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Tag: Financial Investment Services

  • Founder of failed crypto exchange FTX, Bankman-Fried, jailed in New York

    Founder of failed crypto exchange FTX, Bankman-Fried, jailed in New York

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    FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried was sent to jail Friday to await trial after a bail hearing for the fallen cryptocurrency wiz left a judge convinced that he had repeatedly tried to influence witnesses against him.

    U.S. District Judge Lewis A. Kaplan ordered Bankman-Fried’s bail revoked after prosecutors said he’d tried to harass a key witness in his fraud case last month when he showed a journalist her private writings and in January when he reached out to the general counsel for FTX with an encrypted communication.

    His lawyers insisted he shouldn’t be jailed for trying to protect his reputation against a barrage of unfavorable news stories.

    Kaplan said he had concluded there was probable cause to believe Bankman-Fried had tried to “tamper with witnesses at least twice” since his December arrest.

    A defense lawyer said an appeal of the incarceration order would be filed and asked for an immediate stay of the order.

    The 31-year-old has been under house arrest at his parents’ home in Palo Alto, California, since his December extradition from the Bahamas on charges that he defrauded investors in his businesses and illegally diverted millions of dollars’ worth of cryptocurrency from customers using his FTX exchange.

    Bankman-Fried’s $250 million bail package severely restricts his internet and phone usage.

    Two weeks ago, prosecutors surprised Bankman-Fried’s attorneys by demanding his incarceration, saying he violated those rules by giving The New York Times the private writings of Caroline Ellison, his former girlfriend and the ex-CEO of Alameda Research, a cryptocurrency trading hedge fund that was one of his businesses.

    Prosecutors maintained he was trying to sully her reputation and influence prospective jurors who might be summoned for his October trial.

    Ellison pleaded guilty in December to criminal charges carrying a potential penalty of 110 years in prison. She has agreed to testify against Bankman-Fried as part of a deal that could lead to a more lenient sentence.

    Bankman-Fried’s lawyers argued he probably failed in a quest to defend his reputation because the article cast Ellison in a sympathetic light. They also said prosecutors exaggerated the role Bankman-Fried had in the article.

    They said prosecutors were trying to get their client locked up by offering evidence consisting of “innuendo, speculation, and scant facts.”

    Since prosecutors made their detention request, Kaplan has imposed a gag order barring public comments by people participating in the trial, including Bankman-Fried.

    David McCraw, a lawyer for the Times, had written to the judge, noting the First Amendment implications of any blanket gag order, as well as public interest in Ellison and her cryptocurrency trading firm.

    Ellison confessed to a central role in a scheme defrauding investors of billions of dollars that went undetected, McGraw said.

    “It is not surprising that the public wants to know more about who she is and what she did and that news organizations would seek to provide to the public timely, pertinent, and fairly reported information about her, as The Times did in its story,” McGraw said.

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  • Icahn Enterprises’ stock slides 30% after company halves quarterly distribution to $1 per unit

    Icahn Enterprises’ stock slides 30% after company halves quarterly distribution to $1 per unit

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    Icahn Enterprises L.P.’s stock tumbled 30% on Friday, after the company said it’s cutting its quarterly distribution to $1 from $2 previously.

    The company
    IEP,
    -23.23%

    made the announcement as it reported a surprise quarterly loss with Chairman Carl Icahn, the billionaire activist investor, blaming the news squarely on one thing.

    “I believe the second quarter partially reflected the impact of short selling on companies we control or invest in, which I attribute to the misleading and self-serving Hindenburg report concerning our company, “Icahn said in a statement.

    “It also reflected the size of the hedge book relative to our activist strategy.”

    Icahn was referring to a report by short seller Hindenburg Research published on May 2 that accused IEP, Icahn’s publicly traded investing arm, of overstating asset values. Hindenburg also revealed that Icahn himself had borrowed from the company, among other issues.

    That had been disclosed in a footnote to financials that Wall Street had overlooked.

    Read: What we know about Carl Icahn’s margin loan

    See also: Carl Icahn rebuts short seller Hindenburg Research’s report. It’s already cost his company $6 billion in market cap.

    The report shaved billions off IEP’s market cap and was firmly rebutted by Icahn, who recently said he has finalized amended loan agreements with banks that untie his personal loans from the trading price of his company’s shares.

    Icahn said IEP has paid out distributions for 73 continuous quarters and does not intend for a “misleading” report to interfere with that practice.

    “The payment of future distributions will be determined by the board of directors quarterly, based upon current economic conditions and business performance and other factors that it deems relevant at the time that declaration of a distribution is considered,” said Icahn.

    On a call with analysts, IEP’s Chief Executive David Willetts highlighted the long-term “lumpiness” of the business, given its many moving parts.

    “We have large wins at times and we have volatility, we’re not a company that necessarily has predictable cash flow, there are no guarantees,” he told analysts.

    But IEP is not changing its strategy on distributions, he added.

    The stock was headed for the biggest one-day selloff since it went public 36 years ago. The next biggest drop was 20.0% on May 2, when the Hindenburg Research report was released.

    The company, which is 84% owned by Icahn and his son, Brett, offers exposure to Icahn’s personal portfolio of public and private companies, including petroleum refineries, car-parts makers, food-packaging companies and real estate. Its unit holders are mostly retail investors.

    The fund has performed poorly in the past decade. For many years Icahn has publicly expressed suspicion of the bull market that raged around him. He shorted the stock market in a big way as a hedge against his long activist positions. Going into 2021, for example, Icahn’s investment fund had a short exposure of 142%, SEC filings show.

    For more, see: Carl Icahn admits he was wrong to take a huge short position on the market that lost $9 billion

    Hindenburg, the short selling firm founded by Nate Anderson, took a victory lap on Elon Musk’s X platform, the renamed Twitter, noting that it had predicted that IEP’s poor investment performance would eventually force it to cut the distribution.

    Icahn has himself waged endless activist campaigns against companies and their management teams, and most recently succeeded in his effort to shake up management at gene sequencing test maker Illumina Inc.
    ILMN,
    +1.26%

    In June, that company accepted the resignation of its Chief Executive and director, Francis DeSouza, ending a monthslong heated battle over its $7.1 billion acquisition of cancer test maker Grail that has faced regulatory hurdles, as the Associated Press reported.

    Icahn had urged shareholders to vote out its chairman, John Thompson, and DeSouza. Company shareholders voted out Thompson in late May.

    Past activist campaigns by Icahn’s company have generated billions of dollars for shareholders and helped boards and CEOs capture untapped value, Icahn has argued, citing Reynolds, Netflix
    NFLX,
    +0.14%
    ,
    Forest Labs, Apple
    AAPL,
    -4.80%
    ,
     CVR Energy 
    CVI,
    -0.98%
    ,
     Herbalife
    HLF,
    -0.69%

    eBay
    EBAY,
    -1.28%
    ,
     Tropicana, Cheniere
    LNG,
    -0.95%

    and Occidental 
    OXY,
    +2.11%

     as examples.

    IEP said it had a loss of $269 million, or 72 cents per depositary unit, for the second quarter, wider than the loss of $128 million, or 41 cents per depositary unit, posted in the year-earlier period.

    Revenue fell to $2.684 billion from $3.796 billion.

    The FactSet consensus was for income of 25 cents per depositary unit and revenue of $2.657 billion.

    Meanwhile, investors are waiting to see the outcome of a federal probe of IEP’s corporate governance and other issues, which was disclosed along with first-quarter earnings.

    IEP’s stock is down 35% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
    SPX
    has gained 18%.

