Tag Archives: ETSY Inc

Cramer names 6 e-commerce plays that are buys, says to wait on Amazon

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday offered investors a list of e-commerce plays he believes are worth buying, despite the group’s rough performance in 2022.

“There are still some e-commerce plays that I’m willing to get behind here, the ones that have truly prioritized profitability,” he said.

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Here is his list: 

  1. Etsy
  2. Shopify
  3. Pinterest
  4. MercadoLibre
  5. Chewy
  6. Prologis

E-commerce stocks skyrocketed during the height of the Covid pandemic, as at-home consumers made purchases online rather than in-store. But when the economy reopened, consumers prioritized spending on travel and experiences over goods.

That shift, along with the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes, sent e-commerce stocks tumbling from their highs last year.

Cramer cautioned that while he believes the group’s struggles are temporary, it’s still too early to buy many of the names in the e-commerce space — including Amazon

He said that one of his biggest concerns with the company is that it needs to cut more costs. Amazon said earlier this month that it plans to lay off over 18,000 employees. 

While that might seem like a sizable cut, “this is a company with well over a million employees — to them, this is a drop in the bucket,” Cramer said.

But Amazon’s stock will eventually bottom, he said. “I think the business can eventually make a big comeback and there will come a point where the stock’s a screaming buy.”

Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Amazon.

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Stocks making biggest midday moves: Netflix, Bristol-Myers and more

The Netflix logo is seen on a TV remote controller, in this illustration taken January 20, 2022.

Dado Ruvic | Reuters

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.

Catalent Inc. – Shares of pharmaceutical company Catalent fell 8% after earnings that disappointed Wall Street. While Catalent beat expectations for earnings, its revenue and full-year outlook were below estimates.

Dow – The chemical maker dropped 2% after KeyBanc downgraded it to underweight from sector weight. The bank said in a note that an economic slowdown, especially in Europe, could hurt demand for Dow and squeeze the company’s profit margins.

Honda Motor – Shares of Honda moved 1.3%  higher after it joined forces with LG Energy Solution to build a new battery production plant for electric vehicles in the U.S. The companies, who plan to invest $4.4 billion, aim to begin mass production of advanced lithium-ion battery cells by the end of 2025. 

Pinduoduo — Pinduoduo surged 18% after topping estimates in the recent quarter on the top and bottom lines. The China-based e-commerce giant said a recovery in consumer sentiment helped results.

Netflix — Shares of the streaming giant rose 1.1% after a Bloomberg report that its ad tier could cost between $7 and $9 a month.

Bristol-Myers Squibb — Shares of Bristol-Myers Squibb slumped 5.3% after reporting results from a mid-stage trial of its developing stroke treatment that failed to meet the main objective of the study.

Energy stocks — Energy stocks jumped in tandem with oil prices rose on news of a potential OPEC+ supply cut. Shares of Diamondback Energy, Marathon Oil, Occidental and Exxon Mobil rose from 3.3% to 4.3%.

Etsy — Etsy added 1.2% following news that it will require U.S. sellers on its platform to verify their bank accounts or provide their username and password to fintech platform Plaid.

— CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox and Carmen Reinicke contributed reporting

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Some of the first quarter’s biggest losers could be the biggest steals, Jim Cramer says

Investors should consider purchasing stock of the first quarter’s biggest losers if the market shows signs of recovering on its own, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday.

“This market’s screaming that we’re headed for a [Federal Reserve]-mandated slowdown, that could possibly become a Fed-mandated recession,” the “Mad Money” host said. “If we get more signs that inflation is cooling on its own, like the pullback in oil, then some of the hardest hit stocks might end up looking pretty enticing.”

The first quarter of 2022 was marked by rampant volatility. Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine in February sent commodities prices including oil skyrocketing, while in March the Fed took its first interest rate hike in three years in an attempt to tamp down rising prices. Global Covid outbreaks last month also caused supply chain snarls as factories in key areas like China were forced to shutter.

Fed Chair Jay Powell in late March vowed to take strong action against inflation as needed. 

Adding to the speculative market environment, a key part of the Treasury yield remained inverted on Monday after 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields shifted last week, heightening concerns about a possible recession coming. While inversions have historically preceded some economic recessions, they are not guaranteed indicators.

