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    Chegg drops more than 40% after saying ChatGPT is killing its business

    James Tahaney loads textbooks on to a pallet in preparation for shipping at the Chegg warehouse in Shepherdsville, Kentucky, April 29, 2010.
    John Sommers II | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Chegg shares tumbled after the online education company said ChatGPT is hurting growth.
    “In the first part of the year, we saw no noticeable impact from ChatGPT on our new account growth and we were meeting expectations on new sign-ups,” CEO Dan Rosensweig said during the earnings call Tuesday evening. “However, since March we saw a significant spike in student interest in ChatGPT. We now believe it’s having an impact on our new customer growth rate.”

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    The company, which provides homework assistance and online tutoring, said revenue would be between $175 million to $178 million this quarter, far below the analyst consensus estimate from FactSet of $193.6 million.
    Chegg shares were last down 46% to $9.50 in premarket trading Wednesday, set to add to a 30% decline already this year.

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    Chegg shares 1-day

    Otherwise, Chegg beat first-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. The online education firm reported first-quarter earnings of 27 cents per share ex-items on revenue of $188 million. Analysts polled by Refinitiv had expected per-share earnings of 26 cents per share on revenue of $185 million.
    Following the results, Morgan Stanley analyst Josh Baer slashed his price target to $12 from $18, implying a 30% fall. The analyst said that AI “completely overshadowed” the results.
    Meanwhile, Jefferies downgraded the stock to hold from buy, citing the threat artificial intelligence poses on the stock. The Wall Street firm cut its price target to $11 from $25, implying shares could fall more than 35% from Monday’s close. 

    To be sure, Chegg has its own AI product in CheggMate, which is meant to help students with their homework. The product is built in collaboration with OpenAI, which develops ChatGPT. However, Jefferies analyst Brent Thill says the impact of the product is yet uncertain. 
    “While CHGG plans to launch the CheggMate beta this month to a select few, the timing of a full launch is unclear,” he said. “We don’t expect there to be any meaningful impact from CheggMate in FY23, believing any potential impact won’t show up until FY24 at the earliest.”
    — CNBC’s Michael Bloom and Brian Evans contributed reporting. More

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    Wall Street is cutting more jobs as Morgan Stanley plans 3,000 layoffs

    Morgan Stanley plans to eliminate roughly 3,000 positions by the end of June, according to a person with knowledge of the plans.
    That equates to roughly 5% of the New York-based bank’s workforce when excluding the financial advisors and support staff who will be spared in the cuts, the person said.
    In recent weeks, big bank peers including Citigroup and Bank of America and smaller advisor Lazard have cut jobs or announced plans to do so.

    The logo of Morgan Stanley is seen in New York 
    Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

    As Wall Street’s slump in IPOs and mergers deepens this year, top advisory firms including Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and Citigroup have turned to job cuts in recent weeks.
    Morgan Stanley plans to eliminate roughly 3,000 positions by the end of June, according to a person with knowledge of the plans.

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    That equates to roughly 5% of the New York-based bank’s workforce when excluding the financial advisors and support staff who will be spared in the cuts, the person said. The layoffs are expected to impact banking and trading staff the most, according to Bloomberg, which reported the moves earlier.
    A historic boom in deals ignited by the pandemic was followed by a bust that began last year after the Federal Reserve started raising rates to hit the brakes on an overheating economy. The IPOs, debt issuance and mergers that feed Wall Street have all remain muted this year. For instance, IPO volumes are 74% lower than last year, according to Dealogic data.
    For Morgan Stanley, the cuts show that Wall Street is wrangling with expenses as the slump drags on for longer than expected. The bank already cut about 2% of its workforce in December, CNBC reported.

    Rising costs, falling revenue

    Last month, analysts criticized Morgan Stanley for posting higher first-quarter costs while revenue declined. Expenses in the firm’s investment bank and wealth management division hurt profit margins in particular.
    The bank’s moves aren’t isolated. The industry’s job cuts began in September, when Goldman Sachs reinstated a practice of culling those it perceives to be low performers. Nearly all the major Wall Street firms followed, and Goldman itself had to resort to another, deeper round of layoffs in January.

