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In this article INVZLAZROUSTINVZLAZROUST Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTA Hesai lidar sensor on top of a vehicle in Shenzhen, China, July 10, 2022. Jade Gao | AFP | Getty ImagesFor investors in lidar startups, this has been a long time coming. After years of talk — and a SPAC boom in the sensor sector — automakers have finally started incorporating lidar units into their vehicles. Lidar, short for light detection and ranging, is a sensor technology that uses invisible lasers to create a detailed 3D map of the sensor's surroundings. Playing into investors' intense interest in self-driving technology, many lidar startups went public via mergers with special purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs, over the last few years.
Persons: LAZR, INVZ LAZR, Jade Gao, They're, Luminar, , Omer Keilaf, Keilaf, Innoviz, Austin Russell, Russell, we'll, Tom Fennimore Organizations: AFP, Getty, BMW, Volkswagen, Refinitiv, Volvo, Polestar, Benz, Luminar Technologies, Bloomberg Locations: Shenzhen, China, Germany, U.S, SPACs, Orlando , Florida
The company logo of Chinese developer Country Garden is pictured at the Shanghai Country Garden Center in Shanghai, China August 9, 2023. Smaller Chinese cities, whose revenues have already been deteriorating, could have a glut of unfinished homes, a social problem Beijing is trying to avoid. But as China's economy started slowing during and after its COVID-19 lockdowns, property sales in those areas has plummeted along with values of the homes themselves. Country Garden's sales in 2020 were 570.7 billion yuan ($78.22 billion), but that slipped to 357.5 billion yuan in 2022. Country Garden has nearly 1 million homes to complete, according to estimates from Japanese investment bank Nomura.
Persons: Aly, HONG KONG, Oscar Choi, Yang Huiyan, Lu Ting, Nomura, Gerwin Bell, Clare Jim, Liangping Gao, Matt Tracy, Davide Barbuscia, Christian Schmollinger Organizations: Shanghai Country Garden, REUTERS, Country, HK, National Bureau, Statistics, Partners Capital, China Evergrande, Oxford Economics, Nomura, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, HONG, Beijing, Dezhou, Hong Kong, Asia, Washington, New York
Japanese Yen and U.S. dollar banknotes are seen in this illustration taken March 10, 2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File PhotoAug 11 (Reuters) - A look at the day ahead in Asian markets from Jamie McGeever, financial markets columnist. Markets are betting that the Fed's most aggressive rate-hiking campaign in more than 40 years is over. The short end of the bond market was a bit more stable, reflecting the view that the Fed is done raising rates. The dollar is nudging 145.00 yen, around where the Bank of Japan spent record yen-buying sums late last year as the yen hurtled to a 33-year low.
Persons: Yen, Dado Ruvic, Jamie McGeever, Brent, Deepa Babington Organizations: REUTERS, Bank of Japan, Reserve Bank of, Thomson, Reuters Locations: Asia, Reserve Bank of India, India, Hong Kong
X is ‘close to breakeven’ says CEO Linda Yaccarino
  + stars: | 2023-08-10 | by ( Clare Duffy | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
New York CNN —X CEO Linda Yaccarino, leader of the platform formerly known as Twitter, said the company is keeping an eye on new competitor Threads, despite the sharply slowing growth of the rival app from Meta. Musk, who is now the company’s chief technology officer, has also been preparing for a cage fight with Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Yaccarino joined the company after months of turmoil caused by Musk’s takeover, including mass layoffs, controversial policy decisions and various legal battles. Yaccarino, a former marketing executive with NBCUniversal, was brought on to Twitter in part to help revive its advertising business. And she said on Thursday that the company is “close to breakeven.”“Coca Cola, Visa, State Farm is a huge partner, they’re coming back — the last bunch of weeks, continued revenue growth,” Yaccarino said.
