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    Sports fanatics should consider buying these three stocks, Jim Cramer says

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday offered three stock picks for investors dreaming of owning a professional sports team. 
    “You’ve got a lot of options if you want to own part of a pro-sports team or even a whole league, but they’re not always the best stocks,” he later added.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday offered three stock picks for investors who dream of owning a professional sports team but can’t afford to pay up billions of dollars. 
    “Owning the common stock won’t let you weigh in on the trades or attend the owners’ meetings, go through the draft — you’re very much along for the ride — but you do get a real economic interest in these teams,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “You’ve got a lot of options if you want to own part of a pro-sports team or even a whole league, but they’re not always the best stocks,” he later added.
    Here is the list of three stocks that Cramer recommends:

    Liberty Braves Group
    Formula One Group
    Endeavor Group

    “I like Liberty Braves. I like this Formula One for pure plays and Endeavor for live entertainment and that terrific UFC kicker,” he said.
    Cramer added that he believes Madison Square Garden Sports and Manchester United are “more or less okay,” stating that the former’s stock is “totally undervalued, but there’s not necessarily a good way to unlock that value.”
    As for Manchester United, Cramer said that while the team could get a boost if rival franchise Chelsea Football Club is sold at a good price, he’d still “rather own something with better financials.”

    Disclosure: Jim Cramer is represented by the talent agency Endeavor.
    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.
    Disclaimer

    Questions for Cramer?Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC
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    Questions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected]

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    World Cup 2022: Dates, draw, schedule, kick-off times, final for Qatar tournament

    The 2022 World Cup is taking place in Qatar in the winter months rather than the usual summer ones, due to the heat.
    The tournament kicks off on Monday November 21 at the Al Bayt stadium in Al Khor when hosts Qatar take on Ecuador at the Al Bayt Stadium.

    Gio Reyna #11 of the United States is marked by Daniel Chacon #6 of Costa Rica during a FIFA World Cup qualifier game at Estadio Nacional de Costa Rica on March 30, 2022 in San Jose, Costa Rica.
    Brad Smith | ISI Photos | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images

    From key dates to kick-off times, here’s all you need to know about this year’s tournament.
    When and where is the 2022 World Cup?
    The 2022 World Cup is taking place in Qatar in the winter months rather than the usual summer ones, due to the heat.

    The tournament kicks off on Monday November 21 at the Al Bayt stadium in Al Khor when hosts Qatar take on Ecuador at the Al Bayt Stadium.
    England will also feature on the first day with their Group B match against Iran scheduled to take place just eight days after the Premier League shuts down.
    The final will be played at the Lusail Stadium in Doha a week before Christmas on Sunday December 18.
    Who has qualified so far?
    After a successful World Cup qualifying campaign, we pick out the best goals from England’s journey to Qatar 2022, featuring strikes from Harry Kane, Bukayo Saka and more!
    29 of the 32 nations who will appear at the tournament are now known.

    As hosts, Qatar received automatic qualification to next year’s tournament.
    Four-time World Cup winners Germany were the first team to guarantee a spot through the qualification process in Europe, while Brazil – the most successful national team in World Cup history with five trophies – secured swift qualification as one of the top four teams in South America’s groups.
    England secured their place in November by topping their qualifying group.
    Canada qualified for the World Cup finals for just the second time, beating Jamaica 4-0 to book their ticket to Qatar and end 36 years of failure and heartache.
    Mexico and the United States also qualified for the World Cup in their final qualifier, and Senegal, Ghana, Tunisia, Morocco and Cameroon were among the final countries to book their places at Qatar 2022. Sadio Mane scored the winning kick as Senegal beat Egypt 3-1 on penalties, with Mo Salah among the Egyptian players to miss their spot-kicks.
    In Europe, Portugal and Poland progressed to the finals after winning their play-off finals against North Macedonia and Sweden respectively. The third and final European play-off, which will feature Wales against Scotland or Ukraine, has been delayed until June.
    Who will be the final three countries to qualify?
    Wales, Scotland or Ukraine will be at the World Cup as play-off winners.
    Meanwhile, the intercontinental play-offs will be contested on 13-14 June in Qatar with Australia or UAE or Peru plus Costa Rica or New Zealand taking the two remaining places.
    UEFA and Intercontinental play-offs:

    Wales vs Scotland or Ukraine
    Australia or United Arab Emirates vs Peru
    Costa Rica vs New Zealand

    Because Scotland and Wales have been pitched in the same path, it means Scotland and Wales will play each other for a place at next year’s World Cup if Scotland progress past Ukraine in their delayed play-off semi-final.
    What is the World Cup group draw?

