Searchlight and Ares commit £500m to RSK Group

UK environmental consulting and engineering service provider RSK Group is set to receive a £500m preferred equity investment from a consortium led by Searchlight Capital Partners and Ares Management. 

The investment will contribute to the execution of RSK’s 2030 global strategy, which includes both organic growth initiatives and the continuation of its acquisition strategy, according to a company statement. 

In addition, Ares has committed a £300m debt facility to support RSK’s expansion plans, bringing the total available debt facilities provided by Ares to £1.4bn.  

RSK is based in Cheshire and offers services to clients across water, energy, construction and infrastructure. 

Searchlight Capital Partners is a global private investment firm managing over $14bn in AUM, with offices in London, New York, Miami and Toronto. Ares Management is a global alternative investment manager with approximately $428bn in AUM as of 31 March, offering primary and secondary investment solutions across credit, real estate, private equity and infrastructure asset classes. 

Antares Capital closes $400m CLO

Antares Capital has closed its third broadly syndicated loan collateralised loan obligation, Orion CLO 2024-3, securing $400m.  

Antares launched its first BSL CLO, CLO 2023-1, with $450m in October, and the second, CLO 2023-2, at the end of last year, also at $450m. 

Last March, Antares appointed Apex Credit Partners’s Andrew Stern as managing director, portfolio manager and trader for its liquid credit platform, which builds on its private credit CLO platform established in 2017. 

Founded in 1996 and based in Chicago, Antares oversees over $68bn in capital. According to Bank of America, Antares is the second-largest private credit CLO manager in the US by AUM with $11.1bn across 13 CLOs, as of 31 March. 

These groups help people of color and the LGBTQ+ community find a ‘radically inclusive space’ in the outdoors

Participants during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024. Danielle DeVries | CNBC

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. — For 16-year-old Zyshawn Gibson, snowboarding down the indoor ski park at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey, was a welcome change of scenery.

Gibson’s participation at the ski park was made possible through the Hoods to Woods Foundation, a nonprofit based in New York and New Jersey that “promotes awareness of the outdoors to inner city children through snowboarding,” according to the organization’s website. Through its 15-year history, Hoods to Woods has helped hundreds of underserved youth such as Gibson develop a new interest and outlet through snowboarding, co-founder Omar Diaz estimated.

“It keeps me out of the house,” Gibson told CNBC from a lounge room in the Big Snow complex. “It’s a different thing to do, instead of being outside in the streets and being in danger and stuff like that.”

Hoods to Woods, the brainchild of Diaz and co-founder Brian Paupaw, is dedicated to providing new opportunities for teenagers and young adults who come from similar backgrounds to their own. The group hosts weekslong programs across urban areas in the two states.

Participants during the snowboarding activity with the Hoods to Woods Foundation at Big Snow American Dream in East Rutherford, New Jersey on June 13, 2024.  Danielle DeVries | CNBC

The organization is just one of several across the United States working to bringing people of color to outdoor activities, including winter sports — spaces where they are often marginalized and underrepresented.

A 2019-2020 participation study released by Snowsports Industries America showed that the participation for white Americans remained at 67.5%. In comparison, Asians accounted for 7.7% of the participants, while Black people made up 9.2% and Hispanics came in at 14%.

Similarly, a demographics study updated by the National Ski Areas Association in 2023 found that white participants represented 88.1% of guests.

One factor that contributes to this divide is the high barrier to entry for these winter sports, given the average expenses when it comes to equipment and transportation. The same study from Snowsports Industries America revealed that more than half of winter sports participants in 2019 through 2020 made over $75,000 a year.

Breaking down barriers

CNBC

Ranked: The 20 Top Retailers Worldwide, by Revenue

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June 19, 2024 Article/Editing: Graphics/Design:

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The Top Retailers Worldwide, by Revenue

This was originally posted on our Voronoi app. Download the app for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

The global retail landscape is constantly evolving, driven by shifting consumer habits and the growing dominance of online sales.

Despite the rise of e-commerce, many of the top retailers worldwide generate the bulk of their sales in physical stores. However, as customers prioritize convenience and a wider selection of goods, e-commerce giants are capturing an increasing share of the retail market.

This graphic shows the world’s leading retailers by revenue, based on data from the National Retail Federation.

The Methodology

To be included in the rankings, companies must engage in a goods-for-consumer resale business accessible to the public. Additionally, they must and have direct selling operations in a minimum of three companies. The rankings include both public and private companies, based on the most recent 52-week period ending between January and March 2024. All revenue figures were converted to U.S. dollars.

