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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Palantir, Rivian, Uber and more

    Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:
    Palantir Technologies (PLTR) – The data analytics software company’s shares plunged 15.1% in premarket trading after posting a mixed quarter. Palantir reported profit of 2 cents per share, compared to a 4 cents a share consensus estimate. Revenue was higher than expected, however, despite slowing growth in its government business. Palantir also issued a softer-than-expected current-quarter revenue forecast.

    Rivian (RIVN) – Ford Motor (F) is selling 8 million of its 102 million share stake in the electric vehicle maker, according to sources who spoke to CNBC’s David Faber. The move comes as the insider lockup period for selling the stock expires. Rivian shares plummeted 15.6% in the premarket.
    Uber Technologies (UBER) – Uber plans to slash spending on marketing and incentives and be deliberate about adding workers, according to a staff email obtained by CNBC. CEO Dara Khosrowshahi said the ride-hailing and food delivery company said Uber needs to become a leaner business to address a “seismic shift” in investor sentiment. Uber fell 3% in the premarket.
    Coty (COTY) – Coty reported quarterly earnings of 3 cents per share, beating the penny a share consensus estimate. Revenue topped forecasts as well and the cosmetics company raised its full-year outlook on strong demand for its products. The stock rose 1.7% in the premarket.
    Energizer (ENR) – The battery maker beat estimates by 9 cents a share, with quarterly profit of 47 cents per share. Revenue topped Street forecasts as Energizer raised prices. Its shares gained 2.3% in the premarket.
    Elanco Animal Health (ELAN) – Elanco fell 4.3% in premarket action after the animal health products company lowered its full-year outlook, reflecting the impact of a stronger U.S. dollar. Elanco reported slightly better-than-expected profit and revenue for its most recent quarter.

    Tyson Foods (TSN) – The stock rose 1% in the premarket after the beef and poultry producer beat profit and revenue estimates for its latest quarter. Tyson earned $2.29 per share, compared to a $1.91 a share consensus estimate.
    BioNTech (BNTX) – BioNTech trounced Wall Street estimates for profit and revenue in its latest quarter, and also backed its prior outlook for 2022 including projections for Covid-19 vaccine sales.
    Twitter (TWTR) – Elon Musk detailed his financial goals for Twitter in an investor presentation obtained by the New York Times. Among those goals: quintuple revenue by 2028, cut Twitter’s reliance on advertising and reach 931 million users by 2028 compared to 217 million at the end of 2021. Twitter fell 1.3% in premarket trading.
    Shell (SHEL) – Third Point’s Daniel Loeb told investors he has added to his stake in energy giant Shell, according to a letter seen by Reuters. Loeb said in the letter that he had held “constructive” talks with management, the board and shareholders about his call for the company to split itself up. Shell shares fell 2.6% in premarket action.
    Southwest Gas (SWX) – Southwest Gas reached a settlement with investor Carl Icahn that will see the utility company replace its CEO and give Icahn as many as four board seats. Southwest Gas rose 1% in the premarket.

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    UK economy ‘one of the most vulnerable’ in the world right now due to mortgage trends, strategist says

    The Bank of England raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Thursday, taking its base interest rate up to 1%.
    That’s the highest interest rates have been since 2009 and was the BoE’s fourth hike in a row.

    George Clerk | E+ | Getty Images

    There’s an economic idiosyncrasy in the U.K. that makes it “one of the most vulnerable countries in the world right now,” according to an investment strategist.
    Mike Harris, the founder of Cribstone Strategic Macro, argues that a major problem for Britain is that its mortgage market is “heavily short-term.” While in the U.S. and in other parts of Europe citizens like long-tenure mortgages, many Brits opt for short-term loans of less than five years. Tracker mortgages are also popular which fluctuate with the Bank of England’s base rate.

    Harris told CNBC Friday that this was an issue as rate rises would immediately trigger losses to household incomes, while it might not actually deal with the issue of inflation. He explained that the U.K. was a country that “imports inflation,” so the effect of interest rate hikes by the Bank of England wasn’t simply a rebalancing of supply and demand that would slowly rein in consumer price growth.
    “Here we’re actually not really dealing with a pure situation where we’re trying to slow the economy, we are ultimately trying to rebalance expectations, and the U.K. is a country that imports inflation … So we’re not effectively in a position where we’re free effectively to just focus on supply and demand,” he said.
    He added: “We get stuck in a situation where global inflation is driving our inflation at this stage, we have to hit the consumer and instead of just reducing the propensity to spend in the future, we’re actually taking further money out of household income, which doesn’t happen in the U.S.”
    The Bank of England raised interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Thursday, taking its base interest rate up to 1%. That’s the highest interest rates have been since 2009 and was the BOE’s fourth hike in a row. The central bank also forecast that inflation would hit 10% this year, with soaring food and energy prices exacerbated by Russia’s unprovoked attack on Ukraine.

