More stories

  • in

    Sierra Space CEO leaves, as $5 billion company pushes to launch space plane

    Sierra Space CEO Tom Vice left the company at the end of 2024 after 3½ years in the role.
    Chairman Fatih Ozmen will serve as interim CEO, with Eren Ozmen as president.
    The company’s Dream Chaser space plane was supposed to debut as early as 2021, but delays mean the vehicle has yet to launch.

    Tom Vice, CEO of Sierra Space, talks to employees in front of the company’s Dream Chaser space plane on Oct. 30, 2023 in Louisville, Colorado.
    Helen H. Richardson | Denver Post | Getty Images

    Sierra Space CEO Tom Vice has left the company, CNBC confirmed Monday.
    In a statement, Sierra Space said Vice retired Dec. 31. Chairman Fatih Ozmen will serve as interim CEO, with Eren Ozmen as president.

    “After three and half years in the role, Tom Vice has retired as Sierra Space CEO as of the end of 2024 — we thank him for his leadership and wish him well in his retirement,” a Sierra Space spokesperson said in a statement.
    Spun out of aerospace contractor Sierra Nevada Corporation, or SNC, in 2021, Sierra is one of the most valuable private U.S. companies in the burgeoning space sector, most recently valued at more than $5 billion. But Sierra Space has struggled to launch the first mission of its reusable cargo space plane called Dream Chaser, which is key to the company establishing itself as a major player in the industry.

    Read more CNBC space news

    Vice was named CEO of Sierra Space in 2021, a few months after SNC owners Fatih and Eren Ozmen spun out the company — with investors including General Atlantic, Coatue, BlackRock and AE Industrial Partners. Vice was previously the CEO of Aerion Supersonic, a startup that planned to build high-speed business jets and that shut down in April 2021.
    The first Dream Chaser vehicle was supposed to debut by 2021. But even in 2024, the space plane, named Tenacity, was not ready when United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan rocket, its ride to space, needed to launch.
    Dream Chaser has won NASA contracts to fly seven cargo missions to and from the International Space Station. Sierra Space said Tenacity is targeting a launch no earlier than May.

    The company has continued to develop its inflatable space station technology, as well as expand into a product line of satellite buses after winning a high-profile $740 million Pentagon contract last year.
    Sierra Space saw layoffs during Vice’s tenure, as well as turnover in a number of senior executive roles. But in 2024, Vice spoke repeatedly of Sierra Space’s plan to go public, outlining a tentative path to IPO as soon as late 2025. More

  • in

    Eli Manning says ‘only one team’ he’d take an ownership stake in: The New York Giants

    Eli Manning told CNBC Sport he has interest in becoming a minority owner of the New York Giants if the Mara family would consider selling a small stake.
    Manning is already part of a minority ownership group in the NWSL team NJ/NY Gotham FC.
    Manning said he agreed with the Giants’ decision to retain head coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen for next season.

    Former New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning would consider becoming a minority owner of his old team if the Mara family is willing to sell him a stake.
    “It’s definitely something of interest,” said Manning, who spoke in a CNBC Sport interview. “There’s probably only one team I’d be interested in pursuing, and it’s the one I played for for 16 years, and it’s local, and makes the most sense, but we just got to figure out if they would ever sell a little bit.”

    The Mara family has owned the Giants since the team’s founding in 1925. The Giants declined to comment on Manning’s interest.
    Many NFL teams have begun considering the sale of small, minority stakes after the league voted to allow private equity investment for up to 10% of each franchise in August. The process has led to several transactions thus far, both to individuals and to investment firms.
    Former New England Patriots and Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady and his business partner Tom Wagner acquired a 10% stake in the Las Vegas Raiders in October. The Miami Dolphins, Buffalo Bills and Philadelphia Eagles have also sold minority stakes to wealthy individuals in recent months.

