Tag Archives: CVS Health Corp

Analysts love these stocks that churn out loads of cash

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Opioid settlement: CVS, Walgreens and Walmart reach a tentative $12 billion deal



CNN
 — 

CVS has tentatively agreed to pay $5 billion to settle lawsuits brought by states and local governments alleging the retailers mishandled prescriptions of opioid painkillers.

Two other major retailers – Walgreens and Walmart – have tentatively agreed to pay billions of dollars to settle similar lawsuits, according to reports from Bloomberg and Reuters.

The deal calls for Walgreens to pay at least $4 billion and Walmart to pay $3 billion, Bloomberg reported, citing sources familiar with the matter.

The agreement wouldn’t be finalized until enough states, counties and cities agree to the terms, Bloomberg said.

CNN has reached out to the companies for comment.

CVS said if the settlement is reached, it would pay the states over 10 years beginning in 2023.

“We are pleased to resolve these longstanding claims and putting them behind us is in the best interest of all parties, as well as our customers, colleagues and shareholders,” said Thomas Moriarty, CVS’ general counsel, in a statement. “We are committed to working with states, municipalities and tribes, and will continue our own important initiatives to help reduce the illegitimate use of prescription opioids.”

US states, cities and counties have filed more than 3,000 lawsuits against opioid manufacturers, distributors and pharmacies, accusing them of downplaying the addiction risk and failing to stop pills from being diverted for illegal use.

More than 500,000 overdose deaths over the past two decades – including more than 80,000 in 2021 alone – are blamed on the US opioid crisis, government data show, with an estimated 9.5 million Americans age 12 and older reported in 2020 to have misused opioids, including 9.3 million prescription pain reliever abusers and 902,000 heroin users.

Meantime, synthetic opioids, primarily fentanyl, caused nearly two-thirds of the more than 100,000 drug overdose deaths in the US in the 12-month period ending April 2021 – up 49% from the year before – the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics found.

Opioids are drugs formulated to replicate the pain-reducing properties of opium and include prescription painkillers like morphine, oxycodone and hydrocodone and illegal drugs like heroin and illicitly made fentanyl.

People who become dependent on opioids may experience withdrawal symptoms when they stop using it, and dependence is often coupled with tolerance, meaning users need to take increasingly larger doses for the same effect.

A federal judge in August ruled CVS, Walgreens and Walmart must pay a combined $650.6 million to two Ohio counties for damages related to the opioid crisis. The lawsuit was initially filed in 2018 as part of federal multi-district litigation created that year to address the manifold claims against opioid manufacturers and distributors.

Teva Pharmaceutical Industries in July announced a $4.35 billion proposed nationwide settlement that could resolve thousands of lawsuits over the drugmaker’s alleged role in the US opioid epidemic.

Purdue Pharma – whose OxyContin painkiller has been widely blamed for kickstarting the opioid crisis – and the Sackler families in March announced a settlement with a group of states that would require the Sacklers to pay out as much as $6 billion to states, individual claimants and opioid crisis abatement, if approved by a federal bankruptcy court judge.

And Johnson & Johnson and the three largest US drug distributors – McKesson Corp, Cardinal Health Inc and AmerisourceBergen Corp – finalized a $26 billion nationwide opioid settlement in February.

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There could be ‘real signs’ for the Fed to slow down

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday said that next week’s jam-packed week of earnings and economic data releases could result in good news for the Federal Reserve’s battle against inflation.

“This market’s trading like next week, we’ll see some real signs that the Fed’s winning its war on inflation, and they can, therefore, ease up on the rate hikes going forward… I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the market got it exactly right,” he said.

Cramer named two important economic events he’s watching next week: the FOMC’s next meeting, which is expected to conclude with a 0.75 percentage point interest rate increase, and the nonfarm payroll report.

“You can’t get a reduction in wages until you see many people losing their jobs, and that’s what the Fed needs to see,” he said.

Cramer also previewed next week’s slate of earnings. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.

Tuesday: Eli Lilly, Uber, Devon Energy, AMD

Eli Lilly

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6:25 a.m. ET; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.91
  • Projected revenue: $6.89 billion

The company has the chance to shine now that health care stocks are some of the new market leaders, he said.

Uber

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 7:05 a.m. ET; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected loss: loss of 18 cents per share
  • Projected revenue: $8.11 billion

Cramer said that if the company reports that there are plenty of drivers but customers can’t afford rides, that’ll be great news for the Federal Reserve.

