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[1/2] A trader works at the Frankfurt stock exchange, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Frankfurt, Germany, December 30, 2020. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) gained just 0.2% last month, the Labor Department said on Wednesday, lifted by rises in gasoline prices as well as rents, which offset a decrease in prices of used motor vehicles. CPI advanced 3.0% in the 12 months through June, down from 4.0% in May and the smallest year-on-year increase since March 2021. /FRXU.S. Treasury yields also dropped, with the 10-year Treasury yield now at 3.853%, down 12.9 basis points . EARNINGS AHEADOvernight in Asia, Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index (.AXJO) rose 0.4%, while the bouncing yen knocked Japan's Nikkei (.N225) down 0.8%.
Persons: Ralph Orlowski, Alexandra Wilson, Elizondo, Bryce Doty, Australia's, Wells, Scott Wren, Wren, Brent, Lawrence Delevingne, Marc Jones, Ankur Banerjee, Jan Harvey, Chizu Nomiyama, Mark Heinrich Our Organizations: REUTERS, Companies U.S, Treasury, Index, Labor Department, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Bank of England, U.S, Sit Investment, Fed, Bank of Canada, Japan's Nikkei, JPMorgan, Citigroup, Wells, Investment Institute, Brent, Thomson Locations: Frankfurt, Germany, U.S, Minneapolis, Asia, dealmaking, Boston, London, Singapore, Carolina, New York
[1/2] A trader works at the Frankfurt stock exchange, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak, in Frankfurt, Germany, December 30, 2020. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) gained just 0.2% last month, the Labor Department said on Wednesday, lifted by rises in gasoline prices as well as rents, which offset a decrease in the price of used motor vehicles. CPI advanced 3.0% in the 12 months through June, down from 4.0% in May and the smallest year-on-year increase since March 2021. /FRXU.S. Treasury yields also dropped, with the 10-year Treasury yield now at 3.885%, down 9.7 basis points . GLOBAL STOCKS, COMMODITIESOvernight in Asia, Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index (.AXJO) rose 0.4%, while the bouncing yen knocked Japan's Nikkei (.N225) down 0.8%.
Persons: Ralph Orlowski, Alexandra Wilson, Elizondo, Bryce Doty, Australia's, Wells, Brent, Lawrence Delevingne, Marc Jones, Ankur Banerjee, Shashwat Chauhan, Jan Harvey, Chizu Organizations: REUTERS, Companies U.S, Treasury, Index, Labor Department, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Bank of England, U.S, Sit Investment, Fed, Bank of Canada, Japan's Nikkei, JPMorgan, Citigroup, Brent, Thomson Locations: Frankfurt, Germany, U.S, Minneapolis, Asia, Boston, London, Singapore, Bengaluru
The Japanese yen strengthened against most major currencies and last fetched 139.43 against the dollar, its highest in a month. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) was 0.61% higher, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 index (.AXJO) rose 0.54%. "However, if the core CPI decelerates as anticipated, investors may continue to keep the odds for September and November rate hikes low." China shares (.SSEC) eased 0.14%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index (.HSI) rose 0.5% in early trading. The dollar index , which measures the U.S. currency against six peers, fell 0.197% at 101.40, having slid as low as 101.37, its lowest in two months.
Persons: Australia's, Hong, Rodrigo Catril, Wells, Saira Malik, Brent, Ankur Banerjee Organizations: Federal, Japan's Nikkei, Reuters, Saxo Markets, National Australia Bank, Investor, JPMorgan, Citigroup, New Zealand, Thomson Locations: SINGAPORE, Asia, Pacific, Japan, China, Wall, dealmaking
July 12 (Reuters) - China's financial regulator has asked banks to respond to a Goldman Sachs report published last week that downgraded ratings on some Chinese banks and raised questions over the whole sector, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday. Goldman said in a report last week it had downgraded Agricultural Bank of China (601288.SS), Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Industrial Bank(601166.SS), sending Chinese banking stocks tumbling. The Wall Street bank said Chinese banks could not maintain a good balance of provisions, capital and dividends at the same time as their earnings have been squeezed. The National Administration of Financial Regulation communicated with several of the largest Chinese banks and told them to respond appropriately without giving specific guidance, Bloomberg News reported citing sources. Last Friday, China's state-backed Securities Times said in an editorial the Goldman Sachs downgrade of lenders to "Sell" ratings was based on "pessimistic assumptions".
