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The Education Department is assuring schools and students that its financial aid process is under control, after a botched overhaul over the past year that some colleges say has dented incoming classes. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona has vowed that the FAFSA process is being improved after recent missteps. I want to close up [the] Department of Education, move education back to the states. In May, Cardona announced a “full-scale review” of the Federal Student Aid office that oversees FAFSA and promised “transformational changes” at the division. I’ve taken a college and career readiness class from my high school, but it all sounded really confusing,” she said.
Persons: Miguel Cardona, he’s, We’ve, miguel cardona, “ We’ve, ” Cardona, , Peter G ., NAICU, couldn’t, ” Mark Becker, Donald Trump, disburses Pell, ” Trump, Elon, Cardona, “ We’re, they’re, ” “, falloff, Beth Maglione, Hanalise Yarbrough, Kristi Childs, Kristi Childs Kristi Childs, Childs, Mason Yarbrough, , ” Childs, Hanalise, John Jay, she’s “, I’ve, who’s “ Organizations: Department, Education, Federal Student Aid, NBC News, National Association of Independent Colleges, Universities, Education Department, Association of Public, Grant Universities, Department of Education, Republican, Federal, Aid, College, Network, National Association of Student Financial, Madison, Northwest Mississippi Community College, John, John Jay College of Criminal Locations: U.S, DeSoto County , Mississippi, New York City
CNN —President Joe Biden told top donors on a video call Monday that he is still the best candidate to defeat former President Donald Trump as the Biden campaign and the White House sought to move beyond a crisis threatening to consume the Democratic Party. “It’s still a huge hole to climb out of,” the Democratic donor said, speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid alienating the campaign. While the Biden campaign has pointed to a rush of small-dollar donations over the past week, a senior adviser said the falloff among high-dollar contributors was highly troubling. Morgan blamed Biden’s campaign team for his debate performance and argued that Vice President Kamala Harris is in place “if something happens” to Biden. And that’s what people need to be focusing on.”Phillips said anxious Democratic donors “need to get out of their feelings” and instead put their energy behind turning out those voters and selling them on the administration’s accomplishments.
Persons: Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Biden, , I’m, ” Biden, , It’s, Trump, ” “ We’re, he’ll, , Wes Moore, “ It’s, Chris Korge, “ I’m, Joe ”, Harris, John Morgan, They’ve, Morgan, ” Morgan, Biden’s, Kamala Harris, Steve Phillips, Phillips, ” Phillips, CNN’s Donald Judd, MJ Lee Organizations: CNN, White, Democratic Party, Trump, , House Democrats, MSNBC, Democratic, Heritage Foundation, ABC, campaign’s National Finance, Maryland Gov, National Finance Committee, Democratic National, Biden, Republicans Locations: American, Atlanta, Florida, San Francisco
In this next term, I’m going to make sure we got to — straighten out the tax system. STEPHANOPOULOS: The number of Americans who think you’re too old to serve has doubled since 2020. STEPHANOPOULOS: I’ve — I’ve questioned him and his allies as persistently as any journalist has. We have — I mean, I’m not seen what you’re — you’re proposing. He may bring me down, he may.”STEPHANOPOULOS: Mr. President, I’ve never seen a president 36 percent approval get re-elected.