Cramer said that energy stocks performed the best during the first quarter due to soaring prices, while “recession-resistant” utility stocks also rallied. Cramer also listed the first quarter’s biggest winning and losing companies that are listed in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.

Here are the winners and losers:

Dow Jones Industrial Average

Winners

Losers

S&P 500

Winners

Losers

Nasdaq 100

Losers

Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Chevron, Salesforce, Halliburton, Meta

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Cramer sees post-Covid staying power for Etsy, Cash App parent Block

Etsy and Block are Covid-era winners that will continue to thrive even after the pandemic, CNBC’s Jim Cramer contended on Friday.

“You need to understand just how special these stocks are,” the “Mad Money” host said. “While they can have some huge swings, once the volatility’s over, I bet they won’t easily give back their gains.”

Etsy shares soared 16% Friday after the e-commerce marketplace provider reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue Thursday. Even with Friday’s big move, the stock is down nearly 50% over the past three months. The steep decline came as Wall Street rotated into more defensive parts of the stock market and as investors questioned the staying power of pandemic success stories.

Shares of Block, formerly known as Square, skyrocketed 26% Friday after beating Wall Street expectations on earnings and revenue for its fourth quarter. The company also released a rosy outlook for the current quarter and full-year based on the growth of its mobile payment service, Cash App.

Like Etsy’s, Block’s stock has been crushed in recent months. It’s still down more than 40% over the past three months, despite Friday’s gains.

Cramer, who previously warned that many companies aren’t ready for a post-pandemic world, said that the payment giant is “firing on all cylinders” and praised Cash App as “brilliant.” 

As for Etsy, Cramer said the e-commerce shopping platform’s growth internationally, evidenced by its recent increase in transaction fees from 5% to 6.5%, signals a path to success even after the pandemic. “Because of Etsy’s unique nature as the No. 1 marketplace for handcrafted goods, I doubt there will be any resistance,” he added.

Cramer also named DoorDash and Airbnb as other Covid-era winners that he believes will continue to succeed post-pandemic.

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Foot Locker, Cinemark, Dell and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Foot Locker (FL) – Foot Locker shares slumped 16.1% in the premarket after the athletic apparel and shoe retailer gave a weaker-than-expected full-year profit and comparable-store sales outlook. The company cited changes in its vendor mix as well as a decline in fiscal stimulus versus a year ago. Foot Locker reported better-than-expected results for its fiscal fourth quarter, including an unexpected rise in comp sales.

Cinemark (CNK) – Cinemark jumped 3.7% in the premarket after the movie theater operator reported an unexpected quarterly profit and revenue that beat Wall Street forecasts. Attendance jumped as Covid-19 restrictions loosened.

Dell Technologies (DELL) – Dell tumbled 9% in premarket action after saying it expected its order backlog to swell this quarter, with supply chain issues limiting its ability to fulfill strong order demand.

Block (SQ) – Block surged 16.5% in premarket trading after the payments company formerly known as Square reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. Block also gave an upbeat forecast for the current quarter and the full year amid growing success for its Cash App.

LendingTree (TREE) – The financial services company’s stock added 2.6% in the premarket after reporting a narrower-than-expected loss and revenue that exceeded analyst forecasts. LendingTree saw strong performance in its consumer segment during the quarter.

Coinbase (COIN) – Coinbase reported quarterly earnings of $3.32 per share, well above the consensus estimate of $1.85, with the cryptocurrency company’s seeing revenue also topping Wall Street forecasts. However, Coinbase said volatility in the cryptocurrency market will result in lower transactions volume this quarter. Coinbase fell 2% in premarket trading.

Beyond Meat (BYND) – Beyond Meat slid 10.8% in the premarket after reporting a wider-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that fell slightly short of Wall Street forecasts. The maker of plant-based meat substitutes also issued a weaker-than-expected forecast as it expects a temporary disruption of U.S. retail growth.

Etsy (ETSY) – Etsy shares surged 17.4% in premarket action after the online crafts marketplace beat quarterly estimates and issued a strong forecast. Etsy earned $1.11 per share for its latest quarter, compared with a consensus estimate of 79 cents, as it continues to see elevated demand that first developed during the pandemic.