    Harris said he had twice requested data from the Bank of England about how much lending in the country was fixed on a two-year term and how much was set for five years, but said that he was told that the central bank did not keep that information.

    Harris argued that it was “absolutely insane for a central bank to not appreciate the economic impact associated with every rate hike.” He explained that consumer behavior would unlikely change a lot in five years but it would over two years.

    U.K. ‘facing the music’

    According to a data from trade association UK Finance, 1.5 million fixed-rate mortgage deals are due to expire in 2022, with another 1.5 million due to do so next year.
    In data released on Friday, investment platform Hargreaves Lansdown calculated that someone remortgaging at the end of a two-year fixed term deal, following the latest interest rate hike, could see their monthly payment go up by £61. If the base rate hit 1.5%, Hargreaves Lansdown worked out that could add £134 to their monthly mortgage payments. According to a survey of 2,000 U.K. adults, conducted on behalf of the platform in April, more than a third of people would struggle to afford those extra costs.
    Harris said that due to the current rate raises “we’re in an environment where we’re probably going to destroy more demand than we should have because the Bank of England and [former governor] Mark Carney didn’t do their job as they should have.”
    He said this dynamic was similar to that with the Federal Reserve in 2007, just before the onset of the Global Financial Crisis, as “they were allowing people to take mortgages when they knew they couldn’t repay them if house prices fell because they had to refinance so there’s an inherent unsustainability.”
    Harris added that the U.K. was now in a stage where it was “facing the music.”
    “I would say the U.K. is one of the most vulnerable countries in the world right now because of that dynamic and the fact that central bank governors didn’t do anything about it, they still might have some time,” he said, arguing that if policymakers had the means to extend this debt duration now, they should “actively” be doing so.
    A spokesperson for the Bank of England declined to comment but pointed CNBC to recent statements by Governor Andrew Bailey and Chief Economist Huw Pill.
    In the past, two-year fixed-term mortgage have been popular because they tend to be cheaper due to the shorter lending period. However, UK Finance said that the popularity of five-year agreements had been growing with 50% of fixed-term contracts in place in 2021 having this duration, while 45% were on two-year contracts.
    Bank of England data from last week showed that the “effective” interest rate — the actual interest rate paid — on new mortgages increased by 14 basis points to 1.73% in March — the biggest increase since at least 2016, according to Bloomberg.

    Cost of living squeeze

    Speaking on CNBC’s “Street Signs Europe” on Friday, Bank of England Chief Economist Huw Pill also pointed out that the spike in inflation was being driven by external shocks.
    He said it was “uncomfortable” for central bank members to be forecasting a 10% rate of inflation, which is well above the Bank’s long-term target of 2%.
    “Of course that discomfort has to be seen in the context of the real impact of the cost of living squeeze on households and firms here in the U.K., it’s more painful for them than the discomfort from a policymaker point of view,” Pill added.

    He explained that the Bank of England was trying to use monetary policy to try to ensure that those drivers of inflation don’t result in persistently higher prices, and create a stagflationary environment like that of the 1970s. But he said the central bank wanted to bring inflation back down to target without introducing “unnecessary volatility into the economy.”
    Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey told CNBC’s Geoff Cutmore Thursday that the U.K. was seeing an “unprecedentedly large shock to real income in this country coming from abroad,” in terms of trade issues.
    Bailey also defended the central bank’s more cautious approach to raising interest rates, with three dissenting members of its MPC having argued that the BOE should be more aggressive with its hikes.

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    Stock futures fall as Wall Street looks to stabilize after rollercoaster week

    Traders on the floor of the NYSE, May 6, 2022.
    Source: NYSE

    Stock futures fell on Sunday evening as traders looked for the market to find its footing after a dramatic week of trading.
    Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 218 points, or 0.7%. S&P 500 futures shed 0.8%, while those for the Nasdaq 100 lost 0.8%.

