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    Jim Cramer says to consider these five high-yielding stocks to upgrade your portfolio

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday gave investors a list of five “accidentally high yielders” that he believes will provide investors refuge in the currently unpredictable market.
    “Stick with the right groups and avoid the wrong ones — wrong ones being unprofitable tech companies or any other richly valued momentum stocks that have long since lost their momentum,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday gave investors a list of five “accidentally high yielders” that he believes will provide investors refuge in the currently unpredictable market.
    “At the depths of the [2008] financial crisis, you got an amazing opportunity to buy the accidentally high yielders …  real companies with stable dividends that had seen their stocks come down so far that their dividends were sporting ridiculously high yields versus the old days. This moment’s becoming similar,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “It’s worth sticking with the stock market as long as you stick with the right groups and avoid the wrong ones — wrong ones being unprofitable tech companies or any other richly valued momentum stocks that have long since lost their momentum,” he added.
    The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.08% on Monday while the S&P 500 dropped 0.39%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 1.2%.
    Cramer previously came up with a list of stocks with high yields in March, highlighting ten names he believed were investable.
    “Of these, [Simon Property Group is] the only one I still feel confident about. … We came in too early, and we were too confident about retail. I’m not making that mistake again,” he said. “At the same time, even a high dividend isn’t enough to support a stock in a bad sector.”
    “That’s why we need to high-grade our accidental high-yielder portfolio,” he added.

    To come up with his list of accidental-high yielders, Cramer started out by looking for names in the S&P 500 to stick with the “largest of the large caps.” He pinpointed stocks that fit the following criteria:

    Does not have a yield below 3.5%
    Are down 25% or more from their highs

    Left with 21 names that fit his conditions — which included Simon Property Group and Morgan Stanley, two names that were on his last list of high-yielders — Cramer further narrowed the list to five stocks.
    Here is the list he came up with:

    Huntington Bancshares
    Truist 
    Best Buy
    Whirlpool
    Digital Realty

    Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Morgan Stanley.
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    Disclaimer

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    How Carvana went from a Wall Street top pick to trading with meme stocks

    Carvana has gone from Wall Street’s preferred used car retailer to trading like a meme stock amid cost-cutting measures and layoffs.
    Shares of the company are down nearly 90% since November, sinking to less than $40 a share from more than $300.
    The rapid fall from grace for the Arizona-based used car retailer is a mix of changing market condition as well as self-inflicted wounds.

    Ernie Garcia, CEO, Carvana
    Scott Mlyn | CNBC

    Carvana CEO Ernie Garcia III regularly tells Wall Street that “the march continues” in the company’s mission to become the largest and most profitable used car retailer in the world.
    Its stock price has marched this year as well, just in the wrong direction for investors. Within six months, Carvana has gone from Wall Street’s preferred used car retailer poised to capitalize on a robust market to trading like a volatile meme stock amid cost-cutting measures and layoffs.

    The fall from grace for the Arizona-based used car retailer, including a nearly 90% decline in its stock price since November, resulted from a mix of changing market conditions as well as self-inflicted wounds. Many traditional dealers continue to report record or near-record results, shining further light on Carvana’s problems.
    Carvana grew exponentially during the coronavirus pandemic, as shoppers shifted to online purchasing rather than visiting a dealership, with the promise of hassle-free selling and purchasing of used vehicles at a customer’s home. But analysts are concerned about the company’s liquidity, increasing debt and growth, which this year is expected to be its slowest since becoming a public company in 2017.

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    “By the company’s own admission, it had accelerated growth at precisely the wrong time into a consumer slowdown leaving a major mismatch between capacity and demand, creating a liquidity crunch,” Morgan Stanley’s Adam Jonas said in an investor note earlier this month, downgrading the company and slashing its price target to $105 a share from $360.
    The slowdown is due to high vehicle prices, rising interest rates and recessionary fears, among other factors. Carvana purchased a record number of vehicles last year amid sky-high prices and rising inflation, in preparation for unprecedented demand that has since slowed.
    Analysts say Carvana is far from out, but it may have peaked. There are concerns regarding the used vehicle market going forward as well as its near-term risks outweighing the potential rewards.

