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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Tesla, JD.com, Fox & more

    JD.com has become the latest Chinese tech giant to announced plans for a ChatGPT-style product, joining the hype around the chatbot technology.
    Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading.
    News Corporation — Shares gained 4% after the media company reported an earnings and revenue beat. News Corp posted 9 cents earnings per share and $2.45 billion in revenue for the third fiscal quarter. Analysts polled by StreetAccount had estimated earnings of 5 cents per share and $2.38 billion in revenue. The company announced cost-cutting measures, which include laying off 5% of its workforce, are expected to result in $160 million in annualized savings by the end of 2023. 

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    Tesla — Elon Musk’s electric vehicle company gained 2.3% in premarket trading. Musk said Thursday he has pegged a new chief executive for Twitter set to start in about six weeks. Musk has received criticism in the past from Tesla investors who think that simultaneously serving as chief executive at two companies is a distraction away from the EV giant.
    JD.com — The Chinese e-commerce company’s U.S.-listed shares lost 1.4% Friday during premarket trading. The company’s earnings and revenue came above analysts’ estimates, according to Refinitv data. Meanwhile, it announced its current CEO Xu Lei, who has been the leader of the company for about one year, would step down in June. 
    Fox —The media stock dipped 2.4% after Wells Fargo downgraded shares to equal weight from overweight, citing challenges related to demand for linear TV and the costs for sports rights. On Tuesday, the company reported a net loss for the third fiscal quarter due to costs related to Fox News’ settlement with Dominion Voting Systems. 
    PacWest — Shares gained 2.4% in the premarket after tumbling 22.7% in the previous session on deposit outflows. Other regional banks followed suit, with Western Alliance up about 2% and Comerica up 1%.
    Barclays — The British bank’s stock rose 0.5% following an upgrade from RBC Capital Markets. RBC said Barclays is currently trading at a “good entry point,” creating a promising opportunity for investors. U.S.-listed shares of the bank have shed about 1.5% in 2023. 

    First Solar — Shares of the clean energy company climbed 5% in premarket trading after First Solar announced an acquisition of Evolar AB for up to $80 million. Evolar is a European company that develops thin film used in solar panels.
    Pearson — Shares of the education company rose 1.1% Friday before the bell. Morgan Stanley upgraded Pearson shares to overweight from equal weight, citing potential value-creation from generative AI. Shares have declined 10.2% year to date.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li, Alexander Harring, Jesse Pound, Brian Evans and Michelle Fox contributed reporting More

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    Vivek Ramaswamy’s firm courts GOP officials as he pushes businesses to stay out of politics

    Republican presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy built his White House bid around urging companies to stay out of politics.
    What he doesn’t tell voters is the asset management firm he co-founded has engaged more with GOP officials behind the scenes than was previously known, according to private email correspondence reviewed by CNBC.

    Republican presidential candidate businessman Vivek Ramaswamy speaks to guests at the Iowa Faith & Freedom Coalition Spring Kick-Off on April 22, 2023 in Clive, Iowa.
    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    Republican presidential hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy built his White House bid around urging companies to stay out of politics.
    What he doesn’t tell voters is the asset management firm he co-founded has engaged more with Republican Party officials behind the scenes than was previously known, according to private email correspondence reviewed by CNBC.

    The emails show how the firm, Strive Asset Management, became a lead organizer and voice against environmental, social and governance, or ESG, investing, both before and since Ramaswamy entered the presidential race in February.
    Ramaswamy told CNBC in an interview Thursday that he stepped away from his role as executive chairman of the firm and is no longer on its board while he runs for president.
    When he launched his company last year, Ramaswamy told CNBC that businesses should “focus on excellence over politics.” He slammed ESG-style investing by BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard, and accused the firms of using “their clients’ capital to advocate for viewpoints in the boardrooms of corporate America that most of their own clients disagree with.”
    Ramaswamy and his firm have since jumped into the political clash over ESG investing platforms, according to the emails, which were obtained by watchdog Documented and provided to CNBC. The messages show Ramaswamy’s firm actively engaged with GOP state leaders who have defended the fossil fuel industry and criticized environmentally conscious investment standards.
    Ramaswamy on Thursday defended the firm’s engagement with GOP officials, saying bigger firms BlackRock, Vanguard and State Street have conducted similar practices with state officials across the country.

