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How the corporate America is handling sticky inflation and the prospect of higher interest rates will be top of mind for investors in the week ahead, after this week's choppy moves. The first-quarter earnings season, which kicked off Friday, will give Wall Street insight into how businesses expect to weather an environment of elevated interest rates. More macro data, such as U.S. retail sales, will give insight into how the consumer is handling higher pricing pressures. First-quarter earnings season underway The corporate earnings season kicks into high gear in the week ahead. This week, the small cap Russell 2000 is on track for a losing week, down by more than 1%.
Persons: Bob Doll, CNBC's, Wolfe, Rob Ginsberg, Ginsberg, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, FactSet, Robert Haworth, Haworth, Charles Schwab, Johnson, D.R, KeyCorp Organizations: Dow Jones Industrial, Exxon Mobil, Costco, Apple, Crossmark, Investments, Investors, Bank of America, Consumer, U.S . Bank, Index, Retail, T Bank, Housing, Manufacturing, Hunt Transport Services, United Airlines, Johnson, Bank of New York Mellon, UnitedHealth Group, Northern Trust, CSX, Discover Financial Services, Prologis, U.S . Bancorp, Philadelphia Fed, American Express, Procter, Gamble, Fifth Third Bancorp, Schlumberger Locations: America, China, NAHB, Vegas Sands, U.S, Horton
New York CNN —Dealmaking is the lifeblood of Wall Street. But analysts say that funding cuts in the plan could end up harming mergers and acquisitions on Wall Street, squashing hopes of a recovery in dealmaking. The bad news: Recent regulations and proposed budget cuts threaten to step on those green shoots before they’re able to flower. Why it matters: Dealmaking isn’t just good for Wall Street. Shares of the stock are down nearly 30% so far this year after its seemingly nonstop streak of bad luck.
Persons: New York CNN — Dealmaking, Joe Biden, squashing, It’s, Goldman Sachs, , Lucille Jones, Jones, Mitch Berlin, Biden, , ” Berlin, That’s, Hewlett Packard, , TikTok —, Brian Fung, TikTok, Shou Chew, Nadya Okamoto, Okamoto, Teddy Siegel, Siegel, David Goldman, LATAM, it’s, Max Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Wall, LSEG, Federal Reserve, Federal Trade Commission, Department of Justice, Congressional, Office, CNN, Discover Financial Services, Hewlett, Juniper Networks, Target, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, United Airlines, The National Transportation Safety, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, NTSB Locations: New York, dealmaking, EY, Berlin, , LSEG, Australia, New Zealand, Newark
One time-honored corporate M&A prenup strategy, which could become more important going forward, is the use of break-up fees, also known as termination fees. In addition to reverse termination fees, companies are also allowing for longer timelines and more extensions than they were a few years ago, Thomas said. Not all deals include break-up fees for regulatory failures. Meanwhile, Visa's deal for Plaid was scuttled in 2021 due to regulatory snares, with neither of the companies owing break-up fees. A 2022 study by investment bank Houlihan Lokey shows that 57.1% of the 140 transactions reviewed had reverse breakup fees, with median fees of 4.2% as a percentage of transaction value.
Persons: Thomas, Houlihan Lokey, Pitchbook Organizations: Crowell, Moring, Discover Financial, Plaid, Regulators, Federal Trade Commission, Department
A young worker complained about feeling lonely in a hotel room for a work trip and sparked an online debate. The US is facing a loneliness epidemic as young people feel increasingly isolated in a digital world. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementA young worker has gone viral on social media and sparked a debate about loneliness and the relative merits of solo business trips after posting a TikTok complaining about feeling bored and alone in a hotel room for a work trip. Riley Scruggs, a senior creative strategist at Discover Financial Services in Washington, DC, posted a video on TikTok sitting around in a hotel room in suburban Illinois.
