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However, Niclas Füllkrug equalized late on to rescue a point for the host nation and see it top the group. The draw means that Germany finishes on seven points after its three games in Group A, two points ahead of Switzerland. Elsewhere, Hungary scored a dramatic 100th-minute winner against Scotland to get its first win of the tournament and boost its qualification hopes. Germany piled on the pressure as the second half went continued, with Kai Havertz hitting the bar. The second half followed much the same pattern until the injury suffered by Varga halted the game.
Persons: Dan Ndoye, Remo Freuler, Niclas Füllkrug, Barnábas Varga, Angus Gunn, Varga, Damien Meyer, Dominik Szoboszlai, Robert Andrich, Jamal Musiala, Daniele Orsato, Ndoye, Jonathan Tah, Angelos Tzortzinis, Murat Yakin’s, Julian Nagelsmann, Yann Sommer, Kai Havertz, Willi Orbán’s, Kevin Csoboth, Lee Smith Organizations: CNN, Switzerland, C, B, Scotland, Getty, Stuttgart, Hungarian, Germany, Frankfurt, Hungary Locations: Germany, Frankfurt, Switzerland, England, Denmark, Slovenia, Serbia, Italy, Albania, Croatia, Hungary, Scotland, Stuttgart, AFP
A 2-0 victory over Hungary sent Germany through to the round of 16, and they got there pretty comfortably. Shaqiri was actually a surprise selection for Switzerland’s second Euro 2024 game against Scotland on Wednesday. Albania, just like against Italy, were ahead and could have pulled off the greatest result in their footballing history. Schar briefly joins the own goals club (Photo: Alex Grimm/Getty Images)Tim SpiersTalking of shocks, do world rankings matter? If the alternative is FIFA executives arbitrarily deciding on seedings among themselves, then it’s probably worth having official rankings.
Persons: Toni Kroos, Antonio Rudiger, Jamal Musiala, Florian Wirtz, Kai Havertz, Ilkay Gundogan, Wirtz, Robert Andrich, Tom Weller, Joshua Kimmich, Leroy Sane, Rudiger, Jonathan Tah, Sam Lee, Xherdan Shaqiri, Shaqiri, Kirill KUDRYAVTSEV, It’s, he’s, Nick Miller, Hysaj, Ante Budimir, Luka Sucic, Berat Djimsiti, Klaus Gjasula, Gjasula, Maximilian Wober, Robin Hranac, Fabian Schar, Scott McTominay’s, Yann Sommer’s, Schar, Alex Grimm, Tim Spiers, Poland —, GABRIEL BOUYS, it’s, Michael Cox What’s, Stefan Matzke – Organizations: England, European Championship, MLS, Albania, Hungary, Musiala, Getty, Sam Lee MLS, Chicago Fire, Scotland, Major League Soccer, Shaqiri, Croatia, Luka, Portugal, UEFA, Scottish, Belgium, Monday, Championship, FIFA, Locations: Denmark, Spain, Italy, Slovenia, Serbia, Germany, Hungary, South America, Scotland, Switzerland, Croatia, Albania, Swiss, Berat Djimsiti …, Czech Republic, Poland, AFP, Israel, Morocco, … Slovenia
Even without any interest rate cuts so far in 2024 — and with the likelihood of just one meager rate reduction by the end of the year — the stock market has been purring along. That’s quite an achievement, given the expectation in January that the Fed would trim rates six or seven times in 2024 — and that interest rates throughout the economy would be much lower by now. Buoyant as the stock market may seem, when you look closely, it’s apparent that the S&P 500’s recent returns rest on a precarious base. fever — based on the belief that artificial intelligence is ushering in a new technological age — has been spreading among investors, and that has been enough so far to keep the overall stock market averages rising. In fact, strip away the biggest companies, especially the tech companies, and overall market performance is unimpressive.
Persons: Organizations: Federal, Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple Locations: U.S
The annual tallies of chief executive pay for 2023 have arrived and they are fascinating and irritating, in equal measure. But this year, there’s a new wrinkle: Companies must disclose how much C.E.O. By that measure, too, chief executives are amassing extraordinary wealth. In 2023, using traditional measures of executive pay, four chief executives of publicly traded companies were each rewarded with more than $150 million:Plus, new rules stemming from the Dodd-Frank law of 2010 have gone into effect. They focus on how the market changes executive pay each year, yielding a second highest-paid C.E.O.
