Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Healthcare —"


25 mentions found


The Department of Justice should investigate four of the nation’s biggest operators of youth residential treatment facilities for civil rights violations and fraud, Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., argued Wednesday in letters to Attorney General Merrick Garland. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., led a two-year probe into residential treatment facilities for at-risk youth. Wyden said these were clear violations of federal Medicaid rules prohibiting residential treatment facilities from restraining children to discipline them, and from simultaneously restraining and secluding children. Acadia and UHS have both paid multimillion-dollar settlements in recent years to resolve DOJ probes into their hospitals and psychiatric centers. However, those cases did not focus on youth facilities run by the companies, which Wyden is asking the DOJ to investigate.
Persons: Sen, Ron Wyden, General Merrick Garland, Wyden, Healthcare —, , Mandel Ngan, Devereux, UHS, “ It’s, ” Leah Yaw, ” Acadia, ” Vivant, Wyden’s, ” Wyden, Organizations: Justice, NBC News, — Universal Health Services, Acadia Healthcare, Behavioral Health, Healthcare, DOJ, Getty, Senate Finance Committee, , Centers, Medicare, Medicaid Services, Administration, Children, Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC Locations: Acadia, AFP
Southwest Airlines — The airline jumped 11% after it raised its third-quarter revenue forecast and authorized $2.5 billion in share buybacks. Starbucks — The coffee chain rose nearly 2% after Bernstein upgraded shares to outperform , citing confidence in the company's new CEO . CarMax — The used car retailer jumped nearly 6% after topping sales estimates for the fiscal second quarter. New York Community Bank — Shares of the regional lender jumped nearly 8% after Barclays upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight. Accenture — The professional services stock rose nearly 5% on better-than-expected fiscal fourth quarter results.
Persons: Bernstein, Jabil, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Erik Woodring, , Jesse Pound, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Micron Technology, Applied Materials, ASML, Lam Research, Wall Street Journal, Justice Department, Southwest Airlines —, Elliott Investment Management, Starbucks, NRG Energy, GE Healthcare —, UBS, Jefferies, New York Community Bank, Barclays, Bilibili, Accenture Locations: China, Bilibili —
The report examined Americans who have identified as nonprofit workers on the Census' American Community Survey, including many employees in healthcare, educational services, and social assistance. Younger nonprofit workers are particularly struggling. According to the report, 37% of nonprofit workers under the age of 25 fall into the ALICE category. Similarly, 23% of nonprofit workers ages 25 to 44 are considered ALICEs. And, while 16% of white nonprofit workers were below the ALICE threshold, 35% of Black workers in the sector were struggling to make ends meet.
Persons: ALICE, Lisa Kelley, they're, It's, Cherie Tobias, Melissa Hedden Organizations: Service, United, Survey, Business, SNAP, Medicaid Locations: El Paso , Texas, Alexandria , Virginia, Cincinnati, Michigan
Hemant Taneja, the CEO of top venture firm General Catalyst, cofounded the healthcare startup Commure in 2017, and launched it in 2020. AdvertisementIt's made six acquisitions in four years — a remarkable number for a healthcare startup. He hatched Commure inside General Catalyst in 2017 alongside former leaders from Google, Salesforce, and healthcare data analytics firm Health Catalyst. The Philadelphia-based health system co-created a startup with General Catalyst, patient engagement platform Tendo, in 2020. General Catalyst said HATCo will work closely with its more than 20 health system partners, including HCA Healthcare.