    Group A: Qatar, Ecuador, Senegal, Netherlands
    Group B: England, Iran, USA, European play-off*
    Group C: Argentina, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Poland
    Group D: France, Intercontinental play-off 1*, Denmark, Tunisia
    Group E: Spain, Intercontinental play-off 2*, Germany, Japan
    Group F: Belgium, Ghana, Morocco, Croatia
    Group G: Brazil, Serbia, Switzerland, Cameroon
    Group H: Portugal, Canada, Uruguay, South Korea

    What is the World Cup format and schedule?
    Image:France players celebrate winning the World Cup in Moscow in 2018
    The 2022 World Cup will feature 32 teams in eight groups of four.

    Read more stories from Sky Sports

    Four matches will be played each day during the group stage, which will run over a 12-day period and see winners and runners-up progress to the round of 16.
    Matches will only be assigned to particular venues after the finals draw, so organisers can choose optimal kick-off times to suit television audiences in different countries, as well as supporters out in Qatar.
    Unlike at Euro 2020, there will be a third-place play-off game on December 17.
    Group stage: November 21- December 2Round of 16: December 3-6Quarter-finals: December 9/10Semi-finals: December 13/14Final: December 18
    When will the matches kick off?
    FIFA has confirmed the first two rounds of matches will kick off at 1pm, 4pm, 7pm and 10pm local time (10am, 1pm, 4pm and 7pm in the United Kingdom).
    Kick-off times in the final round of group games and knock-out round matches will be at 6pm and 10pm local time (3pm and 7pm UK time).
    The final is scheduled to kick off at 6pm local time (3pm UK time)
    What are the venues?
    The group games will take place across eight stadia: Al Bayt Stadium, Khalifa International Stadium, Al Thumama Stadium, Ahmad Bin Ali Stadium, Lusail Stadium, Ras Abu Aboud Stadium, Education City Stadium, Al Janoub Stadium.
    What will happen with the Premier League?
    The Premier League has confirmed key dates for the 2022/23 campaign, with the season adjusted to accommodate a World Cup that takes place in the middle of the domestic calendar.
    The season will start a week earlier than normal on August 6 2022, with 16 matchdays taking place up to the weekend of November 12/13, before the tournament kicks off on November 21.
    The Premier League will resume on Boxing Day following the World Cup final, which takes place on December 18.
    The final match round of the 2022/23 season will be played on May 28 2023.
    Key World Cup, Premier League, Scottish Premiership dates
    April – World Cup draw.
    July 30 – Scottish Premiership season starts along with the EFL Championship, League One and League Two.
    August 6 – Premier League season starts.
    November 12-13 – Final round of Premier League, Championship and Scottish Premiership matches before the World Cup.
    November 21 – World Cup starts.
    December 2 – Final set of group stage matches.
    December 3-6 – The round of 16 starts.
    December 9-10 – The quarter-finals.
    December 10 – The Championship resumes.
    December 13-14 – World Cup semi-finals.
    December 17 – The Scottish Premiership resumes.
    December 18 – World Cup final.
    December 26 – The Premier League resumes.

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    Will Smith resigns from motion picture academy over 'inexcusable' Chris Rock Oscars slap

    Will Smith has resigned from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, days after he smacked comedian Chris Rock at the Oscars.
    Smith had previously apologized to the academy and to Rock. Minutes after he slapped Rock on Sunday night, Smith won the Oscar for best actor for his role in “King Richard.”
    In a statement issued Friday, Smith said he would “accept any further consequences” the academy’s board of governors deems appropriate.

    Will Smith has resigned from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, days after he smacked comedian Chris Rock at the annual Oscars ceremony in Los Angeles.
    In a statement issued Friday, Smith said he would “accept any further consequences” the group’s board of governors may deem appropriate.

    “My actions at the 94th Academy Awards presentation were shocking, painful, and inexcusable,” he said.
    The academy said later Friday that it has accepted Smith’s resignation and that it would continue disciplinary proceedings against the actor.
    Smith had previously apologized to the academy and to Rock. Minutes after he slapped Rock on Sunday night, Smith won the Oscar for best actor for his role in “King Richard.”
    “Love will make you do crazy things,” he said in his acceptance speech, one of several apparent references to his attack on the comedian.
    Smith confronted Rock onstage after he made a joke about the close-cropped hair of Jada Pinkett Smith, Smith’s wife, who has alopecia, a skin condition that can result in hair loss. After striking Rock, Smith returned to his seat and screamed profanities at his fellow star, who shook off the assault and continued presenting the award for Best Documentary Feature.

