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Wednesday, May 31, 2023

From Elon Musk to Jamie Dimon, CEOs flock to China as risks to trade and investment rise - CNN

Hong Kong CNN  — 

The CEOs of some of America’s biggest companies are in China this week to take the pulse of one of their top markets after the country reopened following nearly three years of pandemic restrictions.

Elon Musk of Tesla (TSLA), Laxman Narasimhan of Starbucks (SBUX) and Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan (JPM) are among the big names in town.

They follow a string of visits in recent months from the leaders of Apple (AAPL), Samsung (SSNLF), Aramco, Volkswagen (VLKAF), HSBC (HSBC), Standard Chartered (SCBFF) and Kering.

The CEO parade in the world’s second largest economy highlights the importance of China for many blue-chip firms. But what executives are finding as they touch down is a more complex business environment characterized by a crackdown on international consulting firms, geopolitical tension and an uncertain investment outlook.

Chinese Foreign Minister Qin Gang met Tesla CEO Elon Musk in Beijing on Tuesday.

Until December, China was largely sealed off under stringent “zero-Covid” restrictions, escalating calls in the international business community to reduce their reliance on the country. Those limits are gone, kicking off an economic recovery in the first quarter that now appears to be sputtering.

To drum up business, Chinese leaders have urged foreign companies to invest more in the country, promising them an open and level playing field.

That theme was apparent Tuesday, when Musk met with China’s Foreign Minister Qin Gang, who called for “a healthy” relationship with the United States, saying it was “in the interests of both countries and the world.”

Musk backed the view, saying Tesla was against the notion of “decoupling” with China.

“The interests of the United States and China are intertwined like conjoined twins,” he was quoted as saying by the foreign ministry. Musk was later also quoted by China’s commerce ministry as saying relations between the two countries were not a zero-sum game — where for one side to win, the other must lose.

Tesla did not respond to a request for comment about Musk’s visit, and the billionaire’s Twitter account was unusually quiet following his arrival.

Tesla has been playing defense in recent months, cutting prices after losing market share to competitors in China, such as Warren Buffett-backed BYD (BYDDF). Those reductions have kicked off a price war in China’s electric vehicle sector, the world’s biggest market for such cars.

Calls for clarity

For executives, the visits are a chance to reconnect with employees and rub shoulders with government officials for the first time in years. Dimon’s visit to mainland China is his first in four years, according to a person close to the bank.

The Wall Street boss met with Shanghai’s Communist Party chief Tuesday, where authorities say he was told the government hoped that JPMorgan would use “its international influence” to promote investment in China’s financial hub.

Dimon was later quoted in a Shanghai government statement as saying the bank would serve as “a bridge” for global companies to better understand and invest in the city.

But dealing with China has “become a far more complex situation,” he acknowledged in a Bloomberg TV interview Wednesday.

Over time, “there will be less trade” between China and the United States, Dimon predicted. “This is not decoupling, this is de-risking.”

In recent years, Western companies have been under pressure to reduce the risk to their businesses by diversifying supply chains beyond China. That’s been driven by a number of factors, including fears that Taiwan could be invaded by the country and ongoing tension between Beijing and Washington.

Apple, long the poster child for US investment in China, has been doing just that.

The visits coincide with a crackdown on international consulting firms that has alarmed foreign businesses.

This month, state security authorities said they had raided several offices of Capvision, an expert network with headquarters in Shanghai and New York. The announcement came after Chinese officials closed the Beijing office of Mintz Group, an American corporate due diligence firm, and questioned employees at the local branch of consultancy Bain.

The investigations are part of wider efforts by Beijing to increase oversight into what is deemed sensitive information pertinent to national security.

The campaign has had a chilling effect on US businesses in China, leading some to wonder “who’s next?” Michael Hart, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China, previously told CNN. The British Chamber of Commerce in China has also said its members are feeling unsettled, calling on the Chinese government to clarify regulatory guidelines.

A mixed bag

The uncertainty has led some firms to hold back on committing more money to China. In a British Chamber survey last month, 70% of businesses said they were “adopting a ‘wait-and-see’ approach” on decisions to invest long term in the country.

