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    Main Street is convinced that a recession will hit the U.S. economy this year

    SMALL BUSINESS PLAYBOOK 2022
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    On Wall Street, more than half of investment and economic professionals think the Fed’s attempt to combat inflation by raising interest rates and running off the balance sheet will eventually cause a recession.
    Fed chair Jerome Powell indicated on Wednesday his belief that a “soft” or “soft-ish” landing can be achieved without the most hawkish central bank policy decisions.
    But on Main Street, eight in 10 small business owners are convinced the U.S. economy will enter a recession this year, according to the latest CNBC|SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey.

    Main Street and Wall Street are often at a distance when it comes to the state of the economy. The likelihood of a recession hitting in 2022 is the latest example. Both camps are bearish, but small business owners are leading the way in negative sentiment — by a notable margin.
    Wall Street has been consumed with the Federal Reserve’s efforts to combat the inflation it pegged wrong for too long, and the risk that interest rate hikes will lead to a recession. A survey earlier this week from CNBC found that more than half of economists and investment professionals expect the Fed to fail in its mission to engineer a “soft landing” for the economy. The stock market breathed a sigh of relief on Wednesday, with stocks surging after Fed chair Jerome Powell said that a more aggressive rate hike of 75 basis points is not being considered, and that the central bank remains convinced it can bring inflation down without crashing the economy.

    The market was giving back those brief gains on Thursday, and on Main Street, the central bank messaging was never likely to cause any short-term relief. Eight in ten small business owners expect a recession to occur this year, according to the latest CNBC|SurveyMonkey Small Business Survey for Q2 2022. Inflation remains the top concern for small business owners polled by CNBC and their business outlook is negative. The survey finds few small business owners seeing any bright spots in the current economy: just 6% rate the current state as excellent and 18% as good, while 31% rate it as fair and 44% rate it as poor.
    While the survey’s small business confidence index ticked up for the first time in the Biden administration due to responses on core index questions related to immigration policy and a 3 percentage point increase (to 36%) among small business owners who described their current business conditions as good, it remains near its all-time lows and well below its pre-pandemic baseline.
    “There just isn’t a lot of optimism on Main Street these days,” said Laura Wronski, senior manager of research science at Momentive, which conducts the survey for CNBC.

    SAN FRANCISCO, CA – APRIL 28: Deanna Sison takes a break from preparing preordered lunches to check the status of her federal small business loan application at Little Skillet restaurant in San Francisco, Calif. on Tuesday, April 28, 2020. Most Covid financial relief to small business has now ended, but the need for more funding remains.
    San Francisco Chronicle/hearst Newspapers Via Getty Images | Hearst Newspapers | Getty Images

    Small business survey results can be influenced by politics, with the community skewing conservative, but economic worries are high among all small business owners. Those who identify as Republicans or lean to the GOP are leading the bearish outlook, with 91% expecting a recession, but among those who are Democrats or lean to the Democratic party, it is still 66% that expect a recession this year.
    The survey was conducted by Momentive between April 18-25 among a national sample of 2,027 self-identified small business owners.

    In a parallel survey of the general public conducted for CNBC, a nearly-identical 77% expect a recession to occur this year, again with Republicans more apt than Democrats to forecast economic trouble (87% vs. 71%).

