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In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTesla doesn't need the pressure from port strikes, says Roth MKM's Craig IrwinCraig Irwin, Roth MKM senior analyst, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss the port strikes impact on Tesla.
Persons: Roth, Craig Irwin Craig Irwin, Roth MKM
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMcGhee: Now is a good time to think about what you can take off the tableTiffany McGhee, CEO and CIO at Pivotal Advisors, highlights the convergence of macro events, including the Middle East conflict and the port strike, which may spark market volatility.
Persons: McGhee, Tiffany McGhee
Rea: Invest in the long term.
  + stars: | 2024-10-03 | 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 EmailRea: Invest in the long term. Salem Investment Counselors President David Rea emphasizes the importance of long-term investing amid challenges like the port strike and oil issues.
Persons: David Rea Organizations: Invest, Salem Investment Locations: Salem
Brashier said some clients had containers that were once destined for the Port of Savannah diverted to the Port of Norfolk in the last hours before the strike began. More than a dozen container vessels are currently waiting in the port anchorage area of Freeport, Everstream Analytics data shows. MSC, the largest containership company in the world, has diverted two vessels, according to Vizion. A container ship departs the Port of Newark for the Atlantic Ocean on September 30, 2024 seen from New York City. Christian Roeloffs, cofounder and CEO of Container xChange, said the timing of this strike is especially challenging for shippers.
Persons: Eric Adams, Spencer Platt, Biden, Paul Brashier, Brashier, Jose Luis Gonzalez, Mirko Woitzik, Lloyd, Hermann Schulte, Port, Harold Daggett, Daggett, Stew Leonard, Jr, Stew Leonard's, Leonard, Brandon Daniels, Daniels, Christian Roeloffs Organizations: International Longshoremen’s Association, ILA, Getty, International Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, ITS Logistics, CNBC, Trucking, Port, Portsmouth, Reuters, Dresden, Turkey East Coast Express Service, America, Schulte Group, MSC, USMX, Local, Virginia International, Walmart, Depot, Folgers Company, Nike, Container, Analytics Locations: Brooklyn, Brooklyn , New York, Gulf Coast, Savannah, Port of Norfolk, Virginia, Portsmouth , Virginia, U.S, Vizion, East Coast, Port of Norfolk , Virginia, Savannah , Georgia, Egypt, America, Charleston, Port, Freeport, Bahamas, Cristobal, Port of New York, New Jersey, Halifax, Canada, Newark, New York City, New York, Savannah , Norfolk, West Coast, demurrage, China, Israel
How the port strike could actually boost Costco sales
  + stars: | 2024-10-03 | by ( Paulina Likos | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. Club stock Nvidia jumped more than 3% — bucking the pressure on Big Tech. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Jensen Huang, Eli Lilly, Lilly, Oppenheimer, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Wall, Nvidia, Big Tech, Blackwell, Broadcom, Devices, Food and Drug Administration, Costco, AMD Locations: New Jersey
There is no need for panic buying, and we encourage consumers to shop responsibly. Bill Simon, former CEO of Walmart, stressed that panic buying is serious and can have a cascading effect on domestic products. "Panic buying not only impacts the availability of imported products, but domestic products as well as consumers shift their purchase behavior," warned Simon. Walmart and Target did not immediately respond to requests about any panic buying patterns identified at their stores. John Catsimatidis, owner of the NYC super chain Gristedes, said the panic buying is occurring and showing no signs of slowing down.
Persons: Stew Leonard, Jr, Stew Leonard's, restocked, Bill Simon, Simon, John Catsimatidis Organizations: CNBC, Gulf Coasts, National Grocers Association, , of Commerce, East, National Retail Federation, Walmart, Target, NYC Locations: Gulf Coast, East Coast, Gulf, United States, U.S, Canada, Mexico, East
CNN —September’s jobs report, due out Friday morning, is expected to show that the US labor market has slowed somewhat but remains on solid footing. While September’s employment data is expected to stay relatively tame, the same can’t be said for the October jobs report, which is set to be released on November 1, just days before the presidential election. The strikes and hurricane-related effects “are not going to permanently alter the trajectory of the labor market; but September is probably our last clean reading on the labor market for a while,” Ryan Sweet, chief US economist at Oxford Economics, told CNN earlier this week. The August jobs report, which showed better-than-expected estimated 142,000 payroll gains and a drop in the unemployment rate, went a long way to quell those fears. It showed that the jobs market is in “stasis,” Wells Fargo economists wrote in a note issued Tuesday.
