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    Omicron boosters are weaker against BQ.1.1 subvariant that is rising in U.S., study finds

    Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch, in a study published in Nature Medicine, found the booster shots performed well against the BA.5 subvariant they were designed to target.
    But the boosters did not trigger a robust antibody response when faced with BQ.1.1, the scientists found.
    Omicron BQ.1.1 appears on track to become the dominant variant in the U.S.
    People with a prior history of infection who received an omicron booster had a stronger response against BQ.1.1.

    A staff member draws up a syringe with the Comirnaty vaccine from Biontech and Pfizer adapted to the Omicron-BA.1 variant at the Mainz vaccination center.
    Sebastian Christoph Gollnow | dpa | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

    Covid shots designed to protect against the omicron variant trigger a weaker immune response against the rapidly emerging BQ.1.1 subvariant than the previously dominant strain, according to a new lab study.
    Scientists at the University of Texas Medical Branch, in a study published online Tuesday in Nature Medicine, found that the booster shots performed well against the BA.5 subvariant they were designed to target.

    But the boosters did not trigger a robust response when faced with BQ.1.1, the scientists found. Antibodies were about four times lower against BQ.1.1 compared to BA.5. These neutralizing antibodies prevent the virus that causes Covid-19 from invading human cells.
    People with a prior history of infection who received an omicron booster, however, had a stronger response to BQ.1.1. Antibodies that neutralize BQ.1.1 were nearly four times higher in this group compared to individuals with no history of infection who faced the subvariant, the scientists found.
    About 42% of adults in the U.S. have a prior history of infection, according to study published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last week. The results were based on adult blood samples collected from from August 2021 through May 2022.
    Omicron BQ.1.1 subvariant appears on track to become the dominant variant in the U.S. It currently makes up about 32% of infections in the U.S., according to CDC surveillance data. Omicron BA.5, on the other hand, now represents about 14% of new infections.

    The boosters performed the weakest against the XBB.1 subvariant, the scientists found. Antibodies were more than eight times lower against XBB.1 than omicron BA.5. However, people with a prior history of infection who receive the booster had three times as many antibodies against XBB.1 than people with no Covid history, according to the study.

    Dr. Anthony Fauci, White House chief medical advisor, said last month protection provided by the boosters drops somewhat against BQ.1.1, but diminishes multifold against XBB.
    “So, you could expect some protection, but not the optimal protection,” Fauci told reporters at a White House press briefing before the Thanksgiving holiday.
    The Texas study examined blood samples of 29 people with no history of infection who received the omicron booster; 23 samples from people who received the booster who did have a history of infection; and 25 people who received a fourth dose of the original vaccine.
    The samples were collected 14 to 32 days after the omicron booster and 23 to 94 days after the fourth dose of the original vaccine.

    CNBC Health & Science

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    Netflix co-CEO Sarandos says streamer likely to offer multiple ad-supported tiers

    Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos said Tuesday the streamer is likely to offer multiple ad-supported tiers over time.
    Netflix recently launched its first cheaper, ad-supported subscription option, priced at $6.99, after years of resistance to an advertising model.

    Ted Sarandos attends the 94th Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on March 27, 2022.
    Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

    Netflix is likely to offer multiple subscription plans with ads in the future, the company’s co-Chief Executive Ted Sarandos said on Tuesday, just weeks after the streaming giant rolled out its first ad-supported option.
    For viewers who don’t want to see commercials, Netflix already offers multiple plans ranging in price from $9.99 a month to $19.99 a month. And the company will likely do the same for its ad-supported model as the business grows, Sarandos said at the UBS TMT conference.

    “We have multiple tiers today, so it’s likely we’ll have multiple ad tiers over time, but nothing to talk about yet,” Sarandos said. “And the product itself will evolve, I suspect, pretty dramatically, but slowly, gradually.”
    After resisting advertising on its platform for years, Netflix last month released a cheaper, $6.99 option with commercials in partnership with Microsoft. The move comes as Netflix faces pressure to find new ways to expand revenue as subscriber growth slows and competition intensifies.
    In another effort to grow revenue, Sarandos also said Tuesday the company will focus on addressing password sharing in 2023. Netflix has said more than 100 million households, including 30 million in the U.S., are using a shared password.
    Sarandos compared the upcoming crackdown on password sharing to increasing prices, which he said doesn’t make consumers happy. It’s why he said the company is focusing on how to address the issue in a way in which customers will “see the value in Netflix.”
    “There are folks who are enjoying Netflix, literally for free today,” Sarandos said. “So, they’re getting a lot of value out of it. I think they’ll be happy to have their own account.”

