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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., May 16, 2023. Stock futures were little changed on Tuesday, as investors parse through another slate of quarterly results halfway through the corporate earnings season. S&P 500 futures pulled back 0.03% while Nasdaq 100 futures fell 0.04%. Tuesday's results marked the halfway point of the fourth-quarter earnings season. Investors will now turn their attention to a fresh batch of quarterly results from media company Disney as well as Uber and PayPal on Wednesday.
Persons: Wall, Ford, Jerome Powell, Powell, Stocks, Adam Crisafulli, CNBC's Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Stock, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Ford, Federal Reserve, Disney, PayPal Locations: New York City, U.S
Fintech has shown few signs of recovering in 2024 as funding declines and layoffs continue. VCs said they want to pick up deals this year in AI and cost-management tools for software. Investors digging for deals in the fintech industry are zeroing in on a few pockets of resilience. Venture funding to financial-technology startups fell by 50% in 2023 from 2022, according to CB Insights. Only one month into 2024, fintech layoffs have been abound.
Persons: Fintech, VCs, Jack Dorsey's Block Organizations: PayPal, Business Locations: Brex
Here are Monday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Goldman Sachs reiterates Nvidia as buy Goldman raised its price target on the stock to $800 per share from $625. "So, since our price target is > $135, we must necessarily believe that Tesla's OTHER businesses will emerge to drive upside. JPMorgan downgrades Mattel to neutral from overweight JPMorgan said in its downgrade of Mattel that the Barbie boost was short-lived for the toy company. JPMorgan reiterates Amazon as overweight JPMorgan said it's standing by top idea Amazon. " JPMorgan reiterates PayPal as overweight JPMorgan said it's standing by PayPal heading into earnings later this week.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Cantor Fitzgerald, Cantor, it's, Piper Sandler, Tesla, Piper, Riley downgrades, Redburn, TD Cowen, Smith Douglas, it's bullish, JPMorgan downgrades, Barbie, Evercore, , Moffett, Guggenheim, Davidson downgrades Clorox, cyberattack Organizations: Nvidia, Bank of America, Apple, Apple's, Vision, Tesla Energy, Cedar Fair, SIX, Citi, JPMorgan downgrades, JPMorgan, Broadband, Companies, Smith, Smith Douglas Homes, JPMorgan downgrades Mattel, Mattel, Guggenheim, Inc, DA, PayPal Locations: United States
Final Trades: Apple, Fiverr, PayPal and Alphabet
  + stars: | 2024-02-05 | 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 EmailFinal Trades: Apple, Fiverr, PayPal and Alphabet'Halftime Report' Investment Committee, Steve Weiss, Joe Terranova, Amy Raskin, and Sarat Sethi give their top picks to watch for the second half.
Persons: Steve Weiss, Joe Terranova, Amy Raskin, Sarat Sethi Organizations: Apple, PayPal, Investment
In a letter days before the Fed’s decision Wednesday to hold interest rates steady at a 23-year high, Democratic US senators blasted the central bank for America’s housing woes. In 2021 when the Fed’s key interest rate was near zero, home-price growth soared at a historic double-digit pace, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller National Home Price Index. Divounguy said that the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate will likely not fall below 6% this year. That way we can actually start heading in the right direction with affordability and have that be sustainable and not just a short-term interest rate phenomenon,” she said. Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin delivers remarks.
Persons: Valerie Plesch, Orphe Divounguy, Freddie Mac, it’s, Fannie Mae, Divounguy, ” Daryl Fairweather, Trump, Jerome Powell, Donald Trump, Powell, David Goldman, Alexandra Ross, ” Trump, Maria Bartiromo, Joe Biden, Estee Lauder, Tyson, Raphael Bostic, Eli Lilly, Loretta Mester, Walt Disney, Adriana Kugler, Thomas Barkin, Michelle Bowman, Ralph Lauren, Armour Organizations: CNN Business, Bell, DC CNN, Federal Reserve, Democratic, Eccles Federal Reserve, Bloomberg, Getty, CNN, National Association of Realtors, Fox Business, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Trump, Fed, Caterpillar, Tyson Foods, P Global, Institute for Supply Management, Atlanta Fed, Toyota, UBS AG, Chipotle, Cleveland Fed, Walt, CVS, PayPal, Brands, Fox, The Carlyle, News Corporation, New York Times Company, Mattel, Spirit Airlines, US Commerce Department, China’s National Bureau of Statistics, ConocoPhillips, Unilever, Duke Energy, Expedia, Warner Music Group, Tenet Healthcare, Richmond Fed, Pepsico, Honda Locations: Washington, Washington , DC, CAVA
The Snapchat company let go of several dozen staffers on Friday, according to two people familiar with the company. Many Snap employees took the memo as a hint that more company changes were coming. Staffers have been "on pins and needles" about layoffs in recent weeks, according to one of the people familiar with the company. In September, Snap let go of about 150 people after shutting down a short-lived division for creating augmented reality tools for businesses. Evercore senior managing director Mark Mahaney said in mid-January that "Snap has yet to snap back."
