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Match Group — Shares of the Tinder dating app owner moved 13% higher after the company posted second-quarter revenue of $864 million. That is above the $856.5 million estimate that analysts polled by FactSet had expected. Revenue, however, came in below expectations at $6.48 billion, compared to the $6.55 billion analysts polled by FactSet had expected. Marriott reported $6.44 billion, which was below the $6.47 billion analysts polled by FactSet had expected. Bunge — The food stock moved nearly 8% lower after the company posted second-quarter results that missed analysts' expectations.
Persons: Vistra, FactSet, LSEG, Dan Dolev, AutoNation, Kraft Heinz —, Bunge, Robert " Kelly, Ortberg, Dave Calhoun, Rockwell Collins, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: FactSet, Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Nuclear, AMD, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Arista Networks, Mizuho, DuPont de Nemours, DuPont, Humana, Starbucks, LSEG, Marriott, Constellation Energy, Constellation, Boeing, Rockwell, Collins Aerospace Locations: Texas, Japan, Korea, Tuesday's
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Wednesday pointed to three media stocks poised to do well in what now promises to be a tight presidential race: Fox , The New York Times and Nexstar . Cramer also recommended The New York Times, saying a close election or a win by Donald Trump would boost the stock. Shares of the media company rallied more than 338% from Election Day in 2016 to President Joe Biden's inauguration in 2021, according to FactSet. Nexstar could also benefit from a close election, Cramer said, but with the caveat that the company is "more of a trade than an investment." To Cramer, the company is small enough that the "influx of ad dollars has the potential to move the needle."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Donald Trump, Joe Biden's, we've, Wall Organizations: The New York Times, Nexstar, NFL, Fox News, New York Times, Times, FactSet
Investors should be wary of those stocks that are due to report next week whose lackluster earnings could send their share prices down. While earnings have been mostly positive this quarter, several stocks could bring bad news and trip up investors. To find these, CNBC Pro screened FactSet for companies reporting next week that have seen their earnings estimates cut by 5% or more in the past three- and six months. The gas pipeline stock has seen analysts' earnings per share estimates cut by 5.3% over the past three months and 18.6% over the past six months. Analysts have slashed their per-share earnings outlook by 44% and 51% in the past three and six months, respectively.
Persons: Walt Disney, Eli Lilly, Williams, Wells, Michael Blum, Blum, FactSet, Rockwell Organizations: Caterpillar, Walt, CNBC Pro, Williams Companies, Mosaic, Rockwell Automation, Rockwell Locations: Wells Fargo, Milwaukee
Merck on Tuesday reported second-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that topped Wall Street's expectations as it saw strong sales from its blockbuster cancer drug Keytruda as well as other treatments in its oncology and vaccines portfolios and a newly launched cardiovascular drug. The pharmaceutical giant also raised its full-year sales forecast to a range of $63.4 billion to $64.4 billion on increased demand for key products, particularly its oncology treatments. That's only slightly higher than the $63.1 billion to $64.3 billion guidance the company provided in April. Merck reported $16.11 billion in revenue for the quarter, up 7% from the same period a year ago. Some analysts expect that worldwide sales of Winrevair could reach $5 billion by 2030.
Persons: Keytruda, Merck Organizations: Merck, Harpoon Therapeutics, LSEG, Prometheus Biosciences Locations: Rahway , New Jersey, U.S
Pfizer on Thursday reported second-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that blew past expectations and raised its full-year outlook, benefiting from its broad cost-cutting program, better-than-expected sales of its Covid antiviral pill Paxlovid and strong non-Covid product sales. Pfizer now expects to book adjusted earnings of $2.45 to $2.65 per share for the fiscal year, up from its previous guidance of $2.15 to $2.35 per share. Pfizer also hiked its revenue outlook to a range of $59.5 billion to $62.5 billion, up from a previous revenue forecast of between $58.5 billion and $61.5 billion. 60 cents adjusted vs. 46 cents expected. Revenue: $13.28 billion vs. $12.96 billion expected.
Organizations: Pfizer, LSEG, Revenue Locations: U.S, Seagen
The market risks a harmful debt bubble, potentially spreading losses in the financial sector. Economist Dambisa Moyo warns of overvalued stocks driven by enthusiasm for artificial intelligence. AdvertisementThe stock market could be hosting one of the most harmful types of debt bubbles, with losses that risk spreading around the financial sector, according to one economist and investing veteran. But even more concerning is that the US could be seeing one of the most problematic types of bubbles, fueled by highly borrowed and "unproductive" assets, Moyo said. Losses from troubled companies also risk contaminating other areas of the market, Moyo added.