    “The biggest asset allocators into the asset management systems are state pension funds and BlackRock, State Street, Vanguard, Invesco and others, are regularly engaged,” Ramaswamy told CNBC. “It’s just a hard fact that these institutions have for decades been educating, discussing with states and pension fund systems, the merits of ESG based investment framework. Strive is bringing an alternative perspective to bear across the market.”
    Since he began his campaign, Ramaswamy has deferred questions about Strive’s business strategy to the firm.

    Strive CEO Matt Cole echoed Ramaswamy’s remarks in an interview with CNBC.
    “We’re just copying the playbook of BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard,” Cole said Thursday. When asked about the emails showing how the firm has become a leading organizer against ESG investing, Cole said: “I think Strive is the leading voice in America pushing in favor of shareholder capitalism.”
    Strive has become one of the more vocal opponents of ESG investing and has gained enough notoriety to challenge the likes of fossil fuel giant ExxonMobil. Ramaswamy, as Strive’s executive chairman, sent a letter to Exxon in November saying the company’s board “reflects an overrepresentation of directors whose principal focus appears to be on Exxon’s climate change strategy.”
    Ramaswamy later secured a meeting with Exxon CEO Darren Woods. Strive said in a December press release that the oil and gas executive “pushed back on certain points in Strive’s letter but committed to exploring suitable directors for Exxon’s board with relevant industry expertise.” A month after the meeting, Exxon announced it would add Lawrence Kellner, a former CEO of Continental Airlines, and John Harris II, a former CEO of Raytheon International, to its board.
    Ramaswamy’s firm at the same time focused its investment strategy on fossil fuels. Strive launched an ETF in 2022 called Strive U.S. Energy, which is listed on the New York Stock Exchange as DRLL. The fund’s fact sheet lists Exxon, Chevron and ConocoPhillips as its top three holdings. It has net assets of over $300 million.
    Ramaswamy told CNBC on the day the ETF launched that Strive “is delivering a new mandate.”
    “What I call the post ESG mandate to the U.S. energy sector to drill for more oil,” he said at the time. “To frack for more natural gas. To do whatever allows them to be most successful over the long run without regard to political, social, cultural or environmental agendas.”
    The firm’s overall assets under management total over $520 million, according to a regulatory filing signed in February and submitted by Strive to the Securities and Exchange Commission. The form was signed a week after Ramaswamy announced he was running for president, and shows that at that time his ownership stake in Strive was at least 50%. Ramaswamy did not dispute in the CNBC interview that he still owns at least 50% of the company.
    Cole confirmed that the ownership structure listed on the filing has not changed since Ramaswamy announced his run for president. He added that Strive, as of Wednesday, had about $680 million in assets under management.

    Strive moves to organize ESG forum

    Ramaswamy has cast himself for years as a leading culture warrior against major corporations and extended his fight to the campaign trail. He co-founded the anti-ESG firm in 2022, a year after he published a book called “Woke, Inc.: Inside Corporate America’s Social Justice Scam,” which takes on the concept of stakeholder capitalism.
    His declared and potential rivals, including former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, have often attacked ESG investing standards and corporations that support social causes — an increasingly common refrain within the GOP.
    The opposition to businesses expressing political views has helped to propel Ramaswamy to the top tier of the Republican primary, according to early polls. One recent Morning Consult survey found him, in a hypothetical GOP primary field, tied with former Vice President Mike Pence for third place with 5% of support. He trailed only Trump at 60% and DeSantis at 19%.
    Trump has raved about Ramaswamy, saying his positive comments about the Trump administration are “the reason he is doing so well.”
    The emails suggest that both before and after Ramaswamy explicitly jumped into politics, his firm had entered the fray by establishing ties to anti-ESG Republican officials.
    In March, one month after Ramaswamy announced his run for president, Strive organized a call featuring what the email labeled as the “Pro-Fiduciary Investors Taskforce.”
    The more than 30 people invited to participate included at least half a dozen Republican state financial officers who have either vehemently opposed ESG investment standards, or in some cases, have used their power to directly take on Wall Street firms that follow the practice, the email shows. Ramaswamy was not on the invite list.