    In recent weeks, big bank peers including Citigroup and Bank of America have cut a few hundred jobs each, relatively surgical cuts that should position the banks well when a rebound in deals finally arrives.
    Last week, top boutique advisor Lazard said it planned to cut 10% of its workforce this year. The step was necessitated by restrained capital markets activity and wage inflation that pumped up salaries across banking.
    “Candidly, things are not feeling as good as they were in December or January,” Chief Executive Ken Jacobs told Bloomberg. More

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    Crypto exchange owned by embattled conglomerate Digital Currency Group loses top global exec

    Vijay Ayyar, Luno’s vice president of corporate development and international, resigned from the firm after seven years working there, he told CNBC Tuesday.
    Digital Currency Group-owned firm recently announced the closure of its operation in Singapore, where Ayyar is based.
    However, Ayyar said the move was not related to its decision to exit Singapore.
    His departure comes as Luno undergoes a major restructuring effort to contend with the lull in crypto markets.

    DCG, Luno’s parent company, has been grappling with the ongoing fallout from last year’s plunge in token prices and the collapse of FTX.
    Rafael Henrique | Sopa Images | Lightrocket via Getty Images

    Vijay Ayyar, a senior executive at cryptocurrency exchange Luno and one of its earliest employees, is leaving the company.
    Ayyar, who is Luno’s vice president of corporate development and international, resigned from the firm after seven years working there, he told CNBC Tuesday.

    It comes after the company, which is owned by Digital Currency Group, announced the closure of its operation in Singapore, where Ayyar is based.
    Ayyar said the move was not related to Luno’s decision to exit Singapore, however, and that he quit to join another company in the crypto and Web3 space. Ayyar did not disclose which company he is joining next.
    “I’ll be leaving Luno after 7 years at the company,” Ayyar said in a WhatsApp message. “Given the time I’d spent at Luno, just seemed like it was time for another challenge.”
    A Luno spokesperson confirmed Ayyar’s decision Tuesday.
    “Vijay will be leaving after seven years,” the spokesperson said. “His role is a global one and isn’t tied to anything related to our Singapore closure. He’s leaving to pursue a new opportunity in the industry.”

    Ayyar held a number of roles at Luno over the years. He was most recently tasked with building out the firm’s business-facing services, pitching Luno accounts to funds, fintech companies, and businesses wanting to use crypto.
    Before that, Ayyar led Luno’s partnership efforts globally and helped the exchange launch in over 40 markets across Southeast Asia, Africa, Europe, and the U.S.
    In addition to his corporate responsibilities at Luno, Ayyar also serves as something of a crypto market guru, providing frequent commentary to the press on moves in markets.
    His departure comes as Luno undergoes a major restructuring effort to contend with the lull in crypto markets. Luno laid off 35% of its workforce in January, joining a host of other crypto exchanges that have cut jobs.
    The company also lost its co-founder and chief technology officer, Timothy Stranex, in December.
    In March, Luno announced its CEO Marcus Swanepoel was stepping down and would be replaced with Chief Operating Officer James Lanigan.
    The company hired Canaccord Genuity, the investment bank, to court outside investors for the first time since it was taken over by DCG in 2020.
    DCG, Luno’s parent company, has been grappling with the ongoing fallout from last year’s plunge in token prices, and the collapse of FTX, the controversial exchange whose failure in November sparked a series of bankruptcies in the industry.
    WATCH: FTX’s collapse is shaking crypto to its core. The pain may not be over More

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    Stocks making the biggest premarket moves: Uber, Pfizer, Chegg, Dell & more

    Travelers wait for an Uber rideshare vehicle at Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) on February 8, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.
    Mario Tama | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:
    Uber Technologies — Shares gained nearly 8% after reporting revenue of $8.82 billion for the first quarter, topping the $8.72 billion expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv. The ride sharing company also posted an adjusted 8 cents loss per share, less than the 9 cents expected by analysts.

