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    Off-the-grid homes are coming to your neighborhood, as climate change creates suburban survivalists

    The Atlantic hurricane season doesn’t official begin until June 1, but excessive spring flooding has already displaced thousands of residents in Louisiana.  A freak ice storm in Texas in February took out much of the state’s power grid, plunging nearly 10 million people into a cold, dark catastrophe. More than 150 people died, and at an estimated $200 billion, it was the costliest natural disaster in the state’s history.And California’s last wildfire season set the record for the largest amount of land burned in modern history, according to the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. The fires destroyed over 10,000 structures and cost over $10 billion in property damage.The growing effects of climate change are no longer seasonal. Increasingly extreme weather from climate change is now a year-round phenomenon. This has homebuilders reconsidering how they design and power new homes, and how to take them off the grid, so they can be more environmentally sustainable, as well as operational when disaster hits. It also has traditional homebuyers thinking more like survivalists.”More severe storms each year are going to further and further indicate the needs for resilient development,” said Ben Keys, associate professor of real estate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.Keys studies the effects of climate change on real estate and the growing need for housing that can function off the grid. This goes well beyond solar panels. “These houses can be built in much more efficient ways, so not just solar, but they can have their own water filters, other sources of electricity generation and a number of other efficient ways to manage their utilities,” said Keys. A growing number of small builders, like California-based Dvele, are stepping up to the challenge. Dvele HomeSource: DvelePower outages spur change”The whole idea of the self-powered home actually came from the California wildfires where the grids were shutting down,” said Matt Howland, Dvele’s president. Dvele, founded in 2017, builds its homes in a factory. They are sleek, modern designs with high-end fixtures and finishings. The average size is about 2,600 square feet, although it can be larger, and the cost is around $1.2 million. That is about 20% higher than the cost of a comparably sized luxury home with none of the resilient efficiencies and technologies. Dvele homes have solar, battery and other construction and insulation elements, as well as smart technology, that allow them to use far less energy and operate longer off the grid. The home monitors its own energy input and output all the time, then tweaks the systems to save more. If the local power goes out, the home should see no difference. “We’re seeing things that we’ve never seen before and that grids simply aren’t made to manage. Since all the events in Texas, the interest in the self-powered concept has really gone off the charts for us,” said Howland. Most of Dvele’s projects are on the West Coast, but they are forecasting big expansion of individual homes and whole new communities in other states. The highest-risk homes are in California, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska, along the Mississippi River, and large Gulf and Atlantic coastal stretches, according to CoreLogic’s annual Catastrophe Report. Major grid failure or “blackout” events in the U.S., impacting 50,000 or more people, jumped by more than 60% since 2015, according to new research published in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.  Homeowners have become much more aware of their risk and much more inclined to do something about it. There is more interest now than ever before from consumers seeking new strategies to safeguard themselves and their families from climate events.Dvele HomeSource: DveleIncrease in queriesRise, a home improvement website dedicated specifically to sustainable projects, has seen a sharp increase in off-the-grid queries from its followers.”It’s homeowner independence in general. A new way of thinking where you’re not relying on others and realizing there are a lot of things they can do,” said Rise CEO Matthew Daigle. “Solar is just a piece of the pie. They’re taking a page from rural settings.” They may be taking a page, but this isn’t about individuals living in a cabin in the woods, away from society, as off-the-grid has long been considered. “It’s not just for extremists. I think you’re going to see more and more people looking for ways in which they can protect themselves as there are increased risk from storms, more utility disruptions, and more need for resiliency,” said Wharton’s Keys. Growth in off-the-grid technology is not just expected for individual homes. Dvele is now exploring shared storage on microgrids for whole communities of its homes. “We didn’t anticipate it would go this fast nationally, but we’re excited for the growth,” said Howland.Biggest hurdlesThe biggest hurdle to more expansion of off-the-grid housing is cost. Right now it is expensive, and especially so to retrofit homes. Most of the demand is coming from wealthier homeowners and homebuyers.”I think the funding is a big challenge because the payoffs to many of these investments don’t pay off right away,” said Keys.Incremental changes at the high end can filter down, which happens a lot with technology that is in our appliances and in our heating and cooling systems today. The more investment in off-the-grid technology, the cheaper it will become.”So you need investors, or you need homeowners who have that long view and recognize that these benefits are going to accrue over time,” Keys added. More

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    Bitcoin steadies after a wild week that saw the cryptocurrency plunge 30% at one point

