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Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street.
Persons: Jim Cramer, There's, Nvidia —, Russell, Dow, Robert Ford, Abbott, we're, Stanley Black, Decker, Elliott, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Microsoft, Nvidia, Nasdaq, Abbott Laboratories, Honeywell, Bloomberg, Quantinuum, Procter & Gamble, Stanley, Devices, Starbucks, Elliott Management, Jim Cramer's Charitable
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Ryanair — Shares fell 16% after the budget airline reported weaker-than-expected fiscal first-quarter earnings . CrowdStrike — The cybersecurity stock plunged 12% as investors fully digested Friday's massive outage , which resulted in thousands of canceled flights. IQVIA Holdings — The stock jumped more than 6% after the health tech company's earnings beat expectations for the second quarter. In the second quarter, the company reported sales of $32.8 billion, below the $33.05 billion FactSet consensus estimate. Mattel — Shares of the toymaker soared more than 11%.
Persons: CrowdStrike, FactSet, Tesla, Elon Musk, LPR, Xpeng, Catterton, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Darla Mercado Organizations: Ryanair —, Guggenheim, Holdings, Nvidia —, Reuters, Blackwell, Verizon —, , EV, People's Bank of, Li Auto, Mattel —, Mattel, Semiconductor, — Investors, VanEck Semiconductor, KLA Corporation, ASML Locations: CrowdStrike, People's Bank of China, chipmakers
Bank of America — The bank stock dipped more than 1% in premarket trading after a filing revealed that Warren Buffett 's Berkshire Hathaway sold 33.9 million Bank of America shares for almost $1.5 billion last week. Berkshire remains Bank of America's largest shareholder with a 10.8% stake after the sale. Berkshire may be taking some profits with the bank stock up 27.4% so far this year. Verizon — The telecommunications stock slid 3% after Verizon posted quarterly revenue that disappointed estimates. Apple — Shares gained 1% after Wells Fargo raised its price target on Apple to $275 from $225, implying more than 20% upside, ahead of the company's earnings results.
Persons: Guggenheim, Blackwell, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, Fitch, Wells Fargo, , Alex Harring, Yun Li Organizations: Nvidia —, Reuters, Nvidia, Bank of America, Berkshire, of America, Bank, America's, Verizon, Abercrombie, JPMorgan, Truist, Apple —, Apple, Apple Intelligence Locations: CrowdStrike, Berkshire
With the S & P 500 surging more than 18% in 2024, it might be time for investors to make a few defensive moves in their portfolios. But that surge is spurring some financial advisors to reassess their clients' exposure to large-cap tech and turn toward currently unloved asset categories that could be poised to rise. "It might take a little longer to manifest but we think [health care] is an interesting combination of offense and defense, and it provides meaningful cash flows for investors," Saccocia said. Checking in on risk and cash Investors reviewing their 2024 gains should also reassess their risk profile and consider whether their asset allocation reflects their long-term goals. Tom Balcom, CFP and founder of 1650 Wealth Management in Lighthouse Point, Florida, has used custom market-linked notes to hedge clients' exposure to the market.
Persons: Nvidia —, Shon Anderson, Russell, Jerome Powell's, Shannon Saccocia, Neuberger Berman, Saccocia, Colin Gerrety, Gerrety, Tom Balcom, Balcom, Morningstar Organizations: Nvidia, Anderson Financial, Federal, Big Tech, Investors, JPMorgan Chase, UnitedHealth, Wealth Services Locations: Dayton , Ohio, REITs, North Bethesda , Maryland, Lighthouse Point , Florida
The most bullish year-end target for the S&P 500 was 5,100, which represented solid upside of about 7% from where it ended the year. Those predictions look paltry in hindsight, as the S&P 500 finished the first half of the year up 14.5% at 5,460. Bulls are getting bolder, but risks remainIn response, several major firms have boosted their year-end S&P 500 targets in recent months. AdvertisementGoldman Sachs recently shared earnings growth projections for the 100 biggest stocks in the S&P 500, both for this year and next. Below are those 14 large-cap stocks expected to grow earnings by at least 25% next year, along with each one's ticker, market capitalization, and 2024 and 2025 earnings growth estimates.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Oppenheimer's John Stoltzfus, David Kostin, Kostin Organizations: Service, Business, Bulls, BMO Capital Markets, Deutsche Bank, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia —
Helen of Troy — The housewares stock plummeted nearly 28%, hitting a new 52-week low during the session. The company posted an earnings miss for its first quarter of fiscal 2025 before the bell, earning 99 cents per share, excluding items. Lucid — The electric vehicle company's stock added nearly 1% after rallying about 8% in the previous session. Lucid jumped after the firm said it delivered 2,394 vehicles in the second quarter, marking a 70% year-over-year increase. Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle company popped more than 4%.
