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    Cramer's lightning round: Norwegian Cruise Line is 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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    Norwegian Cruise Line: “One of the worst performers in the market, with one of the best CEOs. I still believe. I think at $20, with everything starting to open around the world, it is a [buy].”

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    Companhia Energetica de Minas Gerais: “I think that’s an interesting spec, frankly, because I believe in emerging markets, and that would certainly be the way to play it. I’m going to say I think you’re onto something. I like it.”

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    Masimo: “I am just astounded, astounded, that people hate it. We’ve got to bring them on. I’m not going to jump to conclusions. I just said wow. I’m so glad I haven’t been pushing that stock because I happen to like their product. I used it every day during the pandemic. Let’s go Masimo on. Their products are fantastic, and I never understood that shortfall.”

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    Foot Locker: “I was tempted to think it was an overreaction, but here’s my problem: I have another retailer that I like because the [dividend] yield and keep thinking it’s going to come back, and it’s been a mistake. Foot Locker, I think, is at cross purposes with Nike right now. Nike wants to do more direct-to-consumer. Foot Locker is in the way. I am not attracted by that yield … because we were worried about the fundamentals.”

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    DigitalBridge: “There are too many of those. … I am going to say no to the tower business in any way, shape or form.”
    Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer’s every move in the market.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Nordstrom, Salesforce, Ford and more

    Pedestrians walk past a Nordstrom Inc. store.
    Ben Nelms | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Nordstrom — Shares of the department store rallied a whopping 37.8% after the company reported better-than-expected profits and sales for the holiday quarter. The strong results also prompted Nordstrom to offer an optimistic outlook for the coming year. Meanwhile, the retailer called out improvements in its off-price business, Nordstrom Rack, amid a report that the company has been reviewing a potential spin-off.

    Salesforce — Salesforce shares gained nearly 1% after the company reported an earnings beat. The software giant issued upbeat guidance after beating expectations in its fourth quarter on its top and bottom lines. The company posted adjusted earnings of 84 cents per share on revenue of $7.33 billion. Analysts expected a profit of 74 cents per share on revenue of $7.24 billion, according to Refinitiv.
    Ford — Shares of Ford jumped 8.3% after the company said it plans to separate its electric vehicle and legacy businesses. The move is expected to streamline the company’s growing electric vehicle business and maximize profits. The automaker plans to breakout financial results for both units, and its Ford+ business, by 2023.
    SoFi — Shares of SoFi rose 3.3% following its better-than-expected quarterly results. The fintech company reported a loss of 15 cents per share, versus analysts’ prediction for a loss of 17 cents per share. SoFi also reported reaching all-time highs in members added, ending 2021 with about 3.5 million members, up 87% from the start of the year.
    Ross Stores — Ross shares jumped 6% following a fourth-quarter earnings beat. The off-price retail giant reported earnings of $1.04 per share on revenue of $5.02 billion. Analysts expected earnings of 87 cents per share on revenue of $4.96 billion.
    Hewlett Packard Enterprise — Shares of Hewlett Packard jumped 10.2% after the company topped earnings expectations for its most recent quarter. Hewlett Packard posted earnings of 53 cents per share for the quarter, beating analysts’ estimates by 7 cents. Revenue came in shy of the Refinitiv consensus estimate.

    Abercrombie & Fitch — The retail stock sunk 13% after reporting weaker-than-expected quarterly results. Abercrombie & Fitch posted a profit of $1.14 per share, below analysts’ estimates of $1.27 per share. Revenue was $1.16 billion, missing analysts’ estimates of $1.18 billion.
    First Solar — Shares of First Solar tumbled about 8% after the company missed revenue expectations for the fourth quarter. The solar-panel manufacturer also issued weak full-year guidance.
    Booking Holdings — Shares of the travel booking site operator gained 4.4% after Evercore ISI upgraded the stock to outperform from in line. The firm said it sees a “more rapid” leisure-travel recovery.
    DraftKings — Shares of DraftKings dipped 1.4% despite Morgan Stanley naming the sports-betting stock a top pick. “We expect the US online sports betting/iGaming market to be very large, with a few market share winners, including DKNG,” Morgan Stanley said.
     — CNBC’s Samantha Subin, Hannah Miao, Yun Li and Sarah Min contributed reporting.

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    Ford plans to produce 2 million EVs annually, generate 10% operating profit by 2026

    Ford plans to produce more than 2 million electric vehicles annually and generate a 10% adjusted operating profit margin by 2026.
    Both targets would be substantial increases from the company’s current operations.
    Ford and other major automakers are racing to create production capacity for EVs to meet what’s expected to be rapid adoption in the emerging segment this decade.

