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  • Robotics startup cofounded by Synapse CEO is raising funds with exaggerated claims about GM ties

    Robotics startup cofounded by Synapse CEO is raising funds with exaggerated claims about GM ties

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    3alexd | E+ | Getty Images

    A humanoid robotics startup cofounded by the CEO of bankrupt fintech firm Synapse has canvassed Silicon Valley investors for funds by claiming close ties and an imminent investment from General Motors — claims rejected by the automaker.

    The company, called Foundation Robotics Labs, is seeking the last $1 million in funds for an $11 million seed round, according to documents obtained by CNBC. The investor pitch claimed GM had already committed to an investment, along with the Menlo Park-based VC firm Tribe Capital.

    “Foundation is building humanoid robots to take over work that humans do in factories, warehouses and eventually homes,” the startup declared.

    On top of the seed investment, the fundraising document said GM was set to be Foundation’s first customer, with a targeted $300 million purchase order, and had also provided access to its factories to help them train its robots.

    “GM agreed to let us collect the ground truth data in their factories,” Foundation said in the document. “Our team is in their Mexico factory this week to start the collection process. We would probably be the only company in this space with a dataset like this.”

    ‘Fabricated’ claims

    But, according to GM and one of the startup’s founders, most of Foundation’s claims related to the automaker are exaggerated or untrue.

    While GM met with Foundation executives a few times, it hasn’t allowed data collection from its factories, has no agreements for robot orders and isn’t planning an investment, according to a GM spokesman.

    “GM has never invested in Foundation Robotics and has no plans to do so,” spokesman Darryll Harrison said in an emailed statement. “In fact, GM has never had an agreement of any kind with the company. Any claims to the contrary are fabricated.”

    In a phone interview with CNBC, one of Foundation’s cofounders, Mike LeBlanc, confirmed GM’s points and said he was embarrassed that marketing materials existed that overstated their relationship.

    “The engineering stuff we’ve done is really incredible, and it’s the bedrock of what this company will be,” LeBlanc said. “That, to me is what Foundation Robotics is.”

    New Foundation

    Foundation was started in April by Synapse CEO Sankaet Pathak, Tribe Capital CEO Arjun Sethi, and LeBlanc, cofounder of Cobalt Robotics, a maker of autonomous security guards, according to the company’s fundraising pitch.

    It’s raising money at a time when American corporations look to automate more of their labor: 25% of capital spending by industrial companies in the coming years will be on automated systems, according to McKinsey.

    The misleading fundraising pitch was shared in an email group with about 1,500 startup executives and investors this month, according to one of the recipients. The contents of the document were confirmed by someone with direct knowledge of Tribe Capital.

    Tribe Capital and its cofounder Sethi declined to comment, while Pathak didn’t respond to messages seeking comment.

    Fintech meltdown

    The robotics startup finds itself in the spotlight after the implosion of Pathak’s other company, Synapse, which enabled fintech brands like Mercury and Dave to offer banking services by connecting them to FDIC-backed banks.

    Cofounded by Pathak in 2014, Synapse went bankrupt earlier this year after some of its largest clients, including Mercury, left its platform. Mercury, which instead pursued a direct relationship with Evolve, later had disagreements with Synapse over contract issues.

    The mess has left more than 100,000 Americans with a combined $265 million in deposits locked out of their accounts for more than a month, according to a trustee appointed to oversee the firm’s bankruptcy proceedings.

    Making matters worse, there is an $85 million shortfall between what partner banks of Synapse are holding and what depositors are owed, and no answers yet on what happened to the missing funds, according to the trustee.

    Pathak’s move to his next venture, coming on the heels of the still-ongoing Synapse failure, has raised eyebrows among some founders and investors in the startup community.

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  • Affirm buy now, pay later loans will be embedded into Apple Pay later this year

    Affirm buy now, pay later loans will be embedded into Apple Pay later this year

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    Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Apple device users will soon be able to tap into buy now, pay later loans from Affirm for purchases, the companies said Tuesday.

    Affirm will surface as an option for U.S. Apple Pay users on iPhones and iPads later this year, the San Francisco-based fintech company said in a filing. Apple confirmed the news in its own update.

    “This provides users with additional payment choices, and offers the ease, convenience and security of Apple Pay alongside the features users love in Affirm – flexibility, transparency and no late or hidden fees,” Affirm said in an email statement.

    The move is a boost to Affirm and the buy now, pay later sector in general. When Apple introduced its own BNPL product last year, investors were concerned that the tech giant would crowd out stand-alone providers like Affirm. But the fact that Apple decided to also allow Affirm products in its ecosystem shows that the fintech company has something unique to offer.

    For instance, while Apple’s BNPL loan lets users repay purchases in four installments over six weeks, Affirm has an array of longer-term offerings that can be repaid over a year or more. The companies didn’t provide details on the terms of the new loans.

    “The bottom-line — in our view — is that Affirm’s strong brand and sophisticated underwriting technology have a moat that Apple likely could not replicate on its own,” Mizuho Securities analyst Dan Dolev said in a research note.

    Citi, Synchrony

    Apple also said that installment loans via credit and debit cards would be available on Apple Pay in the U.S. with Citigroup, Synchrony and Fiserv-related issuers. Traditional credit card players have begun offering BNPL-style installment loans after their popularity surged during the Covid pandemic

    Synchrony said in an email that it was planning personalized installment loans with promotions based on the transaction size and merchant involved, with the possible use of promotional interest rates and loan durations.

    “This announcement with Apple marks an opportunity for Synchrony to scale our flexible payment options and offer our merchants the ability to expand their presence in a growing mobile payments ecosystem,” Mike Bopp, Synchrony’s chief growth officer, said in an email.

    Thanks to the ubiquity of the iPhone, Apple Pay has more than 500 million users around the world and a leading market share in the U.S. for its mobile payment and digital wallet platform.

    Shares of Affirm rose 11% Tuesday, while Apple’s stock was up 7.3%.

    Affirm’s stock rose despite the fact that the company indicated it would take time for the partnership to significantly boost its revenue.

    “Affirm does not expect this partnership to have a material impact on revenue or gross merchandise volume in fiscal year 2025,” the company said in its filing.

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  • Synapse bankruptcy trustee says $85 million of customer savings is missing in fintech meltdown

    Synapse bankruptcy trustee says $85 million of customer savings is missing in fintech meltdown

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    Jelena McWilliams, chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021.

    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    There is an $85 million shortfall between what partner banks of fintech middleman Synapse are holding and what depositors are owed, according to the court-appointed trustee in the Synapse bankruptcy.

    Customers of fintech firms that used Synapse to link up with banks had $265 million in balances. But the banks themselves only had $180 million associated with those accounts, trustee Jelena McWilliams said in a report filed late Thursday.

    The missing funds explain what is at the heart of the worst meltdown in the U.S. fintech sector since its emergence in the years after the 2008 financial crisis. More than 100,000 customers of a diverse set of fintech companies have been locked out of their savings accounts for nearly a month after the failure of Synapse, an Andreessen Horowitz-backed startup, amid disagreements over user balances.

    While Synapse and its partners, including Evolve Bank & Trust, have lobbed accusations of improperly moving balances or keeping incorrect ledgers at each other in court filings, McWilliams’ report is the first outside attempt to determine the scope of missing funds in this mess.

    Much unknown

    Spreading the pain

    McWilliams’ task has been made harder because there are no funds to pay external forensics firms or even former Synapse employees to help, she said in her report. Synapse fired the last of its employees on May 24.

    Still, some customers whose funds were held at banks in what’s called demand deposit accounts have already begun getting access to accounts, she said.

    But users whose funds were pooled in a communal way known as for benefit of, or FBO, accounts, will have a harder time getting their money. A full reconciliation will take weeks more to complete, she said.