Persons: Hemant Taneja, Catalyst, PitchBook, Commure, It's, Augmedix, He's, Tyler Le, Taneja, Livongo, Teladoc, Glen Tullman, Ashwini Zenooz, CommureOS, Tanay Tandon, Rusty Russell, Strongline, Tandon, didn't, General Catalyst, it's, Axios, he's, HATCo, GABRIELLA AUDI, wasn't, Hemant Organizations: Catalyst, Business, Catalyst's, Google, NASDAQ, Jefferson Health, Healthcare, HCA Healthcare, Athelas, SMP Labs, SMP, Commure, BI, FCC, Labs, Strongline Pro, Strongline, Northern District of, Canopy, General, Health, Healthcare Assurance Transformation Corporation, Summa Health, Olive AI, Augmedix, HCA, Getty, Big Tech, Commure's Locations: Livongo, Philadelphia, Commure, PatientKeeper, Athelas, Strongline, Northern District, Northern District of California, Ohio, Augmedix
Subramanian said investors should buy defensive stocks so they can "sleep at night." According to Bank of America strategist Savita Subramanian, investors should "get used to the volatility." AdvertisementTo combat expectations of continued volatility, Subramanian said investors should buy defensive stocks that would allow them to "sleep at night." "The best hedge is owning high quality stocks," Subramanian said of combating market volatility. Most of these defensive stocks are found in defensive sectors, which include consumer staples, healthcare, real estate, and utilities.
Persons: Savita Subramanian, Subramanian, , They're, Stocks Organizations: . Bank of America, Service, Bank of America, Procter, Gamble, Kroger, PepsiCo, Walmart, Utilities, Investors, Consolidated Edison, Alliant Energy, CMS Energy, Healthcare, Quest Diagnostics, Essex Property Trust, Digital Realty Trust Locations: Essex
Ford posted adjusted earnings per share of 47 cents compared to the consensus forecast of 68 cents, according to LSEG. Edwards also reported second-quarter adjusted earnings of 70 cents a share, a penny above expectations, per LSEG. Honeywell — Shares moved more than 4% lower after the industrial giant's full-year outlook missed analysts' expectations. According to LSEG, analysts were expecting earnings to come in at $2.20 per share on $15.62 billion in revenue. Northrop Grumman — The defense stock climbed more than 5% after the company beat second-quarter earnings expectations.
Persons: Ford, Molina, FactSet, Edwards Lifesciences, Edwards, CJ Desai, LSEG, RTX, AbbVie, Northrop Grumman, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Ford, Viking Therapeutics, U.S . Army . American Airlines, American Airlines, Honeywell —, Southwest Airlines —, Southwest, Citi, Hasbro, Revenue, Machines, Business Machines, Nasdaq
Southwest reported 58 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $7.35 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were looking for a profit of 51 cents per share on $7.32 billion in revenue. RTX reported $1.41 earnings per share, ex-items, compared to analysts' estimate of $1.30 per share, according to LSEG. KLA reported adjusted earnings of $6.60 per share, higher than analysts' expectations of $6.15 per share, according to LSEG. Ford reported adjusted earnings per share of 47 cents, significantly less than the consensus forecast of 68 cents, per LSEG.
Persons: oversupply, overshadowing, AbbVie, Dow, LSEG, Northrop Grumman, Dr Pepper, ServiceNow, CJ Desai, Molina, FactSet, Edwards, Ford, , Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Christina Cheddar Berk, Fred Imbert Organizations: Airlines —, American Airlines, Honeywell —, Southwest Airlines —, Hasbro, IBM, Northrop, LSEG, Nasdaq, KLA Corporation, U.S . Army, Molina Healthcare, Technology, Ford, Viking Therapeutics Locations: LSEG
The automaker posted adjusted earnings per share of 47 cents, significantly less than analysts' forecast of 68 cents, per LSEG. The burrito chain topped earnings and revenue expectations as it saw higher traffic at its restaurants. The company reported adjusted earnings of $2.43 per share on revenue of $15.77 billion for the second quarter. ServiceNow posted second-quarter adjusted earnings of $3.13 per share on revenue of $2.62 billion. KLA reported adjusted earnings of $6.60 per share, higher than analysts' expectations of $6.15 per share, per LSEG.
Persons: LSEG, ServiceNow, Molina, FactSet, Edwards, O'Reilly, , Darla Mercado Organizations: Ford, Wall, Automotive, Machines, IBM, Healthcare, KLA Corporation, Revenue, O'Reilly Automotive
Scott Wren, a senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, recently noted that market breadth is abnormally narrow. He found that the five best performers in the S&P 500 accounted for nearly three-fifths of its exceptional 10.6% year-to-date gain through May 31. That fate will soon apply to the S&P 500, Wren warned. Such a sell-off would take the S&P 500 below 5,000 for the first time since April. "And it's tough to be patient when the S&P 500 set a bunch of all-time high records."
