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    AMC drops plan to charge more for better seats at the movies

    AMC Entertainment is dropping its new tiered pricing system that provided moviegoers multiple seating options to meet their viewing preferences.
    The results show moviegoers have little interest in sitting in the front row, and don’t mind paying extra for the seats they really want.
    The chain said it’ll start testing new ways to increase front row attendance.

    AMC Movie theatre in New York.
    Scott Mlyn | CNBC

    AMC Entertainment dropped its plans to charge customers variable prices for movie theater seats.
    The company announced its “Sightline” pricing strategy in February and tested it out at select locations in three U.S. markets. The program charged moviegoers more for the best theater seats, or “Preferred Sightline” seats.

    The program also reduced the price of seats deemed less attractive to patrons, such as those located at the front row of theaters.
    The change comes as the movie theater industry suffers through a sluggish summer blockbuster season. And theaters are banking on this weekend’s “Barbie” and “Oppenheimer” releases to bring much-needed foot traffic to theaters.
    Shares of AMC Entertainment fell less than 1% on Thursday. The stock is up more than 5% this year, lagging the broader market.
    Preferred Sightline seats included select locations in the middle of the auditorium that are preferred by some moviegoers, whereas Value Sightline seats were those typically located in the front row.
    The chain said the program would end at participating locations in the coming weeks.

    The decision comes after the pilot program showed moviegoers had little or no interest sitting at the front row, even though prices were reduced. The company said it also found that most moviegoers continued to choose the seats they preferred, even at higher prices.
    The company added that the pivot is to ensure AMC’s ticket prices remain competitive. Other theater chains like Regal are not charging higher prices for better seats.
    The cinema chain said its focus will now be to test front row seating with more comfortable recliners in select locations in the United States later this year.
    CNBC reached out to AMC for additional comment. More

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    Netflix stock sinks as Wall Street looks for clarity on revenue growth

    Netflix stock sank more than 8% Thursday after a quarterly earnings report that was largely positive but left Wall Street underwhelmed.
    Netflix’s average revenue per membership showed weakness in the most recent quarter.
    “I think people expected a lot more revenue growth in the third quarter,” said analyst Michael Nathanson of MoffettNathanson.

    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Netflix stock sank more than 8% Thursday after a quarterly earnings report that was largely positive but left Wall Street underwhelmed and uncertain about key revenue drivers.
    The sell-off in Netflix shares follows a 60% year-to-date rally, spurred by the rollout its cheaper, ad-supported plan and a crackdown on password sharing, both of which were supposed to drive growth for the streaming giant.

    related investing news

    Netflix offered few details on those initiatives Wednesday in its quarterly report, and its second-quarter revenue fell short of expectations.
    “I think people expected a lot more revenue growth in the third quarter, plus there was the weakness in [average revenue per membership],” said analyst Michael Nathanson of MoffettNathanson.

    Stock chart icon

    Netflix’s stock has risen on the rollout of ad-supported streaming and a new password sharing policy, which are both meant to boost revenue.

    Netflix’s average revenue per membership showed weakness in the most recent quarter as the streamer focused on its stated revenue drivers rather than increasing prices. The company this week removed its least expensive, no-ads plan in a push for customers to opt for the cheaper ad plan instead.
    Chief Financial Officer Spencer Neumann said on Wednesday’s earnings call that price increases were put on the back burner as the new sharing policy rolled out. For advertising, he said, the company expects a “gradual revenue build,” adding “that’s not expected to be a big contributor this year.”
    The ad-supported plan, which launched late last year, has so far signed up about 1.5 million subscribers, a small piece of overall subscribers, according to a report from The Information on Wednesday.

