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In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRoku CEO Anthony Wood on Q4 results: I'm more confident than ever in our businessCNBC’s Julia Boorstin and Roku CEO Anthony Wood join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the company's quarterly earnings results, the streaming service provider's steeper-than-expected first-quarter loss forecast, state of the video advertising market, and more.
Persons: Anthony Wood, Julia Boorstin
NEW YORK, Aug 23 (Reuters) - A recent spike in U.S. bond yields has come alongside muted expectations for inflation, a sign to some bond fund managers that economic resilience and high bond supply are now playing a larger role than second-guessing the Federal Reserve. Bond yields, which move inversely to prices, tend to rise in an inflationary environment because inflation erodes the value of a future bond payout. But while higher moves in bond yields in the last several months were often driven by investors pricing in higher interest rates as the Fed sought to tame rising inflation, expectations on the pace of price rises have moved lower in recent weeks. Long-term Treasury yields account for factors such as inflation expectations and term premiums, or what investors demand to be compensated for the risk of holding long-term paper. A recent string of strong economic data despite higher interest rates has strengthened investor beliefs that interest rates will remain higher for longer, even if inflation is tamed.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Jackson, Bond, , Calvin Norris, John Madziyire, Anthony Woodside, , Aegon's Norris, Davide Barbuscia, Megan Davies, Anna Driver Organizations: Federal Reserve, Federal, Aegon Asset Management, Investors, Bank of Japan, BMO Capital Markets, Treasury, Securities, Reuters, Fed, Thomson Locations: U.S, America
For investors who had expected more economic strife, sticking to those calls has become increasingly difficult. "It's going to take longer for rates to rally," said John Madziyire, senior portfolio manager and head of U.S. Treasuries and TIPS at Vanguard Fixed Income Group. "Recession or no recession, we think the probability of higher-for-longer interest rates is far greater than the likelihood of near-term cuts," credit investment firm Oaktree Capital said in a recent note. A re-acceleration in inflation could lead to higher rates than the market has priced in. Some are navigating the uncertainty by combining exposure to higher-yielding short term bonds with long-term bonds in case of a downturn.
Persons: , Felipe Villarroel, John Madziyire, Oaktree Capital, Danielle Poli, Anthony Woodside, Woodside, Stephen Dover, Chip Hughey, Davide Barbuscia, Richard Chang Organizations: Bond, Federal Reserve, TwentyFour Asset Management, Bank of, Fitch's U.S, Treasury, Oaktree, Fund, Reuters, U.S, Franklin Templeton Investment Solutions, Truist Advisory Services, Vanguard, Thomson Locations: U.S, Oaktree
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRoku CEO Anthony Wood on streaming, digital advertising, and the media competition landscapeRoku CEO Anthony Wood sits down with CNBC's Julia Boorstin at Cannes Lions 2023 to discuss streaming, digital advertising, media competition, and the future of content.
Persons: Anthony Wood, CNBC's Julia Boorstin Organizations: Cannes Lions
WASHINGTON — Two top progressive lawmakers questioned whether Silicon Valley Bank offered its largest depositors unusually cushy treatment, one month after the institution collapsed and sparked broader damage to the banking system. "Silicon Valley Bank's unusually cozy relationship with its clients increased the threat of contagion when the bank went under," Warren said in a statement. "The American people deserve to know how these mutual backscratching arrangements developed, who benefitted from them, and what role they played in Silicon Valley Bank's failure." Over 95% of the bank's deposits were uninsured as of December, which threatened companies' ability to make payroll after the bank failed. Warren and Ocasio-Cortez asked the depositors to provide details on any special treatment they received from SVB by April 24.
A video sign displays the logo for Roku Inc, a Fox-backed video streaming firm, in Times Square after the company's IPO at the Nasdaq Market in New York, September 28, 2017. Roku said Thursday it will sell the first smart TVs designed and made by the company exclusively at Best Buy and the electronic retailer's website. Roku's hardware items, including streaming players and sound-amplifying devices, have often been the money-losing parts of the business. Roku CEO Anthony Wood told CNBC in January he is optimistic about selling the new TVs. The new TVs will feature Roku's voice remote pro, Bluetooth private listening, automatic brightness and local dimming.
NEW YORK, March 7 (Reuters) - Spooked by a flurry of hotter-than-expected U.S. economic and inflation data last month, investors are reviving trading strategies that bet on a higher peak in interest rates. The recalibration in inflation expectations has led some investors to bet on a policy rate of 6% or even higher. Trading platform Tradeweb said it saw average daily volume in inflation swaps - derivatives used to hedge inflation risk - increase by 23% month-on-month in February. With higher inflation expectations lifting short-term bond yields higher than those at the longer end, some investors are wary of committing to debt maturities at the long end of the bond market yield curve. "The momentum in the economy is so strong that we may have to get into 2024 before the Fed funds rate peaks."
