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

Search resuls for: "Bets"


25 mentions found


Why the stock market is freaking out again
  + stars: | 2024-08-05 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
The Dow tumbled more than 1,000 points at the open, and the broader market plunged 3% Monday. The Nasdaq, full of risky tech stocks, dropped 3.7%. Although that’s not in and of itself an unhealthy unemployment rate, its sudden march higher is alarming: Last year, the unemployment rate was at its lowest level since the moon landing. Traders are beginning to unwind big trades on Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Alphabet and other tech stocks that had been surging since the beginning of last year. Monday’s rout, if it ends at current levels, wouldn’t even crack the top 100 worst days in market history.
Persons: Dow, that’s, Goldman Sachs, That’s, Jeremy Siegel, , , Siegel, Stocks, it’ll, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Organizations: CNN, Nasdaq, Nikkei, Federal Reserve, of Labor Statistics, Citigroup, JPMorgan, CNBC, Traders, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Berkshire Locations: Wall
Alex Karp, CEO of Palantir Technologies poses beside the company's logo ahead of an interview with Reuters in the Alpine resort of Davos, Switzerland May 23, 2022. Palantir Technologies raised its annual revenue forecast for the second time this year on Monday, the latest sign that the generative AI boom is driving demand for its software services. The company co-founded by billionaire Peter Thiel now expects annual revenue between $2.74 billion and $2.75 billion, compared with $2.68 billion to $2.69 billion expected earlier. It also raised its annual revenue expectation from U.S.-based companies by $11 million, to $672 million. The company forecast third-quarter revenue between $697 million and $701 million, compared to analysts' average estimate of $679.1 million, according to LSEG data.
Persons: Alex Karp, Peter Thiel, Ryan Taylor, Reuters Palantir, Karp Organizations: Palantir Technologies, Reuters, Big Tech, Microsoft, Palantir Locations: Davos, Switzerland
Signs of a slowing U.S. economy sowed panic among investors on Monday, with a sell-off in markets that began last week turning into a global rout. The moves were a sharp reversal in major stock markets, which for much of the past year have risen to new heights, propelled by optimism about cooling inflation, solid labor markets and the promise of artificial intelligence technology. South Korea’s benchmark Kospi index fell more than 10 percent at one point. Japanese stocks have been on a tear for more than a year, fueled by a weak Japanese yen. Adding to the pressure, foreign investors have started selling off positions in Japanese stocks over the last few weeks.
Persons: , Andrew Brenner, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Jordi Basco Carrera, , Basco Carrera, Jitters, Jesper Koll, Koll, John Liu, Melissa Eddy Organizations: Federal, Nasdaq, National Alliance Securities, Equity, Technology, Samsung Electronics, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Nvidia, Intel, Allianz, Monex, Bank of Japan, Tokyo Stock Exchange Locations: Asia, Europe, Americas, Japan, U.S, Taiwan, Singapore, Australia, Hong Kong, China, Stocks, India, Netherlands, Switzerland, New York, Munich, , New, Seoul, Berlin
Safe-haven gold firms on U.S. recession fears, rate-cut bets
  + stars: | 2024-08-05 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Two Argor-Heraeus SA 250 gram gold bars at Solar Capital Gold Zrt. Gold prices drifted higher on Monday, aided by worries that the United States could be headed for a recession and rising bets that the Federal Reserve will likely need to start cutting interest rates aggressively. Spot gold rose 0.14% to $2,446.83 per ounce, as of 0519 GMT, after falling 1% earlier in the session. "Gold is picking up safe-haven flows, with financial markets in a risk-averse mindset to start the week," said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade. Share markets tumbled and bonds rallied in Asia as U.S. recession fears sent investors rushing from risk assets.