    Last week, the Nasdaq Composite lost 1.54%, while the S&P 500 and Dow dropped 0.21% and 0.24%, respectively. It was the sixth straight losing week for the Dow, and the fifth straight for the other two major indexes.
    While the cumulative moves for the week were not out of the ordinary, some of the day-to-day swings were eye-popping. The Dow had its best day since 2020 on Wednesday, but then erased all those gains and more on Thursday.
    The short-lived Wednesday rally came after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank was not considering a 75-basis-point rate hike at upcoming meetings. Stocks and bonds rallied following that comment but reversed course on Thursday.
    Billionaire hedge fund manager David Tepper told CNBC’s Scott Wapner on Friday that Powell’s statement was an “unforced error” that contributed to market volatility.
    First-quarter earnings season is slowing down, but there are several notable reports before the opening bell on Monday, including Palantir and vaccine-makers BioNTech and Novovax.

    In other corporate news, Ford was looking to sell 8 million shares in Rivian Automotive over the weekend, sources told CNBC’s David Faber.
    Investors will also be keeping an eye on the war in Ukraine. U.S. first lady Jill Biden made a surprise visit to the country on Sunday. The U.S. and Group of Seven countries announced that they would increase short-term financial support for Ukraine as the war with Russia nears the three-month mark.

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    Bitcoin drops below $35,000 over the weekend, extending Friday's losses

    Bitcoin continued to drop this weekend after a broader stock sell-off in the U.S. last week sent the cryptocurrency market into a frenzy and prompted bitcoin to plummet by roughly 10%.
    The world’s largest digital currency by market value declined to $34,661.02 on Sunday, according to Coin Metrics.
    The drop comes after the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than 1,000 points on Thursday and the Nasdaq fell 5%, losses that marked the worst single-day drops since 2020.

    Bitcoin is a volatile asset, and has been known to swing more than 10% higher or lower in a single day.
    Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Bitcoin continued to slide after a broader stock sell-off in the U.S. last week sent the cryptocurrency market into a frenzy and prompted bitcoin to plummet by roughly 10%.
    Bitcoin, the world’s largest digital currency by market value, was down more than 3% at $34,582.36 on Sunday, according to data from Coin Metrics. This year, Bitcoin has been trading in a narrow range as it attempts to reclaim its highs of late 2021.

    The cryptocurrency is now down 50% from its peak price of $67,802.30 in November 2021.
    The drop comes after the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average lost more than 1,000 points on Thursday and the Nasdaq plunged by 5%. Those losses marked the worst single-day drops since 2020. The Dow and Nasdaq fell again on Friday.
    Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday raised its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point as it responds to inflation pressures.
    The stock market rallied after Fed chair Jerome Powell said a larger rate hike of 75 basis points isn’t being considered. But by Thursday, investors had erased the Fed rally’s gains.
    The global cryptocurrency market cap was at $1.68 trillion on Sunday, according to data from CoinGecko.com, and cryptocurrency trading volume in the last day was at $119 billion.
    —CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting

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    'Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness' snares $185 million in domestic debut

    Disney’s latest flick “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” snared $185 million domestically over the weekend, the highest haul of any movie released in 2022.
    Internationally, the film generated $265 million in ticket sales, bringing its global total to $450 million.

    Still from “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.”

    The summer blockbuster season has started with a bang. Disney’s latest Marvel Cinematic Universe flick “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” snared $185 million domestically over its debut weekend, the highest haul of any movie released in 2022.
    “Nothing says movie theaters are back more than a Marvel movie posting a monumental debut,” said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst at Comscore. “This is great news for the industry, moviegoers and the slate of films set to open in the coming weeks.”

    It’s estimated around 13.5 million moviegoers saw “Doctor Strange” over the weekend, the second most attended film since the pandemic started, according to data from EntTelligence. “Spider-Man: No Way Home” is the current record-holder with 20.6 million patrons on its first weekend.
    Internationally, the film generated $265 million in ticket sales, bringing its global total to $450 million.
    While the first four months of the year saw a limited number of film releases, following “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” is a steady stream of new, hotly anticipated features.
    Next on the docket is “Top Gun: Maverick” followed in quick succession by “Jurassic World: Dominion,” “Lightyear,” “Minions: The Rise of Gru” and “Thor: Love and Thunder.” All of these films will debut between now and the end of July.
    “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness,” showcases “the global demand for big-screen events, premium formats, and shared experiences in a movie theater,” said Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at Boxoffice.com. “It’s exactly the kind of launch to this summer that the entire industry was hoping for, and it perfectly sets the pace for a strong slate of films opening over the next few months.”

