Tag Archives: Wayfair Inc

Cramer says these 6 ‘positives’ could lift stocks in earnings season

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday said that several elements could help propel stocks higher, even during what could be an ugly earnings season.

Tuesday kicks off a new earnings season featuring some of the biggest companies in technology, retail and consumer goods. Companies like Microsoft, IBM and ServiceNow are slated to report their quarterly financial results this week.

Here are the six factors that could help stocks as companies report earnings, according to Cramer:

  1. More firms are implementing layoffs. Companies including Microsoft, Salesforce and Wayfair recently announced head count cuts, and their stocks popped.
  2. The U.S. dollar and interest rates peaked last fall. Cyclical, more economically sensitive stocks have since bounced, as many companies conduct a large portion of their business overseas.
  3. The Federal Reserve could almost be done raising interest rates. That’s according to a Wall Street Journal report, and could mean that bad loan worries – and possible ensuing damage to banks – could be over.
  4. China’s economy is reopening. The return of the world’s second-largest economy is great news for companies, particularly those in entertainment, travel and consumer goods.
  5. The government is poised to spend big on infrastructure. Cash from the bipartisan infrastructure bill and the Inflation Reduction Act provide a “safety net” for companies that build roads, bridges or tunnels.
  6. Analysts are upgrading chip stocks. Barclays on Monday upgraded Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm to overweight. “Remember, the [semiconductor chips] inventory glut included everything from cellphones to desktops to high-performance computers. This is a very big deal,” Cramer said.

Cramer cautioned that while earnings season may still not be smooth sailing, any dips in stock price aren’t necessarily unwelcome.

“At the moment of the first print, when we see the numbers, I still expect to see some vicious declines. The difference from 2022? Those declines, they might be buyable,” he said.

Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Advanced Micro Devices, Qualcomm, Salesforce and Microsoft.

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Dow jumps 300 points to start the week as investors weigh next Fed rate move

Stocks rallied Monday as investors contemplated a potential slowdown in rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and braced for a busy week of earnings.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 318 points, or 0.9%, while the S&P 500 added 1.4%. The Nasdaq Composite surged 2.1%.

Semiconductor stocks and shares of Tesla and Apple gained on hopes that a reopening in China would boost their businesses. Both big tech names recently grappled with temporary shutdowns and blows to production as the country dealt with surging Covid-19 cases.

Investors have begun weighing the possibility that the Fed is preparing to slow the pace of its inflation-fighting rate hikes after months of aggressive tightening. Economic data released last week showed a decline in wholesale prices and retail sales, along with commentary from central bank officials, seemed to signal a slowdown.

Remarks from Fed Governor Christopher Waller Friday seeming to favor a quarter percentage point rate increase at the next meeting lifted investors’ hopes for a downshift. A Wall Street Journal report Sunday raised the possibility of a spring pause to rate increases — a sign that the Fed could be nearing the end of its rate hiking campaign.

“Bulls are running with the near-term momentum, the ‘soft landing’ narrative, and it’s hard to argue with recent price action,” wrote Jonathan Krinsky, BTIG’s chief market technician in a note Monday. “On the other hand, long term trends are still somewhat bearish, and we are always skeptical of such a widely watched ‘breakout’, especially after big run.”

Markets have priced in a nearly 100% chance of a 25-basis point hike, according to CME Group data, which would bring the interest rate to a targeted range of 4.5%-4.75%.

Earnings reports could keep the market on edge, with about 40% of the Dow scheduled to release their latest financial results and offer more insight into how companies are weathering inflation and interest rates. Some big names on deck include Microsoft, IBM, Tesla, Visa and Mastercard.

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U.S. job market divide boosts some workers’ prospects, puts others on notice

A help wanted sign is displayed in the window of a Brooklyn, New York business.

Spencer Platt | Getty Images

Cracks are forming in the U.S. labor market as some companies look to curb hiring while others are desperate for employees.

Microsoft, Twitter, Wayfair, Snap and Facebook-parent Meta recently announced they plan to be more conservative about adding new employees. Peloton and Netflix announced layoffs as demand for their products slowed, and online car seller Carvana cut its workforce as it faces inflation and a cratering stock price.

“We will treat hiring as a privilege and be deliberate about when and where we add headcount,” Uber boss Dara Khosrowshahi wrote to staff earlier this month, pledging to reduce costs.

U.S.-based employers reported more than 24,000 job cuts in April, up 14% from the month before and 6% higher than the same month last year, according to outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

But airlines, restaurants and others still need to fill positions. Job cuts for the first four months of the year were down 52% compared with the same period of 2021. Just under 80,000 jobs cuts were announced from January to April, the lowest tally in the nearly three decades the firm has been tracking the data.

What’s emerging is a tale of two job markets — albeit not equal in size or pay. Hospitality and other service sectors can’t hire enough workers to staff what’s expected to be a bustling summer rebound after two years of Covid obstacles. Tech and other large employers are warning they need to keep costs down and are putting employees on notice.

Record job openings

U.S. job openings soared to a seasonally adjusted 11.55 million at of the end of March, according to the latest available Labor Department report, a record for data that goes back to 2000. The numbers of employees who quit their jobs also hit a record, at more than 4.5 million. Hires stood at 6.7 million.

Wages are rising but not enough to keep pace with inflation. And people are changing where they spend their money, especially as household budgets tighten thanks to the highest consumer price increases in four decades.

