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Kinga Krzeminska | Moment | Getty ImagesIreland goes to the polls on Nov. 29, with center-right parties Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael once again expected to form the nucleus of the country's next government. On the flipside, there are concerns in Dublin that U.S. President-elect Donald Trump will look to clamp down on U.S. companies paying taxes in Ireland, instead of in America. Political angleThe country's two biggest parties look once again on track to form a government, despite some travails for Fine Gael as the campaign winds down. The latest Irish Times/Ipsos B&A poll of Nov. 25 shows support for Fine Gael falling six points to 19% over the last two weeks, while Fianna Fáil's backing now stands at 21%. It is nevertheless unclear what policy changes can be expected, given the sway that Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael are likely to have in a potential government.
Persons: Kinga, Fáil, Donald Trump, Republican Party Sinn, Emma Howard, Jack Chambers, Howard, Trump's Organizations: Images, Fine Gael, Green Party, European Court of Justice, Apple, Irish Times, Republican Party, Housing, Central Bank of Ireland, TU Dublin, CNBC, IMF, ECB, European Commission, Finance, AAA Locations: Ireland, Dublin, America
AdvertisementAs many Americans struggle with a high cost of living, Gen X is in a particularly tight spot. Gen X has the highest income of all but also the highest debt. As a Bank of America Institute research note said, Gen X has seen its discretionary spending drop the most of all generations. The analysis attributed that, in part, to Gen Xers trying to sock away more for retirement and investing more. AdvertisementBut as Bank of America notes, Gen X is in the "sandwich" phase of life: Some are juggling supporting adult children and older relatives.
Persons: X, Gen X, Xers —, they're, Xers, Gen Xers, I'm, Wendy Graham, Barbara Lose, Graham, who's, Xer Organizations: Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Philadelphia Fed, Bank of America Institute, of Labor Statistics, Bank of America, University of Michigan's Locations: Philadelphia, Florida
A pedestrian walks past signage for the Bank of Korea in Seoul, South Korea, on Monday, Nov. 22, 2021. South Korea on Thursday cut its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points to 3% in a surprise move, as the country strives to boost its economy that has seen tepid growth. Economists polled by Reuters had estimated the bank to hold rates at 3.25%. This also marked the first time the BOK has enacted two back-to-back cuts since 2009. It had cut rates by 25 bps in its last meeting in October.
Persons: BOK Organizations: Bank of, Reuters, bps Locations: Bank of Korea, Seoul, South Korea
The Kansas City Chiefs' most important catch happened after Sunday's win against the Carolina Panthers, when defensive lineman Tershawn Wharton saved a young fan who fell from the stands. The moment Wharton caught the child was captured on video. Wharton told The Pat McAfee Show that it was a "natural reaction" to catch the child. The video shows Wharton, 26, lift the child back up into the stands. He said he hopes to connect with the child and invite him to another Chiefs game.
Persons: Tershawn Wharton, Wharton, Pat McAfee, Taylor Moton, Peter Joneleit Organizations: Kansas City Chiefs, Carolina Panthers, Bank of America, NFL, Chiefs Locations: Charlotte , North Carolina, Charlotte, N.C
JPMorgan upgrades Martin Marietta Materials to overweight from neutral JPMorgan says the building materials company is well positioned. JPMorgan reiterates HP Inc. as overweight JPMorgan says it's standing by the stock following earnings on Tuesday. Bank of America reiterates CrowdStrike as buy Bank of America says trends are improving for CrowdStrike following earnings on Tuesday. Citi upgrades Urban Outfitters to buy from neutral Citi upgraded the stock following earnings and says it likes the retailer's execution. HSBC downgrades CrowdStrike to hold from buy HSBC downgraded CrowdStrike following its earnings and says it sees "limited near-term visibility."
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Piper Sandler, Baird, it's bullish, Daiwa, Datadog, CrowdStrike, Bernstein Organizations: Dell Technologies, DELL, JPMorgan, Martin Marietta Materials, HP Inc, Holdings, Disney, DIS, Bank of America, Nvidia, Citi, Urban Outfitters, UBS, Goods, HSBC, CrowdStrike, Ford, General Motors
Meanwhile, active mutual funds lost money in all but one year (2021); they shed $344 billion in the first 10 months of 2024. "We see [active ETFs] as the growth engine of active management," said Bryan Armour, director of passive strategies research for North America at Morningstar. As a result, passive funds have attracted more annual investor money than active funds for the past nine years, according to Morningstar. watch nowBut, for investors who prefer active management — especially in more niche corners of the investment market — active ETFs often have a cost advantage versus active mutual funds, experts said. "They are a tiny portion of active net assets but growing rapidly at a time when active mutual funds have seen pretty significant outflows," he said.
