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    American Express CEO says the shift to remote work made a new segment of business travelers

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

    American Express expects remote workers to create new demand for business travel, CEO Steve Squeri told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday.
    “You’re going to have, I believe, a lot more internal travel where colleagues and employees will come into the headquarters to be with their team for a few days,” Squeri said.

    American Express expects remote workers to create new demand for business travel, CEO Steve Squeri told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday.
    “You’re going to have, I believe, a lot more internal travel where colleagues and employees will come into the headquarters to be with their team for a few days. And they may do that multiple times a year. So I think that part of business travel will be a new piece.” Squeri said in an interview on “Mad Money.”

    Travel has recovered faster than expected this year, which major airlines expect will help offset higher costs in things like jet fuel. Travelers spent $6.6 billion on airline tickets last month on carriers’ websites, according to Adobe.
    Squeri said that American Express has seen growth in leisure travel over the last few months.
    “We’re at 80% overall [travel and expenses] in the fourth quarter with consumer over 100% from 2019 levels. When we look at our travel bookings, our travel bookings were up in December … and that has sequentially grown in January and in February,” he said, adding that the numbers only encompass consumer travel.
    Squeri said Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has “not really” affected travel volumes for American Express.
    The payments company announced it was suspending business in Russia on March 6, becoming one of the hundreds of other companies who also pledged to suspend or curtail business in the country. 

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    Charts suggest the Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 could be days away from bottoming, Jim Cramer says

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

    Legendary chartist Tom DeMark thinks key U.S. stock market indexes could be days away from reaching a bottom, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday.
    DeMark and his team specifically looked at the S&P 500 and Invesco QQQ Trust.
    “What we’re looking at right now could be premature buying,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    Legendary chartist Tom DeMark thinks key U.S. stock market indexes could be days away from reaching a bottom, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday.
    “We’ll be in some more pain before we get there,” Cramer cautioned, as he broke down analysis from DeMark and his team focused on the S&P 500 and Invesco QQQ Trust, a popular ETF that tracks the tech-focused Nasdaq-100. Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq-100 saw strong gains Wednesday, posting their first back-to-back positive sessions since late February.

    “What we’re looking at right now could be premature buying,” the “Mad Money” host suggested. “When the shorts have finished, DeMark says that often creates a downside vacuum—a big move lower once the shorts have covered their positions and there’s no more forced buying,” he added.
    According to Cramer, DeMark uses a 13-session countdown pattern that tells him when a rally or a decline is likely to change directions, or in other words, reach a top or bottom. DeMark’s methodology calls a bottom when the countdown gets to 13, Cramer added.
    Cramer said that DeMark spotted patterns in the S&P 500 and the ETF that tracks the Nasdaq-100 that suggest both are days away from making bottoms.
    Here’s a look at the QQQ since September, including the two trend exhaustion 13s late last year.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    The Nasdaq-100 is at buy countdown 10, so it needs three more successively lower lows in order to potentially reach a bottom.

    Now, Cramer noted DeMark finds the Nasdaq-100 is in the midst of a buy countdown 10.

    “That means we need three days of successively lower lows, with lower closes, before the downside is truly exhausted,” Cramer said. “In other words, DeMark’s expecting one last leg lower before the weakness in tech runs out of steam.”
    DeMark is seeing a similar pattern playing out in the broad S&P 500. Here’s a look at DeMark’s analysis on the benchmark U.S. stock index since September.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    The S&P 500 is also currently at countdown 10, meaning it needs three days of successively lower lows to possibly reach a bottom.

    The S&P also is at a 10 on DeMark’s buy countdown, Cramer explained. “Again, that means we need three days in a row with lower lows and also lower closes before the selling exhausts itself,” he said.
    Put the two pieces of analysis together, and DeMark believes the selling on Wall Street is “not over yet,” Cramer said. “We can see the light at the end of the tunnel, but we’re still in the tunnel.”
    Cramer’s breakdown of DeMark’s analysis Wednesday comes one day after he looked at charts from technical analyst Carolyn Boroden, who predicted that the S&P 500 will soon have a temporary bounce.
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    Own companies that are 'built to last' instead of worrying about the Fed, Cramer says

