ChatGPT’s creator OpenAI is already raking in cash from the paid version of its famed chatbot and business licensing, but the firm recently disclosed that it’s planning to sell existing shares to fund its world-changing mission. According to reports, the share sale could value the private firm at around $90 billion, roughly triple its $30 billion valuation from back in January when Microsoft bought its giant stake. A long leap, for sure, but that’s the tech world for you.
Target will sure be jealous of all that cash. The retail giant’s been plagued by mass-level stealing, known in the industry as “shrinkage”. Now, Target’s closing nine stores in what it describes as particularly dangerous districts. The retailer has said that organized crime is the culprit, and that the issue disrupts the industry as a whole. But Target’s rivals seem to be getting by without shutting up shop, so the closures could be a sign of self-contained issues bubbling under the surface. Investors, keep watch.
If The Devil Wears Prada taught us anything (and it did), it’s the history of cerulean blue. Besides that, though, the film highlighted that Paris is the place to be for fashion and beauty brands. Just look at American beauty firm Coty: the owner of brands like Rimmel and CoverGirl announced it’ll be selling shares on the Paris stock exchange, in an effort to pay down debt and raise funds for an image makeover. The listing will place Coty in the company of luxury and beauty royalty including L'Oréal, LVMH, and Hermès, so the American rival may be hoping to cozy up to the region’s luxury investor base. Time will tell if those investors are willing to diverge from their beloved European style, though.
That said, it’s looking like Europe’s economy may be the first to buckle under the weight of higher interest rates. Recent data showed a fourth-straight month of slowing activity in the services and manufacturing sectors, with readings now under the danger-zone mark of 50, meaning the economy could be in outright decline. Official economic growth data hasn’t confirmed that just yet, but the market's sure expecting it to: the Eurostoxx 50 index has hit a six-month low.
Over in China, it’s the infamous property market – which makes up about a quarter of the country’s economy – hogging the headlines. Developer Evergrande has become the poster child for the sector’s turmoil, and this week, the company’s shares were suspended in Hong Kong after news that its chairman has been placed under police watch. That could very well influence whether the government lets Evergrande fail or rides to its rescue.