More stories

  • in

    More contagious omicron BA.2 on track to displace other variants in U.S. in next two weeks

    Omicron BA.2 now makes up 72% of circulating Covid variants in the U.S., according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    Ali Mokdad, a leading epidemiologist, said BA.2 will likely displace BA.1 in the next two weeks.
    White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci has said he doesn’t expect BA.2 to cause another major surge.

    A resident receives a Covid-19 swab test during a mobile clinic at Saint Paul MB Church in Cleveland, Mississippi, on Saturday, Jan. 8, 2022.
    Rory Doyle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The more contagious omicron BA.2 subvariant now makes up 72% of Covid infections that have undergone genetic sequencing in the U.S., according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
    BA.2 became dominant in the U.S. last week, and now appears on track to displace the earlier version of omicron, BA.1. Ali Mokdad, an epidemiologist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation in Washington state, projected that will happen within the next two weeks.

    Though some estimates differ, BA.2 spreads 30% to 80% faster than BA.1., according to data from public health authorities in the U.K. and Denmark.

    A top World Health Organization official, Maria Van Kerkhove, has described BA.2 as the most transmissible version of the virus so far. Renewed outbreaks have occurred in major European nations, including the U.K. and Germany.
    Here in the U.S., though, White House chief medial advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci has said infections might rise, but he doesn’t expect another major surge. Mokdad said he believes infections in the U.S. will likely level off for a week or two and then decline until winter.
    In the U.S., new infections and hospital admissions have declined more than 90% since the peak of the omicron wave in January. The average number of people hospitalized with Covid in the U.S. was 11,000 as of Monday, the lowest level since 2020, according to data from the federal Health and Human Services Department. The U.S. reported a seven-day average of about 28,000 new infections on Sunday, the lowest level since last July, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.
    BA.2 generally does not make people sicker than the earlier version of omicron, and the vaccines have the same level of effectiveness against it, according to studies from South Africa and Qatar. However, omicron in general is adept at evading the protective antibodies generated by the vaccines and causing breakthrough infections that normally cause mild illness.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Climate change could cost U.S. $2 trillion each year by the end of the century, White House says

    Floods, drought, wildfires and hurricanes made worse by climate change could cost the U.S. federal budget about $2 trillion each year by the end of the century, the White House said on Monday.
    The analysis by the Office of Management and Budget, which administers the federal budget, also said the U.S. government could spend an additional $25 billion to $128 billion each year in such areas as coastal disaster relief, flood insurance and crop insurance.
    The news comes the same day as the United Nations’ climate science panel’s highly anticipated report, which warned that slashing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels will require greenhouse gas emissions to peak before 2025.

    Dry cracked earth is visible in an area of Lake Powell that was previously underwater on March 28, 2022 in Page, Arizona. As severe drought grips parts of the Western United States, water levels at Lake Powell dropped to their lowest levels since the lake was created by damming the Colorado River in 1963.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Floods, drought, wildfires and hurricanes made worse by climate change could cost the U.S. federal budget about $2 trillion each year — a 7.1% loss in annual revenue — by the end of the century, the White House said in an assessment on Monday.
    The analysis by the Office of Management and Budget, which administers the federal budget, also warned the U.S. government could spend an additional $25 billion to $128 billion each year in areas such as coastal disaster relief, flood insurance, crop insurance, health-care insurance, wildland fire suppression and flooding at federal facilities.

    “The fiscal risk of climate change is immense,” Candace Vahlsing, the OMB’s associate director for climate, and Danny Yagan, its chief economist, wrote in a blog published on Monday.
    “Climate change threatens communities and sectors across the country, including through floods, drought, extreme heat, wildfires, and hurricanes that affect the U.S. economy and the lives of everyday Americans,” they wrote. “Future damages could dwarf current damages if greenhouse gas emissions continue unabated.”
    The news comes the same day as the United Nations’ climate science panel’s highly anticipated report, which warned that slashing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels will require greenhouse gas emissions to peak before 2025.

    More from CNBC Climate:

    The world has already warmed about 1.1 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels and is on track to experience global temperature rise of 2.4 degrees Celsius by 2100.
    The OMB’s analysis warned that intensifying wildfires could increase federal fire suppression costs by between $1.55 billion and $9.60 billion each year, representing an increase between 78% and 480% by the end of the century. Meanwhile, more frequent hurricanes could drive up annual spending on coastal-disaster response to between $22 billion and $94 billion by 2100.