    “Deteriorating capital market conditions and worsening trends in the used vehicle industry have eroded our conviction in the path for Carvana to secure the necessary capital to realize sufficient scale and self-funding status,” Stifel’s Scott W. Devitt said last week in an investor note.
    Carvana stock is rated “hold” with a price target of $89.30 a share, according to analyst estimates compiled by FactSet.

    ‘We weren’t prepared’

    Carvana’s stock was at more than $300 a share ahead of the company reporting its third-quarter results on Nov. 4, when it missed Wall Street’s earnings expectations and internal operational problems were disclosed.
    Garcia, who also serves as chair, told investors that the company couldn’t meet customer demand, causing it to not offer its entire fleet of vehicles on its website for consumers to purchase. He said it was a result of the company purchasing vehicles at a higher rate than it could process.
    “We weren’t prepared for it,” said Garcia, who co-founded the company in 2012 and has grown it into a nearly $13 billion business.

    To assist future throughput of purchasing vehicles and times to recondition them, Carvana on Feb. 24 announced a definitive agreement to purchase the U.S. operations of Adesa – the second-largest provider of wholesale vehicle auctions in the country – from KAR Global for $2.2 billion.
    Garcia, at the time, said the deal “solidifies” Carvana’s plan to become “the largest and most profitable automotive retailer.” Ending his prepared remarks with investors for its fourth-quarter earnings that same day with, “the march continues.”
    The deal was hailed by investors, who sent the stock up 34% over the next two days to more than $152 a share. It followed a steady decline due to recessionary fears and other macroeconomic trends impacting the used car market.

    Overbuilt costly inventory

    The gains from the deal were short-lived due to the macroeconomic environment and the company significantly missing Wall Street’s expectations for the first quarter, initiating a sell-off of the company’s stock and a host of downgrades by analysts.
    The company was criticized for spending too much on marketing, which included a lackluster 30-second Super Bowl ad, and not preparing for a potential slowdown or downturn in sales. Carvana argues it overprepared for the first quarter, after being underprepared for the demand last year.
    “We built for more than showed up,” Garcia said during an earnings call April 20.

    Source: NYSE

    The results tanked shares during the following week. Garcia described the problems as “transitory” and something the company will learn from. He admitted that Carvana may have been prioritizing growth over profits, as the company pushed back plans to achieve positive earnings before interest and taxes by “a few quarters.”
    The stock was hit again in late April, when the online used-car dealer struggled to sell bonds and was forced to turn to Apollo Global Management for $1.6 billion to salvage the agreement to finance the Adesa deal.
    Analysts view the deal to finance the purchase of Adesa as “unfavorable,” at a rate of 10.25%. Its existing bonds were already yielding upwards of 9%. Bloomberg News reported Apollo saved the deal after investors were demanding a yield of around 11% on a proposed $2.275 billion junk bond and around 14% on a $1 billion preferred piece.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    The unfavorable terms will “inevitably delay the path” to positive free cash flow for the company until 2024, said Wells Fargo analyst Zachary Fadem. In a note to investors on May 3, he downgraded the stock and cut its price target from $150 to $65 a share.
    RBC Capital Markets’ Joseph Spak voiced similar concerns about the deal, saying the integration “could be messy” during the next two-plus years. He also downgraded the stock and cut its price target.
    “While the strategic rationale for Adesa makes sense, in our view, retrofitting and staffing up 56 facilities over the next couple years is likely to face a prolonged period of operating inefficiencies with as much as 18-24 months of ongoing bottom-line risk upcoming,” he said in an investor note early last month.

    Meme status

    Carvana shares last week hit a two-year low before surging as much as 51% the same day along with “meme stocks” such as GameStop and AMC.
    Meme stocks refer to a select few stocks that gain sudden popularity on the internet and lead to sky-high prices and unusually high trading volume.
    For example, trading volume for Carvana on Thursday was over 41.7 million, compared with its 30-day average volume of about 9 million. Trading of Carvana shares on Thursday was halted at least four times.  
    Nearly 29% of Carvana shares available for trading are sold short, according to FactSet, among the highest ratios on U.S. markets.

    Carvana is attempting to get back into Wall Street’s good graces. In an investor presentation released late-Friday, the company defended the Adesa deal and updated its growth and cost-cutting plans, including lowering its vehicle acquisition costs.
    The company said it’s refocusing its three key priorities: growing retail units and revenue, increasing total gross profit per unit and demonstrating operating leverage.
    “We have made significant progress on the first two objectives,” the company said. However, it said it needed to do more, specifically regarding profitability, free cash flow, and selling, general and administrative costs.
    The company, in the presentation, reconfirmed reports last week that it cut 2,500 employees, or about 12% of its total workforce, and that the Carvana executive team would forego salaries for the remainder of the year to contribute to severance pay for terminated employees.