    Matthew Kopko, a senior vice president at Strive, said in one of the obtained emails that the “kick-off call” would focus, in part, on a Biden administration rule that allows employers to select ESG funds for their company 401(k) plans. In March, days before the meeting took place, President Joe Biden vetoed a bill that would have rolled back the Labor Department standard.
    Cole confirmed to CNBC that the veto came up on the call.
    “I think the vast majority of people [at the meeting] thought the bill should not have been vetoed,” he said. Cole added that “it was pretty interesting I think from our perspective that the first veto of Biden’s presidency was a bipartisan bill that was focused on maximizing value, or forcing asset managers to focus on maximizing value.”
    An emailed invite to the Zoom call also shows that Strive executives were planning to organize a central forum to discuss ESG-related issues.
    “As discussed with many of you across the nation, there is strong interest among state financial leaders to have a forum to share and learn information related to emerging developments in ESG, corporate governance, proxy voting, stewardship and other fiduciary matters,” Kopko said in another email to those invited.
    The officials invited included Jimmy Patronis, Florida’s GOP chief financial officer, who in December said the state treasury would pull out $2 billion in assets previously managed by BlackRock. West Virginia state Treasurer Riley Moore was also invited to take part in the call. He announced in 2022 that the state will no longer use a BlackRock investment fund as part of its banking transactions. Representatives for Moore and Patronis said the two did not participate in the call.
    Marlo Oaks, the Utah state treasurer who labeled ESG part of “Satan’s plan” and moved about $100 million in state money previously managed by BlackRock to different asset managers, is also listed as invited to the call. A representative for Oaks did not respond to a request for comment.
    Derek Kreifels, the CEO of the conservative-leaning State Financial Officers Foundation, which has organized conferences bashing ESG investing, was also invited to take part in the call. Ramaswamy was a keynote speaker at one of the foundation’s meetings last year and the state chief financial officers invited to take part on the Strive call are publicly listed SFOF members. A representative for Kreifels said the nonprofit CEO did not participate in the call.
    Kopko sent a follow-up email in May for what he described as the “next task force call.” The email shows that the next event was set to take place May 3. While there’s no document showing who was invited to that Zoom gathering, the itinerary for the call notes that ESG critic and Yale law school professor Jed Rubenfeld was expected to give a “presentation on state pension fiduciary duties.”
    Cole said Rubenfeld’s presentation on that call was about “best practices for pensions.” He explained there were about 30 people on the call and most of the people at the meeting were “pension-related employees,” along with some state attorneys general.
    Cole said he didn’t know all of the state AGs who took part in the call and which political party they were affiliated with. But he also said that “typically Republican AGs have been more interested in trying to pushback against asset managers pursuing non financial interests but the invite wasn’t to any particular political party.”

