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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: First Republic, Whirlpool and more

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell.

    People walk near a First Republic Bank branch on March 16, 2023 in New York City. 
    View Press | Corbis News | Getty Images

    First Republic Bank — Shares of the San Francisco-based regional bank tumbled 7.8% postmarket after rising more than 12% during Monday’s main trading session. Although the bank’s earnings per share in the first quarter topped analysts’ estimates, its deposit flight was worse than what analysts had estimated, plunging 41% to $104.5 billion. Analysts had expected the quarter-end deposits to total approximately $145 billion, according to the consensus estimate from FactSet’s StreetAccount.

    Whirlpool — The home appliance maker rose 3% after its first quarter earnings and revenue beat analysts’ estimates. Whirlpool posted per-share earnings of $2.66 and revenue of $4.65 billion. Analysts had estimated $2.28 in earnings per share and revenue of $4.5 billion, according to Refinitiv data.
    Cadence Design Systems — The maker of software and silicon structures for designing printed circuit boards fell 3.2% in after hours trading on weak earnings and revenue guidance for the second quarter. Cadence’s first quarter earnings of $1.29 per share and revenue of $1.02 billion topped analysts’ estimates of $1.26 and $1.01 billion, respectively, according to FactSet data. More

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    Bed Bath & Beyond vows it can pull off a sale – here’s what that means for shareholders 

    Bed Bath & Beyond declared bankruptcy but is hoping it can find a buyer willing to keep operations running in some fashion.
    “Bed Bath & Beyond has pulled off long shot transactions several times in the last six months, so nobody should think Bed Bath & Beyond will not be able to do so again,” an executive said in filings.
    The home goods retailer was a meme stock, and its many retail investors are expected to be “wiped out,” one expert told CNBC.

    Store closing sale announcement at a Bed Bath & Beyond indoor mall in northern Idaho. 
    Don & Melinda Crawford | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

    Bed Bath & Beyond is confident it can offload its names and stores after it declared bankruptcy, but shareholders are expected to be wiped out as its stock plummets. 
    The home goods retailer, which declared bankruptcy Sunday after a series of failed Hail Mary efforts to keep operations running, detailed its descent to insolvency in a series of court filings. But the company noted it is still marketing the business to avoid outright liquidation. 

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    4 hours ago

    “While the commencement of a full chain wind-down is necessitated by economic realities, Bed Bath & Beyond has and will continue to market their businesses as a going-concern, including the buybuy Baby business,” the company’s chief financial officer and chief restructuring officer Holly Etlin wrote in a Sunday declaration to New Jersey’s bankruptcy court. 
    “Bed Bath & Beyond has pulled off long shot transactions several times in the last six months, so nobody should think Bed Bath & Beyond will not be able to do so again. To the contrary, Bed Bath & Beyond and its professionals will make every effort to salvage all or a portion of operations for the benefit of all stakeholders,” she added.
    Shares of the company closed about 36% lower on Monday, giving it a market value of around $88 million. The stock has fallen about 90% this year. Last April, it was trading around $20 a share but closed at 18 cents on Monday.
    Whatever money Bed Bath is able to generate in its liquidation and sale efforts will go to its secured creditors and bondholders, said Eric Snyder, chairman of the bankruptcy department at the law firm Wilk Auslander. He said its shareholders, including its many retail investors who took advantage of its short-lived meme stock craze, will be “wiped out.” 
    “There’s always some speculation that someone will come in and save the company and there’ll be something for equity but that was never really in the cards here,” said Snyder. “At the end of the day it’s just another story of another retailer whose bond holders and secured creditors are just going to take it on the chin.”