    Ford has started initial pre-production of its electric F-150 Lightning pickup truck at a new plant in Dearborn, Mich.
    Michael Wayland | CNBC

    Ford Motor plans to produce more than 2 million electric vehicles annually and generate a 10% adjusted operating profit margin by 2026, the company announced Wednesday as part of a larger restructuring of its EV and legacy businesses.
    Both targets would be substantial increases from the company’s current operations. Ford reported a 7.3% adjusted operating profit in 2021. It only sold roughly 64,000 of its all-electric Mustang Mach E crossovers globally in 2021, including 27,140 in the U.S.

    Ford’s restructuring plan includes reorganizing operations to separate its electric and internal combustion engine, or ICE, businesses into different units within the automaker.
    The plans were lauded by investors, sending shares of the automaker up 8.4% on Wednesday to $18.10 a share. Ford’s stock is down 12.4% this year.
    “We applaud Ford’s decision to take the first important step to optimize the competing missions of the EV/ICE businesses,” Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said Wednesday in an investor note. “In our opinion, other legacy auto OEMs may be planning something similar. Ford leads the world in actually announcing it.”

    Ford and other major automakers are racing to create production capacity for EVs to meet what’s expected to be rapid adoption in the emerging segment this decade. They are attempting to be ahead of the demand curve rather than playing catch-up as they have been with EV industry leader Tesla.
    “We want to beat the old players, we want to beat the new players,” Ford CEO Jim Farley said during an event Wednesday morning.

    To meet the 10% margin, Farley on Wednesday said Ford expects to cut $3 billion from its structural costs, largely from its traditional internal combustion engine business. It plans to do so while increasing sales volumes and lowering the costs of build materials for EVs.
    Ford’s goals are similar to ones previously announced by its largest crosstown rival, General Motors. The Detroit automaker last year said it plans to double its annual revenue and expand margins to 12% to 14% by 2030. It also plans to increase plant capability to produce 2 million EVs globally in North America and China by 2025.
    GM in late 2019 also largely split up its engineering of EVs and traditional vehicles, but it has not announced plans to break out their financial results. The company also has said it does not have plans to spin off its EV business.
     — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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    Fanatics hits $27 billion valuation, adds BlackRock, Michael Dell as investors

    Michael Rubin’s Fanatics has raised $1.5 billion in a new funding round that values the sports platform company at $27 billion.
    Its latest funding round includes new investors Fidelity, BlackRock and Michael Dell’s MSD Partners, as well as existing investors.
    Fanatics was most recently valued at $18 billion less than a year ago.

    Fanatics Founder/Executive Chairman Michael Rubin attends Fanatics Super Bowl Party at College Football Hall of Fame on February 2, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia.
    Mike Coppola | Getty Images

    Michael Rubin’s Fanatics raised $1.5 billion in a new funding round that values the sports platform company at $27 billion. The company was most recently valued at $18 billion less than a year ago.
    Its latest funding round includes new investors Fidelity, BlackRock and Michael Dell’s MSD Partners, as well as existing investors. The investment was first reported by the Wall Street Journal. A source familiar with the deal confirmed the details to CNBC.

    A representative for Fanatics declined to comment.
    Rubin, co-owner of the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils, started the Jacksonville, Florida-based company in 2011. That same year, he sold a sports e-commerce business to eBay for $2.4 billion, bought back parts of it and acquired Fanatics — which back then was a two-store retail operation. Fanatics now has exclusive licensing deals with the NFL, NHL, NBA, Major League Baseball, and scores of colleges and universities to make and sell jerseys, caps, and tons of other official team merchandise.
    Earlier this year, the company acquired Topps trading cards for $500 million. Fanatics’ trading card entity is valued at $10 billion after a $350 million round of funding last September. Rubin called Topps an iconic brand in a statement announcing the move.

    Fanatics is a two-time CNBC Disruptor 50 company. Sign up for our weekly, original newsletter that goes beyond the annual Disruptor 50 list, offering a closer look at private companies like Fanatics, and founders like Rubin who continue to innovate across every sector of the economy. More

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    OneWeb's internet satellites caught in UK-Russia standoff days before launch

    Russian space agency Roscosmos is refusing to launch the next batch of 36 OneWeb internet satellites unless the company meets the state agency’s demands.
    OneWeb’s mission was scheduled to liftoff on a Russian-built Soyuz rocket on March 4 from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
    Roscosmos is demanding that the U.K. government sell its stake in OneWeb and that the company guarantee that the satellites will not be used for military purposes.
    U.K. Business and Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said in a statement that there is “no negotiation” with Roscosmos about OneWeb and that the government “is not selling its share.”