Economists, employers, job seekers, investors and consumers are looking for signals on the economy’s direction, and are finding emerging divisions in the labor market. The divergence could mean a slowdown in wage growth, or hiring itself, and could eventually curtail consumer spending, which has been robust despite deteriorating consumer confidence.

Companies from airlines to restaurants large and small still can’t hire fast enough, which forces them to cut growth plans. Demand snapped back more quickly than expected after those companies shed workers during the pandemic-induced sales plunges.

JetBlue Airways, Delta Air Lines, Southwest Airlines and Alaska Airlines have scaled back growth plans, at least in part, because of staffing shortages. JetBlue said pilot attrition is running higher than normal and will likely continue.

“If your attrition rates are, say, 2x to 3x of what you’ve historically seen, then you need to hire more pilots just to stand still,” JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes said at an investor conference May 17.

Denver International Airport’s concessions like restaurants and shops have made progress with hiring but are still understaffed by about 500 to 600 workers to get to roughly 5,000, according to Pam Dechant, senior vice president of concessions for the airport.

She said many cooks are making about $22 an hour, up from $15 before the pandemic. Airport employers are offering hiring, retention and, in at least one case, what she called an “if you show up to work every day this week bonus.”

Consumers “spent a lot on goods and not much on services over the pandemic and now we’re seeing in our card data they’re flying back into services, literally flying,” said David Tinsley, an economist and director at the Bank of America Institute.

“It’s a bit of a shakeout from those people that maybe [had] overdone it in terms of hiring,” he said of the current trends.

Snap back

The companies leading job growth are the ones that were hit hardest early in the pandemic.

Jessica Jordan, managing partner of the Rothman Food Group, is struggling to hire the workers she needs for two of her businesses in Southern California, Katella Deli & Bakery and Manhattan Beach Creamery. She estimates that both are only about 75% staffed.

But half of applicants never answer her emails for an interview, and even new hires who already submitted their paperwork often disappear before their first day, without explanation, she said.

“I am working so hard to hold their hand through every step of the process, just to make sure they come in that first day,” Jordan said.

Larger restaurant chains also have tall hiring orders. Sandwich chain Subway, for example, said Thursday it’s looking to add more than 50,000 new workers this summer. Taco Bell and Inspire Brands, which owns Arby’s, said they’re also looking to add staff.

Hotels and food services had the highest quit rate across industries in March, with 6.1% of workers leaving their jobs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The overall quit rate was just 3% that month.

Some of those workers are walking away from the hospitality industry entirely. Julia, a 19-year-old living in New York City, quit her restaurant job in February. She said she left because of the hostility from both customers and her bosses and too many extra shifts added to her schedule at the last minute. She now works in child care.

“You have to work really hard to get fired in this economy,” said David Kelly, chief global strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management. “You have to be really incompetent and obnoxious.”

Slowdown in Silicon Valley

And if industries in rebound are hiring to catch up, the reverse is equally true.

After a boom in recruiting, several large tech companies have announced hiring freezes and layoffs, as concerns about an economic slowdown, the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine curb growth plans.

Richly funded start-ups aren’t immune, either, even if they aren’t subject to the same level of market value degradation as public tech stocks. At least 107 tech companies have laid off employees since the start of the year, according to Layoffs.fyi, which tracks job cuts across the sector.

In some cases, companies such as Facebook and Twitter are rescinding job offers after new hires have already accepted, leaving workers like Evan Watson in a precarious position. 

Last month, Watson received a job offer to join the emerging talent and diversity division at Facebook, what he called one of his “dream companies.” He gave notice at the real estate development firm where he worked and set a start date at the social media giant for May 9.

Just three days before then, Watson received a call about his new contract. Facebook had recently announced it would pause hiring, and Watson anxiously speculated he might receive bad news.

“When I got the call, my heart dropped,” Watson said in an interview. Meta was freezing hiring, and Watson’s onboarding was off.

“I was just like silent. I didn’t really have any words to say,” Watson said. “Then I was like, ‘Now what?’ I don’t work at my other company.”

The news left Watson disappointed, but he said Facebook offered to pay him severance while he searched for a new job. Within a week, he landed a job at Microsoft as a talent scout. Watson said he “feels good” about landing at Microsoft, where the company “is a lot more stable, in terms of stock price.”

For months, retail giant Amazon dangled generous sign-on bonuses and free college tuition to lure workers. The company has hired 600,000 employees since the start of 2021, but now it finds itself overstaffed in its fulfillment network.

Many of the company’s recent hires are no longer needed, with e-commerce sales growth cooling. Plus, employees who went on sick leave amid a surge in Covid cases returned to work earlier than expected, Amazon CFO Brian Olsavsky said on a call with analysts last month.

“Now that demand has become more predictable, there are sites in our network where we’re slowing or pausing hiring to better align with our operational needs,” Amazon spokesperson Kelly Nantel told CNBC.

Amazon did not respond to questions about whether the company foresees layoffs in the near future.

Recession shield

The reductions and hiring shifts are isolated for now, but they have some executives on edge.

“Any kind of news flow … when its high-profile companies around job losses, has the potential to chip away at sentiment a bit,” said Bank of America’s Tinsley, cautioning that the job market is still strong. “Things are not as bad perhaps as the picture some might paint.”

He said the pace of job growth in the service sector will likely begin slowing, however.

JPM’s Kelly said that even if the market lost 3 million openings it would still be a job-seekers’ market.

