More stories

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves before the bell: Nike, Blue Apron, Bumble and more

    Black Friday shoppers wait to enter the Nike store at the Opry Mills Mall in Nashville, Tennessee, on November 25, 2022.
    Seth Herald | AFP | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading.
    Nike — The sneaker behemoth added nearly 10% in premarket trading after a mixed earnings report. The company reported 94 cents per share and $12.94 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG forecast 75 cents and $12.98 million, respectively. Nike also reiterated mid-single digit full-year revenue growth guidance.

    Uranium Energy — The uranium miner added 2% after the company said its fiscal full-year revenue came in at Revenue $164.4 million, dwarfing the $23.2 million seen a year ago. Uranium Energy lost 1 cent per share in the year on a GAAP basis, marking a turn after earning 2 cents per share in the prior year.
    Blue Apron — Shares of the meal kit company jumped more than 100% in premarket trading after Blue Apron announced that it had reached a deal to be acquired by Wonder Group for $13 per share. Blue Apron’s stock closed at $5.49 per share on Thursday, with a market cap below $50 million.
    Anheuser-Busch InBev — Shares of the beer maker gained 3.9% in premarket trading after Bank of America upgraded the company to buy from neutral and said it is approaching a margins inflection point.
    Brinker International — The Chili’s parent climbed 4% after Stifel upgraded the stock to buy from hold. Stifel said Brinker’s strategic playbook appears similar to those of Olive Garden, Popeyes and KFC, which all saw successful turnarounds.
    Editas Medicine — The genome editing company popped 9% in premarket trading following a Stifel upgrade to buy from hold. The firm said investors may be overly negative when looking at the total addressable market.

    Ball — Shares added 1.7% in premarket trading after the aluminum-can maker was upgraded by Jeffries to buy from hold. The Wall Street firm said fundamentals have bottomed, free cash flow is accelerating and the business is resilient in a recession.
    Bumble — The dating application stock climbed 4.1% after an upgrade to buy from Loop Capital Markets. The firm said the stock is “de-risked,” while Bumble’s strong cash balance and free cash flow generation will help protect its balance sheet.
    Texas Roadhouse — The restaurant chain advanced 1.6% after Northcoast Research raised its rating to a buy. Northcoast said the company has kept traffic up more than expected and has fundamentals outperforming its current valuation.
    — CNBC’s Brian Evans, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound and Michelle Fox contributed reporting More

  • in

    Can China’s economy reverse a sluggish 2023 in the last quarter? Here’s what to watch

    The months ahead are set to bring more clarity on China’s economic outlook and any government support — especially for real estate.
    “Probably in half a year, we are going to see the housing market stabilize,” Yao Yang, dean of the National School of Development at Peking University in Beijing, told reporters in a briefing Wednesday.
    In coming weeks, China’s ruling Communist Party is also due to hold its Third Plenum, a meeting held once every five years which typically focuses on longer-term aspects of the economy.

    This photo taken on September 24, 2023, shows residential buildings in Chongqing, in southwest China.
    Stringer | Afp | Getty Images

    BEIJING — The last three months of the year are set to bring more clarity on China’s economic outlook and any government support — especially for the critical real estate sector.
    China’s rebound this year from Covid-19 has slowed since April. Then over the summer, the property slump accelerated, despite many large cities easing restrictions for buying apartments.

    “Gradually, the central government is going to loosen up on the supply side, too,” Yao Yang, dean of the National School of Development at Peking University, told reporters in a briefing Wednesday.
    “Probably in half a year, we are going to see the housing market stabilize,” he said, noting regulators were previously “overshooting” in their real estate crackdown.
    At its peak, China’s property sector accounted for about a quarter of the economy, which means the industry’s struggles have weighed on everything from consumption to local government finances.

    Yao also expects the central government to allow local governments to borrow more money to pay back their long-term debt — which he said can help the economy recover fully by the middle of next year.
    In 2020, Beijing tried to rein in real estate developers’ high reliance on debt with new restrictions on financing. Covid restrictions dampened homebuyer appetite, drying up an important source of cash for developers since apartments are typically sold ahead of completion in China.