Persons: Blackwell, Helen of Troy —, FactSet, UiPath, Lucid, Eli Lilly's Mounjaro, Eli Lilly, Morgan Stanley, Corning, Yun Li, Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Darla Mercado Organizations: Nvidia, UBS, BP — U.S, Novo Nordisk, Novo Nordisk's Ozempic, Sony, Paramount, National Amusements, Skydance Media, Apollo, CNBC Locations: Novo
Nvidia — Shares rose more than 1% after KeyBanc hiked its price target on the chipmaker to $180, implying upside of more than 40% from Monday's close. "Despite the impending launch of Blackwell in 2H24, we are not seeing any signs of a demand pause as demand for H100 remains robust," KeyBanc said. BP — The oil and gas giant's U.S.-listed shares fell more than 4% after the company warned it expects to report an impairment of up to $2 billion. Tempus AI — Shares popped nearly 4% after several Wall Street banks initiated coverage of the health-care diagnostics company with buy or overweight ratings. Helen of Troy — Shares of the Hydro Flask and Oxo parent fell more than 25% after a big earnings miss.
Persons: KeyBanc, Helen of Troy —, FactSet, , Fred Imbert, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: UBS, Nvidia, Blackwell, BP, Nasdaq, Intel, Hydro Locations: Monday's, 2H24, U.S
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Nvidia — Shares of the artificial intelligence darling fell 1% after a rare negative call on Wall Street . New Street Research downgraded Nvidia to hold from buy, citing limited upside given the big run already this year. Crypto stocks — Stocks tied to the cryptocurrency plummeted after the trustee for the now defunct Mt. SoftBank Group , Arm Holdings — U.S. shares of SoftBank rose 5.5% after Japanese shares hit their first record high in 24 years on Thursday. Teck Resources — The stock rose more than 2% after Bloomberg reported Thursday that Canada had approved Glencore's $6.9 billion acquisition of Teck's metallurgical coal business.
Persons: Macy's, Stocks, Energy, CleanSpark, Masayoshi, SoftBank, Nio, Zeekr, Li, Emmanuel Papadakis, Teck, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: Nvidia, New, Research, Street Journal, Arkhouse Management, Brigade Capital Management, Marathon, SoftBank, Arm Holdings —, Reuters, Francisco Partners, KKR, , European Union, Li Auto, Novo Nordisk, Novo Nordisk's Ozempic, Deutsche Bank, Harvard Medical, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: SoftBank, Europe, Novo, Teck
Boeing , Spirit AeroSystems — Boeing on Monday said it would buy back fuselage maker Spirit AeroSystems in a $4.7 billion all-stock deal. Boeing shares dipped 0.3%, while Spirit AeroSystems shares popped 4.5%. Verizon — Shares ticked up 0.5% after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage with a buy rating. Verizon shares will rise amid an improving competitive backdrop in the telecommunications industry, according to Goldman Sachs. Intercontinental Exchange — The financial exchange's shares rose 1.4% on the back of a Goldman Sachs upgrade to buy from neutral.
Persons: Kitty, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, , Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: UBS, GameStop, Boeing, Verizon, Intercontinental Exchange, Nvidia
Rivian Automotive — Shares of Rivian Automotive skyrocketed more than 40% after the electric vehicle company secured up to $5 billion in funding from Volkswagen Group. A so-called short squeeze added fuel to the gain as about 19% of the Rivian shares available for trading were sold short before this news, according to FactSet. Nvidia — The chip stock added more than 2%, building on a nearly 7% rebound during Tuesday's session. Aptiv — The automotive technology stock dropped 7% after Piper Sandler downgraded Aptiv to underweight from neutral and cut its price target. Robinhood — Shares added 3%.
Persons: Bosch, Mills, Aptiv, Piper Sandler, Campbell, Ken Goldman, Wolfe, Sarah Min, Lisa Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Rivian Automotive, Volkswagen Group, FactSet, FedEx — FedEx, Whirlpool, Reuters, Southwest Airlines —, Nvidia, Citi Research, Rivian, Volkswagen, JPMorgan, United States Steel, BMO Capital Markets, U.S, Steel, Nippon Steel, Micron Technology Locations: Tuesday's
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: SolarEdge Technologies — Shares of the company tumbled more than 20% following the announcement that it will offer $300 million worth of convertible notes due 2029. — The stock plunged more than 7% after the company updated its earnings guidance for the full year on Monday after the bell. The wholesale pool supplies distributor expects full-year earnings between $11.04 and $11.44 per share. Carnival — Shares added nearly 8% after the cruise company posted a second-quarter earnings and revenue beat. Penn Entertainment — The casino operator and online gambling platform's stock fell 5% after Raymond James downgraded it to market perform from outperform.