    A Soyuz 2 rocket launches 36 OneWeb satellites on March 25, 2020 from Vostochny Cosmodrome, Russia.

    The corporate internet space race has taken a geopolitical turn.
    Russian space agency Roscosmos is refusing to launch the next batch of 36 OneWeb internet satellites as scheduled for Friday, unless the company meets the state agency’s demands. Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin said the ultimatum is a response to U.K. sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine.

    Roscosmos said in a statement on Wednesday that the Soyuz rocket will be removed from the launchpad at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan unless OneWeb meets two demands:

    The U.K. government sells its stake in the company.
    OneWeb guarantees that the satellites not be used for military purposes.

    U.K. Business and Energy Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said in a statement that there is “no negotiation” with Roscosmos about OneWeb and that the government “is not selling its share.”
    “We are in touch with other shareholders to discuss next steps,” Kwarteng said.
    In turn, Rogozin responded to Kwarteng by saying he would give the U.K. two days to think about its decision, and implied that OneWeb would not be able to complete its satellite network without Roscosmos’ help.
    OneWeb’s chief of government, regulatory and engagement Chris McLaughlin told CNBC that in the meantime, the company has removed its personnel from Baikonur Cosmodrome – as Russia leases the spaceport. McLaughlin said OneWeb’s team on site, as well as a U.S. State Department security representative, are now all safely offsite and relocated elsewhere within Kazakhstan.

    “We’ve not been complacent – we’ve been looking after, as a priority, the safety and security of our people and of our compliance with ITAR [International Traffic in Arms Regulations],” McLaughlin said.
    Arianespace, a subsidiary of European rocket builder ArianeGroup, has also relocated its personnel in coordination with the OneWeb teams. The company sells rockets, including the Soyuz, that are supplied by Roscosmos for OneWeb launches. Arianespace declined CNBC’s request for comment on the situation.

    A stack of 36 OneWeb satellites being prepared ahead of its launch on March 25, 2020.
    Arianespace

    OneWeb has launched 428 satellites to low Earth orbit on Soyuz rockets and plans to operate a constellation of 650 satellites to provide global internet coverage from space.
    McLaughlin said that OneWeb has been receiving information about the situation the same way that the public is: through tweets by Roscosmos and Rogozin.
    “It’s all we’re getting,” he said. “It sounds crazy but I’ve seen the letters [to OneWeb from Roscosmos], and the letters say nothing that isn’t already in the tweets.”
    As McLaughin understands it, Roscosmos will have a meeting on Friday evening, at which point — if the demands aren’t met — the Russian space agency would formally declare it’s not launching the OneWeb mission, roll the rocket back from the launchpad and disassemble it.
    OneWeb’s satellites arrived in Kazakhstan before Russia invaded Ukraine, and McLaughlin explained that all the parties involved decided to continue moving forward as “this particular launch was not subject to any sanction.”
    “Yesterday, they were looking forward to launching us,” McLaughlin said.
    In the event Russia cancels the launch, McLaughlin says the contracts between OneWeb, Arianespace, and OneWeb are “all to be discussed” and anticipates each party will point to “force majeure.”
    “I’ve just got a visual of that Reservoir Dogs scene, where everyone’s pointing guns at everyone,” McLaughlin said.

    OneWeb’s multinational sprawl

    Space companies have been racing to build next-generation satellite internet networks, largely in low Earth orbit using hundreds or thousands of satellites. OneWeb is one of the most mature versions of these concepts — alongside SpaceX’s Starlink — and has already begun to provide service to customers.
    OneWeb’s business depends on multinational cooperation with a diversity of stakeholders across the world. The company was rescued from bankruptcy in 2020 when the U.K. government and Indian telecommunications conglomerate Bharti Global each took equity stakes to finance the company’s network. It also counts among its stakeholders Japanese investment giant SoftBank, European communications firm Eutelsat and South Korean conglomerate Hanwha systems.
    McLaughlin said that OneWeb’s shareholders expect to hold an emergency meeting in the coming days to discuss the Roscosmos standoff.
    The company’s supply chain is also global: OneWeb’s satellites are manufactured in Florida through a joint venture with European aerospace giant Airbus. Its launches are conducted through Arianespace on Russian-built rockets. Countries require regulatory approval for the company to provide service.
    By contrast, SpaceX is a private, heavily-verticalized U.S. venture. Elon Musk’s company builds and launches Starlink internet satellites itself. SpaceX provides Starlink service in more than two dozen countries.
    The company recently activated service in Ukraine in response to requests from the government. SpaceX also sent Starlink terminals to Ukraine, with the antennas helping to connect the country to the internet amid the Russian invasion.
    McLaughlin said OneWeb is not providing services in Ukraine because “we’re still early stage,” and also does not have ground stations in Russia.
    “We weren’t in a position to assist in the way that Musk went ahead and did,” McLaughlin said.