Persons: , Riley Scruggs, Scruggs, Eloise, I'm lowkey, Vivek Murthy, Murthy Organizations: Service, Discover Financial Services, US Locations: Washington ,, Illinois, TikTok
Analyst Mike Mayo assigned an overweight rating and $70 price target, which suggests more than 25% upside for shares. Analyst Bill Katz raised his price target by $14 to $128 on the outperform-rated company, which has seen roughly 74% share price growth over the past year. He upped his price target by $25 to $350, implying roughly 19.5% upside for the company, which will report fiscal fourth-quarter results on Wednesday. "While LT debates around monetization and competition have yet to be resolved, we think risk-reward now skews attractive given an improving cloud demand backdrop." It also raised its price target to $86 from $75, but the new forecast still implies downside of more than 13% going forward.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, HashiCorp, Wells, Mike Mayo, Mayo, — Pia Singh, TD Cowen, Cowen, Bill Katz, Katz, Jefferies, Brent Thill, Thill, Salesforce, bode, Sanjit Singh, Singh, Yifeng Liu, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, HSBC, Moderna, Citigroup, Citi, Discover Financial Services, KKR, Salesforce, HSBC downgrades Moderna, Merck & Co Locations: Wells, monetization
Premarket stocks: Is Nvidia too big to fail?
  + stars: | 2024-02-21 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
Investors expect Nvidia to report earnings of $4.59 a share and $20.378 billion in revenue, up from just $6.05 billion a year before. Too big to fail: For the time being, Nvidia is the “most sophisticated and deployed” chipmaker in the world, and its output is one of national importance, said Newman. Capital One wants to be the biggest credit card company in America. If approved by regulators and shareholders, Capital One’s (COF) acquisition will create the biggest US credit card company by loan volume. Compared to other major credit card issuers, Capital One has historically catered to customers with credit scores in the 600s range, which is considered subprime.
Persons: , , Daniel Newman, Newman, Jensen Huang, ” What’s, Sam Altman, Pat Gelsinger, Elisabeth Buchwald, Biden, Richard Fairbank, Fairbank, Samantha Delouya, Dow, Dow hasn’t Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Nvidia, Wall, Microsoft, Apple, Investors, Intel, AMD, Discover Financial Services, Capital, Discover, Mastercard, Consumer Financial, Bureau, Walgreens, Dow Jones, Alliance, Dow Jones Industrial, Dow Jones Indices, Dow, Tesla Locations: New York, California, United States, China, Dubai, America
Rosenblatt's price target is now the highest forecast for the stock on Wall Street. Caterpillar — Shares pulled back 2% following a downgrade to in line from Evercore ISI, which noted concern over a longer-than-expected outlook for earnings growth. Analyst Brian Mullan hiked his price target on US Foods to $59 from $45, or roughly 19% upside from Friday's closing price of $49.58. Capital One stock pulled back more than 4%. Arm Holdings — Stock in the chipmaker slid about 4% as investors pulled back bets on the stock after its massive rally .
Persons: Rosenblatt, FactSet, Piper Sandler, Brian Mullan, Biden, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound Organizations: Walmart, LSEG, Revenue, Caterpillar —, ISI, Foods, Intel —, Bloomberg, Discover Financial, Capital, Arm
If approved by regulators and shareholders, Capital One’s (COF) acquisition will create the biggest US credit card company by loan volume. Discover cards are already accepted at 99% of all US merchants that allow customers to make credit card purchases, according to the company. Credit card networks are the liaison between card issuers and merchants, for whom they set fees. If Capital One flips all its credit cards to Discover, Mastercard would stand to lose a quarter of its US credit card volume. Compared to other major credit card issuers, Capital One has historically catered to customers with credit scores in the 600s range, which is considered subprime.
