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AdvertisementSpeed and ease — that's how generative AI is changing the game for finance professionals. In a survey of 780 banking and capital-markets employees by Accenture Research, 62% of respondents expect generative AI to increase people's stress and burnout. "Employees with AI skills will replace people without AI skills," Andrew Chin, the chief AI officer at the $759 billion money manager AllianceBernstein, told BI. AdvertisementA data scientist at a midsize hedge fund told BI that generative AI models are a "superpower for coders." The firm's ultimate aim is to use generative AI to replicate the success of its best bankers for all advisors.
Persons: Christina Melas, Rowe Price's Sébastien, Eric Burl, Alyssa Powell, Thomas H, Lee, Keri Smith, Smith, Ken Griffin, They've, Goldman Sachs, Marco Argenti, Argenti, It's, I've, drudge, Andrew Chin, AllianceBernstein, Lisa Donahue, Donahue, Jobs, who's, He's, he'd, ChatGPT, Accenture's Smith Organizations: Bain Capital Ventures, Management, Business, Bain Capital, Man Group, Accenture Research, Finance, Wall Street, Blackstone, Sigma, Citadel, Milken Institute Global Conference, Excel, Accenture, Northern Trust, Citibank, Citi, JPMorgan Locations: New York City, New York
Tim Graham | Getty ImagesIndia "clearly has a problem" figuring out new drivers for its economic growth even as its economy expands at a fast pace, JPMorgan's Jahangir Aziz said, following the country's union budget. "If you look at India over the last two years post the pandemic, recorded growth has been strong. But if you look at the drivers of growth, it's essentially these two: Public infrastructure and services export," Aziz, chief emerging markets economist at JPM, told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia" on Tuesday. According to estimates by the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, India's services exports will likely hit $30.3 billion in June, compared with $27.8 billion in the same month last year. According to the International Monetary Fund's latest World Economic Outlook, the country's growth is predicted to decline to 6.5% in 2025.
Persons: Tim Graham, JPMorgan's Jahangir Aziz, Aziz, CNBC's, V Anantha Nageswaran, Raghuram Rajan Organizations: Getty, Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Services, Reserve Bank, India's, International Monetary, University of Chicago Booth School, Reserve Bank of India Locations: Tardeo South Mumbai, India
(This is CNBC Pro's live coverage of Wednesday's analyst calls and Wall Street chatter. "At this point, we believe EPS and investor sentiment have troughed and believe the risk-to-reward profile skews favorable," wrote analyst Nik Modi. "However, with minimal upside to our revised $47 price target and a relatively 'balanced' risk-reward between our $28 bear case …. –Samantha Subin 5:54 a.m.: Wall Street stands by Alphabet, AI potential post-earnings Wall Street analysts remain bullish on the outlook for Alphabet , even after the stock fell on the back of its second-quarter results. His price target of $425, up from $320, implies upside of more than 28% from Tuesday's close.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Lauder, Estee Lauder, Nik Modi, Modi, Estee, – Samantha Subin, Morgan Stanley downgrades, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Samantha Subin, Dan Levy, Tesla, Michaeli, Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi, Mark Delaney, GOOGL, Doug Anmuth, Justin Post, Eric Sheridan, Brent Thill, Sheridan, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Spotify, RBC, Markets, Motors, GM, General Motors, Tesla, Barclays, YouTube, Bank of America, Google, Jefferies Locations: China, 1H25, Tuesday's
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailInvestors want Fed cuts to be proactive rather than reactive, says JPMorgan's Gabriela SantosGabriela Santos, JPMorgan Asset Management chief markets strategist for the Americas, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, state of the economy, regulatory outlook, and more.
Persons: JPMorgan's Gabriela Santos Gabriela Santos Organizations: Investors, JPMorgan Asset Management
Officially, the National Bureau of Economic Research defines a recession as "a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months." But regardless of the country's economic standing, many Americans are struggling in the face of sky-high prices for everyday items, and most have exhausted their savings and are now leaning on credit cards to make ends meet. We're in a 'vibecession'Economists have wrestled with the growing disconnect between how the economy is doing and how people feel about their financial standing. We're in a "vibecession," Joyce Chang, JPMorgan's chair of global research, said at the CNBC Financial Advisor Summit in May. "If you're a homeowner or if you own financial assets, you've done very well, but you're leaving out huge segments of the population," Chang said.
Persons: Harris, Joyce Chang, JPMorgan's, Chang, that's Organizations: Guardian, National Bureau of Economic Research, CNBC, Summit Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailJPMorgan's Jordan Jackson: Market will end 2024 higher than where it is nowStrategas' Chris Verrone, NewEdge's Cameron Dawson, and JPMorgan's Jordan Jackson join 'Closing Bell' to discuss markets, earnings, and the rally's staying power.
