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    Chip shortage forces Ford to cut SUV, truck production at two plants

    Ford is once again cutting production of highly profitable trucks and SUVs due to an ongoing global shortage of semiconductor chips.
    Vehicles impacted include Ford Super Duty pickups, Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator SUVS, medium-duty trucks and chassis cabs.
    The Detroit automaker has been one of the most impacted by the parts shortage, which has caused sporadic plant shutdowns across the industry for more than a year.

    An employee works on a Ford Motor Co. Super Duty Truck engine at the Ford Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville, Kentucky, Sept. 30, 2016.
    Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Ford Motor is once again cutting production of highly profitable trucks and SUVs due to an ongoing global shortage of semiconductor chips that has wreaked havoc on the automotive industry for more than a year.
    Ford on Thursday confirmed production downtime next week for Ford Super Duty pickups and Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator SUVs at a plant in Kentucky and medium-duty trucks and chassis cabs at a plant in Ohio.

    The Detroit automaker has suffered one of the biggest impacts from the parts shortage, which has caused sporadic plant shutdowns across the industry.
    The fact that Ford is cutting pickup and SUV production shows automakers continue to battle with the problem despite many in the industry expecting a gradual improvement in the supply of chips in 2022.
    The chip shortage dates to early 2020, when Covid caused rolling shutdowns of vehicle assembly plants. As the facilities closed, chip suppliers diverted the parts to other sectors such as consumer electronics, which weren’t expected to be as hurt by stay-at-home orders.
    Automakers are dealing with the chip shortage in addition to other supply chain constraints and emerging impacts of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that could further strain supplies.
    The production cuts also come after Ford unveiled plans to split its electric vehicle and legacy auto businesses into two units, in a bid to streamline and boost its EV output.

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    Spirit Airlines plans to open crew bases in Miami and Atlanta as it grows in rivals' strongholds

    Spirit Airlines is planning to open crew bases in Atlanta and Miami this year, according to a note sent to flight attendants.
    Spirit has been studying ways to improve its staffing after crew shortages contributed to more than 2,000 canceled flights in the middle of last summer.
    Spirit and fellow U.S. budget airline Frontier last month announced an agreement to merge.

    A Spirit Airlines plane on the tarmac at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport on February 07, 2022 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
    Joe Raedle | Getty Images

    Spirit Airlines is planning to open crew bases in Atlanta and Miami this year, according to a note sent to flight attendants that their union sent on Thursday.
    The Miramar, Fla.-based discount airline is setting up the new bases for pilots and flight attendants as it staffs up to take on bigger rivals with strong holds on those airports, like Atlanta-based Delta Air Lines and American Airlines, which is the dominant airline in Miami.

    Spirit first launched service from Miami International Airport last October and now has 30 nonstop routes from there, making it the second-biggest carrier at the airport, still far behind American Airlines, which has more than 300 daily departures out of the airport this month.
    Spirit and fellow budget carrier Frontier Airlines last month announced plans to merge into the country’s fifth-largest carrier. Spirit Airlines spokesman said the crew bases are not related to the combination.
    The new bases come after Spirit has been studying for months how to staff more efficiently after crew shortages contributed to more than 2,000 flight cancellations in the middle of last summer.
    Spirit, like other airlines, has been scrambling to hire pilots, flight attendants and other staff to cater to the rebound in travel demand.
    The airline said it plans to have more than 100 pilots and 200 flight attendants at each new base at first. The note to flight attendants said the bases are expected to open in June.

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    Verizon CEO sees strong growth ahead, says growing dividend is still a top priority

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

    Verizon has “more growth opportunity than we’ve ever had before,” CEO Hans Vestberg told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday.
    The telecom giant held an investor day Thursday and also said it entered into a strategic partnership with Facebook parent Meta.
    Verizon shares rose nearly 1% Thursday, closing at $54.66 apiece, to bring its year-to-date gains to 5.2%.