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  • Manufacturing stalled in the first half. But now the stage is set for a recovery, says JPMorgan.

    Manufacturing stalled in the first half. But now the stage is set for a recovery, says JPMorgan.

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    The Institute for Supply Management’s manufacturing index is due for release Tuesday, which outside of inflationary periods (i.e., now), tends to be one of the more important economic indicators for financial markets, given its record as a bellwether.

    ISM manufacturing data during the current rate-hike cycle (in red) has lagged other periods.

    Even compared to other rate-hike cycles, the ISM manufacturing series has been one of the worst in history, points out Jason Daw, head of North America rates strategy at RBC Dominion Securities. Daw makes the case that the U.S. economy overall is not very strong for this period of the cycle, and the manufacturing data, not just ISM but also industrial production, has been particularly feeble.

    But the call of the day comes from JPMorgan’s economic team. They note that while global manufacturing stalled in the first half, the non-manufacturing components rose at a 3.2% annualized rate, allowing the global economy to grow at an above trend 2.7% rate.

    The team led by Bruce Kasman say that the typical channels through which weak manufacturing would bring down the broader economy haven’t materialized. “A major channel by which weakness in goods sectors broadens out is through depressing corporate income and pricing power. While our start-of-year outlook anticipated elevated wage gains to pressure corporate profits, the surprising strength in [first-half] global GDP was accompanied by upside surprises to inflation,” they say. In turn, there have been solid gains in both labor income and profits, and while margins have come off their peaks, they are well above pre-pandemic levels.

    Business hiring, they add, is the ultimate signal of confidence, and employment growth has continued even though expectations have soured.

    Now, say the JPMorgan team, the stage is set for a goods sector recovery. Labor income, when adjusted for inflation, is rising, while finished goods inflation is falling sharply.

    Also, business capital spending continues to expand, particularly in emerging economies outside of China. And importantly, inventories are swinging from a drag to a lift. In the first half, the step down in the pace of stock building depressed global industrial production by 3.4 percentage points.

    “Even if the pace of stockbuilding was only to level off, the impulse to global industry would be material. Add to that a potential desire to align the pace to firming demand growth and the boost could generate a jump in factory output in the coming months,” they say.

    Finally, they note, the tech spending decline after the 2020 to 2021 surge looks to be ending, and global motor vehicle production is picking up as supply-chain bottlenecks ease.

    The markets

    After an okay finish for the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.29%

    to a strong July, U.S. stock futures
    ES00,
    -0.36%

    NQ00,
    -0.42%

    were a bit lower as the seasonally weak month of August commenced. Gold futures
    GC00,
    -1.28%

    were trading below $2,000 an ounce. The dollar
    DXY,
    +0.42%

    rose.

    For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

    The buzz

    The ISM report is due out at 10 a.m. Eastern, when the job openings and construction spending reports also come out. Monthly auto sales also will be released throughout the day.

    Pfizer
    PFE,
    -0.03%
    ,
    Caterpillar
    CAT,
    +4.05%
    ,
    Uber Technologies
    UBER,
    -3.96%

    and after the close, Starbucks
    SBUX,
    -0.35%

    and Electronic Arts
    EA,
    -0.61%

    highlight the day’s earnings reports. Pfizer lowered its sales guidance while Caterpillar beat Wall Street earnings estimates and Uber reported a surprise profit.

    JetBlue Airlines stock
    JBLU,
    -8.56%

    slumped as the airline says it no longer expects to report a profit in the third quarter, owing to what it called a challenging environment in the northeast, as well as a preference by consumers for long-haul international flights.

    CVS Health
    CVS,
    +0.48%

    is going to cut 5,000 corporate jobs, according to The Wall Street Journal.

    Best of the web

    BlackRock
    BLK,
    -0.56%

    and MSCI
    MSCI,
    -0.42%

    are targets of a Congressional probe into facilitating U.S. investment in China.

    The first new U.S. nuclear reactor in nearly seven years starts operations.

    Modern-day Oppenheimers see the future of nuclear energy — and it’s mobile.

    Top tickers

    Here were the most active stock-market tickers as of 6 a.m. Eastern.

    Ticker

    Security name

    TSLA,
    -1.13%
    Tesla

    TUP,
    +14.28%
    Tupperware Brands

    NIO,
    -4.97%
    Nio

    AMC,
    -0.27%
    AMC Entertainment

    PLTR,
    -2.60%
    Palantir Technologies

    GME,
    -1.80%
    GameStop

    NVDA,
    -0.74%
    Nvidia

    AAPL,
    -0.15%
    Apple

    NKLA,
    +14.79%
    Nikola

    AMSC,
    +54.02%
    American Superconductor

    The chart

    The inflation-adjusted equity premium is looking pretty bleak. That’s calculated by taking the expected return to the S&P 500 and subtracting 10-year TIPS yields. “While admittedly this graphic is skewed by the few megacaps trading at huge multiples, it’s sobering nonetheless,” says Michael Ashton, better known as the Inflation Guy.

    Random reads

    Granted, Philadelphia’s a big sports town, but there were actual tailgates to get the Eagles’ throwback Kelly green jerseys that went on sale.

    A Chinese zoo has denied that a bear is human after video of the creature standing on two feet.

    Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

    Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch financial columnist James Rogers and economist Stephanie Kelton.

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  • U.S. corporate bonds flash ‘green light’ for further stock-market gains as equities soar in 2023

    U.S. corporate bonds flash ‘green light’ for further stock-market gains as equities soar in 2023

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    The bond market is expressing confidence in company cash flows, flashing a sign of support for the stock market’s rally, according to DataTrek Research. 

    “U.S. corporate bond spreads continue to tighten and are now essentially the same as 2017–2019,” said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, in a note emailed Monday. “That is a green light for further stock market gains.”

    Declining corporate bond spreads over comparable Treaurys signal rising confidence in future cash flows and earnings, said Colas. Both investment-grade and high-yield bonds have broadly seen their spreads tighten over the past few weeks to average levels seen in 2017–2019, when conditions in the economy were generally good, his note shows. 

    Investment-grade spreads averaged 1.19 percentage points over Treasurys over that stretch, while junk bonds averaged 3.82 percentage points, according to Colas’s research. 

    “This was a period of generally good economic conditions and just one hiccup in capital markets, namely when the Fed briefly overreached on rate policy in late 2018,” he said.

    Weekend Snapshot: Stocks are on a seemingly unstoppable hot streak, but this bond-market ‘tipping point’ could see it end in a hurry

    This year, investment-grade bond spreads have recently declined to around 1.22 percentage points and those for high-yield debt have narrowed to 3.78%, the DataTrek note said. 

    “Corporate bond markets continue to mirror equity market confidence” in stable and strengthening company cash flows, Colas said. “This is not only supporting the ongoing rally in large caps, but also helping small caps outperform in July.”

    The Russell 2000 index
    RUT,
    +1.09%
    ,
    which tracks small-cap stocks in the U.S., has climbed 4.9% so far this month, exceeding the S&P 500’s 3% gains over the same period, according to FactSet data. The Russell 2000 has been trailing the S&P 500 in 2023, though, with 12.5% gains so far this year.

    Earlier this month, Bespoke Investment Group also pointed to high-yield bonds as the latest indicator confirming the equity market’s rally. The S&P 500, a gauge of U.S. large-cap stocks, has jumped 19.3% this year through Friday.

    Citigroup analysts said in a research note on Friday that they raised their 2023 target for the S&P 500 by 600 points to 4,600, while revising up their mid-2024 target to 5,000, from 4,400.  

    The popular stock-market index
    SPX,
    +0.15%

    closed Friday at 4,582.23.

