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    Home prices hit record high in June on S&P Case-Shiller Index

    Prices nationally were 5.4% higher than June 2023.
    New York saw the highest annual gain among the top 20 cities, with prices increasing 9% in June, followed by San Diego and Las Vegas with annual increases of 8.7% and 8.5%, respectively.
    Portland, Oregon saw just a 0.8% annual increase in June, the smallest gain of the top cities.

    A recent CreditNews Research study ranked the slowest-selling metro areas in the U.S.
    The Good Brigade | Digitalvision | Getty Images

    Even as mortgage interest rates were rising, home prices reached the highest level ever on the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index.
    On a three-month running average ended in June, prices nationally were 5.4% higher than they were in June 2023, according to data released Tuesday. Despite being a record high for the index, the annual gain was smaller than May’s 5.9% reading.

    The index’s 10-city composite rose 7.4% annually, down from 7.8% in the previous month. The 20-city composite was 6.5% higher year over year, down from a 6.9% increase in May.
    “While both housing and inflation have slowed, the gap between the two is larger than historical norms, with our National Index averaging 2.8% more than the Consumer Price Index,” noted Brian Luke, head of commodities, real and digital assets at S&P Dow Jones Indices, in a release. “That is a full percentage point above the 50-year average. Before accounting for inflation, home prices have risen over 1,100% since 1974, but have slightly more than doubled (111%) after accounting for inflation.”
    New York saw the highest annual gain among the 20 cities, with prices climbing 9% in June, followed by San Diego and Las Vegas with annual increases of 8.7% and 8.5%, respectively. Portland, Oregon, saw just a 0.8% annual rise in June, the smallest gain of the top cities.
    Since housing affordability has been a major talking point in this election cycle, this month’s report also broke out home values by price tier, dividing each city’s market into three tiers. Looking just at large markets over the past five years, it found that 75% of the markets covered show low-price tiers rising faster than the overall market.
    “For example, the lower tier of the Atlanta market has risen 18% faster than the middle- and higher-tiered homes,” Luke wrote in the release.

    “New York’s low tier has the largest five-year outperformance, rising nearly 20% above the overall New York region,” he continued. “New York also has the largest divergence between low- and high-tier prices. Conversely, San Diego has seen the largest appreciation in higher-tier homes over the past five years.”
    Prices in the overall San Diego market are up 72% in the past five years, but the high tier is up 79% versus 63% for the lower tier.
    The increase in prices came even as mortgage rates rose sharply from April through June, which is the period averaged on the index. Usually when rates rise, prices cool.
    The average rate on the 30-year fixed started April just below 7% and then shot up to 7.5% by the end of the month, according to Mortgage News Daily. Rates stayed over 7% before falling back under that level in July. The 30-year fixed is now right around 6.5%.
    “Mortgage rates have fallen since June, but there is evidence that even the decline in rates has not been enough to bring buyers back into the market,” said Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist at Bright MLS. “Some buyers are waiting for home prices — and not just interest rates — to come down,”
    While home prices should ease month to month going into the fall, due to seasonal factors and more inventory on the market, they are unlikely to drop significantly, and are expected to still be higher than they were last fall.

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    Eli Lilly releases new form of weight loss drug Zepbound for half the price to boost access, supply

    Eli Lilly released a new form of its weight loss drug Zepbound for roughly half its usual monthly list price to increase access for patients without insurance coverage for the highly popular injection.
    The move also aims to expand the U.S. supply of Zepbound amid soaring demand and ensure patients are safely accessing the treatment as cheaper copycat versions of the drug gain traction. 
    The company is now offering 2.5-milligram and 5-milligram single-dose vials of Zepbound for $399 per month and $549 per month, respectively, through its direct-to-consumer website.

    Eli Lilly on Tuesday released a new form of its weight loss drug Zepbound for roughly half its usual monthly list price to reach millions of patients without insurance coverage for the popular injection, such as those with Medicare. 
    The move also aims to expand the supply of Zepbound in the U.S. as demand skyrockets, and to ensure eligible patients are safely accessing the real treatment as cheaper copycat versions gain traction. 