Devon Energy

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call on Wednesday at 11 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.12
  • Projected revenue: $4.16 billion

While the company is doing well, investors shouldn’t buy shares of oil companies when the economy is weakening, he warned.

AMD

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 70 cents
  • Projected revenue: $5.69 billion

Cramer said he’s interested in knowing if AMD is losing market share to Intel.

Wednesday: Humana, CVS, Qualcomm

Humana

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $6.27
  • Projected revenue: $22.82 billion

CVS

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 6:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2
  • Projected revenue: $76.74 billion

“I fear that CVS is considered a Covid play. Humana is a post-Covid darling,” Cramer said.

Qualcomm

  • Q4 2022 earnings release at 4 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:45 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $3.14
  • Projected revenue: $11.33 billion

He said he wouldn’t be surprised if the stock went up even on a guidance cut, given how much shares of Qualcomm have declined this year.

Thursday: Starbucks, PayPal, DoorDash

Starbucks

  • Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 72 cents
  • Projected revenue: $8.32 billion

He said he expects the company to report a solid quarter.

PayPal

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 96 cents
  • Projected revenue: $6.81 billion

“I think PayPal has a chance to regroup here, as their flagging days have probably ended,” Cramer said.

DoorDash

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected loss: loss of 59 cents per share
  • Projected revenue: $1.63 billion

He said that DoorDash is “inviting skepticism” since people aren’t getting their food delivered as frequently as they did during the height of the Covid pandemic.

Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Eli Lilly, Devon Energy, AMD, Humana, Qualcomm and Starbucks.

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Here’s who made Fortune’s Most Powerful Women in Business list for 2022

The competition to be listed among Fortune’s Most Powerful Women has gotten a little stiffer this year. In recognition of just how global business has become, Fortune decided to merge its domestic and international lists of top corporate women leaders.

Still, in some ways, this year’s top 10 list is similar to last year’s with a few exceptions.

Coming in at No. 1 for the second year running is CVS Health president and CEO Karen Lynch, who is leading the highest-ranking Fortune 500 and Global 500 company ever run by a woman. On her watch – she took the helm in February 2021 – the company’s revenue jumped 9% and its share price gains (up 42%) well outpaced performance of the S&P 500. CVS, meanwhile, continued to be a central player in the fight against Covid, and Lynch implemented a mental health program to help prevent suicide among its Aetna members.

Ranking close behind Lynch once again are Julie Sweet, chair and CEO of Accenture (No. 2); Jane Fraser, CEO of Citi (No. 3); and Mary Barra, chair and CEO, GM (No. 4).

But the No. 5 spot went to Jessica Tan, co-CEO and executive director of Ping An Insurance (Group) Company of China, Ltd, which is the 25th largest company in the world. Fortune notes that despite China’s Covid lockdowns and “skittish consumer sentiment,” Ping An under Tan’s leadership beat profit expectations in the first half of 2022 and aims to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030.

Also new to the top 10 relative to Fortune’s domestic list last year is Emma Walmsley, CEO of global drugmaker GSK. She spun off her company’s $13 billion consumer health unit. “That leaves the now exclusively pharma-focused GSK with a pile of cash to invest in promising drug and vaccine candidates,” Fortune notes.

Two executives, meanwhile, fell out of the top 10 from last year: Thasunda Brown Duckett, president and CEO of TIAA; and Ruth Porat, senior vice president and chief financial officer of Alphabet. But neither fell far, ranking as No. 11 and 12, respectively.

Here are the top 10 women executives on Fortune’s 2022 Most Powerful Women list:

1. Karen Lynch, president and CEO, CVS Health

2. Julie Sweet, chair and CEO, Accenture

3. Jane Fraser, CEO, Citigroup

4. Mary Barra, chair and CEO, GM

5. Jessica Tan, executive director and Co-CEO, Ping An Insurance

6. Carol Tomé, CEO, UPS

7. Rosalind Brewer, CEO, Walgreens Boots Alliance

8. Emma Walmsley, CEO of GSK

9. Gail Boudreaux, president and CEO, Elevance Health

10. Abigail Johnson, chair and CEO, Fidelity Investments

(For more on each of these executives, here is Fortune’s full list of the top 50 Most Powerful Women in Business. Please note a subscription is required.)

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Cisco, BJ’s Wholesale, Bed Bath & Beyond, Kohl’s and more

Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:

Cisco Systems — Shares of the networking equipment producer jumped 5.8%. The company reported earnings after the bell on Wednesday that beat estimates. Cisco also provided a better-than-expected forecast for 2023.