    Getting access

    Ramaswamy’s firm gained more access to anti-ESG Republican politicians before he launched a presidential bid than was previously known, according to the emails.
    His firm’s leaders privately turned to anti-ESG Republican state officials in both Texas and West Virginia to help gain access to government officials to discuss Strive’s business ventures, either through in-person or Zoom meetings, according to emails from September through March.
    Cole said they’ve met with leaders from more than 20 states and have also engaged with large wealth managers about their company. “To me these are just two meetings that we have on our calendar every day,” he said.
    Strive President Anson Frericks, in a September email to Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar, discussed a lunch he had in August with Hegar and one of his top donors, oil and gas developer Ben “Bud” Brigham. Frericks in the email requested a “warm introduction” to a state-based contact for an “emerging managers fund for new firms like Strive.”
    “At lunch with Bud Brigham, you mentioned that TX has an emerging managers fund for new firms like Strive. Are you able to provide us with a contact for that fund (I cc’d our Head of Institutional Investing, Rob Melton)? Or make a warm introduction?” Frericks asked Hegar in the email.
    Hegar had argued in letters to money managers in 2022 that firms such as BlackRock, HSBC and UBS are boycotting the energy industry, saying in a statement that he believes “environmental crusaders” have created a “false narrative” that the economy can transition away from fossil fuels.
    Hours after Frericks sent his September email, Hegar replied in an email that he obliged the request for an introduction and forwarded Frericks’ email to Mike Reissig, the CEO of the Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust Company. That entity was created by the Texas Legislature “as a special purpose entity to efficiently and economically manage, invest and safeguard funds for its clients: the state and various subdivisions,” according to its website.
    Hegar is the chair of the Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust Company.
    That introduction led to a March meeting being scheduled in Austin between Reissig, Frericks and Kopko to discuss Strive’s proxy voting services, according to the emails.
    Representatives for Hegar and Reissig did not respond to requests for comment.
    Federal Election Commission records show that Brigham, the same oil and gas executive who had lunch with Frericks in August, donated $6,600 in March to Ramaswamy’s campaign for president. That amount represents the most an individual donor can give directly to a campaign in the 2024 election cycle. More

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    Here’s why Covid vaccines will still be free for uninsured Americans as public health emergency ends

    Uninsured Americans can still access Covid vaccines for free, even now that the U.S. public health emergency is over. 
    That’s partly because the availability and cost of coronavirus shots are determined by the federal government’s supply of free vaccines, not the emergency declaration.
    But Covid-19 vaccines will also remain free to people without insurance after the Biden administration’s stockpile runs out.
    The Department of Health and Human Services and drugmakers Pfizer and Moderna have announced programs that will fill the gap.

    A healthcare worker prepares a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination clinic in the Peabody Institute Library in Peabody, Massachusetts, on Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2022.
    Vanessa Leroy | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Uninsured Americans can still access Covid-19 vaccines at no cost, for now, even though the U.S. public health emergency has ended. 
    The Biden administration on Thursday lifted the 3-year-old emergency declaration, which had enabled the government to provide enhanced social safety net benefits and free Covid vaccines, tests and treatments during the pandemic. 

    But the availability and cost of those vaccines are actually determined by the federal government’s supply of free shots, not by the public health emergency. 
    That means people with or without insurance will not have to pay out of pocket for Covid jabs, as long as that stockpile lasts.
    Providers of federally purchased Covid vaccines cannot charge patients, or deny them shots, based on a person’s insurance status, according to the Centers for Disease Control Prevention. 
    The Biden administration ordered 171 million omicron Covid boosters last July. Since then, about 56 million omicron shots have been administered, the CDC says.
    That leaves more than 100 million free shots available to the public. The government estimates that supply could last until the fall. 

    “There are many, many doses still left. As you know, the booster uptake hasn’t been very good,” said Jen Kates, senior vice president of KFF, a health policy research organization. 

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    But the vast majority of Americans will not have to pay out of pocket for Covid vaccines even after the federal government’s stockpile runs out. 
    The government will shift Covid vaccine distribution to the private market as soon as that supply is gone.
    That means vaccine makers Pfizer and Moderna will sell their shots directly to health-care providers at around $130 per dose — an almost fivefold increase over current prices.
    Insured Americans will be able to access Covid shots as part of their coverage, without having to pay out of pocket.
    Private insurers and the government-run Medicare and Medicaid programs are required to cover all shots recommended by the CDC.
    But for uninsured Americans, federal and corporate programs are aiming to fill the gap.
    There are still outstanding questions about what those efforts will look like.
    Here’s what we know about those programs so far:

    Vaccines for Children program

    The CDC’s Vaccines For Children program will provide free Covid shots to children whose families or caretakers can’t afford them after the shots move to the commercial market.
    Children and teens 19 or younger who are uninsured, underinsured or eligible for Medicaid qualify for the permanent VFC program.
    That program already provides free shots for other diseases, such as measles and chickenpox.
    The CDC’s decision to include Covid shots in the free vaccine program will be crucial to maintaining access for many children — especially those who will no longer be eligible for other programs.
    As many as 5 million kids are expected to lose health insurance through Medicaid or the Children’s Health Insurance Program without the public health emergency in place, according to a report last year from the Department of Health and Human Services.