Persons: Tang Ming Tung, Bryan Armour, it's, Morningstar, It's, Jared Woodard, Armour Organizations: Getty, Morningstar, North America, P, Bank of America Securities
Expect RBNZ to 'slow down' pace of monetary easing in 2025: HSBC
  + stars: | 2024-11-27 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExpect RBNZ to 'slow down' pace of monetary easing in 2025: HSBCPaul Bloxham of HSBC explains why he expects the Reserve Bank of New Zealand's official cash rate to lower to 3.25% by the end of 2025.
Persons: HSBC Paul Bloxham Organizations: HSBC, Reserve Bank of New
President-elect Donald Trump has called for cutting the corporate tax rate – and a slate of companies could stand to benefit, according to an analysis from Wolfe Research. That would be a reduction from the current corporate tax rate of 21%. A corporate tax rate of 18% would increase S & P 500 earnings per share by $5, while a 15% rate would lift earnings per share by $10, he said. Senyek's team identified companies that could see the greatest impact on their earnings per share from a lower tax rate. Wolfe also highlighted Amazon in its list of companies that could benefit from a lower corporate tax rate.
Persons: Donald Trump, Chris Senyek, Wolfe, Peter Supino, Biden, Supino, LSEG, Wells, Ken Gawrelski, AMZN, Fiserv, Goldman Sachs, Trump Organizations: Wolfe Research, Trump, White House, Republicans, GOP, US, Warner Bros, Discovery, Warner, White, ., Bank of America Locations: China, Wells Fargo
The New Zealand dollar rose after the Reserve Bank of New Zealand cut benchmark rates by 50 basis points to 4.25% while noting that inflation had declined to near the mid-point of its targeted range. "This uncertainty can lead markets to 'sell first and ask questions later' which is a positive for the USD." The Australian dollar was mostly flat at $0.64755 after domestic consumer price inflation stayed at a three-year low in October. In cryptocurrencies, bitcoin was trading at $91,795, keeping well below the record high of $99,830 it touched last week. It has climbed more than 40% since the U.S. election on expectations Trump will loosen the regulatory environment for cryptocurrencies.
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump's, Trump, Carol Kong, Joe Biden, Scott Bessent, bitcoin, Bitcoin Organizations: U.S, New Zealand, Reserve Bank of New, jittery, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Canadian, Treasury, Trump Locations: Reserve Bank of New Zealand, Canada, Mexico, China, United States, U.S, Israel, Iran, France, Israeli, Trump's
CNN —After quite possibly saving a child’s life on Sunday, Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Tershawn Wharton has invited the young fan to a game. Wharton caught the child after he fell headfirst from the Bank of America Stadium stands following the Chiefs’ 30-27 win against the Carolina Panthers in Charlotte, North Carolina, on Sunday. The child loses his footing before falling headfirst from the stands, which are roughly 10 feet above the ground. It is not clear from the video whether a railing gave way, or whether the particular area that the young fan was leaning over was not covered by a fence. But I just had to kind of, like, push him into the stands a little bit to make sure he didn’t hit too hard,” he continued.
Persons: Tershawn Wharton, Wharton, Pat McAfee, , McAfee, Travis Kelce, Organizations: CNN, , Kansas City Chiefs, Bank of America, Chiefs, Carolina Panthers, CNN Sport, ” CNN, New, Panthers Locations: ,, Charlotte , North Carolina
AdvertisementElon Musk says he wants to eliminate the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The CFPB was created after the 2008 crisis to protect consumers from financial abuses. "Delete CFPB," Musk wrote on X early Wednesday of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. The agency investigates consumer complaints related to credit cards, loans, bank accounts, and debt collection and enforces consumer protection laws. Earlier this year, the CFPB also limited credit card late fees to $8 a month, compared to the average $32 fee charged by issuers in 2022.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy, Dodd, Frank, Democratic Sen, Elizabeth Warren, Barack Obama, Warren, Wells Fargo, who've, , Clarence Thomas Organizations: Financial, Bureau, Elon, Consumer Financial, Trump, Government, Trump Administration, Congress, Democratic, Harvard Law School, Personnel Management, Bank of America, of America, Apple, Google, Federal Locations: Wells Fargo, Wells
New Zealand's central bank expectedly slashed its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points on Wednesday, marking a third straight cut, as the country strives to boost its struggling economy. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand's interest rate now stands at 4.25%. Economists polled by Reuters had expected the bank to cut its rate by 50 bps. In October, the RBNZ had also cut the cash rate by 50 bps, following a 25 bps cut in August. It added that economic growth is expected to recover in 2025 as lower interest rates boost investment and spending.
