Categories
World News

Asia-Pacific shares set to drop; Japan’s retail gross sales information forward

SINGAPORE – Asia Pacific markets were mostly lower in early Friday trading. Meanwhile, US stocks rebounded, despite data showing that gross domestic product grew less-than-expected in the second quarter.

The Japanese Nikkei 225 lost 0.8% in early trading while the Topix lost 0.46%.

Reuters reported that the country’s industrial production rose 6.2% in June, up sharply after falling 6.5% in May. Retail sales in June were up 0.1% yoy, less than forecast for a 0.2% increase.

South Korea’s Kospi lost 0.55%.

The S & P / ASX 200 in Australia traded just above the flatline. Markets will be tracking the Covid situation in Sydney, which reported a record daily surge in Covid cases despite an extended lockdown on Thursday. Reuters reported that authorities have asked the military for help enforcing the lockdown.

MSCI’s broadest index for Asia Pacific stocks outside of Japan was unchanged.

CNBC Pro’s Stock Picks and Investment Trends:

Shares rebounded during Thursday’s regular session in the US, although data showed US GDP rose 6.5% on an annualized basis in the second quarter, well below the 8.4% Dow Jones estimate.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained around 150 points on Thursday after hitting a new intraday high. The S&P 500, which also briefly hit an all-time high, ended the day up 0.4% at 4,419.15.

“Yesterday’s rebound in Chinese equities after the recent regulatory-induced sell-off resulted in solid performance overnight in risk assets,” said Rodrigo Catril, senior FX strategist at National Australia Bank.

Investors will watch as Chinese stocks end a week of volatile trading. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index fell more than 8% in two days and rebounded 3% in Thursday’s session.

Currencies and oil

The US dollar index, which tracks the greenback versus a basket of its competitors, stood at 91.880, falling from a level above 92 the previous day.

The Japanese yen was trading at 109.40 per dollar, up slightly from above 109.9 at the beginning of the week. The Australian dollar changed hands at $ 0.7394 after falling to around $ 0.735 earlier in the week.

Oil prices fell on the morning of Asian trading hours, with Brent crude oil futures falling 0.34% to $ 75.79 a barrel. US crude oil futures are down 0.42% to $ 73.33 a barrel.

Categories
World News

Dow jumps above 35,000 as retail gross sales prime expectations

U.S. stock indexes rose on Friday as the latest retail sales data topped economists’ expectations.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained about 28 points, or 0.08%, jumping above 35,000. The index closed just short of that level on Monday. The S&P 500 added around 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite ticked roughly 0.2% higher.

Retail and food service sales rose 0.6% in June, while economists surveyed by the Dow Jones had expected a 0.4% decline. Excluding autos, those sales jumped 1.3%, beating economists’ estimate of a 0.4% gain.

The retail sales data came after initial jobless claims numbers released Thursday totaled 360,000 for the week ending July 10, its lowest level since March 14, 2020.

“The unexpected rise in retail sales combined with yesterday’s pandemic-era low of jobless claims are two more strong proof points that we are edging closer to a full economic recovery,” said Mike Loewengart, managing director of investment strategy for E*TRADE Capital Management.

Live Nation’s stock rose after Goldman said the stock can rally nearly 40% as concerts return.

Shares of Carnival and Royal Caribbean each edged higher after Canada announced it would allow cruise ships to resume operations in its waters starting Nov. 1, sooner than planned. Previously, the Canadian government extended its cruise ban until the end of February 2022.

The moves in recovery-related stocks came even amid concerns about ultra-infectious variants of the coronavirus. Los Angeles County announced Thursday it would restore an indoor mask mandate, including for fully-vaccinated people, due to a rapid and sustained increase in Covid-19 cases.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

Investors also digested strong earnings results from the first major week of second-quarter reports. Though some of the nation’s largest companies posted healthy profits and revenues amid the economic recovery, the reaction in the stock market has so far been muted.

Morgan Stanley’s second-quarter earnings report, for example, topped analysts’ expectations Thursday, yet its shares closed just 0.18% higher.

For 18 S&P 500 companies that beat analyst estimates for second-quarter earnings this week, the average earnings-per-share result was 18% higher than expected. But those companies saw their shares fall 0.58% on average after reporting.

The soft moves in reaction to corporate earnings have contributed to a lackluster week for the S&P 500, which dipped 0.2% on the week as of Thursday’s close.

Much of the market’s upward pressure over the last week has come from a handful of mega-cap internet and communications stocks. Apple, Netflix, Google-parent Alphabet and Microsoft are all up this week.

Become a smarter investor with CNBC Pro
Get stock picks, analyst calls, exclusive interviews and access to CNBC TV. 
Sign up to start a free trial today

Categories
Business

Wall Road lukewarm on HSBC’s U.S. retail exit

LONDON – HSBC announced on Wednesday that it would end its money-losing US retail business, which Wall Street analysts received with lukewarm applause.

Europe’s largest bank in terms of assets will be selling some parts of its mass market business and winding up others to draw attention to its largest market – Asia.

In a statement on Thursday, Goldman Sachs bank analysts reiterated that HSBC’s lack of scalability in US retail banking is the main reason for the low profitability and high cost-to-income ratio in the US.

“We therefore view the announced measures as positive, as they represent a small step towards a potentially more focused, simpler and more profitable HSBC group,” said analysts Martin Leitgeb, Andreas Scheriau and Gurpreet Singh Sahi.

After battling the big domestic players in the US and some parts of Europe, the UK lender has been looking to get out of its less profitable activities for some time.

Although HSBC is letting go of most residential and small business clients, it will maintain a low physical presence in the US to serve its richest international clients.

The group will leave 90 of its 148 branches, which comprise a small network of 20-25 physical locations that are being recalibrated as international asset centers. The remaining branches will be closed.

Goldman analysts noted that while the financial impact of the transactions in the broader corporate context is negligible and no further details have been released on the profitability of US assets and private banking after the exit, the outlook is more positive.

“We see scope for improved profitability as the branch’s footprint has been reduced by over 80% while credit will only decrease by 13% (all others equal),” they said, continuing their buy rating on HSBC stock.

Key downside risks that Goldman highlighted included weaker macro trends such as pandemic setbacks, limited progress in restructuring the bank, escalating geopolitical tensions, increased competition and “delays in optimizing capital efficiency within the group”.

