business model.”

    Jonah Peretti, founder and CEO of Buzzfeed; co-founder of the Huffington Post
    Courtsy of Ebru Yildiz/NPR

    “While an economic downturn may affect the media advertising market, we’re on track to achieve our business growth goals following a milestone year of profitability,” said Roger Lynch, CEO of Conde Nast. The company, which publishes The New Yorker and Vogue, turned a profit last year after many years of losing money.
    Part of why smaller digital media companies feel prepared for a recession is they’ve already laid off hundreds of employees in the past few years, stemming from acquisitions and a desire to shed costs. BuzzFeed announced more layoffs just a few months ago.

    Still, many digital media companies make the bulk of their money from advertising — Conde Nast and BuzzFeed included. And not everyone is optimistic that media companies are out of the woods. Since going public, BuzzFeed shares have fallen more than 80%. BuzzFeed took in $48.7 million in advertising revenue during the first quarter, about 53% of total sales.
    If companies are looking to save money on marketing, there’s little they can do to avoid taking it on the chin, Graydon Carter, founder of subscription-based media company Air Mail and former longtime editor of Conde Nast’s Vanity Fair, said in an interview.
    “If you are in the business of programmatic advertising, which most digital media companies are, you’ll suffer at some point when the economy turns. It’s simply out of your hands,” Carter said. “I think [a downturn] will be brutal and possibly long.”

    Media layoffs in recessions

    The last three recessions – the 2020 Covid-19 pullback, the 2007-09 financial crisis and the 2001 dot-com bubble bust – have all led to job loss spikes among media companies, many of which have historically lacked the balance sheets to shrug off temporary downturns in advertising. While the media industry has contracted over the past two decades, 2001, 2008 and 2020 were the three biggest years for job losses, according to data from Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

    It’s natural for executives to feel optimistic about their company’s prospects. But their sense of “this time will be different” isn’t without merit, said Alex Michael, co-head of Liontree Growth, which specializes in working with emerging media companies. This is especially true for smaller digital media companies, including newspaper and magazine owners, which have had diversify to subscriptions, e-commerce, events and other products to wean themselves off ad revenue.
    “In the past, these businesses both didn’t have their models right and weren’t fully matured,” Michael said. “Now they’ve gone through waves of consolidation. There absolutely has been streamlining and optimization. Many of the remaining companies now have endemic audiences who will open their wallets in a bunch of different ways.”

    How bad could it be?

    There are mixed feelings among industry participants about how big of a pullback media companies may see in advertising revenue.
    TikTok’s head of global business solutions, Blake Chandlee, said he’s heard there’s been about a 2% to 6% contraction in advertising spend so far, though he notes TikTok hasn’t seen it.
    “I’ve talked to some other folks, and I think there are some other folks feeling it,” Chandlee said in an interview. “We’re not seeing the headwinds that others are seeing.”
    Read more: TikTok exec: We’re an entertainment platform, not a social media network
    Still, others are being cautious. Snap, the owner of Snapchat, said last month the “macroeconomic environment has deteriorated further and faster than anticipated,” causing its shares to fall 40% in a day. Meta and Twitter have instituted partial hiring freezes. Digital media companies Insider and Vice Media are reportedly slowing down hiring.
    One digital media executive told CNBC while a smaller slowdown may have already happened, a 20% advertising revenue cutback by year-end isn’t out of the question.

