Business
Robinhood lays off 23% of its staff, blaming crypto meltdown and inflation.
Robinhood, the buying and selling app that popularized one-click buying and selling and helped gasoline final 12 months’s meme inventory frenzy, stated on Tuesday that it was shedding about 23 p.c of its work power.
Vlad Tenev, the chief government of Robinhood, stated in a weblog publish that the layoffs would have an effect on workers throughout the corporate, particularly these in operations, advertising and marketing and program administration roles.
Robinhood declined to touch upon the layoffs.
The announcement adopted intently on the heels of cuts in April, when Robinhood laid off 340 staff, or about 9 p.c of its workers on the time. Since then, Mr. Tenev wrote, additional worsening of the economic system, together with inflation and the crash of the crypto market, has “diminished buyer buying and selling exercise and belongings beneath custody.” The value of Bitcoin has fallen by greater than half this 12 months, to about $23,000 per coin. The cryptocurrency rose as excessive as $66,000 in late 2021.
The layoffs come as a part of a wave of job cuts at tech firms, together with some cryptocurrency corporations. In June, cryptocurrency exchanges together with Coinbase and Gemini introduced that they had been shedding workers. Final week, Shopify, a web-based market, introduced it was reducing 10 p.c of its 10,000 workers.
In his memo on Tuesday, Mr. Tenev stated Robinhood misjudged the economic system and buying and selling exercise. “As C.E.O., I authorised and took duty for our formidable staffing trajectory — that is on me,” he wrote.
The corporate additionally launched its second-quarter outcomes on Tuesday, reporting that its month-to-month depend of lively customers declined to 14 million in June, a lower of 1.9 million.
The turbulence represents a serious comedown for Robinhood, which turned a key participant within the meme inventory craze in early 2021, when buyers banded collectively to drive up the shares of firms together with the online game retailer GameStop and the movie show chain AMC. On Jan. 27, 2021, GameStop shares closed up almost 1,800 p.c from a number of weeks earlier than, a file. Then, Robinhood restricted buying and selling in some meme shares. The restrictions led the shares to plunge. Lawsuits, a Securities and Trade Fee investigation and congressional hearings quickly adopted.
Robinhood’s inventory worth soared throughout the meme-stock buying and selling. On Aug. 7, 2021, the corporate was price $46 billion, up about 60 p.c from its valuation per week earlier than. However its inventory has plunged 50 p.c for the reason that starting of the 12 months because it continues to cope with the fallout.
The layoffs come at a difficult second for monetary know-how firms.
Coinbase, the publicly traded cryptocurrency trade, laid off 18 p.c of its workers in June amid the crypto market crash. Different main crypto firms, like OpenSea, Gemini and Crypto.com, have additionally made job cuts.
“Everybody over-hired — Coinbase over-hired, Robinhood over-hired. When cash was simple, they had been simply hiring, hiring, hiring,” stated Dan Dolev, a senior analyst at Mizuho. “I’m not stunned to see these cuts.”
The general worth of the cryptocurrency market is all the way down to about $1 trillion from $3 trillion final 12 months, when enthusiasm for crypto buying and selling peaked and the value of Bitcoin reached a brand new excessive.
Robinhood has been working to construct out its crypto arm this 12 months, itemizing new cash and rolling out a crypto pockets product. “The one factor that I favored the least about Robinhood is their crypto publicity,” Mr. Dolev stated. “Something that has no intrinsic worth is all the time liable to issues.”
Additionally on Tuesday, the New York State Division of Monetary Companies introduced it was fining Robinhood’s crypto operation $30 million over violations of its anti-money laundering and cybersecurity rules.
“As its enterprise grew, Robinhood Crypto failed to take a position the correct assets and a spotlight to develop and preserve a tradition of compliance,” Adrienne A. Harris, the superintendent of economic companies, stated in an announcement.
Cheryl Crumpton, affiliate normal counsel at Robinhood, stated in an announcement that the corporate was “happy” the settlement had been finalized. “We’ve got made important progress constructing industry-leading authorized, compliance, and cybersecurity applications, and can proceed to prioritize this work to finest serve our clients,” she stated.
Business
Albania Gives Jared Kushner Hotel Project a Nod as Trump Returns
The government of Albania has given preliminary approval to a plan proposed by Jared Kushner, Donald J. Trump’s son-in-law, to build a $1.4 billion luxury hotel complex on a small abandoned military base off the coast of Albania.
