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More than 70 S & P 500 names have posted their numbers, with 75% beating analyst earnings expectations. What history shows: General Motors has topped earnings estimates for eight straight quarters, Bespoke Investment Group data shows. What history shows: Coca-Cola has beaten analyst earnings expectations 73% of the time, Bespoke data shows. What history shows: Tesla has beaten earnings expectations 61% of the time, according to Bespoke. Thursday UPS is set to report earnings in the premarket, followed by a conference call at 8:30 a.m.
Persons: Michael Wayland, Mary Barra, Peter Grom, Leslie Josephs, Kelly Ortberg, TSLA, Dan Levy, Levy, Tesla Organizations: General Motors, Boeing, Netflix, CNBC, Detroit automaker, UBS, Management, Barclays, UPS, Amazon Logistics, Walmart, Citi Locations: China
Tentative deal announced to end Boeing strike
  + stars: | 2024-10-19 | by ( Chris Isidore | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
New York CNN —A tentative deal has been reached to end the five-week-long strike at troubled aircraft maker Boeing, the union announced to its 33,000 striking members early Saturday. Rank-and-file already nearly unanimously rejected a previous tentative agreement, precipitating the first strike at the company in 16 years. Many union members had expressed anger over the loss of the pensions. The union credited Acting Labor Secretary Julie Su with brokering the deal in indirect talks between the union and management. A week after that deal was rejected, Boeing improved its offer to 30% in wage increases over the four-year deal, terming that its best and final offer.
Persons: Kelly Ortberg, Julie Su, Su, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, Boeing, International Association of Machinists, International Longshoremen’s Association, Gulf, Airbus, Alaska Airlines, Federal Aviation Administration Locations: New York
Boeing and union leaders have reached a deal that could end a weekslong strike. AdvertisementBoeing and leaders from a union representing striking machinists have reached a deal that could end a strike that has lasted over a month. About 33,000 Boeing workers have been on strike in the Pacific Northwest for over a month, halting much of Boeing's production. Bank of America analysts estimated that the strike is costing Boeing $50 million a day. Less than a week after the strike began, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said the company would furlough white-collar workers in an email to employees.
Persons: , Labor Julie Su, who've, Kelly Ortberg, Ortberg Organizations: Boeing, Service, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, Labor, Bank of America, Federal Aviation Administration, Alaska Airlines, Space Station Locations: Pacific Northwest
A Spirit Airlines aircraft undergoes operations in preparation for departure at the Austin-Bergstrom International Airport in Austin, Texas, on Feb. 12, 2024. Spirit Airlines on Friday said it reached an agreement with its credit card processor to again extended a debt refinancing timeline to December, hours before it was set to hit its deadline. Spirit said in a filing late Friday that earlier this week it drew down the entirety of its $300 million revolving credit facility and expects to end the year with just over $1 billion in liquidity. The deadline was previously set in September and had been extended until Oct. 21 before the Friday change. The airline's stock closed at a new low Friday, down roughly 3%, at less than $1.50 per share.
Persons: Spirit, Perella Weinberg Organizations: Spirit Airlines, Austin, Bergstrom International Airport, Pratt & Whitney, JetBlue Airways, Street Journal, Perella Weinberg Partners Locations: Austin , Texas, Miramar , Florida
An Air India flight to Chicago diverted due to what a Canadian minister said was a bomb threat. The Canadian Air Force flew passengers to Chicago, landing 24 hours later than initially expected. AdvertisementHundreds of Air India passengers caught a flight with the Royal Canadian Air Force after the Boeing 777 they were on was diverted due to an apparent bomb threat. The bad news is there was a bomb threat on an Air India flight and an emergency landing. Air India said that over 18 hours after landing in Iqaluit, a Canadian Air Force plane took off to take passengers to Chicago.