    Additionally, 12,000 federal buildings across the country could be flooded by 10 feet due to rising sea levels, with total replacement costs of more than $43.7 billion, the analysis said. That scenario would be on the high side, though. A 2021 report from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicted a range of sea level rise in the U.S. between 0.6 meters (nearly two feet) and 2.2 meters (just over seven feet) by the end of the century.
    President Joe Biden last week released his 2023 budget proposal, which called for nearly $45 billion in new funding for climate change, clean energy and environmental justice programs. The budget, which includes an increase of nearly 60% in climate funding over the 2021 fiscal year, comes as Biden’s core legislation to address climate change is stalled in Congress.
    The climate portion of the $1.75 trillion House-passed bill, called the Build Back Better Act, would be the largest-ever federal clean energy investment and could help the U.S. get about halfway to the president’s pledge to curb emissions in half by 2030, according to the nonpartisan analysis firm Rhodium Group.
    Earlier this year, Biden said he would likely need break up the plan, but maintained that he believes Congress would still pass parts of it, including $555 billion in climate spending.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Twitter, Starbucks, Tesla and more

    Andrew Burton | Getty Images News | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Twitter — The social media company soared 27.1% after a filing revealed that Elon Musk has taken a 9.2% passive stake in the firm worth about $2.9 billion. The purchase came weeks after the Tesla CEO polled his 80-plus million Twitter followers about whether the platform adheres to free speech principles. Musk also recently hinted at starting his own site. The move is sparking speculation among analysts that Musk could take a more active ownership in Twitter or even consider a takeover down the road.

    Tesla — Shares added 5.6% after Tesla reported first-quarter electric vehicle deliveries. The more than 310,000 vehicle deliveries marked a quarterly record, but slightly missed consensus Wall Street estimates. Most analysts attributed the miss to Covid shutdowns in Shanghai, where Tesla has a major factory.
    Starbucks — The coffee chain fell 3.7% following the suspension of its share repurchase program. The decision comes as Howard Schultz returns to the helm as CEO of the company and amid a greater union push from the firm’s baristas.
    JD.com, Netease, Alibaba, Tencent Music – U.S.-listed shares of Chinese companies rallied after China proposed revising confidentiality rules regarding audit oversight. The move could prevent those companies from being delisted in the U.S. JD.com jumped 7.1%, Netease rose 2.4%, Alibaba gained 6.6% and Tencent Music added 10.7%.
    Hertz — Shares of the rental car company surged 10.7% after Hertz announced a partnership with electric vehicle company Polestar. As part of the deal, Hertz will purchase up to 65,000 electric vehicles over the next five years, according to a news release.
    Logitech — The stock rose 7% after Goldman Sachs upgraded the company to a “buy” from “neutral” and said it could see big gains from growing trends toward gaming and videoconferencing.

    Quest Diagnostics – Shares slipped 1.3% after Citi downgraded the diagnostic information services company to neutral from buy, due to uncertainty around its post-pandemic model. Citi cited Quest’s margin outlook this and next year as well as heightened labor pressures and volume declines.
    Baxter — Shares fell 4% after Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to a sell rating from neutral. The firm said the call is due to Baxter’s “over-indexing to headwind variables and numbers being at risk.”
    Ollie’s Bargain Outlet Holdings — The retail stock jumped 15.7% after Wells Fargo upgraded Ollie’s to overweight from equal weight. Wells Fargo said that the stock could prove to be a “coiled spring” after the company has worked through its pandemic-era disruptions.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Britain announces plans to mint its own NFT as it looks to 'lead the way' in crypto

    Watch Daily: Monday – Friday, 3 PM ET

    U.K. Finance Minister Rishi Sunak has asked the Royal Mint to create and issue the NFT “by the summer,” a government minister said Monday.
    City Minister John Glen announced a number of steps the U.K. will take to bring digital assets under more regulatory scrutiny.
    He says the government wants Britain to “lead the way” in crypto.

    In this photo illustration a novelty Bitcoin token is photographed on £10 notes.
    Matt Cardy | Getty Images

    LONDON — The U.K. government on Monday announced plans to mint its own non-fungible token, as part of a push toward becoming a “world leader” in the cryptocurrency space.
    Finance Minister Rishi Sunak has asked the Royal Mint — the government-owned company responsible for minting coins for the U.K. — to create and issue the NFT “by the summer,” City Minister John Glen said at a fintech event in London. “There will be more details available very soon,” he added.