    The average ticket price for the film was just shy of $13, according to EntTelligence, with premium format tickets going for $16.25 and 3D tickets costing $15.44.
    Disclosure: Comcast is the parent company of NBCUniversal and CNBC. NBCUniversal is the distributor of “Jurassic World: Dominion” and “Minions: The Rise of Gru.”

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    Disney investors are focused on streaming, but don't forget about theme parks

    In a little over a year, Disney’s theme parks have rebounded from massive pandemic-related operating losses.
    While not all international theme parks are fully reopened, domestic parks have seen strong ticket sales and foot traffic thanks to new rides and park expansions.
    Tech innovations have made the theme park experience and operations smoother for guests and cast members.
    Disney reports quarterly results Wednesday.

    Handout | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    LOS ANGELES – In April last year I took a stroll down an empty Main Street in Disneyland with the head of Walt Disney theme parks, Josh D’Amaro.
    The California park was a week from opening after more than a year of being shuttered due to Covid-19 restrictions, and cast members were hard at work putting the last touches in place before guests arrived. 

    It was a strange walk down the iconic cobblestone lane. It was quiet, a word that has probably never been used to describe a Disney theme park. There was no background music, no bustle of kids clamoring for a Mickey balloon or a soft pretzel, and no parade of colorful characters ready to pose for photos or sign autographs.
    As we followed the trolley tracks toward the statue of founder Walt Disney, D’Amaro spoke about the future of the company’s parks in optimistic, but practical, terms. The road ahead, he noted, wasn’t going to be smooth. Attendance caps, mask requirements and mandatory temperature checks were the cost of reopening. For five quarters Disney’s park division had reported a loss in operating income, and that would continue if the gates did not reopen. If D’Amaro was worried, he didn’t show it. 
    While much of the focus of Disney’s earnings during the last two years has been on Disney+ and the company’s streaming efforts, the resurrection of the theme park industry is critical to Disney’s bottom line. On Wednesday, the company will update shareholders on its most recent results and trends when it announces fiscal second-quarter earnings. Disney shares are down about 30% since January.
    In 2019, the segment, which includes cruises and hotels, accounted for 37% of the company’s $69.6 billion in total revenue. Typically, theme parks account for the majority of this revenue.
    New theme park lands such as Avengers Campus and the opening of Star Wars Galactic Starcruiser have enticed guests to travel to Disney’s domestic amusement hubs, but more expansions, including new additions to Disney World’s Epcot, are on the horizon.

    A year after that stroll with D’Amaro, Disney’s parks have rebounded significantly. The division, which also includes Disney experiences and consumer products, saw revenues top $7.2 billion during the fiscal first quarter, double the $3.6 billion generated in the prior-year quarter. The segment saw operating results jump to $2.5 billion compared to a loss of $100 million in the same period last year.
    The company said in February that its domestic parks have yet to see a significant return from international travelers, which prepandemic accounted for 18% to 20% of guests. Additionally, not all of its international parks have been open full-time during the last quarter. While Paris Disneyland is celebrating its 30th anniversary, Shanghai Disneyland closed its gates temporarily due to local Covid spikes.

    A fresh start

    “As miserable as the pandemic has been, we had this opportunity not to just reopen those gates again, but to kind of restart, in a way,” D’Amaro told CNBC last week. “You don’t get these opportunities much in life where the world stands still for you for a moment.”
    Technology that was put in place or updated during the pandemic remains a big part of the Disney experience. While rides, restaurants and character meet-and-greets are often what bring people through the park gates, shorter waits, faster service and ambiance keep visitors coming back.
    Virtual ride queues, which help maintain social distancing, and an online reservation system, which helps with crowd control aren’t going away, D’Amaro said. The company relies on the data from these services to help staff high-traffic areas of the park and redistribute traffic to less-crowded locations.
    Mobile order and pay, which was available before the pandemic, has become increasingly popular with guests. Before the pandemic, Disney saw single-digit adoption of its mobile ordering system. Now, around nine out of 10 guests opt to use it.
    A bonus is that consumers tend to spend more money when making purchases through mobile ordering and payment options than traditional in-person cash or credit card purchases.