    Verizon Communications CEO Hans Vestberg painted an optimistic future picture Thursday, telling CNBC’s Jim Cramer the telecom giant has “more growth opportunity than we’ve ever had before.”
    Vestberg’s comments in a “Mad Money” interview came after Verizon held an investor day earlier Thursday, during which it laid out its strategy for the years ahead. It’s targeting growth of at least 4% for service and other revenue in 2024.

    “We’ve done quite a lot in the last couple of years, and we stand here right now with more growth opportunity than we’ve ever had before,” Vestberg said. He pointed to its recent acquisition of value wireless brand TracFone and its large purchase of C-Band spectrum in early 2021, a move to help build out 5G in the U.S. He also mentioned its sale of Verizon Media last year.
    “We built a network for many, many different things, a multi-purpose network,” Vestberg said.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    Verizon also announced Thursday that it entered into a strategic partnership with Facebook parent Meta. It’s focused on how Verizon’s 5G network and computing power can help build out the so-called metaverse, a new and major priority for the Mark Zuckerberg-led social media firm.
    Vestberg stressed it’s still early innings for the development of these immersive, digital worlds known as the metaverse. The concept was not even on his radar when he joined Verizon in 2017, initially as chief technology officer and president of Global Networks, he said. He became CEO in 2018.
    “We’re just starting in that area …. and actually that’s not even in my numbers for the future because it’s so early,” Vestberg said. “But clearly we built a network that’s so different than anybody else in the market. That’s why we talked to Meta, and that’s why they chose to work with us.”

    Dividend outlook

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    Verizon shares rose nearly 1% Thursday, closing at $54.66, to bring its year-to-date gains to 5.2%. The S&P 500 is down 8.5% in the same span.
    Investors don’t look to telecommunications firms like Verizon for eye-popping revenue growth. The stocks tend to be seen as a relatively defensive play, with their dividends being a key reason some income-seeking investors want to own them. Verizon boasts a dividend yield of 4.7% based on Thursday’s close.
    Cramer asked Vestberg whether the company’s emphasis on growth initiatives will hold back Verizon in further boosting its dividend payout.
    The CEO said Verizon has a clear capital allocation strategy, with the top priority being reducing its capital intensity to under 12% in 2024. The second priority is continuing to grow the dividend, Vestberg said.
    “Then after that, we pay down our debt and then we come to the repurchase of shares and today we talked about that as well, that we will now start considering doing repurchasing earlier than we had said before,” he said.
    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.

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    Jim Cramer warns investors still betting on high-growth tech stocks: 'I don't think it's going to work'

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday cautioned investors that buying the dip on high-growth tech stocks is a losing strategy in today’s turbulent market.
    “There’s still plenty of other stocks out there, but if you’re still betting on these bouncing back … I don’t think it’s going to work,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday cautioned investors that buying the dip on high-growth tech stocks is a losing strategy in today’s turbulent market.
    “The era of beat and raise and buy no matter what … is over for the formerly high-flying growth stocks. There’s still plenty of other stocks out there, but if you’re still betting on these bouncing back … I don’t think it’s going to work,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    Growth stocks are particularly susceptible to inflation, Cramer said, because it hits the value of future earnings.
    “You may think these companies are the greatest things since sliced bread, but the pros know not to pay as much for unprofitable sliced bread when there’s an inflation spiral,” the host added.
    Cramer said falls in shares of Okta and Snowflake — whose chief executives were both on “Mad Money” Wednesday evening — signified the last straw for investors who purchase beaten-up high growth tech stocks and try to cash in later.
    Both stocks dropped on Thursday after reporting fourth-quarter earnings the day before. Okta shares were down 8.06% while Snowflake plummeted 15.37%.
    “Given that there are so many momentum camp followers and so many ETFs centered on the [cloud and cybersecurity] businesses that are covered by [Snowflake and Okta], these two names did literally bring down the proverbial houses” of dip buyers and high-growth stock chasers, Cramer said.

