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Brokerage TD Cowen lowered its U.S. holiday spending estimate to 2% to 3% growth, from 4% to 5%, as it forecast flat Black Friday traffic. With many consumers squeezed by persistent inflation and high interest rates, U.S. holiday spending is expected to rise at the slowest pace in five years. But at 6 a.m. on Friday at a Walmart in New Milford, Connecticut, the parking lot was only half full. "It's a lot quieter this year, a lot quieter," said shopper Theresa Forsberg, who visits the same five stores with her family at dawn every Black Friday. The rise of online shopping has reduced the importance of Black Friday as a single-day event.
Persons: Cowen, David Klink, , Barbara Kahn, Theresa Forsberg, Michael Brown, Kearney, Jimmy Lee, Leah Millis, there's, Jeff Gennette, Bergdorf Goodman, Nordstrom, Oscar de, Carlos Araejo, Ruiz, It’s, Paul Aheren, Puma, Siddharth Cavale, Helen Reid, Arriana McLymore, Katherine Masters, Andrew Hay, Bianca Flowers, Danielle Broadway, James Davey, Deborah Sophia, Miral Fahmy, Nick Zieminski, Frances Kerry, Leslie Adler Organizations: Shoppers, Huntington Private Bank, Walmart, Target, Ross Stores, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, , National Retail Federation, Garden, Insider Intelligence, Adobe Analytics, Adobe, Wealth Consulting, Amazon, REUTERS, Nordstrom, Saks, Protesters, Puma, Israel Football Association, Thomson Locations: RALEIGH, N.C, U.S, New Milford , Connecticut, Paramus , New Jersey, Wheaton, Glenmont , Maryland, Indianapolis, Israel, Palestine, United States, Dallas, Raleigh, Crabtree, Boston
He predicted central bankers could begin cutting interest rates as soon as March. The Wharton professor thinks the US could risk a recession if the Fed doesn't dial back interest rates soon. AdvertisementThe battle against high inflation is just about over, and that could give the Federal Reserve the green light to soon start cutting interest rates soon, according to Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel. AdvertisementThe Fed has raised short-term interest rates 525 basis points over the past year, which Siegel previously warned could trigger a recession. Central bankers have a bigger risk now of dialing back interest rates too late, he suggested, as the economy is already showing signs of slowing down.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Wharton, , Siegel, Powell, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Service, Federal Reserve, CNBC, Treasury, Bank of America
(Photo by Lawrence Sumulong/Getty Images)Workplace culture is changing, and Wharton organizational psychologist Adam Grant wants Americans to keep up. Now they are announcing a research grant award of up to $100K to researchers looking into areas of human potential and workplace trends in which Grant thinks there will be important cultural shifts. Grant explains the top three areas he's focused on — employee motivation, workplace well-being and AI — and what he suspects will be changing. Going from languishing to flourishingWorkers are struggling with motivation and it's leading to an overall feeling of stagnation and emptiness, Grant says. To do so, company leadership should value employee well-being, Grant says.
Persons: Adam Grant of, Lawrence Sumulong, Adam Grant, Grant, BetterUp, haven't, Martin Kilduff, Ginka Toegel, we've Organizations: CANADA, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, CNBC, Economic, Future Forum Locations: VANCOUVER, TED2018, Vancouver, Canada
Elon Musk has started an electric-vehicle price war that Tesla can't finish. In April, Ford CEO Jim Farley said Tesla's cuts could start an unsustainable price war. If it slides back into the red because of its price cuts, expect investors to run in another direction. In China, Tesla's price cuts even sparked protests among owners who paid more for their vehicles. Waging price war during a downturn is a challenge unlike any Tesla has faced before.