    NFTs are digital assets that represent ownership of a virtual item like an artwork or video game avatar using blockchain, the technology that underpins many cryptocurrencies. They’ve gained a lot of traction over the past year thanks to increased adoption from celebrities and large corporations.
    The U.K.’s NFT initiative is part of a broader effort by the government to “lead the way” in crypto, according to Glen. The minister announced a number of steps the U.K. will take to bring digital assets under more regulatory scrutiny, including plans to:

    Bring stablecoins within the U.K.’s existing regulations on electronic payments.
    Consult on a “world-leading regime” for regulating trade in other cryptocurrencies, including bitcoin.
    Ask the Law Commission to consider the legal status of blockchain-based communities known as decentralized autonomous organizations, or DAOs.
    Examine the tax treatment of decentralized finance (DeFi) loans and “staking,” which gives crypto users the ability to earn interest on their savings.
    Establish a Cryptoasset Engagement Group that will be chaired by ministers and host members from U.K. regulators and crypto businesses.
    Explore the application of blockchain technology in issuing debt instruments.

    “We shouldn’t be thinking of regulation as a static, rigid thing,” Glen said. “Instead, we should be thinking in terms of regulatory ‘code’ — like computer code — which we refine and rewrite when we need to.”
    CNBC previously reported on the government’s plans to unveil a regulatory framework for cryptoassets and stablecoins.

    Stablecoins, cryptocurrencies that derive their value from sovereign currencies like the U.S dollar, are a fast-growing but controversial phenomena in the crypto world. Tether, the world’s biggest stablecoin, has a circulating supply of more than $80 billion. But it’s attracted criticism over a lack of transparency around the reserves that back the token. The government is now set to bring stablecoins into the U.K. regulatory system.

    Glen said the government was also “widening” its gaze to look at other aspects of crypto, including so-called Web3, a movement that proposes a more decentralized version of the internet built on blockchain technology.
    “No one knows for sure yet how Web3 is going to look,” Glen said. “But there’s every chance that blockchain is going to be integral to its development.”
    “We want this country to be there leading from the front, seeking out the greatest economic opportunities.”
    Mauricio Magaldi, global strategy director for crypto at the fintech consultancy 11:FS, took a skeptical view on the government’s NFT plans. The decision “seems to be nothing more than a strategic PR-play,” he said in an emailed comment. But “talk of the U.K. becoming a ‘crypto hub’ seems to hold much more promise,” he added.

    Mixed signals

    Industry insiders have been calling for clarity about the U.K.’s position on crypto as policymakers around the world begin taking a closer look at the $2 trillion market.

    Last month, U.S. President Joe Biden signed an executive order urging government-wide coordination when it comes to regulating crypto. The move was seen as broadly positive for the sector.
    Meanwhile, European Union lawmakers recently voted against measures that would have put the future of crypto mining at risk. However, they also passed new rules cracking down on anonymous crypto transfers.
    Back in the U.K., British regulators have taken a harsh tone on digital assets.
    The Financial Conduct Authority has shunned a vast majority of crypto firms applying to be registered with the watchdog, warning it’s worried too many “financial crime red flags” are going unnoticed.
    Last week, the FCA extended a crucial deadline for crypto businesses on a temporary register — which includes Revolut and Copper — to obtain full authorization. Philip Hammond, the former U.K. finance minister, is an advisor to Copper.
    Several companies have been forced to wind down their U.K. crypto operations and move offshore after failing to make it onto the final register, including Blockchain.com, B2C2 and Wirex. Just 33 firms have been approved by the FCA. More

  • in

    How Walmart thwarted $4 million in elder gift card scams

    Technology developed by Walmart helped the retail giant identify and freeze nearly $4 million in gift cards that had been bought by thousands of primarily elderly victims at the direction of con artists who duped them.
    The U.S. Department of Justice, after being notified by Walmart, recently seized that money through a federal court action in Arkansas. Now the money can be claimed by victims of the frauds.
    But federal authorities say the money that Walmart managed to save for those victims is just a small fraction of the millions of dollars annually lost in so-called imposter scams that rely on the purchases of gift cards.