Persons: , Scott Wren, Wren, Steve Sosnick, Sosnick, who's, it's, we've, they've, they're, we're, Goldman Sachs, There's, He's Organizations: Service, Wells, Wells Fargo Investment Institute, Business, Interactive Brokers, Wells Fargo Investment, Nvidia, Investors Locations: Wells Fargo
A new generative AI tool can create those studies in minutes. That directive informed Atropos' development of ChatRWD, which Atropos Health launched in beta form in October to 75 customers. Atropos says it's the first generative AI tool to create publication-grade studies from clinical data in minutes. AdvertisementAtropos' $33 million Series B funding follows Atropos' $14 million Series A in August 2022, bringing the company's total funding to $54 million. See the 22-slide pitch deck Atropos Health used to raise $33 million in Series B funding.
Persons: , Brigham Hyde, Valtruis, Jim Breyer's Breyer, Laurene Powell Jobs, Nigam Shah, Saurabh, Hyde, Atropos, Green Button, Green, Johnson, Johnson's Janssen Organizations: Service, Business, Atropos, Cencora Ventures, McKesson Ventures, Merck GHI Fund, Presidio Ventures, Stanford University, National Institutes of Health, Atropos Health, pharma Locations: Geneva, Arcadia
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. Jim Cramer noted it's been a relatively muted week for economic news and Fed pronouncements. 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, it's, Jim, , Jim Cramer's, ABT Organizations: CNBC, Federal Reserve, Dow Jones, Abbott Laboratories, GE Healthcare, GE
To make that happen, Crockett retired a few years ahead of schedule, collected early Social Security, and sold her house, cars, and most of her other valuable belongings. I live totally on my Social Security," she said. There's walking groups, there's jogging groups, there's knitting groups, there's yoga, there's something for everyone here." One 63-year-old said that she doesn't see her Social Security keeping her afloat due to the lingering impacts of the pandemic, which caused her to lose her job and run through her savings. AdvertisementAre you living abroad?
Persons: Debra Crockett, Crockett, she's, didn't, it's, there's Organizations: Service, Social Security, Business, BI Locations: Europe, Turkey, Turkish
Change Healthcare provides payment, revenue management and other solutions like e-prescription software. UnitedHealth told CNBC in April that it paid a ransom to try and protect patient data. Its business unit Optum — which provides care to 103 million customers — and Change Healthcare — which touches one in three patient records — merged in 2022. Committee Chairman Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said in his opening remarks that the Change Healthcare breach serves as a "dire warning about the consequences of too-big-to-fail mega-corporations." Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo., pressed Witty to share how UnitedHealth is working to ensure something like the Change Healthcare breach will not happen again.
Persons: Andrew, UnitedHealth, Sen, Ron Wyden, Wyden, Thom Tillis, they're, Tillis, Blackcat, Michael Bennet Organizations: Senate, Capitol, U.S ., Finance, UnitedHealth, Healthcare, CNBC, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, U.S . Department of Justice Locations: Washington , DC
Eli Lilly — Shares added 5% after Eli Lilly, maker of the Mounjaro diabetes and weight loss drug, beat analysts' expectations for first-quarter adjusted earnings. PayPal — Shares gained 3.6% after the payment company posted $7.70 billion in first-quarter revenue, beating analysts' estimates for $7.51 billion, according to LSEG. The chipmaker posted adjusted earnings of $3.24 per share, higher than the consensus estimate of $3.16 per share, according to LSEG. Earnings of 24 cents per share on $1.37 billion in revenue exceeded consensus forecasts of 11 cents and $1.36 billion, according to FactSet. Adjusted earnings of 71 cents per share topped anticipated earnings of 65 cents per share.