    US actor Will Smith accepts the award for Best Actor in a Leading Role for “King Richard” onstage during the 94th Oscars at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, California on March 27, 2022.
    Robyn Beck | AFP | Getty Images

    On Wednesday, the organization behind the Oscars said its board of governors has initiated a disciplinary proceeding against Smith for violating the group’s standards of conduct. During the board’s next meeting on April 18, it said, it would decide what action it will take, if any, including suspension or expulsion.
    With Smith preemptively leaving the organization, it is unclear what the academy will do next. Smith’s resignation will prevent him from voting for Oscars in the future, but he can still be nominated and win.
    The Los Angeles Police Department was ready to arrest Smith at the awards ceremony Sunday, according to a producer of the show, but Rock declined to press charges. The academy has said that Smith refused to leave the ceremony after he struck the comedian.
    Rock, meanwhile, has refrained from commenting too deeply on the slap. He told a crowd at a comedy show earlier this week in Boston that he was “still processing what happened.”
    Smith, who has been one of Hollywood’s most bankable stars for decades, had made his name as a star of blockbusters such as “Independence Day” and the “Men in Black” franchise. But he mixed in serious dramatic roles, such as in “Ali” and “The Pursuit of Happyness,” in what seemed like a quest for Oscars glory. Now his long-sought-after Academy Award will forever be associated with the most shocking moment in the show’s history.
    Read Smith’s complete statement:
    I have directly responded to the Academy’s disciplinary hearing notice, and I will fully accept any and all consequences for my conduct. My actions at the 94th Academy Awards presentation were shocking, painful, and inexcusable.
    The list of those I have hurt is long and includes Chris, his family, many of my dear friends and loved ones, all those in attendance, and global audiences at home. I betrayed the trust of the Academy. I deprived other nominees and winners of their opportunity to celebrate and be celebrated for their extraordinary work. I am heartbroken. I want to put the focus back on those who deserve attention for their achievements and allow the Academy to get back to the incredible work it does to support creativity and artistry in film.
    So, I am resigning from membership in the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, and will accept any further consequences the Board deems appropriate.
    Change takes time and I am committed to doing the work to ensure that I never again allow violence to overtake reason.

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    Cramer's lightning round: WW is not a buy

    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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    Nikola Corp: “They’re going to lose money as far as the eye can see.”

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    $100 million New Jersey deli owner Hometown International just announced a merger with a bioplastics firm

    Hometown International, the owner of the so-called $100 million New Jersey deli, has agreed to a merger with bioplastics company Makamer.
    The company resulting from the merger will not operate the store, Your Hometown Deli in Paulsboro, but a worker there said the eatery will remain open after the merger.
    It is not clear how the 60 or so shareholders in Hometown International will make out in the deal.

    Your Hometown Deli in Paulsboro, N.J.
    Google Earth

    Hometown International — that odd, publicly traded company with a market capitalization of more than $100 million despite owning just one small New Jersey deli — has announced plans to merge with Makamer, a private bioplastics start-up firm.
    The money-losing Your Hometown Deli in Paulsboro, N.J., which is owned by Hometown International, will not be operated by the company that will result from the merger with the Los Angeles-based Makamer.

    But a woman who answered the phone at the deli on Friday said, “We’re still going to be open” after the merger is completed.
    The announcement of the tie-up of Makamer and Hometown International comes nearly a year after hedge fund manager David Einhorn in a client letter noted the bizarre disparity between the deli’s extremely modest sales, which were $25,004 for all of 2021, and Hometown’s sky-high stock market valuation.
    “The pastrami must be amazing,” Einhorn quipped in the most-quoted line from that April 2021 letter.
    On the heels of that letter, CNBC detailed the tangled business relationships and controversial history of a number of people connected to Hometown International, whose CEO at the time was Paul Morina, the high school principal and head wrestling coach in Paulsboro.
    Morina, who was removed as CEO in May after those reports, is still listed as owning 31.5 million shares of Hometown International.