    A gift card display stands at a Walmart Inc. store in Burbank, California.
    Patrick T. Fallon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Technology developed by Walmart helped the retail giant identify and freeze nearly $4 million in gift cards that had been bought by thousands of primarily elderly victims at the direction of con artists who duped them, according to court records and the company.
    The U.S. Department of Justice, after being notified by Walmart, recently seized that money through a federal court action in Arkansas. Now victims of the frauds can claim the money.

    “It was impressive what they were able to do,” a DOJ official said about Walmart’s actions. The official spoke with CNBC on the condition that they not be identified.
    The seizure of the swindled gift card funds is good news for older Americans and others who lost money in those schemes — if they become aware that they can claim their swindled money.
    But the money that Walmart saved for those victims is just a small fraction of the millions of dollars annually lost in so-called imposter scams that rely on gift card purchases.
    And the amount of money obtained by such schemes has spiked in recent years.
    In the first nine months of 2021, consumers reported losing $148 million in frauds where gift cards were used to pay scammers, according to Federal Trade Commission data.

    In comparison, $114 million was reported lost in gift card frauds for the entirety of 2020, the FTC says.

    How gift card scams work

    Gift card scams routinely involve callers, often from overseas, phoning victims and telling them they owe money for a debt or needed services and that they should immediately go to a retail location to buy a gift card that can be used to pay off the purported obligation.
    The caller claims to be the representative of a government agency, utility or private company that insists on immediate payment.
    “They create this false sense of urgency,” said the DOJ official.
    “‘You need to resolve this now, or some sort of horrible thing is going to happen,'” the official said, giving an example of how scammers pressure their targets.
    “It’s a very vulnerable position to be put in, and it’s very effective.”
    A common trick is to claim to be a federal entity, such as the IRS.
    “Government agencies are scary,” the official noted.
    The official said people when they get such calls should “take a breath. Hopefully, that will give you time to think about it” and not rush to satisfy the caller’s demand for payment.
    Andy Mao, the DOJ’s elder justice initiative coordinator, noted that “federal agencies, like the Social Security Administration, Internal Revenue Service, or FBI, will never request payment through a gift card.”
    “So if someone makes that request, you should hang up or immediately stop the communication and report to the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center,” said Mao.
    The FTC, on its website about gift card scams, notes: “Someone might ask you to pay for something by putting money on a gift card, like a Google Play or iTunes card, and then giving them the numbers on the back of the card.”
    “If they ask you to do this, they’re trying to scam you,” the FTC says. “No real business or government agency will ever insist you pay them with a gift card. Anyone who demands to be paid with a gift card is a scammer.”
    But about half of the victims who report “imposter scams” end up making a payment using a gift card, data shows.
    In 2021, gift cards were the most commonly reported method of payment for victims of imposter frauds who were more than 60 years old.
    Once the cards are purchased, scammers have their victims scratch off the back of the cards to reveal an ID number. It can be used online or in store to buy items that can then be sold for profit.
    And when the cards are used, the cash is gone. It becomes difficult, if not impossible, for victims to recoup their losses.
    Even as the losses from gift card scams grow, it remains relatively rare for retailers such as Walmart, Target, Walgreens, CVS and others to stop victims from getting ripped off, much less freeze swindled gift cards so that victims can be repaid. Data shows that those large retailers are the most common places where fraudsters direct their victims to buy gift cards.
    “It’s great what happened in the Arkansas case [with Walmart], but that’s the exception, not the rule,” said the DOJ official who spoke with CNBC on the condition of anonymity.
    “I suspect that a very small percentage of victims, particularly of gift card scams, get their money back,” said the official.
    “It’s hard to get the money back,” noted the official.
    The official urged people who believe they have been defrauded to contact the Victim Witness Program via a DOJ website — https://www.justice.gov/uspc/victim-witness-program — to report the crime, and, potentially, recoup their money.
    Walmart says its victim-assisted consumer fraud program is unique among retailers. The effort has been successful in stopping some cases of fraud and in freezing funds in gift cards associated with scams.
    “Walmart has implemented a multi-prong strategy to better protect consumers against the growing problem of victim-assisted gift card fraud in the retail industry,” said company spokesperson Randy Hargrove.