Citizens Bank and Cathay Bank, subsidiaries of Citizens Financial Group and Cathay General Corp., have agreed to buy HSBC’s businesses on the east and west coasts respectively.

The deal would represent much of HSBC’s 850,000 customer relationships sold, mostly customers with balances under $ 75,000. However, Bank of America found that a 2% deposit bonus on sales is “low” compared to the industry average, reflecting the high cost structure of the business. “

“The number of remaining customers is small, but the dominant part of US retail deposits. The customer base is active internationally or in line with HSBC’s wealth management ambitions,” said BofA bank analysts Alastair Ryan and Rohith Chandra-Rajan in one Announcement on Thursday.

BofA estimates full year revenue loss at $ 200 million and a $ 250 million reduction in recurring costs for its US wealth and personal banking businesses.

“Given the large excess of deposits in this business – as in the rest of the group – better dollar rates would likely make matters a lot better,” they added, calling the latest move “small steps.”

The BofA found that HSBC is heavily exposed to global interest rates due to its “world-leading deposit base” and predicted that while the bank currently has a “cost / income problem”, the situation would “mechanically improve” should the bank Market a three year Fed implying fund rate materialize.

“However, we note that the group is pursuing a relatively costly wealth management expansion that would put additional cost / income pressure in the short term,” added Ryan and Chandra-Rajan, reiterating their “neutral” rating on the stock and maintaining it £ 4.80 ($ 6.80) per share price target.

Categories
Business

Retail conglomerate Genuine Manufacturers Group readies for summer season IPO

People enter a Forever 21 store at a shopping mall in Montebello, California on September 30, 2019 a day after the fashion retailer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

Frederic J. Brown | AFP | Getty Images

The retail conglomerate Authentic Brands Group is preparing for an initial public offering that could come as soon as this summer, according to a person familiar with the matter.

Authentic Brands — which owns businesses including Juicy Couture, Brooks Brothers, Aeropostale and Forever 21 — is targeting a valuation of about $10 billion in its IPO, said the person, who requested anonymity because the discussions remain private. At $10 billion, that would mean Authentic Brands’ market value would surpass that of Under Armour, Kohl’s, Ralph Lauren and Dick’s Sporting Goods. However, the size of the deal could change since it isn’t finalized.

Authentic Brands was valued at more than $4 billion, inclusive of debt, when BlackRock invested in the business back in 2019.

The official registration statement for the public offering is expected to be filed by Authentic Brands in early July, the person said, and shares could begin trading by the end of that month.

A spokesperson from Authentic Brands declined to comment.

Since the company’s inception, Authentic Brands’ founder and CEO Jamie Salter has accumulated more than two dozen retail brands, including the bankrupt department store chain Barneys New York, Nautica and Nine West.

The business currently does more than $10 billion in retail sales annually, according to its website.

Authentic Brands’ strategy in recent years has entailed working with two of the biggest publicly traded mall owners in the United States, Simon Property Group and Brookfield Property Partners. The trio came together in 2016 to purchase the teen apparel retailer Aeropostale out of bankruptcy. They did it again with Forever 21 last year.

With Simon, Authentic Brands has separately created a joint-venture known as SPARC Group, which currently runs the operations of Brooks Brothers, Nautica, Aeropostale, Forever 21 and Lucky Brand.

Authentic Brands and SPARC recently announced they will be acquiring Eddie Bauer from the private-equity firm Golden Gate Capital.

In addition to BlackRock, Authentic Brands is backed by investors including General Atlantic and Leonard Green & Partners. BlackRock and General Atlantic declined to comment, while Leonard Green & Partners didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

“I’m in the first inning,” Salter told CNBC in an interview last year. “People are asking me, ‘Jamie. Mall-based retail? I don’t get it.’ … What I am going to say to you is, we need bricks and mortar. Retail really needs it.”

Bloomberg first reported on Authentic Brands’ plans to go public.

Categories
Business

Low cost retail levels a comeback as buyers crave ‘treasure searching’

Buyers’ reflection can be seen in a window of a TJ Maxx store in Peoria, Illinois.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Any doubts that shoppers would return to discounters to browse shelves in search of bargains were allayed this week when TJX Companies and Ross Stores reported their first quarter earnings.

Sales of both companies surged above analyst estimates as consumers returned to their stores to search for new outfits, shoes, luggage and housewares as the lockdowns caused by pandemics wore off.

TJX and Ross cited pent-up demand from buyers, many armed with additional stimulus dollars in the past few months, but also a desire from many people to keep looking for good deals. The so-called treasure hunt in stores could be something that many consumers are craving for more than they were before the Covid health crisis.

“We believe the appeal of our fun treasure hunt shopping experience provides consumers with a compelling reason to shop with us,” said Ernie Herrman, CEO of TJX, on a teleconference on earnings. “In-store shopping doesn’t go away.”

“We see our stores as a desirable destination for stress-relieving consumers,” said Herrman, “and also a great place to shop when they’re looking for inspiration and discovering new things that are difficult to replicate online.”

“Our business model is now getting more resonance than it was before Covid,” he said.

A year earlier, TJX had more than halved net sales and posted a net loss in the first quarter as the pandemic forced the company to temporarily close more than 4,500 stores in the US and abroad. It was a devastating blow to the company that relies on in-store purchases. TJX has an online shoppable platform for some of its brands, including TJ Maxx, but not all.

Ross also posted a loss in the year-ago period when all stores closed from March 20, 2020 through the end of the quarter.

But this week, TJX made a comeback in the first quarter as net sales jumped nearly 130% from $ 4.41 billion last year to $ 10.09 billion and, according to Refinitiv, Wall Street estimates 8, Exceeded $ 62 billion. TJX is the parent company of Marshalls and TJ Maxx.

Although stocks fell after the blowout quarterly report, it was largely due to the ongoing fighting the company is facing outside of the United States. Due to Covid, TJX has still closed around 300 stores in Canada and Europe. In the second quarter, TJX forecast that its Canadian and European locations would remain closed for 17% and 7%, respectively, of the period.

TJX shares are down around 1% since the start of the year.