    In its annual report, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on March 18, Hometown International disclosed that “the Company has identified a potential target company and is currently engaged in discussions regarding a possible business combination.”

    Makamer CEO talks to CNBC

    Alex Mond, the head of Makamer, told CNBC in an interview Friday that he expects the merger with Hometown International, which was disclosed in an SEC filing on the eve of April Fool’s Day, to be completed “in a few weeks.”
    After that, Mond said, he plans to soon after transfer what will be the bioplastics company’s new stock trading symbol to Nasdaq from the over-the-counter markets.
    Mond said Los Angeles-based Makamer considered Hometown an attractive merger candidate even after the headlines about the deli owner because of its status as a publicly traded company.
    “We have investors who pushed us to go public,” he said.
    Mond said that going public will make it easier for Makamer to get much-needed money to grow its business, which launched more than three years ago, by issuing debt.
    Mond said Makamer is in discussions with “major companies interested in selling our product,” which is designed to replace petroleum-based plastics, and to reduce the amount of plastic pollution in the world’s oceans and land.
    “We’re anticipating purchase orders,” Mond said.
    “We use 45 different blends, mainly hemp,” Mond said about the firm’s bioplastics.
    “Hemp is the best replacement” for plastics, he said, noting that “it uses the least amount of energy, and it’s easy to grow,” is renewable, and “also cleans up the soil” of pollutants.

    Stock price hits $14 a share

    The SEC filing announcing the intended merger, which was made by Hometown International under the new name Makamer Holdings, did not reveal how Hometown International and Makamer were each being valued in the merger, or how the 60 or so shareholders in Hometown International will make out in the deal.
    It is not likely, at all, that the shareholders will receive the current value of the share price, which remained unchanged at $14 per share after the end of the trading day Friday. That price gives Hometown International a market capitalization of $109.2 million, just based on outstanding shares alone.
    HWIN, the current symbol of Hometown International, trades in very low volume, if at all, on the Pink platform of OTC Markets, an over-the-counter listing service.
    OTC Markets in April 2021delisted HWIN from its OTCQB platform, shifted the stock to the less prestigious Pink market, and slapped a “buyer beware” warning on the deli owner “for not complying with the rules” of OTC Markets.
    The last recorded trades of the stock were for 100 shares on March 8. Before that, the last recorded trades of the stock were for the same number of shares on Dec. 31.

    ‘More details will follow shortly’

    Peter Coker Jr., the Hong Kong-based investor who is Hometown International’s CEO, in an email response to being asked about the merger said, “Everything that is available to discuss has been Disclosed in the SEC Form 8K.”
    “More details will follow shortly,” wrote Coker Jr.
    Manoj Jain, the founder of Maso Capital in Hong Kong, which is a major investor in Hometown International, declined to comment through a spokesman.
    Maso Capital for more than a year had positioned Hometown International and another related publicly traded shell company, formerly known as E-Waste, as vehicles for private companies to merge with and become publicly traded themselves.
    E-Waste last year entered into a reverse merger with EZRaider Global Inc., a privately held electric vehicle corporation. E-Waste itself before the merger had a market capitalization of $110 million despite having no business operations.
    On the heels of CNBC reports about Hometown International and E-Waste, both firms, in highly unusual filings with the SEC, disavowed their stock’s publicly quoted stock process, saying they were aware of no basis to support their companies’ high market capitalizations.
    Other major investors in Hometown International include the investment funds of two U.S. universities, Duke and Vanderbilt, with those funds having mailing addresses in the same building as Maso Capital.
    The largest shareholders in the deli owner are a group of opaque entities in Macao, China, whose mailing addresses are located on the same floor in the same office building there.

    CNBC Politics

    Read more of CNBC’s politics coverage:

