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Retail sector is in a 'limbo state': BMO's Simeon Siegel
  + stars: | 2023-09-22 | 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 EmailRetail sector is in a 'limbo state': BMO's Simeon SiegelSimeon Siegel, senior analyst at BMO Capital Markets, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss the rough week for retail stock, their future, and more.
Persons: BMO's Simeon Siegel Simeon Siegel Organizations: BMO Capital Markets
Policymakers at the Federal Reserve will announce their latest decision on interest rates on Wednesday, after a series of increases squeezed the budgets of debt-laden Americans and rewarded those with money to stash in savings. The Federal Reserve has raised its benchmark rate, the federal funds rate, to a range of 5.25 to 5.5 percent to rein in inflation, which recently sped up as gas prices rose. Prices remain elevated, leading the Fed to keep rates high for a prolonged period of time. That means the cost of credit cards and mortgages may remain relatively high, making it more difficult for people who want to pay down debt — as well as those who want to take out new loans to renovate their kitchen or buy a new car. “We were very spoiled for a while with low rates, and that lulled us into a false sense of security in terms of what the true cost of debt can be,” said Anna N’Jie-Konte, president of Re-Envision Wealth, a wealth management firm.
Persons: , Anna N’Jie Organizations: Federal Reserve, Federal, Fed, Re
Surf City USA —for a financial conference. A financial conference on a beach? Reinventing the financial conferenceWelcome to FutureProof, billed as "the largest gathering of top-tier wealth management professionals, CEOs, CTOs, COOs, and fast-growing financial advisors." It's the brainchild of Barry Ritholtz, co-founder, chairman, and chief investment officer of Ritholtz Wealth Management, and CEO Josh Brown. "Coming out of the pandemic, it was obvious to us that the traditional financial conference was past its sell-by date," Ritholtz told me.
Persons: Tang, Redman, They're, Jeremy Siegel, Jeff Kleintop, Charles Schwab, Emily Roland, John Hancock, Cliff Asness, Jeff Gundlach, maven Jan van Eck, Barry Ritholtz, Josh Brown, Ritholtz, FutureProof, You'll, Goldman, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan, RIAs, Dan Ives, Scott Wapner, Siegel, Morningstar, Christine Benz, Jeffrey Ptak, Ben Johnson, podcasters Michael Batnick, Ben Carlson, Wu, Tang Clan Organizations: Wharton, Ritholtz Wealth Management, Chiropractic, Health, Investment Advisors, CNBC, Financial Locations: Huntington Beach , CA, Huntington Beach , California, Surf, Huntington Beach, AQR, DoubleLine, FutureProof, COOs, Wells, Wedbush, Young
September is historically considered the worst month of the year for stocks, in what is known as the "September Effect." But this year, market experts appear divided over whether US equities will repeat the pattern or defy it. AdvertisementAdvertisementEd Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research"On Sunday, we observed that September is a good month for picking apples. Among things that could go wrong for investors this month, Yardeni highlighted rising oil prices, inflation risks, and China's faltering economy. David Rosenberg, founder of Rosenberg ResearchIn contrast, top economist Rosenberg has long-warned about a looming crash in in stocks.
Persons: Ed Yardeni, Yardeni, it's, Santa Claus, Tom Lee, Fundstrat's Tom Lee, Lee, we're, Stephen Suttmeier, Suttmeier, Jeremy Siegel, Wharton, Siegel, David Rosenberg, Rosenberg Organizations: Service, CFRA Research, Yardeni, Investor, Federal Reserve, Bank of America, " Bank of America, Fed, Rosenberg Research Locations: Wall, Silicon, Septembers, Santa
Aditude, a startup that helps publishers manage their ad businesses, raised $15 million in Series A funding. Founder and CEO Jared Siegel started Aditude in 2019 consulting for ad-supported publishers before building products for publishers. Siegel said the average publisher Aditude works with has between 700 million and 1 billion monthly ad impressions. Aditude can also recommend layouts of where publishers should place ads on pages and what size ads to sell. Here are the key slides from the pitch deck Aditude used to raise its Series A funding.
Persons: Jared Siegel, Aditude, Siegel Organizations: Aditude
After about 42 months, the student loan payment hiatus is officially ending: Interest on federal loans begins accruing again in September, and monthly payments will become due in October. To help borrowers with this transition, the Biden administration has provided some leeway for the first year after payments begin. So if you miss a monthly payment from Oct. 1 to Sept. 30, 2024, you won’t be considered delinquent. You’re more likely to find a payment plan you can afford. The Biden administration recently opened up its more affordable income-driven repayment plan, SAVE, which pegs the size of your monthly payment to your income and family size.