Bed Bath & Beyond — The latest favored meme stock, which has surged in August, dropped over 20%. Investors appeared to be reacting to activist investor Ryan Cohen’s filing that he intends to sell his entire stake in the company.

Kohl’s — Kohl’s shares sank about 5% after the retailer slashed its financial forecast for the year, citing inflation pressures on middle-income customers. The company expects net sales in fiscal 2022 down 5% to 6%, down from a prior range of flat to up 1%. However, Kohl’s beat analysts’ expectations for fiscal second-quarter profit and revenue.

BJ’s Wholesale — Shares of the club retailer popped more than 7% on Thursday after BJ’s reported better-than-expected results for the second quarter. The company generated $1.06 in adjusted earnings per share on $5.01 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting 80 cents per share on $4.67 billion of revenue. The company’s comparable sales rose 7.6% year over year, excluding gasoline. BJ’s was also upgraded by Bank of America to a buy from neutral.

Elanco Animal Health — Shares of Elanco shed more than 3% after the company was downgraded by Morgan Stanley. The firm shifted the stock to equal weight from overweight citing concerns about future profits.

Verizon — Shares of Verizon slipped 2.7% after MoffettNathanson downgraded it to underperform and slashed its price target. Increased competition from AT&T and T-Mobile is weighing on Verizon and will likely drag shares lower, analysts said.

Canadian Solar — The solar equipment and services company hit a new 52-week high, popping nearly 18%, after reporting quarterly profits that beat expectations. Canadian Solar also raised its full-year revenue forecast and reported solar module shipments that were at the high end of its forecast.

Wolfspeed — Shares surged more than 27% after the semiconductor company surpassed expectations in its most recent earnings report. Wolfspeed CEO Gregg Lowe said he remains “very encouraged about the industry’s prospects for future growth and the activity we are seeing across our end-markets.”

Walgreens Boots Alliance — Shares of Walgreens fell more than 5% in midday trading. The drugstore chain, along with CVS and Walmart, was ordered Wednesday by a federal judge to pay a combined $650.6 million to two Ohio counties to address damage done by the opioid crisis. Walgreens also announced Wednesday it had sold 11 million shares of Option Care Health’s common stock in an underwritten secondary offering.

Energy stocks — Energy stocks were buoyed by the rise in oil prices, with shares of Devon Energy rising more than 3%. Halliburton jumped 4%, and APA added more than 5%. Exxon Mobil and Occidental Petroleum and both gained about 2%.

—CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Carmen Reinicke and Sarah Min contributed reporting.

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Jobs report will make or break July’s rally

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday said the most important data this week is the Bureau of Labor Statistics release of the July nonfarm payrolls report on Friday morning.

“If it shows some job growth with no wage inflation, then the fabulous July rally can stand. But if it shows booming hiring with exceptionally large wage increases, then some of this rally, if not much of it, is going to be repealed,” the “Mad Money” host said. 

Job growth has been strong this year, leading economists to say the U.S. is not in a recession even with two back-to-back quarters of negative GDP. 

Another strong jobs report could mean the Federal Reserve, which added a three-quarters a percentage point interest rate hike last week, will have to take stronger action to slow down the economy and inflation.

Cramer also previewed this week’s slate of earnings. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.

Tuesday: Uber, AMD, Starbucks, Airbnb, JetBlue, PayPal

Uber

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at TBD time; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected loss: loss of 27 cents per share
  • Projected revenue: $7.36 billion

Cramer said he believes Uber will always struggle to make money unless it gets “real” autonomous vehicles.

AMD

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.03
  • Projected revenue: $6.53 billion

AMD will likely report a strong performance, Cramer predicted.

Starbucks

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 77 cents
  • Projected revenue: $8.15 billion

Cramer said he wants to bet on Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz, not against him.

Airbnb

  • Q2 2022 earnings release between 4 p.m. and 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 45 cents
  • Projected revenue: $2.11 billion

The company will likely report it’s doing well, Cramer said, adding that he believes shares of Airbnb won’t go higher unless it turns its cash flow into actual earnings.

JetBlue

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected per share loss: 11 cents
  • Projected revenue: $2.45 billion

Cramer said he believes the Justice Department will block JetBlue’s deal to acquire Spirit Airlines.

PayPal

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 87 cents
  • Projected revenue: $6.78 billion

“If PayPal misses again, this is Elliott’s ballgame,” Cramer said, referring to activist investor Elliott Management’s recently acquired stake in the payment platform.