    HHS Bridge Access Program

    The Biden administration proposed creating a permanent program similar to VFC for uninsured adults who cannot afford Covid vaccines and shots for other diseases. But Congress so far has not enacted that proposal into law.
    In the meantime, the administration last month launched the “HHS Bridge Access Program,” a temporary effort that will provide free Covid shots and treatments to uninsured Americans once those products move to the commercial market.
    Under the arrangement, the CDC will continue to purchase Covid vaccines at a discount and distribute them through 64 state and local health departments. 
    That HHS effort will leverage the “public commitments” by drug manufacturers to provide free Covid vaccines and treatments to uninsured people. HHS expects the manufacturers to directly supply shots to pharmacies for free as part of those commitments.
    Kates said HHS appears to be referring to Pfizer’s and Moderna’s newly announced patient assistance programs, which are committed to providing free Covid vaccines and treatments to uninsured people.
    “To my understanding, HHS is basically saying it will pay pharmacies the cost of administering vaccines and treatments to the public, while manufacturers will directly provide pharmacies with free vaccines and treatments as part of their patient assistance programs,” Kates told CNBC. 
    Pfizer and Moderna have not said whether they would supply free shots to pharmacies.
    Kates said the Bridge Access Program overall will “certainly help” some uninsured Americans, but added that it is still “hard to gauge” how many people will benefit and how long the program will stay in place.

    Pfizer’s and Moderna’s programs 

    Pfizer and Moderna both intend to launch patient assistance programs for their Covid shots, but the companies have provided few details on those efforts. 
    Patient assistant programs typically involve pharmacies and other vaccine providers paying a company upfront for a drug, according to Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers. 
    She said those providers can then submit a reimbursement request to the program for the cost of that drug after they administer it to an eligible patient.
    Pfizer’s patient assistance program will allow eligible uninsured Americans to access its Covid shot for free once vaccines shift to the commercial market, according to a company spokesperson. Pfizer already has an assistance program in place for its other medicines.
    The company will share further information on the assistance program’s application process and eligibility guidelines when it is available, the spokesperson added.
    Moderna in February said its patient assistance program would go into effect after the public health emergency ends.
    The company did not immediately respond to CNBC’s questions about additional details on the program.
    Lawmakers and health policy experts have heavily criticized patient assistance programs for being difficult to access and understand.
    A 2018 study suggested providers don’t always know which patients would be best for those programs due to a lack of clear information on eligibility and benefits. 
    Hannan said companies will have to ensure that people without insurance can easily access a free Covid shot through their patient assistance programs.
    “If you make it challenging and make them jump through multiple hoops, vaccine uptake is probably not going to be where we would want to see it,” Hannan told CNBC. More

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    Jamie Dimon warns panic will overtake markets as U.S. approaches debt default

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Thursday that markets will be gripped by panic as the U.S. approaches a possible default on its sovereign debt.
    “The closer you get to it, you will have panic” in the form of stock market volatility and upheaval in Treasurys, he said.
    Such an event would ripple through the financial world, impacting “contracts, collateral, clearing houses,” Dimon said.

    JPMorgan Chase and Company President and CEO Jamie Dimon testifies before a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs hearing on “Annual Oversight of the Nation’s Largest Banks”, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., September 22, 2022. 
    Elizabeth Frantz | Reuters

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon said Thursday that markets will be gripped by panic as the U.S. approaches a possible default on its sovereign debt.
    An actual default would be “potentially catastrophic” for the country, Dimon told Bloomberg in a televised interview. Dimon said he expects that worst-case scenario will be avoided, however, because lawmakers will be forced to respond to growing concern.

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    “The closer you get to it, you will have panic” in the form of stock market volatility and upheaval in Treasurys, he said.
    Dimon joined a host of business figures and administration officials making dire predictions about the consequences of failing to raise or suspend the U.S. debt limit and allowing the world’s largest economy to default on its bonds. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has said the idea that the country could default should be “unthinkable” and would lead to economic disaster.
    “If it gets to that panic point, people have to react, we’ve seen that before,” Dimon said.
    But “it’s a really bad idea, because panic becomes something that is not good,” he added. “It could affect other markets around the world.”

