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    Home prices rose for third straight month in April, S&P Case-Shiller index says

    Home prices in April were 0.5% higher month to month, after seasonal adjustments.
    Prices are now just 2.4% below their June 2022 peak.

    Ryan Ratliff (C), Real Estate Sales Associate with Re/Max Advance Realty, shows Ryan Paredes (L) and Ariadna Paredes a home for sale on April 20, 2023 in Cutler Bay, Florida. 
    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    Home prices peaked last June, falling sharply through the beginning of this year. Now, they’re recovering steadily.
    Home prices in April were still down 0.2% compared with April 2022, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller national home price index. They were, however, 0.5% higher month to month, after seasonal adjustments. Prices are now just 2.4% below their June 2022 peak.

    Miami, Chicago, and Atlanta were still seeing big gains in April, with prices up 5.2%, 4.1% and 3.5% year over year, respectively. When compared with a year ago, the price declines were larger in April than in March in 17 of the top 20 index cities. Boston, San Francisco and Cleveland showed slight increases.
    A major jump in mortgage rates last summer caused a decline in prices. But, rates are still high, and homebuyers appear to be adjusting to the new normal. Demand is strengthening.
    “The ongoing recovery in home prices is broadly based,” Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI, said in a release.
    “If I were trying to make a case that the decline in home prices that began in June 2022 had definitively ended in January 2023, April’s data would bolster my argument,” he added. “Whether we see further support for that view in coming months will depend on the how well the market navigates the challenges posed by current mortgage rates and the continuing possibility of economic weakness.”
    Before seasonal adjustments, prices rose in all 20 cities in April, as they had also done in March. Seasonally adjusted data showed prices rising in 19 cities in April versus 14 in March.

    The average interest rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage is still hovering in the high 6% range, more than double what it was in the first two years of the Covid pandemic, when homebuying surged dramatically.
    Buyers, however, are still out in force. But they are coming up against extremely low inventory of homes for sale. Part of that is because the vast majority of homeowners have mortgage rates in the 3% range, which makes them much less likely to want to sell their home and buy another at a higher rate.
    “Home price trends are caught in a tug of war between stretched buyer budgets and limited inventory forcing competition despite reduced affordability,” Danielle Hale, chief economist for Realtor.com, said in a release. “With high mortgage rates keeping 1 in 7 homeowners from selling, new listings have lagged far behind what we’ve seen in prior years, pushing buyers to continue to bring their best offers even as home sales are 20% lower than at this time last year.” More

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    Delta lifts profit forecast thanks to strong demand and premium tickets

    Delta forecast full-year adjusted earnings at the high end of its previously stated range.
    The airline also raised its estimate for free cash generation this year.
    Delta holds its investor day on Tuesday and reports second-quarter results next month.

    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Delta Air Lines on Tuesday raised its second-quarter forecast and estimated full-year adjusted earnings of $6 a share, at the high end of estimates it gave last April as strong travel demand and trade-ups to more expensive fare classes continue to drive growth.
    Delta forecast adjusted earnings per share of $2.25 to $2.50 for the second quarter, up from a previous range of $2 to $2.25 a share. CEO Ed Bastian said that the company’s second-quarter earnings, which it will report next month, could be its highest ever for the April-June period.

    “The demand as you know, as anyone that’s traveling knows, is off the chain,” Bastian said in an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
    In an investor day presentation Tuesday, the airline also raised its estimate for free cash generation this year to $3 billion from $2 billion. Delta reinstated its quarterly dividend earlier this month.

    Delta and its rivals have reported strong travel demand, particularly for international trips, while other sectors have struggled as consumers grapple with inflation and other challenges. The airline industry has also faced growth constraints because of air traffic controller shortages, delays in new aircraft and shortfalls of new pilots, helping keep fares firm.
    But in addition to resilient demand, airlines are also enjoying jet-fuel prices that are down about 30% from a year ago.
    And, Delta on Tuesday forecast revenue per available seat mile, a gauge of how much money an airline is generating for how much it’s flying, to be up as much as 18% over last year, an increase from a previous forecast of 15% to 17% growth.