    Netflix executives declined to provide specifics on the ad-supported tier on the company’s pre-taped earnings call.
    “Most of our revenue growth this year is from growth in volume through new paid memberships, and that’s largely driven by our paid sharing rollout,” Neumann said. “It is our primary revenue acceleration in the year, and we expect that impact … to build over several quarters.”
    But with uncertainty around how long it will take revenue-driving initiatives to take hold, it’s difficult to project Netflix’s revenue in the next two years, making the future murky, according to Wall Street analysts.
    “Buyside expectations are high,” Wells Fargo analyst Steven Cahall said in a note before Netflix reported earnings Wednesday.
    In a note following the earnings report, however, Cahall said, “patience is a virtue,” and called out investors that were “over-exuberant on paid sharing,” noting revenue growth will take longer.
    “It’s not an overnight kind of thing,” Netflix co-CEO Greg Peters said during Wednesday’s investor call.
    Netflix forecasts third-quarter revenue of $8.5 billion, up 7% year over year.
    The streaming giant has fared better than its legacy media competitors, and its boost in subscriber growth showed its strength as others struggle and prepare for a tumultuous rest of the year as they look for streaming profits and face the Hollywood actors and writers strikes.
    Netflix said Wednesday it added 5.9 million customers, but following last year’s first subscriber loss in a decade that sent its stock on a downward spiral, the company said it would shift focus to revenue growth and forecasts. More

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    Johnson & Johnson investors can soon swap their shares for Kenvue stock — here’s what you need to know

    Johnson & Johnson said its shareholders will soon be able to swap their shares for stock of Kenvue, which spun out as an independent consumer health company just two months ago.
    J&J owns nearly 90% of Kenvue shares and plans to reduce its stake through an exchange offer that could launch “as early as the coming days,” J&J CFO Joseph Wolk said during an earnings call. 
    Both companies reported second-quarter earnings that beat Wall Street’s expectations.

    Thibaut Mongon, CEO and Paul Ruh CFO of Kenvue Inc. a Johnson & Johnson’s consumer-health business, pose together during the company’s IPO at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., May 4, 2023.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    Johnson & Johnson on Thursday said its shareholders will soon be able to swap their shares for stock of Kenvue, which spun out as an independent consumer health company just two months ago.
    J&J owns nearly 90% of Kenvue shares and plans to reduce its stake through an exchange offer that could launch “as early as the coming days,” depending on market conditions, J&J CFO Joseph Wolk said during the company’s second-quarter earnings call. 

    related investing news

    That process, also known as a split-off, will allow J&J shareholders to exchange all or a portion of their shares for Kenvue’s common stock. J&J did not provide further details on the planned offer.
    But Wolk said a split-off is the “most advantageous form of separation” for J&J. He added that after the split, Kenvue will most likely have a shareholder base that wants to own its stock.
    When asked about J&J’s planned exchange offer, Kenvue CEO Thibaut Mongon told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” that the company is “pleased with the way that the IPO has been received by shareholders.”
    “We see a lot of alignment among our new investors in seeing the potential of Kenvue, but I can tell you that we are fully ready to leave as a fully independent company,” he said. 
    Kenvue shares fell following the announcement Thursday, even though the company beat earnings and revenue estimates in its first quarterly report since its IPO. Kenvue also initiated a quarterly cash dividend of about 20 cents per share for the third quarter, payable to shareholders on Sept. 7.

    J&J’s second-quarter results also beat expectations on Thursday, sending the company’s stock 6% higher. 
    Previously, J&J did not disclose whether it would divest its Kenvue shares through a split-off or a spinoff. The latter would involve distributing Kenvue stock to existing J&J shareholders rather than giving them the option to exchange. 
    The suggested timing of the offer came as a surprise.
    Kenvue’s IPO filing in April said J&J agreed to wait 180 days to sell or transfer its shares of the new company, which would have limited any split-off until the end of October at the earliest. 
    The filing said J&J would only be able to do so with written permission from Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase, the IPO’s lead underwriters. More

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    Victims want Morgan Stanley to answer for ex-financial advisor’s Ponzi scheme

    A former Morgan Stanley financial advisor has pleaded guilty to fraud and money laundering in what prosecutors said was a $7 million scam. 
    Victims filed arbitration claims against the firm, alleging that it failed to reasonably supervise its employee.
    Morgan Stanley said it fired the advisor after the fraud was discovered. But it was a customer who alerted the firm.