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Gursimran Kaur, Sonali Paul Organizations: Bloomberg, Agricultural Bank of China, Commercial Bank of China, Industrial Bank, National Administration of Financial, Securities Times, Thomson Locations: China's, Bengaluru
REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File PhotoNEW YORK, July 11 (Reuters) - Wall Street banks are expected to report higher profits for the second quarter as rising interest payments offset a downturn in dealmaking. Results for investment banking behemoths will also weaken, with EPS forecast to drop almost 59% at Goldman Sachs (GS.N). That offsets the doldrums in investment banking, where revenues have been depressed by rising interest rates and economic uncertainty. Reuters GraphicsBanking executives have also lowered expectations for the second quarter after mergers, acquisitions and debt offerings plunged in recent months. "We see higher credit risk ahead for lower to middle class families with higher credit card debt that cannot keep pace with higher living costs," Leon added.
Persons: Kevin Lamarque, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley's, David Konrad, Keefe, Goldman, Stephen Biggar, Wells, Morgan Stanley, Betsy Graseck, Kenneth Leon, Leon, Konrad, Nupur Anand, Saeed Azhar, Niket, Lananh Nguyen, Marguerita Choy, Andrea Ricci Organizations: Bank of America, REUTERS, JPMorgan, . Bank of America's, Citigroup, Universal, Argus Research, JPMorgan Chase, Reuters Graphics Banking, Federal Reserve, CFRA Research, Investors, Thomson Locations: Washington, Wells, Refinitiv, Wells Fargo, U.S, New York, Bengaluru
SummaryCompanies JPMorgan gains on Jefferies' upgrade ahead of earningsMegacaps recover after dip ahead of Nasdaq 100 rebalanceFutures up: Dow 0.02%, S&P 0.11%, Nasdaq 0.16%July 11 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures inched higher on Tuesday ahead of key inflation data that could support a sooner-than-expected end to the Federal Reserve's rapid interest-rate hikes. "The big-cap Nasdaq index is going to adjust weightings vs. a full addition or deletion. Also, far more money tracks the S&P 500, which is why S&P 500 component changes get a lot more attention than Nasdaq 100 moves." The S&P 500 banks index (.SPXBK) has shed 9% so far this year in the aftermath of the biggest crisis since 2008 that pummeled regional lenders. The sub-index is underperforming the benchmark S&P 500 index (.SPX), which has notched a 14.9% gain.
Persons: Joshua Warner, Hogan, Jefferies, Johann M Cherian, Shinjini Ganguli, Arun Koyyur Organizations: JPMorgan, Jefferies, Nasdaq, Dow, Federal, Fed, Index, Treasury, Nasdaq Inc, Riley, Dow e, JPMorgan Chase, Zions Bancorp, Truist, Thomson Locations: U.S, Bengaluru
NEW YORK, July 10 (Reuters) - Retail investors bought roughly $7 billion of equities last week, showing a near record appetite for shares since 2016, while U.S. hedge funds trimmed their exposure to global equities, Morgan Stanley said in a note to institutional investors seen by Reuters. The Wall Street bank said retail investors net bought mainly exchanged traded funds (ETF), although individuals also added shares across sectors except for communications, consumer staples and utilities. Contrary to retail, U.S.-based long/short hedge funds reduced their exposure to global equities last week. The bank tracks hedge funds it has as clients of its prime brokerage to show how they positioned during the week. Morgan Stanley estimated U.S. long/short hedge funds went down roughly 1% last week through Thursday.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Hedge, Dow Jones, Carolina Mandl, Chris Reese Organizations: YORK, Retail, Reuters, Nasdaq, Carolina, Thomson Locations: U.S, Asia, Japan, New York
Goldman Sachs says the recent surge in artificial intelligence stocks is not just hype but is driven by genuine potential in the new technology. Goldman's analysts dismissed some of those concerns and said companies like Nvidia and Microsoft are still trading at reasonable multiples. Stocks exposed to A.I. The analysts also highlighted stocks exposed to the AI trend, including Microsoft , Alphabet , and Amazon , leveraging their vast computing infrastructures to commercialize AI on a grand scale. According to Goldman Sachs, companies like Meta Platforms, Salesforce, Adobe, ServiceNow, Intuit, Capgemini, Pearson, London Stock Exchange Group, and Relay Therapeutics were also exposed to the AI theme.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, ChatGPT, Kash Rangan, Bubbles, Eric Sheridan, Sheridan, Stocks, Pearson Organizations: Robotics, Artificial Intelligence, Street, upstarts, Microsoft, Google, Nvidia, Wall, Marvell Technology, TSMC, Unimicron Technology, Adobe, Intuit, Capgemini, London Stock Exchange Group, Therapeutics