“There’s strong excess demand for workers. It really shields the economy from recession,” he said.

But job cuts can ripple through other sectors.

A sharp increase in hiring freezes, job cuts, wage stagnation or even a pullback in company spending on things such as employee benefits and a return to business travel could hurt the very service sectors that have thrived as Covid cases fell.

“The question is, ‘Will consumer spending keep its head above water?'” Tinsley said.

— CNBC’s Jordan Novet contributed to this story.

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Conagra, Levi Strauss, Rite Aid and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Conagra (CAG) – The food producer’s stock tumbled 5.5% in the premarket after issuing a weaker-than-expected forecast for the fiscal year ending in May. Conagra’s results are being hit by higher transportation and raw materials costs.

Levi Strauss (LEVI) – Levi Strauss beat estimates by 4 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of 46 cents per share, and the apparel maker’s revenue also topped Wall Street forecasts. The company saw strong demand for its jeans, tops and jackets while successfully raising prices and cutting down promotions. Levi Strauss rose 3% in premarket trading.

HP Inc. (HPQ) – HP is surging 15.2% in premarket trading following news that Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway took an 11.4% stake in the maker of personal computers and printers.

Rite Aid (RAD) – The stock tumbled 18.3% in premarket action after Deutsche Bank downgraded the drugstore operator to “sell” from “hold.” Deutsche Bank said Covid hastened the decline of the retail pharmacy segment, and there’s a possibility that Rite Aid may not be able to generate enough earnings to continue as an operating company.

Wayfair (W) – Wayfair slid 4.1% in the premarket after Wells Fargo downgraded the stock to “underweight” from “equal weight.” Wells Fargo said the high-end furniture retailer will be hurt by waning demand, overly optimistic consensus estimates and other headwinds.

Rent the Runway (RENT) – Rent the Runway stock jumped 3.9% in the premarket after the fashion rental company announced a price hike for its subscribers.

CDK Global (CDK) – The provider of automotive retail technology agreed to be bought by Brookfield Business Partners for $54.87 per share in cash. The price represents a 12% premium over CDK’s Wednesday closing price.

SoFi Technologies (SOFI) – The online personal finance company’s shares slid 5.1% in the premarket after cutting its full-year outlook. The cut follows the White House announcing a student loan payment moratorium will be extended.

JD.com (JD) – JD.com announced that founder Richard Liu has left the chief executive officer position and President Xu Lei will take over as the Chinese e-commerce company’s CEO. Liu will remain as chairman. JD.com fell 1.1% in the premarket.

Teladoc Health (TDOC) – The provider of virtual doctor visits saw its stock gain 1.5% in premarket action after Guggenheim initiated coverage with a “buy” rating. Guggenheim said health care access is moving more toward digital interactions and that Teladoc has a broader service portfolio than other providers.

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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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Golf courses, offices turn into warehouses as industrial demand rises

A worker stacks boxes inside of an Amazon fulfillment center in Robbinsville, New Jersey.

Lucas Jackson | Reuters

The next big industrial warehouse might find itself on top of a former golf course. Or in an empty office building. Maybe in a vacated shopping mall.

The Covid pandemic has accelerated e-commerce sales globally, with digital sales driving a larger portion of retailers’ and grocers’ businesses. That has sparked a race for warehouse space and caused companies to seek creative commercial real estate alternatives as they strive to fulfill online orders and avoid delivery delays.

Demand for industrial, big-box facilities — warehouses or distribution centers of 200,000 square feet or more — hit a record in North America last year, according to commercial real estate services firm CBRE. It was the strongest performer among all industrial real estate. Transactions for those spaces totaled 349.3 million square feet in 2020 across the top 22 markets, a nearly 25% jump from 2019, according to CBRE.

The pace of e-commerce growth will likely slow in 2021, as people feel safe shopping at stores again. But real estate executives say industrial space will remain a competitive market.

“We’re really just seeing the tip of the iceberg as far as demand and growth of e-commerce,” said Mindy Lissner, a CBRE executive vice president. “Once you start it, you figure out how easy it is to order things online.”

“The pandemic has had a huge impact on the growth of demand of warehousing and fulfillment,” Lissner added. “But it was already growing anyway. … And the trend is going to continue.”

Time to get creative

With a hot market and supply of industrial space running thin, businesses and their brokers in a land grab are having to get creative.

How about an old golf course? Amazon recently found a shuttered 18 holes in the town of Clay, New York, to build a $350 million distribution center. It’s also plotting a fulfillment center on top of a portion of a former golf course in Alcoa, Tennessee.

The e-commerce giant also has taken old and defunct malls, of which there are plenty in the U.S., and turned them into warehouse spaces. Like the old golf courses, old malls are often situated in communities full of paying customers, which makes the land suitable for distribution facilities looking to be near people’s homes. But developers still face hurdles like rezoning.

Vacant office buildings are becoming an attractive target to flip into warehouse space, Lissner said. She said many have convenient locations and sprawling campuses, just off a highway. More office space could end up on the market, especially if businesses extend remote work policies after the pandemic and need less space for employees’ cubicles.

Experts also point to a pivot away from sprawling warehouse facilities in the middle of nowhere toward spaces closer to customers. In some cities, such as New York, that has inspired companies to build up rather than out. Some have moved into multistory buildings that have been converted into vertical warehouses in outer boroughs and neighborhoods like Long Island City.

