Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: ". Capital"


25 mentions found


Oil and natural gas producer Coterra Energy (CTRA) delivered mixed results after the closing bell Monday, with second-quarter sales missing expectations and profit outpacing estimates. However, natural gas liquid prices missed estimates. While management did raise their outlook for total production along with their production targets for oil and natural gas, they left capital expenditure expectations alone. Given the pressure seen on commodity prices, particularly in natural gas, management was forced to lower their outlook for operating cash flow and free cash flow. Guidance Forward guidance for both the third quarter and full year 2023 was mixed — and unfortunately, the full-year misses were on management's cash flow forecasts.
Persons: We'll, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Pavlo Gonchar Organizations: Coterra Energy, Revenue, Refinitiv, Natural Resources, Management, West Texas, CNBC, Energy Inc, Getty
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File PhotoAug 4 (Reuters) - President Joe Biden is expected to issue his long-awaited executive order to screen outbound investments in sensitive technologies to China early next week, according to people familiar with the matter. The order is expected to target U.S. private equity, venture capital and joint venture investments in China in semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence. Most investments captured by the order will require that the government be notified about them. The regulations are not expected to take effect right away and the administration will solicit comment on its proposals, according to sources. Sources have told Reuters the investments that will be restricted are expected to track export control rules for China issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce in October.
Persons: Joe Biden, Jonathan Ernst, Cordell Hull, Janet Yellen's, Laura Black, Emily Kilcrease, Karen Freifeld, Anna Driver Organizations: Auburn Manufacturing, REUTERS, U.S . Commerce Department, U.S, Foreign Investment, Reuters, U.S . Department of Commerce, Thomson Locations: U.S, Auburn , Maine, China, Yellen, United States
Biden order curbing investment to China expected next week
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
President Joe Biden is expected to issue his long-awaited executive order to screen outbound investments in sensitive technologies to China early next week, according to people familiar with the matter. The order is expected to target U.S. private equity, venture capital and joint venture investments in China in semiconductors, quantum computing and artificial intelligence. Most investments captured by the order will require that the government be notified about them. The regulations are not expected to take effect right away and the administration will solicit comment on its proposals, according to sources. Sources have told Reuters the investments that will be restricted are expected to track export control rules for China issued by the U.S. Department of Commerce in October.
Persons: Joe Biden, Xi Jinping, Cordell Hull, Janet Yellen's, Laura Black, Emily Kilcrease Organizations: U.S . Commerce Department, U.S, Foreign Investment, Reuters, U.S . Department of Commerce Locations: Bali , Indonesia, China, U.S, Yellen, United States
Humana (HUM) reported second-quarter results Wednesday that were much better than feared, sending its stock price soaring and giving us the confidence to stick with the jilted health insurer. Not only did second-quarter numbers top expectations, but management offered assuring commentary on the worrisome medical-cost trends that torpedoed its stock price in mid-June . That one-two punch explains the more-than-5% jump in Humana shares, pushing the stock to its highest levels since June 14. Outlook Humana raised its outlook for 2023 individual Medicare Advantage membership growth by 50,000 to roughly 825,000 members, representing an 18% increase compared with enrollment levels at the end of 2022. Capital allocation Humana CFO Susan Diamond said the company has capitalized on the "recent dislocation" in its stock price — i.e.
Persons: MLR —, Wall, Bruce Broussard, , Broussard, Susan Diamond, Humana, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Ty Wright Organizations: Revenue, Humana, Club, UnitedHealth, Management, Insurance, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Louisville , Kentucky
Here's how Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and UBS recommend investing in AI. Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, and UBS are more optimistic about AI stocks after each expressed hesitations earlier this year as shares of companies tied to the technology exploded higher. In contrast, Morgan Stanley has dismissed concerns that AI stocks are in a bubble. "Inevitably, the market will compare AI to the dot-com boom," wrote Morgan Stanley analyst Shawn Kim in a July report. As for chipmakers, Morgan Stanley agreed with Bank of America that the path forward is bifurcated.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Marcelli, Art Cashin, Michael Hartnett, Shawn Kim, Mike Wilson, Morgan, Vivek Arya, Wilson Organizations: Wall, Bank of America, UBS, Americas, Nvidia, Marvell Technology, Broadcom, Cadence Design Systems, Bank of, Accenture, Microsoft, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Consumer Locations: California, Snowflake, OpenAI
Pioneer Natural Resources (PXD) reported strong second-quarter profits and cash flow after the bell Tuesday, but favorable revisions to its guidance shined the brightest. Pioneer's Q2 oil production came in toward the top of its guidance, at 369.1 thousand barrels per day (MBbls/d). For the third quarter, Pioneer expects its total production to average between 705 and 725 MBoe/d, with oil production specifically to average between 367 and 377 MBbls/d. This favorable revision is despite raising its full-year oil production and total production forecasts. Permian Basin rigs in 2020, when U.S. crude oil production dropped by 3 million a day as Wall Street pressure forced cuts.