Persons: Biden, won’t, You’re
Now, travelers also look to social media for proof of how others behave. If their peers from home are throwing caution to the wind while on vacation, this can cause a domino effect of bad behavior. I’ve identified other bad travel attitudes and habits that have emerged as a result of social media-driven tourism. The Instagram effectWhen people travel to a beautiful place, the temptation to post photos and videos to social media is high. This speaks to the role of social media as part of the problem when it comes to bad tourist behavior.
Persons: I’ve, David Silverman, Bali, Vienna –, Finland’s, Finn, aren’t, you’ve, Lauren A, Siegel Organizations: CNN, Getty, influencers, Research, University of Greenwich Locations: Rome, geotags, Italy, Florence, Bali, Iceland, Hawaii, Palau, New Zealand, Costa Rica, Vienna, Netherlands, Amsterdam, London
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPowell's speech did not address GDP rise from productivity growth, Wharton School's Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School professor of finance, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss what the market reaction to Powell's Jackson Hole speech says about the state of monetary policy, strong productivity despite a labor market slowdown, and the risk of commodity price inflation rising further.
Persons: Wharton, Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel, Powell's Jackson Organizations: University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School
College students around America are beginning the trek back to campus. A precursor to that journey is the back-to-school shopping season, and this year it's estimated to hit a record-breaking $94 billion for college students. Inflation is driving the price of school supplies up, but it's a TikTok trend that may be fueling a part of the high spending for college students. Back-to-school shopping is also used as a barometer to gauge potential holiday spending. Watch the video above to find out more about the TikTok trend fueling back-to-college spending.
Persons: Simeon Siegel Organizations: National Retail Federation, BMO Locations: America, U.S
David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThis 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. A year ago, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang promised investors the company is "navigating our supply chain transitions in a challenging macro environment and we will get through this." Hum goes on to suggest it's possible that, three months later, Nvidia reports revenue of $18 billion to $19 billion. That's almost $3 billion more than the $16 billion Nvidia said it expects.
Persons: Jensen Huang, David Paul Morris, bluster, Dan Ives, Robert Hum, Chaim Siegel, Elazar, , Kif Leswing Organizations: Nvidia, Bloomberg, Getty, CNBC, Wedbush Securities, Elazar Advisors Locations: Las Vegas
About half of Nvidia's data center revenue comes from cloud providers, followed by big internet companies. The growth in Nvidia's data center business was in "compute," or AI chips, which grew 195% during the quarter, more than the overall business's growth of 171%. Some startups have even gone into debt to buy Nvidia GPUs in hopes of renting them out for a profit in the coming months. On an earnings call with analysts, Nvidia officials gave some perspective about why its data center chips are so profitable. Nvidia's AI software, called Cuda, is cited by analysts as the primary reason why customers can't easily switch to competitors like AMD .
Persons: Jen, Hsun Huang, Huang, Chaim Siegel, Elazar, OpenAI, Meta, Colette Kress, Raymond James, H100s, Jensen Huang Organizations: Consumer, Audi, Nvidia, Elazar Advisors, Microsoft, AMD, Center Locations: Las Vegas, USA
It also creates a new safety net, automatically enrolling certain borrowers into the SAVE plan after they have fallen behind on their payments. By enrolling now, you can have your paperwork processed with enough time before your first payment becomes due, officials added. Borrowers won’t receive the full benefits of the plan until next summer, because some features won’t immediately take effect. Here’s a rundown on how the plan will work:Who is eligible for the new repayment plan? Parents who borrowed to pay for their children’s schooling using Parent PLUS loans cannot enroll in the new plan.
Persons: , won’t Organizations: SAVE
There's "no way" bonds are better than stocks for long-term investors, Wharton professor Jeremy Siegel said. By the time investors have doubled their money in bonds, they've quintupled their money in stocks, he estimated. Siegel has turned more bullish on stocks and the US economy over the past year amid inflation's decline. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 is currently trading with price-to-earnings ratio of about 20, which means stocks have around a 5% yield. "By the time you've doubled your money in bonds, you've multiplied your money by five times in stocks," Siegel said in an interview with CNBC on Monday.