Persons: bode, Lydia Boussour, ” Ryan Sweet, Helene, , Erica Groshen, They’ve, , Andrew Challenger, Wells, Noah Yosif, ’ Sweet, Ejindu Ume, “ We’re, ” Ume Organizations: CNN, Federal Reserve, Boeing, Gulf Coasts, Oxford Economics, of Labor Statistics, Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relations, Employers, Challenger, Labor Department, Pantheon, Labor, BLS, , American Staffing Association, Oxford, Miami University in Locations: EY, Hurricane, East, Gulf, Miami University in Ohio
Over the 12-month period ending June, about 2 of 3 active bond managers trounced their average passive counterpart, according to a recent analysis from Morningstar . There were a few tailwinds in active managers' favor. With the Fed recently cutting rates by a half point — and Chair Jerome Powell noting that two more quarter-point cuts could be in the cards this year — a new challenge awaits these active bond funds. As interest rates fall, active managers can position accordingly, said Roger Hallam, global head of rates at Vanguard. "We expect active managers to make a little more, and they should be because they're doing more trades and it costs more to manage active portfolios," said Olmsted.
Persons: , Ryan Jackson, Jerome Powell, it's, Jackson, Paul Olmsted, Roger Hallam, wouldn't, Hallam, Morningstar, Olmsted Organizations: Federal Reserve, Morningstar, Vanguard, Bond Fund, SEC
Hard seltzers, spiked seltzers, and their ilk have been marketed as lighter than traditional alcoholic beverages. In the 2010s, the hard seltzers started to pop up, with names like White Claw and Truly, both of which launched in 2016. Advertisement"During the pandemic, hard seltzers really blew up, and I think hard seltzers are one of those ones that were perceived as a little bit of a better-for-you option," said Kaleigh Theriault, an associate director of beverage-alcohol thought leadership at NIQ, a market research firm. The market got saturated, and people started to realize there could be a lot more to canned alcohol than beer and hard seltzers. "So companies are having to innovate more and more, and that has led to some higher-ABV canned cocktails."
Persons: they've, aren't, seltzer, Kaleigh Theriault, that's, NIQ, Chris Budzik, Cayman Jack, there's, Kate Bernot, Bernot, you've, " Theriault, It's, Bud, , Bud Light, Budzik, he'd, Will, Emily Stewart Organizations: Brands, Anheuser, Busch InBev, NIQ, AB InBev, Coca, Modelo, Business Locations: seltzers, Manhattan, NIQ, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Vermont, America
The International Longshoremen's Association and the United States Maritime Alliance reached a deal. Port employers and striking dockworkers reached a tentative agreement on wages, according to a joint statement. The strike will be suspended until January to allow time to work out the specifics of a new contract. The 62% increase would up the hourly rate for port workers from $39 to $63 in the coming years, according to the outlet. AdvertisementThe three-day strike shuttered ports across the East and Gulf Coast, disrupting the supply chain and impacting consumer items like fruits and car parts.
Persons: dockworkers, Organizations: Longshoremen's Association, United States Maritime Alliance, Service, CNN, Associated Press, Street Journal, White, The, CBS News, International Longshoremen's Association Locations: Maine, Texas, West, East, Gulf
New York CNN —With barely a month to go before the US presidential election, a trifecta of economic shocks is threatening to sap Vice President Kamala Harris’ momentum on voters’ No. 1 issue: a port strike, a hurricane and an escalation of fighting in the Middle East. Price pain could crop up elsewhere if the East Coast port strike, which began Tuesday, drags on longer than a week. “If the Boeing strike and the port strike … last through the second week of October, job growth for October could be negative,” researchers at Oxford Economics wrote Wednesday. A negative jobs report hasn’t been seen in this country since December 2020, the last full month of the Trump administration.
