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New York CNN —Self-service kiosks at McDonald’s and other fast-food chains have loomed as job killers since they were first rolled out 25 years ago. The kiosks show the unintended consequences of technology in fast-food and retail settings, including self-checkout. Chains are now experimenting with artificial intelligence at drive-thru lanes, and the experience with kiosks holds lessons for them. It raised a familiar refrain that those workers would be replaced by technology, such as self-service kiosks. Fast-food chains and retailers need to do a better job communicating what the potential benefits of kiosks and self-checkout are to consumers and employees, Andrews said.
Persons: New York CNN —, McDonald’s, Robert Lynch, you’ve, Eva Marie Uzcategui, , RJ Hottovy, ” Hottovy, — don’t, , Ed Rensi, Christopher Andrews, Andrews Organizations: New, New York CNN, Subway, Starbucks, Shack, Bloomberg, Getty, Temple University, Labor Department, Drew University Locations: New York, McDonald’s, United States, California
Spruce Point shorts Intuit
  + stars: | 2024-09-20 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSpruce Point shorts IntuitBen Axler, Spruce Point Capital founder and CIO, joins ‘Money Movers’ to discuss why his firm is shorting Intuit, what has led the company to underperform this year, and more.
Persons: Ben Axler, Organizations: Point Capital, Intuit
Three years ago, a drone took flight at an Ikea warehouse in Switzerland for the first time. They're more self-sufficient, too: For every 10 minutes that a Verity drone is in flight, it charges for 20 minutes. Ikea's investments in Verity's drone technology fit into its broader strategy to explore and test newer supply-chain technologies. Jönsson added that deploying drones has allowed employees to have more time for analyzing inventory data. Before using warehouse drones, workers would check thousands of pallets repeatedly in order to manage inventory.
Persons: Verity, , Raffaello D'Andrea, — there's, Uber, Jeff Bezos, Bezos, Domino's, there's, DroneUp, D'Andrea, Verity hasn't, it's, Moller, Erik Jönsson, they're, haven't, Jönsson Organizations: Ikea, Chain Management, Service, Amazon, Walmart, Companies, McKinsey & Company, McKinsey, Ikea's, Ingka, Maersk, Samsung Group, Ingka Investments, Nvidia, Federal Aviation Administration, Investors, Kiva Systems, Amazon Robotics, Qualcomm Ventures, A.P, Moller Holding, Exor Ventures Locations: Switzerland, Swiss, Dutch, , Zealand, Arizona , Florida, Utah, Dallas
Nike's CEO is stepping down, and some on Wall Street appear to be lukewarm about the news. On Thursday after the bell, the sneaker giant announced that CEO John Donahoe will be retiring on Oct. 13. Wells Fargo maintained its overweight rating and increased its target by $9 to $95, implying more than 17% upside ahead. "We expect multiple expansion commensurate with Hill's hire — as leadership has been a large point of contention and controversy surrounding the stock," analyst Ike Boruchow wrote in a note. Bernstein, which has an outperform rating on Nike, expects the turnaround "will take time," but said market sentiment will be sympathetic.
Persons: John Donahoe, Elliott Hill, Jay Sole, Sole, Morgan Stanley, Alex Straton, Straton, Wells Fargo, , Ike Boruchow, Bernstein, Aneesha Sherman Organizations: UBS, Nike, JD, Bank of America Locations: FL
Read previewThe chip giant Intel could be at a crossroads as it figures out its next steps amid its declining valuation and struggling business. AdvertisementThe foundry side of Intel's business could also be in question, putting its billions in CHIPS and Science Act funding in jeopardy. Related storiesPreviously, Qualcomm had explored buying pieces of Intel's design business, Reuters reported. Intel's foundries would be expected to compete more against companies like GlobalFoundries, TSMC, and Samsung. The expanded collaboration between the two tech companies helps give more confidence about Intel capturing the AI boom, Rasgon said.
Persons: , Pat Gelsinger, Biden, Logan Purk, Edward Jones, Purk, Dan Morgan, There's, Intel's, Morgan, Lisa Su's, Stacy Rasgon, Rasgon Organizations: Service, Intel, Qualcomm, Wall Street, Amazon, Business, Biden Administration, Reuters, Samsung, Nvidia, AMD, Bernstein Research, Amazon Gelsinger, Amazon Web Services, Apple Locations: American, Synovus, Abu Dhabi
Shares of Trump Media fell at the opening bell Thursday, with just hours to go until former President Donald Trump is expected to be able to start selling his nearly $2 billion stake. The company, which owns social media platform Truth Social and trades as DJT on the Nasdaq, was down 5% at the market open. Trump Media has acknowledged in regulatory filings that the end of the lockup could spur large sales of the company’s stock, and even the market’s perception of a sell-off could drive down DJT’s stock price. The company’s fortunes are tied up with those of Trump, whose use of Truth Social makes him a main draw to the platform. After soaring in its public trading debut, Trump Media has suffered a monthlong stock slump that has coincided with Trump’s tumultuous presidential campaign against Democratic nominee Kamala Harris.