Persons: , Harjit Sajjan, zyYdqcA33j, Robin Debreuil Organizations: Air, Boeing, Canadian Air Force, Service, Air India, Royal Canadian Air Force, Preparedness, Air France Boeing Locations: Air India, Chicago, Canadian, Iqaluit, Canada's Nunavut, Air, Delhi, Greenland, Flightradar24, Canada's, Nunavut, ❤️, India, Air France
With Wall Street rolling into the thick of earnings season, CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday told investors what market-moving action to keep an eye on next week, including reports from Boeing , Tesla , IBM and T-Mobile . On Tuesday, a slew of big names will report, including General Motors , Danaher , RTX and GE Aerospace . Cramer said the automaker could be a bargain, even as many on Wall Street are pessimistic about its earnings. IBM , Tesla , Lam Research and T-Mobile will report after close. Friday brings earnings from Colgate-Palmolive , and Cramer said he thinks Wall Street will love the stock but that such fondness is "way overdone."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Clark, Vertiv's, Elon Musk, Lam, Decker Organizations: Boeing, Tesla, IBM, Mobile, SAP, General Motors, GE Aerospace, Texas Instruments, Texas, Lam Research, Southwest Airlines, Honeywell, UPS, Carrier, Colgate, Palmolive Locations: Norfolk Southern
Earnings next week will be key to where stocks head from here. While roughly one-tenth of S & P 500 companies reported over the past week, about 20% of the broader index plans to report next week. He noted that the S & P 500 is trading at a 40% premium to its long-term P/E ratio, while tech stocks are trading at upwards of 60%. For the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S & P 500 , it's the first such streak going back to December 2023. Meanwhile, the equal-weighted S & P 500 slightly outpaced the market-cap weighted benchmark this week, a bullish signal for sectors such as health care.
Persons: Sam Stovall, Stovall, FactSet's John Butters, Butters, it's, Tesla, Lockheed Martin, Russell, Nelson Yu, Harker Organizations: U.S, CFRA Research, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Lockheed, GE Aerospace, Business Machines, General Motors, Verizon Communications, United Parcel Services, Southwest Airlines, Nvidia, Philadelphia Reserve, Chicago, PMI, New, . Kansas City Fed Manufacturing Locations: Independence, Philadelphia, . Kansas
Embraer CEO Francisco Gomes Neto speaks during the Embraer Media Day 2022 at the aircraft factory in Sao Jose dos Campos, Brazil, May 30, 2022. Brazilian plane maker Embraer SA is studying the market and new technology that could warrant it building an all-new jet, CEO Francisco Gomes Neto told CNBC. A new airplane could help the airplane manufacturer compete with much larger rivals Airbus and Boeing , which deliver hundreds of jets a year compared with Embraer's dozens of aircraft. But Gomes Neto noted that no decisions have been made yet. In the meantime, Gomes Neto said Embraer is focused on improving results and selling its regional planes, which won orders earlier this year from American Airlines , manufacturing its E2 jet and "delivering what we promise" customers.
Persons: Francisco Gomes Neto, Sao Jose dos Campos, Gomes Neto Organizations: Embraer, Embraer Media, Embraer SA, CNBC, Airbus, Boeing, American Airlines Locations: Sao Jose, Brazil, Brazilian
Several airlines have criticized Boeing for delivery delays. Ryanair CEO Michael O'Leary told Reuters Wednesday that the airline is likely to cut its traffic growth expectations for next year as it predicts delivery delays. Also on Wednesday, at an Irish think tank event, the head of the world's foremost airline trade group spoke out about delivery delays. AdvertisementLast Friday, Boeing announced further delays to its 777X jet, with its first delivery pushed from 2025 to 2026. AdvertisementThe Boeing 777X was delayed again last week, leading to sharp criticism from the boss of Emirates, one of Boeing's biggest customers.