“Our customers are preferring more expensive real estate,” said Chris Caton, managing director of global strategy and analytics at Prologis. “They’re no longer going out into really remote locations, like Columbus or Indianapolis or Memphis. Instead, a lot of that demand, and in particular the rent growth in our business over the last decade, has been focused in major 24-hour cities.”

Prologis, a real estate investment trust that owns warehouses and is Amazon’s biggest landlord, estimates that for every $1 billion in sales, e-commerce companies require 1.2 million square feet of distribution space.

Aggressive leasing

The need for industrial space has been especially high among discount retailers like Burlington, TJ Maxx and Ross Stores; home goods and home improvement stores like Wayfair and Home Depot; and meal-kit companies and grocers, Lissner said during a CBRE virtual event.

But the demand is seemingly everywhere you look.

Gap announced in February a $140 million investment to construct a distribution center in Longview, Texas, as part of its effort to double its online business over the next two years. Upon completion, Gap said the 850,000-square-foot facility will be able to process 1 million packages per day. Initially, it will be used for Old Navy’s burgeoning e-commerce business, then expand to other parts of Gap’s business.

Williams-Sonoma recently told analysts it plans to increase its manufacturing and distribution capacity by 20% to 30% over the next year, including adding about 2 million square feet to the company’s distribution-center network.

Home Depot earlier this year opened a 1.5 million-square-foot distribution center to fulfill online and store orders in Dallas.

For those grocery and food businesses, space can be even harder to find. They need special cold-storage facilities where they can keep perishable items, which are pricier and more limited than a typical warehouse that holds apparel or electronics. Real estate executives from CBRE and JLL say demand has grown for those as more Americans cook at home and order their weekly groceries online.

Shares are up about 15% over the past 12 months for Americold, the only publicly traded temperature-controlled warehouse owner in the U.S., in part because of storage requirements for Covid vaccines.

Unlike retail real estate, where rents have been pressured because demand isn’t what it used to be, prices for industrial real estate are still climbing.

Craig Meyer, president of JLL’s Americas industrial division, said “aggressive leasing” among retailers has caused vacancy rates to drop and rents to rise.

“We’re actually concerned about the availability of product beginning in the middle of the year,” he said.

Industrial rents, as a national average, hit $6.47 per square foot in February, up 5.1% year over year, according to data from the real estate tech firm CommercialEdge. New leases signed for the month commanded a 14.7% premium, averaging $7.42 per square foot, the group said.

“On the industrial side, prices are higher than I’ve ever seen in my 30 years,” Lissner said. “I mean, much, much higher than any prediction.”

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Hilton Grand Vacations, J&J, NRG Energy & more

Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:

Hilton Grand Vacations (HGV) – The timeshare company posted a wider-than-expected loss for its latest quarter, while revenue was also below Wall Street forecasts. Hilton Grand Vacations said the pandemic has created a challenging environment but said 85% of its properties are now open and operating. Its shares fell 2.3% in premarket trading.

NRG Energy (NRG) – The energy provider reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter, and also said the financial impact of the extreme weather in Texas is expected to be within NRG’s current guidance range. The company’s shares jumped 5.5% in the premarket.

Perrigo (PRGO) – Perrigo shares initially jumped 4.1% in premarket action after the drugmaker announced a deal to sell its Generic Rx Pharmaceuticals business to private-equity firm Altaris Capital for $1.55 billion in cash and other considerations. The gains disappeared, however, after Perrigo reported lower-than-expected earnings for its latest quarter as sales fell.

Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) – J&J rose 2.1% in the premarket after its Covid-19 vaccine received emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration over the weekend, followed by an endorsement from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Administration officials say deliveries of the vaccine should begin Tuesday.

Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.B) – Berkshire reported a 23% increase in fourth-quarter profit to $35.8 billion, helped by a surge in the value of Berkshire’s stock market holdings. Berkshire also bought back nearly $25 billion in stock during 2020, with CEO Warren Buffett explaining in his annual letter that the move increased shareholder value while still leaving ample cash for other opportunities that might arise. Berkshire Class B shares rose 2.1% premarket.

Twitter (TWTR) – Twitter rose 1% in premarket trading after it announced its intention to sell $1.25 billion in convertible notes due in 2026, subject to market conditions.

Walmart (WMT) – The retailer dropped its $35 minimum charge for its two-hour express delivery service. However, the $35 minimum will still apply for regularly delivery, curbside pickup and Walmart+ delivery services. Walmart shares rose 1% in the premarket.

L3Harris Technologies (LHX) – The defense contractor struck a deal to sell its military training division to Canadian aerospace company CAE (CAE) for $1.05 billion. The deal will enhance CAE’s defense business.

Logitech (LOGI) – Logitech shares fell 1.5% premarket after it said operating income for fiscal 2022 would be between $750 million and $800 million, down from the $1.1 billion it expects to report for fiscal 2021. Logitech had seen a boom in demand for devices like computer mice and keyboards due to the pandemic, with more people working and attending school from home.

Twilio (TWLO) – Twilio is in talks to invest up to $750 million in messaging company Syniverse Technologies, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Wall Street Journal. They said that the expected investment by the cloud communications company would value Syniverse – currently owned by private-equity firm Carlyle Group (CG) – at $2 billion to $3 billion. Twilio rose 2.3% in premarket action.