Zscaler (ZS) – Zscaler took an 11.6% hit in the premarket despite beating quarterly estimates on the top and bottom lines. Investors are focusing on the cybersecurity company’s weaker-than-expected outlook, although it reported its strongest year-over-year revenue growth in three years.

Farfetch (FTCH) – Farfetch soared 30.5% in premarket action even though its adjusted quarterly loss of 3 cents per share merely matched estimates and revenue fell below the consensus estimate. The luxury fashion seller was profitable on an adjusted basis for 2021, encouraging investors after a recent tumble in the stock’s price.

KAR Auction Services (KAR) – Carvana (CVNA) is buying KAR Auction Services’ vehicle auction business in the U.S. for $2.2 billion, as the online used-car seller moves to boost its physical presence. KAR soared 66.2% while Carvana rose 0.8% in the premarket.

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Beyond Meat, Etsy & more

Beyond Meat “Beyond Burger” patties made from plant-based substitutes for meat products sit on a shelf for sale in New York City.

Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines after the bell

Beyond Meat — Shares of the meat alternative producer tumbled more than 11% in extended trading after the company reported a wider-than-expected loss and shrinking revenue for its fourth quarter. Beyond Meat also released a weak forecast for its 2022 revenue.

Coinbase — Shares of the crypto trading platform dipped more than 5% in after-hours trading even after the company reported fourth-quarter earnings that beat analyst estimates. The company predicted that retail Monthly Transaction Users and total trading volume would be lower in Q1 2022 compared with Q4 2021.

Etsy — The online marketplace saw its stock pop a whopping 15% after the company beat analysts’ estimates for the fourth quarter. Etsy reported earnings of $1.11 per share for the December quarter, ahead of analysts’ consensus expectations of 79 cents, according to Refinitiv. Its quarterly revenue also came in above expectations.

KAR Auction Services — Shares of the used car company soared more than 60% in extended trading after it said it has agreed to be acquired by Carvana in a $2.2 billion all-cash deal. Carvana, which also reported a wider-than-expected loss for the fourth quarter, saw its stock fall more than 10% in after-hours trading.

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Shoppers are buying from resale retailers more than ever. Here’s why

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Secondhand retail companies are finding success with shoppers focused on sustainability and hard-to-find items, while also avoiding the supply chain pressures being felt by traditional retailers.  

Big box retailers like Walmart and Target have focused on keeping prices down, and have absorbed the increasing costs in shipping, labor, and materials for shoppers. Other retailers, like Macy’s and Kohl’s, have raised prices to keep up with the uptick in costs.    

But resale companies The RealReal and ThredUp are playing up their secondhand supply chains, inventory levels, and pricing.   

“While many retailers have been forced to raise prices due to inflation or supply chain pressure, we do not have the same level of exposure,” James Reinhart, CEO of ThredUp, said on the company’s recent third quarter earnings call.  

ThredUp’s business is entirely sourced domestically from its users, according to Reinhart, and has no reliance on direct manufacturing for inventory.  

“We have chosen to strategically lower prices in order to engage as many customers as possible during a time when consumers are feeling price pressure in many other parts of their life,” he added.  

ThredUp’s prices averaged 15% lower in the third quarter compared to the same period last year. Reinhart said the company will continue to keep prices down through ThredUp’s domestic supply system.  

The company reported record quarterly revenue of $63.3 million in its third quarter, up 35% year-over-year. It also had record numbers of active buyers at 1.4 million and a record number of orders at 1.3 million, growing 14% and 28%, respectively, year-over-year.  

Julie Wainwright, founder and CEO of the RealReal, said after its third quarter earnings that the company’s inventory has exceeded pre-Covid levels, adding “we believe we are well-positioned from a supply perspective as we enter the holiday season.”

She also noted that the RealReal is shielded from the inflationary impacts other businesses are seeing.  

The RealReal reported total revenue of $119 million in its third quarter, an increase of 53% compared to last year. There were 757,000 orders in the third quarter, up 38% year-over-year.

“Adjacent to the issue of reselling and all of the empty storefronts, I feel very strongly that retail is just changing,” said Tim Ceci, founder and president of Tim Ceci Retail Consulting.  