A pedestrian walks past a now hiring sign at the Ross Dress For Less store in San Rafael, California on April 2, 2021.

Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

Ross revenue in the first quarter more than doubled to $ 4.52 billion, compared to $ 1.84 billion a year ago. That surpassed Wall Street’s estimates for $ 3.87 billion.

CEO Barbara Rentler said the company is particularly optimistic about its chance to gain market share from the growing number of retail store closures and bankruptcies that have occurred in recent years. In addition to his business with Ross Dress for Less, Ross also owns DD’s discounts.

For the full fiscal year ending January 29, 2022, Ross predicts comparable revenue growth of between 7% and 9% compared to 2019.

Ross stock has fallen less than 1% since the start of the year.

“We still expect a sequel [market] Stock gains who believe that off-price gains are winning because they don’t have e-commerce, not in spite of everything, “said Simeon Siegel, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets.

It is true that these companies faced more problems than other retailers during the pandemic due to their lack of online presence. The off-price business has traditionally been focused on the store experience, not the internet. Ross does not have an ecommerce site. The discounter chain Burlington Stores phased out its website in early 2020.

But now that consumers are regaining the freedom and confidence to leave the home and store, it may not matter so much.

“Hunting for a bargain and finding a bargain has returned with a little vengeance,” said Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData Retail, in an interview. “I think the value segment could actually find itself with a really good influx of customers.”

The positive results from TJX and Ross caused the Telsey Advisory Group to raise its expectations ahead of Peer Burlington’s earnings report, which is expected on May 27.

For the first quarter of 2021, Telsey now expects Burlington to post earnings per share of $ 1, after a previous forecast of 62 cents. Net sales grew around 127% year over year to $ 1.81.

While maintaining an outperform rating on Burlington shares, the company raised its target price from $ 320 to $ 370 in a statement to clients on Friday. Burlington stock closed at $ 321.44 on Thursday, up 22% year over year.

The department store chain Nordstrom, which operates the off-price chain Nordstrom Rack, will also publish its quarterly results after the bell on Tuesday.

– CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

Categories
Business

China says retail gross sales grew 17.7% in April, lacking expectations

A worker uses a thermometer to check a customer’s temperature as they enter a Starbucks store while the country is hit by the new coronavirus outbreak in Beijing, China on Jan. 30, 2020.

A worker uses a thermometer to check a customer’s temperature as they enter a Starbucks store while the country is hit by the new coronavirus outbreak in Beijing, China on Jan. 30, 2020.

BEIJING – As the latest sign of a sluggish recovery from the coronavirus pandemic, China said on Monday that consumer spending grew more slowly than expected in April.

Retail sales rose 17.7% year over year last month, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday. According to analysts polled by Reuters, this fell short of expectations of 24.9% growth in April.

Retail sales in April also slowed from 34.2% year over year in March.

“China is still experiencing an unbalanced recovery as employment, household income, consumption, manufacturing investment, the service sector and private businesses have not yet returned to pre-pandemic levels,” Bruce Pang, director of macro and strategic research at China Renaissance, said in one Explanation.

Catering sales, which also include restaurants, rose 46.4% year over year in April from 91.6% in March.

Online sales of consumer goods rose 23.1% year over year in the first four months of the year, slower than the growth rate of 25.8% in the first three months of the year. The statistics bureau has not published any growth rates for a month.

In a quarterly monetary policy report released last week, the People’s Bank of China noted that the foundation for economic recovery is not yet solid and consumer spending remains constrained.

The urban unemployment rate fell from 5.3% in March to 5.1% in April, but the average number of hours worked fell from 46.9 hours in March to 46.4 hours last month.

Consumption has left China’s macroeconomic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic behind. Retail sales declined last year despite the expansion of China’s GDP – the only major economy that grew last year.

“The travel, leisure, and entertainment sectors are a busy place for a lot of people,” said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, in a note. “The uncertainty of Covid is still holding these sectors back.

“Economic growth is likely to have peaked quarter over quarter in the first quarter,” he said, reckoning that growth will slow in the coming months and that the likelihood of a rate hike by the central bank has decreased.

In yet another sign of persistent consumption weakness, Chinese tourist travel surged to a record high during the May 1-5 holidays, but spending was still below 2019 levels.

Other April numbers showed steady growth in non-consumer sectors.

Industrial production rose 9.8% in April, in line with Reuters’ expectations.

Fixed investment rose 19.9% ​​in the first four months of the year, slightly above the 19% forecast by a Reuters survey.

Categories
Business

Retail earnings and client spending

Investors will learn more about the ongoing impact of the pandemic on the consumer economy as retailers prepare to release quarterly earnings reports, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Friday.

The industry will have its time in the Wall Street spotlight after the Commerce Department announced on Friday that retail sales were flat in April, up 10.7% in March.

“Next week is about consumer spending, whether at home, outside or in the mall,” said the host of “Mad Money”. “Before betting on which retailer is doing the best, you need to consider where their stocks come from as some of them have overrun while others still have room to catch up.”

Cramer announced his schedule for the coming week. The earnings per share forecasts are based on FactSet estimates:

Monday: Lordstown Motor, Fisker Income

Lordstown Motor

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 10 a.m.
  • Estimated losses per share: 28 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 0

“Lordstown is a former hoard that traded at $ 31 less than four months ago, but management was over-promoting its pre-order numbers,” Cramer said, “and the stock has been at $ 7 since then like.”

Fisker

  • Earnings publication for the first quarter of 2021: after market entry; Conference call: 5 p.m.
  • Estimated losses per share: 19 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 0

“I think they’ll be able to tell a better story about their electric SUV, the Ocean, although I don’t know if it matters,” he said.

Tuesday: Walmart, Home Depot, Macy’s, Take-Two Interactive earnings

Walmart

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2022: 7:00 a.m. Conference call: 8 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 1.21
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 132.16 billion

“There’s been a lot of talk about the company doing well, but e-commerce execution has fallen hopelessly behind Amazon,” said Cramer. “I have to tell you, I have not been able to confirm this dire outlook and I remain convinced that Walmart is worth owning.”

Home Depot

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: 6 a.m. Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 3.08
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 34.75 billion

“This is possibly the most successful do-it-yourself renovation and gardening season in ages,” he said. “Home Depot has a nasty habit of its stocks running in the quarter, so if there’s a good day on Monday, stocks could sell out after the quarter and this is your chance to pounce.”