AstraZeneca (AZN) – The drugmaker sold its stake in Moderna (MRNA) for more than $1 billion, according to the London Times. The paper said the sale occurred after Moderna shares soared following approval of its Covid-19 vaccine, although the exact timing was unclear. Moderna shares rose 1.8% in premarket trading.

Vector Acquisition (VACQ) – The special purpose acquisition company will take space transportation startup Rocket Lab public through a merger deal that values Rocket Lab at $4.1 billion. The deal is expected to be completed during the second quarter. Vector shares surged 17.1% in premarket trading.

Wayfair (W) – The home goods retailer’s shares rose 2.1% in the premarket after Truist Securities upgraded the stock to “buy” from “hold,” saying it sees an improved picture for long-term profitability and a faster growth trajectory.

Catalent (CTLT) – The pharmaceutical technology company has been struggling with vaccine production problems, according to a report in the Financial Times. Catalent fills vaccine vials for both Johnson & Johnson and Moderna, and the report said issues with automation technology have meant that vials have had to be checked by hand.

Citigroup (C) – Citigroup shares rose 2.1% in premarket trading as Jane Fraser takes over as Chief Executive Officer of the bank today, becoming the first woman to run a major U.S. bank.

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GameStop, Koss Corp, Wayfair & more

Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:

GameStop (GME) – GameStop remains on watch after another Reddit-fueled surge Wednesday in the video game retailer’s shares, as well as other so-called “Reddit stocks” like BlackBerry (BB), AMC Entertainment (AMC) and Koss Corp. (KOSS). GameStop surged 55.8% premarket, while AMC rose 12.9%, BlackBerry gained 4.3% and Koss soared 81.3%.

Best Buy (BBY) – The electronics retailer’s shares fell 5.3% in premarket trading after its revenue and comparable-store sales missed Wall Street forecasts for the holiday quarter as pandemic fueled demand for electronics lessened. Best Buy’s quarterly earnings of $3.48 per share beat estimates by 3 cents a share, however.

Moderna (MRNA) – The drugmaker’s shares rose 2.9% in premarket action as its quarterly revenue vastly exceeded estimates and it forecast $18.4 billion in Covid-19 vaccine sales this year. Moderna did, however, report a quarterly loss of 69 cents per share, wider than the 35 cents a share loss that analysts were anticipating.

Wayfair (W) – The furniture and home goods seller earned $1.24 per share for its latest quarter, above the consensus estimate of 86 cents a share. Revenue was slightly below Wall Street forecasts, as were the number of orders and the shares fell 9% premarket.

Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH) – The cruise line operator’s shares rose 1.9% in the premarket after quarterly revenue came in well above estimates, despite the Covid-19 related shutdown of cruises. Its loss of $2.33 per share for its latest quarter was slightly wider than the consensus estimate of a $2.17 per share loss.

Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) – Anheuser-Busch reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for the fourth quarter. The company also forecast higher earnings for 2021, however the beer brewer said its profit margins would be hurt by higher commodity costs. Its shares fell 5.3% in premarket trading.

ViacomCBS (VIAC) – ViacomCBS came in 2 cents a share ahead of estimates, with quarterly profit of $1.04 per share. Revenue essentially was in line with Wall Street forecasts. The company also said it had 30 million streaming subscribers, ahead of its planned March 4 launch of Paramount+ service that will replace the current CBS All Access service. Its shares dropped 2.8% in premarket action.

Teladoc Health (TDOC) – Teladoc dropped 6.5% in premarket trading after it reported a loss of 27 cents per share for its latest quarter, 3 cents a share wider than Wall Street had expected. The provider of video medical visits’ revenue came in above estimates.

Nvidia (NVDA) – Nvidia reported quarterly earnings of $3.10 per share, compared to a $2.81 a share consensus estimate. The company best known for its gaming chips saw revenue beat estimates as well. Nvidia also predicted strong revenue for the current quarter, but the shares were down 2.6% in premarket action.

Fisker (FSR) – Fisker struck a deal with contract manufacturer Foxconn Technology to assemble cars for the electric vehicle startup. The agreement calls for the companies to jointly produce more than 250,000 vehicles annually. Shares fell 1% premarket.

Pfizer (PFE) – The Covid-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech (BNTX) works equally well across all age groups, according to an Israeli study. It provided 94% protection against developing coronavirus symptoms a week after the second dose of the vaccine, and 92% effective in preventing severe disease.

Verizon (VZ) – Verizon was the top bidder in a government auction of 5G airwaves, spending $45.5 billion, while AT&T (T) bid $23.4 billion and T-Mobile US (TMUS) bid $9.3 billion.

Pure Storage (PSTG) – Pure Storage came in 4 cents a share ahead of estimates, with quarterly profit of 13 cents per share. The provider of business memory storage systems also saw revenue beat Wall Street forecasts. Pure Storage gave a mixed forecast, but it was the first time it gave any forward guidance since the pandemic began. Shares gained 2.5% in the premarket.

L Brands (LB) – L Brands earned $3.30 per share for its latest quarter, 12 cents a share above estimates. The Victoria’s Secret parent’s revenue came in short of forecasts. L Brands, which also owns the Bath & Body Works chain, gave strong current-quarter earnings guidance. L Brands was up 2.7% in the premarket.

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Latest news on the Covid-19 pandemic

Virologist says reopening indoor dining is “reckless” as new, more transmissible coronavirus strains spread in the U.S.