The project is one of several involving Mr. Trump and his extended family that directly involve foreign government entities that will be moving ahead even while Mr. Trump will be in charge of foreign policy related to these same nations.
The approval by Albania’s Strategic Investment Committee — which is led by Prime Minister Edi Rama — gives Mr. Kushner and his business partners the right to move ahead with accelerated negotiations to build the luxury resort on a 111-acre section of the 2.2-square-mile island of Sazan that will be connected by ferry to the mainland.
Mr. Kushner and the Albanian government did not respond Wednesday to requests for comment. But when previously asked about this project, both have said that the evaluation is not being influenced by Mr. Kushner’s ties to Mr. Trump or any effort to try to seek favors from the U.S. government.
“The fact that such a renowned American entrepreneur shows his interest on investing in Albania makes us very proud and happy,” a spokesman for Mr. Rama said last year in a statement to The New York Times when asked about the projects.
Mr. Kushner’s Affinity Partners, a private equity company backed with about $4.6 billion in money mostly from Saudi Arabia and other Middle East sovereign wealth funds, is pursuing the Albania project along with Asher Abehsera, a real-estate executive that Mr. Kushner has previously teamed up with to build projects in Brooklyn, N.Y.
The Albanian government, according to an official document recently posted online, will now work with their American partners to clear the proposed hotel site of any potential buried munitions and to examine any other environmental or legal concerns that need to be resolved before the project can move ahead.
The document, dated Dec. 30, notes that the government “has the right to revoke the decision,” depending on the final project negotiations.
Mr. Kushner’s firm has said the plan is to build a five-star “eco-resort community” on the island by turning a “former military base into a vibrant international destination for hospitality and wellness.”
Ivanka Trump, Mr. Trump’s daughter, has said she is helping with the project as well. “We will execute on it,” she said about the project, during a podcast last year.
This project is just one of two major real-estate deals that Mr. Kushner is pursuing along with Mr. Abehsera that involve foreign governments.
Separately, the partnership received preliminary approval last year to build a luxury hotel complex in Belgrade, Serbia, in the former ministry of defense building, which has sat empty for decades after it was bombed by NATO in 1999 during a war there.
Serbia and Albania have foreign policy matters pending with the United States, as both countries seek continued U.S. support for their long-stalled efforts to join the European Union, and officials in Washington are trying to convince Serbia to tighten ties with the United States, instead of Russia.
Virginia Canter, who served as White House ethics lawyer during the Obama and Clinton administrations and also an ethics adviser to the International Monetary Fund, said even if there was no attempt to gain influence with Mr. Trump, any government deal involving his family creates that impression.
“It all looks like favoritism, like they are providing access to Kushner because they want to be on the good side of Trump,” Ms. Canter said, now with State Democracy Defenders Fund, a group that tracks federal government corruption and ethics issues.
Business
Craft supplies retailer Joann declares bankruptcy for the second time in a year
The craft supplies and fabric retailer Joann filed for bankruptcy for the second time in less than a year, as the chain wrestles with declining sales and inventory shortages, the company said Wednesday.
The retailer emerged from a previous Chapter 11 bankruptcy process last April after eliminating $505 million in debt. Now, with $615 million in liabilities, the company will begin a court-supervised sale of its assets to repay creditors. The company owes an additional $133 million to its suppliers.
“We hope that this process enables us to find a path that would allow Joann to continue operating,” said interim Chief Executive Michael Prendergast in a statement. “The last several years have presented significant and lasting challenges in the retail environment, which, coupled with our current financial position and constrained inventory levels, forced us to take this step.”
Joann’s more than 800 stores and websites will remain open throughout the bankruptcy process, the company said, and employees will continue to receive pay and benefits. The Hudson, Ohio-based company was founded in 1943 and has stores in 49 states, including several in Southern California.
According to court documents, Joann began receiving unpredictable and inconsistent deliveries of yarn and sewing items from its suppliers, making it difficult to keep its shelves stocked. Joann’s suppliers also discontinued certain items the retailer relied on.