    In her report, McWilliams presented several options for Judge Martin Barash to consider at a Friday hearing that will allow at least some FBO customers to regain access to their funds.

    The options include paying some customers out fully, while delaying payments to others, depending on whether the individual FBO accounts have been reconciled. Another option would be spreading the shortfall evenly among all customers to make limited funds available sooner.

    During the hearing Friday, McWilliams told Barash that her recommendation was that all FBO customers receive partial payments, which “will partially alleviate the effects to end users who are currently waiting locked out of access to their funds” while keeping a reserve for later payments.

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  • GameStop shares jump 30% as ‘Roaring Kitty’ schedules YouTube livestream for Friday

    GameStop shares jump 30% as ‘Roaring Kitty’ schedules YouTube livestream for Friday

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    Pavlo Gonchar | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

    Shares of GameStop shot to session highs Thursday after meme stock leader Roaring Kitty scheduled a livestream on Youtube, which would be his first one in almost four years.

    Roaring Kitty, whose real name is Keith Gill, set the time for his live chat at noon Friday, which traders speculated would be a bullish discussion about his massive GameStop stake. The investor hosted three-hour livestreams in August 2020 explaining his investing thesis behind his favorite brick-and-mortar video game retailer.

    GameStop popped 30% higher to trade around $40 apiece. It surged 40% at one point after this livestream update and trading was briefly halted for volatility. The stock is up more than 80% this week.

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    GameStop, 1-day

    There were already more than 10,000 people waiting in the livestream and countless comments were flowing through the chat box.

    Gill, who goes by DeepF——Value on Reddit, resurfaced online recently more than three years after sparking the historic trading mania in 2021 that burned short-selling hedge funds. Last Sunday, he started posting screenshots of his E-trade portfolio holding 5 million shares of GameStop common shares and 120,000 call options. Combined, they have a market value of at least $200 million now.

    He seemed to have held onto his positions as of Monday night. Gill stopped posting updates after the Wall Street Journal reported that Morgan Stanley’s E-Trade broker was considering booting him because of the worry that what he was doing could amount to market manipulation. 

    The investor is a former marketer for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance. The mania in 2021 led to a series of congressional hearings, featuring Gill, around brokers’ practices and gamifying retail trading.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia pushes past $3 trillion

    CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia pushes past $3 trillion

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    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading in New York City.

    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Nvidia powers S&P 500 to record
    The 
    S&P 500 rose to a record after Nvidia crossed through the $3 trillion barrier for the first time and softer-than-expected jobs data raised hopes for an interest rate cut. The Nasdaq Composite also set a record, climbing almost 2%, with technology stocks Hewlett Packard Enterprises and CrowdStrike soaring on better-than-expected sales and earnings, respectively. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged behind, adding just under 100 points. The yield on the 10-year Treasury slipped, while U.S. oil prices rose from four-month lows.

    Nvidia passes Apple
    Artificial intelligence chipmaker Nvidia surpassed the $3 trillion market capitalization mark, pushing past Apple to become the second most valuable company behind Microsoft. Nvidia’s shares have risen 24% since its blockbuster earnings report in May, while Apple’s shares are up only 5% this year as sales growth stalled in recent months.

    Baron backs Musk’s pay deal
    Billionaire investor Ron Baron has publicly defended Elon Musk’s controversial $56 billion Tesla pay package. The Baron Capital chairman and CEO argues the package, tied to “aggressive” performance targets, is justified as without Musk “there would be no Tesla.” Baron previously revealed that his firm has made about 20 times its investment in Tesla since he first bought the stock in 2014. The package, previously voided by a Delaware judge, will face a shareholder vote on June 13.

    Elliott retakes SoftBank stake
    Elliott Management, an activist investor, has taken a $2 billion stake in SoftBank and is pushing for a $15 billion share buyback. This marks the second time Elliott has taken a stake in the Masayoshi Son-led firm. In 2020, at Elliott’s urging, SoftBank launched a $20 billion share buyback and asset disposal program. Elliott believes another buyback would boost SoftBank’s share price and signal confidence in CEO Son’s plans, particularly in AI.

    Electric air taxi gets FAA signoff
    Shares of Archer Aviation soared 6% after the Federal Aviation Administration granted the electric air taxi maker a key certification that would allow the company’s aircraft to eventually carry passengers. Archer, which has won orders and backing from United Airlines, is building electric vertical takeoff and landing aircraft for urban areas, which could reduce carbon emissions. Archer has partnered with automaker Stellantis to produce hundreds of the electric air taxis.

    [PRO] Buy the dip
    While investors are concerned about this biotech company’s potential loss of exclusivity and rising competition, Goldman Sachs sees an upside of more than 60%. The Wall Street bank believes investors should buy the dip and consider its “overlooked” pipeline. 

    The bottom line

    Billionaire investor Ron Baron's support of Elon Musk's $56 billion compensation package almost feels like looking in the rearview mirror. Nonetheless, it's a crucial intervention just ahead of next week's vote on what would be corporate America's biggest compensation package.

    Shareholder advisory firms, Glass Lewis and ISS, have told investors to reject the award. In voiding the original package, the judge said the process was flawed because of the close relationship the compensation committee had with Musk. For example, Robyn Denholm, the chair of Tesla, sold some of her Tesla options for $280 million between 2021 and 2022 — a "life-changing" transaction, as she described it. Other members of the team had relationships with Musk going back 15 years or more and regularly vacationed together.

    The package has no salary or cash bonus and sets rewards based on Tesla's market value rising to as much as $650 billion over the 10 years from 2018. The court also found the defendants did not prove the package was necessary to retain Musk.

    At its height, Tesla reached a market capitalization of $1.2 trillion in November 2021. Since then, the EV market has slowed and competition has intensified. Its current market cap is $560 billion. While Baron remains bullish and has made and expects to make a lot more money from Tesla, other investors expect the company's stock to fall by as much as 30%.

    Who would bet against Musk? He took a niche vehicle manufacturer that has flirted with bankruptcy and challenged Detroit, and now plans to reinvent the EV maker into a leader in AI and robotics.

    Still, Wall Street has a new favorite in Nvidia. It passed the $3 trillion mark and surpassed Apple to become the second most valuable U.S. company. Before Thursday's record high, UBS noted that Nvidia's year-to-date gain is responsible for a significant chunk of the S&P 500's 2024 rally.

    "NVDA accounts for 30% of the market's return YTD," wrote strategist Jonathan Golub in a Wednesday note to clients. "S&P 500 returns drop from 11.3% to 7.8% ex-NVDA. Many stocks have moved in step with the AI theme." 

    While some caution a bit of profit-taking, the company's 10-for-1 stock split should encourage side-lined retail investors to take a slice of the AI frenzy. Bank of America still sees an upside to the stock.

    CNBC's Brian Evans, Alex Harring, Darla Mercado, Kif Leswing, Rohan Goswami, Leslie Josephs and Yun Li contributed to this report.

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  • Barry Sternlicht on why rents are ‘guaranteed’ to go up in 2026 barring a recession

    Barry Sternlicht on why rents are ‘guaranteed’ to go up in 2026 barring a recession

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    Barry Sternlicht, Starwood Capital chairman and CEO, joins ‘Squawk Box’ to discuss the state of the economy, real estate trends, limiting redemptions on property fund, the Fed’s inflation fight, impact of interest rate hikes, and more.

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  • The best banks in the Asia-Pacific region, according to customers

    The best banks in the Asia-Pacific region, according to customers

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    SINGAPORE — Customers in Asia-Pacific have picked their favorite banks as lenders scramble to meet consumer expectations in a fast-changing environment.

    After a prolonged period of high inflation — and interest rates — banks in the region are starting to navigate the global trend of lower rates. They're also facing technological innovation that has the potential to transform the sector, as generative AI gains traction around the world.