Persons: Elon Musk, Tesla, Mark Schirmer, crumb, John Zhang, Musk, , he's, hasn't, — it's, Frederic J . Brown, Ford, John Lawler, Schirmer, I've, it's, Jim Farley, Elon, Oliver Zipse, Zhang, they're, they'd, Zach Kirkhorn, Linette Lopez Organizations: Cox Automotive, , Revenue, Wharton School, Ford, BMW, Getty, GM, Mercedes, EV, Hyundai Locations: AFP, China
Hong Kong CNN —Business leaders in China are under immense pressure, as the country’s leader Xi Jinping intensifies a regulatory crackdown on companies and strengthens its control of the economy. They face rising risks, including the possibility of police raids and detentions of staff, in the world’s second largest economy. A former banker, he has invested in a series of Chinese companies since 2000 and brought their shares to the public markets in mainland China and Hong Kong. No end in sightThe crackdown this year has spooked the business community in China, but it is not unfamiliar. Xi launched a sweeping regulatory crackdown on the private sector in 2020, which wiped trillions of dollars off the market value of Chinese companies worldwide.
Persons: Xi Jinping, , Doug Guthrie, ” Guthrie, Tencent, Chen, Zhao Bingxian, “ China’s Warren Buffett, Zhao, Guthrie, , Zhou Zheng, Zhou, watchdogs, Zhang Hongli, Bao Fan, Bao, Xi, Kevin Frayer, Mauro Guillen, ” Guillen Organizations: Hong Kong CNN — Business, China Initiatives, Arizona State University’s Thunderbird School of Global Management, CNN, Cyberspace Administration of China, Wohua Pharmaceutical, Central Commission, National Supervisory Commission, COFCO, Industrial, Commercial Bank of, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania Locations: China, Hong Kong, Communist, Beijing, Arizona, Shenzhen, “ Beijing, DouYu, Shandong, Commercial Bank of China
Ivanka Trump’s brothers, Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr., who are co-defendants in the case, testified last week. Video Ad Feedback Analyst: Ivanka Trump isn't a 'secondary player' in fraud trial 04:12 - Source: CNN“Mr. Trump and Ivanka Trump participated personally in the bidding process in 2011,” the attorney general’s office wrote. “The record before us…indicates that defendant Ivanka Trump was no longer within the agreement’s definition of ‘Trump Organization’ by the date the tolling agreement was executed,” the order states. “The allegations against defendant Ivanka Trump do not support any claims that accrued after February 6, 2016.
Persons: New York CNN — Donald Trump’s, Ivanka Trump, Letitia James ’, badgered, Arthur Engoron, Engoron, Ivanka Trump’s, Eric Trump, Donald Trump Jr, Jared Kushner, Trump, Ivanka, , ” Engoron, , “ I’ve, I’ve, I’m, James ’, ” Trump, Bennet Moskowitz, Trump’s, Chris Kise, Donald Bender Organizations: New, New York CNN, Trump Organization, Ivanka, Trump, Doral, , Deutsche Bank, Mr, Post, CNN, GSA, Wharton School of Business, University of Pennsylvania, ‘ Trump Organization ’ Locations: New York, Manhattan, Florida, Chicago, Washington , DC, Trump, Mazars
Apollo CEO Marc Rowan halted his donations to UPenn over its response to Hamas' attacks on Israel. A Penn trustee accused Rowan of using aggressive Wall Street tactics to pressure the college. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe billionaire Marc Rowan was accused by a University of Pennsylvania trustee of using aggressive Wall Street tactics to put pressure on the college over its handling of campus antisemitism. Rowan has contacted "half of Wall Street" to discuss ways major donors can utilize their influence to try and bring about leadership changes at top schools, CNBC reported. Andy Rachleff, a trustee at Penn, told The Wall Street Journal that he saw Rowan's outspoken efforts as an attempt "to strong-arm the university using the classic Apollo playbook."