Persons: Pioneer's, What's, it's, annualizes, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Paul Ratje Organizations: Natural Resources, Resources, CNBC, Afp, Getty
Wells Fargo Bank branch is seen in New York City, U.S., March 17, 2020. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon/File PhotoNEW YORK, Aug 1 (Reuters) - Wells Fargo (WFC.N) said on Tuesday it expects to pay $1.8 billion to help replenish a government deposit insurance fund that was drained of $16 billion this year after three banks collapsed. Under a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) proposal, Wells Fargo estimates it will face a pretax "special assessment" of $1.8 billion, which it will pay when the FDIC finalizes the rule, it said in a regulatory filing on Tuesday. Banking giants are likely to bear most of the costs of replenishing the fund, the FDIC said in May. Wells Fargo also said that separate proposals on U.S. capital rules could lead it to rejig its balance sheet.
Persons: Wells, Wells Fargo, Nupur Anand, Lananh Nguyen, Matthew Lewis, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: REUTERS, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, FDIC, . Banking, Thomson Locations: Wells Fargo Bank, New York City, U.S, New York
ROCHESTER, New Hampshire, July 31 (Reuters) - U.S. Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis took an aggressive swipe at China, railed against what he described as corporate bailouts, and said he would rein in the Federal Reserve in an economic policy speech on Monday. DeSantis was particularly harsh on China and the technology sector which he accused of enriching the East Asian nation to the detriment of Americans. The U.S. Senate voted in 2000 to grant the status to China as it prepared to join the World Trade Organization. "They said if you granted China special trading status and put them in the World Trade Organization, that China would become more democratic," he said. In written bullet points released alongside the speech, DeSantis' campaign said he would appoint a chair of the Federal Reserve "who will focus on maintaining a stable dollar instead of the political pressures of the day."
Persons: Ron DeSantis, DeSantis, we've, Jerome Powell, Gram Slattery, James Oliphant, Rosalba O'Brien Organizations: Republican, Federal Reserve, Republican Party, U.S, Senate, World Trade Organization, Federal, Fed, Thomson Locations: ROCHESTER , New Hampshire, China, New Hampshire, U.S, United States, Rochester, Washington
July 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) had asked Coinbase (COIN.O) to stop trading in all cryptocurrencies except bitcoin before suing the cryptocurrency platform in June, the Financial Times reported on Monday, citing CEO Brian Armstrong. The SEC told FT that its enforcement division did not make formal requests for "companies to delist crypto assets". The regulator sued Binance in June, with both civil cases part of SEC Chair Gary Gensler's push to assert jurisdiction over the crypto industry. Gensler has labeled the crypto industry a "Wild West" that has undermined investor trust in the U.S. capital markets. The SEC and Coinbase did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment on the report.
Persons: Coinbase, Brian Armstrong, Armstrong, let's, Gary Gensler's, Gensler, Juby Babu, Sonia Cheema, Savio D'Souza Organizations: U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, SEC, Financial Times, Binance, Thomson Locations: Solana, Cardano, U.S, Bengaluru
Sixth Street, Blackstone, and Ares have backed providers of treatments like laser hair removal. Laser hair removal, body contouring, filler injections — it's not just TikTok and Instagram where people are talking about their latest treatments. The space is another consumer-focused vertical, like dentistry and dermatology, that private equity firms, big and small, are aggressively pushing into. Christian Karavolas, who owns laser hair removal specialist Romeo & Juliette in New York City, said he's turned away offers by private equity investors. Laser hair removal, for instance, isn't considered a medical procedure in every state.