    A former Morgan Stanley financial advisor has been sentenced to more than seven years in prison after admitting he ran a $7 million Ponzi scheme at the firm for more than a decade.
    But even though the scam targeted Morgan Stanley clients and the advisor admitted using a Morgan Stanley product to carry it out, the firm has fought efforts to hold it responsible.

    Victims say not only has Morgan Stanley resisted their efforts to recover money from the firm, it is also continuing to hold them responsible for lines of credit that the advisor fraudulently convinced them to open. Morgan Stanley is America’s sixth-largest brokerage firm, with more than $1.3 trillion under management. The firm made $11 billion in profits last year.
    “I can liken the whole process to being assaulted in a back alley while you’re on mind-altering drugs like roofies,” said Caitlin Andrews, 43, of Carolina Beach, North Carolina, a single mother of two boys who lost $1.7 million, or virtually her entire net worth. “And then one day you wake up in the police station and you have to watch the video again and again and go over bank statements of when things happened and listen to phone calls again and again. It’s traumatizing.”
    The advisor, Shawn Edward Good, was a vice president in Morgan Stanley’s Wilmington, North Carolina, office from 2012 until early last year, when he was abruptly fired after the scam came to light. Last September, he pleaded guilty in federal court to one count of money laundering and one count of wire fraud.
    Prosecutors said that Good, 56, conned at least a dozen clients into paying him more than $7.24 million that they thought was going toward “low risk” investments. Good instructed them to borrow against their portfolios using a Morgan Stanley product known as a Liquidity Access Line of Credit, transfer the money to him and he would take care of the rest.

    Fraudulent transfers

    Shawn Good, former Morgan Stanley broker

    “Access the cash you need to fund your goals, with the strength of Morgan Stanley behind you,” says a corporate video touting the Liquidity Access Line of Credit.

    But instead of investing the funds as promised, Good spent the money on homes, luxury cars, European vacations and payments to multiple women. Investigators found electronic money transfers with memo lines such as “Hotel for Destiny,” “because youre [sic] sexy” and “Nailz.” By the time the scam came to light in 2022, he had racked up $800,000 in credit card bills, according to court filings.
    “Shawn Good spent that money to prop up a lavish lifestyle,” Michael F. Easley Jr., U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina, said in an interview. “It was a hallmark of somebody who every single day of their life chose greed over good.”
    The use of the Morgan Stanley lines of credit gave the transfers an air of legitimacy.
    “So, effectively, Morgan Stanley is lending money to the victims of this scheme and that money then gets diverted into Shawn Good’s pocket,” Easley said.
    But it also meant that while they were unwittingly funding Good’s scam, the victims also were on the hook for interest to Morgan Stanley for as much as $2,000 per month.
    “Shawn Good convinced them he would get enough return that he could make money and pay back his liquidity access loan principal and interest and still come out ahead,” Easley said. “That didn’t happen.”
    Prosecutors said that in addition to the money he spent on himself, Good used some of it to pay other investors, in a classic Ponzi scheme.
    On May 24, a federal judge in Raleigh sentenced Good to 87 months in prison and ordered him to pay more than $3.6 million in restitution. It’s not nearly enough to make the victims whole, prosecutors and victims said. And because of the nature of the scam, much of the money Good pilfered is long gone.

