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Alaska Airlines CEO Ben Minicucci told NBC he was "mad" and "angry" about the Flight 1282 blowout. AdvertisementAlaska Airlines' CEO expressed his frustration with Boeing during an interview with NBC News — the second airline boss to do so on Tuesday. "It makes me angry," Ben Minicucci told NBC. Minicucci told NBC: "We had a guardian angel, honestly," because the 178-capacity plane had seven unoccupied seats — which happened to include those next to the gaping hole. "It makes you mad that we're finding issues like that on brand-new airplanes," Minicucci told NBC.
Persons: Ben Minicucci, United's Scott Kirby, , Minicucci, Scott Kirby, Kirby, Stan Deal Organizations: Alaska, NBC, Boeing, Service, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration, United Airlines, Max, CNBC, Boeing Commercial, FAA Locations: Alaska, United
United Airlines is the world's biggest operator of the Boeing 737 Max 9. AdvertisementUnited Airlines said it expects to lose money as a result of the Boeing 737 Max 9 grounding, in a Monday filing. Related storiesUnited is the world's biggest operator of the 737 Max 9, with 79. Worldwide, there are 171 such jets with a door plug like the one that came off during Alaska Airlines Flight 1282. Alaska Airlines, which operates 65 Boeing 737 Max 9 jets, will report its Q4 earnings before the market opens on Thursday.
Persons: , Scott Kirby Organizations: Airlines, Boeing, Service, United Airlines, Max, Alaska Airlines, Bloomberg, United
Macy's – Shares of the department store giant added 2% in premarket trading after the company over the weekend rejected a $5.8 billion proposal by Arkhouse Management and partner Brigade Capital Management to take the retailer private. Boeing — The airline stock slid 1.8% after the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration recommended operators visually inspect the mid-exit door plugs of Boeing 737-900ER aircraft, which are similar to the ones grounded after the Alaska Airlines flight emergency. Archer-Daniels-Midland – Shares slid nearly 12% after the food processor placed CFO Vikram Luthar on administrative leave amid an investigation into some accounting practices and issued fourth-quarter earnings guidance that fell below prior expectations. Spirit Airlines , JetBlue Airways — The airlines said Friday that they plan to appeal a federal judge's ruling that blocks their planed merger. Spirit Airlines added about 1% before the bell, while JetBlue Airways slipped 0.8%.
Persons: Macy's, Vikram Luthar, Goldman Sachs, Riley, Morgan Stanley, Oppenheimer, , — CNBC's Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Tanaya Macheel, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Arkhouse Management, Brigade Capital Management, Boeing, U.S . Federal Aviation Administration, Alaska Airlines, Daniels, Midland, Bloomberg, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways Locations: Brazil
Following the ruling, Bank of America downgraded Spirit to an underperform rating, while Susquehanna downgraded the airline to negative. Rivian — The electric vehicle manufacturer slid nearly 8% following a downgrade to a hold rating from Deutsche Bank. Polaris , Mattel — The stocks moved following rating changes from Morgan Stanley. Meanwhile, toymaker Mattel slid 2.8% after Morgan Stanley downgraded shares to equal weight, citing lofty consensus estimates and a tough 2024 outlook. Marathon Digital — The crypto mining firm slid 3% during Wednesday's trading session.
Persons: JetBlue's, Sinclair —, Sinclair, SolarEdge — SolarEdge, Teladoc, Davidson, Nutanix, William Blair, Uber, Ford, Morgan Stanley —, Ted Pick, Morgan Stanley, TD Cowen, Gregory Lewis, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Spirit Airlines, JetBlue Airways —, Bank of America, Susquehanna, Interactive, LSEG, Diamond Sports Group, Diamond, Barclays, Broadcom, VMware, Wolfe Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS, JPMorgan, Polaris, Mattel, Automotive, Boeing, Federal Aviation Administration, BTIG, Marathon Digital Locations: Europe, China
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday: PDD Holdings — U.S.-listed shares of the international ecommerce company jumped more than 18% after PDD posted a big earnings and revenue beat . PDD, the parent of Pinduoduo and Temu, reported a whopping 94% year-over-year increase in revenue for its third quarter. Micron Technology — Micron Technology's stock fell nearly 3% even after the memory chipmaker boosted its revenue guidance for its fiscal first-quarter. Twilio — The enterprise software stock jumped nearly 4% after CNBC reported activist investor Anson Funds has built a stake in Twilio. U.S. Steel — Shares added 1.7% in midday trading.
