ReportWire

Tag: U.S. Economy

  • ‘Oppenheimer’ steamrolls toward Oscars with Screen Actors Guild Award wins

    ‘Oppenheimer’ steamrolls toward Oscars with Screen Actors Guild Award wins

    [ad_1]

    Oppenheimer film billboard in Times Square, NYC on July 29th, 2023.

    Adam Jeffery | CNBC

    Historical epic “Oppenheimer” picked up more prizes on Saturday at Hollywood’s Screen Actors Guild (SAG) Awards, bolstering the movie’s chances to score the best picture trophy at next month’s Oscars.

    The film about the race to build the first atomic bomb took the top honor – best movie cast – handed out by members of the SAG-AFTRA actors union at a red-carpet ceremony in Los Angeles.

    Cillian Murphy, who played scientist J. Robert Oppenheimer, won best movie actor, and co-star Robert Downey Jr. best supporting actor.

    Irish actor Murphy said he took up the profession after trying to make a career as a musician and often felt like an “interloper.”

    “This is extremely special to me because it comes from you guys,” Murphy told his fellow actors as he accepted his award.

    SAG-AFTRA’s choices are closely watched because actors form the largest group of voters for the Academy Awards, the film industry’s top prizes.

    At the moment “Oppenheimer” appears unstoppable. Director Christopher Nolan’s drama already has claimed trophies at the Golden Globes, the British Academy Film Awards and other ceremonies. Honors from Producers Guild of America, another key predictor of Oscars success, will be announced on Sunday. 

    In other SAG accolades, the best actress trophy went to Lily Gladstone, star of “Killers of the Flower Moon.” Gladstone played a member of the Osage Native American community that suffered a string of murders in 1920s Oklahoma over their oil-rich land.

    “My friends, fellow actors, I feel the good in what you have done,” Gladstone said. “We bring empathy into a world that so much needs it.”

    Da’Vine Joy Randolph won supporting actress for playing a grieving mother in “The Holdovers.” “How lucky are we to get to do what we do. I wake up every day overwhelmed with gratitude to be a working actor,” Randolph said.

    The awards streamed live on Netflix for the first time, part of the company’s efforts to expand its live programming.

    SAG-AFTRA staged a four-month strike against Hollywood studios last year to fight for higher pay and protections from artificial intelligence.

    “It is especially meaningful to be here with us all together again, for this occasion, after going though a very difficult time with the strike,” actor Idris Elba said in opening remarks.

    In television categories, FX restaurant dramedy “The Bear” claimed best cast in a TV comedy and acting honors for stars Jeremy Allen White and Ayo Edebiri.

    “I am so honored to be in this community,” White said. “I wanted to be part of this my whole life. I had no backup plan.”

    HBO’s “Succession” secured best TV drama cast for its final season about the battle for control of a family’s media dynasty.

    Elizabeth Debicki, who played Princess Diana in Netflix series “The Crown,” won best TV drama actress. “The Last of Us” star Pedro Pascal was named best actor in a TV drama and appeared stunned when he walked on stage.

    “I’m a little drunk,” Pascal said as he held his trophy. “I thought I could get drunk… I’m making a fool of myself. Thank you so much!”

    SAG-AFTRA also handed out a lifetime achievement honor to Barbra Streisand, the award-winning actor, producer, director, singer and writer.  

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Magnificent 7 profits now exceed almost every country in the world. Should we be worried?

    Magnificent 7 profits now exceed almost every country in the world. Should we be worried?

    [ad_1]

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on January 31, 2024 in New York City.

    Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images

    The so-called “Magnificent 7” now wields greater financial might than almost every other major country in the world, according to new Deutsche Bank research.

    The meteoric rise in the profits and market capitalizations of the Magnificent 7 U.S. tech behemoths — Apple, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia and Tesla — outstrip those of all listed companies in almost every G20 country, the bank said in a research note Tuesday. Of the non-U.S. G20 countries, only China and Japan (and the latter, only just) have greater profits when their listed companies are combined.

    Deutsche Bank analysts highlighted that the Magnificent 7’s combined market cap alone would make it the second-largest country stock exchange in the world, double that of Japan in fourth. Microsoft and Apple, individually, have similar market caps to all combined listed companies in each of France, Saudi Arabia and the U.K, they added.

    However, this level of concentration has led some analysts to voice concerns over related risks in the U.S. and global stock market.

    Jim Reid, Deutsche Bank’s head of global economics and thematic research, cautioned in a follow-up note last week that the U.S. stock market is “rivalling 2000 and 1929 in terms of being its most concentrated in history.”

    Deutsche analyzed the trajectories of all 36 companies that have been in the top five most valuable in the S&P 500 since the mid-1960s.

    Reid noted that while big companies eventually tended to drop out of the top five as investment trends and profit outlooks evolved, 20 of the 36 that have populated that upper bracket are still in the top 50 today.

    “Of the Mag 7 in the current top 5, Microsoft has been there for all but 4 months since 1997. Apple ever present since December 2009, Alphabet for all but two months since August 2012 and Amazon since January 2017. The newest entrant has been Nvidia which has been there since H1 last year,” he said.

    Tesla had a run of 13 months in the top five most valuable companies in 2021/22 but is now down to 10th, with the share price having fallen by around 20% since the start of 2024. By contrast, Nvidia’s stock has continued to surge, adding almost 47% since the turn of the year.

    “So, at the edges the Mag 7 have some volatility around the position of its members, and you can question their overall valuations, but the core of the group have been the largest and most successful companies in the US and with it the world for many years now,” Reid added.

    Could the gains broaden out?

    Despite a muted global economic outlook at the start of 2023, stock market returns on Wall Street were impressive, but heavily concentrated among the Magnificent Seven, which benefitted strongly from the AI hype and rate cut expectations.

    In a research note last week, wealth manager Evelyn Partners highlighted that the Magnificent 7 returned an incredible 107% over 2023, far outpacing the broader MSCI USA index, which delivered a still healthy but relatively paltry 27% to investors.

    Daniel Casali, chief investment strategist at Evelyn Partners, suggested that signs are emerging that opportunities in U.S. stocks could broaden out beyond the 7 megacaps this year for two reasons, the first of which is the resilience of the U.S. economy.

    “Despite rising interest rates, company sales and earnings have been resilient. This can be attributed to businesses being more disciplined on managing their costs and households having higher levels of savings built up during the pandemic. In addition, the U.S. labour market is healthy with nearly three million jobs added during 2023,” Casali said.

    Nvidia has an 'iron grip' on the market, says RSE Ventures' Matt Higgins

    The second factor is improving margins, which Casali said indicates that companies have adeptly raised prices and passed the impact of higher inflation onto customers.

    “Although wages have risen, they haven’t kept pace with those price rises, leading to a decline in employment costs as a proportion of the price of goods and services,” Casali said.

