8 The Economist April 30th 2022
The world this week Business
Elon Muskstruck a deal to buy
Twitter, capping three weeks
of drama during which he had
revealed he had amassed a
9.2% stake and rejected a seat
on the board and Twitter had
tried to block a sale. In the end
its big investors forced Twitter
to the table when Mr Musk
revealed a financing package
for his offer. At around $44bn
it will be one of the largest
ever leveraged buyouts. The
Twitterati went into meltdown
at Mr Musk’s pledge to nurture
free speech on the platform.
But he seemed to have the
support of Jack Dorsey, Twit
ter’s founder, who tweeted:
“Taking it back from Wall
Street is the correct first step.”
Tesla’sshare price tumbled the
day after Twitter accepted Mr
Musk’s bid. Part of his financ
ing for the offer includes a loan
against the stock he owns in
the carmaker; a much lower
share price would complicate
that calculation.
Meta’squarterly earnings
pleased investors, a relief for
the company after its results
for the previous quarter
showed a sharp slowdown in
growth, pummelling its share
price. Overall revenue grew at
the slowest pace since Face
book went public, but the
number of daily active users
across all Meta’s apps, which
include WhatsApp and
Instagram, was up.
Microsoftreported solid
quarterly revenues and fore
cast better sales for the current
quarter, driven by its cloud
computing services. Satya
Nadella, the chief executive,
said that the inflationary
environment was good for
software, as firms seek to “do
more with less”.
Revenuesfromadvertisingat
Alphabetalsogrewsharplyin
thelatestquarter,thoughnot
atthesamepaceasduringthe
heightofthepandemic.Itsaid
adspendingonitsYouTube
platformhadnotgrownas
muchasit hadhopedbecause
ofthe“outsizedimpact”of
Russia’swarinUkrainein
Europeanmarkets.Salesfrom
Google’ssearchadvertising
werelessaffectedbywider
economicconcernsandrose
by25%,yearonyear.
Cookupa storm
America’s Senate confirmed
Lael Brainard as vicechair of
the Federal Reserve, becoming
deputy to the chair, Jerome
Powell. But the confirmation
of Lisa Cook to the Fed’s board
of governors was temporarily
suspended by Democrats
because they lacked the num
bers to support her (mostly
because of covid absences). Ms
Cook would be the first black
woman to sit on the board,
though Republicans contend
that she is an activist who
would use her position to
“promote radical hyperbole”.
It was a tale of two Swiss
banks, as ubsreported its best
firstquarter profit in 15 years
and Credit Suissefell to a loss
and overhauled its manage
ment, replacing its chief
financial officer. ubs’s in
vestmentbanking business
rebounded from its exposure a
year ago to the collapse of
Archegos Capital Manage
ment, though income from its
assetmanagement division
was sharply lower (Bill Hwang,
the founder of Archegos, was
charged with fraud in America
this week). Credit Suisse’s loss
came as revenue fell in in
vestment banking and wealth
management, year on year.
In a blow to green investors,
shareholders at Bank of Amer
ica, Citigroup and Wells Fargo
overwhelmingly rejected
proposals to stop the three big
American banks financing
new fossilfuel projects. With
energy costs rising, Jane Fra
ser, Citi’s chief executive, said
that moving to a netzero
carbon economy would take
time. But in a sign of the grow
ing power of shareholder
activists at investor meetings,
Ms Fraser was also asked a
question about Citi’s policy on
reimbursing staff who have to
travel to get an abortion.
The largest independent in
vestor in Just Eat Takeaway
called for the company’s chief
financial officer and most of
the supervisory board to be
sacked at the forthcoming
annual general meeting. The
online fooddelivery company
recently announced that it was
assessing its options for Grub
hub, which it took over only
last year. Furious investors
claim they have been misled.
Nota veryhappyplace
Florida’s governor, Ron
DeSantis, signed a bill revok
ing privileges that the state
had granted to Disney’stheme
parks, which in effect had
allowed the company to oper
ate as its own local govern
ment. Walt Disney World was
given its special status in 1967,
but the firm has fallen out with
Republicans over legislation
that bans classroom instruc
tion on sexual orientation or
gender identity to young chil
dren. Mr DeSantis says that
Disney’s privileges were an
“aberration”, but critics think
he has taken revenge on a
private company just because
it does not agree with him.
America’s house-price boom
continued apace, with the s&p
CoreLogic CaseShiller index
registering a rise of nearly 20%
in February, year on year.
Home prices in Phoenix and
Tampa were up by a third.
Rising interest rates, the result
of high inflation, could soon
pierce that bubble.