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  • The ‘narrow breadth’ chorus has fallen silent. What broadening participation in stock-market rally means for investors.

    The ‘narrow breadth’ chorus has fallen silent. What broadening participation in stock-market rally means for investors.

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    A wider swath of stocks have joined the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.15%
    ’s
    upswing after the so-called Magnificent Seven — Apple
    AAPL,
    +0.32%
    ,
    Amazon
    AMZN,
    +1.11%
    ,
    Alphabet
    GOOG,
    +0.08%
    ,
    Microsoft
    MSFT,
    -0.72%
    ,
    Meta
    META,
    -2.11%
    ,
    Nvidia
    NVDA,
    -0.04%

    and Tesla
    TSLA,
    +0.37%

    — single-handedly propelled the large-cap index into a bull market in early June, with the gauge now up more than 28% from its low notched last October and rising to new highs since April 2022, according to Dow Jones Market Data. 

    Hopes that the U.S. economy could pull off a soft landing and avoid a recession despite the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest-rate hikes, as well as receding inflation pressures and expectations for the end of the Fed’s monetary tightening campaign, have underpinned a notable expansion in market breadth over the past two months, according Adam Turnquist, chief technical strategist at LPL Financial. 

    The S&P 500 Equal Weighted Index
    SP500EW,
    +0.27%
    ,
    which lagged behind the market-cap-weighted S&P 500 index for most of the year, has now kicked back into gear and staged an impressive comeback in July. The equal-weighted index and the S&P 500 each advanced 3.1% this month, according to FactSet data. 

    The equal weighting eliminates the distortion of the megacap components and significantly changes several sector weightings in the S&P 500, including technology, which drops from around 29% on the SPX to only 13% on the equal-weighted index, said Turnquist in a Friday note. Meanwhile, the industrials sector has the biggest increase in weight, jumping from 9% on the SPX to 16% on the equal-weighted index.

    Another way to quantify and compare market breadth is to look at the percentage of stocks on an index trading above their longer-term 200-day moving average (dma), Turnquist said. In general, if a stock is trading above its 200 dma, it is considered to be in an uptrend, and if the price is below the 200 dma, it is considered in a downtrend. Furthermore, a higher percentage of stocks above their 200 dma implies buying pressure is more widespread — suggesting the market’s advance is likely sustainable.

    The chart below shows that 73% of stocks within the S&P 500 are trading above their 200 dma as of July 27, which compares to only 48% at the end of 2022. Moreover, the composition of breadth leadership has turned increasingly bullish. The highest sector readings include technology, industrials, energy, and consumer discretionary.

    “So not only is breadth on the index robust, but cyclical stocks are also leading,” said Turnquist. 

    SOURCE: LPL RESEARCH, BLOOMBERG

    Wall Street often views broadening participation in the stock-market rally as a measure of health and a constructive sign of the sustainability of the bull market. 

    Jimmy Lee, founder and chief executive officer of The Wealth Consulting Group said he is seeing “a lot of money” flowing into areas that are not the Magnificent Seven such as stocks in the industrials, financials, materials, energy and even real-estate sectors.

    The S&P 500’s industrials sector
    SP500.20,
    +0.23%

    climbed 2.9% in July, while the financials sector
    SP500.40,
    +0.44%

    advanced over 4.7% this month. The S&P 500’s energy sector
    SP500.10,
    +2.00%
    ,
    which had been the biggest laggard when the rest of the markets exited the bear market in June, jumped 7.3% month to date after the U.S. oil benchmark
    CL.1,
    -0.20%

    CL00,
    -0.20%

    closed above $80 a barrel for the first time since April. 

    Meanwhile, the tech-heavy S&P 500’s communication-services sector
    SP500.50,
    -0.03%

    rose 6.7% in July, while the consumer-discretionary sector
    SP500.25,
    +0.56%

    gained 2.4% and the information-technology sector
    SP500.45,
    +0.13%

    was up 2.6%, according to FactSet data. 

    See: Stocks are on a seemingly unstoppable hot streak, but this bond-market ‘tipping point’ could see it end in a hurry

    Stephen Hoedt, managing director of equity and fixed income research at Key Private Bank, told MarketWatch in an interview that he doesn’t see “any reason to get bearish here with the fundamentals that are underlying,” which gives investors reason to rotate toward the more cyclical areas such as energy, financials and industrials, while broadening the market away from just being concentrated in the megacap technology names. 

    “The growth has been a surprise this year for everyone, so that’s what the market got wrong coming into this year. When I look at growth, nominal GDP growth translates directly into earnings and we’ve seen earnings continue to surprise on the upside,” Hoedt said. 

    Hoedt pointed to the direction of the 12-month forward earnings estimate for the S&P 500 as an important indicator. “As long as the direction of the 12-month forward earnings number for the S&P 500 is going up, it’s really, really difficult to be bearish on the stock market,” he said. “It seems to me that we may start to see another inflection higher in forward earnings revisions that take into account this stronger growth environment that we’re in.” 

    However, the broadening of the stock-market rally and the bullish sentiment were also driving some on Wall Street to believe stocks are overbought and due for a correction. 

    Lee said there’s still too much pessimism out there and too much concern that some investors haven’t chased the market yet. “In the second half of this year, when the Fed does stop raising rates and if the economy stays out of recession, you can see major money — trillions of dollars moving from the money market into equities and other risk assets,” he told MarketWatch in a phone interview on Friday.

    “When that happens, it’s probably going to push valuations even further. So I would imagine when that happens is when you can expect more of a correction to occur, but I think that we still have more room to go before that happens.” 

    U.S. stocks ended higher on Monday, finishing up July on a positive note. Three major stock indexes rallied this month, with the S&P 500 up 3.1% and booking its fifth monthly gain. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.21%

    gained 4.1% month to date, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.28%

    advanced 3.4%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. 

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  • Here are 4 of the biggest changes to the Nasdaq 100 from Monday’s special rebalancing

    Here are 4 of the biggest changes to the Nasdaq 100 from Monday’s special rebalancing

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    New weightings for the largest stocks in the Nasdaq 100 are taking effect on Monday following the index’s second “special rebalancing” in 25 years.

    See: Nasdaq rebalancing is coming, and it’s boosting interest in Friday’s $2.3 trillion option expiration

    These new levels were shared ahead of time with Goldman Sachs Group Chief U.S. Equity Analyst David Kostin. Kostin and his team have published a report on the changes that was shared with Goldman clients and the press last week.

    Here are four of the most important shifts highlighted in Kostin’s note:

    • The seven stocks with the heaviest weightings in the Nasdaq 100 are seeing their collective weight reduced to 44% from 56%.

    • At the sector level, information technology will continue to account for roughly half of the index, but the sector’s weight will decline to 49% from 51%.

    • Apple Inc.
      AAPL,
      +0.56%

      and Microsoft Corp.
      MSFT,
      +0.19%

      will remain the index’s largest constituents, but their index weights will be reduced by roughly four percentage points — to 12% and 10%, respectively.

    • Broadcom’s index weight is seeing the biggest increase, and will see its weighting increase by 64 basis points to 3%.

    The Goldman analyst summarized how the new weightings would impact the index’s 25 largest constituents in the chart below.


    GOLDMAN SACHS

    According to Nasdaq representatives, the Nasdaq 100 is the most popular of the exchange’s indexes. So far this year, it has outperformed the Nasdaq Composite, a broader index including every company traded on the exchange. The Nasdaq 100 is up 41.2%, to the Composite’s 34.4%, according to FactSet data.

