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    Warner Bros. Discovery’s Max targets MLB playoffs for new streaming sports tier

    Warner Bros. Discovery plans to simulcast live games on cable TV and Max streaming in October.
    The company plans to charge users more if they want to watch sports on Max.
    The new streaming tier will be branded under the Bleacher Report name and will include highlights and interviews in addition to games.
    There won’t be any exclusive MLB or NBA games on Max in 2023.

    Julio Rodríguez of the MLB’s Seattle Mariners was the American League Rookie of the Year in 2022.
    Diamond Images | Diamond Images | Getty Images

    Warner Bros. Discovery has targeted the beginning of the Major League Baseball playoffs to debut a sports tier for its Max streaming service, according to people familiar with the matter.
    The company plans to simulcast games from the MLB, National Basketball Association, National Hockey League and National Collegiate Athletics Association, including college basketball’s March Madness, on Max. It also intends to add content from its sports media outlet Bleacher Report, such as highlights and interviews.

    Warner Bros. Discovery plans to brand the new tier using the Bleacher Report name, the people said. The company wants to target a younger audience that increasingly skips the traditional pay-TV bundle and would be more aligned with a digital sports brand such as Bleacher Report.
    Time Warner acquired Bleacher Report in 2012. It has operated as a subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery since WarnerMedia and Discovery merged last year.
    Warner Bros. Discovery executives hinted at charging users more for sports during the company’s second-quarter earnings conference call last week, with CEO David Zaslav noting customers would “hear from us on that soon.” The company said last week it ended its second quarter with 95.8 million global direct-to-consumer streaming subscribers.
    “Our view is sports is a such a premium offering with a very focused and passionate fan base that generally … it needs to be monetized incrementally,” said JB Perrette, CEO and president of global streaming and games, during the conference call.
    Current discussions center around Max simulcasting MLB playoff games on both TBS and Max, said the people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the discussions are private. No MLB games would appear exclusively on Max.

    The MLB playoffs begin Oct. 3.

    Adding the NBA

    The NBA, which begins its regular season Oct. 24, has discussed a similar arrangement with Warner Bros. Discovery, where only games that air on the TNT cable network would be simulcast on Max, said the people familiar with the matter.
    Any exclusive Max games would begin next year at the earliest and would likely be a part of the NBA’s rights renewal agreement with Warner Bros. Discovery, the people said.
    The NBA has an exclusive window to negotiate new TV rights with Disney and Warner Bros. Discovery, its current broadcast partners, which ends April 2024.
    Warner Bros. Discovery hasn’t finalized pricing for its planned sports tier yet, said the people. Max currently costs $15.99 per month without ads or $9.99 per month with commercials.
    A Warner Bros. Discovery spokesperson declined to comment.
    WATCH: Warner Bros. Discovery loses subscribers after Max launch, but shares rise on debt reduction More

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    Elon Musk’s plans could hinder Twitternomics