    Getting the model right

    The key to weathering a recession is having a product that resonates with a specific audience, said Liontree Growth’s Michael. Digital media companies and magazines that have had too wide an aperture haven’t been able to compete during economic lulls because brands haven’t had passionate user bases.
    “Advertisers have asked, what do you stand for?” said Michael. “What are they selling against?”
    There’s also been a “loosening” among ad buyers willing to move money away from Facebook and Google on moral grounds, said Justin Smith, former CEO of Bloomberg Media.
    Smith is in the process of establishing Semafor, a new media start-up for global news. While Google and Facebook have dominated the digital ad space for more than a decade, there’s a growing movement among some advertisers who are diversifying ad spend away from the tech giants to support the news industry in the face of Big Tech privacy violations and disinformation.
    “It used to be that ad marketers really shunned the news media, especially with digital targeting, because of brand safety. The news was tied closely with negativity, war and famine,” said Smith. “Now you’re seeing the opposite of that — brand bravery. The only true antidote to misinformation is human intervention. This is a multi-hundred-billion-dollar pool. Even a small loosening of that group is big, big money.”
    Smith isn’t concerned with launching Semafor into a potential recession. He said while Semafor aims to appeal to college graduates around the globe, a wider audience than niche sites with passionate audiences, even general interest publications are in a better place now than they were 10 or 15 years ago. He credits the wide adoption of subscription.
    “If you look at the last five years in particular, whether it was the pandemic, or the fascination with Trump, or the rise of Spotify and Netflix, there’s been a sea change with subscription,” said Smith. “There’s example after example of cross-category consumer adoption for subscription models for news.”
    Smith implemented a consumer paywall for Bloomberg News’ website three years ago. Today, more than 400,000 people pay for access. Semafor, which will launch this fall, will start as a free, ad-supported service and will stay that way for “six, 12, maybe 18 months,” before installing a paywall. Some articles will always remain free, Smith said, similar to many other digital news services.
    Smith also said the industry has morphed in ways to better connect audience to reporters, even through down times. Smith is promoting this enhanced bond by directly staffing talent agents, who will be tasked with pairing journalists on products and events outside of Semafor’s core business to broaden their reach.
    “The media industry is in better shape than it was a decade ago,” Smith said. “Strategies are more sensible. Digital adoption is more ubiquitous. Models are clearer. Revenue streams are more diverse. Executives are more experienced. Even though we’re probably heading into a global recession, I do think the media business is going to withstand some of the downward pressure in a stronger way than it has in the past.”
    Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of CNBC.
    WATCH: TikTok ad chief Blake Chandlee speaks from Cannes

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Accenture, Darden Restaurants, FactSet and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Accenture (ACN) – The consulting firm’s shares fell 3.3% in the premarket after its quarterly revenue beat forecasts but earnings were impacted by the cost of its Russia exit. Accenture raised its full-year revenue forecast but cut the top end of its projected earnings range due to a greater-than-expected negative impact from foreign exchange.

    Darden Restaurants (DRI) – The parent of Olive Garden and other restaurant chains reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. It also increased its quarterly dividend by 10% and authorized a new $1 billion share repurchase program. Darden added 3.4% in premarket trading.
    FactSet (FDS) – The financial information provider beat top and bottom-line estimates for its latest quarter. It also backed its prior full-year guidance, with growth projected at the upper end of its projected range.
    Rite Aid (RAD) – Rite Aid shares jumped 4.3% in premarket action after reporting better-than-expected revenue and a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss.
    KB Home (KBH) – KB Home reported quarterly earnings of $2.32 per share, beating the $2.03 consensus estimate, and the home builder’s revenue also came in above analyst forecasts. However, it said rising interest rates and higher prices were beginning to have a negative impact on sales growth. KB Home jumped 3% in premarket trading.
    Occidental Petroleum (OXY) – Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) bought an additional 9.6 million shares of Occidental Petroleum, raising its stake in the energy producer to 16.3%. Occidental rallied 2.9% in premarket action.

    Steelcase (SCS) – Steelcase shares rose 3.1% in premarket trading after the office furniture maker reported better-than-expected quarterly results. Higher prices and increased demand helped offset rising costs stemming in part from supply chain difficulties.
    WeWork (WE) – The office-sharing company’s stock rose 3.3% in the premarket after Credit Suisse initiated coverage of the stock with an “outperform” rating. Credit Suisse feels WeWork is among the companies that will benefit from the increase in hybrid work and co-working, as well as demographic trends.
    Snowflake (SNOW) – The cloud computing company’s stock was upgraded to “overweight” from “neutral” at J.P. Morgan Securities, which pointed to an attractive valuation as well as extremely high satisfaction levels among Snowflake customers. Snowflake surged 6.1% in premarket trading.
    Revlon (REV) – Revlon slid 5.7% in the premarket, signaling a possible end to the three-day win streak that followed its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing last week. The cosmetics maker’s shares have surged more than fourfold over the past 3 sessions.

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    Olive Garden's parent company Darden beats earnings estimates as sales jump

    Darden Restaurants on Thursday reported quarterly earnings and revenue that beat analysts’ expectations.
    The company’s combined same-store sales climbed 11.7%, fueled in part by the rebound of its fine-dining business.
    In the face of inflation and other economic uncertainty, Olive Garden’s parent company issued a mixed forecast for fiscal 2023.