Persons: New York CNN —, Biden, Richard Fairbank, Fairbank, JPMorgan Chase, Andrew Harrer, Democratic Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Jaret, Cowen Organizations: New, New York CNN, Discover Financial Services, Capital, Discover, Mastercard, Visa, US, American Express, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Bloomberg, Getty, Consumer Financial, , Democratic Locations: New York, Mastercard’s, Visa’s
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Alibaba's overseas betChinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group is placing its bets on overseas businesses as domestic growth remains weak. The company's latest earnings showed its international e-commerce business unit was a bright spot, with revenue up 44% from a year ago. [PRO] UBS picks 'hidden gems'Small-and medium-sized stocks are often overlooked but "have the charm of being hidden gems," according to UBS.
Persons: Hong Organizations: CNBC, People's Bank of China, CSI, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Home Depot, Walmart, Alibaba, Citi, Discover Financial Services, UBS Locations: Chicago, China, Asia, U.S, Europe
New York CNN —US markets broke a five-week winning streak last Friday after disappointing inflation data reignited economic and interest rate-related fears on Wall Street. Then last week, two key inflation indicators for January — the Consumer Price Index and Producer Price Index — rose above Wall Street expectations. Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin said the new data showed that the Fed needs more confidence before cutting rates. I think in this case, the market isn’t necessarily telling you much about the economy’s fundamentals, the market is telling you what other market participants think. And I think that those economic fundamentals get you to the part that says, you know, it’s not not the economy.
Persons: Price, Thomas Barkin, Raphael Bostic, isn’t, Bell, Jared Bernstein, Joe Biden, I’m, they’re, It’s, it’s, Joe Weisenthal, Elisabeth Buchwald, Hanna Ziady, Liam Peach, ” Peach Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Federal Reserve, Richmond Fed, White House Council, Economic Advisers, CPI, Apple, Google, Nvidia, Microsoft, Capital, Discover Financial Services, Discover, Hamas, Gross, Israel’s, Bureau, Statistics, Capital Economics Locations: New York
CNBC Daily Open: U.S. consumers upbeat on the economy
  + stars: | 2024-02-20 | by ( Sumathi Bala | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Alibaba's overseas betChinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group is placing its bets on overseas businesses as domestic growth remains weak. [PRO] Only two ETFs shineThere were only two exchange-traded funds in the world that made money every year for the past decade. Both invested in defensive stocks and stood out among 8,300 equity ETFs worldwide, screened by CNBC Pro using FactSet data.
Organizations: Macy's Herald, CNBC, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Home Depot, Walmart, Discover Financial Services, Alibaba, Bank, CNBC Pro Locations: Macy's, New York City, U.S
Walmart : The largest U.S. retailer reported a strong holiday quarter Tuesday, with sales rising 6% in three months ended Jan. 31. The decline comes after Walmart announced a deal to acquire TV maker Vizio for $2.3 billion. "I would point out, just so people know," that Walmart says the deal is slightly dilutive to near-term earnings per share, "which surprised me," Jim said. Capital One : The company on Monday announced an all-stock deal , valued at $35.3 billion, to acquire credit card rival Discover Financial Services . "Buried within Discover is a payments system that may be unrivaled, that [Capital One CEO] Richard Fairbank can put to work," Jim said, reiterating his call to buy Capital One stock into Tuesday's weakness.
Persons: Wall, Jim Cramer, Jim, Doug McMillon, Richard Fairbank Organizations: Walmart, Intel, Science, AMD, Discover Financial Services, Capital Locations: U.S, California
Challenges, and opportunities, for a financial megadealCapital One’s $35.3 billion takeover to buy Discover Financial Services will create a colossus in the fast-growing credit card industry and a more powerful force in the payment networks that underpin the consumer economy. That will almost surely invite tough scrutiny from a Washington that is increasingly skeptical of big financial mergers. But continuing scrutiny of the two biggest payment networks in the U.S., Visa and Mastercard, may complicate the regulatory math. The deal: Capital One agreed to pay 1.0192 of its shares for each share of Discover, a roughly 26 percent premium to Friday’s trading prices. If completed, the transaction would become a giant among credit card lenders, with Bloomberg estimating that the combined company would outstrip JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup in U.S. card loan volume.