    As a result, the Ukraine conflict is likely a boon for Musk’s company over the likes of OneWeb, Deutsche Bank analyst Edison Yu wrote in a note on Wednesday.
    “In the near-term, the clearest winner is SpaceX considering it essentially becomes the only viable backup option for any entity that was reliant on Russian Soyuz rockets,” Yu wrote in a note to investors.
    Yu highlighted Rocket Lab as another potential beneficiary, saying the company’s Electron rocket “could potentially take over some small payload launches.” Meanwhile, Yu emphasized that “the biggest losers would likely be the European Space Agency, OneWeb, and the International Space Station given heavy Russian cooperation.”
    Clarification: This story was updated to reflect the role of Arianespace as an ArianeGroup subsidiary.

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    Wheat prices trade 'limit up' again, hit highest in nearly 14 years as Russia-Ukraine conflict continues

    A summer wheat harvest in Chernihiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, Aug. 10, 2017.
    Vincent Mundy | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Wheat futures reached new multiyear highs Wednesday, as war between major exporters Russia and Ukraine continued to raise concerns about the global supply of the commodity.
    The moves in the commodity market come amid reports that Russian forces have surrounded two key cities in southern Ukraine.

    Wheat futures on Wednesday settled at $10.59 per bushel, up 7.62%, the highest level since wheat traded at $10.9125 on March 26, 2008.
    For a second consecutive day, wheat was at “limit up,” meaning it reached the highest amount the price of a commodity is allowed to increase in a single day.
    “Look at what’s happening to wheat prices right now. We could be talking about a major food inflation story,” Helima Croft, RBC Capital Markets’ head of global commodity strategy, told CNBC’s “Worldwide Exchange” on Wednesday morning.

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    Russia is the largest exporter of wheat and Ukraine is among the four biggest exporters of the commodity, according to JPMorgan. Of the 207 million ton international wheat trade, 17% comes from Russia and 12% comes from Ukraine, according to Bank of America.
    The price of corn, also a major agricultural product of the two countries, hit $7.4775 per bushel at its highs Wednesday, its highest level since reaching $7.5275 on Dec. 7, 2012. Corn futures settled at $7.27 per bushel.

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    The 10 stock and bond funds with the biggest Russia exposure

    Everyday investors in mutual funds and exchange-traded funds likely have limited exposure to Russian debt and stock.
    However, some stock funds allocate at least 10% of their assets to Russia, according to Morningstar. Bond funds are relatively more subdued, allocating at most about 4.5% to 8% to Russian debt, the firm said.
    Some funds have seen big losses in recent days. The West has targeted sanctions at Russia after it invaded Ukraine.

    Nitat Termmee | Moment | Getty Images

    Americans who invest in mutual funds and exchange-traded funds have largely been insulated from financial exposure to Russia amid its conflict with Ukraine.
    The reasons are twofold: First, fund managers who buy Russian debt or Russian company stock generally do so in small quantities; second, funds that buy these securities (which are generally focused on the developing world) are often a fringe part of investors’ overall portfolios.

    “The reality is most people in a 401(k) might have a really tiny exposure to Russian stocks and/or bonds, probably under 1%,” said Karin Anderson, director of North American fixed income strategies at Morningstar, which tracks data on mutual funds and ETFs.
    However, there are a handful of stock and bond funds with much bigger stakes in Russia, according to data provided by Morningstar Direct. Some took a big hit in recent days, due to Western sanctions aimed at crippling Russia’s economy that may be ratcheted up even further.