Persons: RBNZ Organizations: Reserve Bank of New, Reuters, NZ Locations: Auckland , New Zealand, New, New Zealand
Pt Stock | Moment | Getty ImagesWhen Americans measure success, they're not often thinking about their net worth or account balances. "Few people view wealth itself" as the best benchmark, said Rebecca Rickert, head of communications at Empower. Only 27% believe wealth is the highest measure of success, the report found. 'You have to strike a balance'"Americans are equating success with happiness as to what money can buy," said Rickert. About 35% of polled Americans believe the economy is the top barrier to success, followed by income instability at 30%, the Empower report found.
Persons: they're, , Rebecca Rickert, That's, Rickert, Clifford Cornell, Cornell Organizations: Bank of America, Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University Locations: New York City, U.S
She usually shopped at Publix, but in 2021, when inflation was sending grocery prices soaring, her curiosity got the better of her. AdvertisementAs grocery prices have jumped by double digits over the past few years, people have felt the sting. So how did a German grocery chain find such a ravenous following in America? For comparison, about 20% of groceries sold in the US last year were store brands, according to the Food Marketing Institute. He expects to see even more Aldi stores opening.
Persons: Julie Herron, Herron, Theo, Karl Albrecht, Aldi, wasn't, Oscar Mayer, Gen Z, Scott Patton, Patton, Joe's, there's, Phil Lempert, She's, Lempert, it's, Dunnhumby, Zak Stambor, I'm, Trump, Jason Hart, they'll, Alex Bitter Organizations: Aldi, Kroger, Foods, Iowa City, Employees, Bank of America, Food Marketing Institute, Aldi USA, Costco, Facebook, Southeastern Grocers, Winn, EMARKETER, Business, Walmart Locations: Nashville, Aldi, Euromonitor, America, Germany, Iowa City , Iowa, Charlotte , North Carolina, Wisconsin, Florida, Washington and Colorado, Illinois
A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) at the opening bell on November 26, 2024, in New York City. U.S. stock futures opened little changed on Tuesday night as traders await the release of the Federal Reserve's favorite inflation gauge. Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 20 points, or 0.04%. Economists polled by Dow Jones expect a year-over-year increase of 2.8% for the core reading, which excludes food and energy. Both the S&P 500 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average reached fresh intraday and closing highs.
Persons: Dow Jones, Stephen Stanley, CNBC's, That's, It's Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Dell Technologies, Fed, Santander U.S, Capital Markets Locations: New York City . U.S, U.S
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump at a viewing of a test-flight launch of the SpaceX Starship rocket in Brownsville, Texas, Nov. 19, 2024. Brandon Bell | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesAs Inauguration Day nears, investors are trying to unravel what booms or busts lay ahead under President-elect Donald Trump. Yet the energy sector climbed 22.9% under Biden as of Nov. 19, despite the administration's push for renewables and sustainability. As president, Trump is expected to embrace crypto more than any of his predecessors. When Biden won in 2020, there was a lot of panic about the outlook for energy, oil and gas.