    “Factors, including China joining the World Trade Organisation and technological advances, have enabled an increased supply of labour and accessibility to overseas job markets. This has contributed to improving profit margins, supporting earnings growth. We see this trend continuing.”

    When the market is so heavily weighted toward a small number of stocks and one particular theme — notably AI — there is a risk of missed investment opportunities, Casali said.

    Many of the 493 other S&P 500 stocks have struggled over the past year, but he suggested that some could start to participate in the rally if the two aforementioned factors continue to fuel the economy.

    “Given AI-led stocks’ stellar performance in 2023 and the beginning of this year, investors may feel inclined to continue to back them,” he said.

    “But, if the rally starts to widen, investors could miss out on other opportunities beyond the Magnificent Seven stocks.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Why direct-to-consumer darlings such as Casper, Allbirds and Peloton are now struggling

    Why direct-to-consumer darlings such as Casper, Allbirds and Peloton are now struggling

    [ad_1]

    The direct-to-consumer boom is coming to an end.

    A once-bustling group of companies, backed by billions in venture capital funding, saw a record year for IPOs in 2021. Now, three years later, most of those direct-to-consumer, or DTC, companies still struggle with profitability.

    “It’s that profitability angle now that demarcates the winners in DTC from the losers,” said GlobalData Retail’s managing director, Neil Saunders. “One of the problems with a lot of direct-to-consumer companies is they’re not profitable and a number of them don’t really have a convincing pathway to profitability. And that’s when investors get very nervous, especially in the current market where capital is expensive.”

    Allbirds, Warby Parker, Rent the Runway, ThredUp and others once represented a new era of retail. These digital-first, ultra-modern companies rose to prominence in the 2010s, boosted by the rising tide of social media ads and online shopping. With the cohort came a huge wave of venture capital funding, propped up by low interest rates.

    In just under a decade, venture capital funding exploded, from $60 billion in 2012 to an eye-watering $643 billion in 2021. Thirty percent of that funding was funneled into retail brands, and more than $5 billion went specifically to companies that intersected e-commerce and consumer products. As the Covid-19 pandemic moved most shopping online, venture capital funds were all-in on digital native direct-to-consumer companies.

    According to a CNBC analysis of 22 publicly traded DTC companies, more than half have seen a decline of 50% or more in their stock price since they went public. Notable companies in the space, such as SmileDirectClub, which went public in 2019, and Winc, a wine subscription box, have declared bankruptcy. Casper, a direct-to-consumer mattress company, announced it was going private in late 2021 after a lackluster year-and-a-half of trading. Most recently meal kit subscription service Blue Apron exited the U.S. stock market after being acquired by Wonder Group.

    Now many of these so-called DTC darlings are being forced to reevaluate their business model to survive a shifting consumer landscape.

    Watch the video above to find out what happened to the DTC darlings of the 2010s and how the direct-to-consumer cohort is pivoting in the new decade.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Japanese bank tanks over 20% after flagging losses tied to U.S. commercial property

    Japanese bank tanks over 20% after flagging losses tied to U.S. commercial property

    [ad_1]

    A pedestrian walks past a sign for Aozora Bank Ltd. at the company’s headquarters in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, May 14, 2010. Shinsei Bank Ltd., the lender partly owned by U.S. investor J. Christopher Flowers, and Aozora Bank Ltd. said they canceled a planned merger that would have created Japan’s sixth-largest bank by assets. Photographer: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Shares of Aozora Bank tumbled to their lowest level in eight months Thursday after the Japanese bank warned of a fiscal-year net loss due to its exposure to U.S. office loans.

    The Tokyo-based commercial lender said it now expects to post a net loss of 28 billion Japanese yen ($191 million) for the fiscal year ending Mar. 31, a swing from its previous forecast for a net profit of 24 billion yen.

    Aozora shares sank by as much as 21.5% to 2,557 yen (about $17.41), its lowest closing level since May 31. In comparison, Japan’s Nikkei 225 benchmark closed down 0.8% Thursday.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

    Aozora Bank shares

    “Due to higher U.S. interest rates and a shift to remote work accelerated by COVID-19, the U.S. office market continues to face adverse conditions combined with extremely low liquidity,” the bank said in a statement on Thursday.

    “While price discovery is anticipated to eventually improve with a gradual increase in office transactions on the back of an expected return-to-office movement as well as a pause in the rise in U.S. interest rates, our view is that it may take another year or two for the market to stabilize,” the bank added.

    Aozora’s announcement came shortly after U.S. regional bank New York Community Bancorp announced a surprise net loss of $252 million for the fourth quarter, slashing its dividend and saying it “[built] reserves during the quarter to address weakness in the office sector” — renewing some fears of the strength of U.S. regional banks, which were embroiled in a liquidity crisis last year.

    New York Community Bancorp said this was in response to its purchase of the assets of Signature Bank, one of the regional banks that collapsed in last year’s crisis. That purchase raised their total assets to $100 billion, placing them in a category that subjects the bank to more stringent liquidity standards.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady, sets the stage for cuts. What that means for your money

    Federal Reserve holds interest rates steady, sets the stage for cuts. What that means for your money

    [ad_1]

    The Federal Reserve announced Wednesday it will leave interest rates unchanged, setting the stage for rate cuts to come and paving the way for relief from the combination of higher rates and inflation that have hit consumers particularly hard. 

    Although Fed officials indicated as many as three cuts coming this year, the pace that they trim interest rates is going to be much slower than the pace at which they hiked, according to Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.

    “Interest rates took the elevator going up; they are going to take the stairs coming down,” he said.

    More from Personal Finance:
    Forget a soft landing, there may be ‘no landing’
    ‘Positive’ labor market data can feel awful. Here’s why
    Gen Z is getting money advice from TikTok

    Inflation has been a persistent problem since the Covid-19 pandemic, when price increases soared to their highest levels since the early 1980s. The Fed responded with a series of interest rate hikes that took its benchmark rate to its highest in more than 22 years.

    The federal funds rate, which is set by the U.S. central bank, is the interest rate at which banks borrow and lend to one another overnight. Although that’s not the rate consumers pay, the Fed’s moves still affect the borrowing and savings rates they see every day.

    The spike in interest rates caused most consumer borrowing costs to skyrocket, putting many households under pressure.

    Below the surface, 60% of households are living paycheck to paycheck.

    Greg McBride

    chief financial analyst at Bankrate

    “Below the surface, 60% of households are living paycheck to paycheck,” McBride said. Even as inflation eases, high prices continue to strain budgets and credit card debt continues to rise, he added.

    Now, with rate cuts on the horizon, consumers will see some of their borrowing costs come down as well, although deposit rates will also follow suit.

    From credit cards and mortgage rates to auto loans and savings accounts, here’s a look at where those rates could go in the year ahead.