As more infectious strains of the coronavirus spread in the U.S., the decision to reopen indoor dining is “extraordinarily reckless and premature,” virologist Angela Rasmussen told CNBC.

Indoor dining resumed at a limited capacity on Friday in New York and Portland, Oregon.

“We don’t need to create new opportunities for the virus to spread among strangers who are not in each other’s household groups,” said Rasmussen, a virologist at Georgetown University’s Center for Global Health Science and Security.

New, more contagious coronavirus strains originating in the U.K., South Africa and Brazil have been identified in the U.S. Indoor dining increases an individual’s risk of coronavirus infection, according to the CDC.

Until vaccination has increased, individuals should continue to practice non-pharmaceutical interventions such as masking and social distancing, Rasmussen said.

Hannah Miao

California will open up vaccinations to people with disabilities and underlying health conditions

Registered Nurse Emily Enos loads the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine into a syringe ahead of distribution to seniors above the age of 65 who are experiencing homelessness at the Los Angeles Mission, in the Skid Row area of Downtown Los Angeles, California on February 10, 2021, as the fight against the coronavirus pandemic continues.

Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

California officials announced that those between the ages of 16 and 64 with any kind of disabilities or at the highest risk for morbidity or mortality from the coronavirus will be eligible for vaccines starting March 15.

Underlying health conditions mentioned by health officials on the list include: cancer, chronic kidney disease (stage four or above), chronic pulmonary disease (oxygen dependent), Down syndrome, immunocompromised immune system (weakened immune system) from solid organ transplant, pregnancy, sickle cell disease, heart conditions, such as heart failure, coronary artery disease, or cardiomyopathies (excludes hypertension), severe obesity and Type 2 diabetes mellitus.

Anyone 16 or over suffering from a “developmental or other severe high-risk disability” which leaves them susceptible to serious illness from coronavirus will also be eligible, “or if acquiring coronavirus will limit the person’s ability to receiving ongoing care or services,” or if “providing adequate and timely covid care will by particularly challenging as a result of the individual’s disability.”

So far, 5 million vaccine doses have been administered across California.

Riya Bhattacharjee

White House says not planning to require Covid tests before domestic flights

The White House says it is not planning to require that travelers show proof of a negative Covid test before domestic flights.

Airlines, labor unions and Boeing in recent weeks have balked at the possibility, which they argue would devastate already depressed travel demand, stretch testing availability in the U.S. as well as single out the industry unfairly.

On Jan. 26, the U.S. started requiring travelers show a recent negative Covid result before boarding flights to the United States from abroad, a policy airline executives say has hurt demand for some international travel. Late last month, a CDC official told reporters the Biden administration is “actively looking” at extending that to domestic flights.

“Reports that there is an intention to put in place new requirements such as testing are not accurate,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said in a briefing on Friday.

CEOs from several major U.S. airlines met virtually on Friday Biden administration’s coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients.

“We had a very positive, constructive conversation focused on our shared commitment to science-based policies as we work together to end the pandemic, restore air travel and lead our nation toward recovery,” said Nick Calio, CEO of Airlines for America, the industry group that represents most large U.S. carriers, said in a statement.

Leslie Josephs

How iconic Katz’s deli is navigating Covid after outlasting the 1918 pandemic

The owner of Katz’s Delicatessen in New York told CNBC he felt the weight of the iconic eatery’s history as he’s tried steering it through the coronavirus pandemic. The deli, initially founded in 1888, also withstood the 1918 flu pandemic.

Jake Dell, a fifth-generation owner, said there’s been a bit of a “make-it-up-as-you-go” approach. But the ultimate goal, he said, is to “make the best decision we can in the moment without losing touch with the nostalgia and tradition that’s truly at the core of Katz’s.”

Previous investments in building up its own local delivery network — plus a decades-long history of shipping food across the U.S. — have been central to Katz’s success in the past 11 months, according to Dell. The business also focused on improving its website experience for visitors.

“We’ve been lucky. We haven’t actually laid anyone off during this pandemic, and I’m pretty grateful for that,” Dell said.

Kevin Stankiewicz

WHO says new Covid strains can reinfect recovered Covid patients

Initial reports from South Africa show people who have recovered from Covid-19 have been reinfected with a new, more contagious strain of the virus, World Health Organizations officials said.

While vaccination also may not completely protect individuals from infection with the new variants, it appears to reduce the severity of illness among those who do develop Covid-19, according to WHO’s chief scientist Dr. Soumya Swaminathan.

Vaccination can reduce an individual’s viral load if infected, reducing the risk of spreading the virus to others, Swaminathan said.

Hannah Miao

CDC releases school reopening roadmap

Schoolchildren swab and test themselves for COVID-19 to prevent the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the classroom at South Boston Catholic Academy in Boston, Massachusetts, January 28, 2021.

Allison Dinner | Reuters

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday unveiled sweeping new guidance for schools to can safely reopen for in-person learning despite the spread of the coronavirus and highly contagious new variants.

The guidance advises schools to phase in their reopening plans in accordance with the severity of the outbreak in their areas. It recommends schools adopt “essential elements” in resuming in-person learning, including wearing masks, physical distancing and monitoring the level of spread in the surrounding community. 

However, the agency noted that the guidance might need to be updated as new, more contagious variants of the coronavirus spread across the U.S. 

“If we get to a point where we are beyond the red zone here, really high levels of community spread related to the variants or related to just more transmission, we may need to revisit this again,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said on a conference call with reporters.