    A question of supervision

    That is where Morgan Stanley comes in. Some of Good’s clients filed arbitration claims against the firm — standard account agreements bar brokerage customers from suing in court. The victims alleged that the firm failed to reasonably supervise its employee.
    “I think any other brokerage firm would have detected this activity,” said attorney Marc Fitapelli of New York, who represents Andrews and her mother. Andrews’ mother also lost everything she had, roughly $1 million.
    The arbitration process, under the auspices of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, is confidential. While the firm settled with at least one client under undisclosed terms, Fitapelli said Morgan Stanley has pushed back against claims that it was somehow responsible for Good’s actions. And several of Good’s victims said the firm is still holding them to their lines of credit, and it is still charging them interest.
    One victim, Charles Hayward of Wilmington, said that means he has no choice but to keep his account at Morgan Stanley to this day.
    “It’s awful hard to pay that debt off to move my money away, or I just give them all my money and then move whatever’s left away,” he said.
    According to a court filing, Hayward lost $150,000 in the scam.
    Morgan Stanley, which topped earnings expectations Tuesday thanks in large part to its wealth management business, declined an interview request. In a statement, a spokesperson for the firm said: “After discovering Mr. Good’s fraud, he was promptly terminated from Morgan Stanley. We have and will continue to cooperate fully with law enforcement and other authorities and to work with counsel for Morgan Stanley clients to address their claims.”
    It wasn’t Morgan Stanley that discovered Good’s fraud, according to multiple law enforcement sources. These sources said that federal and state investigators in North Carolina, who were looking into Good’s finances, began contacting his clients early last year. One of those customers was the first to alert the firm. Only after Good refused to be interviewed by investigators did Morgan Stanley fire him.
    After this article was first published, a Morgan Stanley spokesperson offered an additional statement.
    “The fraud committed by Shawn Good was conducted outside Firm systems and involved transfers to Good that were made from client accounts held elsewhere,” the statement said.
    Nonetheless, the statement said, the firm “has worked with all clients who have raised claims to amicably resolve them.”
    Earlier this month, the firm reached an agreement in principle with Caitlin Andrews and her mother to settle their claims.

    Trading on trust

    Caitlin Andrews said she began investing with Good in 2014, opening her Morgan Stanley account with approximately $1.7 million from a divorce settlement. She said that she saw no reason not to trust him. Good was already handling her mother’s investments, and before that he had worked with her grandmother.
    “He just seemed really invested in our family,” she said. “He just seemed very trustworthy and friendly.”
    But more important than all of that, she said, was that he worked for Morgan Stanley.
    “Morgan Stanley does the homework about who they hire,” she said. “And he isn’t just some guy on a street corner with a sign.”

    Caitlin Andrews, Morgan Stanley client

    Andrews said that she stressed to Good from the outset that the money was everything that she had. As a single mother, her earning power was limited.
    “It’s what I lived off of, it’s what I paid groceries off of, it’s what I paid my mortgage off of,” she said, explaining what she told Good. “It was my sons’ college education, it was health insurance, it was everything.”
    Eventually, she said, Good pitched her on a plan that would allow her to leverage her holdings to invest in an Airbnb in her beach-side community, earning her extra income with minimal risk.
    “I’ve got a high yield, low risk bond that pays out every three months. So, in three months, you’re going to get $15,000 and that would be great for this bathroom,” she said he told her. “And then in the next three months, $15,000 will be great for, you know, that kitchen upgrade.”
    Good would arrange for the purchases through her Liquidity Access Line of Credit. What she said she had not understood, as a novice investor, was that the funds for the bonds were going from her line of credit into Good’s personal account.

    The scam unravels

    It wasn’t until early last year that she had any idea something was wrong. That’s when investigators from the IRS and the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigators contacted her about the money transfers from her brokerage account to Good.
    “I remember one of the women was really nice, and she said, ‘Do you know that you are missing X amount of money?'” Andrews recalled. “And I said, ‘No, I’m not.'”
    She said she then pulled up her account on her phone, and it showed her holdings were still there. But then the agent instructed her to scroll down to the section about her line of credit.
    “If you go down to how much I owed, no, I didn’t have any money,” Andrews said. At that point, the agent started crying, she said. “And I knew that when the law enforcement agent starts crying on your behalf, that things are really bad.”