Persons: Marc Rowan, Penn, Rowan, , Elizabeth Magill, Magill, Carolyn, Andy Rachleff, Bill Ackman Organizations: Ivy League, Service, University of Pennsylvania, Street Journal, Penn, CNBC, Wharton School's, Advisors, Wall Street Journal, Harvard, Pershing, Capital Management, Cornell Locations: Israel, UPenn, Penn, Gaza, Hamas
3 Ways to Unlock Your ‘Hidden Potential’
  + stars: | 2023-10-26 | by ( Melinda Wenner Moyer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In a culture that focuses so intensely on success, it’s easy to feel like a failure. But according to the organizational psychologist Adam Grant, that might be because we’re thinking about achievement all wrong. Many people assume that accomplishments are tied closely to innate ability, so they give up on pursuits they find challenging. That’s a mistake, Dr. Grant writes in his new book, “Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things.”Dr. Grant shares anecdotes about people who accomplished the extraordinary despite showing little aptitude at first — including himself. Interwoven with the stories he shares, Dr. Grant analyzes the paths and strategies that led to each success and discusses relevant insights from the research literature — his home turf.
Persons: Adam Grant, Grant, Dr, ” He’s Organizations: Junior Olympic, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, The Times
Anita A. Summers, an economist at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania who injected quantitative rigor into a wide variety of public policy topics, including zoning, education and tax incentives, died on Sunday at her home in Gladwyne, Pa. She was 98. Her son Lawrence H. Summers, the economist and former secretary of the Treasury, confirmed the death. Though she spent much of her career in academia, Mrs. Summers was far from a hidebound intellectual. She was the founding chairwoman of Wharton’s public policy and management department, the first of its kind at a business school. (It is now called the department of business economics and public policy.)
Persons: Anita, Summers, Lawrence H Organizations: Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Treasury, Wharton, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia Locations: Gladwyne, Pa
When The League first entered the emerging dating app space in 2014, it was labeled "elitist." All of this, of course, makes The League harder to join than other dating apps such as Tinder or Bumble. Eight years since that post, and one year since the app was acquired by Match Group, Bradford maintains the app isn't elitist. It's less about what you've achieved and more about where you're going. Bradford: She's a Harvard graduate and thinks people from those schools want someone that's going to match them from those communities.
Persons: Amanda Bradford, Bradford, Aditi Shrikant, it's, It's, you've, Wharton MBAs, I've, she's, She's Organizations: League, The League, LinkedIn, Match Group, Bradford, CNBC, Pew Research Center, People, Survey, Ivy League, Harvard, MTA, York's Metropolitan Transportation, Global Locations: Bradford, San Francisco
The marketing failure that's going to kill us all
  + stars: | 2023-10-19 | by ( Jake Safane | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +12 min
A good example of bad climate marketing comes from the Irish budget airline Ryanair. Carbon offsets involve contributing money to a project that will help avoid, reduce, or remove carbon emissions from the atmosphere, such as planting trees or building wind farms. Some of the most successful corporate efforts at climate marketing place more emphasis on consumers' personal concerns. According to the International Energy Agency, global carbon emissions reached a record high last year. The more you focus on what everyday people care about, Berger said, the more effective your marketing campaign will be.
Persons: they've, , Jonah Berger, that's, Jonathan Ernst, Biden, Jenna DiPaolo, DiPaolo, John Oliver, Oliver, Ben Forman, Ryanair, Forman, " Forman, Tesla, " Berger, Berger, Jake Safane Organizations: Keystone XL, Pew Research, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, REUTERS, National Petroleum Reserve, Greenpeace, Wildlife, Ryanair, International Monetary Fund, International Energy Agency, United Nations Locations: Canada, Alaska, Greenpeace USA, Ireland, Phoenix
Billionaire Ronald Lauder wrote a letter threatening to stop donations to the University of Pennsylvania. AdvertisementAdvertisementRonald Lauder, the billionaire Estée Lauder heir, wrote a searing letter to the University of Pennsylvania's president threatening to stop donations to the school if it doesn't take a stronger stance against antisemitism. "Those invited to the event had a history of not just strong anti-Israel bias, but outright antisemitism," he wrote. "The University did not, and emphatically does not, endorse these speakers or their views," Magill wrote in an email to the Penn community on Sunday. Lauder, who is worth $4.5 billion, per Forbes, has donated millions of dollars to Penn, as has his brother, Leonard.