    The company is now offering 2.5-milligram and 5-milligram single-dose vials of Zepbound for $399 per month and $549 per month, respectively, through its direct-to-consumer website. Patients typically start treatment with a 2.5-milligram dose, gradually increase the amount and later take so-called maintenance doses to keep the weight off.
    The list prices of Zepbound and other popular weight loss drugs, such as Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy, are around $1,000 per month before insurance and other rebates. Those treatments are part of a blockbuster class of medications called GLP-1s, which mimic certain gut hormones to tamp down a person’s appetite and regulate blood sugar. 
    Patients need to use a syringe and needle to draw up the medicine from a single-dose vial — the version of Zepbound Eli Lilly is releasing Tuesday — and inject themselves. That differs from single-dose autoinjector pens, the currently available form of all Zepbound doses, which patients can directly inject under their skin with the click of a button.
    Eli Lilly has said the vials will create additional supply capacity because they are easier to manufacture than autoinjector pens.
    The lower price points will benefit patients who are willing to pay for Zepbound themselves and are enrolled in Medicare or employer-sponsored health plans that do not currently cover obesity treatments, said Patrik Jonsson, president of Eli Lilly diabetes and obesity, in an interview. 

    He noted that Medicare beneficiaries are also not eligible for Eli Lilly’s savings card programs for Zepbound. One program allows people with insurance coverage for Zepbound to pay as little as $25 out of pocket, while another allows those whose insurance does not cover the drug to pay as low as $550.
    Having patients directly pay for single-dose vials of Zepbound also “enables a transparent price by removing third-party supply chain entities,” the company added in a release. 
    There “will be no markups, and we believe that’s super important … that consumers have this predictability in terms of pricing,” Jonsson said. 

    An Eli Lilly & Co. Zepbound injection pen arranged in the Brooklyn borough of New York on March 28, 2024.
    Shelby Knowles | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Patients with a valid prescription can purchase the single-dose vials from a new “self-pay pharmacy” section on the company’s direct-to-consumer site, LillyDirect. Eli Lilly is partnering with a third-party digital pharmacy, Gifthealth, which will process prescriptions electronically as well as package and send vials to eligible patients.
    People can also choose to purchase syringes and needles from Eli Lilly’s website and will have access to materials on how to correctly administer Zepbound from a vial. 
    LillyDirect, which launched in January, connects people with an independent telehealth company that can prescribe certain drugs if the patients are eligible. The site also offers a home-delivery option if the prescribed treatment is Eli Lilly’s, tapping a third-party online pharmacy to fill prescriptions and send them directly to patients. 
    Eli Lilly said in a release that distributing the vials through the site will ensure patients and health-care providers are receiving “genuine” Zepbound. It builds on the company’s efforts to “help protect the public from the dangers posed by the proliferation of counterfeit, fake, unsafe or untested knock-offs of Lilly’s medications,” according to the release.
    During shortages, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration allows compounding pharmacies to make versions of drugs that are essentially a copy of brand-name medicines. Compounded medications are custom-made alternatives to branded drugs designed to meet a specific patient’s needs. 
    But both Zepbound and Eli Lilly’s diabetes drug, Mounjaro, are under patent protection in the U.S. The company also does not supply the active ingredient of those two drugs, tirzepatide, to outside groups. 
    Eli Lilly has said that raises questions about what some compounding pharmacies and other clinics are selling and marketing to consumers. The company and its rival Novo Nordisk have both stepped in to address illicit versions of their weight loss and diabetes treatments, suing wellness clinics, medical spas and compounding pharmacies across the U.S. over the past year. 
    All doses of Zepbound are now listed as available on the FDA’s drug shortage database. Still, thousands of online platforms offering compounded versions of weight loss drugs from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly have cropped up over the past six months, according to Jonsson. 
    “We believe that the U.S. population is actually a target for … untested, unapproved, unregulated anti-obesity medications that we know is far from always containing the drug it’s supposed to,” he said. “This is also an opportunity to make sure that there is access to FDA-approved, quality-approved tirzepatide for consumers in need.”

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    NFL expected to vote in favor of private equity ownership; select firms to commit $12 billion

    NFL owners are expected to vote on Tuesday to allow select private equity firms to invest at up to 10% of a team stake.
    The initial firms will include Ares Management, Sixth Street Partners and Arctos Partners, Dynasty Equity, Blackstone, Carlyle Group and CVC Capital Partners, people familiar with the matter told CNBC.
    The NFL is the last major sports league to allow private equity investment as rising valuations make it harder for owners to buy in.

