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    China Boeing 737 plane crash: No reports yet of bodies or survivors

    No bodies or survivors have yet been found from the China Eastern Airlines crash as of Tuesday morning, Chinese state media said.
    The domestic flight on a Boeing 737-800 and carrying 132 people nosedived Monday afternoon in the southern region of Guangxi, China’s aviation authority confirmed.
    Only plane debris has been found so far, state media said.

    BEIJING — No bodies or survivors have yet been found from the China Eastern Airlines crash as of Tuesday morning, Chinese state media said.
    The domestic flight on a Boeing 737-800, which was carrying 132 people, nosedived Monday afternoon in the southern region of Guangxi, China’s aviation authority confirmed.

    The cause of the crash remains unknown, and no fatalities have been confirmed.
    Chinese President Xi Jinping ordered an investigation and rescue teams to the location of the crash in the rural, mountainous region.
    The missing people on board the plane have not yet been found at the site of the crash, state media said Tuesday, noting only plane debris has been found so far. The crash initially caused a mountain fire, which has since been put out, the reports said.
    As the aircraft was a U.S.-made plane, the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board said it has appointed an investigator for the crash. It was not clear whether the investigation would include travel to China.

    Chicago-based Boeing said in a statement it is in contact with the U.S. transport safety board, and its technical team is “prepared to assist with the investigation led by the Civil Aviation Administration of China.”

    The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration said it was aware of the crash and will assist in the investigation “if asked.”
    China Eastern Airlines said it is sending workers to the crash site and has opened a hotline for family members. The company’s Hong Kong-traded shares briefly dropped more than 7% on Tuesday morning.
    Boeing shares fell by nearly 7% overnight in U.S. trading.

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    Why foreign investors are feeling jittery about China

    STATE MEDIA have not tried to hide the fact that billions of dollars in global investors’ funds have drained away from China in recent weeks. They have attributed the outflows—$11.5bn since the start of March and counting—to volatility in global markets, a hawkish Federal Reserve and the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on global supply chains. One government publication has downplayed the seriousness of the situation and speculated that foreign money will soon come pouring back in.Indeed, China’s markets have experienced short spells of outflows in recent years only to see them reverse quickly, usually within two months. Onshore markets have mainly been a sure bet since the inclusion of many mainland-traded securities in several global indices, such as MSCI’s flagship emerging-markets index, starting in 2018. Tens of billions of dollars’ worth of inflows have been ushered into China’s markets each year since then. Occasional outflows, once in 2019 and twice in 2020, have occurred in that time. During the most severe bout in July 2020 about $12bn drained away before net inflows resumed two and a half months later.This time around, however, foreign investors say that deeper, structural problems are sapping China’s markets. The outflows have been more violent. And they have been accompanied by a global sell-off in Chinese securities. The Hang Seng tech index, which tracks many of China’s biggest tech groups listed in Hong Kong, is down by 45% compared with a year ago. The NASDAQ Golden Dragon China index, which includes similar companies listed in America, has fallen by 58% over the same period. “A bounce is unlikely to come easily until investors see structural forces change again,” says Kevin Lai of Daiwa Capital Markets, a broker.Reports in the state media notwithstanding, the outflows do not appear to be closely linked to Fed tightening. Even as capital has left China, it has kept flowing into other emerging markets, suggesting that there is no overall shortage of liquidity, according to the Institute of International Finance, an industry group. Instead investors point to China-specific factors. State meddling in the private sector and with tech companies has, of course, become commonplace. Another worry is that Xi Jinping’s support for Russia could lead to sanctions on Chinese companies. The war has also led to increased concerns over Taiwan, which China claims as its own and has vowed to take back by any means necessary. Fears over a Chinese invasion have for the first time led some investors to add geopolitical risk to their frameworks for assessing their Chinese investments. The risk premium that investors deem acceptable to hold Chinese assets is rising, pushing some to scale back their allocations. The longer the war in Ukraine drags on, the higher the premium could go. Moreover, China’s weakening control over Omicron, the highly transmissible variant of covid-19, is darkening the economic outlook. The response to a worsening outbreak in Shanghai, home to many foreign executives, has become an embarrassment for the local government. International flights have been diverted from the metropolis. A chaotic, rolling lockdown of districts is being implemented. The gates of residential communities are being welded shut to keep dwellers from leaving. The situation, in China’s most developed city, and two years into the pandemic, reveals Mr Xi’s lack of an exit strategy from the crisis.The property market has also continued to wobble. On March 22nd Evergrande, a troubled developer, said Chinese banks had claims on $2bn of its cash, another bad sign for foreign creditors hoping to recover their investments.The government has been slow to act. Many had expected “shock and awe” from the National People’s Congress, China’s legislature, in early March, says Rob Mumford of GAM, an asset manager. “They didn’t get that.”But the market sell-off has jolted officials into action. The Financial Stability Committee (FSC), chaired by Liu He, a top economic adviser, is now spearheading an attempt to regain investors’ confidence. Starting on March 15th Mr Liu and the FSC have promised to increase lending growth and push state-owned funds to buy more stocks. Officials in Beijing will help stabilise markets in Hong Kong.China’s leadership will support the listing of firms in America and ease its crackdown on tech companies. Housing-market policies will become more accommodative. And the government is also preparing to tackle the Omicron outbreak with self-testing kits and Pfizer’s Paxlovid pill, which helps protect infected people against serious disease. Mr Liu hopes to better communicate China’s economic plans to the market in the future. But the important thing, says Laura Wang of Morgan Stanley, a bank, is how quickly the authorities can execute their promises. It will take more than talk to stanch the outflows. ■ More