Persons: JPMorgan's Jordan Jackson, Chris Verrone, NewEdge's Cameron Dawson
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC’s full interview with Strategas' Chris Verrone, NewEdge's Cameron Dawson and JPMorgan's Jordan JacksonStrategas' Chris Verrone, NewEdge's Cameron Dawson, and JPMorgan's Jordan Jackson join 'Closing Bell' to discuss markets, earnings, and the rally's staying power.
Persons: Strategas, Chris Verrone, NewEdge's Cameron Dawson, JPMorgan's Jordan Jackson Strategas, JPMorgan's Jordan Jackson
Investment banking was the rock star of big bank earnings this season. For Club stock Morgan Stanley, investment banking revenues surged 51% year over year with equity underwriting fees jumping over 56%, and advisory fees increasing over 30% from the year-ago period. Wells Fargo's investment banking revenues, which fall underneath its corporate and investment banking (CIB) division, jumped 38% year over year. "The investments we have been making allowed us to take advantage of the market activity in the quarter with strong performance in investment advisory, trading and investment banking fees." And good news for investors, it doesn't look like the rebound in investment banking is slowing anytime soon.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Wells, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Morgan, We've, Morgan Stanley's, NII, Charlie Scharf, Ted Pick, we're, David Solomon, Donald Trump, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, JPMorgan Organizations: JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup, Citi, Investment, IB, Federal Reserve, Wells, CNBC, CIB, Morgan, Wall, Citibank, JPMorgan Chase, Reuters Locations: Wells Fargo, Wells, U.S
For Europe, the prime concern is tariffs," wrote Goldman analysts. "If the entire impact came in 2025 this would be enough to eliminate any growth that year (our current top-down forecast is 4%)," Goldman wrote. Within sectors, beneficiaries of rising trade risks tend to be defensive stocks such as utilities, health care as well as Europe's GRANOLAS stocks, according to the bank. But he says a "meaningful selloff" in mega tech will see other names "pushed down as collateral damage." And if the AI narrative plays out as expected, a material sell-off in Mega Tech will present a buying opportunity in those names as well," he wrote.
Persons: Biden, Donald Trump, Trump, Europe's, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Louis Navellier, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Bloomberg, Taiwan, Trump, U.S, JPMorgan, China Gas, Power, Huaneng, Republicans, National Security, Hire, GSK, Roche, ASML, Nestle, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, L'Oreal, LVMH, AstraZeneca, SAP, Sanofi, Liquide, Tobacco, Dassault Systemes, Intercontinental Hotels, Nvidia, Navellier, Associates, Mega Tech Locations: China, Taiwan, U.S, Hong Kong, Europe, United States, Germany, France, Stellantis
Analyst Mauricio Serna also raised his price target to $20 from $13, indicating 57.6% upside potential from where shares closed on Thursday. Barclays also lowered its price target to $47 from $55, indicating 11.4% downside from Thursday's close. Analyst Benjamin Swinburne has a $780 price target on shares, indicating shares could rise 20% from Thursday's close. Cahall raised his price target to $758 from $726, suggesting nearly 18% upside potential from the stock's close price on Thursday. His new price target of $190, up from $107, implies upside of 20% from Thursday's close.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Mauricio Serna, Serna, — Hakyung Kim, Barclays downgrades Molson Coors, Lauren Lieberman, BUD YTD, Hakyung Kim, Benjamin Swinburne, Swinburne, Doug Anmuth, Anmuth, Wells, Steven Cahall, Cahall, Arm Holdings Morgan Stanley, Lee Simpson, Simpson, GenAI, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Netflix, Arm Holdings, UBS, Barclays downgrades, Barclays, bearish, Molson Coors, NFLX's, Holdings, ARM Locations: Serna, Thursday's, Wells Fargo
Walmart shares have outperformed the market. Analysts remain overwhelmingly bullish on the stock with more than 80% of analysts rating shares a buy or overweight, according to FactSet. Target shares reflect the strain of the competition. And if Walmart continues to win over wealthier customers, that's more bad news for Target. On Tuesday, KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Bradley Thomas reiterated that Walmart remains one of his top stock ideas.