Persons: Leslie's, LSEG, Raymond James, Enovix, Rivian, , Alex Harring, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound Organizations: U.S . Securities, Exchange, Pool Corp, Carnival, Penn Entertainment, Airbus, Nvidia —, Novo Nordisk, Guggenheim, Spirit AeroSystems, Boeing, Bloomberg Locations: Singapore, France, China
Affirm — The buy now, pay later stock popped 10% after Goldman Sachs assumed coverage of the name at a buy rating. Roth MKM upgraded Cinemark to a buy from a neutral rating, saying that headwinds should soon shift to "very attractive tailwinds." Anheuser-Busch InBev — The brewing company's shares rose around 3% after UBS upgraded the stock to buy from neutral. Carrier Global — The heating and ventilation stock rose 3% on the heels of a Citi upgrade to buy from neutral. Energy stocks – A slate of energy names rose as crude oil futures jumped to start the last week of June.
Persons: Eli Lilly, tirzepatide, Eli Lilly's, ATTR, Goldman Sachs, Will Nance, Roth MKM, headwinds, Morgan Stanley, Cowen, Ferrari, Brent, SLB, Baker Hughes, — CNBC's Lisa Han, Jesse Pound, Alex Harring, Sean Conlon, Samantha Subin Organizations: Systems, Food and Drug Administration, Coyote Logistics, UPS, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Nvidia, Microsoft, Anheuser, Busch InBev, UBS, Busch, IBM, Ryder, Carrier, Citi, Ferrari —, Energy, West Texas Intermediate, APA Locations: U.S
UPS shares were unchanged in premarket trading. Planet Fitness — The budget-friendly gym chain climbed 3.1% after TD Cowen named the stock a top pick and raised its rating to buy from hold. Affirm — The buy-now-pay-later stock jumped 3.2% on the heels of Goldman Sachs' initiation at a buy rating. IBM — The legacy tech giant moved 1.4% higher after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage with a buy rating. Cinemark — Shares popped 3.3% after Roth MKM upgraded the American movie theater chain to buy from neutral, citing "meaningful box office improvement."
Persons: Eli Lilly — ResMed, Eli Lilly's, Eli Lilly, Jefferies, TD Cowen, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Roth MKM, , Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound Organizations: Coyote Logistics, UPS, RXO, Coyote, Nvidia, Carrier, Citi, Ferrari —, UBS, Anheuser, Busch InBev —, IBM
The decline comes after the AI chipmaker on Tuesday briefly topped Microsoft as the most valuable public company. Nike — The athletic clothing maker moved 1% higher following an upgrade at Oppenheimer to outperform from market perform. Asana — Shares popped more than 3% after the software firm announced a $150 million share buyback plan. Gilead Sciences — The pharmaceutical stock rose more than 2.6%, building on a rally of 8.5% from the previous session. Delta Air Lines — The stock rose 0.7% following news Thursday that the airliner announced a quarterly dividend of 15 cents a share, a 50% increase from previous levels.
Persons: Oppenheimer, Gilead, LendingTree, Bernstein, Toni Sacconaghi, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Sarepta Therapeutics, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Nike, Gilead Sciences, Bloomberg, Apple —, Air Lines Locations: U.S, Gilead
Hertz Global — Shares rose more than 10% after the car rental giant upsized a bond offering to $1 billion . Asana — The stock popped 10.5% after the software firm announced a share buyback plan that would cost $150 million. Nvidia — The chipmaker dropped another 1% following a 3.5% decline in the previous session. Gilead Sciences — Shares of the pharmaceutical company popped around 2%, adding to an 8.5% rally from the previous session. Palo Alto Networks — Shares rose 2.4% after D.A.
Persons: Gilead, LendingTree, Davidson, D.A, Boyd Gaming, Boyd, , Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox Organizations: Therapeutics, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, FDA, Hertz, Nvidia, Gilead Sciences, Bloomberg, Palo Alto, D.A, Penn Entertainment, Boyd, Reuters, Boeing Locations: U.S, Gilead, Palo, cybersecurity, Thursday's
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: Accenture — The tech stock jumped 8.6%. While Accenture missed earnings and revenue expectations in its latest quarter, according to FactSet, the information technology company posted more than $900 million in new generative AI bookings. Trump Media & Technology Group — Shares tumbled nearly 12% after the company on Tuesday said that its registration of additional shares was declared effective by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Dell Technologies , Super Micro Computer — Shares jumped more than 4% each. Advanced Micro Devices — Shares added about 1% after Piper Sandler called the semiconductor stock a top pick among large caps.