    The 10 stock funds with the biggest exposure allocate at least 9% of their assets to Russia, according to Morningstar data. The two largest — the iShares MSCI Russia ETF and the VanEck Russia ETF — hold 95% and 94% of their assets in Russian companies, respectively, according to Morningstar.
    The most-exposed bond funds allocate to Russia in much smaller shares than stock funds. The top 10 hold roughly 4.5% to 8% of their total assets in Russian debt, according to Morningstar. The Western Asset Macro Opportunities mutual fund has the largest allocation, about 8.4%, it said.
    More from Personal Finance:Russia-Ukraine crisis: How to avoid fundraising scamsYou might be subsidizing a colleague’s 401(k) feesBiden reiterates $400,000 tax pledge to fund agenda

    The stock and bond funds are a mix of actively managed and index funds. The latter try to replicate a particular stock or bond benchmark, whereas fund managers in the former category have more latitude to select securities according to a particular fund strategy.
    Importantly, the Morningstar data reflects the most recent publicly available data on fund holdings (as of Dec. 31 or Jan. 31, depending on the fund). Active fund managers may have since altered their holdings in Russian stock and debt given the invasion and resulting economic sanctions.

    For example, disclosures peg the GQG Partners Emerging Markets Equity Fund’s Russia stock allocation at more than 16% of holdings. However, the firm on Friday said it only had about 3.7% of assets exposed to Russian stock, according to Morningstar.
    To a certain extent, a reduction in a fund’s Russia stake will occur naturally if the value of those holdings declines. (In other words, active decisions from fund managers may not be primary cause.)
    Benchmarks that incorporate Russia may ultimately remove the country, effectively stripping country exposure from certain index funds. An official at index provider MSCI hinted at that eventuality on Monday, for example, citing an inability to transact in Russian securities.

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    WHO says war in Ukraine will increase Covid transmission, putting large numbers of people at risk of severe disease

    “Infectious diseases ruthlessly exploit the conditions created by war,” said Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior advisor at the WHO.
    Aylward said refugees are particularly vulnerable to severe disease and death in the conditions created by war.
    WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called for a safe humanitarian corridor to deliver medical supplies to Ukraine.
    The WHO declined to name Russia as the aggressor.

    People carry their suitcases as they arrive in Poland after crossing a border check point on February 27, 2022 in Kroscienko, Poland.
    Omar Marques | Getty Images

    The WHO on Wednesday said the mass displacement of people in Ukraine will increase Covid transmission, warning that large numbers of people are at risk of severe disease as oxygen supplies are critically low.
    “Infectious diseases ruthlessly exploit the conditions created by war,” Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior advisor at the WHO, said during a press briefing in Geneva, warning that refugees are particularly vulnerable to severe disease and death in wartime.

    At least three major oxygen plants are now closed in Ukraine due to the fighting, according to the WHO. Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said medical supplies delivered to Kyiv before Russia invaded the nation are currently inaccessible. Tedros called for a safe humanitarian corridor to deliver critically needed medical supplies to Ukraine. There’s also a shortage of cancer medicine and insulin, according to the WHO.
    The WHO director added the mass displacement of people will increase Covid transmission, also putting increased pressure on health-care systems in neighboring countries.
    “Prior to the conflict, Ukraine experienced a recent surge of cases of Covid-19,” Tedros said at the press conference. “Low rates of testing since the start of the conflict mean there is likely to be significant undetected transmission coupled with low vaccination coverage. This increases the risk of large numbers of people developing severe disease.”
    Tedros said health facilities have come under attack during the war — without naming Russia. When asked to name Russia as the aggressor, WHO’s head of emergencies programs, Dr. Mike Ryan, said the global health agency does not want to get involved in politics. He did, however, ask Moscow to reconsider its stance.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Ryan said the WHO is delivering surgical equipment for skin and bone grafts and amputations. A shipment of 36 metric tons of medical supplies for trauma care and surgery will arrive in Poland on Thursday to meet the needs of 1,000 patients and other supplies to help 150,000 people in Ukraine, Tedros said.

    The United Nations relief agency has warned that the risk of another Covid contagion is growing as hundreds of thousands of people flee the Russian invasion to Ukraine’s neighbors in Poland and elsewhere in Europe. Ukraine suffered a 555% increase of Covid cases, driven mostly by omicron, in January and February, according to a report from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
    The relief agency warned that a Covid outbreak, on top of people injured in the war, will put even more pressure on Ukraine’s health-care system, which is already stretched thin.
    Europe has recorded more than 5.5 million Covid cases in the past week, down 24% from the week prior, according to data from the WHO. More than 22,000 people have died from Covid in the past week in Europe, according to the data.
    Covid cases are declining in every region of the world except the western Pacific as the omicron wave subsides. More than 10 million new infections and 60,000 deaths were reported globally in the past week, according to the WHO.
    Correction: The WHO will ship 36 metric tons of medical supplies for trauma care and surgery for Ukraine, which will arrive in Poland on Thursday. A previous version of this story misstated the number.

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