    Credit cards

    Since most credit cards have a variable rate, there’s a direct connection to the Fed’s benchmark, and because of the central bank’s rate hike cycle, the average credit card rate rose from 16.34% in March 2022 to nearly 21% today — an all-time high.

    Going forward, annual percentage rates will start to come down when the Fed cuts rates but even then, they will only ease off extremely high levels. With only a few potential quarter-point cuts on deck, APRs would still be around 20% by the end of 2024, McBride noted.

    “The credit card rates are going to mimic what the Fed does,” he said, “and those interest rate decreases are going to be modest.”

    Mortgage rates

    Due to higher mortgage rates, 2023 was the least affordable homebuying year in at least 11 years, according to a report from real estate company Redfin.

    Although 15- and 30-year mortgage rates are fixed, and tied to Treasury yields and the economy, anyone shopping for a new home has lost considerable purchasing power, partly because of inflation and the Fed’s policy moves.

    But rates are already significantly lower since hitting 8% in October. Now, the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is 6.9%, up from 4.4% when the Fed started raising rates in March 2022 and 3.27% at the end of 2021, according to Bankrate.

    Doug Duncan, chief economist at Fannie Mae, expects mortgage rates will dip below 6% in 2024 but will not return to their pandemic-era lows, which is little consolation for would-be homebuyers.

    “We don’t see the affordability problem solved until supply increases substantially, interest rates come down and real incomes rise,” he said. “The combination of those things need to move together over time. It’s not going to be sudden.”

    Auto loans

    Even though auto loans are fixed, consumers are increasingly facing monthly payments that they can barely afford due to higher vehicle prices and elevated interest rates on new loans.

    The average rate on a five-year new car loan is now more than 7%, up from 4% when the Fed started raising rates, according to Edmunds. However, rate cuts from the Fed will take some of the edge off the rising cost of financing a car — possibly bringing rates below 7% — helped in part by competition between lenders and more incentives in the market.

    “There are some very encouraging signs as we kick off 2024,” said Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds’ head of insights.

    “Incentives are slowly coming back as inventory improves,” she said, and “most consumers are looking for low APRs with longer loan terms, so the growth in those loans is helpful to lure consumers who have been sitting out due to adverse financing and pricing conditions.”

    Savings rates

    While the central bank has no direct influence on deposit rates, the yields tend to be correlated to changes in the target federal funds rate.

    As a result, top-yielding online savings account rates have made significant moves and are now paying more than 5% — the most savers have been able to earn in nearly two decades — up from around 1% in 2022, according to Bankrate.

    Although those rates have likely maxed out, “it will be another good year for savers even if we do see rates come down,” McBride said. According to his forecast, the highest-yielding offers on the market will still be at 4.45% by year-end.

    Now is the time to lock in certificates of deposit, especially maturities longer than one year, he advised. “CD yields have peaked and have begun to pull back so there is no advantage to waiting.”

    Currently, one-year CDs are averaging 1.75% but top-yielding CD rates pay over 5%, as good or better than a high-yield savings account.

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • 50 years of history tell you to buy gold when the Fed cuts rates, says Bernstein

    50 years of history tell you to buy gold when the Fed cuts rates, says Bernstein

    [ad_1]

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Forget a soft landing, there may be ‘no landing,’ economist says. Here’s what that would mean for you

    Forget a soft landing, there may be ‘no landing,’ economist says. Here’s what that would mean for you

    [ad_1]

    The Federal Reserve is expected to announce it will leave rates unchanged at the end of its two-day meeting this week, after recent reports showed the economy grew at a much more rapid pace than expected and inflation eased.

    “In many ways, we already have a soft landing,” said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House. “The Fed has threaded the needle of the economy very artfully with a kind of ‘Goldilocks‘ scenario.”

    Gross domestic product grew at a much faster-than-expected 3.3% pace in the fourth quarter, fueled by a solid job market and strong consumer spending. However, inflation is still above the central bank’s 2% target, and that also opens the door to a “no-landing scenario,” according to Alejandra Grindal, chief economist at Ned Davis Research.

    What a ‘no landing’ scenario means

    “No landing means above-trend growth, and also above-trend inflation,” Grindal said, describing an economy that is “overheating.”

    Inflation has been a persistent problem since the Covid pandemic, when price increases spiked to their highest levels since the early 1980s. The Fed responded with a series of interest rate hikes that took its benchmark rate to its highest in more than 22 years.

    As of the latest reading, the current annual inflation rate is 3.4%, still above the 2% target that the central bank considers a healthy annual rate.

    The combination of higher rates and inflation have hit consumers particularly hard. A “no landing” scenario also means more strain on household budgets and those with variable-rate debt, such as credit cards.

    More from Personal Finance:
    Why egg prices are on the rise again
    A 12% retirement return assumption is ‘absolutely nuts’
    Here’s where prices fell in December 2023, in one chart

    While still elevated, inflation is continuing to make progress lower, possibly giving the Fed a green light to start cutting interest rates later this year.

    “That looks like the soft landing has been more or less achieved and is likely to be sustained,” House said.

    For consumers, this means relief from high borrowing costs — particularly for mortgages, credit cards and auto loans — may finally be on the way as long as inflation data continues to cooperate.

    The alternative: A hard landing

    Some experts still haven’t ruled out a recession altogether.

    “The real danger here is that the Fed loosens prematurely, which is exactly what they did in the late 1960s,” said Mark Higgins, senior vice president for Index Fund Advisors and author of the upcoming book “Investing in U.S. Financial History: Understanding the Past to Forecast the Future.”

    “The risks of allowing inflation to persist still far outweighs the risk of triggering a recession,” he said. “Their failure to do this in the late 1960s is one of the major factors that allowed inflation to become entrenched in the 1970s.”

    According to Higgins, history suggests there could likely still be a recession before this is over.

    To that point, 76% of economists said they believe the chances of a recession in the next 12 months is 50% or less, according to a December survey from the National Association for Business Economics.

    “It’s normal for an economy to go through periods of expansion and contractions,” Higgins said. “In the short term it will be painful, in the long term we are better off doing what is necessary to return to price stability.”

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump's proposed 10% tariff plan would 'shake up every asset class,' strategist says

    Trump's proposed 10% tariff plan would 'shake up every asset class,' strategist says

    [ad_1]

    Former U.S. President and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump holds a rally in advance of the New Hampshire presidential primary election in Rochester, New Hampshire, U.S., January 21, 2024. 

    Mike Segar | Reuters

    Markets need to begin thinking about the structural impact of Donald Trump‘s proposed 10% tariff increase, which “shakes up every asset class,” according to Michael Every, global strategist at Rabobank.

    The former president, and overwhelming favorite to secure the Republican nomination for the 2024 race, plans to impose a 10% tariff on all imported goods, trebling the government’s intake and aiming to incentivize American domestic production.

    Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said earlier this month that the plan would “raise the cost of a wide variety of goods that American businesses and consumers rely on,” though she noted that tariffs are appropriate “in some cases.”

    Criticism of the policy has been relatively bipartisan. The Tax Foundation think tank highlights that such a tariff would effectively raise taxes on U.S. consumers by more than $300 billion a year, along with triggering retaliatory tax increases by international trade partners on U.S. exports.

    The center-right American Action Forum estimated, based on the assumption that trading partners would retaliate, that the policy would result in a 0.31% ($62 billion) decrease to U.S. GDP, making consumers worse off and decreasing U.S. welfare by $123.3 billion.

    After Republican rival Ron DeSantis ended his bid for the GOP nomination, Every told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Monday that markets were “not going to be caught napping” by a potential Trump presidency, as they were in 2016. He suggested one of investors’ top concerns would be the 10% tariff on all U.S. imports.

    “First of all, they can’t model that because they don’t really understand what the second and third order effects are, and more importantly, they don’t grasp that Trump isn’t talking about a 10% tariff just because it’s a 10% tariff,” Every said.

    “He’s talking about structurally breaking the global system by hook or by crook to basically reindustrialize the U.S. in a neo-Hamiltonian manner which is how the U.S. originally industrialized, putting up a barrier between it and the rest of the world so it’s cheap to produce in America and more expensive to produce everywhere else if you’re importing into America.”

    A second Trump term

    Every added that a return to this type of trade policy “shakes up every asset class — equities, FX, bonds, you name it — everything gets put in a box and shaken around, so that’s what markets should start thinking about.”

    In the American Action Forum’s November report, data and policy analyst Tom Lee concluded that in the most likely scenario that trading partners impose retaliatory tariffs, a new 10% duty on all goods imported to the U.S. would “distort global trade, discourage economic activity, and have broad negative consequences for the U.S. economy.”

    Read more CNBC politics coverage

    Trump floated the 10% tariff during an interview last year with Fox Business’ Larry Kudlow, his former White House economic advisor, saying “it’s a massive amount of money.”

    “It’s not going to stop business because it’s not that much,” he claimed, “but it’s enough that we really make a lot of money.”

    During his first term in office, Trump triggered a trade war with China by unilaterally slapping $250 billion worth of tariffs on goods imported from China, which the AAF estimated have cost Americans an extra $195 billion since 2018.

    China responded with its own tariffs on U.S. goods, and Trump also imposed tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from most countries, including many of Washington’s biggest allies.

    Wealth management firm explains why Trump could be bad for markets

    Keen to maintain a firm stance on Beijing, President Joe Biden‘s administration has largely kept these tariffs in place, though converted some of the metal tariffs into tariff-rate quotas, which allow a lower tariff rate on particular product imports within a specified quantity.

    Dan Boardman-Weston, CEO of BRI Wealth Management, said the macroeconomic and geopolitical landscape is now very different and more challenging than when Trump’s first term began in 2017, and added that his erratic approach to policy decisions would add to the kind of uncertainty that markets most dislike.

    “In 2017, markets really appreciated the Trump presidency because of all the tax cuts and deregulation, and there was a more conducive market environment I think back then, with where rates were, for markets to move higher,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday.

    “I think this time is going to be very different, and I do think the geopolitical risks across the world are rising, and this doesn’t seem to be on investors’ radars as of yet.”

    He noted Trump’s tendency to “change his mind” so frequently on geopolitical issues that “people won’t know where his thinking is at.”

    Can Putin and Trump agree a deal behind Ukraine's back? No, says Ukraine's foreign minister

    Trump has claimed that he would stop Ukraine’s war with Russia within 24 hours, but has been economical with details of his supposed peace plan, and throughout his political career has lavished praise on Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    He was also impeached by the U.S. House of Representatives for allegedly threatening to withhold U.S. military aid to Ukraine unless President Volodymyr Zelenskyy sanctioned a politically motivated investigation into his then-leading electoral challenger Biden. Trump was acquitted by the Senate.

    “That unpredictable approach to how he will approach the war in Ukraine or how he will approach relations with China and Taiwan I think lead to heightened risks from a geopolitical perspective, which I think will impact into market valuations,” Boardman-Weston said.

    “It’s that added element of uncertainty in an already very uncertain world.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Red Sea risk to oil 'very real,' prices could change rapidly if supply disrupted, Chevron CEO says

    Red Sea risk to oil 'very real,' prices could change rapidly if supply disrupted, Chevron CEO says

    [ad_1]

    The crisis in the Red Sea poses serious risks to oil flows and prices could change quickly if tensions lead to a major supply disruption in the Middle East, Chevron CEO Michael Wirth told CNBC on Tuesday.

    “It’s a very serious situation and seems to be getting worse,” Wirth said in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

    The Chevron CEO said he was surprised that U.S. crude oil was trading below $73 a barrel because the “risks are very real.”

    “So much of the world’s oil flows through that region that were it to be cut off, I think you could see things change very rapidly,” Wirth said.

    Chevron has continued transporting crude through the region as the company works closely with the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet, Wirth said. The CEO cautioned that situation is evolving.

    “We really have to watch very carefully,” Wirth told CNBC.

    Shell suspends Red Sea shipments

    The British oil major Shell has suspended shipments through the Red Sea, people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal Tuesday. Shell declined to comment in response to a request from CNBC.

    Shell’s decision to halt shipments through the crucial trade chokepoint comes about a month after BP paused transits through the Red Sea. Several major tanker companies, which transport petroleum products such as gasoline as well as crude oil, halted traffic toward the Red Sea on Friday.

    Houthi militants, who are based in Yemen and allied with Iran, have repeatedly attacked commercial vessels in the Red Sea in response to Israel’s war in Gaza. The U.S. and Britain have launched airstrikes against Houthi targets in Yemen to secure shipping through the waterway.

    The Houthis have continued to launch attacks despite the U.S.-led strikes. The militants on Tuesday launched an antiship ballistic missile that struck a Maltese-flagged bulk carrier in the Red Sea, according to U.S. Central Command. No injuries were reported and the vessel continued to transit the waterway, according to CENTCOM.

    Sullivan: Houthis are hijacking the world

    U.S. National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said nations with influence in Iran need to take a stronger stand to demonstrate the “entire world rejects wholesale the idea that a group like the Houthis can basically hijack the world as they are doing.”

    The U.N. Security Council adopted a resolution last week condemning the Houthi attacks “in the strongest possible terms.” Permanent council members China and Russia, which wield veto power, abstained from the vote on the resolution.

    “We anticipated that the Houthis would continue to try to hold this critical artery at risk, and we continue to reserve the right to take further action, but this needs to be an all hands on deck effort,” Sullivan said during an interview in Davos on Tuesday.