Persons: Donald Trump, Trump, Kamala Harris Organizations: Trump Media, Nasdaq, Trump, Republican, Democratic
The blasts that rocked Lebanon for a second day reached the doors of a walkie-talkie maker in Japan on Thursday, as Israel’s declaration of a “new phase” to the conflict raised fears of all-out war. As the world urged against further escalation after months of devastating war with Hamas in Gaza, Israel indicated its focus had shifted to its northern border with Lebanon. “We are at the start of a new phase in the war — it requires courage, determination and perseverance on our part,” he said. In northern Israel, at least eight people were injured by anti-tank fire from across the Lebanon border, health authorities said early Thursday. While Israel has not taken responsibility for the attacks, the militant group and Lebanese officials also pinned the blame on Israel.
Persons: pagers, Hassan Nasrallah, Yoav Gallant, , Gallant, Defense Lloyd Austin, Israel, Abdallah Rashid Bouhabib, NNA, Icom, Kazuhiro Nogi, ” Yoshiki Enomoto, Enomoto, didn't, ” Icom, Cristiana, Gold, Arcidiacono Organizations: , Defense, NBC News, . Security, Lebanese Telecommunications Ministry, Getty, Reuters, Icom, NBC, Consulting, Taiwanese Ministry of Economic Affairs Locations: Lebanon, Japan, Iran, Gaza, Israel, U.S, New York, Taiwan, Bulgaria, Beirut, Osaka, Tokyo, AFP, East
A photo taken on September 18, 2024, in Beirut's southern suburbs shows the remains of exploded pagers on display at an undisclosed location. “The design and manufacturing of the products are solely the responsibility of BAC,” Gold Apollo said. The allegations raise further questions as to who manufactured the devices and just how they made their way into Hezbollah’s pockets. Hungarian authorities denied Gold Apollo’s suggestion, saying that the Budapest-registered company “is a trading intermediary” with no manufacturing sites in the country. CNN has attempted to reach BAC at the address listed for its office, located in a residential area of Budapest.
Persons: Hsu Ching, kuang, Hsu, Gold, International Communication Zoltan Kovacs, Kovacs, Organizations: Getty, Consulting, , International Communication, CNN Locations: Beirut's, AFP, Lebanon, Budapest, Hungarian, Hungary, ” Hungary’s
New York CNN —The strike at Boeing by 33,000 members of the International Association of Machinists union, which reaches its seventh day today, has already cost the company and workers $572 million, according to an estimate from Anderson Economic Group. “The first week of losses for Boeing are substantial, but they’ll pale in comparison to what comes in the following weeks,” Anderson told CNN. The strike at Boeing (BA), on the other hand, has yet to have a measurable economic impact on airlines so far, Anderson said. The losses for workers, primarily the 33,000 union members who have gone on strike, as well as for suppliers come to about $117 million in the first week. The strike will also cost about $10 million in local losses, including at businesses near the plants, according to Anderson.
Persons: Patrick Anderson, , ” Anderson, Anderson, Kelly Ortberg, Boeing’s, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, Anderson Economic, CNN, General Motors, Max, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Airbus Locations: New York, Michigan, South Carolina
For the first time in its century-plus history, the Anti-Defamation League is suing a Fortune 500 company, Intel , joining a case brought by the law firm of Wigdor on behalf of a former Israeli employee of the technology firm. Intel has operated in Israel for 50 years, where it has invested more than $50 billion, and remains one of Israel's largest private employers with more than 11,700 Israeli employees. The company estimated $8.7 billion in exports from its Intel operations, accounting for 5.5% of Israel's high-tech exports and 1.75% of the country's GDP, in 2022. When employers do not meet their legal obligations in protecting their Jewish employees, ADL will not hesitate to act." The former Israeli employee also recently sent an open letter to Intel's board of directors about his complaint.