    Against this backdrop, CNBC and market research firm Statista surveyed 22,000 individuals with a checking or savings account in 14 major economies. The report below — the first of its kind — is designed to highlight the banks that best meet consumer needs in their respective markets.

    For the survey, participants evaluated their overall satisfaction with a bank, and whether they would recommend it to others. They also rated each based on five criteria: trust, terms and conditions (such as fees and rates), customer service, digital services and quality of financial advice. Read the full methodology here. The ranking only included banks that qualified according to the criteria described in the report.

    See below to see which banks made the list in your location.

    Australia

    1 ING Group
    2 Bank Australia
    3 Westpac
    4 Ubank
    5 NAB
    6 Alex Bank
    7 Newcastle Permanent Building Society
    8 People's Choice Credit Union
    9 Beyond Bank
    10 ME
    11 Suncorp
    12 MyState Bank
    13 Australian Military Bank
    14 Community First bank
    15 Heritage Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Dutch bank ING came out top in Australia, against a sea of local competition. Like most economies, Australians valued trust the most and were less concerned on the financial advice they were given.

    China

    1 China Merchants Bank
    2 Bank of China
    3 ICBC
    4 HSBC
    5 China Construction Bank
    6 Postal Savings Bank of China
    7 China Minsheng Bank
    8 Standard Chartered
    9 SPD Bank
    10 Bank of Communications
    11 Agricultural Bank of China
    12 UBS (China) Limited
    13 JPMorgan Chase Bank (China)
    14 China Everbright Bank
    15 Ping An Bank
    16 DBS Bank (China)
    17 Bank of Suzhou
    18 Bank of Jiangsu
    19 Chongqing Rural Commercial Bank
    20 Hang Seng Bank
    21 Hubei Rural Credit Union Association
    22 Huishang Bank
    23 East West Bank
    24 WeBank
    25 Hankou Bank (HKB)

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    China Merchants Bank, listed in both Shanghai and Hong Kong, earned the top spot in mainland China beating both domestic and foreign players.

    Hong Kong

    1 China Construction Bank
    2 China Minsheng Bank
    3 ICBC
    4 SPD Bank
    5 China Everbright Bank
    6 Bank of Communication
    7 HSBC
    8 CGB
    9 Livi Bank
    10 China Merchants Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    China Construction Bank, one of China's four major state-owned banking institutions, was ranked the top lender over foreign players like HSBC.

    India

    1 ICICI Bank
    2 HDFC Bank
    3 Axis Bank
    4 Kotak Mahindra Bank
    5 State Bank of India
    6 HSBC
    7 Paytm Payments Bank
    8 Standard Chartered
    9 Federal Bank
    10 IndusInd Bank
    11 Union Bank of India
    12 Karnataka Bank
    13 Punjab National Bank
    14 Bank of Baroda
    15 Bandhan Bank
    16 Fincare
    17 DSCB
    18 Kerala Gramin Bank
    19 Fino Payments Bank
    20 APCOB
    21 Punjab Gramin Bank
    22 IDFC First Bank
    23 UCO Bank
    24 RBLBank
    25 New India Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    ICICI bank, a leading private sector bank in India, was the top pick in the country despite strong competition from mostly local lenders.

    Indonesia

    1 Bank Central Asia
    2 Bank Mandiri
    3 Sea Bank
    4 Jago
    5 Raya Bank
    6 Bank Negara Indonesia
    7 United Overseas Bank
    8 PermataBank
    9 Cimb Niaga
    10 DBS
    11 Bank Rakyat Indonesia (BRI)
    12 BNC
    13 Bank Muamalat
    14 Jenius
    15 BCA Syariah
    16 HSBC
    17 BDP DIY
    18 Bank Aceh
    19 Standard Chartered
    20 Bank Sumsel Babel

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Bank Central Asia, Indonesia's largest private commercial bank, beat the competition to clinch the top spot. Customers valued both trust as well as digital services in their ranking.  

    Japan

    1 SBI Sumishin Net Bank
    2 Rakuten Bank
    3 Sony Bank
    4 Aeon Bank
    5 au Jibun Bank
    6 PayPay Bank
    7 Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation
    8 Senshu Ikeda Bank
    9 The Juhachi-Shinwa Bank
    10 Iyo Bank
    11 Ehime Bank
    12 Japan Post Bank
    13 Ja Bank
    14 Kyushu Labor Bank
    15 Hamamatsu Iwata Shinkin Bank
    16 Keiyo Bank
    17 Bank of Fukuoka
    18 Shinsei Bank
    19 The Nishi-Nippon City Bank
    20 Aozora Bank
    21 Saitama Resona Bank
    22 MUFG Bank
    23 Lawson Bank
    24 Gunma Bank
    25 Hachijuni Bank
    26 Rokin Bank
    27 Kiyo Bank
    28 Tokyo Star Bank
    29 The Bank of Okinawa
    30 Kyoto Chuo Shinkin Bank
    31 Abukuma Shinkin Bank
    32 North Pacific Bank
    33 Ogaki Kyoritsu Bank
    34 Tottori Bank
    35 Bank of Kyoto

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    SBI Sumishin Net Bank, a Japan-based company, managed to beat other domestic lenders to come out top. Japanese citizens valued trust as their most important criteria.

    Malaysia

    1 Maybank
    2 Standard Chartered
    3 Maybank Islamic
    4 HSBC
    5 RHB Islamic Bank
    6 Bank Islam
    7 AmBank Group Islamic
    8 OCBC Bank
    9 United Overseas Bank
    10 Hong Leong Islamic Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Maybank, which is the largest bank by market value in Malaysia, was the customers top pick against competition from domestic and foreign lenders.

    New Zealand

    1 Bank of New Zealand
    2 ASB Bank
    3 The Co-operative Bank
    4 SBS Bank
    5 Kiwibank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Bank of New Zealand, one of New Zealand's big four banks, earned the top spot among consumers who also valued trust as the most important criteria. In some economies, like New Zealand, there are fewer competitors in the market and the size of the banking market differs, thus only five banks made the list.

    Philippines

    1 Philippine National Bank
    2 Union Bank (Philippines)
    3 Maya Bank
    4 OFBank
    5 UnionDigital Bank
    6 UNO Digital Bank
    7 GoTyme Bank
    8 LANDBANK
    9 Metrobank
    10 BPI

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Philippine National Bank, one of the largest banks in the country, earned the top rank against competition from largely local lenders.

    Singapore

    1 DBS
    2 HSBC
    3 Citibank
    4 Bank of Singapore
    5 United Overseas Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Singapore's biggest bank DBS beat its domestic peers to clinch the top spot in the city-state. Given the small market size, there are fewer banking competitors as a result only five made the list.

    South Korea

    1 TossBank
    2 KakaoBank
    3 Kwangju Bank
    4 K bank
    5 Jeonbuk Bank
    6 KB Kookmin Bank
    7 Industrial Bank of Korea
    8 DGB Daegu Bank
    9 BNK Busan Bank
    10 KEB Hana Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Toss Bank, an internet-only bank based in South Korea, managed to fend off domestic competition to emerge as top lender in the country.

    Taiwan

    1 E.Sun Financial
    2 Bank SinoPac
    3 Standard Chartered
    4 CTBC Bank
    5 Taipei Fubon Bank
    6 Taishin International Bank
    7 HSBC
    8 Rakuten International Commercial Bank
    9 Cathay Financial
    10 Mega International Commercial Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Taiwan's E.Sun Financial, headquartered in Taipei, earned the top ranking with customers focused on trust and less concerned about financial advice.

    Thailand

    1 Kasikornbank
    2 Siam Commercial Bank
    3 Bank of Ayudhya
    4 United Overseas Bank
    5 Krung Thai Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Kasikornbank bank, Thailand's second-largest lender, came out top in the country. Only five banks made the list as there are fewer competitors and the size of banking market varies.