    The airline has repeatedly touted customers’ willingness to buy up to more expensive seats, from those with extra legroom to first class. Premium revenue will come in at about $19 billion this year, a 35% share of total revenue, up from a 24% share in 2014.
    The carrier also said its lucrative partnership with American Express credit cards continues to grow, generating an estimated $6.5 billion this year compared with $4 billion in 2019.
    Delta shares were up more than 1% in premarket trading Tuesday. More

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    Walgreens slashes earnings guidance due to lower consumer spending, drop in Covid care demand

    Walgreens slashed its full-year earnings guidance to a range of $4.00 to $4.05 per share, down from its previous forecast of $4.45 to $4.65 per share.
    Walgreens fiscal third-quarter earnings missed analyst expectations for the first time since July 2020.
    CEO Rosalind Brewer said Walgreens will increase its cost-cutting program to $4.1 billion and take immediate action to increase profitability in the company’s health-care segment.

    Walgreens Boots Alliance on Tuesday slashed its full-year earnings guidance as it fell short of Wall Street expectations for its fiscal third quarter due to lower consumer spending and a drop in demand for Covid vaccines and testing.
    The retail pharmacy chain lowered its earnings guidance to a range of $4.00 to $4.05 per share for the full year, down from its previous forecast of $4.45 to $4.65 per share.

    CEO Rosalind Brewer told analysts during the company’s earnings call that she was disappointed by the reduced profit guidance for the year.
    Brewer said soft demand for Covid vaccines and lower consumer spending is likely to extend into next year. She said the company is closing watching the end of fiscal stimulus and resumption of student loan payments as potential headwinds.
    “Our customer is feeling the strain of higher inflation and interest rates, lower SNAP benefits and tax refunds and an uncertain economic outlook. They are pulling back on discretionary and seasonal spending and responding strongly to promotional activity,” Brewer said.
    Brewer said she is increasing Walgreen’s cost-cutting initiative to $4.1 billion, which includes $800 million in savings for fiscal year 2024. The company is also working to increase profitability of its health-care segment, she said.
    Brewer said although she’s not satisfied with Tuesday’s results, Walgreens had the right strategy to drive future growth.

    Shares of Walgreens fell roughly 9% in premarket trading following the release.
    Here’s how Walgreens performed in its fiscal third quarter compared with what Wall Street was expecting based on analyst estimates polled by Refinitiv:

    Earnings: $1.00 per share adjusted, vs. $1.07 expected.
    Revenue: $35.42 billion, vs. $34.24 billion expected.

    The earnings miss is the first time Walgreens has underperformed analyst expectations since July 2020.
    But the company beat revenue expectations and posted sales growth, booking sales of $35.4 billion in the quarter — 8.6% higher than revenue of $32.6 billion in the same period a year earlier — due to growth in its retail pharmacy and health-care segments.
    Walgreens booked net profit of $118 million for the quarter, or 14 cents per share unadjusted, a 59% drop from the $289 million in income the company reported for the same quarter last year. The decline was due primarily to lower operating income, according to the company.
    Walgreens’ U.S. retail pharmacy segment generated about $28 billion in sales for the quarter, an increase of 4.4% compared with the same period last year. Comparable sales at individual locations rose 7%.

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    Walgreens pharmacy sales also increased 6.3% compared with the same quarter last year, with comparable sales up nearly 10% due to price inflation in brand medications.
    Total prescriptions filled in the quarter, including immunizations, increased by 0.1% for a total of 305 million. Covid vaccines administered during the period plummeted 83% to 800,000, down from 4.7 million in the same period last year.
    “We had called out Covid as a wildcard heading into the quarter and have unfortunately seen less patient willingness to vaccinate,” Brewer said.
    Walgreens expects to administer 9 million to 10 million Covid vaccines in 2024, in line with a typical flu season, compared with 12.5 million projected vaccinations in 2023, Brewer said.
    Sales in Walgreens U.S. health-care segment came in at $2 billion, a $1.4 billion increase compared with the same period last year.
    The company’s partnership with primary-care provider VillageMD, which includes urgent care provider Summit Health, saw revenue grow by 22%. Sales at Walgreens at-home health-care provider CareCentrix increased 15% due to additional service offerings. More

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    The Inform Act takes effect today — here’s how it aims to target organized retail theft

    The Inform Act, a bipartisan bill that takes effect on Tuesday, requires online marketplaces to disclose and verify the identity of its sellers to deter the sale of stolen, counterfeit or harmful products.
    The bill came after retailers and trade groups lobbied Congress and blamed online marketplaces, such as eBay and Amazon, for what they called a surge in retail theft.
    Online marketplaces that don’t comply with the law could face more than $50,000 in fines for each violation.