Persons: Biden, George Stephanopoulos, GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS, BIDEN, Nancy Pelosi, you’ve, I’m, You’ve, I’ve, , , who’ve, what’s Biden, George, — BIDEN, , “ You’re, Walter Reed, Madeleine Albright, Netanyahu, They’ll, ” BIDEN, Putin, it’s, I’d, Donald Trump, You’re, It’s, he’s, you’re, That’s, “ That’s, hadn’t, Nothing’s, They’re, Trump, — I’ve, oth, Hoover, Mark Warner, We’ve, Mark’s, Chuck Schumer, Hakeem Jeffries, “ We’re, Jim Clyburn, they’re, Almighty, “ Joe, ” I’d, Almighty’s, Hakeem, “ Oh, what’s, I’ll, George . Organizations: ABC, The New York Times, National Security Council, New York Times, The Washington Post, Street, NATO, Big Pharma, BIDEN, Putin, AUKUS, Senate, CBS Poll, NBC, Electoral College, Washington Post, Democratic Party, House Democrats, Senate Democrats Locations: Europe, Camp David, North Carolina, , Georgia, The, England, Pacific, Ukraine, South Korea, United States, It’s, New York, China
Elon Musk attends 'Exploring the New Frontiers of Innovation: Mark Read in Conversation with Elon Musk' session during the Cannes Lions International Festival Of Creativity 2024 - Day Three on June 19, 2024 in Cannes, France. Tesla's stock price rose enough on Friday to wipe out its loss for the year and bring its gain for the week to 27%. The latest rally was sparked by a better-than-expected deliveries report for the second quarter on Tuesday. In April, Tesla shares hit a 52-week low after a string of troubling developments. Since last year, Tesla has been offering extensive discounts and incentives to attract customers to its aging lineup of EVs, including its popular entry-level Model 3 sedans, Model Y crossover utility vehicles, and its more expensive, flagship Model S sedans and Model X SUVs.
Persons: Elon Musk, Mark Read, Tesla Organizations: Cannes Lions Locations: Cannes, France, Texas
Americans will be splashing around this summer in the backyard pools they've already got, but not splashing out as much on new ones. Swimming pool installations were part of the home improvement frenzy that swept the country during the pandemic as Americans were stuck at home. Pool Corp., a national pool equipment distributor with a roughly $11 billion market valuation, said last week it expects new pool construction to fall by 15% to 20% this year. But businesses that rely on Americans' appetite for home upgrades are still adjusting to leaner times — including pool builders. In Arizona, Ast said, "the lines get blurred a little bit between luxury and need in the middle of the desert."
Persons: Skip Ast, wasn't, Scott Payne, Payne Organizations: Pool Corp, Shasta, Airlines, Analytics, Ast, Corp Locations: Phoenix, Hatfield , Pennsylvania, Shasta, Arizona
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell met with the press after the March Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, which was pretty fraught. Data centers If there is the whiff of a data center or anything in one, the stock goes higher. It's why Meta stock is a buy a tad lower as stocks tend to revisit those kinds of declines. I worry about Club stock Stanley Black & Decker for this reason, but the dividend will keep it propped up for now. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: what's, Jerome Powell, Powell, Powell isn't, Voltaire, Vertiv, Eaton, Meta, It's, jetsam, Darius Adamczyk, Vimal, Stanley Black, Decker, Azek, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Charlie Scharf, Wells Fargo, Chipotle, that's, Johnson, Jensen Huang, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Scott Mlyn Organizations: Federal, Market, Broadcom, Google, Microsoft, Nvidia, Travel American Express, Raytheon, GE Aerospace, Royal, AAR, Honeywell, Southwest Airlines, Housing, Stanley, JPMorgan, Procter, Gamble, Colgate, Merck, Bristol, Myers, PepsiCo, Energy, Coterra Energy, Diamondback, drillers, CNBC Locations: California, Royal Caribbean, Delta, Devon
Pitchfork announced it was no longer a freestanding music site, after digital publications BuzzFeed News and Jezebel disappeared last year. Even The Washington Post, whose subscriptions boomed during the Trump administration, has seen a falloff, leading its management to acknowledge that it was too optimistic in expansion plans and needed to cut costs. THE PATH FORWARD IS JUST AS BUMPYSome of the troubled outlets also have unique issues that contributed to their problems. “We need journalists in society, and we will find a way to fill that need,” he said. But in the short run, it's going to be ugly.”___David Bauder covers media for The Associated Press.
