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    Biden is 'paying lip service' to the U.S. position on Taiwan, former Chinese army officer says

    U.S. President Joe Biden has repeatedly indicated the U.S. would defend Taiwan militarily upon attack, only to have the White House deny a shift in a decades-long “one China policy.”
    “We believe he is actually paying lip service to this one China policy,” said Zhou Bo, a senior fellow at Tsinghua University’s Center for International Strategy and Security Studies.
    Taiwan is a democratically self-ruled island the 72-year-old government in Beijing considers part of its territory. Beijing has maintained its seeks peaceful reunification with Taiwan.

    BEIJING — There is an increasing wariness of U.S. claims to recognize Beijing as the sole legal government of China, a retired officer of the People’s Liberation Army told CNBC on Monday.
    His comments came after U.S. President Joe Biden repeatedly indicated the U.S. would defend Taiwan militarily if the island is attacked, only to have the White House deny a shift in a decades-long “one China policy.”

    “We believe he is actually paying lip service to this one China policy,” said Zhou Bo, now a senior fellow at Tsinghua University’s Center for International Strategy and Security Studies.
    Zhou did not specify who “we” referred to in his response to a question on CNBC’s ”Street Signs Asia” about how Beijing viewed the back-and-forth over Biden’s comments.

    U.S. Vice President Joe Biden delivers remarks at the Strategic and Economic Dialogue (S&ED) at the State Department in Washington, U.S. June 23, 2015.
    Yuri Gripas | Reuters

    Taiwan is a democratically self-ruled island that Beijing considers part of its territory. Beijing has maintained it seeks peaceful reunification with Taiwan.
    During the Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore over the weekend, China’s Defense Minister Wei Fenghe maintained that Beijing would achieve reunification and warned those pursuing Taiwan independence would “come to no good end.”
    A day earlier, U.S. Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin accused China of “provocative, destabilizing” military activity close to Taiwan.

    For more than 40 years, the U.S. “one China policy” has recognized Beijing as the sole legal government of China. Meanwhile, the U.S. maintains unofficial relations with Taiwan, with a policy of making sure the island has the resources to defend itself.
    Given recent media reports about U.S. assistance to Taiwan, Zhou said, “How could we have trust in the one China policy?”
    — CNBC’s Ravi Buddhavarapu contributed to this report.

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    Chinese automakers want to bring assisted driving to the masses

    China sold nearly 21.5 million passenger cars last year. That’s roughly the equivalent of sales in the United States, Europe and Japan combined, according to industry data accessed through the Wind database.
    Chinese tech giant Baidu’s tie-up with automaker Geely is one of those rushing to make a bet on assisted driving a reality.
    Just 15 months since the companies’ Jidu electric car project launched, the brand revealed Wednesday a concept car it says is 90% of what customers will get next year for about $30,000.

    Jidu, Baidu’s electric car venture alongside Geely, revealed its first concept car on June 8, 2022.

    BEIJING — As Chinese companies race for a slice of the world’s largest car market, they’re betting heavily on assisted driving technology.
    China sold nearly 21.5 million passenger cars last year. That’s roughly the equivalent of sales in the United States, Europe and Japan combined, according to industry data accessed through the Wind database.

    Electric cars have grabbed a growing share of that Chinese market. Tesla, start-ups like Nio and traditional automakers have jumped in. After initially competing on battery driving range and in-car online entertainment, companies increasingly emphasize assisted driving capability.
    Chinese tech giant Baidu and automaker Geely are among those rushing to make a bet on making assisted driving a reality.
    Just 15 months since the companies’ Jidu electric car project launched as part of a tie-up, the brand revealed Wednesday a concept car it says is 90% of what customers will get next year for about $30,000. Tesla’s Model Y runs closer to $50,000 in China.

    Evolution of ‘smart cars’

    “It’s a car, and, even more so, a robot,” Jidu CEO Joe Xia said during the livestreamed event in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. “We use a concept car to quickly prove our early stage design and idea.”