    EPFR data show $261 billion in mutual fund and exchange-traded fund assets are benchmarked to the Nasdaq 100, including the Invesco QQQ Trust Series
    QQQ,
    +0.11%
    ,
    better known by its ticker QQQ. More than $250 billion of this money is invested in passive benchmark-tracking strategies.

    Nasdaq decided to implement the special rebalancing earlier this month to try and ward off concentration risk after its seven largest components surged earlier this year. According to its official index-management methodology, Nasdaq aims to keep the combined weighting of its largest constituents to 40%.

    Kostin said he doesn’t expect these changes to have much of an impact on markets, arguing that the previous special rebalancing didn’t move the index much, either.

    Both the Nasdaq 100 and Nasdaq Composite were slightly lower on Monday as big-tech names continued to lag the S&P 500 and suddenly high-flying Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +0.57%
    ,
    just like they did last week.

    Nasdaq 100-tracking QQQ
    QQQ,
    +0.11%

    was off by 0.2% at $374 per share Monday morning, while the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +0.19%

    was down 0.2% at 14, 013.

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  • Morgan Stanley credits Bidenomics in lifting its U.S. economic-growth outlook

    Morgan Stanley credits Bidenomics in lifting its U.S. economic-growth outlook

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    The U.S. economy is enjoying ‘a boom in large-scale infrastructure [and] rebounding domestic business investment led by manufacturing.’


    — Morgan Stanley’s Zentner

    At least one major investment bank has bought into Bidenomics.

    President Joe Biden’s Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act has seeped into the domestic economy, “driving a boom in large-scale infrastructure,” wrote Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist for Morgan Stanley, in a research note out late this week. Plus, she wrote, “manufacturing construction has shown broad strength.”

    As a result Morgan Stanley now projects 1.9% gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the first half of this year. That’s some four times higher than the bank’s previous forecast for the first half of 2023 of 0.5%.

    Infrastructure spending signed into law in 2021 marked an early legislative win for a president handed only a slim majority in Congress. It was followed up by another legislative banner for the incumbent: the Inflation Reduction Act, a climate change and healthcare-focused spending bill signed into law about a year ago. Much of the incentives in the laws are tied to domestic manufacturing and require U.S. hiring, sometimes at the expense of less-expensive or readily available goods from abroad.

    As a result of these economic lifts, the Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    +0.22%

    analysts also doubled their original estimate for GDP growth in the fourth quarter, to 1.3% from 0.6%. And they nudged up their forecast for GDP in 2024 by a tenth of a percent, to 1.4%.

    “The narrative behind the numbers tells the story of industrial strength in the U.S,” Zentner wrote.

    Read: Are we still going to have a recession? Maybe next year

    The White House has run with the theme of U.S. brick-and-mortar economic growth in recent weeks, increasingly leveraged by the president and his acolytes as “Bidenomics.” It’s a phrase originally used by Republicans to take a shot at the president, who has been saddled with high inflation and rising interest rates in his first term.

    Don’t miss: Everyone thinks the Fed’s rate hike next week will be the final one — except the Fed

    For now, the Biden team co-opted the term as a badge of honor as Biden has tried to tap into economic performance during recent road appearances. That included a speech to a union crowd at a shipyard in Philadelphia this past week.

    Bidenomics and Morgan Stanley forecasts aside, wider polling shows that some Americans, likely feeling the lingering sting of inflation, aren’t yet convinced.

    A Monmouth University poll released Wednesday showed only three in 10 Americans feel the country is doing a better job recovering economically than the rest of the world since the COVID-19 pandemic. Respondents were split on Biden’s handling of jobs and unemployment, with 47% approving and 48% disapproving of his performance. 

    The latest CNBC All-America Economic Survey, released Thursday, found that just 37% of respondents approved of Biden’s handling of the economy, while 58% disapproved. Some 20% of Americans agreed that the economy was excellent or good, while 79% said it was just fair or poor, CNBC’s poll found.

    Republicans looking to challenge Biden and the Democrats in 2024 care less about Wall Street’s forecasts and more about Main Street’s polling, it would seem.

    “Bidenomics is about blind faith in government spending and regulation,” Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy said in a statement Friday. “It’s an economic disaster where government causes decades-high inflation, high gas prices
    RB00,
    -0.32%
    ,
    lower paychecks and crippling uncertainty that leaves America worse off.”

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  • Charles Schwab’s stock on track for biggest one-day gain since March of 2020 after earnings beat

    Charles Schwab’s stock on track for biggest one-day gain since March of 2020 after earnings beat

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    Charles Schwab Corp.’s stock soared 12% Tuesday to put it on track for its biggest one-day increase since March of 2020, after the discount brokerage’s second-quarter earnings fell from a year ago but still topped consensus estimates.

    Chief Executive Walt Bettinger acknowledged a “somewhat unsettled backdrop,” but said Schwab gathered $52 billion in core net new assets in the quarter, bringing the year-to-date total to more than $180 billion.

    “While we observed signs of typical tax seasonality, as well as softer investor sentiment at the beginning of the quarter, we still attracted nearly 1 million new brokerage accounts and finished the period serving $8.02 trillion in total client assets across 34 million accounts,” he said in a statement.

    The company
    SCHW,
    +12.57%

    posted net income of $1.294 billion, or 64 cents a share, for the quarter, down from $1.793 billion, or 87 cents a share, in the year-earlier period. Adjusted per-share earnings came to 75 cents, ahead of the 71-cent FactSet consensus.

    Revenue fell 9% to $4.656 billion, ahead of the $4.610 billion FactSet consensus.

    See now: Morgan Stanley’s profit drops but beats expectations as stock rises

    Bank deposits fell to $304.4 billion from $442.0 billion a year ago. The company’s clients have been engaged in a practice called “sorting,” where they are moving cash out of sweep accounts and into higher-paying products. When that process exceeds cash on hand, the company has to borrow from other funding sources that can be more expensive.

    Still, Chief Financial Officer Peter Crawford said the daily outflows that have hurt the company over the last year as clients react to higher interest rates by seeking out better-paying options, began to slow.

    “While anticipated client cash realignment, along with net equity buying during June, pushed cash levels lower, we observed a continued and substantial deceleration in the daily pace of cash outflows versus prior months,” he said.

    Also read: Bank of America’s stock rises after second-quarter earnings and revenue beat expectations

    “The continuation of this trend through the end of the quarter further strengthens our conviction that this realignment activity will inflect before the end of 2023, unlocking growth in client cash held on the balance sheet.”

    On a call with analysts, Crawford said the company has not had to make any short-term borrowings from either CDs or Federal Home Loan Bank loans since late May and can now cover cash needs with organic sources.

    “And as client cash realignment continues to slow and eventually reverses, we’d expect our supplemental funding balances to continue to decline over the next 18 months and be mostly paid off by the end of 2024,” he said, according to a FactSet transcript. “And this means that they should not really be a factor in our earnings picture in 2025 and beyond.”

    Elsewhere, the company’s net interest income fell 10% to $2.3 billion as net interest margins fell 32 basis points from the first quarter to 1.87%.

    Net interest revenue rose to $4.1 billion from $2.7 billion a year ago, while interest expenses jumped to $1.8 billion from $166 million.

    The company also made progress with the conversion of client accounts from TD Ameritrade into Schwab accounts, with about 30% of accounts converted so far, said Bettinger. That comes after a major effort over the Memorial Day holiday weekend.

    Schwab expects to move almost all of the rest over by year-end and to transition the final group in the first half of 2024, he said.

    The stock has fallen 30% in the year to date, while the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +0.71%

    has gained 17.8%.