Persons: Lindsay Rosner, Piper Sandler, Peter Keith, Keith, Daniel Kurnos, Kurnos, FactSet, Alexis Deladerriere, JLL, Christopher Horvers, JPMorgan's Horvers, Cowen, Oliver Chen, Chen, hasn't, Bradley Thomas, Thomas Organizations: Walmart, Target, Goldman Sachs Asset Management, Analysts, Keith, P Retail, Amazon, Microsoft, Apple, Adobe Analytics, Adobe, Amazon's, Costco, Amazon Prime, Sam's, Paramount, KeyBanc Capital Locations: Wednesday's
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon is a huge believer in artificial intelligence's impact on the workforce. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementJPMorgan's Jamie Dimon said that he'll likely add thousands of more jobs centered around artificial intelligence at his company in the next couple of years. In an interview with LinkedIn's Editor in Chief Dan Roth, the JPMorgan CEO lauded AI as a valuable "productivity tool" that is already impacting the workforce, including at his bank. "It's huge," Dimon said of AI.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, , Dan Roth, Dimon Organizations: Service, Business
Netflix reports after the bell Thursday, ushering in the start of earnings season for Wall Street's biggest media and technology giants. Analysts expect the streaming behemoth to post earnings of $4.74 per share on about $9.53 billion in revenue, according to analysts polled by LSEG. The analyst regards upside to subscriber additions, commentary surrounding margin expansion and a reacceleration in revenue as key for investors. Jefferies analyst James Heaney expects these programs and a strong content slate position Netflix well for a second-quarter subscriber beat. Netflix has made strides within advertising, disclosing in May that there were 40 million active monthly users in the tier.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Morgan Stanley's Benjamin Swinburne, Jefferies, James Heaney, JPMorgan's Doug Anmuth, Morgan Stanley's Swinburne, Evercore ISI's Mark Mahaney, Jessica Ehrlich, Jason Bazinet, Piper Sandler's Matt Farrell, Farrell Organizations: Netflix, Wall Street's, LSEG, Bank of America
Helping an 'Anxious Generation'All Saints' experiment with an extended school day comes as concern mounts about the impact of smartphones and social media on teenagers. AdvertisementUS Surgeon-General Vivek Murthy also recently called for social media to carry cigarette-style warning labels to warn of the health risks. Writing in The New York Times, he said social media increased the risk that children would suffer anxiety and depression. However, the extended school day program has produced some noteworthy results. AdvertisementRausch said his research had shown that constant access to smartphones and social media only increases social inequality.
Persons: , London that's, It's, Andrew O'Neil, O'Neil, it's, Andrew O'Neill ., mick, Zacariah Pinto, Mia Benoit, Benoit, I'm, Pinto, Jonathan Haidt, Vivek Murthy, Zach Rausch, Haidt, Rausch, Rebecca Fuller, Jonathan Brenner, Helena, Brenner, She's Organizations: Service, Saints Catholic College, Business, Grenfell Tower, All, YouTube, The New York Times, NYU, Stern School of Business, Saints, Eton Locations: Notting Hill, London, Notting, Portobello
Stocks like Shake Shack and CarMax are among several of JPMorgan's short-term investment opportunities heading into the second half of the year. Take a look at five of JPMorgan's picks below: Shake Shack made the list with an underweight rating. The stock is up 16% this year as Shake Shack expects to grow its total revenue by 11% to 15% and open 80 restaurants, bringing its total footprint to about 600 locations. Another restaurant stock, Cheesecake Factory , made the cut as a short pick, as JPMorgan expressed concerns about its near-term outlook. The stock appears "fully valued at current levels," Ivankoe added, putting an underweight rating on the company.
Persons: Dow, Nicholas Rosato, Shack, John Ivankoe, Ivankoe, Kenneth Worthington, Worthington Organizations: Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, JPMorgan, Cheesecake, FactSet, Group Locations: Chicago
JPMorgan highlighted Amazon as its best idea going into the second-quarter earnings season for technology stocks, followed by Uber and Google . JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth wrote that the Wall Street bank remains bullish on larger players in the industry, for now. The analyst highlighted Amazon as his favorite stock for the near and long term. Amazon stock has gained 27% this year. "Google remains focused on innovation, and we continue to believe there is healthy runway across Search and YouTube ads as AI drives higher ROI & TV dollars shift online," the analyst wrote.
Persons: Uber, Doug Anmuth, Anmuth, Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, Google, Amazon Web, Costco, YouTube
Around the dinner table in the early 2000s, David Katzman would quiz his kids about their dream startups. ModelFit employees told BI that Gelband used the Pelvicore Pro only with the permission of its creator, the physical therapist Christina Christie. Once, in October 2018, David Katzman met with Facebook's ad team to discuss SDC's before-and-after advertisements, which violated the tech company's policies. SDC employees worked on Pvolve marketing campaigns, and Pvolve employees took trips on David Katzman's jet. "He didn't come from anything, and he spent years and years building up the business," the person close to Pasterino told BI.