Overall, shares in European banks are outperforming U.S. peers as they did not face the deposit flight experienced in the United States. "In Europe, hedge funds have rotated out of banks and insurance into financial services in the past couple of months, but still positioning in European banks remains stronger than in U.S. banks," Goldman Sachs said in the report obtained by Reuters. The data shows European investors are more bullish about banks on their own continent, while they have a more neutral approach to U.S. banks. The gap between European hedge funds' positioning in European and U.S. banks has widened mainly after a crisis this year in which U.S.-based bank Silicon Valley Bank and two other lenders failed. Short interest as a share of free float in U.S. banks grew to 2.3% in June from 1.8% in January, while staying stable for European banks, at 0.6%.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Wells, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Carolina Mandl, David Holmes, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: YORK, Dow Jones, Banks, Reuters, Silicon Valley Bank, UBS, Credit Suisse, Bridgewater Associates, JPMorgan & Co, Bank of America Corp, Wells Fargo & Co, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Thomson Locations: U.S, United States, Europe, Silicon, Swiss
Goldman Sachs' said its clients in mainland China have "low expectations" for further stimulus measures to prop up the economy, the firm's economists wrote in a Wednesday note. "Local clients held low expectations for policy easing and structural reforms this year," Goldman's economists led by Maggie Wei wrote in the note. This comes after the People's Bank of China lowered policy rates last month, which included the medium-term lending facility (MLF) rate and loan prime rates (LPR). "Local clients did not expect major policy easing measures or structural reform measures to be rolled out in the July Politburo meeting," the economists added. Goldman's note added that while its local clients carry a "seemingly less pessimistic view" on China's near-term growth, they remain cautious about a longer-term trajectory for the economy.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Maggie Wei, it's Organizations: Lujiazui Financial, 5th China, Visual China, Getty, People's Bank of, U.S Locations: SHANGHAI, CHINA, Shanghai, China, People's Bank of China, China's
China bank shares slump in Hong Kong after Goldman downgrades
  + stars: | 2023-07-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
SHANGHAI, July 5 (Reuters) - Chinese banking shares listed in Hong Kong tumbled on Wednesday after Goldman Sachs downgraded top lenders including Agricultural Bank of China (AgBank) in a report that raised questions over the sector's financial health. Meanwhile, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and Industrial Bank (601166.SS) were both downgraded from "Buy" to "Sell". Agbank shares fell roughly 3% in Hong Kong, on track for their biggest one-day loss in nearly two months. In its report, Goldman said it expects Chinese banks' dividend yields would come in at 4-6% this year, two percentage points lower than before the adjustment. The bank also revised down pre-provision operating profit estimates for large Chinese banks by 5-6% this year and next.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Agbank, Himani Sarkar, Kim Coghill Organizations: Agricultural Bank of China, Mainland Banks Index, Industrial, Commercial Bank of China, Industrial Bank, Shanghai, Thomson Locations: SHANGHAI, Hong Kong, Mainland, ICBC's Hong Kong, China
NEW YORK, July 5 (Reuters) - European hedge funds have reduced their exposure to U.S. banks at a fast pace since the beginning of the year, while roughly keeping their positioning in European banks, Goldman Sachs (GS.N) said in a recent report sent to clients. Overall, shares in European banks are outperforming U.S. peers as they did not face a deposit flight as happened in the U.S. "In Europe, hedge funds have rotated out of banks and insurance into financial services in the past couple of months, but still positioning in European banks remains stronger than in U.S. banks," Goldman Sachs wrote in the report obtained by Reuters. The data show that European investors are more bullish about banks on their own continent, while they have a more neutral approach to U.S. banks. The gap between European hedge funds' positioning in European and U.S. banks has widened mainly after the banking crisis in which U.S.-based bank Silicon Valley Bank and two other lenders failed earlier this year.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Wells, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Carolina Mandl, David Holmes Organizations: YORK, U.S, Dow Jones, Banks, Reuters, Silicon Valley Bank, UBS, Credit Suisse, Bridgewater Associates, JPMorgan, Co, Bank of America Corp, Wells Fargo & Co, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Thomson Locations: U.S, Europe, Silicon, Swiss
CNN —Wall Street bankers, investors and economists have for months waffled over whether a US recession is coming. But for some Americans, the unforgiving economic pain typical during recession has already set in. Consumer spending accounts for about two-thirds of economic output, so if more Americans are forced to cut back because they were laid off, that might throw the US economy into a recession. Bank of America Chief Executive Brian Moynihan told CNN last week that he expects a mild recession early next year, rather than the late 2022 recession many have predicted. That means that laid-off Americans were often able to find a new job quickly due to a hot job market.