    Read now: JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citi beat earnings targets but uncertainty clouds the economic outlook

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  • Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Lockheed, Masimo, Novartis, and More Stock Market Movers

    Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Lockheed, Masimo, Novartis, and More Stock Market Movers

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  • Cathie Wood’s ARK funds dump $26 million more in Coinbase stock, shed $13 million more of Tesla shares

    Cathie Wood’s ARK funds dump $26 million more in Coinbase stock, shed $13 million more of Tesla shares

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    Funds associated with Cathie Wood’s ARK Investment continued to cull shares of Coinbase Global Inc. and Tesla Inc. on Monday, according to recent trade disclosures.

    The ARK Fintech Innovation ETF
    ARKF,
    +1.58%

    dumped 76,788 Coinbase shares
    COIN,
    +0.23%

    on the day, while the ARK Innovation ETF
    ARKK,
    +2.29%

    sold 127,266 and the ARK Next Generation Internet ETF
    ARKW,
    +2.23%

    sold 44,784 shares.

    Those were worth $26.3 million based on Coinbase’s Monday closing price of $105.55, and the sales follow ARK’s move to dump about $50 million in Coinbase’s stock Friday.

    Coinbase represents 0.78% of the Fintech Innovation ETF, along with 0.15% of the Innovation ETF and 0.30% of the Next Generation Internet ETF. ARK disclosed the transactions and weightings in the daily trade notifications it posts to its website.

    Read: Coinbase’s spectacular stock surge after Ripple ruling sparks fierce debate

    Meanwhile, the ARK Innovation ETF shed 38,329 Tesla shares
    TSLA,
    +3.20%

    on Monday, while the ARK Next Generation Internet ETF sold 6,855. Those shares were worth $13.1 million based on Tesla’s Monday closing level of $290.38. Tesla represents about 0.12% of both funds as they continue to unload shares.

    Don’t miss: Tesla is looking at its best sales quarter ever

    ARK scooped up 455 shares of Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    +0.57%

    within its Next Generation Internet ETF and bought up 3,729 shares within the ARK Innovation ETF. That amounted to $1.3 million worth of stock based on Meta’s $310.62 Monday close.

    Two ARK funds bought a combined $790 million in Robinhood Markets Inc.’s stock
    HOOD,
    +0.89%
    ,
    with the fintech fund scooping up 25,641 shares and the Next Generation Internet ETF buying 37,630 shares. ARK added 4,608 shares of SoFi Technologies Inc.
    SOFI,
    +4.41%

    to the fintech fund, worth $43,683 based on Monday’s close.

    See also: SoFi’s stock catches another downgrade as analyst says it ‘needs to be valued more like a bank’

    ARK was also active in shares of Twilio Inc.
    TWLO,
    -0.63%
    ,
    buying 15,702 within the Fintech Innovation ETF, 133,499 within the Innovation ETF and 22,748 within the Next Generation Internet ETF. That amounted to $11.4 million in Twilio’s stock based on Monday’s $66.47 closing price.

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  • The nation’s biggest banks are gearing up for more consumer struggles ahead

    The nation’s biggest banks are gearing up for more consumer struggles ahead

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    JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Jamie Dimon on Friday said the U.S. economy was basically doing OK, even if customers were spending “a little more slowly.”

    But with rivals like Bank of America Corp., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and American Express Co. set to report quarterly results this week, recession agita still prevails.

    For evidence, look no further than JPMorgan’s
    JPM,
    +0.60%

    own quarterly results. The bank’s second-quarter profit blew past expectations, but it set aside $2.9 billion during the second quarter to cover potentially bad loans, amid concerns that more consumers could run into more difficulty paying their bills on time as higher prices manage to stick at stores.

    That figure was well up from $1.1 billion in the same quarter last year, although still far below the billions it stowed away when the pandemic first hit. Similarly, Wells Fargo & Co.
    WFC,
    -0.34%

    on Friday set aside $1.7 billion for loan losses in this year’s second quarter, nearly triple what it was a year ago.

    The figures underscore the anxiety over the second half of this year, when many economists expect the economy to tilt into a recession. However, for the 500 companies in the S&P 500 index, Wall Street analysts still expect profit growth.

    Any downturn could be exacerbated by the pressure investors have put on companies, potentially via more layoffs and money-saving technology, to keep prices high and cut costs to replicate the abnormally large profit-margin gains they put up in 2021 and 2022. Businesses have indeed kept prices high, at least for many basic necessities, in an effort to cover their own higher costs and to pad profits.

    When Bank of America
    BAC,
    -1.89%

    reports this week, the results will narrow the lens on lending and spending in the U.S. Results from Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    -0.50%

    and Goldman Sachs
    GS,
    -0.76%

    will fill in the gaps on trading and deal-making. American Express
    AXP,
    -0.49%

    will give a more detailed breakdown of what consumers are still spending their money on, after Delta Air Lines Inc.
    DAL,
    -2.35%

    — which has a partnership with AmEx — said that travel demand remained “robust.”

    Banks shoveled more money into their reserve stockpiles in 2020 to bulk up against the pandemic’s shutdown of the economy. A year later, they started releasing those funds as the economy reopened and recovered. FactSet expects the broader banking sector to plump up its cash cushion during this year’s second quarter to account for more late loan payments or potential defaults.

    In a report on Friday, FactSet said the 15 banking-industry companies in the S&P 500 Index tracked by the firm were on pace to set aside $9.9 billion to cover losses from souring loans in the second quarter. That’s more than double the amount set aside a year ago. And if that $9.9 billion figure, based on actual and projected financial figures, ends up as the actual figure at the end of the quarter, it would mark the highest since the beginning of the pandemic and the third highest in five years, according to FactSet data.

    “The U.S. economy continues to be resilient,” Dimon said in a statement on Friday. “Consumer balance sheets remain healthy, and consumers are spending, albeit a little more slowly. Labor markets have softened somewhat, but job growth remains strong.”

    However, he noted difficulties in JPMorgan’s investment banking segment. And he said consumer savings were slowly eroding as inflation endures.

    As the nation’s biggest bank, JPMorgan has flexed its financial muscle this year, swallowing up First Republic after that bank got into trouble. But as it consolidates power and influence, building thicker armor against shocks to the economy, its financial results might not always reflect the struggles of its smaller rivals, where difficulties are likely felt more acutely. Analysts at Raymond James said that while JPMorgan remained a “best in breed” bank, its outlook pointed to “heightened challenges for smaller banks.”

    See also: Jamie Dimon says U.S. consumers are in ‘good shape.’ This evidence may prove otherwise.

    This week in earnings

    For the week ahead, 60 S&P 500 companies, including five from the Dow, will report quarterly results, according to FactSet. Two big oil companies, Halliburton Co.
    HAL,
    -2.28%

    and Baker Hughes Co.,
    BKR,
    -0.95%

    will report, as oil prices fall from levels seen last year. Results from two transportation giants — trucking company J.B. Hunt Transport Services
    JBHT,
    -0.42%

    and railroad operator CSX Corp.
    CSX,
    -0.27%

    — will also be a proxy for how much people are buying things and having them shipped. United Airlines Holdings Inc.
    UAL,
    -3.42%

    and American Airlines Group
    AAL,
    -1.68%

    will also report.

    The call to put on your calendar

    Netflix results: Hollywood shutdown, ‘slow-growth’ expectations. Hollywood’s writers — and now its actors — have gone on strike, and Netflix Inc.
    NFLX,
    -1.88%

    reports second-quarter results on Wednesday. The streaming platform will likely face questions over how much content it has left in the tank, as the strike upends studio-production schedules and leaves viewers with vast expanses of reruns. Still, Macquarie analyst Tim Nollen said that the production standstill “may ironically drive even more viewers to streaming services.”