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

    Investors should stop worrying about the Federal Reserve’s moves and focus on maintaining a portfolio of strong companies instead, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday.
    “You don’t need to parse every single word from the Fed if you’re buying stocks of good companies that are built to last,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    Investors should stop worrying about the Federal Reserve’s moves and focus on maintaining a portfolio of strong companies instead, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Wednesday.
    “You don’t need to parse every single word from the Fed if you’re buying stocks of good companies that are built to last, because these are the same companies that are suffering from the ever-higher raw costs. [Fed Chair Jerome] Powell is tightening in order to help them, as well as you,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    “I think [watching the Fed’s moves is] very important if you’re trading bonds, but most of you aren’t. It’s very important if you’re borrowing money to buy stocks. That’s not something you should be doing in the first place, and after today it’s even dumber than it was,” he added.
    Cramer’s comments came on the heels of a market rally Wednesday prompted by the Fed raising rates by 0.25 percentage point. The central bank also forecast six more hikes this year. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 1.5% while the S&P 500 rose 2.2%. The Nasdaq Composite increased 3.7%.
    The 10-year Treasury yield reached its highest point since pre-pandemic levels after the Fed’s statement.
    Cramer previously advised investors to look for the leading companies in a particular industry and invest in businesses that make money and tangible products. He stuck to these sentiments of investing in profitable companies, advising investors to turn their attention away from following Fed policy to more productive activities.
    “The players of the rate-hike parlor game, I got ideas for them … maybe they could spend hours upon hours filling out their March Madness brackets — a much better use of their time,” Cramer said.

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    Netflix makes Volodymyr Zelenskyy's show 'Servant of the People' available to U.S. streamers

    “Servant of the People,” the satirical comedy series starring Ukraine’s now-President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has returned to Netflix in the U.S.
    The show follows a teacher who unexpectedly becomes president after a video of him complaining about corruption goes viral.
    The series began in 2015 and ran for three seasons, ending when Zelenskyy launched an actual campaign for the position in 2019.

    Servant of the People is once again available on Netflix in The US. The 2015 satirical comedy series stars Volodymyr Zelenskyy playing a teacher who unexpectedly becomes President after a video of him complaining about corruption suddenly goes viral.

    “Servant of the People,” the satirical comedy series created by and starring Ukraine’s now-President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, has returned to Netflix in the U.S.
    “You asked and it’s back,” the streaming service wrote in a tweet Wednesday announcing the return of the series. It’s available to stream starting Wednesday.

    The show follows a high school history teacher, played by Zelenskyy, who unexpectedly becomes president after a video of him complaining about corruption goes viral.
    The series began in 2015 and ran for three seasons, ending when Zelenskyy launched an actual campaign for the position in 2019 under the banner of a new political party, also called Servant of the People. He won in a landslide, collecting more than 73% of the votes, and became the president of Ukraine later that year.
    Zelenskyy has become the face of Ukrainian resistance in recent weeks as he seeks to stave off an ongoing Russian invasion of his country. He has posted frequent videos on social media, addressed world leaders and become something of a global household name.

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    Beyond first rate hike, the Fed signals that inflation fight is going to get harder

    Executive Edge

    A 25-basis point interest rate hike on Wednesday from the Federal Reserve was the first since 2018.
    But Chair Jerome Powell’s outlook and the Fed’s projections for GDP, inflation and future rate hikes say more about the future path of the economy and risk of recession amid new risks from war in Ukraine, according to Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.
    The Fed is now forecasting six more rate hikes and inflation at over 4%, a significant increase in its inflation outlook.

    The Federal Reserve raised its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2018, but it’s already time for the market to look past this well-telegraphed move, according to Kathy Bostjancic, chief U.S. economist at Oxford Economics.
    While there are complicating factors such as the war in Ukraine, the most prominent issue for the Fed is that economic growth remains quite strong. If the Fed is shy about raising rates and reducing the balance sheet because of war, there is a risk that it gets even further behind on inflation, Bostjancic says. Consumers are still sitting on a high level of savings and benefitting from rising wages, and if the Fed gets further behind the curve on inflation by waiting, it will only increase the risk of the central bank becoming more hawkish later on.