Persons: Ronald Lauder, Lauder, , Estée Lauder, Penn, Elizabeth Magill, Marc Rowan, Dick Wolf, Huntsman, David Magerman, Rowan, Magill, Steve Fluharty, Fluharty, Leonard, Batia Ofer, Israel's, Les Organizations: University of Pennsylvania, Service, University of, Apollo Global Management, Penn, Wolf Humanities Center, Ivy League, The Daily, Penn's Department of Arts and Science, University, Forbes, Institute, Wharton School, Penn Law, The Lauder Institute, Republican, Jewish, Harvard, Harvard's Kennedy School, University of Pennsylvania's Locations: Israel, Palestine, Penn, Cambridge
AdvertisementAdvertisementThe University of Pennsylvania "should have moved faster" in condemning the antisemitic views of speakers that appeared at a recent Palestinian literary festival held on campus, its president said. He was also one of 4,000 people to sign a letter condemning the university for hosting the festival. But, in light of the terror attack by Hamas on Israel, Rowan said the response was not enough. AdvertisementAdvertisementIn the statement Sunday, Magill said that the university could've been more forceful in condemning anti-Semitism in its initial statement on the festival. I, and this University, are horrified by and condemn Hamas's terrorist assault on Israel and their violent atrocities against civilians.
Persons: , Elizabeth Magill, Magill, Marc Rowan, Rowan, Magill's, Roger Waters, Pink Floyd, Marc Lamont Hill, Waters, Hill, Rowan's oped, Carolyn, could've Organizations: The University of Pennsylvania, Service, of Pennsylvania, University, Penn, Apollo Global Management, CNN, The Daily, Wharton School's, Advisors, Daily Locations: Israel, Gaza, Palestinian, UPenn, Palestine
Starboard Value's Jeffrey Smith, one of the busiest activist investors for two decades, said companies have grown more receptive to voices like him. Smith also sought a turnaround at pizza chain Papa John's in 2019 at a tumultuous time for the company . The Starboard CEO was even active during the Covid-19 pandemic . We're simultaneously respected and feared inside companies," Smith said. "More often than not, now the conversations are highly constructive and respectful and relatively easy," Smith said.
Persons: Jeffrey Smith, Smith, , we've, I'm, We're Organizations: CNBC's Financial, Olive, Darden, Mercury Systems, Wharton Locations: New York
Apollo Global Management CEO Marc Rowan is calling for University of Pennsylvania leaders to resign. AdvertisementAdvertisementApollo Global Management CEO Marc Rowan is the latest business leader to slam an Ivy League institution for not taking a stronger stance against what he called antisemitism. AdvertisementAdvertisementAt the time, the university responded, saying in a statement that "we unequivocally — and emphatically — condemn antisemitism as antithetical to our institutional values." But, in light of the attack by Hamas on Israel, Rowan has said the response was not enough. "We see sickening parallels between Harvard leadership's inaction against Harvard's antisemitism and the failure by UPenn's leadership to take a stand against hate," Rowan wrote in his letter.
Persons: Marc Rowan, Hedge, Bill Ackman, Israel, , Elizabeth Magill, Scott Bok, Rowan, Magill, Magill's, didn't, Pink Floyd, Roger Waters, Carolyn, Ackman, Jonathan Newman, Jake Wurzak, Penn Organizations: Apollo Global Management, University of Pennsylvania, Hamas, Harvard, Service, Global Management, Ivy League, Daily, Defamation League, Jewish, Wharton School's, Advisors, Pershing, Capital Management, Dovehill Capital Management Locations: Israel, UPenn, mater
Stocks will end the year higher, say Wharton's Jeremy Siegel
  + stars: | 2023-10-05 | 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 EmailStocks will end the year higher, say Wharton's Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, professor emeritus at the Wharton School, and Joe Terranova, chief market strategist at Virtus Investment Partners, join 'Closing Bell' to discuss stocks and markets in this rising bond yield environment.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel, Joe Terranova Organizations: Wharton School, Virtus Investment Partners
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC’s full interview with Wharton's Jeremy Siegel and Virtus Investment's Joe TerranovaJeremy Siegel, professor emeritus at the Wharton School, and Joe Terranova, chief market strategist at Virtus Investment Partners, join 'Closing Bell' to discuss stocks and markets in this rising bond yield environment.
