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    Oil tumbles to lowest level since December 2021 as banking crisis routs markets

    Oil production in Azerbaijan
    Vostok | Getty Images

    Oil prices fell sharply Wednesday, as traders feared a brewing banking crisis could dent global economic growth.
    West Texas Intermediate futures fell more than 5% to settle at $67.61 per barrel, reaching its lowest level since December 2021. Brent crude, the international benchmark, slid 4% to $74.36 per barrel.

    “The oil market is going to be stuck in a surplus for most of the first half of the year, but that should change as long as we don’t see a major policy mistake by the Fed that triggers a severe recession,” said Ed Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda. “Now near the mid-$60s, WTI crude’s plunge is at the mercy of how much worse the macro picture gets.”
    A retest of October’s lows could add increased downward pressure on WTI crude, he said, adding that energy stocks may struggle given the weakening demand outlook and surplus likely to persist in the short-term.

    “Longer-term views however still support having energy in your portfolios as a lot of the oil giants have robust balance sheets that support continued buybacks and dividends,” he added.
    The drop came as global risk markets sold off following news that Credit Suisse’s biggest investor, the Saudi National Bank, would not provide more assistance for the embattled bank. The news led to a more than 20% drop in the bank’s U.S.-listed shares. It also raised concern over the state of the global banking system less than a week after two U.S. regional banks failed.
    The stress in smaller banks led Goldman Sachs to cut its U.S. GDP growth forecast.

    “Small and medium-sized banks play an important role in the US economy,” Goldman economists wrote. “Banks with less than $250bn in assets account for roughly 50% of US commercial and industrial lending, 60% of residential real estate lending, 80% of commercial real estate lending, and 45% of consumer lending.”
    “US policymakers have taken aggressive steps to shore up the financial system, but concerns about stress at some banks persists,” they added. “Ongoing pressure could cause smaller banks to become more conservative about lending in order to preserve liquidity in case they need to meet depositor withdrawals, and a tightening in lending standards could weigh on aggregate demand.”
    The Federal Reserve is slated to hold a policy meeting next week. Entering this week, traders had priced in at least a 25 basis-point rate hike. However, CME Group’s FedWatch tool now shows nearly a 2-to-1 chance of rates staying at current levels.
    — CNBC’s Christopher Hayes contributed to this report.
    Correction: Oil was headed for its worst day since July. A previous headline misstated the timeframe.

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    3M fights a growing legal battle over combat-grade earplugs

    Nathan Frei is one of more than 200,000 military servicemembers and veterans suing 3M claiming its Combat Arms earplugs failed to protect him from loud noises causing hearing loss and tinnitus.
    3M denies wrongdoing and told CNBC the earplugs worked when used properly.
    3M has lost 10 of the 16 bellwether cases that have gone to trial so far, with a total of $265 million awarded to 13 plaintiffs.

    Nathan Frei, a former active-duty infantry officer who served from 2011 to 2015, first noticed issues with his hearing in 2013, shortly after returning from training with the U.S. Army. Nate was identified with tinnitus and now is one of more than 200,000 claimants suing 3M over its Combat Arms earplugs.
    Nathan Frei

    Former active duty U.S. army infantry officer Nathan Frei says from 2011 to 2015 he went through some of the most intense training that the U.S. Army had to offer. With it, came loud noises — everything from weapons to helicopters to explosions.
    To protect his hearing, Frei wore standard issue earplugs made by 3M.

    Today, he’s one of more than 200,000 military service members and veterans suing the conglomerate. 3M stock, which hit a new 52-week low Wednesday, is one of the worst-performing industrial stocks this year, down more than 16% in 2023, versus the XLI Industrials ETF, which is down 1.5% year to date.
    Plaintiffs claim 3M earplugs were “defective” and failed to protect against hearing loss and tinnitus.
    “We used [the earplugs] every time that we were around loud noises,” Frei, who lives in Seattle, told CNBC. “And I relied on that hearing protection during that time.”
    From 2003 to 2015, Aearo Technologies and its parent company, 3M, manufactured and supplied the U.S. military with the Combat Arms CAEv2 earplugs. The plugs were standard issue for soldiers in Afghanistan and Iraq and were designed to protect service members’ hearing in military training and during combat.

    3M’s Combat Arms CAEv2 earplugs

    Each earplug had two ends: The green end was designed to block out all sound. The yellow end, signaling “whisper mode,” purported to block out loud sound — but allowed the user to hear quieter noises, like conversations.

    I don’t look like somebody who probably should have as much hearing loss as I do at my age.