Organizations: Discover Financial, Visa, Mastercard, Capital, Bloomberg, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, U.S Locations: Washington, U.S
Capital One plans to acquire Discover in an all-stock deal valued at $35.3 billion, pending approval. On Monday, Capital One Financial announced its plans to buy Discover Financial Services. Here's what you need to know about the deal and what it could mean for current Capital One and Discover customers. Capital One credit cards are part of the Visa and Mastercard credit card networks. The Wall Street Journal reports that Capital One is planning to switch some of its credit cards to the Discover network.
Persons: , Simon Blanchard, Alvin Carlos Organizations: Discover, Service, Financial, Discover Financial Services, Capital, Visa, Mastercard, Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business, Street Journal, CFA, CFP, District Capital Management
Capital One is set to acquire Discover Financial Services in a $35.3 billion all-stock deal. The deal would merge two of the largest credit-card issuers in the US. Capital One Financial is set to acquire Discover Financial Services in an all-stock deal valued at $35.3 billion, the two companies announced on Monday. The deal — first reported by the The Wall Street Journal — would merge two of the largest credit-card issuers in the US. "Our acquisition of Discover is a singular opportunity to bring together two very successful companies with complementary capabilities and franchises, and to build a payments network that can compete with the largest payments networks and payments companies," Richard Fairbank, Capital One's founder, chairman and CEO said in the statement.
Persons: , Richard Fairbank Organizations: Discover Financial Services, Discover, Capital, Capital One's, Business
New York CNN —Capital One announced it’s acquiring Discover Financial Services for $35.3 billion in an all-stock deal, giving the bank a leg up in the competitive credit card market. Under the terms of the deal announced Monday evening, Discover (DFS) shareholders will receive a little over one share of Capital One (COF) for every Discover share they own. If the deal is finalized, current Capital One shareholders will own a 60% stake in the combined company, while Discover shareholders will own the remaining 40%. Credit card networks are the liaison between card issuers and merchants, for whom they set fees. Currently, Capital One issues credit cards with Mastercard, Visa and Discover.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Richard Fairbank Organizations: New, New York CNN, Capital, Discover Financial Services, Discover, US, Visa, Mastercard, American Express, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wall Street Journal Locations: New York
Stocks fell Tuesday as Nvidia led a broader tech decline ahead of the chipmaker's earnings report. Shares of Nvidia , which is set to report earnings Wednesday after the bell, fell more than 5%. Although Nvidia is expected to post impressive results, investors have expressed concerns about its sky-high valuation. Walmart shares added more than 4% after the big-box retailer also beat quarterly earnings and revenue expectations, fueled by double-digit growth in the company's global e-commerce sales. Tuesday kicks off the shortened trading week after U.S. markets were closed Monday in observance of the birthday of George Washington.
Persons: Stocks, Sam Stovall, George Washington Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Nvidia, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Microsoft, Meta, CFRA Research, Discover Financial Services, Discover, Walmart, Federal Reserve
Capital One announced on Monday that it would acquire Discover Financial Services in an all-stock transaction valued at $35.3 billion, a deal that would merge two of the largest credit card companies in the United States. “A space that is already dominated by a relatively small number of megaplayers is about to get a little smaller,” said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. Capital One, with $479 billion in assets, is one of the nation’s largest banks, and it issues credit cards on networks run by Visa and Mastercard. Acquiring Discover will give it access to a credit card network of 305 million cardholders, adding to its base of more than 100 million customers. The country’s four major networks are American Express, Mastercard, Visa and Discover, which has far fewer cardholders than its competitors.
Persons: , Matt Schulz, Jesse Van Tol Organizations: Discover Financial Services, LendingTree, Visa, Mastercard, Discover, American Express, National Community Reinvestment Coalition Locations: United States
HONG KONG (AP) — Asia markets mostly advanced Friday after Wall Street recouped most of the week's earlier losses and Japan reported slowing inflation, which may keep its ultra-low interest rates steady. Japan’s inflation slowed for a second straight month, increasing the chance that the Bank of Japan will keep its ultra-low interest rates unchanged at its meeting next week. Hong Kong stocks were on track for their third consecutive week of losses as investors remain worried about the gloomy economic prospects. The market was broadly steadier as Treasury yields in the bond market slowed their jump from earlier in the week. On the losing end of Wall Street were several financial companies that reported weaker results for the end of 2023 than analysts expected.
