ReportWire

Tag: Michael Dell

  • Trump Accounts: What to know about Super Bowl ad

    [ad_1]

    A Super Bowl TV ad tells parents to expect “free money” from the federal government to help their children achieve their dreams.

    Invest America, a nonprofit advocacy group, created the 30-second ad, which is narrated by a group of children who say investing when they’re young can change their future. 

    Here’s the script, with the children trading lines: “I want to be a nurse. Go to college. Be a businesswoman. I can save for a house with a trampoline. Two trampolines. This year, every American child gets an investment account and millions will be pre-funded. That’s free money. We can all expand the American dream. Sign me up.” 

    The ad ends by directing people to InvestAmerica.org and “Trump Accounts.”

    Promises of free money are rarely true, but in this case it’s legit.

    As always, there’s fine print: Not every child is eligible for a $1,000 contribution in a new savings account from Uncle Sam.

    And whether the account can provide a college education or house with multiple trampolines depends in large part on future contributions and the health of the U.S. stock market.

    Here’s what else you need to know about the Super Bowl ad. 

    Who gets a pre-funded Trump account and how do you sign up?

    Under the 2025 tax and spending law signed by President Donald Trump, babies born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028, will receive $1,000 to launch the account from the U.S. Treasury. Parents could make additional deposits but aren’t required to.

    Older children can have an account, too, if parents want to invest, but they won’t get the $1,000 in seed money from the government.

    “For children born outside the 2025 through 2028 window, the benefit is limited,” said Adam Michel, director of tax policy studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. “Parents can still open an account and contribute after-tax dollars, but there is no federal government seed money.”

    The government plans to launch the accounts around July 4  to coincide with the nation’s 250th anniversary. Starting then, parents will be able to open a Trump account for any child under 18 who has a Social Security number. Parents can deposit up to $5,000 a year into a fund that tracks the growth of the overall stock market. The $5,000 annual cap will eventually be indexed for inflation. 

    The White House said before the Super Bowl that 1 million people had already signed up in one week.

    Parents can establish an account with IRS form 4547. Beginning in May, the U.S. Treasury or its designated financial agent will send information to the person who activated the account. Parents can transfer the account to their preferred brokerage firm later.

    Employers can also deposit up to $2,500 per year. The employer contribution counts against the account’s $5,000 annual limit but not toward the employee’s taxable income. 

    Dell Technologies CEO Michael Dell announced that he and his wife, Susan, will provide 25 million Trump Accounts with $250 each for children who live in ZIP codes where the median income is $150,000 or less. That adds up to $6.25 billion.

    How much money could the accounts generate?

    The Trump administration and its allies have told people to expect six- or seven-figure savings from Trump Accounts.

    U.S. Rep. Randy Fine, R-Fla., said Jan. 29 that a $1,000 account would grow to $243,000 by age 55, even with no extra deposits. Trump shared similar figures.

    White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said if parents make maximum contributions, the projected value for the child’s account would be nearly $1.1 million by age 28.

    Leavitt’s number comes from a White House Council of Economic Advisers report. Michel said it is “technically correct, but misleading.” 

    “It assumes optimistic stock market performance, assumes parents max out their additional $5,000 account contributions each year, and is not adjusted for inflation or taxes,” Michel said. 

    Earning that much would also require holding the money until 2081, which many accountholders would not be able to do.

    Could the accounts help buy a house or pay college tuition?

    Whether the account could generate enough to buy a house or pay for college tuition depends on where the child lives, the price of the house and tuition, and whether additional contributions are made beyond the government money or the announced philanthropic gifts.

    The most likely answer “is that the pilot money alone will not be enough to cover college or a down payment in the vast majority of places,” said Madeline Brown, senior policy associate at the Urban Institute, a public policy think tank.

    Michel agreed that a $1,000 one-time deposit, even invested over decades, is unlikely alone to cover college tuition or a house. Depending on stock market performance and factoring in inflation and taxes, the $1,000 seed money would be worth between $8,000 and $46,000 in 55 years, he said. 