Persons: Stephen Pasterino, Pasterino, he'd, hadn't, Rachel Katzman, who'd, Katzman, Pvolve, Jennifer Aniston, David Katzman, bankrolled, , Laura Quintana, Stephen, Erik Connolly, Connolly, John Mayer, Nietzsche, Dan Gilbert, David, Gilbert, Usher, Jordan, decanting, Justin Gelband, ModelFit, Taylor Swift, Gelband, Vanessa Packer, Bryan Bedder, we'll, didn't, Woody Allen's, Vera Wang, Katzman's, I've, Cynthia Hannah, Blanca Padilla, Pasterino's, Justin Gelband's, Tracy Anderson's, cofounders, Packer, Christina Christie, Christie, Jordan Katzman, David Katzman's, Camelot, Julie Cartwright, Pvolve's, Cartwright, Hannah Bronfman, Nadine Leopold, Tim P, Pvolve didn't, Quintana, Rachel, SmileDirectClub, Jamie Dimon, Olivia Culpo, Craig Barritt, Bethenny Frankel, Madelaine Petsch, Lola tampons, They'd, Mara, ThreeForm, loaning, Hannah, Christie Brinkley, Monica Schipper, she'd, Rebecca Minkoff, Lindsay Pinchuk, Pamela, couldn't, Kathryn Delacruz, Madison Krause, Krause, Delacruz, " Krause, Pvolve's attorney's, Aniston's, Aniston, Jennifer, Jennifer Aniston's, Connelly, SDC's cofounders, — Pasterino, ThreeForm hasn't, Sarah VanZalen, there's, Erewhon, WWD, Tim Michaels, franchisors, Michaels, they've, Aperol Organizations: SoHo, Pvolve, Los Angeles ., Depot, DeeKay Enterprises, Quicken Loans, Cleveland Cavaliers, Camelot Venture Group, New, ModelFit, GQ, Getty, Hamptons, Beverly Hills Hotel, Cosmopolitan, BI, Gray Institute, SDC, Camelot, Lionsgate, Facebook, Whitby, Ventures, . Press, Miss, Employees, Naboisho Conservancy, Katzman's, Southampton, Pvolve Facebook, LinkedIn, Health, Forbes, Workers, Industry Locations: Pvolve, New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Hammonton , New Jersey, Atlantic City, Jersey Shore, Franklin , Michigan, Michigan, Detroit, Las Vegas, Beverly, SoHo, Ibiza, France, Paris, Vogue, California, ModelFit, Covent, London, Riverdale, New Jersey, Pasterino, Italy, Kenya, Naboisho, Nashville, San Diego, New York City, shuttering, Ann Arbor , Michigan, ThreeForm, Angeles, Malibu
Read previewWhen Morgan Stanley reported earnings on Tuesday, it wasn't the first bank to make hay over the coming "investment-banking rebound." Top executives up and down across Wall Street have been talking for days about their predictions that Wall Street's bread-and-butter business of advising and financing deals could soon come roaring back. And the parade of optimism has only heated up this year as investment-banking revenues have started the slow climb from historical lows. AdvertisementIB revenues surgingLike many of the other Wall Street banks that reported earnings in recent days, Morgan Stanley saw investment-banking revenues soar in the second quarter. And as Pick said on Tuesday, Wall Street is getting excited about more than just traditional dealmaking, but also the financing and other hedging strategies that come with companies getting off the sidelines.
Persons: , Morgan Stanley, Mike Mayo, Mayo, Morgan, Ted Pick, Pick, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Solomon, Chase, It's, It'd Organizations: Service, Wells, Wells Fargo Securities, Business, Wall, Reserve, quicken, Goldman, Bank of America Locations: Wells Fargo, issuances, Mayo
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExpect a Fed rate cut in September with quarterly cuts thereafter: JPMorgan's Michael FeroliChris Harvey, Wells Fargo Securities head of equity strategy, and Michael Feroli, JPMorgan chief U.S. economist, join 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss the supposed market rotation, Feroli's calculations towards the rate path, and much more.