Persons: there’s, Dodd, Frank
Millions of Americans worry about Social Security — whether they will get the full retirement paychecks promised to them in years to come. And many younger people believe — incorrectly, in my view — that by the time they are ready to retire, Social Security will no longer be there for them. The latest annual Social Security Trust Funds report in May said that unless action was taken, benefit cuts of roughly 20 percent would have to start in 2033. Yet when you stop and really look at the problem, it turns out that what’s required for fixing Social Security is no big deal. It’s based on hard numbers calculated by Alicia Munnell, a Boston College economics professor who is among the nation’s premier experts on Social Security.
Persons: paychecks, Alicia Munnell Organizations: Social, Social Security Trust, Boston College, Social Security Locations: Washington
The Social Security Fix Nobody Wants to Talk About
  + stars: | 2024-05-31 | by ( Jeff Sommer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Millions of Americans worry about Social Security — whether they will get the full retirement paychecks promised to them in years to come. And many younger people believe — incorrectly, in my view — that by the time they are ready to retire, Social Security will no longer be there for them. The latest annual Social Security Trust Funds report in May said that unless action was taken, benefit cuts of roughly 20 percent would have to start in 2033. Yet when you stop and really look at the problem, it turns out that what’s required for fixing Social Security is no big deal. It’s based on hard numbers calculated by Alicia Munnell, a Boston College economics professor who is among the nation’s premier experts on Social Security.
Persons: paychecks, Alicia Munnell Organizations: Social, Social Security Trust, Boston College, Social Security Locations: Washington
If you follow the news, you know that tensions between the United States and China are high and that the commercial relationship between the two biggest trading nations on the planet has been fraying. Yet, amid the ominous headlines about a possible “decoupling” of the United States and China, you may be surprised by how strong and binding their financial ties remain. The two economies are closely linked, and, as an old China hand, I think that’s a good thing. Consider that while the publicly traded U.S. companies in the S&P 500 obtain almost 60 percent of their revenue domestically, the biggest source of their foreign sales is China. The second-largest foreign source was Japan, with 2.6 percent; followed by Germany and Britain, with 2.2 percent each; and then Taiwan, with 1.8 percent.
Locations: United States, China, Japan, Germany, Britain, Taiwan
Johnson Controls : Activist investor Elliott has built a more than $1 billion stake in the HVAC control firm, Bloomberg News reported. "The stock is up 22% [year to date], but it has lagged Trane . "It was just a mistake [to have an underweight rating on the stock]," Cramer said, adding later: "From 1995 on, you have to understand the moment inventories are lean, you've got to buy. Steel stocks: Analysts at Jefferies initiated coverage of steel stocks, beginning with a buy rating on Cleveland-Cliffs and U.S. Steel and hold ratings on Nucor and Steel Dynamics . JPMorgan Chase : The banking giant slightly raised its full-year net interest income outlook to $91 billion from $90 billion.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Elliott, Jim Cramer, Morgan Stanley, Cramer, you've, I've, Frank Del Rio, Harry Sommer, He'll Organizations: CNBC, Club, Johnson, Bloomberg News, Micron Technology, Jefferies, Cliffs, . Steel, Steel Dynamics, JPMorgan Chase, Cruise Locations: Cleveland
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNorwegian Cruise Line CEO Harry Sommer sits down with Jim CramerNorwegian Cruise Line President and CEO Harry Sommer 'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer to talk the state of the cruise industry, summer travel trends, and more.
Persons: Harry Sommer, Jim Cramer Organizations: Cruise, Cruise Line
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNorwegian Cruise Line's guests love freedom and flexibility, says CEO Harry SommerNorwegian Cruise Line President and CEO Harry Sommer 'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer to talk the state of the cruise industry, summer travel trends, and more.
Persons: Harry Sommer, Jim Cramer Organizations: Cruise Line
Norwegian Cruise Line CEO Harry Sommer told CNBC's Jim Cramer on Monday that younger generations are becoming more interested in the company's offerings. "We appeal obviously to older customers, but millennial and Gen Z is the fastest-growing segment of our cruising right now," he said. "They're coming, they're enjoying it, they see the value for the money, but they also appreciate the guest experience." Shares jumped on Monday, closing up 7.56%, after Norwegian raised its full year-guidance. According to Sommer, Norwegian continues to see demand among its target customer base, "middle and upper tier income consumers."