Persons: Linda Yaccarino, it’s, ” Yaccarino, they’ll, , Yaccarino, we’re, Staving, Elon Musk, WeChat, Mark Zuckerberg, , Musk, they’re Organizations: New, New York CNN, Twitter, Meta, CNBC, Fidelity, Visa Locations: New York, breakeven, Coca Cola
Disney (DIS) reported fiscal third-quarter results after the closing bell Wednesday, and it was another mixed quarter even against low expectations. Still, there were enough pockets of optimism in the company's restructuring plan and streaming strategy to believe CEO Bob Iger's turnaround is working. Indeed, global Disney+ subscribers declined to 146.1 million from 157.8 billion, but nearly all of that was associated with Disney+ Hotstar and not Disney's core markets. Quarter over quarter, that loss of $512 million was narrower by $147 million. Thanks to the ongoing strength of Disney's international parks and cruise line business, Disney expects fourth-quarter operating margins at DPEP to exceed the prior year.
Persons: Bob Iger's, we've, Kevin Lansberry, Iger, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Bob Iger, CNBC's David Faber, David A Organizations: Disney, Refinitiv, DIS, Consumer, Hollywood, Indian Premier League cricket, Netflix, Disney Media, Entertainment, Linear Networks, ESPN, Penn Entertainment, Disney Parks, Walt Disney, Star Wars, CNBC, Allen, Grogan Locations: India, Florida, Europe, Canada, DMED, Sun Valley , Idaho
Take profits on SoFi after recent rally, KBW says
  + stars: | 2023-08-01 | by ( Alex Harring | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Investors should sell their SoFi holdings after the stock has more than doubled in just a few months, KBW said. Analyst Michael Perito downgraded the financial technology stock to underperform from market perform while simultaneously hiking his price target for shares by $2 to $7.50. Still, Perito's new price target implies shares could tumble 34.5% from where they finished Monday. "We believe valuation has overshot the fundamental earnings outlook," Perito said in a note to clients Monday. SoFi posted a loss of 6 cents per share when accounting for GAAP, while analysts polled by FactSet forecasted 7 cents lost per share.
Persons: KBW, Michael Perito, Perito, SoFi, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: FactSet Locations: 2Q23
The survey also indicated the European Central Bank's sustained campaign of interest rate rises is starting to take its toll on consumers and denting the services sector. In our baseline case we expect subdued growth for the second half of the year, but today's data suggest the risk of a small contraction in euro zone GDP in Q3 is increasing." In France a downturn extended into July as both the services and manufacturing sectors did worse than expected. A PRICE TO PAYThe euro zone services PMI fell to 51.1 from 52.0, its lowest since January and shy of the Reuters poll forecast for 51.5. An index measuring output, which feeds into the composite PMI, fell to its lowest in over three years.
Persons: Paolo Grignani, Jack Allen, Reynolds, Jonathan Cable, John Stonestreet, Toby Chopra Organizations: P Global, June's, Oxford Economics, PMI, Reuters, Capital Economics, ECB, Thomson Locations: Germany, France, Europe's, Britain
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. The benchmark Stoxx 600 index retreated 0.11%, dragged down by telecom stocks after downbeat news from Nokia and Ericsson. Biggest bank gets biggerJPMorgan Chase's second-quarter net income surged 67% to $14.5 billion, or $4.75 per share. All figures beat Wall Street's estimates — and the bank's own, causing it to raise its expectations for the full year's net interest income.
Persons: Wall, Elon Musk, Sony's, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: JPMorgan Chase & Co, Headquarters, CNBC, Dow Jones, Nokia, Ericsson, Biggest, JPMorgan, First, Revenue, BBC, Activision, Activision Blizzard, U.S, Appeals, Federal, Microsoft, Activision's, PlayStation, of Locations: New York, First Republic, Southern, of New York
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. The Chinese economy slowsChina's second-quarter gross domestic product grew 6.3% from a year ago, falling short of the 7.3% increase analysts had expected. When tabulated month over month, GDP grew only 0.8%, much slower than the 2.2% increase in the first quarter. [PRO] Retail therapyChina's economy may be slowing, but the country's "premium" spenders are still splashing out on goods, according to Bernstein.
Persons: Elon Musk, Sony's, Bernstein Organizations: CNBC, Dow Jones, BBC, Activision, Activision Blizzard, U.S, Appeals, Federal, Microsoft, Activision's, PlayStation Locations: Asia, Pacific, Shanghai
"Need to reach positive cash flow before we have the luxury of anything else," Musk wrote in response to a tweet. Musk took over Twitter in October of last year in a deal valued at around $44 billion, including about $13 billion in debt. He also claimed at that time that the company was "roughly breakeven," and expected to become cash flow positive within the next quarter. A number of widely followed accounts on Twitter posted that they were dismayed they did not qualify to earn income from the program yet. It's not clear how much Twitter paid creators in total in this first round of payments.