Persons: Wharton's Jeremy Siegel, Virtus Investment's Joe Terranova Jeremy Siegel, Joe Terranova Organizations: Virtus Investment's, Wharton School, Virtus Investment Partners
But at the regional level, the IG has yet to weigh in on the trading activities of Rosengren, Kaplan and current Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic. Both Rosengren and Kaplan have said they followed the Fed rules that governed trading at the time, and their disclosures were approved by Fed lawyers. Conti-Brown praised the central bank's new ethics regime as likely the best in government, which he said casts the IG's work in an even worse light. They have proposed legislation that would make the Fed IG position a presidential appointment requiring confirmation by the Senate, something Bialek has publicly opposed. During a hearing in the Senate in May, Bialek said the Fed had never interfered in his work.
Persons: That's, Jerome Powell, Eric Rosengren, Robert Kaplan, Mark Bialek, Elizabeth Warren, Rick Scott, Peter Conti, Brown, Powell, Richard Clarida, Kaplan, Raphael Bostic, Rosengren, Bostic, Conti, Warren, Scott, Bialek, Clarida, she's, There's, Michael S, Dan Burns, Paul Simao Organizations: Dallas, Boston Federal Reserve, U.S . Congress, Boston Fed, Dallas Fed, Fed, Democratic, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Reserve Bank, Rosengren, Atlanta Fed, Senate, Committee, Thomson Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe Fed will not raise rates in November, says Wharton's Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, professor emeritus at the Wharton School, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss his views on the separation between yields and inflation, why bond yields are rising, and more.
Persons: Wharton's Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel Organizations: Wharton School
"I'm one of those folks," said Kashkari, who is considered one of the Fed's more hawkish policymakers. Kashkari said that if inflation cools next year as expected, the Fed will need to cut rates to keep policy from tightening too much. But he also said he has been surprised by how well consumer spending has held up despite the Fed's rate hikes so far. "Everybody on the Federal Open Market Committee is committed" to bringing inflation back down to the Fed's 2% target, he said. Inflation by the Fed's preferred measure was 3.3% in July.
Persons: Neel Kashkari, Mike Segar, Kashkari, Ann Saphir, Himani Sarkar, Muralikumar Organizations: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Reuters, REUTERS, Minneapolis Federal Reserve Bank, Wharton School of Business, Fed, U.S, Federal, Thomson Locations: New York City , New York, U.S, Minneapolis
Michael Baum's cybersecurity software company, Splunk, just sold to Cisco for $28 billion. As soon as I saw MacPaint and MacDraw, I knew I had to figure out how this worked," Baum told U.K.-based The Gentleman Magazine in 2022. Baum went on to establish himself as a serial entrepreneur, building and selling multiple software businesses before 2000. When Splunk went public in 2012, it was valued at roughly $1.6 billion. The "inquisitive nature" that drove him to learn more about Jobs' Macintosh computers "continues to drive me today," Baum told The Gentleman Magazine.
Persons: Michael Baum's, Steve Jobs, Baum, Jobs, Drexel, — Rob Das, Erik Swan —, Splunk, refashioned, he's Organizations: Cisco, Drexel University, Gentleman Magazine, BBC, Reuters, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Walt Disney, Yahoo, Jobs, CNBC Locations: Philadelphia, San Francisco, France's Burgundy
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Financial markets are hoping Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu keeps Bank of Israel Governor Amir Yaron for a second term to safeguard the bank’s independence and provide reassuring stability to an economy rattled by political turmoil this year. FILE PHOTO: The Bank of Israel building is seen in Jerusalem June 16, 2020. “Therefore, markets and credit rating agencies are reading more into the question of ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to a second term. “Who will be governor is a major concern for investors abroad,” said Leader Capital Markets Chief Economist Jonathan Katz. Israeli media have reported that Netanyahu is considering Efraim Benmelech - a professor of finance at Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.