    The host added that he believes many such buyers have already exited the market.
    “The momentum is gone, the charts are broken. … They’ve lost too much money,” he said.

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    More than 90% of U.S. population can ditch facemasks under CDC Covid guidance

    Less than 10% of the U.S. population now lives in areas where facemasks are recommended when indoors in public places, according to the CDC.
    Everyone is still required by federal law to wear facemasks and planes, trains and other forms of public transportation.
    You can check the status of your county by visiting the CDC’s website.

    US President Joe Biden holds up a KN95 mask as he delivers an update on his Administrations whole-of-government COVID-19 surge response at the White House in Washington, DC, on January 13, 2022.
    Jim Watson | AFP | Getty Images

    More than 90% of the U.S. population lives in area where they no longer need to wear facemasks, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said on Thursday.
    The CDC issued new guidance last week that focuses on severe disease from Covid and hospitalizations when making recommendations on whether or not facemasks are needed.

    The guidance is broken into three color-coded levels. People in green and yellow counties, with low and medium Covid levels respectively, do not need to wear masks. However, people in yellow counties who are at high risk of severe illness from Covid should consult with their physician about whether they should wear a mask or take other precautions.
    Everyone is still required by federal law to wear facemasks and planes, trains and other forms of public transportation. The facemask requirement for planes expires on March 18. CDC officials have said they are reviewing whether or not the requirement is still necessary.
    People in red counties with high Covid levels are recommended to wear masks indoors in public places regardless of vaccination status. Less than 10% of the U.S. population now lives in such counties, according to the CDC. You can check the status of your county by visiting the CDC’s website.
    The omicron Covid variant upended the U.S. in December and January, causing an unprecedented level of infection. However, new infections have plummeted and are now down more than 90% from a pandemic record in January. The U.S. reported an average of nearly 58,000 new infections on Wednesday, compared the peak of more than 802,000 on Jan. 15, according to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University.
    Hospitalizations are down 77% from the peak level during the omicron wave. More than nearly 35,000 people were hospitalized with Covid on Thursday, down from nearly 153,000 on Jan. 20, according to data from the Health and Human Services Department.

    President Joe Biden, in his State of the Union speech on Tuesday, said it was safe for most Americans to return to work in person.
    “With 75% of adult Americans fully vaccinated and hospitalizations down by 77%, most Americans can remove their masks, return to work, stay in the classroom, and move forward safely,” the president said.  

    CNBC Health & Science

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    Oil rises to the highest since 2008, before paring gains

    Oil pipelines, pumping rigs, and electrical transmission lines dot the landscape along California’s “Petroleum Highway” (Highway 33) running along the northwestern side of the San Joaquin Valley.
    George Rose | Getty Images

    U.S. oil surged to the highest level since 2008 Thursday before reversing course as the market weighs supply disruptions from Russia against a possible Iran nuclear deal.
    West Texas Intermediate crude futures, the U.S. oil benchmark, traded as high as $116.57 per barrel, a price last seen on Sept. 22, 2008. International benchmark Brent crude hit $119.84, the highest level since May 2012.

    Prices later turned negative, and traded lower throughout the afternoon. WTI ended the day 2.65% lower at $107.67 per barrel, while Brent declined 2.19% to $110.46 per barrel.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has been driving the narrative for oil, sending prices surging. A possible deal with Iran has been one factor cited that could bring some immediate relief for a very tight market.
    “Unless there is a palpable thawing in tension in the form of concessions from either side and sanctions are lifted and/or Iran is allowed back to the market pronto so it can start selling its oil from storage until production is ramped up the risk premium is not expected to deflate markedly,” brokerage PVM said Thursday in a note to clients.
    Despite Thursday’s decline both contracts are still solidly in the green for the week. WTI is up around 19%, while Brent has advanced 14%.
    The oil market was already tight prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and with countries now shunning oil from key producer Russia, traders are worried that supply shortfalls will follow.