Persons: , tacos, Jezebel, Conde, walkouts, , Didier Saugy, Gray, Jeff Jarvis, ” Jarvis, , Trump, Jeff Bezos, Patrick Soon, Jarvis, Aileen Gallagher, that's, Elon Musk's, ” Gallagher, Jim VandeHei, haven't, Tara Dublin, Steve Reilly, you've, ___ David Bauder Organizations: National Press, Los Angeles Times, Business, Time, Washington Post, Pitchfork, Washington Post , New York Daily News, Conde Nast, Press Club, Northwestern University, New York Times, Hollywood, Philanthropy, Associated Press, MacArthur Foundation, Knight Foundation, ” Tech, Syracuse University, Google, Publishers, Facebook, Twitter, Sports, Axios, Politico Locations: Washington, Washington Post , New, United States
Stock Market Today: Dow Futures Rise; Bitcoin Jumps
  + stars: | 2023-10-24 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
A falloff in the 10-year Treasury yield lifted stock futures amid a busy slate of earnings from companies including Google parent Alphabet and Microsoft. After cresting Monday just beyond 5% for the first time since 2007, the yield on the 10-year note held below 4.9% in early trading. Stock futures advanced, led by contracts tied to the tech-focused Nasdaq-100 index. S&P 500 and Dow industrials futures posted smaller gains. General Electric, 3M and Coca-Cola stocks all rose in premarket trading after the companies raised their financial outlooks.
Persons: Bitcoin Organizations: Treasury, Google, Microsoft, Federal Reserve, Dow, General Electric, GE, bund
Corporate bankruptcy filings have surged so far this year, already eclipsing the number of bankruptcies in 2022. But there are three reasons why bankruptcy filings aren't as scary as they sound, according to Carson Group. But according to Varghese, there are three reasons why investors shouldn't panic about the recent uptick in bankruptcy filings. But bond investors — even those who buy below-investment-grade debt — have not shown signs of worry. "Bond investors typically sniff out hard economic times for companies well ahead of other investors.
Persons: it's, Sonu Varghese, Varghese, , Banks Organizations: Carson Group, Service, Bed, Valley Bank, Party, Treasury, Carson, Federal Reserve, Entrepreneurship Locations: Wall, Silicon
X CEO Linda Yaccarino said she's not sure if Elon Musk will actually fight Mark Zuckerberg. She said she's seen Musk train, but it "may be a humorous back-and-forth between Zuck and Musk." Linda Yaccarino, the CEO of X, which was formerly known as Twitter, said on Thursday that's she not sure if Elon Musk will go through with his offer to fight Mark Zuckerberg in a cage match. The X CEO said it's important that the excitement around a potential matchup between the two billionaires doesn't take away from "the potential of X." Musk and Zuckerberg have a longstanding feud and Meta's recent roll-out of its X competitor Threads only appears to have fueled the fight.
Persons: Linda Yaccarino, she's, Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Musk, NBCUniversal, I've, Elon, doesn't, Yaccarino, X, Twitter —, Laura Cavanaugh, AWXII Musk's, Walter Isaacson, Zuckerberg, It's, they'll, We're Organizations: Morning, Twitter, CNBC, Meta
Cruise ship stocks have been riding high, defying pessimistic market consensus on the industry. Three of the biggest cruise companies cost hedge funds almost $3 billion in bad bets, per a report. Of this, the three cruise ship companies account for almost $3 billion of the total mark-to-market losses, according to figures from S3 Partners seen by the outlet. Other large short positions in Airbnb and Booking.com have also backfired after those stocks jumped 70% and 44% year-to-date respectively. While cruise stocks still remain below their pre-pandemic valuations, the release of pent-up demand has been a boon to the sector.
Organizations: Service, Financial Times, S3 Partners, Royal, Tech, Nvidia, Tesla, Microsoft Locations: Wall, Silicon, Royal Caribbean, Norwegian, Airbnb
The results underscore the risk Meta poses to Twitter’s business and raise questions about how, or if, Twitter can stem its losses. Twitter traffic had already been trending downward for months, according to data from the internet infrastructure company Cloudflare and the web analytics firm Similarweb. “Twitter traffic tanking,” Prince said as he posted the chart. A Twitter rival but not quite a Twitter replacementFueling Threads’ rapid growth has been Meta’s use of Instagram as a springboard to sign up new users, along with what many Threads users have identified as a dissatisfaction with Twitter. But after a Threads user pointed out that the new app was not featured in Twitter’s trending topics tab, Zuckerberg replied “Concerning” with a crying-laughter emoji.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Zuckerberg, Twitter didn’t, Cloudflare, Matthew Prince, ” Prince, Similarweb, , David Carr, We’ve, Alex Stamos, , Stamos, ” Stamos, Kim Kardashian, Jeff Bezos, Axios, Adam Mosseri, Mosseri, Musk Organizations: Washington CNN, Twitter, Meta, Elon, CNN, , Stanford Internet Observatory, Facebook
The Education Department last week said loan payments would resume in October. Reuters GraphicsA White House source said Biden plans to announce new actions on Friday to protect student loan borrowers in the wake of the ruling. Another challenge to at least some of those who face student loan repayment: Managing new debt taken on when student loan payments were off the table. The New York Fed found the debt payment holiday boosted credit scores of student loan borrowers, opening the door to take on other debt. Delinquency rates on student loans plummeted from roughly 10% before the payment holiday to below 1% at the end of the first quarter of this year.