    The company is hoping a buyer will be willing to purchase either Bed Bath & Beyond or Buy Buy Baby as standalone businesses, buy the brands’ intellectual property and perhaps take on a few of their better performing stores.
    Bidders could purchase either of the brands and keep them open in a variety of ways, or just bid on their assets and inventory. 
    Buyers who would be willing to purchase the businesses could end up paying more for the company’s intangible value, its so-called goodwill, than what they would have spent on just its assets, said Snyder.
    The likelihood of finding a buyer will come down to how much Bed Bath and Buy Buy Baby’s names are worth. 
    The valuation of the company and its intellectual property is unclear. In its most recent quarterly securities filing, the retailer noted the intangible value of trade names and trademarks was just $13.4 million. 
    As of late November, Bed Bath & Beyond had about $4.4 billion in assets and $5.2 billion in debts, court filings show. 
    The company is open to taking bids for all of its assets and will accept the strongest package it receives, even if it means the retailer will cease to exist altogether, it said in filings. 
    “The Debtors are seeking to sell all of their assets, or any portion thereof, either as a going concern or as a liquidation,” court records say. 
    “These assets include, but are not limited to, the Debtors’ going-concern business, unexpired leases, executory contracts, equipment, inventory, supplies, intellectual property, insurance proceeds, prepaid expenses and deposits, and books and records, in each case, free and clear of all liens, claims, interests, or other encumbrances,” according to the records.
    Bed Bath is already in the process of starting liquidation sales at its stores but said it will “pivot away” from store closings if it secures a successful sale. The company expects store sales to be completed and properties vacated by June 30, with expected proceeds of about $718 million.
    Still, the company has begun the liquidation process and is not running the stores as usual, which indicates Bed Bath has little faith it will find a buyer willing to keep it alive in some fashion, said Snyder. 
    “I actually think they were able to pull a genie out of a hat once or twice by staving off bankruptcy but at the end of the day, it’s a broken model and they had lost a lot of faith from not only investors but suppliers, which are arguably more important,” said Snyder, who has been a bankruptcy lawyer for 30 years.
    “Secured creditors, they get creditor fatigue and they’re not going to let them sit around and fund losses while they find a buyer because they tried to do that outside the bankruptcy,” he said.
    The company is asking the courts to approve a bid deadline of May 28 and an auction date for June 2.  More

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    CNN fires anchor Don Lemon in the wake of sexist comments, reported mistreatment of colleagues

    CNN fired anchor Don Lemon after 17 years at the news network.
    Lemon’s departure comes in the wake of sexist comments and reports that he mistreated women he worked with during his tenure at CNN.
    The primetime anchor’s firing is the latest high-profile media exit after Tucker Carlson left Fox News and Jeff Shell parted ways with NBCUniversal.

    Television anchor Don Lemon arrives at the 2022 Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Ripple of Hope Award Gala at the Hilton Midtown in New York City on December 6, 2022.
    Angela Weiss | AFP | Getty Images

    CNN on Monday fired anchor Don Lemon in the wake of sexist on-air comments and reports that he mistreated female coworkers during his 17 years at the network.
    An hour before Lemon announced his termination, Fox News said that right-wing prime-time host Tucker Carlson is leaving the cable network immediately. On Sunday, NBCUniversal said CEO Jeff Shell has left his role due to an “inappropriate relationship with a woman in the company.”

    Lemon, who had hosted “CNN This Morning” as scheduled, said his agent informed him about his termination Monday morning. Lemon said he was “stunned” by the news.
    “I would have thought that someone in management would have had the decency to tell me directly,” Lemon, 57, said in a Twitter post. “At no time was I ever given any indication that I would not be able to continue to do the work I have loved at this network.”
    Lemon added that “it is clear that there are some larger issues at play,” without offering more details.
    CNN, a unit of Warner Bros. Discovery, later Monday disputed Lemon’s account of his departure. The network called Lemon’s comments “inaccurate,” saying he was “offered an opportunity to meet with management but instead released a statement on Twitter.”
    Shortly after Lemon first tweeted that he was fired, the network’s CEO, Chris Licht, said the anchor and CNN “parted ways.”