    On Monday, Canada said it was banning Russian oil imports, but so far it’s the only nation to target Russia’s energy complex directly.
    Still, there are ripple effects, including that buyers will decide to shun Russian oil to avoid any possible risk of violating sanctions.
    “We expect that Russian oil exports will plunge by 1 million bpd from the indirect impact of sanctions and voluntary actions by companies,” Rystad Energy said Thursday in a note to clients.

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    Rising oil prices could hit cigarette demand as smokers pay more at the pump

    Rising prices at the gas pump will likely hurt cigarette demand, according to Barclays analyst Gaurav Jain.
    He estimated that a 1% increase in oil prices will cause U.S. cigarette volume to slide by 0.1%.
    The Russian war in Ukraine has driven prices for oil higher in recent days.

    A pack of Marlboro cigarettes.
    Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Rising prices at the gas pump will likely hurt cigarette demand as smokers have less cash to spend on impulse purchases while filling up, according to a new report from Barclays.
    The Russian war in Ukraine has driven prices for oil higher in recent days as the U.S. and other Western countries imposed sanctions on Russia, although so far only Canada has banned its crude oil exports.

    Earlier on Thursday, the U.S. oil benchmark, West Texas Intermediate crude futures, was trading at prices last seen in the financial crisis days of September 2008, while Brent crude hit a high from May 2012.

    In addition to its massive energy exports, Russia is also the world’s largest exporter of fertilizer and grains. Experts believe that prices on a wide array of products could rise, but cigarette manufacturers like Altria and British American Tobacco will likely be among the companies who see falling demand tied to higher oil prices.
    Barclays analyst Gaurav Jain estimated that a 1% increase in oil prices will cause U.S. cigarette volume to slide by 0.1%. Jain compared the current spike in oil prices to their sharp decline in 2014 through 2016. In 2015, U.S. cigarette volume turned roughly flat after shrinking in 2014.
    “The trend seems to suggest that as consumers saved more money at the gas station and went to the attached convenience store, they bought more cigarettes (impulse purchase item). Now as oil prices move higher, the reverse could happen,” he wrote in a note to clients on Thursday.
    Cigarette smokers were already reckoning with higher prices as tobacco companies seek to protect their profit margins from inflation. Yet, while CEOs of consumer packaged-goods companies say they haven’t seen consumers opt for cheaper alternatives or skip a purchase altogether, categories that skew toward lower-income consumers, like tobacco, beer and energy drinks, are seeing consumers trade down, RBC Capital Markets analyst Nik Modi said.
    For fiscal 2022, Barclays’ Jain is predicting that U.S. cigarette volume will fall by 5%, with prices climbing 7%. Looking for cheaper alternatives, some consumers will likely turn to other tobacco substitutes to satisfy nicotine cravings, like e-cigarettes or modern oral nicotine pouches.

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    What's next for Pfizer, Moderna beyond their projected $51 billion in combined Covid vaccine sales this year

    Pfizer expects $32 billion in Covid vaccine sales for 2022, while Moderna is forecasting at least $19 billion in sales.
    Analysts are debating what future vaccine demand will look when Covid becomes an endemic, seasonal virus.
    Moderna is a particular point of focus, because the company’s Covid vaccine is its only commercial product right now.
    With Pfizer, analysts are shifting focus to its Covid treatment pill, Paxlovid.

    Vials with Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine labels are seen in this illustration picture taken March 19, 2021.
    Dado Ruvic | Reuters

    Pfizer and Moderna expect $51 billion in combined vaccine sales in the coming year, even as the omicron wave dramatically subsides in many parts of the world and both companies believe the pandemic is shifting into an endemic phase where the virus will be less disruptive to society.
    Pfizer expects $32 billion in Covid vaccine sales for 2022, while Moderna is forecasting at least $19 billion in sales, the companies said in their fourth-quarter earnings statements released last month.