Persons: Australia’s, Taiwan’s Taiex, homebuilders, KeyCorp, Brent Organizations: , Nikkei, Bank of Japan, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Big Tech, Apple, Broadcom, Federal Reserve, Treasury, Discover Financial Services, U.S Locations: HONG KONG, — Asia, Japan, Hong Kong, Shanghai, South Korea, Bangkok, United States
Discover Financial Services — The financial services stock dropped more than 7% after posting mixed fourth-quarter results. Hertz — The automotive rental company's stock climbed about 6% following an upgrade to overweight from Morgan Stanley earlier on Thursday. Kinder Morgan — Shares of the energy infrastructure company fell less than 1% after Kinder Morgan's fourth-quarter revenue came in lower than expected. Fastenal — The industrial supplies company added 4% after posting fourth-quarter earnings that exceeded analyst expectations. Humana — The health insurance company lost more than 14% on Thursday after guiding for full-year 2023 adjusted earnings of $26.09 per share.
Persons: Hertz, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Hertz's, BofA, Ranjan Sharma, Kinder Morgan —, Kinder Morgan's, Kinder, Fastenal, Chris Caso, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Michelle Fox, Fred Imbert, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Discover Financial, Apple, Bank of America, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue, Citi, Spirit, Alaska Air Group —, Boeing, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, JPMorgan, Wolfe Research, Humana, Alcoa, Revenue Locations: Singapore
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — U.S.-listed shares of the semiconductor company popped 9.79% on the back of a fourth-quarter profit and revenue beat . Fastenal earned 46 cents per share on revenue of $1.76 billion, while analysts polled by StreetAccount forecast 45 cents per share on $1.75 billion in revenue. Adjusted earnings per share were 32 cents, versus the 27 cents expected from analysts polled by StreetAccount. KeyCorp — The Cleveland-based bank dropped 4.62% after reporting fourth-quarter adjusted earnings per share of 3 cents, down from 38 cents a year prior. Kinder Morgan — Kinder Morgan shares slid 1.42% after the natural gas pipeline operator reported fourth-quarter revenue of $4.04 billion, missing the LSEG consensus estimate of $4.41 billion.
Persons: Sekisui, Hertz, Morgan Stanley, Fastenal, Birkenstock, KeyCorp —, Kinder Morgan — Kinder Morgan, CNBC's Lisa Han, Samantha Subin, Alex Harring, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Sarah Min Organizations: Apple —, Nasdaq, Bank of America, Apple, CVS Health, MDC Holdings, MDC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Devices, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue, Citi, StreetAccount, Horizon, Discover Financial, Wolfe Research, JPMorgan Locations: KeyCorp — The Cleveland, Singapore
Discover Financial Services — Shares dropped nearly 7% after Discover Financial Services reported fourth-quarter results. The financial services company reported quarterly revenue of $4.20 billion that topped estimates of $4.10 billion, according to analysts polled by LSEG. Alcoa — Shares dropped nearly 3% after the aluminum producer reported fourth-quarter results. Alcoa posted a narrower-than-expected adjusted loss of 56 cents per share, compared to an expected loss of 86 cents per share, according to analysts polled by LSEG. Talos Energy — Shares of the oil and gas company dropped 5% after Talos Energy issued fourth-quarter revenue guidance in the range of $380 million to $395 million, compared to the $393.5 million expected by analysts polled by FactSet.
Persons: Fuller — H.B, Fuller Organizations: Discover Financial, Discover Financial Services, LSEG, Alcoa —, Alcoa, Talos Energy, FactSet, QuarterNorth Energy, Riley Securities Locations: LSEG .