    The writers and actors argue that the studio industry — increasingly consolidated, increasingly publicly traded, increasingly oriented around a handful of film franchises — has profited immensely while skimping on things benefits and streaming residuals. But after a decade-long rise, and a recent shift in investor focus from subscriber growth to profit growth, Netflix has emerged as one of the biggest production powerhouses in the business. And after years of flooding customers with new films and shows, it’s trying to squeeze out sales via more boring ways: things like a password-sharing crackdown and ads.

    Daniel Morgan, senior portfolio at Synovus Trust Co., said Netflix still faced a plenty of streaming competition amid “muted” subscriber growth. But Wedbush analyst Michael Pachter said investors should look at Netflix as a profitable, albeit more mature company.

    “We think Netflix is well-positioned in this murky environment as streamers are shifting strategy, and should be valued as an immensely profitable, slow-growth company,” Pachter said in a research note on Friday.

    “Even while the ad-supported tier is not yet directly accretive (we think it will be accretive over time), the ad-tier should continue to reduce churn and draw new subscribers to the service,” he continued.

    The number to watch

    Tesla sales. Electric-vehicle maker Tesla Inc. also reports second-quarter results on Wednesday. And like streaming, some analysts say the fervor for EVs has faded.

    However, they also said that Tesla
    TSLA,
    +1.25%

    had so far been immune from the malaise. And even though Elon Musk remains preoccupied with Twitter — which now faces competition from Meta Platforms Inc.’s
    META,
    -1.45%

    Threads — Tesla’s second-quarter deliveries were far above expectations. Sales are expected to be big. And one analyst said that price cuts, which Tesla has used to capture more of the auto market in China, were likely “fairly minimal” during the second quarter. But some analysts wondered what the blowout delivery figures would mean for margins. And the industry, broadly, has increasingly tested the patience of profit-minded investors.

    “We’ve now seen a market where demand is constrained, capital has been tighter, and there is less tolerance for EV related losses,” Barclays analysts said in a note last week, adding that there was a “step back from EV euphoria.”

    Claudia Assis contributed reporting.

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  • Worried that stocks are too expensive? This value approach can highlight bargains.

    Worried that stocks are too expensive? This value approach can highlight bargains.

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    At a time when many investors seem euphoric, others are warning that stock valuations have once again turned frothy. It may pay to take a look back at valuation and performance and consider your own risk tolerance.

    A value-based approach that offers lower volatility and good long-term returns can be expected to be less flashy than one focused on the hottest technology stocks. But depending on how much it bothers you when the stock market gyrates, it may be a better way for you to invest. Lower volatility might help you to avoid the type of emotional reaction that can lead to selling into a declining market or attempting to time the market, both of which tend to be losing strategies.

    Aaron Dunn is a co-head of the value equity team at Eaton Vance, which is based in Boston and is a unit of Morgan Stanley. During an interview, he explained how he and Brad Galko, who co-heads the team, select stocks for the Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunities Fund. The fund’s performance benchmark is the Russell 1000 Value Index
    RLV,
    +1.08%
    .

    First, let’s take a broad look at how aggregate forward price-to-earnings ratios have moved for exchange-traded funds tracking several broad indexes over the past 10 years:


    FactSet

    The valuations are lower than their 2020 peaks. But for all but one, the valuations still appear to be high when compared with their 10-year averages:

    ETF

    Ticker

    Current forward P/E

    10-year average forward P/E

    Current valuation to 10-year average

    SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

    SPY,
    +0.64%
    19.06

    15.93

    120%

    iShares Russell 1000 ETF

    IWB,
    +0.80%
    18.94

    16.02

    118%

    iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF

    IWD,
    +1.07%
    14.33

    13.94

    103%

    iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF

    IWF,
    +0.50%
    26.63

    19.00

    140%

    Source: FactSet

    All of the listed ETFs listed here are trading well above their 10-year average P/E valuations except the iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF, which is only slightly higher. These numbers back the notion that the broad market is expensive and that a value approach may be more reasonable. It is also worth keeping in mind that during 2022, when the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
    SPY,
    +0.64%

    declined 18.2% and the iShares Russell 1000 ETF
    IWB,
    +0.80%

    fell 19.2%, the iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF
    IWD,
    +1.07%

    pulled back 7.7% and the Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund’s Class I shares were down only 3.3%, all with dividends reinvested.

    If we look at 10-year total returns, the nonvalue indexes, so heavily weighted to the largest technology-oriented companies, have been excellent performers for investors who could remain committed through thick and thin:


    FactSet

    Fund

    Ticker

    3-year average annual return

    5-year average annual return

    10-year average annual return

    SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

    SPY,
    +0.64%
    13.2%

    11.4%

    12.3%

    iShares Russell 1000 ETF

    IWB,
    +0.80%
    12.5%

    11.0%

    12.1%

    iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF

    IWF,
    +0.50%
    11.2%

    14.0%

    15.0%

    iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF

    IWD,
    +1.07%
    13.7%

    7.3%

    8.7%

    Eaton Vance Value Opportunities Fund – Class I

    EIFVX,
    +0.92%
    14.8%

    8.7%

    9.7%

    Source: FactSet

    For five and 10 years, the growth-oriented approaches have shined. But for three years, which includes the 2022 disruption, the Eaton Vance Value Opportunities Fund has fared best, even outperforming its benchmark.

    A selective approach to value

    The Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund’s Class I
    EIFVX,
    +0.92%

    shares are rated four stars (out of five) within Morningstar’s Large Value fund category. The fund’s Class A
    EAFVX,
    +0.93%

    shares are rated three stars. The difference is that the Class I shares, which are typically distributed through investment advisers, have annual expenses of 0.74% of assets under management, while the Class A shares have an expense ratio of 0.99%. You can purchase Class I shares directly through brokerage platforms for a $50 fee.

    Dunn said that when selecting stocks for the fund, he and Galko take a bottom-up approach to identify quality companies. The want to see high returns on invested capital (ROIC) over the long term, as well as a “good competitive position” for a company and a strong management team.

    They also prefer companies with low debt. “We do not want to buy overlevered companies and be in a situation where we are diluting through equity raises and putting capital at risk,” he said.

    Dunn added that he and Galko look closely at free cash flow generation. A company’s free cash flow is its remaining cash flow after capital expenditures. This is money that can be used to fund expansion, acquisitions, dividend increases or share buybacks, or for other corporate purposes.

    “Philosophically, what this results in is that we hold up well in markets such as last year’s. And we find upside in stocks trading below intrinsic value,” he said.

    “We focus on finding ideas where there is a good skew for upside relative to downside,” he added.

    According to Morningstar, the fund’s active share when compared with IWD is high, at 91.45%. Active share is a measure of how much an actively managed fund differs in investment exposure from its benchmark index. If you are paying more for active management than you would to invest in an index fund, active share is something to consider. If it is low, you might be overpaying for a “closet indexer.” You can read about how Morningstar assesses active shares here.

    The fund is concentrated, typically holding between 25 and 45 companies.

    According to Morningstar’s most recent data, these were the fund’s top 10 holdings (out of 28 stocks) as of May 31:

    Company

    Ticker

    % of Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund

    Forward P/E

    2023 total return

    Alphabet Inc. Class A

    GOOGL,
    +0.59%
    5.0%

    19.6

    32%

    Micron Technology Inc.

    MU,
    +1.79%
    4.8%

    N/A

    25%

    American International Group Inc.

