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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJPMorgan's Jamie Dimon says the U.S. economy could have a hard landingJamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, discusses the outlook for the U.S. economy and interest rates.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase Organizations: JPMorgan Locations: U.S
JPMorgan is testing a generative AI "copilot" within its private bank, a move that is already saving advisors a couple of hours a day. AdvertisementHow Donnelly's team drives innovation in the private bankJPMorgan's private bank caters to clients with at least $10 million in assets. The unit's $974 billion in assets are managed by just over 3,500 client advisors. When the CEO of JPM's private bank tapped an advisor with little to no technical experience to lead digital product for his division, it was intentional. He didn't "want the individuals that are deciding the advisor experience and client experience not to sit amongst the front-office users," she said.
Persons: Karen Donnelly, Donnelly, Morgan Stanley, Mary Erdoes, Dan Pinto's, JPMorgan's, She's, aren't, David Frame, , Donnelly doesn't, gunning Organizations: Service, JPMorgan, Business, Advisors, ChatGPT
"You can't ignore it, you have to do business there, even if you decide not to do business there, you need to understand what's going on," Leenart said, adding that what happens in China "influences every industry around the world." In terms of purchasing power parity, China currently accounts for 19% of global GDP and 48% of Asia's GDP . China is too big to be sidelined, and investors "have to do business there," JPMorgan Asia Pacific CEO Sjoerd Leenart said Thursday, adding that the country had emerged as the second world power. Given how extensively China is linked with the region, Leenart emphasized that there needs to be "good activity" in China in order to have a buoyant investment banking business. "I think that [China] have a lot to sell to the world, and that product will be needed all over the world," said Leenart, adding that he sees a lot of opportunity in China.
Persons: Leenart, CNBC's, Sjoerd Leenart, We've Organizations: JPMorgan Chase &, CNBC's Sri, Global China Summit, JPMorgan Asia Pacific, Investors, China's National Bureau of Statistics, Reuters, Wilson Locations: New York, United States, China, CNBC's Sri Jegarajah, Shanghai . China, Asia, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Vietnam
Aerial view of Eleven Mile Solar in Coolidge, Az. Put simply, large financial institutions provide part of the financing for a renewable energy project, in exchange for the project's tax credits. Smaller developers don't always have the means to enter into these partnerships, and the appetite from large financial institutions to take stakes in renewable energy projects is limited. That's "[s]till far short of what is needed in the post-IRA clean energy investment landscape," the investment bank Evercore ISI noted. Aerial view of Eleven Mile Solar in Coolidge, Az.
Persons: Az, Van Applegate, Orsted, Biden, , Applegate Organizations: JPMorgan, U.S, Orsted's, IRA, American Council, Renewable Energy Locations: Coolidge, U.S, Coolidge , Arizona, Mineral , Texas, Nextracker
Read previewPersistent inflation and a full-blown recession are still firmly on the table, two Wall Street titans have warned. Jamie Dimon told CNBC on Thursday that sticky inflation is more likely than many people think. Dimon said the "worst outcome" would be stagflation — a painful combination of elevated inflation, higher rates, and a recession that would hit consumers and pull down corporate profits. No cuts and a real slowdownDavid Solomon struck a similar tone at a Boston College event on Wednesday, Bloomberg reported. Solomon also said in March that he was less certain of a soft landing than the market consensus.
Persons: , Jamie Dimon, Dimon, David Solomon, Goldman Sachs, Solomon Organizations: Service, Wall, CNBC, JPMorgan, Business, Federal Reserve, Boston, Bloomberg
JPMorgan Chase 's chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon says the the U.S. economy could see a "hard landing." When asked by CNBC's Sri Jegarajah about the prospect of a hard landing, Dimon replied: "Could we actually see one? The CEO was speaking at the JPMorgan Global China Summit in Shanghai. Dimon said the worst outcome for the U.S. economy will be a "stagflation" scenario, where inflation continues to rise, but growth slows amid high unemployment. "I look at the range of outcomes and again, the worst outcome for all of us is what you call stagflation, higher rates, recession.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Jamie Dimon, CNBC's, Jegarajah, Dimon, we'll Organizations: JPMorgan, JPMorgan Global China Summit Locations: U.S, Shanghai
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJPMorgan says China is an 'incredibly important place' and cannot be ignoredJPMorgan's Asia-Pacific CEO, Sjoerd Leenart, said that in spite of the rhetoric, a lot of international companies are still investing in China and the country remains an important market.