    An Olive Garden restaurant in Silverdale. Darden Restaurants, Inc. which owns Olive Garden and other restaurant chains is scheduled to report its fourth-quarter 2022 earnings on June 23.
    Toby Scott | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Darden Restaurants’ quarterly earnings and revenue beat analysts’ expectations, shaking off inflationary pressures as diners returned to LongHorn Steakhouse and The Capital Grille.
    In the face of higher costs and economic uncertainty, Olive Garden’s parent company issued a mixed forecast for fiscal 2023.

    Shares of the company were up 5% in premarket trading on Thursday.
    Here’s what the company reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: $2.24 vs. $2.21 expected
    Revenue: $2.6 billion vs. $2.54 billion expected

    Darden reported fiscal fourth-quarter net income of $281.7 million, or $2.24 per share, down from $368.5 million, or $2.78 per share, a year earlier. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting earnings per share of $2.21.
    Net sales rose 14.2% to $2.6 billion, topping expectations for $2.54 billion. Across the company’s chains, same-store sales climbed 11.7%, fueled by the rebound of its fine-dining business.
    Its fine-dining restaurants, which include The Capital Grille and Eddie V’s, reported same-store sales growth of 34.5%. The segment was hardest hit by the pandemic but its sales surpassed 2019 levels in the fiscal fourth quarter.

    Olive Garden, which accounts for nearly half of Darden’s revenue, saw its same-store sales rise just 6.5% in the quarter. Wall Street was expecting same-store sales growth of 7.2% for the Italian-inspired chain, according to StreetAccount estimates.
    Strong demand for LongHorn Steakhouse helped make up the difference. The steak restaurant chain reported same-store sales growth of 10.6%, beating analysts’ estimates of 5.6%.
    For its fiscal 2023, Darden is expecting earnings per share from continuing operations of $7.40 to $8, falling short of analysts’ expectations of $8.11. The company is assuming that inflation will rise 6% in the new fiscal year. Its revenue outlook of $10.2 billion to $10.4 billion is in line with Wall Street’s estimates for $10.22 billion.
    Darden is also expecting same-store sales growth of 4% to 6% and 50 to 60 new restaurant openings in fiscal 2023.
    The company’s board authorized a new $1 billion share buyback program. It does not have an expiration date.

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    The retail industry is facing a potential wave of bankruptcies – here's why

    Last week, Revlon filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, making it the first household consumer-facing name to do so in months.
    Now the questions are: Which retailer will be next, and how soon?
    After a nearly two-year reprieve, the retail industry could start seeing an increase in bankruptcies later this year, experts say.

    Revlon makeup products are displayed at a CVS store on August 9, 2018 in Sausalito, California.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    The retail industry is up against a potential wave of bankruptcies following a monthslong slowdown in restructuring activity.
    There could be an increase in distressed retailers beginning later this year, experts say, as ballooning prices dent demand for certain goods, stores contend with bloated inventory levels and a potential recession looms.

    Last week, 90-year-old cosmetics giant Revlon filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, making it the first household consumer-facing name to do so in months.
    Now the questions are: Which retailer will be next? And how soon?
    “Retail is in flux,” said Perry Mandarino, co-head of investment banking and head of corporate restructuring at B. Riley Securities. “And within the next five years, the landscape will be much different than it is today.”
    The industry had seen a dramatic pullback in restructurings in 2021 and early 2022 as companies — including those that had been on so-called bankruptcy watch lists — received relief from fiscal stimulus that offered cash infusions to businesses and stimulus dollars to consumers. The pause followed a flood of distress in 2020, near the onset of the pandemic, as dozens of retailers including J.C. Penney, Brooks Brothers, J. Crew and Neiman Marcus headed to bankruptcy court.
    Including Revlon’s filing, there have been just four retail bankruptcies so far this year, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. That’s the lowest number the firm has tracked in at least 12 years.

