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    Pittsburgh Steelers star JuJu Smith-Schuster joins Wasserman agency after leaving Jay-Z's Roc Nation Sports

    JuJu Smith-Schuster #19 of the Pittsburgh Steelers reacts against the Jacksonville Jaguars at TIAA Bank Field on November 22, 2020 in Jacksonville, Florida.Michael Reaves | Getty ImagesIf the Pittsburgh Steelers want to re-sign star wide receiver JuJu Smith-Schuster to a long-term deal, the club will need to negotiate with a different agent.Smith-Schuster departed agency Roc Nation, which entertainer Jay Z founded, and joined respected National Football League agent Chafie Fields at Wasserman Media Group’s sports division, the agency announced on Monday. Smith-Schuster joins a roster led by Fields that includes Dallas Cowboys wideout Amari Cooper and San Francisco 49ers defensive lineman Arik Armstead.Fields, the firm’s the executive president of team sports, also added National Basketball Association star James Harden to his clients in January.Smith-Schuster, 24, signed a one-year pact with the Steelers worth $8 million after producing 97 catches for 831 yards and nine touchdowns in the 2020 season. His best season came in 2018 when he made the Pro Bowl following 111 receptions for 1,426 yards and seven touchdowns.By signing a one-year agreement, Smith-Schuster is essentially betting on himself that he’ll produce a better season statistically and avoid a significant injury. Hence, he could be one of the most sought-after players in the 2022 free agency class and cash in on a higher salary cap that could reach $208 million, up from $182.5 for the 2021 season.Currently, Cooper’s five-year, $100 million contract is the most expensive deal in the NFL for a receiver. Fields negotiated that deal in the 2020 offseason. Arizona Cardinals receiver DeAndre Hopkins ($27.2 million) and new Tennessee Titans wideout Julio Jones ($22 million) are the highest-paid per year, according to Spotrac.So, if he produces and makes another Pro Bowl, its likely Smith-Schuster will seek a new deal in that money range.NFL training camps start next month for the 2021 campaign. After its pandemic season that restricted most fans, the league expects clubs to allow full attendance. More

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    Cramer says a 'late-June swoon' could create opportunities in stocks

    In this article.SPXCNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday laid out a playbook for investors in the event the S&P 500 pulls back from its highs.”If history is any guide, next week’s gonna be ugly,” he said.The “Mad Money” host offered the recommendation after reviewing chart analysis from noted technician Larry Williams, who sees a pullback playing out next week.”If you’re a nimble trader, you might want to sell the S&P at the opening next Monday then swap back in near the end of the week,” Cramer said. “Even if you’re not that nimble, watch out for the weakness, because it could create a nice buying opportunity.”The S&P 500 has turned in three record closes in as many days, finishing Monday’s session at 4,255.15. Williams, who makes a habit of spotting seasonal patterns, is warning about a “late-June swoon,” Cramer said.Whether it’s just a modest dip or a significant decline, stocks tend to get hit near the end of the month, according to Williams. Cramer said he wouldn’t bet against the forecast.Last year the index fell almost 5% from top to trough between June 23 and June 26.”Based on Williams’ analysis, shorting the market next week has been a good strategy for at least the last 22 years,” Cramer said. “If the S&P starts getting crushed, I want you to remember that you’re up against a powerful seasonal trend. You want to start bottom fishing.”The seasonal pullback could be followed up by another pattern Williams calls the Fourth of July trade, Cramer highlighted.Last year the S&P 500 bounced from under 3,000 in late June, rising more than 6% by July 10.DisclaimerQuestions 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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    Jim Cramer: Own these stocks if the Fed leaves interest rates unchanged