Persons: Sjoerd Leenart Organizations: JPMorgan Locations: China, Asia, Pacific
Snowflake posted $829 million in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG had called for $786 million. Adjusted earnings for the period came in at 14 cents a share, however, missing the consensus estimate by 4 cents. Beauty — The cosmetics maker added 3.4% after easily surpassing consensus forecasts from analysts surveyed by FactSet for the fiscal fourth quarter. posted 53 cents in earnings per share, excluding items, on $321.1 million in revenue, while analysts penciled in just 33 cents on $292.6 million in revenue. On top of that, LiveRamp offered firm revenue guidance for both the current quarter and full year.
Persons: Snowflake, LSEG, NetEase, FactSet, e.l.f, LiveRamp, Cytokinetics, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Ed Bred, Lori Koch, Alibaba, GoodRX, , Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Nvidia, Micro, Taiwan Semiconductor, Bloomberg, Department of Justice, of, News, Corp, JPMorgan, DuPont de Nemours, DuPont, Bloomberg News, Bank of America, RBC, Hasbro —, Hasbro Locations: Southern, of New York,
Bank of America reiterates Nvidia as buy Bank of America raised its price target on the stock to $1,320 per share from $1,100 following earnings. Deutsche Bank initiates Freshpet a buy Deutsche said it sees "multiple structural tailwinds" for shares of the pet food and health company. Deutsche Bank initiates BellRing Brands as buy Deutsche said it sees a long runway for growth for the food company. " Deutsche Bank initiates Legend Biotech as buy Deutsche said it's bullish on the biotech company's multiple myeloma drug Carvykti. Bank of America reiterates Super Micro Computer as buy Bank of America said Nvidia's earnings report on Wednesday bode well for companies like Super Micro.
Persons: Bernstein, Ford, Morgan Stanley downgrades NetEase, Morgan Stanley, Evercore, BRBR, Wedbush, Jefferies, GDRX, Oppenheimer, Armour, Kevin, Dell, Chubb, Stephens, FHN, Tesla, Argus, it's bullish, bode Organizations: " Bank of America, Nvidia, Bank of America, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, BellRing Brands, JPMorgan, Hasbro, RBC, Norfolk Southern, NSC, GE Vernova, GE, UBS, Eastman Chemical, Eastman, SAP, underperform Bank of America, Berkshire Hathaway's, of America, Rockstar Games, NextEra Energy Partners, Argus, Wynn, Biotech, Computer Locations: U.S, China, Berkshire, Macau, Las Vegas, 2H24
Whether today's activist investors contribute any genuine economic value is open for debate. As this year's proxy season draws to a close, defeat after defeat for activist investors in proxy fights this year – most prominently at Disney and Norfolk Southern – raises the question: Are activist investors increasingly getting de-activated, losing their credibility and power? These self-styled "activist investors" are distinct from the original activists who helped catalyze needed governance reforms two decades back. Many of today's activist investors are a far cry from the original, heroic crusaders for shareholder value who pioneered the activism space decades ago. However, given the failing financial performance of many of today's activist investors, their losing streak in proxy fights and increasing public rejection of their bullying tactics, the credibility and value of activist investors writ large is increasingly imperiled.
