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    Stellantis CEO warns of electric vehicle battery shortage, followed by lack of raw materials

    Carlos Tavares expects a shortage of EV batteries by 2024-2025, followed by a lack of raw materials for the vehicles by 2027-2028.
    The possibility of shortages has been a focus of Wall Street analysts when rating automakers and predicting their ability to sell EVs.
    Stellantis, the world’s fourth-largest carmaker, was formed by the merger of Fiat Chrysler and France-based Groupe PSA last year.

    Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares holds a news conference after meeting with unions, in Turin, Italy, March 31, 2022.
    Massimo Pinca | Reuters

    Stellantis CEO Carlos Tavares said he expects shortages of the batteries and raw materials needed to make electric vehicles in the coming years, as the global automotive industry pivots to EVs to meet an expected increase in consumer demand and government regulations.
    Tavares said he expects a shortage of EV batteries by 2024-2025, followed by a lack of raw materials for the vehicles that will slow availability and adoption of EVs by 2027-2028.

    “The speed at which we are trying to move all together for the right reason, which is fixing the global warming issue, is so high that the supply chain and the production capacities have no time to adjust,” he told media Tuesday after the company announced a new $2.5 billion EV battery plant in Indiana.
    Stellantis, the world’s fourth-largest carmaker, was formed by the merger of Fiat Chrysler and France-based Groupe PSA last year.
    Tavares used the prospect of a shortage to urge policymakers globally to stop aggressively moving targets for EVs forward.
    European regulators have been among the most aggressive in implementing new EV regulations, with those in the United Kingdom announcing plans to ban the sale of vehicles with traditional internal combustion engines by 2030, sooner than the previous target date of 2040. The Biden administration last year also announced a target for half of all vehicles in the U.S. to be EVs by the end of the decade.  
    “All the car companies now, at least the best ones, are now full speed ahead; in full execution mode, going as fast as they can,” Tavares said. “The only thing that really helps to deliver is stability. Stop playing with the rules. Leave the rules as they are and let people work properly.”

    Tavares expects a bottleneck in batteries first, as more EV production plants come online. He then expects those facilities to create a shortage of raw materials for the vehicles. Such shortages have been a focus of Wall Street analysts when rating automakers and predicting their ability to sell EVs.
    This isn’t the first time Tavares has warned of such a shortage, but it’s the most detailed.
    “The point is, when we want to move too fast with a big magnitude and there is not enough feasibility studies, we may be bumping on this kind of stuff,” Tavares said. “You’ll see that the electrification path, which is a very ambitious one, in a time window that has been set by the administrations is going to bump on the supply side.”
    Automakers globally have set sales expectations to transition certain brands to exclusively offering EVs by the end of this decade, if not sooner.
    Stellantis is investing $35 billion in EVs and expects to achieve annual sales of 5 million electric vehicles globally by 2030. That would include all passenger car sales in Europe and 50% passenger car and light-duty truck sales in North America, in line with government targets.

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    CDC says monkeypox doesn't spread easily by air: ‘This is not Covid’

    Monkeypox is spread primarily through close physical contact and people are most infectious when they have rashes on their body, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    The virus can also spread through respiratory transmission when a person has lesions in their throat or mouth, but this requires prolonged contract.
    “This is not Covid,” Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, a CDC official, said. “Respiratory spread is not the predominant worry. It is contact and intimate contact in the current outbreak setting and population.”

    Head of the Institute of Microbiology of the German Armed Forces Roman Woelfel works in his laboratory in Munich, May 20, 2022, after Germany has detected its first case of monkeypox.
    Christine Uyanik | Reuters

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention wants to calm public anxiety over how the monkeypox virus is transmitted, emphasizing that it doesn’t spread that easily through the air because it requires close contact with an infected person.
    Monkeypox is primarily spread through sustained physical contact such as skin-to-skin touch with someone who has an active rash, CDC officials said this week. The virus can also spread through contact with materials that have the virus on it like shared bedding and clothing. But it can spread through respiratory droplets as well, although not nearly as easily as Covid-19, they said.