    Locked up merchandise, to prevent theft in Target store, Queens, New York. 
    Lindsey Nicholson | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    The Inform Act, a new law that aims to curb organized retail theft and the sale of counterfeit and harmful products on online platforms, takes effect on Tuesday as more retailers blame theft as a reason for lower profits. 
    The bipartisan legislation, which stands for Integrity, Notification and Fairness in Online Retail Marketplaces, passed in December as part of an omnibus spending bill, more than a year after it was introduced by Reps. Jan Schakowsky, D-Ill., and Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla.

    The identity of sellers on online marketplaces is typically unknown, but the new law seeks to change that. Under the Inform Act, web vendors such as Amazon and eBay will be required to verify and share information on third-party sellers that do a high volume of transactions on their platforms.
    “The goal of the INFORM Consumers Act is to add more transparency to online transactions and to deter criminals from acquiring stolen, counterfeit, or unsafe items and selling them through those marketplaces,” the Federal Trade Commission, which will be tasked with enforcing the law along with state attorneys general, said on its website. 
    “The Act also makes sure online marketplace users have a way to report suspicious conduct concerning high-volume third party sellers.”
    Once the bill passed, online marketplaces were given six months to get into compliance. Now that the law has taken effect, they can face steep civil penalties for violations. 
    The law comes after trade associations and retailers lobbied Congress about an alarming uptick in retail theft that they say was driven by lax regulations governing third-party sellers and verification processes on online platforms. They claim organized crime groups steal merchandise from stores and then resell it on online marketplaces, typically at a lower amount than the sticker price.

    Many experts say organized retail theft has grown alongside the rise of online shopping, which boomed during the Covid pandemic and became the primary way consumers shopped.
    During the second quarter of 2020, e-commerce sales in the U.S. accounted for 16.1% of total retail sales and reached $211.5 billion, a 44.5% increase from the prior-year period, according to Census data. E-commerce growth in the U.S. has since leveled out, but its share of sales has remained consistent.
    In the first quarter of 2023, e-commerce in the U.S. accounted for 15.1% of total retail sales, and reached $272.6 billion, a 7.8% jump from the year-ago period.
    While stolen or counterfeit goods make up a small fraction of those transactions, retail groups and law enforcement officials have increasingly called on legislators to address the problem. They’ve said it’s been difficult to catch bad actors who sell stolen goods online because their identities were shielded.
    Criminals have been able to operate with “complete anonymity using fake screen names and fake addresses,” but the Inform Act will change that, Lisa LaBruno, the senior executive vice president of retail operations at Retail Industry Leaders Association, told CNBC.
    “Under INFORM, online marketplaces can no longer turn a blind eye to criminal actors using their platforms to sell stolen and counterfeit goods. The FTC and state attorneys general will be empowered to hold these platforms accountable, and consumers will also have their own reporting mechanism to flag suspicious activity,” said LaBruno. “For retailers, INFORM’s implementation means we have more support and partners in the fight against organized retail crime.”

    What does the law require online marketplaces to do? 

    Online marketplaces are now required to collect, verify and disclose certain information about third-party sellers that have high transaction volumes on their platforms. 
    The rules apply to sellers that had 200 or more separate sales or transactions and $5,000 or more in gross revenue in any continuous 12-month period during the past 24 months, according to the FTC. 
    Digital marketplaces will now be required to collect bank account details, a tax ID number and contact information from relevant sellers and verify that information is correct within 10 days of a vendor reaching “high-volume” status. 
    Individuals that carry out the relevant number of transactions will only be required to give their name, email address and phone number to the platforms. Legal entities and corporations will have to provide the same information. But they also have to give a copy of a valid government-issued ID or a valid government record or tax document that includes the business name and physical address of the seller.
    Third-party vendors are required to keep the information current and certify it as accurate at least once a year. Marketplaces must disclose that information either in the sellers’ product listings or in order confirmations. 
    The new law requires marketplaces to suspend sellers from the platform if they fail to disclose the required information. The marketplaces also have to provide a clear way for consumers to report suspicious conduct on product listings from relevant third-party vendors. 
    For sellers that have annual gross revenues of $20,000 or more on a particular marketplace, the platforms must clearly disclose their information on product listing pages, or in order confirmation messages and account transaction histories on the platform. That data includes the name of the vendor or their business, and their address and contact information, including a phone number and email address. 
    Many of the online marketplaces subject to the legislation are national, household names. But smaller, more niche platforms with relevant sellers and volume are covered, as well. 

    How will the law be enforced?