“Many companies and investors are sitting on the sidelines right now as they are still looking for more clarity around China’s economic policy, including how China will manage its relationship with the US,” said Ben Cavender, managing director of strategy consultancy China Market Research Group.

Beijing and Washington have been working to stabilize relations, but tensions remain. This month, China banned US chipmaker Micron (MICR) from selling to key suppliers in the country, citing cybersecurity risks. The move was seen as retaliation for restrictions the United States has imposed on Chinese chipmakers.

Nick Marro, global trade lead at the Economist Intelligence Unit, said business confidence was “already relatively fragile” from China’s pandemic policies, which only ended recently.

“The recent crackdowns on information providers has worsened a lot of this uncertainty,” he told CNN. “Companies are increasingly unsure of where the government’s ‘red lines’ are, and what steps they need to take to avoid falling foul of regulators.”

Apple CEO Tim Cook leaving the China Development Forum in Beijing in March. Cook is one of many global CEOs who have flown into China in recent months, highlighting the country's continued importance for their firms.

In some cases, though, businesses are boosting their investments.

Last month, Tesla announced a second factory in Shanghai, dedicated to the production of large-scale batteries.

Volkswagen (VLKAF) also unveiled plans to pour $1 billion into a new development center for electric cars in China. The move came weeks before shareholders called for an independent audit of the German automaker’s factory in Xinjiang, the western Chinese region that has been linked to allegations of forced labor.

Marro said the decision to reinvest in China was unsurprising.

“We’ve long cautioned against expectations of a wide-scale ‘exodus’ of companies fleeing China, even as business sentiment has moderated in recent years,” he added.

“This doesn’t mean that the conversations around ‘de-risking’ or ‘de-coupling’ aren’t happening, particularly at the government level. Instead, it shows how tricky these policy objectives are in practice.”

— CNN’s Sophie Jeong and Martha Zhou contributed to this report.

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From Elon Musk to Jamie Dimon, CEOs flock to China as risks to trade and investment rise - CNN
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Tuesday, May 30, 2023

Home prices jump again in March amid low supply, competitive market - Fox Business

Home prices rose for the second straight month in March as buyers confronted steep competition and limited inventory.

Prices increased 0.7% nationally in the period from February to March, the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller index showed Tuesday. On an annual basis, prices are down just 3.6% from their peak in June 2022, according to the index.

"The modest increases in home prices we saw a month ago accelerated in March 2023," said Craig Lazzara, managing director at S&P DJI, in a release. "Two months of increasing prices do not a definitive recovery make, but March’s results suggest that the decline in home prices that began in June 2022 may have come to an end."

THE HOUSING RECESSION ISN'T OVER YET

US housing

Homes in Rocklin, California, on Dec. 6, 2022.  ( Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The 10-city composite, which encompasses Los Angeles, Miami and New York, fell 0.8% annually, compared with a 0.5% increase in February. The 20-city composite, which also tracks housing prices in Dallas and Seattle, fell 1.1% in March, following a gain of 0.4% the previous month. 

There was a major discrepancy in the price gains in the 20 cities: Miami saw a 7.7% annual gain, making it the best-performing city for the eighth straight month. Tampa, meanwhile, posted a 4.8% increase, followed by Charlotte, N.C., with an increase of 4.7%. 

Conversely, cities in the West posted some of the biggest declines: Seattle prices plummeted 12.4%, edging out San Francisco with its 11.2% decline. 

"Home prices continue to rise with low inventory plaguing the market, despite high mortgage rates and widespread unaffordability," said Nicole Bachaud, Zillow senior economist. "However, on an annual level, prices are still recovering from pandemic-era highs."

COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE MARKET COULD CRASH SOON. HERE’S WHY

The Case-Shiller index reports with a two-month delay, meaning it may not capture the latest ongoings in the market. 

home sales

A "For Sale" outside a house in Hercules, California, US, on Tuesday, May 31, (Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The interest-rate-sensitive housing market entered a deep freeze last year in the wake of the Federal Reserve's aggressive interest-rate hike campaign. 

But as mortgage rates have slowly declined from a peak of 7% – and as buyers grapple with limited inventory – the housing market has shown early signs of stirring back to life. 