    Concern about management

    Mond, in the interview, said that he and his current management at Makamer will be in charge of the merged company, despite the initial desire of people currently involved with Hometown to have management roles in the company when merger discussions started last year.
    “They weren’t OK with it, but that was our condition,” Mond said. “It was all my management, or I’m not taking the deal.”
    Mond said that he knew of the legal and regulatory controversies surrounding people involved in Hometown before he was approached by two “Wall Street guys” whom he knew, who suggested merger discussions.
    “I was concerned” about those controversies, Mond said. “That’s why I made sure that our management takes over and not the old management.”
    Mond said that during negotiations about the merger he only spoke only “very briefly” with Coker Jr., Hometown International’s president.
    “Maybe three or four minutes,” Mond said, referring to the length of his discussions with Coker Jr. on the phone.
    Mond said that his main point of contact in negotiations was with Hometown International’s lawyers, and “also James Patten.”
    CNBC last year reported that Patten was working at the time as a financial analyst at Tryon Capital Ventures, a North Carolina investment company owned by Coker Jr.’s father, Peter Coker Sr.
    Patten also had wrestled in high school with Morina, the major Hometown International shareholder and its former CEO. His LinkedIn profile lists him as manager of the Mantua Creek Group, a partnership in which Morina is a member, and which leases space to the Paulsboro deli.
    Patten also is barred by FINRA, the broker-dealer regulator, from acting as a stockbroker or associating with broker-dealers, according to the regulator’s database.
    He previously was the subject of repeated disciplinary actions by FINRA, which included not complying with an arbitration award of more than $753,000 for violating securities laws, unauthorized trading and churning a client’s account.
    Coker Jr.’s father, Peter Coker Sr., is listed as owning 1.3 million shares of Hometown International. Coker Sr. and his business partner in Tryon Capital, Peter Reichard, control another entity, Europa Capital Investments, which is listed as owning nearly 2 million shares of the deli owner.
    Coker Sr. previously has been sued for allegedly hiding money from creditors and alleged business-related fraud. He has denied wrongdoing in those cases, one of which was settled out of court in recent years in North Carolina.

    Peter Lee Coker mugshot from the Raleigh/Wake City-County Bureau of Identification (CCBI).
    Source: Raleigh/Wake City-County Bureau of Identification

    In August 1992, the then-49-year-old Coker Sr. was arrested in Allentown, Pa. and charged “with prostitution and other offenses after he allegedly exposed himself” to three underage girls as he drove around Central School,” The Morning Call reported at the time. Records detailing the outcome of that case are not publicly available.
    Coker Sr. was arrested in North Carolina in 2010, on a charge of soliciting a prostitute.
    Reichard in 2011 entered a plea in a criminal case that led to his conviction for a scheme to illegally contribute thousands of dollars to the successful 2008 campaign for North Carolina governor of Bev Perdue, a Democrat.
    The scheme involved the use of a bogus consulting contract between Tryon Capital Ventures and a fast-food franchisee who wanted to support Perdue. Coker Sr. was not charged in that case.
    CNBC last year detailed that Tryon Capital was being paid thousands of dollars per month for consulting by both Hometown International and the related shell company, E-Waste. Both of those companies terminated those consulting contracts on the heels of that reporting.

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    As Wall Street banks embrace crypto, high-flying start-ups look to lure top finance talent

    Watch Daily: Monday – Friday, 3 PM ET

    Major banks are building out teams dedicated to cryptocurrencies and the underlying blockchain technology.
    Start-ups are looking to compete for talent by offering faster-paced environments, equity and less red tape, courting talent from Goldman Sachs, BlackRock and others.
    “You’re taking brand risk — Goldman is one of the storied institutions of Wall Street,” said Justin Schmidt, former head of digital asset markets at Goldman Sachs.

    Wall Street has been beefing up hiring for digital asset teams. But some employees are walking away from name-brand institutions in search of more risk, and potentially, more reward.
    JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs are among the firms with dedicated groups for cryptocurrency and its underlying blockchain technology. JPMorgan has one of the largest crypto teams, with more than 200 employees working in its Onyx division. The JPM Coin digital currency is being used commercially to send payments around the world.

    Umar Farooq, the CEO of Onyx by JPMorgan, said the team has to worry about compliance and protecting the bank’s brand and often moves slower than your average crypto start-up. But when products are launched, they reach “a scale that a fintech can only dream of.”
    “There aren’t many places where you can roll out a new platform and that platform can go from literally nothing to transacting a billion dollars of trade a day in a few months,” Farooq told CNBC. “That sort of scale can only be possible when you operate at a company like JPMorgan Chase. The upside of that scale is way more important than whatever downsides might exist by virtue of more regulations or controls.”
    When it comes to hiring, Farooq said it’s a mix of current JPMorgan employees and competing for talent with start-ups and bigger tech companies. From first-year analysts to senior management and managing directors, there’s a greater interest in making the move to crypto, he said.