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    Kroger is a safety stock that can withstand inflation, Jim Cramer says

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

    Grocery retailer Kroger is maintaining its position as a strong performer as competitors struggle with inflationary pressures, Cramer said.
    “We’ve got the worst inflation in decades, which is bad news for the whole industry except Kroger, which we know is coping just fine with inflation,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    Grocery retailer Kroger is maintaining its position as a strong performer as competitors struggle with inflationary pressures, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday.
    “We’ve got the worst inflation in decades, which is bad news for the whole industry except Kroger, which we know is coping just fine with inflation and even has expanding gross margins,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “We know Kroger’s safe because they’re doing great right now, and if the Fed tightens too aggressively, causing an actual recession, this stock will only get more attractive because it’s exactly what money managers like to own when they’re worried about a real slowdown,” he added.
    Cramer’s comments come after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter-percentage point on March 16, spurring a market rally. Chair Jerome Powell said Monday the Fed could implement more aggressive interest rate hikes for the rest of the year to combat inflation, leading stocks to fall in a volatile trading session.
    Kroger stock fell 0.25% on Monday. The grocery chain, which saw a boost during the pandemic as consumers turned to at-home cooking, forecast annual same-store sales and profit above Wall Street expectations in its most recent quarterly earnings report. Kroger’s same-store sales, minus fuel, increased 4% in the fourth quarter.
    Cramer attributed Kroger’s recent success to the company’s large-scale and omnichannel business that allowed it to build out a strong digital presence as more customers turn to delivery and pick-up options. The host also highlighted the company’s high-profile partnerships, including with Starbucks and DoorDash. 
    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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    Cramer's lightning round: I like Truist

    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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    PPG Industries Inc: “I think PPG is down too much. I think it’s okay, but … This is a company that has been really hurt by raw costs. That’s going to end eventually. I think if you can handle disappointment at this point, I would buy the stock.”

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    AppFolio Inc: “You’ve got a software portfolio that is meant for housing. And I think it’s much needed, and it reminds me very much of Anaplan, which got a bid today from Thoma Bravo.”

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    Berkshire Hathaway Inc Class B: ” I think [having it as more than a third of a portfolio is] a lot for any one particular company, but I do love the company so much. Let’s cut it to 20% [of a portfolio], so that we can sleep better at night.”

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    Star Bulk Carriers Corp: “I think the dividend’s too high, but for what’s going on right now in Ukraine, I think it’s actually going to be good for the next year.”

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    Vaalco Energy Inc: “This is, yes. It will work. It will work because [the price of] oil is so high, even though I don’t like their business model.”

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    Truist Financial Corp: “I like Truist. … They’re in the right place where wealth is, they’re a very smart-run bank, I think it’s a good place to be.”

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    Stock futures are flat after Powell says bigger hikes may be needed to fight inflation

    Stock futures were flat in overnight trading after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the central bank is open to higher rate hikes to combat rising inflation.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 10 points, while S&P 500 futures Nasdaq 100 futures were flat.

    Nike shares rose 6% in extended trading on Monday after the retailer reported a beat on the top and bottom lines in the third quarter, buoyed by strong demand in North America.
    The Monday trading session was volatile as Powell vowed to take “necessary steps” to curb inflation less than a week after the agency raised rates for the first time since 2018. Powell said “inflation is much too high” and added that rates could increase more than the previously approved 25 basis points if needed.
    During regular trading on Monday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 201.94 points, or 0.6%, breaking a five-day winning streak. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 finished marginally lower after rising as much as 0.4% during the session, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.4% to 13,838.46 after dipping as much as 1.5% at session lows.
    “I’m pretty encouraged that the market came back pretty nicely in the last hour of trading,” Ed Yardeni, Yardeni Research president and chief investment strategist, told CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Monday.
    “I think the market is looking for opportunities and the opportunities continue to be in areas like energy, commodities. I think the market will also find more opportunities in financials as interest rates go up and technology looks awfully cheap to me,” he added.