Persons: Nelson Peltz's, Ed Garden, Ralph Whitworth, John Biggs of TIAA, John Bogle of, Ira Millstein, Weil, Nell Minow, Bob Monks, Harvard's Stephen Davis, Carl Icahn's, Aubrey McClendon, , Bill Cohan, Jamie Dimon, Glass Lewis, resoundingly, Mason Morfit's ValueAct, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Lester, Steven Tian Organizations: CNBC, Salesforce, Dow Jones, Disney, Norfolk Southern, Relational Investors, John Bogle of Vanguard, Services, Chesapeake, Norfolk, JetBlue, Elanco, of Institutional Investors, United Shareholders Association, Responsibility Research, ISS, Lester Crown, Management, Yale University, Yale's, Institute Locations: Norfolk Southern, greenmailers, America
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAsia as a region is 'supremely interesting,' says JPMorgan's Filippo Gori"You have Japan, which is on fire. India, which is very in high demand," said Filippo Gori, co-head of global banking at JPMorgan, explaining why Asia as a region is interesting for investors.
Persons: JPMorgan's Filippo Gori, Filippo Gori Organizations: Asia, JPMorgan Locations: Japan, India, Asia
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email'Put me in the cautious side on this one': Jamie Dimon shares his outlook on U.S. interest ratesJamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, says "could inflation be stickier than people think? I think the odds are higher than other people think."
Persons: Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase Organizations: JPMorgan
Hedge funds added more exposure to financial and tech names in the last quarter, according to Morgan Stanley. Castagno highlighted that in the last quarter, hedge funds seemed to shift their portfolio allocations toward the information technology and financials sectors, moving away from health care. However, hedge funds still remain most overweight stocks within the health care, consumer discretionary and industrials industries. Hedge funds have recently increased their ownership shares in retailer Bath & Body Works by 2.5%. Wolfe Research upgraded shares of Alaska Air Group to outperform from peer perform last Friday.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Todd Castagno, Castagno, A.J, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Securities and Exchange, Universal Health Services, UBS, Body, JPMorgan, Airline, Alaska Air Group, Wolfe Research, TPG, DXC Technology, Avis Budget Group Locations: Rice, Bath, Coast
Wall Street analysts are turning more bullish on Nvidia yet again following another strong guide from the chipmaking behemoth. "The narrative is clearly nowhere near its end, or likely nowhere near its peak," he wrote, adding that shares appear inexpensive. He expects Nvidia's Blackwell chips to be sold out through 2025. "While it's large enough market that competitors can succeed or even gain share, NVIDIA remains the standard bearer for multifaceted AI," he wrote. Nvidia's results lifted the broader chip sector, with the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) trading 3% higher in the premarket.
Persons: Tom O'Malley, Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon, Blackwell, Blayne Curtis, Citi's Atif Malik, JPMorgan's Harlan Sur, Goldman Sachs, Toshiya Hari, Sur, Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore, Nvidia's Blackwell Organizations: Nvidia, Blackwell, Wall, Barclays, Jefferies, NVIDIA, VanEck Semiconductor, Micron Technology, AMD Locations: CY25
Morgan Stanley accompanied the move by cutting its price target to $100 from $120. His $185 price target, up from $160, forecasts that shares of Take-Two could rally 23% from Wednesday's close. — Lisa Kailai Han 5:55 a.m.: Bernstein initiates Ford at an outperform rating Investors who don't own Ford are missing out, according to Bernstein. — Lisa Kailai Han 5:55 a.m.: JPMorgan upgrades Hasbro Don't expect Hasbro's momentum to slow in the near future, according to JPMorgan. It also raised its price target on shares to $74 from $61, implying upside of 22%.