    The FTC and states will share enforcement authority of the Inform Act. 
    Marketplaces found to have run afoul of the law could face civil penalties of $50,120 per violation. 
    State attorneys general and other state officials can also file actions in federal court that could result in higher penalties from damages, restitution or other compensation, the FTC said. 
    It’s not clear how the law will be enforced, or if the FTC will actively seek out violations or only respond to complaints made through the new reporting systems. 
    The Buy Safe America Coalition, a group that advocates against the sale of stolen or counterfeit goods, sent a letter to the FTC this month urging the agency to “take immediate action” once the Inform Act takes effect. 
    “While our respective organizations represent a diverse group of industries and interests, we are singularly united in our belief that INFORM must be fully enforced by the FTC (and the state AGs) to protect consumers and businesses from what has become a serious threat to consumers, honest businesses, and a fair and healthy marketplace,” the letter, signed by retailers including Gap, Home Depot, Walgreens and Best Buy, states. “We strongly encourage the FTC to act quickly and publicly to rigorously enforce the law.”
    The group also offered its assistance to the FTC. 
    A week before the measure took effect, the FTC sent a letter to 50 online marketplaces about their new obligations under the law and reminded them of the penalties associated with violations.
    It urged the groups to communicate the new requirements to the sellers they work with and advise them on how to avoid “potential imposters” that could trick them into sharing personal or account information. 
    “The Commission will enforce the Act to the fullest extent possible and will collaborate with our state partners to hold online marketplaces accountable,” Samuel Levine, the director of the FTC’s Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a statement.
    In a statement, a spokesperson for eBay said the company is “fully prepared” to comply with the new law.
    “eBay fully supports transparency and is committed to a safe selling and buying experience for our customers,” the spokesperson said. “We were proud to support passage of the INFORM Act to create a national standard to protect consumers from bad actors who seek to misuse online marketplaces, while also ensuring important protections for sellers.”
    Meta, Facebook’s parent company, told CNBC it has already rolled out a business verification tool for shops and sellers that meet the relevant threshold. 
    Amazon has notified high-volume sellers that they must verify their information before the law takes effect in order to avoid getting kicked off the platform or having their funds frozen.
    — Additional reporting by CNBC’s Annie Palmer More

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    A U.S. recession is coming this year, HSBC warns — with Europe to follow in 2024

    In its midyear outlook, the British banking giant’s asset manager said recession warnings are “flashing red” for many economies, while fiscal and monetary policies are “out of sync” with stock and bond markets.
    Along with China, HSBC believes India is the “main macro growth story in 2023” as the economy has recovered strongly from the Covid pandemic on the back of resurgent consumer spending and services.

    Hong Kong observation wheel, and the Hong Kong and Shanghai Bank, HSBC building, Victoria harbor, Hong Kong, China.
    Ucg | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    The U.S. will enter a downturn in the fourth quarter, followed by a “year of contraction and a European recession in 2024,” according to HSBC Asset Management.
    In its midyear outlook, the British banking giant’s asset manager said recession warnings are “flashing red” for many economies, while fiscal and monetary policies are out of sync with stock and bond markets.

    Joseph Little, global chief strategist at HSBC Asset Management, said while some parts of the economy have remained resilient thus far, the balance of risks “points to high recession risk now,” with Europe lagging the U.S. but the macro trajectory generally “aligned.”
    “We are already in a mild profit recession, and corporate defaults have started to creep up too,” Little said in the report seen by CNBC.
    “The silver lining is that we expect high inflation to moderate relatively quickly. That will create an opportunity for policymakers to cut rates.”
    Despite the hawkish tone adopted by central bankers and the apparent stickiness of inflation, particularly at the core level, HSBC Asset Management expects the U.S. Federal Reserve to cut interest rates before the end of 2023, with the European Central Bank and the Bank of England following suit next year.

    The Fed paused its monetary tightening cycle at its June meeting, leaving its fed funds rate target range at between 5% and 5.25%, but signaled that two further hikes can be expected this year. Market pricing narrowly anticipates the fed funds rates to be a quarter percentage point higher in December of this year, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

    HSBC’s Little acknowledged that central bankers will not be able to cut rates if inflation remains significantly above target — as it is in many major economies — and said it is therefore important that the recession “doesn’t come too early” and cause disinflation.
    “The coming recession scenario will be more like the early 1990s recession, with our central scenario being a 1-2% drawdown in GDP,” Little added.
    HSBC expects the recession in Western economies to result in a “difficult, choppy outlook for markets” for two reasons.
    “First, we have the rapid tightening of financial conditions that’s caused a downturn in the credit cycle. Second, markets do not appear to be pricing a particularly pessimistic view of the world,” Little said.