Persons: Ares, It's, Levine, Leonard Green, Blackstone, Levine Leichtman, Christian Karavolas, Juliette, he's, Karavolas, Alex Thiersch, Thiersch, Chanel, Dior, David Yurman, Louis Vuitton, isn't, Sevana Petrosian, Eva Longoria Bastón, SEV, Andrew Schwartz, Schwartz, Heravi Organizations: Sixth, Blackstone, Levine Leichtman Capital Partners, Leonard Green & Partners, Boston Consulting, Industry, KKR, SkinSpirit, Walmart, ORIX Venture Finance, TPG, General Atlantic, Wax Center, Med Spa Association, Getty, Consumers Locations: Blackstone, Milan, LaserAway, California, New York City, H.I.G, Manhattan, Burbank , California
Kazuo Ueda, governor of the Bank of Japan (BOJ). Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThe Bank of Japan announced Friday "greater flexibility" in its monetary policy — surprising global financial markets. The central bank loosened its yield curve control — or YCC — in an unexpected move with wide-ranging ramifications. When asked if the central bank had shifted from dovish to neutral, he said: "That's not the case. MUFG said that Friday's "flexibility" tweak shows the central bank is not yet ready to end this policy measure.
Persons: Kazuo Ueda, Shigeto Nagai, CNBC's, , Duncan Wrigley, MUFG, Governor Ueda, Michael Metcalfe, Metcalfe Organizations: Bank of Japan, Bloomberg, Getty, of Japan, Nasdaq, Oxford Economics, disinflation, Capital Economics, U.S, U.S . Federal, Bank, Pantheon, Street Global Locations: Europe, Japan, U.S ., China, dovish
Since the central bank embarked on its rate-hiking campaign in March 2022, yields on fixed income instruments, ranging from Treasurys to money market funds and bank deposit products, have become more attractive. Some strategists have suggested income-focused investors begin locking in higher rates so they can keep earning good yields once the central bank shifts gears. Capital One recently pushed up the annual percentage yield on its 2-year CD 5 basis points to 4.35%. As a result, a handful of institutions now offer yields of 5% or close to it for 2-year CDs. See below for a table of 2-year CDs.
Persons: Michael Kaye, Ally Financial, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Federal Reserve, Financial, Delta Community Credit Union Locations: Wells
The rule, which would implement a 2017 agreement by global regulators, aims to overhaul how banks gauge their riskiness, and in turn how much money they must keep on hand. Industry opponents have already begun to criticize the plan as banks seek to soften, delay, or otherwise derail the government's long-planned effort. The proposal would see U.S. regulators implement a previous global agreement via the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. "Bank capital is critical," said Dennis Kelleher, president and CEO of Better Markets, which advocates for tougher financial rules. "However, maximizing Wall Street’s bonuses depends on minimizing capital and that’s why Wall Street fights to prevent regulators from requiring them to have enough capital."
Persons: it’s, Ian Katz, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Michael Barr, Barr, Joe Biden, Dennis Kelleher, Pete Schroeder, Susan Heavey Organizations: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Federal, Industry, Washington, Capital Alpha Partners, JPMorgan, Banking Supervision, Citizens Financial, Bank, Better, Thomson Locations: U.S, Basel, Huntington, that’s
To scale up, he's used the BRRRR method and 1031 exchanges. One example of how Nunez has used the BRRRR method involves a property in Long Beach, California that he bought in 2015. For the 1031 exchange approach, Nunez did the same thing: he fixed up properties, forcing appreciation in them. To allow him keep all of the value he'd built up and not get taxed on it, Nunez used a 1031 exchange and bought other properties. When he believes he's maxed out a properties appreciation, he uses a 1031 exchange as opposed to a cash-out refinance.
Persons: Guido Nunez, he's, Guido Nunez's, Guido wasn't, He's, It's, Nunez, Dave Wieland — Organizations: Capital Locations: Long Beach , California
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/IllustrationORLANDO, Florida, July 26 (Reuters) - Remember the U.S. twin deficits? The dollar did fall - around 40% between the dotcom bust and the global financial crisis - and the twin deficits were a factor. Indeed, when the twin deficits really exploded in 2008 as the government and Fed fought to prevent another Great Depression, the dollar actually rose 25%. "Twin deficits are inherently unsustainable – for Treasuries and the dollar - unless there is a shift towards a deflationary environment that stimulates demand for sovereign debt instruments," Costa said. Persistently wide twin deficits will test the appetite to use the dollar as the savings currency of choice for investors and countries around the world.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Mark Carney, Tavi, Costa, Meera Chandan, Octavia Popescu, Bill, Jamie McGeever, Tomasz Janowski Organizations: REUTERS, Fed, Reuters, Bank of England, Crescat, Treasuries, United, Office, Thomson Locations: ORLANDO , Florida, U.S, Britain, United States, Americas, Washington
The job market may be strong, but the invisible strings that connect workers to their jobs are increasingly weaker. As the co-head of global private equity at KKR , he's been a key champion of instilling employee stock ownership programs in all the companies the firm buys for its $19 billion Americas Fund. "It's better for investors, it's better for the company, it's better for employees, and in the end, it's better for the communities that they live in." Over 60,000 non-management employees have been awarded billions of dollars in total equity value through these ownership programs since 2011, the firm said. Through the non-profit, other private-equity firms like Apollo and TPG also committed to advancing shared ownership within their own portfolios.