    Netflix priced its “basic with ads” option just below its competitors’ prices. Subscribers to the tier are shown an average of four to five minutes of commercials each hour and can’t download movies or TV series.
    A limited number of TV series and movies aren’t initially available on the ad-supported tier due to licensing restrictions, but Sarandos said Tuesday about 90% is included and negotiations will start soon to include the rest.
    Last week, Netflix founder and co-CEO Reed Hastings acknowledged at The New York Times’ Dealbook conference that he initially didn’t believe in the ad-supported model for Netflix and was slow to come around to it.
    “I was wrong about that. Hulu proved you could do that at scale and offer customers lower prices. We did switch on that,” Hastings said. “I wish we had flipped a few years earlier on that, but we’ll catch up.”
    In addition to Hulu, streaming competitors like Warner Bros. Discovery’s HBO Max, NBCUniversal’s Peacock and Paramount Global’s Paramount+ offer cheaper, ad-supported subscription options. Disney+ also plans to launch a tier with advertising, while also raising prices for its commercial-free option and other streaming services.
    Disclosure: Comcast’s NBCUniversal is CNBC’s parent company.

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    Lawmakers tell Live Nation CEO they want answers on the Taylor Swift Ticketmaster fiasco

    The House Energy and Commerce Committee penned a letter to Live Nation CEO Michael Rapino asking the executive to provide a briefing on Ticketmaster’s ticketing process for Taylor Swift’s Eras tour.
    It has also requested that Live Nation provide a list of actions the company will take to ensure consumers will have better access to live entertainment in the future.
    The probe comes just weeks after Ticketmaster bungled the presale ticketing for Swift’s upcoming Eras tour.

    Taylor Swift accepts an award onstage during the MTV Europe Music Awards 2022 held at PSD Bank Dome on November 13, 2022 in Duesseldorf, Germany.
    Jeff Kravitz | Filmmagic | Getty Images

    Lawmakers have some questions for Live Nation’s CEO after Ticketmaster bungled the recent sale of Taylor Swift tour tickets.
    The House Energy and Commerce Committee penned a letter to Michael Rapino Tuesday asking the executive to clarify Live Nation’s ticketing process for the Eras tour and provide a list of actions the company will take to ensure consumers will have better access to live entertainment in the future. Live Nation is the parent company of Ticketmaster.

    Ticketmaster was supposed to open up sales for 1.5 million verified Taylor Swift fans last month ahead of general public ticket sales. However, more than 14 million users flocked to the site, including bots, spurring massive delays and lockouts on the site. Ultimately, 2 million tickets were sold during the presale and the general public sale was canceled, company representatives said.
    Ticketmaster said 3.5 million people had preregistered as part of the “Verified Fan” program, which was designed to keep tickets in the hands of actual fans and not resellers, resulting in far more requests for tickets than could be fulfilled.
    “This statement raises questions over your bot management solution and its ability to adequately protect consumers,” the House committee wrote in a letter.
    The committee also requested that Rapino provide insights into Ticketmaster’s additional fees, insider reserves, dynamic pricing, restrictions on transferability of tickets, its verified fan program and scalping by bots and other scammers.
    The committee noted in its letter that there is legislation is in place to address anti-consumer practices and that Ticketmaster could be slapped with fines if it “knowingly sold tickets that were improperly purchased” by automated processes.

    The committee requested that Rapino schedule a briefing by Dec. 15.
    Representatives from Live Nation did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
    Live Nation, which merged with Ticketmaster in 2010, has faced long-standing criticisms about its size and power in the entertainment industry — complaints that have only gained steam following the Eras tour debacle.
    Swift herself publicly slammed the company for bungling the sales process.
    “I’m not going to make excuses for anyone because we asked them, multiple times, if they could handle this kind of demand and we were assured they could,” she wrote in an Instagram post last month. “It’s truly amazing that 2.4 million people got tickets, but it really pisses me off that a lot of them feel like they went through several bear attacks to get them.”
    Eras tour tickets were priced from $49 to $450, with VIP packages starting at $199 and reaching $899. Secondary market prices can be seen ranging from $800 to $20,000 per ticket.