    Jacob Kupferman | Getty Images

    The NFL’s most exclusive club is about to let in new members.
    At a special league meeting in Eagan, Minnesota, on Tuesday, the National Football League’s 32 owners are expected to vote in favor of allowing select private equity firms to buy up to a 10% stake of a team. Each fund or consortium will be able to do deals with up to six teams.

    The initial approved firms will include Ares Management, Sixth Street Partners and Arctos Partners, in addition to a consortium nicknamed “The Avengers” that includes Dynasty Equity, Blackstone, Carlyle Group and CVC Capital Partners, people familiar with the matter told CNBC.
    The firms collectively have $2 trillion in assets and intend to commit $12 billion of capital to be raised (inclusive of leverage) over time, the people said. With at least four investor groups able to invest in up to six teams each, that works out to $500 million of added capital on average for each team that receives an investment.
    NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell told CNBC in July that the league has had tremendous interest from private equity.
    The league created a committee last September to look at the possibility of welcoming private equity funding and has been meeting with the selected firms more recently.
    The NFL is the last major sports league to allow private equity investment, and it’s still treading lightly on the issue by allowing only a select group to participate and at a lower rate than the other professional sports leagues.

    The National Basketball Association, Major League Baseball, the National Hockey League and Major League Soccer all allow private equity ownership of up to 30%.
    Goodell told CNBC in July that he believes the 10% is a complement to the existing ownership structure and that the percentage could be raised at some point in the future.
    As NFL team valuations rise, it’s meant a smaller pool of owners have the money to foot the price tag when teams become available.
    That dynamic was on display during the sale of the Washington Commanders last year. The franchise sold for a record $6.05 billion to an ownership group that included Apollo cofounder Josh Harris and 20 other investors.
    Harris said in June that the process “created a little bit of a wake-up call at the NFL.”
    “Unless you’re one of the wealthiest 50 people [in the world], writing a $5 billion equity check is pretty hard for anyone,” Harris told CNBC at the CNBC CEO Council Summit at the time.
    As the NFL opens its doors to new capital, the money will also free up funding for new stadiums and related projects.
    The Buffalo Bills and Tennessee Titans are both currently in the process of building a new stadium, while the Cleveland Browns, Chicago Bears and Washington Commanders are actively pursuing new stadiums in the future. More

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    Bitcoin rally helps create more than 84,000 new crypto millionaires in a year

    The population of crypto millionaires in the world soared 95% over the past year, as bitcoin ETFs and other crypto assets climbed, according to a new report.
    There are now 172,300 individuals worldwide holding over $1 million in crypto assets, according to a report from New World Wealth and Henley & Partners. The number of pure bitcoin millionaires more than doubled, to 85,400.
    The surge reflects the rapid growth of bitcoin ETFs, awhich now have over $50 billion in assets since their launch in January.

    In this photo illustration, a visual representation of the digital Cryptocurrency, Bitcoin is on display in Paris, France, on March 5, 2024.
    Chesnot | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    The population of crypto millionaires in the world soared 95% over the past year, as bitcoin ETFs and other crypto assets climbed, according to a new report.
    There are now 172,300 individuals worldwide holding over $1 million in crypto assets, up from 88,200 last year, according to a report from New World Wealth and Henley & Partners. The number of pure bitcoin millionaires more than doubled, to 85,400.

    The ranks of the crypto rich have grown all the way up the wealth ladder. There are now 325 crypto centi-millionaires (those with $100 million or more in crypto holdings), and 28 crypto billionaires, according to the report.
    The surge reflects the rapid growth of bitcoin ETFs, which now have over $50 billion in assets since their launch in January and have touched off a wave of institutional participation.