    Eli Manning #10 of the New York Giants warms up prior to the game against the Philadelphia Eagles at MetLife Stadium on Dec. 29, 2019 in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
    Sarah Stier | Getty Images

    Manning is already a minority owner of the National Women’s Soccer League’s NJ/NY Gotham FC. He’s also a partner at the private equity firm Brand Velocity Group.
    The NFL has so far only approved select private equity firms to buy a minority stake. Brand Velocity isn’t one of them.

    Supporting Daboll and Schoen

    Manning also told CNBC Sport he agreed with the Giants’ decision to keep head coach Brian Daboll and general manager Joe Schoen for another season, announced Monday by the team.
    The Giants ended the year 3-14 and will have the No. 3 pick in the 2025 NFL draft. The team released its starting quarterback Daniel Jones earlier this season.
    “You’ve got to create some sort of continuity and keep things the same, build that culture, and that just takes time. You can’t necessarily do it in two years or three years,” Manning said. “They have some playmakers, they have some superstars on the team, and it’s just about getting everybody to buy in and to work together, and finding ways to win some of these tight games. And I think it’s the right move by keeping these guys there. Let them bring in their guys, let them create their style and create their culture.”
    Manning is juggling multiple business ventures as he tries to find a new path after playing football, he said. He will serve as a Verizon FanFest ambassador next month when the telecommunications company transforms stadiums across NFL markets into a one-day party featuring live music, food and celebrity meet-and-greets with former NFL players including Jason Witten, Tiki Barber and Patrick Willis.
    “I think my quest post-football is trying to find that passion and find something similar that I can work towards or am truly committed to,” said Manning. “I kind of feel like I get to start over a little bit, and I’m enjoying that learning process of figuring out what else I’m passionate about.” More

  • in

    Alcohol-free booze is becoming big business

    Dry January is under way. After the excesses of the festive period, nearly one-third of Americans are expected to give up, or at least cut down on, alcohol this month. Many will save money. Some will lose weight. And a growing number will still continue to drink their favourite tipple—or at least something close to it. More

  • in

    Alcohol-free drinks are becoming big business

    Dry January is under way. After the excesses of the festive period, nearly one-third of Americans are expected to give up, or at least cut down on, alcohol this month. Many will save money. Some will lose weight. And a growing number will still continue to drink their favourite tipple—or at least something close to it. More

  • in

    Lucid reports record quarterly vehicle deliveries, meets production target

    Lucid Group reported record quarterly vehicle deliveries for the fourth quarter.
    The electric vehicle manufacturer also announced production of 9,029 units and deliveries of 10,241 cars in 2024.
    Last year’s results represented a 71% increase in deliveries and 7% uptick in production compared with 2023.

    Brand new Lucid electric cars sit parked in front of a Lucid Studio showroom in San Francisco on May 24, 2024.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Lucid Group on Monday reported record quarterly vehicle deliveries for the fourth quarter and confirmed production of more than 9,000 vehicles in 2024 — meeting a previously announced target.
    The electric vehicle manufacturer reported production of 9,029 units and deliveries of 10,241 cars in 2024. That included production of 3,386 units and delivery of 3,099 vehicles during the fourth quarter, the company said.

    Last year’s results represented a 71% increase in deliveries and 7% uptick in production for Lucid compared with 2023.
    However, such increases have not transcended to better investments for investors. Lucid’s stock declined by roughly 28% last year, as EV adoption has been slower than expected and the company has burned through billions of dollars in cash as it discounted some models and launches a new SUV.
    The company’s stock rose nearly 2% in trading Monday morning.
    Lucid’s first product was the Air sedan, which it began delivering in late 2021. Since then, the market has grown more competitive, and the company has not scaled as quickly as it previously anticipated.
    Lucid ended the third quarter with $5.16 billion in total liquidity. That excluded a $1.75 billion stock offering and capital raise that surprised many investors in October.
    Lucid, which is largely backed by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, is scheduled to announce its fourth-quarter financial results in February.

    Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO More

  • in

    Comcast to launch Universal Ads in bid to win smaller advertisers over from tech

    Comcast will launch Universal Ads, an advertising platform meant to simplify the ad-buying process for small- and medium-sized businesses.
    Comcast has signed deals with media companies including NBCUniversal, Warner Bros. Discovery, AMC Networks, Fox Corp., A+E, Roku and others.
    The platform, which will launch in the first quarter, is meant to attract more ad dollars to media companies’ streaming services as advertisers have poured money into tech and social media.

    Jaque Silva | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Comcast plans to launch a new advertising platform that will make it easier for smaller businesses to buy ad time — and, the company hopes, to beckon some advertisers away from social media and digital outlets and over to traditional TV’s streaming businesses.
    On Monday, Comcast announced the creation of Universal Ads, a new platform for advertisers to buy spots on premium video content on the streaming businesses of traditional media companies. The announcement comes ahead of the annual CES tech conference in Las Vegas.

    Comcast has signed partnerships with other media companies, giving advertisers the ability to buy spots on a variety of outlets. So far, Comcast-owned NBCUniversal and ad-supported streamer Xumo are part of the platform, as well as A+E, AMC Networks, DirecTV, Fox Corp., Paramount, Roku, TelevisaUnivision and Warner Bros. Discovery. Others are expected to join in the coming months.
    “Universal Ads is intended to create new demand from advertisers who have not traditionally worked with us,” said Mark Marshall, chairman of global advertising and partnerships for NBCUniversal, CNBC’s parent company. “And while we’re starting with streaming and [small- and medium-sized businesses], in a future state this can be for linear and for agencies as well.”
    Universal Ads, which will launch in the first quarter, is meant to create an easier experience for advertisers of all shapes and sizes to buy up ad time, which can be a notoriously complicated process in comparison to purchasing ads for platforms such as Meta, YouTube and TikTok, said James Rooke, president of Comcast Advertising. It’s designed to mimic the process of buying ads on social media content and tech platforms.
    “The head scratcher is that there’s a sort of large number of advertisers who’ve built their businesses, or started to build their businesses, on the backs of social video,” said Rooke. “Yet when you talk to these advertisers there’s an increasing wish to diversify away from a very limited number of big technology companies.”
    Rooke said the challenge has been that these big tech companies “make it super simple to transact on their platforms,” whereas traditional media, or so-called premium content, does not.

    Marshall said he and Rooke had been in discussions over the last several months on how to “create new demand opportunities” for the nontraditional advertisers.
    Comcast built the free, self-service platform using its ad tech company FreeWheel. Many of the partners that have already signed on are FreeWheel clients.
    There are also plans to offer free, automated artificial intelligence tools to help produce the ads, which can be another pain point for smaller companies.
    “Universal Ads has a tremendous opportunity to steal market share from our competitors in a very unique and collaborative way that will fundamentally change the advertising landscape,” said Marshall.