    Developers delayed construction on projects, further worrying homebuyers. By late 2022, several real estate giants had defaulted on their debt. This summer, top leadership started to signal a new tone.
    “The decline in the real estate sector was the result of the government’s intentional measures to correct the bubbles in the market,” Yao said. He noted that floor space sold this year will likely be more than 500 million square meters less than what it was before the crackdown — and 200 million square meters less than what’s considered acceptable for the industry.
    But he and other economists mostly don’t expect real estate to return to significant growth in the future.
    Dan Wang, Shanghai-based chief economist at Hang Seng China, said she expects housing market weakness will persist and prices to fall in the coming years, but not abruptly.
    Her analysis found an unofficial minimum price for sales of newly built homes across China. “Some developers would say they sort of know the baseline, they cannot give a discount of 15%,” she said.
    “For [the] Chinese government, they would like to see more of a controlled decline rather than a sudden adjustment,” she said, noting significant social consequences if house prices plunge, since much of household wealth is stored in housing.

    The combination of these measures could allow the economy to rebound modestly from 4Q23 onward.

    Morgan Stanley

    This week, worries about China’s real estate sector persisted with highly indebted Evergrande running into more liquidity problems — along with reports Wednesday its chairman has been put under surveillance.
    “A breakthrough on Evergrande’s restructuring, yeah it’s going to make a difference,” Clifford Lau, portfolio manager at William Blair, said in a phone interview Monday.
    “But is it going to re-price the entire bond sector to high single-digit[s], to 20 cents to a dollar? I think that is a very long journey.”

    Gloomy sentiment

    Such headlines have weighed on sentiment, both domestically and among international investors. Some longtime China watchers, especially outside the country, have said they are confused about Beijing’s economic policies. Foreign businesses have grown pessimistic.
    “When we talk about confidence, most of businesses live in today. They want to get by today. No one cares about 10 years after,” said Yao, who is also director of the China Center for Economic Research.
    “So the lack of confidence is the same thing as slowing down of the Chinese economy. If the economy is slowing down, no one is going to have an optimistic view about the economy [any]where,” he said.
    Yao has been a long and early proponent of handing out cash to some people in China to boost consumption. While some cities have done so, central government authorities have been hesitant, preferring to cut taxes, especially for businesses.

    Policy meetings ahead

    Lack of formal communication is not helping sentiment.
    China’s tightly controlled system means that policy changes can typically only occur after major meetings of top leadership known as the Politburo. Those generally occur in late April and late July, and another meeting in December to discuss the year ahead.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    In the coming weeks, China’s ruling Communist Party is due to hold its Third Plenum, a meeting held once every five years which typically focuses on longer term aspects of the economy.
    “A central-government-led, comprehensive plan to resolve local debt risk may be unveiled before/at the Third Plenum this fall. The combination of these measures could allow the economy to rebound modestly from 4Q23 onward,” Robin Xing, chief China economist at Morgan Stanley, and a team said in a note.
    Also widely anticipated is the National Financial Work Conference, a meeting to discuss financial development and risks. It has been delayed since it was originally expected to be held last year.
    The meetings are part of a structure China has had for years. What’s different is that more recently, policymakers have become less likely to make major announcements before high-level directives are clear.
    The Communist Party of China is also gaining increased oversight of finance and tech with the establishment of new commissions — a reorganization process announced in March and expected to take effect by the end of the year.

    Is organic growth enough?

    It’s not clear how much more policymakers need to do for the economy, especially since there’s still modest growth.
    In the long term, Yao expects China’s GDP has the potential to grow by 5.5% a year, supported by a high savings rate and the country’s leadership in new energy vehicles, renewables and advanced technology.
    This month, weekly data from Nomura indicate the real estate sales slump has moderated. Retail sales also grew better-than-expected in August and industrial profits for the month surged by 17.2% from a year ago.
    Bruce Pang, chief economist and head of research for Greater China at JLL, pointed out that industrial profits rose regardless of company type.
    What’s needed is “policy stability, not policy overshoot,” he said in Mandarin, according to a CNBC translation.
    Pang doesn’t expect major policy changes at meetings later this year, but anticipates the central bank will continue to lower interest rates and growth to pick up naturally.