Along with the “unanticipated inventory challenges,” Joann and other retailers face pressure from inflation-wary consumers and interest rates that were for a time the highest in decades. The crafts supplier has also been hindered by competition from others in the space, including Michael’s, Etsy and Hobby Lobby, said Retail Wire Chief Executive Dominick Miserandino.
“It did not necessarily learn to evolve like its nearby competitors,” Miserandino said of Joann. “Not many people have heard of Joann in the way they’ve heard of Michael’s.”
Joann is not the first retailer to continue to struggle after going through bankruptcy. The party supply chain Party City announced last month it would be shutting down operations, after filing for and emerging from Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2023.
Over the last two years, more than 60 companies have filed for bankruptcy for a second or third time, Bloomberg reported, based on information from BankruptcyData. That’s the most over a comparable period since 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic kept shoppers home.
Discount chain Big Lots filed for bankruptcy last September, and the Container Store, a retailer offering storage and organization products, declared bankruptcy last month. Companies that rely heavily on brick-and-mortar locations are scrambling to keep up with online retailers and big-box chains. Fast-casual restaurants such as Red Lobster and Rubio’s Coastal Grill have also struggled.
High prices have prompted consumers to pull back on discretionary spending, while rising operating and labor costs put additional pressure on businesses, experts said. The U.S. annual inflation rate for 2024 was 2.9%, down from 3.4% in 2023. But inflation has been on the rise since September and remains above the Federal Reserve’s goal of 2%.
If a sale process for Joann is approved, Gordon Brothers Retail Partners would serve as the stalking-horse bidder and set the floor for the auction.
Business
U.S. Sues Southwest Airlines Over Chronic Delays
The federal government sued Southwest Airlines on Wednesday, accusing the airline of harming passengers who flew on two routes that were plagued by consistent delays in 2022.
In a lawsuit, the Transportation Department said it was seeking more than $2.1 million in civil penalties over the flights between airports in Chicago and Oakland, Calif., as well as Baltimore and Cleveland, that were chronically delayed over five months that year.
“Airlines have a legal obligation to ensure that their flight schedules provide travelers with realistic departure and arrival times,” the transportation secretary, Pete Buttigieg, said in a statement. “Today’s action sends a message to all airlines that the department is prepared to go to court in order to enforce passenger protections.”
Carriers are barred from operating unrealistic flight schedules, which the Transportation Department considers an unfair, deceptive and anticompetitive practice. A “chronically delayed” flight is defined as one that operates at least 10 times a month and is late by at least 30 minutes more than half the time.
In a statement, Southwest said it was “disappointed” that the department chose to sue over the flights that took place more than two years ago. The airline said it had operated 20 million flights since the Transportation Department enacted its policy against chronically delayed flights more than a decade ago, with no other violations.
“Any claim that these two flights represent an unrealistic schedule is simply not credible when compared with our performance over the past 15 years,” Southwest said.
Last year, Southwest canceled fewer than 1 percent of its flights, but more than 22 percent arrived at least 15 minutes later than scheduled, according to Cirium, an aviation data provider. Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Alaska Airlines and American Airlines all had fewer such delays.
The lawsuit was filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California. In it, the government said that a Southwest flight from Chicago to Oakland arrived late 19 out of 25 trips in April 2022, with delays averaging more than an hour. The consistent delays continued through August of that year, averaging an hour or more. On another flight, between Baltimore and Cleveland, average delay times reached as high as 96 minutes per month during the same period. In a statement, the department said that Southwest, rather than poor weather or air traffic control, was responsible for more than 90 percent of the delays.
“Holding out these chronically delayed flights disregarded consumers’ need to have reliable information about the real arrival time of a flight and harmed thousands of passengers traveling on these Southwest flights by causing disruptions to travel plans or other plans,” the department said in the lawsuit.
The government said Southwest had violated federal rules 58 times in August 2022 after four months of consistent delays. Each violation faces a civil penalty of up to $37,377, or more than $2.1 million in total, according to the lawsuit.
The Transportation Department on Wednesday also said that it had penalized Frontier Airlines for chronically delayed flights, fining the airline $650,000. Half that amount was paid to the Treasury and the rest is slated to be forgiven if the airline has no more chronically delayed flights over the next three years.
This month, the department ordered JetBlue Airways to pay a $2 million fine for failing to address similarly delayed flights over a span of more than a year ending in November 2023, with half the money going to passengers affected by the delays.
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