Persons: Benjamin Netanyahu, Amir Yaron, Ronen, Netanyahu, Yaron, Karnit Flug, Fitch, , Jonathan Katz, , ” Katz, Nadine Baudot, Jacob Frenkel, ” Frenkel, Netanyahu’s, Flug, Stanley Fischer, Fischer, Efraim Benmelech, Benmelech, Andrew Abir Organizations: Bank, Israel, Bank of, REUTERS, Netanyahu’s, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Reuters, , Capital Markets, Bank of Israel, Israel Democracy Institute, U.S . Federal Reserve, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University Locations: JERUSALEM, Bank of Israel, Jerusalem, Israeli, United States, Ukraine, Russia, “ Israel, Israel
[1/2] The Bank of Israel building is seen in Jerusalem June 16, 2020. "Therefore, markets and credit rating agencies are reading more into the question of 'yes' or 'no' to a second term. "Who will be governor is a major concern for investors abroad," said Leader Capital Markets Chief Economist Jonathan Katz. A few years earlier in 2010, Stanley Fischer accepted a second term and helped Israel weather the global financial crisis. Reporting by Steven Scheer Additional reporting by Maayan Lubell Editing by Christina FincherOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Ronen, Amir Yaron's, Benjamin Netanyahu, Amir Yaron, Yaron, Netanyahu, Flug, Fitch, Jonathan Katz, Katz, Nadine Baudot, Jacob Frenkel, Frenkel, Netanyahu's, Stanley Fischer, Fischer, Efraim Benmelech, Benmelech, Andrew Abir, Steven Scheer, Maayan, Christina Fincher Organizations: Bank of, REUTERS, Bank, Israel, Netanyahu's, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Reuters, Capital Markets, Bank of Israel, Israel Democracy Institute, U.S . Federal Reserve, Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University, Thomson Locations: Bank of Israel, Jerusalem, JERUSALEM, Israeli, United States, Ukraine, Russia, Israel
U.S. News and World Report ranked the best countries in the world based on quality of life. U.S. News and World Report recently released its ranking of the best countries in the world based on quality of life. 1 country for quality of life: SwedenThe great square of Stortorget, in Gamla Stan Stockholm Sweden. After Sweden, Norway ranked as the second best country in the world for quality of life, according to the U.S. News and World Report. Canada ranked as the third best country based on quality of life, according to the U.S. News and World Report.
Persons: Michael Robinson, Alexander Spatari Organizations: . News, U.S . News, WPP, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Gamla Stan Stockholm, Sweden Norway Canada, CIA, Getty, Canada Locations: U.S, Sweden, Gamla Stan, Gamla Stan Stockholm Sweden, Sweden Norway, Sweden Norway Canada Denmark Finland Switzerland Netherlands Australia Germany New Zealand Norway, Norway, United States, Canada
When shares of Arm, the British chip designer, begin trading on the Nasdaq stock exchange on Thursday in the year’s biggest initial public offering, investors, tech executives, bankers and start-up founders will be watching closely for how it performs. If Arm’s stock falls, they will know that the market for I.P.O.s is likely to stay frozen for longer. But a warm welcome for the shares could entice many more companies to go public in the coming months, ending the cold streak. Arm is the largest company to brave the public markets in 2023, a year that has been almost deathly quiet for I.P.O.s. The chip designer, which is owned by SoftBank, priced its offering on Wednesday at $51 a share, raising $4.87 billion and valuing the company at $54.5 billion.
Persons: , David Hsu Organizations: Nasdaq, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, SoftBank Locations: British
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