    A monkeypox patient with lesions in their throat or mouth can spread the virus through respiratory droplets if they are around someone else for an extended period of time. However, the virus does not spread easily that way, according to Dr. Jennifer McQuiston, a CDC official.
    “This is not Covid,” McQuiston told reporters on a call Monday. “Respiratory spread is not the predominant worry. It is contact and intimate contact in the current outbreak setting and population.”
    For example, nine people with monkeypox took lengthy flights from Nigeria to other countries without infecting anyone else on the planes, according to McQuiston.
    “It’s not a situation where if you’re passing someone in the grocery store, they’re going to be at risk for monkeypox,” she said.
    The lesions that characterize monkeypox are the source from which the virus spreads, and people are most infectious when these lesions appear on the skin, according to Dr. John Brooks, a medical epidemiologist at the CDC’s division for AIDS prevention.

    However, Brooks said front-line health-care providers should use the standard precautions for infectious diseases when treating a patient with monkeypox, including wearing a N95 respirator mask, gloves and a gown if contact with the patient is particularly close.
    The U.S. has confirmed one monkeypox case in Massachusetts and four presumed cases in New York City, Florida and Utah that need further analysis. The CDC sequenced the virus from the Massachusetts patient within 48 hours and found a patient match in Portugal, McQuiston said. It’s likely that additional cases will be reported in the coming days, she said.
    The recent monkeypox cases in the U.S. and around the world have been identified as the West African strain, a milder form of the virus. Monkeypox is in the same family as smallpox, but is not as severe. Most people who are infected with this strain of monkeypox recover in two to four weeks without specific treatment, McQuiston said.
    Monkeypox usually begins with symptoms similar to the flu including fever, headache, muscle aches, chills, exhaustion and swollen lymph nodes. The disease then progresses to rashes that can spread to different parts of the body including the face, eyes, hands, feet, mouth or genitals. These rashes turn into raised bumps that become blisters. However, the rashes have appeared first in some of the recent cases.
    The World Health Organization has identified about 200 confirmed or suspected cases in at least a dozen countries. The recent outbreaks are unusual because they are occurring in North American and European countries where the virus is not endemic, like in Africa. Monkeypox is usually found in West and Central African rainforests, home to animals that carry the virus live.
    The WHO said this week the current virus appears to spreading among men who have sex with men. Brooks, the CDC official, alerted gay and bisexual men to the potential risk, though he emphasized that anyone can catch the virus regardless of sexual orientation.
    Brooks said monkeypox is not a sexually transmitted disease, which generally spreads through semen and vaginal fluids. It’s important for physicians and individuals to know that some of the current patients have anal or genital lesions that can be confused with sexually transmitted diseases such as herpes or syphilis in addition to chickenpox, Brooks added.
    “Anyone with a rash or lesion around or involving their genitals, their anus or any other place that they have not seen it before, should be fully evaluated, both for that rash but particularly for sexually transmitted infection and other illnesses that can cause rash,” he said.
    The CDC plans to increase its public health messaging ahead of LGBTQ Pride Month, which starts in June, so people in the community are aware of the situation, Brooks said.
    The recent monkeypox outbreak in multiple countries is also different from Covid because there are already federally approved vaccines effective in preventing monkeypox. The U.S. has a stockpile of 100 million doses of an older generation smallpox vaccine called ACAM2000, which can be used to protect against monkeypox, though it can have significant side effects and any decision to distribute it widely would require serious discussion, McQuiston said.
    There’s another vaccine, Jynneos, that targets smallpox and monkeypox and does not have the same risk of significant side effects. It is administered in two doses for people ages 18 and older who are high risk of smallpox or monkeypox. However, the U.S. only has 1,000 available doses of this vaccine, though the drugmaker Bavarian Nordic will start ramping up its production in the coming weeks, McQuiston said.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:

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    Nordstrom raises full-year outlook as first-quarter sales top expectations

    Nordstrom reported fiscal first-quarter sales ahead of analysts’ estimates.
    Nordstrom also hiked its financial outlook for the full year, citing momentum in the business.
    CEO Erik Nordstrom said the company has been able to capitalize on demand from people who are shopping for “long-awaited occasions.”