    Inflation remains the top concern

    Thirty-eight percent of small business owners say inflation is their biggest concern, twice as many as the second place “supply chain disruptions” (19%) and well above Covid-19 (13%) and labor shortages (13%).
    A majority of small business owners (75%) surveyed say they’re currently experiencing a rise in the cost of their supplies. But as much as they need to offset those rising costs by raising prices, the CNBC survey finds more are hesitant to pass on price hikes to consumers who are already hard-hit by inflation.
    The percentage of those raising prices is down from 47% to 40% quarter over quarter. Just 17% say now is a good time for businesses to raise prices in general, about half the number (35%) who say now is a bad time to raise prices. Almost half (47%) have mixed opinions on whether now is a good or bad time to raise prices. 
    While this finding contrasts with other recent small business surveys showing that price increases are still a requirement for the majority of small businesses given the input cost inflation, the CNBC data matches a bleaker business outlook found in other recent Main Street data.
    The National Federal of Independent Business monthly surveying shows the outlook for business conditions at the lowest level in its history, and that bearish view has increased sharply. The percentage of small business owners who expect conditions to be worse in the next six months hit a net negative 49% in March, the most recent month for which data is available, increasing from a net negative of 35% in the previous month. In August, that reading was at a net negative 28%.
    “The inflation pressures have continued, and now seem more built-in and foundational,” said Holly Wade, director of the NFIB Research Center. “It really is a concern about the ability to operate a business going forward, and it is incredibly stressful to find ways to balance absorbing the price increases from inputs and the level to which those price increases are passed along. … Something has to break and it will likely be a recession,” she said.
    “They can only do so much,” said Eric Groves, co-founder and CEO at online small business platform Alignable. “They are already inhibited from getting all the inventory they want, and the only way they get out of this is to bring customers back and drive more revenue, and they are struggling to figure it out.”
    His firm’s research on small business anticipation of sales back to pre-pandemic levels continues to shift out in time. Since the end of 2021, every month of its data has shown a shift in outlook in when Main Street expects to be back to full recovery. At the beginning of this year, the expectation was Q1 of 2023, now it is Q4 2023.
    “The customers are not coming back as fast as they thought and inflation is squeezing margins. And with all of that going on, it is not surprising that the sentiment is that a recession is coming,” Groves said. “The ability to shift pricing to customers is not as strong as it is for a big box business.”
    The challenge for many on Main Street has been the ability to access inventory they need to sell at a competitive rate, which remains much lower than for a big retailer. “They are not getting their fair share of the widget,” he said.
    The percentage of small businesses indicating they are back to at least 90% of pre-pandemic revenue, which had been a sign of health, is dropping again, according to Alignable, from 40% to 27% in its most recent data, as they attempt to compete against much better economics of scale.

    Timing a recession call

    Even the best market pundits have a weak track record at calling a recession, at least the exact timing, and there is no reason to expect that small business owners are any better at pinpointing this economic turning point. But such a negative view on the economy coming from a large component of it is significant.
    This hasn’t shown up in the Q1 business investment figures, which were solid, but a recent slowing in core durable goods shipments in the past two months suggests a slowing in the pace of business investment in Q2, according to Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. “However, it is too early to say we are seeing a turning point and long lasting slowing in capex,” she said.
    Consumer sentiment is down sharply, according to the University of Michigan, but consumers continue to spend at a healthy clip and the Conference Board sentiment measure is higher, reflecting its consumer survey focus on the labor market, which remains hot.
    Right now, with inventory levels so low, in large part due to the supply chain disruptions, companies need to continue to invest to rebuild inventory levels, as well as invest in technology for productivity gains, especially with the cost of labor so high. Business owners may be hiring less and doing more work themselves, but to recruit and retain any staff right now is likely critical to increasing sales as well.
    These requirements in the supply chain and labor market are adding to the stress level on Main Street, and ultimately, “it can exert a real economic impact,” Bostjancic said. “Business owners’ confidence levels can directly impact their investment decisions and hiring as well.”
    “They are not seeing how the current environment is sustainable,” Wade said. “Consumer spending is strong and GDP is strong, but the stress they are feeling in trying to absorb these costs and fill positions and continue to increase compensation for retention and recruitment is all incredibly stressful,” she said.
    Robert Fry, an economist who is among the respondents to CNBC’s Fed Survey, remains of the view that a recession does not hit until late 2023, and he cited the words of Rudi Dornbusch, a famous MIT economics professor who taught central bankers: “A crisis takes a much longer time coming than you think, and then happens much faster than you thought.”
    He views the current environment as still more rooted in negative sentiment than actual negative data. “Three variables drive sentiment. The unemployment rate, the stock market, and the price of gasoline. And it’s not a weighted average. People just grab one at a time, and right now it’s gasoline prices.” 
    “Ultimately, I think small businesses will be right, they’re just early,” Fry said. “They don’t appreciate the lags of monetary policy. … people cry wolf for a long time, but the wolf eventually comes.” 
    Groves said how small business owners define recession may be less academic and more a reflection of just how tough their current operating conditions are, and what it will take to recover to pre-pandemic levels, and their ability to sustain the business through the next few years.
    Inflation putting pressure on margins, pushing back revenue goals and shifting out the timeline to full recovery, puts everything at risk for small business owners. “It’s going to be more of a slog,” Groves said, and to a business owner, that may feel like recession, regardless of the formal economic research. “I don’t know what going into recession means versus the operating margins of my business being challenged, and how much I have to spend on things. … and I have an econ degree,” he said. “You put your head down and do whatever you need to do to survive, and you do more with less, and you see them working more hours. Owners have to figure out a way through it.” More

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    Cramer's lightning round: Stay away from CoreCivic

    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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    SGHC Limited: “They are doing well, and I don’t say that idly.”