Persons: Michael O'Leary, , O'Leary, Willie Walsh, Walsh, Tim Clark, GIUSEPPE CACACE, I've, Carsten Spohr, Spohr Organizations: Boeing, Service, Ryanair, Reuters, International Air Transport Association, Guardian, Airbus . Supply, Alaska Airlines, Emirates, Business, Getty, Lufthansa, Airlines, Europe, Financial Times, BI Locations: Irish, AFP, Emirates
CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Markets rise on upbeat earningsU.S. stocks resumed their advance Wednesday, as Morgan Stanley and United Airlines earnings topped estimates. The ministry also announced that bank loans to developers will be speeded up and nearly double to 4 million trillion yuan by the end of 2024, from the 2.23 trillion yuan already approved. [PRO] A shining sector that's not tech nor utilitiesBig Tech stocks, fueled by excitement over generative artificial intelligence, have been responsible for most of this year's rally in the market. But there's a new group of stocks that's fast becoming one of the best-performing sectors for the year.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, it'd, CSAC Organizations: CNBC, United Airlines, CSI, Beijing, ECB, European Central Bank, Intel Intel, Cybersecurity Association of China, Officials, Big Tech Locations: Asia, Pacific
'Mad Money' host Jim Cramer looks at Delta Airlines earnings. Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email
Persons: Jim Cramer Organizations: Delta Airlines
Stocks rose Thursday as investors digested strong retail sales data and more earnings. Retail sales data showed US consumer spending remains robust, with monthly spending up 0.4%. AdvertisementUS stocks climbed on Thursday as traders saw better-than-expected retail sales data and continued to digest strong corporate earnings reports. September's retail sales report showed consumer spending remains strong, with monthly spending up 0.4% from August, just above a Dow Jones consensus estimate of 0.3%. And almost every AI innovator is working with TSMC," TSMC chairman and CEO C.C.
Persons: Stocks, ASML, , C.C, Wei, TSMC, Morgan Stanley, JB Hunt Organizations: Service, Dow Jones, Commerce Department, Federal Reserve, Labor Department, chipmaker Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Nvidia, AMD, chipmakers, United Airlines, Netflix, Caixin Global, JB Locations: Wednesday's, Here's, China
(This is a wrap-up of the key money moving discussions on CNBC's "Worldwide Exchange" exclusive for PRO subscribers. Worldwide Exchange airs at 5 a.m. "This is a time when markets are distorted… the October period before US elections have usually been distorted," Wieting said on Worldwide Exchange. He says Home Depot (HD) and American Express (AXP) are stocks that will benefit from continued spending of higher income earners. "The higher end consumer is where you want to be right now," said Zaman on Worldwide Exchange.
Persons: Patience Steven Wieting, Wieting, Aadil, JB Hunt Organizations: PRO, Worldwide, U.S, Citi Global Wealth Investments, American Express, Wall Street Alliance, Vanguard, Big Tech, US Freight, American Trucking Association, East, CSX Locations: U.S, East Coast
As a global leader in digital payments, Visa has 4.2 billion credit and payment cards in circulation across more than 200 countries. Through its advanced transaction processing network, VisaNet, the company facilitates payment authorization, clearing, and settlement, and it is one of the most remarkable and consistent growth stories around — along with fellow payment processing company Mastercard. The following chart illustrates its remarkably consistent growth since the pandemic plunge (which naturally suspended considerable economic activity). While a 30 P/E is higher than the market's, the S & P trades closer to 26 times earnings; Visa should trade at a premium. The ability for consumer spending growth to continue apace is limited, so presumably, topline growth will slow somewhat.
Organizations: Visa, Mastercard, DOJ, Nvidia, United Health, Southwest Airlines, CNBC, NBC UNIVERSAL
A dozen states, including Texas, have new laws limiting or banning DEI policies at their public universities. The plea deal states that the Justice Department would select the person with “input” from Boeing. A Justice Department lawyer said the provision doesn’t mean that a less-qualified person would be picked, only that the government will consider all candidates. He asked the Justice Department and Boeing to respond in writing by Oct. 25. Possibly he wants to delay the decision, but that is an unsupported hunch.”The Justice Department and Boeing said they would comply with the judge’s order and declined to comment further.