Persons: wasn't, Jonathan Greenblatt, Greenblatt, Google, we've Organizations: Defamation League, Fortune, Intel, ADL, CNBC, Google Locations: Wigdor, Israel, U.S, boardrooms, Gaza
Heading into a lower interest-rate environment, there is one stock that should be on investors' radar, according to Ariel Investments' Charles Bobrinskoy: Oracle. " AI is all about analyzing your data, and Oracle controls a lot of that data." While Bobrinskoy said Oracle used to be "way too cheap," it is currently "getting pretty close to fairly valued." Bobrinskoy now expects there to be a rotation into value stocks given the view that there is a lower risk of a recession. "Value stocks are very cheap," he continued.
Persons: Ariel, Charles Bobrinskoy, CNBC's, Bobrinskoy, BorgWarner, Stocks Organizations: Ariel Investments, Oracle, Federal Reserve
CNN —Lebanon is reeling after facing deadly back-to-back attacks targeting Hezbollah members – with pagers simultaneously exploding across the country on Tuesday, then walkie-talkies detonating in a similar fashion on Wednesday. At least 22 people, including children, have died so far from the two attacks, which Lebanese officials have blamed on Israel. Firefighters put out flames and a crowd gathers after a reported explosion in Saida, Lebanon, on September 18, 2024. How have Hezbollah, Israel and the world responded? It appears US officials were largely in the dark until reports emerged of the explosions, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
Persons: pagers, Mahmoud Zayat, Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel, Mohamed Azakir, ICOM, , Abdallah Bou Habib, Yoav Gallant, ” Gallant, Organizations: CNN, pagers, Firefighters, Getty, Hamas, American University of, American University of Beirut Medical Center, The New York Times, NBC News, Lebanon’s, United Nations Security Council, Israeli, UN, , Human Rights Watch Locations: Lebanon, Israel, Beirut, Iran, Saida, AFP, Gaza, Yemen, Syria, Iraq, Israeli, American University of Beirut, Asia, Europe, Hungarian, Budapest, United States
Edward Frazer and Sam Brashears have built software together since fourth grade, and that's exactly what they'll start with if you're a venture capitalist listening to their pitch for funding. The two 22-year-old cofounders and longtime friends started developing the API integration software known as DryMerge last year. "Sam and I have spent more time with each other than anyone else except probably our families, so we're just really, really good friends." When evaluating team risk, VCs also look for whether the co-founders can build the product the way they envision it. Here's the eight-page pitch deck that Frazer and Brashears used to secure their $2.2 million seed round for DryMerge.
Persons: Edward Frazer, Sam Brashears, Frazer, Slack, DryMerge, Sam, Brashears, VCs, they've Organizations: Service, Business, Garage Capital, Goodwater, Ritual, Yale University, University of Wisconsin Locations: Madison
The U.S. government has restricted the export of Nvidia's most advanced chips to China since 2022, with restrictions tightening last year. "These companies have made notable progress in developing AI chips tailored to specific applications (ASICs)," Wei Sun, a senior analyst at Counterpoint Research, told CNBC. China's key challengesThe flags of China and the USA are being displayed on a smartphone, with an NVIDIA chip visible in the background. Huawei leading the packTriolo identified Huawei as one of the leaders in China with its Ascend series of data center processors. In its annual report earlier this year, Nvidia explicitly identified Huawei, among other companies, as a competitor in areas such as chips, software for AI and networking products.
Persons: Nvidia's, China's, Wei Sun, Paul Triolo, Albright Stonebridge, SMIC, TSMC, Triolo, Chip IPOs Organizations: Nvidia, CNBC, Huawei, Alibaba, Baidu, Technology, Counterpoint Research, NVIDIA, Nurphoto, Wall Locations: Beijing, wean, China, U.S, USA, SMIC
The Fed looks like it's following the same path it did in 1995, according to TS Lombard. It's also great news for stocks, as the S&P 500 more than doubled in value that decade. AdvertisementThe Fed is following a 30-year-old playbook with its interest rate moves — and that's good news for the US economy, according to TS Lombard. Stocks soared a day after the big rate cut. Despite wobbling in the hours after the Fed's rate move, the major indexes hit fresh records in Thursday trades.
Persons: It's, , Dario Perkins, Perkins, Stocks Organizations: TS Lombard, Service, Fed, American Institute for Economic Research, Cleveland Fed
Many companies don't have cyber insurance because of costs, but the market is growing. Cyber insurance can help companies recover financially from cyberattacks and data breaches. But one way leaders can minimize the impact of losses from a cybersecurity incident is by getting cyber insurance. One reason is the cost: The Cyber Readiness Institute estimates that cyber insurance can cost businesses $500 to $5,000 a year. What cyber insurance does and doesn't coverMany policies offer first- and third-party coverage, and most companies need both, Engstrom said.