Roku announces its own TV line at CES 2023
  + stars: | 2023-01-05 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRoku announces its own TV line at CES 2023CNBC's Julia Boorstin talks to Roku CEO Anthony Wood about the company's announcement it was launching its own TV line at CES 2023 in Las Vegas.
Roku is counting on its growing consumer base beyond 70 million customers as it launches its own line of televisions, CEO Anthony Wood told CNBC on Thursday. The streaming company unveiled its new line of televisions, Roku Select and Roku Plus Series, Wednesday during the Consumer Electronics Show. "Roku streaming hours were 87 billion hours of streaming last year" said Wood. All TV is going to be streamed, that means all TV advertising is going to be streamed." Shares of Roku are up more than 4% in the early going of 2023, closing at $42.76 on Thursday.
Roku is the nation’s largest maker of streaming hardware, but it derives most of its revenue from advertising. Roku Inc. said it expected revenue from its two main business drivers—advertising and sales of streaming hardware—to fall in the fourth quarter as macroeconomic conditions pressured both consumers and advertisers to reduce their spending, sending the company’s shares down 18% in after-hours trading. Chief Executive Anthony Wood told investors Wednesday that the coming holiday season was “probably going to be different than the typical holiday season.” He said advertisers including toy marketers were reducing their fourth-quarter ad spending because of uncertainty over a potential recession.
Nov 3 (Reuters) - Roku Inc (ROKU.O) market-cap dropped by nearly a fifth on Thursday following downbeat forecasts a day earlier, as the streaming tech provider suffers from a collapse in advertising dollars. The company expects fourth-quarter revenue substantially below market estimates, while its adjusted operating loss outlook was much wider than Wall Street expectations. "We expect these conditions to be temporary, but it is difficult to predict when they will stabilize or rebound," Roku Chief Executive Anthony Wood said in a letter to investors. Roku stock, down 19% at $43.74 before the bell, has lost more than three-quarters of its value this year. "Roku is likely dead money over the next two quarters at least, but should rebound within the next twelve months," Wedbush Securities said.
Short-term inventory "reset," meaning there's a chip glut that must be dealt with before the price-to-earnings multiple can be determined. Wall Street was looking for fiscal first-quarter (current quarter) revenue of $12 billion, but company guide was $9.2 billion to $10 billion. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade.
London CNN Business —Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has the power to make or break markets these days. “Essentially, it killed the pivot dreams.”Economic data, particularly for the labor market, still looks relatively strong. “Big advertisers that we traditionally get spend from are not spending this quarter,” Roku (ROKU) CEO Anthony Wood told analysts after the company reported earnings on Wednesday. Ford saw its October US sales slump 10% over the last year as the company continued to battle supply chain difficulties. In March, the company said it would ship some vehicles without some less crucial computer chips and add them later.
Nov 2 (Reuters) - Shares of Roku Inc (ROKU.O) fell more than 20% in extended trading on Wednesday after the streaming platform forecast holiday-quarter revenue below Wall Street estimates as ad spending dries up. Top players including Google-parent Alphabet (GOOGL.O) and Snap Inc (SNAP.N) have warned of shrinking ad spending, which led to a broad tech sell-off in recent weeks. Roku added 2.3 million "active accounts" in the third quarter, compared with 1.3 million net additions last year. "Roku’s growth will be disrupted by a recessionary environment because advertising budgets on the whole will see cuts, while at the same time TV ad budgets continue to see migration to digital," Third Bridge analyst Jamie Lumle said. "We will continue to slow headcount and operating expense growth in response to the macro environment," Wood added.
But none of that explains why political campaigns have been turning away from Facebook. Political ads have always been a small part of Facebook's overall business. The pandemic accelerated that trend since so many consumers turned to streaming platforms while stuck at home, and content for cord-cutters proliferated. Ad tracking firm AdImpact projected that of the $9.7 billion spent on political ads this cycle, $1.4 billion would go to connected TVs. Apple's crackdown has indeed diminished Facebook's position in political advertising.
That means Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud could be poised for a merger-and-acquisition spree. As for cloud acquisitions, analysts said Amazon's cloud unit didn't often buy companies. Cybersecurity has been a greater focus for Microsoft, AWS, and Google Cloud after the hack of the IT-software company SolarWinds in 2020. In 2019, Google purchased the data-analytics company Looker for $2.6 billion in cash under Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian. With Kurian at the helm, bringing with him the Oracle acquisition playbook, Google Cloud may now have a bigger M&A appetite.
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