    Oil market and geopolitical analysts say that the biggest risk to energy supplies would come if Middle East tensions erupt into a regional conflict that disrupts crude oil flows out of the Strait of Hormuz.

    Some 7 million barrels of crude oil and products transit the Red Sea daily, compared to 18 million barrels that transit the Strait of Hormuz, according to data from the trade analytics firm Kpler.

    Goldman Sachs has warned that a prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz could double oil prices, though the investment bank views that scenario as unlikely.

    Wirth said Chevron had two ships attacked by the Iranian Navy last year, one of which was hijacked by commandos and taken to an Iranian port and the other took fire for four hours until the U.S. Navy intervened.

    Iran seized an oil tanker last week in the Gulf of Oman. The Marshall Islands-flagged tanker St. Nikolas was previously involved in a dispute between the U.S. and Iran over sanctioned crude.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Trump is a 'transactional president' but may not rock the boat on China, Standard Chartered CEO says

    Trump is a 'transactional president' but may not rock the boat on China, Standard Chartered CEO says

    [ad_1]

    Bill Winters, chief executive officer of Standard Chartered, said the U.S. Federal Reserve looks set to pause its interest rate cycle in June get a better read on the latest inflation data.

    Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Former U.S. President Donald Trump would be a “transactional president” if he returns to power, but is unlikely to blow up the Biden administration’s rebuilding of relations with China, according to Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters.

    Trump won the Iowa caucus by around 30 points over his closest rival and is the clear favorite to secure the Republican nomination for the 2024 presidential election, despite facing 91 felony counts across numerous criminal cases relating to his attempts to overturn his 2020 election defeat, mishandling of classified documents and hush-money payments to a porn star.

    During his last term in office, Trump took a combative stance toward Beijing and triggered a trade war with a slew of tariffs on Chinese goods and constant threats of more economically punitive measures.

    President Joe Biden‘s administration has sought to repair the fragile relationship. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo visited China last summer, and Biden met Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation leaders’ meeting in San Francisco in November.

    Speaking to CNBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Tuesday, Winters said Washington and Beijing are now “pretty interlinked” and that for any president to “aggressively disentangle” would be bad for the U.S., Chinese and global economies.

    “Nobody really wants that or needs that right now, so I think the slight re-engagement that we’re seeing through the Biden administration, visits from the Commerce Secretary and Janet Yellen etc., are an indication to me that the U.S. is looking to stabilize,” he said.

    “If Trump becomes president, we know that he’s a transactional president, and there’s probably a transaction in there someplace that keeps the economy on an even keel without fundamentally disrupting that relationship, but of course we watch all the time and we’re well aware that there could be either unintended consequences or accidents, but I’m staying pretty optimistic that we could avoid the worst.”

    Though it’s headquartered in the U.K., Standard Chartered earns most of its revenue in Asia, and Winters also said he remains “very optimistic about the Chinese economy in the medium-, long-term” despite its well-documented short-term headwinds.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Standard Chartered: Trump is 'transactional' but may not rock the boat on China

    Standard Chartered: Trump is 'transactional' but may not rock the boat on China

    [ad_1]

    Standard Chartered CEO Bill Winters discusses the outlook for the Chinese economy and relations between Washington and Beijing.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Tanker companies temporarily halt traffic toward Red Sea after U.S. airstrikes on Houthi militants

    Tanker companies temporarily halt traffic toward Red Sea after U.S. airstrikes on Houthi militants

    [ad_1]

    An Egyptian man sits and eats ice cream as he watches international cargo and tanker ships pass through the Suez canal

    Scott Nelson | Getty Images

    Several of the world’s major tanker companies on Friday halted traffic toward the Red Sea after U.S. and British airstrikes on Iran-allied Houthi militants in Yemen.

    Hafnia, Torm and Stena Bulk confirmed that they halted traffic toward the crucial trade gateway in response to an advisory from the Combined Maritime Forces, a multinational coalition led by the U.S.

    The companies are among the world’s largest operators of tankers for petroleum products such as gasoline, according to their websites. Stena Bulk also transports crude oil.

    “Considering these developments and in alignment with expert recommendations, we have decided to immediately halt all ships heading toward or within the affected vicinity,” Hafnia spokesperson Sheena Williamson-Holt told CNBC in statement.

    The multinational coalition advised ships to avoid transiting the Bab el-Mandeb Strait for “several days,” according to a statement from the International Association of Independent Tanker Owners.

    “The situation is dynamic and ships should consider holding outside of the area while a period of taking stock of the situation is undertaken until daylight on Saturday 13 January,” the tanker association said.

    The Bab el-Mandeb Strait connects the Gulf of Aden with the Red Sea. Some 7 million barrels of crude oil and products transit the Red Sea daily, according the trade analytics firm Kpler.

    West Texas Intermediate futures spiked more than 4% to $75.25 while Brent touched $80.75 earlier in the session. The benchmarks have since pulled back with U.S. crude trading at $72.89 a barrel and Brent trading at $78.53.

    “The market is going to wait to see whether we see this spread to a significant waterway for oil like the Strait of Hormuz,” Helima Croft with RBC Capital Markets told CNBC on Friday. Some 18 million barrels of crude and products transit the Strait of Hormuz daily, according to Kpler.

    Robert McNally, president of Rapidan Energy, said the key flashpoint is really Lebanon, where Israel has threatened to push Iran-allied Hezbollah back from the border area. Hezbollah is Iran’s strategic right arm, McNally said, and Tehran would have to respond.

    “Its leverage point is oil, specifically gasoline prices in an election season,” McNally said of Iran. The risk is that Tehran would respond to a major Israeli attack against Hezbollah by attacking oil vessels in the Strait of Hormuz or by targeting oil infrastructure in the Arabian Gulf, McNally said.

    Iran’s Navy seized a crude oil tanker on Thursday in the Gulf of Oman.

    Goldman Sachs has said oil prices could double if there is a prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz, though the investment bank views that scenario as unlikely.

    Houthis vow to respond

    The Houthis have vowed to retaliate for the U.S. and British airstrikes.

    The Houthis have launched 27 attacks on shipping lanes in waterway since Nov. 19, according to U.S. Central Command. The militants say the attacks are in response to Israel’s military campaign in Gaza.

    The bulk of those attacks have been on container ships. Tanker traffic in the Red Sea was steady throughout December, averaging 230 vessels daily compared 239 in November, according to Kpler.

    Container ship traffic, on the other hand, dropped 31% in December compared to the month prior, according to Kpler data.

    — CNBC’s Lori Ann Larocco contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Home prices are surging — and Detroit gained the most in November, beating Miami for the first time

    Home prices are surging — and Detroit gained the most in November, beating Miami for the first time

    [ad_1]

    A “For Sale” sign hangs outside a home on the west side of Detroit, Michigan.