    Elon Musk is no fan of the Federal Reserve. At least a dozen times over the past year the owner of X (a firm until recently known as Twitter) has savaged America’s central bank for raising interest rates. Last December, for instance, he tweeted that its hikes might go down as the “most damaging ever”. But Mr Musk’s disdain for the Fed is not mirrored by the Fed’s attitude towards X. On the contrary, the central bank’s researchers rather like the website, treating it as a compelling barometer of the economy.This puts X in a peculiar position. Its value as a business remains dubious, which is why Mr Musk has been scrambling to remake it, with changes including (but not limited to) the company’s name. But its value to the economy is a different story altogether. The firm can serve as a timely indicator of both fundamental trends and market sentiment.There is a large, growing literature on how to decode economic signals from social-media sites, ranging from Facebook to Reddit. Yet even in the sea of online information and commentary, Mr Musk’s stands out. Others simply cannot match its volume and frequency. By 2013 Twitter users were already producing more than 5,700 posts in a second. By 2016 Instagram’s larger user base was producing only 1,000. Three papers recently published by the Fed explore the platform’s economic contributions. The first is as a predictor of markets. Sentiment gleaned from tweets seems to be rather good at presaging short-term movements in both share prices and bond yields. In one paper a group of economists including Francisco Vazquez-Grande sifted 4.4m finance-related tweets posted between 2007 and April 2023 to create a Twitter Financial Sentiment Index. They used a machine-learning model to measure each tweet’s sentiments: a message about stocks going to the Moon would be positive; Mr Musk’s quips about the Fed would presumably count as negative.The index, they find, correlates tightly with corporate-bond spreads (the difference between yields on corporate and government bonds, which usually widens as investors turn pessimistic). More than merely shadowing financial movements, posts can even foreshadow them. The overnight index before the stockmarket’s open dovetails with the coming day’s equity returns. A separate paper by Clara Vega and colleagues finds that the website’s sentiment also closely tracks Treasury yields. Indeed, the correlation is stronger with tweets than with sentiment measures gleaned from the Fed’s own official communications.A second use of tweets is as a gauge of economic conditions. Posts about job losses in particular seem to offer timely information about the labour market. Tomaz Cajner and co-authors construct a separate machine-learning model to digest posts with keywords such as “lost job” or “pink slip”. Their measure of job losses mirrors official data on employment levels from 2015 to 2023. This correlation is potentially powerful because most government statistics appear with a lag, whereas the tweets are available immediately. Twitter, for example, would have provided a ten-day advantage in detecting the collapse in employment at the height of the covid-19 pandemic in 2020.The Fed papers also see a third use for tweets: as a bellwether of sorts for monetary policy. Ms Vega and colleagues find that the social-media site fares better than changes in bond yields in predicting monetary-policy decisions on the day of their announcement. The Twitter sentiment index, meanwhile, is good at anticipating shocks from tighter policy such as rate increases. Tweets tend to turn sour just ahead of these moves. (That the website wastes no time in turning bitter will come as little surprise to regular users.)No one is about to ascribe powers of causation to X. The social-media posts instead reflect broader feelings that are already coursing through financial markets. Still, the cornucopia of tweets does provide an additional way of measuring such sentiment, which, if proved valid over time, would be highly valuable.Beyond the Fed, some analysts are also finding other potential applications. Agustín Indaco of Carnegie Mellon University in Qatar calculates that the volume of tweeting alone can account for about three-quarters of cross-country variation in GDP. Rather like satellite images of night lights, tweets may therefore be a way of observing economic health without relying so heavily on tardy official statistics. This metric may work best in poorer countries, where heavy posting on social media would be a proxy for the state of telecommunications and use of smartphones.Marking the spotIf X is so economically useful, why is it not more lucrative? The various papers do not venture so far as to examine the gulf between Twitter’s struggle for profitability and its evident utility—not just as an economic tool but as a platform for sharing information, opinions, jokes and more. Mr Musk was onto something when he described the firm as a “common digital town square”. The problem in economic terms is that a town square falls into the category of public goods such as parks and clean water. Although public goods can be privately owned, it is notoriously hard to extract profits from them given that, by definition, it is difficult to charge people for all the benefits they confer.Mr Musk is doing his darnedest to shift the economic equation at X by giving additional privileges to users who pay $8 a month for the site’s blue-check verification. Tweets by users who cough up now receive extra promotion, among other benefits, showing up more often in the feeds of other people on the website. That, however, sets up a trade-off. Paid-for tweets may start crowding out better-informed posts from users who would rather not subscribe to the website. Over time, a website that prioritises payment over credibility will function less well as a town square and, by extension, as an economic indicator. The gain to X’s finances would be a loss to the Fed’s economists. ■ More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Tesla, Berkshire Hathaway, PayPal, Cinemark and more

    Model Y cars are pictured during the opening ceremony of the new Tesla Gigafactory for electric cars in Gruenheide, Germany, March 22, 2022.
    Patrick Pleu | Pool | via Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Tesla — The electric vehicle stock dropped nearly 3% after announcing the departure of its chief financial officer, Zach Kirkhorn. Tesla said it appointed Vaibhav Taneja to the position. Taneja will hold the role concurrently with his position as chief accounting officer.