    Even with a number of lowered China growth forecasts this year, economists’ expectations are close to, or slightly lower than, the official target of around 5%. Nomura on Wednesday increased its full-year GDP forecast to 4.8% from 4.6%.
    “I guess every couple of years, you hear these stories about something. Trust companies, shadow banking was supposed to take the country down back in 2013. Didn’t happen,” said Peter Alexander, founder of Shanghai-based consulting firm Z-Ben. He said he arrived in China in 1996, at around the Asian financial crisis.
    “Somehow, someway,” he said, “policy has entered to be able to provide some form of corrective action that has stabilized, or at a minimum, postponed the supposed inevitable.” More

  • in

    Automakers grow frustrated over pace of UAW negotiations as new deadline looms

    Tensions are rising and accusations are flying between the Detroit automakers and United Auto Workers, as the union threatens to expand U.S. plant strikes.
    Frustrations remain around key economic demands and what some see as a lack of urgency by the union to reach a deal, according to people familiar with the discussions.
    GM and Stellantis have grown increasingly frustrated by a lack of participation from Fain and what they say are delays in receiving counter proposals from the union, sources said.

    Striking members of the United Auto Workers (UAW) picket outside the GM’s Willow Run Distribution Center, in Bellville, Wayne County, Michigan, U.S., September 26, 2023.
    Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

    DETROIT – Tensions are rising and accusations are flying between the Detroit automakers and United Auto Workers, as the union threatens to expand U.S. plant strikes – marking two weeks of work stoppages and the dwindling likelihood of an imminent breakthrough.
    The UAW is expected to announce additional strike targets at 10 a.m. ET Friday, barring substantial progress by in negotiations with General Motors, Ford Motor and Stellantis for contracts covering some 146,000 autoworkers. UAW President Shawn Fain will host a Facebook Live event then to update members on the talks and identify additional strike locations, a source familiar with the talks said.

    In the run-up, frustrations remain around key economic demands and what some see as a lack of urgency by the union to reach a deal, according to people familiar with the discussions who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the talks are private.
    Specifically, GM and Stellantis have grown increasingly frustrated by a lack of participation from Fain and what they say are delays in receiving counter proposals from the union, sources said.
    The union set a new Friday deadline before holding any high-level meetings between Fain and the companies, the people said, raising questions about the union’s commitment to reaching a deal and ending the strikes. As of the Wednesday announcement, the UAW also hadn’t put forth counter proposals to offers made by the automakers roughly a week earlier, the people said.
    The first high-level, “main table” talks between the union with Fain and the two automakers came only after that Wednesday announcement, in a late-afternoon meeting the same day with GM, without CEO Mary Barra, and a midday Thursday meeting with Stellantis, the sources said.

    The union Thursday afternoon confirmed it submitted a counter offer to Stellantis during the meeting – giving the company less than 24 hours to respond ahead of the fresh deadline.

    The lack of urgency is increasingly frustrating company negotiators, many of whom are more accustomed to around the clock bargaining to get a deal as soon as possible, the sources said. Such talks have been few and far between as Fain attempts to negotiate with all three companies at once, they said.
    Fain has consistently said the union is available to negotiate 24/7, however the automakers have questioned his availability and the union’s tactics broadly, particularly in light of leaked private messages in which UAW communications director Jonah Furman described keeping the companies “wounded for months.”
    A UAW spokesman declined to comment on the strategy, including on the union waiting a week to counter and giving Stellantis less than 24 hours to respond.
    Concerns around the pace of talks follow similar claims by Fain and the union. Prior to initiating strikes on Sept. 15, Fain heavily criticized the automakers for failing to provide counter offers to the union’s proposals, which were first delivered to the companies in early August.
    All three automakers say they’ve made substantial offers to the union. The deals on the table include hourly wage increases of roughly 20%, thousands of dollars in bonuses, and enhancements to the workers already-substantial benefits packages. Ford, for its part, has offered to reinstate prior cost-of-living adjustments to offset inflation.
    But the UAW has demanded more, including 40% wage increases, an end to the “tier” system under which new hires spend several years working up to full wages, a 32-hour workweek, and benefits including additional time off and insurances about electric vehicles.
    About 18,300 workers, or roughly 12.5% of the UAW members covered by its contracts with the Detroit automakers, are currently on strike.

