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    Delta plans to hire more than 1,000 pilots by next summer as travel demand returns

    In this articleDALDelta Air Lines told staff on Monday that it expects to hire more than 1,000 pilots by next summer, the latest move by an airline to cater to a rebound in travel demand.Delta in April said it would resume hiring midyear as bookings began to recover from the coronavirus pandemic slump, starting with about 75 pilots from June through August.”This is exciting news both for the pilots looking to join Delta and those of you already on the seniority list because it means career progression opportunities as we continue our recovery, account for scheduled pilot retirements and position for network expansion,” John Laughter, head of operations, said in a memo seen by CNBC.The carrier is planning for a continued recovery in air travel and to avoid staffing problems. Delta canceled hundreds of flights over Thanksgiving and Christmas because it didn’t have enough pilots ready to fly.Over the weekend, American Airlines canceled more than 300 flights due to staffing shortages and other issues, and said it planned to trim its schedule through mid-July by about 1% to avoid straining its operations.Delta told pilots on Monday that it would add 13 crew schedulers and a supervisor to answer pilot calls and questions.American, United Airlines, Spirit Airlines and other carriers have restarted or plan to resume pilot hiring this year. The start of the pandemic halted hiring plans last year, when airlines encouraged thousands of employees to take buyouts, leaves of absence or other voluntary options.Congress approved $54 billion in federal aid for airlines in exchange for not involuntarily furloughing employees, funds airlines said would help them stay staffed for an eventual recovery in travel. More

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    Asia needs to keep Covid under control before the Fed hikes rates, says economist

    Asian countries have to tame the current waves of the coronavirus outbreak in order to get their economies ready for future rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve, an economist said Monday.Fed officials last week indicated that interest rate hikes could come as soon as 2023, shifting from earlier comments in March that said the U.S. central bank was not expecting any increases until at least 2024.Higher U.S. rates would lure investors from abroad, and central banks in other countries may have to raise their own rates in defense. Raising interest rates could help countries prevent too much capital from leaving their economies, but increasing rates too quickly heightens the risk of an economic slowdown.”Asian countries have to get Covid under control so that once the Federal Reserve does begin raising interest rates, the economies here are in good stead and can manage the transition as well,” Steve Cochrane, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Moody’s Analytics, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia.”  Cochrane predicted that the U.S. central bank might raise interest rates by 25 basis points once every quarter starting 2023. The so-called dot plot of individual Fed member expectations pointed to two hikes that year.Asian countries have to get Covid under control so that once the Federal Reserve does begin raising interest rates, the economies here are in good stead and can manage the transition as well.Steve CochraneChief APAC economist, Moody’s AnalyticsMany economies in Asia including Japan, Taiwan and Malaysia have in recent months seen a renewed surge in Covid cases — which forced authorities to impose stricter social-distancing measures. The fresh waves of infections come as vaccination progress in the region lags that of the U.S. and Europe.The World Bank said in a report this month that economic output in two-thirds of East Asia and Pacific countries will remain below pre-pandemic levels until 2022. Factors that dampen potential economic growth in those countries include extended Covid outbreaks and a collapse in global tourism, said the bank.Cochrane pointed out that Covid outbreaks across the region are “staunching” domestic demand and keeping inflation moderate.The economist said several Asian countries including China, South Korea and Singapore are ramping up Covid vaccinations. “That’s looking good but that has to continue going forward,” he said.But other countries including Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines have not effectively controlled the outbreak and don’t have strong vaccination programs yet, added Cochrane.— CNBC’s Jeff Cox contributed to this report. More

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    Here's why the market may be wrong about the Federal Reserve and interest rates

    Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.Source: NYSEMonday’s aggressive stock market rally came despite the fears of one Wall Street firm that investors still aren’t appreciating how quickly the Federal Reserve could start raising interest rates.After getting hammered in the final three trading days last week, Wall Street came roaring back with a move that sent the Dow Jones Industrial Average up more than 1.5%.”The market is getting back to its comfortable mode,” Mohamed El-Erian, the chief economic advisor at Allianz, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” “Growth is strong. They still believe inflation is transitory. They believe the Fed is going to be relatively slow in tapering [monthly asset purchases], and that’s why you’re seeing” stocks higher.That sanguine view of Fed policy is a mistake, according to Bank of America credit strategist Hans Mikkelsen.Last week’s Federal Open Market Committee meeting concluded with officials indicating they now see two rate increases coming as soon as 2023, more quickly than the market had been anticipating.But Mikkelsen’s view is that tighter monetary policy may come even sooner.”Expect the Fed to soon begin tapering its [quantitative easing] purchases, and to start hiking interest rates earlier than expected – and most importantly much faster than currently priced in markets,” he said in a note to clients.The bank’s analysis noted the committee was only “two dots,” or the projections of two members of the 18-person committee, away from pulling the first rate increase into 2022. The panel split evenly on whether rates should move next year, while eight members saw as many as three hikes for 2023.Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:The bull market will get a $500 billion cash injection by year-end, Goldman saysSmall caps have slumped, but Jefferies says these cheap stocks are primed for a comebackHere’s why Tom Lee says energy stocks still have the ‘most upside’ of any sectorTaken collectively, the members’ sentiment about where policy should go offered a significant deviation from what has been a historically easy Fed.Mikkelsen said the credit market, which sent rates sharply lower despite the hawkish Fed, is misjudging which way the central bank is heading. From the market’s perspective, it is seeing just a 41% chance that the Fed hikes rates by July 2022, according to the CME’s FedWatch tracker.”The key mispricing in the rates market, as our rates strategists continue to point out, is not the taper, not the timing of the first rate hike, but the pace of hikes from that point on, which is way too shallow compared with normal hiking cycles in the past,” he wrote.Mikkelsen pointed out that the Fed in effect has already begun tapering with its moves to unwind the small portfolio of corporate bonds it purchased during the Covid-19 pandemic. That move, “which was 100% unexpected as the Fed has a poor track record selling assets – was a signal the Fed increasingly feels emboldened to exit their super-easy monetary policy stance, even if that means defying market expectations.”Changes in the FedFor their part, Fed officials are indicating the landscape indeed is shifting, as reflected in the dot-plot projections released Wednesday.New York Fed President John Williams, in a speech Monday, reflected the consensus view when he said he sees inflation as transitory and Fed policy as appropriate given the current and expected conditions.”It’s clear that the economy is improving at a rapid rate, and the medium-term outlook is very good. But the data and conditions have not progressed enough for the FOMC to shift its monetary policy stance of strong support for the economic recovery,” Williams said in prepared remarks.But within the Fed, opinions are diverging.St. Louis Fed President James Bullard jolted the market Friday when he told CNBC he was one of the FOMC members who thinks a rate hike in 2022 would be appropriate. Bullard is not a voter this year but will be one next year.But Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan said Monday he is more focused on reducing the pace of bond purchases – tapering – for now, and sees the rates question as one to be answered another day.”I would rather see us act sooner rather than later on asset purchases, then we’ll make a decision down the road in 2022 and beyond about the additional steps that are necessary,” said Kaplan, who appeared jointly with Bullard for a discussion presented by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum. “But I think the issue on the table today and in the near term is the timing and adjustment of these purchases.”Both officials noted the progress the economy has made and see reason that the inflation that has arisen in recent months may be a little stickier than the Fed had anticipated.”The supply-demand imbalances, some of them we think will resolve themselves in the next six to 12 months,” Kaplan said. “But again some of them we think are likely to be more persistent, driven by a number of structural changes in the economy.”For example, he cited changes in the energy industry – a key component of Kaplan’s district – toward sustainable power as contributing to longer-lasting inflationary pressures.Bullard spoke of the evolving labor market as an important consideration for future Fed policy.”We have to be ready for the idea that there’s upside risks to inflation,” he said. “Certainly, the anecdotal evidence is overwhelming that this is a very tight labor market.”If those inflationary pressures are hotter than Fed officials think, it would force them into tightening policy faster than they would like. That would hit the stock market and broader economy, both of which are dependent on lower rates.A tight Fed would drive up borrowing costs for a government that has been on a spending binge over the past year and wants to do even more with infrastructure.”Right now, inflation is transitory. But if you overlay that with significant further stimulus, then you run the risk of making something transitory permanent,” Natixis chief economist for the Americas Joe LaVorgna said. “So, you’re in a really tricky spot. I think the Fed’s best approach is to say less.”Become a smarter investor with CNBC Pro.Get stock picks, analyst calls, exclusive interviews and access to CNBC TV.Sign up to start a free trial today. More