    A pedestrian and cyclist wear facemasks outside a branch of department store chain Nordstrom in Santa Monica, California on May 11, 2020.
    Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

    Nordstrom on Tuesday reported fiscal first-quarter sales ahead of analysts’ expectations and hiked its full-year outlook, citing momentum in the business as shoppers visited the company’s department stores to refresh their closets with designer brands and shoes.
    Nordstrom now sees fiscal 2022 revenue, including credit card sales, up 6% to 8%, compared with a prior range of up 5% to 7%.

    It forecasts earnings per share, excluding the impact of any share repurchase activity, in a range of $3.38 to $3.68, up from a prior range of $3.15 to $3.50. On an adjusted basis, it expects to earn between $3.20 and $3.50 a share.
    Its shares jumped about 9% in after-hours trading on the news.
    The optimistic outlook stands in contrast to retailers like Target, Kohl’s, Abercrombie & Fitch and a slew of others that in recent days dialed back their annual forecasts as supply chain costs and other expenses eat into profits. But Nordstrom’s business also hasn’t been operating in tandem with those other retailers.
    Last fall, for example, as many retailers saw their sales rebound to above pre-pandemic levels, Nordstrom was still working to do so. Now, as retailers such as Macy’s lap more difficult year-over-year comparisons, Nordstrom is building off of a lower base.
    Chief Executive Officer Erik Nordstrom said the company has been able to capitalize on demand from people who are shopping for “long-awaited occasions” as pandemic restrictions dissipate and invitations resume for weddings, reunions and other social gatherings.

    Still, the retailer booked an adjusted per-share loss that was slightly wider than what analysts had been looking for.
    Here’s how Nordstrom did in its fiscal first quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a Refinitiv survey:

    Loss per share: 6 cents adjusted vs. 5 cents expected
    Revenue: $3.57 billion vs. $3.28 billion expected

    Nordstrom reported net income for the three-month period ended April 30 of $20 million, or 13 cents a share, compared with a net loss of $166 million, or $1.05 per share, a year earlier.
    Nordstrom lost 6 cents a share on an adjusted basis, excluding a gain resulting from the sale of the company’s interest in a corporate office building and an impairment charge related to a Trunk Club property. That per-share loss was a penny wider than what analysts had been looking for.
    Nordstrom announced Tuesday that it plans to sunset its Trunk Club business, a personal styling platform — somewhat akin to Stitch Fix — that it acquired back in 2014. The company said it will be focusing resources instead on its own styling services available at Nordstrom.
    Total revenue, including credit card sales, grew to $3.57 billion from $3 billion a year earlier. That beat expectations for $3.28 billion.
    At Nordstrom’s namesake banner, net sales grew 23.5%, exceeding pre-pandemic levels. Net sales at Nordstrom Rack rose 10.3% but were still below 2019 levels, the company said.
    Nordstrom Rack, which competes with off-price chains such as TJX, Ross Stores and Macy’s Backstage, has struggled more so during the pandemic to secure merchandise from other retail brands, which it can then sell at a markdown. In April, Nordstrom announced plans to streamline ownership of the Rack business as it brought in a bench of executives with prior experience in off-price retail.
    “By increasing our supply of premium brands and fine tuning our assortment to better align with customer needs, we are achieving a better balance of price points at the Rack,” Nordstrom management said in prepared remarks.
    Digital sales were flat on a year-over-year basis, as shoppers trimmed their online spending and headed back to stores. E-commerce represented 39% of total sales, compared with 46% a year earlier.
    Nordstrom said its urban stores, including its flagship location in New York City, performed the strongest during the quarter, as workers returned offices to nearby office buildings and tourist traffic rebounded. Collectively, urban store sales returned to pre-pandemic levels, the company said.
    Chief Financial Officer Anne Bramman said that, so far, the company hasn’t seen inflationary cost pressures result in a pullback of customer spending. On a post-earnings conference call, she said that’s like due to to the “higher income profile and resiliency” of its customers.
    Nordstrom ended the three-month period with inventory levels up 23.7% compared with a year earlier, in part because the company ordered extra goods to build a string stock of merchandise ahead of its upcoming, annual Anniversary Sale.
    Also on Tuesday, Nordstrom announced it will soon start to sell shoes from Allbirds, making it one of the sustainable sneaker brand’s few third-party retail partners, and said it had authorized a new $500 million buyback.