    Nathan Frei
    Former active duty U.S. army infantry officer

    “We were told that by wearing ‘whisper mode’ that we could still protect our hearing,” said Frei, who claims he first noticed issues with his hearing in 2013.
    “I was hearing ringing,” Frei recalled. “At first, I thought it was a TV that was on. And so I searched and scoured the house looking for where the noise was coming from before I realized that it was just in my head.”
    As the years passed, the 35-year-old said, his hearing issues got worse. Department of Veterans Affairs records shared by Frei with CNBC show he was later diagnosed with tinnitus.
    “It’s constant,” he said. “It’s a loud ringing in my ears — very similar to just like a buzz noise.”
    He said the ringing is so disruptive it occasionally keeps him awake.
    “I don’t look like somebody who probably should have as much hearing loss as I do at my age,” he said.

    3M’s response

    Eric Rucker, an attorney for 3M, told CNBC the company has great respect for the men and women in the military and that their safety has always been a priority.

    Maplewood, Minnesota, 3M company global headquarters.
    Michael Siluk | Getty Images

    “The purpose of the creation of [the Combat Arms earplugs] was to collaborate with the military to solve one of the longest-standing problems they have had, that soldiers won’t wear their hearing protection around loud noises and in combat,” Rucker said.
    Rucker said the plugs were designed in collaboration with the U.S. military and tested by the Air Force, Army, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, and others.
    “All of that testing shows the Combat Arms earplugs, when properly fitted and when used according to its instructions, work to protect people’s hearing,” he said.
    Rucker conceded that military audiologists were “well trained in how to train people and fit people for the use of earplugs,” but maintained, “it should have worked and protected their hearing in environments where it was appropriate to be using these earplugs.”
    After a whistleblower suit was filed in 2016, accusing 3M of selling “dangerously defective” earplugs, the company agreed to pay $9.1 million to the Department of Justice to resolve the allegations without admitting liability.
    Soon after, there was a flood of new suits from hundreds of thousands of other service members.

    Where things stand today

    Today, the lawsuits have been consolidated in Florida federal court, creating what some are calling the largest mass tort in U.S. history, surpassing even the multidistrict litigation involving Johnson & Johnson’s talc products.
    3M has lost 10 of the 16 cases that have gone to trial so far, with a total of $265 million awarded to 13 plaintiffs to date.
    “There have been several bellwether trials. And unfortunately, Aearo and 3M have not been able to present all of the evidence related to the original design of the product, the military’s involvement in the design of the product, all of the issues concerning the instructions, and how to use the product, and how well the product performed, including some testing information which has been excluded from certain trials,” Rucker said.
    “All of that is on appeal. And we’re hoping that the decisions on appeal will cause more of that information to come forward,” he added.

    The Combat Arms earplugs, when properly fitted and when used according to its instructions, works to protect people’s hearing.

    Eric Rucker
    3M attorney

    3M recently unveiled new data that shows 90% of a group of 175,000 plaintiffs have no hearing impairment under medically accepted standards, according to U.S. Department of Defense records. The lead attorneys for the plaintiffs call the data a “misrepresentation.”
    “3M has purposefully skewed this data by relying on hearing standards that do not measure frequencies most affected by noise, concealing the hearing damage suffered by veterans,” said Bryan Aylstock and Chris Seeger, co-lead counsel for the service members and veterans, in a joint statement.
    3M disagreed with those claims, telling CNBC: “The data support what 3M has maintained throughout this litigation: the Combat Arms Earplugs version two were safe and effective to use. This has been confirmed by every independent, third-party organization that has tested the product, including the Army Research Lab, the Air Force Research lab, NIOSH, and others.”

    Liability risk

    Mizuho’s executive director Brett Linzey wrote in a note to clients that “even the low end of previously settled Combat Arms lawsuits (or even half that amount) equates to some pretty healthy liabilities 3M may have to address.”
    According to one Wall Street analyst, 3M’s liability risk could potentially be in the billions.
    “Do the math on the number of plaintiffs, which is north of 200,000 and you take the average settlement value — the simple math on that gets you well north of $10 billion to $20 billion,” JPMorgan analyst Stephen Tusa told CNBC. 3M told CNBC that estimate was “completely speculative.”
    “We will continue to defend the cases. But the vast majority of these claims do not have complete information,” said Rucker.
    In a legal maneuver that would indemnify 3M, the company’s attorneys attempted to put its subsidiary Aearo Technologies into bankruptcy protection, and put aside a $1 billion trust to settle the suits. The service members suing 3M are accusing the company of using the bankruptcy to shield itself and have asked a judge to dismiss it.
    A ruling on that potential dismissal is scheduled for April. Oral arguments for the appeal of the initial bellwether trials are scheduled for May 1.
    As for Frei, he expects his case to go to trial by year-end.
    “It does make me mad,” Frei told CNBC, accusing 3M of “trying to scheme away through either bankruptcy or through these arguments to try and avoid responsibility for what they’ve done.”