Persons: , Shruti Engstrom, Engstrom, Josephine Wolff, Wolff, it's, Stephen Boyer, Boyer Organizations: Service, IBM, Tufts University, Insurance, Federal Trade Commission, Companies Locations: cyberattacks
Talen's surge comes on the back of its deal to sell a data center campus to Amazon Web Services and supply the facility with nuclear power from the Susquehanna station northwest of Allentown, Pennsylvania. The deal is viewed as a trailblazing agreement for the power industry, and Wall Street has taken notice. A year ago, Talen was not covered by any Wall Street analysts, according to FactSet data. And Talen's assets are located almost entirely in the PJM grid, a predominantly mid-Atlantic region where power prices are expected to explode as demand outstrips supply due in part to growing data center load. Data center developers are expected to spend $250 billion annually on data centers, Barclays analyst Nicholas Campanella said in a note this week.
Persons: Talen, Shahriar Pourreza, Pourreza, TLN, William Appicelli, Nicholas Campanella, Campanella, amortization, Appicelli Organizations: Talen Energy Corporation, Amazon Web Services, Street, Barclays, Guggenheim, Jefferies, UBS, Susquehanna, Talen Energy, AWS, American Electric Power, AEP, Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Locations: Susquehanna, Allentown , Pennsylvania, Wednesday's
German media empire Axel Springer to split in deal with KKR
  + stars: | 2024-09-19 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Passers-by walk in front of the main entrance to the Axel Springer high-rise. The two sides had reached a deal in the summer to split Axel Springer, a source told Reuters on Saturday. KKR and its partner CPP Investments currently hold a 35.6% and 12.9% stake in Axel Springer, respectively, while Doepfner and Friede Springer hold 21.9% and 22.5%. Axel Springer had been preparing to float Stepstone but the planned initial public offering was shelved when war broke out in Ukraine in 2022. KKR and CPP Investments are now likely to target an IPO in the second half of 2025, according to an industry source.
Persons: Axel Springer, Mathias Doepfner, Axel Springer's, Springer, Friede Springer, Axel's, Doepfner, Friede Organizations: Politico, KKR, Reuters, Investments, Friede Springer, Springer Locations: Hamburg, North America, Aviv, Ukraine
Moscow — Vladislav Bakalchuk, the estranged husband of Russia’s richest woman, was arrested and charged with murder Thursday, his lawyers said, after a deadly shootout at the Moscow office of Russia’s largest online retailer. Two people were killed in a shooting Wednesday just a few blocks away from the Kremlin at the Wildberries office, as a dispute over the company’s future took a violent turn. Tatyana founded Wildberries, Russia’s answer to Amazon, in 2004, growing it from an online clothes reseller into a major marketplace for all kinds of goods. Tatyana Bakalchuk, billionaire and chief executive officer of Wildberries OOO, pictured in her office in Moscow, Russia, on Feb. 16, 2021. Tatyana said Vladislav and his colleagues had tried to seize the office and that there was no meeting scheduled.
Persons: Moscow — Vladislav Bakalchuk, Russia’s, Vladislav, Tatyana Bakalchuk, Wildberries, Russ, Tatyana, Elena Chernyshova, Robert Mirzoyan, Ramzan Kadyrov, Vladimir Putin’s, “ Vladislav Organizations: Kremlin, Russ Group, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Moscow, Russia, RVB, Wildberries, Soviet Union
This trade was the biggest post-Fed winner
  + stars: | 2024-09-19 | by ( Sean Conlon | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
It looks like small caps were the winning trade following the Federal Reserve's supersized rate cut on Wednesday . With that, the fund has climbed 3.1% this week and 10.2% in the third quarter alone, double the return of the S & P 500 in each period. Large-cap stocks easily outperformed small caps in five of eight instances when the Fed was lowering rates, small caps outperformed twice and in one case, 1995, there was virtually no difference. Regime Indicator to 'Downturn' all support our preference for large vs small [stocks]," the analysts wrote. In Thursday's session, the S & P jumped 1.7% to a fresh all-time high, topping the 5,700 mark for the first time.
Persons: Russell, Clinton Organizations: Fed, Strategas Securities, Federal, Bank of America, U.S
Darden Restaurants — Shares advanced nearly 11% after the restaurant operator announced a multiyear partnership with Uber for on-demand delivery later this year. The company reported weaker-than-expected quarterly earnings and revenue, however, as its sales weakened at Olive Garden and its fine dining restaurants. DoorDash — The food delivery stock rose more than 3% after an upgrade to buy from neutral at BTIG. Alibaba – Shares rose more than 4% after the Chinese e-commerce company launched more than 100 open-source artificial intelligence models and a text-to-video tool. FedEx — Shares rose more than 1% ahead of the shipping giant's first-quarter earnings report due after the bell.