    “We think the incoming news flow over the next six months could be tough to digest for a market that’s pricing a ‘soft landing.'”
    Little suggested that this recession will not be sufficient to “purge” all inflation pressures from the system, and therefore developed economies face a regime of “somewhat higher inflation and interest rates over time.”
    “As a result, we take a cautious overall view on risk and cyclicality in portfolios. Interest rate exposure is appealing — particularly the Treasury curve — the front end and mid part of the curve,” Little said, adding that the firm sees “some value” in European bonds, too.
    “In credit, we are selective and focus on higher quality credits in investment grade over speculative investment grade credits. We are cautious on developed market stocks.”
    Backing China and India
    As China emerges from several years of stringent Covid-19 lockdown measures, HSBC believes that high levels of domestic household savings should continue to support domestic demand, while problems in the property sector are bottoming out and government fiscal efforts should create jobs.
    Little also suggested that comparatively low inflation — consumer prices rose by a two-year monthly low of 0.1% in May as the economy struggles to get back to firing on all cylinders — means further monetary policy easing is possible and GDP growth “should easily exceed” the government’s modest 5% target this year.
    HSBC remains overweight on Chinese stocks for this reason, and Little said the “diversification of Chinese equities shouldn’t be underestimated.”

    “For example, value is outperforming growth in China and Asia. That’s the opposite of developed stock markets,” he added.
    Along with China, Little noted that India is the “main macro growth story in 2023” as the economy has recovered strongly from the pandemic on the back of resurgent consumer spending and a robust services sector.
    “In India, recent upward growth surprises and downward surprises on inflation are creating something of a ‘Goldilocks’ economic mix,” Little said.
    “Improved corporate and bank balance sheets have also been boosted by government subsidies. All the while, the structural, long run investment story for India remains intact.” More

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    Lordstown Motors files for bankruptcy, sues Foxconn over $170 million funding deal

    Lordstown Motors filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection early Tuesday.
    Lordstown also sued Taiwanese contract-manufacturing giant Foxconn, alleging that it breached a deal to provide the EV startup with additional funding.
    Foxconn, which bought Lordstown’s Ohio factory for $230 million last year, said it had been proceeding in good faith, but it will now consider legal action of its own.

    The Lordstown Motors Corp. Endurance electric pickup truck is displayed during an unveiling event in Lordstown, Ohio, June 25, 2020.
    Matthew Hatcher | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Struggling electric-truck maker Lordstown Motors filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Tuesday and said that it would put itself up for sale amid an ongoing dispute over investments that had been promised by Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn.
    Shares were down over 60% in premarket trading following the news.

    Simultaneously with its bankruptcy filing, Lordstown filed a suit against Foxconn. The company accused Foxconn of fraud and of failing to abide by an agreement that called for the Taiwan-based firm to invest up to $170 million in Lordstown, and for the two to work together on a range of new electric vehicles.
    In a statement provided to CNBC, Foxconn said it had hoped to continue discussions to reach a solution that would “satisfy all stakeholders” without “resorting to baseless legal actions.” But in light of the litigation and what it characterized as Lordstown’s attempts to “mislead the public,” it is suspending talks and reserving the right to take legal action of its own.
    Lordstown, launched in 2019 with a factory acquired from General Motors and the enthusiastic support of the Trump administration, struck a deal to sell that Ohio factory to Foxconn for $230 million last year. Following the deal, which closed in May 2022, Lordstown and Foxconn  agreed to a second deal in which Foxconn would invest up to $170 million in Lordstown, taking a 19.3% stake in the startup.
    Foxconn paid the first $52.7 million due under that deal last year. The next payment, of $47.3 million, was due within 10 days of regulatory approval by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States. That approval was secured in late April, Lordstown said – but Foxconn never made the payment.
    Instead, Foxconn told Lordstown that the startup had breached the deal by allowing its stock price to fall below $1 per share. (Lordstown executed a 1:15 reverse stock split in May, pushing its share price back over the critical $1 mark.)

    In early May, Lordstown warned investors that a bankruptcy filing was likely if it didn’t reach an agreement with Foxconn or acquire additional funding elsewhere. A few days later, Lordstown said that it was nearly out of cash and that it would be forced to stop production of its Endurance electric pickup unless it could find a strategic partner.
    Lordstown had just $108.1 million in cash available at the end of March, after losing $171.1 million in the first quarter.   More

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    Wise shares spike 18% as higher interest rates help fintech triple profits

    Wise said in a statement to the stock market that its profit before tax nearly tripled to £146.5 million ($186.5 million).
    Wise benefited from surging interest rates, which last week were raised by the Bank of England to 5% as policymakers grapple with high inflation.
    Overall income reported by the firm rose to £964.2 million, up 73% year-on-year, boosted by a surge in customer balances.