Persons: Elon Musk, Dell, Musk, LSEG, Piper Sandler, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Accenture, Trump Media & Technology, Securities and Exchange Commission, Nvidia, Microsoft, Dell Technologies, xAI, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Juniper Networks, Juniper, KB
Shares in Adobe jumped by 17% after its results announcement last week, and are up around 7% in the last 12 months. "The market is not seeing much potential in Adobe because Nvidia is making all these big future predictions and markets love that. HDFC Bank In India, the wealth manager is betting on financial firm HDFC , as the country — and the bank itself — prepares for growth. When asked how HDFC compares with competitors like ICICI Bank , Sengupta responded that the former's management is "very stable with consistent leadership and that puts them in good standing." Shares in the bank are up by just over 1% in the last 12 months, but are showing signs of picking up.
Persons: Dhruba Jyoti Sengupta, Sengupta, Davidson, Harley Davidson, HDFC Organizations: Nvidia, CNBC Pro, Wrise, Adobe, Harley, HDFC Bank, India, ICICI Bank, National Stock Exchange, U.S, India Financials Locations: Asia, East, Europe, Dubai, India, FactSet
But while fundamental factors around these names are supportive of their multiples, the market isn't in the all-clear zone, according to Charles Schwab chief investment strategist Liz Ann Sonders. "AI and its enthusiasm — I think that's very legitimate," Sonders told CNBC's " Squawk on the Street " on Monday. "At this stage in the game, the trajectory of earnings, you could argue, is supportive of valuations." In contrast to the dot-com bubble, the current AI rally has much stronger fundamental factors correlated to momentum, Sonders said. "You're looking at the party of stocks and what they're doing, or just what the index is doing courtesy of a very small number of stocks," Sonders said.
Persons: Charles Schwab, Liz Ann Sonders, Sonders, CNBC's, brining Organizations: Nvidia
The S & P 500 is higher by 14% already this year, having topped 5,400 for the first time, already blowing past the year-end forecasts of many strategists. In its revised forecast, Goldman Sachs anticipates the S & P 500 still has further to climb. It would mean a 13% fall for the S & P 500, back down to 4,700. Megacap exceptionalism If AI stocks continue to outperform, defying expectations, stocks could see a huge megacap tech rally between now and year's end. In this scenario, investors can expect the S & P 500 to close out the year at 6,300, a gain of about 16%.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, David J, Kostin, Goldman, Nvidia — Organizations: Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Federal Reserve
Wall Street is wondering whether the tech rally that's pushed the S & P 500 through record after record this year can continue, even as some cracks emerge in the market outlook. .SPX YTD mountain S & P 500 near record highs A peek inside the major indexes also reveals a similar pattern. Information technology is the best-performing sector in the S & P 500 this week, gaining 6.2%. As it is, the S & P 500 is already above 5,400, having advanced more than 13% this year. Winners and losers market David Miller, investment chief at Catalyst Funds, also said the S & P 500 could end 2024 with a 17% or 18% gain.
Persons: Jeff Klingelhofer, it's, Klingelhofer, Brian Nick, Nick, Dave Sekera, Dave Donabedian, Donabedian, David Miller, Miller Organizations: Nasdaq, Nvidia, Dow Jones, Apple, Thornburg Investment Management, CNBC, Macro, Federal Reserve, Morningstar, CIBC Private Wealth, Catalyst Funds, Microsoft, Google, Visa, MasterCard, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Novo Nordisk, TransDigm, Index, Retail, Manufacturing, Housing, Philadelphia Fed, Kroger, Darden, PMI Locations: U.S, NAHB
DraftKings — The sports betting stock added 1.8% after Morgan Stanley reiterated its overweight rating and said shares were again worthy of a top-pick designation. Morgan Stanley said the stock can rally despite concerns around Illinois' legalization of a sports betting tax. Nvidia — Shares were marginally lower ahead of the chipmaker stock's first day of trading after its 10-for-1 stock split . Planet Fitness — Stock in the fitness center chain advanced about 4% on the heels of an upgrade from Jefferies earlier on Monday. Analyst Randal Konik said "the stars have aligned" for Planet Fitness stock, adding that he expects strong franchise unit growth in 2025.