    A ‘Wall St’ sign is seen above two ‘One Way’ signs in New York.
    Lucas Jackson | Reuters

    Financial services firms added three times as many crypto jobs last year than in 2015, according to recent data from LinkedIn. In the first half of 2021, that pace jumped by 40%. Banks on a crypto hiring spree included Deutsche Bank, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, Capital One, Barclays, Credit Suisse, UBS, Bank of America and BNY Mellon.
    The crypto boom on Wall Street coincides with more funding and hiring in the start-up world. Crypto and blockchain companies raised a record $25 billion last year, an eightfold increase from a year earlier, according to CB Insights data.

    Farooq said that even with the start-up boom, JPMorgan has seen “limited attrition.” Those leaving have been people “wanting to start their own company versus wanting to leave and go do something similar.”
    However, JPMorgan did lose one of its highest-profile crypto deputies last year. Christine Moy is on garden leave after departing her role as managing director and global head of crypto and metaverse at Onyx. She has yet to announce her next move.
    “After over a half-decade laying the foundations for blockchain-based infrastructure across financial markets and cross-border payments, creating new businesses that have already scaled into the $USD billions at J.P. Morgan, I am looking to challenge myself further by finding new opportunities to create value and drive impact for the Web3/crypto ecosystem from a new angle,” Moy told CNBC in an email.

    Leaving Wall Street

    Other top crypto executives who left Wall Street recently expressed some frustration at how long it takes to get projects moving within a large financial institution.
    Mary Catherine Lader, chief operating officer at Uniswap Labs, left her job as a managing director at BlackRock last year. Her foray into crypto started as a side project within the asset management company.
    “It certainly wasn’t my primary job,” Lader said. “It was kind of a hobby, as it is for so many people on Wall Street, and it definitely wasn’t something that at the time I was thinking about, because it was early stages of adoption.”
    At Uniswap, Lader is now working on an emerging decentralized cryptocurrency exchange. She said she couldn’t pass up the opportunity to work on the next wave of innovation.
    “This technology is so critical to the future of finance that it didn’t feel like a risk at all,” Lader said. “I was sad to leave the people I had loved working with for many years. I have tremendous respect for the firm, but it didn’t feel like a risk. That’s a great thing about where we are in Web3.”
    Justin Schmidt, former head of digital asset markets at Goldman Sachs, made a similar career change last year. He joined institutional crypto trading platform Talos and described the risk in a similar way, calling the decision “multidimensional.”
    “Inherently, you’re taking a brand risk — Goldman is one of the storied institutions of Wall Street,” Schmidt said. “You are also taking a risk by staying someplace more traditional, and I very firmly believe that this is a generational change and there’s a generational opportunity here.”
    Cryptocurrency start-ups and banks describe a shift in the hunt for top talent. Many are looking beyond top candidates with MBAs, and instead considering those with less conventional resumes. Lader and Schmidt said some of their best crypto hires have been self-taught engineers or crypto influencers they first interacted with on Twitter.
    “I constantly am meeting people who are 23 years old, who are as smart about markets as people I worked with on Wall Street for years,” Lader said. “People who frankly had no interest in financial services, who would never really explore or consider working on Wall Street, are excited to work at UniSwap Labs and companies like us.” More

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    General Motors' U.S. sales slumped in the first quarter, trailing rival Toyota's

    GM’s U.S. sales fell 20.1% from a year ago, after supply-chain disruptions left dealers with thin inventories.
    Toyota faced similar challenges, but was able to squeeze GM for the U.S. sales crown again.

    A Chevrolet pickup truck is seen at the Knapp Chevrolet dealership on February 02, 2022 in Houston, Texas.
    Brandon Bell | Getty Images

    General Motors’ first-quarter U.S. sales fell 20% from a year ago, in line with analysts’ expectations, as ongoing supply-chain issues disrupted its production and kept dealers’ inventories tight.
    But GM’s North America chief said that supplies of semiconductor chips are improving, and that he expects that GM will be able to post year-over-year sales increases by the second half of 2022.

    GM’s factories were able to operate at “close to normal levels” in the first quarter, said Steve Carlisle, president of GM’s North America business unit.
    The time lag between production and deliveries to dealers meant that GM’s total U.S. sales lagged those  of rival Toyota, which took the U.S. sales crown from GM in 2021. GM delivered 512,846 vehicles in the first quarter. Toyota said that its first-quarter U.S. sales fell 14.7% from a year ago, to 514,492 vehicles.