    The Fed forecast six more rate hikes and tellingly, its view of inflation’s trajectory moved up considerably, with a forecast now above 4% this year.
    There are risks on both sides of the Fed equation. If it is too hawkish and tightens too quickly, that can send the financial markets into a convulsion and lead to a mass selling of risk assets which feeds back into the real economy. Recent action in the bond market showing a narrowing of the spread between the two-year and 10-year treasuries stoked fears of an inverted yield curve, which is a signal that this worst-case, recessionary scenario could play out.
    After the Fed announcement on Wednesday, yields rose to their highest levels since 2019.
    Recession is not the base case for Bostjancic, even if she says the Fed won’t be blind to these signals.
    Fed Chair Jerome Powell indicated during recent testimony that he sees inflation running a little faster than the Fed’s previous expectation, and any adjustment from the Fed is significant, Bostjancic said. Her view of the inflation outlook into the meeting was much higher than the median forecast of 2.7% year over year through Q4 2022 — closer to 4% than 3%, and that has now been matched by the Fed. Her view is based on a labor market that is strong and a consumer that is resilient, and the Fed being behind the curve on inflation already.

    “It is high and elevated and rising at a rapid pace,” she said. “The Fed has to worry about inflation. We’re not talking about just 3%. It’s close to 8%. This is a massive overshoot.”

    A trader works, as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is seen delivering remarks on screens, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), January 26, 2022.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    The “dot plot” and the Fed’s economic projections for GDP and inflation will need to be digested by the market, and the Dow pared gains initially after the Fed’s announcement, but stocks ended much higher on Wednesday afternoon with the S&P 500 notching a gain of over 2%. Ultimately, it’s how Powell frames the Fed thinking on Wednesday that matters most.
    “I want to hear how he handicaps the risks around growth and inflation. That will tell me something about the Fed’s reaction function and that is the forward guidance,” Bostjancic said.
    Powell said in his remarks after the official announcement, as he had said after the last FOMC meeting, that the risk to inflation remains to the upside. Though Powell said he does not see signs of a wage-price spiral and wage gains are already showing signs of moderating. The Fed expects unemployment to end the year holding at 3.5%, according to its latest forecast.
    While oil prices and the pain at the pump, which eased this week, caught the market’s attention amid the outbreak of war in Europe, Bostjancic says food prices have double the weight of energy in the consumer price index and loom as an even larger factor in the inflation outlook — and are not immune to war. Commodities prices rising sharping are likely to get worse because of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which impacts the production of wheat, among other commodities, and will reverberate through the global supply chain and “turbocharge food prices even higher,” she said.
    Powell has already said rate hikes are coming, in spite of the outbreak of war.
    Oxford Economics is in line with a market view of 175 basis points of total tightening by the Fed this year, but isn’t sure whether those hikes remain limited to 25 basis points or include the potential for a 50 basis point hike at some point. One FOMC member, James Bullard of the St. Louis Fed, voted for a 50 basis point hike at this meeting.
    “Our view is that the economy is strong enough and demand still strong enough that even with the impact from war we still see growth at 3% or higher this year, so the Fed needs to get to a neutral rate as quickly as possible without destabilizing the market,” Bostjancic said.
    The situation is not “dramatically different” for the U.S.,” she said. The U.S. economy is not immune to the war, but compared to Europe’s economy, it is much better insulated. “I don’t think Ukraine necessarily slows the economy enough to take the edge off inflation,” she added. 
    The Fed did lower its GDP outlook for the year, from 4% at its last meeting to 2.8%, with the Ukraine war being cited as factor, and while the central bank anticipates higher inflation and more rate hikes to combat it.
    Powell will need to provide a view on where his concern primarily lies — how does the shock of this war impact the U.S. economy versus the shock on the inflation side and the growth side, and the market will be looking closely for any signals from the Fed chair on what he emphasizes more in the risk analysis.
    But in the end, Bostjancic says, “The Fed has to come in. It can’t control the war even if there is a knock-on effect in supply chains and scarcity of food and oil occur.”
    There is also no way for a central bank to project the potential for a ceasefire in war.  
    Even in Europe, the ECB recently showed itself to be more hawkish in inclination, holding rates but saying it would wind down stimulus sooner rather than later. “They need to fight inflation even if growth is slowing,” Bostjancic said, and the ECB’s recent policy views match an outlook on the Fed that suggests it can be more hawkish even in the face of larger uncertainty.
    The war could potentially delay the Fed’s balance sheet runoff, but by a month or two, and in her view, it should not alter the general path of normalization of both rates and the Fed’s holdings in the bond market.
    Powell indicated in his press conference that the Fed was moving ahead on the balance sheet reduction plan and may stick with May. He described “exceptional progress” in the discussions among FOMC members and added that the balance sheet unwind could begin at the next meeting in May.
    “The framework is going to look very familiar to people who are familiar with the last time we did this,” he said. “But it will be faster than the last time and of course it’s much sooner in the cycle than last time.”
    While this week’s producer price index showed a slight undershoot of the inflation expectation and the latest wage inflation reading came down, the recent flow of data has reinforced that the inflationary pressures are still widespread and elevated, and the Fed needs to raise rates and has the ability to raise in a significant way. “They have to come in and cool things off,” Bostjancic said. 
    Powell said in his press conference after the rate hike announcement that the risk of recession isn’t particularly elevated — this week’s CNBC Fed Survey put the risk at 1 in 3 — and the economy is strong, and inflation will come down eventually. The median inflation projection among FOMC members is 4.3% for the year, and the forecast through 2024 is “notably higher” than previous Fed projections, Powell noted.
    “It may take longer than we like but I’m confident that we’ll use our tools to bring inflation down,” Powell said.
    The market has already priced in an aggressive rate hike profile, and the market was not expecting the Fed to tell it to price in less than it already has. “The market is already in tightening conditions without the Fed having to do it. It’s doing the work for the Fed,” she said.
    The Fed matched that view on Wednesday. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Alibaba, AeroVironment, Boeing and more