    ‘I want my money’

    Filled with adrenaline and confusion, Andrews said she decided to confront Good and record the whole thing. The phone conversations would eventually become part of the court record.
    “How do we know it’s not a Ponzi scheme?” she is heard asking Good on Feb. 2, 2022.
    “It’s not! I mean, I mean, the money’s there. It’s coming back. It’s not,” he said.
    “OK, and I’m going to trust you because you work at Morgan Stanley. And you should know these things,” Andrews replied.
    But by this point, Good was no longer touting his Morgan Stanley credentials. That became even clearer in Andrews’ second phone call to Good a week later.
    “I want my money. And I want it in my hands,” Andrews told Good on Feb. 9, 2002. “I have two boys. I am their only parent. This is all of my money. And you took it!”
    “And you have it all, Caitlin. You have it all, we will get it all transferred back,” Good replied.
    But, he said, “If they go to Morgan Stanley, they will fire me. I mean, I will lose my job.”
    On the recordings, Good can be heard telling Andrews that going to the firm, or even contacting an attorney, would “hamstring” his efforts to get her money back. And in the recordings he is heard instructing her to correspond with him using a private email address and not his Morgan Stanley account.

    Reading the red flags

    Good’s efforts to hide his scam from Morgan Stanley do not absolve the firm, said Louis Straney, a 43-year veteran of the securities industry who consults in arbitration cases but isn’t involved with this one.
    “They should have detected it and prevented it at the outset,” said Straney, the founder and managing partner at Arbitration Insight in Santa Fe, New Mexico. “They should have been more proactive. Because the red flags, the alerts were there.”
    According to court filings, Good’s cars included a 2010 Lexus RX350, a 1997 Porsche Boxster, a 2019 Tesla Model 3 and a 2018 Alfa Romeo Stelvio. His travel destinations included France, Italy, Spain, and the Netherlands. Straney said Good’s lifestyle alone should have been a dead giveaway.
    “As a supervisor, you’re looking at the advisors that work for you and determining whether or not their lifestyle matches their income,” he said. “I managed some of the best and largest producers at my firm, and none of them had a lifestyle that matched this, not one.”
    The fact that virtually all of Good’s clients had opened lines of credit and they were actively using them was a second red flag.
    “You really have to justify why they’re borrowing,” Straney said.

    Under the radar

    Morgan Stanley office in Wilmington, N.C. where Good worked.

    It was also not the first time that employees went behind Morgan Stanley’s back using unofficial channels, and the firm failed to notice. 
    Last year, the firm paid a $125 million fine to the Securities and Exchange Commission after admitting to the “widespread and longstanding failure of Morgan Stanley employees throughout the firm” to follow rules prohibiting “off-channel communications” on personal devices and messaging apps as far back as 2018, following an investigation that began in 2021.
    Morgan Stanley was among 16 firms charged, all admitting they violated federal securities laws. Specifically, the SEC said that communicating outside of official channels violates recordkeeping provisions of the law, thwarting the agency’s ability to guard against fraud.
    Fitapelli said that meant the firm was already on notice about the same kind of conduct Good was engaging in.
    “The activity that they’re being fined for is exactly what happened,” he said. “And, so, the harm is foreseeable.”

    Sense of abandonment

    Caitlin Andrews was Good’s biggest victim, according to court filings.
    She said the fraud upended her life. She was forced to move with her boys into the cottage, still under construction, that she had been planning to turn into an Airbnb. With no money to pay her contractors, she is trying to do the construction by herself, bit by bit. The family has no health insurance and with no money for child care, she can’t work a full-time job.
    “The stress on me is understandable. But what I hate is the amount of stress on my kids,” she said. “I try to be strong. I think I am strong, and I try to talk about it, not cover it up, but at least not let it bleed into everything. But the children know exactly what’s happening and how their life has changed.”
    Andrews said that at one point, she even considered suicide, and was saved only by her love for her children, as well as a therapist who insisted on treating her for free.
    “You’re just in this dark void of empty abandonment, because you’re abandoned by your financial advisor who took everything. You’re abandoned by the firm whose commitment is to help you,” she said.
    At his sentencing hearing in May, a disheveled-looking Good said “there’s no excuse” for what he did, and that “the guilt and remorse is overwhelming.”
    Several of his victims spoke at the sentencing, as well, all describing how Good stole not only their money but also their trust.
    “He took my boys out for ice cream while he was stealing their college funds,” Andrews told the judge.
    Not in court, nor anywhere near it, was anyone from Morgan Stanley.
    If you or someone you know is in crisis, call 988 to reach the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline. More