Persons: CNN Business ’, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump hasn’t, , , Harris, Emily Elconin, Harris ’, Price, Biden, Hurricane Helene, Moody’s, Helene, hasn’t, Trump, Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Republican, Democratic, Bloomberg, Getty, Boeing, Biden, Oxford Economics Locations: New York, Georgia, East, Maine, Texas, Carolinas, Florida, Tennessee
CNBC Daily Open: Soft landing hit by minor turbulence
  + stars: | 2024-10-02 | by ( Yeo Boon Ping | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Mark Felix | Afp | Getty ImagesThis 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. Port workers along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast started striking Tuesday. It's just the first days of the port strike and flare-up in Middle East tensions, however. The best-case scenario would be that recent events are just minor turbulence on the way to a soft landing.
Persons: Mark Felix, Kathy Hochul, Adam Kamins, Christopher Ball, Piper Sandler, Campbell, It's, Steve Liesman, Jeff Cox, Fred Imbert, Lori Ann LaRocco, Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Brian Evans Organizations: Afp, Getty, CNBC, U.S ., Gulf Coast, New, Moody's, Quinnipiac University, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Apple Locations: Seabrook , Texas, Port, U.S, U.S . East Coast, New York, New Jersey, Iran, Major U.S, East
President Joe Biden called for port companies to offer fair deals to striking dockworkers. He and the acting labor secretary, Julie Su, urged dock workers and companies to negotiate. AdvertisementPresident Joe Biden and other government officials are urging port companies to offer stronger contracts to the 45,000 dockworkers on strike at East and Gulf Coast ports. The message from the Biden administration is clear: Companies need to offer a fair deal to the striking workers as soon as possible. Su said the port workers' sacrifices and importance during the pandemic and in helping communities recover from Hurricane Helene weren't fairly reflected in their salaries.
Persons: Joe Biden, Pete Buttigieg, Julie Su, , Biden, Hurricane Helene, Buttigieg, he'd, she'd, Su, Hurricane Helene weren't, Taft, Hartley Organizations: Service, JPMorgan, Federal Maritime Commission, US Maritime Alliance, International Longshoremen's Association, Associated Press, dockworkers, Department of Labor, Department of Transportation, Business Insider Locations: East, Gulf Coast, Hurricane
CNBC Daily Open: Minor turbulence for the soft landing
  + stars: | 2024-10-02 | by ( Yeo Boon Ping | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Kirk Side | Houston Chronicle | Getty ImagesThis 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. Port workers along the U.S. East Coast and Gulf Coast started striking Tuesday. Higher oil prices pose a risk to inflation resurging, or at least slowing less than everyone is hoping for. The best-case scenario would be that recent events are just minor turbulence on the way to a soft landing.
Persons: Seabrook . Kirk, Kathy Hochul, Adam Kamins, Christopher Ball, Piper Sandler, Campbell, It's, Steve Liesman, Jeff Cox, Fred Imbert, Lori Ann LaRocco, Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Brian Evans Organizations: Houston Chronicle, CNBC, U.S ., Gulf Coast, New, Moody's, Quinnipiac University, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Apple Locations: Seabrook ., Port, U.S, U.S . East Coast, New York, New Jersey, Iran, Major U.S, East
That's led the market to assume rates will fall to pre-pandemic lows, BofA's Bernard Mensah says. Yet, inflationary risks will likely keep rates elevated, Mensah says. Before the pandemic, in the decade following the Great Financial Crisis, interest rates remained at historical lows. Despite the Fed's apparent confidence that pricing pressures have eased, Mensah says a variety of inflationary risks will keep interest rates higher. Other analysts have also pointed to inflation risks from geopolitical conflicts.