    It’s not exactly clear when that tally could begin to grow, but restructuring experts say they’re preparing for more trouble across the industry as the all-important holiday season approaches.
    An analysis by Fitch Ratings shows that the consumer and retail companies most in danger of default include mattress maker Serta Simmons, cosmetics line Anastasia Beverly Hills, skin-care marketing company Rodan & Fields, Billabong owner Boardriders, men’s suit chain Men’s Wearhouse, supplements marketing company Isagenix International and sportswear manufacturer Outerstuff.
    “We have potentially a perfect storm brewing,” said Sally Henry, a professor of law at Texas Tech Law School and former partner at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see an uptick in retail bankruptcies.”
    Still, advisors who have worked on retail bankruptcies in recent years believe, for the most part, that any looming distress in the industry shouldn’t be as intense as the massive shakeout in 2020. Instead, bankruptcies could be more spread out, they said.
    “What you saw in 2020 was a tremendous amount of restructuring activity getting pulled forward,” said Spencer Ware, managing director and retail practice leader at Riveron, an advisory firm. “Then we got from 2020 through today with a tremendous amount of stimulus. What’s going to happen now? It’s a bit of a mixed bag.”
    A split in consumer behavior could make things more unpredictable. Americans with lower incomes have been particularly pinched by inflation while wealthier consumers keep splurging on luxury goods.
    “We’re at a moment now we’re predicting what will happen next is far more complicated,” said Steve Zelin, partner and global head of the restructuring and special situations group at PJT Partners. “There are many more variables.”

    The clearance rack at T.J. Maxx clothing store in Annapolis, Maryland, on May 16, 2022, as Americans brace for summer sticker shock as inflation continues to grow.
    Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

    The latest retail sales data shows where consumers are pulling back the most. Advance retail and food service spending fell 0.3% in May versus the prior month, the Commerce Department reported last week. Furniture and home furnishings retailers, electronics and appliances stores, and health- and personal-care chains all saw month-over-month declines.
    “Consumers aren’t just buying less stuff, they are shopping less, which means a loss of the impulse-shopping moments that are critical to retail growth,” said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry advisor at NPD Group, a market research firm.
    In the first three months of 2022, consumers bought 6% fewer items at retail than they did in the first quarter of 2021, NPD Group said in a survey issued in late May. More than 8 in 10 U.S consumers said they planned to make further changes to pull back on their spending in the next three to six months, it said.

    A race to stay ahead of rising rates

    The threat of future rate increases — after the Federal Reserve last week raised benchmark interest rates three-quarters of a percentage point in its most aggressive hike since 1994 — has prompted retailers looking to tap the debt markets to accelerate those plans.
    Riveron’s Ware said businesses had been racing to get in front of future rate increases. Some bought back debt or attempted to push out maturities. For example, department store chain Macy’s in March said it completed refinancing $850 million in bonds that were coming due in the next two years.
    More recently, however, Ware said he’s noticed that refinancing activity over the past 12 months has begun to slow, with a bigger number of deals getting canceled or pulled. “It seems the window is closing for more difficult refinancing,” Ware said.
    In late 2020, Revlon narrowly escaped bankruptcy by persuading bondholders to extend its maturing debt. But a little less than two years later, the company succumbed to a heavy debt load and supply chain issues that prevented it from fulfilling all of its orders.
    As has always been the case, retailers that are grappling with the heaviest debt loads are going to be the most vulnerable to bankruptcy, said David Berliner, chief of BDO’s business restructuring and turnaround practice.
    More distress could start to appear after the upcoming back-to-school shopping season, he added, after families return from long-awaited summer vacations and may be forced to tighten the belt.
    A survey by UBS earlier this month found only about 39% of U.S. consumers said they plan to spend more money on the back-to-school season this year relative to the prior year, down from the number of people who said the same in 2021.
    “Consumers are getting more stingy with their wallets,” Berliner said. “There are going to be the winners and losers like we always see. I’m just not sure yet how soon it’s going to happen.”
    Berliner said he has been keeping a close watch on consumer debt levels, which are hovering near all-time highs.
    “Consumers have been willing to spend on credit cards, on mortgages and on buy now pay later programs,” he said. “I’m afraid a lot of consumers are are going to be tapping out their credit cards and then they’re going to be forced into an abrupt pullback.”
    If consumer spending slowed in that way, more retailers could be pushed into bankruptcy at a faster pace, Berliner said. But if spending stays at a reasonable clip, and consumers are able to reasonably pay off their debts, companies will instead “share a little bit of the pain” with fewer bankruptcy filings, he said.
    Either way, Berliner said the distress will be greater among smaller retail businesses, particularly mom and pop shops, that don’t have as many resources to weather harder times.