Persons: Bernstein, Morgan Stanley downgrades NetEase, Morgan Stanley, Alex Poon, Poon, Lisa Kailai Han, Omar Dessouky, Dessouky, — Lisa Kailai Han, Sam Poser, Sean Dodge, Dodge, GoodRx, Ford, Daniel Roeska, Roeska didn't, Roeska, Christopher Horvers, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Ford, JPMorgan, Hasbro, NetEase, Bank of America, Rockstar Games, Rockstar, Supreme, Corp, Trading, EMEA, Timberland, RBC, RBC Capital Markets, pharma, Kroger Locations: China, Wednesday's, Americas
Nvidia stock soared 9% on Thursday to record highs after its reported earnings. The company defied analyst expectations yet again, and said that demand for its AI chips continues to outstrip demand. Wall Street analysts were impressed by the results, with a slew of price target increases hitting the tape Thursday morning. Wedbush: "AI revolution just getting started"Analysts at Wedbush said the "AI gold rush" is just getting started as a "tidal wave" of spending on AI chips hits the entire tech sector. The AI Revolution starts with Nvidia and in our view the AI party is just getting started with the popcorn getting ready."
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, it's, Nvidia's, Blackwell, Wedbush, AI Jensen Organizations: Service, Nvidia, Wall Street, Center, Data Center, Data, Blackwell, JPMorgan, Meta, Bank of America Locations: 2HCY24, CY25, CY24
Beauty posted its first billion-dollar fiscal year on Wednesday as sales spiked 77%, but the retailer's shares fell as it said it expects its growth to slow. Sales rose to $321.1 million, up about 71% from $187.4 million a year earlier. For the full year, the company's sales grew to $1.02 billion, an increase of 77% from the year-ago period. Its guidance reflects that sentiment, but even so, the company expects to grow at a slower pace than Wall Street anticipated. expects net sales to be between $1.23 billion and $1.25 billion, which would be an increase of 20% to 22%.
Persons: Tarang Amin, Dave Kimbell, Estée Lauder, Coty, Kimbell, JPMorgan Chase, Read Organizations: LSEG, Walmart, Target, Wall, JPMorgan Locations: E.l.f
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Rate cuts several months awayFederal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said he does not think further rate increases are necessary, but he will need convincing before backing any rate cuts. Singapore Airlines: one dead, 30 injuredOne person died and 30 people were injured aboard a Singapore Airlines flight that was hit by severe turbulence and forced to land in Thailand. Singapore Airlines Flight 321 encountered "sudden, severe turbulence" about 10 hours into a flight from London to Singapore, the airline said.
Persons: Christopher Waller, Waller, Biden, Jennifer Granholm, Walt Disney, Bob Iger, Jesse Pound, JPMorgan's Marko Kolanovic Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, CNBC, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Dow Jones, Federal, Gasoline, East, Pixar, Studios, Disney, Walt Disney Animation, Singapore Airlines, Singapore Airlines Flight, Boeing, Wall Street Locations: New York City, Israel, Thailand, London, Singapore
Specifically, analyst Chris Schott called Eli Lilly one of his highest conviction opinions. Analyst Harlan Sur noted that one of his top picks includes semiconductor manufacturer Broadcom , which has rallied 25% in 2024. In the report, the bank also highlighted data centers as an area that investors should watch. As demand grows for data centers, beneficiaries could include stocks such as Vertiv , up an eye-watering 106% in 2024, which is one of analyst Steve Tusa's highest conviction picks in the electrical equipment industry. Other stocks JPMorgan listed in the report include Delta Airlines and Carvana .
Persons: Chris Schott, Eli Lilly, Harlan Sur, Steve Tusa's, Rajat Gupta, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, Dow Jones, Major Pharma, Broadcom, Delta Airlines
New York CNN —Even after years of inflation, geopolitical chaos and recession in Europe, the US economy remains robust and resilient. Unemployment rose to 3.9% last month, lower-income consumers are spending less and businesses are limiting employee hours and pay. A recent survey by Santander Bank of its customers found that while inflation fears have largely subsided, middle-income Americans are pessimistic about the economy. Those Americans could still be suffering, but their stories are obscured by data that paints a broad picture of a resilient economy. Piepszak, meanwhile, now leads the company’s newly combined commercial and investment bank with her co-CEO Troy Rohrbaugh.