Persons: Pete Stavros, he's, it's, Stavros Organizations: Alpha, UPS, KKR, Employees, Apollo, TPG Locations: Capital
[1/3] FILE PHOTO: A sign is displayed on the Morgan Stanley building in New York U.S., July 16, 2018. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson/File PhotoNEW YORK, July 25 (Reuters) - U.S. banking giants may take up to four years to set aside profits to meet new capital rules, according to a report by Morgan Stanley. U.S. banking regulators will on Thursday unveil a sweeping proposal for stricter bank capital requirements known as the "Basel III endgame" aimed at ensuring the stability of big banks under international rules rolled out after the 2008 financial crisis. Holding more RWA will require banks to set aside more capital under the new standards. Most of the need to raise capital would come from assessments of the bank's operational risks and their trading books.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Lucas Jackson, Betsy Graseck, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan, Michael Barr, Tatiana Bautzer, Pete Schroeder, Lananh Nguyen, Chris Reese Organizations: New York U.S, REUTERS, Citigroup, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Federal, Federal Reserve, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Thomson Locations: New York, Basel, Washington
Regulators of the world’s top stock exchanges gave their backing to the international climate-reporting standards framework Tuesday, adding momentum to efforts to establish the rules as the global baseline. The International Organization of Securities Commissions, known as Iosco, endorsed the International Sustainability Standards Board’s recently published climate reporting standard. While some businesses may be waiting to see the completed SEC climate reporting rules, it hopes the advantages of using a single standard worldwide outweigh any disadvantages of being more demanding than the SEC’s coming climate reporting rules. PREVIEWIt is now up to individual countries and jurisdictions to decide if and when they adopt the ISSB standards. “This is a hugely significant step towards a global baseline of sustainability reporting.
Persons: , Jean, Paul Servais, Benoit Doppagne, “ Iosco, , Larry Bradley, Iosco, PwC, KPMG’s Bradley, , Rochelle Toplensky Organizations: International Organization of Securities Commissions, International, U.S . Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Securities, Exchange, Zuma, SEC, U.S, EU, KPMG, Sustainable Business, Rochelle Locations: Japan, China, Britain, U.S, Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, Malaysia, New Zealand, Nigeria, Singapore, Glasgow
That special fee, which the FDIC proposed in May, would be assessed based on their uninsured deposits at the end of 2022. The regulator said some banks were "not reporting estimated uninsured deposits in accordance with the instructions." A July 6 report by S&P Global noted 55 banks restated their fourth-quarter uninsured deposits in FDIC reports, more than twice the norm. Specifically, the FDIC reminded banks they must report uninsured deposits backed by pledged assets as well as uninsured deposits held at their own subsidiaries. “Earlier this year, we identified certain internal or intra-bank accounts that shouldn’t have been reported,” Bank of America spokesman Bill Halldin said.
Persons: Zions, Paul Burdiss, Bill Halldin, Bank spokespeople, Niket, Pete Schroeder, Tatiana Bauzer, Shweta Agarwal, Megan Davies Organizations: U.S, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Valley Bank, FDIC, P Global, Bank of America, ” Bank of America, P, Huntington National Bank, Bank, Bank Policy Institute, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru, Washington
Revenues beat across the board, Azure's revenue growth decelerated in line with expectations, and companywide operating margins expanded nicely from last year. But total revenues fell a little less than expected, at 4%, mostly due to a 12% decline in Windows OEM revenue and a 18% drop in devices revenue growth. Gaming revenue grew 2%, with Xbox content and services revenue up 6%, offset by a 13% decline in Xbox hardware. In the productivity and business processes segment, revenue increased about 10% from last year thanks to a 15% increase in Office 365 Commercial Revenue growth. Microsoft sees Azure revenue growing 25% to 26% in constant currency, including roughly 2 points from all Azure AI services.