Wednesday: CVS

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 6:30 a.m. ET; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.18
  • Projected revenue: $76.41 billion

Cramer said he expects the retail giant to report great numbers.

Thursday: Eli Lilly, Warner Bros Discovery, DoorDash

Eli Lilly

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 6:25 a.m. ET; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.70 
  • Projected revenue: $6.85 billion

Cramer said he believes the success of Eli Lilly’s new weight loss drug will help the company report a great quarter.

Warner Bros Discovery

  • Q2 2022 earnings release after the bell; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 12 cents
  • Projected revenue: $11.85 billion

Cramer said he believes the company will try to muddle through getting rid of its huge debt load totaling around $55 billion.

DoorDash

  • Q2 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 6 p.m. ET
  • Projected per share loss: 21 cents
  • Projected revenue: $1.52 billion

Cramer said he’s unsure whether DoorDash will be able to revive its stock price.

Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of AMD and Eli Lilly.

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How Amazon plans to fix its massive returns problem

Amazon is handling a rapidly growing number of returns that are causing a massive problem for the e-commerce giant and the planet.

A National Retail Federation survey found a record $761 billion of merchandise was returned to retailers in 2021. That amount surpasses what the U.S. spent on national defense in 2021, which was $741 billion. 

Amazon wouldn’t share its overall returns numbers, but in 2021, the National Retail Federation estimates 16.6% of all merchandise sold during the holiday season was returned, up more than 56% from the year before. For online purchases, the average rate of return was even higher, at nearly 21%, up from 18% in 2020. With $469 billion of net sales revenue last year, Amazon’s returns numbers are likely staggering. 

U.S. returns generate 16 million metric tons of carbon emissions during their complicated reverse journey and up to 5.8 billion pounds of landfill waste each year, according to returns solution provider Optoro. 

“We’re talking about billions, billions, and billions of [dollars of] waste that’s a byproduct of consumerism run amok,” said Mark Cohen, director of retail studies at Columbia Business School and former CEO of Sears Canada. 

“The reverse logistics are always going to be nasty because the merchandise, in most cases, cannot be resold as it was originally,” Cohen said. “The most expedient pathway is into a dumpster, into a landfill.”

Amazon has told CNBC it sends no items to landfills but relies on “energy recovery” as a last resort.

“Energy recovery means you burn something to produce heat, to produce energy. And you rationalize the disposal of goods as a conversion from one form of matter to another,” Cohen said. “To the degree they’re doing that I don’t think they fully reveal.”

Amazon has said it is “working towards a goal of zero product disposal,” although it wouldn’t set a target date for reaching that goal.

“We encourage a second life on all of the products that we receive back,” said Cherris Armour, Amazon’s head of North American returns in an exclusive interview with CNBC.

“And that comes in the form of selling the majority of the items that we do receive. They are resold as new and used, or they go back to the seller or supplier, or we donate them,” Armour said.

Energy recovery, Armour added, is only for “items that we can’t recover or are not recyclable” due to legal or hygienic reasons or product damage.

Armour first joined Amazon 12 years ago, starting as a night shift operations manager at a fulfillment center in Indianapolis. She said the goal of zero product disposal was something they talked about at Amazon for many years. 

Cherris Armour, Amazon’s head of North American reverse logistics, poses with two other Amazon employees at a fulfillment center in Phoenix, Arizona, in November 2021.

Amazon

Easy returns are good business, but then what?

Researchers have found that consumers love easy returns.

An often-cited 2018 survey of 1,300 online shoppers found 96% would come back to a retailer if they had a good returns experience, and 69% were deterred from buying if they knew they’d have to pay for return shipping. In 2019, Amazon expanded free, easy returns to millions of items.

“Amazon has really been a game changer in the reverse logistics world because of how easy their returns are,” said Zac Rogers, who ran returns for an Amazon subsidiary called Quidsi from 2010 to 2012 before he became an assistant professor of supply chain management at Colorado State University.

“So now you have your more traditional retailers like Walmart or Target sort of implementing similar policies because that’s a really big piece of how you compete on the retail side of it,” he said. “It creates loyalty to the brand, makes you more likely to sign up for [Amazon’s] Prime, and Prime is really the thing that drives the flywheel of that company.”

Amazon now allows returns at 18,000 locations, including the option to drop off items without a box or label at Kohl’s, UPS and some Whole Foods stores. There’s a Try Before You Buy program for Prime members designed to make returns for clothes even easier, with return labels already included in the box. On the extreme end of easy returns, Amazon is increasingly allowing customers to keep some “returned” items while still refunding them.