Persons: Eli Lilly —, Eli Lilly, drugmaker, Jefferies, Tesla, Goldman Sachs, Tenet, Corning, FactSet, Sysco, Medifast, Paccar, Bob Bakish, Skydance, Needham, Macheel, Michelle Fox, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Sarah Min Organizations: PayPal —, PayPal, Semiconductor, Tenet, FactSet, Technology, GE Healthcare Technologies, LSEG, Taco Bell, KFC, Paramount Global, CBS, Paramount Locations: Indianapolis, China, LSEG, FactSet, Houston
A handful of drivers will keep the American economy humming along, said Jose Rasco, chief investment officer of the Americas at HSBC's wealth division. On the cyclical front, Rasco expects growth to cool as the effects of higher rates become fully felt. "Those four themes suggest to me that's how we avoid recession," said Rasco, a Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch alum. Bonus: Presidential election year While not exactly an investment trend, Rasco also noted that a big part of his short-term optimism toward U.S. stocks stems from the looming presidential election. Data shows U.S. stocks tend to outperform in presidential election years.
Persons: Jose Rasco, Rasco, Merrill Lynch, it's Organizations: Federal Reserve, CNBC Pro, Federal, Lehman Brothers, U.S, U.S . Research, BlackRock, HSBC Asset Management Locations: New York City, Americas, China, Mexico, U.S
Kylie Adamec moved to Portugal in 2022 after struggling to get her career off the ground in the US. I had a medical emergency when I was 23 years old, and I had a private healthcare plan in the United States. There's an analogy for how people socialize in the United States versus in Portugal. It describes people in the United States as peaches, and people in Portugal as coconuts. Moving back to the United States permanently?
Persons: Kylie Adamec, , I've, Adamec, he'd, who's, It's, Jermaine Amado, Camila Ana Organizations: Service, Colgate, North Locations: Portugal, Chicago, New York City, Lisbon, Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Madison, Toronto, Rome, Europe, New York, Tennessee, United States, Casa Azul, Americas, Japan, Turkey, Spain, Malaysia, Belize, El Salvador
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. Evercore ISI highlighted a bullish outlook for GE HealthCare stock on Friday. "Those who don't own GE HealthCare, this is your chance," Jim said, adding that shares are cheap right now. 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 .
Persons: Jim Cramer, Dow, Jensen Huang, Jim, Eli Lilly, Eli Lilly's, Jim Cramer's Organizations: CNBC, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Broadcom whipsawed, GTC, GE HealthCare, Analysts, General Electric, Food and Drug Administration
Crypto stocks — Stocks whose performance is tied to the price of bitcoin rose as the cryptocurrency pushed to another record for the third day in a row. Dollar Tree posted adjusted earnings of $2.55 per share on $8.64 billion of revenue for the fourth quarter. Analysts surveyed by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, had penciled in $2.65 per share on $8.67 billion in revenue. GE HealthCare — Shares dropped 3% after the medtech company announced a secondary offering of 13 million shares. Analysts had expected earnings of 2 cents per share on revenue of $1.62 billion, per LSEG.
Persons: Coinbase, MicroStrategy, CleanSpark, Baird, Goldman Sachs, Wells, Raymond James, , Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: Marathon, Iris Energy, Texas, Nvidia, Devices, Micron Technology —, Micron, AMD, LSEG, GE, , GE HealthCare Technologies, General Electric, Royal, Petco, Wellness Locations: Kentucky, Royal Caribbean
AbridgeAbridge CEO Dr. Shiv Rao. AbridgeHQ: PittsburghTotal raised: $62.5 millionWhat it does: The medical scribe startup uses large language models to document patient-doctor interactions in electronic medical records. What makes it promising: Easing administrative burdens for providers is top of mind for investors as growing burnout drives more clinicians out of the healthcare field. Abridge is using AI to tackle one of the most time-consuming, burnout-inducing processes in healthcare — clinical documentation.