Persons: Uber, Jefferies, chipmakers, FactSet, Alibaba, Max, Stocks, bitcoin, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Darden, Olive, NextEra Energy, Nvidia, Arm Holdings, Micron, Micron Technology, FedEx —
Morgan Stanley reiterates Apple as overweight The firm said iPhone 16 demand may not be as bad as feared after comments from the T-Mobile CEO. Morgan Stanley reiterates Nio as overweight Morgan Stanley said it's bullish on the EV company as Nio unveils its latest mid-sized family model, the L60. " Morgan Stanley reiterates Tesla as overweight Morgan Stanley said it's concerned about the company's robotaxi event but that it's standing by the stock. Morgan Stanley downgrades Elanco to equal weight from overweight Morgan Stanley said it "lacks conviction" in shares of the pet biopharma company. "We are initiating on Coursera (COUR) with a Buy rating and a PO of $11 (44% upside potential).
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Apple, TMUS, Piper Sandler, Robinhood, Piper, KeyBanc, Redburn, Mizuho, Raymond James, Nio, it's bullish, TD Cowen, Cowen, Tesla, it's, Hertz, Wells, Morgan Stanley downgrades Elanco, rideshare Organizations: Mobile, Apple Intelligence, JPMorgan, Gas Sciences, Kodiak Gas Services, Talos Energy, Northern Oil, Nio, Micron, Barclays, UW, Laboratories, Abbott Laboratories, Outfront Media, " Bank of America Locations: Kodiak
This photograph taken on April 6, 2022, shows a general view of the National Thermal Power Corporation (NTPC) plant in Dadri. The mounds of jet-black coal shimmering under the afternoon sun at the Dadri power plant are a raw illustration of India's coal dependence -- a habit that despite increasing pressure, the country is finding hard to kick. India's NTPC Green Energy filed draft papers for a 100 billion rupees ($1.19 billion) initial public offering on Wednesday, as it looks to cash in on the country's renewables expansion plans and a red-hot equities market. The company, a unit of state-owned power producer NTPC , will only issue new shares, and existing shareholders will not sell any stake, the draft papers showed. So far this year, about 235 companies have gone public and raised more than $8.6 billion, which exceeds the total amount raised last year.
Persons: NTPC Organizations: National Thermal Power Corporation, Green Energy Locations: Dadri, India
Read previewElon Musk's X says it accidentally restored temporary access to the social media platform in Brazil on Wednesday, just weeks after it was banned in the country. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. This made "blocking the app much more complicated," the country's trade group for internet service providers added. In response, Musk closed X's Brazil offices and refused to comply with an order to name a legal representative in the country. X didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.
Persons: , Elon Musk's, ABRINT, Basílio Rodriguez Pérez, Pérez, Musk, Alexandre de Moraes, X, Moraes, X didn't Organizations: Service, Global Government Affairs, Business, Brazilian Association of Internet, Telecommunications Providers, BBC, AFP, New York Times Locations: Brazil, Brazilian, Moraes
The Israeli military said it had struck Hezbollah infrastructure and a weapons storage facility in southern Lebanon in overnight airstrikes. Israeli artillery also struck several areas in southern Lebanon, the IDF said in a statement. In northern Israel, at least eight people were injured by anti-tank fire from across the Lebanon border, health authorities said early Thursday. While Israel has not taken responsibility for the attacks, the militant group and Lebanese officials also pinned the blame on Israel. Whether original Gold Apollo products were tampered with, or entirely fake ones manufactured, was still being investigated, a spokesperson for the Taiwanese Economic Affairs Ministry told NBC News.
Persons: Hassan Nasrallah, Yoav Gallant, Gallant, Lloyd Austin, Israel, Abdallah Rashid Bouhabib, NNA, Icom, Yoshiki Enomoto, Enomoto, didn't, Cristiana, Gold, Arcidiacono Organizations: Hamas, Israeli, NBC News, United Nations Security Council, Lebanese Telecommunications Ministry, Reuters, Icom, NBC, Consulting, Taiwanese Economic Affairs Ministry Locations: Beirut's, Lebanon, Japan, Iran, Gaza, Israel, U.S, New York, Taiwan, Bulgaria, Beirut, Osaka, East
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