Persons: Tim Waterer, Thomas Barkin Organizations: Heraeus, Solar, Federal Reserve, KCM, Richmond Fed, P Global, Pentagon Locations: Budapest, Hungary, United States, Asia, U.S, Iran
Warren Buffett is turning heads after Berkshire Hathaway disclosed it sold nearly half of its Apple stake last quarter. About 72% of Berkshire's equity portfolio is concentrated in five stocks, according to the conglomerate's latest earnings report. Meanwhile, Berkshire held onto longtime bets Coca-Cola and American Express , worth $25.5 billion and $35.1 billion, respectively, at the end of the second quarter. Buffett was in a selling mood overall in the second quarter with Berkshire shedding more than 75 billion in stock, raising its total cash level to an eye-popping $277 billion. After the sales, these holdings remain same top five holdings Berkshire disclosed in the first quarter.
Persons: Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett Organizations: Apple, Oracle, of America, Bank of America, Chevron, American Express, Berkshire Locations: Omaha, Berkshire
Gold prices set for weekly gain with U.S. payrolls data on tap
  + stars: | 2024-08-02 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Gold prices firmed on Friday and were set for a weekly gain, driven by prospects of a Fed rate cut in September and rising tensions in the Middle East, while market participants awaited U.S. nonfarm payrolls data for further direction. Gold prices firmed on Friday and were set for a weekly gain, driven by prospects of a Fed rate cut in September and rising tensions in the Middle East, while market participants awaited U.S. nonfarm payrolls data for further direction. Spot gold was up 0.2% at $2,451.07 per ounce, as of 0243 GMT, and has gained more than 2% for the week. Trader bets for a super-sized 50-basis-point rate cut in September jumped to 28.5% from 11.8% earlier this week, according to the CME Group's FedWatch tool. "Angst surrounding U.S. elections and the conflict in the Middle East will play an assisting role in moving gold higher on a sustained basis," analysts at TD Securities said in a note.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Ajay Kedia, Mohammed Deif Organizations: Federal, Kedia Commodities, TD Securities Locations: U.S, Mumbai, Gaza, Tehran
"A 50 basis point Fed cut in September is clearly justified as the labor market is now showing clear signs of softening," said Yung-Yu Ma, chief investment officer at BMO Wealth Management. The firm, which has long been saying the Fed will need to cut aggressively this year, expects another 50 basis point cut in November by a 25 basis point cut move in December. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. The S & P 500 lost more than 2.5% and Treasury yields plummeted, sending the policy-sensitive 2-year note down more than a quarter percentage point to 3.91%. "It's very possible the Fed alters its inter-meeting communications on the balance of risks to remove all doubt [of] a September rate cut."
Persons: Yung, Yu Ma, David Donabedian, Preston Caldwell, David Rosenberg, Jerome Powell, Jamie Cox Organizations: Federal Reserve, Fed, Labor Statistics, BMO Wealth Management, Wall, Citigroup, CIBC Private Wealth, Morningstar, Rosenberg Research, Harris Financial
Mobile betting powerhouse DraftKings is planning a tax on consumers in states with the highest sports betting tax rates, as the company looks to boost profit. The company announced Thursday that starting next year it will implement a gaming surcharge on winning bets in states with multiple betting operators and where the tax rate is above 20%. Fears of tax hikes in gaming pressured DraftKings stock and other betting companies like FanDuel back in May, when Illinois approved a tax hike on sports betting revenue. The sliding tax rates impose 40% levies on companies with the largest adjusted gross revenue. New York and New Hampshire each maintain 51% tax rates on sports betting companies.
Persons: Jason Robins, LSEG, Robins Organizations: Mobile, CNBC Locations: Illinois, New York , Pennsylvania, Vermont, York, New Hampshire
Read previewLeading fund manager David Vaughn would have every reason to be confident — cocky, even. Playing it safe can pay offSince Vaughn doesn't pretend that he can predict the future, he hedges his bets accordingly. ClariVest's international fund, which Vaughn has run since its inception in early 2013, holds a whopping 120 to 150 stocks at a time — far higher than many of its peers. The top fund manager and his colleagues don't develop an in-depth thesis for each stock or get cozy with sweet-talking management teams. Advertisement6 international stocks to buy nowAlthough Vaughn avoids getting attached to stocks in his heavily diversified fund, that doesn't mean he doesn't have favorite ideas in international markets.