Persons: Evan Spiegel, Spiegel, It's, Jerry Hunter, Hunter, Snap's, Nima Khajehnouri, Bernstein, Evercore, Mark Mahaney Organizations: Business, Meta, Block, PayPal
The three major averages posted gains for the fourth week in row, lifted by strong quarterly earnings results for most of the Big Tech companies and a strong jobs report. A weaker ADP Employment report on Wednesday provided no read-through to the monster January jobs report Friday. Here's what we're keeping an eye on in the coming week: 1. Earnings: It's another big earnings week head for the portfolio, with 8 more of our companies reporting. Consistency is what we appreciate most from nat gas giant Linde , so we're hoping for another quarter of solid earnings growth Tuesday.
Persons: Estee Lauder, Eli Lilly, Mounjaro, Nelson Peltz, Estée Lauder, Tyson, CARR, Jacobs, Willis Towers Watson, Edwards, Walt Disney, Oscar Health, Philip Morris, Armour, BAX, BILL, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, George Frey Organizations: Big Tech, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, PMI, Apple, Starbucks, Procter, Gamble, GE Healthcare, DuPont, Linde, Ford, General Motors, Trian Partners, Disney, ESPN, Wynn Resorts, Wynn, Vegas, Prix, Estée Lauder Companies, Caterpillar, McDonalds Corp, Allegiant Travel, Bowlero Corp, Tyson Foods, TSN, Air Products & Chemicals, IDEXX Laboratories, CNA Financial Corp, CNA, Timken Company, Graham Corporation, Mesa Laboratories, Sphere Entertainment, Loews Corp, Technologies, Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Semiconductors, Simon Property Group, Amkor Technology, FMC Corporation, FMC, BellRing Brands, Crown Holdings, ChampionX Corporation, Golub Capital BDC, Flexsteel Industries, Kilroy Realty Corp, Gladstone Capital Corp, Unibanco, S.A, Snack Foods Corp, Kimball Electronics, Skyline Corp, Cabot Corporation, Simpson Manufacturing Co, Varonis Systems, Co, GE HealthCare, Linde plc, LIN, Spotify Technology S.A, BP, Hertz Global Holdings, AeroSystems Holdings, Toyota Motor Corp, Cummins, CMI, Software Technologies, AGCO Corporation, Carrier Global Corporation, Lear Corp, CONSOL Energy, Centene Corporation, Gartner, Arcbest Corp, CTS Corporation, Energizer Holdings, Hamilton Lane Incorporated, KKR, Precision Drilling Corporation, Frontier Group Holdings, Waters Corp, Alfa Laval, Aramark Holdings Corp, FirstService Corporation, Garden Sports Corp, New Jersey Resources Corp, nVent Electric plc, PJT Partners, Resources, Sensata Technologies, Ford Motor Company, Enphase Energy, Grill, VF Corp, Edwards Lifesciences Corp, Gilead Sciences, Lumen Technologies, Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp, Weatherford International plc, Amcor plc, Arrowhead Pharmaceuticals, Advanced Energy Industries, Uber Technologies, CVS Health, Roblox Corporation, Ares Capital Corp, Bunge, XPO Logistics, Scotts Miracle, Gro Company, Berry Global, Flex LNG, Equinor ASA, Griffon Corporation, OneMain Holdings, Brookfield Asset Management, Emerson Electric Co, Hilton Worldwide Holdings, Reynolds Consumer Products, Silicon Laboratories, Brands, Sciences, CDW Corp, Fox Corporation, WYNN, PayPal, Arm Holdings plc, ARM, Axcelis Technologies, Mattel, Paycom, Annaly Capital Management, McKesson Corp, Health Corporation, O'Reilly Automotive, Allstate Corp, Fluence Energy, Power Systems, Digital Turbine, Blue Bird Corp, Everest Group, Omega HealthCare, Coty, COTY, ConocoPhillips, Cameco Corp, Philip Morris International, Spirit Airlines, Hershey Company, Lightspeed Commerce, Aurora Cannabis, Lincoln National Corp, P, Tenet Healthcare Corp, Asbury Automotive Group, Arrow Electronics, Baxter International, PetMed, Boyd Gaming Corp, FirstEnergy Corp, Motorola Solutions, Terex Corp, PepsiCo, Growth, AMC Networks, Owl, American Pipeline, TELUS International, Magna International, Newell Brands, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: U.S, China, Macau, Wynn Macau, Valvoline, VVV, ALFVY, Madison, New Jersey, Gilead, Ceridian, ORLY, Paycor, Aurora, Provo , Utah
Wall Street continues to climb a wall of worry even as investors deliberate how much longer equities can maintain their record run. But questions remain for investors after some major disappointments in an intense week suggested more challenges ahead. Apple dropped 3% this week after reporting lackluster earnings, weighing on the Dow Jones Industrial Average. Elsewhere in corporate earnings, regional banks as represented by the SPDR S & P Regional Banking ETF slid 7% after poor results from New York Community Bank spurred investor fears of a wider contagion. Signs of market weakness For investors, there may be more issues in the market going forward in 2024.