Macy’s

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 8 a.m.
  • Estimated losses per share: 39 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 4.36 billion

“I’m afraid that today’s 14% advance stole much of the profit,” said Cramer. “I still expect a slightly better than expected set of numbers with a positive undertone.”

Take-Two Interactive

  • Q4 2021 Results publication: After Market; Conference call: 4:30 p.m.
  • Projected EPS: 68 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 661 million

“The stock is down nearly 50 points after reporting a pretty good quarter last time. I think it can run here,” the host said.

Wednesday: Lowe’s, Target, TJX, Analog Devices, Cisco earnings

Lowes

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 2.60
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 23.73 billion

“I think a rejuvenated Lowe under the leadership of [CEO] Marvin Ellison has an interest in the Home Depot, “said Cramer.

aim

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 8 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 2.18
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 21.61 billion

“Target can’t stop betting good numbers after asserting itself as the dominant discounter,” he said.

TJX

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2022: 9:30 a.m. Conference call: 11 a.m.
  • Projected EPS: 30 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 8.59 billion

“TJX is quietly making a lot of money and this time it should be no different,” said the hosts.

Analog devices

  • Earnings release for the 2nd quarter of 2021: 7.00 a.m.; Conference call: 10 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 1.45
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 1.61 billion

Cisco

  • Q3 2021 Results publication: After Market; Conference call: 4:30 p.m.
  • Projected EPS: 82 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 12.57 billion

“I think they will both make us both feel good about the business,” said Cramer. “I expect a very positive outlook.”

Thursday: Kohls, Ralph Lauren, Petco, Hormel, Applied Materials, and Palo Alto Networks

Kohls

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Projected EPS: 8 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 3.35 billion

“It’s too daunting after this big rally,” said Cramer. “I wasn’t the best at Kohl. Suffice it to say that other people know Kohl better than I do.”

Ralph Lauren

  • Earnings release for the fourth quarter of 2021: 8 a.m. Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Estimated losses per share: 72 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 1.21 billion

“Ralph Lauren is getting more youthful and upscale,” he said. “It’s a good move and I forecast upgrades in the quarter.”

Petco

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: 7:15 a.m. Conference call: 8:30 a.m.
  • Estimated losses per share: 9 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 1.27 billion

“I think they will be able to benefit from the pandemic pet boom,” the host said. “The stock is up nearly 9% today so it could escape before the quarter.”

Hormel Foods

  • Q2 2021 results to be published: before the market; Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Projected EPS: 41 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 2.42 billion

“They recently bought one of the least-occupied brands in supermarket history, Planters Nuts, and I bet they tell a great story about how the acquisition is already paying off,” he said.

Applied materials

  • Q2 2021 Results publication: After Market; Conference call: 4:30 p.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 1.51
  • Estimated revenue: $ 5.4 billion

“You have to deal with analyst hecklers who tear every sentence, if not every word, apart because some of these semiconductors suddenly dip in,” Cramer said. “I think that’s totally exaggerated, but it won’t stop analysts from being skeptical.”

Palo Alto Networks

  • Q3 2021 Results publication: After Market; Conference call: 5 p.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 1.29
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 1.06 billion

“Who doesn’t want a cyber security game when a bunch of hackers just turn off gasoline on the east coast? I bet they have excellent numbers,” he said.

Friday: Deere, VF Corp, Foot Locker Income

Deere

  • Q2 2021 results to be published: before the market; Conference call: 10 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 4.51
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 10.57 billion

“It’s going to be a breakout. It’ll be a positive surprise,” said Cramer, “unless the grain complex collapses first … so be sensitive to the chatter of the goods, but understand we’re talking about that strongest agricultural cycle in the world. ” a decade. “

VF Corp.

  • Earnings release for the fourth quarter of 2021: 6:55 a.m. Conference call: 8:30 a.m.
  • Projected EPS: 28 cents
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 2.51 billion

“This clothing company has been inconsistent and the stock will be hostage to Kohl’s and Target,” he said.

Foot locker

  • Earnings release for the first quarter of 2021: ahead of the market; Conference call: 9 a.m.
  • Projected earnings per share: $ 1.07
  • Estimated Revenue: $ 1.86 billion

“I think there could be a gap before fearing that there is simply too much good and not enough suffering so it’s time to go,” the hosts said.

Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable foundation owns interests in Take-Two Interactive and Walmart.

Disclaimer of liability

Questions for Cramer?
Call Cramer at 1-800-743-CNBC

Would you like to dive deep into Cramer’s world? Open it up!
Mad Money Twitter – Jim Cramer Twitter – Facebook – Instagram

Questions, comments, suggestions for the Mad Money website? madcap@cnbc.com

Categories
Business

company criticized, retail staff say it makes them vaccine ‘police’

New York University and New School graduates are seen under Washington Square Arch in Washington Square Park in New York City on May 13, 2021.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Disney quickly announced that it plans to further increase capacity limits at its U.S. theme parks a few hours after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced relaxed mask guidelines for the U.S. on Thursday.

“”[It’s] Big news for us, especially if someone was in Florida in the middle of summer wearing a mask, “joked CEO Bob Chapek about two hours after the new recommendations were published with analysts about a profit call.

“Given the guidance today from the CDC and previous guidance we received from the Florida governor, we have already begun increasing our capacity,” he said.

According to the CDC, in most environments, whether outdoors or indoors, fully vaccinated individuals no longer need to wear a face mask or stay 6 feet away from others as per updated guidelines. It’s the first time the federal government has been encouraging people to stop wearing masks since the agency first called for face coverings more than a year ago. It marks a major turning point in the US Covid-19 pandemic and brings the country one step closer to normal. Public health experts also said the change is likely to encourage more Americans, especially those who are still reluctant to receive the shots, to get the vaccine.

However, the agency was sharply criticized for its quick turnaround. Just six weeks ago, CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky facing “impending doom” as daily Covid-19 cases in the US rose again. And many health and business leaders say the new recommendations are too ambiguous. It will require key personnel to monitor police vaccination protocols and will be difficult to enforce.