Persons: , David Vaughn, Vaughn, You've, Vaughn doesn't, We'd, that's, Charlie Brown, Lucy Organizations: Service, Carillon, Stock Fund, Business Locations: ClariVest
Why the stock market is going berserk today
  + stars: | 2024-08-02 | by ( Jennifer Sor | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
The stock market is in shambles on Friday, with all three major indexes falling more than 2%. AdvertisementThe US stock market has plunged into chaos as investors digest a streak of negative economic data and disappointing mega-cap-tech earnings. Months ago, signs of a slowing economy would bolster expectations for Fed rate cuts, which are seen as rocket fuel for stocks. "Pressure will escalate on the Federal Reserve as market interest rates will continue the attempt to force their hand." She added: "A September rate cut is in the bag and the Fed will be hoping they haven't, once again, been too slow to act."
Persons: They're, , John Lynch, Seema Shah, Ryan Detrick, Carson Organizations: Amazon, Service, Investors, Intel, Comerica Wealth Management, Federal Reserve, Asset Management, York Fed Locations: New York
Why the stock market is suddenly freaking out
  + stars: | 2024-08-01 | by ( David Goldman | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
CNN —The narrative on Wall Street is shifting. Rate cuts tend to juice stocks, because they lower borrowing costs for businesses and can help boost profits. Powell warned Wednesday that cracks are starting to form in the labor market. But America’s economy remains undeniably strong. And Wall Street seems unfazed by Vice President Kamala Harris’ surprise frontrunner status for the Democratic presidential nomination.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell, It’s, Kamala Harris ’ Organizations: CNN, Federal Reserve, Dow, Nasdaq, Democratic Locations: America
AdvertisementIt tracks: The closer you live to a casino, the likelier you are to develop a gambling problem. About 1% of US adults have a severe gambling problem, according to the National Council on Problem Gambling, and 2% to 3% have a mild or moderate problem. Advertisement"By the time everyone gets all excited, we're talking about really large credit-card debt, really large debts to friends and family. A lot of online debt," said Timothy Fong, a clinical professor of psychiatry at UCLA and a codirector of its gambling-studies program. In the sports world, we've recently seen some high-profile examples of young men getting into hot water from sports betting.
Persons: that's, Brett Hollenbeck, Hollenbeck, It's, Michelle Malkin, You've, Timothy Fong, Fong, Young, we've, Shohei, Ippei Mizuhara, Jontay Porter, Malkin, doesn't, it's, Emily Stewart Organizations: University of California, University of Southern, UCLA's Anderson School of Management, National Council, East, East Carolina University's, Policy Initiative, UCLA, MLB, NBA, Sports, Business Locations: Los Angeles, University of Southern California, East Carolina, America, New Jersey
Kohl's plans to have 200 Babies R Us shops in its stores by the end of September. CEO Tom Kingsbury estimated in late May that those expanded categories, including Babies R Us, are "a $2 billion-plus sales opportunity" in the coming years. On a store tour in New Jersey on Wednesday, Chief Merchandising Officer Nick Jones showed off the first Babies R Us shop. Over the past few weeks, online shoppers have also seen Babies R Us on Kohl's website. Jones said Kohl's will decide whether to open Babies R Us in more stores after learning from the first 200 shops.
Persons: hasn't, Tom Kingsbury, Nick Jones, Hatch, Frida, Graco, Baby Bjorn, Kohl's, Jones, That's, Dana Telsey, There's, Stephen Hinz, They're, Hinz, Macy's, Zola, Babylist, Kingsbury Organizations: U.S, U.S . National Center for Health Statistics, Nike, Telsey Advisory, U.S . Census, Walmart, CNBC Locations: N.J, Wisconsin, New Jersey, U.S, Bath
In today's big story, hedge funds are dusting off an old strategy that's a unique twist on passive investing . And with the fundraising environment for hedge funds looking bleak , they'll take any help they can get. AdvertisementBut with portable alpha, hedge funds are tying themselves to something they've pledged they are better than. What happens if the hedge fund's portion of the portable alpha strategy is what pulls returns down? With competition from venture capital and private equity, hedge funds can't afford to turn their nose up at anything.