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    Raiders’ Carl Nassib comes out as gay, the first active NFL player to do so

    Carl Nassib #94 of the Las Vegas Raiders celebrates a 31-26 win over the Los Angeles Chargers at SoFi Stadium on November 08, 2020 in Inglewood, California.Harry How | Getty ImagesLas Vegas Raiders defensive lineman Carl Nassib announced on Monday that he is gay, becoming the first player on an active National Football League roster to come out. “I just wanted to take a quick moment to say that I’m gay,” Nassib said in an Instagram post. “I’ve been meaning to do this for a while now but finally feel comfortable getting it off my chest. I really have the best life, the best family, friends and job a guy can ask for.”Nassib also announced he is donating $100,000 to The Trevor Project, a nonprofit that provides suicide and crisis prevention services to LGBTQ youth.”I’m a pretty private person so I hope you guys know that I’m not doing this for attention. I just think that representation and visibility are so important,” Nassib said in the post. “I actually hope that one day, videos like this and the whole coming out process are not necessary, but until then I will do my best and my part to cultivate a culture that’s accepting and compassionate.”Nassib added that he had agonized for the past 15 years about whether to publicly come out, and that only recently he felt it was possible to make the announcement.Nassib, 28, is entering his second year with the Raiders and his sixth season in the NFL. He was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year at Penn State in 2015.”The NFL family is proud of Carl for courageously sharing his truth today. Representation matters. We share his hope that someday soon statements like his will no longer be newsworthy as we march toward full equality for the LGBTQ+ community. We wish Carl the best of luck this coming season,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement.In 2014, Michael Sam became the first openly gay player to be selected in the NFL draft when the St. Louis Rams selected him in the seventh round. Sam was cut just before the regular season started.Jason Collins, who is now retired, became the first active openly gay NBA player in 2013. Two weeks earlier that year, WNBA’s Brittney Griner came out as lesbian. More

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    Jim Cramer sees buying opportunities as pandemic winners lag the market

    In this articleBCDISBRBWTHOThe stocks that thrived during the height of Covid-19 have lost momentum, but CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday that not all pandemic winners should be branded as reopening losers.”If your company made a killing during the pandemic, it’s become toxic in this market, even if business is still booming,” the “Mad Money” host said. “That could create some buying opportunities, but only if you’re very patient and willing to take some pain.”Some of those buying opportunities exist in stocks of companies connected to the outdoors lifestyle, including recreational vehicle manufacturer Thor Industries and boat maker Brunswick, Cramer said. Shares of Thor and Brunswick are down 29% and 18.7%, respectively, from the 52-week highs reached earlier this year as the economy recovers from last year’s lockdowns.Some investors worry that consumers will leave behind Airstream campers and Mercury boats for hotel stays and air travel. The deep backlogs and lasting high demand for Thor and Brunswick products, however, paint a different business case, Cramer said.”Covid didn’t just give them a temporary boost; it was a long-term gamechanger,” he said. “The bears are convinced that there’s no way business can stay this good, hence the ever-shrinking price to earnings multiples on great numbers.”Campbell Soup is another underperforming stock Cramer highlighted. The stock, he noted, tanked earlier this month after it missed quarterly estimates and had to slash its forecast. Despite that hiccup, the snacks and food producer has taken market share, he added. The stock is more than 13% off its January high.Disney, which stands to benefit from the return of theme parks and movie theaters, has a what Cramer called a “broken stock.” It’s down about 14% since March partially because investors are focused on the slowing growth rate in the company’s video streaming platform, Disney Plus.”I think [CEO Bob] Chapek can turn things around, but he has to avoid the trap of Disney Plus becoming another ESPN, which dragged the stock down for years after their numbers peaked,” Cramer said. “Chapek needs to remind people that the rest of the company exists and is perfectly poised for the great reopening.”Questions for Cramer? Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBCWant to take a deep dive into Cramer’s world? Hit him up! Mad Money Twitter – Jim Cramer Twitter – Facebook – InstagramQuestions, comments, suggestions for the “Mad Money” website? [email protected] More