    Chewbacca is seen at Disneyland Park on July 14, 2020 in Anaheim, California. Disneyland plans to reopen on April 30, 2021.
    Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    A recent addition to Disney’s suite of technology innovations is Genie, which is a kind of digital concierge. First announced in 2019 during Disney’s D23 Expo, the service creates custom itineraries for guests based on what attractions they most want to experience and restaurants the want to dine at.
    A paid version, called Disney Genie+, replaces the domestic park’s FastPass, FastPass+ and MaxPass offerings, which were discontinued during the pandemic.
    For $15 per ticket per day at Walt Disney World in Florida and $20 per ticket per day at Disneyland, guests can use the new Lightning Lane at select attractions. Visitors can make one selection at a time to bypass the main line at a scheduled time for rides such as Haunted Mansion, Big Thunder Mountain and Millennium Falcon: Smugglers Run.
    D’Amaro said adoption rates for Genie, Genie+ and the Lightning Lane have exceeded expectations.
    “We did not take our foot off the pedal as it relates to investments,” D’Amaro said. “We had a chance to look a lot more clearly at our future and start to lay the tracks for a future that is not bound by what we did prepandemic or what we did 10 years ago or 20 years ago, but is, in fact, boundless.”

    Beefing up the experience

    In addition to smoother operations, Disney has provided guests with new places to explore within and alongside its parks in the last year.
    Avengers Campus opened in June 2021. The new area, located within Disneyland’s California Adventure theme park, replaced A Bug’s Land. It includes the preexisting Guardians of the Galaxy: Mission: Breakout ride at the edge of Hollywood Land.
    It is also host to a new Spider-Man attraction, a dining location called Pym Test Kitchen and a portal to Doctor Strange’s sanctum. At its center is the Avengers compound, the home to Marvel’s mightiest heroes. On the rooftop launchpad is a to-scale quinjet that lights up and revs its engines for guests.
    Avengers Campus is a popular destination for Disneyland guests who can catch sight and interact with their favorite heroes, anti-heroes and villains from the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
    And for theme park junkies looking for more than just a photo op, Disney recently opened its new Star Wars experience the Galactic Starcruiser. Branded as an “immersive adventure,” the Star Wars Galactic Starcruiser blends elements of the company’s resorts, cruise lines and theme parks into a 48-hour romp in space.

    Ouannii, a Rodian musician, is aboard the Halcyon with galactic superstar Gaya.

    The experience comes with a steep price tag — around $1,200 per person per day — but has been generally well-received by guests since its opening in March.
    The upcoming fiscal second-quarter results will include the first month of these voyages and give shareholders insight into what they can expect revenue wise from this attraction going forward. The two Star Wars Galaxy’s Edge land expansions cost around $2 billion, but it’s unclear what Disney has invested toward other recent upgrades to its parks.
    Disney’s next park expansion comes at the end of May. The Wonders of Xandar Pavilion at Disney World’s Epcot is the newest piece of Disney’s massive transformation of the nearly 40-year-old park, which has long been known for its unique food offerings and annual festivals.

    The former Universe of Energy Pavilion is now the Wonders of Xandar Pavilion, home to Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.

    The Wonders of Xandar Pavilion is based on Marvel’s “Guardians of the Galaxy” and features a new roller coaster: Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind.
    “We have lots going on here at Epcot,” Kartika Rodriguez, vice president of Epcot, told CNBC back in February, during a media tour of the new attraction.
    Already, Epcot has expanded its French pavilion to include Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, a trackless ride that takes guests through a Pixar version of France. It has also added a new space-themed restaurant called Space 220, which takes diners hundreds of miles up above the park to eat among the stars. Still to come is a “Moana”-inspired walkthrough attraction called Journey of Water.
    “I think our [Walt Disney Imagineering] partners have found are really unique way of just assuring that Epcot stays true to what it’s about … it’s about growing, it’s about being connected,” Rodriguez said. “And that’s what Epcot is, dreaming about what the world of tomorrow will be.”
    Refreshing its parks is one way that Disney keeps its parkgoers excited to return and elevates its storytelling and experiences. D’Amaro said the company is far from done innovating.
    The company is set to launch its newest cruise ship the Disney Wish this summer and is working to complete Tron: Lightcycle Run roller-coaster at Magic Kingdom.
    However, perhaps more exciting is the promise of something new on the horizon. Disney’s Galactic Starcruiser is a blueprint that could easily be applied to other franchises owned by the company and innovations in animatronics and AI could bring fan-favorite characters big and small to the parks.
    “There are so many things we can do and so many places we can go,” he said.