Ranked: The Top 20 Global Retailers

Below, we show the world’s leading retail giants by revenue:

RankingRetailerTotal RevenuesShare of Domestic Retail RevenueHeadquarters 1Walmart$628.6B84.7%🇺🇸 U.S. 2Amazon.com$355.1B70.4%🇺🇸 U.S. 3Costco$234.0B75.0%🇺🇸 U.S. 4Schwarz Group$176.4B32.0%🇩🇪 Germany 5The Home Depot$151.6B93.7%🇺🇸 U.S. 6Aldi$145.4B25.8%🇩🇪 Germany 7Walgreens Boots Alliance$117.8B89.3%🇺🇸 U.S. 8Ahold Delhaize$97.0B21.8%🇳🇱 Netherlands 9Alibaba$94.1B97.3%🇨🇳 China 10Carrefour$89.7B34.3%🇫🇷 France 11Seven & I$85.0B62.1%🇯🇵 Japan 12Apple$81.6B86.9%🇺🇸 U.S. 13Rewe$73.5B75.5%🇩🇪 Germany 14Aeon$68.9B93.3%🇯🇵 Japan 15Tesco$61.9B85.1%🇬🇧 UK 16TJX$50.4B78.9%🇺🇸 U.S. 17Leclerc$50.4B95.0%🇫🇷 France 18IKEA$45.6B3.4%🇸🇪 Sweden 19Best Buy$44.6B92.8%🇺🇸 U.S. 20Woolworths Limited (Aus)$43.5B88.2%🇦🇺 Australia

As the largest retailer by sales globally, Walmart raked in $628.6 billion dollars in revenue, with 84.7% of its revenue being domestic.

Today, about 90% of Americans are located within 10 miles of a Walmart store, attracting 200 million visitors each month. To gain a greater edge in the market, Walmart is expanding its advertising business, launching a premium product line, and growing its digital sales channels.

Rate Cuts May Boost ESG Bond Funds

Until March 2022, sustainable bond funds experienced a positive five-year period in terms of returns and low volatility compared to traditional bond products, but then the relationship reversed. That’s “because of their higher average duration, which made them suffer greatly in a period of rising interest rates,” Mara Dobrescu, head of fixed income analysis at Morningstar, explained on Thursday.

“Investors looking to invest in green, social and sustainable bond funds should be mindful of the biases these funds may introduce in their portfolio,” according to Dobrescu. “Indeed, our data has shown that most sustainable bond funds have a higher average duration than their traditional global bond peers, meaning that they will be more sensitive to variations in interest rates. This should benefit them when rates fall.”

What Are Green, Social and Sustainability-Linked Bonds?

USD 870 billion in new sustainable bonds were issued globally in 2023, pushing the outstanding amount at year-end towards the record threshold of USD 4.4 trillion, across over 43,000 individual bonds worldwide, according to data from the non-profit Climate Bonds Initiative.

As the chart below shows, green bonds continue to account for two-thirds of the market. But what exactly are they? They are issued to raise money for the sole purpose of financing new or existing projects or activities that have a positive impact on the environment. These projects can include renewable energy, energy efficiency, waste management, sustainable transport and other green initiatives.

However, there are other types of sustainable bonds: Social bonds, for example, are intended to finance new projects and refinance existing ones, with a positive social impact. The projects are most commonly aimed at supporting low-income, unemployed or otherwise vulnerable parts of the population.

Meanwhile, sustainability-linked bonds (SLB) have structural features, such as interest rates, that are linked to the achievement of sustainability goals. Unlike green bonds, they are not linked to the realisation of a single sustainability project. The proceeds from the bond issue can be used for general purposes, linked to an overall sustainability strategy with targets that can be measured year by year. These bonds are the most ‘generalist’ category within ESG fixed income in that they can include environmental targets, social targets or a combination of both.

Funds and ETFs Exposed to Sustainable Bonds

There are just under 300 bond funds and ETFs in Europe that are classified under Article 9 by the SFDR, the European Union’s regulation on sustainable

Is US Recession Risk Rising? Warning Signs Are Starting To Emerge

Recession talk for the US is on the march again. Although there’s still room for debate on the near-term business-cycle outlook, some indicators are highlighting decelerating growth that could be the start of trouble in the second half of the year into early 2025.

To be fair, there’s plenty of real-time pushback that suggests the economic expansion will roll on. But a set of multi-factor indexes featured in the weekly updates of The US Business Cycle Risk Report show a marked deterioration in the macro trend.