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Credit Suisse, Adobe, UiPath and more

    A Credit Suisse office in New York, US, on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023. 
    Stephanie Keith | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell.
    Credit Suisse — Credit Suisse shares rallied almost 7% after a statement from the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority and the Swiss National Bank said that the bank is currently well capitalized. The SNB added that it would provide additional liquidity if necessary. Shares tumbled 13.9% during Wednesday’s trading session after Credit Suisse’s largest investor, Saudi National Bank, said that it could not provide the Swiss bank with any further financial assistance.

    Adobe — The software company’s shares were up 4.6% after its fiscal first-quarter results topped Wall Street estimates. The company reported adjusted earnings of $3.80 per share and revenue of $4.66 billion. Analysts polled by Refinitiv had expected earnings of $3.68 per share and revenue of $4.62 billion.
    Five Below — Shares of the value retailer were down more than 3% in extended trading, slipping on the company’s muted outlook for the first quarter. Five Below reported revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations, according to Refinitiv, and earnings were in-line with estimates.
    PagerDuty — The digital operations management platform’s stock gained 3% after reporting an earnings and revenue beat for the fourth quarter. PagerDuty posted adjusted earnings of 8 cents per share and revenue of $101 million. Meanwhile, analysts polled by Refinitiv had estimated per-share earnings coming in at 2 cents and revenue at $98.8 million
    UiPath — The automation software stock surged 12% in extended trading after the company’s quarterly earnings smashed expectations. UiPath reported an adjusted EPS of 15 cents, compared to the 6 cents anticipated by analysts. Revenue also came in well ahead of estimates.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li contributed to reporting

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Credit Suisse, First Republic Bank, Halliburton and more

    A person walks by the First Republic Bank headquarters on March 13, 2023 in San Francisco, California.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Credit Suisse — U.S.-listed of Credit Suisse plunged nearly 14% after its biggest backer, Saudi National Bank, said it won’t provide the Swiss bank with further financial help. Credit Suisse and several other European banks, including Societe Generale, Italy’s Monte dei Paschi and UniCredit, were briefly halted from trading on Wednesday as prices plummeted amid the fallout from Silicon Valley Bank.

    First Republic Bank — The regional bank stock tumbled 21.4%, giving back some of Tuesday’s gains as turmoil at Credit Suisse rattled the broader sector and S&P Global Ratings downgraded its debt rating to BB+ from A-. PacWest shares slid 12.9%, while Western Alliance shares added 0.6%.
    U.S. banks — Major U.S. banks tumbled on Wednesday as unease over the latest crisis at Credit Suisse spooked some investors. JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs fell about 4.7% and 3.1%, respectively. Wells Fargo slipped 3.3%. Citigroup and Morgan Stanley shed more than 5% each.
    Energy stocks — Major energy stocks took a hit as oil stooped to its lowest level in more than a year. Halliburton and Marathon Oil shed 9% and 8.5%, respectively. APA Corporation and Devon Energy dropped about 8%. Diamondback Energy slumped more than 7%.
    SentinelOne — The cybersecurity stock jumped more than 7% after posting a smaller-than-expected loss for the recent quarter.
    New York Community Bancorp — The regional bank stock jumped more than 57%, bucking the broader sell-off trend in banking names. UBS assumed coverage of New York Community Bancorp with a buy rating, saying shares can jump 50%.

    Smartsheet – The maker of work management software saw shares jump 17.8% after the company reported fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that beat analysts’ expectations, according to FactSet. Earnings guidance for the first quarter and full year also came ahead of Wall Street forecasts.
    Atlas Air Worldwide Holdings — The aircraft and aviation services company’s shares gained 3.2% following news that all regulatory conditions to closing its merger agreement were satisfied. Atlas Air expects to finalize the merge on or around Mar. 17.
    Guess? —The clothing maker lost 5.2% after the issuing weak guidance for the first quarter and full year, according to FactSet.
    Freshpet — Shares dropped 1.8% after activist investor JANA Partners said Freshpet requires either “significant board change, or in the absence of such change, should be sold.” The statement comes after the pet food company announced an equity-linked capital raise on Tuesday.
    — CNBC’s Michelle Fox, Tanaya Macheel, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh and Sarah Min contributed reporting.