Persons: Dambisa Moyo, Moyo, , Dambisa Moyo —, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Service, Project Syndicate, Versaca
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
Read previewAll eyes are on Meta Platforms with the company set to report its second-quarter earnings results after the market close on Wednesday. AdvertisementHere's what Wall Street expects from Meta's second-quarter earnings report. Looking forward, Post highlighted that a potential TikTok ban in early 2025 could provide a big boost to Meta's advertising business. Advertisement"With political spend, and potential TikTok ban in 1Q'25, Meta could also see an ad spend benefit in 2H'24," Post said. The company also has the potential to offer guidance on the monetization potential of its licensing of Llama, its open-source large language model.
Persons: , Meta, Justin Post, Ronald Josey, Josey, Wells, Wells Fargo, Ken Gawrelski, Gawrelski, Mizuho, James Lee, Lee, Mandeep Singh, Singh Organizations: Service, Meta, Nvidia, it's, Business, Bank of America, Citi, Cannes, Mizuho, Bloomberg Intelligence Locations: monetizing, Wells Fargo
The stock market is about to see a major shift once the Fed cuts rates, Jeremy Siegel said. The top economist thinks value stocks could start outperforming growth stocks once the Fed eases policy. Cooling inflation data supports a Fed rate cut by September, Siegel predicted. The Wharton School finance professor pointed to opportunity lurking in value stocks, an unloved group of the market that's underperformed this year when compared to growth stocks. Growth stocks have outperformed partly due to Wall Street's AI craze, which has ignited investor fervor for growth stocks, like mega-cap tech firms.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, , Powell Organizations: Service, Wharton School, CNBC
In as soon as three years, there probably won't be an employee at Goldman Sachs who isn't touched by AI, predicted Goldman Sachs' chief information officer, Marco Argenti. The hypothesis (which Argenti conceded is "completely not scientific") goes to show the incredible momentum of generative AI on Wall Street. Goldman, like its peers up and down the Street, put generative AI tools in the hands of their software engineers to help them write and document code faster. Now, Argenti is looking ahead to "the next big wave" in Goldman's AI journey: front-office workers. What do you think will be different about how Goldman adopts generative AI versus your competition?
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Argenti, Goldman, copilot, We're, We've Organizations: Service, Business, Wall
Revvity — The life sciences company advanced 6% after posting a second-quarter earnings beat. Revvity's adjusted earnings of $1.22 per share topped the FactSet estimate of $1.12 per share. The new Marvel movie topped $200 million at the domestic box office, a record opening weekend for an R-rated film. Second-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at 96 cents, versus the expected consensus estimate of 92 cents, per FactSet. The stock plunged more than 40% in the previous session after Dexcom reported disappointing second-quarter results and offered weak guidance.
Persons: Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Walt Disney, Dexcom, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: Management, Guggenheim, Ford, Deutsche Bank, Walt Disney —, Marvel, Semiconductor —, Revenue, Dexcom, Health Canada
The odds of a pullback in the S & P 500 are higher now, according to Bank of America. "We are thus overdue for a pullback," wrote Subramanian, adding there is "elevated downside risk in coming months. In fact, the strategist expects the S & P 500 will end the year at 5,400. Just 50% have been triggered [today] vs. an average of 70% ahead of prior S & P 500 peaks." From 1936 to 2010, dividends contributed around 40% to S & P 500 total returns, but have only accounted for 15% since 2010.
Persons: Savita Subramanian, Subramanian Organizations: Bank of America, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, BofA Securities
Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Ford, GM and Stellantis shares"Investors who think autos can outperform on + earnings beats and buybacks should think again. GMFor GM, investors balked at pullbacks in growth businesses, waning upside during the second half of the year, and fear that the automaker's earnings power has peaked, according to Wall Street analysts. Selling more EVs is one reason that GM, which has raised its annual financial guidance twice this year, expects the second half to underperform the first. The new Ford F-150 truck goes through the assembly line at the Ford Dearborn Plant on April 11, 2024 in Dearborn, Michigan. StellantisTransatlantic automaker Stellantis arguably faces the most challenging second half of the year, particularly regarding its U.S. operations.
Persons: Ram, Joe Raedle, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Stellantis, GM's, Mary Barra, Ford, Ford doesn't, Joseph Spak, Bill Pugliano, John Lawler, Lawler, Carlos Tavares, Remo Casilli Organizations: Dodge Chrysler, Getty, DETROIT, Ford, Detroit automakers, GM, Wall Street, Analysts, Street, UBS, Ford Dearborn Plant, Ford Pro, Transatlantic, Stellantis Locations: Miami , Florida, U.S, China, Dearborn , Michigan, Atessa, Italy
As market competition heated up, Tesla started cutting prices, which turned into an industrywide price war that Tesla isn't winning. It's a steep fall, considering Tesla's share of the EV market used to be as high as 80%. Critics balked, but Musk assured the Tesla community that this was the only strategy to save the company. Musk is looking for ways to buy time for Tesla — and one of those ways is to get Trump elected. Preserving Tesla's market position is imperative until he can conjure another product that people are excited to buy.