A separate report released last week showed the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index, which measures the pulse of the single-family housing market, rose five points to 50, the highest reading since July.

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It marked the first time in nearly a year that the index pulled out of negative territory.

"New home construction is taking on an increased role in the marketplace because many homeowners with loans well below current mortgage rates are electing to stay put, and this is keeping the supply of existing homes at a very low level," said Alicia Huey, NAHB chair and a custom home builder and developer from Birmingham, Alabama.

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Home prices jump again in March amid low supply, competitive market - Fox Business
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Monday, May 29, 2023

Computex 2023: news, hands-on, and more - The Verge

After three years, Computex is finally back — in person, in all its glory. The biggest companies in the laptop and PC space, from Taiwan and elsewhere, will be gathered in Taipei this week to showcase products they’ll be releasing this summer and throughout the rest of 2023. We expect to see a whole bunch of refreshes to popular laptop lines, updated desktop components, and maybe even (dare we say it?) a CPU or two. Plus, software services and artificial intelligence were a major focus of CES earlier this year, and we certainly expect that trend to continue.

If you’re interested in following the latest laptop news but can’t make it out to Taiwan yourself, never fear.

We’ll be on the ground in Taipei all week, catching keynotes, interviewing the big players, and getting our hands on some of the most exciting gadgets that you’ll see in 2023. Come along for the ride.

  • This is what a 144TB Nvidia GPU looks like.

    Nvidia just announced its DGX GH200 at Computex. It’s got 256 of its new “Grace Hopper superchips” for an exaflop of AI performance — and contains 150 miles of optical fiber and over 2,000 fans. Google, Meta and Microsoft will be “evaluating” it, though not necessarily purchasing kits: they tend to build their own compute clouds, even if they contain loads of Nvidia GPUs.

    Nvidia says it’s 2.2x faster than a last-gen DGX H100 cluster at GPT3 training, as one example.


    Click here for a bigger image.
    Click here for a bigger image.
  • Arm Cortex Immortalis 2023.

    Say it with me: Arm doesn’t sell chips. But it does design CPU and GPU cores its licensees can optionally use. What’s new?

    Cortex-X4 (big CPU): 15% more perf, 40% less power

    Cortex-A720 and A520: 20% and 22% more efficient, respectively

    Immortalis-G720 (the GPU): 15% more perf, 40% lighter on memory bandwidth

    Last time, they only came together in the MediaTek Dimensity 9200, which arrived in the Vivo X90, X90 Pro and Oppo Find X6.


  • At Computex 2023 in Taipei, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang just gave the world a glimpse of what it might be like when gaming and AI collide — with a graphically breathtaking rendering of a cyberpunk ramen shop where you can actually talk to the proprietor.

    Seriously, instead of clicking on dialogue options, it imagines you could hold down a button, just say something with your own voice, and get an answer from a video game character. Nvidia’s calling it a “peek at the future of games.”

    Read Article >
  • Image: Future Publishing via Getty Images

    Computex, one of the biggest trade shows of the year for the laptop and PC space, begins in a couple of days. A number of companies will have big announcements, but the most anticipated event of the week is Nvidia’s keynote, which will open the show on Monday morning.

    The keynote speaker will be Nvidia’s founder and CEO Jensen Huang, who — in case you missed it — added $7 billion to his net worth a few days ago following the company’s massive Q1 earnings report.

    Read Article >
  • Computex is almost here.

    The Taipei International Information Technology Show opens in just five days, and we’ve already got announcements rolling in. Acer’s getting the ball rolling this morning with the launch of a refreshed Swift Edge 16 (it’s high-end, AMD-powered, ultralight, OLED workstation) and Predator Triton 16 (a QHD AAA gaming rig).

    Expanded tools for SpatialLabs, its glasses-free 3D technology, are also in the works. Whether these will be enough to make people actually want glasses-free 3D laptops, of course, remains to be seen.

    We’ll be on the ground in Taipei next week bringing you news from all the biggest Taiwanese laptop companies (and maybe some others too).