    Vietnam

    1 Techcombank
    2 Vietcombank
    3 BIDV
    4 Military Commercial Joint Stock Bank
    5 ACB
    6 Vietinbank
    7 VIB
    8 TPBank
    9 Sacombank
    10 VP Bank
    11 BVBank
    12 Shinhan Bank
    13 SeA Bank
    14 HDBank
    15 Ocean Bank

    Source: CNBC & Statista

    Vietnamese private lender Techcombank is the customers' top pick in the country, where trust again was the key factor for survey respondents.

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  • GameStop shares rise 18% — well off highs — after ‘Roaring Kitty’ posts account showing $116 million stake

    GameStop shares rise 18% — well off highs — after ‘Roaring Kitty’ posts account showing $116 million stake

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    Meme stock GameStop rallied again Monday on speculation that Keith Gill, the man who inspired 2021’s epic short squeeze, could have a huge position in the video game retailer.

    Shares were last about 18% higher to trade around $27 apiece. It jumped more than 70% at the open.

    Gill, who goes by DeepF——Value on Reddit and Roaring Kitty on YouTube and X, reappeared Sunday night, posting a screenshot of what could be his portfolio holding a significant amount of GameStop common shares and call options.

    The Reddit trading crowd’s favorite trader holds 5 million shares of GameStop worth $115.7 million as of Friday’s closing price, according to the account snapshot posted on Reddit’s r/SuperStonk forum. The account also showed a position of 120,000 call options in GameStop with a strike price of $20 that expire on June 21 that were purchased for about $5.68 each. GameStop shares closed Friday at $23.14.

    The post was not independently verified by CNBC. Notably, he didn’t post on the infamous WallStreetBets chatroom where he posted all his trade updates at the height of the GameStop mania over three years ago, although the username is the same one used.

    Around the same time Sunday night, Gill posted on X a cryptic picture of a reverse card from the game “Uno.”

    GameStop shares hit their lows of the session following a late-afternoon report by the Wall Street Journal that Morgan Stanley’s E*Trader broker was considering booting Gill because of concern what he was doing amounted to market manipulation. The WSJ cited people familiar with the matter.

    Shares of AMC jumped 13% on Monday after the movie theater chain climbed 48% in May amid the revival of the meme stock craze.

    Gill’s first return to social media three weeks ago sparked an eye-popping rally in GameStop with shares more than doubling in May alone. At the time, he simply posted a picture of a man in a chair leaning forward, but that was enough to trigger a buying frenzy among amateur traders.

    GameStop took advantage of the May rally by raising more than $900 million in a stock sale.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    GameStop, YTD

    The investor is a former marketer for Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance. In 2021, through YouTube videos and Reddit posts, Gill encouraged a band of retail traders to squeeze out short selling hedge funds in GameStop.

    The action got so wild at one point that brokerages including Robinhood had to restrict trading in the stock as it blew up their clearinghouse margin. The mania also led to a series of congressional hearings, featuring Gill, around brokers’ practices and gamifying retail trading.

    GameStop is still struggling with a transition to online gaming away from brick-and-mortar video game purchases, with investors banking on CEO Ryan Cohen to eventually reinvent the company.

    — CNBC’s Katrina Bishop contributed to this report.

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  • Savings app CEO says 85,000 accounts locked in fintech meltdown: ‘We never imagined a scenario like this’

    Savings app CEO says 85,000 accounts locked in fintech meltdown: ‘We never imagined a scenario like this’

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    Oscar Wong | Moment | Getty Images

    When Adam Moelis co-founded a fintech startup named Yotta in 2019, he wanted to give Americans a new way to save money to help them cushion the ups and downs of life.

    Instead, his company has inadvertently been a source of deep pain for thousands of customers who relied on Yotta accounts to receive paychecks, pay bills and save for emergencies.

    The crisis began May 11, when a dispute between two of Yotta’s banking partners — fintech middleman Synapse and Tennessee-based Evolve Bank & Trust — led to the lockup of accounts at Yotta and at least two dozen other startups. Synapse declared bankruptcy earlier this year after several key clients abandoned the firm amid disagreements over the tracking of customer funds.

    For the past three weeks, 85,000 Yotta customers with a combined $112 million in savings have been locked out of their accounts, Moelis told CNBC. The disruption had upended lives, forced users to borrow money for food and thrown upcoming events like surgeries or weddings into doubt, he said.

    “The stories are heartbreaking,” Moelis said. “We never imagined something like this could happen. We worked with banks that are members of the FDIC. We never imagined a scenario like this could play out and that no regulator would step in and help.”

    Boom & bust

    The ongoing mess has exposed the risks in a corner of fintech that grew in prominence during a boom in venture investment — and it will likely reverberate for years as regulators increase scrutiny of the space.

    The so-called “banking as a service” model allowed consumer fintech companies to quickly launch savings accounts and debit services, with firms like Synapse acting as a bridge between the startups and FDIC-backed banks that ultimately held deposits.

    The heart of the dispute between Synapse and Evolve Bank involves a foundational function of finance: keeping accurate ledgers of transactions and balances. Synapse and Evolve disagree on how much of Yotta’s funds are held at Evolve, and how much are held at other banks that Synapse worked with.

    Synapse hasn’t responded to requests for comment, and Evolve has blamed Synapse for the breakdown.

    The Synapse bankruptcy has mostly ensnared lesser-known consumer fintech firms, especially after larger fintech players including Mercury and Dave fled the Synapse platform in the past year.

    That has left Yotta, which encouraged users to save money with free weekly lottery-style sweepstakes, as one of the largest companies to be affected. Accounts at crypto firm Juno and at Copper, which offered savings accounts for families and teens, also have been frozen.

    Non-systemic meltdown

    Moelis, who has been in contact with other fintech principals impacted by the Synapse failure, estimates that at least 200,000 total customer accounts with balances are locked. While Synapse has said in court filings it has 10 million end users, it’s likely that active accounts are far smaller, Moelis said.

    Adam Moelis, Co-Founder at Yotta Savings.

    Courtesy: Yotta

    The fintech co-founder said he believes the relatively limited scope of the issue, and the fact that most of those affected aren’t wealthy, has given regulators clearance to let the situation play out. Last year, regulators swiftly intervened in the regional banking crisis that threatened uninsured deposits of startups and rich families, he noted.

    “To me, if this was happening at a larger scale, I think regulators would have done something by now,” he said. “We’ve got real, everyday Americans that aren’t necessarily wealthy and don’t have the ability to lobby that are being impacted.”

    The Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. have declined to comment on the issue. Representatives of the agencies have pointed to efforts they’ve made to encourage banks to manage the risks of using fintech partners.

    ‘Money doesn’t just disappear’

    But developments in the California bankruptcy court overseeing the Synapse failure give Moelis hope that at least some relief — a partial release of funds, perhaps — may be coming.

    Last week, former FDIC Chair Jelena McWilliams was named trustee over Synapse. Her job is to develop a plan to maintain Synapse systems and craft a solution “that allows funds to be returned to end users, to the rightful owners of those funds, as soon as humanly possible,” said Judge Martin Barash.

    For his part, Moelis said he doesn’t side with either Evolve or Synapse in their dispute — he just wants the situation resolved.

    “I don’t know who’s right or who’s wrong,” he said. “We know how much money came into the system, and we are certain that that’s the correct number. The money doesn’t just disappear; it has to be somewhere.”

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  • How East West Bancorp has gained an edge by serving the Asian American community

    How East West Bancorp has gained an edge by serving the Asian American community

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    Despite the heightened scrutiny around regional banks, little-known East West Bancorp has been able to pull ahead thanks to a key customer base: Asian Americans.