Persons: , Tyler Le, Alex Morrell, It's, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Philippe, hasn't, they've, it's, duMond, Chip Somodevilla, Alyssa Powell, Harris, Jerome Powell, Powell, Tetiana Lazunova, Meta, it'll, Linda Yaccarino, Elon Musk, Kamala Harris, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Business, Trump, DWS Group, BI, Nvidia, Twitter, Apple, Amazon, Barclays, Shell, Democratic National Committee Locations: Hollywood, London, Milan, Dubai, New York
Mizuhara was one of Bowyer’s clients, placing at least 19,000 bets with Bowyer’s illegal gambling business from September 2021 to January 2024, according to prosecutors. Bowyer would increase Mizuhara’s betting limits even as Mizuhara had total losing bets of at least $182,935,206, leaving the former interpreter owing about $40,678,436, the plea agreement states. Bowyer’s other clients include “Individual B,” a professional baseball player for a Southern California-based baseball team, and “Individual C,” a former minor-league baseball player, the plea agreement states. In his plea agreement, Bowyer admitted to falsely reporting his taxable income to the IRS on his tax return for 2022. That year, Bowyer reported $607,897 in total income, while his unreported income from his illegal gambling business was $4,030,938, officials said.
Persons: Shohei Ohtani’s, Ippei Mizuhara, Matthew Bowyer, Diane Bass, ” Bowyer, Ohtani, Mizuhara, Bowyer, , Martin Estrada, Organizations: CNN, Dodgers, Justice Department, US, Office, Central, Central District of, Los Angeles Dodgers, ESPN, Los Angeles Times, Major League Baseball, Bowyer Locations: Central District, Central District of California, Los Angeles, Orange, Las Vegas, Ohtani, Costa Rica, Southern California
Japan will retain its basic approach on the yen with intervention remaining an option to tackle excessively volatile moves in the exchange rate, the country's new top currency diplomat Atsushi Mimura told Reuters. "It has been internationally agreed that measures including interventions are allowed when necessary," he added. Previously head of the ministry's international bureau, the 57-year-old became vice finance minister for international affairs on Wednesday — a post that oversees Japan's currency policy and coordinates economic policy with other countries. Mimura's appointment comes as the Japanese currency shows tentative signs of recovery from 38-year lows, as investors unwound their long-running bets against the currency ahead of a Bank of Japan meeting this week. While a weak yen gives exports a boost, it has become a source of concern for policymakers by pushing up the cost of imports and hurting consumption.
Persons: Atsushi Mimura, Mimura Organizations: Reuters, Bank of Japan Locations: Japan
Along with its S24 series of smartphones, foldable devices, smartwatches and now the Galaxy Ring, Samsung is hoping to lock users into its world of products held together with its suite of artificial intelligence features, known as Galaxy AI. Arjun KharpalOne of the things Samsung said was look, the ring is one product, but we've got the watch, we've got the smartphone. I think that's the right approach for Samsung, I don't think they have unrealistic expectations for volumes on this. And you'd feel like if there was some sort of Apple ring, it would do pretty good volumes. Do you think Samsung is seriously looking at ways to monetize this via subscriptions or other kinds of service business model?
Persons: aren't, Tom Chitty, Ben Wood, Meta's Ray, Arjun, Tom Chitty I've, I've, we've, Arjun Kharpal, let's, It's, That's, it's, you've, they've, there's, they're, someone's, I'm, that's, you'll, Ben Wood It's, smartwatch, Arjun Kharpal Apple's, Ben Wood They've, Tim Cook, He's, who'd, Tom Chitty Diamond, somebody's, who've, wasn't, Samsung hasn't, we'll, Ben, they'll, Will, wearables, Kharpal, Arjun Kharpal Tom, Tom, Tom Chitty We'll Organizations: Samsung, South, Galaxy, CNBC, CCS Insight, Mobile, Apple, Garmin, Apple Watch, U.S, Vision, Samsung Electronics, Google, MWC Locations: South Korean, Paris, France, beyondthevalley@cnbc.com, There's, Finland, London
Reuters —A Tesla Model S car was in “Full Self-Driving” mode when it hit and killed a 28-year-old motorcyclist in the Seattle area in April, police said, making it at least the second fatal accident involving the technology on which Tesla CEO Elon Musk is pinning his hopes. Tesla says its “Full Self-Driving (Supervised)” software requires active driver supervision and does not make vehicles autonomous. Previously, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) said there was one fatal accident involving a Tesla vehicle using FSD software between August 2022 and August 2023. This year, Musk shelved Tesla’s all-new affordable cars and increased his bets on self-driving vehicles, saying he will be shocked if Tesla cannot achieve full self-driving capability next year. In December 2023, Tesla was forced to recall nearly all its vehicles on U.S. roads to add safeguards to the software.