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    Paramount shares fall as CEO lowers fourth-quarter ad revenue forecast

    Paramount CEO Robert Bakish warned that the company’s advertising in the fourth quarter will come in “a bit below” numbers seen in the third quarter.
    CEO Robert Bakish has warned in recent quarterly earnings calls that the worsening advertising market has been weighing on Paramount’s business.
    Paramount isn’t the only media company to signal difficulties with the current advertising market. NBCUniversal’s Jeff Shell noted that the ad market has been steadily worsening.

    In this photo illustration, the Paramount Global logo is displayed on a smartphone screen.
    Rafael Henrique | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Shares of Paramount Global fell about 7% Tuesday after CEO Robert Bakish lowered expectations for the company’s advertising sales during the fourth quarter.
    “The current market is challenging and we’re in it every day,” Bakish said during the UBS Global TMT Conference in New York. “That challenge is both on the linear side and the digital side. We had looked for some improvement in some sectors, but we haven’t seen that.”

    Bakish has warned in recent quarterly earnings calls that the worsening advertising market has been weighing on Paramount’s business. On Tuesday, he revised the company’s previous forecast to down “a bit below” the third quarter, rather than in-line with prior results.
    The company sees fourth-quarter advertising revenue declining by a larger percentage than it did in the third quarter. Paramount’s ad revenue fell 2% in the third quarter.
    In addition to its broadcast network and portfolio of cable-TV channels, Paramount’s streaming service Paramount+ has an ad-supported tier. The company also owns the free, ad-supported streamer Pluto, which Bakish said was also feeling the pain of the tough ad market.
    Paramount isn’t the only media company to say the ad market is rough. NBCUniversal CEO Jeff Shell said at the UBS conference Monday that it has steadily worsened over the last six to nine months. Still, Shell said his company will still see fourth-quarter ad revenue up mid-single digits compared to last year, noting that Peacock and the runoff election campaign in Georgia gave NBCUniversal a boost.
    Paramount’s Bakish is optimistic that current advertising trends will reverse, however.

    “A challenging advertising market is cyclical,” Bakish noted. “We managed through a number of these cycles, as recently as the beginning of the decade. This too is a cycle and will turn. And when it does turn, you really see the power of the portfolio of assets we have.”
    Programing note: Paramount CEO Robert Bakish will appear on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Wednesday at 10 a.m. ET.
    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC.
    Clarification: This story was updated to reflect that Paramount sees ad revenue declining by a greater percentage in the fourth quarter than it did in the third quarter.

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    BuzzFeed to cut 12% of its workforce

    BuzzFeed on Tuesday announced plans to cut its workforce by nearly 12%, or around 180 staffers.
    The digital media company said the decision to lay off staff comes in response to challenging economic conditions.
    The company expects to cut most of the jobs by the end of the first quarter.

    The BuzzFeed website on a smartphone arranged in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York, on Monday, Dec. 6, 2021.
    Tiffany Hagler-Geard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BuzzFeed on Tuesday announced plans to cut its workforce by nearly 12%, or around 180 staffers.
    The digital media company said the decision to lay off staff comes in response to challenging economic conditions, its acquisition of Complex Networks and an ongoing audience shift to short-form, vertical video.

    The layoffs affect the sales, production, tech and content divisions for Complex and Buzzfeed, but not BuzzFeed News or HuffPost, according to the company.
    Shares of BuzzFeed, which went public a year ago, hit a new low of $1.06 on Tuesday.
    “In order for BuzzFeed to weather an economic downturn that I believe will extend well into 2023, we must adapt, invest in our strategy to serve our audience best, and readjust our cost structure,” CEO Jonah Peretti said in a memo to employees.
    The company expects to cut most of the jobs by the end of the first quarter. As of March, the company had around 1,500 employees.
    Last year, BuzzFeed went public via a special purpose acquisition vehicle, and shares fell nearly 40% in their first week of trading. In March, the company scaled back its news operation in an effort to make the division profitable. The restructuring saw the departure of several high-level editors.
    Peretti said Tuesday that he wants the company to invest “in areas that will drive growth” and build “a more robust creator business.”