    Inventory levels on watch

    Rising inventory levels are also on bankruptcy advisors’ radar because they have the potential to lead to much bigger problems. Retailers from Gap to Abercrombie & Fitch to Kohl’s have said in recent weeks that they have too much stuff after shipments arrived late and consumers abruptly changed what they were shopping for.
    Target said earlier this month that it’s planning markdowns and canceling some orders to try to get rid of unwanted merchandise. As other retailers follow suit, profits are going to contract in the near term, said Joseph Malfitano, founder of turnaround and restructuring firm Malfitano Partners.
    And when a retailer’s profit margins shrink as its inventories are reappraised — a routine practice in the industry — those inventories won’t be worth as much, Malfitano explained. A company’s borrowing base could fall as a result, he said.
    “Some retailers have been able to cancel orders to not create more of a bubble on inventory. But a lot of retailers can’t cancel those orders,” Malfitano said. “So if the retailers that can’t cancel orders don’t knock it out of the park during the holiday season, their margins are going to go way down.”
    “You’re going to have more problems in 2023,” he added.

    Shoppers are seen inside a shopping mall in Bethesda, Maryland on February 17, 2022.
    Mandel Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

    Ian Fredericks, president of Hilco Global’s retail group, agreed that retail bankruptcies likely won’t pick up until 2023.
    “Retailers aren’t in distress because they’re still sitting on a boatload of liquidity … between some cash that’s left on their balance sheet plus an undrawn revolver,” he said. “There’s still a lot of runway.”
    That only means the upcoming holiday season, which every year is a vital span of time in the retail calendar for businesses to break even on profits, could be even more of a make-or-break moment for companies.
    “I don’t see a big holiday spending season. I think people are going to really tighten up and buckle down,” Fredericks said. “Inflation is not going anywhere.”
    One additional outcome of an economic slowdown could be an uptick in M&A activity across the retail sector, according to B. Riley Securities’ Mandarino.
    Bigger retailers that are more financially stable may look to gobble up smaller brands, particularly when they can do so at a discount. They would use this strategy in tough times in order to keep growing revenues quarter after quarter, albeit inorganically, Mandarino said.
    Home goods, apparel and department stores could face the most pressure in the months ahead, he added.
    With Bed Bath & Beyond’s namesake banner underperforming in recent quarters, the retailer has faced pressure from an activist to hive off its Buybuy Baby chain, which is viewed as a stronger part of the business. Kohl’s, an off-mall department store retailer, also came under activist pressure to consider a sale and now is in exclusive deal talks with Franchise Group, the owner of Vitamin Shoppe. Franchise Group is considering whether to lower its bid for Kohl’s, a source told CNBC on Wednesday.
    “It’s a buyers market,” Mandarino said. “Growth will not come organically when consumer spending goes down and if we go into a recession.”

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    The rights and wrongs of investing in natural gas

    Can natural gas ever be a “green” investment? Burning any fossil fuel inevitably makes the planet warmer. Yet switching power stations to gas from more carbon-intensive coal has helped countries cut their total emissions in the past. Environmentalists counter that global temperatures have risen so much that all fossil-fuel use needs to be ended as quickly as possible if the world is to meet the targets laid out in the Paris agreement to limit global warming to “well below 2°c”.European institutions cannot agree on the question among themselves. The European Commission’s proposal for a “green taxonomy”, a classification scheme that aims to guide sustainability-minded investors, says the fuel can count as green provided it acts as a “bridge” to more renewable sources. The European Investment Bank (eib), the eu’s state-backed lender, by contrast, has virtually ruled out investing in natural gas as inconsistent with its climate commitments. The eib is not alone. Multilateral development banks (mdbs) that channel money from rich countries towards worthy projects, such as the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, have in general turned away from financing natural gas. In 2018 they signed a joint statement saying they would align their lending with the Paris goals, giving them limited scope to invest in the fuel. Few mdbs lent as much to gas projects as the eib did before it said in 2019 that it would start phasing out such investment. Researchers at Boston University calculate that the eib provided more than half of the $63.7bn invested by mdbs in natural gas between 2008 and 2021, mostly for transmission and storage. (That is a tiny fraction of the total amount invested in energy worldwide, but mdbs argue they help catalyse private investment.)The return of coal provides the case for restarting spending on gas. Eager to move away from imported gas from Russia, on June 19th the German government announced it was restarting some previously mothballed coal power plants. Investing more in Europe’s gas infrastructure—such as pipelines, terminals for liquefied natural gas (lng) imports and storage facilities—could alleviate a shortage of natural gas and keep the continent from having to switch on such plants. At present, bottlenecks prevent lng imports moving from the continent’s terminals, which are mostly in the west, to the eastern and central European countries that need to swiftly wean themselves off piped Russian gas.What does the tension between the commission’s vision of “green” and the eib’s thinking mean for increasing investment in gas? Some think the implications are limited. If there is indeed a business case for gas in Europe, then the private sector could simply finance it, says Sonia Dunlop of e3g, a think-tank. Scarce public money should be used elsewhere.But the disagreement over the question of investing in gas hints at a deeper problem. Whether it is deemed green or not, gas is an increasingly unattractive investment, the high prices for the fuel after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine notwithstanding. Both private and mdb investors worry that gas infrastructure could end up “stranded” as regulatory changes or technological improvements render them unprofitable. mdbs that lend to poor countries are worried that such investments might leave taxpayers saddled with debts for worthless assets. Even the commission’s taxonomy classes the fuel as “green” only until 2030. And as long as everyone agrees that gas is dirty in the long term, there is little incentive to invest today. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, business and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly newsletter. More