    Correction: This story has been updated to correct that Nordstrom announced on Tuesday it will soon start to sell shoes from Allbirds. An earlier version misstated the timing of the announcement.

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    U.S. bars Russia from paying bondholders through American banks, increasing default risk

    The Biden administration will ban Russia’s government from paying bondholders through American banks starting Wednesday morning.
    The move increases the odds that Russia will default on its outstanding debt.
    It is the latest sanction against that country by the United States in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    The Kremlin towers and Ivan the Great Cathedral in Moscow.
    Kirill Kudryavtsev | Afp | Getty Images

    The Biden administration will ban Russia’s government from paying bondholders through American banks starting Wednesday morning, the Treasury Department said.
    The move increases the odds that Russia will default on its outstanding debt.

    It is the latest sanction against that country by the United States in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    The Biden administration since the invasion had granted a crucial exception to sanctions on Russia’s central bank, allowing that bank to process payments to bondholders through U.S. and international banks.
    But that exception will go away at 12:01 a.m. ET Wednesday, according to a bulletin issued by the Treasury Department entitled, “Notice on Russian Harmful Foreign Activities Sanctions General License 9C.”
    JPMorgan Chase & Co. research has said Russa is faced with nearly $400 million in payments due on dollar-denominated bonds on June 23 and June 24, according to a report by Dow Jones.
    Timothy Ash, a senior sovereign strategist at BlueBay Asset Management, earlier this month noted to CNBC that the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which administers economic and trade sanctions, “can act any time to stop Western institutions from processing bond repayments” by Russia.
    “OFAC can force Russia into default at any time. OFAC is still in the driving seat,” Ash said.

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    What retail inventory misses and markdowns signal about the market's fight against inflation

    To learn more about the CNBC CFO Council, visit cnbccouncils.com/cfo-council/

    Founding Members
    CNBC CFO Council

    A warning sign of recession is when inventory builds exceed what can be absorbed by a weakening consumer.
    Walmart and Target’s big misses last week may signal a shift in consumer spending from goods to services.
    But when two of the biggest retailers in the world get inventory so wrong, it could be a sign of worse things to come and just how hard it is to fight inflation. Abercrombie & Fitch’s weak results didn’t help.

    Jay Laprete | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Retailers are missing and missing big. It started last week with the Walmart and Target results which showed big inventory builds and the need for markdowns, and it’s been followed up by weak earnings and outlook from Abercrombie & Fitch which sent its shares tumbling in a similar fashion to what the big box retailers experienced.
    Is retail the canary in the coal mine for the market? There’s good reason to pose the question, though it remains harder right now to answer it in the affirmative. Let’s start with the best-case scenario: the consumer is shifting in their spending habits from goods to services, and while the retailers got caught with the tide going out on their pandemic strength, the recent string of results are not the sign of a weakened consumer — it’s the preferences that are changing. Remember, no matter how much lower-income Americans struggle with inflation — trading down in grocery store shelves from premium to private-label and steak to ham, a shift that Walmart indicated was happening — two-thirds of consumer spending is done by one-third of Americans in the higher income brackets.

    The Walmart and Target results could reflect the changing financial realities for mid- to lower-income households in the face of still high inflation, says Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. And conversely, higher-income households are less affected by the inflation headwinds, and even if they feel some negative wealth effect, their balance sheets are still in very good shape.
    “The level of their wealth and pandemic-fueled savings will continue to buttress their strong consumer spending, especially as they continue to shift towards more in-person services spending,” she said, and while the rotation of consumer purchases away from goods towards more services hurts retailers like Walmart and Target in sales volumes, it isn’t the economy’s loss as a whole.
    This view has been held out as one of the keys to an economic slowdown not turning into a full-on recession, and many economists still hold to it now.
    “My knee-jerk reaction is recession can be avoided,” said Scott Hoyt, senior director for Moody’s Analytics. “The high-end consumer is more meaningful.”
    Best Buy said on Tuesday its outlook has weakened but it isn’t planning for a “full recession.”