    The four-seat vehicle, called Robo-01, has replaced the dashboard with a long screen extending across the front of the car and removed cockpit buttons — since the driver can use voice control instead, Xia said.

    Theoretically, the half-moon of a steering wheel can fold up, paving the way for a cockpit seat with no window obstructions, once full self-driving is allowed on China’s roads. Two large external sensors for assisted driving can retract, for aesthetics and for protection in the event of an emergency.
    Xia claimed Jidu “can become the standard for self-driving cars.” But the company declined to share what level of assisted driving software would come with the car.

    Consumers are considering two important factors in intelligent vehicles. First of all, the most important one is autonomous driving.

    vice president, DeepRoute.ai

    Many electric cars, including Tesla, Nio and Xpeng, offer some form of tech-enabled driving assistance. In late May, Chinese self-driving tech start-up WeRide said it received a strategic investment from German engineering company Bosch to produce an assisted driving software system for mass production and delivery next year.
    “I think the definition of smart cars has evolved a lot,” said Xuan Liu, vice president at autonomous driving software start-up DeepRoute.ai, said in a phone interview Wednesday.
    “Consumers are considering two important factors in intelligent vehicles,” he said. “First of all, the most important one is autonomous driving. I think they are also interested in this so-called intelligent cabinet, so they want the interaction with the vehicle system.”
    Jidu plans to launch a limited version of its first production model in the fall. Deliveries are set to begin next year, with a target market of family passenger vehicles priced above 200,000 yuan ($29,985), Baidu CEO Robin Li said on an earnings call in late May.

    Baidu has majority ownership of Jidu, and the search giant has rolled out commercial robotaxis in parts of China using its Apollo autonomous driving system. That’s the same system, along with other tech from Baidu, that will be used in Jidu’s concept car (above).

    Baidu has majority ownership of Jidu, and the search giant has rolled out commercial robotaxis in parts of China using its Apollo autonomous driving system. That’s the same system, along with other tech from Baidu, that will be used in Jidu’s concept car.
    Co-investor Geely did not have an official release about Jidu’s concept car, after increasing its capital support earlier this year.
    Geely has pushed into the electric car industry with its own vehicles, and announced in November a multi-year plan to build up the software component of the cars. The automaker said it aimed to commercialize full self-driving under specific conditions, called “Level Four” autonomous driving in a classification system, by 2025.
    Earlier this month, Geely announced its subsidiary has launched the first nine of 72 satellites to support mapping and autonomous driving.

    Competing for customers

    Though electric car sales have surged, interest in Jidu’s first concept car appeared modest.
    About 50,000 people viewed one of the main streams on the WeChat messaging app Wednesday night.
    In contrast, Nio’s annual car release event in December drew about 200,000 views, though it included a musical performance. That event introduced a new sedan and custom augmented reality glasses that can impose digital images over the real, physical world.
    For companies focused on self-driving technology, they’re looking at a market at least a year or two into the future.
    For Chinese consumers, the main draw of self-driving cars is getting assistance during the commute home after a long day at work, Liu said. As for the business side, it’s the possibility that lower software costs will speed up widespread use, he said.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    DeepRoute.ai in April announced it cut the price of autonomous driving software from $10,000 per car to $3,000. Liu said the company was able to slash the price by using cheaper sensors but better software, and he expected the price could fall further once the start-up is able to work with automakers for mass production and deployment from 2024 onward.
    While regulators have yet to allow full self-driving cars on most roads en masse, companies like DeepRoute.ai, Baidu and others are building data records through their robotaxi operations.
    Liu said such data can help improve algorithms for self-driving technology, and build a track record to support potential changes in regulation.

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    Stock futures fall after Wall Street’s worst week since January

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, June 3, 2022.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    U.S. stock futures fell Sunday night as Wall Street tries to recover from one of its worst weeks of 2022.
    Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 176 points, or 0.6%, while S&P 500 futures slid 0.95%. Nasdaq 100 futures pulled back by 1.5%.

