Good morning and happy Friday.
Everyone knows Oscar Mayer has a way with b-o-l-o-g-n-a, but is its owner ginning up a bidding war?
Kraft Heinz has put subsidiary Oscar Mayer up for grabs, sources told Reuters, and Mexico-based Sigma Alimentos and Brazilian meatpacker JBS are vying to get their hands on the famed hot dog purveyor. The brand could ultimately sell for around $3 billion, Reuters reported. We’d pay a pretty penny for the Wienermobile alone.
Klarna Shareholders Toss Director Overboard Amid Founder Feuding
One Stockholm boardroom has had enough drama lately to fill an eight-episode season of Nordic noir on Netflix.
The metaphorical knives were out at “buy now, pay later” giant Klarna Thursday. Shareholders of the privately-held Swedish firm ousted a board member closely affiliated with one of its feuding founders in advance of one of the New York Stock Exchange’s most hotly anticipated IPOs.
Melodrama on Lake Mälaren
Two of Klarna’s three co-founders, Sebastian Siemiatkowski and Victor Jacobsson, really don’t get along. Siemiatkowski remains CEO of the company, which was founded in 2005, while Jacobsson left in 2012. But he’s hung on as an investor, and has used his “right of first refusal” to build up a reportedly 8% stake in the company through special vehicles. As we mentioned, these guys don’t like each other.
Enter Mikael Walther — until yesterday, a board member and Jacobsson’s chief envoy at the company’s upper echelons. Earlier this month, Klarna’s board voted to oust him, leading to Thursday’s shareholder vote to approve the decision. Bloomberg News reported at the time of the board vote that Walther alleged his expulsion was retaliation for calling out a bonus package that, according to him, could net Siemiatkowski up to $35 billion. Klarna Chairman Mike Moritz shot back that Walther’s alleged conduct — apparently holding up or vetoing key decisions — was investigated by a law firm, and that the board lost faith in him. Thursday’s vote was a resounding loss for the purported troublemaker:
- Walther was removed with approval from 87% of shareholders, Klarna said in a terse statement. “As a result, there will be one fewer independent voice in the boardroom,” Walther argued.
- Siemiatkowski and Jacobsson have clashed over the terms of a planned IPO, which could seek a valuation of roughly $20 billion, but now the CEO has consolidated power before the offering, whose beneficiaries will include investors BlackRock, Sequoia Capital, Silver Lake, and SoftBank.
Undeterred: Despite the boardroom fisticuffs, Klarna saw revenue surge 27% in the first half of the year to $1.2 billion, and losses turned to profits after the company slashed its workforce and filled the gap with AI tools. Earlier this month, it also reached a deal to offload most of its “buy now, pay later” loans in the UK to American hedge fund Elliott, freeing up $39 billion in funds.
Final Day to Be Part of This 10X Energy Breakthrough

The military is all about meeting standards. One company is exceeding them for the US Navy, and it’s a huge opportunity for investors (it’s also the final day to jump on it).
Infinity Fuel is adding 10X more range to the Navy’s uncrewed underwater vehicles than a traditional battery. Their hydrogen fuel cell technology can turn hydrogen into water, then back again for an “infinite” cycle of energy.
With $50M+ in contracts, Infinity is also supporting the Air Force, NASA, and major commercial space partners with their innovation. Altogether, they’re eyeing a total of $19.4B in market opportunities from hydrogen cars to planes and more.
They’ve reserved the Nasdaq ticker ‘IFCH’, but you can invest today – become an Infinity Fuel shareholder by midnight PST.*
WWE and UFC Parent Group TKO Takes Another Big Swing

You know it’s a bull market for sports when bull-riding leagues are raking it in.
On Thursday, TKO Group — a.k.a. the product of last year’s WWE-UFC merger — announced it will be dropping $3.25 billion to acquire a trio of sports and entertainment properties from Endeavor: IMG, On Location, and Professional Bull Riders, the world’s largest bull-riding league. Of course, media mogul Ari Emanuel serves as CEO for both Endeavor and TKO, so it’s safe to consider this a fair bit of media rights deck-shuffling (which begs the question — when will Emanuel go for poker rights?).