    East West Bancorp shares have eked out a small gain in 2024, up 2%. That’s a paltry advance when compared with the S&P 500, which is up 10%, but impressive considering the performance of the regional bank sector. The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) has fallen 9% over the same time period. 

    Since the day before Silicon Valley Bank failed in March 2023, East West has risen 10%, excluding dividends. East West currently yields 3%.

    The stock is a consensus buy on the Street, per LSEG, and analysts say the Southern California bank — which recently reported record deposits — can weather a slowdown thanks to its conservative capital management. What’s more, they say its leadership in the fastest-growing demographic in the U.S. bodes well for future growth. 

    “East West Bancorp targets Asian Americans, so you’re just less likely to switch banks if somebody literally speaks Mandarin, versus maybe another bank that doesn’t,” said CFRA Research analyst Alexander Yokum. “So, it’s a big advantage they have just from a stickiness perspective.”

    “Banking is obviously very competitive. There’s thousands of banks in the United States. And if you can compete off something besides price, you have an advantage,” he added. In April, the analyst reiterated a strong buy rating on the stock. His 12-month price target of $105 implies more than 40% upside from Thursday’s close.

    American dream = home ownership 

    Part of what’s helping East West succeed with Asian Americans goes all the way back to its origins. East West Bancorp was founded in 1973 as a federal savings and loan in the Los Angeles area to service the Chinese American and immigrant community struggling to obtain mortgages and business loans. 

    Since then, the bank has expanded significantly, with more than 100 locations across the U.S. and Asia, as well as almost $71 billion in assets as of March 31.

    But the residential mortgage business remains a key differentiator for East West, which works with recent immigrants who may not necessarily have all the documentation required by a more traditional bank for home ownership. These include certifications such as a social security number, tax ID number, or documented income and employment history.

    “Some of their customers that are coming over to the U.S., they might not have all the requirements for a conforming mortgage, and they’re utilizing East West to get a mortgage for their home,” said Wells Fargo analyst Timur Braziler. “But the company knows these borrowers, knows this sub sector of the population really well.” 

    That means the bank can charge more up front than it would for a conforming mortgage, which meets guidelines set by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Finance Agency, as well as charge a higher interest rate, said the analyst — who has a buy rating and $85 price target on the stock, according to FactSet. Wells Fargo’s target implies further upside of almost 16% over the next year.

    “It becomes pretty attractive when you can charge a higher rate for this mortgage, you’re getting better leverage, meaning the customer is putting more money down, into the property,” Braziler said. “And you’re doing it in an asset class not many others are participating in.” 

    In fact, finance chief Christopher Del Moral-Niles said East West aspires to have its residential mortgage loan portfolio make up one-third of its total loans; it’s currently just shy of that, at 29%.

    “All communities seem to share a desire to follow the American dream of homeownership, and if it wasn’t being made available to Chinese Americans, East West founders were going to find a way to make that possible, and they did,” Del Moral-Niles said. “And we continue to do that today in a way that other banks don’t.” 

    “I think that’s an opportunity that we feel has been a core component of our offering, and is a core differentiator of our solutions,” Del Moral-Niles added.

    That has helped East West hold onto its customer base, especially as it has evolved from the Cantonese-speaking population that first came to the U.S. to a community reflecting a broader diaspora. 

    Steven Leung, who lives in New York City’s Chinatown, said his oldest business account is with East West Bancorp, where he says he’s banked for more than 20 years.

    “We know all the personnel here already, so it’s really helpful. We need something, they can help us,” Leung said. “We know all the teller, all the bank manager, all the personnel here.” 

    Cross-border trade 

    East West Bancorp has also tried to become the go-to commercial lender for Chinese American entrepreneurs here and abroad, an international orientation that unusual for a regional U.S. bank.

    It first opened a location in Beijing in 2003, and then based its China operations out of Shanghai in 2009. It’s one of just a few U.S.-based banks to have a full banking license in China. East West also drives cross-border activity between the U.S. and other Asian countries, such as Thailand and Vietnam.

    “That’s a role usually played sometimes by larger international banks, but for this sub market — for the Asian community, smaller businesses — we have played a key role, and have grown with many of those to be a sizable player in that cross border market,” Del Moral-Niles said. “Which is somewhat unique for a regional bank.”

    To be sure, strong ties with China are also a potential challenge for East West as geopolitical and trade tensions rise between Washington and Beijing. But CFO Del Moral-Niles is quick to remind people East West is centrally a U.S. based bank with just four branches in Asia.

    Strong capital management 

    For investors, what’s most attractive about the regional bank is the conservative approach of its customer base to savings, as well as by its leaders to capital management. 

    “Asian Americans are, generally speaking, above-average income, below average in terms of defaulting on their loans,” CFRA’s Yokum said. “So, it is a good demographic to go after.” 

    Meanwhile, East West Bancorp’s Common Equity Tier 1 (CET-1) ratio, is a capital ratio that measures a bank’s capital in relation to its risk-weighted assets, stands at 13%. A typical bank has a CET-1 ratio between 10.5% and 11%, Yokum said. 

    “In part because the bank founders were fairly conservative, and in part because [CEO Dominic Ng] is fairly conservative, the entire approach has been first and foremost, ‘let’s remain one of the strongest, best capitalized banks in the industry.’ From that position of strength, we can do what we need to do to drive the business,” CFO Del Moral-Niles said. 

    “And when your customers come to recognize you as that strong bank, then, when things start to go sideways for other banks, you become an attractive alternative for them, and a place where people go to when things get rocky for others,” Del Moral-Niles added. “And that’s worked out well for us over time, and certainly in the last year.”

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  • Oil alliance OPEC+ could extend production cuts this weekend as focus shifts away from Middle East tensions, sources say

    Oil alliance OPEC+ could extend production cuts this weekend as focus shifts away from Middle East tensions, sources say

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    The OPEC logo on the building of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.

    Thomas Coex | Afp | Getty Images

    The oil-producing Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies could extend existing output cuts this week, delegates and analysts told CNBC, even as focus shifts from Middle East tensions to summer demand.

    The group, collectively known as OPEC+, was set to convene in person in Vienna on June 1, but last week moved the encounter virtually to June 2.

    OPEC+ producers are currently implementing a combined 5.86 million barrels per day of supply cuts. Just 2 million barrels per day of these cuts represent unanimous commitments under OPEC group policy, and expire at the end of this year.

    The remainder are reduced voluntarily by a subset of the alliance. A cut of 1.66 million per barrel is in place until the end of 2024, and 2.2 million barrels per day of supplies have been trimmed until the end of the second quarter. Market participants are watching whether this latter cut will be extended for another quarter, amid projected demand hikes.

    “Come June, China would be largely out of refinery maintenance, U.S. consumption is improving as summer moves closer, so June should already see negative crude balances. And then August is the peak month for tightness,” Viktor Katona, lead crude analyst at Kpler, told CNBC.

    The OPEC+ coalition is also eyeing individual members’ quota compliance, asking overproducers to implement additional cuts. Iraq and Kazakhstan have detailed compensation plans.

    Extension

    “I think that the clever thing for OPEC+ would be to gradually unwind the voluntary cuts to limit the upside price pressure, to prevent refilling inflation,” Jorge Leon, senior vice president of Rystad Energy’s Oil Market Research, told CNBC. “However, I think that the market right now has priced in a full extension of the voluntary cuts. So I think that is what, probably, they will do.”

    He added, “If they decide to fully extend the voluntary cuts, and there is perfect compliance, and they do the full compensation, and then, if, I think prices could reach closer to $100 per barrel this summer.”

    Energy security concerns fueled global inflation in the wake of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and were further stoked after the conflict in Gaza threatened a broader spillover in the oil-rich Middle East, while frequent maritime attacks by Yemen’s Houthi militants disrupted trade transit in the Red Sea.