    Pfizer — Shares of the drug maker rose more than 1% in premarket trading after the company topped earnings and revenue expectations for the first quarter, according to Refinitiv, despite experiencing a 75% decline in sales of Covid vaccines from the same quarter a year ago.
    Chegg — Chegg shares tumbled 42% in premarket trading after CEO Dan Rosensweig said he expects artificial intelligence is “having an impact on our new customer growth rate.” Chegg issued a weak second-quarter revenue outlook. Otherwise, the online education firm beat first-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. Following the results, Jefferies downgraded the stock to hold from buy.
    Dupont de Nemours — The stock sank nearly 5% in the premarket after the company gave weak guidance for the second quarter, with both earnings per share and revenue forecasts coming in under Wall Street’s expectations. Dupont cited a delay in the electronics market’s recovery.
    Arista Networks — Shares dropped 8.5% despite the company topping Wall Street’s expectations for the recent quarter on the top and bottom lines and sharing upbeat guidance. The decline came as Arista Networks said it expects moderating spending and slowing growth from its “cloud titans.”
    Stryker — Shares dropped 3.3% after the medical technologies company warned that full-year sales and earnings per share will be unfavorably impacted if foreign exchange rates stay near their current levels. However, its adjusted earnings per share and revenue for the first quarter beat estimates, per Refinitiv.

    NXP Semiconductors — Shares of the chip maker jumped about 5% after the company beat analysts’ expectations for first-quarter revenue and operating income. Revenue guidance for the second quarter was better than anticipated as well.
    Dell Technologies — The stock added nearly 3% in the premarket after being upgraded by Morgan Stanley to overweight from equal weight. The Wall Street firm said it believes the personal computer market is forming a bottom.
    Coinbase — Shares of the cryptocurrency exchange fell 1.4%, after a downgrade from Citigroup cited looming regulatory threats that could afflict the core business. The firm also noted potential legal action from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission over a March Wells notice as another headwind.
    BP — U.S.-listed shares of the British energy giant slid about 5% after the company slowed share buybacks, announcing a further share buyback of $1.75 billion, after completing its previously announced $2.75 billion share buybacks in April. However, its first-quarter revenue beat analysts’ expectations, according to Refinitiv.
    HSBC — The global bank saw its shares jump nearly 6% in premarket trading after it reported first-quarter earnings that beat consensus estimates. The company is also planning an up to $2 billion share buyback after its annual general meeting.
    Marriott International — The hotel stock rose about 2% after Marriott beat estimates on the top and bottom lines for the first quarter. The company reported $2.09 in adjusted earnings per share on $5.62 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had penciled in $1.84 in adjusted earnings per share on $5.41 billion in revenue. CEO Anthony Capuano said in a press release that the lifting of travel restrictions in Asia helped boost growth.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound and Sarah Min contributed reporting. More

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    Pfizer earnings and revenue top expectations despite Covid vaccine sales decline

    Pfizer reported revenue and adjusted earnings that topped Wall Street’s expectations, despite a sales decline driven by the lower demand for the company’s Covid vaccine.
    The pharmaceutical giant reported first-quarter sales of $18.28 billion, down 29% over the same period a year ago.
    The New York-based company maintained its 2023 sales forecast of $67 billion to $71 billion.

    Pharmaceutical Pfizer Inc. said that an oral drug for treating COVID-19 could be available by end of 2021.
    Soumyabrata Roy | NurPhoto | Getty Images

    Pfizer on Tuesday reported first-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that topped Wall Street’s expectations, despite a decline in sales driven by the lower demand for the company’s Covid vaccine.
    The pharmaceutical giant’s stock edged higher in premarket trading Tuesday. Shares are down more than 23% for the year through Monday’s close, putting the company’s market value at around $221.3 billion. 

    Here’s what Pfizer reported compared with Wall Street’s expectations, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: $1.23 adjusted, vs. 98 cents expected 
    Revenue: $18.28 billion, vs. $16.59 billion expected

    Pfizer posted net income of $5.54 billion, or 97 cents per share. That compares with $7.86 billion, or $1.37 per share, for the first quarter of 2022.
    The company reported first-quarter sales of $18.28 billion, down 29% over the same period a year ago.
    Sales of the company’s Covid vaccine declined $10 billion, or 75%, compared with the same quarter last year. Pfizer said this was primarily driven by lower contracted deliveries and demand in international markets.
    The decline was also due to lower U.S. government contracted deliveries as the country prepares to shift Covid products to the commercial market later this year, according to Pfizer.