Not Their First Rodeo
The interlocked history of Endeavor, IMG, and TKO is enough to make your head spin faster than a pro wrestler’s on the receiving end of a Stone Cold Stunner. Endeavor acquired talent agency and media rights consultancy firm IMG for $2.4 billion in 2014 and UFC for $4 billion in 2016. By 2021, the group, backed by private equity giant Silver Lake, went public. Then, last year, it struck a deal to merge UFC with WWE, creating and publicly listing TKO in the process (Endeavor has a 51% stake, and WWE 49%).
In April, Silver Lake announced it would acquire all outstanding shares and take Endeavor private, with the expressed intention of divesting some of its assets. Ultimately, that just resulted in Emanuel skinnying down one part of his empire to beef up another:
- In addition to the historic IMG, TKO will take over On Location, a luxury hospitality group focused on major sporting events like the Super Bowl and March Madness, as well as PBR, which puts on some 200 live events each year.
- The $3.25 billion deal will be all equity, and see Endeavor’s ownership of TKO increase from 53% to 59%. The groups also said Thursday that IMG may still sell off some of its assets, such as the Miami Open tennis tournament and the Frieze art fair.
One Up, One Down: Endeavor’s retreat from the public market isn’t exactly surprising. Since its 2021 IPO, its stock has crawled up just 6%, with Wall Street largely cool to its disparate pieces across volatile industries. TKO, on the other hand, has seen its shares soar around 45% year-to-date.
Hermès Keeps Up Its Luxury Exceptionalism
Who knew colorful silk scarves costing hundreds of dollars were recession-proof?
Hermès reported financial results on Thursday that showed the scarf and handbag maker is doing pretty well — much better than its luxury compatriots, which have struggled to grow thanks to waning demand from Chinese consumers. Kering, the luxury conglomerate behind Gucci, was more on-trend with its own decidedly lackluster financial results.
Handbag Fight
Hermès’ secret ingredient is that it’s at the very high end of high-end shopping. The company makes prospective handbag owners put themselves on waiting lists and spend a certain amount of money on its products before they can be considered for one of its Birkin bags. That strategy maintains a certain pipeline of demand the company has been able to fall back on even as China’s consumer sentiment has grown a tad more frugal. One McKinsey advisor told Business Insider Hermès has always baked scarcity into its brand, and that has paid off with a long-term strategy that doesn’t feverishly chase after growth.
Kering’s tribulations, however, are much more representative of the overall luxury market:
- Hermès has been consistently outperforming other luxury brands this year. Its stock is up 8% year-to-date, while Kering’s is down a sobering 40%.
- Mega luxury conglomerate LVMH’s stock is down 14% so far this year, and last week it announced its first drop in sales since 2020. Meanwhile, Burberry is down almost 46%, and Hugo Boss was down over 35%.
Astronauts and the Devil: There are a couple other luxury brands that have also managed to swim against the current: Switzerland’s Richemont — the company behind Cartier — is up 10% so far this year, and Prada is up 25%, with analysts upbeat about its own upcoming financials. On top of that, earlier this month Prada announced a partnership with aerospace company Axiom Space to design a spacesuit for astronauts to return to the moon. If any stock is going to the moon, it’s Prada.
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Extra Upside
- Landing the Plane: Activist investor Elliott Management strikes deal to score six directors on Southwest Airlines board.
- Contagion: Yum Brands removes onions from some Taco Bell, KFC, and Pizza Hut locations following McDonald’s E. coli outbreak.
- Advisor Upside: Get wealth management industry insights, investment tips, and business strategies to grow AUM. Navigate volatile markets with confidence. Subscribe now to advise boldly and invest wisely.**
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Disclaimer
*This is a paid advertisement for Infinity Fuel Cell and Hydrogen, Inc. Reg CF offering. Please read the offering circular at https://invest.infinityfuel.com/. Reserving the ticker symbol is not a guarantee that the company will list on the NASDAQ. Listing on the NASDAQ is subject to approvals.