    War room

    JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank with about $3.7 trillion in assets, has been preparing for the risk of an American default, Dimon said.

    Such an event would ripple through the financial world, impacting “contracts, collateral, clearing houses, and affect clients definitely around the world,” he said.
    The bank’s so-called war room has been gathering once weekly, a rate that will shift to daily meetings around May 21 and then three meetings daily after that, he said.
    He exhorted politicians from both major U.S. parties to compromise and avoid a ruinous outcome.
    “Please negotiate a deal,” Dimon said.

    Other banks

    In the wide-ranging interview, Dimon said he speaks daily to regional bank executives amid concerns sparked by the Silicon Valley Bank collapse in March. Last week, JPMorgan emerged as the winner in the government-brokered auction for First Republic.
    Regional banks are “quite strong” and will have good financial results, but managers are worried because of the bank runs that have taken down three firms, he said.
    “I think we have to assume there’ll be a little bit more” to the regional banking crisis, he said. More

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    Pfizer CEO says Medicare will likely face legal action over drug price negotiations

    Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said pharmaceutical companies will likely take legal action against Medicare drug price negotiations. 
    Bourla referred to a provision in the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act that will allow the Medicare program to negotiate prices on the costliest prescription drugs each year.
    Bourla, who helms the company that creates Covid vaccines, called the plan “negotiation with a gun to your head.”

    Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla talks during a press conference with the president of the European Commission after a visit to oversee the production of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at the factory of U.S. pharmaceutical company Pfizer, in Puurs, Belgium, April 23, 2021.
    John Thys | AFP | Getty Images

    Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla on Thursday said pharmaceutical companies will likely take legal action against Medicare drug price negotiations, which aim to cut costs for older Americans, but will likely reduce company profits.
    “I think that there will be legal action, but I’m not sure if we’ll be able to stop anything before 2026 or not,” Bourla said during a live-streamed interview with Reuters. 

    Bourla referred to a provision in the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act that will allow the Medicare program to negotiate prices on the costliest prescription drugs each year.
    The first negotiations start in September and new prices will go into effect in 2026.
    He said the most “certain way” to stop negotiations would be to call on Congress to introduce legislation that will revise the federal government’s plan. But Bourla noted he is “not optimistic” about that happening. 
    Democrats control the Senate and President Joe Biden would likely veto any such bill.
    Some drugmakers are already preparing to fight Medicare drug negotiations, industry sources told Reuters. 

    Bourla called the plan “negotiation with a gun to your head.”
    He argued it will cut pharmaceutical profits and force thousands of companies to pull back on developing life-saving medicines. 
    “They will be very careful where and how much they invest in research,” he said. 
    Bourla called it “unfortunate” the government enacted a law that “creates a lot of disincentives” for the industry, even after seeing the pivotal role companies played during the Covid-19 pandemic. 
    “We’re coming out of a global health crisis that became a financial crisis as a result of Covid. But the only reason why we are here today was because we had a thriving life sciences industry,” Bourla said. “They did the tests, the vaccines, the treatments, you name it.”
    Pfizer and rival drugmaker Moderna are the leading developers of Covid vaccines.
    Despite his criticism, Bourla acknowledged some positive aspects of the law for patients, such as lower out-of-pocket costs for medicines.
    Another provision of the Inflation Reduction Act requires Pfizer and other prescription drug companies to refund Medicare through rebates if the prices of their drugs rise faster than the rate of inflation. 
    Five of Pfizer’s drugs are among the first set of 27 Part B prescription drugs that will be subject to Medicare inflation rebates starting April 1, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said in March. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Peloton, Beyond Meat, Alphabet, PacWest & more

    A man walks in front of a Peloton store in Manhattan on May 05, 2021 in New York.
    John Smith | Corbis News | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:
    Peloton — The fitness platform operator saw shares drop 8.9% after the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said it’s recalling more than 2 million bikes over concerns about seat breakages and related injuries. Peloton will offer free, updated seat posts to anyone using the recalled model.

