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Investors in Blackstone's real-estate fund asked for their money back in droves — more than $15 billion to date. Unless the real-estate market comes roaring back, analysts warn, BREIT could end up shrinking to a fraction of its current size, leaving the fund's investors holding the bag. Only 3% of BREIT's holdings are in office buildings, which have been ground zero for commercial real estate pain. Advertisement"Not all real estate is created equal," BREIT boasted in a recent letter to stockholders, "and where you invest matters." "Commercial real estate is a slow burn," Brian Moynihan, the CEO of Bank of America, recently observed.
Persons: Blackstone, , BREIT, REITs, Steve Schwarzman, Jeenah, Nate Koppikar, Craig McCann, BREIT's, Chilton, ​ ​ McCann, McCann, Horacio Villalobos, That's, Donald Trump, Robert Chang, Schwarzman, Michael Blackshire, Phil Bak, Stephen Schwarzman, Shannon Stapleton, Brian Moynihan, it's, It's Organizations: BREIT, Orso Partners, Securities Exchange Commission, Blackstone, SEC, Chilton Capital Management, SLCG Economics Consulting, Publicly, University of California, Regents, Armada Investors, Reuters, Bank of America Locations: BREIT, Lisbon, Fideres
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — U.S.-traded shares of the Taiwanese chipmaker fell 2.4% despite beating revenue and profit expectations in the first quarter. Blackstone — The asset manager slipped 2.2% after lowering its dividend to 83 cents per share from 94 cents per share. EBay — Shares of the e-commerce stock rose nearly 4% following a double upgrade at Morgan Stanley to overweight from underweight. Etsy — The e-commerce stock slumped nearly 5% following a downgrade by Morgan Stanley to underweight from equal weight. Match Group — Shares slipped nearly 2% after Morgan Stanley downgraded shares to equal weight from overweight.
Persons: D.R, Horton —, Horton, LSEG, Blackstone, Morgan Stanley, Etsy, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Fred Imbert Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Deutsche Bank, Alaska Air —, Revenue, Alcoa, EBay, Communications, Rosenblatt Securities Locations: Taiwan, LSEG
JetBlue Airways — Shares jumped 4.1% after JPMorgan upgraded the airline to neutral from underperform, saying it likes its turnaround potential. Barnes Group — The global industrial tech and aerospace stock jumped 9.3% after DA Davidson upgraded the company to buy from neutral, saying shares are attractive. Blackstone — The asset manager slipped 2.3% after lowering its dividend to 83 cents per share from 94 cents per share. Horton exceeded expectations in its fiscal second quarter, posting earnings of $3.52 per share on revenue of $9.11 billion. Elevance Health — Shares jumped 3.2% after the health insurance company posted an earnings beat and raised its full-year guidance.
Persons: Estee Lauder, Tesla, Emmanuel Rosner, Rosner, Davidson, Blackstone, Horton —, Horton, LSEG, Morgan Stanley, Donald Trump's, , Samantha Subin, Brian Evans, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: JPMorgan, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, JetBlue Airways —, Iris Energy, Deutsche Bank, Google, Meta, Reuters, Group, Alaska Air Group, Revenue, BJ's Wholesale, eBay, — Rosenblatt Securities, Trump Media & Technology, Truth Social Locations: Taiwan, Alaska
PVH — Shares of the Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger parent tanked more than 21% on weak revenue guidance for the first quarter and full year. Humana , UnitedHealth — Health insurance managed care stocks declined after the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced rates for the 2025 calendar year will increase 3.7%, as previously proposed. Humana shed 9.6%, while CVS Health tanked 5.3%. GE Aerospace — General Electric shares ticked higher by 0.6% after the company completed spinning off its energy business from its aerospace business. GE Vernova will begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange at market open under the ticker GEV, while General Electric — which becomes GE Aerospace — will keep the GE ticker symbol.
Persons: Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, Estee Lauder —, Estee Lauder, Blackstone — Blackstone, , Sarah Min, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Center, Medicare, Services, CVS, UnitedHealth, Citi, Blackstone, UBS, Trump Media, Technology, Truth, Bank of America, GE Aerospace — General Electric, GE Vernova, New York Stock Exchange, General, GE Aerospace, GE, SLB Locations: Europe
Tesla — Tesla shares sank more than 6% after the electric vehicle maker reported an 8.5% year-over-year decline in deliveries in the first quarter. GE Vernova — Shares jumped more than 3% after GE Vernova started trading on the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday under the ticker "GEV," following its spinoff from General Electric. Shares of GE Aerospace , which was formerly General Electric and is keeping the "GE" ticker symbol, gained roughly 1%. Figs — Shares of the health-care apparel maker slipped 6.2% following a Bank of America downgrade to underperform from neutral. Horton — The homebuilder's shares slipped 3.7%.