    CNBC Politics

    Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

    “This includes developing our own proprietary, industry-leading technology designed to identify distinct red flags and freeze funds when possible before they can be used if consumer gift card fraud is suspected,” Hargrove said.
    Walmart said it has developed technology to identify purchases of gift cards connected to fraud and increased signage in its stores and online to educate consumers about common signs of scams.
    And Walmart participates in government and private retail programs to share its technology with other retailers to help them address the problem of fraudulent gift card purchases at their own locations.

    How $4M in swindled gift cards were saved

    Walmart’s development of that strategy and how it works is discussed at length in an affidavit by a U.S. Secret Service agent. It was filed in federal court in Arkansas as part of the recent gift card forfeiture action.
    The affidavit was publicly flagged by the Twitter account of Seamus Hughes, deputy director of the Program on Extremism at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. Hughes regularly trawls the online federal court filing system PACER for criminal and civil case documents that he finds interesting, but which have not been previously reported.
    The affidavit says that in the fall of 2015, Walmart’s Global Investigations team “noticed a pattern of regular inquiries from local police departments regarding reports filed by victims of unspecified scams” who had been directed to buy Walmart gift cards, usually in the sum of $500 and $1,000.
    In response, that team identified video surveillance in Walmart stores that had captured images of people loading cash on the gift cards that were the subject of the police reports.
    The retailer found that “a disproportionate number of the victims at the cash registers who loaded the Walmart gift cards were senior citizens,” a U.S. Secret Service agent wrote in the affidavit.
    The surveillance also showed that the victims usually were “actively using their cellular phones to convey the Walmart gift card numbers to the unknown individual” on the other end of the calls, the affidavit said.
    The document reveals that Walmart, through a review of its gift card system, saw a pattern where a large number of gift cards were purchased around the United States and their values were immediately checked from overseas locations.
    The retailer also found that those gift cards had been used to make purchases — within hours or minutes of the card value being loaded — in states that were different from where the card was loaded.
    Walmart in February 2016 began tracking the checking of gift card balances from overseas and developed a system to identify what the retailer believed were fraudulent patterns involving the cards, the affidavit said.
    Eventually, Walmart identified about 10,600 suspicious transactions with a value of $4.4 million. In July 2017, the retailer froze the gift card funds connected to the suspected frauds and contacted the Secret Service about the money, the affidavit said.

    The victims

    The document also reveals how such frauds continued, giving examples of the methods con artists used to dupe their victims.
    One man, a 64-year-old truck driver in Belleville, Michigan, identified by the initials “R.J.,” told the Secret Service that in September 2020 a man with “a Middle Eastern accent” called his cellphone “and claimed to be a bill collector from an apartment complex in Michigan where R.J. previously resided.”
    The caller claimed that R.J. owed $4,000, but could settle the balance by buying two Walmart gift cards for $500 each.
    R.J. bought the cards while passing through North Little Rock, Arkansas, and, “as instructed,” quickly called the man who had demanded the payment “and provided the caller with the Walmart gift card numbers,” the affidavit said.
    R.J. told the Secret Service agent that he “did not realize he had been the victim of fraud until the caller telephonically contacted him approximately one week later and made the same demands,” the agent wrote in the affidavit.
    “R.J. refused the second time, and did not hear from the caller again.”
    R.J.’s monetary loss of $1,000, and those of $500 or so by others in similar frauds, are typical for older victims of gift card scams. Other victims ended up losing much more.
    One victim quoted in the affidavit, a 70-year-old identified as K.K., was swindled out of $8,000 worth of Walmart gift cards alone in a scam spanning 21 months.
    K.K. told investigators that a fraudster called to offer K.K. protection from “hacking” of his various online accounts and then much later claimed to be an FBI agent “trying to ‘bust the bad guys.'”
    In addition to the gift cards, K.K. claimed to have been duped out of nearly $130,000 more by the scammer, the affidavit said.
    Individual scammers can earn significant sums from gift-card-related frauds alone.
    The DOJ official who spoke to CNBC on background said that in one case investigated by the department, scammers kept one victim on the phone line for 11 hours “and that person ended up purchasing more than $35,000 in gift cards.”
    In that case, the official said, “the bad guys told the victim that his Social Security number had been compromised and there was a warrant out for their arrest.”
    In November 2019, investigators with Walmart Global Investigations and the Secret Service identified one man, a Chinese national living in New Hampshire named Songhua Liu, as having completed more than $16,000 in gift card transactions in Arkansas during that month alone, according to the Democrat-Gazette newspaper and other Arkansas media outlets.
    An affidavit in Liu’s criminal case said that investigators believed that the Chinese national netted between $500,000 to $1 million per month in fraudulent gift cards, according to reports.
    Liu later was sentenced to 27 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to wire fraud, with the expectation that he would be deported at the end of his term, records show.
    In January, police in Colleyville, Texas, announced that they had arrested two additional people who allegedly were part of what they called an “Asian Money Laundering Ring,” which has scammed victims, many of them elderly, out of more than $3 million involving gift cards, with the proceeds being sent to China.
    Police said Walmart Global Investigations, working with the Texas law enforcement and the Secret Service, identified the fraud, which involved victims being led “through a complex story about how they allegedly owed money for a Norton Antivirus scan.”