Persons: Joe Biden's, Biden, Thomas Simons, Simons, Morgan Stanley, forbearance, Michael S, Dan Burns, Andrea Ricci Organizations: U.S, Biden, White, Republicans, Department, New York Fed, Reuters, Federal Reserve, Jefferies, York Fed, New, University of Chicago, Derby, Thomson Locations: U.S, New York
The stock bubble is still in the process of deflating and the market won't bottom until 2024, Jeremy Grantham said. The legendary investor blasted the Fed's monetary policy as a 36-year-long "horror show." He foresaw mild pain in the year ahead for investors, warning of a falloff in equities around April. Sign up for our newsletter to get the inside scoop on what traders are talking about — delivered daily to your inbox. That's similar to the rallies seen prior to the burst of the dot-com bubble, when the Nasdaq Composite plunged 40% in 2001.
Truckers Expect an Inventory-Driven Rebound Later This Year
  + stars: | 2023-02-01 | by ( Liz Young | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +4 min
Trucking companies are pinning hopes for a rebound in freight demand on the second half of this year, saying their retailer customers expect to resume restocking after winding down inventories over recent months. Carrier executives say they are hearing from their shipping customers that they expect to return to a more normal ordering cycle this year and start moving bigger volumes closer to the fall shopping season following volatile retail spending and distribution in 2022 that left them overstocked. Inbound volumes at U.S. ports are also down, suggesting fewer goods from overseas are flowing into domestic freight networks. “Trucking is definitely down right now,” said Tom Nightingale, CEO of AFS Logistics, a Shreveport, La.-based logistics operator. She said on a Jan. 18 earnings conference call that the company “has good signals” from shipping customers that they plan to pick up their ordering in the second quarter.
Vehicle leasing—once a path for nearly one-third of American buyers to get behind the wheel of a new car—has faded since the pandemic. Now it is likely to be years before the U.S. lease market returns to normal, executives and analysts say. The leasing falloff is largely tied to the vehicle shortage that has plagued the car business for more than two years. Auto makers generally make more money selling cars outright, rather than leasing them, which typically involves a heavier subsidy from the manufacturer. With inventory constrained, car companies have significantly dialed back attractive lease deals that had been a staple of auto retailing.
SummarySummary Companies China's Dec exports worst since Feb 2020, slightly better than forecastImports tumble by smaller margin amid lacklustre demandDomestic demand should slowly recover after zero-COVID scrappedExport outlook gloomy in 2023, major threat to China's growthBEIJING, Jan 13 (Reuters) - China's exports shrank sharply in December as global demand cooled, missing their typical year-end bounce, while imports tumbled again as surging COVID-19 infections and a property downturn weighed heavily on domestic demand. WEAK GLOBAL DEMAND COULD TEMPER ECONOMIC RECOVERYChina's commerce ministry said on Thursday that slowing external demand and the rising risks of a global recession are posing the biggest pressures to the country's trade stabilisation, leaving "arduous tasks." REBOUNDAnalysts polled by Reuters expect China's economic growth to rebound to 4.9% in 2023, before steadying in 2024, a Reuters poll showed. Jin Chaofeng, whose company in the east coast city of Hangzhou exports outdoor rattan furniture, said he has no market expansion or hiring plans for 2023 as he remains cautious about the global demand outlook. "With the lifting of COVID curbs, domestic demand is expected to improve but not for exports...," he said.