Persons: Elon Musk, Porte, Alain JOCARD, ALAIN JOCARD, Musk, Linda Yaccarino, Comcast's NBCUniversal, NBCUniversal, Twitter, Andrew Tate —, Tate, influencers, Omar Qazi, Sawyer Merritt, Brian, Ed Krassenstein Organizations: SpaceX, Twitter, Porte de, Getty, BBC, CNBC, Internet Hall of Fame, of, X Corp Locations: Paris, AFP, Romania
Stock markets could suffer if the United States economy sidesteps a recession that many believe is just around the corner, according to Investec equities strategist Roger Lee. Lee said the market is bracing itself for a recession within the next year, a prediction he called the "most widely forecast recession in history." Paradoxically therefore, the greatest risk to U.S. markets is if the recession risk recedes. The implications of this could potentially lead to a downturn in both equities and bond markets, according to the strategist. "Paradoxically therefore, the greatest risk to U.S. markets is if the recession risk recedes," Lee added.
Persons: Roger Lee, Lee, Investec's Lee, , treasuries, it's, Jeff Cox Organizations: HSBC, CNBC, Dow Jones, Treasury Locations: United States, U.S, London, America
It would represent the first time Chinese automakers have controlled a majority share of China's car market - the world's largest. For the past four decades, China's auto market has been dominated by established global brands such as VW and Toyota operating in joint ventures with Chinese partners. AlixPartners forecast China's overall auto sales would grow 3% this year to 24.9 million vehicles, recovering to the level of sales before COVID-19. Dyer forecast annual sales of Chinese-branded cars in overseas markets would grow to 9 million vehicles by 2030. China's market also faces massive overcapacity, and Dyer forecast a wave of consolidation.
Persons: Jason Lee, AlixPartners, Tesla, Stephen Dyer, Dyer, haven't, Zhang Yan, Kevin Krolicki, Devika Organizations: REUTERS, VW, Toyota, HK, Xpeng Motors, Thomson Locations: Beijing, China, Japan, U.S, Asia, Europe, South America, South East Asia, South Asia, Shanghai, Singapore
Costco says more shoppers are sharing cards at self-checkout, so it's clamping down on checking IDs. There are still ways to shop without a membership: online, with a gift card, or as a member's guest. Still, there are a few ways to shop Costco's selection without paying the fee. In that scenario, the $60 membership fee basically pays for itself after just two trips. Use a Costco gift card without a membershipAnother popular workaround is to use a Costco gift card, known as a Shop Card, which allows shoppers to access the warehouse to use the funds.
Persons: Organizations: Costco, Service, Netflix, Gold Star, Walmart Locations: Instacart
Euro zone business activity contracts in June
  + stars: | 2023-07-05 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) - Euro zone business activity slipped into contractionary territory last month in a broad-based downturn across the bloc's dominant services industry and a deepening decline of factory output, a survey showed. HCOB's final Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), compiled by S&P Global and seen as a good gauge of overall economic health, slumped to 49.9 in June from May's 52.8. The slowdown in business activity growth was accompanied by a weaker rise in new business, lower price increases and a decline in business expectations," said Cyrus de la Rubia, chief economist at Hamburg Commercial Bank. The services new business index was barely above breakeven at a five-month low of 51.0. In one bright spot pricing pressures eased significantly in June with the composite output prices index falling to 53.8 from 56.4, its lowest since March 2021.
