WSJ What’s News - Knicks Fans Priced Out of MSG Head to Texas for NBA Finals
Episode Date: June 3, 2026P.M. Edition for June 3. Many New Yorkers looking to watch the Knicks play in the NBA Finals are finding themselves priced out of Madison Square Garden. We speak to Journal sports reporter Jared Diamo...nd about what’s got prices so high, as well as a few Knicks fans who found it more cost-effective to travel to San Antonio to see their team play the Spurs. Plus, Meta launches artificial intelligence agents for businesses. WSJ tech reporter Meghan Bobrowsky discusses Meta’s enterprise ambitions. And, federal regulators are investigating whether former Congressman George Santos traded illegally on prediction markets. Alex Ossola hosts. Sign up for the WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Mehta starts courting business customers with its new AI agents.
Meta is a consumer ads business, and this is really them saying, we're going after the enterprise business.
Plus, federal regulators are investigating whether former Congressman George Santos traded illegally on prediction markets.
And the NBA finals tip off tonight, but high ticket prices have spurred some Nick's fans to see their team far from home.
It's Wednesday, June 3rd.
I'm Alex O'Sulliv for the Wall Street.
Journal. This is the PM edition of What's News, the top headlines and business stories that move the
world today. We're looking today at some retail earnings. Macy's has raised its outlook for the year
after its sales for the most recent quarter rose 1.8%. A key retail metric, same store sales,
rose 3%. To talk about what's driving this growth, I'm joined now by Suzanne Capner, who covers
retail for the journal. Suzanne Macy's is in the middle of this turnaround plan under its CEO, Tony
spring. He is focused on improving the merchandise they have on sale. They're adding more
higher-end brands. They're sprucing up stores. What do these quarter's numbers tell us about that push?
Well, they're building on some recent success. For Macy's overall, this was their fourth
consecutive quarter of positive same-store sales, which is impressive for a department store.
We all know how challenged department stores have been. So it's really a big boat. He's trying to
turn around and we are starting to see the fruits of those labors. In the earnings, Bloomingdale's
standout. Its comparable sales rose more than 10%. Is this another example of the
K-shaped economy where higher-income consumers are powering this growth? That's definitely
part of it. Bloomingdale's has also benefited from the bankruptcy of the parent of Sacks and
Neiman Marcus. It has also been doing a lot of work to improve the shopping experience. It's
been getting new brands. They just added Chloe ready to wear. They have a big Prada shoe
department in their 59th Street store. And Tony told me,
this morning that he's really seeing customers willing to pay up when the quality is there.
And that means real leather jackets over vegan leather or linen pants over cotton.
Zooming out a little bit from Macy's, we've been hearing pretty great earnings from several retailers this quarter.
We were talking on the show yesterday about Victoria's Secret.
That is all despite consumers saying they're like feeling pretty down about the economy.
Is there a broader retail renaissance going on in the middle of all this?
Some of these retailers are really just hitting the mark.
Victoria's Secret is another turnaround story,
and they have a CEO who's been working really hard
to re-spark that sexiness that the brand used to have
without being off-color,
and they've come out with some new products
that have really connected with shoppers.
You've seen that with the Gap brand as well.
And some of it may tie into this 90s nostalgia
that's fueling spending.
Jay-Crew happens to be private,
but they're benefiting from that too.
retailers that get it right, meaning they have the right product at the right price, at the right
time, are doing well, even if there are some broader challenges in the economy.
That was WSJ reporter, Suzanne Kappner.
Thanks, Suzanne.
Thank you.
Macy's stock rose 0.6%.
The journal has learned that Pershing Square, Bill Ackman's hedge fund, is said to make some
$600 million on his investment in Universal Music Group.
The firm is selling its remaining stake in Universal after the world's largest
music company rejected its recent takeover offer. In markets, stocks reversed course today,
retreating from yesterday's record highs. The Dow fell the most, closing down 1.2%. Oil prices rose,
with Brent crude futures up almost 2%. Traders are losing faith that a deal to end the Iran war
will materialize quickly. And Bitcoin fell for its fourth straight day today, trading over just
$65,000 at 4 p.m. Eastern. One thing pushing its price down? Earlier this week, strategy, the largest
corporate accumulator of the digital token sold a portion of its massive holdings for the first time since the depths of the crypto winter in 2022.
Meta is officially getting into the agent's business. Today, the Facebook parent launched an artificial intelligence agent for businesses on its WhatsApp, Instagram, and messenger services.
Meta was testing the agent before today's launch and the company said one million businesses are already using it.
Megan Babowski covers Meta for the journal and joins me now.
Megan, what can this AI agent tool do?
So it can answer customer questions that can talk to customers for you.
Meta says it can also book appointments for customers, and it can close sales.
In the future, Meta wants this to basically run your whole business.
So doing stuff on the back end, syncing your calendars, providing competitive intelligence, market insights.
So sort of taking it one step beyond this customer support agent and actually taking a more proactive role.
in running the business.
They already have 200 million businesses who use their WhatsApp business app.
So from that perspective, it's not entirely new.
But certainly at scale, you know, meta is a consumer ads business.
And this is really them saying we're going after the enterprise business.
Megan, on the show, we've been talking about rising AI compute costs and how some businesses
are even starting to ration their AI use because of it.