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    The price of bitcoin has jumped 45% this year to about 64,000. As other coins have increased in value, the market cap of crypto assets has increased to $2.3 trillion, according to Henley, up from $1.2 trillion last summer.
    Of the six new crypto billionaires created over the past year, five can attribute their newfound wealth to bitcoin, “underscoring its dominant position when it comes to attracting long-term investors who buy large holdings,” according to Andrew Amoils, head of research for New World Wealth.
    According to Forbes, the richest crypto billionaire (for the third year in a row) is Changpeng Zhao, the founder and former CEO of crypto exchange Binance, who’s worth an estimated $33 billion. Zhao pled guilty to U.S. money laundering charges in November and agreed to pay a $50 million fine. His wealth has soared by more than $10.5 billion over the past year.

    Changpeng Zhao, founder of Binance, attends the Viva Technology conference dedicated to innovation and startups at Porte de Versailles exhibition center in Paris on June 16, 2022.
    Benoit Tessier | Reuters

    Ranking second is Brian Armstrong, the co-founder of Coinbase, worth an estimated $11 billion, according to Forbes. He’s followed by Giancarlo Devasini, the chief financial officer of Tether; and Michael Saylor, the cofounder of MicroStrategy, according to the list.
    Granted, many crypto assets are still below their 2021 highs, and bitcoin’s recent rise essentially marks a three-year round-trip to those levels. Crypto assets reached a market cap of $3 trillion in November of 2021.
    Yet the growing acceptance of crypto assets among big asset managers like BlackRock and Fidelity, with help from Morgan Stanley’s salesforce of 15,000 brokers, could fuel further wealth creation among large crypto holders.
    Crypto will not only create more millionaires and billionaires, but it will also change where the rich live and work. According to Henley, many of the newly crypto rich are looking to move to tax-friendly and crypto-friendly jurisdictions.
    “We’ve seen a significant uptick in crypto-wealthy clients seeking alternative residence and citizenship options,” said Dominic Volek, head of private clients at Henley & Partners.
    To better advise the new crypto nomads, Henley created a “Crypto Adoption Index,” ranking countries according to their tax and regulatory approach to crypto. Singapore ranks first on the index, due to its “supportive banking system, significant investment, comprehensive regulations such as the Payment Services Act, regulatory sandboxes, and alignment with global standards,” according to Henley.
    Hong Kong ranked second, followed by the United Arab Emirates and the United States. In the U.S., according to the report, 15% of the population owns cryptocurrencies: “This is supported by strong infrastructure, with a high density of crypto ATMs, crypto-friendly banks, and an increasing number of businesses accepting cryptocurrency,” the report said.
    Correction: This story has been updated to correct a headline that misstated the number of crypto millionaires created by the bitcoin rally.

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    Mavericks, Pelicans games are leaving their local sports networks ahead of NBA season

    Sports Media

    The Dallas Mavericks and New Orleans Pelicans are exiting their local regional sports networks, ahead of the coming NBA season, which begins Oct. 22.
    Both teams terminated their deals with Diamond Sports, the largest owner of regional sports networks, which is currently under bankruptcy protection.
    The teams aired some of their games on local broadcast stations earlier this year, in deals that are becoming more common for NBA and NHL franchises exiting the regional sports network business.

    The NBA logo before the game between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit on March 11, 2024.
    Nic Antaya | Getty Images

    Dallas Mavericks and New Orleans Pelicans fans are waiting for a new way to watch local games in the upcoming National Basketball Association season.
    Both teams are exiting their regional sports networks owned by Diamond Sports, according to a Friday bankruptcy court filing.

    The NBA season is set to begin Oct. 22. While neither franchise has publicly announced where its local games will be aired, both teams have a history of televising their games with local broadcasters.
    The Pelicans have reached an agreement in principle with Gray Television to air games this season, a person close to the team told CNBC, confirming earlier media reports. Representatives for Gray and the Pelicans declined to comment on the matter.
    Last season, the Pelicans aired 10 of their matchups on Gray’s local stations, and the Mavericks, who appeared in last season’s NBA Finals, entered a 13-game agreement with Tegna’s Dallas-Fort Worth stations.
    Representatives for the Mavericks and Tegna did not immediately respond to CNBC’s requests asking who would broadcast their local games.
    The Mavericks and Pelicans are the latest teams to move the bulk of their regular-season games from their Diamond-owned regional sports networks, which are under the Bally Sports brand.