    “Don will forever be a part of the CNN family, and we thank him for his contributions over the past 17 years,” the network said in a statement. “We wish him well and will be cheering him on in his future endeavors.”
    CNN added that the morning show Lemon hosted alongside anchors Poppy Harlow and Kaitlan Collins would continue to run. The program has been on air for nearly six months, and the network said it is “committed to its success.”
    Lemon faced backlash in February for his remarks about Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley shortly after she announced a bid for the White House.
    “Nikki Haley isn’t in her prime, sorry. A woman is considered to be in their prime in 20s and 30s and maybe 40s,” Lemon said on the air of the 51-year-old Haley.
    Lemon apologized for his remarks about Haley.
    Licht also said in late February that Lemon would undergo formal training because of the the sexist comments. The network head earlier this month told Semafor earlier this month that both CNN and Lemon have “moved on” from the issue.
    Lemon’s firing also follows a lengthy Variety story this month that alleged the anchor had a history of threatening and making offensive remarks to female staffers at CNN.
    The report was based on more than a dozen former and current colleagues of Lemon, Variety said. Most of them spoke anonymously to the outlet. 
    Variety’s report says that, among other incidents, Lemon got angry when he was passed over for a reporting assignment in favor of former CNN correspondent Kyra Phillips in 2008. Lemon had been anchoring CNN’s “Live From” program at the time.
    Phillips later received two threatening texts from an unknown sender, and CNN leadership eventually traced them back to Lemon, according to Variety.
    A spokesperson for Lemon criticized the article at the time it was published, telling NBC News in a statement that it was “amazing and disappointing that Variety would be so reckless.”
    The spokesperson told NBC that Variety’s story is “riddled with patently false anecdotes and no concrete evidence, is entirely based on unsourced, unsubstantiated, 15-year-old anonymous gossip.”
    Before joining CNN in 2006, Lemon previously served as an anchor at NBC Chicago and correspondent for NBC News, the “TODAY” show and “NBC Nightly News.”
    He has served as the prime-time anchor of CNN’s “Don Lemon Tonight” for more than eight years, the network’s website says. 
    More than a year ago, CNN President Jeff Zucker resigned for failing to disclose a romantic relationship with a high-ranking colleague.
    CNN also fired former prime-time anchor Chris Cuomo a year earlier. The network’s decision followed an investigation by New York Attorney General Letitia James that revealed how Cuomo helped his brother and former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo respond to sexual harassment allegations. 
    Cuomo filed an arbitration complaint against CNN last year, seeking $125 million for wrongful termination. That case is still pending.
    Disclosure: NBCUniversal is the parent company of NBC and CNBC. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Fox, Albemarle, First Republic and more

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Monday.

    People walk by the News Corporation headquarters, home to Fox News, on April 18, 2023 in New York City.
    Spencer Platt | Getty Images

    Fox Corp. — The media stock was under pressure after Fox News announced that conservative prime-time host Tucker Carlson has left the network, days after the network settled Dominion Voting Systems’ defamation lawsuit for almost $800 million. Fox’s class A and B shares ended Monday lower by about 3%.

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    Albemarle — Shares of the lithium mining company gained 5.9%, recovering from last week’s losses. The stock fell 10% on Friday amid reports that Chile was considering nationalizing its lithium mining industry. Albemarle CEO Kent Masters told CNBC’s “Last Call” on Friday that Albemarle’s existing mine and contracts in the country would not be affected.
    First Republic — Shares of the San Francisco-based regional bank rallied ahead of its report postmarket Monday. The stock was up nearly 12.2% on Monday but is still down more than 80% for the year.
    First Solar – Shares of the solar company lost 3.2% after a Citi downgrade to sell cited margin risks and concerns that Inflation Reduction Act benefits are already reflected in the share price.
    C3.ai – The artificial intelligence stock dropped about 11% on Monday following a downgrade by analysts at Wolfe Research. Wolfe said C3.ai could fall more than 30% due to risks to its future growth.
    Tencent Music Entertainment Group — Shares dipped 3.5%, bringing the year-to-date loss to some 11%. To be sure, Mizuho initiated the China music company as a buy on Monday with a $10 price target, saying the Tencent-owned stock has upside potential thanks to its high monetization potential and market share.