Persons: Harry Sommer, CNBC's Jim Cramer, Sommer Organizations: Cruise Locations: Sommer , Norwegian
I can’t watch a basketball game on TV without seeing ads urging me to place a bet on one app or another. I can’t walk down the street in New York City without seeing ads about the latest lottery jackpot. And when I sit at my desk in the office, I spend hours studying another type of betting — trading in financial markets, where you can place wagers on companies, bonds, commodities and derivatives of all descriptions. Yet the most consequential betting of all — wagers on elections in the United States — may soon be shut down by regulators. And the commission’s proposed new rule would give it the power to block trading on a broad range of other subjects.
Persons: United States — Organizations: Futures, Commission Locations: New York City, United States
Growth Stocks. Value Stocks. What Do Those Labels Mean?
  + stars: | 2024-05-10 | by ( Jeff Sommer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Growth and value are basic categories in stock investing. They are so widely used that you might assume that they mean something specific. Growth stocks promise to deliver a lot of earnings in the future but often deliver less than other stocks right now. Value stocks are priced well below what their advocates consider to be their real worth. If you look under the hood, you will find that what’s called growth or value in leading stock indexes can be wildly different, and can change year by year.
Locations: East, Eastern Europe
But even after two years of quantitative tightening, the amount of bonds and securities that the Fed still retains is stupendous. Quantitative tightening is a perilous operation. Earlier attempts — notably, in 2019 — disrupted financial markets. The slow pace of quantitative tightening is partly responsible for the Fed’s inability to contribute to the national budget. That’s because the Fed has also raised interest rates, which move in the opposite direction of bond prices.
Persons: Organizations: Fed, Treasury, Silicon Valley Bank Locations: United States
But exactly how inflation is hurting, helping and confusing people is hard to understand. There’s a fancy name for the common human failure to see past the gaudy prices largely created by inflation. This widespread inability to recognize what money is really worth is known as money illusion. Irving Fisher, a Yale economist, wrote a book about it nearly a century ago. But their insights tend to be forgotten when prices are fairly stable, as they were in the United States until three years ago.
Persons: you’re, Irving Fisher, John Maynard Keynes Organizations: Yale Locations: British, United States
The dollar has strengthened and there are new reasons to worry about a steep increase in the price of oil. Behind many of these changes are two familiar culprits: inflation and interest rates. The possibility of a widening conflict in the Middle East — and of rising oil prices feeding into inflation in the United States — surfaced again on Friday when Israel struck Iran. But consider this: For the first three months of 2024, U.S. stocks rose relentlessly, while bonds posted modest gains, amid expectations of a series of cuts in the short-term interest rates controlled by the Federal Reserve. Now, successive months of high inflation readings have dashed those hopes — or, at the very least, deferred them.
Persons: Bonds, Israel Organizations: Federal Reserve Locations: United States, Iran
Mammograms can miss tumors in women with dense breast tissue. So for these patients, doctors often include a second scan — ultrasound, for example, or an M.R.I. Though many women see the extra scan as a routine form of prevention, Medicare won’t pay for it, and some patients are left to pick up a hefty tab. But the clinic’s staff said that while her mammogram would be fully covered by Medicare, a so-called supplemental ultrasound was not. “I just don’t understand how something that has been the recommended diagnostic test for years is suddenly not covered by Medicare,” she said.
Persons: Mammograms, Joellen Sommer, Sommer, , Organizations: Medicare Locations: Manhattan
Trump or Biden? The Stock Market Doesn’t Care.
  + stars: | 2024-04-12 | by ( Jeff Sommer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The markets assume that former President Donald J. Trump has an even chance of winning the November election. After trailing for months, President Biden has moved slightly ahead of Mr. Trump in the betting on Predictit, the longest-running commercial prediction market in the United States. On Betfair, a robust British prediction market that is officially closed to U.S. residents, Mr. Biden has moved within one percentage point of Mr. Trump. Polymarket, an offshore market that accepts only cryptocurrency, shows Mr. Trump slightly ahead. “The prediction markets right now are telling us that the presidential election is basically a tossup,” said Eric Zitzewitz, a Dartmouth economist.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Biden, , Eric Zitzewitz, Organizations: Dartmouth Locations: United States
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNorwegian Cruise Line CEO on why they are 'the biggest growth story' in the cruise sectorHarry Sommer, CEO of Norwegian Cruise Line, joins CNBC's 'The Exchange' to discuss Norwegian's new ship order, travel trends, and more.