    BioNTech — U.S.-traded shares of the biotech firm slipped 9.1% after BioNTech reported disappointing revenue in the second quarter. The company earned 168 million euros in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected 672 million euros.
    Tyson Foods — Shares fell about 6% after a fiscal third-quarter earnings miss. The company reported adjusted earnings of 15 cents per share on $13.14 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecast earnings of 26 cents per share and $13.59 billion in revenue.
    Berkshire Hathaway — Shares of Warren Buffett’s conglomerate rallied to a record high as investors cheered a strong quarter as well as its near-record cash hoard. Class A shares climbed more than 3% to hit an all-time high of $551,387 on an intraday basis, exceeding the conglomerate’s previous high from March 2022. Class B shares of Warren Buffett’s conglomerate rose about 3.4%, putting them on track to close at a record high.
    Viatris — The pharmaceutical company added 6.6% after an earnings beat. The company reported adjusted net income and revenue that beat expectations for the second quarter. Viatris reported revenue of $3.92 billion, while analysts polled by StreetAccount called for $3.86 billion.
    DaVita — The kidney dialysis services stock added 5.3% after UBS upgraded shares to buy from neutral Monday. Analyst Andrew Mok cited stronger patient growth as a driver.

    Sovos Brands, Campbell Soup — Pasta sauce maker Sovos Brands rallied 25% following news that the Rao’s parent would be acquired by Campbell Soup. Campbell fell 1.3% to trade at its lowest share price in more than a year.
    PayPal — PayPal stock climbed 2% after launching its first stablecoin, PayPal USD, backed by the U.S. dollar Monday. The move adds to PayPal’s broader offering of cryptocurrency services and is the first move into stablecoins from a major U.S. financial firm.
    Palantir Technologies — Shares slipped nearly 5% ahead of second-quarter results. Analysts polled by FactSet are forecasting an adjusted 5 cents per share on $534.2 million in sales.
    Cinemark — The movie theater stock added 1.7% following an upgrade from Morgan Stanley earlier Monday. Analyst Benjamin Swinburne said the success of blockbusters “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” could help lift the stock as much as 35%.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li, Alex Harring and Samantha Subin contributed reporting. More

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    Sage Therapeutics stock plunges more than 50% after FDA denies wider use of postpartum depression drug

    Shares of Sage Therapeutics fell after the Food and Drug Administration approved the company’s oral drug zuranolone for postpartum depression, but not for major depressive disorder. 
    Sage jointly developed the pill with Biogen.
    The FDA’s decision to deny the drug’s approval for a much larger population of patients with clinical depression appears to be a notable setback for the two companies.

    In this photo illustration, the Sage Therapeutics logo of a biopharmaceutical company seen on a smartphone and on a pc screen.
    Pavlo Gonchar | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Shares of Sage Therapeutics fell more than 50% on Monday after the Food and Drug Administration approved the biotech company’s oral drug zuranolone for postpartum depression, but not for major depressive disorder, a bigger potential market.
    Shares of Biogen, which jointly developed the treatment with Sage, were up modestly.

    The FDA’s approval late Friday made zuranolone the first oral treatment for postpartum depression, a common complication that affects 1 in 8 women during and after pregnancy and hinders their ability to function normally.
    The two companies also applied for approval of zuranolone for major depressive disorder, also known as clinical depression. But the FDA said they did not provide enough evidence of the drug’s effectiveness in treating the condition, which affects a much larger population of patients.
    Clinical depression afflicts approximately 17.3 million American adults, or about 7% of the people ages 18 and older, in a given year.
    Zuranolone had the potential for $1 billion in peak sales, compared with $250 million to $500 million for postpartum depression, Jefferies analyst Michael Yee said in a research note Sunday.
    He said clinical depression “was really the big upside driver here” for the companies, while postpartum depression is “much smaller and may not be hugely profitable.”