    Home Depot’s results last week were the flip side of the consumer equation, with spending on home remodels and from professional contractors boosting results.
    The stock market drop will weigh on sentiment and high-end consumers have historically been sensitive to it, but this is a unique environment with excess savings, especially among older consumers who were putting away much more cash in recent years as the pandemic created a hole in their spending, Hoyt said. “That doesn’t lessen my concerns about people at the low-end, but from an economics perspective, the high-end is more important, especially if there are still jobs. … If low-end folks can’t afford the ham because they don’t have a job, then we have a real problem,” he added.
    The retail inventory/sales ratios, even excluding autos, are not flashing warning signals that there is a large unintended build up in inventories that will in the near future start to weigh on economic growth, Bostjancic said. 
    But it is an economic data point that will attract more scrutiny given the recent retail results.
    “We’ve been talking for months about the fact that one of the biggest risks to the economic outlook is the inventory swing,” Hoyt said.
    Companies are so scared of not having what they need that they are erring on the side of ordering “a lot” Hoyt said. They double order to get inventory in the door, and then as demand softens, they can end up with too much inventory and have to cut back and markdown existing inventory.
    “That’s the classic inventory cycle that has historically driven recessions, and not infrequently,” Hoyt said. “It’s been very clear in our minds for quite some time now.”
    But this doesn’t mean the issues at Walmart and Target are “enough to say were there and we can’t get out of it,” he added. “We need to know how pervasive it is.”
    It is a difficult time for retailers, in particular, because there are reasons why demand for goods should soften without the shift being the economic canary in the coalmine, and goods price inflation has been running higher than service price inflation, and the economy is still a long way from the pandemic shift in spending from services to goods fully reversing. “Even if you argue it will never fully reverse, it clearly hasn’t reversed to near equilibrium level. It’s a very tricky environment for retailers in particular,” Hoyt said.
    These issues may get worse before they get better into back to school and holiday season, and with lingering pandemic issues in China making companies even more anxious to have inventory. But if inflation keeps running hot and the inventory keeps building into weaker demand, the worst-case scenario could be in the cards. 
    The government’s inventory to sales ratio data doesn’t suggest a problem yet, in fact, it is still low by pre-pandemic standards. Retail may be an example of an “isolated sector,” Hoyt said. But he added, “it’s certainly a cautionary flag. This is a risk we’ve been aware of for a while and emphasized it’s one we need to very closely follow, but I don’t know that it says we are going into recession.” 
    He said the trend to watch is not the inventory sales ratio rising — it has been too low — but how fast is rises and how much as it starts crossing pre-pandemic levels. Right now, “we’re not too far off desirable levels,” he said.