Persons: Wharton, Jeremy Siegel, they've, Siegel, Jay Powell Organizations: Service, Treasury, Securities, Federal Reserve, CNBC Locations: Wall, Silicon
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email'No way' bonds are as good as stocks for long-run wealth creation, says Wharton's Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School professor of finance, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of U.S. economy, promising productivity data, Treasury yields vs. stocks, Fed's inflation fight, and more.
Persons: Wharton's Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel Organizations: University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School Locations: U.S
The U.S. economy could bring down inflation while avoiding a growth slowdown — thanks to a rise in productivity, according to Jeremy Siegel, professor of finance at the Wharton School of Business. "The last quarter was, outside of the few months around the pandemic, the best quarter for productivity in over six years," Siegel told CNBC's "Squawk Box" on Monday. Data from the U.S. Department of Labor showed that nonfarm business sector labor productivity rose 3.7% during the prior quarter, as output gained 2.4% and hours worked fell 1.3%. The Atlanta Federal Reserve's GDPNow tracker of incoming data is suggesting growth of 5.8% in the period of July through September. "That's how you can have strong GDP growth without pressure on the labor market, and really without pressure on inflation.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, CNBC's, Jay Powell, Jerome Powell Organizations: Wharton School of Business, U.S . Department of Labor, Atlanta Federal Locations: U.S
The US won't see a resurgence in inflation, according to Jeremy Siegel. That was a reflection of poor productivity in the economy, Siegel said – a trend that has since turned around:"It was the worst productivity performance in over 70 years. This year we are hiring at less than half the pace and we have two to three times the level of GDP growth. That's why we can have this tremendous GDP growth and still have the disinflationary trend." And inflation won't reaccelerate as improving productivity justifies higher wages and drives more economic output, Siegel explained.
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Wharton, Siegel, Jay Powell, Stocks Organizations: CNBC, Service, Atlanta Fed Locations: Wall, Silicon, BlackRock
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWage growth won't mean a new inflationary spiral, says Wharton Professor Jeremy SiegelJeremy Siegel, professor emeritus at the Wharton School and senior economist to WisdomTree, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss a potential new wave of inflation, the labor market's pressure on wage growth, and how the economy will play out.
Persons: Wharton, Jeremy Siegel Jeremy Siegel Organizations: Wharton School
A Two Sigma chief investment officer has taken a medical leave, Insider has learned. The firm announced the leave of Alex Ginsburg, CIO of equities, to investors and employees in July. A senior Two Sigma investment executive has taken a leave of absence from the firm, Insider has learned. Two Sigma chief data strategist Ali-Milan Nekmouche, who has been with the company since 2004, has been named as Ginsburg's replacement. Siegel did not leave the firm and the group ended up staying at Two Sigma, the Journal reported.
Persons: Alex Ginsburg, Jeff Penney, Timothy Reynolds, Ali, Milan Nekmouche, Ginsburg's, David Siegel, John Overdeck, Siegel, Overdeck, Ginsburg, Geoffrey Duncombe, Alex Morrell, Rebecca Ungarino Organizations: Sigma, Street Locations: amorrell
REUTERS/Leah Acquire Licensing Rights Read moreAug 16 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden on Wednesday marks the first anniversary of signing his signature clean energy legislation called the Inflation Reduction Act by leading a campaign to better explain to Americans what, exactly, it does. Twelve months after it passed, the law commonly referred to as the IRA, like most major U.S. legislation, is drawing mixed reviews. Meanwhile, many Americans, even those who support Biden, don't know much about it, according to Reuters opinion polls. Biden has expressed regret at calling the bill the Inflation Reduction Act. "Voters hear the Inflation Reduction Act, but they do not see their grocery bills coming down.
Persons: Joe Biden, Leah, Biden, Democrat Biden, Donald Trump, Moody's, MARK Biden, Goldman Sachs, WHAT'S, Jimmy Siegel, Jarrett Renshaw, Nichola Groom, Moira Warburton, Heather Timmons, Grant McCool Organizations: Infrastructure Law, White, REUTERS, Democrat, U.S, Republican, LOVE, Wall Street, Bank of America, Democrats, Credit Suisse, University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton Business School, Reuters, Washington Post, University of Maryland, White House, Democratic, Thomson Locations: Washington , U.S, U.S, Utah
WASHINGTON, Aug 16 (Reuters) - U.S President Joe Biden on Wednesday used the first anniversary of his signature Inflation Reduction Act to pitch the landmark clean-energy law as an economic powerhouse to a public that remains largely unaware of its contents. The legislation, Biden said, has shifted production of critical components away from China and into the United States. [1/3]U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks during an event to celebrate the anniversary of his signing of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act legislation, in the East Room of the White House in Washington, U.S., August 16, 2023. The bill's name, the Inflation Reduction Act, helped solve a political problem for Democrats who were concerned that voters would punish them for soaring prices in the 2022 congressional elections. "Voters hear the Inflation Reduction Act, but they do not see their grocery bills coming down.