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    Wells Fargo analyst Mohit Bansal also said the clinical depression market contributed to 85% of the firm’s future sales estimates for zuranolone. But “there could be a silver lining as the pricing power may be higher” in postpartum depression, he wrote in a Sunday research note. 
    Sage and Biogen have not disclosed zuranolone’s price for postpartum depression treatment.
    The FDA said additional studies might be required to support the drug’s approval for clinical depression. 
    But Yee noted that Biogen is unlikely to “quickly move forward on another late-stage study” on the drug for clinical depression since the company is focusing on saving costs and recently announced layoffs. More

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    Berkshire Hathaway rises as investors cheer strong earnings and Buffett’s near-record cash stockpile

    Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway CEO and chairman.
    Cnbc | Nbcuniversal | Getty Images

    Berkshire Hathaway shares climbed on Monday following a strong quarterly report that showed a rebound in insurance operations as well as a massive cash hoard that swelled to nearly $150 billion.
    Class B shares of Warren Buffett’s conglomerate rose 1.6% in premarket trading, on track to trade near an all-time closing high. The Omaha-based giant reported on Saturday that its operating earnings jumped 6.6% year over year, totaling $10.04 billion last quarter.

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    Insurance underwriting earnings recorded a 74% increase to $1.25 billion, benefitting from higher interest rates and lower catastrophe losses. The solid performance in insurance helped offset the softness in railroad due to lower volumes.
    Meanwhile, Berkshire’s massive cash pile grew to $147.38 billion at the end of June, near a record and much higher than the $130.62 billion in the first quarter.
    Elevated interest rates are now enabling Berkshire to earn a hefty return from its cash. The conglomerate held more than $97 billion in short term Treasury bills. Buffett previously revealed that he’s been buying $10 billion worth of 3-month or 6-month T-bills every Monday.
    “Berkshire Hathaway’s resilient earnings illustrated the value of its diversified business mix as it added to its cash hoard,” said Bill Stone, chief investment officer at Glenview Trust and a Berkshire shareholder. 
    Berkshire also reported a near $26 billion unrealized gain from its investments, and much of this gain came from its gigantic stake in Apple. The tech giant fueled the market rally in the second quarter, climbing nearly 18%. Berkshire’s Apple bet has ballooned to $177.6 billion.

    Berkshire’s Class A shares hit a new record close of $541,000 on Thursday, exceeding the conglomerate’s previous high of $539,180 reached on March 22, 2022. The stock has gained 13.8% this year.
    “We continue to believe BRK’s shares are an attractive play in an uncertain macro environment,” Brian Meredith, a Berkshire analyst at UBS, said in a note. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Sovos Brands, BioNTech, Tyson Foods and more

    A truck delivers a load of live chickens to the Tyson Foods processing plant in Monroe, North Carolina.
    Alan Slitz | Tribune News Service | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell Monday.
    Tyson Foods — Shares of the food processing company fell more than 7% after Tyson’s fiscal third-quarter report missed estimates on the top and bottom lines. Tyson generated 15 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $13.14 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting 26 cents per share on $13.59 billion of revenue. Tyson’s sales declined year over year.

    DaVita — Shares of the dialysis company rose more than 1% after being upgraded to buy from neutral by UBS. In a note to clients, UBS said it sees “tailwinds that support our Street-high earnings estimates and contrarian Buy rating.”
    Sovos Brands — Shares of Rao’s parent Sovos Brands’ popped 25% in premarket trading after food giant Campbell Soup said Monday it would acquire the pasta sauce maker for $2.33 billion. Campbell will pay $23 per share for the company, which is 27.6% higher than the Sovos Brands’ last closing price. Campbell Soup shares dipped 1.6%.
    DraftKings — DraftKings rose 1.5% in the premarket after Wells Fargo upgraded the sports betting app to overweight from neutral. The bank said DraftKings’ “EBITDA is inflecting more quickly/steeply than we previously envisioned, and we expect its op. momentum to continue.”
    Berkshire Hathaway — Class B shares of the conglomerate rose more than 1% in premarket trading after Warren Buffett’s company reported a solid increase in second-quarter operating earnings, bolstered by a jump in its insurance underwriting and investment income. Berkshire’s cash hoard swelled to nearly $150 billion, near a record and much higher than the $130.616 billion in the first quarter.
    BioNTech — Shares of the biotech company, which is Pfizer’s partner in developing Covid-19 vaccines, slid 4.9% after the company reported lower-than-expected revenue for the second quarter. BioNTech posted quarterly revenue of €168 million, while analysts surveyed by Refinitiv expected €672 million. The company also said it cut its projected research and development budget for this year.