    Diamond Sports has spent the past 18 months trying to navigate its way out of bankruptcy, and along the way, several NBA, WNBA and National Hockey League teams have ditched regional sports networks in favor of local broadcasters. Some Major League Baseball teams that have left these networks will now have their games produced by the league.
    Diamond Sports will receive $1.3 million and more than $297,000 in repayments from the Mavericks and Pelicans, respectively, as part of the terminations, according to the court filing.
    The split with the Mavericks and Pelicans comes as Diamond enters into broadcast and streaming rights agreements with the NBA and NHL for the upcoming season as part of its bankruptcy process. The deals are subject to court approval.
    “We are appreciative of the ongoing collaboration and long-term partnerships with the NBA and NHL,” Diamond Sports CEO David Preschlack said in a statement, adding the deals with the leagues “are another major milestone” toward exiting bankruptcy protection.
    Diamond Sports has been one of many companies crushed by the decline of cable. Though it launched a sports-only streaming service for some of its teams in 2022, the company’s $8 billion debt load was too staggering to stop it from filing for bankruptcy protection.
    As the NBA and NHL seasons near, Diamond has also faced more pressure in recent months to form a viable business plan and prove it can make the necessary rights payments.
    Diamond marked another milestone this summer when it reached a deal to return its networks to Comcast’s cable TV customers. The Bally Sports networks went dark on Comcast — Diamond’s third largest distributor — in early May.
    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.

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    What could stop the Nvidia frenzy?

    IF today’s stockmarkets have their version of the great wildebeest migration, it is the stampede of the Nvidia bulls. Wall Street is no Serengeti, and Jim Cramer’s high-pitched narration no match for the dulcet tones of Sir David Attenborough. But in other respects investors’ headlong rush into the American chipmaker’s shares has been every bit as enthralling a spectacle. More

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    Boeing Starliner returning empty as NASA turns to SpaceX to bring astronauts back from ISS

    Boeing will return its Starliner capsule from the International Space Station without the NASA astronauts that it delivered to orbit.
    The agency instead is turning to SpaceX to bring back Butch Wilmore and Sunita “Suni” Williams.
    Wilmore and Williams will stay at the ISS for about six more months before flying home in February on SpaceX’s Dragon capsule as part of the Crew-9 mission.

    NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore, left, and Suni Williams pose inside the hatch connecting Boeing’s Starliner to the International Space Station on

    Boeing will return its Starliner capsule from the International Space Station without the NASA astronauts that it delivered to orbit in early June, the agency announced on Saturday.
    With Starliner coming back to Earth empty, NASA will now have astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams return via SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft, which is expected to launch its ninth regular mission to the ISS for the agency on Sept. 24.

    Ultimately, Wilmore and Williams will stay at the ISS for about six more months before flying home in February on SpaceX’s Crew-9 vehicle. The test flight was originally intended to last about nine days.
    The decision to bring Starliner back from the ISS empty marks a dramatic about-face for NASA and Boeing, as the organizations were previously adamant that the capsule was the primary choice for returning the crew.
    But Starliner’s crew flight test, which had been seen as the final major milestone in the spacecraft’s development, faced problems — most notably with its propulsion system.
    “Boeing has worked very hard with NASA to get the necessary data to make this decision,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said during a press conference with top NASA officials at Johnson Space Center in Houston on Saturday. “We want to further understand the root causes and understand the design improvements so that the Boeing Starliner will serve as an important part of our assured crew access to the ISS.”
    He reiterated that test flights are “neither safe, nor routine,” and that the decision was the “result of a commitment to safety.”

    NASA will now conduct another phase of its Flight Readiness Review to determine when to bring the empty Starliner home.

    Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft is pictured docked to the International Space Station orbiting above Egypt’s Mediterranean coast on June 13, 2024.

    Boeing officials had been adamant in press briefings that Starliner was safe for the astronauts to fly home in the event of an emergency, despite delaying the return multiple times. NASA said there was a “technical disagreement” between the agency and the aerospace company, and said it evaluated risk differently than Boeing for returning its crew.
    Nonetheless, NASA officials repeatedly expressed support for Boeing, and Nelson said he was “100% certain” that Starliner would be able to launch with a crew again someday.
    “We continue to focus, first and foremost, on the safety of the crew and spacecraft,” Boeing said in a statement posted on X on Saturday. “We are executing the mission as determined by NASA, and we are preparing the spacecraft for a safe and successful uncrewed return.”