    Fabrizio Costantini | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Home prices are rising faster and faster each month, fueled by a decline in mortgage rates.

    On a national level, home prices jumped 5.2% in November compared to the same month a year earlier, according to a new report from analytics firm CoreLogic. That’s up from a 4.7% annual gain in October.

    States in the Northeast led the gains, with Rhode Island (11.6%), Connecticut (10.6%) and New Jersey (10.5%) seeing the strongest growth. Areas seeing year-over-year price declines in November were Idaho (-1.3%); Utah (-0.4%); and Washington, D.C. (-0.2%).

    “This continued strength remains remarkable amid the nation’s affordability crunch but speaks to the pent-up demand that is driving home prices higher,” Selma Hepp, chief economist for CoreLogic, said in a release. “Markets where the prolonged inventory shortage has been exacerbated by the lack of new homes for sale recorded notable price gains over the course of 2023,” she added.

    The lower the mortgage rate, the greater the buying power for consumers. While prices are expected to soften slightly later next year, much of that will depend on supply. At current low supply levels and demand increasing due to lower mortgage rates, for now at least, prices have nowhere to go but up.

    After hitting more than a dozen record lows in the first two years of the Covid-19 pandemic, mortgage rates began rising sharply in 2022 and hit a more than 20-year high in October last year. The average rate on the 30-year fixed loan briefly crossed over 8%. It has since fallen back and is now in the high 6% range.

    Detroit topples Miami

    On the city level, Detroit saw the largest annual price gain at 8.7%, surpassing Miami, which came in at 8.3%, according to CoreLogic. Miami had held the top spot for 16 months.

    “Detroit lagged appreciation during the pandemic so some of this was a catch up,” said Hepp. “Other Mid-west areas [are] seeing stronger appreciation because they’re more affordable.”

    While the median price of a home in Detroit is still among the most affordable in the nation, the market is considered overvalued due to local income levels.

    Roughly 82% of the nation’s 397 metropolitan housing markets surveyed by CoreLogic were considered overvalued. That means Detroit’s home prices are overly high compared with local household incomes. Notably, large cities considered “normal” in valuation were Boston; Chicago; Los Angeles; and Washington, D.C.

    “It really depends on who is buying in the area, and we’ve seen more higher income folks buying in those areas,” Hepp said.

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mortgage rate decline pulls buyers back into the housing market

    Mortgage rate decline pulls buyers back into the housing market

    [ad_1]

    A sharp drop in mortgage interest rates in December may have kickstarted this year’s spring housing market early. Rates are about a full percentage point lower than they were in October, and consumers expect they will fall even more.

    Optimism about mortgage rates increased sharply in December, according to a monthly consumer survey by Fannie Mae. For the first time since the survey was launched in 2010, more homeowners on net believe rates will go down rather than up, according to Mark Palim, deputy chief economist at Fannie Mae.

    “This significant shift in consumer expectations comes on the heels of the recent bond market rally,” said Palim. “Notably, homeowners and higher-income groups reported greater rate optimism than renters.”

    The average rate on the 30-year fixed has been on a wild ride since the start of the Covid pandemic. It hit more than a dozen record lows in 2020 and 2021, below 3%, causing a historic run on homebuying and a sharp rise in prices, only to then more than double in 2022. Rates hit a more than 20-year high in October 2023, hovering around 8% before falling back below 7% in December. Rates, however, are still twice what they were three years ago.

    Ryan Paredes (R) and Ariadna Paredes look at a home being shown to them by Ryan Ratliff, a Real Estate Sales Associate with Re/Max Advance Realty, on April 20, 2023 in Cutler Bay, Florida. 

    Joe Raedle | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Buyers are coming back. Washington, D.C.-area real estate agent Paul Legere hosted two open houses over the weekend — homes in the $1.1 million to $1.2 million price range — and said they were the busiest he’s experienced in the last year.

    “Similar report from my co-worker,” he added. “Even on Saturday, during torrential rain, we both had over 10 groups of active shoppers. These were people that had been in the market and had slowed or put their search on hold and are coming back, earnestly looking for a new property.”

    Looking for inventory

    Legere said he expects to see “an infusion” of inventory in the next week or two. Tight inventory has helped keep prices higher, another hurdle for potential homebuyers.

    “Homeowners have told us repeatedly of late that high mortgage rates are the top reason why it’s both a bad time to buy and sell a home, and so a more positive mortgage rate outlook may [incentivize] some to list their homes for sale, helping increase the supply of existing homes in the new year,” said Palim.

    A recent report from Redfin, a national real estate brokerage, found demand starting to pick up in December as rates fell. Redfin’s Homebuyer Demand Index — a seasonally adjusted measure of requests for tours and other homebuying services from Redfin agents — was up 10% from a month ago to its highest level since August, according to the report. Pending sales, which measure signed contracts on existing homes, were down 3% from December 2022, but that was the smallest decline in two years.

    Much will depend on both interest rates and home prices in the months to come. Prices continue to rise, due to lack of supply, and if rates continue to drop, price gains could accelerate. The lower the rate, the more potential homebuyers can afford.

    While mortgage rates are expected to drop further, that will depend on the strength of the economy and inflation.

    “The rate momentum is as good as the trajectory of economic data. So if the data continues to do what it has been doing, there’s no reason rates couldn’t go down into the 5’s, possibly even the high 4’s if some of the talking heads are right about recession in 2024,” Matthew Graham, chief operating officer of Mortgage News Daily, said on CNBC’s “The Exchange.”

    The average rate on the 30-year fixed mortgage hit a recent low of 6.61% at the end of December, but is up slightly this month to 6.76%, according to Mortgage News Daily.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Mortgages, auto loans, credit cards: Expert predictions for interest rates in 2024

    Mortgages, auto loans, credit cards: Expert predictions for interest rates in 2024

    [ad_1]

    The Federal Reserve‘s effort to bring down inflation has so far been successful, a rare feat in economic history.

    The central bank signaled in its latest economic projections that it will cut interest rates in 2024 even with the economy still growing, which would be the sought-after path to a “soft landing,” where inflation returns to the Fed’s 2% target without causing a significant rise in unemployment.

    “Rates are headed lower,” said Tim Quinlan, senior economist at Wells Fargo. “For consumers, borrowing costs would fall accordingly.”

    More from Personal Finance:
    Americans are ‘doom spending’ 
    The first step to setting an annual budget
    This strategy can help you meet New Year’s resolution goals

    Most Americans can expect to see their financing expenses ease in the year ahead, but not by much, cautioned Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.

    “We are in a high interest rate environment, and we’re going to be in a high interest rate environment a year from now,” he said. “Any Fed cuts are going to be modest relative to the significant increase in rates since early 2022.”

    Although Fed officials indicated as many as three cuts coming this year, McBride expects only two potential quarter-point decreases toward the second half of 2024. Still, that will make it cheaper to borrow.