    KKR — Shares of the investment company gained more than 1% premarket after the firm posted adjusted earnings for the second quarter that beat analysts’ estimates and a 6% year-over-year increase in assets under management. KKR also announced it’s taking a minority stake in the German space company OHB.
    Nikola — Shares of the electric truck maker advanced 7% in early morning trading, taking back some of its losses from Friday — when the stock dropped 26% on news of lower-than-expected second-quarter sales and an announcement that the company’s CEO stepped down. 
    Viatris – Shares gained more than 2% before the bell. Viatris posted adjusted net income and revenues that topped Wall Street’s second-quarter expectations and reaffirmed its full-year guidance. Revenue came in at $3.92 billion, ahead of the $3.86 billion expected by analysts, per StreetAccount.
    — CNBC’s Fred Imbert, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel and Jesse Pound contributed reporting. More

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    The robots are coming — and the companies building them are looking for workers

    Help Wanted

    Automation is expected to reduce certain jobs in the coming years.
    But as companies adopt robots on manufacturing floors, in kitchens and on delivery routes, workers have a growing opportunity to join the ranks in helping to build and implement the technology.
    The sectors most likely to adopt robotics are electronics, energy tech and utilities and consumer goods, according to a 2023 report from the World Economic Forum.

    There’s no denying automation will eliminate certain jobs in the coming years.
    But as companies adopt robots on manufacturing floors, in kitchens and on delivery routes, workers have a growing opportunity to join the ranks in helping to build and implement the technology.

    Both humanoid and nonhumanoid robots are set to reduce employment in the years to come, as nearly equal amounts of companies say they’re expecting growth, worker displacement or a neutral effect due to the technology, according to the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report for 2023 forecast. The sectors most likely to adopt robotics are electronics, energy tech and utilities and consumer goods, according to the study.
    The effects may differ depending on the industry.
    For example, the WEF study found 60% of companies operating in the production of consumer goods and the oil and gas industry project jobs will be lost due to automation. On the other hand, 60% of companies operating in information and technology services expect jobs to be created due to robots in the next five years.

    Robots in the lab at the Rosenstiel Campus in Miami.
    Jose A. Iglesias | Tribune News Service | Getty Images

    Robotics company Zipline is among the companies looking for employees, as it aims to add at least 100 workers. The San Francisco, California-based startup designs, builds and operates autonomous delivery drones, working with clients that range from more than 4,000 hospitals to the government of Rwanda and major brands such as Walmart, GNC, Toyota and Sweetgreen. Roles are open in positions from electrical and mechanical engineering to coding and security.
    “Even in a world where a lot of startups are doing layoffs or sort of playing defense, this market is big enough and exciting enough that the plan is really being very aggressive over the coming couple years,” Zipline CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton said. 