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    Your new 'retirement' home could be a cruise ship

    Cruise ships offer many of the essential elements older Americans need to thrive: organized activities, a decent level of medical care and, most crucially, a built-in community of like-minded travelers. 
    Upgraded connectivity has also allowed semi-retired cruisers to be based at sea while still working.

    Jeff Farschman, 72, is a serial cruiser from Delaware who spends months at sea in retirement.
    Jeff Farschman

    For nearly two decades, Jeff Farschman, 72, has spent his golden years like many other adventurous retirees — enjoying leisure cruises to exotic ports of call.
    But unlike many of his fellow cruise passengers, Farschman basically lives at sea. He spends months traveling the world’s oceans and waterways — half of the year, if not more. Although he still keeps a physical home near where he grew up in Delaware, Farschman is now part of a growing cohort of older folks who are literally “retiring” on cruise ships.

    “Pandemic aside, I’ve been cruising for seven to eight months a year,” Farschman said. “I am a world traveler and explorer type and cruising has literally allowed me to see the entire planet.” 
    More from Personal Finance:Here’s how to buy new work clothes on a budgetThese are the best and worst U.S. places to dieBe sure to manage this risk as you near retirement
    Living on a ship was not exactly what Farschman had in mind when he first began cruising. But the former vice president at Lockheed Martin found himself stuck on a conventional Caribbean cruise when Hurricane Ivan hit back in 2004.
    “I just kept on extending and extending my time on board because the hurricane ruined my original winter plans,” he explained. “Ultimately I ended up completing six voyages in a row.”
    Almost 20 years later, Farschman now organizes his life around his time at sea — keeping his periods ashore as brief as possible. That said, like every other cruiser, “retirees-at-sea” found themselves back on dry land during much of the coronavirus pandemic, when the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shut down all cruises from U.S. ports.

    For Farschman, that meant 19 months — including winter — without cruising, his longest period ashore in nearly two decades. But once major lines established clear Covid health protocols, serial cruisers were the first back on board. While Covid outbreaks have since been reported — including notable instances in San Francisco and Seattle — folks like Farschman say they feel safe while cruising.

    Cruising’s clarion call to retirees

    Holland America Line offers “grand” voyages lasting months. Here, the line’s Westerdam sails in Alaska.
    Holland America Line

    Although there are no hard numbers, retiring on a cruise ship is gaining an increasingly higher profile — despite the industry tumult caused by the coronavirus crisis.
    Serial cruiser and author Lee Wachtstetter, for instance, wrote a much-read memoir about living on cruise ships for 12 years after her husband died. Farschman, meanwhile, chronicles his sea-faring ventures on his blog — facilitated by on-board WiFi that’s “become so much more reliable, though sadly not necessarily more affordable,” he said.
    Upgraded connectivity has also allowed semi-retired cruisers to be based at sea while still working. “The WiFi on most vessels is now strong enough for Zooms,” said Tara Bruce, a consultant and creative brand manager at Goodwin Investment Advisory Services, a Woodstock, Georgia-based financial advisory firm that helps folks retiring at sea.  

    With cruising, you cover all of your living expenses — food, housing, entertainment — in one place.

    Tara Bruce
    creative brand manager at Goodwin Investment Advisory Services

    In many ways, retiring on a cruise ship makes a lot of sense. Stereotypes aside, cruising has always appealed to older travelers. In fact, according to the Cruise Lines International Association, one-third of the 28.5 million people who took a cruise in 2018 were over 60 years old — and more than 50% were over 50 years old.
    What’s more, cruise ships offer many of the essential elements seniors need to thrive: organized activities, a decent level of medical care and, most crucially, a built-in community of like-minded travelers. 
    Retiring on a cruise ship can also prove economically sound.