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    Victoria’s Secret reportedly borrows $500 million to finance split from Bath & Body Works

    In this articleJPMLBPedestrians walk past a Bath & Body Works store.Craig Warga | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesLingerie retailer Victoria’s Secret is taking out a $500 million loan to finance its split from Bath & Body Works, Bloomberg News reported Monday.The loan is due 2028 and could pay interest that’s 300 to 325 basis points above Libor, Bloomberg reported, citing an unnamed source. JPMorgan Chase is overseeing the sale, with investor orders due by June 30, the report said.The report comes after parent company L Brands announced the spin-off last month that would separate the two brands into independent, publicly traded companies by August.Representatives for Victoria’s Secret, Bath & Body Works, L Brands and JPMorgan Chase did not immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.Last month, L Brands reported quarterly numbers that beat analyst expectations. The company said its results were driven by more customers paying full price for products and strong momentum across its different divisions. Read more about the new loan in Bloomberg. More

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    U.S. to split 55 million Covid vaccine doses between Latin America, Asia and Africa

    A person being vaccinated at the launch of the province-wide roadshows to drum up public support for vaccination against COVID 19 at Moses Mabhida People’s Park on June 08, 2021 in Durban, South Africa.Darren Stewart | Gallo Images | Getty ImagesThe Biden administration announced Monday it will send 55 million Covid-19 vaccine doses to countries in Latin America, Asia and Africa as the coronavirus continues to rapidly spread in low- and middle-income nations.The 55 million vaccine doses are the remaining portion of 80 million shots President Joe Biden has committed to donating abroad. Earlier this month, the administration said it would send the first 25 million doses to South and Central America, Asia, Africa, neighboring countries and U.S. allies.The U.S. plans to allocate 75% of its initial 80 million doses through COVAX, the nonprofit that distributes vaccines mostly to poor countries, while the remaining shots will be sent to countries currently dealing with surges in new infections, the administration said Monday.The administration said about 14 million doses will go to places in Latin America and the Caribbean, including Brazil, Argentina, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador, Paraguay, Bolivia, Uruguay, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Haiti, Dominican Republic, Panama and Costa Rica.About 16 million will go to countries in Asia like India, Nepal, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Philippines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia, Laos and Thailand, the administration said. About 10 million doses will go to Africa and are expected to be shared with countries that will be selected in coordination with the African Union, it said.Another 14 million will be shared with “regional priorities and other recipients” such as Iraq, Yemen, Tunisia and Ukraine, the administration said.”Sharing millions of U.S. vaccines with other countries signals a major commitment by the U.S. government,” the administration said in a release detailing its plan. “Just like we have in our domestic response, we will move as expeditiously as possible, while abiding by U.S. and host country regulatory and legal requirements.”CNBC Health & Science Read CNBC’s latest global coverage of the Covid pandemic:WHO says delta is the fastest and fittest Covid variant and will ‘pick off’ most vulnerableU.S. to split 55 million Covid vaccine doses between Latin America, Asia and Africa U.S. extends travel restrictions at Canada, Mexico land borders through July 21 China has administered more than 1 billion doses of its Covid-19 vaccinesBiden says delta Covid variant is ‘particularly dangerous’ for young peopleThe announcement Monday comes as more than half of the U.S. population has had at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, and new cases and deaths have fallen sharply.As of Sunday, more than 177 million Americans, or 53.3% of the population, have had at least one shot, according to data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. More than 149 million Americans are fully vaccinated, according to the agency.The pandemic outlook in other countries is more bleak, however, with some places such as Africa reporting an increasingly worrying rise in Covid cases.The World Health Organization is urging wealthy nations to donate doses. Many countries have made pledges to share millions of shots around the world, but WHO officials say those doses need to make their way to low-income countries immediately and without delay.Earlier this month, the administration said it would buy 500 million more doses of the Pfizer Covid vaccine to share through the global COVAX alliance to donate to 92 lower-income countries and the African Union over the next year.The administration said the doses are vital “component of our overall global effort to lead the world in the fight to defeat COVID-19 and to achieve global health security.” More