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Nordstrom leadership reclaims oversight of struggling Rack business as executives retire

    Nordstrom on Monday announced it is streamlining leadership of its struggling Rack business with that of its full-line department stores, as two executives retire and company veterans reclaim oversight.
    The company has appointed Ken Worzel, currently chief operating officer at Nordstrom, and Jamie Nordstrom, currently president of Nordstrom stores, to newly created roles as chief customer officer and chief stores officer, respectively.

    Nordstrom Rack in downtown Seattle
    Getty Images

    Nordstrom on Monday announced it is streamlining leadership of its struggling Rack business with that of its full-line department stores, as two executives retire and company veterans reclaim oversight.
    Scott Meden, Nordstrom chief marketing officer, and Geevy S.K. Thomas, Rack president, will both be moving on, the department store chain said in a release. Meden has worked for Nordstrom in various roles for 37 years, and Thomas for 39, the retailer said.

    The company has appointed Ken Worzel, currently chief operating officer at Nordstrom, and Jamie Nordstrom, currently president of Nordstrom stores, to newly created roles as chief customer officer and chief stores officer, respectively.
    Nordstrom said that by centralizing its customer strategy under one leader and by consolidating the responsibility for its brick-and-mortar stores, it will “better align operational oversight with the company’s Closer to You strategy.”
    “This new leadership structure is reflective of a natural evolution that comes directly from our focus to serve customers better across all channels and banners,” said Nordstrom Chief Executive Officer Erik Nordstrom in a statement.
    Nordstrom Rack, once a big growth driver for the Nordstrom business, has struggled to boost revenue in recent months. That’s an issue management has attributed, in part, to difficulty securing merchandise due to supply chain snafus during the Covid pandemic.
    In its fiscal fourth quarter of 2021, Nordstrom reported sales at its Rack business were down 5% on a two-year basis, lagging the performance of its full-price stores. To be sure, that was an improvement from the prior quarter, when Rack sales fell 8% compared with 2019 levels.

    Nordstrom Rack sells fashionable styles from major brands at lower price points, competing with chains such as T.J. Maxx, Burlington, Saks off Fifth and Macy’s Backstage.
    Nordstrom shares rose nearly 3% in afternoon trading Monday, having climbed about 25% year to date.
    Find the full press release from Nordstrom here.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    FDA says Covid vaccines may need to be updated to ensure high level of effectiveness against virus

    The Food and Drug Administration, in a briefing document, said the composition of the current Covid-19 vaccines may need a change to ensure high levels of protection.
    Pfizer and Moderna are conducting clinical trials on vaccines based on the omicron variant.
    The FDA’s committee of vaccine experts will meet Wednesday to discuss how the U.S. should go about changing the current ones if needed.

    A healthcare worker administers a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccine at a vaccination clinic in the Peabody Institute Library in Peabody, Massachusetts, U.S., on Wednesday, Jan. 26, 2022.
    Vanessa Leroy | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The currently approved Covid-19 vaccines may need an update to ensure a high level of protection as the virus continues to evolve, according to the Food and Drug Administration.
    The FDA, in a briefing document published ahead of an advisory committee meeting this week, said scientists still don’t entirely understand Covid variants and the effectiveness of the vaccines. For example, mutations to the spike protein, which is used by the virus to invade human cells, have reduced effectiveness of current vaccines. That’s because today’s Covid shots were developed to target the spike protein in the original strain of the virus that emerged in Wuhan, China in late 2019.