Persons: District Judge Reed O’Connor, George W, Bush, O’Connor, Barack, Ron DeSantis, , Boeing’s, Max, Nadia Milleron, Samya Stumo, ” Milleron, , , John Coffee Organizations: District, Justice Department, Boeing, ., Democratic, U.S, Supreme, Florida Gov, GOP, Alaska Airlines, MCAS, Federal Aviation Administration, , Justice, DOJ, Columbia University Locations: U.S, Fort Worth , Texas, Texas, Indonesia, Ethiopia, Massachusetts
What Boeing’s massive financial crisis means for you
  + stars: | 2024-10-16 | by ( Chris Isidore | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +4 min
New York CNN —Boeing’s finances are a multi-billion-dollar problem for the company, its employees, suppliers and airline customers. But Boeing’s financial problems, which started long before the strike could hurt the broader US economy. Hit to the economyBoeing’s financial problems are bad news for the US economy. But the other way that the financial problems would spread beyond Boeing will be the impact of the strike on suppliers. Boeing’s credit rating is at risk of being downgraded to junk bond status, which would create more financial problems by raising its cost of borrowing.
Persons: International Association of Machinists, Boeing won’t, Max Organizations: New, New York CNN, International Association of, Boeing, Anderson Economic Group, General Motors, Airbus Locations: New York, United States, Washington
Cisco Systems — The networking technology stock added nearly 2% on the heels of a Citi upgrade to buy from neutral. The firm's earnings came in at $1.88 per share, versus the $1.58 expected by a LSEG analyst poll. Revenue was $15.38 billion versus the $14.41 billion consensus estimate. United also announced a $1.5 billion share buyback, its first since before the pandemic. J.B Hunt Transport Services — Shares jumped more than 7% after the company's third-quarter results topped expectations.
Persons: Novocure, Morgan Stanley —, accidently, J.B, Hunt, LSEG, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Cisco Systems, Citi, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Revenue, United Airlines, United, Hunt, Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailUnited Airlines CEO Scott Kirby on Q3 results, impact of Boeing strike and route expansionCNBC’s Phil LeBeau and United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the airline's quarterly earnings results, Q4 outlook, impact of Boeing strike, the company's share buyback program, state of negotiations with flight attendant's union, and more.
Persons: Scott Kirby, Phil LeBeau Organizations: Email United, Boeing, United Airlines
CNN —Twin bomb threats hit Indian airliners on opposite sides of the globe on Tuesday, forcing an emergency landing in the Arctic and fighter jets to scramble in Asia – the latest in a series of similar hoax scares for the country’s airlines. On Tuesday, an Air India flight from New Delhi to Chicago made an emergency landing in Iqaluit, Canada’s northernmost city. Air India flight 127 was the “subject of a security threat posted online” and diverted “as a precautionary measure,” the airline said. Multiple flights by Indian carriers have been delayed or diverted due to false bomb threats since Monday. The Air India emergency landing in Canada comes as tensions rise between the two countries after Canada expelled six Indian diplomats, including the high commissioner, on Monday.
Persons: AXB684, Ng Eng Hen, Ng, SpiceJet, , ” SpiceJet Organizations: CNN, Air India, Air, Air Force, Air India Express, IndiGo, Mumbai, India’s Ministry of Civil Aviation, Civil Aviation Security, Civil Aviation, Canada, Sikh Locations: Asia, New Delhi, Air India, Chicago, Iqaluit, Canada’s, , Singapore, Indian, Madurai, Mumbai, New York, Delhi, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Darbhanga, India’s, Canada, India, Air, Montreal, Ireland
Stocks rose on Wednesday after traders took in a handful of strong corporate earnings reports. Chip stocks wavered after Tuesday's selloff, with eyes on TSMC ahead of earnings. AdvertisementUS stocks rose on Wednesday as traders took in strong earnings results to bounce back from a sell-off in the chip sector in the previous session. Stocks, though, are on par for another strong quarter of earnings results. The S&P 500 is on track to report 7% year-per-year earnings growth for the third quarter, according to estimates from FactSet.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Tuesday's selloff, , ASML Organizations: United Airlines, Service, Dow Jones, Micro Devices, Investors, Nvidia Locations: FactSet, Here's
United Airlines did not mention the cost of July's CrowdStrike IT outage in its earnings report. United executives took a subtle jab at Delta by highlighting their "no excuses" philosophy. "Healthy businesses don't make excuses about CrowdStrike, don't make excuses about weather," CFO Mike Leskinen said on the company's Wednesday earnings call. 'No excuses' is at the core of United's philosophyCEO Scott Kirby said United's "no excuses" ideology stems from his days as a cadet at the United States Air Force Academy. Related stories"The best thing I learned was 'no excuses, ma'am, no excuses, sir,'" Kirby said on the call.