    The major averages last week posted their biggest weekly declines since late January. The Dow and S&P 500 fell 4.6% and 5.1%, respectively, while the Nasdaq Composite lost 5.6%.
    A chunk of those losses came Friday, when hotter-than-expected U.S. inflation data spooked investors. The Dow dropped 880 points, or 2.7%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq lost 2.9% and 3.5%, respectively.
    The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported Friday that the U.S. consumer price index rose last month by 8.6% from a year ago, its fastest increase since December 1981. That gain topped economists’ expectations. The so-called core CPI, which strips out food and energy prices, also came in above estimates at 6%.
    On top of that, the preliminary June reading for the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index registered at a record low of 50.2.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    That data comes ahead of a highly anticipated Federal Reserve meeting this week, with the central bank expected to announce at least a half-point rate hike on Wednesday. The Fed has already raised rates twice this year, including a 50-basis-point (0.5 percentage point) increase in May in an effort to stave off the recent inflation surge.

    “May’s CPI report showed scant signs of inflation peaking, though we still expect peaking soon. The report also suggests a more hawkish Fed and higher recession risk,” wrote Ed Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research.
    “Investor and consumer sentiment both have soured. But this time, pervasive bearishness may not be as useful a contrarian bullish signal as in the past,” he said, adding that the firm now sees a 45% chance of a “mild recession;” that’s up from the previous forecast of 40%.
    Stocks have had a tough year as recession fears rise along with consumer prices. The S&P 500 is down 18.2% year to date through Friday’s close. It’s also 19.1% below an intraday record set in January. The Dow has fallen 13.6% in 2022, and the Nasdaq Composite is deep in bear market territory, down 27.5% this year and trading 30% below an all-time high set in November.
    Subscribe to CNBC PRO for exclusive insights and analysis, and live business day programming from around the world.

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    Jan. 6 Capitol riot committee members are tightlipped on what to expect in this week's hearings

    Members of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot were tightlipped about what to expect in this week’s public hearings.
    The first public hearing claimed that multiple Republican congressmen asked for pardons, but the committee has only named one, Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa. He has denied asking for a pardon.
    The second hearing on the Jan. 6 probe is slated to begin at 10 a.m. ET on Monday.

    Members of the Committee attend the public hearing of the U.S. House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6 Attack on the United States Capitol, on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., June 9, 2022.
    Jonathan Ernst | Reuters

    Members of the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 Capitol riot were tightlipped about what to expect in this week’s public hearings, giving few details beyond their road map to prove that former President Donald Trump is to blame for the efforts to overturn the 2020 election results.
    The first public hearing held by the nine-member committee happened on Thursday evening, and three more days of hearings have been officially scheduled for Monday, Wednesday and Thursday this week.

    Among the revelations from the first hearing was that multiple Republican congressmen asked for presidential pardons. Rep. Liz Cheney of Wyoming, the committee’s vice chair and one of its two Republican members, named Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., as one such representative. Perry has denied the claim, calling it a “shameless” and “soulless” lie.
    The identities of the other congressmen who sought pardons remain unknown, but several members of the committee said during Sunday television appearances that they believe that those requests show they knew they were doing something illegal.
    “To me, I think that is some of the most compelling evidence of consciousness of guilt. Why would members do that if they felt their involvement in this plot to overturn the election was somehow appropriate?” California Rep. Adam Schiff said on ABC’s “This Week.”
    Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger, the other Republican representative on the Jan. 6 committee, echoed that thought in an appearance on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”
    “In general, if someone asks for a pardon, it’s because they have real concern that they’ve done something illegal. I’ll leave it at that, but I’ll say that more information will be coming,” he said.