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    June home sales drop to the slowest pace in 14 years as short supply chokes the market

    June home sales were 18.9% lower compared with last year. That is the slowest sales pace for June since 2009.
    “There are simply not enough homes for sale,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors.

    A house is for sale in Arlington, Virginia, July 13, 2023.
    Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty Images

    Sales of pre-owned homes dropped 3.3% in June compared with May, running at a seasonally adjusted annualized rate of 4.16 million units, according to the National Association of Realtors.
    Compared with June of last year, sales were 18.9% lower. That is the slowest sales pace for June since 2009.

    The continued weakness in the housing market is not for lack of demand. It’s all about a critical shortage of supply. There were just 1.08 million homes for sale at the end of June, 13.6% less than June of 2022. At the current sales pace, that represents a 3.1-month supply. A six-month supply is considered balanced between buyer and seller.
    “There are simply not enough homes for sale,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors. “The market can easily absorb a doubling of inventory.”
    That dynamic is keeping pressure under home prices. The median price of an existing home sold in June was $410,200, the second-highest price ever recorded by the Realtors. Last June’s price was the highest, but by barely 1%. This median measure, however, also reflects what’s selling, and right now, with mortgage rates much higher than last year, the low end of the market is most active.
    “Home sales fell, but home prices have held firm in most parts of the country,” Yun said. “Limited supply is still leading to multiple-offer situations, with one-third of homes getting sold above the list price in the latest month.”
    Sales are unlikely to recover anytime soon, as mortgage rates weigh heavy on affordability. The Realtors measure June sales based on closings, so contracts that were likely signed in April and May. Mortgage rates hung in the mid 6% range during that time and then shot up over 7% at the very end of May. Rates stayed in the 7% range for all of June, as home prices rose.

    First-time buyers are struggling the most. Their share of June sales fell to 26%, down from 30% in June 2022. That is the lowest share since the Realtors began tracking this metric.
    The higher end of the market, however, appears to be recovering. While sales were down across all price points, they were down least at the higher end. That was not the case last year, when higher-priced home sales were dropping off sharply.
    As the competition heats up, buyers are increasingly using cash to win over sellers. All-cash sales made up 26% of June transactions, slightly higher than both May and June of last year.
    Sales are unlikely to rebound soon in the existing home market, but sales of newly built homes are reaping the benefits. The nation’s largest homebuilder, DR Horton, reported a big jump in new orders jumping in its latest earnings release Thursday.
    “Despite continued higher mortgage rates and inflationary pressures, our net sales orders increased 37% from the prior year quarter, as the supply of both new and existing homes at affordable price points remains limited and demographics supporting housing demand remain favorable,” said Donald Horton, chairman of the board, in a release. More

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    Sports drink entrepreneur Mike Repole takes majority stake in sneaker brand Nobull

    Beverage veteran Mike Repole is buying a majority stake in Nobull, a footwear and apparel brand.
    The Boston-based company was founded in 2015 by two former Reebok executives.
    Repole said his plans for the brand may include an eventual initial public offering.

    Nobull is a training brand founded in 2015 by former Reebok executives Marcus Wilson and Michael Schaeffer.
    Source: Nobull

    The man who turned Vitaminwater and BodyArmor into household beverage names is turning his attention to the sneaker industry.
    Mike Repole’s private equity firm will buy a majority stake in the company Nobull, he told CNBC on Thursday. It’s the first significant investment for Impact Capital, the private equity arm of Repole’s family office.