    Sales of Pfizer’s Covid antiviral pill Paxlovid increased $2.8 billion during the first-quarter compared with the same period last year. Pfizer said Paxlovid revenue was propelled by new launches in certain international markets and strong demand in China due to increased Covid cases.
    Sales were also driven by final deliveries associated with a U.S. contract finalized in late December.
    Paxlovid first entered the U.S. market under emergency use authorization in late December 2021. Pfizer hopes to win full Food and Drug Administration approval for the drug this year. Still, the company expects sales of Paxlovid to drop 58% for the full year compared with 2022.
    Excluding Covid product sales, Pfizer said first-quarter revenue grew 5% over the same period a year ago.
    That growth was fueled by products from recently acquired companies, according to Pfizer. That includes Biohaven Pharmaceutical’s migraine drug Nurtec ODT and Global Blood Therapeutics’ sickle cell disease treatment Oxbryta, which contributed $167 million and $71 million, respectively.
    The company said the increase was also driven by strong sales of drugs like Sulperazon, an antibiotic for the treatment of urinary tract infections, and blood thinner medication Eliquis.
    The New York-based company maintained its 2023 sales forecast of $67 billion to $71 billion. Pfizer also reiterated its full-year adjusted earnings outlook of $3.25 to $3.45 per share.
    But Pfizer continues to expect Covid-related sales to decline this year. The company reaffirmed its forecast of $13.5 billion in Covid vaccine sales in 2023 and $8 billion in revenue for Paxlovid.
    A Pfizer spokesperson said the company expects this year to be a “transition year” for Covid sales before “potentially returning to growth in 2024 and beyond.”
    Excluding Covid products, Pfizer said it expects 7% to 9% revenue growth this year.
    Pfizer and other drugmakers like Moderna and Johnson & Johnson have been bracing for a steep drop-off in Covid-related sales this year as the world emerges from the pandemic and relies less on blockbuster vaccines and treatments for the virus. 
    But Pfizer is pinning its hopes on M&A and a record pipeline to help the company navigate its post-pandemic boom. 
    The company said in January it expects to launch 19 vaccines and treatments over the next 18 months. Those drugs have the potential to generate $20 billion in 2030 sales, according to Pfizer. 
    That includes Pfizer’s RSV vaccine for use in older adults, which could win FDA approval later this month.
    The pipeline also includes the company’s new pneumococcal vaccine for children and a treatment for ulcerative colitis from the recently acquired Arena Pharmaceuticals.
    Pfizer also said last year it plans to add $25 billion in revenue through dealmaking by 2030.
    The company already made strides toward that goal with the $43 billion acquisition of Seagen in March. Seagen could contribute more than $10 billion in risk-adjusted sales by 2030 with its cancer therapies, according to Pfizer.
    Pfizer will hold an earnings call at 10:00 a.m. ET.
    Read the earnings release.
    This is a developing story. Check back for updates. More

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    ‘Other problems might be lurking’: Strategist is unconvinced by Jamie Dimon’s bank crisis comments

    JPMorgan won a weekend auction for the regional lender after it was seized, and will acquire nearly all of its deposits and a majority of assets.
    “There may be another smaller one, but this pretty much resolves them all,” CEO Jamie Dimon said.
    David Pierce, director of strategic initiatives at Utah-based GPS Capital Markets, told CNBC on Tuesday that the financial sector’s frailties may be more profound than the messaging from bankers and policymakers suggests.

    Workers are seen inside of a First Republic Bank office on May 01, 2023 in San Francisco, California. 
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon’s assertion that recent turmoil in the banking sector was effectively ended by the resolution of First Republic may be premature, one analyst suggested.
    The Wall Street giant won a weekend auction for the embattled regional lender after it was seized by the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation, and will acquire nearly all of its deposits and a majority of assets.

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    First Republic’s demise marked the third of its kind among midsized banks since the sudden collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in early March. This triggered a global crisis of confidence that eventually pushed Swiss stalwart Credit Suisse to the brink, prompting an emergency rescue by domestic rival UBS.
    “There are only so many banks that were offsides this way,” Dimon told analysts in a call shortly after the First Republic deal was announced.
    “There may be another smaller one, but this pretty much resolves them all,” Dimon said. “This part of the crisis is over.”
    The recent financial instability has added another troubling consideration for central banks, which have been hiking interest rates aggressively to curb inflation, exposing some of the mismanaged positions held by certain banks that did not expect financial conditions to tighten so sharply.
    The U.S. Federal Reserve will announce its latest monetary policy decision on Wednesday, and several of the central bank’s policymakers have reiterated their focus on dragging inflation back down to Earth even if it means tipping the economy into recession.