    Meanwhile, oil prices rose again on Monday following news that the European Union is weighing a ban on Russian oil. West Texas Intermediate and Brent crude both rose about 7%, settling at $112.12 and $115.62 a barrel. Amid the rally, energy stocks including Occidental Petroleum and Marathon Oil jumped 8% each.
    Investors on Monday continued to watch the situation in Eastern Europe as ongoing peace talks between Russia and Ukraine failed to make progress and Ukraine refused to surrender the port city of Mariupol to Russian forces. Market watchers are also monitoring the omicron subvariant as it spreads across Europe along with one of the worst Covid-19 outbreaks in China since 2020.
    Buzzfeed is set to report earnings before the bell on Tuesday, followed by Poshmark and Adobe after the bell.

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    Powell's 'been dealt an insanely bad hand' in the inflation fight, Jim Cramer says

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer defended Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell Monday after the central bank chief promised aggressive action on inflation.
    “Jay Powell’s been dealt an insanely bad hand. So of course he’s fallen behind. Hence why he’s said that the Fed will move with alacrity from here on out,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer defended Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell Monday after the central bank chief promised aggressive action on inflation.
    “Powell’s been dealt an insanely bad hand. So of course he’s fallen behind. Hence why he’s said that the Fed will move with alacrity from here on out,” the “Mad Money” host said. “So feel free to blame him for not seeing what was coming. If he has to do a [50 basis point interest rate hike], he will.”

    “Never forget that Powell’s been asked to do the impossible here: Figure out how fast to raise interest rates when so many things should be slowing the economy and cooling inflation naturally, yet nothing has worked out the way we expected,” he added.
    Powell on Monday pledged that the Fed will take strong action against surging inflation, which is currently at its highest level in 40 years. Powell said rate hikes bigger than a quarter-percentage point are possible and hikes will continue until inflation is under control.
    His strong stance against inflation, which comes one week after the Fed raised interest rates for the first time in more than three years, led the market to teeter Monday, ending a multiday streak of gains. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 0.6%, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.04%. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.4%.
    Listing a bevy of recent market shakers — including the current housing shortage, the semiconductor chip shortage, healthy consumer spending, Covid fears and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — Cramer reiterated that these unprecedented times have made it difficult for Powell to anticipate what will strike the market next.
    Cramer added that he believes it’s unfair for investors to expect Powell to predict the path of the pandemic.

    “At the end of the day, public health is outside of the Fed’s purview,” Cramer said.

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    Last week’s rally is a reminder to watch for bounces during market downturns, Jim Cramer says

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

    The stock market’s recovery last week is proof that investors should never be too negative, even when all seems hopeless, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday.
    “When the whole market roars, you need to recognize that not everything has the same kind of staying power,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    The stock market’s recovery last week is proof that investors should always watch for bounce, even when all seems hopeless, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday.
    “The most important lesson of last week is that you never want to get too negative, because once the market gets oversold, it doesn’t take much good news to create an explosive rebound,” Cramer said.

    “When the whole market roars, you need to recognize that not everything has the same kind of staying power. Many downtrodden groups made a comeback thanks in part to short covering … but some other groups look a lot more durable,” he added. 
    The “Mad Money” host said that he believes “consumer discretionary stocks” like Macy’s and companies in the travel sector including Delta Air Lines and American Express will be winners.
    Cramer’s comments come following last week’s monster rallies as investors digested the news of the Russia-Ukraine War, the Federal Reserve’s quarter-percentage-point-rate hike and Covid outbreaks in Russia and China. All of the major averages finished their best week since November 2020 on Friday, with the S&P and 500 and Nasdaq surging for four consecutive days while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained for five days.
    The markets teetered Monday following Fed chairman Jerome Powell’s statement that the Fed could take more aggressive rate hikes for the rest of the year if necessary to combat surging inflation.
    Cramer said that while investors should be careful to pick stocks with “staying power,” his overall position on only holding stock of money-making firms hasn’t changed.