Still, investors aren’t entirely sold on the outlook for these companies, even amid the supply chain issues around the globe for retailers. ThredUp’s stock has been volatile since its initial IPO pop this year, and after its recent earnings resulted in a one-day bounce, shares continued on a declining trajectory. RealReal received a boost from its recent earnings, but remains down near-25% this year.

But the broader consumer trends supporting the secondhand market do continue to serve as a secular tailwind for the niche.

New habits pushing shoppers towards resellers  

In total, by 2023, the resale market is expected to reach $51 billion, according to a recent report from ThredUp.

The resale industry is growing 11 times faster than traditional retail, according to Carolyn Thomas, president and CEO of Aravenda, a consignment software company. This trend is likely linked to two factors: supply chain logistics and the consumer’s shift to a sustainable mindset.  

It’s also being aided by younger consumers like Edwin Elliott, a 25-year-old Miami resident, who is scoping out old-school pieces online to complete trendy outfits. They can be difficult to recreate “without real vintage pieces,” Elliott said. “And there are so many resale shops online, so it has made it easier to buy vintage items.”  

“Before you would have to go thrifting,” said Elliott, “you would have to sort through piles of stuff and hope that you find something worth buying.”  

Thrifting, the antiquated term for resale, is all about the shopper having choices. And the web has provided that, says Ceci. “Gen Z is running after secondhand and reselling,” he said.  

Etsy, the online business known for its handmade and vintage item marketplace, acquired the resale app Depop in July for $1.62 billion, showing “significant potential to further scale,” according to Etsy CEO Josh Silverman in a statement announcing the deal. 

Etsy’s stock has outperformed the marker this year. 

Depop, or the “resale home for Gen Z consumers” as Silverman described the marketplace, hosts 30 million users across 150 countries. Through its core messaging around environmental and ethical shopping, the resale brand is a huge attraction to the younger consumer.  

“It’s about having choices,” Ceci said. And for the younger shopper who is looking for retro styles and a sustainable way to shop, “it is a viable way to have an exchange with a retailer or a brand,” he added.  

Growing focus on new, unused items  

The sustainability factor is an “added perk” for Elliott, but the main reason he shops resale is for the exclusiveness and online convenience.  

These resale sites are not just providing a platform for sellers to sell off old goods. ‘New with tags’ or ‘new in box’ items are increasingly being sold through resale platforms, according to Thomas.

StockX, which launched in 2016 as the “Stock Market of sneakers,” the resale site has evolved to become a hub for users to buy and sell new high-ticket and hard-to-find items from clothing, handbags, and electronics. In April, StockX completed a new round of funding that valued it at $3.8 billion, signaling the “broad recognition and excitement” for the company in the long-term, StockX CEO Scott Cutler said in a statement.  

Through resale sites like Depop, consumers can resell limited items that may have sold out and are no longer available directly from the retailer – a common occurrence, according to Elliott, “so, it’s hard not to buy off a resale site.”  

“When you pivot over and look at the RealReal, a lot of that relationship with the customer is on luxury or higher-end goods,” Ceci said.  

Traditional retailers moving into resale  

Several traditional retailers are finding ways to move into the reselling space as that business booms.  

Lululemon announced in April it would be launching its own resale program. The brand partnered with Trove, a business that helps companies build out resale shops, and began piloting its ‘Like New’ program in California and Texas in May.   

ThredUp has struck several partnerships, including a deal with Macy’s in August to offer secondhand apparel at 40 stores. J.C. Penney works with ThredUp to offer secondhand women’s clothing and handbags at 30 stores.  

Through its “resale as a service” platform, ThredUp is working with several retailers to help them provide secondhand products to customers, including Walmart, Everlane, Farfetch, Gap, Adidas, and Crocs.  

Even Ikea said it would get into reselling, with the Scandinavian ready-to-assemble furniture store announcing this month it would offer a “buy back & resell” program in 33 of its U.S. stores through December 5, after piloting the service at a Philadelphia store.  

“I am optimistic amid a lot of evolution that is going on,” Ceci said. “And certainly, the resale market is definitely here to stay.”  

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Semiconductor shortage to be in focus yet again

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday looked ahead to next week’s of earnings reports, detailing for investors his key market events to keep an eye on.