    Ford, General Motors — Shares of the car and light truck makers were higher midday Monday, with gains of above 2%. JPMorgan earlier reiterated overweight investment recommendations on both automakers ahead of General Motors’ earnings on Tuesday and Ford’s next week.
    Medtronic — Shares added 4% during midday trading after being upgraded to overweight from equal weight by Wells Fargo on Sunday. The firm expects the medical-device maker to benefit from a maturing product pipeline and improving medtech trends.
    Sunrun, Enphase Energy — Shares of Sunrun and Enphase Energy were higher Monday after Citi added positive catalyst watches on the solar companies, saying it sees further share gains. Sunrun gained nearly 3% while Enphase briefly rose 0.4%. The Wall Street bank opened a 90-day positive catalyst watch on Enphase Energy, citing a strong backlog and expectations for record-high margins.
    Tesla — Shares fell almost 1.5% on Monday. In a Friday letter, institutional shareholders admonished Tesla’ board of directors, telling them to rein in an “over-committed” CEO Elon Musk.  This came two days after Tesla’s first quarter earnings report, in which the electric vehicle maker posted a 20% decline in net income from the prior year.
    Bed Bath & Beyond — Shares plunged 35.7% on Monday after the home goods retailer filed for bankruptcy protection on Sunday, after failing to raise enough money to stave off Chapter 11. Shares have lost nearly 99% in the past year.
    — CNBC’s Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans contributed reporting. More

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    Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos says he’s still in the running with his bid for the Washington Commanders

    Canadian businessman Steve Apostolopoulos says he’s still in the hunt for the Washington Commanders with a reported $6 billion bid.
    He says it’s a head-to-head process as another group led by Josh Harris made a similar bid earlier this month.

    The saga over Washington’s embattled football team might not be over quite yet.
    Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos appeared on CNBC’s Squawk Box on Monday, telling Andrew Ross Sorkin that he’s “still in the hunt” when it comes to purchasing the Washington Commanders.

    “I want to respect the process, but it is a head-to-head process right now,” he said.
    Earlier this month, an ownership group led by Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils owner Josh Harris made a bid worth an estimated $6 billion.
    That bid is said to be awaiting approval from the NFL and its owners.
    Both the league and Harris’ ownership group declined to comment on Apostolopoulos’ remarks.
    Apostolopoulos’ bid is also said to be around $6 billion, according to reports.

    The Toronto businessman is a managing partner of the real estate firm Triple Group of Companies and he’s the founder of the private equity firm Six Ventures.
    He touted the attractiveness of the Washington sports team during his appearance on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “It is a tremendous city, it is a tremendous team, there is lots of great things happening in that market and we are real estate guys, so we look from real estate standpoint as well.”
    Commanders owner Dan Snyder announced in November that he was putting the Commanders up for sale following an investigation that found the organization’s workplace to be “highly unprofessional.” More

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    Social media raises bank run risk, fueled Silicon Valley Bank’s collapse, paper says

    People line up outside of a Silicon Valley Bank office on March 13, 2023 in Santa Clara, California.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    After the sudden end of Silicon Valley Bank in March, market participants were quick to point out the role social media played in the velocity of its failure.
    Now, about six weeks later, a working paper co-authored by a group of university professors digs deeper into the cause and effect of social media in the case of SVB, arguing that greater exposure to social media amplifies bank run risk and warning that other banks could face similar risks.