    None of this can discount the fact that Walmart was off by a lot — caught with 32% more inventory year over year.
    “It’s crazy,” former Walmart president and CEO Bill Simon told CNBC last week. “I mean 8% would have been high, 15% would have been terrible, 32% is apocalyptic. I mean that’s billions of dollars of inventory. That’s just frankly not managed very well.”
    Target was higher by 43%; Abercrombie & Fitch inventory was up 45% year over year.
    “I think that they were ordering to try and stay ahead of the supply chain issues and then the product came in and it came in late and they didn’t cut the orders in time, I mean there were a lot of things that could have, should have, would have been done that frankly weren’t,” Simon told CNBC.
    But to Diane Swonk, chief economist at Grant Thornton, the retailers’ mistakes should be received by the market as a warning sign of something more fundamental and potentially pervasive.
    The pivot on spending from goods to services, and the sensitivity of retailers to the lower- and middle-income households who disproportionately feel the price squeeze in things like gas, are real and acute issues. “People are buying luggage instead of the things they bought before, so all of the things that benefited the retailers, easing the misery of quarantines, is now reversing,” Swonk said. “The bulk of inflation is in the service sector, as is the bulk of spending, and it should be slowing down in goods. Goods had seen deflation until the pandemic,” she said.
    But while that may help the Fed to get some drop in goods prices, it won’t cool the economy enough.
    In the rapid inventory builds at the big box retailers, Swonk sees an inflationary economy that perpetuates more booms and busts within it, and that shouldn’t allay concerns about the macroenvironment. “The Fed is in a world which is now more boom-bust prone,” Swonk said. “It’s as if the Fed went through the looking glass and was unable, like Alice, to wake up. It’s still in an alternative universe and it’s not going back,” she said.
    The resilience of the U.S. economy may ultimately up the ante on the Fed to raise rates.
    “We generated 2.1 million jobs in the first four months of the year. That’s a year [of job gains] on average in the 2010s and a lot of new paychecks,” Swonk said. “We’re not in a recession yet by any means,” she added, but more corporate chief economists are not talking as if they went through the looking glass as well — taking margin hits based on high costs even as they pass along price increases to consumers.
    “This is what happens,” she said.
    The bullwhip that Walmart and Target experienced didn’t come out of nowhere and isn’t limited to goods — Amazon overstaffed as the world came out of omicron, a labor factor Walmart also pointed to in its recent earnings disappointment.
    “These are clearly important retailers and it matters,” Swonk said.
    Firms will still be in a “we don’t know if we can get goods now” mindset, with “Zero Covid” lockdowns still an issue in China, and that will hit smaller and medium-sized firms even harder than it hits the retail giants, who will be doing their own discounting. Major retail behemoths can absorb the shock better on margins, but getting hit with both high inventories and costs, still adds up to one thing for them: “Taking it on the chin,” Swonk said.
    The supply chain’s vulnerabilities are not going away and building in a cushion is costly. “It’s been a long time since we had anything like this,” Swonk said.
    What the market knows for sure from the recent string of retail disappointments is that the pivot from goods to services is underway, and inflation hurts the low-income households first, and that begins to squeeze business margins. But where does that squeeze end?
    That is the question Swonk says that a market already on edge will have to answer.
    The optimistic narrative has been that the economy can hit this soft landing with the Fed’s “blunt” tools and slow demand in a supply-constrained world without bumps in the road.
    “That narrative disappeared,” Swonk said. “The bumps are already there, and even if parts of the economy benefit.”
    Billionaire hedge fund manager Bill Ackman outlined two options for the economy to fight inflation in a series of tweets on Tuesday: “There is no prospect for a material reduction in inflation unless the Fed aggressively raises rates, or the stock market crashes, catalyzing an economic collapse and demand destruction,” Ackman said.
    Resorts are booked up for the summer and airlines are back after nearly going under, and the shift into services is a major shift, but also a reality check for the economy.
    Stock market investors don’t care about the margin pressures faced by independent restaurant owners, but when it is showing up in the country’s biggest retailers, investors start to worry about where else they will see the margin pressure. “It’s whack-a-mole,” Swonk said. “And you will see it elsewhere.”
    Inflation is now as big an issue for companies as it is for households, and the situation can change on a dime. “It changed to their favor for a while, but the reality is inflation burns everyone,” she said.
    When the large firms that are known for low costs, and known for management of inventory and costs, are feeling the heat of inflation, it’s a wake up call, not an isolated event. More

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    Saudi fund in early talks to potentially buy Carnival's ultra-luxury Seabourn brand

    Carnival is in preliminary discussions to sell its Seabourn luxury cruise brand to the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, people familiar with the situation told CNBC.
    Talks between the two parties are still ongoing. A deal of this size would give the Saudis a stronger footprint in the cruise industry, at a time when travel continues to rebound across the Middle East.

    An aerial view of Seabourn Encore cruise ship docked at Bodrum Cruise Port on April 27, 2022, in Mugla, Turkey.
    Ali Balli | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    Carnival is in preliminary discussions to sell its Seabourn ultra-luxury cruise brand to the Saudi sovereign wealth fund, people familiar with the situation told CNBC.
    Talks between the two parties are still ongoing. A deal of this size would give the Saudis a stronger footprint in the cruise industry, at a time when travel continues to rebound across the Middle East.