    New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who is not on the committee, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” the same day that every member of Congress should be able to answer if he or she requested a pardon.
    “When you don’t know which of your colleagues were part of a potential conspiracy, then we need to find out,” Ocasio-Cortez said. “I believe that the committee would never make an allegation so serious without very substantial evidence to present to the American public.”
    Maryland Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin, who sits on the select committee, said that the investigation isn’t just for the public.
    “I suppose our entire investigation is a referral of crimes both to the Department of Justice and the American people, because this is a massive assault on the machinery of American democracy,” he said during an appearance on “State of the Union.”
    But he fell short of saying that the Department of Justice should indict Trump, instead saying that he is respecting the independence of law enforcement. Schiff, for his part, told ABC’s Martha Raddatz that he wants the DOJ to investigate.
    “I would like to see the Justice Department investigate any credible allegation of criminal activity on the part of Donald Trump or anyone else. The rule of law needs to apply equally to everyone,” Schiff said.
    Monday’s hearing is slated to begin at 10 a.m. ET. The committee is expected to focus on Trump’s misinformation campaign and the lack of evidence supporting allegations of election fraud.

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    'Jurassic World: Dominion' nabs $143.3 million in domestic opening, 'Top Gun: Maverick' adds $50 million

    “Jurassic World: Dominion” roared to the top of the domestic box office over the weekend, generating more than $143 million in ticket sales during its debut.
    Around 10.8 million moviegoers turned up to see “Dominion” domestically, representing around 66% of the overall moviegoing audience during the weekend, according to data from EntTelligence.
    “Top Gun: Maverick,” which snared another $50 million in ticket sales during its third weekend in the U.S. and Canada, represented 26% of the domestic moviegoing audience.

    DeWanda Wise and Laura Dern star in Universal’s “Jurassic World: Dominion.”

    “Jurassic World: Dominion” roared to the top of the domestic box office over the weekend, generating more than $143 million in ticket sales during its debut.
    Internationally, the film has secured around $245.8 million since opening earlier this month, bringing its global tally to just under $390 million.

    Around 10.8 million moviegoers turned up to see “Dominion” domestically, representing around 66% of the overall moviegoing audience during the weekend, according to data from EntTelligence.
    “Top Gun: Maverick,” which snared another $50 million in ticket sales during its third weekend in the U.S. and Canada, represented 26% of the domestic moviegoing audience.
    “Maverick” has continued to draw in audiences and saw just a 44% drop in ticket sales between its second and third weekend. This is the second weekend in a row that the Tom Cruise-led sequel has held strong at the box office. Between its opening week and second week, the film saw only a 32% drop in ticket sales. Typically, films will see between a 50% and 70% drop between the first and second weekend
    “‘Top Gun: Maverick’ is still flying high even in the face of stiff competition from ‘Jurassic World: Dominion,'” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore. “For movie theaters, this is a dream scenario of having two blockbusters on their screens at once generating excitement and buzz surrounding the movie theater experience.”
    For “Jurassic World: Dominion,” however, this game of diminishing returns could be much more severe. The blockbuster feature has received overwhelmingly negative reviews from critics and could see a steep drop off in ticket sales after its opening weekend if word of mouth from moviegoers is also sour.
    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal distributed “Jurassic World: Dominion.”

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    Walmart launched a lot of apparel and home brands. Now, that strategy will be put to the test

    Walmart has launched style-forward brands, added national brands and debuted a new store design to try to sell more discretionary merchandise.
    The retailer’s desire to sell more higher-margin items has become more urgent after it disappointed Wall Street with its fiscal first-quarter earnings and cut its profit expectations.
    The company plans to expand its new store design, which draws attention to apparel and home, to 30 more stores by the end of the year.

    Scoop is one of Walmart’s exclusive fashion brands. It has also struck deals with national brands like BCBG Paris.
    Melissa Repko | CNBC

    SPRINGDALE, Arkansas — Dressed-up mannequins. Eye-catching displays of sleek furniture and colorful swimsuits. And store signs that promote exclusive brands and nationally recognized ones.
    Walmart’s redesigned SuperCenter, located just 16 miles from its Northwest Arkansas headquarters, reflects the retailer’s ambitions to get more customers to turn to its stores and website to fill their closets and living rooms, along with their fridges.