“If I tell you to keep the product, instead of counting the cost and the carbon effect of taking it back, I look better as a company, don’t I?” said Tony Sciarrotta, executive director of the Reverse Logistics Association. “Let’s let the people keep it and then it doesn’t count against us. But now you, as a consumer, what do I do with this thing, right?”

Amazon now has to solve the problem of what to do with returns on the back end.

Amazon spent nearly $152 billion on logistics in 2021 — nearly a third of all net sales. That’s up from $119 billion in 2020. Returns factor into these costs, so anything Amazon can do to lower those costs will help the company’s bottom line.

“They’re going to do it for their own self-interests, although they’ll couch it in the name of saving the planet,” Cohen said. “But at the end of the day, their action is going to be based upon the economics of what we’re seeing.”

To that end, in 2019 Amazon launched a donation program that allows U.S. sellers to automatically donate excess and returned goods to a network of 100,000 local charities through a partnership with nonprofit network Good360. The organization works with about 400 companies, including giants such as Walmart, CVS and Nike, but says Amazon is its biggest corporate donor.

Good360 says it coordinates with local charities for direct pickups at more than 230 Amazon facilities, which helps Amazon save on transportation costs as gas prices hit record highs. The nonprofits pay Good360 a fee to help cover freight costs.

They also agree to certain rules before getting access to Amazon donations.

“They’re not going to be reselling those items, putting them on online auction sites, taking them to local flea markets or that sort of thing. So protecting that brand integrity of our donors is really central to what Good360 does,” said Shari Rudolph, Good360’s chief development officer and CMO.

There are also potential tax write-offs that can come with donating to a nonprofit.

“There are some programs that are available,” Rudolph said. “I don’t have any visibility into what the Amazon team is taking advantage of, if anything.”

Good360 program operations manager Regina Freeman handles Amazon returns in Baltimore, Maryland, in September 2020

Jim Halling Photography

Secondary market

There’s also a boom in the secondary market that’s making it easier to make money on secondhand items. Amid mounting pressure from younger shoppers who want sustainable shopping options, and a supply chain backlog causing a shortage of new goods, Colorado State’s Rogers calculated the size of the 2021 secondary market at $688 billion, up from $649 billion in 2020.

As secondhand items became a potential moneymaker, Amazon launched two new programs to rehome returns in 2020. It now gives sellers the option of liquidating returns, sending them to major third-party liquidators such as Liquidity Services to auction them off on the secondary market.

Also in 2020, Amazon started offering select sellers a Grade and Resell option for returns. With this option, Amazon evaluates the returned item and gives it a grade — Like New, Very Good, Good or Acceptable — then resells it on special sections of its site. There’s Warehouse Deals for used goods, Amazon Renewed for refurbished items, Amazon Outlet for overstock, and a tongue-in-cheek daily deal site called Woot! that sells a $10 “Bag of Crap.” Amazon even offers customers gift cards to trade in their used Amazon devices, which it can try to refurbish and resell.

“We expect that these programs will help to give a second life to more than 300 million units a year,” Amazon’s Armour said.

That’s just smart business, explained Rogers, the former Quidsi employee.

“Let’s assume a 20% return rate, that’s $93.8 billion of returns coming in. If instead of getting pennies on the dollar from a salvage dealer, you could get maybe 30 cents on the dollar from strategic targeted disposition, that bumps us up to $28 billion,” said Rogers.

“At $28 billion, having Woot or Amazon Outlet, now that makes a lot more sense because we’re really starting to get a return for our investment,” he said. “Before, when we were at a small scale, it’s like, ‘This is trash, get rid of it.’ Now, when we get bigger, they’re scaling to the point where monetizing those returns, it’d actually be irresponsible not to.”

But reverse logistics experts say the best way to reduce waste, and cut the expense of returns, is to prevent them from happening in the first place and then to create disincentives for returning goods.

“The industry at large would bow down to Amazon in a heartbeat if Amazon were to start to charge for returns because it would give them air cover to do the same,” Cohen said.

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GameStop, Uber, Nielsen Holdings and more

A screen displays the logo and trading information for GameStop on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) March 29, 2022.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

GameStop — Shares of the video game retailer dropped 6% on huge trading volume. More than 8 million shares traded through 10:50 a.m. ET, already doubling its 30-day average full-day volume of 4.6 million. There were some large block trades of GameStop in early trading on the NYSE.

Nielsen Holdings – Shares spiked about 20% following news that a group of private equity investors led by Brookfield Business Partners will acquire the ratings company for $16 billion. The company had previously rejected a $9 billion offer from the same group.