    A user types on the Swift Edge 16 on their lap, seated on the floor.
    A user types on the Swift Edge 16 on their lap, seated on the floor.
    Just casually using the new Swift Edge 16, as you do.
    Image: Asus

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Computex 2023: news, hands-on, and more - The Verge
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Is Walmart open on Memorial Day? Store hours for Monday, May 29 - AL.com

Memorial Day, a holiday rooted in somber history, has also become the unofficial kick off of summer and plenty of people celebrate with get-togethers and cookouts.

According to Wallethub, some 44% of Americans plans to barbecue over Memorial Day weekend. The holiday ranks second for beer sales – falling only behind Fourth of July – with 86% of Americans saying they plan to hit up a store on the Memorial Day weekend.

If you’re one of those holiday shoppers, you will be glad to know Walmart, the nation’s largest retailer, is open on Memorial Day 2023. Walmart locations will be open regular hours – typically 6 a.m. – 11 p.m. for Supercenters, on Monday, May 29th. Some services such as auto centers or pharmacy may be on different schedules, so be sure to check ahead.

READ MORE: Memorial Day 2023: Quotes, remembrances to honor those who lost their lives for freedom

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Is Walmart open on Memorial Day? Store hours for Monday, May 29 - AL.com
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Sunday, May 28, 2023

What to Watch in Markets on Debt Deal: US Dollar ($ USD) May Soften - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. What to Watch in Markets on Debt Deal: US Dollar ($ USD) May Soften  Bloomberg
  2. Debt ceiling negotiators reach a deal: 5 essential reads about the tentative accord, brinkmanship and the danger of default  The Conversation Indonesia
  3. Possible default threatens foundation of global financial system  The Washington Post
  4. View Full Coverage on Google News

What to Watch in Markets on Debt Deal: US Dollar ($ USD) May Soften - Bloomberg
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JPMorgan cutting about 500 jobs this week - Reuters

May 26 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) is cutting about 500 employees this week across its various departments, according to a person familiar with the situation who asked not to be identified discussing personnel matters.

The layoffs will affect employees across the bank's main businesses -- consumer, commercial banking, asset and wealth management -- as well as technology and operations, the source said. JPMorgan is the largest U.S. lender.

There are more than 13,000 current job openings at the bank, the source added.

JPMorgan declined to comment.

On Thursday, a JPMorgan source said the lender was laying off nearly 1,000 First Republic Bank employees after acquiring the failed bank earlier this month.

First Republic became the largest U.S. lender to fail since 2008 after it was seized by regulators and sold to JPMorgan in early May.

JPMorgan's workforce stood at 296,877 at the end of the first quarter, up 8% from a year earlier, according to a filing.

CNBC was the first to report on the job cuts.

Reporting by Nupur Anand in New York and Niket Nishant in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath and David Gregorio

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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JPMorgan cutting about 500 jobs this week - Reuters
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Saturday, May 27, 2023

As Elizabeth Holmes heads to prison for fraud, many puzzle over her motives - ABC News

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- As Elizabeth Holmes prepares to report to prison next week, the criminal case that laid bare the blood-testing scam at the heart of her Theranos startup is entering its final phase.

The 11-year sentence represents a comeuppance for the wide-eyed woman who broke through “tech bro” culture to become one of Silicon Valley’s most celebrated entrepreneurs, only to be exposed as a fraud. Along the way, Holmes became a symbol of the shameless hyperbole that often saturates startup culture.

But questions still linger about her true intentions — so many that even the federal judge who presided over her trial seemed mystified. And Holmes' defenders continue to ask whether the punishment fits the crime.

At 39, she seems most likely to be remembered as Silicon Valley’s Icarus — a high-flying entrepreneur burning with reckless ambition whose odyssey culminated in convictions for fraud and conspiracy.

Her motives are still somewhat mysterious, and some supporters say federal prosecutors targeted her unfairly in their zeal to bring down one of the most prominent practitioners of fake-it-til-you-make-it — the tech sector's brand of self-promotion that sometimes veers into exaggeration and blatant lies to raise money.

Holmes will begin to pay the price for her deceit on May 30 when she is scheduled begin the sentence that will separate her from her two children — a son whose July 2021 birth delayed the start of her trial and a 3-month-old daughter conceived after her conviction.