    In this articleFBXOMCVXDOWCLFCATCNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday that investors should think about buying some industrial and energy names if the Federal Reserve keeps rates unchanged at this week’s meeting.”If you think, as I do, that the Fed will keep the fires going, you’ll want to own a steel stock or a heavy machinery play or a chemical company,” Cramer said on “Mad Money.” “I even sanction some energy stocks because many of these companies have changed their suboptimal ways.”Cramer recommended investors take a look at stocks like chemical-maker Dow Inc, heavy machinery company Caterpillar and Cleveland-Cliffs, the iron ore and steel products producer whose shares cratered 9% Monday. Dow Inc and Caterpillar also fell slightly on Monday. He also pointed to energy stocks Chevron, Exxon Mobil and Pioneer Natural Resources as potential buys for investors.”These are the kind of companies that thrive when economies around the world are growing, and that’s exactly what I expect,” Cramer said.The Fed is slated to start its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday. The central bank is not expected to move interest rates. However, investors will be looking for clues on whether the Fed has changed its stance on U.S. inflation. The meeting is set to wrap up on Wednesday.Cramer’s comments came after gains in growth and technology names carried the Nasdaq Composite to a fresh record close. The S&P 500 staged a late-day rally to also close at an all-time high. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged, closing slightly lower.The moves Monday in growth stocks — such as social media giant Facebook, cloud messaging platform Twilio, cybersecurity provider CrowdStrike and the e-commerce site Etsy — represented a belief the economy could be cooling down or the Fed could hike interest rates to keep the economy from overheating, Cramer said.CrowdStrike shares rose about 1%, while Facebook advanced 1.7%. Etsy moved 2.7% higher, and Twilio climbed 3%.”Until we see … the whites of the [Fed’s] eyes on Wednesday, you can expect the action to look like today, where we had lots of traffic in the junior and senior growth aisles, with shoppers fleeing from the messy industrial aisles and bank stock aisles,” he said.Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Facebook.DisclaimerQuestions 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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    Stock futures are flat after Nasdaq and S&P 500 notch fresh records, Fed meeting ahead

    U.S. stock futures were steady in overnight trading on Monday after the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 registered new record highs ahead of the Federal Reserve’s latest monetary policy meeting.Dow futures fell just 20 points. S&P 500 futures were flat and Nasdaq 100 futures ticked 0.09% lower.On Monday, S&P 500 gained 0.2% to close at a new record of 4,255.15. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, however, fell 85 points.The Nasdaq Composite was the relative outperformer, gaining 0.8% to close at an all-time high of 14,174.14. Investors are pouring back into growth stocks as bond yields keep falling. The 10-year Treasury rate hit a three-month low last Friday and hovered around 1.5% on Monday.Bitcoin rose to $40,000 on Monday after Tesla CEO Elon Musk said Sunday that the company will resume bitcoin transactions once it confirms there is reasonable clean energy usage by miners.The Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting starts on Tuesday, and it’s a focal point for the markets this week. The central bank is not expected to take any action. However, commentary on interest rates, inflation and the economy could drive market moves.Traders will listen closely for comments on inflation and the Fed’s eventual tapering plans.Billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones told CNBC on Monday that this Fed meeting could be the most important in Chairman Jerome Powell’s career. Jones also warned that Powell could spark a big sell-off in risk assets if he doesn’t do a good job of signaling a taper.Investors will also be watching for another inflation gauge released on Tuesday. The Producer Price Index — which measure the prices paid to producers as opposed to prices on the consumer level — is expected to rise 0.5% in May, according to Dow Jones estimates. The core PPI — which excludes volatile items like foods, energy and trade services — is also estimated to increase 0.5%.May’s retail sales data are also slated for release at 8:30 a.m. ET. Economists polled by Dow Jones are expecting a drop of 0.6% for last month. Excluding autos, economists expect May’s retail sales rose 0.5%. Retail sales in April were unchanged as the boost from stimulus checks faded.Enjoyed this article?For exclusive stock picks, investment ideas and CNBC global livestreamSign up for CNBC ProStart your free trial now More

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    NBA star James Harden takes stake, board seat in luxury retailer Saks