    The FDA’s advisory committee of outside vaccine experts on Wednesday will discuss how the U.S. can develop a transparent process to make recommendations about changing the composition of the current ones if needed. Pfizer and Moderna are conducting clinical trials on vaccines based on the omicron variant, the dominant version of the virus worldwide. Omicron and its rapidly spreading subvariant BA.2 have numerous mutations that give them an enhanced capability to breakthrough the vaccines and cause infections that normally result in mild illness.
    The effectiveness of Pfizer or Moderna’s two-dose vaccines against mild illness from omicron dropped from 70% to just 10% 25 weeks after the second shot, according to the U.K. Health Security Agency. A third dose increases protection to 75% for about four weeks, but it then declines to between 25% to 40% after 15 weeks. The effectiveness of two vaccine doses against hospitalization from omicron dropped from 71% to 54% after five months, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A third shot increased protection to 91%, which then declined to 78% after four months.
    When the vaccines were first authorized in December 2020 they were 90% effective at preventing infections that resulted in symptoms, according to the CDC.
    The FDA, in the briefing document, said it is impossible to predict which variant will become dominant and for how long, creating a practical limit to how often the vaccines can be modified. The drug regulator also said it needs to see clinical trial data before authorizing any changes in vaccine composition to ensure they are effective and do not raise safety concerns.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:

    The FDA proposed using the process for updating flu vaccines as a guide to how Covid vaccines could be modified in the future. The World Health Organization meets twice a year to analyze the circulating flu variants and makes a recommendation on the composition of the vaccine.

    The FDA’s outside experts, the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee, meets to make its own recommendation, which the U.S. then accepts. The FDA is not bound by the WHO’s flu vaccine recommendation, but the drug regulator normally comes to the same conclusion.
    However, the FDA said in its briefing document that it may need to consider updating the Covid vaccines without a prior WHO recommendation. It’s unclear if the spread of Covid will follow a pattern that would make a global recommendation on vaccine updates possible, the FDA said in the document.
    The FDA advisory committee on Wednesday will also discuss whether fourth Covid shots may be warranted for younger people in the U.S. at some point. The drug regulator authorized fourth Pfizer and Moderna doses for adults ages 50 and older last week based on data from Israel indicating that an additional shot reduces mortality in older people. The FDA committee did not meet to make a recommendation before that decision, and it will not hold a vote on any recommendations Wednesday.
    Dr. Peter Marks, head of the FDA office responsible for vaccine safety and efficacy, said last week that additional booster doses might be needed in the fall. Public health experts and epidemiologists say the U.S. could face another wave of Covid infection at that time as immunity from the vaccines wanes and people move indoors to escape the colder weather.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    'There are so many ways to lose money.' Advice for college athletes from former basketball player turned financial advisor

    Life Changes

    Former college basketball player Joe McLean found his calling a financial coach and advisor to professional athletes.
    McLean believes highly publicized cases of pro athlete bankruptcies aren’t necessarily representative but do bring awareness to the challenges pro athletes face coping with sudden wealth.
    “The sooner they adopt an organized process of saving, the better off they will be,” he said.

    University of Arizona Wildcats guard Joe McLean plays defense against UCLA Bruins guard Kevin Dempsey during a Pacific-10 Conference game on Jan. 7, 1993.
    Ken Levine | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    Like many former NCAA college basketball players, Joe McLean had dreams of playing in the NBA.
    The 6’6″ forward played four years for celebrated coach Lute Olsen on the University of Arizona Wildcats. He made it to the Final Four in 1994 and averaged nearly 10 points per game in his last season. McLean played professional basketball in Europe for three years, followed by a training camp with the Sacramento Kings before he gave up on his NBA dream.

    “I was good, but others were really good,” he said.

    More from Life Changes:

    Here’s a look at other stories offering a financial angle on important lifetime milestones.

    McLean eventually found his calling as a financial coach and advisor to professional athletes, who have a notoriously tough time managing their good fortune. According to an oft-cited Sports Illustrated survey in 2009, 60% of NBA players were going bankrupt within five years of leaving the game at that time.
    McLean, who is now managing partner for San Ramon, California-based Intersect Capital — ranked 94th on the CNBC Top 100 Financial Advisors list in 2021 — thinks those numbers are exaggerated.
    But he also believes that the survey results brought a much-needed awareness to the very real challenges that pro athletes face coping with sudden wealth.
    CNBC spoke with McLean about those many challenges.