Vaccination police

“Under current plans, in most cases it will be impossible to get this through,” said Dr. Peter Chin-Hong, an infectious disease doctor at the University of California at San Francisco, told CNBC. “Companies, schools and event organizers may still have the option to request proof of vaccination prior to admission to certain communities or events. However, vaccination records or QR codes are not enforced at other everyday events, as is the case in other countries.”

There are some cases when fully vaccinated people still have to wear masks: traveling by plane, bus or train, as well as going to specific locations such as hospitals, nursing homes, prisons or facilities where they are needed, the agency said. The guidance of the CDC is also not mandatory. States, municipalities and corporations can decide whether or not to follow suit, adding to the confusion of many entrepreneurs and employees.

Some health and legal experts told CNBC that it would further complicate public health efforts to end the pandemic, adding that it was “almost impossible” to monitor the use of face masks because it was not known who was vaccinated is and who is not. More than half of the population still did not get the shots, they said, and risked more outbreaks from exposed, unvaccinated people.

During the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic in the Manhattan neighborhood of New York City, New York on May 14, 2021, people ride a maskless tour bus in Times Square.

Carlo Allegri | Reuters

“While we all share a desire to return to normal mask-free conditions, today’s CDC guidance is confusing and does not take into account how this will affect key workers who are often exposed to those who are not vaccinated and who refuse to wear masks “said Marc Perrone, President of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, said in a statement. “Elementary workers are still being forced to play masked police for shoppers who are not vaccinated and refuse to follow local COVID safety measures. Should they become the vaccination police now?”

Creates ambiguity

Lisa LaBruno, senior executive vice president of retail stores and innovation for the Retail Industry Leaders Association, told CNBC that the new guidelines “create confusion for retailers because they don’t fully align with state and local orders.”

“These conflicting positions put retailers and their employees in incredibly difficult situations. We urge state and local governments to coordinate with the CDC as additional guidance is issued on the road to normalcy,” she said in a statement.

Beauty store chain Ulta Beauty said it has no plans to change its masking and social distancing requirements in its stores, despite actively evaluating “the impact of this updated guide on our guests and employees.” The health and safety of employees and customers have top priority.

“I hate to say it’s complicated, but it’s complicated,” said David French, lobbyist for the National Retail Federation. On the one hand, the CDC guidelines could provide more clarity, but they also make things more complex as companies don’t know who is vaccinated or not – and neither does customers.

Even with the milestone announcement, customers shouldn’t expect immediate changes in their grocery or mall, said Joel Bines, global co-head of retail practice for consulting firm AlixPartners. He said the guidelines are going to make little difference to retailers who don’t know people’s vaccination status – and most importantly, want to make sure their employees and customers don’t get sick.

“This is an extremely difficult management problem for any business that physically interacts with consumers,” he said. “There are no operating instructions for this.”

Law professor Lawrence Gostin, director of the World Health Organization’s Collaboration Center on National and Global Health Law, said the new guidelines could have “serious unforeseen consequences”.

“The public will not be comfortable shopping, dining or going to church or the gym if they have no idea whether the exposed person standing next to them is vaccinated or not,” Gostin said.

46% of the US population vaccinated

As of Thursday, more than 154 million Americans, 46.6% of the US population, had received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, according to the CDC. Around 118 million Americans are fully vaccinated, according to the agency. The US government is working to convince more Americans to get vaccinated after the rate of fire has slowed in recent weeks.

Unlike some other countries, the US doesn’t have a system where people can prove they’ve been vaccinated. Even if there was, vaccinated people are unlikely to have their cards with them all the time, and not everyone will have digital evidence, said Dorit Reiss, a law professor at UC Hastings College of Law. Areas with high vaccination rates can likely lift mask restrictions entirely, she added.

“This is an exciting and powerful moment,” Walensky, the CDC director, told reporters at a Covid-19 briefing at the White House Thursday after announcing the new guidelines. “It could only happen because of the work of so many making sure that three safe and effective vaccines are given quickly.”

Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC

Source: CDC | Youtube

From an epidemiological perspective, the CDC guidance means “we are in a place where we are in the best pandemic place we have ever been as a country with ongoing declines in infections, hospitalizations and deaths,” Chin said -Hong.

“The symbolic meaning is even more tangible,” he added. “Masks were the symbol of fear and political division [and] Hopefully, if we take them off, at least for people who have been vaccinated, it will mean we will return to the life we ​​were aiming for before the pandemic. “

The Nevada Gaming Control Board, which sets the rules for casinos, immediately updated its rules so The Wynn Las Vegas can simplify its own mask guidelines. The company said that as of Friday, guests and employees who are fully vaccinated will not be required to wear masks in its hotels and casinos.

Bow to pressure

Gostin and others criticized the CDC’s abrupt change in policy, saying it was bowing to pressure from the public and governors to return to normal. “As a result, CDC is significantly changing its guidelines, moving from excessive caution to all caution,” he said, adding that doing so could undermine public confidence in the agency. “The public will be less likely to rely on CDC guidelines if they feel like the agency is being pushed around.”

On Friday, Walensky defended the timing of the new leadership. In the past two weeks, daily Covid cases have decreased by more than a third, and vaccinations are now widespread in most places in the United States. She added the guidelines “empower” people to make choices about their own health and urge them not to be vaccinated to people who do not run the risk of going out exposed.

If there are multiple people in an exposed room, the vaccinated will be protected from Covid, she said.

New scientific evidence shows people who are vaccinated are protected and have “very little risk of spreading Covid to other people,” even with some variants that appear to affect the vaccine’s effectiveness, she said on CBS This Morning.

– CNBC’s Nadine El-Bawab, Sarah Whitten, and Michael Wayland contributed to this article.

Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that Dr. Peter Chin-Hong is an Infectious Disease Physician at the University of California at San Francisco.

Categories
Business

Retail Gross sales Had been Flat in April

Retail sales were flat after a brisk March last month, the Department of Commerce said Friday as Americans resumed their final round of government economic reviews.

The April number was a slowdown from the previous month, as retail sales rose 10.7 percent as vaccinations increased and people outside their homes became more comfortable and spent more money on clothing, restaurants, bars and sporting goods. Retail sales, which saw a record decline at the start of the pandemic just over a year ago, have been closely watched as monthly measures of the health of the economy and consumer attitudes.