Persons: Donald Trump, Brandon Bell, Jeremy Goldberg, Goldberg, Larry Adam, Raymond James, Trump, Adam, Biden, Monty Rakusen, John Murphy, Murphy, Callie Cox, Cox, Greg Iacurci Banks, Jamie Dimon, Andrew Harrer, Brian Spinelli, Halbert Hargrove, Spinelli, David Rea, Lorie Konish, Bill Varie, , — Greg Iacurci Crypto, Kevin Wurm, Matt Apkarian, Apkarian, Christina Lynn, there's, Lynn, — Lorie Konish, Cooper Neill, Joe Biden, Mike Cerasoli, Cerasoli, you'll, — Lorie, Images Trump, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, bode, David Weinstein, Weinstein, Chris Unger, Charles, Vivek Ramaswamy, Greg Iacurci, Thomas Barwick, Ted Decker, Decker, TJ Maxx, Lorraine Hutchinson, — Greg Iacurci, Donald J Organizations: SpaceX, Getty, Trump, Professional Advisory Services, Digitalvision, EV, Biden, Bank of America Securities, Ford, Ritholtz Wealth Management, U.S . Federal, JPMorgan Chase &, White, Bloomberg, CNBC, Salem Investment, Bank, — Greg Iacurci Crypto Republican, Reuters, bitcoin, Liberty Financial, Cerulli Associates, Mariner Wealth, — Lorie Konish Energy, Double Eagle Energy Holdings LLC, Eagle Global Advisors, Images, Department of Health, Human Services, RFK, U.S . Senate, Merck, Pfizer, Dana Investment, Affordable, Publicly, HCA Healthcare, UFC, Madison, Garden, Ufc, Medical, Charles River Laboratories, Food and Drug Administration, of Government, Retailers, Walmart, Marshalls, Google, Twitter, Trump National Golf Club, Washington Post Locations: Brownsville , Texas, California, U.S, Iran, Venezuela, Washington, Long Beach, Calif, Salem, Winston, Salem , North Carolina, Ritholtz, Nashville , Tennessee, cryptocurrency, Lynn, Midland , Texas, Houston, New York, China, North America, HomeGoods, Bedminster , NJ, Jabin
CNBC's Jim Cramer told investors not to write off Big Tech megacap stocks, some of which were able to jump on Tuesday after recent declines. Cramer reviewed the action in stocks including Apple , Amazon , Nvidia , Microsoft and Meta . According to Cramer, Apple and Amazon are reaping the rewards of two positive analyst notes, with Bank of America praising the latter's e-commerce and online advertising businesses. Cramer was less certain about the reasons for Tuesday's wins in Meta and Microsoft. "Here's the bottom line: don't begrudge the megacaps," Cramer said.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Morgan Stanley, Tim Cook's, Donald Trump Organizations: Big Tech, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Bank of America, President Locations: China
Social media creators are turning to monthly subscription services to generate revenue directly from their followers in an attempt to find a stable source of income in an increasingly competitive and volatile market. The creator economy peaked in September 2021, according to research published this month by the Bank of America Institute. While the average monthly income for content creators has increased over the past three years, a typical, full-time U.S. employee makes five times as much in monthly income on average. While internet virality is unpredictable, turning content creation into a full-time career requires meeting certain financial needs, like the ability to pay monthly bills, content creators told CNBC. Since its launch in 2013, Patreon has paid creators over $8 billion, while Substack claims to host more than 4 million paid subscribers.
Persons: Patreon, Substack, Meta's Instagram, Molly Burke Organizations: Bank of America Institute, Bank of America, CNBC
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with the 'Closing Bell' investment committeeEllen Zentner, Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Chris Hyzy, Merrill and Bank of America Private Bank, and Liz Young Thomas, SoFi head of investment strategy, join 'Closing Bell' to discuss November's Federal Reserve minutes, current market performance, and more.
Persons: Ellen Zentner, Morgan, Chris Hyzy, Liz Young Thomas, SoFi Organizations: Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, Bank of America Private Bank, November's Locations: Merrill
Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Tuesday: Wells Fargo upgrades Eastman Chemical to overweight from equal weight Wells Fargo says the chemical company is "attractive." HSBC downgrades Goldman Sachs & Morgan Stanley to hold from buy HSBC said the risk/reward is a less attractive. KeyBanc reiterates Nvidia as overweight The firm says it sees "limited competitive risks" for Nvidia shares. Wells Fargo reiterates Starbucks as overweight Wells raised its price target on the stock to $115 per share from $110. Redburn Atlantic Equities reiterates Amazon as buy The firm raised its price target on the stock to $235 per share from $225.