    On the picket lines

    In recent days, union members on the picket lines have reported confrontations, intimidations with guns, hit-and-run vehicle accidents and vandalism of vehicles and company property.
    Five people suffered minor injuries when they were hit by a vehicle that drove through the UAW’s picket line while leaving a GM parts facility in Flint, Michigan, on Wednesday. The vehicle was driven by a third-party contractor doing work for GM at the facility.

    UAW members and workers at the Mopar Parts Center Line, a Stellantis Parts Distribution Center in Center Line, Michigan, picket outside the facility after walking off their jobs at noon on September 22, 2023. 
    Matthew Hatcher | AFP | Getty Images

    GM issued a statement saying that three contractors, including the driver, had been banned from its properties. It urged its other contractors and salaried employees to follow established safety procedures when crossing a UAW picket line.
    Separately, Stellantis released a statement on Thursday accusing the UAW of mischaracterizing other incidents that did not – contrary to statements by Fain – involve replacement workers, or so-called “scabs.”
    “Since the UAW expanded its strike to our parts distribution centers last Friday, we’ve witnessed an escalation of dangerous, and even violent, behavior by UAW picketers at several of those facilities, including slashing truck tires, jumping on vehicles, following people home and hurling racial slurs at dedicated Stellantis employees who are merely crossing the picket line to do their jobs,” the statement said.
    The company said it has not hired any outside workers to replace striking UAW members: “Only current employees who are protecting our business and third parties making pick-ups and deliveries as they normally would are entering our facilities.”
    The company called on Fain and other UAW leaders to help ensure the safety of all Stellantis employees, including those on the picket line. More

  • in

    Nike misses on revenue for first time in two years, but stock pops as earnings, margins beat

    Nike reported fiscal first-quarter earnings that fell short of Wall Street’s revenue expectations for the first time in two years.
    The sneaker giant beat expectations on earnings and gross margin.
    Sales fell 2% in North America, Nike’s largest market, but rose in every other region it operates in.

    A shopper leaves a Nike store along the Magnificent Mile shopping district with a purchase in Chicago, Dec. 21, 2022.
    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    Nike reported revenue Thursday that fell short of Wall Street’s sales expectations for the first time in two years, but it beat on earnings and gross margin estimates, sending its stock soaring in after-hours trading.
    Here’s how the sneaker giant performed during its fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: 94 cents vs. 75 cents expected
    Revenue: $12.94 billion vs. $12.98 billion expected

    The company’s reported net income for the three-month period that ended August 31 was $1.45 billion, or 94 cents per share, compared with $1.47 billion, or 93 cents per share, a year earlier.
    Sales rose to $12.94 billion, up about 2% from $12.69 billion a year earlier. Revenue for the quarter was just shy of the $12.98 billion analysts had expected, according to LSEG.
    Nike shares rose about 8% in extended trading Thursday.
    The retailer maintained its full-year guidance of revenue growth in the mid-single digits and gross margin expansion of 1.4 to 1.6 percentage points.
    “We’re closely monitoring the operating environment, including foreign currency exchange rates, consumer demand over the holiday season, and our second half wholesale order book,” said finance chief Matthew Friend on a call with analysts.