Could that happen with these AI agents too?
The way it's set up is if you,
you're a smaller business, you just pay a set subscription fee. If you're a bigger business and you
want to do some more advanced things, meta is planning to charge them based on token usage. So
how much they're using the services will directly correlate to how much they have to pay for them.
But meta's ultimate goal is to have agents for all of their users. They have 3.5 billion daily
active users. And now they want their businesses they work with to also have an AI agent. That's a lot
of potential compute that meta is going to be on the hook to provide.
That was The Journal's Megan Babowski.
Thanks, Megan.
Thanks for having me.
Coming up, why federal regulators have opened a probe into former Congressman George Santos
and why some fans of the New York Knicks are booking flights to Texas.
That's after the break.
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The House plans to vote today on whether to restrict President Trump's ability
to continue the war against Iran without congressional approval.
The resolution is largely symbolic.
It won't by itself end the war, and it's unlikely to ever become law.
Before today, House Democrats have tried and failed multiple times this year
to pass resolutions that would limit the president's war powers.
and in the Senate, Republicans have blocked similar resolutions.
The war, now in its fourth month, has morphed from a heavy bombing campaign to a fragile ceasefire.
Negotiators remain far apart, and in recent days, the war has heated up, with attacks hitting Kuwait, particularly hard.
Today, Iran launched a barrage of ballistic missiles and drones on Kuwait that shut its international airport, killed one person, and injured dozens more.
It's some of the most intense fighting since the ceasefire started in April.
Moving now to the Ukraine War, today Ukrainian drones hit an oil terminal in St. Petersburg, as well as a nearby naval base.
The strikes happened as international guests began arriving for the first day of the St. Petersburg Economic Forum,
where Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to deliver a speech on Friday.
Ukrainian officials said the strikes are aimed at weakening Russia and driving domestic opposition to the war.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin said the attacks were justification for its continuing invasion of Ukraine and that Russia would respond.
In an update on the deadly Ebola outbreak, the virus has spread to a corner of the Democratic Republic of Congo that's controlled by Islamic State militants.
The virus has killed one person in the militant-controlled territory of Mambasa, while another is being treated at a clinic.
It's a place that's too dangerous for health workers to go, and health experts are concerned that this will make controlling the epidemic even harder.
And back in the U.S., federal regulators are probing former Congressman George Santos for illegal trading on prediction markets.
Santos allegedly placed a bet on prediction market Kalshi that he wasn't going to appear at the State of the Union address.
Meanwhile, he wrote several posts on social media saying or suggesting that he was going.
He didn't go to the state of the union.
Posting on social media, Santos called the accusation of illegal trading, quote, preposterous.
Santos is no stranger to the law.
In 2024, after being expelled from the House, he pleaded guilty to wire fraud and identity theft.
He was sentenced to seven years in prison.
Santos served a few months before President Trump commuted his sentence.
And finally,
Believe it, Nick fans, for the first time in 27 years,
the New York Knicks are going to the NBA finals.
That was the NBA broadcast of the Knicks sweeping the Cleveland Cavaliers.
And tonight is the first game of the NBA Finals,
the New York Knicks versus the San Antonio Spurs.
And Knicks fans are particularly excited.
It's the first time their team has made it to the finals since 1999.
Walking around New York City, I see Knicks love everywhere, a lot of orange and blue out there.
WSJ sports reporter Jared Diamond says fans really want to see their team play in the finals.
There's this incredible pent-up demand for the Knicks to be good and we're finally seeing it.
There are a lot of Knicks fans that are now literal adults that have never seen the Knicks in this position, right?
So the interest is enormous.
But fans who want to cheer the Knicks on at Madison Square Garden are looking at some steep,
price tags. We checked resale sites today and you can't buy a nosebleed seat for less than
5K and tickets near the court were going for nearly $160,000. The sky high prices are keeping
a lot of diehards out, like 39-year-old Josh Lanzette. Took me three minutes to see those
prices almost fall out of my chair and eliminate MSG as an option. So what's a Knicks fan to do?
If you're someone with a bit of money, a bit of time, and a lot of passion, you can go see your
team play in the finals in Spurs territory in San Antonio.
One New Yorker I spoke with, 25-year-old Armand-Imani, did the math for me.
So for two nights day at a hotel, I was seeing rates go for $300 a night.
I got that viewpoints, so that's cut out of the cost.
Airline cost, I still going for around $700.
Got that with miles.
And then the ticket itself, I paid $1,800.
And all that's still cheaper than going to MSG.
Significantly cheaper.
As journal reporter Jared Diamond points out,
That's still not cheap.
This is still not accessible to serve your typical Knicks fan, right?
But it just puts it in the perspective how insane these prices are at the garden.
There are enough very rich people in New York City that are not just Knicks fans where they want to say they were there.
It's like going to the Met Gala or going to the Super Bowl or one of these big events.
If you're in that in crowd, you need to be there to be seen.
Everyone else? See you at the bar, I guess.
And that's what's news for this Wednesday afternoon.
Today's show is produced by Danny Lewis and Anthony Bansy
with supervising producer Tali Arbell.
I'm Alex Osloff for the Wall Street Journal.
We'll be back with a new show tomorrow morning.
Thanks for listening.