—Will Feuer

Stimulus check eligibility still hotly debated in Washington

Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., is seen after her weekly news conference in the Capitol Visitor Center on Thursday, February 11, 2021.

Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

As President Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid relief proposal is taking shape on Capitol Hill, lawmakers are still debating the specifics of direct payments to Americans, CNBC’s Lorie Konish reports.

The proposed $1,400 checks would go out to adults, children and adult dependents. Individuals who earn up to $75,000 and married couples who jointly earn up to $150,000 are set to get full payments.

Anyone with income above that threshold will see reduced payments, with the checks phasing out entirely for individuals who make $100,000 or more and couples who jointly earn $200,000 or more.

Some Republican lawmakers have called for capping the payments at lower income thresholds, while Senator Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., called the proposal to cap payments “absurd.”

Rich Mendez

Pandemic closures are still worrying business owners, with Black entrepreneurs the least optimistic

Pedestrians walk past closed shops along Lexington Avenue amid the coronavirus pandemic on April 7, 2020 in New York City.

John Lamparski | Getty Images

Recent data from the Q1 2021 CNBC|SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey reveals that for business owners, the pandemic is far from over, according to reporting from CNBC’s Kate Rogers.

The survey revealed that just over half (55%) of entrepreneurs are confident that their businesses can last another year. But fears of permanent closures varied depending on the race of the business owner, with 59% of White business owners confident that their business can last for another year, compared to 55% of Hispanic business owners, and just 37% of Black business owners expressing confidence.

According to the survey, 20% of small businesses have closed and then reopened at limited capacity during the pandemic, 10% have shut down and haven’t reopened, and 4% have shut down only to reopen and shut down again. More than half of small business owners say they stayed open throughout the pandemic.

The confusion and instability has led many entrepreneurs to support President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion Covid relief proposal, which looks to include aid to small businesses, according to the report.

The previous relief package was met with criticism from small business owners who alleged that the package prioritized wealthy business owners over those who may have needed the relief more.

Rich Mendez

Democrats eye unemployment benefit boost

President Joe Biden and Democrats on Capitol Hill are pushing for additional unemployment benefits as part of a $1.9 trillion pandemic aid package.

The exact duration and amount of those extra benefits are unclear.

The House Ways and Means Committee advanced a measure that would extend jobless benefits to the end of August and pay an extra $400 a week. By contrast, Biden wants to offer benefits through September. Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., the chair of the Senate Finance Committee, is pushing for a larger, $600-a-week supplement.

Democrats’ plans to pass the legislation with a simple majority, which they aim to do using a special budget measure, may be complicated by a $15-per-hour minimum wage provision.

Greg Iacurci

Democrats advance key pieces of $1.9 trillion relief plan

U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat from California, speaks during a news conference at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, Feb. 4, 2021.

Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

House Democrats have advanced major parts of their $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package as they try to get it through Congress before unemployment aid programs expire next month.

Several committees have approved their portions of the proposal, which the House Budget Committee plans to combine into a massive bill as soon as next week. The House Ways and Means Committee advanced core pieces of the rescue package including $1,400 direct payments, an extension of supplemental jobless benefits and relief to households with children.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., expects the House to pass the bill before the end of February. It still faces hurdles in getting through the Senate, even under the special budget reconciliation process that enables Democrats to approve it without Republican votes.

Among the potential issues, House Democrats will include a $15 per hour minimum wage in their version of the legislation. It may not comply with budget rules, however, and at least two Senate Democrats have signaled they oppose the provision.

Senate Democrats will need every member of their caucus on board to pass the bill in a chamber split 50-50 by party.

—Jacob Pramuk

CDC to unveil new school re-opening guidance

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday is expected to unveil sweeping new guidance on how schools can safely reopen for in-person learning, despite the spread of the coronavirus and highly contagious new variants.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky and Donna Harris-Aikens, senior advisor for policy and planning at the Department of Education, are scheduled to host a briefing on the new guidance at 2 p.m. ET. The CDC said they will discuss “new science-based resources and tools to help schools safely reopen and stay open for in-person learning.”

President Joe Biden has made reopening the nation’s schools for in-person instruction one of his top priorities. He pledged in December to reopen the majority of the country’s schools in his first 100 days after taking office, but Biden did not define what it meant for a school to “reopen.”

In January, the president specified that the goal applied only to schools that teach students up to eighth grade. Earlier this week, the White House further clarified that schools will be considered open so long as they teach in person at least one day a week. 

—Will Feuer

Spotify is latest tech company shifting to remote work

Audio-streaming giant Spotify said its employees won’t have to come back to the office following the Covid-19 pandemic.

The company is adopting a “Work from Anywhere” model, which will allow employees to choose whether they want to be in the office full time, work remotely full time or choose a hybrid model. Spotify is also allowing more flexibility around locations, so employees will be able to choose the country and city where they work, with some caveats. Spotify will provide co-working space memberships for employees who choose to work remotely but still want a dedicated workspace.

An increasing amount of companies are starting to consider remote work as a more permanent option due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Salesforce announced this week it will let employees choose whether they want to come into the office again, saying “the 9-to-5 workday is dead.”

—Jessica Bursztynsky

CDC to probe death of Nebraska man following vaccine dose

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention will investigate the death of a Nebraska man who died on Jan. 17 between one and two weeks after receiving his first dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, according to the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

The man was a long-term care facility resident in his late forties with several co-existing diseases and conditions, the department said in a press release. Local health officials listed the Covid-19 vaccine among several causes of death.