Persons: Elon Musk, Donald Trump —, Tesla, Trump, Joe Biden's, Kelley Blue, Musk, Ford, , Critics, shouldn't, ZEV, Steve Granitz, Vaibhav Taneja, China's, Elon — Organizations: Elon, Trump, Tesla, White, EV, GM, Getty Images Trump, PAC Locations: China, USA, Shanghai
Investors seeking solid dividend payers can rely on top-ranked Wall Street analysts, who make recommendations after thoroughly analyzing a company's ability to generate solid financials and deliver strong returns. Here are three attractive dividend stocks, according to Wall Street's top pros on TipRanks, a platform that ranks analysts based on their past performance. WES offers a high dividend yield of 8.8%. Hanold expects Q2 2024 shareholder returns to comprise a fixed dividend of 90 cents a share and a variable dividend of $1.25 per share, with no stock buybacks. KO offers a dividend yield of about 2.9%.
Persons: Wall, WES, Gabriel Moreen, Moreen, TipRanks, FANG, Scott Hanold, KO, Nik Modi, Modi Organizations: Wall Street, Western, Western Midstream Partners, Mizuho, MLP, Diamondback Energy, Endeavor Energy, RBC Capital, Diamondback, Cola Locations: Texas , New Mexico , Colorado , Utah, Wyoming, West Texas, Philippines, India
"For too long our government has violated the cardinal rule that every bitcoiner knows by heart: Never sell your bitcoin," Trump said at this year's Bitcoin Conference in Nashville. Kennedy went further than Trump, promising to establish a 4 million bitcoin strategic reserve to match the country's current stake in gold, some of which is held near the military base at Fort Knox. But Trump's reservation speaks to the complications of promising a bitcoin strategic reserve on par with the gold standard. An executive order would not be enough to bring a U.S. bitcoin reserve into existence. That existing bitcoin stockpile could act as the foundation for the bitcoin strategic reserve, which the U.S. government would build on by regularly buying a certain number of bitcoin.
Persons: Donald Trump, Marco Bello, Trump, Trump's, didn't, Tyler, Cameron Winklevoss, Kid Rock, Cynthia Lummis, Bill Hagerty, Marsha Blackburn, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, Kennedy, bitcoin, Sen, Lummis, Per Sen, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, Fred Thiel Organizations: Reuters NASHVILLE —, Republican, U.S . Marshals Service, Trump, U.S . Treasury, Bitcoin Conference, Saturday, Wyoming, U.S, Treasury Department, House, Independents, Democratic, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, U.S . Locations: Charlotte , North Carolina, U.S, Nashville, United States of America, Germany, Fort Knox, Washington, United States, bitcoin
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange as a picture of Vice President Kamala Harris is displayed on a television screen, on July 22, 2024. Overall, Stoxx losses have eased from last week, when the regional index recorded its worst performance since October. LONDON — European markets are heading for a mixed open Friday, as a global stock selloff eases and investors await U.S. inflation. The biggest item on the data front Friday is the U.S. personal consumption expenditures price index, due at 8:30 a.m. Asia-Pacific markets largely rebounded Friday, as Tokyo's headline inflation slowed slightly to 2.2% in July from 2.3% in May.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Wall, Dow Jones, Mercedes, Stellantis Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, LONDON, Mercedes Benz Locations: U.S, Asia, Pacific, .
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNBC Pro Talks: Frank Cappelleri on charting stocks for successCNBC Pro Talks features one-on-one interviews with Wall Street's top investors, smartest traders and rising stars. CNBC's Dominic Chu finds out what makes them tick, what makes them money, and how you can follow in their footsteps.
Persons: Frank Cappelleri, Wall, CNBC's Dominic Chu Organizations: CNBC
PepsiCo says it's two-thirds of the way done with an overhaul of its supply chain. This article is part of "The Future of Supply-Chain Management," a series on companies' manufacturing and distribution strategies. With more automation, workers are doing fewer physical tasks, like driving a forklift, and far more oversight of the machines taking over those tasks. Workers at manufacturing facilities and distribution centers and the unions that represent them often bristle at automation, which can lead to layoffs. Even as it has invested in automation, PepsiCo's total workforce has swelled: It grew by 20%, to 318,000, over the five years that ended in 2023.