    “Communication and coordination pose a risk to banks, especially when many of the deposits in the bank are uninsured,” the academic paper says. “The amplification of bank run risk via Twitter conversations is a unique opportunity to observe communication and coordination that shapes a critically important economic outcome − distress in banks.”
    Furthermore, “given the increasingly pervasive nature of social communication on and off Twitter, we do not expect this risk to go away, but rather, it is likely to influence other outcomes, as well.”
    In March, Silicon Valley Bank, a firm that primarily served startup businesses, became the biggest bank failure in the U.S. since the 2008 financial crisis and the second-largest ever – all in a 48-hour period. Members of the venture capital community of investors in the very companies that got caught in the crisis have lamented their own role in it, spreading panic. One called it a “hysteria-induced bank run caused by VCs.”
    The authors of the working paper examined original tweets (no retweets) from between Jan. 1, 2020 and Mar. 13, 2023 that include a financial institution’s cashtag (the stock ticker followed by the $ sign). They also looked at stock price data and hourly stock returns from the first half of this March to identify the impact of bank-related tweets on the stock return.
    “During the run period, we find the intensity of Twitter conversation about a bank predicts stock market losses at the hourly frequency,” the paper says. “These results are consistent with depositors using Twitter to communicate in real time during the bank run.”
    “More importantly, SVB is not the only bank to face this novel risk channel,” the authors wrote. “Open communication by depositors via social media increased the bank run risk for other banks that were ex ante exposed to such discussions in social media.” More

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    Crypto winter is over — and bitcoin could hit $100,000 by the end of 2024, Standard Chartered says

    The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and other mid-tier U.S. lenders has solidified the case for bitcoin as a “decentralised, trustless and scarce digital asset,” Standard Chartered analyst Geoff Kendrick said in a note Monday.
    This, coupled with a stabilization of risk assets and speculation that the Federal Reserve will ease monetary tightening further, means the “pathway to the USD 100,000 level is becoming clearer,” Kendrick said.
    Bitcoin is up 66% since the start of the year — though it has fallen sharply since breaching $30,000 two weeks ago.

    Bitcoin, the world’s largest cryptocurrency, has been stealthily rising in 2023.
    Chris Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Bitcoin’s value could jump to as much as $100,000 by the end of 2024, Standard Chartered said in a note published Monday.
    The collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and other mid-tier U.S. lenders has solidified the case for bitcoin as a “decentralised, trustless and scarce digital asset,” Standard Chartered analyst Geoff Kendrick said in the note.

    “We see potential for Bitcoin (BTC) to reach the USD 100,000 level by end-2024, as we believe the much-touted ‘crypto winter’ is finally over,” Kendrick said in the report, titled “Bitcoin — Pathway to the USD 100,000 level.”
    “The current stress in the traditional banking sector is highly conducive to BTC outperformance – and validates the original premise for Bitcoin as a decentralised, trustless and scarce digital asset,” Kendrick added.
    “Given these advantages, we think BTC’s share of total digital assets market cap could move into the 50-60% range in the next few months (from around 45% currently).”
    Bitcoin was trading at $27,601.55 as of 9:40 a.m. ET, according to CoinGecko data.
    The woes of Circle’s USD Coin and other so-called stablecoins, which aim to achieve a 1-to-1 peg to the U.S. dollar, has also benefited bitcoin, Kendrick said.

    USDC lost its peg to the dollar after its issuer Circle revealed exposure to SVB. The coin has since regained its $1 value, however its total market value has fallen to $30.7 billion from more than $43 billion since Mar. 10 when the bank was placed into receivership by the U.S. government, according to CoinGecko data.
    This, coupled with a stabilization of risk assets and speculation that the Federal Reserve will ease monetary tightening further, means the “pathway to the USD 100,000 level is becoming clearer,” Kendrick said.
    Proponents of bitcoin maintain the digital currency is an asset worth diversifying into in times of economic distress. As the theory goes, bitcoin has a limited supply of 21 million bitcoins, meaning it should appreciate as demand for alternative assets grows to avoid the effects of high inflation.