    “Withdrawing the money earlier reduces returns even further,” Michel said. “The accounts may help at the margin, but they are not a realistic standalone solution for major life expenses.”

    Andrew Biggs, a senior fellow at the right-of-center American Enterprise Institute, said if people contributed $5,000 per year for 18 years and earned interest, “then certainly it could cover a down payment. But the house outright? Less likely.”

    RELATED: Could $1,000 seed money in a Trump account multiply to $243,000? That’s without inflation and taxes

    RELATED: More fact-checks about inflation, gas prices and wages

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Dell has best day on stock market since its relisting in 2018 after earnings sail past estimates

    Dell has best day on stock market since its relisting in 2018 after earnings sail past estimates

    [ad_1]

    Michael Dell

    David A. Grogan | CNBC

    Dell shares surged 21.3% Friday, their best day since the company returned to the public market in 2018. The rally followed a better-than-expected earnings report, driven by a big revenue beat.

    The maker of IT hardware and infrastructure technology said sales slid 13% from a year earlier to $22.9 billion, topping the $20.9 billion average analyst estimate according to Refinitiv. Adjusted earnings per share of $1.74 exceeded the $1.14 average analyst estimate.

    Dell traded at $68.59 as of midday Friday. It’s on pace for its biggest gain and highest close since the company relisted its stock five years ago. Dell was taken private in 2013 by founder Michael Dell and a group of private equity firms.

    In addition to its rosy earnings report for the latest quarter, Dell increased its forecast for the year. The company now expects full-year sales of between $89.5 billion and $91.5 billion, representing a 12% year-over-year drop at the middle of the range. Dell previously was calling for a drop of about 15%.

    Despite a decline in revenue, Morgan Stanley on Friday named Dell its top IT hardware pick, replacing Apple. The firm wrote in a report that Dell “is emerging as an early Generative AI winner,” referring to the latest developments in artificial intelligence.

    Morgan Stanley sees Dell benefiting from booming demand for artificial intelligence servers as more companies focus their spending on that corner of the hardware market. The analysts recommend buying the stock and lifted the price target to $70.

    “DELL is the first company in our coverage to directly benefit from the Gen AI spending cycle,” the analysts wrote, pointing to Dell’s disclosure of a $2 billion backlog of AI servers.

    Morgan Stanley maintained an overweight rating for Apple but noted risks of increased regulation around the app store.

    Prior to Friday, Dell’s biggest one-day gain since 2018 was a 14% increase in March 2020, according to FactSet. Its previous record close was $60.77 in February of this year.

    Correction: A headline for this story has been updated to reflect that Dell returned to the public market in 2018. A previous headline misstated the year.

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    WATCH: AI wave will begin to split between open and closed-source models, says Dell Technologies CEO

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Dell has best day on stock market since its relisting in 2018 after earnings sail past estimates

    Dell has best day on stock market since its relisting in 2018 after earnings sail past estimates

    [ad_1]

    Michael Dell

    David A. Grogan | CNBC

    Dell shares surged 21.3% on Friday, their best day since the company returned to the public market in 2018. The rally followed a better-than-expected earnings report, driven by a big revenue beat.

    The maker of IT hardware and infrastructure technology said sales slid 13% from a year earlier to $22.9 billion, topping the $20.9 billion average analyst estimate according to Refinitiv. Adjusted earnings per share of $1.74 exceeded the $1.14 average analyst estimate.

    Dell traded at $68.59 as of mid-day Friday. It’s on pace for its biggest gain and highest close since the company relisted its stock five years ago. Dell was taken private in 2013 by founder Michael Dell and a group of private equity firms.

    In addition to its rosy earnings report for the latest quarter, Dell increased its forecast for the year. The company now expects full-year sales of between $89.5 billion and $91.5 billion, representing a 12% year-over-year drop at the middle of the range. Dell previously was calling for a drop of about 15%.