    AIG,
    +1.15%
    4.3%

    8.1

    -7%

    Reinsurance Group of America Inc.

    RGA,
    -0.34%
    4.2%

    8.0

    1%

    Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

    BMY,
    +0.50%
    4.1%

    7.7

    -11%

    Wells Fargo & Co.

    WFC,
    +0.99%
    4.0%

    8.9

    4%

    ConocoPhillips

    COP,
    +2.96%
    4.0%

    10.5

    -10%

    Constellation Brands Inc. Class A

    STZ,
    +0.30%
    3.9%

    20.4

    9%

    NextEra Energy Inc.

    NEE,
    +0.67%
    3.8%

    21.9

    -13%

    Charles Schwab Corp.

    SCHW,
    -0.43%
    3.8%

    16.0

    -30%

    Source: FactSet

    Click the tickers for more about each company, fund or index.

    Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

    There is no forward price-to-earnings ratio for Micron Technology Inc.
    MU,
    +1.79%
    ,
    because the company’s combined EPS for the next 12 months are expected to be negative.

    Micron is a company in transition, caught up in diplomatic conflict between the U.S. and China, whose government directed some manufacturers in May to stop purchasing memory chips made by the company. Then again, in June, Micron highlighted its “commitment to China” when announcing a new investment in its plant in Xi’an.

    Read: Micron recovery debated by analysts as bottom is called in memory-chip market

    Dunn said downside for Micron’s stock was “mitigated” because of the company’s relatively low debt. He also said that as companies continue to adopt more cloud services and deploy artificial-intelligence technology, demand for memory chips will increase.

    While there is no current forward P/E for Micron, the stock always trades at low valuations relative to most other large tech companies. Dunn touted Micron’s strong cash flow and said the stock was “underappreciated” and remained “an interesting play on cloud and AI.”

    While it is not among the top 10 holdings listed above, Dunn highlighted Dollar Tree Inc.
    DLTR,
    +1.80%

    as an example of the type of value stock he favors. The company “was not well run” following its acquisition of Family Dollar in 2015. But he has been impressed with its more recent turnaround efforts, including improvements in how products are shipped to stores, better efficiency and “a lot of work going on with culture, how they operate, how they treat employees [and] adding some shelf space to move more product.”

    It is interesting to see NextEra Energy Inc.
    NEE,
    +0.67%

    among the fund’s largest holdings. This has been quite a strong grower over the past 10 years, with a total return of 346% as the owner of Florida Power & Light has grown along with its customer base and has become a leader in the build-out of solar-power generation.

    Dunn said the company is “still growing in the mid-single digits. For a utility company, that is a strong profile.”

    When discussing Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    +0.59%
    ,
    the fund’s largest holding as of May 31, Dunn said that “it is really an advertising business with other businesses around it” and that its P/E valuation was “not extremely taxing.” He said Alphabet had been “less aggressive with cost cutting” than other technology giants and added that the company’s “targeted search” through Google and other properties, such as YouTube, “probably provides a better return on investment than broadcast advertising, and that really is the key.”

    Don’t miss: This stock investing strategy has blown away the S&P 500. Here’s a way to refine it for quality.

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  • JPMorgan, Goldman, Citi and Morgan Stanley boost dividends after Fed stress tests

    JPMorgan, Goldman, Citi and Morgan Stanley boost dividends after Fed stress tests

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    Major U.S. banks including Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan Chase & Co. announced dividend increases late Friday, in the wake of the results of the Federal Reserve’s latest bank stress tests earlier this week.

    JPMorgan
    JPM,
    +1.40%

    said it plans to raise the bank’s dividend to $1.05 a share, up from $1 a share, for the third quarter, subject to board approval.

    The stress tests “show that banks are resilient — even while withstanding severe shocks — and continue to serve as a pillar of strength to the financial system and broader economy,” JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said in a statement.

    “We continue to maintain a fortress balance sheet with strong capital levels and robust liquidity,” Dimon added.

    Morgan Stanley
    MS,
    +0.19%

    said it will increase its quarterly dividend to 85 cents a share from the current 77.5 cents a share, beginning with its third-quarter dividend. The bank also said that its board reauthorized a multiyear share buyback totaling as much as $20 billion, without an expiration date, beginning in the third quarter.

    Don’t miss: Fed stress tests see large banks able to handle recession and slide in commercial-real-estate prices

    See also: Wall Street upbeat on banks after ‘mostly positive’ Fed stress tests results

    “The results of the Federal Reserve’s stress test demonstrate the durability of our transformed business model. We remain committed to returning capital to our shareholders and are raising our dividend by 7.5 cents,” Chief Executive James P. Gorman said in a statement.

    Wells Fargo
    WFC,
    +0.54%
    ,
    for its part, said it will increase its dividend to 35 cents a share, up from 30 cents a share, subject to board approval. It said it has the capacity to undertake a share buyback, “which will be routinely assessed as part of the company’s internal capital adequacy framework that considers current market conditions, potential changes to regulatory capital requirements, and other risk factors,” without elaborating further.

    Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
    GS,
    -0.17%

    said it would raise its dividend, to $2.75 a share from $2.50 a share, starting July 1.

    Market Pulse: Goldman Sachs reportedly looking to exit Apple partnership

    Citigroup Inc. C said its board had approved an increase in its quarterly dividend to 53 cents a share, from 51 cents, also for the third quarter.

    Citi Chief Executive Jane Fraser said that, while the bank “would have clearly preferred not to see an increase in our stress capital buffer, these results still demonstrate Citi’s financial resilience through all economic environments, including the severely adverse scenario envisioned in the Federal Reserve’s stress test.”

    Citi’s “robust capital and liquidity position, as well as the diversification of our funding and our business model, allow Citi to continue to be a source of strength for our clients and navigate challenging macro environments securely,” Fraser said.

    The bank bought back $1 billon in shares in the second quarter and will continue to evaluate its capital actions, the chief executive said. “We are completely committed to simplifying Citi, improving returns and delivering value to our shareholders.”

    Shares of Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo rose 1.5% and 0.1%, respectively, in the after-hours session after ending the regular trading day up a respective 0.2% and 0.5%. JPMorgan shares edged up 0.2% in the extended session after closing 1.4% higher on Friday. Citigroup shares were up 0.2%, while Goldman’s were largely unchanged.

    Bill Peters contributed.

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  • Banks Boost Dividends After Passing Stress Test. Their Stocks Are on the Rise.

    Banks Boost Dividends After Passing Stress Test. Their Stocks Are on the Rise.

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    Banks Boost Dividends After Passing Stress Test. Their Stocks Are on the Rise.

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  • Nasdaq posts best first half since 1983 as inflation data power Friday stock surge

    Nasdaq posts best first half since 1983 as inflation data power Friday stock surge

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    U.S. stocks finished higher Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite closing out June with its strongest first half of a year since 1983, as investors hoped the Federal Reserve might be able to back off its inflation battle more quickly than Fed chief Jerome Powell has telegraphed.

    How stock indexes traded

    • The Dow Jones Industrial Average
      DJIA,
      +0.84%

      rose 285.18 points, or 0.8%, to close at 34,407.60

    • The S&P 500
      SPX,
      +1.23%

      gained 53.94 points, or 1.2%, to finish at 4,450.38, its highest closing value since April 20, 2022.

    • The Nasdaq Composite
      COMP,
      +1.45%

      climbed 196.59 points, or 1.4%, to end at 13,787.92, marking its highest closing value since April 7, 2022.