Persons: PDD, Ken Herbert, Twilio, Anson, Crocs, Raymond James, it's, CNBC's David Faber, Ogsiveo, Dow, Carlyle, Jefferies, nLight, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Lisa Han, Spencer Kimball, Jesse Pound Organizations: PDD Holdings —, Micron Technology, Micron, Boeing —, RBC Capital Markets, CNBC, . Steel, Steel, U.S . Steel, SpringWorks Therapeutics, Food and Drug Administration, Therapeutics, Carlyle, Dow Jones Indices, underperform Locations: Ireland, China, Twilio, Cleveland, United States
Zoom Video Communications — The software stock added nearly 2% ahead of its third-quarter earnings due after market close. The Professional Fighters League announced on Monday that it completed its acquisition of mixed martial arts brand Bellator from Paramount. Penn Entertainment — The gambling stock jumped 7% on the heels of a Bank of America upgrade to buy from neutral. Boeing — The aerospace stock jumped 4% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the shares to a buy rating from hold. Chegg — Shares of the education technology company dropped 5% following a downgrade to underweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Wells, Sam Altman, Greg Brockman, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Krispy Kreme, Iovance, Goldman Sachs, Terri Kelly, Kelly, Peter Grom, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Communications, FactSet, Paramount, Professional Fighters League, Bellator, Penn Entertainment, Bank of America, ESPN Bet, Spectrum Brands, Microsoft —, Microsoft, Nvidia, Boeing, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Caterpillar —, HSBC, United Rentals — United Rentals, Bristol Myers, Energizer Holdings, UBS, RBC Capital Markets Locations: FactSet
Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading: Boeing — The aerospace stock added 1.5% following an upgrade to buy from hold by Deutsche Bank. PENN Entertainment — The gambling stock popped 4.4% on the back of a Bank of America upgrade to buy from neutral. The Food and Drug Administration won't be able to meet to make a decision by the target date of Dec. 16. Krispy Kreme — Shares of the doughnut chain slipped 1.8% following a downgrade by JPMorgan to neutral from overweight. Vale — U.S.-listed shares of the Brazil-based metal and mining company added 2.6% following an upgrade by Bank of America to buy from neutral.
Persons: Sam Altman, Cantor Fitzgerald, Bristol Myers, Krispy, Krispy Kreme, Goldman Sachs, Iovance, Morgan Stanley, Terri Kelly, Kelly, , Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Michael Bloom Organizations: Boeing, Deutsche Bank, Microsoft, PENN Entertainment, Bank of America, ESPN Bet, Myers, Drug Administration, Bristol, JPMorgan, Bros, Rentals, United Rentals Locations: Bristol, Vale — U.S, Brazil
U.S. CEOs on the Chinese Menu
  + stars: | 2023-11-17 | by ( The Editorial Board | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Journal Editorial Report: The week’s best and worst from Bill McGurn, Kate Bachelder Odell, Mene Ukueberuwa, and Kim Strassel. Images: AFP/Getty Images/Reuters Composite: Mark KellyWhatever the merits of this week’s summit between President Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping , there was no reason for U.S. business leaders to trip over themselves to get in on the action. Yet there they were Wednesday evening, kowtowing to Mr. Xi at a dinner that delivered China a propaganda coup and the CEOs an embarrassment. The dinner, for which ticket prices ranged up to $40,000, sounds like some affair. Mr. Xi received a standing ovation for taking the stage before he said a word.
Persons: Bill McGurn, Kate Bachelder Odell, Mene Ukueberuwa, Kim Strassel, Mark Kelly, Biden, Xi Jinping, kowtowing, Xi, Tim Cook Organizations: Getty, Qualcomm, Boeing, U.S Locations: China
Buyers could face possible legal action and Tesla may also refuse to sell future EVs to that individual or entity. Plug Power — Shares of the hydrogen developer added 1% after falling earlier in the session and plunging 40% Friday. On Monday, Wolfe Research downgraded Plug Power to peer perform from outperform, citing execution risk for financing operations. The downgrade came after Plug Power on Friday issued a going concern warning . The firm noted that the company recently topped consensus earnings estimates and expressed optimism over Health Catalyst's strong product portfolio and tech-enabled managed services (TEMS).