    “We are cautiously planning for modest markdown improvements for the balance of the year, given the promotional environment,” he added.
    For the second quarter, Nike expects revenue growth to be up slightly versus the prior year and gross margins to grow by about 1 percentage point versus the prior year.
    Investors have been laser focused on Nike’s recovery in China, its relationship with its wholesale partners and how the resumption of student loan payments will impact sales. 
    They’re also keen to see Nike’s margins recover after bloated inventories, high promotions and supply chain woes contributed to lower profits over the last few quarters. 
    During the quarter, Nike’s gross margin fell about 0.1 percentage points to 44.2%, but it was higher than the 43.7% analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount. The company attributed the gross margin drop to higher product costs and currency exchange rates, but those trends were offset by price increases, which contributed to the earnings beat.
    Sales in China grew by 5% compared to the year-ago period to $1.7 billion, which fell short of the $1.8 billion analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.
    During the previous quarter ended May 31, Nike saw China sales jump 16% compared to the year-ago period. But the numbers were against easy comparisons because the region was still under Covid-related lockdown orders during the prior year. 
    While Nike remains bullish on China, the region’s economic recovery has so far been a mixed bag. Following a sluggish July, retail sales picked up during the month of August to rise 4.6% compared to the prior year, beating expectations of a 3% growth forecast by Reuters. 
    “We feel good about the market there and our position,” said CEO John Donahoe, adding he’s traveled to China twice in the last four months. “Frankly, a couple things stand out. One, sport is back in China, you can just feel it, and that gives us great confidence about the future and the Chinese consumer in our segment, regardless of the macroeconomic outlook there.”
    Nike saw sales jumps in every region besides North America, its largest market by revenue. Sales in North America fell 2% from the year-ago period to $5.42 billion, just above the $5.39 billion analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.
    In Europe, the Middle East and Africa, sales were up 8% at $3.61 billion. That compared with the $3.51 billion analysts had expected. Sales in its Latin America and Asia Pacific unit came in 2% higher at $1.57 billion, just shy of the $1.59 billion analysts had expected, according to StreetAccount.
    The Converse brand, on the other hand, fell well short of expectations for a second quarter in a row. Sales came in at $588 million, down 9% compared to the year-ago period. Analysts had expected sales to be about $660 million, according to StreetAccount.
    Nike’s direct channel, which includes its owned stores and its digital channel, led the retailer’s growth during the quarter and was up 6% compared to the prior year. In June, the company noticed that shoppers were shifting towards its stores over its digital channels, signaling consumers are getting closer to pre-pandemic shopping habits.
    “We continue to see that consumers want to connect directly and personally with our brands and in fact, member engagement within our direct business is up double digits versus the prior year with increasing average order values,” said Friend.
    “Our stores delivered an especially strong quarter with traffic up double digits from last year, and members driving an increasing share of our business as consumers shifted from our digital to physical channels… Our team was nimble in transitioning inventory to capture higher full-price sales across our entire store fleet,” he said.
    When it comes to its wholesale revenues, Nike’s relationship with those partners have been rocky. As the company has pivoted to a direct-to-consumer model, it has focused on driving sales online and in its stores at the expense of its wholesale accounts. 
    However, as Nike grappled with excess inventories throughout 2023, it relied on those partners to move through that merchandise. It has now restored its relationship with both Macy’s and DSW – accounts that it previously cut in favor of its DTC strategy. 
    Some analysts expected Nike’s wholesale revenue to be sluggish during the quarter because excess inventories have been a problem throughout the retail industry – and some wholesalers are being more particular in what they order to avoid another backlog. 
    Wholesale revenue during the quarter was flat compared to the year-ago period at $7 billion.
    Both Donahoe and Friend made it clear to analysts that Nike is ready to meet customers in all channels — including through wholesalers and directly. The retailer shouted out Dick’s Sporting Goods as one of its key partners and noted that it’s still in the process of resetting its business with Footlocker, which has seen two quarters in a row of plunging sales and profits.
    Despite the shift in how it’s working with wholesalers, Nike insisted that direct sales will pave the way to its future growth.
    “Ultimately, we have a segmented portfolio of strong partners across price points and channels. With no single partner representing more than a mid-single digit of Nike’s total business,” said Friend.
    “While the ultimate landing spot of digital and direct isn’t as clear, we do believe we’re going to be a more direct and a more digital company, and a more profitable company,” he said. “And there’s a channel mix and channel profitability opportunity that comes with that as well.”
    Meanwhile, inventories fell 10% to $8.7 billion. The drop was driven by a decrease in units but offset by product mix and higher manufacturing and production costs.
    “On the whole, we’re very comfortable with the level of inventory in the marketplace in relation to the retail sales that we’re seeing as we begin increasing levels of wholesale sell in our second half,” said Friend.
    Amid decades-high inflation rates, consumers have been pulling back on apparel and footwear. With the resumption of student loan payments looming ahead, some analysts expect those sectors to take an even greater hit. 
    Jefferies conducted a survey on U.S. consumer spending and found 54% of respondents plan to spend less on apparel and accessories. Meanwhile, 46% plan to spend less on footwear, which doesn’t bode well for Nike. 
    It’s still too early to gauge the impact of student loan payments on Nike. Its first quarter ended in late August, and payments aren’t set to resume until October.
    During the quarter, footwear sales rose 4% to $8.4 billion, making up about 68% of Nike’s total sales. Apparel was down 1% at $3.4 billion.
    Correction: Nike’s gross margin fell 0.1 percentage points. An earlier version of this story misstated that figure. More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: CarMax, Accenture, Peloton, Jefferies and more