Morgan Stanley economists had expected retail sales to grow smaller in April compared to March, based on the distribution of stimulus checks. Around 83 percent of this last round was distributed in the second half of March.

This is a developing story. Check for updates again.

Categories
Business

Retail Gross sales Soar and Jobless Claims Drop in New Indicators of Restoration: Reside Updates

Here’s what you need to know:

Credit…Gabby Jones for The New York Times

Jobless claims fell last week to their lowest level of the pandemic and the latest data on retail sales blew past expectations, renewing confidence in a dynamic economic revival.

About 613,000 people filed first-time claims for state unemployment benefits last week, the Labor Department said Thursday, a decrease of 153,000 from the previous week.

In addition, 132,000 filed for Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, a federal program that covers freelancers, part-timers and others who do not routinely qualify for state benefits. That was a decline of 20,000 from the previous week.

Neither figure is seasonally adjusted. On a seasonally adjusted basis, new state claims totaled 576,000.

“We’re gaining momentum here, which is just unquestionable,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at the accounting firm Grant Thornton. But she cautioned that the jobless claims levels, while good news, were still extraordinarily high compared to what they were before the pandemic.

“You’re still not popping champagne corks,” she said. “I will breath again — and breath easy again — once we get these number back down in the 200,000 range.”

In another sign of the recovery underway, retail sales surged in March, the Commerce Department said Thursday, as Americans spent their latest round of government stimulus checks and the continued roll out of coronavirus vaccines lured more people back into stores.

The 9.8 percent increase last month was a strong comeback from the nearly 3 percent drop in February.

With the pandemic’s end seemingly in sight, the economy is poised for a robust comeback. But weekly applications for unemployment claims have remained stubbornly high for months, frustrating the recovery even as businesses reopen and vaccination rates increase. They have also been a volatile economic indicator, temporarily dipping to their lowest level of the pandemic in mid-March before rising again in recent weeks.

“The job market conditions for job seekers have really improved extremely quickly between January and now,” said Julia Pollak, a labor economist at the job site ZipRecruiter. “But there are still huge barriers to returning to work.”

Jobless claims for the next few months could remain significantly elevated as the labor market adjusts to a new normal.

Concerns about workplace safety persist, especially for workers on the younger end of the spectrum who have only just become eligible for vaccinations. Many children are still attending schools remotely, complicating the full-time work prospects for their caregivers.

But there is hope on the horizon as those barriers begin to fall. President Biden moved up the deadline for states to make all adults eligible for vaccination to April 19, and every state has complied. Students who have been learning remotely will begin to return to the classroom in earnest.

“This was the deepest, swiftest recession ever, but it’s also turning into the fastest recovery,” Ms. Pollak said. “And I don’t think we should lose sight of that just because some of the measures are a little stubborn.”

Retail sales surged in March, the Commerce Department said on Thursday, as Americans spent their latest round of government stimulus checks and the continued roll out of coronavirus vaccines lured more people back into stores.

The 9.8 percent increase last month was a strong comeback from the nearly 3 percent drop in February, when previous stimulus money had dissipated and a series of winter storms made travel difficult across much of the United States.

The rebound in March sales shows how, a year after the nation’s economy locked down to prevent the spread of the virus, consumer spending remains highly dependent on government support. It also reflects that many areas of consumption frozen by the pandemic have bounced back. Sales of clothing and accessories rose 18 percent, while restaurants and bars saw a 13 percent increase.

President Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, which was signed into law last month, provides direct payments of $1,400 to lower-income Americans. Many of these checks began arriving in households toward the end of last month, when economists saw signs that spending was ramping up again, such as increased hotel occupancy and travel through airports.

Economists at Morgan Stanley had predicted that core retail sales would jump 6.5 percent in March, driven by the stimulus checks that started arriving in people’s bank accounts around March 17. The investment bank said 30 percent of consumers tend to spend their checks within the first 10 days, suggesting that many other consumers have yet to spend their checks, which could strengthen April sales.

More broadly, American consumers are also feeling increasingly optimistic as more people become vaccinated and venture out more frequently. One measure of consumer confidence, tabulated by the Conference Board, said confidence increased about 20 points in March from February, fueled by increased income and stronger business and employment expectations.

Kevin Durant of the Brooklyn Nets was an early investor in Coinbase and stands to reap a big profit from the company’s market debut.Credit…Elsa/Getty Images

Heavy trading volume greeted the highly anticipated market debut of Coinbase on Wednesday, which ended the day worth some $86 billion. The cryptocurrency company’s coming-out party made some insiders very rich, opened up new possibilities for cementing its position in the blockchain economy and blazed a trail for other crypto companies to follow its lead onto the public markets, the DealBook newsletter writes.

The stake held by Brian Armstrong, Coinbase’s co-founder and chief executive, is now worth roughly $13 billion. Shares held by its other co-founder, Fred Ehrsam, are worth about $6.7 billion. (Andreessen Horowitz’s stake is worth $11.2 billion, while Union Square Ventures’ holding is worth $5.3 billion.) Other investors who stand to collect big paper profits — if they held on to their shares — include the National Basketball Association star Kevin Durant, the rapper Nas and Alexis Ohanian, a co-founder of Reddit.

The market listing makes it easier for Coinbase to negotiate mergers and acquisitions. “We want to be able to have a public mark on our stock price because it helps us do more and more M.&A.,” Emilie Choi, the company’s chief operating officer, told the technology site Protocol. “There’s so much innovation happening in the crypto ecosystem, and we can’t possibly do it all in-house.” But the listing also brings more scrutiny of the company’s internal culture, which has included accusations of unfair treatment of Black and female employees and poor customer service.

Coinbase could lead the way for others. The tech investor Ron Conway called Coinbase “the Google for the crypto economy.” As crypto goes mainstream, others with similarly big ambitions may follow Coinbase onto the public markets, including rival markets like Binance, the biggest crypto exchange, and Gemini, the company founded by the Winklevoss twins. Exchange-traded funds that hold Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies directly also haven’t yet been approved by the S.E.C., but proponents believe that could happen soon.

Coinbase has come a long way since its humble beginnings. Here’s Mr. Armstrong’s original Hacker News post from March 2012 looking for a co-founder for his crypto venture, which drew dismissive comments like, “Because bitcoin worked out so well. Have fun with that, dude.” Bitcoin was worth about $5 then; it’s more than $60,000 now.