    Rivals’ record profits

    Carvana’s recent troubles come as the country’s largest public dealer groups continue to report record or near-record profits amid low inventories and high prices.
    The country’s largest auto retailer, AutoNation, last month reported record first-quarter earnings per share of $5.78. The company has aggressively moved into used vehicles amid a decline in new vehicle availability during the coronavirus pandemic. Revenue for its used-car business was up 47% for the quarter, pushing its overall revenue to nearly $6.8 billion.
    Lithia Motors, which is in the midst of an aggressive growth plan to become the country’s largest vehicle retailer, said its profit more than doubled during the first quarter from a year earlier to $342.2 million. Average gross profit per unit for used vehicles — a stat closely watched by investors — rose 32%, to $3,037. That compares with Carvana at $2,833.
    “Carvana seems to have gotten a lot of that tech stock halo that Tesla’s also benefited from for a long time,” said Morningstar analyst David Whiston, who covers major publicly traded dealership groups but not Carvana. “I think maybe that was a tad generous by the market.”
    – CNBC’s Michael Bloom and Hannah Miao contributed to this report.

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    Cramer's lightning round: I want to buy more Marvell Technology

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    It’s that time again! “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer rings the lightning round bell, which means he’s giving his answers to callers’ stock questions at rapid speed.

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    Marvell Technology Inc: “They are the best when it comes to 5G, the best in high-performance computing. But remember, those things have fallen out of favor right now. … I’d like to buy more [for the Charitable Trust.] That’s the way to go.”

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    Stem Inc: “It got very, very high. We moved away from companies that don’t make money. … We’re not recommending stocks that don’t [make] money.”

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    AbCellera Biologics Inc: “They do make money, and I will give them that, although it’s not exciting when you’ve got so many great companies like Pfizer that make a lot of money and are inexpensive.”

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    Capri Holdings Ltd: “I think it’s okay, but apparel is very out of favor with this market.”
    Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Marvell Technology.

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    ‘You can’t build on quicksand’ — Jim Cramer warns investors not to invest based on false hope

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer told investors on Monday that they shouldn’t let short-term rallies trick them into making optimistic trading decisions.
    “So far, nothing’s gone right, so stop pretending otherwise and just get used to” the turbulent market environment, the “Mad Money” host said.
    Soaring inflation, concerns about the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes and fears of a recession are some of the economic factors currently roiling the market.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer told investors on Monday that they shouldn’t let short-term rallies trick them into making optimistic trading decisions.
    “A rally based solely on the fact that everything’s going wrong is a rally that cannot and will not stand. It has no staying power, unless something actually goes right,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “So far, nothing’s gone right, so stop pretending otherwise and just get used to” the turbulent market environment, he added. “Because that’s exactly what the market has in mind for you.”
    Cramer’s comments come after the Dow Jones Industrial Average inched up 0.08% on Monday. The S&P dropped 0.39% while the Nasdaq Composite decreased 1.2%, closing a volatile day of trading.
    Soaring inflation, concerns about the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes and fears of a recession are some of the economic factors currently roiling the market. Cramer also pointed to JetBlue’s hostile takeover bid of Spirit Airlines and the cryptocurrency market’s downturn as examples of headwinds.
    “Of course, the market actually goes down thanks to all those negatives. But then, like midday, because of all the hope out there, some of the averages start going higher and then that hope gets the hope machine going again,” Cramer said.
    However, investors who trade on false hope will only make the market downturn worse, he cautioned.

    “I can tell you right now, this kind of wrong-headed thinking has characterized the whole move down: ‘Something to build on.’ … You can’t build on quicksand,” he said.

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    Rivian's shares sink after a report says legal battle with a supplier could delay Amazon vans

    Rivian is enmeshed in a lawsuit against a supplier of seats for delivery vans ordered by Amazon, The Wall Street Journal reported.
    The dispute could hinder Rivian’s ability to deliver the vans as promised.
    Rivian’s shares fell almost 7% Monday.