The “Mad Money” host’s comments came after all three major U.S. equity indexes closed at record highs Friday, despite disappointing quarterly results a day earlier from market heavyweights Amazon and Apple.

All revenue and per-share earnings projections are based on FactSet estimates:

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Monday: ON Semiconductor, NXP Semiconductors, Diamondback Energy and Clorox

On Semiconductor

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 9 a.m. ET Monday
  • Projected EPS: 74 cents
  • Projected sales: $1.7 billion

NXP Semiconductors

  • Q3 results; conference call at 8 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: $2.75
  • Projected sales: $ 2.85 billion

Both companies’ earnings will offer “a read on one of the biggest stories in this market, and that’s the semiconductor shortage,” Cramer said. “They do a lot of auto semis, and they’ve got exposure to many of the others areas where there are the biggest bottlenecks.”

Diamondback Energy

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call at 9 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: $2.79
  • Projected revenue: $1.54 billion

Clorox

  • Q1 2022 results after the bell; conference call at 5:30 p.m. ET Monday
  • Projected EPS: $1.03
  • Projected revenue: $1.7 billion

“I hope for the best, but I am preparing for the worst,” Cramer said, noting the household products maker may not be able to pass through all of its higher commodity costs, possibly hurting margins.

Tuesday: Estee Lauder, DuPont, Pfizer, BP, Devon Energy, T-Mobile and Zillow

Estee Lauder

  • Q1 2022 results before the open; conference call at 9:30 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: $1.70
  • Projected sales: $4.25 billion

DuPont

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: $1.12
  • Projected sales: $4.16 billion

Cramer’s charitable trust owns both Estee Lauder and DuPont. “I don’t expect them to have superb quarters. Fortunately, the expectations are low, though, so it won’t take much to produce an upside surprise that moves the stocks up,” he said.

Pfizer

  • Q3 results before the open; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.08
  • Projected revenue: $22.58 billion

“Unlike Moderna, Pfizer’s a lot more complicated than just a Covid vaccine story. See, they’re facing what’s known as a patent cliff next year,” Cramer said. “We need to know if the boosters, which cost a lot of money, … are going to cover the patent cliff.”

BP

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 5 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: £ 10.83
  • Projected revenue: £29.06 billion

Devon Energy

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call at 11 a.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: 93 cents
  • Projected sales: $3.23 billion

T-Mobile

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: 48 cents
  • Projected revenue: $20.22 billion

“The [telecommunications] industry has got a clear pecking order: T-Mobile for growth, Verizon for the dividend, and AT&T for nothing. Let’s see how many subscribers T-Mobile has been able to steal from its rivals when they report,” Cramer sad.

Zillow

  • Q3 after the close; conference call at 5 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: 16 cents
  • Projected revenue: $2 billion

“They had to put the real estate flipping business on pause because the economics turned out against them, but what does that really mean? We’re going to find out on Tuesday,” Cramer said.

Wednesday: CVS Health, Humana, Marriott International, Wynn Resorts, Qualcomm and Etsy

CVS Health

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 8 a.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: $1.79
  • Projected revenue: $70.5 billion

“This stock’s been on a roll, bolstered by Covid vaccines and superior execution, at least compared to arch-rival Walgreens. I don’t know if it can continue now that the pandemic’s winding down, but remember that CVS also has a huge health insurance business,” Cramer said.

Humana

  • Q3 results before the open; conference call at 9 a.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: $4.66
  • Projected revenue: $20.9 billion

Cramer said he expects the health insurer’s numbers to be even better than rivals Centene and UnitedHealth Group.

Marriott International

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: 99 cents
  • Projected sales: $3.71 billion

Wynn Resorts

  • Q3 results after the close
  • Projected EPS: Loss of $1.36
  • Projected revenue: $943 million

Cramer said he expects Marriott International to have a better story to tell about the hospitality recovery compared to Wynn Resorts, which his charitable trust owns. He said that’s because of Wynn Resorts’ exposure to the gaming hub of Macau.

Qualcomm

  • Q4 results after the close; conference call at 4:45 p.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: $2.26
  • Projected revenue: $8.85 billion

“They’ll give us more insight into the cellphone market, but I bet that can’t be that positive, either,” Cramer said, alluding to the chip crunch.