Persons: Kai Pfaffenbach, Cyrus de la Rubia, Jonathan Cable, Susan Fenton Organizations: P Global, May's, PMI, European Central Bank, REUTERS, Hamburg Commercial Bank, Thomson Locations: Frankfurt, Germany, Hamburg
Goldman Sachs has named the tech stocks it expects to become more profitable over the next two years. Goldman Sachs believes that the bulk of the margin expansion is yet to come as companies start to realize the full benefits of cost-cutting measures implemented in the first half of 2023. The table below highlights Goldman's five stocks with the biggest upside that are expected to benefit from the above factors. Monday.com Monday.com , a software company that aims to improve efficiency among teams, is also expected to improve its financial performance. Vertex Vertex , a tax software provider, is expected by Goldman Sachs to see a 4.2 percentage point expansion in its operating margins from 2022 to 2024.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Salesforce, Goldman, Gabriela Borges, Monday.com, Guidewire, Procore, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Goldman
Americans are still booking short-term rentals for the summer at record rates, beating expectations. But the growing pool of Airbnb and Vrbo hosts means some hosts are seeing revenue drop up to 18%. Americans are still voraciously booking short-term rentals, despite economic uncertainty — and are even outpacing expectations. In January, analytics site AirDNA forecasted demand for short-term rentals, as measured by nights booked, would grow by 5% in 2023. "Travel brands and the service economy have outperformed expectations, and short-term rentals are no different," said Jamie Lane, chief economist at AirDNA.
Persons: , Jen Kelman, Jamie Lane, Katie Kay Mead, Mead, it's, Kelman, Melinda Johnson, We're, Johnson, She's, she's, I'm Organizations: Service, Phoenix, AirDNA Locations: Arizona, Arrowhead , California, Tennessee, Smoky
Morning Bid: Powell patter, UK shock, FedEx warning
  + stars: | 2023-06-21 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +4 min
A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Mike DolanThe Fed chair has a tricky message to communicate. Powell's colleagues on Tuesday stressed again they would stay the course until inflation is back to its 2% target. UK inflation defied expectations of a slowdown and held at 8.7% in May, while 'core' inflation jumped above 7% for the first time since 1992. In corporate news, FedEx FDX.N shares dropped almost 3% overnight after a profit warning. Events to watch for later on Wednesday:* Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell testifies to House Financial Affairs Committee.
Persons: Mike Dolan, Jerome Powell's, rationalises, Powell's, Treasuries, BoE, Sterling recoiled, Rivian, Jerome Powell, Adrian Kugler, Philip Jefferson's, Lisa Cook, Austan Goolsbee, Loretta Mester, Christina Fincher Organizations: Federal Reserve, National Association of Home Builders, Bank of, FedEx FDX.N, Rivals Rivian, European, Financial, Fed Board, Chicago Fed, Cleveland Fed, Treasury, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Reuters, Thomson Locations: U.S, Wells Fargo, Britain, Bank of England, China
The headquarters of Grab Holdings Ltd., in Singapore. Grab Holdings Ltd., reported its latest earnings on Feb. 23, 2023. Singapore-based Grab Holdings is cutting over 1,000 jobs, its CEO said Tuesday, in a bid to manage costs and reorganize the company in a competitive landscape. This is the group's largest round of layoffs since 2020, when it cut 360 jobs in response to Covid-19 pandemic challenges. Even without layoffs, Tan said Grab is on track to hit breakeven this year on group adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization.
Persons: Anthony Tan, Tan Organizations: Grab Holdings Locations: Singapore
Richard: $70 is the new $50 as a breakeven point for oil prices
  + stars: | 2023-06-16 | 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 EmailRichard: $70 is the new $50 as a breakeven point for oil pricesKate Richard, founder and CEO of Warwick Investment Group, discusses the global demand outlook for oil and gas prices, and why there's still under-investment in the energy sector.
Persons: Kate Richard Organizations: Warwick Investment Group
Automotive digital marketplace TrueCar slashes 24% of headcount
  + stars: | 2023-06-14 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
June 14 (Reuters) - TrueCar (TRUE.O) said on Wednesday it was laying off 24% of its workforce as part of restructuring that would result in $20 million of annualized expense reduction for the automotive digital marketplace. As of May 31, the company had nearly $146.5 million of cash and cash equivalents, but its management was expecting aggregate cash balance to drop below $125 million in the near term. However, TrueCar said the fourth quarter will see double-digit year-over-year revenue growth and breakeven or positive adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA). A stormy economic environment brought on by inflation and rate hikes has prompted several companies across corporate America to trim their headcount. Reporting by Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju SamuelOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Jantoon Reigersman, TrueCar, Niket, Maju Samuel Organizations: Thomson Locations: America, Bengaluru
But while the Fed in 2019 was asking "'is this as strong as the labor market can get?' Fed rate hikes could have "very significant, uneven short-term impacts" on the job market. So far headline payroll employment growth remains strong. Reuters Graphics Reuters GraphicsWANTING IT BOTH WAYSFor now, though, the Fed might mark the pandemic labor rebound as essentially complete, despite the risks. The economy needs to create about 100,000 payroll jobs a month to keep pace with population growth.