    From mortgage rates and credit cards to auto loans and savings accounts, here are his predictions for where rates are headed in the year ahead:

    Prediction: Credit card rates fall just below 20%

    Because of the central bank’s rate hike cycle, the average credit card rate rose from 16.34% in March 2022 to nearly 21% today — an all-time high.

    Going forward, annual percentage rates aren’t likely to improve much. Credit card rates won’t come down until the Fed starts cutting and even then, they will only ease off extremely high levels, according to McBride.

    “The average rate will remain above the 20% threshold for most of the year,” he said, “and eventually dip to 19.9% by the end of 2024 as the Fed cuts rates.”

    Prediction: Mortgage rates decline to 5.75%

    Thanks to higher mortgage rates, 2023 was the least affordable homebuying year in at least 11 years, according to a report from real estate company Redfin.

    But rates are already significantly lower since hitting 8% in October. Now, the average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is 6.9%, up from 4.4% when the Fed started raising rates in March of 2022 and 3.27% at the end of 2021, according to Bankrate.

    McBride also expects mortgage rates to continue to ease in 2024 but not return to their pandemic-era lows. “Mortgage rates will spend the bulk of the year in the 6% range,” he said, “with movement below 6% confined to the second half of the year.”

    Prediction: Auto loan rates edge down to 7%

    When it comes to their cars, more consumers are facing monthly payments that they can barely afford, thanks to higher vehicle prices and elevated interest rates on new loans.

    The average rate on a five-year new car loan is now 7.71%, up from 4% when the Fed started raising rates, according to Bankrate. However, rate cuts from the Fed will take some of the edge off of the rising cost of financing a car, McBride said, helped in part by competition between lenders.

    McBride expects five-year new car loans to drop to 7% by the end of the year.

    Prediction: High-yield savings rates stay over 4%

    Top-yielding online savings account rates have made significant moves along with changes in the target federal funds rate and are now paying more than 5% — the most savers have been able to earn in nearly two decades — up from around 1% in 2022, according to Bankrate.

    Even though those rates have likely peaked, “yields are expected to remain at the highest levels in over a decade despite two rate cuts from the Fed,” McBride said.

    According to his forecast, the highest-yielding offers on the market will still be at 4.45% in the year ahead. “It will still be a banner year for savers when those returns are measured against a lower inflation rate,” McBride said.

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Treasury yields fall as investors weigh the 2024 outlook for interest rates

    Treasury yields fall as investors weigh the 2024 outlook for interest rates

    [ad_1]

    U.S. Treasury yields fell Wednesday, as investors considered the outlook for monetary policy and financial markets for the coming year.

    The yield on the 10-year Treasury dropped nearly 10 basis points to 3.789%. The 2-year Treasury yield edged down 4 basis points to 4.246%.

    Yields and prices move in opposite directions. One basis point equals 0.01%.

    In the last week of trading for 2023, investors considered the path ahead for interest rates and how this could impact the U.S. economy and financial markets.

    Earlier this month, the Federal Reserve indicated that interest rates will be cut three times next year, with further reductions expected in 2025 and 2026, as inflation has “eased over the past year.”

    Many investors have interpreted recent economic data, including the November U.S. personal consumption expenditure price index, as a sign that the Fed would be able to stick to its monetary policy expectations for next year.

    Uncertainty remains about when the central bank will start cutting rates, although traders are pricing in an over 70% chance of rate cuts at its March meeting, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • The U.S. avoided a recession in 2023. What’s the outlook for 2024? Here’s what experts are predicting

    The U.S. avoided a recession in 2023. What’s the outlook for 2024? Here’s what experts are predicting

    [ad_1]

    Grocery items are offered for sale at a supermarket on August 09, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois. 

    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    Heading into 2023, the predictions were nearly unanimous: a recession was coming.

    As the year comes to a close, the forecasted economic downturn did not arrive.

    So what’s in store for 2024?

    An economic decline may still be in the forecast, experts say.

    The prediction is based on the same factors that prompted economists to call for a downturn in 2023. As inflation has run hot, the Federal Reserve has raised interest rates.

    Typically, that dynamic has triggered a recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of negative gross domestic product growth.

    Some forecasts are optimistic that can still be avoided in 2024. Bank of America is predicting a soft landing rather than a recession, despite downside risks.

    More than three-fourths of economists — 76% — said they believe the chances of a recession in the next 12 months is 50% or less, according to a December survey from the National Association for Business Economics.

    “Our base case is that we have a mild recession,” said Larry Adam, chief investment officer at Raymond James.

    That downturn, which may be “the mildest in history,” may begin in the second quarter, the firm predicts.

    Of the NABE economists who also see a downturn in the forecast, 40% say it will start in the first quarter, while 34% suggest the second quarter.

    Americans who have struggled with high prices amid rising inflation may feel a downturn is already here.

    To that point, 56% of people recently surveyed by MassMutual said the economy is already in a recession.

    Layoffs, which made headlines at the end of 2023, may continue in the new year. While 29% of companies shed workers in 2023, 21% of companies expect they may have layoffs in 2024, according to Challenger, Gray & Christmas, an outplacement and business and executive coaching firm.

    To prepare for the unexpected, experts say taking these three steps can help.

    1. Reduce your debt balances

    More than one third — 34% — of consumers went into debt this holiday season, down from 35% in 2022, according to LendingTree.

    The average balance those shoppers are taking away is $1,028, well below last year’s $1,549 and the lowest since 2017.

    But higher interest rates mean those debts are more expensive. One-third of holiday borrowers have interest rates of 20% or higher, LendingTree reports.

    Meanwhile, credit card balances topped a record $1 trillion this year.

    Certain moves can help control how much you pay on those debts.

    First, LendingTree recommends automating your monthly payments to avoid penalties for late payments, including fees and rate increases.

    If you have outstanding credit card balances that you’re carrying from month to month, try to lower the costs you’re paying on that debt, either through a 0% balance transfer offer or a personal loan. Alternatively, you may try simply asking your current credit card company for a lower interest rate.

    Importantly, pick a debt pay down strategy and stick to it.

    2. Stress-test your finances

    Much of how a recession may affect you comes down to whether you still have a job, Barry Glassman, a certified financial planner and founder and president of Glassman Wealth Services, told CNBC.com earlier this year. Glassman is also a member of CNBC’s Financial Advisor Council.

    An economic downturn may also create a situation where even those who are still employed earn less, he noted.

    Consequently, it’s a good idea to evaluate how well you could handle an income drop. Consider how long, if you were to lose your job, you could keep up with bills, based on savings and other resources available to you, he explained.

    “Stress-test your income against your ongoing obligations,” Glassman said. “Make sure you have some sort of safety net.”