NortonLifeLock — Shares for the cybersecurity company dropped 4.5% in midday trading. On Tuesday, Morgan Stanley downgraded NortonLifeLock’s stock to equal-weight, saying the firm sees “limited catalysts” for the cybersecurity company. A regulatory probe in the United Kingdom into NortonLifeLock’s $8.6 billion deal with Avast and higher inflation costs is weighing on the stock.

FedEx – FedEx shares gained 4.2% on news that CEO Fred Smith will step down on June 1. Smith, who founded the package and delivery company more than 50 years ago, will serve as executive chairman. President and Chief Operating Officer Raj Subramaniam will replace him as CEO.

Uber — Shares rose 6% as the ride-hailing company is close to a deal to include San Francisco taxis to its app, The New York Times reported. The report comes after Uber last week announced an agreement to offer New York City taxi rides on its platform.

Dave & Buster’s — Shares of the arcade company soared 10% despite missing on the top and bottom lines of its quarterly results. Dave & Buster’s said that business “strengthened” in the first eight weeks of the first quarter with same-store sales up 5.4% over the same period in 2019.

Reynolds Consumer Products — Shares of the maker of consumer products fell nearly 3% in midday trading after Goldman Sachs double downgraded the stock to sell from buy. The Wall Street firm said consensus estimates are too high for Reynolds.

Stellantis — Shares of the automaker rose 7% in midday trading despite news that it is laying off an undisclosed number of workers at its Illinois Jeep plant in an effort to “operate the plant in a more sustainable manner.”

Jefferies — Shares of Jefferies popped more than 7% in midday trading after reporting better than expected quarterly profit and revenue.  Jefferies earned $1.23 per share, well above the 89 cent consensus estimate, according to Refinitiv.

UnitedHealth Group — Health care giant UnitedHealth Group announced a deal to buy LHC Group for $170 per share. LHC Group rose 1% in midday trading while UnitedHealth Group was about flat.

— with reporting from CNBC’s Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Hannah Miao, Tanaya Macheel and Yun Li.

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Walmart’s InHome hunts for ways to ditch single-use plastics

Walmart is trying to reduce its reliance on single-use plastic bags. It has a pilot program through its subscription grocery service, InHome.

Nicholas Pizzolato

When Walmart rolled out a new grocery delivery service, it tested a bold premise: customers letting a stranger walk into their homes to deliver milk, eggs and other products directly into the fridge.

Now that expanding service, InHome, is testing whether the country’s largest grocer and its shoppers can phase out reliance on single-use plastic bags and other kinds of disposable packaging that wind up in shoppers’ homes — and ultimately, the landfill.

Last fall, Walmart swapped out disposable bags for tote bags that it collected, washed and used again for the subscription service.

The pilot project, which was limited to a single store near the New York metro area, is part of Walmart’s broader effort to deliver on a pledge to move toward reusable, recyclable or industrially compostable packaging for its private brands and reach zero waste in its own operations in the U.S. and Canada by 2025.

In the first half of 2022, Walmart plans to test alternatives to single-use plastic for curbside pickup and home delivery, said Jane Ewing, Walmart’s senior vice president of sustainability. Those services are fast-growing parts of Walmart’s grocery business, after shoppers got used to the convenience during the pandemic.

Wall Street, lawmakers and consumers have put pressure on publicly traded companies to set lofty sustainability goals. A growing number of states, major U.S. cities and countries are banning or charging fees for single-use plastics. Consumers, particularly millennials and Gen Zers, are paying more attention to companies’ environmental impact. And investors are considering environmental, social and governance policies as a factor when deciding when to buy or sell a company’s stock.

Judith Enck, president of the nonprofit Beyond Plastics, said companies are “reading the writing on the wall,” much as they did when states and cities began passing laws that phased in higher minimum wages.

Yet she said she has grown weary of seeing retailers and consumer-packaged goods companies make promises that come with yearslong timetables and incremental steps toward compliance.

“Companies need to be bolder and they need to move faster,” she said. “These shouldn’t be pilots. They should be standard store policy.”

From cucumbers to clamshells

At Walmart, Ewing said her team scours store aisles and backrooms for ways to eliminate plastics from its supply chain, from films that wrap up pallets of merchandise to clamshells that hold leafy greens.

She said Walmart is especially focused on finding ways to keep fruits and vegetables fresh with packaging like what it devised with start-up Apeel: an invisible, edible plant-based coating on a cucumber instead of shrink-wrapping it in plastic.