    David Pierce, director of strategic initiatives at Utah-based GPS Capital Markets, told CNBC Tuesday that the financial sector’s frailties may be more profound than the messaging from bankers and policymakers suggests.
    “If you listen to the political side of this, you would have them tell you that it really is a non-issue because it’s all covered through the FDIC insurance but money has to go into that and they’re insuring deposits well above what the insurance covers, and on the flipside of that you look at the deal that Jamie Dimon made, and they got a great deal in their purchase,” he told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe.”
    The FDIC has estimated that the cost to its Deposit Insurance Fund of the First Republic collapse will be around $13 billion, considerably higher than the estimated $2.5 billion for Signature Bank but beneath the $20 billion estimate of resolving Silicon Valley Bank.
    Pierce suggested that the sudden nature of the U.S. collapses and bailouts would indicate that the central bank and regulators may not have their fingers on the pulse with regards to ensuring smaller lenders have access to adequate money supply.
    “It should not be happening in a vacuum like this and it makes me question a little bit why did they have to take them over and sell them over a weekend? Could they have funded them and given them additional capital, provided loans that would have gotten them through this hard time?” he said.

    “Jamie Dimon comes out and says ‘this is it, this is the end of it, we’re all good now’ — I don’t think we can really say that yet, because we don’t know what other problems might be lurking, and obviously there are some things that are hidden, and a lot of this also comes down to there’s been some mismanagement of these banks.”
    He added that the fallen banks have largely catered specifically to the tech sector, leaving them uniquely exposed to increases in interest rates having provided riskier loans to “pre-profit” companies.
    However, recent Wall Street earnings showed that deposits in the aftermath have flowed heavily from smaller and mid-sized banks to the big, systemically large lenders, and Pierce suggested the two months of turmoil has “really reduced the capital in the marketplace, especially available to high-debt companies.”
    The World Economic Forum’s Chief Economists Outlook, published Monday, showed chief economists by and large do not currently see large-scale systemic risk from the recent banking chaos, but they do think it will have some economic impact.
    “Although the chief economists are broadly sanguine about the systemic implications of the recent financial disruption – 69% characterize it as isolated episodes rather than signs of systemic vulnerability – they point to potentially damaging knock-on effects,” the report said.

    “These include a squeeze on the flow of credit to businesses and the prospect of significant disruption in property markets in particular.”
    This assessment was echoed Monday by strategists at DBRS Morningstar.
    “Overall, we expect limited immediate fallout from this failure, as the market was well aware of the issues adversely impacting First Republic Bank, who reported very weak results after the market closed on April 24th,” said John Mackerey, senior vice president of the Global Financial Institutions Group at DBRS Morningstar.
    “Longer term, we expect further asset quality pressure as the rapid interest rate hikes cool the economy and negatively impact asset values, particularly in commercial real estate where retail and office properties are under pressure.” More

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    Singapore’s largest lender expects net interest margins will decline, but sees other growth drivers

    DBS reported a record revenue and net profit for the first quarter of 2023.
    However, the bank expects net interest margins have peaked and will gradually decline.

    Singapore’s largest lender DBS Group Holdings expects net interest income to taper off in the future, but the bank is confident that it can ride on other drivers going forward, such as a growth in loans and fee income.
    On Tuesday, DBS reported record revenue and net profit for the first quarter. Revenue came in at 4.94 billion Singapore dollars ($3.7 billion), up 34% from a year ago, while net profit stood at SG$2.57 billion, a 43% jump compared with the same period the last year.

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    21 hours ago

    DBS said this was due to “higher net interest margin, sustained business momentum and resilient asset quality.” Net interest margin, or NIM, rose 66 basis points year-on-year to 2.12%, compared with 1.46% in the first quarter of 2022.
    Net interest income is a measurement comparing the interest income a firm generates from credit products like loans and mortgages, with the outgoing interest it pays out, such as to savings accounts or fixed deposits.
    Speaking to CNBC’s “Capital Connection,” DBS CEO Piyush Gupta said NIM’s “have probably peaked at around these levels” — about 2.1% for February to April.
    Despite saying there will limited upside from these levels, Gupta said he expects the pace of decline will be very gradual and not “falling off a cliff.” DBS guided for a full-year average of between 2.05% and 2.1% for NIM in 2023.