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    Jim Cramer says to buy selectively and be curious to beat the current market turmoil

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday said that investors looking to successfully navigate a market roiled by inflation, geopolitical concerns and Covid should do two things: buy discriminately and be inquisitive.
    “Right now, I think a curious mind would be buying stocks selectively, not selling them indiscriminately,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday said that investors looking to successfully navigate a market roiled by inflation, geopolitical concerns and Covid should do two things: buy discriminately and be inquisitive.
    “It’s hard to be curious. … But over the long-haul, curiosity tends to be a much better bet [than panic]. Right now, I think a curious mind would be buying stocks selectively, not selling them indiscriminately,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average tumbled 3.12% on Thursday while the Nasdaq Composite plummeted 4.99%, with both drops marking the worst losses in a single day since 2020. The S&P 500 slipped 3.56%, recording its second-to-worst day in 2022.
    The market’s dismal performance comes a day after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by 50 basis points and said it will begin tightening its balance sheet in June.
    “Right now, I think the market’s anticipating the worst-case scenario and there’s a good chance that we actually don’t get it,” Cramer said of the Fed’s inflation-fighting measures.
    He added that curious investors should ask themselves several questions to gauge the state and future of the market. Here are some of the notable questions Cramer outlined:

    Is every company worth less today than yesterday, when the stock market rallied? Cramer said the answer is no. “If you take your cue only from the bond market, we’re headed for a high-inflation world where the Fed has to raise rates aggressively. That means you should buy stocks that do well … in a high-inflation slowdown,” he said.
    Will the Russia-Ukraine war or China’s lockdowns last forever? Cramer reminded investors that this is not the case, and predicted that Nike and Starbucks could see huge snapback rallies once lockdowns in China end.
    Is inflation really that deeply entrenched in the market? “When only oil and natural gas continue to hit new highs, maybe this inflation’s easier to beat than most people expect,” Cramer said.
    Do a company’s earnings still matter? Yes they do, Cramer said, adding that AMD’s stock is a buy, even at its low levels.

    He also said that now might be a great buying opportunity for investors who have money on hand and are looking for additions to their portfolios.

    “If you’ve got enough cash on the sidelines, the market’s throwing a sale on everything, including some great stocks with good yields that have great prospects that are going to beat the earnings,” he said.
    Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of AMD.

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    Here's why Jim Cramer is warning investors to stay away from ScottsMiracle-Gro

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday told investors to resist the urge to add ScottsMiracle-Gro to their portfolios, despite the stock’s low valuation.
    “While Scotts Miracle-Gro might seem cheap on a price to earnings basis … management doesn’t have a handle on how bad it’s going to get,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday told investors to resist the urge to add ScottsMiracle-Gro to their portfolios, despite the stock’s low valuation.
    “Historically, this is a great time of year for anything garden related because it’s planting season, and Scotts is a name that we used to get a ton of questions about. … But, over the past thirteen months, these shares have been obliterated,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “While ScottsMiracle-Gro might seem cheap on a price to earnings basis, the problem is that the earnings forecast keeps coming down … and management doesn’t have a handle on how bad it’s going to get,” he later added.
    ScottsMiracle-Gro stock fell 6% on Thursday. The company reported better-than-expected earnings in its previous quarter two days before.
    JPMorgan upgraded ScottsMiracle-Gro to overweight from neutral on Wednesday, pointing to the stock’s valuation, high margins and market leadership. Stifel downgraded the stock from overweight to hold.
    Cramer said that he agrees with Stifel’s more bearish stance on Scotts, particularly because of the company’s struggles with rising raw costs, lack of confidence regarding an earnings target of $8 a share and his concerns with the performance of Scotts’ Hawthorne division. Hawthorne operates in cannabis, an industry Cramer says has been beaten down for the last year.
    “On top of that, Scotts has an ugly enough balance sheet that they don’t see management embracing an aggressive buyback, either. In short, business is bad and there’s not much Scotts can do to make it better,” Cramer said.

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    Disclaimer

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    Stock futures are little changed after Dow's worst day since 2020

    A trader works on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, May 5, 2022.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    Stock futures were little changed in overnight trading Thursday after the Dow Jones Industrial Average posted its worst day since 2020.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average were near flat. S&P 500 futures traded near the flatline and Nasdaq 100 futures ticked up less than 0.1%.

