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Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway offers 'big stamp of approval' to beauty retailer Ulta

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Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway offers 'big stamp of approval' to beauty retailer Ulta

Berkshire Hathaway (BRK-B, BRK-A) is placing a bet on Ulta Beauty (ULTA).

On Wednesday, the Warren Buffett-led conglomerate revealed in a regulatory filing that it bought 690,106 shares in the beauty retailer in the second quarter, worth roughly $266 million as of the end of June. Ulta stock jumped over 11% on Thursday and continued to rally on Friday, up 14.6% since Berkshire disclosed its holdings.

The move is “a big stamp of approval,” BMO Capital Markets managing director and senior analyst Simeon Siegel told Yahoo Finance. “The beauty category has always been an attractive category.”

In addition to taking a stake in Ulta, Berkshire Hathaway added aerospace manufacturing company Heico (HEI) to its holdings and exited its positions in Snowflake (SNOW) and Paramount (PARA). Berkshire also trimmed shares of Apple (AAPL), among other names.

However, Berkshire’s stake in Ulta came as a surprise. The stock has had a tough year so far, though, which may have made it more attractive, in line with Buffett’s value-oriented investment philosophy. Shares of the retailer are down 23% since the beginning of the year.

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“Warren Buffett is almost like the original value investor, and I think that that’s the way they looked at it,” said Loop Capital Markets managing director Anthony Chukumba, who has a Buy rating on Ulta stock. “We do like the fact that Berkshire got involved with the stock. It definitely lends credibility to the story.”

Ulta is one of the largest beauty retailers in the US and is set to expand into Mexico in 2025. In its most recent quarter, the company increased sales by 3.5% year over year to $2.7 billion, continuing a trend of strong growth and overall resilience in the beauty industry.

However, on April 2, Ulta Beauty CEO Dave Kimbell warned investors of “a slowdown in the total category across price points and segments.”

That spurred a sell-off in the stock, reflecting investors’ fears about a downturn in sales and increased competition from Sephora and Amazon (AMZN), particularly in the higher-end beauty segment.

According to Chukumba, those concerns seem “overblown.”

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“Ulta has a great model,” he continued. “They have a completely debt-free balance sheet. They generate a ton of free cash flow. They buy back stock pretty aggressively. I think they’re going to initiate a dividend later this year, which will open up the stock to income investors as well.”

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett attends the Berkshire Hathaway Inc annual shareholders' meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 3, 2024. (REUTERS/Scott Morgan/File Photo)

Berkshire Hathaway Chairman Warren Buffett attends the Berkshire Hathaway Inc annual shareholders’ meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 3, 2024. (REUTERS/Scott Morgan/File Photo) (Reuters / Reuters)

Siegel questioned whether Ulta is a healthy but more mature business or if it’s saturated and is no longer able to sustain its growth story.

“Ulta and Sephora have revolutionized the way [the] consumer shops beauty the last 15 years,” Siegel said. “The business has dramatically taken … share away from department stores in favor of the specialty beauty retailers, which are predominantly Ulta and Sephora. They’ve done a phenomenal job.”

However, “Ulta has now pivoted or has now cycled into the next leg of its maturity,” Siegel continued. “It’s no longer growing at the same level that it was growing.”

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He added that it will be up to management to prove to shareholders that it can still grow.

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StockStory aims to help individual investors beat the market.

In May, CEO Kimbell told shareholders, “I remain confident in our differentiated model, the resilience of the beauty category, and our ability to execute against our plans, but we have adjusted our annual guidance as we anticipate the dynamics we faced in the first quarter to continue for the balance of the year.”

Kimbell announced that the company will share more details at its investor day in October about its plan to drive long-term share growth.

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Finance

Consumer confidence plunges among younger adults

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Consumer confidence plunges among younger adults

Consumer confidence has plunged among traditionally optimistic younger adults amid fears for their personal finances and the wider economy, figures show.

GfK’s long-running Consumer Confidence Index remained unchanged at an overall score of minus 23 in June.

However, the analyst said this was was “misleading as, beneath the surface, there are new signs that confidence is weakening”.

Source: GfK

Neil Bellamy, consumer insights director at GfK, said: “The biggest fall this month is among those aged 16 to 29, traditionally one of the most optimistic groups.

“Here confidence has dropped 11 points over the past month to minus two, the lowest level seen for two years, driven by large falls in views on both their own personal finances and the wider economy.

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“More broadly, there are now no demographic groups with a positive confidence score, including higher-income households earning £50,000 or more, who have slipped back into negative territory as of June.

“Confidence remains subdued and vulnerable to further economic or political uncertainty.”

Sourve: GfK
Sourve: GfK

Overall, confidence in personal finances over the coming year remained flat at minus two, four points lower than this time last year.

The measures of both personal finances and the economy over the previous 12 months were both slightly down, by two points and three points respectively, “reflecting the sense that things have been extremely tough over the last year for so many”, GfK said.

The only measure to increase was expectations for the wider economy over the next 12 months, up two points to minus 36 but still eight points below this time last year.

The major purchase index, an indicator of confidence in buying big ticket items, remained at minus 20, four points lower than June last year.

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How US-Iran peace deal will affect our cost of living

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How US-Iran peace deal will affect our cost of living

“Ships of the World, start your engines. Let the oil flow!” said Donald Trump on social media after he announced the signing of an interim peace deal with Iran on Sunday. Under the agreement – which Iran acknowledged included a 60-day negotiating period for a final deal – the president said that following retrieval of mines, there would be a “toll free opening” of the Strait of Hormuz.

But many of the finer details remain “unclear”, said The Guardian. There are questions over the “exact timing of the reopening of the maritime route, who will oversee safe passage and whether any conditions will be applied”.

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Finance

Hong Kong graduates prefer careers in finance, survey finds

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Hong Kong graduates prefer careers in finance, survey finds
Hong Kong graduates believe the city’s finance industry is its most attractive and stable sector, making them more optimistic about career opportunities than their global peers, according to a study by the CFA Institute, which trains investment managers.

The US-based institute’s “2026 Graduate Outlook Survey”, released on Wednesday, found that 71 per cent of Hong Kong graduates rated their career prospects between eight and 10 out of 10. The global average for that level of optimism was 59 per cent.

The graduates’ view of careers in finance reflected “both the sector’s resilience and Hong Kong’s continued strength as an international financial centre, which ranks third worldwide and first in Asia-Pacific”, the institute said in a statement.

The findings also indicated that young people were confident about Hong Kong’s role as an international financial centre, resilient amid global uncertainties, and strategically focused on improving skills, it said.

That confidence was “deeply grounded”, it said, with nearly 90 per cent believing they had the skills to succeed and clearly understood what employers were looking for, notwithstanding the wider adoption of artificial intelligence in the city.

“Rather than viewing AI as a threat, 38 per cent of Hong Kong graduates believe it has no negative impact on their job hunting, and 37 per cent believe it makes securing a job easier,” the institute said. “Three quarters are already actively using AI tools in their job applications, demonstrating a proactive, tool-first mindset.”

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