    Despite a decline in revenue, Morgan Stanley on Friday named Dell its top IT hardware pick, replacing Apple. The firm wrote in a report that Dell “is emerging as an early Generative AI winner,” referring to the latest developments in artificial intelligence.

    Morgan Stanley sees Dell benefiting from booming demand for AI servers as more companies focus their spending on that corner of the hardware market. The analysts recommend buying the stock and lifted the price target to $70.

    “DELL is the first company in our coverage to directly benefit from the Gen AI spending cycle,” the analysts wrote, pointing to the Dell’s disclosure of a $2 billion backlog of AI servers.

    Morgan Stanley maintained an overweight rating for Apple, but noted risks of increased regulation around the app store.

    Prior to Friday, Dell’s biggest one-day gain since 2018 was a 14% increase in March 2020, according to FactSet. Its previous record close was $60.77 in February of this year.

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    WATCH: AI wave will begin to split between open and closed-source models, says Dell Technologies CEO

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Way Unveils $100M Valuation Upon Close Of $20M Series A Led By Tiger Global

    Way Unveils $100M Valuation Upon Close Of $20M Series A Led By Tiger Global

    [ad_1]

    Two-year old start-up Way will announce later today the close of their Series A round totaling $20 million with a valuation of $100 million. Tiger Global led the round with several other participants including MSD Capital, the Michael Dell–founded private investment firm which has a strong presence in the real estate technology landscape. In the two years since Way’s start, the company has seen 20% month-over-month growth across dozens of brands such as Fairmont Hotels, Starwood Capital Group, Host Hotels and the short-term rental company Graduate Hotels.

    “We started in September 2020. Which was the worst time in history for hospitality,” said cofounder Michael Stocker. “Hotels were having 30% occupancy at best. We were going to them and saying, ‘how can we help you create a new revenue stream that will help you extract additional spend from that 30% occupancy?’ ”

    Way, which calls itself a “brand activation” platform, provides a means for hotels and other businesses to coordinate with local tourist-centric experiences directly from the hotel’s own websites. The platform’s booking and payment tool is integrated directly with each hotel and each local host has their own account and dashboard where they upload the photos, event description and availability. Hotels decide the revenue split with the local hosts and receive the contact information for each guest who has signed up, providing another potential revenue source at a later date through the ability to create more tailored marketing for their repeat customers. To date the average annual net revenue, after credit card booking fees and commissions, is approximately $40,000 across all their customers.

    The average transaction value hovers around $250 but can range from free events such as this caviar tasting class at Modernhaus to this $1,000 per person Dom Perignon New Year’s Eve celebration at The Little Nell in Aspen. The latter was one of the early adopters of the platform and Henning Rahm, General Manager, said via email, “Prior to Way, launching our activations and adventures required substantial effort and labor hours from our marketing and concierge teams. We have [since] increased their average transaction value on experiences by over 80%.”

    Stocker cites several examples of high-end experiences that generated significant revenue for a hotel on their platform, such as a “snow beach pop-up” that garnered $150,000 over a six week period and a New Year’s Eve party that reached $250,000 in ticket sales.

    However, it is not necessarily the ancillary revenue that adds the most value. “Some hotels, in particular ultra-luxury ones, care less about monetizing the experience and do this more for driving their room revenue,” said Stocker. Instead he says they’re asking: “How can we take our rates from $2,000 to $3,000 a night and make experiences a part of that?”

    Stocker defines Way as an approach that brings together the concept behind online retailer Shopify, which gives brands a way to reach their consumers directly, and the Airbnb model of hosting events as part of a short-term stay. “Nobody has really blended those two together to create a tool that would enable brands to launch their own experiences in house.”

    But he attributes the early runaway success Way has seen to the shift taking place at a grassroots level: “What it really comes down to is this broader change in consumer behavior away from physical goods and in the direction of seeking to spend our capital on experiences.”

    [ad_2]

    Amy Rose Dobson, Senior Contributor

    Source link