Persons: Al Brown, Brown, it’s, ” Brown, That’s, Allison Joyce, haven’t, Nina McCollum, hasn’t, She’s, ” McCollum, , Thomas Simons, ” Simons, Eva Marie Uzcategui, , Timothy A, Clary, Brian Moynihan, frustrates McCollum, Regina Walton, Walton, she’s, “ It’s, I’ve, ” Walton, , I’m, Richard Murray, Murray, he’s, you’re Organizations: CNN, Wall, Flyers, New, New Hanover NCWorks, Workforce, Bloomberg, Getty, Investors, Jefferies, National Bureau of Economic Research, Traders, New York Stock Exchange, Bank of America, San Francisco Bay Area, Companies, Consolidated Omnibus Budget, Cascade Locations: Concord , North Carolina, America, New Hanover, Wilmington , North Carolina, Cleveland , Ohio, Miami , Florida, AFP, San Francisco Bay, , Boston
US Senator Warren questions Goldman's role in SVB failure
  + stars: | 2023-06-30 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
Senator Elizabeth Warren has questioned Goldman Sachs' (GS.N) role in the failure of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and the profits it allegedly made in the process. The letter said Goldman Sachs benefited further as market turmoil following SVB's failure increased the value of the discounted bond portfolio by an estimated $100 million. Goldman acquired a bond portfolio on which SVB booked a $1.8 billion loss, a transaction that preceded a failed share sale by the lender for which the Wall Street bank was an underwriter. But it's well known that banks don't collect fees when capital raises are canceled," said Tony Fratto, a spokesman for Goldman Sachs. He reiterated that Goldman expects proceeds from the SVB portfolio sale to be closer to $50 million, and not $100 million.
Persons: Elizabeth Warren, Goldman Sachs, SVB, Warren, Goldman, Tony Fratto, Jaiveer Singh, Saeed Azhar, Pooja Desai Organizations: Silicon Valley Bank, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, SVB, Valley Bank, U.S, underwriters, Thomson Locations: Silicon, Bengaluru, New York
"For months, analysts have pumped the idea that Beijing has little choice but big-bang monetary easing," said Leland Miller, chief executive of China Beige Book. Shehzad Qazi Managing director, China Beige BookAs the report pointed out, "We already have monetary stimulus, it just isn't working." Major Wall Street banks — from Goldman Sachs and Bank of America to UBS and Nomura — recently cut their China growth projections. China Beige Book's survey involved 4,604 respondents in China across two periods: in mid-April, and from mid-May to mid-June. Derek Scissors Chief economist, China Beige Book
Persons: Leland Miller, it's, Shehzad Qazi, Goldman Sachs, Premier Li Qiang, Derek Scissors Organizations: Getty, People's Bank of China, China, Bank of America, UBS, Nomura, realtors, Premier Locations: China, Beijing, U.S
The emergence of OpenAI's large-language model ChatGPT has spurred investor excitement over AI, helping stocks with direct or perceived exposure to AI soar. AI stocks led the stock market in the first half of the year, with leading AI chipmaker Nvidia touching a $1 trillion market capitalization in May. Jefferies maintains a buy rating on Alphabet stock with a $150 per share price target, or about 25% upside from Wednesday's $120.18 close. The bank has a $280 per share price target on the Facebook parent, or about 2% below Wednesday's $285.29 close. Thill "believes META is best positioned to take advantage of the AI opportunity vs. social peers TikTok and Snap," the Jefferies report said.