    The cryptocurrency failed that test last year when it plunged 65%, marking the second-worse year for bitcoin of all time amid a tumultuous backdrop of multibillion-dollar flameouts such as FTX and Terra and regulatory clampdowns.
    More recently, however, the token has been climbing, suggesting a recovery may be on the cards. Bitcoin is up 66% since the start of the year — though it has fallen sharply since breaching $30,000 two weeks ago.
    “The associated price jump – from below USD 20,000 before the SVB issues to above USD 30,000 – has dramatically increased the profitability of Bitcoin mining companies,” Kendrick wrote.
    Bitcoin miners are volunteers who allocate computing power toward solving complex cryptographic puzzles in order to verify transactions are genuine and mint new units of currency.
    “With the price of BTC now well above our USD 15,000 estimate of direct costs, miners are unlikely to sell many coins,” Kendrick said, noting that this would be a positive development for the cryptocurrency as miners are a major driving force for the market given the size of their holdings.
    “The broader macro backdrop for risky assets is also gradually improving as the FOMC nears the end of its tightening cycle. While BTC can trade well when risky assets suffer, correlations to the Nasdaq suggest that it should trade better if risky assets improve broadly.”

    Bitcoin’s price outlook

    Standard Chartered isn’t the only one predicting a strong rally of bitcoin’s price. Last month, at a blockchain conference in Paris, multiple crypto industry insiders forecast bitcoin hitting a new all-time high in 2023 — with an executive at U.S.-headquartered cryptocurrency exchange Gemini telling CNBC $100,000 could be a possibility.
    Last year, CNBC quizzed multiple venture capitalists, investors and analysts on how they think the digital currency will perform in 2023. On the bullish end of the spectrum, Draper Associates founder and noted bitcoin bull Tim Draper said he thought the cryptocurrency could reach $250,000.
    Ironically, on the bearish end, Standard Chartered said that the cryptocurrency could tumble as low as $5,000 in a list of market surprise for 2023.
    Some crypto investors are pointing to anticipation of the next so-called bitcoin “halving,” which reduces the rewards to bitcoin miners by 50%, as a potential catalyst for another monster rally in the coin’s price.
    — CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report More

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    Johnson & Johnson consumer health unit valued at $40 billion ahead of IPO, report says

    The consumer health business of Johnson & Johnson is valued at $40 billion ahead of its initial public offering later this year, sources told The Wall Street Journal.
    Kenvue, the soon-to-be spinoff of J&J, aims to raise $3.5 billion or more in the offering.
    Kenvue plans to start meeting with prospective investors as early as this week, kicking off an IPO roadshow.
    The consumer health business makes Band-Aid bandages, skin care products under the brands Neutrogena and Aveeno, pain relief drug Tylenol and J&J baby powder. 

    Johnson & Johnson logo
    SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Johnson & Johnson’s consumer health business is valued at $40 billion ahead of its initial public offering later this year, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal. 
    The soon-to-be spinoff Kenvue aims to raise $3.5 billion or more in the offering, people familiar with the matter told the Journal.

    The newspaper noted that “the share sale would be by far the biggest of what so far has been a quiet year for IPOs.”
    Kenvue plans to meet with prospective investors as early as Monday, the sources told the Journal. 
    When asked about the Journal’s report, J&J spokesperson Tesia Williams told CNBC, “Unfortunately, I do not have any information to provide.”
    J&J previously said it expects to complete the separation from Kenvue by mid- to late 2023. 
    The consumer staples giant has also said it will retain majority ownership of Kenvue, with plans to trim the rest of its stake later in the year. 

    Kenvue’s stock would trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker KVUE. 
    J&J unveiled its plan to spin off its consumer health business in late 2021. That division makes Band-Aid bandages, skin care products under the brands Neutrogena and Aveeno, pain relief drug Tylenol and J&J’s baby powder. 
    J&J still faces thousands of allegations that its talc baby powder and other talc products caused cancer.
    A federal bankruptcy judge last week halted nearly 40,000 talc lawsuits through mid-June. That decision was part of J&J’s second attempt to settle talc claims in bankruptcy proceedings.
    The temporary hold will give J&J time to try to win court approval of its $8.9 billion proposed settlement with plaintiffs in the talc cases.
    Kenvue will assume talc-related liabilities that arise outside the U.S. and Canada, according to its IPO filing. More