    It is the retailer’s new model, and it will soon spread across the country. Walmart plans to open 30 more redesigned stores by late January and and hundreds more in the following fiscal year, Chief Merchandising Officer Charles Redfield said.
    He said the locations will vary slightly and will have different elements of the pilot store. They’ll be used to test and learn before Walmart rolls out the look more widely, he said.
    Walmart is the nation’s largest grocery by revenue, but it wants to drive more sales of higher-margin items such as apparel. Over the past five years, the retailer has launched new brands and struck partnerships with companies like Reebok, Gap and Justice to expand its offerings in apparel, home and other discretionary categories. Those brands have often come with a higher price point and a focus on style. Many are expanding to more of Walmart’s big-box stores.
    The retailer’s strategy has taken on more urgency, after Walmart’s first quarter earnings disappointed Wall Street last month and cut profit expectations. Walmart’s mix of merchandise in the period contributed to its earnings miss. As customers spent more on groceries and gas because of inflation, some decided to not buy other, more-profitable items like clothing and TVs — the very purchases that tend to lift profits.

    A changing consumer

    A pullback on discretionary spending is hitting retailers in general, especially as the companies lap a year-ago period when shoppers had extra dollars from stimulus checks. For Walmart, sales of general merchandise in the U.S. slipped in the first quarter, drawing fewer dollars than the year-ago period even as overall U.S. net sales rose to $96.9 billion, according to Walmart’s filings.

    To compound troubles, retailers — including Target, Kohl’s and American Eagle Outfitters — have racked up excess inventory, as consumers snub some popular pandemic items, watch the budget and decide to spend on travel or dining out instead of goods.
    Walmart reported that it had excess merchandise, too, with inventory levels up about 33% versus a year earlier. U.S. CEO, John Furner, said last week at an investor day that it will take “a couple of quarters” to get back to where the retailer wants to be. He estimated that about 20% of that overage is merchandise that the company would like to “just wish away.” The company declined to comment further on its strategy to sell through its merchandise, after Target shared its aggressive inventory plans.
    About 32% of Walmart’s U.S. net sales have come from general merchandise in recent years, according to company filings. That dropped to 28% in the most recent quarter. At Target, 54% of sales come from general merchandise, according to its most recent annual report.
    There’s a big opportunity for Walmart if it can use the frequency of grocery shopping at stores and popularity of online options like curbside pickup to lift general merchandise sales, said Robby Ohmes, a retail analyst for Bank of America.
    Plus, he said, creeping prices may encourage a new or infrequent Walmart shopper to give the discounter a shot.
    “Everybody is sort of managing inflation,” Ohmes said. “There are going to be groups of people who find themselves at Walmart who normally wouldn’t — so they may get a better flow of customers as people become more value-conscious.”

    Walmart is expanding the price points in its beauty department. It recently added a “Beauty finds” display with makeup, skincare, hair and other items for $3, $5 or $9 each. It also sells prestige brands through a new deal with British beauty retailer SpaceNK.
    Melissa Repko | CNBC

    The lure of lower prices

    On its website and in a growing number of its stores, Walmart has expanded its styles and price points. Along with cheap basics, it sells sundresses and tops from exclusive brands, Scoop and Free Assembly, which customers could pack for vacation or wear to a party. It carries jeans a customer could wear out to dinner from Sofia Jeans, an exclusive brand developed with actress Sofia Vergara.
    And in home, Walmart is selling more aspirational styles, too — including a collection developed with Clea Shearer and Joanna Teplin, the stars behind Netflix’s “The Home Edit.”

    In Walmart’s redesigned store in Arkansas, a display shows Thyme & True, one of the retailer’s exclusive home brands. Shoppers can scan a QR code to learn more about the items or order them online.