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    After a golden decade, fintech faces its first true test

    Europe’s annual Money 20/20 conference is where the rock stars of fintech come to cut deals and court investors. The shindig this month, the first proper extravaganza since 2020, had the added buzz of a long-awaited reunion, enhanced by djs and brass bands. “Money 20/20 is back in full technicolour,” trumpeted Tracey Davies, the master of ceremonies. The tone, however, was out of sync with the mood outside the room. Rising interest rates and the threat of an economic slowdown are hanging over the industry. Many listed fintechs have seen their market capitalisation crash by more than 75% since July 2021; private firms are being forced into “down rounds” that value them at less than their previous worth. In recent weeks a sorry cast of multi-billion-dollar fintechs, from Klarna, a “buy now, pay later” (bnpl) firm, to Wealthsimple, a trading app, have announced layoffs. In total, fintechs have sacked about 5,500 employees since May 1st, according to Layoffs.fyi, a website, compared with none last year. The woes are in stark contrast to the exuberance of 2021, which was fuelled by the surge in digital finance and investors’ hunt for returns. Last year financial startups raised $132bn, more than twice their haul in 2020; fully 150 of them reached a valuation of $1bn or more. Now backers are wary—especially “non-traditional” venture capitalists, such as sovereign-wealth and pension funds, that piled in late in the cycle. Some vc investors are pulling out of deals after they are signed.For many insiders, the downturn serves to clear froth from the market. “There was a lot of greed,” notes Vidya Peters of Marqeta, a debit-card firm. The thinking is that the current turmoil will be limited to a correction in valuations, and that the secular trends that have propelled fintech so far remain in place. “Very little has changed,” says Rana Yared of Balderton Capital, a vc firm. Recent declines, she points out, have pushed back many valuations only to the levels of early 2020.Yet the funding crunch could inflict real damage. Olivier Guillaumond of ing, a Dutch bank that also invests in fintech, says he is advising firms in his portfolio to raise debt rather than equity, to avoid diluting valuations. But that means more borrowing just as rates are rising. vcs are also asking startups to hoard more cash to guard against shocks. The boss of one “neobank” says he is planning to cut his marketing budget by 75%. That, however, could compromise the growth on which valuations have tended to be premised.Worse still, business models are exposed to a souring economic environment. Many fintechs rely on the securitisation of loan and credit-card portfolios, or wholesale funding from banks, to fuel their credit operations, leaving them vulnerable to rising interest rates. Declining household incomes and reduced consumer spending could spell higher default rates and lower fees for payments firms. The tide is turning in other ways. Some firms had sought to exploit loopholes that helped them avoid some of the regulatory burdens faced by banks; many of these are now being closed up. Others have seen their products commoditised as rivals have swarmed in. bnpl has been hit by both problems. This month Apple said it would launch a bnpl service in America.Large fintechs with ample cash are responding to the crunch by diversifying faster. Wise, which provides cheap cross-border payments, has launched a stock-trading platform and business-accounting tools. Stripe, a payments giant that raised $600m last year, has branched out into business loans and card issuance. John Collison, its president, says the firm is considering expanding the services it offers. Banks and credit-card giants, meanwhile, are on the lookout for bargains as startup valuations tumble. The very first session of Money 20/20 saw the boss of Visa Europe waxing lyrical about becoming a “network of networks”. Mastercard had sponsored one of the stages at the conference. The incumbents, in other words, are crashing the party. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, business and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly newsletter. More