    Production of electric Amazon delivery vans on April 11, 2022 at Rivian’s plant in Normal, Ill.
    Michael Wayland / CNBC

    Shares of Rivian Automotive sank Monday after a report by The Wall Street Journal that said the upstart electric-vehicle maker is suing a key supplier in a legal battle that could delay vans ordered by Amazon.
    Amazon, a major investor in Rivian, placed an order for 100,000 electric delivery vans last year.

    Rivian’s lawsuit, according to the report, accuses Ohio-based Commercial Vehicle Group of violating its contract with Rivian to supply seats for the vans by sharply raising its prices after the contract was signed. It said in court filings that the dispute could impact its ability to deliver the vans as promised, the Journal reported.
    Commercial Vehicle Group has denied the allegations, according to the report, arguing that it wasn’t obliged to deliver the seats at the lower price and that it raised its price after Rivian submitted changes to the design of the seats.

    A Rivian spokesperson told CNBC that Commercial Vehicle Group has continued to supply seats to Rivian and that the two companies are discussing a resolution to the dispute. Representatives for Commercial Vehicle Group did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
    Rivian’s shares ended Monday’s session at $24.86, down 6.9%.
    Read the full report at The Wall Street Journal.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: United Airlines, Take-Two Interactive & more

    A United Airlines passenger plane is loaded at the capital’s BER airport before its first flight from BER to New York’s Newark Airport. On flights to the U.S. East Coast, Berliners and Brandenburgers no longer necessarily have to change planes. From Monday, United Airlines will connect Schönefeld directly with New York’s Newark Airport on a daily basis. It is the first long-haul connection from BER to the USA.
    Patrick Pleul | Picture Alliance | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in after-hours trading:
    United Airlines — Shares of the airline company added more than 3% in extended trading after the company issued an update on its second-quarter outlook. “[T]he demand environment has continued to improve, resulting in a higher unit revenue outlook for the second quarter 2022,” United said in a securities filing.

    Take-Two Interactive — Shares of the video game company advanced more than 2% despite missing bookings expectations during the fourth quarter. Take-Two reported net bookings of $846 million, compared with the $882 million analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting.
    Tencent Music Entertainment — Tencent shares gained about 1% following the company’s first-quarter earnings. Tencent posted revenue of $1.05 billion, while analysts surveyed by StreetAccount were expecting $1.03 billion.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Spirit Airlines, Eli Lilly, Signature Bank and more

    Spirit Airlines planes on the tarmac at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on February 07, 2022 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Monday.
    Spirit, JetBlue — Shares of JetBlue Airways dipped 6% on news that the company’s offering $30 a share to take over Spirit Airlines. The airline turned down a previous offer from JetBlue amid a planned merger with Frontier Airlines. Spirit’s shares soared 13.5% on the takeover news.

    Eli Lilly — The drugmaker’s shares rose 2.6% after the Food and Drug Administration approved the company’s tirzepatide treatment for type 2 diabetes for adults. The drug is expected to be available in the United States in the coming weeks.
    Signature Bank — Shares fell 7% after the bank gave a midquarter update. Signature reported total deposits are down $1.39 billion. The drop comes as the crypto market is experiencing steep losses. Signature is known for serving crypto institutions, and swings in crypto prices can be reflected in its crypto-related deposit and transaction volume growth.
    Carvana — Carvana shares gained 4.1% before pulling back after the online used car retailer forecast a quicker-than-expected timeline for profitability. The company also shared plans to cut costs.
    Twitter — Twitter shares were 8.2% lower Monday as speculation about whether Elon Musk would complete his takeover deal of the social media company continued. The Tesla CEO tweeted over the weekend that Twitter’s legal team said he violated a nondisclosure agreement.
    Nucor Corporation — Shares of the steel products manufacturer fell 3.3% after the company announced plans to acquire C.H.I. Overhead Doors, a manufacturer of overhead doors for residential and commercial markets in the U.S. and Canada. The transaction is valued at $3 billion and is expected to be completed in June.