Persons: Stocks, Jerome Powell, Apple, Scott Rubner, Goldman Sachs, Rubner, Russell, Liz Ann Sonders, Charles Schwab, CNBC's, Sonders, Lehman, Raymond James, Josh Beck, James McCann, Abrdn, McCann, Rhys WIlliams, Williams, it's, Art Hogan, They're, Hogan, Estee, Eli Lilly, Ralph Lauren, Rowe Price, Philip Morris Organizations: Meta, Dow Jones, Regional Banking, New York Community Bank, Bank, Microsoft, Nvidia, Apple, Markets, Wayve Capital Management, Riley, Atlanta, PMI, Simon Property, Companies, Tyson Foods, Semiconductor, Caterpillar, Prudential Financial, Ford Motor, Enphase Energy, GE Healthcare Technologies, Consumer, Walt Disney Co, Wynn Resorts, PayPal, Brands, CVS Health, Hilton Worldwide, Uber Technologies, Costco Wholesale, Motorola Solutions, Expedia, Rowe Price Group, ConocoPhillips, The Hershey Co, Philip Morris International, PepsiCo Locations: China
The job outplacement firm said planned layoffs totaled 82,307 for the month, a jump of 136% from December though still down 20% from the same period a year ago. It was the second-highest layoff total and the lowest planned hiring level for the month of January in data going back to 2009. Amazon also said it would be cutting as did UPS in the biggest month for layoffs since March 2023. Tech layoffs totaled 15,806, the highest since May 2023. Additionally, climate change and immigration policies are influencing labor dynamics and operational challenges in this sector," Challenger said.
Persons: Amazon, Andrew Challenger Organizations: Challenger, Technology, Microsoft, PayPal, Tech, Food, Labor Department
Remote workers and middle managers are often more vulnerable to layoffs, experts say. Remote workers who are anxious about job security should return to the office, one expert said. Still, there's likely to be more cuts on the way, experts say, and remote workers and middle managers may be prime targets. Middle managers are also vulnerable, experts say. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in 2023: "I don't think you want a management structure that's just managers managing managers, managing managers, managing managers, managing the people who are doing the work."
Persons: , It's, there's, Ariel Schur, Andy Challenger, Mark Zuckerberg, Daniel Zhao, they're, Daniel Keum Organizations: Service, PayPal, ABS Staffing Solutions, Bloomberg, Wall Street, Meta, Columbia Business School
Peter Thiel has invested in an effort to create an Olympic Games that welcomes doping. The PayPal cofounder was one of several investors named Wednesday in the Enhanced Games. AdvertisementPeter Thiel is backing an effort to create an Olympic Games that welcomes using performance-enhancing drugs. The Olympic Games bans the use of hundreds of medications and drugs, including categories like stimulants, anabolic agents, and hormone and metabolic modulators. Just this week, Russian figure skater Kamila Valieva was retroactively disqualified from the 2022 Beijing Olympic Games after the Court of Arbitration for Sport ruled she'd violated anti-doping rules.
