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Showing posts from November, 2025

PJT Partners Earnings Exceed Analysts' Expectations

By Priya Batchu PJT Partners Inc., a leading global advisory investment bank, announced third quarter earnings that exceeded expectations, citing sustained investments across the firm's businesses. “Our firm delivered very strong results , with Revenues, Pre-tax Income and EPS all reaching record highs for both the three and nine-month periods as the significant investments we have made over an extended period of time continue to bear fruit ," Paul J. Taubman , Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of PJT Partners, said on its earnings call. According to the company’s balance sheet, the third quarter ended with $521 million in cash, cash equivalents, and no funded debt.  In the first nine months of 2025, PJT repurchased 2.3 million shares and equivalents at an average price of $156.55.  The earnings signal that Wall Street deal making is strong, and more mergers and capital raise are happening. Smaller, independent advisory firms like PJT are also taking a bigger slice of fe...

Cracker Barrel Faces Executive and Bylaw Shakeup After Rebrand Backlash

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By Taylor Kase  Cracker Barrel’s fourth quarter revenue fell 2.9% after a controversial brand overhaul, resulting in marketing executive Gilbert Davila’s resignation and corporate bylaws revision after last week's shareholder meeting. The company faced public backlash after CEO Julie Masino announced a brand makeover to address what she described as declining relevance, with renovation efforts that began last year. The market responded sharply to the decision to change the logo, contributing to an overnight stock drop of nearly 15% and wiping out roughly $100 million in market value. Other proposed renovations included menu changes and store remodels. The revamp was expected to cost $600-700 million but has since been halted. After the logo change, customers took to social media to express their displeasure. The company issued a public apology and posted a TikTok video showing workers taking down the new decorations and changing the logo back. Photo Credit: Cracker Barrel  Dav...

CLEAR Profit Rises as Senators Move for Opt-Out Face Scans

By Georgia Fearn Shares of Clear Secure Inc. rose as much as 8% after the airport-security company beat third-quarter estimates and raised its cash-flow outlook, even as senators push a bipartisan bill to allow travelers to bypass face-scanning technology and watchdogs urge tighter limits on how checkpoints use travelers’ biometric data. The New York-based identity verification company reported third-quarter revenue of $229.2 million, up 15.5% from a year earlier, and bookings of $260.1 million, up 14.3%. Operating profit rose to $52.6 million and net income to $45.1 million. Clear reported 7.7 million active CLEAR+ members, up 7.5% across 60 airports and 328 TSA PreCheck enrollment locations. It has installed automated eGates at 10 airports and plans to expand that to 30 by year-end, with “network-wide” deployment expected in 2026. The gates use facial recognition and other biometrics to match passengers to their IDs in seconds before TSA screening. That expansion comes as a record n...

BNY Mellon Cleared of Unjust Enrichment After Six-Year Legal Battle

By Charlotte Plaskwa A jury found Bank of New York Mellon not liable for unjust enrichment, rejecting claims that it stole an investment analyst's financial models and passed them to Deloitte to copy. BNY Mellon openly admitted to sending to Deloitte models by Andre Pauwels which assess the economic viability and projected returns of wind energy investments. The bank denied, however, that Deloitte’s models were a copy. Pauwels accused Deloitte of lifting major parts of his models, including the formulas he wrote and the formatting he designed, sparing BNY Mellon the cost of paying the consulting firm to develop new models from scratch.   “The bank stole my models and sent them to Deloitte,” said Pauwels in his deposition. “They were taken from me and they didn’t pay anything for it.” The bank contested that Deloitte pulled only basic data from Pauwels’ models and that, regardless, BNY Mellon and Deloitte were entitled to use the analysis and formulas under an implied contract be...

Power, Cooling Companies Rush to Meet AI Demand, With Strong Results

By: Madhulika Pathak  Mid-size power, cooling and infrastructure firms posted standout results in the third quarter, boosted by hyper-scalers racing for both the ability to deliver electricity to data centers for Artificial Intelligence, and also to keep those complexes at a mild temperature. While GPUs, or chips used to train AI models, are essential to the massive scaling of the technology, it's power to run data centers that has become the forefront of the conversation. There was a clear indication of this demand in third-quarter earnings reports of mid-cap infrastructure firms. A standout this reporting season was Vertiv, a power, cooling, and IT infrastructure solutions provider, which reported a 60% year-over-year surge in organic orders in the third quarter, raising its backlog to $9.5 billion and its net sales to $2.676 billion. Deloitte projects global data center power demand could reach 96 gigawatts, or the equivilant of enough power for approximately 80 million U....

Freddie Mac Boosts Reserves for More Multifamily Defaults

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Mortgage giant Freddie Mac is bracing its reserves for deepening credit stress in the apartment market amid rising delinquencies and an uncertain economic outlook. The government-sponsored enterprise boosted its rainy-day fund by $57 million, citing a steady rise in delinquencies for multifamily mortgages which also include affordable housing projects and senior and student housing. “There’s a housing crisis we’ve never seen before,” said affordable housing expert Mecky Adnani, founder of MAHousing Advisers.  The Federal Housing Agency, which insures mortgages to protect lenders from default, has also seen similar strains in the third quarter, reporting serious loan delinquency rates above pre-pandemic levels. The rising delinquencies in multifamily buildings come as part of a wider conversation about lingering inflation and housing affordability in the United States. The shelter category of the consumer price index, a measure of inflation, continues to be a stubbornly large cont...