Persons: PVH, Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, Blackstone, Nextracker, Horton —, Wedbush, Horton, Brent Bowman, Tim Cabral, , Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin Organizations: GE, , GE Vernova, New York Stock Exchange, General Electric, GE Aerospace, SLB, CVS, Health, Medicare, Medicaid Services, CVS Health, UnitedHealth, Endeavor, Silver, Blackstone —, UBS, Barclays, Bank of America, Veeva Locations: Europe, D.R
Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle manufacturer dropped more than 7% after it reported third-quarter earnings results that failed to impress investors. Zscaler — This cybersecurity company was also up nearly 2% in premarket trading, after Jefferies similarly upgraded it on Thursday, citing an improved growth outlook. First Solar — Shares added nearly 2% in premarket trading after JPMorgan upgraded the renewable energy company to overweight. Blackstone — The alternative asset manager fell 3% in premarket trading after Blackstone's third-quarter results came in below expectations. Las Vegas Sands — Shares popped more than 5% after Las Vegas Sands reported third-quarter revenue that topped expectations.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Jefferies, Aptiv, Curtis Nagle, LSEG . Blackstone, Blackstone, Lam, FactSet, , Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: LSEG, Netflix, Goldman, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Wall Street, Vegas Sands, Lam Research Locations: LSEG, Vegas, Lam
Las Vegas Sands – The casino operator rose 3.8% after topping revenue estimates for the third quarter and pointing to a recovery in Macao and Singapore. Las Vegas Sands posted revenues of $2.8 billion, exceeding the $2.73 billion expected by analysts polled by LSEG. American Airlines — Shares advanced 2% midday even after the air carrier posted weaker-than-expected earnings and revenue for the third quarter . Netflix added 8.76 million subscribers in the quarter while analysts polled by StreetAccount forecast 5.49 million. Zscaler — Stock in the cloud security firm added 1% following an upgrade to buy from Jefferies on Thursday, citing upside to 2024 earnings estimates.
Persons: Tesla, Blackstone, LSEG, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Union Pacific, LSEG, Vegas Sands, Las Vegas Sands, LSEG . American Airlines —, Netflix, StreetAccount, Lam Research, Zions, Jefferies, Blackstone — Locations: Vegas, Macao, Singapore, Las, Atlantic, Pacific
"The unknown is hard to transact in," Sam Powers, the global head of technology, media, and telecommunications for Bank of America, told Insider. Microsoft's $69 billion acquisition of Activision , which was completed Thursday, has also put media and tech M&A back in the spotlight. "People have been holding their breath in nervous anticipation" about the idea of tech buying big media , one investor told Insider. Private-equity bets on media and Hollywood have seen mixed resultsPrivate-equity firms may have the cash to finance major media acquisitions, but they're reckoning with market volatility. Are you a Hollywood insider?
Persons: Hollywood dealmakers, Jonathan Handel, Sam Powers, Bob Iger, , Byron Allen, Greg Doherty, Iger, Disney's, Byron Allen —, Allen, Disney, it's, Handel, It's, you've, Reese Witherspoon, Dave Kotinsky, Moonbug, Reese Witherspoon's, Jeff Zucker, Abu, Tom Staggs, Kevin Mayer, Lucia Moses, Reed Alexander Organizations: Hollywood, Puck News, Bank of America, SAG, Writers Guild of America, Disney, ESPN, Activision, Byron Allen The Weather, Wall Street shareholders, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Hulu, ABC, Nexstar Media Group, Allen Media Group, Weather, Lionsgate, Starz, Paramount, BET, Warner Bros, Games, Disney Digital Network, Maker Studios, Observers, Comcast, Paramount Global, Tech, MGM, Microsoft, Netflix, Apple, RedBird Capital Partners, RedBird IMI, Private, SP, G Global Market Intelligence, Bloomberg, Media, Apollo Global Management, Yahoo Locations: Hollywood, Blackstone, Abu Dhabi, lmoses@insider.com, ralexander@insider.com
Oracle — The software stock climbed 2.5% on the back of an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Barclays. Airbnb — Shares rose 7.2% on the back of S&P Dow Jones Indices' Friday announcement that the stock would join the S&P 500 starting Sept. 18. The S&P 500 is widely tracked by large index funds, which could create buying pressure on Airbnb's stock in the weeks ahead. Warner Bros. said its adjusted full-year expectation assumes the financial effect of the writers and actors strikes will persist through the end of the year. Brady — The manufacturing stock gained 11.4% after the company reported quarterly results.