    It would also give Carnival access to more capital, with shares losing over 40% in the past three months. The price tag for Seabourn wasn’t immediately clear.
    Carnival said it won’t comment on rumor or speculation. The Saudi fund, also known as Public Investment Fund, didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.
    Talks to sell Seabourn come less than a week after Carnival raised over $1 billion in the debt market at a yield of 10%.
    Seabourn came to market in 1988 and operates six ships. Its destinations span from Antarctica to the Middle East to the Caribbean.
    The Saudi sovereign wealth fund, also known as the Public Investment Fund, purchased a stake in Carnival at the height of the pandemic in 2020. It currently has a 5.1% stake in Carnival, according to FactSet.
    Private equity firms have also been buyers in the cruise space. In March 2021, Royal Caribbean sold its Azamara cruise brand to Sycamore Partners for $201 million. Both TPG and Apollo Group invested billions in Norwegian Cruise Line in 2008, eventually taking the cruise operator public in 2013. TPG is currently invested in Viking Cruise, while Bain Capital is Virgin Voyage’s main investor.

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    Jeep maker Stellantis to build $2.5 billion EV battery plant in Indiana

    Automaker Stellantis plans to invest more than $2.5 billion in partnership with Samsung SDI to build the automaker’s first U.S. electric vehicle battery manufacturing facility.
    The companies on Tuesday announced the new plant will be located in Kokomo, Indiana, where Stellantis already has a supplier base.
    The new facility is part of Stellantis’ goal to achieve annual sales of 5 million battery-electric vehicles by 2030.

    Stellantis logo displayed on a phone screen is seen with some of the company brands logos displayed in the background in this illustration photo taken in Krakow, Poland on December 7, 2021.
    Jakub Porzycki | NurPhoto | Getty Images

    Automaker Stellantis plans to invest more than $2.5 billion in partnership with Samsung SDI to build the automaker’s first U.S. electric vehicle battery manufacturing facility
    The companies on Tuesday announced the new plant will be located in Kokomo, Indiana, where Stellantis already has a supplier base. It’s also centrally located to several of its vehicle assembly plants in the Midwest.

    Stellantis said the new facility will supply lithium-ion battery modules for a range of vehicles. Plant construction is scheduled to begin later this year, with production projected to launch in the first quarter of 2025. The plant is expected to create 1,400 new jobs.
    The new facility is part of Stellantis’ goal to achieve worldwide annual sales of 5 million battery-electric vehicles by 2030, bolstered by a plan to invest $35 billion in electrification and supporting technologies by 2025.
    The facility, which will be operated through a joint venture, adds to a wave of tens of billions of dollars announced by automakers in recent years for U.S. production of electric vehicles and batteries to power them.
    Hyundai Motor on Friday confirmed plans to spend $5.54 billion to build its first dedicated electric vehicle and battery manufacturing facilities in Georgia. Others, such as General Motors, Ford Motor and Volkswagen, have announced similar U.S. investments.
    The recent commitments are notable wins for the Biden administration, which has been urging companies to establish electric vehicle supply chains and production in the U.S. rather than overseas. President Joe Biden last year set a target for EVs to represent half of all new auto sales in the country by 2030.

    Stellantis previously announced plans for five battery plants, or gigafactories, in Europe and North America. In March, Stellantis and LG Energy Solution said they would invest $4.1 billion for a joint venture plant in Canada that is expected to come online in 2024.
    Stellantis – the world’s fourth-largest carmaker – was formed by the merger of Fiat Chrysler and France-based Groupe PSA in January 2021. It has 14 individual auto brands, including Alfa Romeo, Chrysler, Dodge, Fiat, Jeep and Peugeot.

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    Allbirds to start selling its shoes in select Nordstrom department stores

    Beginning June 1, a selection of Allbirds shoes, including its signature wool sneakers, will be available for sale in 14 Nordstrom locations.
    The assortment will expand to Nordstrom’s website and to additional stores later this year.
    The move is part of Allbirds’ push to win new customers and become profitable.
    It also helps give Nordstrom an edge as a partner of choice for newer companies looking to test the wholesale waters.

