WSJ What’s News - What’s News in Markets: U.S. Steel Deal, SunRun Sinks, 23andMe Slides
Episode Date: June 21, 2025How did U.S. Steel shares react to White House deal approval? And why did solar stocks slide after Senate revisions to the big budget bill? Plus, what’s the latest twist in the 23andMe sale drama? H...ost Francesca Fontana discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Americans love using their credit cards, the most secure and hassle-free way to pay.
But DC politicians want to change that with the Durbin Marshall credit card bill.
This bill lets corporate megastores pick how your credit card is processed,
allowing them to use untested payment networks that jeopardize your data security and rewards.
Corporate megastores will make more money and you pay the price.
Tell Congress to Guard Your Card because Americans lose when politicians choose. Learn more at GuardYourCard.com. Hey listeners, it's Saturday, June 21st.
I'm Francesca Fontana for The Wall Street Journal, and this is What's News in Markets,
our look at the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.
Let's get to it.
We had a shortened trading week, with Thursday off for the Juneteenth holiday, and the main
threads to follow were updates from the Middle East and from the Federal Reserve.
Investors were focused on developments in the conflict between Israel and Iran, and
how the situation in the Middle East affects volatility and oil prices.
Then, Wednesday, the Fed kept interest rates on hold, as expected.
Meanwhile, hopes for a quick resolution to the Israel-Iran conflict began to fade.
And late Thursday, the White House said that President Trump would make a decision on striking
Iran within two weeks. And the major indexes ended the week barely changed.
ended the week barely changed. In individual movers, let's start with U.S. Steel, the, you guessed it, American steelmaker,
which has finally completed its deal with Japan's Nippon Steel.
It's been a long time coming.
Nippon Steel's acquisition of the company started back in 2023 when it beat out rivals with
a $14.1 billion offer, but was blocked from completing the purchase by Joe Biden, the then
president, on national security grounds. Trump's executive order on June 13 allowed it to move
forward thanks to a national security agreement with Nippon. That agreement with the federal
government calls for Nippon to invest roughly $14 billion in U.S. Steel's domestic operations. The pact also includes
issuing a so-called golden share to the government, giving it authority over U.S. Steel's production
and trade matters. Trump's executive order came on a Friday, so we got to see the stock's
reaction on Monday, when U.S. steel shares jumped 5.1 percent.
And the sale ended up being completed on Wednesday.
We're staying in Washington for this next one, shifting our focus to solar stocks like
Sun Run.
Which fell after Senate Republicans on Monday
proposed major revisions to the House's giant tax and spending bill. Long story short, the Senate
maintained the full phase-out of solar and wind energy tax credits. The Senate's plan gives more
time for projects to use the credits than the House plan did, but the renewable energy industry
had hoped for even more beneficial changes.
The credits date back to the Democrats' 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. That wasn't all. Of course,
the proposed revisions also include more permanent business tax breaks and deeper cuts to Medicaid.
Now, back to Sunrun, whose shares plummeted 40% on Tuesday and notched a weekly loss of about 38%.
did 40% on Tuesday and notched a weekly loss of about 38%. Finally, let's talk 23andMe, the DNA testing company whose name probably rings a bell.
You or your relatives may have sent off your saliva and got a breakdown of where your ancestors
are from.
Well, 23andMe has gone from being valued at $6 billion to bankruptcy, with its assets being won last
month by biotech firm Regeneron during a bankruptcy auction.
The winning bid?
$256 million.
But late last Friday, 23andMe said that co-founder Anne Wojcicki was set to regain control of
the company after her nonprofit, TTAM Research Institute, offered $305 million
for the company's assets, unsolicited, thus reopening the bidding.
Those of you playing along at home may recall that the former CEO had made two past offers
to take the company private, which were rejected by two different boards of directors.
One board resigned en masse. The second put
the company into bankruptcy. And now that it's in bankruptcy, it's delisted from
the Nasdaq and trades over the counter. The stock plunged 24% Monday and ended the week
down about 21%.
And now you know what's news in markets this week. You can read about more stocks that moved on the week's news in The Score, my column
in the Wall Street Journal's Exchange section.
Today's show was produced by Zoe Kolkin with supervising producer Talia Arbel.
I'm Francesca Fontana.
Have a great weekend, and I'll see you next Saturday. day. Learn more at HartfordFunds.com slash active. Investing involves risk.
Carefully consider a fund's investment objectives,
risks, charges, and expenses before investing.
Visit HartfordFunds.com to obtain a prospectus
containing this and other information.
Read it carefully before investing.
Alps distributors.