    The current delivery ecosystem is slow, expensive and not good for the environment, Rinaudo Cliffton said. The opportunity to make it over with automation has benefits for customers, workers and the planet.
    “Technology is sometimes changing the nature of jobs, but typically, it’s just dramatically increasing the productivity of any given person,” Rinaudo Cliffton said. “Before, we were using a human to do one delivery at a time driving a car one at a time to go and make deliveries. Now, we’re training that human to maintain and manage a fleet of robots. So that human can now do 50 deliveries in an hour rather than five, and that enables us to pay that human a lot more. These are jobs that people actually really want.”
    The use of automation at companies large and small has two advantages, the Association for Advancing Automation argues. It reduces challenges for workers in taking away monotonous or dangerous tasks in their day-to-day roles and it keeps companies competitive and speedy in the production process. It can also help to solve an ongoing labor shortage.
    “From a worker standpoint, it’s another tool — a tool to help you become more effective in the job you’re currently doing, to make you better eligible to get the job for the future, which are often better, safer and higher-paying jobs,” said Jeff Burnstein, the president of the group known as A3, which has 1,200 member companies all across the globe. 
    Businesses have to strike a delicate balance between using automation to make employees’ lives easier without replacing them entirely. Unions and labor rights advocates have often fought the adoption of robotics, worrying that it could replace some human functions entirely.
    Burnstein points to China’s large-scale adoption of robotics as evidence that automation has become more important for companies to maintain an edge in business. 
    “China is the largest user of robots in the world by far. That tells you that this tool is so important that even countries that have an abundance of labor and low-cost labor still need to automate in order to stay globally competitive,” he said. 

    Avocados sliced, cored and peeled by the Autocado robot created by Chipotle and Vebu Labs.
    Source: Chipotle Mexican Grill

    Automation has also started to take hold in food service as companies try to make restaurants more productive.
    Vebu Labs, based in El Segundo, California, is working with Chipotle on a robot that helps prep avocados for its guacamole, dubbed the Autocado. The burrito chain has also been testing out a chip-making robot from Miso Robotics, Chippy, as it aims to free up workers to focus on other tasks in the kitchen and make their labor more effective.
    Vebu wants to bring on over 40 workers in the U.S. in roles from engineering to accounting to fabrication.
    “The demand for our services is through the roof because the problem is so acute — the problem of labor in restaurants is so acute,” Vebu CEO Buck Jordan said. “It’s not a problem that is going to go away anytime soon. It’s not a transitory thing. It’s not caused by Covid. This is caused by a lack of workers in the workforce.”
    While robots and automation may be solving labor pains for certain sectors, there’s a shortage of workers for the suppliers of the technology. A3’s Burnstein said the workforce needs more training on how to use and build robots.
    “As a country, we often have a mindset that the only way to get a great job is to go to college, get a four-year degree, get a Master’s, get a Ph.D. — [that’s] not true,” he said. “There are companies hiring people right out of high school because of this labor shortage that they have in terms of technical skills. We have to address this as a country because otherwise, companies who want to adopt automation are challenged with the ability to do it because they don’t have anybody on staff that knows how to operate the machine.”
    — CNBC’s Kasey O’Brien contributed to this report. More

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    The end of affirmative action at colleges poses new challenges, and risks, in corporate hiring

    Business leaders and academic administrators anticipate that the end of affirmative action at colleges will result in a less diverse applicant pool from which to recruit new workers.
    That presents new challenges for companies’ own diversity, equity and inclusion efforts and could have a negative effect on how the U.S. fares on the global stage.
    The Supreme Court affirmative action ruling could create legal uncertainty for businesses that promote diversity in their recruitment practices.

    Affirmative action supporters and counterprotesters shout at each other outside the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., June 29, 2023.
    Kent Nishimura | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

    Even before the Supreme Court’s ruling on affirmative action policies in college admissions, the nation’s top business leaders expressed concern over how the decision could affect their own diversity goals and hiring practices. 
    Major companies, including Apple, General Electric, Google, Salesforce and Starbucks, argued “racial and ethnic diversity enhance business performance” and filed a brief in support of Harvard University and the University of North Carolina, the two schools at the center of the case, reaffirming the importance of student-body diversity on college campuses.  