Persons: Jefferies, isn't, Mark Lipacis, Mark, Bard, Brent Thill, Lloyd Byrne, TikTok Organizations: Jefferies Equity Research, Nvidia, Intel, Microsoft, Jefferies, Google, Chevron, . Energy, Facebook
Banks typically provide research to clients as part of a broader offering of services, but that changed when the European Union introduced the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) II laws in 2018 to improve transparency. "It took about a year for us to become compliant to MiFID II laws -- it was a long, intense process," said Candace Browning, head of BofA Global Research. U.S. financial firms were initially given an exemption by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which expires on July 3. "Companies continue to face challenges complying with the MiFID II unbundling requirement and U.S. law," said Joe Corcoran, SIFMA's managing director and associate general counsel for capital markets. 'EXPENSIVE AND COMPLICATED' In Europe, asset managers under MiFID II are not allowed to pay for research through broker commissions on trading -- instead, investors are billed separately by banks for research.
Persons: Banks, Candace Browning, Joe Corcoran, SIFMA's, SIFMA, MiFID, Michael Eastwood, Jefferies, Jesse Forster, BofA, salespeople, Browning, Forster, Russell Sacks, Nupur Anand, Lananh Nguyen, Deepa Babington Organizations: YORK, Bank of America Corp, Jefferies Financial, European Union, Financial, BofA Global, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Securities Industry, Financial Markets Association, SEC, Jefferies, Coalition, King, Spalding, Thomson Locations: Europe, U.S, Greenwich, Coalition Greenwich, New York
Goldman Sachs has named the tech stocks it expects to become more profitable over the next two years. Goldman Sachs believes that the bulk of the margin expansion is yet to come as companies start to realize the full benefits of cost-cutting measures implemented in the first half of 2023. The table below highlights Goldman's five stocks with the biggest upside that are expected to benefit from the above factors. Monday.com Monday.com , a software company that aims to improve efficiency among teams, is also expected to improve its financial performance. Vertex Vertex , a tax software provider, is expected by Goldman Sachs to see a 4.2 percentage point expansion in its operating margins from 2022 to 2024.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Salesforce, Goldman, Gabriela Borges, Monday.com, Guidewire, Procore, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Goldman
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. General Mills — Shares dropped 3.9% following mixed fiscal fourth-quarter results. The Betty Crocker and Cheerios owner beat Wall Street expectations on earnings, reporting $1.12 in adjusted earnings per share against a Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.07 per share. The Wall Street bank said Pinterest is making the strategic move to outsource monetization to third-parties to overcome its attribution and scale challenges, including a partnership with Amazon. ZoomInfo — Shares of the software company added 3.9% in premarket trading after Needham initiated coverage of ZoomInfo with a buy rating.
Persons: Mills, Betty Crocker, Biden, Wells, Pinterest, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Needham, ZoomInfo, Yun Li, Jesse Pound Organizations: Safeway, Nvidia, Street Journal, iShares Semiconductor, Amazon Locations: San Anselmo , California, China
A change to the board of directors at a top Wall Street bank has raised questions about what it means for the CEO. Goldman Sachs board is reportedly planning to add Tom Montag, a former longtime Goldman exec who became the No. And as a former partner at the bank, Montag also brings with him a certain cachet. Such is life on Wall Street, where the line between friend and foe is never quite clear. From Mark Zuckerberg's martial arts-led comeback to Jeff Bezo's hot yacht summer, tech bros are feeling themselves these days.