Yet progress can be slow. For example, Walmart recently removed a plastic window from a box that holds plastic cutlery sold by its private label, Ewing said. That small change will be multiplied across inventory throughout its more than 4,700 U.S. stores. But that doesn’t solve the underlying problem — the plastic utensils themselves.

What’s more, private brands only drive a fraction of Walmart’s total sales. That means it must ultimately coax suppliers to change packaging to shift the balance of single-use plastics at Walmart’s stores. Eliminating or cutting back on packaging is one of the key parts of Project Gigaton, an effort that Walmart launched five years ago that aims to reduce one gigaton of greenhouse gas emissions from the company’s supply chains by 2030.

Walmart is part of Beyond the Bag, an initiative by retailers including Target, CVS Health, Kroger and others to look for ways to remove single-use plastic bags from the environment.

For its part, Walmart has tried Goatote and Chico Bags, two different kiosk systems that allow shoppers to borrow and return reusable bags, and Fill it Forward, an app-enabled tag that customers can add to their own bag, which tracks and incentivizes use by giving rewards.

“Most customers want to do the right thing; they want to lead a more sustainable life,” Ewing said. “But as a retailer, we have to make it easy for them. If it’s too complex, too hard, they’re not going to do it. So we have to figure out how can we build this into the flow of their regular shopping experience and take out the pain points for them.”

By the end of this year, Walmart plans to expand the InHome delivery service’s availability from 6 million to 30 million households. The subscription program costs $19.95 per month.

In the coming months, the grocer envisions that millions more customers will get their milk, pasta and other purchases delivered to the kitchen or garage with reusable tote bags, Ewing said.

Walmart has yet to decide its geographic markets or how many customers will receive the tote service, but Ewing said it will expand the pilot in the Northeast. Ultimately, she said she would like to see the totes used by InHome across the country.

Sustainability is built into other parts of the InHome initiative. For example, Walmart has reserved 5,000 electric delivery vans from General Motors for the service.

A circular system

The tote bags for the InHome pilot are made by Returnity, a company that is trying to move retailers and consumer-packaged goods brands away from disposable boxes and bags and toward a circular system of containers that can be reused. Returnity has developed packaging for Estee Lauder, New Balance and Rent the Runway.

Mike Newman, CEO of Returnity, said for the model to work, reusable packaging must make sense financially. That means packaging that is used frequently, designed with recycled plastics or other sustainable materials, with a return rate of more than 92%. With the Walmart program, he said, the return rate was nearly 100%.

Returnity counts James Reinhart, CEO and co-founder of online thrift store ThredUp, as one of its early investors.

At ThredUp, reusable packaging flopped and became a telling lesson, Newman said. Too many customers just tossed company-provided bags rather than reuse them, he said.

“You have to be cost competitive,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how green it is. If it can’t be economically viable, it’s never going anywhere.”

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This is a treacherous market filled with extreme stock moves

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday offered viewers his game plan for the next five trading days on Wall Street.

The “Mad Money” host’s lookahead came after the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite posted their best weeks so far in 2022, finishing 1.5% and 2.4% higher, respectively.

“This week we saw the true colors of what is a treacherous market,” the “Mad Money” host said. If investors love a stock, there’s “no level it won’t be taken up to,” he said. “But if it’s hated? There are no depths it won’t sink to. Either way … it’s likely to be an extreme.”

All revenue and earnings per share estimates are from FactSet.

Monday: Tyson Foods, Two-Take Interactive and Simon Property Group

Tyson Foods

  • Q1 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.93
  • Projected revenue: $12.17 billion

Cramer said the company’s quarter should provide insights into the country’s meat supply chain, which has experienced a host of challenges during the Covid pandemic.

Take-Two Interactive

  • Q3 earnings release after the close; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.12
  • Projected sales: $868 million

Take-Two’s quarter will provide a glimpse into how much of the pandemic-related surge in gaming has stuck around, Cramer said. “[CEO] Strauss Zelnick is the straightest of straight shooters. If demand is waning, he’s just going to say it.”

Simon Property Group

  • Q4 earnings release after the bell; conference call at 5 p.m.
  • Projected EPS: $2.89
  • Projected revenue: $1.25 billion

Tuesday: Centene, Pfizer, Chipotle, DuPont and Peloton

Centene

  • Q4 earnings before the open; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 98 cents
  • Projected revenue: $32.5 billion

“I think it’s a takeover target and I bet we’ll get a very good quarter,” Cramer said of the health insurer.