    Geoff Howie, market strategist for equities at the Singapore Exchange, agreed with Gupta’s view, saying growth in NIM will become more difficult as interest rate hikes, especially from the U.S. Federal Reserve, start to taper off.

    Speaking to CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia,” Howie said, “From a net interest margin perspective, how do you back up from say, 475 basis points of Fed funds hikes over 13 months or so?”
    Rising rates generally boost bank earnings by allowing banks to raise rates on loans, while the interest costs to banks — like that paid on deposit accounts — can remain unchanged.
    He noted that in 2022, net interest income jumped about 30% for Singapore’s three major banks, but as NIMs are “somewhat consolidating,” it will be difficult to continue this pace of growth.
    Howie points out “you had nine consecutive quarters of quarter-on-quarter net interest income growth, that might be the end of it for some time, [and] we expect some consolidation in the net interest income.”

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    In light of the results, the company’s board also declared a dividend of 42 Singapore cents per share for the first quarter, higher than the 36 cents in the same period a year ago.
    Shares of DBS rose as much as 1.37% on Tuesday following the results.

    Other growth drivers

    While Gupta sees net interest income growth tapering off, he said the bank is still seeing “healthy business momentum.” He said growth forecasts for Asia are still “quite robust” despite the slowdown in the West.
    He noted that “two quarters ago, everybody was fairly sure there will be a recession [in the West] , and now the jury’s out whether they might actually escape a recession. So we think that a slowdown is not going to be calamitous.”
    Gupta said he continues see supportive fundamentals in Asia, saying “the demographics are good, infrastructure spending is going on, trade and intra-Asia trade continues to be robust, wealth management continues to be very strong”
    As such, he said that these drivers are in place to help DBS continue to build a business “quite decently” going forward. More

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    Pro sports unions unite to discuss importance of mental health

    Six of the major professional sports unions are working together to promote mental health awareness and provide resources.
    Many star athletes have opened up about their own struggles in recent years.
    A new, monthlong campaign will aim to normalize mental health through players opening up about their own struggles.

    Seattle Seahawks defensive end Marcus Smith (97) leaves the field after an NFL football game against the Tennessee Titans in Nashville, Tennessee.
    Mark Zaleski | AP

    Six of the biggest professional sports unions in the country are teaming up in May to bring attention to Mental Health Awareness Month.
    The NFL Players Association, National Basketball Players Association, National Hockey League Players Association, MLB Players Association, MLS Players Association and Women’s National Basketball Players Association will work together to raise awareness about the cause and invest resources to improve mental health for the pro athlete community.

    This is the first time the sports organizations have come together to promote mental health.
    “‘MentalHealthisMAYnstream’ will advance the national and global conversation around mental health and wellness and relate it to the experiences of athletes at every level of competition,” a joint statement from the organizations said.
    The high stakes, busy lifestyles and pressures of professional sports have caused many athletes to reveal their own mental health struggles in recent years. With the National Alliance on Mental Illness reporting 1 in 5 adults in the U.S. experience a mental health-related issue each year, athletes have not been exempt.
    Former Seattle Seahawks defensive end Marcus Smith II even contemplated ending his life after feeling like he wasn’t living up to expectations of being a first-round draft pick.
    He credited his head coach, Pete Carroll, and defensive line coach, Cliff Hurtt, for helping him find resources that ultimately saved his life.

    “If it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t have done what I was doing and I probably wouldn’t be here today,” Smith said last year.
    Today, Smith dedicates himself to helping other players avoid reaching that breaking point.
    “Everyone is going through something that we can’t see,” said Miami Heat power forward Kevin Love, when he revealed his own struggle with panic attacks in 2018 in The Players’ Tribune.
    The Covid-19 pandemic created even more isolation for many who were already struggling.
    Star Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott opened up about his depression in 2020, following the death of his brother and mother. Prescott said the isolation from Covid-19 quarantines only added to his anxiety.
    “I obviously got the help that I needed and was very open about it,” he said at the time. “I think that’s why I was fortunate enough to get over it, as not all of us are.”
    As athletes from all levels have expressed their struggles, many of the leagues realized that mental health needs to be as much of a priority as physical health.
    This new, monthlong campaign will aim to normalize mental health through players opening up about their own struggles, in addition to the sports unions providing tips and resources from wellness experts.
    The sports leagues will also highlight inspirational stories from athletes and the various mental health efforts they are leading. More