    The businesses said they “depend on universities to recruit, admit, and train highly qualified, racially and ethnically diverse students to become the employees and business leaders of the future.”  
    Now that the Supreme Court has struck down race-conscious admissions, employers could face challenges in how they find diverse talent. While the ruling is focused on university admissions and does not mandate changes by employers, experts say it is still likely to affect hiring and retention practices. On top of that, the ruling could create legal uncertainty for businesses that promote diversity in their recruitment practices.
    And while it’s unclear what formal legal implications, if any, the ruling could eventually have for corporate practices, some Republican officials have argued the basis for the decision could apply to employers’ diversity hiring efforts.
    A group of 13 Republican attorneys general suggested in the wake of the ruling that companies’ diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs could be considered unlawful discrimination. Several Democratic AGs later pushed back on that interpretation, saying it was wrong.
    The court’s decision “will likely hamper the efforts of colleges and universities to enroll diverse student bodies, and I think unfortunately, narrow the pipeline that employers have relied on in the past to identify candidates for a diverse and inclusive workforce,” said Jocelyn Samuels, vice chair of the bipartisan Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

    How does it affect business?

    In the wake of the ruling, many fear universities could become less reliable sources from which to recruit diverse talent.
    “It will shrink the diverse talent pool for hiring, advancement and leadership, and it could set a precedent for challenges to workplace diversity initiatives,” according to Lorraine Hariton, president and CEO of global nonprofit firm Catalyst.
    “That will be the first and immediate consequence,” said Donald Harris, associate dean and equity, diversity and inclusion liaison at Temple University School of Law.
    Real-world examples already back up that prediction.
    After the University of California eliminated affirmative action in 1996, the share of underrepresented groups fell 12% in the years that followed. When the University of Michigan banned race-conscious admissions, Black undergraduate enrollment at the school dropped nearly by half from 2006 to 2021, according to the Urban Institute. 
    “Employers are not going to be able to recruit the same diverse employees if they rely on the same methods,” said Stacy Hawkins, a vice dean of law at Rutgers University.
    Companies can still find ways to fulfill DEI commitments, according to Kim Waller, senior client partner at recruiting firm Korn Ferry’s organizational strategy and DEI practices arm.
    Businesses can emphasize training and promoting internal talent for more senior roles, she said, rather than turning to more traditional hiring pools such as universities, since current employees already know the culture and the organization. Some companies are looking at investing in internship programs, she added.
    However, Waller noted that demographic changes could bring a shift to the makeup of colleges, as more than half of the U.S. population under age 16 is nonwhite or Hispanic, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
    “When you think about the demographics shift … there’s a talent pool that’s going to be educated,” Waller said. “The only question is where.” 

    There will undoubtedly be lawsuits attacking private firms’ efforts with diversity.

    Donald Harris
    associate dean and equity, diversity and inclusion liaison at Temple University School of Law

    Business leaders also fear that restrictions on college admissions will ultimately have a negative effect on how the U.S. fares on the global stage.
    Ahmad Thomas, CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, a business association that was part of the amicus brief in support of upholding affirmative action, said the Supreme Court’s decision “undermines business competitiveness at a time of significant economic volatility and broader societal discord.” 
    Thomas worries that the prospect of less diverse higher education institutions will be a competitive disadvantage to the U.S., because he says strong diversity and inclusion efforts drive business outcomes. He fears it will have a chilling effect on high school students from marginalized backgrounds who might have considered applying for science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM, programs, but now feel they may receive less consideration from top schools.  
    “I think it is incumbent upon our educational institutions to continue to find ways to holistically evaluate applicants,” Thomas said. “Because if we are not able to continue to uplift and drive equitable outcomes in our classrooms, our pool of diverse STEM talent, it’s not going to be trending in the direction it needs to and that is a significant concern for me.” 
    And despite recent strides in diversity, many minorities are still underrepresented, particularly at the top of organizations.
    For example, board directorships filled by Black candidates increased more than 90% from January 2019 to January 2023, reaching 2,190 seats. That represents just 8.3% of board positions, according to data from ISS Corporate Solutions, a corporate governance advisory firm, which studied 3,000 companies.