Persons: Amy Hood, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Satya Nadella, Flipkart, Nadella, Amit Madheshiya Organizations: Microsoft, Revenue, Refinitiv, Revenues, Services, Activision Blizzard, Office Consumer Products, Nvidia, CNBC, Microsoft Corp, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Mumbai, India
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:American Express — American Express slid 3% after posting smaller-than-expected revenue for the previous quarter, even as earnings per share beat expectations. The company reported second-quarter earnings of $2.89 per share on revenue of $15.05 billion. The company beat on the top and bottom lines, reporting adjusted earnings of $6.29 per share on revenue of $6.89 billion. CSX — CSX fell 4% after the transportation company missed revenue expectations in its second quarter. CSX reported revenue of $3.7 billion, lower than the $3.74 billion consensus estimate from Refinitiv.
Persons: Refinitiv, AutoNation, StreetAccount, Swift, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Yun Li Organizations: Express, Sunnova Energy, BMO, CSX, PPG, PPG Industries, Refinitiv, Swift Transportation, Scholastic, StreetAccount
July 21 (Reuters) - Alabama executed a man early on Friday for beating an elderly woman to death two decades ago, the state's first execution since Governor Kay Ivey lifted a suspension on capital punishment in February following a review. Barber argued to the United States Court of Appeals that his execution should be halted because he is at substantial risk of serious harm and "torture" under current protocols. Legal and ethical questions have swirled around capital punishment in the United States after several lethal injections have been botched in recent years. The number of executions in the United States has drastically fallen since 1999, when a record 98 executions were carried out. Capital punishment was reinstated in the United States in 1976.
Persons: Kay Ivey, James Barber, William Holman, Barber, Dorothy Epps, Ivey, Brendan O'Brien, Daniel Trotta, Gursimran Kaur, Bharat Govind Gautam, Sandra Maler, Andrew Heavens Organizations: William, William Holman Correctional, U.S, Supreme, Republican, Department of Corrections, United States, of Appeals, Thomson Locations: Alabama, . U.S, Atmore , Alabama, Harvest , Alabama, United States, Chicago
American Express — Shares slipped about 4% after the company reported second-quarter revenue of $15.05 billion, falling short of the $15.48 billion expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. The car dealer company reported second-quarter results that exceeded expectations on the top and bottom lines. The company posted systems revenue of $392.7 million, lower than the $415.9 million, according to a consensus estimate from StreetAccount. CSX — CSX slid more than 4% after the transportation company reported disappointing second-quarter revenue. The company reported revenue of $3.7 billion, which was weaker than $3.74 billion expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.
Persons: Herc — Herc, Sherif El, Sabbahy, AutoNation, Swift, StreetAccount, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Scholastic, Traders, American, Refinitiv, American Express, Bank of America, Swift Transportation —, Swift Transportation, PPG, PPG Industries, Sunnova Energy, BMO Capital Markets, CSX Locations: Hollywood, U.S
Barber argued to the United States Court of Appeals that his execution should be halted because he is at substantial risk of serious harm and "torture" under current protocols. Legal and ethical questions have swirled around capital punishment in the United States after several lethal injections have been botched in recent years. The number of executions in the United States has drastically fallen since 1999, when a record 98 executions were carried out. Capital punishment was reinstated in the United States in 1976. Over the last five years, a total of 78 death row inmates have been executed, according to the Death Penalty Information Center.
Persons: Kay Ivey, James Barber, William Holman, Dorothy Epps, Ivey, Barber, Brendan O'Brien, Sandra Maler Organizations: William, William Holman Correctional, Republican, Department of Corrections, United States, of Appeals, Thomson Locations: Alabama, Atmore , Alabama, Harvest , Alabama, United States, Chicago
The proposal, which will kick off an ambitious agenda for Barr, plans to fully implement the globally agreed Basel bank capital agreement. BANKING OPPOSITIONThe banking industry is not waiting for details before trying to disrupt the effort, arguing it could hinder economic activity, curb lending, and kill lines of business. The criticism is also emerging among some Republican bank regulators, who appear likely to oppose the plans. Regulators will have to digest numerous and voluminous comments from the banking industry dissecting their plans. And in the meantime, banks are expected to continue hammering that higher capital requirements means a smaller economic role for banks and are not needed.
Persons: Michael Barr, Barr, Michael Barr's, Isaac Boltansky, Spokespeople, Kevin Fromer, Jerome Powell, Powell, Republican Andy Barr, Bill Foster, Tim Scott, Michelle Bowman, Barr's, Morgan Stanley, James Gorman, Pete Schroeder, Megan Davies, Andrea Ricci Organizations: Banking, Fed, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office, FDIC, Financial Services, Financial Services Committee, Republican, Senate, Committee, Regulators, White, Thomson Locations: Basel
Total: 25