Etsy

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: 55 cents
  • Projected revenue: $519 million

“I bet CEO Josh Silverman will have a lot of good to say about his e-commerce platform for handicrafts—should make a nice contrast to Amazon’s disappointing quarter,” Cramer said.

Thursday: Uber, Skyworks Solutions, Peloton and Square

Uber

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call 5 p.m. ET Thursday
  • Projected EPS: Loss of 34 cents
  • Projected revenue: $4.41 billion

“I think Uber can deliver, but the stock’s been kept down by persistent sellers, so even a good quarter might not matter, at least not until these weak hands finish dumping their shares,” Cramer said.

Skyworks Solutions

  • Q4 results after the bell; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET Thursday
  • Projected EPS: $2.55
  • Projected sales: $1.3 billion

“Maybe they give us some insight into when the chip shortage nightmare can come to an end,” Cramer said.

Peloton

  • Q1 2022 results after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET Thursday
  • Projected EPS: Loss of $1.10
  • Projected sales: $809 million

The fitness equipment maker was a major pandemic winner, but the stock has struggled to gain traction since investors shifted toward reopening plays, Cramer said. “I think they’ve got their work cut out for them.”

Square

  • Q3 results after the close; conference call at 5 p.m. ET Thursday
  • Projected EPS: 37 cents
  • Projected revenue: $4.38 billion

“I’m betting their mojo will be absent for now, mojo being a technical term on Wall Street for the massive love a stock gets after a monster beat and raise quarter,” Cramer said.

Friday: Enbridge and October nonfarm payrolls

Enbridge

  • Q3 results before the bell; conference call at 9 a.m. ET Friday
  • Projected EPS: 57 cents
  • Projected revenue: $9.62 billion

Cramer said he likes the company’s dividend payment. “Plus, we have a real shortage of energy infrastructure, so I bet business is good,” Cramer said.

The Labor Department’s report on nonfarm payrolls for the month of October is out at 8:30 a.m. Friday, but Cramer cautioned the recent monthly reports have been “all over the map right now,” making their appearance “seem deceiving.”

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Amazon piles ads into search results as big brands pay for placement

The Amazon logo displayed on a smartphone and a PC screen.

Pavlo Gonchar | LightRocket via Getty Images

Search for “toothpaste” on Amazon, and the top of the web page will show you a mix of popular brands like Colgate, Crest and Sensodyne. Try a separate search for “deodorant” and you’ll first see products from Secret, Dove and Native.

Look a little closer, though, and you’ll notice that those listings are advertisements with the “sponsored” label affixed to them. Amazon is generating hefty revenue from the top consumer brands because getting valuable placement on the biggest e-commerce site comes with a rising price tag.

“There’s fewer organic search results on the page, so that increasingly means the only way to get on the page is to buy your way on there,” said Jason Goldberg, chief commerce strategy officer at advertising firm Publicis.

For consumers looking for toothpaste on Amazon, getting to unpaid results requires two full swipes up on the mobile app.

An example of a mobile search for “toothpaste” on Amazon shows a sponsored brand ad at the top of results.

Until recently, Amazon put two or three sponsored products at the top of search results. Now, there may be as many as six sponsored products that appear ahead of any organic results, with more promotions elsewhere on the page, said Juozas Kaziukenas, who runs e-commerce research firm Marketplace Pulse.

The number of ads that appear differs depending on the exact search term and other factors such as whether users are shopping on desktop, mobile or in the Amazon app, Amazon says.

While Amazon doesn’t break out advertising revenue, ads account for the majority of the company’s “other” sales. That category was the fastest-growing part of Amazon’s overall business in the second quarter, with revenue soaring 87% from a year earlier to more than $7.9 billion.

In 2018, Amazon leapfrogged Microsoft to become the third-largest ad platform in the U.S., trailing only Google and Facebook. Amazon is capitalizing on its market control, knowing that its website or app is where many consumers begin their online shopping journey.

Kaziukenas said Amazon and founder Jeff Bezos have completely transformed from being anti-advertising. It’s become such a lucrative business that ads “have replaced most of the functionality on the site,” he said.