    The moves came after stocks sold off sharply in Thursday’s regular session. The Dow lost more than 1,000 points and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell nearly 5%. Both indexes notched their worst single-day drops since 2020. The S&P 500 fell 3.56%, its second-worst day of the year.
    Thursday’s losses erased Wednesday’s big post-Federal Reserve meeting rally. Fed Chair Jerome Powell ruled out the prospect of larger rate hikes on Wednesday, sending the S&P 500 and the Dow to their best daily gains since 2020.
    “Yesterday, it was more the relief, the optimism, the hope. … There’s more realism coming through in the market today,” Michelle Cluver, portfolio strategist at Global X ETFs, said Thursday.
    Technology stocks bore the brunt of Thursday’s fall, with cloud companies, e-retailers and mega-cap names seeing steep declines.
    Despite Thursday’s wipeout, the S&P 500 is on pace to close the week up 0.4%. The Dow is on track to finish the week marginally higher, while the Nasdaq Composite is lower by 0.1% this week so far.
    Investors are looking ahead to the April jobs report, set for release Friday morning. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect employers added 400,000 jobs to nonfarm payrolls, down slightly from 431,000 in March. The unemployment rate is expected to fall to 3.5% in April, down from 3.6% in March, according to Dow Jones.

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    E-commerce stocks plummet as consumers pull back online spending

    Shares of Etsy, Shopify, Wayfair, Poshmark and a number of other e-commerce retailers fell Thursday.
    E-commerce transactions have declined 1.8% from a year ago, while in-store sales rose 10%, Mastercard SpendingPulse said in a new report.
    The decline in online retailers came as a broader sell-off walloped stock markets Thursday.

    The Etsy website
    Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Shoppers are eager to head back to brick-and-mortar stores, while inflation is stoking fears that consumers are pulling back their spending on some items to still afford the essentials.
    That combination spells bad news for many e-commerce-focused retailers, and their stocks tumbled amid a broader market sell-off Thursday as investors feared their growth could be screeching to a halt and profits could be harder to come by.

    Wayfair’s stock dropped 26%, touching a fresh 52-week low, after the online furniture retailer reported wider-than-expected losses in the first quarter and logged fewer active customers.

    Wayfair Chief Executive Officer Niraj Shah told analysts on a conference call Thursday morning that the “typical seasonal pattern of gradually building demand” that the business is used to tracking has been transpiring in a more “muted” fashion.
    He also said he has noticed more shoppers are devoting a larger share of their wallets to nondiscretionary categories and “reprioritizing experiences like travel.”
    Read more: Surging prices force consumers to ask: Can I live without it?
    Etsy shares tumbled 17% on the heels of the online marketplace issuing disappointing guidance for the second quarter. Shopify stock fell nearly 15% after it forecast that revenue growth would be lower in the first half of the year, as it navigates tough Covid pandemic-era comparisons.

    Shares of The RealReal and Farfetch both fell around 11% Thursday, while those of Peloton and Revolve each dropped about 9%, and Warby Parker and ThredUp fell 8%. Poshmark, an online site for shopping secondhand, saw its shares end Thursday down about 4%.
    “Investor appetite for high growth, negative EBITDA (and free cash flow) pandemic winners is very low,” Wells Fargo analyst Zachary Fadem said in a note to clients.
    In a report issued Thursday morning, Mastercard SpendingPulse said total retail sales in the United States, excluding sales of autos, grew 7.2% from the prior year. Within that, e-commerce transactions dropped 1.8%, while in-store sales rose 10%, it said.
    Read more: Nasdaq drops as tech experiences brutal selloff
    A week ago, e-commerce behemoth Amazon set the tone for waning momentum and downbeat outlooks. The company logged the slowest revenue growth since the dot-com bust in 2001 and issued a bleak forecast, attributing much of the slowdown to macroeconomic conditions and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    Amazon shares ended Thursday trading down 8%.
    Gordon Haskett analyst Chuck Grom wrote in a note to clients that he continues to collect evidence that consumers are just beginning to push back on rising prices, “which will soon be a potential conundrum for the retail space.”
    A number of these companies — including Peloton, Poshmark, Thredup and Allbirds — are set to report quarterly results next week. Analysts and investors will be looking closely for any signs of a spending pullback.

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    Spirit CEO says he wonders whether JetBlue's bid was meant to block Frontier deal

    Spirit Airlines CEO Ted Christie on Thursday laid bare the reasons his company rejected JetBlue Airways’ $3.6 billion offer to buy the low-cost carrier.
    “I have wondered whether blocking our deal with Frontier is in fact their goal,” Christie said.
    In February, Spirit and Frontier announced plans to merge in what would create a massive discount airline, the fifth-largest carrier in the U.S.

    A JetBlue airliner lands past a Spirit Airlines jet on taxi way at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport on Monday, April 25, 2022. (Joe Cavaretta/Sun Sentinel/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
    Joe Cavaretta | Sun Sentinel | Getty Images

    Spirit Airlines CEO Ted Christie on Thursday laid bare the reasons his company rejected JetBlue Airways’ $3.6 billion offer to buy the ultra-low-cost carrier, and went so far as to suggest that the bid may have been intended to stop Spirit’s planned merger with Frontier Airlines.
    “JetBlue shareholders aren’t supportive of this deal, either, based on the company’s stock performance. However, despite clear concern from JetBlue shareholders, JetBlue has continued to pursue disruption to the Spirit-Frontier combination,” Christie said during Spirit’s first-quarter earnings call.