    The Trimble logo is displayed on a smartphone.
    Igor Golovniov | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Trimble — The technology services provider jumped 6.5% Thursday on the back of an announcement that AGCO Corporation will acquire an 85% stake in Trimble’s agribusiness for $2 billion in cash, as the tractor and seeding equipment firm looks to grow its precision agriculture portfolio.

    DigitalBridge — Shares of the digital infrastructure company added 4.8% after JPMorgan upgraded the company to overweight from neutral. The firm said DigitalBridge is largely finished with the transformation of its business.
    Jefferies Financial Group — The financial services stock rose 1.9% even though the company’s third-quarter profits were hurt by a slowdown in deal-making. After the market closed Wednesday, Jefferies posted earnings of 22 cents per share on revenue of $1.18 billion. Still, the company’s CEO expressed optimism that momentum in investment banking activity will return.
    Duolingo — Shares gained 3.2% on Thursday after UBS initiated coverage of Duolingo the day prior with a buy rating, saying it’s a “best-in-class brand.”
    Host Hotels & Resorts — Shares gained 3.5% after Wolfe Research initiated coverage of the real estate investment trust with an outperform rating. The firm assigned a $22 price target on the company. 
    Workday — Shares plunged 8.5% a day after the cloud services company lowered its long-term subscription growth target to a range of 17% to 19%, compared to its previous target of 20%.

    Accenture — Shares of the IT and consulting firm fell 4.3% Thursday after Accenture reported mixed results for its fiscal fourth quarter. The company reported $2.71 in adjusted earnings per share on $15.99 billion of revenue. Analysts were expecting $2.65 per share on $16.07 billion of revenue, according to FactSet. The company’s full-year guidance for the upcoming fiscal year for earnings and cash from operations also came in below expectations, according to StreetAccount.
    Micron — The chipmaker’s shares fell 4.4% a day after Micron posted a weaker-than-expected earnings forecast. Micron estimates a fiscal first-quarter loss of $1.07 per share, while analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, expected a loss of 95 cents. For the fiscal fourth quarter, the company reported a narrower-than-expected loss as well as revenue that topped expectations.
    Peloton — Peloton popped 5.4% Thursday. Peloton and Lululemon announced a five-year strategic partnership on Wednesday. As part of the deal, Peloton’s content will be available on Lululemon’s exercise app and Lululemon, in turn, will become Peloton’s primary athletic apparel partner.
    CarMax — Shares fell 13.4%. The used-car retailer’s fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue slipped from a year ago on weakening demand for used cars. The company said it earned 75 cents per share on revenue of $7.07 billion, and that it bought 14.9% fewer vehicles from consumers and dealers from the previous year as steep market depreciation hurt volume. 
    Concentrix — Shares gained 6.8% a day after Concentrix said it would hike its quarterly dividend 10% to about 30 cents a share. Separately, the consumer experience tech company posted adjusted earnings of $2.71 per share on revenue of $1.63 billion, while analysts polled by FactSet had estimated Concentrix would earn $2.85 per share and revenue of $1.64 billion.
    — CNBC’s Jesse Pound and Christina Cheddar-Berk contributed reporting. More

