| Bankruptcy ain't the end | UK's worst April on record |

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Hi John, here's what you need to know for June 15th in 3:14 minutes.

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Today's big stories

  1. Bankrupt car rental company Hertz is looking to sell $1 billion worth of shares
  2. Our analysts stare down one of the biggest risks facing American companies in the coming months – Read Now
  3. The UK economy shrank by over 20% in April
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Lost Cause

Lost Cause

What’s Going On Here?

Bankrupt car rental company Hertz announced late last week it was looking to find its bearings – and its mojo – with a surprise $1 billion dollar share sale.

What Does This Mean?

With global travel a no-go, Hertz wasn’t making any money from renting out cars. So it’s no surprise that back in May, the firm officially declared bankruptcy. But as debt investors worked with the courts to figure out how best to get their money back, equity investors were buying Hertz’s shares – which are typically worthless post-bankruptcy – and pushing up their value almost tenfold from May’s low.

Hertz now wants to capitalize on its newfound popularity: it’s asked bankruptcy courts to greenlight the sale of almost 250 million new shares. The move could add as much as $1 billion to Hertz's coffers, as well as help the company live to fight another day once bankruptcy proceedings are over.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: Leave it to the non-professionals.
Retail investors” don’t usually have enough cash to make a difference to the share price of a big company. But when they buy shares of bankrupt firms, they can single-handedly push prices up (tweet this). And while professional investors argue that buying Hertz’s stock doesn’t make sense, those retail investors might be betting the US government will save it from collapse. Maybe that’s why, according to the Financial Times, Robinhood users bought more shares in Hertz last week than in any other company.

For markets: Don’t Hertz yourself.
Hertz might be hoping the investors and traders who have bought up its stock so far will buy into its share sale. But the very retail investors who’ve been backing the stock can’t easily participate in share sales, and there’s a big question mark over whether “institutional investors” will step in to fill the gap. And given that Hertz’s bonds were trading at about 40% of what they should be worth last week, no one seems convinced they will…

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2/3 Premium

Playing Politics

What’s Going On Here?

The US stock market may have fallen late last week after a downbeat update from the Federal Reserve, but there could be bigger risks ahead for major companies…

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True Brit

True Brit

What’s Going On Here?

Data out on Friday showed the UK economy shrank by the most ever in April. Oh well, no use crying over spilled tea.

What Does This Mean?

If you’re a cup-half-empty kind of person, you might say the UK economy contracted by 20.4% in April from March’s 6% drop. If you’re a someone-stole-my-cup kind of person, you might say the UK economy was 24.5% smaller this April than the last. Either way, the UK’s all-important services sector – which covers the hard-hit hospitality, leisure, and travel industries, and contributes most of the UK’s economic output – was all but immobilized by the whole lockdown thing. And manufacturing didn’t have it easy either: the sector declined by more than 24%, while construction halved.

May’s data will probably be just as damning, but June will finally see non-essential businesses start to reopen. Economists, then, are hoping things will pick back up again from here on out.

Why Should I Care?

The bigger picture: The “Boooooo!” normal.
Global businesses are trying to get back to business as usual, but for UK airlines, it’s anything but. The government’s new rules of two weeks' self-isolation for the UK’s new arrivals threatens to deter jetsetters, potentially costing airlines millions in lost airfares and increasing the risk of job cuts. British Airways, Ryanair, and EasyJet aren't okay with it: they've all taken legal action to stop the plan from coming into effect.

For markets: That was so yesterday.
Economic data for April that’s released in June isn’t particularly useful for investors, especially when the writing – and the economic damage – has been on the wall for months. So most of them probably won’t have done much to their portfolios in response to Friday’s release. They’re more likely to pay attention to, say, up-to-the-minute survey data, which gives a good idea of where economic growth will end up landing – however depressing it might be.

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💬 Quote of the day

“No one is useless in this world who lightens the burdens of another.”

– Charles Dickens (a British novelist, social critic, journalist, and illustrator)
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