Good morning and happy Friday.
Just in time for soup season.
On Thursday, casual restaurant and suburban-family-favorite chain Olive Garden announced it would be partnering with Uber to offer exclusive app-based delivery service after years of abstaining from the gig-based courier industry. Even then, the service will only be available inside Olive Garden’s app, not Uber Eats. It will be available at all 900 US locations by May 2025. We only have one question: What happens when we need a refill on unlimited breadsticks?
Walmart Wants to Cut Out Credit Card Networks

If retailers and payments companies are increasingly wading into a Cold War, Walmart may have just turned up the heat.
On Thursday, the retail supergiant announced it will soon roll out an option for consumers to pay for online orders directly via instant bank account transfers — a move that would sidestep credit card payments networks and their pesky processing fees. Translation: shots fired.
Discredited
Walmart has been flirting with pay-by-bank for a while now, quietly launching the feature within its in-app Walmart Pay function earlier this year. But that service was based on the somewhat antiquated Automated Clearing House infrastructure, which meant payments could take around three days to process — similar to writing and cashing a digital check. That made it a bit of a lose-lose: Walmart had to wait to actually get the money, while consumers walking a low-balance tightrope could get smacked by overdraft fees if the transactions completed at a bad time. Actually, make that lose-lose-lose: The credit card networks would lose out on fees, too. Though for Walmart, of course, that’s the point. Consumers, who sometimes bear the brunt of the up-to-2% processing fees, score a small win, too.
For the new system, to be launched next year, Walmart is teaming with Fiserv to implement a more efficient network for cutting out the credit card middlemen:
- The pay-by-bank feature will use Fiserv’s NOW Gateway, an infrastructure built on both The Clearing House’s Real Time Payments network and the Federal Reserve’s FedNow. The system will allow funds to instantly transfer from the consumer to Walmart.
- “As an industry we believe we need to create this connectivity,” Fiserv head of digital payments Matt Wilcox told Bloomberg. “FedNow and RTP, they don’t necessarily talk to one another. The NOW Network can play that role in the industry of bringing all these networks together to enable applications like pay-by-bank.”
It’s Settled: Merchants scored a major victory over credit card networks earlier this year when Mastercard and Visa — which, combined, hold a roughly 84% credit card market share in the US — agreed to lower swipe fees by 0.04% and maintain those levels through 2030 as part of a settlement in a class-action lawsuit. That sounds like small potatoes, but it could save merchants and consumers some $30 billion in swipe fees over the next five years. Meanwhile, adoption of pay-by-bank options is slowly picking up. In a 2023 report, PYMNTS.com found 33% of US retailers plan to add real-time pay-by-bank optionality in the next three years. Until then, enjoy your credit card points.
This Stock is Up 1,072% (Hint: It’s Not Nvidia)
It’s EnergyX. Thanks to its breakthrough lithium extraction technology, EnergyX’s share price has increased by 1,072%. Major companies like GM and POSCO are already investing, and you can too for a limited time.
Here’s why it’s such an intriguing opportunity. Lithium demand is projected to soar 20X higher by 2040, and EnergyX’s patented technology can extract lithium 300% more efficiently than current methods. Plus, EnergyX is scaling quickly. They just announced plans for a US lithium plant backed by a US Department of Energy grant.
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German Government Investigates Itself Over UniCredit’s Shock Commerzbank Stake Purchase
When German-speaking composer Mozart and Italian librettist Da Ponte teamed up for “Don Giovanni,” they brought together melodrama, comedy, and the supernatural. When Italian bank UniCredit took a stake in German Commerzbank last week, it opted for just a boatload of melodrama.
The latest chapter: The German government has launched an internal probe, sources told Bloomberg Thursday, trying to figure out how it was blindsided by UniCredit staking out a major position in one of the country’s most historically important lenders.
Drama on the Main (River)
Last week, Milan-based UniCredit, which is Italy’s second-largest bank, announced it had built a 9% stake in Frankfurt-based Commerzbank, Germany’s second-largest private-sector bank. Overnight, the Italians became Commerzbank’s second-largest shareholder.
The German government had reduced its own stake in Commerzbank to 12% and figured the sale would be bought up in pieces by institutional investors. But UniCredit bought a roughly 4.5% stake from the government’s partial exit, and CEO Andrea Orcel went fishing around on the market for the second half of the stake, news magazine Der Spiegel reported. Orcel then announced he was angling for a full takeover, something he reiterated in an interview Wednesday with the newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung. He’s already taking steps to get there, but battles await:
- On Tuesday, UniCredit sought approval from the European Central Bank to own up to 30% of Commerzbank, Italian newspaper Il Messaggero reported. The ECB has to approve stakes at the 10%, 20%, 30%, and 50% thresholds — ECB President Christine Lagarde hinted that “cross-border bank mergers are desired by many authorities” in the EU, something supporters say would increase their competitiveness abroad.
- Verdi, the powerful German services sector union that holds two seats on Commerzbank’s board, said it will fight a merger “tooth and nail,” citing UniCredit’s transfer of decision-making power from its Germany subsidiary HypoVereinsbank to Italy.
We’re No. 1: Deutsche Bank, Germany’s largest bank, is plotting to block the deal, knowing a merger might create a new banking giant that could surpass it as the country’s largest lender. One option being entertained in the immediate term is buying the German government’s remaining 12% stake.
AI Could Make People ‘Uninsurable,’ Financial Regulator Warns
As if submitting an insurance claim wasn’t Kafkaesque enough already.
The head of the UK’s financial watchdog, the Financial Conduct Authority, told the Financial Times that the insurance industry needs to walk a delicate tightrope when it comes to using AI, or else AI black boxes could render consumers uninsurable without any explanation.
Insure Against the Machine
The insurance sector isn’t entirely new to the concept of AI: It’s been using AI software for years to do complex, data-crunchy tasks like risk modeling. But, like every other sector, the insurance industry has ridden the current wave of generative AI products, its proponents saying that it can actually drive down prices for consumers by really digging deep into their personal details.
But FCA CEO Nikhil Rathi said that this level of AI-driven personalization could leave people open to the risk of having a computer decide, without any explanation, that they’re uninsurable:
- Bias is a longstanding issue in all kinds of AI software, generative AI included. Existing biases in historical data can be ingested and then replicated by an AI program, which might then discriminate against a specific set of people.
- Rathi said that a drive toward generative AI in insurance could end up in a scandal, similar to the ongoing outrage over dynamic pricing in concert tickets.
On the Flip Side: While the insurance sector may need to keep a close eye on its own AI algorithms, it also needs to be on the lookout for fraudsters using the same technology. The International Travel & Health Insurance Journal reported Thursday that UK claims-handlers are seeing an uptick in fraudulent claims, and a significant proportion of those seem to contain AI-generated content.
Extra Upside
- Highly Rated: Market indexes soared in the first day after the Federal Reserve’s super-sized rate cut.
- Copyright Attorney, I Choose You! Nintendo is suing the makers of a game called “Palworld,” saying it infringes Pokémon’s copyright.
- The Engine Revolution Of Our Lifetime? LiquidPiston, the company developing the biggest engine innovation since 1872, ends their investment round next week. Plus they’re already addressing the $400B combustion engine market. Invest before 9/27.**
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Disclaimer
*This is a paid advertisement for EnergyX’s Regulation A+ Offering. Please read the offering circular at invest.energyx.com/.
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