    CEO Doug McMillon said Walmart’s range will help it better weather a period of inflation.
    At an investor day earlier this month, he and other Walmart executives stressed that the retailer will continue to offer entry-level price points for customers who live on a tight budget. It will have those low prices not only on key food items like rice, cans of tuna and macaroni and cheese, but also on general merchandise like T-shirts and tennis balls.
    But it can also draw in customers who have more money to spend, McMillon said.
    “As you move up the income scale, how many of those customers can you attract in the areas you might not have been doing business with them as frequently?” he said. “Can we move some volume into apparel and home and maybe even some of the consumable categories as people become even more value-conscious?”
    Walmart attracted consumers for basics and groceries, but was losing them when they shopped for other items, Redfield said.
    “They were having to go somewhere else to get what they want from a style and quality standpoint, so we said, ‘We’ve got to fix that,'” he said in an interview.

    Walmart has launched exclusive apparel brands, including active and swimwear line Love & Sports, to nudge customers to buy more general merchandise. Those brands are front and center at a new store in Springdale, Ark., which is near Walmart’s headquarters.
    Melissa Repko | CNBC

    Silk scrunchies, craft beer and sundresses

    Inside of the redesigned store in Northwest Arkansas, the clothing department has fewer racks and wider aisles to encourage browsing. It has dedicated areas that resemble mini shops for national brands, such as Reebok and kids clothing brand Justice. And it puts Walmart’s own fashion and home brands front and center with mannequins and displays that suggest how to put together an outfit or a room.
    Walmart gives direct-to-consumer brands that resonate with younger, social media-savvy customers more square footage in the stores, too, including shaving company Billie and dog food company Jinx.
    One of the other big changes? Price signs are smaller near the national apparel brands and Walmart’s elevated clothing brands — a big break from the retailer’s tendency to make the numbers big and bold.
    “We’re selling apparel in a grocery store, however that doesn’t mean we have to sell apparel like it’s grocery,” said Alvis Washington, Walmart’s vice president of marketing, store design, innovation and experience. “Apparel is a discretionary category. It’s emotional. You want them to fall in love with the fashion.”
    “This is where you actually want them to look, feel, touch the item and then validate the choice by looking at the price point on it,” Washington said. “We’re letting the product be hero and setting the tone.”
    Even in the grocery department, the store has a different look. The wine aisle is larger and includes expensive red wines and top-shelf champagnes. The craft beer section is also prominent. Both changes are geared toward a more trendy millennial customer, Redfield said.
    “We’re going to sell a lot of underwear and socks,” he said. “We do sell a lot of underwear and socks. We’re going to continue to sell that, but we’re not going to force our customer to go somewhere else when they want something special.”

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    Why Marriott, Hilton and Hyatt say hotel prices are only going up

    EVOLVE LIVESTREAM 2022
    Evolve Events

    Hit hard by the Covid-19 pandemic, the hotel industry has bounced back alongside the larger travel industry thanks to pent up demand, delayed trips and increased consumer savings.
    That hot market has led to rising room prices, something major hotel chain executives say will not subside soon.
    A recent Biden administration decision to repeal Covid-19 testing requirements for inbound international air travelers should only further boost demand.

    Some CNBC survey respondents think that a post-pandemic comeback for the service sector will ensure that the global economy continues to grow.
    Spencer Platt | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Despite high inflation, a softening economy, and fears of a recession, the hotel industry is not seeing any slowdown.
    It’s the exact opposite, with Hilton CEO Chris Nassetta predicting that the hotel chain will “have the biggest summer we’ve ever seen in our 103-year history this summer.”

    Few industries were hit as hard as travel by the Covid-19 pandemic, which curbed nearly all leisure and business travel plans. But as vaccination rates and loosened restrictions have spread across the country, travelers have returned. In May, global leisure and business flights topped 2019 levels for the first time since the pandemic started.
    But while that has come with a cost, driven by both the high level of demand from fellow travelers as well as other inflationary pressures, hotel operators still believe there is room to further increase prices.
    “The price has gone up for everything, so we’re not different than when you go to a gas pump or the grocery store or any other aspect of life; it’s discretionary,” Nassetta said on CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street” on Monday. 
    Nassetta said that two things were keeping demand high: the leisure consumer’s more than $2.5 trillion in incremental savings, and strong corporate balance sheets paired with “very good” profitability.
    “They’ve gone two years both from a leisure point of view and a business point of view with meetings and events without being able to do the things that they need to do,” he said. “They have the availability of discretionary income in both segments to do it and they have the need, and that is being matched with demand.”