An Amazon spokesperson said there are no dedicated ad slots within search results, meaning that a user may see one ad, multiple ads or none at all. The company said advertising is an optional service for brands and sellers, but that using it can improve visibility of their products.

“Like all retailers, we design our store to help customers easily find and discover the right brands and products, and sponsored ads is one of the many ways we do this,” the spokesperson said in an email. “In all cases we work back from the most useful customer experience and the relevance of the results surfaced, regardless of how they’re presented to the shopper.”

Big consumer products makers aren’t the only ones taking up the most valuable virtual real estate. Amazon is also populating search results with its own products. For example, a search for “shampoo” pulls up a promotion for a bottle of Amazon brand Solimo before ads for products from Pantene, Nexxus, L’Oreal and others.

Sponsored product ads accounted for roughly 73% of retailers’ ad spend on Amazon in the second quarter, according to digital marketing agency Merkle. Last year, Amazon began replacing product recommendations in listings with product ads.

Amazon has also added new ad formats like video ads and sponsored brands posts, which feature a single brand and several product listings in a banner at the top of the page.

Ad prices going up

For brand owners, the price of doing business on Amazon is surging as the company expands its dominance in online commerce.

The cost per click for Amazon search advertising was $1.27 in August, up from 86 cents a year ago, according to a survey of more than 300 Amazon sellers conducted by Canopy Management, an agency that helps manage businesses on Amazon.

Companies that don’t pay the toll are finding their listings buried in search results. At the same time, sellers are paying more overall to Amazon for things like transaction fees and fulfillment services.

“It’s not uncommon now for brands to be spending 50% or more of their product price on various fees to be selling on Amazon,” Kaziukenas said.

Competition has also intensified as a result of the rise of Amazon aggregators, venture-backed companies that are raising big money from outside investors to acquire independent sellers. Some smaller sellers are concerned they may not be able to compete against deep-pocketed aggregators, which are bringing “massive budgets to be spent on Amazon, also in the form of advertising,” Kaziukenas said.

“They’re going from competing against other, smaller sellers to now competing against massive and well-funded sellers,” he said.

WATCH: Inside the rapid growth of Amazon Logistics and how it’s taking on third-party shipping

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Dow futures rise, extending Monday’s 300-point rally

Dow futures moved higher in overnight trading on Monday, putting the index on track to extend its rally from the regular session.

Dow futures rose about 150 points. S&P 500 futures gained 0.5% and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.6%.

On Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied more than 300 points on investor optimism about the economic comeback from the pandemic.  At its session high, the 30-stock average jumped 650 points to hit an intraday record.

The bullishness was fueled in part by the Senate’s passing of a $1.9 trillion economic relief and stimulus bill on Saturday, which is set to include another round of stimulus checks. Banks, airlines, cruise lines and retailers all rose on hopes of a sharp economic rebound.

Additionally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Monday that people who’ve been fully vaccinated against Covid-19 can meet safely indoors without masks. The announcement came after the U.S. reached 3 million vaccinations over the weekend.

Technology stocks, meanwhile, continued their recent weakness as the Nasdaq Composite dropped 2.4%. The tech-heavy benchmark closed more than 10% below its Feb.12 closing high, falling into correction territory.

The S&P 500 also ended the day down about 0.5%, dragged down by shares of Tesla, PayPal, Etsy and Advanced Micro Devices.

The high-growth names have been pressured by rising interest rates lately. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yield stood around 1.6% on Monday. However, hedge fund manager David Tepper said the recent sharp rise in rates is likely over and it’s hard to be bearish on stocks right now.

Monday’s “initial rally was due primarily to news over the weekend that President Biden’s relief package had passed,” Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group, told CNBC. “Ultimately, however, equity investors are currently obsessed with bond yields keeping the Nasdaq and S&P 500 technology sector under pressure all day. Since the 10-year bond yield failed to pull back from the 1.6% level near the close today, eventually pressure on technology stocks intensified going into the close.”  

“Nonetheless, most of the stock market had a nice day as small caps stocks and several reopening sectors posted healthy gains,” added Paulsen.

The small-cap benchmark Russell 2000 gained about 0.5% on Monday.

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