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    WHO says delta is the fastest and fittest Covid variant and will 'pick off' most vulnerable

    The highly contagious delta variant is the fastest and fittest coronavirus strain yet, and it will “pick off” the most vulnerable people, especially in places with low Covid-19 vaccination rates, World Health Organization officials warned Monday.Delta, first identified in India, has the potential “to be more lethal because it’s more efficient in the way it transmits between humans and it will eventually find those vulnerable individuals who will become severely ill, have to be hospitalized and potentially die,” Dr. Mike Ryan, executive director of the WHO’s health emergencies program, said during a news conference.Ryan said world leaders and public health officials can help defend the most vulnerable through the donation and distribution of Covid vaccines.”We can protect those vulnerable people, those front-line workers,” Ryan said, “and the fact that we haven’t, as Director-General [Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus] has said, again and again, is a catastrophic moral failure at a global level.”Coronavirus safety posters are displayed in the window of the Sondheim Theatre on June 14, 2021 in London, England. Prime Minister Boris Johnson has confirmed a four-week delay to the final easing of coronavirus restrictions following concern over the virus’s Delta variant and rising infection rates.Rob Pinney | Getty ImagesThe WHO said Friday that delta is becoming the dominant variant of the disease worldwide.The agency declared delta a “variant of concern” last month. A variant can be labeled as “of concern” if it has been shown to be more contagious, more deadly or more resistant to current vaccines and treatments, according to the health organization.Delta is now replacing alpha, the highly contagious variant that swept across Europe and later the U.S. earlier this year, Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, said in a recent interview.Studies suggest it is around 60% more transmissible than alpha, which was more contagious than the original strain that emerged from Wuhan, China, in late 2019.”We need to vaccinate now. Get everyone vaccinated now,” Offit said.Delta has now spread to 92 countries, Maria Van Kerkhove, the WHO’s technical lead for Covid, said Monday. It now makes up at least 10% of all new cases in the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and is on its way to becoming the dominant variant in the nation.The United Kingdom recently saw delta become the dominant strain there, surpassing its native alpha variant, which was first detected in the country last fall. The delta variant now makes up more than 60% of new cases in the U.K.WHO officials have said there were reports that the delta variant also causes more severe symptoms, but that more research is needed to confirm those conclusions. Still, there are signs the delta strain could provoke different symptoms than other variants.No variant has really found the combination of high transmissibility and lethality, but delta is “the most able and fastest and fittest of those viruses,” WHO officials said Monday.”This particular delta variant is faster, it is fitter, it will pick off the more vulnerable more efficiently than previous variants, and therefore if there are people left without vaccination, they remain even at further risk,” Ryan said.Van Kerkhove said, “unfortunately we don’t yet have the vaccines in the right places to protect people’s lives.”The WHO has been urging wealthy nations, including the U.S. to donate doses. The Biden administration earlier Monday detailed where it will send 55 million vaccine doses, the majority of which will be distributed through COVAX, the WHO-backed immunization program.”These vaccines are highly effective against severe disease and death. That is what they are intended for, and that is what they need to be used for” Van Kerkhove said. “This is what COVAX and WHO and all of our partners have been advocating for, that these vaccines reach people most at risk.” More