Discover Financial explores sale of students loan portfolio
  + stars: | 2023-11-29 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: 1 min
Nov 29 (Reuters) - Discover Financial Services (DFS.N) said on Wednesday it was exploring the sale of its students loan portfolio. The company said it will stop accepting applications for student loans from Feb. 1, 2024 without impacting the loans or payments from current customers. The potential sale will see the transfer of servicing of these loans to a third-party. The company did not give a deadline for the sale. Reporting by Pritam Biswas in Bengaluru; Editing by Arun KoyyurOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Pritam Biswas, Arun Koyyur Organizations: Discover Financial Services, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru
Amazon.com Inc | ReutersThe initial third-quarter report on gross domestic product showed consumer spending zooming higher by 4% percent a year, after inflation, the best in almost two years. How is this possible with interest rates on everything from credit cards to cars and homes soaring? But they were below expectations at electric-vehicle leader Tesla , which blamed high interest rates, and at Ford . "And as interest rates rise, the proportion of that monthly payment that is interest increases." At American Express , which saw U.S. consumer spending rise 9%, the mild surprise was the company's disclosure that young consumers are adding Amex cards faster than any other group.
Persons: Bill Ackman, CFRA, Sam Stovall, Ryan Marshall, Wells, Jackie Benson, Tesla, Elon Musk, GM, Mary Barra, Paul Jacobson, John Lawler, Musk, Brian Moynihan, Jeremy Barnum, Sachin Mehra, Zers, Guess they're, Stovall, chargeoffs, John Greene, Morgan Stanley, Ravi Shanker, Spirit, Sundaram, Ethan Allen, they've, Marc Bitzer, Arun Sundaram, Amanda Agati, there's Organizations: Amazon.com Inc, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, Coldwell, Ford, General Motors, GM, United Auto Workers, UAW, Cox Automotive, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, MasterCard, American Express, Discover Financial Services, JetBlue, Whirlpool, Amazon, PNC, Federal, Asset Management Locations: Shakopee , Minnesota, U.S, Covid, PulteGroup, Vermont
Regional banks will be in focus in the week ahead as traders head into the thick of third-quarter earnings season. Regional bank earnings are also expected to be a weak point this season. But a closer look into the sector's sub-industries showed that regional banks are anticipated to have tumbled by 15% last quarter. Traders parsing through regional bank earnings will pay special attention to signs of narrowing net interest margins (NIM). Earnings season underway Many investors anticipate that the third-quarter earnings season will be alright.
Persons: Wells, Kumar, FactSet's John Butters, NIM, They'll, JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, FactSet's Butters, Nancy Tengler, Lauren Goodwin, we'll, Goodwin, Charles Schwab, Lockheed Martin, Goldman, Zions, Kinder Morgan, Lam, McLennan, Philip Morris, Huntington Bancshares, , Jesse Pound Organizations: Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Sri, Kumar, Silicon Valley Bank, Regional Banking, Dow Jones Industrial, JPMorgan, Hamas, Northern Trust, U.S . Bancorp, T Bank, Citizens Financial, Bank of America, Federal Reserve, Companies, Investments, New York Life Investments, Index, Johnson, Bank of New York Mellon, Goldman Sachs Group, Hunt Transport Services, Omnicom, United Airlines Wednesday, Housing, Elevance, Citizens Financial Group, Procter, Gamble, Abbott Laboratories, Discover Financial Services, Las Vegas Sands, PPG Industries, Steel Dynamics, Tesla, Netflix, Lam Research, Philadelphia Fed, Truist, Alaska Air Group, Fifth Third Bancorp, American Airlines Group, Marsh, Philip Morris International, Union, CSX, Comerica, Regions Financial, American Express, Interpublic, Cos Locations: Wells Fargo, Silicon, Ukraine, Israel, J.B, Las Vegas, Philadelphia, Truist Financial, Union Pacific, Freeport, Huntington
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