    A high-inflation environment and tight monetary policy in turn reined in oil demand, but central banks have signaled readiness to lower interest rates in the second half of the year.

    Tamas Varga, analyst at PVM Oil Associates, told CNBC that the OPEC+ supply restrictions will likely remain in place for the third quarter, adding, “I also believe that the producer group will emphasize that anyone who did not comply with the quota will have to make amends. And I believe that OPEC+ will only ease the supply constraints when they see obvious signs of global oil inventories depleting.”

    Kpler’s Katona aligned with the views, but noted that heavyweights Saudi Arabia, Russia and the United Arab Emirates, who participate in the voluntary reductions, could seek to scrap the latter curbs toward the end of the year.

    “Further down the line into 2025, unwinding cuts might be challenging for prices as incremental production from Guyana, Brazil, Canada will saturate the markets,” he said, flagging new Floating Production Storage and Offloading facilities due to come online. “This year there’s no new FPSO in Guyana, whilst next year it starts up a new one in [third-quarter] 2025. Brazil, likewise, has one FPSO starting up this year whilst next year it will be a bonanza of new capacity.”

    S&P Global Commodity Insights: We expect OPEC+ to extend cuts through year-end

    Rising competing supplies have reduced the market prominence of OPEC+, one OPEC+ delegate acknowledged, while analysts signaled that the group’s ongoing output cuts allows unfettered producers to capture their market share.

    Priced in

    Oil prices have largely languished range-bound in the first half of the year, under ongoing threat of spikes from developments in the Middle East. Regional escalations could top prices with a risk premium of up to $10 per barrel, Rystad’s Jorge Leon noted – while OPEC+ delegates told CNBC that the situation in the Gaza Strip is still adding a little pressure, but that the market has already absorbed the majority of its effect.

    Katona likewise noted that the Gaza crisis “will seemingly persist for longer than everyone expected but it doesn’t really have an imprint on OPEC+ coherence and policy.”                     

    One OPEC+ delegate meanwhile said that the unexpected death of Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi represented a tragic accident that could not be interpreted as a risk to the market, especially given that his successor will likely pursue similar politics.

    “I think the geopolitical risk premium has subsided and I think that the tension between Israel and Hamas will only support prices if it will have an obvious impact on oil production or oil flows, which might come in the form of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, or attacks on oil infrastructure in the region, something which does not look plausible at the moment,” Varga said.

    OPEC+ must also balance its relationship with the U.S., which has previously blasted the coalition’s supply cuts amid concerns over gasoline prices. The Biden administration last week said it will release 1 million barrels of gasoline from reserves in a bid to curb prices at the pump. The U.S. undertook similar crude releases from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve Stocks during the Covid-19 pandemic, but one OPEC+ delegate noted such measures are unlikely to have an impact beyond price relief during the summer. The U.S. typically seeks to replenish the emergency stockpile of its state reserves.

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  • Bank of America CEO says U.S. consumers and businesses have turned cautious on spending

    Bank of America CEO says U.S. consumers and businesses have turned cautious on spending

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    Bank of America Chairman and CEO Brian Thomas Moynihan speaks during the U.S. Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee oversight hearing on Wall Street firms, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., December 6, 2023. 

    Evelyn Hockstein | Reuters

    U.S. consumers and businesses alike have turned cautious about spending this year because of elevated inflation and interest rates, according to Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan.

    Whether it’s households or small- to medium-sized businesses, Bank of America clients are slowing down the rate of purchases made for everything from hard goods to software, Moynihan said Thursday at a financial conference held in New York.

    Consumer spending via card payments, checks and ATM withdrawals has grown about 3.5% this year to roughly $4 trillion, Moynihan said. That’s a sharp slowdown from the nearly 10% growth rate seen in May 2023, he said.

    “Both of our customer bases that have a lot to do with how the American economy runs are saying, ‘You know what? I’m being careful, slowing things down,'” Moynihan said, referring to consumers and businesses.

    The slowdown began last summer and is consistent with the “very low growth” environment of the period from 2016 through 2018, he said.

    Nearly a year after the last Federal Reserve rate increase, consumers and businesses are wrestling with inflation and borrowing costs that remain higher than they are accustomed to. The Fed began efforts to tame inflation by hiking its benchmark rate starting in March 2022, hoping it could slow the economy without tipping it into recession.

    Many economists believe the Fed is on track to pull off that feat, which has helped the stock market reach new highs this year. But consumers are still grappling with higher prices for goods and services, and that has impacted U.S. companies from McDonald’s to discount retailers as Americans adjust their behavior.

    Food shoppers are hitting up more store locations in search of deals, according to Moynihan. “They’re going to three grocery stores instead of two, is one of the stats we see,” he said.

    The now-tepid growth in overall spending is being propped up by travel and entertainment, while “other things have moderated, except for insurance payments,” Moynihan said. Growth in rent payments has slowed, he noted.

    “We’ve got to keep the consumer in the game in the U.S. economy, because [they’re] such a big part of it,” Moynihan said. “They’re getting a little more tenuous, and that is due to everything going on around them.”

    The same is true for small- and medium-sized businesses, the Bank of America CEO said. His company is the second-largest U.S. bank by assets, after JPMorgan Chase. Moynihan and other bank CEOs have a bird’s-eye view of the economy, given their coast-to-coast coverage of households and companies.

    Business owners are saying, “‘I still feel good about my overall business, but I’m not hiring as much. I’m not buying equipment as fast. I’m not making software purchases as fast,'” Moynihan said.

    The bank’s economists believe that inflation will take until the end of next year to get under control and that the Fed will begin cutting interest rates later this year, Moynihan said. The U.S. economy will probably grow at around a 2% level, avoiding recession, he added.

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  • Wells Fargo CEO talks up reasons to love the stock — plus, what’s behind the market drop

    Wells Fargo CEO talks up reasons to love the stock — plus, what’s behind the market drop

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    Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street.

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  • Jim Cramer likes bullish calls on Viking and Airbnb but is cautious on this bank

    Jim Cramer likes bullish calls on Viking and Airbnb but is cautious on this bank

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  • Wells Fargo goes on quiet hiring spree to expand from lending. What it means for the stock

    Wells Fargo goes on quiet hiring spree to expand from lending. What it means for the stock

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    A woman walks past Wells Fargo bank in New York City, U.S., March 17, 2020.

    Jeenah Moon | Reuters

    Wells Fargo is breaking out of its lending roots. The bank has quietly gone on a hiring spree to grab a bigger slice of the profitable investment banking business long dominated by its Wall Street rivals.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Dow’s worst day in 2024, Nvidia shares pop

    CNBC Daily Open: Dow’s worst day in 2024, Nvidia shares pop

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    Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 19, 2024. 

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    This report is from today’s CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Dow sinks 600 points
    The
    Dow Jones Industrial Average suffered its worst day of the year, dropping over 600 points on Thursday. Boeing led the decline on the Dow. Despite reaching intraday record highs earlier, both the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite ended the day in negative territory. Nvidia‘s blockbuster earnings and guidance failed to prop up markets, with more than 400 stocks on the S&P 500 trading lower. Treasury yields extended gains as the Fed delays rate cuts, while oil prices bounced back after a three-day decline.

    Nvidia pops
    Shares of Nvidia soared as much as 11% after the AI chipmaker’s earnings that beat Wall Street’s estimates. It also issued strong guidance as demand for its artificial intelligence accelerators remains robust. Shares passed $1,000 for the first time, reaching an all-time high of $1,063.20 during intraday trading, and are up about 111% this year. 