Persons: That's, BofA's Bernard Mensah, Mensah, , Bank of America's Bernard Mensah, Rowe Price, Tomasz Wieladek Organizations: Fed, Service, Federal Reserve, Bank of America's, Bloomberg Locations: US, China, England, Switzerland, Sweden, Canada, Mexico
Automation is a core issue at play in the ongoing dockworker strike at Eastern US ports. AdvertisementStriking dockworkers at US ports say they're worried that jobs could plummet as shipping companies increasingly turn to automation. Picketing workers gathered at ports in New York and Miami carrying signs reading "Machines don't feed families" and "Fight automation, Save jobs." AdvertisementThe union's objection to the way shipping companies are using automation now is a key sticking point in the negotiations for a new labor contract. The move eventually contributed to the ILA earning the unusual distinction of being a labor union being named in an unfair labor practices complaint filed by management.
Persons: , USMX, Harold Daggett, Jesus Olarte, Daggett, it's, Stephen Edwards, Dominick Organizations: Service, International Longshoremen's Association, US Maritime Alliance, Business, Port, Getty, Maersk, APM, New York Times, ILA Locations: Eastern, New York, Miami, East Coast, Anadolu, Mobile , Alabama, Port of Virginia, Norfolk, Baltimore
Its fund manager, Sean Peche, has a track record in picking winners that have helped the fund beat the S & P 500 over the past two years without owning any of the so-called " Magnificent Seven " technology stocks. The fund manager identified the U.S.-listed Perion Network as its worst-performing stock investment of the year. As an Israeli company not included in major stock indices, the Ranmore fund manager believed it might be undervalued due to reduced investor attention. The Ranmore fund manager noted that the company's cash reserves, which stood at $188 million at the end of 2023, provided some protection against further losses. Despite the setback with Perion Network, Peche remains optimistic about other investments.
Persons: Sean Peche, Peche, Bing, CNBC's Silvia Amaro, Perion, Microsoft's Bing, PERI 1Y, Macron Organizations: Global Equity Fund, Network, Microsoft, Perion, Nippon Locations: U.S, France
The US port strike on the East and Gulf Coasts could threaten farm exports amid harvest season. AdvertisementThe US port strike at East and Gulf Coast ports isn't just impacting bananas and consumer imports into the country — it could hurt America's farm exports too. Seyfert told Politico on Friday that while some farm exports can be moved to the West Coast for shipping, there's probably not enough capacity there. "A prolonged strike would force importers to seek alternative supplies, either from West Coast ports or other countries," wrote Glauber. AdvertisementLogistics experts told Business Insider's Tim Paradis that the port strike could damage the US economy badly.
Persons: Joe Biden, , Mike Seyfert, Seyfert, Joseph Glauber, Tim Paradis, Biden Organizations: Association, Service, White, Politico, Food Policy Research Institute, Logistics, United States Maritime Alliance, International Longshoremen's Association Locations: Gulf, East, Gulf Coast, West Coast, Mexico
Here’s the deal: The East Coast port strike is getting a lot of attention for its potential disruption to the economy — which is precisely the point. No dockworkers means no bananas (or whatever), which means no profits for the companies that produce and ship them. While research shows automation has obvious benefits, like lower operating costs and fewer human-related errors, port automation does not, on its own, significantly improve performance, according to a 2018 McKinsey report. But automation anxiety is rapidly spilling over into office work, where managers are adopting AI in the hopes of replacing human work or amplifying production. As Washington Post columnist Heather Long wrote Tuesday, the strike is “an early battle of well-paid workers against advanced automation.