Persons: Peter Thiel, , Balaji Srinivasan, Aron D'Souza, Michael Sagner, Kamila Valieva Organizations: Games, PayPal, Service, Apeiron Investment Group, King's College London, Medical Advisory Commission, Olympic Games, Beijing Olympic Games, Sport Locations: Russian
PayPal is slashing 9% of its workforce — about 2,500 jobs. The CEO said cuts will "right-size our business." Last week, CEO Alex Chriss said the payment company would launch new products using AI. The payment company's CEO Alex Chriss told staff on Tuesday that another 9% of the workforce — about 2,500 positions — will be slashed. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: Alex Chriss, , Chriss Organizations: PayPal, Service, Business
PayPal will cut 9% of its global workforce, or about 2,500 jobs, CEO Alex Chriss wrote Tuesday in an internal letter to employees, which was viewed by CNBC. The cuts will affect both existing roles and job listings that PayPal had planned to hire for, and will take place over the course of the year, Chriss wrote. If your role is included in this workforce reduction, you will be notified between today and the end of the week. PayPal has significant potential to create substantial value for our employees, our customers, and shareholders. I am confident that our PayPal community will come through this period even stronger, and I am optimistic about the future we will create together.
Persons: Alex Chriss, Chriss, Alex Don't Organizations: PayPal, CNBC, Intuit, CNBC PRO
PayPal is laying off 9% of its employees
  + stars: | 2024-01-30 | by ( Ramishah Maruf | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: 1 min
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Lido's Gina Sanchez bails on Tesla, here's why
  + stars: | 2024-01-26 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLido's Gina Sanchez bails on Tesla, here's whyGina Sanchez, Lido Advisors chief market strategist, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss how to trade Dupont, Tesla, Humana, and PayPal.
Persons: Lido's Gina Sanchez, Tesla, Gina Sanchez, Dupont Organizations: Lido Advisors, Tesla, Humana, PayPal
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPayPal's AI announcement is 'shockingly unshocking', says Mizuho's Dan DolevDan Dolev, Mizuho senior analyst, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk PayPal's AI announcement and the stock's response.
Persons: Dan Dolev Dan Dolev Organizations: Mizuho
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Thursday said the market's had a significant run, and it may be time to ring the register. Cramer reflected on the CNBC Investing Club's decision to sell all of the Charitable Trust's shares of Caterpillar . The trust bought Caterpillar stock in part due to the assumption the Fed would implement several rate cuts, which usually bodes well for industrials. According to Cramer, stock dips for PayPal and ServiceNow may signal losses for other stocks previously bolstered by AI initiatives. "It means you need to do some trimming, purely because your profits don't count until you ring the register."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Alex Chriss Organizations: CNBC, Caterpillar . Dupont, Caterpillar, PayPal
PayPal shares fall after CEO announces AI-based products
  + stars: | 2024-01-25 | 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 EmailPayPal shares fall after CEO announces AI-based productsJosh Brown, CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management, joins CNBC's 'Halftime Report' to share his reaction to PayPal's AI announcement.
Persons: Josh Brown Organizations: PayPal, Ritholtz Wealth Management
Facebook fired Kagan in 2006 after he leaked company information to the press at Coachella. "I didn't work too hard at Intel and I didn't spend a lot of money," Kagan says. Following his firing from Facebook, Kagan ran conferences for aspiring entrepreneurs (a hustle he had started while at Intel), taught English in South Korea and picked up consulting work for Silicon Valley tech firms. In addition to working on AppSumo, Kagan manages rental properties and creates content for his YouTube and social media channels. In addition to his AppSumo business and his book, Kagan operates a YouTube channel and manages five rental properties.
Persons: Noah Kagan, Kagan, Bill Gates, Kagan's, Facebook, Camila Ortega, He'd, Maria, didn't, hadn't, AppSumo, They'll, We've, everyone's, we've, Kagan didn't, wasn't, Rolexes, , he's Organizations: CNBC, Microsoft, Facebook, University of California, Intel, Mint, Apple, PC, PayPal, Rolex, Entertainment, Insurance, Spotify, YouTube, AppSumo, Mazda Locations: Silicon Valley, Redmond , Washington, Barcelona, Austin , Texas, Berkeley, Israel, South Korea, Philippines, Argentina, Austin, Pakistan, AppSumo
With fourth quarter earnings season in full swing, Wolfe Research released a list of potential stocks that are best left alone. The companies fall into the bottom 20% of their sector earnings quality and are likely to underperform in 2024, according to Wolfe. The company's average earnings quality score for the trailing four quarters came in at 5. Its average earnings quality score for the trailing four quarters amounted to 25. The payments platform earned an earnings quality score of 10 and an average score in the trailing four quarters of 30.