Persons: Tesla, Guggenheim, Wolfe, CrowdStrike, Henry Schein —, Henry Schein, Piper Sandler, GitLab, , Sarah Min, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Warner Bros, Discovery, Boeing —, Dubai carrier Emirates, Boeing, Bloomberg, Nvidia —, Wolfe Research, StreetAccount, Tyson, Stifel, CrowdStrike Locations: China
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: Monday.com — Shares of the project management company jumped 10% after Monday.com reported a strong quarter and issued a rosy forecast. Monday.com reported third-quarter earnings and revenue of 64 cents per share on revenue of $189.2 million. Tyson Foods — The food products company fell 3.3% in premarket trading after Tyson's fiscal fourth-quarter revenue came in weaker than expected. Boeing — Shares rose 3.25% after Emirates Airlines announced the purchase of 95 Boeing aircraft for a total of $52 billion. TripAdvisor — Shares of the online booking company added 2.3% after Bernstein upgraded TripAdvisor to outperform from market perform.
Persons: Monday.com, FactSet, Matt Gline, Roche, Bernstein, GitLab, Henry Schein, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh Organizations: Tyson, Boeing, Emirates Airlines, Sciences, Roivant Sciences, Revenue, HP Inc, Citi
Alphabet — The Google and YouTube parent sank more than 6% premarket after results for its cloud business fell short of estimates. Boeing — Shares of the jet plane maker rose more than 3% premarket after it reported a quarterly revenue beat . Texas Instruments —The semiconductor designer and manufacturer's stock slid 5.5%, one day after fourth quarter guidance trailed estimates. Visa — The payments stock fell 1.3% before the bell after fourth quarter earnings and revenue topped analyst estimates and it raised its dividend by 16%. Revenue also beat expectations, along with fiscal second quarter and full-year revenue guidance.
Persons: Max, TXN, FactSet's StreetAccount, Wells, Hilton, Stride, , Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Fred Imbert, Yun Li Organizations: Google, YouTube, LSEG, Microsoft, Xbox, Boeing —, Boeing, Texas, Deutsche Bank — U.S, Deutsche Bank, Visa, Dynamics, General Dynamics, Mobile, Revenue Locations: Israel, FactSet
Microsoft posted almost 13% year-over-year revenue growth, and its Azure cloud segment saw revenue gain 29% for the quarter. Norfolk Southern — The freight railroad dropped 5.3% on the back of disappointing third-quarter earnings. General Dynamics — Shares of General Dynamics rose 4% after the defense contractor's third-quarter earnings and revenue topped estimates. The semiconductor manufacturer sees earnings per share between $1.35 and $1.57, versus the $1.76 expected by analysts polled by FactSet. The stock's third-quarter revenue also disappointed investors, coming in at $4.35 billion, versus the $4.58 billion estimated by analysts polled by LSEG.
Persons: Wells, Max, , Lisa Kailai Han, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Yun Li Organizations: Microsoft —, Microsoft, Windows, Norfolk Southern, LSEG, Revenue, Dynamics —, Dynamics, General Dynamics, Boeing —, Deutsche Bank, . Waste Management, Texas, FactSet Locations: U.S
On Friday, Gordon Haskett upgraded the stock to buy , saying Dollar General's latest leadership change could help stabilize the company. Wells Fargo — The bank stock gained close to 3% after Wells Fargo posted third-quarter results that beat expectations. Citigroup — Shares of the New York-based bank rose 1.4% after posting its third-quarter results . Citigroup reported $1.63 in earnings per share, or $1.52 per share, excluding the effect of divestitures. Post Holdings — Shares of the packaged food company gained 2% after JPMorgan initiated coverage with an overweight rating on shares.
Persons: Todd Vasos, Gordon Haskett, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, LSEG, JD.com, Morgan Stanley, UnitedHealth, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound Organizations: Boeing —, Boeing, JPMorgan, Revenue, LSEG, Citigroup —, Citigroup, PNC Financial, PNC, Oil, EOG, ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil, Progressive, Post Holdings, Netflix, Wolfe Research, Dow, United Food, Commercial Workers International Union, Hormel Locations: York, China
The war provoked by Hamas' attack on Israel has shaken American politics — and put the primary race in her wheelhouse. Iran has long supported Hamas, though U.S. officials say there's no conclusive evidence yet that Iranian agents were involved in the most recent attack. Ron DeSantis proposed state-level sanctions against Iran for its ongoing support of Hamas. Since before the war, Haley has gone after her rivals on issues such as U.S. support for Ukraine against Russia's invasion and how Washington deals with China. And, in keeping with how he treats rivals, Trump has given Haley a nickname, “Birdbrain."