Persons: CNN Business ’, It’s, , Dennis Daggett, Mark Felix, Sameera Fazili, Biden, it’s, , ” Fazili, Heather Long Organizations: CNN Business, New York CNN, Hollywood, McKinsey, International Longshoremen’s Association, Economic, Getty, National Economic Council, Washington Locations: New York, East Coast, China, Singapore, Europe, Port of New York, New Jersey, Long Beach, Los Angeles, AFP
Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic (AP) — The Dominican Republic announced Wednesday that it would start massive deportations of Haitians living illegally in the country, expelling up to 10,000 of them a week. Government spokesman Homero Figueroa told reporters that the government took the decision after noticing an “excess” of Haitian migrants in the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti. Last year, the Dominican Republic deported more than 174,000 people it says are Haitians, and in the first half of the year, it has expelled at least 67,000 more. Activists have long criticized the administration of President Luis Abinader for what they say are ongoing human rights violations of Haitians and those of Haitian descent born in the Dominican Republic. Undocumented Haitians detained by immigration officials stand inside a police vehicle, in Dajabon, Dominican Republic, May 17, 2024.
Persons: Santo Domingo, Homero Figueroa, Figueroa, Luis Abinader, Abinader, Matias Delacroix Organizations: Dominican Republic, UN, Assembly, US Locations: Dominican Republic, Dominican, Hispaniola, Haiti, UN, Dajabon, Kenya, Jamaica, Belize
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTransportation Sec. Buttigieg on the East Coast port worker strikePete Buttigieg, U.S. Transportation Secretary, join 'The Exchange' to discuss the White House's lack of presence in the port worker's strike, if the administration would step in, and much more.
Persons: Pete Buttigieg Organizations: Transportation Locations: East, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWarehouses could be a big winner from port strikes, in the short-termCNBC’s Diana Olick joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss a surprising sector that could benefit from the port strike.
Persons: Diana Olick
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLazard CEO Peter Orszag on the economy, impact of port strike and Middle East conflict, state of M&APeter Orszag, Lazard CEO and former OMB Director under President Obama, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the economy, impact of the port strike and the Middle East conflict, the Fed's inflation fight, state of dealmaking, what he's learned in his first year as Lazard CEO, and more.
Persons: Peter Orszag, Obama, he's Organizations: Lazard Locations: dealmaking
The $69 billion hedge fund uses a strict trading strategy to make sure it consistently makes money. This trading strategy has helped founder Israel Englander become a billionaire. AdvertisementThe $69 billion Millennium Management hedge fund employs a simple yet effective trading strategy to make sure it almost always makes money in the stock market: cut losing stock positions as quickly as possible. This strict stop-loss trading strategy means the hedge fund goes through a lot of employees, sporting a high turnover rate of about 15%-20% of its staff each year. But the trading strategy is also what turned its founder, Israel Englander, into a billionaire.
Persons: Israel Englander, , Englander Organizations: Management, Service, Millennium, Bloomberg, Wall Street Journal, Millennium Management
President Biden said on Tuesday that his administration will be "monitoring for any price gouging activity" that benefits foreign ocean carriers, including those on the USMX board. He also said "foreign ocean carriers have made record profits since the pandemic, when Longshoremen put themselves at risk to keep ports open." UBS forecast that 20% of Maersk's total volume would touch a U.S. port that would be impacted by the strike. Acting Secretary Julie Su lashed out at the idea that labor wage increases would be passed onto U.S. exporters and importers. I know they understand, just as consumers and American workers understand, that foreign companies who profit from our economy and who employ American workers and have an impact on American consumers should do the right thing, and in that battle, we are always going to stand with American workers, American businesses and American consumers."
Persons: Biden, Longshoremen, majeure, Daggett, Harold Daggett, Lars Jenson, Pete Buttigieg, Julie Su, Taft, Hartley, Buttigieg, Larry Lindsey, Su, Peter Friedmann, I've, nonfarm, Helene, switchers, they're, Jim Bianco, CNBC's, Peter Boockvar, Alan Baer, Steve Lamar, Taft Hartley, Lamar, CNBC's Jeff Cox Organizations: CMA, U.S, United States Maritime Alliance, Vespucci, Federal Reserve, Transportation, Labor, International Longshoremen's Association, UBS, Maersk, Federal Maritime Commission, ILA, Boeing, The Lindsey Group, Agriculture Transportation Coalition, Bianco Research, Bleakley Financial, USA, American Apparel and Footwear Association, Biden Administration, Locations: East, Gulf Coast, U.S, autoworkers
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