The CDC and Food and Drug Administration have received 1,170 reports of fatalities among individuals in the U.S. who received a Covid vaccine — 0.003% of vaccinated people — between Dec. 14 and Feb. 7. Over 41 million doses of Pfizer or Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccines were administered across the country during this time frame, the CDC reported.

No pattern has been found in the causes of death that would suggest safety concerns with Covid vaccines, according to the CDC.

Nebraska’s chief medical officer Dr. Gary Anthone said in the statement the death is likely due to underlying factors.

“It is really important for individuals that have high-risk conditions to consult their medical provider about the best approach to getting vaccinated,” Anthone said.

Hannah Miao

Dr. Kavita Patel says precautions still needed even after being fully vaccinated

Dr. Kavita Patel told CNBC some public-health precautions will be necessary even for Americans who have been fully vaccinated against Covid.

While the vaccines have proven effective in preventing severe disease and death from Covid, the former Obama administration official said on “Squawk Box” that more information is needed around whether they reduce transmission of the virus.

She said even though she’s been fully vaccinated, she continues to wear a face mask, for example.

“As the months go on and more people in your household and potentially another household, like your parents or your grandparents are vaccinated, that could make smaller gatherings safer,” Patel said. “That is something to look forward to because we’ve been holding off now for over a year, some of us, to see older parents and relatives with high risk.”

Kevin Stankiewicz

Williams-Sonoma sales get a boost from people spending more time at home

Williams-Sonoma posted a 22% jump in third-quarter revenue as demand for all things home-related increased amid travel restrictions and more people working from home, CNBC’s Shawn Baldwin reports.

The 65-year-old retailer sells home goods, high-end cookware and furniture through its seven brands including Pottery Barn, Williams Sonoma and West Elm.

—Melodie Warner

Spirit Airlines hiring flight crews for first time since pandemic’s start

Spirit Airlines is hiring again as the discount airline aims to increase flights in hopes of a travel rebound later this year.

Training for new pilots and flight attendants starts next month, Spirit said. Spirit last trained a class of new pilots in May and new flight attendants in February 2020. It ended last year with 8,756 employees, including 2,497 pilots and 4,028 flight attendants.

Other airlines are trying to shrink headcount through voluntary measures. American Airlines and United Airlines are supporting additional government payroll support for workers with a combined 27,000 employees facing furlough when the current round of aid expires on March 31.

Late Thursday, the House Financial Services Committee advanced the proposal for $14 billion in additional federal payroll support for airlines, which would be a part of the Biden administration’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief package.

Leslie Josephs

White House Covid official to meet with airline CEOs on Friday

U.S. President-elect Joe Biden listens as Jeff Zients, named as Biden’s coronavirus disease (COVID-19) czar to oversee the response to the pandemic, addresses a news conference at Biden’s transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, December 8, 2020.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

The CEOs of major U.S. airlines are planning to meet virtually with the White House’s Covid response coordinator, Jeff Zients, and other administration officials to discuss travel-related issues, including plans to require Covid-19 testing ahead of domestic flights, Reuters reported, citing sources.

Southwest Airlines Co-CEO Gary Kelly and leaders of its unions urged President Joe Biden in a letter to not mandate pre-departure testing.

“Such a mandate would be counterproductive, costly, and have serious unintended consequences,” including putting jobs at risk, according to the letter, which was released on Wednesday.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in January said the Biden administration was “actively looking” at mandatory testing for U.S. domestic flights. On Jan. 26, the CDC began requiring testing or evidence of recovery from Covid-19 from nearly all U.S.-bound international passengers age 2 and older.

Terri Cullen

Physicians warn Covid may never go away and people need to learn to live with it

Healthcare workers wearing protective gear prepare to attend patients at the Portimao Arena sports pavilion converted in a field hospital for Covid-19 patients at Portimao, in the Algarve region, on February 9, 2021. (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA / AFP) (Photo by PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA/AFP via Getty Images)

PATRICIA DE MELO MOREIRA | AFP | Getty Images

A growing chorus of infectious disease experts and public health officials have warned the coronavirus will become endemic, saying people need to learn to live with the virus.

“I think if you speak with most epidemiologists and most public health workers, they would say today that they believe this disease will become endemic, at least in the short term and most likely in the long term,” said David Heymann, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

Heymann is the chair of the WHO’s strategic and technical advisory group for infectious hazards and led the health agency’s infectious disease unit during the SARS epidemic in 2002-2003.

His comments echo the thoughts of White House coronavirus advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci, Moderna CEO Stephane Bancel and the World Health Organization’s Executive Director of the Health Emergencies Program Dr. Mike Ryan.

— Sam Meredith

Japan approves its first Covid vaccine, made by Pfizer, NHK TV reports

Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine

Sergio Perez | Reuters

Japanese health officials approved the country’s first Covid-19 vaccine, made by Pfizer, NHK national television reported, according to Reuters.

Japan has been rushing to contain a third wave of infections as it prepared to host the Olympic Games, Reuters said.

Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has said vaccinations will begin from the middle of next week, the wire service reported, and the government hopes to secure enough doses for the whole country by mid-year.

The Tokyo Olympic Games are slated to start on July 23.

Terri Cullen

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