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    Norfolk Southern reaches new paid sick leave deal as it contends with derailment fallout

    Norfolk Southern said it reached a deal to offer up to seven paid sick days to members of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers and Blacksmiths.
    The IBBB is now the ninth of Norfolk Southern’s 12 unions that have negotiated paid sick days.
    Norfolk Southern is contending with political and environmental fallout from a last month’s derailment of a train carrying toxic materials in East Palestine, Ohio.

    A Norfolk Southern Corp. engine car moves through the Lamberts Point coal transloading facility in Norfolk, Virginia, on Wednesday, March 17, 2010.
    Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Norfolk Southern said Wednesday it agreed to provide up to seven paid sick days per years for members of the International Brotherhood of Boilermakers and Blacksmiths.
    The deal provides Norfolk Southern’s mechanical railroaders with four paid sick days per year, in addition to three existing days of paid time off that can now be used as sick days. The IBBB is now the ninth of Norfolk Southern’s 12 unions that have negotiated paid sick days, benefitting about 6,000 workers.

    The move comes after months of fighting between unions and railraods – including Norfolk Southern, Union Pacific and BNSF – over paid sick leave. President Joe Biden signed a bill at the end of 2022 to avert a nationwide rail strike. The legislation, however, did not include paid sick leave.
    Norfolk Southern announced the deal as the company contends with political and environmental fallout from a last month’s derailment of a train carrying toxic materials in East Palestine, Ohio, near the Pennsylvania border. Company and government officials have said it’s safe to live in the area following the disaster, although some workers and residents have complained of ailments. Ohio sued the company Tuesday.
    The paid sick leave agreement comes two days after Norfolk Southern reached deals with the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers. Last week, the company announced agreements with the International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail, Transportation Workers, Mechanical Department and the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
    The company reached deals with two other unions in February, while two others already had access to paid sick leave benefits.
    “We continue to make strides to improve the quality of life of our craft railroaders in partnership with our unions,” said Norfolk Southern CEO Alan Shaw. “Our railroaders help drive the American economy forward, and each of these new agreements helps ensure that they have even more time to manage their personal health and well-being.”

    Norfolk Southern did not comment beyond its previously released statements.
    In February, Sens. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Mike Braun, R-Ind., demanded railroad carriers offer workers at least seven paid sick days. Sanders urged rail companies to “do the right thing” while mentioning the carriers’ record profits. Sanders’ office said that rail companies spent 184% more on shareholder returns than workers’ wages and benefits.
    “At the end of the day, in 2023, it is not acceptable to have workers that do dangerous work not to get one sick day,” Sanders said at the time.
    –CNBC’s Lori Ann LaRocco contributed to this report.

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    Axiom unveils spacesuits for NASA’s upcoming Artemis moon missions

    Axiom Space on Wednesday revealed a prototype of the lunar spacesuit that NASA plans to use on its Artemis missions to the moon.
    “We’re pleased that humanity’s next steps on the moon are going to be in an Axiom spacesuit,” Axiom president and CEO Michael Suffredini said during an event at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.
    The company won an initial contract worth $228.5 million last year to design and build the spacesuits.

    Chief Engineer Jim Stein wears the new spacesuit during the Axiom Space Artemis III Lunar Spacesuit event at Space Center Houston in Houston, Texas, on March 15, 2023. “Since a spacesuit worn on the Moon must be white to reflect heat and protect astronauts from extreme high temperatures, a cover layer is currently being used for display purposes only to conceal the suits proprietary design, ” Axion said in a press release.
    Mark Felix | AFP | Getty Images

    Axiom Space on Wednesday revealed a prototype of the lunar spacesuit that NASA plans to use for its astronauts during Artemis missions, which are set to launch later this decade.
    “This is a big deal for us” Axiom President and CEO Michael Suffredini said during an event at NASA’s Johnson Space Center in Houston.

    “We’re pleased that humanity’s next steps on the moon are going to be in an Axiom spacesuit,” Suffredini added.
    The company won an initial contract worth $228.5 million last year to design and build the spacesuits, which are planned for use on the Artemis III mission and onward. NASA’s Artemis program represents a series of missions with escalating goals. The agency successfully completed the first, uncrewed flight in December.

    Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

    In addition to Axiom, NASA also awarded a contract to Collins Aerospace, a subsidiary of Raytheon, to build next-generation spacesuits. Under the Exploration Extravehicular Activity Services program, NASA expects to provide up to $3.5 billion for spacesuits through 2034.

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    Airline stocks slide despite CEOs’ upbeat demand outlook

    Airline stocks’ slide outpaced the broader market.
    The move comes after a decline in consumer retail spending and other investor concerns.
    Airline executives have been upbeat about travel demand in 2023.

    A JetBlue airplane at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on March 9, 2023.
    Stefani Reynolds | AFP | Getty Images

    Airline stocks slid Wednesday as the market fell broadly amid concerns over stability of some banks and new data that showed a slowdown in consumer spending.
    The NYSE Arca Airline index, which includes mostly U.S. carriers, was down about 6% Wednesday afternoon, on track for its biggest one-day percentage decline since last June. It outpaced a drop in the S&P 500.

    related investing news

    Airline executives during a JPMorgan industry conference on Tuesday said they expect strong demand — and profits — in 2023, despite higher costs, with leisure travel continuing to lead the way. Consumer appetite for air travel has surged over the past year and higher fares have boosted airlines’ bottom lines.
    But carriers also pointed to near-term problems like higher expenses like fuel and labor. United Airlines on Monday forecast a first-quarter loss from a potential new pilot contract and weaker-than-expected demand early this year, traditionally a slow period for travel.
    Some executives said lucrative business travel is shifting because of more hybrid work models that allow customers to mix work trips with leisure in place of more traditional schedules.
    “I think business travel has changed,” JetBlue Airways CEO Robin Hayes said at the conference. “Those day trips where you used to get up at 6 a.m., you’re back at 8 p.m. … you’re just not going to do that anymore.”
    Hayes said that means shifts in the network.

    “We came in with 15 Boston-LaGuardias as we thought that was a great idea. It turns out it wasn’t,” he said. “And that’s now going to be nine or 10 as we get later into the year.”
    Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said corporate travel has recovered more than 80% of prepandemic levels.
    “As I tell many of my CEO friends across the industry and outside of the industry, I know where your employees are. They may not be in the office, but you can find them on my airplanes,” he said at the conference. “And that’s because of the new way of work, the new hybrid, new mobility. And I don’t think that’s changing.”

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    Goldman Sachs cuts GDP forecast because of stress on small banks, which are key to U.S. economy

    Goldman Sachs lowered its growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points to 1.2% for 2023, as gauged by the fourth quarter of 2022 to the fourth quarter of this year.
    Analysts believe a pullback in lending will lead to substantial tightening in bank lending standards, dragging down growth already affected by tightening in recent quarters.
    Banks with less than $250 billion in assets comprise about 50% of U.S. commercial and industrial lending.

    Photo illustration, the Silicon Valley Bank logo is visible on a smartphone, with the stock market index in the background on the personal computer on March 14, 2023, in Rome, Italy.
    Andrea Ronchini | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Goldman Sachs on Wednesday lowered its 2023 economic growth forecast, citing a pullback in lending from small- and medium-sized banks amid turmoil in the broader financial system.
    The firm lowered its growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points to 1.2% under expectations that smaller banks will attempt to preserve liquidity in case they need to meet depositor withdrawals, leading to a substantial tightening in bank lending standards.

    related investing news

    Tighter lending standards could weigh on aggregate demand, implying a drag on GDP growth already affected by tightening in recent quarters, Goldman economists David Mericle and Manuel Abecasis wrote in a note to clients.
    “Small and medium-sized banks play an important role in the US economy,” the analysts wrote. “Any lending impact is likely to be concentrated in a subset of small and medium-sized banks.”
    Banks with less than $250 billion in assets comprise about 50% of U.S. commercial and industrial lending, 60% of residential real estate lending, 80% of commercial real estate lending and 45% of consumer lending, according to the firm. 
    While the two recent bank failures — Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank — account for just 1% of total bank lending, Goldman noted that lending shares are 20% for banks with a high loan-to-deposit ratio and 7% for banks with a low share of FDIC-insured deposits.
    Regulators had seized both of the banks earlier this week and ensured that depositors would regain full access to their funds through the FDIC’s deposit insurance fund. Many depositors were uninsured due to the $250,000 cap on guaranteed deposits. 

    The analysts assume that small banks with a low share of FDIC-covered deposits will reduce new lending by 40% and that other small banks will reduce new lending by 15%, leading to a 2.5% drag on total bank lending.
    The effect of tightening would have the same impact on demand growth as would an interest rate hike of 25 to 50 basis points, they said.

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