Persons: GoDaddy, Robert Half, Dow, Morgan Stanley, Joseph Moore, Randal Konik, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: KKR, CrowdStrike, Comerica, Dow Jones, Dell Technologies, Palantir Technologies, AMD —, Nvidia —, Southwest Airlines —, Street Journal, Elliott Investment Management, Carvana, JPMorgan, Energy Global, Jefferies, Fitness Locations: Illinois
Five Below told investors to expect between $830 million and $850 million, while analysts polled by LSEG forecasted $883 million. Sprinklr — The business technology stock dove 21.1% in the wake of weak guidance for the current quarter and full year. StoneCo — The financial technology stock rose 2.6% following an upgrade to overweight from neutral by JPMorgan . Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical — The biopharma stock added nearly 4% following an upgrade to buy from neutral at Goldman Sachs. Shopify — The e-commerce technology stock slipped 1.6% on the back of a MoffettNathanson downgrade to neutral from buy.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Smartsheet, LSEG, Sprinklr, Mizuho, there's, StoneCo, CH Robinson, Goldman, ISI's, Shopify, Guggenheim, , Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Nvidia, LSEG, Revenue, Mizuho, JPMorgan, Ultragenyx Pharmaceutical, Goldman, eBay, Citi, UBS, BMO Capital, BMO, Viridian Therapeutics, ISI, Energy Locations: Americas
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: CrowdStrike — The cybersecurity company popped 9% after posting a strong outlook and a first-quarter results beat. Dollar Tree — Shares of the discount retailer fell more than 4% after second-quarter guidance came in below expectations. Dollar Tree said it expected between $1 and $1.10 in adjusted earnings per share, while analysts surveyed by FactSet had penciled in $1.19 per share. Verint reported adjusted earnings of 59 cents per share on revenue of $221.3 million in the first quarter. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had anticipated just 54 cents in earnings per share and $214.5 million in revenue.
Persons: CrowdStrike, LSEG, FactSet, Kerrisdale, Brown, Forman, Verint, Tommy Hilfiger, PVH, Fadi Chamoun, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, KeyBanc, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Yun Li, Sean Conlon, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin Organizations: Hewlett Packard Enterprise, GameStop, AMC, Kerrisdale, FactSet, SAP, Archer Aviation, Federal Aviation Administration, Systems, Materials, KLA, Barclays, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Authentic Brands, Old Dominion, BMO Capital Markets, Nvidia, America's, Jazz Pharmaceuticals Locations: China
Read previewNvidia cofounder and CEO Jensen Huang is in Taiwan this week, where he's getting rockstar reception and boosting the stock market. The drills started on Thursday, but Taiwan's stock market was little changed over the period. "In this case, the AI equity theme, physical investment in AI, and the wider upturn in electronic component demand are driving robust Taiwanese growth and the strong stock market performance," wrote Green. He added that an outright invasion of Taiwan by China is "very unlikely" due to high military and economic risk. "If the macro backdrop is positive and China remains far from achieving 'fortress-like' economic conditions, future sell-offs may offer attractive buying opportunities," Green wrote.
Persons: , Jensen Huang, Huang, Li Xi, Morris Chang, Lisa Su —, Pat Gelsinger, Cristiano Amon, Rene Haas, Rory Green, It's, Green Organizations: Service, China's People's Liberation Army, Business, Local, rockstar, Asus, AMD, Qualcomm, Semiconductor, PLA, Investors, Philadelphia Stock Exchange, Nvidia Locations: Taiwan, China, Beijing, TSMC, Taipei, Taiwan's, GlobalData.TS, Ukraine, Russia
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday: GameStop — Shares jumped nearly 23% following the video game retailer's announcement on Friday that it made about $933 million from a stock sale. U.S. Cellular — Shares added 7% after the telecom company announced T-Mobile will acquire its wireless operations and 30% of spectrum assets for $4.4 billion. T-Mobile was up less than 1%, while Telephone and Data Systems , which owns 84% of U.S. Cellular, slipped 2%. Norwegian Cruise Line — The cruise stock rose 3% after an upgrade to buy from neutral at Mizuho. Zscaler — The cybersecurity company shed nearly 4% following a downgrade at Wells Fargo to equal weight from overweight.
Persons: Agios, vorasidenib, , Duolingo Max, Semler, Elon, Zscaler, Airbnb, Eli Lilly, Macheel, Pia Singh, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: GameStop, . Illinois, U.S, Cellular, Mobile, Telephone, Data Systems, U.S . Cellular, . Food, Drug, Pharmaceuticals, Royalty Pharma, Nvidia, Cruise, Mizuho, Sarepta Therapeutics, RBC Capital Markets, RBC, Sea, Reuters, , Energy Capital Partners, Wedbush, FDA Locations: U.S, Norwegian, Wells
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