Benzinga - by Vandana Singh, Benzinga Editor.
Wall Street Journal
iPhone 15 May Face Hurdle In China As Government Officials Receive Foreign Device Ban
- The Chinese government has banned its officials from using Apple Inc.'s (NASDAQ: AAPL) iPhones and other foreign-branded devices at work, dealing a blow to the company just days ahead of its 'Wonderlust' iPhone 15 launch event.
- Chinese government officials have been banned from using iPhones and other foreign-made devices at work.
- While China's iPhone ban applies only to government officials at work, the scope has significantly expanded.
- The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) could prosecute Amazon.com Inc (NASDAQ: AMZN) over antitrust claims. Amazon's legal team engaged in a video conference with FTC officials on 15 August, typically a final effort to avoid a court battle.
- However, Amazon did not propose any specific concessions during this crucial meeting.
- The FTC, which has been investigating Amazon's practices for several years, plans to file its lawsuit against the tech giant later this month.
- Toyota Motor Corporation (NYSE: TM) launched a new version of its chauffeur-driven Century model in Japan, with a monthly base sales volume of 30 units.
- The new model of the Century will be fully customizable globally.
- The production of the latest model will be done in the Tahara Plant. The manufacturer's suggested retail price for the vehicle is JPY25 million (~$170,000).
Benzinga
SoftBank Backed Arm Eyes $52B IPO With T. Rowe Price as Key Player
- Arm Holdings Ltd, a chip designer backed by SoftBank Group Corp (OTC: SFTBF) (OTC: SFTBY), has officially launched its roadshow for its highly anticipated initial public offering.
- The company aims to convince investors that it's worth as much as $52 billion in what could be the most significant share sale of the year.
- Warner Music Group Corp (NASDAQ: WMG) inked a joint venture with 10K Projects, the groundbreaking Los Angeles-based label founded in 2016 by Elliot Grainge, the son of Universal Music chief Lucian Grainge — Warner Music's rival.
- 10K Projects will become a standalone label within the WMG ecosystem, bringing its superstar roster and next-generation team into the WMG fold.
- Warner Music has acquired a majority stake in record company 10K Projects, the upstart label behind the rapper Ice Spice, for an undisclosed sum.
- Roku Inc (NASDAQ: ROKU) stock is trading higher Wednesday after the company disclosed additional measures to cut down its year-over-year operating expense growth rate.
- It intends to do so by consolidating its office space utilization, performing a strategic review of its content portfolio, reducing outside services expenses, and slowing its year-over-year headcount expense growth rate through a workforce reduction and limiting new hires, among other measures.
- Shares of United Airlines Holdings Inc (NASDAQ: UAL) fell more than 3% during Tuesday's trading session after the company issued a notice to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) asking it to ground all United Airlines flights until further notice due to an "equipment outage."
- Flights that were en route to their destinations continued as planned, but the airline was holding the rest of its aircraft at their departure airports due to a "systemwide technology issue," it said on X.
- Moderna Inc's (NASDAQ: MRNA) clinical trial data from its research assay confirm that its updated COVID-19 vaccine generates an 8.7-fold increase in neutralizing antibodies in humans against BA.2.86 (Pirola), a variant under monitoring.
- The updated COVID-19 vaccine is pending approval by the FDA for the fall 2023 vaccination season.
TechCrunch
Spotify's Paid-Subscriber Dilemma - Lyrics May Hold the Key
- Spotify Inc (NYSE: SPOT) is witnessing a surge in its user base, but its paid subscribers growth lags behind free listeners. In response, the music-streaming giant is exploring a move to put lyrics behind its paywall.
- Recently, Spotify made headlines by restricting lyrics access to some non-paying users.
- This alteration is currently in the testing phase.
Reuters
Google's Play Store Class Action Suit Nears Settlement for Antitrust Claims - Will Regulatory Overhang End?
- Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ: GOOG) (NASDAQ: GOOGL) Google tentatively settled a class action suit for allegedly violating antitrust norms by its U.S. Play Store by overcharging customers on Tuesday.
- The financial terms of the settlement remained disclosed.
- In the action brought by over 30 U.S. states and representing 21 million consumers, the plaintiffs had claimed that Google's monopoly took a toll on the consumers who could have spent less on apps and had more options.
- General Motors Company (NYSE: GM) reportedly said that the United Auto Workers union's demands will pressure the auto behemoth's manufacturing momentum. The company wants to reach a "fair" agreement without a strike.
- The UAW demands have "significant costs attached that would threaten our ability to maintain our manufacturing momentum," Johnson said.
- C&S Wholesale Grocers, backed by SoftBank Corp (OTC: SFBQF), is reportedly approaching a deal to buy stores from The Kroger Company (NYSE: KR) and Albertsons Companies Inc (NYSE: ACI).
- KR and ACI are looking to sell these stores to get regulatory approvals for their imminent $24.6 billion acquisition.
- The transaction value and store count are unknown.
- Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL) inked a fresh deal with British chip designer Arm Ltd for chip technology that extends beyond 2040.
- The companies signed the deal between 21 August - 5 September.
- Arm owns the intellectual property behind the computing architecture for most of the world's smartphones, which it licenses to Apple and many others.