VC investment in restaurant tech firms, from ghost kitchens to delivery robots, slowed in the third quarter, according to Pitchbook. But instead of leaning into kiosks and QR codes, Redstick Ventures and Rethink Food are entering the space with a different investing game plan. Despite an investment slowdown in foodtech, Crowder and Larisey believe there are massive opportunities in the sector. Another new foodtech VC firm, Rethink Food, is also looking differently at food innovation. Rethink Food"Our most recent investment is one of the most disruptive and exciting, and it's in cultured meat," said Rini Greenfield​, a founding managing partner at Rethink Food.
Stocks rallying on hopes of the Fed pausing rate hikes will fool investors into thinking the bear market is over, Morgan Stanley's Mike Wilson said. But stocks could be hit with an earnings recession next year, he told Bloomberg, warning a 26% drop in the S&P 500 was still possible. This is a classic Fed pause stock market rally," Wilson said in an interview with Bloomberg TV on Thursday. That means the Nasdaq and other heavily-shorted stocks could be leading the new market rally, but investors are still in a bear market, even if gains last through December, Wilson warned. "This rally will go further and will probably drag people back into thinking that this bear market is over," he added.
After the pandemic-driven surge in consumer demand that triggered a frenzy of shipping activity and skyrocketing prices, logistics and transportation companies are signaling a fast slowdown. The weekly Shanghai Containerized Freight Index, which measures shipping prices out of China, recently dropped to $1,443.29, about one-third the level it hit in early June. The jaw-dropping declines also measure the spot market prices. Most freight business moves on contract rates, and those long-term prices haven’t fallen nearly as fast as the spot market. Here are some tips for logistics and supply-chain managers to take advantage of a changing market.
The following is a look at third-quarter sequential sales growth numbers for each category. Operating profit of $974 million, up 13% over last year, was higher than estimates of $937 million. Sales growth was led by Electronics and Chemicals & Energy, while volume growth was equally split between base business and project startups. Operating profit of $429 million was up 12% from last year and roughly in line with the $424 million estimate. Linde management held a call Wednesday to explain the rationale behind its proposal to delist from the Frankfurt Stock Exchange.
Freight Operators’ Peak Shipping Season Is Crumbling
  + stars: | 2022-10-18 | by ( Paul Berger | Paul Page | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +7 min
The peak shipping season is fizzling as overstocked retailers cancel overseas orders and freight companies scale back expectations for heavy freight volumes heading into the holidays. Many retailers pulled peak season orders in early this year to avoid a repeat of 2021 when supply-chain congestion caused delays and product shortages during the holidays. Container shipping rates that hit record highs last year have also pulled back sharply, although they still remain above 2019 levels. The peak shipping season cascades down into package transport, as United Parcel Service Inc., FedEx Corp. and others typically handle growing volumes as the calendar counts down to Christmas. Citi analysts say they expect a “weaker peak season and a large amount of uncertainty in terms of the magnitude of demand.”—Esther Fung and Liz Young contributed to this article.
Freight Operators’ Peak Shipping Season is Crumbling
  + stars: | 2022-10-18 | by ( Paul Berger | Paul Page | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +6 min
The peak shipping season is fizzling as overstocked retailers cancel overseas orders and freight companies scale back expectations for heavy freight volumes heading into the holidays. But a range of measures of shipping demand across the U.S. are sliding, freight rates are falling as a result, leading carriers to pull back capacity amid concerns a deeper downturn is coming. Many retailers pulled peak season orders in early this year to avoid a repeat of 2021 when supply-chain congestion caused delays and product shortages during the holidays. Container shipping rates that hit record highs last year have also pulled back sharply, although they still remain above 2019 levels. The peak shipping season cascades down into package transport, as United Parcel Service Inc., FedEx Corp. and others typically handle growing volumes as the calendar counts down to Christmas.
And for consumers who want to cut down on corporate monitoring, hitting “decline cookies” might not make much of a difference. Ulta Beauty’s Brent Rosso, vice president of the cosmetics seller’s ad business, called retail media networks “the hottest thing in the media world.”The Home Depot app encourages users to allow tracking. Home DepotNew ways to track and targetBefore the rise of retail media networks, retailers regularly sold ad space like sponsored products or banner ads on their own digital properties. But many retail media networks combine first-party data with existing third-party information, such as demographic data, to build more detailed profiles on consumers. About $40 billion will be spent this year across retail media networks alone, the analytics firm projects.
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