    Alphabet — Shares added 4.31% a day after Google unveiled new software and gadgets at its developer conference. The tech giant also said it is eliminating the waitlist for its chatbot Bard.
    PacWest Bancorp — The regional bank’s stock sank 22.7% after the company said deposits dropped 9.5% for the week ended May 5. Other regional bank shares followed suit, with Western Alliance and First Horizon shedding 7.3% and 3.2%, respectively.
    Beyond Meat — Shares tumbled 18.27% after the alternative meat manufacturer said it plans to sell up to $200 million of its common stock. The company said it intends to use the proceeds for general corporate and working capital purposes. The announcement came after Beyond Meat reported a first-quarter earnings-per-share loss that was less than expected.
    Disney — Disney shares tumbled 8.73% after the media company reported a drop in streaming subscribers. The entertainment giant also reported revenue and earnings in line with Wall Street’s estimates, according to Refinitiv.
    Icahn Enterprises — Shares of Carl Icahn’s conglomerate slid another 1.77% after notable short seller Hindenburg Research doubled down on its short-selling campaign against the company following its quarterly report. Icahn Enterprises reported a net loss of $270 million in the first quarter, with its hedge fund losing 4.1% during the period. It declared a $2 per share quarterly dividend.

    AppLovin — Shares popped 23.53% following the company’s first-quarter revenue beat. Revenue was $715.4 million, compared to the $694.8 million expected, per StreetAccount. AppLovin’s second-quarter guidance also topped expectations.
    Goodyear Tire & Rubber — The tire manufacturer’s stock soared 21.42% after Elliott Investment Management sent a letter and presentation to the company. Elliott, which has about a 10% stake in Goodyear, said the purpose was to “outline the right path forward to create value at Goodyear and realize its full potential.”
    Unity Software — Shares rallied about 12.94% after the video game software developer reported its first-quarter results. Unity Software’s revenue of $500 million beat the $480 million expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. The company also raised its full-year revenue outlook.
    Tapestry — Shares of the Coach parent jumped 8.27% after the company reported stronger-than-expected earnings and revenue for its latest quarter. It also issued upbeat guidance for the year that topped estimates.
    Robinhood — The stock added 6.39% after the brokerage reported better-than-expected revenue for the first quarter. Its first-quarter revenue came in at $441 million, versus analyst estimates of $425 million, according to Refinitiv. Robinhood also showed growth of monthly users, which hit 11.8 million.
    Sonos — Shares plunged 23.69% on the back of disappointing quarterly results. The company reported an adjusted loss of 24 cents per share, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected a loss of 18 cents per share. The home sound systems manufacturer also reduced its guidance for the second half of the 2023 fiscal year amid weakening consumer demand and channel partner inventory tightening.
    JD.com — The U.S.-listed shares of JD.com advanced 7.21% after the Chinese tech firm beat analysts’ first-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. JD.com reported earnings of CNY4.76 per share, exceeding consensus estimates of CNY3.53. Revenue came in at CNY242.96 billion, higher than expectations of CNY240.81 billion. Separately, JD.com said that Sandy Ran Xu, who is the company’s current CFO, has been appointed to succeed Lei Xu as CEO and executive director.
    Axon Enterprise — Axon Enterprise gained 6.16% after JPMorgan said the pullback in the stock following its first-quarter results on Tuesday is a buying opportunity. The Taser maker slid 15% on Wednesday after reporting some disappointing total gross margin figures, even as it otherwise beat analysts’ expectations.
    Albemarle — The chemical manufacturing stock added 2.06% after being upgraded by Keybanc to overweight from sector weight, citing improving trends in China’s lithium market.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Hakyung Kim, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin and Sarah Min contributed reporting. More

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    Adidas will sell some leftover Yeezy inventory instead of burning it, CEO says

    Adidas intends to sell part of its leftover Yeezy inventory and donate the money to charities that were harmed by Ye’s anti-Semitic comments, said the company’s CEO.
    CEO Bjorn Gulden said it was the right thing for Adidas to terminate the contract of their biggest star, Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West.