Persons: Wells Fargo, HSBC downgrades Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Baird, Bernstein, KeyBanc, it's bullish, TD Cowen, Pinterest, Cowen, Wells, Guggenheim, Michael Kors, UAL Organizations: Eastman Chemical, UBS, HSBC, Royal Caribbean, Nvidia, Bank of America, Citi, Chevron, ExxonMobil, SPX, JV, China, Guggenheim, Capri Holdings, Barclays, Apple, and Department of Justice, Google, DoJ, UBS reinstates United, Alaska Airlines, Amazon Web Services, Anheuser, Busch InBev, GAP Locations: Caribbean, China, Delta, DAL
Three decades before he was tapped to lead the Treasury Department, Scott Bessent was asked to help break another country’s financial system. Then 29 years old, Mr. Bessent, working for the financier George Soros, helped “break” the Bank of England with crushing trades against the British pound. He was on a small team at Mr. Soros’s investment firm that, in 1992, amassed a $10 billion bet that the pound was overvalued. Mr. Soros’s fund earned more than $1 billion, along with credit (and infamy) for orchestrating one of Wall Street’s most audacious trades. When President-elect Donald J. Trump announced his selection of Mr. Bessent as Treasury secretary last week, there was no mention of the connection to Mr. Soros.
Persons: Scott Bessent, Bessent, George Soros, Donald J, Trump, Soros Organizations: Treasury Department, Bank of England, Mr Locations: British
The Wall Street firm set its 2025 S & P 500 target at 6,666, which implies an 11% upside from current levels. .SPX YTD mountain S & P 500 In particular, BofA said it is bullish on financials, discretionary, materials, real estate and utilities. The firm expects bank stocks to benefit from a return in merger and acquisition activities as well as optimism around deregulation under a Donald Trump administration. Deutsche Bank sees the S & P 500 hitting 7,000 in 2025 on the back of rising risk appetite. Goldman also projected an 11% S & P 500 return for next year.
Persons: Savita Subramanian, BofA, Donald Trump, Goldman Organizations: of America, BofA Securities, Wall, Deutsche Bank, UBS
Here are Monday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Bernstein reiterates MicroStrategy as outperform The firm raised its price target on the stock to $600 per share from $290. " Morgan Stanley upgrades Banco Santander to overweight from equal weight The firm said the bank has a "resilient regional footprint." Morgan Stanley upgrades Robinhood to overweight from equal weight The firm said Robinhood is a Trump election beneficiary. Morgan Stanley upgrades KinderCare to overweight from equal weight Morgan Stanley said shares are compelling at current levels for the daycare company. Morgan Stanley reiterates Apple as overweight Morgan Stanley said it's survey checks "reinforce [the] multi-year iPhone upgrade thesis."
Persons: Bernstein, MicroStrategy, Morgan Stanley, Oppenheimer, Robinhood, Trump, HOOD, it's, Telsey, Apple, Goldman Sachs, Berkley, it's bullish, Tesla, TD Cowen, D.A, Davidson, Rosenblatt, Wedbush, Palantir, PLTR, Wolfe, Jones Lang Lasalle Organizations: Banco Santander, Caixabank, ING, Citi, U.S, Bancorp, UBS, Arm Holdings, BMO, Apple Intelligence, CVS, Bank of America, Shoals Technologies, Procter, Gamble, China, China EV, Nvidia, FedEx Locations: Santander, China
Oil prices retreated on Monday following 6% gains last week, but remained near two-week highs as geopolitical tensions grew between Western powers and major oil producers Russia and Iran, raising risks of supply disruption. "Oil prices are starting the new week with some slight cool-off as market participants await more cues from geopolitical developments and the Fed's policy outlook to set the tone," said Yeap Jun Rong, market strategist at IG. "Tensions between Ukraine and Russia have edged up a notch lately, leading to some pricing for the risks of a wider escalation potentially impacting oil supplies." Enforced sanctions could sideline about 1 million barrels per day of Iran's oil exports, about 1% of global oil supply, he said. Investors were also focused on rising crude oil demand at China and India, the world's top and third-largest importers, respectively.
Persons: Jun Rong, Trump, Brent, Yeap, centrifuges, Vivek Dhar, Priyanka Sachdeva, Phillip Nova, Sachdeva Organizations: Brent, U.S, West Texas, Russia, IG, IAEA, Commonwealth Bank of Australia Locations: Russia, Iran, Ukraine, United States, Kyiv, Iranian, China, India, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPasta sauce sales increase linked to negative restaurant traffic growth, says BoA's Sara SenatoreSara Senatore, Bank of America senior restaurants analyst, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss the link between pasta sauce volumes and restaurant traffic growth.
Persons: BoA's Sara Senatore Sara Senatore Organizations: Bank of America
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