Persons: Harry Sommer Organizations: Cruise, Norwegian Cruise
Is it last orders for London’s nightlife?
  + stars: | 2024-04-06 | by ( Anna Cooban | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +9 min
London CNN —It’s Thursday, 11.00 p.m., and on a street in London’s Soho district, there’s a loud clatter. “People haven’t got the money,” she told CNN. “That’s when their bills started coming through, the first heating bills from the winter,” he told CNN. Even before the ravages of the pandemic, the number of London’s nightlife venues was in steady decline. They don’t just go out for the sake of going out now,” she told CNN.
Persons: London CNN —, Lesley Lewis, haven’t, , Michael Kill, Grazyna, ” Kill, , , that’s, Kill’s, Jeremy Joseph, Freddie Mercury, ” Joseph, Jack Henry, Henry, Lutz Leichsenring, Fabian Sommer, Leichsenring, London’s, Sadiq Khan, Amy Lamé, Lamé, Khan, Lamé “, Charlie Fenemer, It’s, Becky Lam, Lam, ” Chris Lau Organizations: London CNN, Staff, CNN, Time Industries Association, York Minister, London, , , German Commission, UNESCO, United Nations, Office, National Statistics, City Hall, Labour, Shady Locations: London’s Soho, London, Wales, Soho , London, Hoxton, London’s, Berlin, “ Berlin, Hong Kong, Soho, Hong, Beijing
It’s been a splendid run for the market — so emphatically great that in just the first three months of the year, the S&P 500 climbed to record highs on 22 separate days. But what most reports and commentary haven’t pointed out is that because inflation has also climbed sharply over the last few years, the value of stock prices has eroded, along with nearly everything else in the economy. When you factor in inflation, the stock market did not actually reach new heights. That’s finally changing, with the market’s gains outpacing the ravages of inflation sufficiently to push real stock valuations close to a new peak, according to calculations by Robert J. Shiller, the Yale professor and Nobel laureate in economics. In a phone conversation, he said, “On a monthly, inflation-adjusted basis, it does appear that the S&P 500 now is right around a record high.”
Persons: It’s, Robert J, Shiller, , Organizations: Yale
CNN —Crowds gathered in Germany overnight to celebrate the legalization of cannabis starting from Monday. Adults can now cultivate up to three cannabis plants for private consumption. From July 1, cannabis will be available in licensed not-for-profit clubs with no more than 500 members – all of whom would have to be adults. The German government said that cannabis would remain illegal for minors and highly restricted for young adults, adding that consuming the drug near schools and playgrounds would be illegal. The move makes Germany the third country in Europe – after Malta and Luxembourg – to legalize the drug for recreational use, removing cannabis from the official list of banned substances.
Persons: Fabian Sommer, Karl Lauterbach, it’s, Organizations: CNN Locations: Germany, Berlin, Europe –, Malta, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Australia
The advertised jackpots aren’t nearly as big as they look. And Powerball says its current jackpot is $935 million. These lottery grand prizes are a fortune, no doubt about that. But truth be told, those mouthwatering advertised jackpot numbers aimed at tempting people to buy tickets are misleading. Thanks to the magic of rising interest rates, the advertised numbers have swelled, while the real value of the current lottery prizes isn’t even half that much.
Locations: United States, New Jersey
It’s not a household name quite yet, but anyone who follows the stock market knows at least a little about Nvidia. The company is the wonder of the year, a stock by which all others are measured. Nvidia designs the chips that make artificial intelligence work, and because A.I. is being hailed as the most important technological development since the internet, Nvidia shares have been rocketing since last year. will one day become, but I do pay close attention to the stock market, which values Nvidia at more than $2.2 trillion, making it the third-largest public company in the world behind Microsoft and Apple.
Persons: It’s, I’m Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Meta, AMD, Taiwan Semiconductor, Intel
Politics and economics have always been intertwined, often in ways that were mystifying in real time. The polls show that many Americans perceive this contest with the distress reserved for root canals or colonoscopies. Democrats tend to view Mr. Trump as a villain who has committed serial misdeeds that include plotting to overturn the results of the last presidential election. At the same time, many Trump supporters see Mr. Biden as a doddering tax-and-spend political hack. The prospect of this dreaded rematch sent me back to the history books, and to economic and markets data, looking for precedents and parallels.
Persons: Biden, Donald J, Trump, Mr,
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