    Shoes are offered for sale at an Adidas store on February 10, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois. 
    Scott Olson | Getty Images

    Adidas intends to sell part of its leftover Yeezy inventory and donate the money to charities that were harmed by Ye’s anti-Semitic comments, the company’s chief executive said Thursday.
    The CEO, Bjorn Gulden, did not name the charities he is considering.

    “When we do that and how we do that, remains to be seen but we’re working on that” he said.
    At one point, the company considered burning the merchandise.
    “Burning the shoes cannot be the solution,” Gulden said. He says he came to that conclusion after talking with various NGOs and the learning of the environmental damage.
    Appearing at his first annual meeting for the German company, Gulden said it was the right thing for Adidas to terminate the contract of their biggest star, Ye, the artist formerly known as Kanye West.
    “He is a difficult person, but he’s arguably the most creative person in our industry,” he said. “He created a model with Adidas that was sought after around the world,” he added.

    Gulden took the helm of Adidas on Jan. 1, following CEO Kasper Rorsted’s departure. He previously worked at rival Puma.
    What to do with the tarnished sneaker brand stoked debate. Gulden has said he has received more than 500 offers for Yeezy leftovers.
    Adidas’ most recent earnings beat expectations but were weighed down by Yeezy inventory piling up. “The decline in lifestyle and the loss of Yeezy are of course hurting us,” Gulden said during his company’s May 5 earnings call.
    The company parted ways with Ye in October following months of bizarre behavior and antisemitic comments from the hip hop artist.
    The split left Adidas with inventory levels of $500 million worth of sneakers, with selling value of over $1 billion, according to the company. More

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    Disney shares sink nearly 9% after the company reports streaming subscriber losses

    Disney shares sank Thursday after the company reported subscriber losses at Disney+ for the most recent quarter.
    The company posted profit and revenue for the fiscal second quarter that were in line with Wall Street estimates.

    The Disney+ logo is displayed on a TV screen in Paris, December 26, 2019.
    Chesnot | Getty Images

    Disney shares fell nearly 9% Thursday after the company reported subscriber losses at Disney+ during the most recent quarter.
    The company, which posted profit and revenue for the period that were in line with Wall Street estimates, reported a loss of four million Disney+ subscribers. That downtick was offset by price increases, which led to a narrowing of operating losses at the streaming unit by $400 million for the fiscal second quarter.

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    Still, Wall Street expected a gain of more than one million Disney+ subscribers, according to StreetAccount, and the surprise subscriber loss spooked the Street.
    Shares of the company closed at around $92 per share Thursday. The stock is now up over 6% for the year year.

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    Disney’s stock sank on Thursday following its fiscal second-quarter earnings report.

    Disney will face headwinds from reductions in ad budget, intense streaming competition with Netflix’s new ad tier and continued economic uncertainty, according to a note from Paul Verna, principal analyst at research firm Insider Intelligence.
    “While Disney managed to stem its streaming revenue losses, it did so mainly by raising prices, and that strategy is not sustainable in the long term,” Verna wrote. “Disney plans another price hike later this year, but it will soon run out of headroom for further increases.”
    Analysts at SVB MoffettNathanson lowered their price target for the stock by $3 to $127 following the report, but maintained the firm’s outperform rating. The firm sees aggregate subscriptions being roughly flat in the fiscal third quarter and rising in the fiscal fourth quarter.

    Tim Nollen, Macquarie senior media tech analyst, also maintained an outperform rating, noting Disney “has the essential assets to successfully transition to streaming, but it’s a multi-faceted effort.”
    “Disney is making headway in its cost-saving and operating-efficiency efforts amid a deteriorating linear TV business, both structurally and cyclically,” Nollen wrote in the note.
    Disney CEO Bob Iger is overseeing a broad restructuring at the company, including about 7,000 total job cuts, which are planned to be completed before summer.
    The company also said Wednesday it would add Hulu content to its Disney+ streaming app, while expecting to raise the price of its ad-free streaming service later this year.
    Shares of fellow streaming services Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount also fell Thursday, down roughly 4% each. Netflix shares were little changed. More