    Cheaper than assisted living

    “With cruising, you cover all of your living expenses — food, housing, entertainment — in one place,” said Bruce. Although pricing on luxury liners can inch towards $250 per day, “we’ve seen folks get costs down to $89 per day, which is far cheaper than assisted care or other kinds of senior living.”
    Repeat cruisers like Farschman are also eligible for on-board credits towards premium meals, drinks, spas and other activities that can easily reach “hundreds of dollars per voyage,” Farschman said.  
     The rise of the “retire-at-sea” movement has been aided by a recent shift toward longer, more elaborate “world cruises” or “grand cruises” that can last 50 days or more at a time.

    Holland America, for instance, offers a 71-day Grand Africa Voyage itinerary stopping in 25 ports in 21 countries along with a Grand World Voyage visiting 61 ports in 30 countries, totaling 127 days at sea.
    “They’re typically comprised of several segments with extensive times in each port,” explained Colleen McDaniel, editor-in-chief of Cruisecritic.com. With careful planning — often bookended by shorter “connector” cruises — “grand” itineraries can keep cruisers at sea almost indefinitely.
    Holland America’s back-to-back so-called Collectors Voyages not only help retirees avoid repeating port calls, they also include discounts of 10% and 15%, according to Eric Elvejord, Holland America’s director of public relations. 

    A lucrative demographic

    The World, described as “the largest private residential yacht on Earth,” calls at Villefranche-sur-Mer on the French Riviera.
    The World | The Dovetail Agency

    Although few cruise lines specifically target retirees — Oceania, for its part, had a Snowbird in Residence program, which has since been canceled — specialty agents are waking up to this lucrative demographic.
    CruiseWeb, based in Tysons, Virginia, launched a Senior Living at Sea program that both builds out retiree-specific itineraries and helps clients manage their their lives back on shore. Beyond booking cabins, CruiseWeb handles issues such as shore transfers, ship-switches, visas and insurance.
    “We have clients that have been on board for over a year,” said CruiseWeb senior marketing and operations coordinator Michael Jones. “Usually they’ve downsized their permanent residence back home with many even renting it out while on-board” to help cover the cost of cruising, he added. 

    Perhaps the most notable component of the retiring at sea movement is the arrival of fully residential ships, like the 20-year-old The World and the soon-to-debut MV Narrative, from Storylines. The former includes 165 individually-owned on-board residences, while the far larger MV Narrative – set to hit the high seas in 2023 – offers 547 one- to four-bedroom apartments.
    Owning at sea isn’t cheap: MV Narrative units run between $1 million and $8 million, while a limited number of one- to two- year leases start at $400,000.
    “There are also monthly or annual costs to cover things like fuel, port fees, taxes and house-keeping,” McDaniel explained. “It’s kind of like living in a condo – that just happens to be at sea.”
    — By David Kaufman. Kaufman is a freelance writer.

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    Ford is selling 8 million shares of once high-flying EV maker Rivian, sources say

    Ford Motor is selling 8 million of its Rivian Automotive shares as the insider lockup for the stock expires on Sunday, sources told CNBC’s David Faber.
    Ford will be selling the shares through Goldman Sachs, sources said.
    JPMorgan Chase also plans to sell a Rivian share block of between 13 million and 15 million for an unknown seller, sources told Faber.

    Production of electric Rivian R1T pickup trucks on April 11, 2022 at the company’s plant in Normal, Ill.
    Michael Wayland / CNBC

    Ford Motor is selling 8 million of its Rivian Automotive shares, with the insider lockup for the stock of the once high-flying electric vehicle maker is set to expire on Sunday, sources told CNBC’s David Faber.
    The automaker currently owns 102 million shares of Rivian. Ford will be selling the shares through Goldman Sachs, sources said.

    The lockup defines a period of time after a company has gone public when early investors and company insiders cannot sell their shares. That ensures the IPO is carried out in an orderly manner and does not flood the market with additional shares.
    Ford declined to comment, when contacted by CNBC.

    JPMorgan Chase also plans to sell a Rivian share block of between 13 million and 15 million for an unknown seller, sources told Faber. Both blocks of stocks are priced at $26.90 a share.
    Shares of the EV manufacturer have plummeted by more than 50% in the first three months of 2022, reversing course from the fourth quarter, when the company held its stock market debut and saw its value skyrocket.
    Rivian said in March it expected to produce 25,000 electric trucks and SUVs this year, as the start-up battles through supply chain constraints and internal production snags. That would be just half of the vehicle production it forecast to investors last year as part of its IPO roadshow.
    — CNBC’s Michael Wayland and Ari Levy contributed to this report.

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