    Read more CNBC space news

    Ken Bowersox, NASA associate administrator, said NASA officials were unanimous in their decision to choose SpaceX to bring the crew home.
    Meanwhile, SpaceX will bring two astronauts along on its Crew-9 vehicle — instead of four who were originally planned to go — to make room for Wilmore and Williams.”SpaceX stands ready to support @NASA however we can,” President and COO Gwynne Shotwell responded in a social media post on X.
    Boeing’s Starliner capsule “Calypso” has been at the International Space Station since early June on a mission that NASA extended indefinitely as the agency and company tried to identify why multiple of the spacecraft’s thrusters failed during docking.
    Those thrusters, part of the spacecraft’s propulsion system, are key to Starliner’s safe return from the ISS. NASA cited the thrusters on Saturday as an ongoing problem.
    The Starliner crew flight test was supposed to be a final box checked for Boeing and a key asset gained for NASA. The agency was hoping to fulfill its dream of having two competing companies — Boeing and Elon Musk’s SpaceX — flying alternating missions to the ISS.
    Instead, the flight test is further setting back Boeing’s progress in NASA’s Commercial Crew program and, with over $1.5 billion in losses absorbed already, threatens the company’s future involvement with it. More

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    Restaurants fight back against the FTC crackdown on ‘junk fees’ as diners balk at new charges

    A proposed rule from the Federal Trade Commission aims to crack down on “junk fees,” but restaurants are hoping their fees and surcharges will still be allowed.
    In 2023, 15% of restaurant owners added surcharges or fees to checks because of higher costs, according to the National Restaurant Association.
    Restaurant operators say the fees keep their menu prices lower, improve employee compensation and are better for customers.

    Leopatrizi | E+ | Getty Images

    Lawmakers want to crack down on “junk fees,” but restaurants are trying to stay out of the fight.
    Surcharges or fees covering everything from credit card processing to gratuities to “inflation” have become more popular on restaurant checks in recent years.

    Last year, 15% of restaurant owners added surcharges or fees to checks because of higher costs, according to the National Restaurant Association. In the second quarter, 3.7% of restaurant transactions processed by Square included a service fee, more than double the beginning of 2022, according to a recent report from the company.
    Opponents of the practice say those fees and surcharges may surprise customers, hoodwinking them into paying more for their meals at a time when their wallets are already feeling thin. Fed-up diners compiled spreadsheets via Reddit of restaurants in Los Angeles, Chicago and D.C. charging hidden fees. Even the Onion took a swing at the practice, publishing a satirical story in May with the headline “Restaurant Check Includes 3% Surcharge To Provide Owner’s Sugar Baby With Birkin.”
    The Biden administration has broadly targeted so-called junk fees, like an undisclosed service charge for concert tickets or unexpected resort fees when checking out of a hotel. This fall, the Federal Trade Commission is expected to publish a rule banning businesses from “charging hidden and misleading fees.”

    U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks about retirement security in the State Dining Room at the White House on October 31, 2023 in Washington, DC. The Biden Administration is attempting to crack down on so-called “junk fees” in retirement accounts with a rule prosed by the U.S. Labor Department.
    Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

    Restaurants are trying to stay out of the Biden administration’s crosshairs. They say surcharges and fees are necessary to keep their businesses afloat and to compensate their employees fairly in a competitive industry with razor-thin profit margins.
    “The challenge for the restaurants is that not all fees are junk fees … People know what they’re paying for when it comes to most fees that are on a restaurant bill,” said Sean Kennedy, executive vice president of public affairs for the National Restaurant Association.

    Fighting fees

    Some customers might disagree with Kennedy.
    While federal law makes it illegal for management to keep their workers’ tips, mandatory service charges are the property of the restaurant. Some states, like New York, have their own laws that say service charges belong to staff.
    A Denver-based restaurant worker said in a public comment responding to the FTC’s proposed rule that his employer describes the fee to customers as “equitably distributed to the staff.” But he was told when he was hired that the business keeps 30% of the proceeds.
    Service fees increase the risk of wage theft, because employers might claim that the money goes to workers but fail to distribute it, the National Women’s Law Center wrote in its public comment. Moreover, customers who pay a service charge are less likely to tip on top of the check, hurting workers’ income, the non-profit organization said.