The Economic Trend Index (ETI) and Economic Momentum Index (EMI) continue to roll over after more than a year of recovery. Both benchmarks remain above the respective tipping points that mark recessionary conditions, based on data through May, but it’s clear that these indicators have peaked. Meanwhile, forward estimates suggest that the deterioration will continue.

Using an econometric technique that estimates data for each of the 14 underlying components of ETI and EMI suggests that both indexes will drop to just above their tipping points in July. The implication: recessionary conditions could start as early as August, although looking that far ahead is still mostly guesswork. (March is currently the last full month of published data for calculating ETI and EMI, with progressively higher degrees of missing numbers going forward.)

Using another methodology to nowcast US recession risk paints a brighter profile, which serves as a reminder that the path ahead for the US economy is not yet written in stone. The Composite Recession Probability Index (CRPI) is currently estimating a low 5% probability that the US is in an NBER-defined recession or will imminently fall into one. But the recent uptick in CRPI may be an early sign of things to come. A rise above 10% in the days and weeks ahead, in concert with the recent weakness in ETI and EMI, would be a worrisome sign for the second half of 2024. (CRPI aggregates several business cycle indexes, including ETI and EMI, along with benchmarks published by other sources, including two regional Fed banks.)

For now, economists are debating if recession risk can be avoided. By some accounts, cutting interest rates would lower the threat, but the clock is ticking, advises Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors. “My baseline is not recession,” she says. “But it’s a real risk, and I do not understand why the Fed

What does the family office explosion mean for the world?

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Personal Assets trust declares additional special dividend following higher income

In a stock exchange notice today (19 June), the special dividend was introduced in addition to the trust’s annual dividend of 5.6p per share. The special dividend will be paid to shareholders in July this year, with the payment to be made along with the first interim dividend of 1.4p per share for the year ending on 30 April 2025. The latest dividend payments came against a hot inflationary backdrop throughout the year, particularly in the United States, which has led to a higher income for the trust on its holding of the US Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS) compared to prev…

Inflation Hits Target, But Will The BoE Cut Rates?

UK inflation dropped to 2% in May, according to the Office for National Statistics, increasing pressure on the Bank of England to cut interest rates in the coming months.

The fall in the annual inflation rate to 2% was in line with market consensus and marks the first time in since July 2021 that this has been in line with the official inflation target.

May’s fall in the inflation rate was driven by lower prices for food, drink, furniture, recreation and household goods, the ONS said.

The Bank of England will announce its interest rate decision tomorrow, but is expected to hold rates at 5.25%, the same level they have been since August 2023.

Market data, as measured by overnight index swaps, suggest a rate cut is more likely in August, when the Bank releases its quarterly monetary policy report and holds a press conference.

“Today’s inflation reading will help the case for rate cuts, with the UK now operating with one of the highest interest rates in the developed world, giving it much room for manoeuvre,” says Michael Field, European market strategist at Morningstar.

Core Inflation Remains Too High

On the side of an interest rate “hold” are services inflation and so-called “core” inflation (a longer-term measure that excludes transitory price changes in energy or food), which the Bank of England is still monitoring closely. Annual services inflation fell from 5.9% to 5.7% from April to May, but even this level is still too high for policymakers, who are forecasting a services inflation rate of 5.3% this year.

Field highlights that the rate of core inflation also remains high – at 3.5%. Services costs and home ownership costs, a key component of the core inflation measure, are likely to remain elevated, he says.

Policymakers are more concerned about core CPI because it’s falling more slowly than the headline rate of inflation. It’s also considered a more realistic measure of price pressures in the UK economy than the lower headline CPI rate.

When Will the Bank of England Cut Rates?

James Lynch, fixed income investment manager at Aegon Asset Management, praised the Bank for achieving a “gargantuan task” of bringing the Consumer Price Index from 11% in 2022 to 2% in May 2024. But policymakers will not be ready to cut rates until services inflation is tamed, he adds.

“The underlying mix of the inflation basket does not give it much comfort

Schroder European REIT plans September board restructure

The plan comes amid wider board succession planning, following the appointment of Mark Beddy as an independent non-executive director on 1 January 2024. Beddy, who focused on real estate investment as a senior audit partner at Deloitte, replaced Jonathan Thompson following his retirement at the March annual general meeting. In SERE’s half-year report, published today (19 June), chair Julian Berney said the trust posted “another robust set of financial results,” despite ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty. Schroders launches emerging markets value fund in the UK Berney …