Persons: Bryan Woolston, Michael Madowitz, Raphael Bostic, Trump, Howard Schneider, Dan Burns, Andrea Ricci Organizations: Kentucky, Center, REUTERS, . Federal Reserve, Washington Center for Equitable, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Atlanta Fed, BLS, American Progress, White House Council, Economic Advisers, Thomson Locations: Frankfort , Kentucky, U.S, Bryan Woolston WASHINGTON, COVID
The latest reading on the U.S. consumer price index, a widely followed inflation gauge, is slated for release Tuesday at 8:30 a.m. The S & P 500 would pop between 0.75% and 1.25% under this scenario, JPMorgan said. The S & P 500 would trade between breakeven and 0.5% higher under this outcome, the traders predicted. The clear winner here would be the tech sector, JPMorgan traders said. The S & P 500 would drop 2.5% to 3% under this outcome.
Persons: Dow Jones, Buckle, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: CPI, Federal, JPMorgan, Services Locations: U.S, breakeven
Amtrak CEO: Pandemic delayed profitability by years
  + stars: | 2023-06-06 | by ( Greg Wallace | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +2 min
Instead, CEO Stephen Gardner asked a congressional subcommittee on Tuesday to tolerate losses for several more years for the federally funded rail system while the company and country invest billions into improving passenger rail service. “Financial performance is not Amtrak’s sole objective,” CEO Stephen Gardner said in his written testimony to a House Transportation subcommittee. Amtrak CEO Stephen Gardner, left, accompanied by Northeast Corridor Commission Executive Director Mitch Warren, right, speaks during a House Transportation subcommittee hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, June 6, 2023. Amtrak is also developing new lines of service to connect fast-growing regions and growing frequencies on existing routes. Subcommittee Chairman Troy Nehls, a Texas Republican, said Amtrak needed to prioritize its existing network over adding new routes.
Persons: Stephen Gardner, Gardner, Mitch Warren, Andrew Harnik, We’re, ” Gardner, Troy Nehls, ” Nehls Organizations: CNN, Amtrak, , Transportation, Penn Central, Corridor Commission, Capitol, Long Distance, Texas Republican Locations: Washington, Texas
Apple announced the Vision Pro, a $3,499 mixed-reality headset that will be released in early 2024. Wall Street is reacting to the device, with one analyst expecting more than 1 million units sold in its first year. The $3,499 Vision Pro headset offers both augmented- and virtual-reality capabilities, hand-based gesture controls, and advanced eye tracking. Those ranges imply that the Vision Pro will generate between $525 million and $5.2 billion in revenue next year. Rating: Neutral — Price Target: $190"The price tag of $3,499 was higher than the $3K broadly speculated.
Persons: , Wedbush, Dan Ives, America's Wasmi Mohan, Price, Samik Chatterjee, Goldman Sachs, We're, Michael Ng Organizations: Apple, Vision, Apple Watch, Service, Bank of America, Wall, Meta, Bank, America's, JPMorgan Locations: Cupertino
CrowdStrike reported first-quarter earnings results for its fiscal 2024 year Wednesday, beating consensus estimates on the top and bottom lines but sending shares down more than 11% after hours on slowing revenue growth. : 57 cents, adjusted, vs. 51 cents expected. Revenue: $692.6 million, vs. $676.4 million expected. CrowdStrike swung to a profit of $500,000, or breakeven per share, compared with a loss of $31.5 million, or 14 cents a share, a year ago. The company offered current quarter guidance of $717.2 million to $727.4 million, compared with a consensus range of $698 million to $742 million.
Persons: CrowdStrike, George Kurtz, Burt Podbere, Kurtz Organizations: Revenue, Nasdaq, Microsoft, U.S . Navy, National Security Agency, U.S . Department of Justice Locations: cybersecurity, China, U.S, Guam
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