She is expected to be incarcerated in Bryan, Texas, about 100 miles (160 km) northwest of her hometown of Houston. The prison was recommended by the judge who sentenced Holmes, but authorities have not publicly disclosed where she will be held.

Her many detractors contend she deserves to be in prison for peddling a technology that she repeatedly boasted would quickly scan for hundreds of diseases and other health problems with a few drops of blood taken with a finger prick.

The technology never worked as promised. Instead, Theranos tests produced wildly unreliable results that could have endangered patients' lives — one of the most frequently cited reasons why she deserved to be prosecuted.

Before those lies were uncovered in a series of explosive articles in The Wall Street Journal beginning in October 2015, Holmes raised nearly $1 billion from a list of savvy investors including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and media mogul Rupert Murdoch. It was the duping of those investors that led to her prison sentence and a $452 million restitution bill.

Holmes' stake in Theranos at one point catapulted her paper wealth to $4.5 billion. She never sold any of her stock in the company, though trial evidence left no doubt she reveled in the trappings of fame and fortune — so much so that she and the father of her children, William “Billy” Evans, lived on a palatial Silicon Valley estate during the trial.

The theory that Holmes was running an elaborate scam was buttressed by trial evidence documenting her efforts to prevent the Journal's investigation from being published. That campaign compelled John Carreyrou — the reporter responsible for those bombshell stories — to attend court and position himself in Holmes' line of vision when she took the witness stand.

Holmes also signed off on surveillance aimed at intimidating Theranos employees who helped uncover the flaws with the blood-testing technology. The whistleblowers included Tyler Shultz, the grandson of former Secretary of State George Shultz, whom Holmes befriended and persuaded to join the Theranos board.

Tyler Shultz became so unnerved by Holmes' efforts to shut him up that he began sleeping with a knife under his pillow, according to a wrenching statement delivered by his father, Alex, at her sentencing.

Holmes' supporters still contend she always had good intentions and was unfairly scapegoated by the Justice Department. They insist she simply deployed the same over-the-top promotion tactics as many other tech executives, including Elon Musk, who has repeatedly made misleading statements about the capabilities of Tesla's self-driving cars.

According to those supporters, Holmes was singled out because she was a woman who briefly eclipsed the men who customarily bask in Silicon Valley's spotlight, and the trial turned her into a latter-day version of Hester Prynne — the protagonist in the 1850 novel “The Scarlet Letter.”

Holmes steadfastly maintained her innocence during seven often-riveting days of testimony in her own defense — a spectacle that caused people to line up shortly after midnight to secure one of the few dozen seats available in the San Jose courtroom.

On one memorable day, Holmes recounted how she had never gotten over the trauma of being raped while enrolled at Stanford University. She then described being subjected to a long-running pattern of emotional and sexual abuse by her former lover and Theranos conspirator, Ramesh “Sunny” Balwani, and suggested his stifling control blurred her thinking.

Balwani's lawyer, Jeffrey Coopersmith, denied those allegations during the trial. In Balwani's subsequent trial, Coopersmith unsuccessfully tried to depict his client as Holmes' pawn.

Balwani, 57, is now serving a nearly 13-year prison sentence for fraud and conspiracy.

When it came time to sentence the then-pregnant Holmes in November, U.S. District Judge Edward Davila seemed as puzzled as anyone about why she did what she did.

”This is a fraud case where an exciting venture went forward with great expectations and hope, only to be dashed by untruth, misrepresentations, hubris and plain lies," Davila lamented while Holmes stood before him. “I suppose we step back and we look at this, and we think what is the pathology of fraud?”

The judge also hearkened back to the days that Silicon Valley consisted mostly of orchards farmed by immigrants. That was before the land was ceded to the tech boom beginning in 1939 when William Hewlett and David Packard founded a company bearing their surnames in a one-car garage in Palo Alto — the same city where Theranos was based.

“You’ll recall the wonderful innovation of those two individuals in that small garage,” Davila reminded everyone in the rapt courtroom. “No exotic automobiles or lavish lifestyle, just a desire to create for society’s benefit through honest hard work. And that, I would hope, would be the continuing story, the legacy and practice of Silicon Valley.”