Persons: Halliburton, Dow Jones, Blackstone, acquirer Thoma, Brady —, Brady, Lennar, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Occidental Petroleum, Halliburton, EOG, Resources, OPEC, Oracle, Barclays, Blackstone —, Warner Bros, NextGen, Bloomberg, acquirer Thoma Bravo, FactSet Locations: Occidental, Saudi Arabia
Netflix posted earnings of $3.29 a share on $8.19 billion in revenue. However, IBM reported earnings that topped analysts' estimates as the company expanded its gross margin. United Airlines — Shares rose 3% after United Airlines reported record quarterly earnings and said it expects a strong third quarter as travel demand surges. During the period, the company reported a rebound in customer deposits. The company reported earnings of 92 cents a share on $2.35 billion in revenue.
Persons: Refinitiv, it's, Johnson, Horton —, Horton, Blackstone, Blackstone — Blackstone, Morgan Stanley, Bud Light, , Macheel, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Yun Li Organizations: Netflix, IBM, Vegas Sands, Refinitiv, Taiwan Semiconductor, Taiwan Semi, Revenue, Discover, Discover Financial, United Airlines, Bancorp, American Airlines —, Airlines, Blackstone —, Anheuser, Busch Locations: Los Angeles , California, Vegas, Taiwan
Whipsaw trading in shares of regional banks this week made it clear the fallout from three federal bank seizures was far from over. Some investors are betting against even seemingly healthy banks like PacWest, and regulators are gearing up to tack on new capital constraints for small and medium-size lenders. Large banks, though raking in cash, are facing their own constraints, saddled with loans written before interest rates started rising. That means businesses large and small may soon need to look elsewhere for loans. And a growing cohort of nonbanks, which don’t take deposits — including giant investment firms like Apollo Global Management, Ares Management and Blackstone — are chomping at the bit to step into the vacuum.
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:First Republic Bank — The San Francisco-based bank stock jumped 45% after closing down 61.8% on Monday. First Republic shares rose amid a broader rebound in regional bank stocks. Credit Suisse — The bank stock fell by about 1.6% after Credit Suisse said it had found "material weaknesses" in its financial reporting processes for 2022 and 2021. Honeywell International — Honeywell shares rose 0.4% after the conglomerate announced that Vimal Kapur, president and chief operating officer, will succeed Darius Adamczyk as CEO. Blackstone shares rose 1.8%.
Tesla — The electric-vehicle maker soared 7% after reporting record revenue and an earnings beat. Wall Street analysts cited upbeat comments about its reopening in Macao on the company earnings call for their positive outlook on the stock. Levi Strauss topped analysts' revenue estimates and beat earnings projections by 5 cents a share. Total segment revenues fell short of expectations, while distributable earnings beat estimates by 12 cents a share. American Airlines — The airline gained 1.5% after its fourth-quarter profits beat Wall Street's expectations, thanks to strong holiday demand and high fares.
While earnings met analyst predictions, forward earnings fell short of a Refinitiv consensus estimate. . Bed Bath & Beyond — The meme stock gained 5.78%, building on its dramatic start to the year, even as the retailer warns of a potential bankruptcy. Johnson & Johnson — Shares of the drug maker ticked higher by less than 1% premarket after the company reported mixed quarterly financial results. Johnson & Johnson beat profit estimates by 10 cents per share, excluding items, according to Refinitiv. AMD — The chip stock fell more than 2% in premarket after Bernstein downgraded the chipmaker to market perform from outperform.
In other words, big money is buying up warehouse space as fast as smaller owners can sell. The coronavirus pandemic accelerated this change, with warehouse investment outpacing office investment in 2020 and 2021, according to CBRE. A Prologis warehouse in Ichikawa City, Japan. Prologis, Blackstone, and the rest of big money duke it outOther big-money investors have increasingly invested in warehouses. The UK's Segro once sold warehouse space to Blackstone — now it's acquiring its own warehouses for last-mile delivery that Blackstone might have otherwise picked up for itself.
Year-over-year price growth has already slowed for commercial properties, signaling souring outlooks that could reduce values by 20 to 30%, the strategists wrote in a report. Executives at the Bisnow event pointed to high rents on multifamily properties, though growth is softening. Yardi"If this doesn't clear the market, then I don't know what does," Marcus said of her multifamily properties, which she described as large and relatively new. Andrew Holm, a cohead of US investments at Ares, the owner of more than $50 billion in commercial real estate, is hunkered down for the long haul, however. At the Bisnow event, he was so bearish on commercial real estate that he struggled to name a single sector that might be attractive over the next six months.
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