Persons: , Gregory Daco, haven’t, Skyler Weinand, Regan, , ” Nanette Abuhoff Jacobson, Bryan Mena, What’s, Jamie Dimon, Here’s, Dimon, he’s, , ” Dimon, can’t, “ Dimon, Marianne Lake, Jennifer Piepszak, Piepszak, Troy Rohrbaugh, Rohrbaugh, Mary Erdoes, Jeremy Barnum, Daniel Pinto, COOs Gordon Smith, Smith, Satya Nadella, Bing Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, New York CNN, Regan Capital, Santander Bank, Hartford Funds, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, JPMorgan, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Microsoft Locations: New York, Europe, Redmond, Washington
Check out the companies making headlines after the bell : Nvidia — The chipmaker added about 4% after announcing a 10-for-1 stock split . Nvidia also surpassed Wall Street's fiscal first-quarter estimates on the top and bottom lines, and it issued strong guidance for the current quarter. Fiscal first-quarter revenue surpassed the Street's expectations, coming in at $829 million, versus consensus estimates for $786 million, per LSEG. — The apparel and footwear company sank 9% after posting an unexpected loss for the recent quarter and revenue that fell short of Wall Street's estimates. VF Corp. posted a loss of 32 cents per share on $2.37 billion in revenue.
Persons: LSEG, FactSet, Synopsys, LiveRamp, Dow Jones, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Ed Breen, Lori Koch, Breen, , Darla Mercado, Sarah Min, Scott Schnipper, Christina Cheddar, Berk Organizations: Nvidia, Super Micro, Devices, Corp, VF Corp, LiveRamp Holdings, News Corp, JPMorgan, DuPont de Nemours, DuPont
What Do Students at Elite Colleges Really Want?
  + stars: | 2024-05-22 | by ( Francesca Mari | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
“Freshmen after spending 0.02 seconds on campus,” read the caption, posted in 2023 to the anonymous messaging app Sidechat. The campus in question was Harvard, where, at a wood-paneled dining hall last year, two juniors explained how to assess a fellow undergraduate’s earning potential. It’s easy, they said, as we ate mussels, beets and sautéed chard: You can tell by who’s getting a bulge bracket internship. One of the students paused, surprised that he was unfamiliar with the term: A bulge bracket bank, like Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase or Citi. Not to be confused with M.B.B., which stands for three of the most prestigious management consulting firms: McKinsey, Bain and Boston Consulting Group.
Persons: , sautéed, who’s, ” Benny Goldman, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Harvard, JPMorgan Chase, Citi, The, McKinsey, Bain, Boston Consulting Group Locations: sautéed chard
And yet, consumer sentiment recently sank to a six-month low. That disconnect is what Joyce Chang, JPMorgan's chair of global research, calls a "vibecession." On the flip side, the combination of higher interest rates and inflation have hit working-class Americans particularly hard. Many of these households have exhausted their savings and are now leaning on credit cards to make ends meet. "Every client we've been talking to over the last several months has brought up the concern of, they're worried about inflation, worried they can't spend money," Garcia said.
Persons: Joyce Chang, JPMorgan's, Chang, that's, Courtney Garcia, they're, Garcia Organizations: Federal, CNBC, Payne Capital Management Locations: U.S
Cambridge University professor Thomas Roulet has hit back at the idea that Gen Z is lazy. He said younger people just have a different idea about what work means to them. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon said people shouldn't "feel so bad" for Gen Z and millennials this week. AdvertisementGen Z is often called lazy — but a Cambridge University professor thinks younger people just have a different idea about what work means. Thomas Roulet, who teaches organizational sociology and leadership at the Judge Business School, defended the generation's work ethic in a video posted on the university's YouTube channel.
Persons: Thomas Roulet, Jamie Dimon, , Socrates Organizations: Cambridge University, JPMorgan, Service, Judge Business School, YouTube, Business
Getting an internship with a top bank like Goldman Sachs is getting harder. This year, just 0.9% of the applicants made the cut — a new record. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Though internship programs at the firm have always been competitive, this year marks a new level of selectivity. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, , Goldman Organizations: JPMorgan, Service, Business
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