    CNBC: Why do so many professional athletes who earn so much money end up in financial difficulties?
    Joe McLean: With anyone who comes into sudden wealth, there is a risk of crash and burn. Age plays into it. The younger you are, the greater the likelihood that you’re a knucklehead. We’re working with young people who typically don’t look past next Friday and we’re talking about a 20-year-old making money that if proper planning is in place will last for generations.
    The biggest problem is that the traits that make someone a great athlete or a successful entrepreneur are not the same traits you need to be a successful investor. The drive to win and the willingness to take risks and bet on yourself doesn’t transfer well to managing money.

    CNBC: What are the key challenges that young athletes face?
    JM: Most people live and spend and save the remainder of their income. With athletes, you need more intensive financial planning because you’re working with a five-to-10-year income stream that may have to last a lifetime. I tell clients to compete on the court, not in the locker room.
    There is an overspending dynamic. At an early age, lifestyle can start making decisions for you. A $50,000 watch today could have been worth half a million dollars a couple of decades from now.
    CNBC: What is the most important piece of advice you have for young professional athlete clients?
    JM: I tell them to be patient with the money coming in. My clients have to save a minimum of 40% of every dollar they earn in their first contract; 60% of their second contract; and 80% of their third. If someone doesn’t buy into that idea, then the relationship probably won’t work.
    I’m not there to tell people what to do but to empower them to have positive outcomes. The sooner they adopt an organized process of saving, the better off they will be.
    CNBC: How much advice do you provide clients on their spending?
    JM: For most of our athlete clients, we are their personal chief financial officer. We help with paying bills and making major purchases such as a new home and cars along with setting up their first LLC or S Corp. We all need to learn how to manage a home for the first time. Understanding what things like utilities, property upkeep and taxes cost sets the client up for financial success. Some day they will pass the knowledge on to the next generation.
    CNBC: What is your investing approach for all the savings that accumulate?
    JM: We begin every investing conversation talking about three buckets: the safety and security bucket; the growth bucket; and the dream/entrepreneurial bucket.
    In the first, we recommend putting enough cash to cover at least a year of all fixed and variable costs, including the costs of life insurance, a will and trust, and possibly their first home. We then begin filling the growth bucket.
    Early in a client’s career we invest in a mixture of low-cost, tax-managed equities and fixed income assets. We also begin investing up to 15% of the portfolio in income-producing real estate but until the client has some experience investing, we keep them very liquid.
    When those two buckets are filled, we leave 5% to 10% of the money for the dream/entrepreneurial bucket. This can be invested in private equity, venture capital, and small business ventures. It might also include buying a second car or home they want. Most people want to fill the dream bucket first, but this approach allows clients to take more risk over time in that third bucket knowing that they have filled the other two first.

    Don’t spend money before you earn it. Honor your mother with a financial plan for the future, not just a new house.

    Joe McLean
    managing partner at Intersect Capital

    CNBC: What would you tell one of the 60 athletes who will be drafted by an NBA team next month?
    JM: These players are living out their dreams in the NCAA tournament and some will have the opportunity to play beyond college. If you watch a draft, you’ll see a lot of people celebrating along with the athletes. Many of them have your best interests at heart but many of them also have expectations that you’ll help them financially.
    I write a letter on social media before every draft with ideas that athletes should think about going into the process. They include things like don’t spend money before you earn it. Honor your mother with a financial plan not just a new house. Empower your friends and family to get jobs, don’t give them one. Seek advice from experts and people who have been there.
    They need to be patient with the money. We all do knucklehead things. That’s why it’s so important to have a process to get on track early.
    CNBC: How do you convince young people to be disciplined in that situation?
    JM: I think it’s more helpful to talk about reasons why professional athletes remain wealthy rather than horror stories about why they went broke. There are so many ways to lose money and there’s no judgment. We all do knucklehead things. That’s why it’s so important to have a process to get on track early.

    CNBC: Any other tips for young athletes coming into big money?
    JM: Learn to play golf. It allows you to spend two to four hours with people to learn about them and from them. Golf is a humbling sport and humility is the new smart.
    In minor league baseball and hockey, they put you on buses and buses humble you. I think there’s a correlation between travelling on buses and being successful when you sign a big pro contract. The slower that money comes to someone, the longer it will last. Be patient. More