Persons: CLIVE, — Nikki Haley, peppering, , Haley, Donald Trump, , we’re, wouldn't, Israel, Kevin McCarthy, Joe Biden, South Carolina Sen, Tim Scott, Ron DeSantis, Trump, Vivek Ramaswamy’s, , ” Ramaswamy, ” Haley, DeSantis, ” DeSantis, Bill Strong, ” Strong, Nikki, doesn’t, Bruce Rauner, Rauner, She’s, Linda Marks, ” Marks, Thomas Beaumont, Elliot Spagat, ___ Meg Kinnard Organizations: Republican, United Nations, Department of Homeland Security, Israel, Saturday, Banking, Gov, Ukraine, Washington, GOP, Lockheed, Raytheon, Boeing, Trump, Disney, ” Former Illinois Gov, doer, Palestinian, Security, The Associated Press, NORC, for Public Affairs Research, Associated Press Locations: Iowa, China, Russia, Israel, U.S, America, Mexico, Iran, Tehran, South Carolina, Florida, Ukraine, Taiwan, , Texas, United States, Gaza, Des Moines, Windsor Heights , Iowa, Boone , Iowa, San Diego
Adjusted earnings came in at $2.70 per share, ahead of the $2.09 estimate expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. Snowflake posted 22 cents adjusted earnings per share on $674 million in revenue. AutoDesk reported adjusted earnings of $1.91 per share on $1.35 billion in revenue. Adjusted earnings per share of 6 cents was in line with expectations and revenue slightly beat, per StreetAccount. However, Petco's full-year guidance for adjusted EPS and adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization fell short of consensus estimates.
Persons: Splunk, FactSet, Snowflake, Refinitiv, , Carlos Alberini, Petco's, amortization, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound Organizations: Nvidia, Refinitiv, Wall, Taiwan Semiconductor, AMD, Marvell Technology — Semiconductor, Devices, Marvell Technology, Broadcom, Boeing —, AutoDesk, Petco, Wellness Locations: Wall Street
Nvidia - The chipmaker's stock climbed more than 1% to a record high after the company reported a beat on the top and bottom lines. Splunk — The cloud stock climbed 13.6% after the company beat Wall Street expectations for second-quarter earnings and raised its guidance. Autodesk — Shares added 3.1% after Autodesk reported an earnings beat and higher forward guidance. Snowflake — Snowflake dipped more than 5% in midday trading even after after reporting an earnings beat. Guess — The apparel company soared more than 28% after reporting an earnings beat, highlighted by an adjusted 72 cents per share and revenue of $664.5 million.
Persons: Marvell, Max, Refinitiv, Wolfe, Splunk, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Michelle Fox Organizations: Nvidia, AMD, Marvell Technology, Boeing —, Boeing, Discover Financial, Bank of America, Autodesk, Refinitiv Locations: Santa Clara , California
Alphabet — The Google parent popped more than 6% after topping Wall Street's second-quarter earnings expectations, fueled by growth in its cloud-computing segment. Microsoft, however, did beat Wall Street's estimates, reporting earnings of $2.69 per share on $56.19 billion in revenue. Snap topped second-quarter expectations, reporting a narrower-than-expected loss of 2 cent a share on $1.07 billion in revenue. Wells Fargo also said that its board approved a previously announced dividend hike to 35 cents from 30 cents per share. The company topped earnings but fell short on revenue expectations, reporting adjusted earnings per share of 63 cents on $29.92 billion in revenue.
Persons: Ruth Porat, Refinitiv, Wells Fargo, popper, , Sarah Min, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Google, Microsoft, Boeing, Texas, — Texas, Teladoc Health, Dish, Bloomberg News, Fisher, Pacific Locations: Mountain View , California, Banc, California
Microsoft — The Xbox owner saw its shares slide 3.7% after issuing quarterly revenue guidance that fell short of analysts' expectations. Microsoft did report earnings and revenue that beat Street estimates for the calendar second quarter, however. Alphabet — Shares of the Google parent rose 5.8% after Alphabet beat analysts' revenue and profit in the second quarter. Boeing's revenue of $19.75 billion topped analysts' estimates of $18.45 billion, according to Refinitiv. The company also reported an 82-cent-loss per share, while Refinitiv analysts had estimated a loss of 88 cents per share.