    James Harden #13 of the Brooklyn Nets handles the ball against the Boston Celtics in Game One of the First Round of the 2021 NBA Playoffs at Barclays Center at Barclays Center on May 22, 2021 in New York City.Steven Ryan | Getty ImagesNBA superstar James Harden is a new investor in luxury retailer Saks, the parties announced on Monday.Harden purchased a minority stake and will become a member of the Saks’ board, where he’ll advise on growing “high-potential consumer brands” and help expand its e-commerce platform, according to the announcement. Terms of Harden’s investment were not made available.”I am honored to join the Saks board and to be a part of a company that is paving the future of luxury retail,” Harden said in a statement. “This is an exciting opportunity for me to combine two of my personal passions – a love of fashion and teaming up with brands that have the potential to lead while making an impact on the communities they serve.”Harden, a star on the Brooklyn Nets, is one of the more fashionable players in the NBA and has garnered a following among the league’s younger fans via social media partnerships. Harden, 31, is in good position to leverage his cultural influence, name, image and likeness to drive new business to Saks and help launch clothing brands.Ramin Talaie | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesHarden has previously made investments in beverage company BodyArmor, personal hygiene company Art of Sport, and Major League Soccer’s and the National Women’s Soccer League’s Houston franchises. “As we work to build this new board, James is an important and valuable addition,” Saks’ chairman Richard Baker said in a statement. “With experience in growing businesses and as someone who values self-expression through fashion, I am confident that he will bring a distinct point of view that will help us better deliver for our customers.”Harden will make $44 million for the 2021-22 season, part of a four-year $171 million extension he signed in 2017 with the Rockets. He was traded to the Nets in January.In six games in the 2021 postseason, Harden is averaging 23.2 points and 8.8 assists. He suffered a hamstring injury in Game 1 of the current playoff round against the Milwaukee Bucks. The Nets-Bucks series is tied 2-2 with Game 5 on Tuesday. More

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    American Express puts Kabbage acquisition to work with card company's first checking account

    In this articleAXPAmerican ExpressAmerican Express, best known for its array of personal and corporate cards, is making a push into territory held by banks and a growing list of fintech players.The card company is launching its first checking account for small businesses by leaning on technology acquired last year in the acquisition of online lender Kabbage, CNBC has learned.The product, called Kabbage Checking, is a no-fee digital account that pays 1.1% interest on up to $100,000 in balances. It includes mobile check deposits, a debit card, bill pay and targeted savings features as well as access to a network of ATMs and retail locations for cash transactions.It’s the latest move to shake up the increasingly competitive world of small business banking. For decades, big U.S. lenders were mostly content to offer bare-bones checking accounts and credit cards to small business owners. Entrepreneurs who needed access to more working capital were often out of luck.That gave rise to online lenders like OnDeck Capital and Kabbage more than a decade ago. More recently, fintech players like Square, Brex and Intuit have rushed to offer small business checking accounts. And banking giants like JPMorgan Chase have been fighting back by rolling out fintech-inspired services and hardware for merchants.Regardless of their starting point, many of the competitors are morphing into all-encompassing providers of cash management, transaction and lending services for small businesses. Key to this strategy is the humble checking account, which enables access to deposits — a foothold to offer complementary services and data on money flows.Kathryn Petralia, co-Founder of Kabbage, which was acquired by American Express last year.Source: American Express”The checking account is sort of the financial operating system for a business, it’s one of the first things a business gets” after being created, Kabbage co-founder Kathryn Petralia said last week in an interview. “With the record number of new businesses being created last year, we think it’s important to help them get products that a brand new business wouldn’t be able to get from a traditional institution.”That’s why AmEx acquired Kabbage in August, reportedly paying as much as $850 million for the start-up. While the New York-based company is the largest issuer of small business cards in the country, executives have acknowledged it needed a digital storefront for a full suite of products beyond just plastic.”We have great cards, we’re an industry leader for small business cards,” AmEX president of global commercial services Anna Marrs said last month at a conference. “It’s when you try to go beyond that that we don’t always have the skills in-house, we don’t always have the products on the shelf.”Competitors, in particular the Silicon Valley firm Brex, have seen surging growth by providing more credit to start-ups than traditional competitors dared and quickly rolling out new products beyond its corporate charge card. Brex, which is ranked No. 6 on the CNBC Disruptor 50 list, more than doubled its valuation this year to $7.4 billion.Kabbage had been close to completing its checking account around the time the coronavirus pandemic struck in the U.S., according to Petralia. Even though AmEx is itself a bank holding company, the checking account is backed by Green Dot, a partner to technology and fintech firms.AmEx is betting that its cardholders may be frustrated with the limitations and fees of traditional banks and open to an alternative. But it also has no minimum balance requirement and offers a relatively high interest rate; most small business checking accounts pay virtually no interest, though they often offer cash sign-on bonuses.Kabbage Checking by American ExpressSource: American ExpressSome U.S. business owners may have soured on Kabbage, however. Months before the takeover, Kabbage abruptly halted lending during the pandemic, slashing some customers’ credit lines. The start-up pivoted to administering Paycheck Protection Program loans, but when AmEx bought Kabbage, it excluded the fintech firm’s loan book.Borrowers who had used Kabbage for the first round of PPP loans had to rely on K Servicing, a new entity, for follow-up loans. That business has garnered less-than-stellar reviews from people desperate for rescue loans.After AmEx completed the Kabbage acquisition, it began piloting the fintech’s services to its cardholders earlier this year. The card company has begun offering credit lines of $1,000 to $150,000 for small businesses, leaning on Kabbage’s automated underwriting software.As part of its cash management platform, the company will be able to deliver insights to users including when to pay vendors and borrow money, Petralia said.”That’s the beauty of having a suite of products that all work together to help customers manage cash flow,” she said. Business owners “are not folks with finance degrees; they’re ordering inventory and making products and dealing with customers. We’re trying to simplify their lives.”AmEx CEO Stephen Squeri told Jim Cramer in an interview set to air Monday evening that he believed the accounts would be a hit with cardholders. “With Kabbage, we’re taking a fintech platform and combining that with a scale business,” Squeri said. 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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    Major investors reportedly up stakes in Stripe ahead of public listing