    Marriott CEO Tony Capuano said that over Memorial Day weekend the company’s revenue per available room, which measures hotel performance, was up about 25% in 2022 compared to 2019. In Marriott’s luxury portfolio, which includes hotels like JW Marriott, Ritz-Carlton, and St. Regis, those hotels saw nearly a 30% increase in rates in the first quarter of 2022 compared to 2019.
    “I think as long as we’re delivering on service, which can be challenged in markets where labor is difficult, we continue to see really remarkable pricing,” Capuano said on “Closing Bell” on Monday. He did note that while there was “exceedingly strong rate potential” in places like leisure destinations and coastal destinations, that the “middle of the country, some of the urban markets have not come back as quickly.” 
    Another possible boost to demand could come as the Biden administration has now dropped Covid-19 testing requirements for air travelers from abroad.
    While other countries like the United Kingdom and Greece have long lifted their requirements, the U.S. still required travelers to present proof of a negative Covid-19 test a day before boarding a U.S.-bound flight, regardless of their vaccination status. It was one of the last countries still enforcing such a rule.
    Executives in the travel industry had argued that the restriction had been hurting international travel demand. “Requiring pre-departure testing creates uncertainty for travelers, one more hurdle that may lead them to choose a destination with less friction,” Capuano said in a statement to CNBC’s Seema Mody.
    “The Biden administration is to be commended for this action, which will welcome back visitors from around the world and accelerate the recovery of the U.S. travel industry,” Roger Dow, president of the U.S. Travel Association said in a statement. “International inbound travel is vitally important to businesses and workers across the country who have struggled to regain losses from this valuable sector.”
    Hyatt president and CEO Mark Hoplamazian said on “Squawk on the Street” on Tuesday that foreign travelers to the U.S. spend a lot more than domestic travelers, and that the testing requirements were “creating friction.”
    But even without travelers that may have put their trips on hold given the requirement, demand remains high. “Pretty much across the board, all the business segments and leisure are all firing on all cylinders,” Hoplamazian said.
    Keith Barr, the CEO of IHG Hotels & Resorts which owns brands like the InterContinental and Holiday Inn, said that he expects demand to continue to grow for the rest of the year as travel is more normalized post-pandemic.
    That will likely come with further price increases as inflation and other costs are further factored in.
    “The demand is so strong … we’re having the ability to price, but in fact, we haven’t even been keeping pace with inflation,” Barr said on “Closing Bell” on Tuesday. “There’s still some pricing power in this business moving forward, and demand will continue to come through the summer.”
    Those prices will likely only grow as there will be “very little incremental new capacity coming into the industry,” Nassetta said.”The laws of supply and demand, laws of economics, are alive and well,” he said. More

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    I talked to 70 parents who raised highly successful kids—here are the 4 hard parenting rules that make them different

    What is a parent’s role in raising smart, confident and successful children? What matters? What doesn’t? Though I am the mother of two happy and driven entrepreneurial sons, these are questions I never thought to ask.
    Looking back, I would have loved to have read stories about how entrepreneurs had grown up — not just Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, but people who we could actually identify with.