Persons: Elon Musk, Tesla, Waymo, Sam Abuelsamid, , Raj Rajkumar, Musk Organizations: Reuters, Tesla, Traffic Safety Administration, NHTSA, Carnegie Mellon University Locations: Seattle, Silicon
Read previewWhen Satya Nadella took over as CEO of Microsoft in 2014, he was on a mission to transform the company's culture. A decade later, it's clear that Nadella followed his own counsel as he seeks to establish Microsoft as a dominant force in AI. So, by 2016, Microsoft ditched its mobile business and sold the Nokia phone line to follow Nadella's new vision for the company. This cemented Nadella's vision to build up its open-source software offering, solidifying Nadella's vision to boost Microsoft's open-source software offerings. CFO Amy Hood said on Tuesday that Microsoft's AI bets will be monetized "over 15 years and beyond."
Persons: , Satya Nadella, Nadella, Steve Ballmer, Ballmer, Kevin Scott, Bill Gates, OpenAI, Bing, Nadella isn't, Mustafa Suleyman, Suleyman, Carol Dweck's, Amy Hood Organizations: Service, Microsoft, Business, Nokia, Work Conference Locations: reenergize, OpenAI, ChatGPT
Just 20 years ago journalists covered the tech industry "like it didn't matter, like it was this hobbyist, interesting, plucky thing." The pro-tech media gives tech's main characters the chance to write their way back to the original storyline. Trae Stephens, a partner at Founders Fund, described Pirate Wires as a kind of daily affirmation for Silicon Valley. Related storiesTrae Stephens, a partner at Founders Fund, described Pirate Wires as a kind of daily affirmation for Silicon Valley. Of the members of the news media I talked to about pro-tech media, some were backhandedly laudatory.
Persons: Mike Solana, Solana, Peter Thiel, , David Sacks, Jason Calacanis, Chamath Palihapitiya, David Friedberg, Elon Musk, Sam Altman, Tucker Carlson, Donald Trump, There's, Coogan, John Coogan, Andreessen Horowitz, Marc Andreessen, they're, Balaji Srinivasan, Mark Zuckerberg, Donald Trump's, Tyler Le, Sam Bankman, Warren Buffett, Trae Stephens, Andreessen, Palmer Luckey, It's, Dick Lucas, Lucas, Joe Rogan, Kamala, Stephens, Packy McCormick, Taylor Lorenz, Ryan Mac, Kevin Roose, Jesse Singal —, Casey Newton, Casey isn't, Casey, Newton, Erik Torenberg, Anthony Fauci, Ellen Pao, Katherine Maher, George Soros, Joe Biden, Chesa Boudin, Boudin, Gavin Newsom, Palihapitiya, Sacks, Trump, JD Vance, Brian Merchant, Ben Smith, Eric Newcomer, he's, Lulu Cheng Meservey, Balaji Srinivasan's, Zoë Bernard Organizations: Fund, Tech, Founders Fund, Apple, Elon, Elite, Sequoia Capital, Pirate, Penguin Group, Big Tech, Card Industry, Washington Post, TechCrunch, Media, NPR, Google, Disney, Twitter, Republican National Convention, Bloomberg, monetization, San, Business Locations: San Francisco, Substack, Silicon Valley, New York, Silicon, Solana, Miami, Francisco, California, Los Angeles
In his Sunday column , Jim Cramer wrote that these earnings reports will test that rotation narrative. Another way to help "take the sting away" is management teams providing a rationale behind the spending, Jim also wrote Sunday. Alphabet's second-quarter capex of $13.2 billion was up 91% year over year and higher sequentially from $12 billion in the first quarter. Alphabet's full-year capex spending is expected to total nearly $50 billion, according to estimates compiled by FactSet. Investors fretting about AI spending is not entirely new.