Persons: Wolfe, Chris Senyek, Tesla, Elon Musk, Chewy, Goldman Sachs, Trevor Young, Morgan Stanley, BTIG, Oppenheimer, Dominick Gabriele, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Wolfe Research, Tesla, Argos Holdings, Barclays, PayPal, Paypal, Mizuho Locations: F2H24
CNN —Venmo, Cash App, PayPal, Zelle and other payment apps may be convenient ways to send cash with a few taps of your smartphone, but they’re a breeding grounds for theft, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg tells CNN. Bragg says he’s seen so many instances of criminals using payment apps as a crime of opportunity. The passenger would ask to put in a new address into the Lyft driver’s phone and once inside, they would transfer the in-app earnings to their own bank accounts using Cash App, the records show. Once in custody, investigators found that the pair has sent themselves $1,749 using Cash App, the records show. Bragg said his team has been trying to get the word out in recent years and have heard from victims who never came forward during outreach campaigns about cash app thefts.
Persons: CNN —, Attorney Alvin Bragg, swindlers, Bragg, Sen, Elizabeth Warren’s, , ” Bragg, Zelle, he’s, It’s, Organizations: CNN, PayPal, Attorney, Consumer Financial Locations: Manhattan, New York, Zelle, Los Angeles, Boston
So she turned to a novel solution to get through the season: Buy now, pay later. It's tough to say how buy now, pay later fits into the country's overall debt picture. Klarna, PayPal and Affirm all declined to share buy now, pay later delinquency rates with CNBC. Affirm has said the short-term and high-velocity nature of its buy now, pay later service makes traditional credit metrics less relevant. Klarna said its global default rate for its overall business including buy now, pay later is less than 1%.
Persons: Kiki Andersen, Andersen, I've, I'm, It's, Ted Rossman, delinquencies, who've, Klarna Organizations: PayPal, CNBC, Adobe, Federal Reserve Locations: Los Angeles, U.S
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Friday told investors to gear up for a "fast and furious" slew of earnings reports next week that could lead to some profit-taking, including Procter & Gamble , Tesla and Lockheed Martin . Only if we still have plenty of people out there bad-mouthing the market and calling it dangerous and perilous," Cramer said. Tuesday is one of the busiest days of the week, with reports from Procter & Gamble , Verizon , 3M , Johnson & Johnson , RTX , Lockheed Martin , D.R. Cramer predicted Verizon will do well, but Procter & Gamble may not see a blowout quarter, perhaps creating a buying opportunity. He'll be waiting to hear about an increased defense budget from Lockheed Martin and said D.R.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Tesla, Lockheed Martin, Cramer, Johnson, D.R, He'll, Horton, he'll, Williams Organizations: Procter & Gamble, Lockheed, United Airlines, Logitech, Verizon, Johnson, General Electric, Netflix, Procter, Gamble, Abbott Laboratories, Tesla, Lam Research, IBM, Union Pacific, Intel, Sherwin, PayPal, American Express, Norfolk Southern, Federal Reserve Locations: RTX, Horton, Colgate
Buy now, pay later plans — installment loans that allow you to spread out payments over time — aren't exactly new, but they've seen explosive growth over the last several years. AdvertisementBut Chloe Moore , a certified financial planner based in Atlanta, Georgia, says that buy now, pay later is still debt and that most people should steer clear of it. Here are three reasons why she advises her clients against using buy now, pay later:1. Since buy now, pay later is so easy to use, some consumers have multiple installment plans that they are paying in a month. If you have multiple installments that you are paying with a buy now, pay later plan, you may be eliminating any breathing room in your budget.
Persons: BNPL, Chloe Moore, , Moore Organizations: Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, PayPal, Finance Locations: Atlanta , Georgia
Sheryl Sandberg says she's leaving Meta's board
  + stars: | 2024-01-17 | by ( Jonathan Vanian | In | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +4 min
Former Meta operating chief Sheryl Sandberg is leaving the company's board of directors. "With a heart filled with gratitude and a mind filled with memories, I let the Meta board know that I will not stand for reelection this May," Sandberg wrote in a Facebook post on Wednesday. Sandberg, 54, joined Facebook in 2008 as Mark Zuckerberg's top deputy after spending about seven years at Google. Since leaving Meta, Sandberg has dedicated much of her time on her LeanIn.org nonprofit, which focuses on empowering women tin the workplace, and related projects. "Thank you Sheryl for the extraordinary contributions you have made to our company and community over the years," Zuckerberg wrote.
Persons: Sheryl Sandberg, Sandberg, Mark Zuckerberg's, Javier Olivan, We've, Sandberg's, Zuckerberg, Sheryl, Adam Bosworth, Peggy Alford, Marc Andreessen, Drew Houston, Nancy Killefer, Robert M, Tony Xu, Tracey T, Travis, Estée Lauder, Here's, Javi Olivan, Justin Osofsky, Nicola Mendelsohn, Mark Organizations: Meta, Facebook, Google, CNBC, McKinsey & Company, Estée Locations: U.S
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