Bank of America and Citigroup were aided by the release of the cash cushions they had set aside during the economic downturn last year to absorb potential losses.Credit…Carlo Allegri/Reuters

Profit at both Bank of America and Citigroup jumped for the first three months of this year, bouncing back from the lows of the early stages of the pandemic in 2020, as they reduced their loss cushions to reflect an improving economy.

Citigroup more than tripled its profit from a year ago, reporting earnings of $7.9 billion even as its sales fell 7 percent, to $19.3 billion. Bank of America doubled its profit to $8.1 billion from $4 billion. Its revenue of $22 billion was flat.

Like JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo, which reported first-quarter results on Wednesday, both banks were aided by the release of the cash cushions they had set aside during the economic downturn last year to absorb potential losses. Citi released $3.9 billion of the reserve it had built up to absorb loan losses, whereas Bank of America’s provision for losses decreased $6.6 billion.

“It’s been a better than expected start to the year, and we are optimistic about the macro environment,” said Jane Fraser, who became Citi’s chief executive last month. “This is the healthiest we have seen the consumer emerge from a crisis in recent history.” Similarly, Bank of America’s chief, Brian Moynihan, noted that “progress in the health crisis and the economy point to an accelerating recovery.”

During a call Thursday morning with analysts and investors, Mr. Moynihan noted that March had been a record month for consumer spending by Bank of America customers.

Low interest rates, which have been a central feature of the Federal Reserve’s efforts to shore up the economy, dogged both companies. At Citi, investment banking and stock trading were areas of strength, rising 46 percent and 26 percent from the prior year.

At Bank of America, investment-banking fees for advising corporations on deals hit a record $2.2 billion, a 62 percent rise, thanks partly to a doubling of activity in stock underwriting deals, including initial public offerings. Global markets revenue rose 17 percent, which was primarily attributable to gains in the sales and trading of bonds and related products.

As part of its earnings release, Citi announced that would exit the consumer market in 13 countries in Asia and Europe, including Australia, China, India, and Russia, reflecting a desire to focus on the bank’s more profitable geographies. In those areas, “we don’t have the scale we need to compete,” Ms. Fraser said.

By: Ella Koeze·Data delayed at least 15 minutes·Source: FactSet

Stocks on Wall Street climbed on Thursday, with shares lifted by a new round of earnings reports and as economic data from the United States added to signs of a budding economic recovery.

The S&P 500 climbed about 0.7 percent, putting it on track for a record, while the Nasdaq composite rose by more than 1 percent. European stock indexes also rose. The Stoxx Europe 600 index increased about 0.3 percent, for a third straight day of gains in record territory.

The gains came after the U.S. government reported that jobless claims fell last week to their lowest level of the pandemic, and the latest data on retail sales blew past expectations.
About 613,000 people filed first-time claims for state unemployment benefits last week, the Labor Department said Thursday, a decrease of 153,000 from the previous week.

Separately, the Commerce Department said that retail sales surged 9.8 percent in March, a strong comeback from the nearly 3 percent drop in February, when previous stimulus money had dissipated and a series of winter storms made travel difficult across much of the United States.

Other signs of recovery came as companies reported earnings. Executives at Bank of America and Citigroup both joined their counterparts at other large financial firms in sounding an optimistic tone about the outlook for the economy. Shares of Citigroup rose more than 1.5 percent after its earnings report, while Bank of America’s stock fell slightly.

“It’s been a better-than-expected start to the year, and we are optimistic about the macro environment,” said Jane Fraser, who became Citi’s chief executive last month. “This is the healthiest we have seen the consumer emerge from a crisis in recent history.”

And Delta reported that it has stemmed daily operating losses, a sign that its planes are fuller and fares are returning to more normal levels. Its shares were lower, however, after the company said that in the first three months of the year, it lost $1.2 billion as revenue plunged from a year earlier.

After a bumper market debut, Coinbase shares rose 3 percent in early trading. On Wednesday, the cryptocurrency exchange ended its first day of trading at $328.28 a share, valuing the company at nearly $86 billion — more than 10 times its last valuation as a private company.

Despite the economic optimism, yields on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes dropped sharply to 1.58 percent. On Wednesday, Jerome H. Powell, the chair of the Federal Reserve, reiterated the central bank’s intention of keeping monetary policy accommodative for a long time. He said the bank would probably slow its bond-buying program “well before” it lifts its policy interest rate.

”Delta is accelerating into the recovery with our brand stronger and more trusted than ever before,” the airline’s chief executive, Ed Bastian said.Credit…Charlie Riedel/Associated Press

Airlines are still racking up big losses even as ticket sales begin to recover.

Delta Air Lines said on Thursday that it lost $1.2 billion in the first three months of the year and its revenue fell about 60 percent, to $4.2 billion, from the first quarter of 2019.

But the airline said it was optimistic that business would soon improve.

“A year after the onset of the pandemic, travelers are gaining confidence and beginning to reclaim their lives,” Ed Bastian, the company’s chief executive, said in a statement. “Delta is accelerating into the recovery with our brand stronger and more trusted than ever before.”

The airline said it stemmed daily operating losses last month, a sign that its planes are fuller and fares are returning to more normal levels. Well over one million travelers have been screened at airport security checkpoints each day for more than a month, according to the Transportation Security Administration.

“If recovery trends hold, we expect positive cash generation for the June quarter and see a path to return to profitability in the September quarter as the demand recovery progresses,” Mr. Bastian said.

The airline said it expected revenue in the current quarter to be down about 50 to 55 percent compared with the same period in 2019. It expects to fly about 68 percent as many people in the quarter as it did in 2019.

The airline said ticket sales for domestic flights had recovered to 85 percent of 2019 levels, though lucrative corporate and international travelers have yet to come back in meaningful numbers. Delta will officially lift its ban on the sales of middle seats next month, allowing it to earn more from each flight.

“In the June quarter, we expect significant sequential improvement in revenue as leisure demand accelerates into the peak summer period and we add capacity,” Glen Hauenstein, Delta’s president, said in the statement.