  • in

    GameStop’s survival demands ‘extreme frugality,’ CEO Ryan Cohen tells employees

    GameStop’s new CEO Ryan Cohen sent an email to corporate employees and store leaders Thursday.
    In the note, which was obtained by CNBC, Cohen emphasized the company will have to avoid common industry pitfalls such as “buying bad inventory, using leverage, and running expenses too high.”
    Cohen was named CEO earlier Thursday.

    A GameStop location on 6th Avenue in New York on March 23, 2021.
    View Press | Corbis News | Getty Images

    Just hours after being named GameStop’s CEO, Ryan Cohen sent out a memo to employees Thursday that emphasized he will take dramatic steps to ensure the struggling video game retailer survives.
    “Our job is to make sure GameStop is here for decades to come,” he wrote in the email that was sent to corporate employees and store leaders and obtained by CNBC. “Extreme frugality is required. Every expense at the company must be scrutinized under a microscope and all waste eliminated. The company has no use for delegators and money wasters. I expect everyone to treat company money like their own and lead by example.”

    Cohen, a billionaire activist investor and founder of direct-to-consumer pet food and supply retailer Chewy, was named the company’s new leader Thursday morning. He was previously executive chair of GameStop. As of late June, his firm RC Ventures was the company’s largest shareholder with a 12.09% stake, according to FactSet.
    Cohen’s CEO announcement previewed the company’s emphasis on slashing costs: He will not receive a salary in his new role.
    Cohen became an integral part of the “meme stock” frenzy, as he invested in companies including now bankrupt Bed Bath & Beyond. He joined GameStop’s board in 2021 in the thick of the phenomenon.
    Cohen’s new role kicks off the latest chapter of GameStop’s effort to reinvent itself. The Grapevine, Texas-based retailer, which was founded in the 1980s, built its business on selling video games, consoles and other gaming merchandise.
    Yet as customers buy video games online, it has fallen from relevance and had to chase new ways make money. It has experimented with new businesses, such as launching an NFT marketplace and striking a partnership with now bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX.

    The company has also dealt with major leadership changes. With Cohen on its board, GameStop tapped multiple Amazon veterans, including Matt Furlong, who became CEO, and Mike Recupero, who became chief financial officer.
    Yet GameStop fired both of those leaders. Cohen got the top job nearly four months after the company ousted Furlong.
    GameStop shares closed at $16.84 on Thursday and have fallen nearly 9% this year. The closing price was less than a quarter of its all-time high close of more than $86 a share in January 2021.
    Earlier this month, GameStop reported a second-quarter net loss of $2.8 million, compared to a $108.7 million loss in the prior-year period.

    Read the full memo below:
    Subject: Survival I will be straight to the point. It is not sustainable for GameStop to operate a money losing business. The mission is to operate hyper efficiently and profitably. Our expense structure must allow us to endure any adverse scenario. Whether it’s a difficult economy or revenue deceleration from shrinking software, we must be profitable. Our job is to make sure GameStop is here for decades to come. Extreme frugality is required. Every expense at the company must be scrutinized under a microscope and all waste eliminated. The company has no use for delegators and money wasters. I expect everyone to treat company money like their own and lead by example. Prospering in retail means survival. If we survive, we stay in the game. Survival is avoiding the deadly sins that often lead retailers to self-destruct. This is usually a result of the following – buying bad inventory, using leverage, and running expenses too high. By avoiding these self-inflicted mistakes and focusing on the basics, GameStop can be here for a long time. I expect everyone to roll up their sleeves and work hard. I’m not getting paid, so I’m either going down with the ship or turning the company around. I much prefer the latter. It won’t be easy. Best of luck to us all. Ryan
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
    — CNBC’s Gabrielle Fonrouge contributed to this report. More

  • in

    Bill Ackman believes the 10-year Treasury yield could approach 5% soon

    Register now for full access to the Delivering Alpha Investor Summit livestream

    Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman believes long-term Treasury yields can shoot even higher in the short run on the back of stubborn inflation.
    “I would not be shocked to see 30-year rates through the 5% barrier, and you could see the 10-year approach 5%,” he told CNBC’s Scott Wapner at the CNBC Delivering Alpha Investor Summit on Thursday in New York City.