    “While the last week gave you a tremendous opportunity to reposition, it has not changed my fundamental thesis. … Stick to profitable companies with real products or real services, especially the ones that return capital to their shareholders,” he said.
    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
    Want to take a deep dive into Cramer’s world? Hit him up!Mad Money Twitter – Jim Cramer Twitter – Facebook – Instagram
    Questions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected]

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    Nike reports sales growth driven by North American demand, delays outlook amid global unrest

    Nike’s fiscal third-quarter results topped analysts’ estimates thanks to robust North America demand.
    But with lingering uncertainties around inflation, a war overseas and clogged supply chains, Nike is holding off on giving an outlook for the upcoming year.
    “We are focused on what we can control,” said Chief Financial Officer Matthew Friend, on a post-earnings conference call. “There are several new dynamics creating higher-levels of volatility.”

    Nike shares rose more than 5% in extended trading Monday as the sneaker retailer’s fiscal third-quarter results topped analysts’ estimates due to robust demand in North America.
    But with lingering uncertainties around inflation, a war overseas and clogged supply chains, Nike is holding off giving its outlook for the coming year until it reports fiscal fourth quarter results.

    “We are focused on what we can control,” said Chief Financial Officer Matthew Friend, on a post-earnings conference call. “There are several new dynamics creating higher-levels of volatility.”
    Given its global reach, Nike is serving as somewhat of a bellwether of how other retailers are managing challenges such as elevated oil prices, inflation, crippled supply chains and global unrest driven by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
    Nike’s China business is also on watch. A boycott among Chinese consumers toward Western brands caused Nike’s sales to take a hit early last year, and it’s still in recovery mode. Nike has prioritized North America, its biggest market, over China during the pandemic when supplies have been tight.
    In its third quarter, Nike said sales in North America climbed 9%. Sales in Greater China, the company’s third-biggest market behind its Europe, Middle East and Africa segment, fell 5% from the prior year.
    For its current fiscal year, Nike reiterated its expectations for sales to grow mid-single-digits from the prior 12-month period. Analysts had forecast revenue to be up 5.3%, according to Refinitiv data.

    Here’s how Nike did in its fiscal third quarter compared with what Wall Street was anticipating, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: 87 cents vs. 71 cents expected
    Revenue: $10.87 billion vs. $10.59 billion expected

    Nike reported net income for the three-month period ended Feb. 28 of $1.4 billion, or 87 cents per share, compared with $1.45 billion, or 90 cents a share, a year earlier. That topped profit estimates for 71 cents a share, according to Refinitiv data.
    Sales rose 5% to $10.87 billion from $10.36 billion a year earlier, beating analysts’ expectations for $10.59 billion.
    The better-than-expected results proved Nike’s ability to operate in a volatile environment, CEO John Donahoe said in a press release. “Marketplace demand continues to significantly exceed available inventory supply,” he added.
    Friend told analysts Nike’s revenue growth would have been even stronger over the holiday period had Nike had enough merchandise on hand to meet shopper demand. All of its factories in Vietnam are now operational, he said, following pandemic-driven shutdowns that stalled manufacturing.
    Transportation times, however, remain elevated, particularly in North America. Friend said that Nike has moved up its buying timelines in order to have enough products on shelves for later this fall.
    As of Feb. 28, Nike said inventories on its balance sheet totaled $7.7 billion, up 15% from the prior-year period, in part due to ongoing supply chain disruptions that have elongated transit times, the company said. The bloated inventory levels were partially offset by robust consumer demand, it said.
    Nike’s gross margins increased slightly to 46.6% from 45.6% the prior year, thanks to more full-price selling.
    Nike has increasingly shifted its business away from wholesalers and instead to selling more goods directly to consumers. Foot Locker, for example, recently said it would lose a percentage of Nike merchandise in the coming years. In turn, Nike has been investing heavily in its website and flagship stores to win sales.
    To be sure, Donahoe said that Monday evening that Foot Locker remains a “large and important partner” for Nike. Moving forward, Foot Locker will have a distinct role in Nike’s business as a wholesaler with a focus on basketball and kids, he said.
    At this point, Nike noted that it has finished communicating the “big account pivots” to all of its wholesale partners.
    Nike’s wholesale revenue in the third quarter fell 1%, while store sales rose 14% year over year, as shopper traffic “normalized,” the company said.
    Nike’s digital sales in the latest quarter rose 19% from the prior year, fueled by 33% growth in North America. Donahoe told analysts on the earnings call that Nike will continue to grow its presence in the so-called digital metaverse, through its tie-up with Roblox as well as its acquisition of the virtual sneaker marker RTFKT.
    As of Monday’s market close, Nike shares are down 22% this year.
    Find the full earnings press release from Nike here.

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