In Hot Water

Activision is back in hot water. This time, it’s with America’s biggest and baddest regulator.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating Activision Blizzard, one of the world’s largest gaming companies. The company has been at the core of an ongoing controversy involving company-wide sexual harassment and discrimination.

California’s Department of Fair Employment and Housing filed a lawsuit involving the claims, which was followed by an investor class action against the company. Just last week, another suit was filed by employees and a major media labor union against the company. The suit aims to go after Activision Blizzard for allegedly intimidating workers and preventing them from forming a union. 😲

The SEC’s investigation will focus on the company’s handling of the allegations against the company and its employees. The agency subpoenaed the company, current and former employees, and intends to find out if Activision Blizzard intentionally withheld “material information” from investors. While some analysts indicate it’s unlikely the SEC’s search will bring about any new information, it’s still a possibility. Regardless, it’s never a great precedent to have a regulator knocking at your door. 😬

$ATVI fell 4.3% this week. It’s down 16.2% YTD.

Chinese Smartphone Maker Unveils EV

Chinese smartphone giant Xiaomi is entering the highly competitive electric vehicle (EV) market, revealing its first electric car this weekend. 👀

The consumer electronics company unveiled its SU7 sedan, which it says it spent more than $1.4 billion to develop. The vehicle is set to roll out in China next year and is attempting to do something Faraday Future and other competitors have failed to do: create a software-focused vehicle that matches the technology people find in their phones to what’s happening in their cars. 

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March Madness Continues At NYCB

When regular people talk about March Madness, they’re referring to college basketball. But when traders and investors talk about March Madness, they’re referring to a regional bank stock imploding.

We’re about a year out from three regional banks failing and/or being rescued, and now the sharks are circling New York Community Bancorp. The long story short, until today, is that the regional lender has too much commercial real estate exposure, weak internal controls over financial reporting, and a new CEO trying to right the ship. 🗞️

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Adobe Leads Day Of Breakups

Most of today’s stories were related to hookups in the market, but we also need to touch on some major breakups. 💔

The first and most prevalent news story was that Adobe and Figma have called off their $20 billion acquisition. The two companies have faced intense scrutiny from European regulators, today saying, “There is no clear path to receive necessary regulatory approvals from the European Commission and the U.K. Competition and Markets Authority.”

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Peloton’s New Partnership

With Peloton’s turnaround strategy not yet bearing the fruit it had anticipated, the company continues to lean on partnerships to grow market share. For example, in September, the company entered a 5-year strategic partnership with Lulemon to bring its content to the athleisure brand’s exercise app. It also made Lululemon Peloton’s primary athletic apparel partner. 👟

It’s still too early to tell whether or not that cooperative effort is working, but management seems to think further initiatives like it will help boost revenues. As a result, it’s partnering with TikTok to bring short-form fitness videos and other content to the social media platform.

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