    The Wise logo displayed on a smartphone screen.
    Pavlo Gonchar | SOPA Images | LightRocket via Getty Images

    Online money transfer firm Wise’s shares soared nearly 18% Tuesday as the company reported a spike in profits thanks to rising interest income.
    The company said in a statement to the stock market that its profit before tax tripled to £146.5 million ($186.5 million). Earnings per share also more than tripled, to 11.53 pence.

    That was as the company saw customer growth of 34%, with 10 million total users by March 31, 2023, and volumes increased 37% to £104.5 billion.
    Wise was trading at about £6.18 at around midday London time, up almost 18% on the day.
    Wise benefited from surging interest rates, which last week were raised by the Bank of England to 5% as policymakers grapple with persistently high inflation.
    Like other fintechs, Wise has been able to accrue income from interest on funds sitting in customer accounts.
    Monzo and Starling Bank recently reported their own respective profitability milestones, citing increased income from lending.

    Wise said Tuesday its revenues grew 51% to £846.1 million, from £559.9 million the year prior.
    Overall income reported by the firm rose to £964.2 million, up 73% year-on-year. This was boosted by a surge in the amount of funds deposited by customers.
    Still, Wise has been grappling with a number of less positive developments.
    The company’s CEO Kristo Kaarmann last year became the subject of an investigation by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs over a £365,651 tax bill he failed to pay on time.
    The news is significant as it could lead to serious ramifications for Kaarmann’s position if he is found to have breached U.K. tax laws.
    “The FCA [Financial Conduct Authority] is still conducting the investigation and it’s taking a while. I find this is a bit unfortunate but we’ll have to wait until we hear what they conclude,” Kaarmann said in an interview with BBC Radio Tuesday.
    “It has really not much to do with the business that we’re running, it was a personal mistake. I was really late with my taxes a long time ago and I paid the fines.”
    Wise was also the subject of a $360,000 fine by regulators in Abu Dhabi over failings in its anti-money laundering controls.
    This issue has since been “resolved,” Kaarmann told the BBC.
    Kaarmann earlier this year announced that he plans to take a three-month sabbatical between September and December to spend time with his baby.
    Harsh Sinha, the company’s chief technology officer, is set to assume his duties as CEO in the interim. This has led to speculation from some investors that Sinha may step up into the CEO role permanently. Wise has not itself indicated this will be the case. More

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    Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Walgreens, Kellogg, Eli Lilly, Delta and more

    A man walks out of Walgreens pharmacy on March 09, 2023 in New York City. 
    Leonardo Munoz | Corbis News | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:
    Walgreens Boots Alliance — The retail pharmacy chain sank about 7% after the company lowered its full-year earnings guidance to $4 to $4.05 per share from its previous forecast of $4.45 to $4.65 per share. It also reported adjusted earnings per share for its fiscal third quarter of $1, missing a Refinitiv forecast of $1.07.

    Kellogg — Shares added 2.5% in premarket trading after an upgrade from Goldman Sachs to buy. The firm said Kellogg was “mispriced” compared to the potential growth opportunity offered to investors.
    Lordstown Motors — Lordstown Motors tumbled 61% in the premarket after the U.S. electric truck maker filed for bankruptcy protection and sued Taiwan’s Foxconn for a deal that came apart.
    Delta Air Lines — The travel stock added about 1% in premarket trading after Delta forecast full-year adjusted earnings of $6 per share, at the high end of previous guidance. The company cited strong demand and customers trading up to more expensive share classes as reasons for the more optimistic outlook.
    American Equity Investment Life — The stock jumped 15% in premarket trading after Bloomberg reported Canadian investment firm Brookfield was close to making a deal to buy the insurance firm for approximately $4.3 billion.
    Eli Lilly — Shares gained 1.5% in the premarket. Eli Lilly released clinical results Monday that showed its experimental drug retatrutide helped patients lose up to 24% of their weight after almost a year.

    Host Hotels & Resorts — Shares fell nearly 2% following a downgrade by Morgan Stanley to underweight from equal weight. The Wall Street firm said it expects deteriorating trends in key markets and higher competitive supply versus its peer group.
    — CNBC’s Sarah Min, Brian Evans, Jesse Pound and Michael Bloom contributed reporting. More