Persons: JPMorgan's Michael Feroli Chris Harvey, Michael Feroli Organizations: Wells, Wells Fargo Securities, JPMorgan Locations: Wells Fargo
Experts hold drastically different views, creating a new hot-button topic that will continue to be debated up until the election in November. The camp staunchly opposed to Trump's policiesThe base argument against Trump's fiscal platform is that tariffs are, by nature, inflationary. AdvertisementIn a recent op-ed for the Financial Times, he cited the "benign" impact Trump's first-term tariffs had on the US economy. Looking ahead to a new term, Yardeni thinks Trump's most extreme pursuits will likely be watered down by Congress. AdvertisementRepublican donor Kyle Bass — who serves as the chief investment officer of Hayman Capital Management — has taken a different tact in his support of Trump's fiscal agenda.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump's, Trump, he's, David Kelly, Larry Summers, Paul Krugman, Goldman Sachs, Ed Yardeni, Yardeni, Steve Eisman, Kyle Bass —, Hayman Capital Management —, Joseph Stiglitz, Biden Organizations: Service, Donald Trump White House, Business, Trump, House Republicans, Foundation, New York Times, Peterson Institute, Yardeni Research, Financial Times, Congress, CNBC, Hayman Capital Management, Oxford Economics Locations: China, It's
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Barnum also said the bank's debt capital markets jump was due more to refinancing than fundraising for deals and raised concerns about the future of IPOs. 'Down round' fears haunt the IPO marketOn public issuances, which are handled by the bank's equity capital markets business, Barnum said he would have expected stronger numbers in more normal times. "The regulatory overhang is there, remains there," on the advisory side of the business, Barnum said. Barnum suggested that the flow of capital into credit could be slowing because there isn't enough dealmaking to justify continued fundraising.
Persons: , JPMorgan Chase, Wells, Jeremy Barnum, Barnum, it's, Jamie Dimon, Dimon, Tom Williams, Biden, It's, You've Organizations: Service, JPMorgan, Business, Federal Reserve, Inc, Getty, Dow Jones Industrial Locations: Wall, Wells Fargo, Israel, Gaza, East, Russia, Ukraine, Central Europe
U.S. crude oil rose 1 % on Friday, topping $83 per barrel as consumer prices eased and inventories fall. The recent oil rally has stalled out with West Texas Intermediate largely flat this week, ahead 0.38%, after booking four-straight weeks of gains. U.S. crude oil and gasoline inventories also fell for the week ended July 5, in a sign that summer fuel demand may be finding some life. OPEC and the International Energy Agency once again sent conflicting demand signals. JPMorgan sees a global oil demand gain of 1.4 million bpd this year.
Persons: John Evans, Brent, Natasha Kaneva, Kaneva Organizations: West Texas, Reserve, JPMorgan, International Energy Agency, Colorado State University Locations: China, Gulf, Hurricane
JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon on Friday issued another warning about inflation despite recent signs of easing in price pressures. "Therefore, inflation and interest rates may stay higher than the market expects." His comments came after this week's data showed the monthly inflation rate dipped in June for the first time in more than four years, which fueled bets that the Federal Reserve could cut rates soon. Dimon joined many economists in sounding the alarm on the U.S.' burgeoning debt and deficits. The federal government has so far spent $855 billion more than it has collected in the 2024 fiscal year.
Persons: Jamie Dimon, Dimon, Jerome Powell Organizations: JPMorgan, Federal, U.S Locations: U.S
CNBC Daily Open: S&P retreats, yen surges, Tesla sinks
  + stars: | 2024-07-12 | by ( Abid Ali | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. The declines follow the lowest consumer price index in over three years. The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell, while U.S. oil prices rose on hopes of a rate cut. The Fed is "one step closer to a September rate cut," said Chris Larkin, managing director of trading and investing at E-Trade.
Persons: Jesse Pound, Chris Larkin, Kit Juckes, Elon Musk, Jamie Dimon's Organizations: CNBC, Nasdaq, Big Tech, Nvidia, Meta, Dow Jones, Treasury, U.S, Societe Generale, Delta Air Lines, Paris, Bloomberg, JPMorgan Locations: U.S
Along with the top- and bottom-line numbers, Wall Street is also keeping close watch on net interest income and guidance. "We see the greatest sources of potential earnings upside being driven by higher loan growth and capital markets." Barclays analyst Goldberg anticipates a slight decrease in net interest income in the second quarter due to a compression in net interest margin. Last year, the company posted $21.9 billion in net interest income for the period. Despite expectations for seasonally lower trading, he also expects strong investment banking activity and net interest income to drive ongoing positive momentum.
Persons: Jason Goldberg, Jamie Dimon, Goldman Sachs, Richard Ramsden, America's Ebrahim Poonawala, Goldberg, Wells, Mike Mayo, Redburn, John Heagerty Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, LSEG, Barclays, JPMorgan, Bank, America's Locations: United States
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