    Those are minimum sales, reflecting contracts that have already been signed by nations across the world anticipating their need for the year. But they could be far higher, depending on the trajectory of the virus. Pfizer just raised its 2022 Covid vaccine sales guidance by $1 billion from its previous forecast given to investors in the third quarter while Moderna upped its guidance by $2 billion.
    The companies’ 2022 expectations come after booking bumper revenues during the the first full year of the Covid vaccine rollout. Pfizer sold $36.7 billion of its Covid vaccine worldwide in 2021, representing 45% of its total year revenue of $81.2 billion. Moderna’s vaccine is its only commercially available product, and the $17.7 billion in 2021 sales represents effectively all of its $18.5 billion yearly revenue.

    Profitable shots

    The vaccine makers are booking strong profits on their shots. Moderna soared to profitability after the vaccine rollout, reporting $12.2 billion in net income for 2021 after a net loss of $747 million in 2020 while the shots were under development. Pfizer’s 2021 profit margin on the vaccine was in the high 20% range and is expected to slightly rise in 2022, according to Chief Financial Officer Frank D’Amelio. Pfizer splits profits from the vaccine equally with its partner BioNTech.

    Pfizer’s vaccine, Comirnaty, and Moderna’s, Spikevax, have both received full approval from the Food and Drug Administration. The vaccines received emergency use approval in December 2020 after rapid development began in the spring of that year.
    Pfizer remains far and away the dominant vaccine in both the U.S. and European Union, the two companies’ key markets. Some 58% of all Covid shots administered in the U.S. were Pfizer’s and 37% were Moderna’s, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In the E.U., 71% of all doses administered were Pfizer’s while 17% were Moderna’s, according to Our World in Data.

    Pfizer and Moderna both expect the pandemic to shift into an endemic phase where the virus is less disruptive to society. Michael Yee, an analyst at Jefferies, said he expects Moderna will have a strong year, but future demand is unclear as the unprecedented wave of omicron infection rapidly declines in many parts of the world.
    “The market continues to debate the ultimate trajectory of the demand for boosting during 2022 and for 2023 and beyond,” Yee told CNBC. “There is a sense that we are working our way out of a pandemic and more into an endemic where we have seen the peak behind us.”

    Moderna’s endemic plans

    Jefferies has a hold rating on Moderna’s stock with a price target of $170. Moderna’s stock is down 42% year to date. It was trading around $148 on Thursday.
    Moderna’s Chief Medical Officer Paul Burton told analysts during the company’s earnings call last week that the Northern Hemisphere, is moving into a period where new infections, hospitalizations and deaths are more stable. Moderna’s key markets, the United States and Europe, are located in the Northern Hemisphere.

    Burton said Covid will likely follow a seasonal pattern like other well-known respiratory viruses such as the flu. Although a majority of the population will not be susceptible to severe disease, the virus will still cause sickness and death among the vulnerable. CEO Stephane Bancel said people older than 50 and those with health conditions will still need to get vaccinated against Covid. Key markets are already preparing for annual boosters, he said.
    “Some countries like the U.K. and others wanted to secure supply because they believe very deeply that the endemic market will require annual boosters,” Bancel told analysts during the company’s earnings call.
    Bancel also noted that Moderna’s $19 billion sales projection for this year doesn’t include any orders from the U.S., which receives its last shipment in April and hast not signed a contract for the fall. Moderna also has $3 billion in vaccine order options on top of its already signed agreements.
    Bancel said he expects a substantial portion of those options to be exercised by governments regardless of whether a new variant emerges, which could bring the company’s 2022 guidance to at least $22 billion, not including any possible U.S. orders.
    Children in the U.S. are not yet eligible for Moderna’s vaccine. Moderna’s shot for teenagers ages 12- to 17-years-old is currently under review by the FDA. The company is waiting to file an application with the FDA to authorize its vaccine for 6- to 11-year-olds until after the shots for teenagers get cleared. Moderna expects data on the vaccine for children 5-years-old and younger this month.
    As the market debates future vaccine demand, not all analysts believe the world is rapidly moving toward an endemic phase. Investment bank Cowen believes the endemic seasonal phase may not emerge for another two years. If that’s the case, Moderna’s current Covid vaccine will have longer and stronger demand than many expect, according to Cowen. Boosters that target Covid variants will be crucial moving forward, according to an analyst note.