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    Artificial intelligence is permeating business at last

    The machines are coming for your crops—at least in a few fields in America. This autumn John Deere, a tractor-maker, shipped its first fleet of fully self-driving machines to farmers. The tilling tractors are equipped with six cameras which use artificial intelligence (ai) to recognise obstacles and manoeuvre out of the way. Julian Sanchez, who runs the firm’s emerging-technology unit, estimates that about half the vehicles John Deere sells have some AI capabilities. That includes systems which use onboard cameras to detect weeds among the crops and then spray pesticides, and combine harvesters which automatically alter their own setting to waste as little grain as possible. Mr Sanchez says that for a medium-sized farm, the additional cost of buying an AI-enhanced tractor is recouped in two to three years.For decades starry-eyed technologists have claimed that AI will upend the business world, creating enormous benefits for firms and customers. John Deere is not the only proof that this is happening at last. A survey by McKinsey Global Institute, the consultancy’s in-house think-tank, found that this year 50% of firms across the world had tried to use AI in some way, up from 20% in 2017. Powerful new “foundation” models are fast moving from the lab to the real world. Excitement is palpable among corporate users of AI, its developers and those developers’ venture-capital backers. Many of them attended a week-long jamboree hosted in Las Vegas by Amazon Web Services, the tech giant’s cloud-computing arm. The event, which wrapped up on December 2nd, was packed withI talks and workshops on ai. Among the busiest booths in the exhibition hall were those of AI firms such as Dataiku and Blackbook.ai.The buzzing AI scene is an exception to the downbeat mood across techdom, which is in the midst of a deep slump. In 2022 venture capitalists have ploughed $67bn into firms that claim to specialise in AI, according to PitchBook, a data firm. The share of vc deals globally involving such startups has ticked up since mid-2021, to 17% so far this quarter. Between January and October, 28 new AI unicorns (private startups valued at $1bn or more) have been minted. Microsoft is said to be in talks to increase its stake in OpenAI, a builder of foundation models. Alphabet, Google’s parent company, is reportedly planning to invest $200m in Cohere, a rival to OpenAI. At least 22 AI startups have been launched by alumni of OpenAI and Deepmind, one of Alphabet’s AI labs, according to a report by Ian Hogarth and Nathan Benaich, two British entrepreneurs. The exuberance is not confined to Silicon Valley. Large companies of all sorts are desperate to get their hands on AI talent. In the past 12 months large American firms in the S&P 500 index have acquired 52 AI startups, compared with 24 purchases in 2017, according to PitchBook. Figures from PredictLeads, another data provider, show that the same group of firms posted around 7,000 job ads a month for AI and machine-learning experts in the three months to November, about ten times more than in the first quarter of 2020 (see chart). Derek Zanutto of CapitalG, one of Alphabet’s vc divisions, notes that large companies had spent years collecting data and investing in related technology. Now they want to use this “data stack” to their advantage. AI offers ways to do that.Unsurprisingly, the first industry to embrace AI was the technology sector itself. From the 2000s onwards, machine-learning techniques helped Google supercharge its online-advertising business. Today Google uses Ai to improve search results, finish your sentences in Gmail and work out ways to cut the use of energy in its data centres, among (many) other things. Amazon’s AI manages its supply chains, instructs warehouse robots and predicts which job applicants will be good workers; Apple’s powers its Siri digital assistant; Meta’s serves up attention-grabbing social-media posts; and Microsoft’s does everything from stripping out background noise in Teams, its videoconferencing service, to letting users create first drafts of PowerPoint presentations. Big tech quickly spied an opportunity to sell some of those same AI capabilities to clients. Amazon, Google and Microsoft all now sell such tools to customers of their cloud-computing divisions. Revenues from Microsoft’s machine-learning cloud service have doubled in each of the past four quarters, year on year. Upstart providers have proliferated, from Avidbots, a Canadian developer of robots that sweep warehouse floors, to Gong, whose app helps sales teams follow up a lead. Greater use of cloud computing, which brings down the cost of using AI, enabled the technology to spread to other sectors, from industry to insurance. You may not see it, but these days AI is everywhere.Dulling the cutting edgeIn 2006 Nick Bostrom of Oxford University observed that “once something becomes useful enough and common enough it’s not labelled AI any more”. Ali Ghodsi, boss of Databricks, a company that helps customers manage data for AI applications, see an explosion of such “boring AI”. He argues that over the next few years AI will be applied to ever more jobs and company functions. Lots of small improvements in AI’s predictive power can add up to better products and big savings. This is especially true in less flashy areas where firms are already using some kind of analytics, such as managing supply chains. When in September Hurricane Ian forced Walmart to shut a large distribution hub, cutting off the flow of goods to its nearby supermarkets in Florida, the retailer used a new