    Alibaba’s headquarters in Hangzhou, China, on Wednesday, Nov. 10, 2021.
    Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Alibaba, JD.com, Pinduoduo — Shares of Chinese companies listed publicly in the U.S. surged as Beijing signaled support for the stocks. The Chinese government said it supports the listing of businesses overseas and that its crackdown on technology companies should end soon, according to Chinese state media. Alibaba jumped 36.7%, JD.com added 39.4% and Pinduoduo rallied 56%.

    AeroVironment — The defense stock jumped 9.8% after NBC News reported that the White House was considering supplying drones made by AeroVironment to the Ukrainian government to help fend off Russian forces.
    Lockheed Martin — Shares of the defense contractor dropped 6.1% after Bloomberg News reported that the Pentagon would cut its request for F-35 fighter jets in the new fiscal budget proposal.
    Boeing — Boeing shares rallied 5.1% after Baird added the aerospace company to its bullish fresh picks list. While the company’s stock is down year-to-date, investors should buy the dip as deliveries of the 737-Max are expected to resume in China even amid the recent surge in Covid-19 cases, analysts wrote.
    Micron Technology — The semiconductor stock surged 9%. Bernstein analysts upgraded Micron to outperform, saying the firm will see huge gains after supply issues are resolved later this year.
    Spotify — The streaming company’s stock price jumped more than 6% in midday trading. Spotify signed a stadium and shirt sponsorship deal on Tuesday with Spanish soccer team FC Barcelona. The team members will wear the Spotify logo on their uniform shirts for the next four years.

    Starbucks — Shares of Starbucks climbed 7.9% after the coffee giant announced CEO Kevin Johnson’s retirement following five years on the job and said that Howard Schultz will return as interim CEO. JPMorgan analysts also upgraded Starbucks to overweight and said its shares could rally 22% despite recent China restrictions.
    Nvidia — The chipmaker’s stock price surged 6.6%. Analysts at Wells Fargo added Nvidia to their “signature picks” list, saying the stock’s recent tumble has created an attractive risk/reward profile. Wells Fargo also expects upbeat announcements at Nvidia’s upcoming investor day.
    Nike — The sportswear company’s stock price spiked 4.9%. Bernstein said Tuesday that supply chain issues have created a buying opportunity in Nike, which analysts expect will maintain its top position in China.
    NortonLifeLock — Shares for NortonLifeLock tumbled 13.3% after Britain signaled that the cybersecurity company’s $8.6 billion deal to acquire competitor Avast may get an “in-depth” probe by antitrust regulators.
    — CNBC’s Hannah Miao, Jesse Pound and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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    Kohl's shares jump 17% after reports say Hudson's Bay, Sycamore are preparing bids

    The Canadian department store chain Hudson’s Bay is considering a bid for Kohl’s, reported Axios and The Wall Street Journal.
    Private equity firm Sycamore Partners is also considering a bid for Kohl’s, the outlets said.
    A Kohl’s spokeswoman said in an emailed statement, “As previously disclosed, the board’s engagement with potential bidders is robust and ongoing.”