    “I fell in love with just the name, the brilliance of Nobull and what it stands for. It is no excuses, no BS, just get it done,” he said.
    Terms of the deal were not disclosed, but Repole said it’s his biggest investment in a brand to date.
    Nobull is a training brand founded in 2015 by former Reebok executives Marcus Wilson and Michael Schaeffer. The Boston-based company employs about 100 people across the U.S., U.K. and China, and sells its sneakers and apparel primarily online.

    Nobull is a footwear, apparel and accessory brand based in Boston.
    Source: Nobull

    In recent years, the company has signed partnerships with fitness brand CrossFit, The PGA Tour and the NFL Combine.
    Repole said he first reached out to the founders about 14 months ago with a deal proposal. It went ignored. He continued to reach out until about two months ago when they met and immediately hit it off with a shared vision of success, Repole said.

    “I think that this brand can really be a life-changing brand for so many people,” Repole said. “The Nobull mentality is about being a better version of yourself and just cutting out the noise and clutter.”
    Repole said his plans for the brand may include an eventual initial public offering.
    “If we want to build this big multibillion platform … taking this public I think is going to be the best way to go about it,” he said.
    Co-founder Wilson said Repole’s history of successful exits is part of what makes him a compelling partner for Nobull.
    Repole sold BodyArmor to Coca-Cola for $5.6 billion in 2021. Before that, he co-founded Glaceau, maker of the popular brands Vitaminwater and Smartwater, which were also sold to Coke in 2007.
    “As we think about the next phase or the next chapter in this book of our brand, Mike is someone who has been multiple times to where we’re going and is often several chapters ahead in that book,” Wilson told CNBC.
    In the near term, the trio will be focused on broadening the brand’s reach.
    “Some of the many things that [Repole] and his team bring are operational excellence,” Wilson said. “Mike gets what it takes to go from hundreds of millions into billions.” More

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    Walmart cuts price of Walmart+ for households that receive food stamps, other government aid

    Walmart is cutting its Walmart+ membership fee in half for Americans who receive food stamps or other government assistance.
    Walmart’s discounted price could put Walmart+ within reach of more shoppers if they are willing to pay the fee.
    Amazon has a similar discounted price for Prime.

    Rafael Henrique | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Walmart is reducing the cost of its subscription service for Americans who receive food stamps and some other types of government assistance, as it pushes to grow the program and notices more price sensitivity among shoppers.
    The nation’s largest retailer said Thursday that it will cut the price of Walmart+ in half for those low-income households. Starting July 20, customers who are eligible for qualifying government aid can pay $49 a year or $6.47 on a monthly basis for Walmart+. That compares with the typical price of $98 a year or $12.95 if members pay monthly.

    related investing news

    2 days ago

    For Walmart, the move could help capture and retain the swath of shoppers who may be quicker to skip or cancel services with recurring fees or turn to another retailer such as a dollar store. Walmart has not disclosed total Walmart+ subscribers but said about a quarter of its members get government assistance. It declined to say how that compares with the rest of its customer base.
    On Walmart’s most recent earnings call in May, CEO Doug McMillon said customers are feeling the burden of higher grocery bills. He called persistent inflation, especially for food, “one of the key factors creating uncertainty for us in the back half of the year.”
    Many families struggling to afford groceries are also receiving less generous Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program benefits, formerly known as food stamps, after pandemic-related emergency funding ended earlier this year.
    Walmart’s discounted price could put Walmart+ within reach of more shoppers if they are willing to pay the fee. More than 41 million Americans received funding for food through the SNAP in 2022, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. That number does not include people who receive another type of government aid that may qualify for the discount. Most of the types of aid on the list, such as Medicaid and the National School Lunch Program, help families with children or those who are food insecure.
    Walmart launched Walmart+ in 2020 to hook shoppers and increase the likelihood of them spending more on its website and in stores. It’s similar to Amazon Prime and follows the playbook of membership-based warehouses, such as Costco and Walmart-owned Sam’s Club.