    “Omicron makes it painfully obvious that we are not yet in the endemic seasonal phase and variant-specific boosts may be more important now than ever,” Cowen analyst Tyler Van Buren wrote in the note published last week after Moderna’s earnings. Cowen has a market perform rating on Moderna with a price target of $200.
    Moderna announced last week that it is developing a booster that targets omicron and other known variants. Burton, the chief medical officer, said Moderna believes this booster will play a vital role moving forward, because people will need protection against omicron as well as the previous dominant delta variant, which continues to circulate throughout the world.
    Moderna’s ultimate goal is to develop an annual booster that covers three major respiratory viruses — flu, respiratory syncytial virus and of course Covid. The company’s candidate for a flu vaccine could enter phase three trials this year, and its RSV vaccine has already moved into phase three testing. Yee, the Jefferies analysts, said Moderna needs to demonstrate strong, clear data that shows a visible path to the market for its other vaccines under development.
    “It’s obviously hugely important because the Covid part is becoming less critical as we shift to an endemic period and revenues will presumably be declining,” Yee said.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Moderna said its vision is to create a subscription model for a pan-respiratory vaccine with a 10-year supply of annual boosters, Bancel told analysts during the call. Moderna has memoranda of understanding with Canada and Australia, he said. Bancel previously said the company aims to have the vaccine ready by the fall 2023 in some countries in a best-case scenario.

    All eyes on Pfizer’s Covid treatment

    For Pfizer, analysts are shifting focus to the company’s Covid treatment pill, Paxlovid, as a major source of revenue in 2022. CEO Albert Bourla said during Pfizer’s earnings call last month that the company’s antiviral pill, on top of its vaccine, will equip countries to better manage the virus and move into an endemic phase.
    Pfizer is projecting sales of $22 billion this year for Paxlovid. The oral antiviral treatment showed 89% effectiveness in preventing hospitalization among people at risk of severe Covid in clinical trials when administered with a widely used HIV drug. It received emergency authorization from the FDA in December.
    During the company’s earnings call, Bourla said 2022 sales for Paxlovid may actually come in much higher than the guidance, which only included deals signed or those close to finalization. Angela Hwang, Pfizer’s biopharmaceuticals chief, said Pfizer is in active discussions with over 100 countries around the world on Paxlovid. The oral antiviral treatment has a higher profit margin than the vaccine, according to Pfizer CFO D’Amelio.

    “Paxlovid also carries a higher gross margin than Comirnaty, making any boost in Paxlovid sales more favorable to earnings,” Argus analyst David Toung wrote in a note last month. Argus has a buy rating on Pfizer and raised its price target to $65. Pfizer is down by about 18% year to date. The stock was trading around $48 a share on Thursday.
    Steve Scala, a Cowen analyst, said during the earnings call that Pfizer’s guidance on Paxlovid was conservative. “It seems that Pfizer has merely scratched the surface on its 2022 potential,” Scala said.
    Pfizer is also developing a vaccine that targets omicron. Bourla has said the shot should be ready this month, though he has noted in the past that it’s not clear how or when the omicron vaccine would be used. Bourla has also said in the past that a fourth shot may be needed, but it’s important to wait on data from studies.
    Pfizer’s vaccine for children under 5-years-old is also waiting for authorization. The FDA had sought to rapidly approve the first two-doses of the shot this month, but Pfizer delayed those plans after data showed the significantly lower doses for young kids weren’t that effective. The drug regulator is now waiting for data on the third dose, which Pfizer expects in April.
    In the U.S., Pfizer’s vaccine is authorized for people ages 5 and older, and fully approved for those 16 and older. Moderna’s vaccine is fully approved for adults ages 18 and older.

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