Delta is the first major U.S. airline to report first-quarter results. United Airlines and American Airlines are scheduled to do so next week.

Instagram is developing a service for children as a way to keep those under 13 off its main platform.Credit…Jenny Kane/Associated Press

An international coalition of 35 children’s and consumer groups called on Instagram on Thursday to scrap its plans to develop a version of the popular photo-sharing app for users under age 13.

Instagram’s push for a separate children’s app comes after years of complaints from legislators and parents that the platform has been slow to identify underage users and protect them from sexual predators and bullying.

But in a letter to Mark Zuckerberg, the chief executive of Facebook — the company that owns the photo-sharing service — the nonprofit groups warned that a children’s version of Instagram would not mitigate such problems. While 10- to 12-year-olds with Instagram accounts would be unlikely to switch to a “babyish version” of the app, the groups said, it could hook even younger users on endless routines of photo-scrolling and body-image shame.

“While collecting valuable family data and cultivating a new generation of Instagram users may be good for Facebook’s bottom line,” the groups, led by the Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood in Boston, said in the letter to Mr. Zuckerberg, “it will likely increase the use of Instagram by young children who are particularly vulnerable to the platform’s manipulative and exploitative features.”

The coalition of nonprofit groups also includes the Africa Digital Rights’ Hub in Ghana; the Australian Council on Children and the Media; the Center for Digital Democracy in Washington; Common Sense Media in San Francisco; the Consumer Federation of America; and the 5Rights Foundation in Britain.

Stephanie Otway, a Facebook spokeswoman, said that Instagram was in the early stages of developing a service for children as part of an effort to keep those under 13 off its main platform. Although Instagram requires users to be at least 13, many younger children have lied about their age to set up accounts.

Ms. Otway said that company would not show ads in any Instagram product developed for children younger than 13, and that it planned to consult with experts on children’s health and safety on the project. Instagram is also working on new age-verification methods to catch younger users trying to lie about their age, she said.

“The reality is that kids are online,” Ms. Otway said. “They want to connect with their family and friends, have fun and learn, and we want to help them do that in a way that is safe and age-appropriate.”

The Thomson Reuters offices in Times Square. The company’s media organization will begin charging for access to its website.Credit…Andrew Kelly/Reuters

Reuters will begin charging for access to its website as it tries to capture a slice of the digital subscription business.

The company, one of the largest news organizations in the world, announced the new paywall on Thursday, as well as a redesigned website aimed at a “professional” audience wanting business, financial and general news.

After registration and a free preview period, a subscription to Reuters.com will cost $34.99 a month, the same as Bloomberg’s digital subscription. The Wall Street Journal’s digital subscription costs $38.99 a month, while The New York Times costs $18.42 monthly.

Reuters.com attracts 41 million unique visitors a month. Months of audience research showed that those readers were divided in two separate groups: those wanting breaking news and professionals looking for context and analysis about how news affected their industry, Josh London, chief marketing officer at Reuters, said in an interview.

Reuters will roll out new sections on its website for subscribers in coming weeks that include coverage of legal news, sustainable business, energy, health care and the auto industry. It also plans to introduce industry-specific newsletters.

Mr. London described the new website as “the largest digital transformation at Reuters in a decade.” He declined to provide specifics on digital subscription goals but said that it represented “a major opportunity for us.”

Arlyn Gajilan, the digital news director at Reuters, said she expected to expand the digital team working on the revamped website.

On Monday, Reuters announced that Alessandra Galloni, a global managing editor, would become its next editor in chief. Ms. Galloni, who will be the first woman to helm the news agency in its history, starts her new role on Monday. She takes over from Stephen J. Adler, who retired after running Reuters for a decade.

Ms. Gajilan said that Ms. Galloni had been closely involved in the new direction of Reuters.com.

“She’s a very strong advocate for all things digital at Reuters,” Ms. Gajilan said.

Dan Rozycki, president of the Transtec Group in Texas, is looking at alternatives for his semiconductor supplies.Credit…Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times

Shortages of semiconductors, fueled by pandemic interruptions and production issues at multibillion-dollar chip factories, have sent shock waves through the economy. Questions about chips are reverberating among both businesses and policymakers trying to navigate the world’s dependence on the small components.

Most attention has focused on temporary closings of big U.S. car plants. But the chips are in everything from cash registers and kitchen appliances, and the problem is affecting many other sectors, particularly the server systems and PCs used to deliver and consume internet services that became crucial during the pandemic, Don Clark reports for The New York Times.

“Every aspect of human existence is going online, and every aspect of that is running on semiconductors,” said Pat Gelsinger, the new chief executive of the chip maker Intel who attended the meeting with the president on Monday. “People are begging us for more.”

The chip shortage potentially affects just about any company adding communications or computing features to products. Many examples were described in 90 comments filed by companies and trade groups to a supply chain review by President Biden, including a laundry list of needs from industry giants like Amazon and Boeing.

Dan Rozycki is the president of a small engineering firm, that sells small sensors used to monitor construction sites to ensure concrete is hardening properly. His firm is for now among the lucky chip users. It planned ahead and has enough chips to keep making the roughly 50,000 sensors it supplies each year to construction sites. But his distributor has warned him it might not be able to deliver more of them until late 2022, he said.

“Is that going to halt those projects?” Mr. Rozycki asked. He is scouring the market for other distributors that might have the two needed chips in stock. Other possibilities include redesigning the sensors to use different chips.

  • A former editor at Vanity Fair has been working to create a new digital publication, in which writers will share in subscription revenue — Vanity Fair meets Substack. The new company behind the publication, Heat Media, hopes to unveil it in the coming months, four people with knowledge of the matter said. The start-up is partly the brainchild of Jon Kelly, a former editor at Vanity Fair. One of the backers is the private equity firm TPG, which would take three seats on the Heat Media board, the people said. Another investor is 40 North, a related investment arm of Standard Industries, a global industrials company, the people said. Heat Media has raised around $7 million so far, according to the people.

  • Kimberly Godwin, a veteran CBS News executive, was named the next president of ABC News on Wednesday, making her the first Black woman to lead a major broadcast network’s news division. Ms. Godwin succeeds James Goldston, who announced his departure from ABC in January. She will begin in her job in early May. Ms. Godwin most recently served as CBS’s executive vice president of news.