    Potential recruitment changes

    To deal with the prospect of a less diverse talent pipeline from elite universities, businesses may need to get more creative about how they recruit new workers to maintain their diversity hiring initiatives.
    “We’ve been urging companies to change their recruitment efforts for years,” said Alvin Tillery, a political science professor and director of Northwestern’s Center for the Study of Diversity and Democracy.  
    Hiring managers should ramp up recruitment efforts at historically Black colleges and universities, or HBCUs, and other minority-serving institutions, as well as large state universities, he said. 
    “The pathway to CEO is not necessarily an elite university,” Tillery said. 
    Other approaches may include partnerships between businesses and universities that help develop students from diverse backgrounds.
    “I think companies would be wise to identify those institutions that do a good job and partner with them,” said Carey Thompson, Gettysburg College’s vice president for enrollment and educational services. “I see that as a plus in a self-interested sort of way, but I also think it’s good for higher education.” 
    Adam Kovacevich, founder and CEO of center-left tech industry coalition Chamber of Progress, predicted that companies may have to consider looking at a wider swath of colleges and other career prep paths that they might not have focused on before. 
    “It may prompt many companies to reassess their biases about which schools they recruit from,” said Kovacevich, whose group counts Apple, Google and Meta among its partners. “Recruiting from universities that have had affirmative action admissions policies has been kind of almost a shortcut for companies.” 
    Thomas, of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, suggested that the development of a diverse talent pipeline might include investing earlier on in children’s education in disadvantaged communities, at the grade school or high school level, or creating partnerships with HBCUs and community colleges with paths to the workforce. 
    But he also made clear he doesn’t consider the need for new approaches to be a silver lining. 
    “I think this is an opportunity where the ability of government to drive positive impact is limited. So in the sense that our private sector has an opportunity to do the right thing and set a direction and course for society, that responsibility we take extremely seriously,” Thomas said. “But in no way do I believe that’s a silver lining — that it’s incumbent upon the private sector to do the right thing here.”  

    ‘Boom or bust’

    Despite decades of pushing for equality, both women and racial minorities still fall far short in terms of representation and pay compared with their white male colleagues, according to the Economic Policy Institute.
    Increasing diversity in workplaces became a bigger corporate priority for many companies following the murder of George Floyd in May 2020.
    At the time, the nation’s largest corporations in the Russell 1000 announced far-reaching initiatives to promote more diversity, equity and inclusion within their ranks, pledging more than $50 billion to these advancement programs. 
    However, during the last year there has been a “step back” in terms of diversity hiring, said Reyhan Ayas, a senior economist at Revelio Labs, a workforce data and analytics firm. “There’s a big difference between having DEI officers and having diverse hires,” she said, adding that it will likely take several years to know the full impact on hiring of the Supreme Court admissions ruling.
    “This work is cyclical,” said Northwestern’s Tillery. “It’s boom or bust, and we are heading to a period in our culture where if you don’t do this work, it’s permanent bust.” 

    In no way do I believe that’s a silver lining — that it’s incumbent upon the private sector to do the right thing here.

    Ahmad Thomas
    CEO, Silicon Valley Leadership Group

    In statements following the ruling, companies including Amazon, Airbnb, Google, Microsoft and Salesforce reaffirmed their commitments to diversity and inclusion in their workforces. 
    Both Kovacevich and Thomas said businesses still have a strong incentive to increase diversity in their ranks — noting it’s both the right thing to do and good for business.
    “At this point, companies are not going to turn back on their commitment to diverse hiring pools, diverse candidate pools, and their belief that generally having a diverse workforce is a good thing and it helps them be more in tune with a diverse customer base,” said Kovacevich.
    “There’s a business imperative here to transform Silicon Valley companies and to, I believe, catalyze change across the entire business landscape of our nation,” said Thomas. “There’s an opportunity that our companies are taking very seriously to be that beacon, not just from a business competitive standpoint, but, I also believe, from a moral imperative standpoint.” 
    Some businesses, however, could find their hiring practices suddenly under new scrutiny. 
    Although the equal protection clause embodied in Title VI of the Civil Rights Act doesn’t apply to private employers, “there will undoubtedly be lawsuits attacking private firms’ efforts with diversity,” said Temple’s Harris.
    “This case is just the beginning,” Harris said. “If you are an employer highlighting your diversity efforts, are you putting a target on your back?”    More