Persons: Joe Biden, Biden, Moody's, Kevin Lamarque, MARK Biden, WHAT'S, Jimmy Siegel, Jarrett Renshaw, Nichola Groom, Moira Warburton, Heather Timmons, Grant McCool, Jonathan Oatis, Andy Sullivan Organizations: Biden, LOVE, Wall, Bank of America, White, REUTERS, Democrats, Reuters, Washington Post, University of Maryland, White House, Democratic, Thomson Locations: China, United States, U.S, Asia, Europe, Washington , U.S
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe are seeing people shop when they are given a reason to, says BMO's Simeon SiegelSimeon Siegel, BMO Senior Analyst, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the upcoming slate of retail earnings.
Persons: BMO's Simeon Siegel Simeon Siegel Organizations: BMO
Harris to play a leading role in Biden's 2024 campaign
  + stars: | 2023-08-11 | by ( Emma Kinery | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
US Vice President Kamala Harris speaks about the impact of "Bidenomics," at Sycamore and Oak retail village in the Congress Heights neighborhood of Washington, DC, on August 4, 2023. Be prepared to see a lot more of Vice President Kamala Harris. The central role that Harris will play in President Joe Biden's reelection effort was laid out in a campaign memo Friday, that coincided with the three year anniversary of Biden's tapping Harris to be his running mate. The role could provide Harris with an opportunity to redefine herself after a mixed tenure as vice president. But it's not just Democrats who are eager to see Harris on the campaign trail.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Joe Biden's, ", Biden, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Becca Siegel, Chavez Rodriguez, Sandy, it's Organizations: Biden, Democratic, Safety, Republicans, California Democrat Locations: Sycamore, Heights, Washington, Chicago, Sandy Hook, California
Katie Siegel is the author of newly published mystery novel, "Charlotte Illes Is Not a Detective." Siegel didn't originally envision the story as a novel, but as a video series for TikTok. An editor at Kensington Books saw her videos, and Siegel ended up with a six-figure book deal. Katie Siegel didn't get onto TikTok thinking she'd get a book deal. "When it came up on my feed, I thought, 'This would be such a great mystery series,'" Plackis said.
Persons: Katie Siegel, Charlotte Illes, Siegel, Katie Siegel didn't, she'd, TikTok, Shannon Plackis, Plackis, perusing, Vida Engstrand, Siegel's, BookTok, Barnes, Noble, Michelle Schusterman, that's, preneurs, I've, creatives Organizations: Kensington Books, The New York Times Locations: Kensington, The
Herbert J. Siegel, a maverick investor who became a billionaire entertainment-industry mogul most notable for finally enabling the merger of Warner Communications and Time Inc. in 1989 and for selling 10 television stations to Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation in 2000, died on Saturday at his home in Manhattan. Mr. Siegel, the gregarious son of an immigrant garment manufacturer, combined his boyhood passions — deal-making and an infatuation with the film industry — to reap massive profits. The humorist Art Buchwald once said that Mr. Siegel deserved an Academy Award for having earned the most money in Hollywood without ever making a movie. Mr. Siegel got started young; he was still in college when, flush with a trust fund from his father, he sought to purchase a 20 percent stake in the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League for $60,000. His bid was unsuccessful, so instead he bought an interest in a company that packaged television programs and that was partly owned by his father-in-law, an organizer of the Columbia Broadcasting System.
Persons: Herbert J, Siegel, Jeanne, , Art Buchwald Organizations: Warner Communications, Time Inc, Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, Hollywood, Philadelphia Eagles, National Football League, Columbia Broadcasting System Locations: Rupert, Manhattan
Alista Lineburg is not a lawyer, but she assumed the role when she couldn’t find one to help her discharge $146,000 of federal student debt in bankruptcy. Ms. Lineburg, 49, knows this all too well. “The attorney called and she said, ‘You can’t win this,’” Ms. Lineburg recalled. “I feel like I can finally get ahead,” said Ms. Lineburg, who lives in Fairport Harbor, Ohio. Unlike credit card, medical and other consumer debts, student loans don’t automatically disappear in bankruptcy.
Persons: Lineburg, Locations: Fairport Harbor , Ohio
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