    Entrepreneurs, in my view, are not just founders of for-profit businesses. They are resilient, hard-working people who start something, who come up with ideas and bring them to life, who turn passion into projects. 
    As I researched and wrote my book, “Raising an Entrepreneur,” I interviewed 70 parents who raised highly successful adults. Here are their four hard parenting rules that differentiates them from most others:

    1. Give kids extreme independence

    Susan and Anne Wojcicki are two incredibly accomplished sisters. Susan, Google’s first marketing manager, became its CEO in 2014. Anne co-founded 23andMe, a genomics and biotech company.
    When I talked with their mom Esther, it was clear that her girls grew up knowing she trusted them to behave responsibly.
    The girls were given the freedom that some parents, especially today, would balk at. “I gave my children the opportunity to be very independent early on,” Esther told me. “I had three children in four years, and no help, so I put them to work out of necessity.”

    Her kids loved that sense of freedom. “I think it gave them a lot of confidence,” she said. “My mother lived in L.A., and I would put my five-year-old daughter on a plane [alone] — with a name tag around her neck — to visit her grandmother in L.A.”
    Even if you’re afraid to give your kids the kind of freedom Esther gave her daughters, she said “you can still give them things to do around the house to contribute to the family, like chores to make them responsible and to develop their confidence.”

    2. Actively nurture compassion

    Children whose parents show them how it feels to help others who are struggling, whether across the world or across the kitchen table, get a head start in developing a compassionate outlook.
    Scott Harrison is the founder of charity: water, a non-profit that restores and maintains wells to give people sustainable access to clean water. In only 15 years, charity: water has funded 60,000 projects in 29 developing countries, brought clean water to 12 million people, and raised almost half a billion dollars for the cause.
    Before Scott’s mom Joan passed away, she told me that she credits his success to the parenting foundation she set early on, built on spiritual community, disciplined and hard work.
    When he was in elementary and middle school, she would help him sort through his clothes, books and toys, and they would give some away to kids who could use them.
    Early awareness of others people’s problems can also encourage kids to start asking entrepreneurial questions: “Do things really have to be this way?” “How can I make them better?”

    3. Welcome failure early and often

    Nia Batts co-founded Detroit Blows, an inclusive, non-toxic hair and beauty service. I met Nia about 10 years ago when she worked at Viacom.
    When I asked her how she gathered the courage to leave her secure job and start something from scratch, she said it was because she learned the merits of failing early and often when she was young.
    “My mom was a trial attorney. Most of the time she won, sometimes she lost,” Nia said. “I remember my dad often asking me, ‘What did you fail at today?’ He asked me when I was young and he was driving me to or from school; he asked me when I was in college; and he asked me more frequently when I started to work.”
    I’ve seen so many parents try to save their kids from failing. But Nia’s parents wanted to make sure they created an environment where it was okay to fail. “I think they were excited to watch the process unfold as I grew up and learned that lesson. My father taught me that in your wounds lie your gifts, and in your failures lie your opportunities,” she said. 

    4. Let go of control and lead by following

    Kids need time to discover their paths. Many experience periods when it’s unclear where they’re going. In this situation, some parents may see their kids as being lost. But parents of kids who grow up to become entrepreneurs are more likely to see their kids as exploring.
    Here’s the tough part for a lot of parents: If you want to raise an entrepreneur, you need to lead by following, regardless of where your child wants to go.
    Kenneth Ginsburg, author of “Building Resilience in Children and Teens,” offers this advice: “Getting out of the way is a challenge. We want to help, fix and guide kids. But we have to remind ourselves that when we let them figure things out for themselves, we communicate this: ‘I think you are competent and wise.'”
    In other words, see what your kids want, what their passion is, what they are good at, and what makes them happy. Allow their gift to reveal itself. Then support it. Tell them how proud you are of them for succeeding in their chosen path. And then tell them again and again, until you’re sure they believe it. 
    They may not end up with a career you had in mind, but if they’re able to pursue their passion, they’ll be happy and fulfilled. And isn’t that what all parents want for their kids?
    Margot Machol Bisnow is a writer, mom and parenting expert. She spent 20 years in government, including as an FTC Commissioner and Chief of Staff of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers, and is the author of “Raising an Entrepreneur: How to Help Your Children Achieve Their Dream.” Follow her on Instagram @margotbisnow.
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