    The Stripe logo on a smartphone with U.S. dollar banknotes in the background.Budrul Chukrut | SOPA Images | LightRocket via Getty ImagesMajor investment firms are upping their stakes in digital payments firm Stripe ahead of an eventual public listing, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.Capital Group, Sequoia Capital, Shopify and Silver Lake all bought shares from existing stakeholders, including current and former Stripe employees, the Journal reported, citing unnamed sources. The sales totaled about $1 billion, of a total $4 billion that was bid.Representatives for Stripe and for the investment firms did not immediately respond to request for comment.San Francisco-based Stripe, founded a decade ago, makes software that processes payments for e-commerce businesses and became the most valuable private fintech company after a round of fundraising in March that valued the company at $95 billion.Stripe ranked No. 2 on the 2021 CNBC Disruptor 50 list.Read more about the recent stock sale in the Wall Street Journal.SIGN UP for our weekly, original newsletter that goes beyond the list, offering a closer look at CNBC Disruptor 50 companies, and the founders who continue to innovate across every sector of the economy. More

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    Bank of America CEO details back-to-office plan, concentrating on Covid-vaccinated employees first

    Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan on Monday detailed the financial firm’s approach to bringing employees back to the office, telling CNBC that those who have received the coronavirus vaccine are the priority for now.In an interview on “Squawk Box,” Moynihan said Bank of America began to ask staff whether they had received a Covid shot a few months ago.”About 60,000 people in the U.S. … have told us that status,” Moynihan said, adding that the number stands around 70,000 for employees outside the U.S.”Now we’re in the process of inviting those people back to work. We give them 30 days-plus notice,” he said. “The basic concept is from now to Labor Day or mid-September, you’re kind of in that transition mode. The idea is the vaccinated teammates should be back to work after Labor Day.”Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America had 212,201 employees as of March 31, the company said in its latest earnings report.Moynihan’s comments Monday came on the same day that Goldman Sachs’ U.S. employees were required to return to the office. In the runup, Goldman required U.S. employees to inform the company of their vaccination status.Companies across Wall Street and corporate America more broadly have adopted various approaches — some more strict than others — to bringing staff back to the office after the coronavirus pandemic last year prompted an unprecedented adoption of remote work.Some have decided to embrace a so-called hybrid model permanently, requiring workers to come into the office a few days per week. Other companies have gone further, allowing most employees to work remotely full-time even after the pandemic ends.Moynihan noted that certain Bank of America employees such as those at bank branches have long been working in person during the pandemic and “done a spectacular job.” For those who are continuing to work remotely, Moynihan said he believes there’s a desire to return to the office.”People want to get back to work,” said Moynihan, whose firm is the second-largest bank in the U.S. by assets. “It was interesting, I was at this wedding over the weekend and a bunch of young kids working in our industry for a competitor, and they’re all … tired of working out of their rooms.”Moynihan said bringing employees back to the office who haven’t been vaccinated against Covid remains a bit tricky. “That’s why we’re concentrating on the vaccinated people,” he said, while emphasizing the importance of controlling coronavirus spread in order for the economic recovery to persist.”The key is not to lose track of the virus vaccine path and the virus infection path. The No. 1 risk to our economy still is that question,” Moynihan said. More