    The Pershing Square Capital Management CEO said he did not believe the Federal Reserve could get inflation back down to its 2% target partly due to a resurgent labor movement and high energy prices.
    “Our view is that we’re in a different world,” the investor said. “You have a generation of people that are used to rates, you know, four sounding like a high interest rate. On a historical basis, it’s an extremely low rate of interest.”
    The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield hit a 15-year high this week, topping 4.65%, as the Federal Reserve signaled higher interest rates for longer this month. The 30-year rate last traded around 4.71%.

    Stock chart icon

    10-year Treasury yield this year

    Still, Ackman said buying the 30-year Treasury bond isn’t worth locking up your money for that long with inflation eating into its return.
    “We have an economy that is still strong and inflation at 3.5%, 4%, persistent,” Ackman said. “Our view is basically you’re not being paid enough to enter into a 30-year contract with this government.” More

  • in

    Endeavor, Fenway Sports consider investment in the PGA Tour

    Endeavor Group and Fenway Sports are considering investing in the PGA Tour, sources said.
    Such an investment could potentially rival or coincide with a deal proposed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund.
    In June, the PGA Tour reached a deal with Saudi-backed LIV Golf that would see the rival entities combine alongside a PIF investment in the tour.

    The PGA Tour logo is seen during the third round of the Travelers Championship at TPC River Highlands in Cromwell, Connecticut, on June 24, 2017.
    Fred Kfoury | Icon Sportswire | Getty Images

    The PGA Tour is attracting potential outside investors — some of which are considering making a rival pitch to the Saudi-backed Public Investment Fund’s proposal, according to people familiar with the matter.
    Endeavor Group Holdings and Fenway Sports Group are considering investing in the PGA Tour, potentially to rival or coincide with the PIF’s proposed deal, said the people, who declined to be named due to the sensitive nature of the discussions.

    The discussions, which are in preliminary stages, stem from a PGA Tour investment vehicle created as part of the framework agreement for its proposed deal with PIF.
    “Throughout 2023, the PGA Tour has demonstrated its strength, reach and value as an enterprise. Our focus continues to be on finalizing an agreement with the Public Investment Fund and the DP World Tour, however, our negotiations have resulted in unsolicited interest from other investors,” said a PGA Tour spokesperson.
    Representatives for Endeavor and Fenway declined to comment.
    Bloomberg earlier reported that Endeavor and Fenway were mulling a rival offer.
    In June, the PGA Tour announced a proposed deal that would see it combine with rival LIV Golf following months of lawsuits and competition between the two. The PIF, which is controlled by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, finances LIV.

    Under the framework agreement, the tour would hold a permanent controlling interest in the new entity’s board of directors and would maintain that majority share regardless of PIF’s investments. PIF has said it would invest billions into the entity and hold a noncontrolling minority stake.
    Specifics of the deal and its valuation are still being discussed. The tour’s board, including player directors, have to sign off on an eventual definitive agreement. Ultimately, the tour and its members will make the decision on the final investment structure, and whether it includes or is led by PIF or alternative investors, one of the people said.
    The deal between LIV and the PGA Tour has faced criticism and controversy. It is currently under investigation by a Senate subcommittee. The Saudis have been accused of “sportswashing” to take the focus off the kingdom’s history of human rights violations.
    Endeavor recently was behind the combination of its UFC and World Wrestling Entertainment, a newly merged publicly traded company now called TKO. Fenway is an investment firm that backs several major sports franchises, including Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox, the Liverpool Football Club and the National Hockey League’s Pittsburgh Penguins. More