    Musk disapproves China EV tariffs
    Tesla CEO Elon Musk said he’s not in favor of tariffs on Chinese electric vehicles, which were imposed last week by President Joe Biden. “Neither Tesla nor I asked for these tariffs,” Musk said in response to a question from CNBC’s Karen Tso. “Tesla competes quite well in the market in China with no tariffs and no preferential support. I’m in favor of no tariffs.”

    Boeing sinks
    Shares of Boeing dropped 7.6% after CFO Brian West said the company would continue to burn through cash this year.  Delivery of new planes, a major source of revenue, will not improve in the second quarter. Boeing is facing a host of production issues related to safety concerns. The company burned through nearly $4 billion in cash in the first quarter and West believes that figure could be similar or “possibly a little worse” in the second quarter.

    Asia-Pacific markets slide
    Stocks in the Asia-Pacific region fell on Friday as investors assessed inflation data from Japan. The Nikkei 225 fell 1% as inflation slowed for the second straight month. While the Bank of Japan is under pressure to raise interest rates, inflation is expected to push higher in the coming months. South Korea’s Kospi dropped 1% after a report said Samsung Electronics’ new chip wasn’t ready for Nvidia. Samsung shares fell 2.4%. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dipped 1.3%, mainland China’s CSI 300 index declined 0.4%, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 shed 1.1%. 

    [PRO] What’s next for Nvidia?
    Wall Street analysts are revising their price targets for Nvidia upwards after its blowout earnings and guidance. Some had feared a slowdown in demand as Amazon and Microsoft wait for Nvidia’s more powerful AI chips. Nvidia’s decision to split its stock could provide more upside for investors.

    The bottom line

    Nvidia's blockbuster earnings and forecast couldn't stop Wall Street from taking a late dive. Nvidia held up well, its stock closing above $1,000, up 9% on the day after reassuring investors its sales of graphics chips that power artificial intelligence weren't a flash in the pan.

    What comes next for Nvidia is a 10-for-1 stock split; Post-split shares will start trading on June 10. Stock split will help retail investors, put off by a share price of a thousand-plus dollars, to buy them at around $100. Nvidia shares are up more than 240% in the last 12 months.

    CNBC's Ryan Ermey explains more on the psychology of the move and how the mechanism of the stock split works.

    So what's freaking markets? According to the Charles Schwab Trader Sentiment Survey, the bullish outlook among traders fell to 46% from 53% in the second quarter.

    "Traders began the year feeling pretty confident that the economy was improving and Fed rate cuts would be quick to follow," said James Kostulias, head of Trading Services at Charles Schwab. "But inflation concerns have jumped significantly."

    Before the latest minutes from the Federal Reserve meeting, suggesting concern about stubborn inflation, some strategists had estimated the Fed could cut interest rates at least three times this year as prices cooled. Now, traders are lowering their expectations to just one reduction, possibly in September or November.

    As the first-quarter earnings season winds down, investors are shifting their attention to geopolitical concerns.

    "The Fed has been pretty clear that they're not going to cut rates, so you don't have this, 'Will they or won't they' [scenario] keeping everybody on edge. We are going to start to see a turn to some of this geopolitical stuff, whether it's elections or the two ongoing wars," said Melissa Brown, managing director of applied research at SimCorp.

    While events such as the U.S. and UK elections don't necessarily result in economic impacts, they do increase uncertainty, Brown noted.

    "People may go from saying 'I'm just going to buy now,' to, 'Look, I'm gonna wait and see the outcome of this before I decide to commit more money to market,'" Brown said. 

    The Daily Open will be back on Tuesday as U.S. markets will be closed for Memorial Day on Monday. 

     — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Ryan Ermey, Jeff Cox, Sophie Kinderlin, Spencer Kimball, Ece Yildirim, Sarah Whitton and Ryan Browne contributed to this report.

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  • CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia shares top $1,000 on AI boom

    CNBC Daily Open: Nvidia shares top $1,000 on AI boom

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    A sign is posted in front of Nvidia headquarters on May 21, 2024 in Santa Clara, California. 

    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    This 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. Like what you see? You can subscribe here.

    What you need to know today

    Nvidia to split stock, sales to soar
    Shares of
    Nvidia rose more than 7%, topping $1,000 for the first time, in after-hours trading after its first-quarter earnings and sales beat analysts’ expectations. The chipmaker expects second-quarter sales of $28 billion, compared with estimates of $26.6 billion. The company plans to split its stock 10 for 1.

    Wall Street sinks on inflation fears
    The Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged more than 200 points, marking its worst day so far this month as minutes of the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting stoked concerns about sticky inflation. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite also lost groundTreasury yields inched higher as the prospect of rate cuts was pushed further out. Oil prices fell for the third consecutive day ahead of an OPEC meeting.  

    Fed inflation worries
    Minutes of the Federal Reserve’s latest rate-setting meeting showed the central bank was concerned about the “lack of progress” in bringing inflation closer to its 2% target, sending the Dow down 200 points. The minutes also revealed that “various participants mentioned a willingness to tighten policy further should risks to inflation materialize in a way that such an action became appropriate.” The Fed policymakers maintained the benchmark borrowing rate within the 5.25%-5.5% range.

    Alexa’s AI makeover
    Amazon plans to upgrade its Alexa voice assistant with generative artificial intelligence and charge a monthly subscription for the service, according to people familiar with the plans. The move comes after Google and OpenAI launched similar products. Subscription for the new AI-powered Alexa will not be included in the $139 per year Prime offering. 

    Vivek takes Buzzfeed stake
    Buzzfeed shares shot up 20% after the former GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy bought an 8% stake in the online media company. In a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Ramaswamy said he would talk with Buzzfeed’s management about every aspect of the company’s operations, including an acquisition by a third party. The media outlet went public in 2021 and has seen its shares fall 94% since then.

    [PRO] Under-the-radar AI plays
    Hedge funds are loading up on these lesser-known beneficiaries from the artificial intelligence boom while cutting back on their exposure to mega caps, according to Goldman Sachs. The Wall Street investment bank analyzed the holdings of 707 hedge funds with $2.7 trillion of gross equity positions at the start of the second quarter.

    The bottom line

    There were two major announcements after the markets closed on Wednesday.

    First from Prime Minister Rishi Sunak of the United Kingdom, the world's sixth-largest economy with a GDP of about $3 trillion, calling a general election, which barely had any market impact. The pound was largely unchanged.

    The second was from a 31-year-old graphics chip company valued at $2.3 trillion, Nvidia, which delivered its much-anticipated earnings — and saw its shares soar to record highs.  

    There were expectations of a $200 billion swing one way or the other in the company's stock, depending on the outcome of its earnings. In after-hours trading, the stock rose more than 7%. Nvidia's shares are up 92% this year and 200% over the last 12 months. Nvidia is the bedrock of the artificial intelligence revolution, with Google, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft estimated to be spending $200 billion buying up its AI chips. 

    "The next industrial revolution has begun," Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang said in a statement. "We are poised for our next wave of growth." 

    Dan Niles, founder of Niles Investment Management, has likened Nvidia to Cisco in the 1990s. Cisco was the go-to company for internet gear. From 1994 to its peak in 2000, Cisco's shares rose 4000%. Niles believes Nvidia will go through a similar cycle.

    "We're still really early in the AI build," Niles told CNBC's "Money Matters" on Monday. "I think the revenue will go up three to four times from current levels over the next three to four years, and I think the stock goes with it."

    "If you look at today for the AI build-out, who's really driving that?" Niles said. "It's the most profitable companies on the planet — it's Microsoft, it's Google, it's Meta, and they're driving this."

    Crucially, Nvidia said it expects second-quarter sales to soar to $28 billion, up from the $26.6 billion analysts were expecting. Even with the prospects of increased competition from Advanced Micro Devices and Google building its own custom chip, Piper Sandler analysts expect Nvidia to keep at least 75% of the AI accelerator market.

