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Trading house Itochu looks to finance Seven & i management buyout

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Trading house Itochu looks to finance Seven & i management buyout

Trading house Itochu Corp. is considering helping finance the potential buyout of Seven & i Holdings Co. by its management, responding to a request from the founding family of the Japanese retail giant, sources close to the matter said Monday.

Itochu, the parent of convenience store chain operator FamilyMart Co., is apparently in the initial phase of the study, the sources said. The move could complicate the around 7 trillion yen ($45 billion) buyout offer by Canada’s Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. toward Seven & i.

File photo taken in March 2024 shows Itochu Corp.’s Tokyo headquarters in Minato Ward. (Kyodo)

The Seven & i founding family, which anticipates a management buyout worth 9 trillion yen, has also contacted some banks and investment funds, according to the sources.

Alimentation Couche-Tard, the operator of Circle K convenience stores, has raised its buyout offer from the initial offer of around 6 trillion yen.

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With its possible participation, Itochu may expect some synergies between FamilyMart and Seven-Eleven, two of the leading convenience store chains in Japan. But it could also cause antitrust issues because of their dominance in the industry, and Itochu may need to keep its investment ratio low, the sources said.


Related coverage:

Seven & i mulls management buyout to fend off Canadian takeover bid

Seven & i unveils 1.7-fold sales growth plan amid takeover pressure

Japan retailer Seven & i reveals its own strategy amid takeover offer

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US consumers slow spending as inflation bites, Synchrony says

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US consumers slow spending as inflation bites, Synchrony says

By Nupur Anand

NEW YORK (Reuters) – U.S. consumers are starting to curb their spending in response to high prices and a worsening economic outlook, according to consumer finance company Synchrony Financial (SYF).

Americans have been accumulating more debt amid strain in their finances, with delinquencies edging up for auto loans, credit cards and home credit lines, the Federal Reserve said last month.

Philadelphia Federal Reserve President Patrick Harker has also warned that trouble may be brewing for the U.S. economy, which is showing signs of stress in the consumer sector with consumer confidence also waning.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JANUARY 13: People walk by a Macy’s store in Brooklyn after the company announced it was closing the store along with over 60 others on January 13, 2025 in New York City. Macy’s, once the nation’s premier department store, has struggled in recent years with the competition from online retailers and discount stores such as Walmart. Macy’s has said that the closures would allow them to prioritize its roughly 350 Macy’s remaining locations. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images) · Spencer Platt via Getty Images

The belt-tightening indicates that Americans, whose finances are broadly healthy, are preparing for their finances to be more stretched, said Max Axler, chief credit officer of Synchrony. Most clients are still keeping up their loan repayments, he added.

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“Purchase volumes have gone down across the industry as consumers across all income groups become more thoughtful about spending,” Axler told Reuters.

Synchrony, which issues credit cards in partnership with retailers and merchants, has more than 100 million consumer credit accounts.

U.S. consumer sentiment plunged to a nearly 2-1/2-year low in March as inflation expectations soared. Some economists have warned that President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs could boost prices and undercut growth.

Concerns about higher prices have driven consumers’ long-term inflation expectations to levels last seen in early 1993.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - MARCH 25: A shopper looks at meat products on display at a grocery store on March 25, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. The budget is expected to return to deficit after two years of surplus, focusing on cost-of-living relief measures, including extended electricity rebates and increased healthcare spending, while also addressing economic challenges and potential voter concerns ahead of the upcoming federal election. (Photo by Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA – MARCH 25: A shopper looks at meat products on display at a grocery store on March 25, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. The budget is expected to return to deficit after two years of surplus, focusing on cost-of-living relief measures, including extended electricity rebates and increased healthcare spending, while also addressing economic challenges and potential voter concerns ahead of the upcoming federal election. (Photo by Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images) · Lisa Maree Williams via Getty Images

Retailers including Target and Walmart have said that shoppers are being careful with their spending, waiting for deals or making tradeoffs to lower-priced items.

Household spending cuts could be a precursor to increasing late credit payments or loan defaults, analysts said. While default rates have remained broadly steady, spending is being watched carefully as an early indicator of deteriorating consumer finances.

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Borrowers could also become more cautious, taking out fewer or smaller loans and crimping a key source of revenue for banks. Across the industry, loan growth slowed by 5% to 12% in February versus a year earlier, HSBC analyst Saul Martinez said.

“There is clearly a slowdown, and it shows that the consumer is vulnerable,” Martinez said. “And for banks, slowing loan growth could result in lower net interest income and revenue,” he added.

The concerns about household finances have also weighed on consumer finance stocks with shares of American Express (AXP), Capital One (COF), Synchrony, (SYF) and Discover (DFS) down between 15-22% over the past month, Martinez said.

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Mag 7 takes on ‘growth as defensive’ bias, strategist says

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Mag 7 takes on ‘growth as defensive’ bias, strategist says
Citi head of US equity strategy Scott Chronert joins Market Domination hosts Julie Hyman and Josh Lipton to discuss Monday’s “Magnificent Seven” rally in the context of the recent tech trade decline. In particular, Chronert emphasizes a “growth as defensive” component coming into play for the Magnificent Seven. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination here.
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Finance

Trump executive order threatens small business lending in Philadelphia

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Trump executive order threatens small business lending in Philadelphia

While most of the CDFI fund appears to be protected by Congress, Hinkle Brown said he’s concerned that the rules won’t apply.

“It’s unclear what overzealous implementation in this regard would look like,” he said. “If they eviscerate and make non-functional the CDFI fund there’s a lot of costs, the Philly region will suffer.”

It could put a dent in regional economic development efforts in low income communities, said Leslie Benoliel, CEO of Entrepreneur Works in Philadelphia.

“[Community Development Financial Institutions] are like the capillaries of the financial distribution system in our country. And if you cut off the blood flow to those extremities, that will cause enormous harm,” Benoliel said.

Small business owners who may not typically trust the banking system or government often will work one-on-one with a community organization, she said.

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CDFIs across Pennsylvania were allocated $32 million under financial assistance, healthy foods and persistent poverty county financial assistance awards last year.

If there’s no federal support, local nonprofits will likely have to raise money another way, said Varsovia Fernandez, CEO of the Pennsylvania CDFI Network.

“There is a possibility of moving to a fee for services model where small businesses need to pay to receive technical assistance education and I would imagine [loans would have] a higher rate to be sustainable,” she said. “I am hoping that it’s not a drastic change what the White House ends up doing.”

On March 17, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said in a statement that the Trump administration understands the significance of the federal fund and local community lending organizations.

“CDFIs [Community Development Financial Institutions] are a key component of President Trump’s commitment to supporting Main Street America in the pursuit of job growth, wealth creation and prosperity,” Bessent said.

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