Persons: it's, , Gregg Roden, he'd, Roden, Athina, Campbell, Kanioura Organizations: PepsiCo, Chain Management, Service, Gatorade, Frito, Microsoft, Workers, Tyson Foods, Food, McKinsey Locations: Doritos, North America
Several companies appear oversold this week and could be due for a rebound after a wild week on Wall Street. Stocks with a 14-day RSI reading below 30 often indicate that it's oversold, with a potential rebound possible ahead for the company's shares. Here are some of the most oversold names: Dexcom is the most oversold stock of the list, with a 14-day RSI of 11.6%. Wells Fargo recently reiterated its overweight rating on Disney and its $136 price target, which implies shares could gain 52.4%. That's driven the stock's RSI to more than 81.
Persons: , Walt Disney, Wells Fargo, we're, Steven Cahall, Wall, Sara Senatore, Senatore, FactSet, LSEG, Myers Squibb, Northrop Organizations: Nasdaq, CNBC, Stock, Entertainment, Walt, Disney, DIS, Media, " Bank of America, Mohawk Industries, RSI, Northrop Grumman, Citizens Financial Group Locations: Bristol
Ford stock plunged Thursday as the automaker missed Wall Street's earnings estimates. The downbeat quarter was driven by high warranty costs and a $1.14 billion loss in its EV division. AdvertisementFord shares hit their lowest point since January after the carmaker's most recent earnings missed targets, sparking its steepest single-day loss since 2008. On Wednesday's earnings call, the carmaker reiterated its full-year profit guidance. Ford saw a $1.14 billion loss in its EV business as demand slows in the market.
Persons: , Ford, Jim Farley, Farley, EVs Organizations: EV, Service, Bloomberg
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
DETROIT – Ford Motor is leading a decline in major U.S. automotive stocks this week amid disappointing results and investor skepticism around future performance. Shares of Ford were off by more than 17% in early trading Thursday – on pace for their worst decline since 2009 – after missing Wall Street's bottom-line earnings expectations due to warranty problems, a reoccurring issue with the company. Shares of General Motors and Stellantis were notably off as well after reporting their results this week. Shares of Tesla , which reported results Tuesday afternoon, were up slightly Thursday after their largest daily decline since 2020 on Wednesday. GM, down roughly 7% this week, outperformed Wall Street's expectations for the second quarter and increased its guidance for the year.
Persons: , Stellantis —, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares Organizations: New York, DETROIT, Ford, General Motors, Tesla, — Ford, GM, NYSE Locations: Detroit
Auto giant Stellantis on Thursday reported a steep drop in first-half net profit, citing reduced volumes, temporary production gaps and lower market share in North America. The company, which owns household names including Jeep, Dodge, Fiat, Chrysler and Peugeot, reported first-half net profit of 5.6 billion euros ($6.07 billion), down 48% from the same period of 2023. Stellantis' adjusted operating income for the first six months of 2024 came in at 8.5 billion euros, down 5.7 billion euros on the year, primarily due to decreases in North America. For its part, Stellantis posted first-half net revenues of 85 billion euros, down 14% compared to the same period a year earlier. Of the 20 new product launches planned for 2024, Stellantis said 10 had already started production in the first six months of the year.
Persons: Ram, Stellantis, Carlos Tavares, Wall Organizations: Dodge Chrysler, Auto, Dodge, Fiat, Chrysler, Peugeot, U.S, General Motors, Ford Motor, GM, Ford Locations: Miami , Florida, North America
AdvertisementSpeed and ease — that's how generative AI is changing the game for finance professionals. In a survey of 780 banking and capital-markets employees by Accenture Research, 62% of respondents expect generative AI to increase people's stress and burnout. "Employees with AI skills will replace people without AI skills," Andrew Chin, the chief AI officer at the $759 billion money manager AllianceBernstein, told BI. AdvertisementA data scientist at a midsize hedge fund told BI that generative AI models are a "superpower for coders." The firm's ultimate aim is to use generative AI to replicate the success of its best bankers for all advisors.
Persons: Christina Melas, Rowe Price's Sébastien, Eric Burl, Alyssa Powell, Thomas H, Lee, Keri Smith, Smith, Ken Griffin, They've, Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Argenti, It's, I've, drudge, Andrew Chin, AllianceBernstein, Lisa Donahue, Donahue, Jobs, who's, He's, he'd, ChatGPT, Accenture's Smith Organizations: Bain Capital Ventures, Management, Business, Bain Capital, Man Group, Accenture Research, Finance, Wall Street, Blackstone, Sigma, Citadel, Milken Institute Global Conference, Excel, Accenture, Northern Trust, Citibank, Citi, JPMorgan Locations: New York City, New York
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