    The Kohl’s logo is displayed on the exterior of a Kohl’s store on January 24, 2022 in San Rafael, California.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Kohl’s shares jumped 17% Wednesday after reports said that another department store chain is mulling a buyout of the retailer.
    The Canadian department store chain Hudson’s Bay is considering a bid, said Axios, which based its reporting on conversations with multiple sources.

    Private equity firm Sycamore Partners is also considering a bid for Kohl’s, Axios said. Though it’s unclear whether or not Sycamore is serious, according to the report.
    The Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the matter, later reported that Sycamore and Kohl’s were planning bids priced in the high $60s per share, potentially valuing Kohl’s at more than $9 billion. Shares of Kohl’s closed at $63.11 on Wednesday.
    A Kohl’s spokeswoman said in an emailed statement, “As previously disclosed, the board’s engagement with potential bidders is robust and ongoing.”
    “The board will measure potential bids against a compelling standalone plan and choose the path that it believes maximizes shareholder value,” she said.
    Hudson’s Bay didn’t immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment. Sycamore declined to comment.

    The rumors of potential suitors come as Kohl’s has already said an offer from Starboard-backed Acacia Research, of $64 per share, was too low. Kohl’s shares opened Wednesday at $54.46. The stock is up about 14% this year.
    After pressure mounted from activists earlier this year for Kohl’s to consider selling itself, the company began working with Goldman Sachs and other financial advisors to consider unsolicited bids, and also to make some proactive outreach to potential buyers.
    Kohl’s said last month that it has so far engaged with more than 20 parties, including real estate-focused investors and strategic businesses. Without giving specific names, it said some of those entities had entered into confidentiality agreements with Kohl’s and were invited to submit proposals.
    Also on Wednesday, Engine Capital sent a letter to Kohl’s board saying that it was “extremely disappointed” with the longer-term outlook provided at Kohl’s recent investor day.
    Engine said it’s concerned that Kohl’s may end up rejecting any final offers for its business, “based on a misguided and unrealistic conclusion that it undervalues Kohl’s.”

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    Joe Buck and Troy Aikman leave Fox to host ESPN's Monday Night Football

    The superstar announcing team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman is leaving Fox to host “Monday Night Football” for ESPN, the sports network announced.
    Buck and Aikman called games, including six Super Bowls, for 20 seasons on Fox.

    Fox Sports play-by-play announcer Joe Buck, left, and analyst Troy Aikman work in the broadcast booth before a preseason NFL football game between the Miami Dolphins and Jacksonville Jaguars in Miami Gardens, Fla., Aug. 22, 2019.
    Lynne Sladky | AP

    The superstar announcing team of Joe Buck and Troy Aikman is leaving Fox to host “Monday Night Football” for ESPN, the sports network announced Wednesday.
    The announcement came after weeks of speculation about the duo, who have been calling games together for 20 seasons. They called six Super Bowls together on Fox.

    Buck and Aikman, who was also a Super Bowl-winning quarterback with the Dallas Cowboys, will also contribute content to ESPN’s streaming service, ESPN+.
    “My earliest memories of walking around football stadiums are tagging along with my dad as he called ‘Monday Night Football’ on radio,” Buck said, referring to his father, the late announcing legend Jack Buck. “To return to the stadium on Monday nights with Troy — who I have the utmost comfort with and confidence in — and begin a new chapter, for us and ESPN, has me excited about this season and our future.”
    Back in January, Aikman said that he did not know what his future at Fox Sports would look like. The former Dallas Cowboys quarterback was also in talks with Amazon for “Thursday Night Football.”
    The New York Post previously reported that Aikman would be headed to “Monday Night Football.” Last week, the Post also reported that Buck was expected to join Aikman in leaving Fox.
    “Monday Night Football” premiered on ABC 52 years ago this September.

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