    GM has been scrambling to rebuild dealer inventories that have been hit hard by production cuts amid a global shortage of semiconductor chips and other key automotive components. GM said that it was able to increase its production in North America sequentially in both the fourth quarter of 2021 and the first quarter of 2022 as chip supplies have improved.
    As of the end of March, GM had about 274,000 vehicles in its U.S. inventory, including vehicles in transit to dealers – up from about 200,000 at year end and 129,000 at the end of September.
    “Supply chain disruptions are not fully behind us,” Carlisle said. “But we expect to continue outperforming 2021 production levels, especially in the second half of the year.”

    Sales of most GM vehicles were down year-over-year, but there were a few exceptions. GM’s big truck-based SUVs – the Cadillac Escalade, Chevrolet Tahoe and Suburban and GMC Yukon – all had modestly higher sales than in the first quarter of 2021. So were the heavy-duty versions of the Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra pickups, as GM prioritized production and deliveries of its most profitable products.
    This is developing news. Check back for updates.

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    Dow climbs more than 100 points as Wall Street begins second quarter on a positive note

    Stocks were modestly higher on Friday as investors assessed a new quarter of trading and a troublesome bond market recession indicator.
    The S&P 500 rose 0.34% to 4,545.86, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.29% to 14,261.50. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 139.92 points, or 0.40%, to close at 34,818.27 after being down more than 100 points earlier in the session. Stocks closed near session highs.

    The gains for stocks came on the first trading day of April and the second quarter. Wall Street is fresh off its first negative quarter in two years, but there were positive signs for investors on Friday.
    The price of U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate fell below $100 per barrel as the Biden administration pledged to release more strategic oil reserves. Energy prices surged earlier this year as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine disrupted global supply, leading to some worry that the high prices could hurt economic growth.
    Investors were also digesting the official jobs report for March, which showed the U.S. economy adding 431,000 payrolls. The result was below the composite estimate of 490,000 from Dow Jones but above some of the lower-end estimates.

    “With some sentiment indicators in the U.S. pointing in the wrong direction, the jobs data also came in weaker than expected, but not as bad as many would have feared given the backdrop,” said Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors. “Job vacancies are still being filled and wage growth remains robust, suggesting that the economy is in good shape. That is the case for now; the key will be the impact on the jobs market and broad economy as rates jump higher and growth slows.”
    Materials stocks moved higher, with Freeport-McMoRan rising more than 2% and gold miner Newmont rising nearly 4.2%. Health care, utility and energy stocks also outperformed. Edwards Life Sciences and Illumina rose more than 4%, making them two of the top performers in the S&P 500. Walmart rose more than 1%.

    U.S.-listed Chinese stocks jumped on Friday after a report that China was considering sharing company audits with foreign regulators.
    Investors appeared to largely shake off a recession signal from the bond market that was triggered after the closing bell Thursday and again on Friday morning. The 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields inverted for the first time since 2019.
    For some investors, it’s a signal that the economy is headed for a possible recession, though the inverted yield curve does not predict exactly when it will happen, and history shows it could be more than a year away or longer.
    “It is a warning about whether the Fed is going to be able to land this thing properly. And I think that’s a valid concern,” said Keith Lerner, co-CIO and chief market strategist at Truist Advisory Services. “But most of the data by itself suggests that the yield curve itself is not a short-term sell signal.”
    Lerner added that the market appeared to be shifting toward leadership by more defensive stocks in recent days.

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    Bank stocks struggled on Friday after the inversion, with Citigroup losing 2%. Chip stocks fell again on Friday, with Intel dropping nearly 3% and Advanced Micro Devices losing about 1%, amid growing concern about personal computer demand.
    There were some more negative economic readings on Friday, with February construction spending data and March manufacturing data from ISM coming in below expectations.
    The three major averages slumped on Thursday to close out the first negative quarter for stocks in two years, with losses accelerating in the final hour of trading. The Dow and S&P 500 ended the quarter down nearly 4.6% and 4.9%, respectively, during the period. The Nasdaq dropped more than 9%.
    The start of the Fed’s rate hiking cycle, persistently high inflation and the ongoing war in Ukraine contributed to the rough quarter for stocks.
    For the week, the S&P 500 squeaked out a slight gain while the Dow declined 0.12%. The Nasdaq added 0.65%.
    Correction: This article was updated to accurately reflect trading in U.S. futures that started Thursday evening. An earlier version misstated the session. Shannon Saccocia is chief investment officer at SVB Private Bank. An earlier version misstated her firm.

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