    Members of Walmart+ get free shipping, fuel discounts, access to streaming service Paramount+ and unlimited deliveries of online orders of $35 or more from the store to their doorstep.
    The program appears to have gained some traction, but Walmart is still looking for ways to increase its uptake as it lags behind Prime. Its membership count is about 12 million, according to estimates by market researcher Consumer Intelligence Research Partners, based on quarterly consumer surveys and industry research.
    Some others peg the count higher. In a recent estimate, Morgan Stanley said Walmart+ has reached approximately 21.5 million members, or roughly 17% of household penetration in the U.S.
    Either figure, however, makes up only a small fraction of Amazon Prime’s estimated 170 million memberships in the U.S., according to CIRP.
    Amazon has a similar discounted fee for low-income households that qualify for government assistance and sign up for Prime. It charges $6.99 per month, instead of the full $14.99 per month. The lower fee started in 2017.
    Along with the Walmart+ discounted price, Walmart said it has made it easier for families receiving food aid to shop online. It said it now accepts SNAP online in all 50 states. Customers who qualify for SNAP can add their benefits card to Walmart’s app or website, so they can buy groceries online or use curbside pickup.
    Amazon accepts SNAP in every state but Alaska.
    For Walmart, expanding the subscriber base of Walmart+ comes with other benefits. Not only do monthly and annual fees provide a stream of revenue, but the program allows the retailer to better understand customers’ preferences and purchases.
    It can use those insights to support its analytics tool, Walmart Luminate, which it sells to clients, or support its growing advertising business, Walmart Connect. More

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    American Airlines raises 2023 profit forecast after strong second quarter

    American Airlines raised its earnings outlook for 2023 after a strong start to the peak travel season.
    Record revenue of $14.06 billion topped analysts’ expectations and was up 4.7% from a year earlier.
    Airline executives have been upbeat about travel demand, particularly for international trips.

    Boeing 787-9 Dreamliner, from American Airlines company, taking off from Barcelona airport, in Barcelona on 24th February 2023. 
    JanValls | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    American Airlines on Thursday raised its earnings outlook for 2023 after a strong start to the peak travel season, the latest airline to reap the rewards from the continued boom in demand.
    The Fort Worth,Texas-based carrier expects to earn between $3 and $3.75 a share for the full year, adjusting for one-time items, up from a forecast in May to earn about $2.50 to $3.50. That updated 2023 profit guidance falls in line with Wall Street expectations of $3.10, according to Refinitiv consensus estimates.

    Airline executives have been upbeat about travel demand, particularly for international trips. Some airfares have declined compared with last year, when airlines struggled to rebuild their schedules after the worst of the Covid pandemic, leaving travelers with fewer flights and seats to choose from.
    American said Thursday that it expects unit revenues to drop as much as 6.5% in the third quarter from a year earlier with capacity growth of up to 7% from the same period of 2022. For the third quarter, American expects to earn an adjusted 85 cents to 95 cents per share, in line with estimates.
    The company’s forecasts include costs from labor deals, like a tentative agreement with its pilots. However, American’s pilots union are seeking improvements to its tentative contract following a deal struck but rival United and its pilots’ union last week.
    “In regard to wages, we’re going to match those,” American’s CEO, Robert Isom, told CNBC’s Phil LeBeau on Thursday. “I want our pilots to know that.”
    Here’s how American Airlines performed in the second quarter compared with what Wall Street anticipated, based on an average of analysts’ estimates compiled by Refinitiv:

    Adjusted earnings per share: $1.92 vs. $1.59 expected
    Total revenue: $14.06 billion vs. expected $13.74 billion

    American reported net income in the second quarter of $1.34 billion, or $1.88 a share, up from $476 million, or 68 cents a share in the same period a year earlier. Adjusting for one-time items, including costs associated with planes retired early in the pandemic, the company earned $1.37 billion, or $1.92 per share.
    Record revenue of $14.06 billion topped analysts’ expectations and was up 4.7% from a year earlier.
    The airline’s flying capacity was up 5.3% from a year ago. More