    Going on the offensive

    Jaque Silva | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    The media industry has been in a period of tumult, as consumers have gravitated toward streaming services and away from traditional TV.
    But further eclipsing this content is the time spent on social media and tech platforms. YouTube continues to grab a large share of TV viewing time, according to Nielsen. Younger generations are leaning more into social media such as TikTok.
    Streaming services, from Netflix to NBCUniversal’s Peacock, have been increasingly emphasizing advertising to reach profitability. Streamers have been nabbing a bigger share of ad dollars in recent quarters, but that pales in comparison to the advertising revenue generated by tech giants.
    Marshall noted that social media has “generated immense scale” when it comes to the number of advertisers drawn to the tech platforms.
    “Take a Meta for example. They have over 10 million advertisers who spend on search and social, whereas NBCUniversal is only in the thousands,” said Marshall.
    While GroupM, WPP’s media investment group, called TV “the most effective form of advertising” in a recent report, it expects the segment to grow less than 2% in 2025 to $169.1 billion in total global ad revenue.
    Ad revenue for “pure play digital,” which excludes the streaming arms of traditional media but includes platforms such as YouTube and TikTok, is expected to grow by 10% to $813.3 billion globally in 2025, according to GroupM estimates.
    In the U.S., social media ad spending is estimated to have hit $90.35 billion in 2024, up roughly 19% from the year prior, and is expected to rise another 13.6% to $102.66 billion in 2025, according to eMarketer.
    While industry executives anticipate the ad market will stabilize in 2025 for traditional media companies, the trends of prior years are also expected to continue — meaning ad budgets for digital media will continue to eclipse traditional media.
    “You can continue to compete in a diminishing market, or you can go on offense and you can go after where the growth is,” said Rooke. “We have to be fishing in the ponds where the growth is.”
    Large-scale advertisers and brands still spend heavily with traditional media outlets when it comes to live sports and events. Fox executives have said the company already sold out of Super Bowl ads for February, which reportedly cost about $7 million each. The college football season, especially with the expanded College Football Playoff format, has also attracted hefty ad dollars.
    Key to the Universal Ads platform has been signing up the other media companies, Rooke said, in order to present a unified front in trying to attract more ad dollars from digital platforms.
    “In recent years, individual ad platforms and walled gardens have created obstacles for smaller and medium-sized companies lacking the resources needed to effectively manage multiple platforms,” said Amy Leifer, chief advertising sales officer at DirecTV.
    Leifer, along with executives from NBCUniversal, Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox, called out the importance of reaching small- and medium-sized businesses as advertisers.
    “The idea of empowering small- and medium-sized businesses to connect with audiences through premium content, especially on connected TV, aligns perfectly with the growing demand for flexibility and efficiency in ad buying,” said Ryan Gould, Warner Bros. Discovery’s executive vice president of sales in streaming, digital and advanced advertising.
    Media executives recently told CNBC that traditional linear TV is still an important outlet for advertisers because it reaches more demographics than social media does. They also noted that linear and streaming are no longer thought of in different contexts, and are grouped together in conversation.
    Advertisers seeking platforms outside social media are “looking for a new product because they’re seeing sort of diminishing returns from the existing channels,” Rooke said.
    “They’re running out of new audience,” he said.
    Disclosure: Comcast owns CNBC parent NBCUniversal. More

  • in

    A new electricity supercycle is under way

    The factory floor of Schneider Electric’s plant in Conselve, Italy, hums with urgency. Workers at the power-equipment company’s facility, which is in the midst of a major expansion, are busily assembling advanced cooling systems for the data centres underpinning the development of artificial intelligence (AI). “The key is the integration of grid to chip and chip to chiller,” says Pankaj Sharma, an executive at the company, referring to a new design it recently developed with Nvidia, an AI chip giant. More

  • in

    A year after Boeing’s door plug accident, the aircraft giant faces a steep road to recovery

    A year ago, a door plug blew out of a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 during an Alaska Airlines flight.
    The incident thrust Boeing back into the spotlight for safety concerns and manufacturing flaws.
    New CEO Kelly Ortberg, who began in the top job in August, is tasked with ensuring Boeing can ramp up production and maintain quality.

    Boeing 737 Max aircraft are assembled at the company’s plant in Renton, Washington, on June 25, 2024.
    Jennifer Buchanan | Via Reuters

    Boeing is embarking on another rebuilding year.
    A year ago, the company was thrust back into the spotlight for concerns over safety and quality when a fuselage panel that covered an unused emergency exit door blew out midair from a nearly new Boeing 737 Max 9 operated by Alaska Airlines. The accident terrified those on board though no one was seriously injured and the plane made a safe emergency landing back in Portland, Oregon.

    Key bolts were not installed before the aircraft left Boeing’s Renton, Washington, 737 factory, a preliminary National Transportation Safety Board report found, again tarnishing the image of the marquee U.S. exporter.
    Boeing’s stock price is down more than 30% over the past 12 months, while the S&P 500 is up nearly 27%.