Persons: , Mike Leskinen, It's, United's, Scott Kirby, Kirby, United Organizations: Airlines, United, Service, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, United States Air Force Academy Locations: Crowdstrike, Texas, New York
United Airlines – The stock soared 11% after the airline posted an earnings and revenue beat for the third quarter and guided for a strong fourth quarter. In addition, United said it is starting a $1.5 billion share buyback, its first since before the Covid pandemic. The firm posted earnings of $1.88 per share, higher than the $1.58 expected by a LSEG analyst poll. J.B Hunt Transport Services – Shares added 3.4% after the company posted a top and bottom line beat. J.B. Hunt posted $1.49 earnings per share on $3.07 billion of revenue in the third quarter.
Persons: United, Morgan Stanley, Novocure, J.B, Hunt, LSEG, Aspen Aerogels, FactSet, Prologis, Hamid Moghadam, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: Food and Drug Administration, United Airlines, Revenue, Cisco Systems, Citi, Food, ASML, J.B Hunt, Aspen, of Energy, U.S . Bancorp, General Motors, Lithium Americas Corp Locations: Dutch, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailUnited Airlines hasn't shown any interest to reach a deal with flight attendants, says Sara NelsonSara Nelson, Association of Flight Attendants international president, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss news United Airlines launching a $1.5 billion share buyback program, the backlash from flight attendant's union, state of negotiations between the union and the airline, and more.
Persons: Sara Nelson Sara Nelson Organizations: Email United Airlines, Association of, United Airlines
While Su has previously spoken with Boeing and the striking West Coast factory workers’ union, it is her first time in Seattle meeting both sides in person. Roughly 33,000 workers have been on strike since Sept. 13, seeking a 40% wage increase over four years. Boeing will next month send out 60-day notices to thousands of workers including many in its commercial aviation division, meaning those staff will leave the company in mid-January, one source familiar with the matter said. A Boeing spokesperson said the company had shared information with managers including plans for 10% reductions at its commercial unit involving both union and non-union workers. “Boeing just turned its back on 17,000 of its own workers — the same people who carried Boeing through crisis after crisis, year after year,” he said in a statement.
Persons: Julie Su’s, Su, Jon Holden, , Brian Bryant, Nick Cunningham, Tim Clark, , ” Clark Organizations: Boeing, Labor, Department of Labor, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, ” Boeing, White, Society of Professional Engineering Employees, Aerospace, Rivals, Partners, Alaska Airlines, Emirates, Air Locations: U.S, Seattle, West Coast
United Airlines — The travel stock dipped less than 1% despite United's third-quarter report beating estimates on the top and bottom lines. United reported adjusted earnings of $3.33 per share on $14.84 billion of revenue. Interactive Brokers — Shares of the brokerage firm fell more than 3% after third-quarter earnings missed expectations. J.B. Hunt Transport Services — The freight shipping company surged 8% after beating third-quarter estimates on the top and bottom lines. J.B. Hunt reported earnings of $1.49 per share on $3.07 billion of revenue.
Persons: LSEG, . Hunt Organizations: . United Airlines —, United, Interactive, Hunt Transport Services
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