Persons: Abridge, Shiv Rao Organizations: Abridge, Pittsburgh
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Monday unpacked Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's comments on inflation, saying that even though it's unclear when rates will come down, there is money to be made in the interim. He encouraged investors to buy stocks and not just keep money in lower-risk investments. "I'm beginning to believe that the biggest money will be made between this period where the Fed's holding pat and the moment where we get the first rate cuts," Cramer said. After the Federal Reserve's meeting last week, Powell said the central bank would cut rates sometime this year, but not likely in March, when many on Wall Street expected. Cramer conceded that some investors think stocks are a reckless option until the Fed starts cutting.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Jerome Powell's, Cramer, Powell, Scott Pelley Organizations: Wall, Fed
That's tough to write, even as a 31-year-old who's never wanted kids, without tacking on a "right now" at the end. I don't take the decision of whether to bring a new life into this world lightly. My partner and I have health insurance through our employers, but we've been between coverage before. Plus, there can be up to a three-month delay for health insurance to kick in when you start a new job. Now factor in prenatal care, postnatal care, diapers, and — even worse, I'm told — formula, as well as day care and education.
Persons: , who's, I've, wasn't, neurodiversity, I'm, we've, That's Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Oregon, Iceland
Two Americans who moved to Canada told Business Insider they did so to escape polarized and divisive politics, inadequate healthcare, and to feel safer in their communities. A lot of the characteristics Ouellet was looking for in New Zealand, he said, he found in British Columbia. Advertisement"In British Columbia, the regulations for being able to own a gun are extremely tight," he said. He added that there is still an opioid crisis in British Columbia, but it's not as striking as it is in Portland. Ouellet has no regrets about moving to British Columbia, but Canada's housing crisis sidelined his dreams of homeownership.
Persons: , Rae Johnson, Johnson, Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, wasn't, Joe Biden, Roe, Wade, Michael Niren, couldn't, Niren, United States —, Canada Chris Ouellet, Ouellet, hasn't, it's, he's Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, Ministry of Health Locations: Canada, Los Angeles, California, United States, American, Portland , Oregon, Victoria, British Columbia, Wellington , New Zealand, New Zealand, Pacific Northwest, Portland, Chicago
Adjusted earnings of 59 cents per share smashed analysts' expectations of 19 cents per share, per LSEG. Revenue also beat estimates, coming in at $3.77 billion compared with the $3.6 billion forecast. Otherwise, the company topped fiscal fourth-quarter earnings and revenue estimates. It now forecasts third-quarter revenue of $108 million to $113 million, lower than prior guidance of $150 million to $165 million. Tenet Healthcare — Shares jumped more than 11% after Tenet Healthcare said it would sell three of its South Carolina hospitals to Novant Health.
Persons: Ross, Dillard's, GitLab, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh Organizations: Old Navy, Revenue, Brands Holdings, Spectrum Brands, ChargePoint Holdings, Tenet, Tenet Healthcare, Novant Health, Ross Stores, Reuters, Justice Department, Pacific Biosciences, UBS, biosciences, , ISI, Barclays Locations: South Carolina, California
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. BJ's Wholesale Club — Shares retreated 4.6% in premarket trading after the company revised its expectation for comparable store sales in the fourth quarter amid shifting consumer behavior. Applied Materials — Shares slid 7.2% on Friday, a day after Reuters reported , citing sources, that the semiconductor company was under a Justice Department probe. Gap — The retailer soared 18.5% in premarket trading Friday. Marriott Vacations Worldwide — Shares of the timeshare company lost 2.5% after a Bank of America downgrade to underperform from neutral.
Persons: Alibaba, FactSet, Ross, Expedia, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min Organizations: BJ's Wholesale, Tenet Healthcare, Novant Health, Reuters, Justice Department, Ross, LSEG, Evercore ISI, Pacific Biosciences, UBS, biosciences, Barclays, Marriott, Bank of America Locations: Alibaba —, Carolina, California, GitLab
Arista Networks reported $1.83 in earnings per share, excluding items, on $1.51 billion in revenue. Analysts polled by FactSet had estimated $1.58 in earnings per share on $1.48 billion in revenue. The company posted a loss of 53 cents per share, while analysts called for 67 cents per share, per LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. Analysts called for $1.20 per share in earnings and revenue of $5.02 billion, per FactSet. The company also gave fourth-quarter revenue guidance ranging between $442 million and $462 million, while analysts called for $451.7 million.
Persons: FactSet, FactSet's, Tenet, Pinterest, LSEG, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Arista Networks, Lattice Semiconductor, Revenue, Tenet
Total: 25