    Nvidia's done everything that's been asked of it, now it's over to Wall Street to decide if it's time to crack through more milestones or consolidate.

    — CNBC's Kif Leswing, Jeff Cox, Kate Rooney, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailia Han, Yun Li and Rohan Goswami contributed to this report.

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  • Nvidia crushes sky-high expectations and charts continued AI-driven dominance for years to come

    Nvidia crushes sky-high expectations and charts continued AI-driven dominance for years to come

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    Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference (GTC) in San Jose, California, US, on Tuesday, March 19, 2024. 

    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    In what was the most anticipated quarter this earnings season, Nvidia far outpaced lofty expectations on the top and bottom lines. Even better was a big revenue guide and a broader vision from CEO Jensen Huang that reinforced the notion that companies and countries are partnering with the AI chip powerhouse to shift $1 trillion worth of traditional data centers to accelerated computing.

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  • Fintech nightmare: ‘I have nearly $38,000 tied up’ after Synapse bankruptcy

    Fintech nightmare: ‘I have nearly $38,000 tied up’ after Synapse bankruptcy

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    A dispute between a fintech startup and its banking partners has ensnared potentially millions of Americans, leaving them without access to their money for more than a week, according to recent court documents.

    Since last year, Synapse — an Andreessen Horowitz-backed startup that serves as a middle-man between customer-facing fintech brands and FDIC-backed banks — has had disagreements with several of its partners about how much in customer balances it owed.

    The situation deteriorated in April after Synapse declared bankruptcy following the exodus of several key partners. On May 11, Synapse cut off access to a technology system that enabled lenders, including Evolve Bank & Trust, to process transactions and account information, according to court filings.

    That has left users of several fintech services stranded with no access to their funds, according to testimonials filed this week in a California bankruptcy court.

    One customer, Chris Buckler, said in a May 21 filing that his funds at crypto app Juno were locked because of the Synapse bankruptcy.

    “I am increasingly desperate and don’t know where to turn,” Bucker wrote. “I have nearly $38,000 tied up as a result of the halting of transaction processing. This money took years to save up.”

    Until recently, Synapse, which calls itself the biggest “banking as a service” provider, helped a wide swath of the U.S. fintech universe provide services like checking accounts and debit cards. Former partners included Mercury, Dave and Juno, well-known fintech firms that catered to segments including startups, gig workers and crypto users.

    Synapse had contracts with 20 banks and 100 fintechs, resulting in about 10 million end users, according to an April filing from founder and CEO Sankaet Pathak.

    Pathak didn’t immediately return an email seeking comment. A spokesman for Evolve declined to comment, instead pointing to a statement on the bank’s website that read, in part:

    “Synapse’s abrupt shutdown of essential systems without notice and failure to provide necessary records needlessly jeopardized end users by hindering our ability to verify transactions, confirm end user balances, and comply with applicable law,” the bank said.

    It is unclear why Synapse switched the system off, and an explanation couldn’t be found in filings.

    The freeze-up of customer funds exposes the vulnerabilities in the banking as a service, or BAAS, partnership model and a possible blind spot for regulatory oversight.

    The BAAS model, used most notably by the pre-IPO fintech firm Chime, allows Silicon Valley-style startups to tap the abilities of small FDIC-backed banks. Together, the ecosystem helped these companies compete against the giants of American banking.

    Customers mistakenly believed that because funds are ultimately held at real banks, they were as safe and available as any other FDIC-insured accounts, said Jason Mikula, a consultant and newsletter writer who has tracked this case closely.

    “This is 10 million-plus people who can’t pay their mortgages, can’t buy their groceries … This is another order of disaster,” Mikula said.

    Regulators have yet to take a role in the dispute, partly because the underlying banks involved haven’t failed, the point at which the FDIC would usually intervene to make customers whole, Mikula added.

    The FDIC and Federal Reserve didn’t immediately return calls seeking comment.

    In pleading with the judge in this case, Martin Barash, to help the impacted customers, Buckler noted that while he had other financial accounts besides the one that is frozen, others are not as lucky.

    “So far the federal government is not willing to help us,” Buckler wrote. “As you heard, there are millions affected who are in far worse straits.”

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  • CFPB says buy now, pay later firms must comply with U.S. credit card laws

    CFPB says buy now, pay later firms must comply with U.S. credit card laws

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    Rohit Chopra, director of the CFPB, testifies during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on June 14, 2023.

    Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau declared on Wednesday that customers of the burgeoning buy now, pay later industry have the same federal protections as users of credit cards.

    The agency unveiled what it called an “interpretive rule” that deemed BNPL lenders essentially the same as traditional credit card providers under the decades-old Truth in Lending Act.

    That means the industry — currently dominated by fintech firms like Affirm, Klarna and PayPal — must make refunds for returned products or canceled services, must investigate merchant disputes and pause payments during those probes, and must provide bills with fee disclosures.

    “Regardless of whether a shopper swipes a credit card or uses Buy Now, Pay Later, they are entitled to important consumer protections under long-standing laws and regulations already on the books,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in a release.

    The CFPB, which last week was handed a crucial victory by the Supreme Court, has pushed hard against the U.S. financial industry, issuing rules that slashed credit card late fees and overdraft penalties. The agency, formed in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, began investigating the BNPL industry in late 2021.

    Surging debt

    The use of digital installment loan-type services has ballooned in recent years, with volumes surging tenfold from 2019 to 2021, Chopra said during a media briefing. Among CFPB concerns are that some users are given more debt than they can handle, he said.

    “Buy now, pay later is now a major part of our consumer credit market as these loans provide a meaningful alternative to other options for consumers,” Chopra told reporters. “The CFPB wants to make sure that these new competitive offerings are not gaining an advantage by sidestepping longstanding rights and responsibilities enshrined under the law.”

    It’s unclear how many BNPL providers don’t comply with refund and dispute requirements; on the website for Affirm, for instance, there are pages for both activities.

    While the CFPB acknowledged that many BNPL players offer those services, the new rule will ensure that they are applied consistently across the industry, a senior agency official told reporters.

    The new rule will go into effect in 60 days, and the agency is now accepting public commentary on it, the official said.

    Shares of Affirm were off 5.2% Wednesday, while PayPal slipped 3%.

    Litigation ahead?

    For some time, BNPL providers have anticipated greater regulation, including efforts to apply existing card rules onto the industry. In March, Klarna published a post arguing that its no-interest product was less risky for customers than credit cards — which can often come with steep interest rates — thus requiring less oversight.

    “Instead of trying to jam BNPL into an outdated credit card framework that does little to actually protect consumers, leaders in Washington should draft and implement a framework for BNPL that is proportionate to the risk it poses,” Klarna said at the time.

    In a statement provided Wednesday, Klarna called the CFPB move a “significant step forward” in BNPL regulation, adding that it already adhered to standards for refunds, disputes and billing information.

    “But it is baffling that the CFPB has overlooked the fundamental differences between interest-free BNPL and credit cards, whose whole business model is based on trapping customers into a cycle of paying sky-high interest rates month after month,” said a Klarna spokesperson.

    An Affirm spokesman said the company was “encouraged” that the CFPB was promoting industry standards, “many of which already reflect how Affirm operates,” and that it was engaged with the regulator on improving how it operates.

    “Affirm’s success is aligned with responsibly extending access to credit as we do not charge late or hidden fees,” the spokesman said. “We urge other companies that offer buy now, pay later products to live up to the industry’s promise to provide consumers with a more flexible and transparent alternative to other payment options.”

    The industry’s stance raises the possibility that, like other financial players including payday lenders, BNPL companies could push back against the CFPB rule by suing the agency.

    The CFPB rule capping credit card late fees at $8 per incident, which was set to go into effect this month, was challenged and paused by a federal judge recently.

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