___

Michael Liedtke has been covering Silicon Valley for The Associated Press for 23 years.

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As Elizabeth Holmes heads to prison for fraud, many puzzle over her motives - ABC News
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Friday, May 26, 2023

The Key Fed Inflation Rate Heated Up In April - Investor's Business Daily

The Federal Reserve's primary inflation rate showed that core price pressures ran hotter than expected in April. Supercore inflation, or core services excluding housing, also increased. The S&P 500 initially lost traction, then regained its stride after the report, though the data bolsters the position of Fed hawks eyeing a further rate hike. Progress in debt-ceiling talks took center stage.

X

Core Inflation Rate

The personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index rose 0.4% in April. That lifted the annual inflation rate t0 4.4%, vs. expectations of 4.2%.

Typically, Federal Reserve decision-making puts more weight on core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices. Core prices also rose 0.4% in April, while the core 12-month inflation rate came in at 4.7% vs. the 4.6% expected.

Wall Street economists expected a 0.3% monthly increase for both the overall PCE price index and core prices.

Fed Focus: Supercore Services Inflation

Starting late last year, Federal Reserve chair Powell shifted the inflation focus to core PCE services excluding housing, or supercore services. That's in keeping with the Fed's view that the tight labor market and elevated wage growth are at the root of stubbornly high inflation. Wages make up a high percentage of costs for service businesses. Therefore, supercore services inflation should ease as wage pressures moderate.

April PCE data for for these services, such as health care, haircuts and hospitality, showed prices rose 0.4% on the month. The increase for March was revised slightly higher to 0.29% from 0.24%. The 12-month inflation rate for core nonhousing services eased to rose to 4.6% from 4.5%. Still, the trend over the past three months has been better, with supercore prices up 4.35% at an annual rate. That's the lowest since last September.

Personal Income And Spending

Personal income rose 0.4% on the month, matching forecasts of a 0.4% rise. Personal consumption expenditures rose 0.8%, twice the expected gain, after two soft months of spending.

Federal Reserve Rate Hike Odds

Ahead of the PCE inflation report, markets were pricing in 41% odds of a quarter-point rate hike at the June 13-14 Federal Reserve meeting. That jumped to 58.5% after the PCE data. Markets now see a 77% chance of a hike by the Fed meeting on July 25-26.

S&P 500

The S&P 500 rose 0.6% in early Friday stock market action after futures briefly turned negative after the inflation data. Futures had been rising amid apparent progress toward a debt-ceiling deal.

A debt-ceiling deal won't necessarily clear a path for an extended S&P 500 rally. Fading fiscal support and further Fed tightening, by unloading assets it purchased during the pandemic, could prove to be a downer.

Be sure to read IBD's daily afternoon The Big Picture column to stay in sync with the market's underlying trend and what it means for your trading decisions.

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The Key Fed Inflation Rate Heated Up In April - Investor's Business Daily
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The Key Fed Inflation Rate Heated Up In April - Investor's Business Daily

The Federal Reserve's primary inflation rate showed that core price pressures ran hotter than expected in April. Supercore inflation, or core services excluding housing, also increased. S&P 500 futures initially slipped, then regained their stride after the report, though it bolsters the position of Fed hawks eyeing a further rate hike. Progress in debt-ceiling talks took center stage.

X

Core Inflation Rate

The personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index rose 0.4% in April. That lifted the annual inflation rate t0 4.4%, vs. expectations of 4.2%.

Typically, Federal Reserve decision-making puts more weight on core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices. Core prices also rose 0.4% in April, while the core 12-month inflation rate came in at 4.7% vs. the 4.6% expected.

Wall Street economists expected a 0.3% monthly increase for both the overall PCE price index and core prices.

Fed Focus: Supercore Services Inflation

Starting late last year, Federal Reserve chair Powell shifted the inflation focus to core PCE services excluding housing, or supercore services. That's in keeping with the Fed's view that the tight labor market and elevated wage growth are at the root of stubbornly high inflation. Wages make up a high percentage of costs for service businesses. Therefore, supercore services inflation should ease as wage pressures moderate.