Pfizer

  • Q4 earnings before the bell; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 87 cents
  • Projected sales: $24.16 billion

Cramer also said he expects very good numbers from Pfizer.

DuPont

  • Q4 earnings before the open; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 99 cents
  • Projected revenue: $4.02 billion

“The great industrials have had a real up and down time in this market and I fear this could be DuPont’s down time, which is why we finally decided to ring the register for a terrific profit for the charitable trust,” Cramer said.

Chipotle

  • Q4 earnings after the close; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $5.25
  • Projected sales: $1.96 billion

Cramer said Chipotle’s quarter is the one he’s most interested in Tuesday. “I think it could do low double-digit same-store sales versus last year’s already excellent numbers and that should cause the stock to ignite,” he said. “Raw costs are always a problem in the business, though.”

Peloton

  • Q2 earnings after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: Loss of $1.22
  • Projected revenue: $1.14 billion

Cramer said he’s looking for a host of updates from Peloton’s management after the exercise equipment maker’s stock has been pummeled in recent months. One topic that is likely to come up is The Wall Street Journal’s report Friday that Amazon has approached Peloton about a potential deal, Cramer said.

Wednesday: CVS Health, PepsiCo, Disney and Mattel

CVS Health

  • Q4 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.83
  • Projected sales: $75.66 billion

“I expect a very good quarter from CVS [because of] Covid testing, but what happens next?” Cramer said. “Have they monetized the vaccination seekers? That would take it to the next level.”

PepsiCo

  • Q4 earnings release before the open; conference call at 8:15 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.52
  • Projected revenue: $24.24 billion

Cramer said he was surprised the beverage giant’s stock fell 1.6% Friday, suggesting he’d pick up some shares ahead of the quarterly print.

Disney

  • Q1 earnings release after the close; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 73 cents
  • Projected revenue: $20.27 billion

Cramer said he thinks the media and entertainment giant does not get enough credit for the value of its intellectual property. “This isn’t Netflix. It isn’t Facebook. It’s a one-of-a-kind growth vehicle. It is not stagnant. It is not dead, and that’s why I’d like to build a bigger position ahead of the quarter for my trust,” he said.

Mattel

  • Q4 earnings release after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 33 cents
  • Projected revenue: $1.66 billion

“I think there could be a whole new slate of toys and entertainment from CEO Ynon Kreiz, who’s been a turnaround whizz,” Cramer said.

Thursday: Coca-Cola, Twitter, Cloudflare and Zendesk

Coca-Cola

  • Q4 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 41 cents
  • Projected revenue: $8.98 billion

While Cramer said he expects a good quarter from Coca-Cola, he specifically mentioned looking for updates on the beverage maker’s partnership with Molson Coors on a Topo Chico hard seltzer. “I think this is the next big spiked [beverage],” Cramer said.

Twitter

  • Q4 earnings release before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 33 cents
  • Projected revenue: $1.58 billion

It’s unclear whether Twitter’s digital ad business faces challenges like Facebook parent Meta or is growing just fine like Amazon or Alphabet, Cramer said. “I think we’ll find out that it remains the same old plodding Twitter when it reports—a company that has nothing we truly want to pay up for,” Cramer said.

Cloudflare

  • Q4 earnings after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 0 cents
  • Projected revenue: $185 million

Cramer said he’s anticipating “great numbers” from the cybersecurity firm, but “I don’t expect anyone to care” because the stock is out of favor on Wall Street.

Zendesk

  • Q4 earnings after the bell; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 18 cents
  • Projected sales: $371 million

Cramer said he’s keeping an eye out for an update on Zendesk’s pursuit of Momentive Global, a deal which activist investor Jana Partners has urged Zendesk to drop.

Friday: Under Armour, Cleveland-Cliffs and Goodyear Tire & Rubber

Under Armour

  • Q4 earnings release before the open; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 6 cents
  • Projected sales: $1.47 billion

“There’s lots of good buzz about this one, so much that I think it’s actually a terrific speculation going into the quarter. We keep hearing about a potential turnaround, maybe this time it’s going to happen,” Cramer said.

Cleveland-Cliffs

  • Q4 earnings before the bell; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.15
  • Projected revenue: $5.73 billion

“I’m betting actually that Cleveland-Cliffs will do a decent number,” Cramer said, complimenting the company’s management and improved balance sheet.

Goodyear Tire & Rubber

  • Q4 earnings before the open; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 32 cents
  • Projected sales: $5.01 billion

“I think that Goodyear will positively dazzle,” Cramer said.

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Disclaimer

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