Persons: , Jim Cramer, Jeff Marks, Jim, Alphabet's, Sundar Pichai, FactSet, Apple, Meta's, Goldman Sachs, Jim Covello, Covello, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Big Tech, Microsoft, Apple, KeyBanc, Markets, Google, Meta, stoke, Wall Street, Wedbush Securities, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: capex
How YouTube Took Over Our Television Screens
  + stars: | 2024-07-30 | by ( Nico Grant | John Koblin | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Two years ago, YouTube abandoned its audacious plan to beat Hollywood at its own game. So it canceled the shows and fell back on the user-created content that had made it a household name. Now, YouTube consistently ranks as the most popular streaming service on U.S. televisions, surpassing the companies it once tried to emulate. Since Netflix started offering original content in 2012, TV networks have jumped into the streaming race, trying to outflank one another with major upfront investments. Netflix alone spends $17 billion a year on new series and movies as well as on older fare from other companies’ libraries.
Organizations: YouTube, Hollywood, Netflix, Disney, Paramount
Some parents had voiced concerns about Hays' "background," he told Business Insider. In 2020, he started What If Ventures, a venture firm focused on investing in mental health startups. Hays's new public persona as a staunch mental health advocate also puts a certain pressure on him to perform his recovery — "and I hate that," he said. He wants to show people struggling with their own mental health that working to get well is good enough. Advertisement"I don't just want to destigmatize addiction and mental health issues — I want to destigmatize the journey of getting better," he said.
Persons: , Stephen Hays, Hays, couldn't, didn't, They'd, it's, Christine, he'd, Amit Etkin, Etkin, he'll, that's, Stephen, Christopher Kim, Kim, Hays doesn't, It's Organizations: Service, Little League baseball, Business, Neuroscience, Ventures, West, Space Ventures, Atlantic City, Magazine, Deep Space Ventures, Alto Neuroscience, BI, Argosy Strategic Partners, Argosy Locations: Dallas, Texas, Atlantic, Las Vegas, Colorado, Wickenburg , Arizona
Three famed "Big Short" investors say gold remains a top long-term bet. Danny Moses, Porter Collins, and Vincent Daniel went on CNBC to explain why they're bullish. They cite rising debt levels, which they say could result in a "huge debasement" of the dollar. AdvertisementInvestors should be scooping up more gold for the long haul, according to three investors of "Big Short" fame. Collins and Daniel — the co-founders of Seawolf Capital — said they remained long on gold, gold miners, and precious metals like silver in their annual letter to shareholders.
Persons: Danny Moses, Porter Collins, Vincent Daniel, , Vincent Daniel —, Collins, Daniel, Daniel —, Moses, Gold, we've Organizations: CNBC, Service, Treasury, stoke, Seawolf, Moses Ventures Locations: US
"The Big Short" traders Danny Moses, Vincent Daniel and Porter Collins are focused on one of their top long bets: gold. "I just don't think Americans have enough gold in their portfolio," Collins said on CNBC's " Fast Money " in an exclusive interview this week . We are still very long gold , gold miners , Silver , Platinum Group Metals (PGMs) and Bitcoin ," they wrote. In a special email to "Fast Money" on Monday, Moses wrote he has a "large long" in the Sprott Physical Gold Trust . As of Friday's close, the Sprott Physical Gold trust is up more than 16% so far this year.
Persons: Danny Moses, Vincent Daniel, Porter Collins, Collins, Daniel, Moses Organizations: Seawolf, Group Metals, Moses Ventures, Trust Locations: U.S
Total: 25