    For the week, the Dow gained 2%, the S&P 500 advanced 2.3% and the Nasdaq increased 2.2%, according to Dow Jones Market Data. All three indexes rose in June, with the S&P 500 climbing for a fourth straight month to book its longest monthly win streak since August 2021. The Nasdaq also climbed for a fourth consecutive month to score its longest such win streak since April 2021.

    What’s driven markets

    The final trading day of the week, month and quarter presented a positive picture for U.S. stocks as the main indexes advanced following the latest inflation report.

    “Clearly today the market likes and is responding to the inflation data,” said Chris Fasciano, portfolio manager at Commonwealth Financial Network, in a phone interview Friday. “It continues to show softening inflation and that’s clearly what the Fed’s looking for,” he said. “I think investors are comfortable right now with a soft-landing scenario” for the economy.

    On Friday, data showed U.S. inflation measured by the personal-consumption-expenditures price index eased to 3.8% in May on a 12-month basis, the slowest increase since April 2021.

    The PCE price index edged up 0.1% on a month-over-month basis in May, while core prices, which exclude volatile food and energy products, increased by 0.3%. The government’s PCE inflation report was in line with economists’ expectations.

    See: U.S. inflation slows, PCE shows, but price pressures still intense

    The data added to an increasingly upbeat portrait of a U.S. economy, which has continued to expand despite the Fed’s aggressive tightening of monetary policy. Gross domestic product in the U.S. expanded 2% during the first quarter, much stronger than the previous 1.3% reading, data released on Thursday showed.

    In other U.S. economic updates, the University of Michigan said Friday the final reading of its consumer-sentiment index for June improved to 64.4. That’s a four-month high.

    Still, the PCE report showed consumer spending rose just 0.1% in May, slower than economists had anticipated.

    The Federal Reserve has been raising interest rates since 2022 to cool the economy and tame inflation. Fed Chair Jerome Powell said earlier this week that he didn’t expect inflation in the U.S. to return to the central bank’s 2% target until 2025.

    “Right now, the Fed’s job is not clear-cut,” said George Mateyo, the chief investment officer of Key Private Bank, in emailed commentary Friday. “While they may not be done with rake hikes, perhaps they don’t have much more work to do.”

    The U.S. stock market has rallied this month, bringing the S&P 500 index’s gains this quarter to 8.3%. The S&P 500 jumped 15.9% in the first six months of this year, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq soared 31.7% for its best first half since 1983, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    Companies in focus

    Jamie Chisholm and Greg Robb contributed.

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  • Cathie Wood Sold More Tesla Stock. She Might Not Be Done.

    Cathie Wood Sold More Tesla Stock. She Might Not Be Done.

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    Cathie Wood Sold More Tesla Stock. She Might Not Be Done.

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  • BlackRock is applying for a spot bitcoin ETF. Here’s why it matters to the crypto industry.

    BlackRock is applying for a spot bitcoin ETF. Here’s why it matters to the crypto industry.

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    BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, has filed an application for a spot bitcoin exchange-traded fund.

    There are currently no such products in the U.S. The SEC approved several bitcoin BTCUSD futures-based ETFs in the past, but has yet to greenlight anything that is backed by bitcoin itself.

    BlackRock BLK will tap Coinbase Global…

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  • Nestle Names New CFO

    Nestle Names New CFO

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    By Mauro Orru

    Nestle appointed Anna Manz from the London Stock Exchange Group to succeed Francois-Xavier Roger as chief financial officer after he decided to step down in pursuit of new professional challenges.

    The Swiss packaged-foods giant said Tuesday that Manz would take over as soon as she is released from her present duties as chief financial officer and board member at the London Stock Exchange Group. Roger will remain in place until then, Nestle said.

    “Anna has spent her career growing businesses and improving operational efficiencies,” said Chief Executive Mark Schneider. “Her deep knowledge of the consumer goods industry, combined with her extensive experience across many corporate functions, make her uniquely positioned to help lead Nestle into its next phase of value creation.”

    Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com; @MauroOrru94

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  • Bill Ackman resurrects billionaire feud, saying Carl Icahn needs a friend. Icahn’s company’s stock tumbles 21%.

    Bill Ackman resurrects billionaire feud, saying Carl Icahn needs a friend. Icahn’s company’s stock tumbles 21%.

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    ‘Icahn’s favorite Wall Street saying: “If you want a friend, get a dog.” Over his storied career, Icahn has made many enemies. I don’t know that he has any real friends. He could use one here.’


    — Bill Ackman, Pershing Square Capital Management

    That was billionaire hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman, founder and chief executive of Pershing Square Capital Management, resurrecting his longstanding feud with billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn in a tweet Wednesday.

    Ackman was referencing the fallout from the recent report by short-selling firm Hindenburg Research that accused Icahn’s publicly traded investment vehicle, Icahn Enterprise Partners LP
    IEP,
    -13.83%
    ,
    of inflating asset values and causing his company to trade at a large premium. The report from May 2 has cost IEP about $10.9 billion in lost market cap, after the stock tumbled another 21% on Thursday.

    For more: Carl Icahn rebuts short seller Hindenburg Research’s report. It’s already cost his company $6 billion in market cap.

    Ackman said he is neither long or short IEP but merely “watching from a distance.”

    But he seemed to agree with Hindenburg’s founder and CEO, Nate Anderson, who questioned margin loans extended to Icahn using his roughly 85% stake in IEP as collateral. Icahn has not disclosed the terms of those loans although he recently told the Financial Times that he used the money to make additional investments outside of his publicly traded vehicle.

    “Over the years I have made a great deal of money with money,” he was quoted as having said. “I like to have a war chest, and doing that gave me more of a war chest.”

    Ackman said the margin lender or lenders “must be extremely concerned with the situation,” particularly after IEP has disclosed a federal investigation of its business and corporate governance.

    For his part, Icahn has called Hindenburg’s analysis “misleading and self-serving” and said it was designed solely to hurt long-term IEP shareholders.

    Ackman compared the situation to that of failed investment fund Archegos, “where the swap counterparties were comforted by each having relatively smaller exposures to the situation.”

    “The problem is that multiple lenders make for a more chaotic situation. All it takes is for one lender to break ranks and liquidate shares or attempt to hedge, before the house comes falling down. Here, the patsy is the last lender to liquidate.”

    Ackman also expressed his surprise that Icahn has not disclosed the margin-loan terms, or even said who provided them. “My understanding of 13D SEC rules is that they require disclosure of sources of financing and even copies of financing agreements, although many investors ignore these requirements.”

    Ackman also questioned how IEP’s large dividend yield is feasible, as it’s not supported by operating cash flows.

    “The yield is generated by returning capital to outside shareholders, which is in turn funded by the company selling stock to investors,” said Ackman.

    Icahn’s problem now is that his system has been outed by the short seller, Ackman wrote.

    “Transparency is not the friend of $IEP having caused a more than 50% decline in the shares, which has caused Icahn to post more shares, now more than 65% of his holdings,” he said in the tweet.

    The bad blood between Icahn and Ackman goes back to a business dispute the two had over a 2003 deal involving Hallwood Realty. The litigation between them went on for years. 

    But their animosity for one another hit a crescendo in 2013, when Bill Ackman publicly waged a $1 billion short-selling campaign against Herbalife. Sensing weakness, Icahn took a long position in Herbalife’s stock
    HLF,
    -5.21%

    and helped deal Ackman significant losses on his bet over time.

    The two claimed they had made up in 2014, sharing a stage at a conference broadcast by CNBC.

    Ackman had previously had taken a soft shot at Icahn over the Hindenburg report, saying there was a “karmic quality” to it. But now their battle of Wall Street titans appears to be back in full force.

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