    Stock chart icon

    Boeing and S&P 500 performance

    Boeing’s leaders have spent the past 12 months making major changes that span replacements in its executive ranks, including a new chief executive, to more robust training for hundreds of factory workers, many of whom are new.
    The company on Friday outlined its progress over the past year, including initiating random quality audits at factories. Boeing said it has “significantly” reduced defects in 737 fuselages made by Spirit AeroSystems, which it is buying back, and cut down on so-called traveled work, where tasks to build aircraft are done out of sequence, in an effort to reduce flaws. The manufacturer also said it addressed much of the feedback from employees provided during sessions with management throughout the year.

    Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Michael Whitaker testifies before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure Subcommittee on Aviation at the Rayburn House Office Building in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 24, 2024 .
    Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images

    Since the accident, the Federal Aviation Administration increased its oversight of Boeing, capping its production of its best-selling 737 Max jets, though output is still below those levels. FAA chief Mike Whitaker, who said he will step down on Jan. 20, warned the company on Friday that “enhanced oversight is here to stay.”

    He said Boeing’s turnaround “is not a one-year project.”
    “What’s needed is a fundamental cultural shift at Boeing that’s oriented around safety and quality above profits. That will require sustained effort and commitment from Boeing, and unwavering scrutiny on our part,” Whitaker said in a statement.

    Mounting losses, delivery delays

    Boeing has not posted an annual profit since 2018.
    That year was the first of two fatal crashes of its 737 Maxes that killed 346 people — Boeing’s worst crisis in recent memory. A flight-control system was implicated in both crashes, and the aircraft was grounded worldwide for almost two years.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Boeing’s annual net income/loss.
    CNBC/FactSet

    Other quality flaws emerged over the years, delaying deliveries of aircraft from the 737 Max, 787 Dreamliner and the pair of 747s that will serve as Air Force One, among others.
    Since 2019, Boeing has lost more than $30 billion, and its new CEO is tasked with ensuring Boeing can increase production without defects that have slowed deliveries in the past.

    In August, the company brought in Kelly Ortberg, a former CEO of Rockwell Collins with three decades of experience in aerospace, as Boeing’s new chief executive, replacing Dave Calhoun.
    Weeks into Ortberg’s tenure, Boeing machinists went on strike for nearly two months, a work stoppage that ended after they approved a new four-year labor deal with 38% raises. Some longtime workers sought to have Boeing reinstate pensions, but that was not part of the new labor deal.

    Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg visits the company’s 767 and 777/777X programs’ plant in Everett, Washington, on Aug. 16, 2024.
    Boeing | Marian Lockhart | Via Reuters

    The strike, however, idled production of most of Boeing’s jets, though factories have resumed output in recent weeks. It is setting Boeing up for another year of focusing on stabilizing production to get jetliners to airlines before ramping up further, while Airbus continues to top Boeing delivery volumes.
    Boeing raised billions this fall to stave off the crisis. Ortberg also said the company would cut 10% of its workforce of about 170,000 people. Notices started going out late last year. Ortberg said in October that the company has to focus on its core businesses and that it would review its portfolio.
    “I think that we’re better off … doing less and doing it better than doing more and not doing it well,” he said on his first earnings call in October.
    He spent early weeks of his tenure visiting factories and moved to the Seattle area, where most of Boeing’s production is centered, and has won praise from airline executives who had grown exasperated with the company’s rolling aircraft delivery during a post-pandemic travel boom.

    Read more CNBC airline news

    Bob Jordan, chief executive of all-Boeing 737 airline Southwest, cautioned in an interview last month that it is “really early” in Boeing’s recovery but said he thinks Ortberg understands the depth of the issues at the company.
    “He’s not looking at this as a Band-Aid. He’s looking at this as a wholesale change to Boeing,” he said. More