AI-powered simulation of its supply chain to reroute deliveries from other hubs and predict how demand for goods will change after the storm. Thanks to AI the process took hours rather than days, says Srini Venkatesan of Walmart’s tech division. The coming wave of foundation models is likely to turn a lot more AI boring. These algorithms hold two big promises for business. The first is that foundation models are capable of generating new content. Stability AI and Midjourney, two startups, build generative models which create new images for a given prompt. Request a dog on a unicycle in the style of Picasso—or, less frivolously, a logo for a new startup—and the alogrithm conjures it up in a minute or so. Other startups build applications on top of other firms’ foundation models. Jasper and Copy.AI both pay OpenAI for access to GPT3, which enables their applications to convert simple prompts into marketing copy.The second advantage is that, once trained, foundation AIs are good at performing a variety of tasks rather than a single specialised one. Take GPT3, a natural-language model developed by OpenAI. It was first trained on large chunks of the internet, then fine-tuned by different startups to do various things, such as writing marketing copy, filling in tax forms and building websites from a series of text prompts. Rough estimates by Beena Ammanath, who heads the AI practice of Deloitte, a consultancy, suggest that foundation models’ versatility could cut the costs of an AI project by 20-30%. One early successful use of generative AI is, again predictably, the province of tech: computer programming. A number of firms are offering a virtual assistant trained on a large deposit of code that churns out new lines when prompted. One example is Copilot on GitHub, a Microsoft-owned platform which hosts open-source programs. Programmers using Copilot outsource nearly 40% of the code-writing to it. This speeds up programming by 50%, the firm claims. In June Amazon launched CodeWhisperer, its own version of the tool. Alphabet is reportedly using something similiar, codenamed PitchFork, internally. In May Satya Nadella, Microsoft’s boss, declared, “We envision a world where everyone, no matter their profession, can have a Copilot for everything they do.” In October Microsoft launched a tool which automatically wrangles data for users following prompts. Amazon and Google may try to produce something similar. Several startups are already doing so. Adept, a Californian firm run by former employees from Deepmind, OpenAI and Google, is working on “a Copilot for knowledge workers”, says Kelsey Szot, a co-founder. In September the company released a video of its first foundation model, which uses prompts to crunch numbers in a spreadsheet and perform searches on property websites. It plans to develop similar tools for business analysts, salespeople and other corporate functions. Artificial colouringCorporate users are experimenting with generative AI in other creative ways. Mr Sanchez of John Deere says his firm is looking into AI-generated “synthetic” data, which would help train other AI models. In December 2021 Nike, a sportswear giant, bought a firm that uses such algorithms to create new sneaker designs. Since last month Alexa, Amazon’s virtual assistant, has been able to invent stories to tell children. Nestlé, a Swiss food company, is using images created by DALLE-2, another OpenAI model, to help sell its yogurts. Some financial firms are employing AI to whip up a first draft of their quarterly reports. Users of foundation models can also tap an emerging industry of professional prompters, who craft directions so as to optimise the models’ output. PromptBase is a marketplace where users can buy and sell prompts that produce particularly spiffy results from the large image-based generative models, such as DALLE-2 and Midjourney. The site also lets you hire expert “prompt engineers”, some of whom charge a $50-200 per prompt. “It’s all about writing prompts these days,” says Thomas Dohmke, boss of GitHub.As with all powerful new tools, businesses must tread carefully as they deploy more AI. Having been trained on the internet, many foundation models reflect humanity, warts and all. One study by academics at Stanford University found that when GPT3 was asked to complete a sentence starting “Two Muslims walked into a…”, the result was likelier to invoke violence far more often than when the phrase referred to Christians or Buddhists. Meta pulled down Galactica, its foundation model for science, after many claimed it generated real-sounding but fake research. Carl Bergstrom, a biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle, derided it as a “random bullshit generator”. (Meta says that the model remains available for researchers who want to learn about the work.)Other problems are specific to the world of business. Because foundation models tend to be black boxes, offering no explanation of how they arrived at their results, they can create legal liabilities when things go amiss. And they will not do much for those firms that lack a clear idea of what they want AI to do, or which fail to teach employees how to use it. This may help explain why merely a quarter of respondents to the McKinsey Global Institute’s survey said that AI had benefited the bottom line (defined as a 5% boost to earnings). The share of firms seeing a large benefit (an increase in earnings by over 20%) is in the low single digits—and many of those are tech firms, says Michael Chui, who worked on the study. Still, those proportions are bound to keep rising as more AI becomes ever more dull. Rarely has the boring elicited this much excitement. ■ More