April PCE data for for these services, such as health care, haircuts and hospitality, showed prices rose 0.4% on the month. The increase for March was revised slightly higher to 0.29% from 0.24%. The 12-month inflation rate for core nonhousing services eased to rose to 4.6% from 4.5%. Still, the trend over the past three months has been better, with supercore prices up 4.35% at an annual rate. That's the lowest since last September.

Personal Income And Spending

Personal income rose 0.4% on the month, matching forecasts of a 0.4% rise. Personal consumption expenditures rose 0.8%, twice the expected gain, after two soft months of spending.

Federal Reserve Rate Hike Odds

Ahead of the PCE inflation report, markets were pricing in 41% odds of a quarter-point rate hike at the June 13-14 Federal Reserve meeting. That jumped to 57% after the PCE data. Markets now see a 75% chance of a hike by the Fed meeting on July 25-26.

S&P 500

S&P 500 futures were up 0.2% in early Friday stock market action after briefly turning negative. Futures had been rising amid apparent progress toward a debt-ceiling deal.

A debt-ceiling deal won't necessarily clear a path for an extended S&P 500 rally. Fading fiscal support and further Fed tightening, by unloading assets it purchased during the pandemic, could prove to be a downer.

Be sure to read IBD's daily afternoon The Big Picture column to stay in sync with the market's underlying trend and what it means for your trading decisions.

YOU MAY ALSO LIKE:

These Are The Best 5 Stocks To Buy And Watch Now

Join IBD Live And Learn Top Chart-Reading And Trading Techniques From The Pros

Find The Best Growth Stocks To Buy And Watch

The Debt Ceiling Is Just The Start. These Drags Could Derail The Economy.

Nvidia, AI Plays Soar, But This Looks Terrible; Two Big Winners Late

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The Key Fed Inflation Rate Heated Up In April - Investor's Business Daily
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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Marvell Technology, Gap, RH & more - CNBC

In this article

Matt Murphy, president and CEO of Marvell Technology
Adam Jeffery | CNBC

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Marvell Technology — Marvell Technology surged 17% in premarket trading after reporting a top-and-bottom beat in its first quarter. Marvell posted adjusted earnings of 31 cents per share, topping estimates for 29 cents, according to Refinitiv. It reported $1.32 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected $1.3 billion. It expects revenue growth will accelerate in the second half of the fiscal year.

Gap — Shares of the apparel retailer jumped more than 11% premarket despite the company posting net losses and declining sales Thursday for its most recent quarter, as investors cheered Gap's big improvement in its margins thanks to reduced promotions and lower air freight expenses.

Workday — Workday jumped 9% after topping first-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. The financial management software firm also named a new chief financial officer, Zane Rowe, and raised the low end of its full year subscription revenue guidance. 

Autodesk — Autodesk rose 1% in premarket trading. The software company reported first-quarter results that were in line with analysts' expectations. It gave second-quarter guidance that was weaker than expected, while its full year outlook was roughly in line. 

Deckers Outdoor — Deckers Outdoor fell 2% in premarket trading. The lifestyle footwear company reported fourth-quarter results that exceeded analysts' expectations, according to Refinitiv. However, it gave full year earnings and revenue guidance that was lower than expected. 

RH — Shares of the retailer fell more than 3% in premarket trading despite RH beating estimates for its fiscal first quarter in a Thursday evening report. The company reported $2.21 in adjusted earnings per share on $739 million of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were looking for $2.09 in earnings per share on $727 million of revenue. However, RH's second-quarter revenue guidance was short of expectations, and the company warned of increased markdowns. 

Ulta Beauty — Ulta Beauty slid 9% in premarket trading even after the beauty retailer posted strong earnings and revenue for the first quarter. It very slightly raised full year revenue guidance, and reaffirmed earnings per share guidance. However, comparable sales grew slightly less than expected.

— CNBC's Tanaya Macheel and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Marvell Technology, Gap, RH & more - CNBC
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Regional Bank Stocks Fall After New York Community Bancorp Cuts Dividend, Posts Loss - The Wall Street Journal

[unable to retrieve full-text content] Regional Bank Stocks Fall After New York Community Bancorp Cuts Dividend, Posts Loss    The Wall St...