    “I have wondered whether blocking our deal with Frontier is in fact their goal,” Christie added.
    JetBlue declined to comment on Christie’s claims.
    In February, Spirit and Frontier announced plans to merge in what would create a massive discount airline, the fifth-largest carrier in the U.S. JetBlue’s unsolicited bid for Spirit initially threw that tie-up into question. But on Monday, Spirit rejected JetBlue’s offer in favor of the Frontier deal, citing concerns that a JetBlue buyout wouldn’t clear regulatory hurdles.

    JetBlue has a partnership with American Airlines in what’s known as the Northeast Alliance (NEA) to better compete against the likes of United Airlines and Delta Air Lines at major airports. JetBlue contends that acquiring Spirit would help it further compete.
    Christie on Thursday emphasized that the Department of Justice is already suing to block the JetBlue-American partnership, while highlighting that “half the expected synergies” of JetBlue absorbing Spirit “would come from reduced capacity and increased fares to consumers.”

    “You don’t need to be an antitrust attorney to see the issues here,” Christie said. “It stretches any sort of common sense to believe that an acquisition of Spirit by JetBlue would be approved by the DOJ while it is suing to block the NEA.”
    Spirit said it submitted a counteroffer to JetBlue – including abandoning the NEA with American – but JetBlue rejected the alternative proposal.
    JetBlue CEO Robin Hayes wrote in a letter to Spirit’s CEO and its chairman on April 29 that its offer stands a better chance of clearing regulators than the Frontier merger.
    “We firmly believe that it is in the best interest of your stockholders for you to accept our Proposal, which has significantly greater odds of achieving regulatory clearance given the stronger regulatory commitment on our part compared to Frontier,” Hayes wrote then.

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    Lucid reports 30,000 EV reservations and raises prices on its Air sedans

    Customers reserving a Lucid Air in June or later will pay 10% to 12% more for their vehicles.
    Lucid said it will honor current pricing for all existing reservations, and for any new reservations made before the end of May.
    Lucid maintained its previous full-year production guidance.

    CEO Peter Rawlinson poses at the Lucid Motors plant in Casa Grande, Arizona, U.S. September 28, 2021.
    Caitlin O’Hara | Reuters

    Electric luxury vehicle maker Lucid Group said Thursday it now has more than 30,000 reservations for its Air sedan — but any customers making reservations after June 1 will have to pay higher prices.
    Lucid said that it will honor its current pricing for any customer with an existing reservation, as well as any new customers who make reservations before the end of May. After that, pricing on the various Air models will jump roughly 10% to 12%, depending on trim level.

    Lucid made the announcements as it reported its first-quarter results. Here are the key numbers:

    Loss per share: 5 cents
    Revenue: $57.7 million
    Net loss: $81.3 million
    Vehicles delivered in the quarter: 360
    Vehicle reservations: More than 30,000

    “We continue to have a healthy balance sheet, closing the quarter with nearly $5.4 billion of cash on hand, which we believe is sufficient to fund the company well into 2023,” Chief Financial Officer Sherry House said in a statement.

    In February, Lucid cut its full-year guidance for production from 20,000 vehicles to between 12,000 and 14,000 vehicles, citing ongoing difficulties in obtaining basics like glass and carpet. The company maintained that reduced guidance Thursday.
    Lucid began deliveries of the Air in October of 2021 to positive reviews, including Motor Trend’s coveted Car of the Year award. Customer demand for the Air has been strong, but the company has struggled to ramp up production amid ongoing global supply chain disruptions.
    CEO Peter Rawlinson, who previously served as chief engineer of Tesla’s landmark Model S sedan, spent several years assembling the team that created Lucid’s Air sedan. A mix of Tesla veterans and former big-auto engineers, the group developed new batteries and technologies that have given the Air the longest range of any EV sold in the United States so far.

    Its next vehicle, a luxury SUV called Gravity, is expected in the first half of 2024, Lucid confirmed on Thursday.
    The company said last month that Saudi Arabia’s government had agreed to buy up to 100,000 of its vehicles over the next 10 years. Saudi Arabia’s public wealth fund owns about 62% of the U.S.-based automaker.
    Rawlinson clarified during Lucid’s earnings call that the 30,000 reservations does not include any vehicles from Saudi Arabia’s order.

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