    Nordstrom signage outside one of the company’s full-line department stores.
    Tim Boyle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Allbirds will start selling its shoes in select Nordstrom department stores next month, the companies announced Tuesday, as the sneaker brand seeks tie-ups with other retailers to broaden its reach and post a profit.
    Starting June 1, a selection of Allbirds shoes, including the company’s signature wool sneakers, will be available for sale in 14 Nordstrom locations. The assortment will expand to Nordstrom’s website and to additional stores later this year, the companies said.

    For Allbirds, the move is a chance to win new customers and become profitable. It’s also emblematic of a broader trend among retailers such as Allbirds and Warby Parker that started by selling products exclusively online directly to consumers.
    Increasingly, such direct-to-consumer companies — including Casper mattresses, Harry’s razors and athletic apparel makers Vuori and Outdoor Voices — have expanded to sell through third parties. Others have pushed to open dozens of brick-and-mortar stores to connect with shoppers in person. The moves have made the newer businesses more closely resemble long-standing retailers such as Nike or Ralph Lauren.
    The deal helps Nordstrom build its reputation as the partner of choice for newer retailers looking to test the wholesale waters. It also helps give the department store company an edge over rivals such as Macy’s and Kohl’s with items that might draw shoppers.
    Earlier this month, Allbirds announced its first two retail partners: Public Lands, a banner of Dick’s Sporting Goods, in the United States, and Zalandao in Europe. It teased at the time that more deals were in the works.
    Selling through other retailers should help Allbirds reach consumers who would have not known about the brand otherwise, Joey Zwillinger, Allbirds co-founder and co-CEO, said on a post-earnings conference call in mid-May.

    In particular, the company hopes to attract environmentally conscious shoppers. In 2020, Allbirds committed to cutting its carbon footprint in half by 2025. In addition to labeling all of its products with a carbon footprint score, the company said it sources natural materials found in trees and sugar cane fields and works to cut back on waste.
    Allbirds’ brand awareness in the U.S. is still in the low double digits out of 100%, according to Zwillinger. Third-party retail can be “a highly effective way to build awareness and drive credibility,” he said on the call.

    Allbirds shoes consist of wool, and the laces consist of recycled plastic bottles.
    Source: Allbirds

    Allbirds is hoping the move helps lift investors’ confidence. Shares of the company have tumbled from an IPO price of $15, closing Monday at $4.68. Allbirds listed on the Nasdaq exchange last November, before the window for public debuts was frozen shut amid surging inflation and Russia’s war on Ukraine.
    In the three-month period ended March 31, Allbirds’ net loss widened to $21.9 million from a loss of $13.5 million a year earlier. That’s even as its sales grew 26% to $62.8 million, up from $49.6 billion.
    Allbirds also dialed back its outlook for the year, citing persisting disruption to its business overseas due to ongoing Covid-related lockdowns in China and the war in Ukraine.
    This isn’t the first time Allbirds and Nordstrom have teamed up. In 2018, Allbirds opened in Nordstrom’s rotating pop-up exhibit, marking the sneaker company’s first trial with another retail partner. Nordstrom has worked with other online-first brands, including Kim Kardashian’s Skims line and On Running.
    Zwillinger said on the conference call that Allbirds plans to be selective about how it grows its third-party business. The company doesn’t expect to see a material impact to its financials in 2022, but the partnerships should become a catalyst for new business by next year, he said.
    BMO Capital Markets analyst Simeon Siegel has been a proponent of retailers using of wholesale to build a profitable business with strong gross margins, citing Ralph Lauren and Calvin Klein owner PVH as businesses that have successfully used the approach.
    “Companies build very healthy and very large businesses by embracing wholesale,” Siegel said in an interview. “You shouldn’t totally shun wholesale and just write off wholesale as bad.”
    It’s when companies push too heavily into wholesale and use excessive discounting and unclear messaging that they can ruin their reputation, he said.
    Nordstrom is set to report its fiscal first-quarter results after the market close on Tuesday.

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