Persons: Dan DeFrancesco, you've, , we've, Tom Montag, Craig Barritt, Tory Burch, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, David Solomon, Montag, Solomon, Insider's Dakin Campbell, Merrill, Insider's Alex Morrell, Jeff Bezos, Clive Mason, Mark Zuckerberg's, Jeff Bezo's, Biden's, Jen Glantz, Pete Buttigieg, Jeffrey Cane, Hallam Bullock Organizations: Costco, Tory, Tory Burch Foundation, Bank of America, Bloomberg, Goldman, Solomon, BofA, Getty, Finance bros, Transportation, Starbucks, LinkedIn Locations: NYC, BofA, BlackRock, New York, London
LONDON, June 27 (Reuters) - Wall Street bank JPMorgan said on Tuesday it was staying "bearish" on China's yuan despite its recent slide and that the country's central bank could look to step in to prevent the move accelerating. "As spot currency weakness and depreciation expectations tend to be self-reinforcing, the People's Bank of China might find it necessary to introduce some circuit breaker, with stronger fixings (the central bank's official daily FX rate) a preemptive move to prevent currency weakness going non-linear," JPMorgan's analysts said in a research note. The yuan rallied on Tuesday after the central bank set its daily fixing stronger than market expectations for the second day in a row, bolstering speculation that authorities were becoming less tolerant of the currency's weakness. Reporting by Marc Jones; Editing by Amanda CooperOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Marc Jones, Amanda Cooper Organizations: JPMorgan, People's Bank of China, Thomson Locations: Street
New York CNN Business —The United States is recovering faster than its peers from the historic bout of inflation squeezing families and souring the mood of the nation, according to a new analysis from White House economists. To address that, the White House economists built an apples-to-apples inflation metric that makes certain adjustments to how shelter costs factor into overall inflation. But we are very heartened and happy to see the trend going where it is,” a CEA official told CNN in a phone interview. And here’s the thing about inflation: It is undeniably down in the United States.”Two independent economists that CNN shared the CEA report with support the logic powering the analysis. That is absolutely a painful thing,” the CEA official said.
Persons: Joe Biden’s, , “ I’m, Mark Zandi, Republican John McCain, Zandi, Joe Brusuelas, ” Brusuelas, Joe Biden, Ronald Reagan, Biden, Brian Moynihan, CNN’s Poppy Harlow, George W, Bush, Piper Sandler, Trump, ” Piper Sandler Organizations: New York CNN Business —, White House, of Economic Advisers, CNN, CEA, White, Republican, RSM, Federal Reserve, Bank of America, Federal, Gallup Locations: United States, Ukraine, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, America, Europe, Wall, Middle America
Lucid Group — Lucid shares jumped 9% after the electric vehicle maker said it will provide powertrain and battery systems to British luxury automaker Aston Martin. Davidson upgraded the stock to buy from neutral, noting WSFS could benefit from a higher-for-longer interest rate environment. UBS upgraded the pharmaceutical stock to buy from neutral, saying the potential for other vaccines for the company isn't fully appreciated by investors. Alphabet — Shares of Alphabet fell 1.8% after UBS downgraded the tech giant to neutral from buy. Tesla — The electric vehicle maker dropped 2.8% after Goldman Sachs downgraded Tesla to neutral from buy.
Persons: Aston, Davidson, WSFS, Tesla, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: Aston Martin, D.A, Regional Banking, Pfizer, Cruise, Moderna — Moderna, UBS, Barclays Locations: Royal Caribbean
NEW YORK, June 26 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) plans to add former Bank of America executive Tom Montag to its board, a person familiar with the matter said on Monday, as Goldman's leadership faces challenges over its strategy. The bank's board is gathering in India this week, a second source said. Montag, who has previously worked at Goldman Sachs, is currently CEO of Rubicon Carbon, a carbon-market venture backed by asset manager TPG. The planned appointment was first reported by Bloomberg News, which said that Montag is an ally of CEO David Solomon. Montag, described by his peers as a hard-charging executive, was formerly a partner at Goldman Sachs and jointly led its securities division until late 2007.
Persons: Tom Montag, Montag, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, Goldman, Merrill Lynch, Solomon, Saeed Azhar, Manya, Arun Koyyur, Emelia Organizations: YORK, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, of America, Rubicon, TPG, Bloomberg News, Bank of America, Manya Saini, Thomson Locations: India, New York, Bengaluru
Bank of America has named the European companies whose stocks are expected to perform robustly in the face of a possible economic downturn. It comes amid increasing signs that the European economy could be headed for a period of extended recession. Bank of America's proprietary Style Cycle model also shows that the region is facing a "recession phase." The forward cash yield measures how much cash a company is expected to generate for its shareholders over the next year compared to its current market price. The cash yield also includes returns through buybacks.
Persons: Intesa Sanpaolo, Paulina Strzelinska Organizations: of America, of, KBC, Eni, Nordea Bank, Barclays, Aviva, BNP, Bank, America's Locations: Europe, Belgium, Italy, Finland, Repsol, Spain, United Kingdom, France, buybacks, industrials
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