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    Fanatics valuation hits $31 billion after $700 million investment round

    Fanatics has raised $700 million in capital. The company is now valued at $31 billion.
    The new funding will be used for M&A activity across the Fanatics platform.

    Fanatics CEO and co-chair Michael Rubin
    Shareif Ziyadat | Filmmagic | Getty Images

    Michael Rubin’s sports platform company Fanatics has raised $700 million in fresh capital, pushing its value to $31 billion, according to people familiar with the matter.
    The company plans to use the new money to focus on potential merger and acquisition opportunities across its collectibles, betting and gaming businesses, one of the people said.

    Fanatics declined to comment.
    The round was priced and led by a new investor, Clearlake Capital, in addition to LionTree. The existing investors in the new raise include Silverlake, Fidelity, and Softbank.
    Fanatics was previously valued at $27 billion. In March, the company raised $1.5 billion led by Fidelity and Blackrock and Michael Dell’s MSD Partners.
    Fanatics has seen rapid growth over the past year. What began as an e-commerce company selling sports gear has evolved into a sports powerhouse that has collected a database of more than 94 million fans.
    It’s also been snapping up companies this year: In January, The Florida-based company expanded into the collectables business through its $500 million purchase of Topps. And in October, it purchased the iconic clothing brand Mitchell and Ness, in partnership with LeBron James and Kevin Durant, who hope to use their tastemaker status to revive the century-old brand.

    This summer, Fanatics ventured deeper into collegiate sports, signing a long-term deal with Nike to manufacture college sports fan apparel. And last month, it signed Japan’s most popular baseball team, the Tokyo Giants.
    Rubin now has his eyes on the sports gaming market. Fanatics is gearing up to launch sports gambling in 2023, joining an already crowded market. Yet, Rubin is optimistic, predicting in October at the Sports Business Journal’s World Congress of Sports Conference that sports betting and Fanatics’ other business segments could achieve $8 billion in annual profit in the next decade.  
    Revenue for Fanatics, including its Lids segment, will be approximately $8 billion in 2023, according to company estimates. That number excludes any trading card rights expected to come in the next few years.
    The company is also weighing an initial public offering, and Rubin recently met with more than 90 internet, retail and gaming analysts from various Wall Street firms, where he spoke of Fanatics growth plans.
    Fanatics ranked No. 21 on the 2022 CNBC Disruptor 50 list. More

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    Rising thefts at Walmart could lead to price jumps, store closures, CEO says

    Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said theft is becoming a bigger issue at stores across the U.S.
    If the problem continues, it could lead to store closures and price jumps, McMillon said.

    Walmart stores across the U.S. are grappling with an uptick in shoplifting that could lead to higher prices and closed stores if the problem persists, Walmart CEO Doug McMillon said Tuesday. 
    “Theft is an issue. It’s higher than what it has historically been,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”

    “We’ve got safety measures, security measures that we’ve put in place by store location. I think local law enforcement being staffed and being a good partner is part of that equation, and that’s normally how we approach it,” McMillon said.
    Walmart isn’t the only big-box retailer dealing with an uptick in theft. Last month, Target Chief Financial Officer Michael Fiddelke said shoplifting has jumped about 50% year over and year, leading to more than $400 million in losses in this fiscal year alone. 
    Most of the shoplifting is organized retail theft, rather than petty theft, Fiddelke said.
    When asked on Tuesday about how local jurisdictions handle shoplifting cases, McMillon said a lax approach from prosecutors could impact prices and lead to store closures down the line. 
    “If that’s not corrected over time, prices will be higher, and/or stores will close,” McMillon said. 

    “It’s really city by city, location by location. It’s store managers working with local law enforcement and we’ve got great relationships there for the most part,” he added.
    — CNBC’s Sara Salinas contributed to this report.

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