    3. Boost emergency savings

    Even having just a little more cash set aside can help ensure an unforeseen event like a car repair or unexpected bill does not sink your budget.

    Yet surveys show many Americans would be hard pressed to cover a $400 expense in cash.

    Experts say the key is to automate your savings so you do not even see the money in your paycheck.

    “Even if we do get through this period relatively unscathed, that’s all the more reason to be saving,” Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate, recently told CNBC.com.

    “I have yet to meet anybody who saved too much money,” he added.

    Another advantage to saving now: Higher interest rates mean the potential returns on that money are the highest they have been in 15 years. Those returns may not last, with the Federal Reserve expected to start cutting rates in 2024.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Lawmakers praise workers for landmark Wells Fargo union branch vote in New Mexico

    Lawmakers praise workers for landmark Wells Fargo union branch vote in New Mexico

    [ad_1]

    Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    WASHINGTON — Democratic lawmakers on Thursday praised workers at a New Mexico branch of Wells Fargo for becoming the first branch of the nation’s fourth-largest bank to unionize.

    “Your success brings the fight for the Dignity of Work directly to Wall Street’s front door,” said Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee.

    “I look forward to watching your movement grow from branch to branch across the country,” Brown said in his statement.

    Workers at the bank’s Albuquerque branch voted 5 to 3 on Wednesday to unionize under the Communications Workers of America’s Wells Fargo Workers United.

    The vote made Wells Fargo the first major U.S. lender with a unionized workforce.

    “This is the first union at a big bank in the country! #UnionStrong,” Rep. Melanie Stansbury, a New Mexico Democrat, wrote in a post on the social media site X, formerly known as Twitter.

    The organizing move follows successful negotiations by the United Auto Workers, SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America after weeks of strikes earlier this year.

    But workers at an Alaska Wells Fargo branch last week withdrew a petition to form a union.

    Wells Fargo was among the banks eyed in an industry-wide investigation into discriminatory mortgage lending in 2022.

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Former Swiss finance executive pleads guilty to tax evasion scheme that hid $60 million

    Former Swiss finance executive pleads guilty to tax evasion scheme that hid $60 million

    [ad_1]

    The Internal Revenue Service headquarters building in Washington, D.C.

    Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    WASHINGTON — A former Swiss finance executive pled guilty in New York federal court on Thursday to conspiring to defraud the U.S. in a tax evasion scheme known as the “Singapore Solution” that hid $60 million in income and assets held by wealthy Americans, prosecutors said.

    Rolf Schnellmann, 61, former head of Zurich-based Allied Finance Trust AG, helped defraud the Internal Revenue Service by stashing money of U.S. taxpayer clients in undeclared accounts at a private Swiss bank, Privatbank IHAG Zurich AG, between 2008 and 2014, according to the Manhattan U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    In the “Singapore Solution,” Schnellmann and colleagues conspired to transfer more than $60 million from the undeclared accounts across several countries and Hong Kong, and back to the private bank in newly opened accounts under a Singapore-based asset management firm established by a co-conspirator.

    Schnellmann and the co-conspirators were paid large fees to assist the tax evasion scheme, prosecutors said.

    He was arrested in August in Italy, and extradited to the U.S.

    Schnellmann faces a maximum possible sentence of five years in prison when he is sentenced on July 19.

    Don’t miss these stories from CNBC PRO:

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Is the U.S. in a ‘silent depression?’ Economists weigh in on the viral TikTok theory

    Is the U.S. in a ‘silent depression?’ Economists weigh in on the viral TikTok theory

    [ad_1]

    A shopper carries several bags in the Magnificent Mile shopping district of Chicago on Dec. 2, 2023.

    Taylor Glascock | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The U.S. economy has remained remarkably strong but affordability is worse than it has ever been, some social media users say, even when compared to The Great Depression.

    One of TikTok’s latest trends, coined the “silent depression,” aims to explain how key expenses such as housing, transportation and food account for an increasing share of the average American’s take-home pay. It’s harder today to get by than it was during the worst economic period in this country’s history, according to some TikTokers.

    But economists strongly disagree.

    “Any notion from TikTok that life was better in 1923 than it is now is divorced from reality,” said Columbia Business School economics professor Brett House.

    More from Personal Finance:
    62% of Americans are living paycheck to paycheck
    Shoppers embrace ‘girl math’ to justify luxury purchases
    Even high earners consider themselves ‘not rich yet’

    Compared to 100 years ago, “today, life expectancies are much longer, the quality of lives is much better, the opportunities to realize one’s potential are much greater, human rights are more widely respected and access to information and education is widely expanded,” House said.

    Even when just looking at the numbers, the country has continued to expand since the Covid-19 pandemic, sidestepping earlier recessionary forecasts.

    Officially, the National Bureau of Economic Research defines a recession as “a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months.” There have been more than a dozen recessions in the last century, some lasting as long as a year and a half.

    ‘This is hardly a depression’

    In fact, the latest quarterly gross domestic product report, which tracks the overall health of the economy, rose more than expected, while the Federal Reserve‘s effort to bring down inflation has so far been successful, a rare feat in economic history.

    The central bank signaled in its latest economic projections that it will cut interest rates in 2024 even with the economy still growing, which would be the sought-after path to a “soft landing,” where inflation returns to the Fed’s 2% target without causing a significant rise in unemployment.

    “To be sure, the economy is slowing, and the job market is cooling, but we are not in a depression,” said Sung Won Sohn, professor of finance and economics at Loyola Marymount University and chief economist at SS Economics.

    ‘Inflation has been hitting the poor more than the rich’

    But regardless of the country’s economic standing, many Americans are struggling in the face of sky-high prices for everyday items, and most have exhausted their savings and are now leaning on credit cards to make ends meet.

    Lower-income families have been particularly hard hit, said Tomas Philipson, a professor of public policy studies at the University of Chicago and former acting chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

    Here's why Americans can't keep money in their pockets — even when they get a raise

    The lowest-paid workers spend more of their income on necessities such as food, rent and gas, categories that also experienced higher-than-average inflation spikes. 

    “Inflation has been hitting the poor more than the rich, in terms of share of real income lost, because it has been relatively higher for categories that make up larger shares of household budgets,” Philipson said.

    The housing market weighs on sentiment

    Housing, especially, has weighed on many Americans’ opinion about how the nation, overall, is faring regardless of what other data says. Year to date, home prices nationally have risen 6.1%, much more than the median full calendar year increase over the past 35 years, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index.

    Mortgage rates have pulled back but are still above 7%, and there remains a very low supply of homes for sale.

    That explains why Americans feel so bad about their own financial standing, even when the country is in good shape, House said. “Since homeownership is the biggest investment decision most people make in their lifetimes, the real estate market is likely dampening many Americans’ feelings about the U.S. economy.”

    Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.

    [ad_2]

    Source link