Persons: Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley, Lauren Schenk, Chubb, Spotify's, selloff, PacWest, Warburg Pincus Organizations: Microsoft, YouTube, Boeing, Texas, Texas Instruments, FactSet, Visa, Spotify, Deutsche Bank, Warburg, Centerbridge Locations: Banc, California
CNBC's Investing in Space newsletter offers a view into the business of space exploration and privatization, delivered straight to your inbox. CNBC's Michael Sheetz reports and curates the latest news, investor updates and exclusive interviews on the most important companies reaching new heights. The space sector has seen a variety of mergers and acquisitions since the start of the year, but the deal-making is only heating up. Meanwhile, one financier told me even Boeing is exploring options for its space business, and "everything's on the table." The markets and underlying technologies of space companies are often very different, and the reasons why one company sells or fails are often just as different from that of another.
Persons: CNBC's Michael Sheetz, Lockheed Martin, Boeing —, ULA, you've Organizations: CNBC, United, Alliance, Lockheed, Boeing, Ball Aerospace
Palantir – Palantir shares popped nearly 20% after the software company beat first-quarter estimates and said it anticipates full-year profitability. The firm also reaffirmed full-year revenue guidance and raised its full-year adjusted EBITDA expectations, while cutting 6% of its workforce. Under Armour — The apparel company slipped 5.3% after the company projected earnings per share and revenue to be short of Wall Street expectations for the full-year. Fisker — Shares shed 4.8% after the automotive company's first quarter earnings came in under Wall Street forecasts. Trex Company — Trex Company jumped 8.1% after the maker of wood-alternative decking and railing topped analysts' first-quarter expectations, and issued stronger-than-expected second-quarter revenue guidance.
The graduating class of 2023's desire for stability in an uncertain economy is dictating where they want to work most after college. It's hard to escape unrelenting news of tech layoffs in recent months, including major staff cuts from Meta, Google, Amazon, Microsoft and many others. "They're gravitating toward companies that offer solid benefits, career pathing and a level of stability they've been looking for." Most young professionals plan to pick up new tech skills for their careersThough search interest for major tech companies dropped, Cruzvergara says today's grads are more likely than their predecessors to be interested in jobs that require tech skills. New college grads feel confident they have the skills they need to get the job they want but also plan to develop new tech skills on the job or after hours.
The company said Tuesday its upcoming quarterly revenue will range from $700 million to $750 million, compared to the expected $765.2 million from analysts surveyed by StreetAccount. The company reported an adjusted loss of $1.27 per share and $17.92 billion in revenue. Activision Blizzard — Activision Blizzard shares dropped about 10.4% in the premarket after a UK regulator blocked Microsoft's purchase of the video game publisher. ServiceNow will be announcing its quarterly earnings Wednesday after the bell. The gain came after fellow tech-related giant Microsoft reported quarterly earnings that exceeded expectations, boosting sentiment for Amazon.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:Microsoft — Shares of tech giant Microsoft gained more than 8% Wednesday after a better-than-expected earnings report a day earlier. The company earned $1.17 per share on $69.79 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected it to earn $1.07 per share on revenue of $68.9 billion. The company also announced a $70 billion share buyback. 107230585First Republic — Shares of the regional bank fell more than 20% on Wednesday, extending their steep losses for the week. However, deposits for the first quarter totaled about $28.2 billion, down from $33.9 billion from the fourth quarter of 2022.
United Airlines — The airline lost 0.9% in the premarket after it announced a net loss for the first quarter. The company reported $11.43 billion in revenue, slightly above the $11.42 billion estimated. The company posted earnings per share of $1.35, which fell below the $1.41 consensus estimate from analysts polled by Refinitiv. Ally Financial — The digital financial services company's shares were down 1.3% after its first quarter earnings and revenue missed Wall Street's expectations. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.23, topping against a consensus estimate of $1.20 per share, according to FactSet.
JPMorgan Chase reported revenue of $39.34 billion, beating the $36.19 billion estimates for analyst polled by Refinitiv. Wells Fargo — The bank added 3.1% after beating Wall Street expectations when reporting earnings. The company reported revenue at $20.73 billion, which is higher than the $20.08 expected by Wall Street. PNC — Shares rose 1.3% after the bank reported first-quarter earnings. UnitedHealth – UnitedHealth shares rose slightly after the health insurance provider beat Wall Street's estimates on the top and bottom lines and lifted its profit outlook for 2023.
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