    Rivian, Ford — Shares of Rivian fell 6.9% after Ford Motor disclosed in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing that it sold an additional 7 million shares of the electric vehicle maker. That follows Ford’s earlier sale of 8 million shares last week. Ford shares fell 3.3%.
    SoFi — Shares of the consumer financial services provider rose 2.4% after Piper Sandler upgraded them to overweight from neutral, saying they have the potential to rebound by about 50% on earnings momentum in the second half of this year and into 2023.
    Warby Parker — The eyewear company fell 5.3% after it reported an unexpected loss of 30 cents per share as compared with estimates of a 1 cent per share profit, according to Refinitiv, for its most recent quarter. It also posted weaker-than-expected revenue.
    Energy stocks — Energy names were the top gainers in the S&P 500 on Monday, as oil prices got a boost after the European Union moved closer to banning crude imports from Russia. Occidental Petroleum advanced 5.6%. APA Corp advanced more than 3%, along with Marathon, Devon Energy and Chevron.
     — CNBC’s Hannah Miao and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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    Auction of Judy Garland 'Wizard of Oz' dress in jeopardy as judge sets hearing on ownership lawsuit

    The planned auction of a long-lost dress worn by Judy Garland in “The Wizard of Oz” is in jeopardy after a federal judge ordered a hearing on a lawsuit over its ownership.
    That hearing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan was set for May 23, a day before Bonham’s auction house is currently scheduled to auction the dress on behalf of The Catholic University of America.
    Judge Paul Gardephe’s order scheduling the court session came after a lawyer for Wisconsin resident Barbara Hartke asked him to stop the dress’s sale until the lawsuit could be decided.

    A lobby card from the film ‘The Wizard Of Oz,’ shows a film still of a scene in which American actress Judy Garland (1922 – 1969) (as Dorothy) wipes tears from the eyes of actor Bert Lahr (1895 – 1967) (as the Cowardly Lion), while watched by Jack Haley (1898 – 1979) (as the Tin Man) (left), and Ray Bolger (1904 – 1987) (as the Scarecrow), 1939. The film was directed by Victor Fleming.
    Hulton Archive | Moviepix | Getty Images

    The planned auction of a long-lost dress worn by Judy Garland in “The Wizard of Oz” is in jeopardy after a federal judge on Monday ordered a hearing on why he should not block the sale pending the outcome of a lawsuit over its ownership.
    The hearing in U.S. District Court in Manhattan was set for May 23, a day before Bonham’s auction house is currently scheduled to auction the dress on behalf of The Catholic University of America.

    Judge Paul Gardephe’s order scheduling the court session came after a lawyer for Wisconsin resident Barbara Hartke asked him to stop the dress’s sale until the lawsuit could be decided.
    Hartke, 81, claims in her suit that the dress is the legal property of the estate of her late uncle, the Rev. Gilbert Hartke, who founded Catholic University’s drama school.
    Barbara Hartke, as an heir, could be one of the people to inherit the dress if she wins the lawsuit.

    A blue and white checked gingham dress, worn by Judy Garland in the “Wizard of Oz,” hangs on display, Monday, April 25, 2022, at Bonhams in New York.
    Katie Vasquez | AP

    But the Washington, D.C., university has said it is the “rightful owner” of the dress that was given to Hartke in 1973 by Academy Award-winning actress Mercedes McCambridge.
    The university said that Gilbert Harkte’s vow of poverty as a Roman Catholic priest barred him from accepting gifts as his personal property.

    “Fr. Hartke’s estate does not have a property interest in it,” the school said in a May 6 statement.
    The blue-and-white gingham dress is one of just two of what are believed to have been six dresses made for Garland to wearing the classic “Oz” film. Bonham’s has estimated the dress could sell for anywhere between $800,000 and $1.2 million.
    The other dress was auctioned in 2015 by Bonham’s for more than $1.5 million.
    Gilbert Hartke’s possession of the dress was well known at Catholic University after McCambridge gave it to him in appreciation for his assistance to her as she battled alcoholism.
    But the dress was missing for decades until it was found last June in a trash bag above the faculty mail slots during a renovation of the school’s Hartke Theater.
    Amin Al-Sarraf, a lawyer for Catholic University, in a statement to CNBC, said he and other lawyers for the school later this week will submit legal briefs defending the auction.
    Al-Sarraf noted that the temporary restraining order issued Monday by Gardephe barring the auction for “is only effective until the hearing, so it does not prevent the auction from going forward unless the Court grants the injunction request on the 23rd..
    “We look forward to the opportunity to present the overwhelming evidence supporting Catholic University’s ownership of the dress to the Court next week,” he said.
    Barbara Hartke’s lawyer and Bonham’s did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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