    The restaurant perspective

    For their part, restaurant operators argue that service fees and other surcharges help them pay their employees more and provide better benefits.
    When Galit, a Middle Eastern restaurant in Chicago, opened its doors in 2019, it tacked on an optional 2% fee to cover health-care costs for its workers. These days, the fee is 4%, plus the restaurant adds a 20% service charge to each bill for hourly workers. The fees are stated clearly on its website, its Resy page and its menu.
     Co-owner and general manager Andres Clavero, who has an accounting background, said the restaurant chose that approach for a few different reasons.
    “We can dictate where it all goes, so some of our service charge of 20% goes to the back of house,” Clavero said.
    Moreover, higher menu prices could scare away customers, plus diners would have to pay higher sales tax. Galit would also have higher payroll taxes. And the service charge aims to address issues with tipping. The practice has grown more controversial in recent years, thanks to studies that connect it to sexual harassment and racial discrimination.
    If the fees were instead baked into the restaurant’s prices, customers might choose cheaper options that don’t provide the same benefits for its employees, Clavero said.
    In some cases, fees help restaurants navigate tricky legislation. For example, service charges became much more common in D.C. after voters approved Initiative 82, which will phase out the tipped wage by 2027. In March, the city passed a bill protecting service fees of 20% or less.
    Kaliwa, a Southeast Asian restaurant in D.C., said it implemented an 8% surcharge to manage rising labor and operating costs.
    “Our priority is to remain transparent with our guests, ensuring they understand the reasons behind these fees,” Kaliwa director Peter Demetri said.
    For Ming-Tai Huh, the head of Square’s restaurant business and a partner of Cambridge Street Hospitality Group, service fees have helped some of his Boston restaurants pay cooks and dishwashers more.
    Massachusetts law forbids sharing servers’ tips with kitchen workers. Thanks to the higher pay from the surcharges, more of the restaurant company’s workers have opted into its health-care program.
    Huh said that the service charge was easier to implement at the company’s fine-dining restaurants. But CSHG ended up taking it away from a fast-casual eatery because of customer pushback. Instead, the company just raised menu prices.

    Lobbyists vs. legislators

    On the state level, restaurants have already had some success in getting excluded from the fight over junk fees.
    In California, last-minute legislation excluded bars and restaurants – as well as grocery stores and grocery delivery services – from having to list the mandatory fees that they charge customers. As a result, the industry was exempt from a broad anti-junk-fee law that went into effect on July 1.
    “We believe that allowing the many restaurants who for decades have used auto gratuity instead of tips, (which is more fair and equitable), and more recently who have added service charges to help offset things like the SF Health Care Security Ordinance, will make it possible for restaurants to continue to support pay equity and contribute to worker health care,” the Golden Gate Restaurant Association wrote in a statement following the legislation’s passage.

    Close-up of a receipt showing a Convenience Fee in addition to charges for food items, Oakland, California, June 12, 2024. California’s SB 478 law would ban so-called “junk fees”.
    Smith Collection | Gado | Archive Photos | Getty Images

    The National Restaurant Association argues that getting rid of fees will lead to customer confusion, higher prices, less transparency and costly compliance. The trade group estimates that the cost for new menus alone would reach more than $4,800 per restaurant.

    Exceptions to the rule

    Even restaurant operators admit that not all fees and surcharges are worth protecting.
    Clavero opposes restaurants that use Covid surcharges more than four years after the pandemic temporarily shuttered dining rooms.
    “To have that, to me, is a cry for help. That’s not being fully open and honest about where your money is going,” he said.
    For its part, the National Restaurant Association said it’s pushing the FTC to protect three fees commonly charged by restaurants: large party, delivery and credit card processing.
    Kennedy said the trade group is trying to help operators preserve their razor-thin margins of 3% to 5%, which is difficult as the costs of doing business keep rising. For example, credit card swipe fees have doubled over the last decade, and are now the third-highest cost for restaurants, according to Kennedy.
    “What we have really been instilling in or membership is to be as open and transparent and public about it as possible, so customers know exactly what they’re getting into when they sit down to dine at their favorite restaurant,” Kennedy said. More