    In this articleBTC.CM=A Bitcoin sign is seen at the entrance of a cryptocurrency exchange office on April 16, 2021 in Istanbul, Turkey.Chris McGrath | Getty ImagesBitcoin’s price held firmly above the $40,000 level on Friday, as cryptocurrency investors reeled from a huge sell-off earlier this week.The digital coin was up 2.2% at a price of $41,065 by 8:20 a.m. ET, according to Coin Metrics data, on pace for its worst week since March 13. It bounced above the $42,000 mark on Thursday as digital currencies attempted to rebound from a big sell-off earlier in the week.Other cryptocurrencies were in the red Friday, with ether down 3.4% at $2,707, XRP off by 4.6% at $1.13 and litecoin falling 2% to $206. Dogecoin, a meme-inspired crypto supported by Tesla CEO Elon Musk, was down 2.8% at 39 cents.Bitcoin’s gains were capped Friday after the U.S. Treasury Department said a day earlier that it would require any cryptocurrency transfer worth $10,000 or more to be reported to the IRS.”Cryptocurrency already poses a significant detection problem by facilitating illegal activity broadly including tax evasion,” the Treasury said.Read more about cryptocurrencies from CNBC ProDeutsche Bank says bitcoin’s gone from ‘trendy to tacky.’ Here’s what it expects to happen nextBig institutional investors are dumping bitcoin and going back into gold, JPMorgan saysAvoid crypto and ‘meme stocks’ and buy these instead, hedge fund manager saysIt’s the latest sign of an impending regulatory crackdown on cryptocurrencies. Earlier this week, China issued a warning reiterating its stance that financial institutions and payment firms are forbidden from providing crypto-related services.Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies slid as much as 30% on Wednesday, as investors reacted to the statement from China as well as mixed signals from Musk.The Tesla CEO came out as a supporter of bitcoin earlier this year, with his company buying $1.5 billion worth of the cryptocurrency and briefly accepting it as a means of payment. However, he halted the purchase of Tesla vehicles with bitcoin last week, citing concerns over bitcoin’s huge energy consumption.Critics have long warned about bitcoin’s environmental impact. The cryptocurrency uses as much electricity as entire countries like the United Arab Emirates and Pakistan, according to Cambridge University researchers. More

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    Gwyneth Paltrow’s Goop threatened with shutdown in the UK

    Steve GranitzLONDON — Gwyneth Paltrow’s wellness company Goop has been warned that its U.K. operations could be shut down after failing to file its accounts. According to Goop’s page on Companies House, a registrar for companies in the U.K., the firm’s accounts are overdue. Companies House issued a second notice for a “compulsory strike-off” in April, which warns a company that it could be taken off the U.K. register and dissolved from two months after the notice. But Goop’s strike-off process was suspended last week, according to Companies House, giving the company more time to file its accounts. Goop first received a strike-off notice in 2019 but this was also suspended, with the accounts listed as having been audited in July 2020. A spokesperson for Goop wasn’t immediately available for comment when contacted by CNBC.Paltrow launched Goop in 2008 but registered it as a U.K. company in 2011, when she lived in England with her ex-husband Chris Martin, the lead singer of Coldplay. Its most recent public valuation was for $250 million in 2018, according to The New York Times.  Goop is also facing a lawsuit in the U.S. from a man in Texas who claimed the brand’s vagina-scented candle “exploded” after burning it for a few hours. NBC News reported earlier this week that Colby Watson filed a class-action complaint Monday. Watson reportedly said he bought a $75 “This Smells Like My Vagina” candle from the Goop website in January, but after lighting it for the first time a month later and letting it burn for three hours, it allegedly “exploded” and became “engulfed in high flames.” The candle has a warning that advises users not to burn it for more than two hours, according to its listing on the Goop website. A Goop spokesperson told NBC News that Watson’s claim was “frivolous.” This isn’t the first lawsuit Goop has faced, having settled a $145,000 case in 2018 over the health claims it made about using vaginal jade eggs. The Hollywood star’s brand has faced other criticisms about its health and wellness claims. Last year, the CEO of Britain’s National Health Service, Simon Stevens, reportedly said that Paltrow’s Netflix show “the Goop Lab” pushed “dubious wellness products and dodgy procedures.” He argued that Paltrow’s brand “peddles psychic vampire repellent, says chemical sunscreen is a bad idea, and promotes colonic irrigation and DIY coffee enema machines, despite them carrying considerable risks to health.”A spokeswoman for Goop told the BBC at the time that it was “transparent when we cover emerging topics that may be unsupported by science or may be in early stages of review.” More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: VF Corp, The Buckle, Palo Alto Networks & more

    Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:VF Corp (VFC) – The company behind apparel brands like The North Face, Timberland and Vans posted a mixed quarter, beating top line estimates but reporting lower-than-expected per-share profit. VF said the majority of its supply chain is operational, although it has seen isolated product delays. VF shares tumbled 6% in the premarket.The Buckle (BKE) – The accessories retailer’s shares jumped 7.9% in the premarket after reporting better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. The Buckle earned $1.16 per share, compared to a consensus estimate of 43 cents a share, helped by the reopening of its stores.Palo Alto Networks (PANW) – Palo Alto reported quarterly earnings of $1.38 per share, beating estimates by 10 cents a share. The cybersecurity company’s revenue also came in above Wall Street projections. Palo Alto raised its full-year forecast amid an increase in remote working security issues and challenges. Palo Alto shares surged 5.7% in premarket action.Deere (DE) – Deere rose 1.1% in premarket trading after beating estimates on the top and bottom line and raising its full-year forecast. Deere earned $5.68 per share for its fiscal second quarter, compared to a consensus estimate of $4.52 a share. Revenue also beat estimates as a rebounding global economy boosts demand for farm and construction equipment.Foot Locker (FL) – Foot Locker shares rallied 3.3% in the premarket after the footwear and apparel retailer reported quarterly profit of $1.96 per share. That was well above the $1.09 a share consensus estimate, with revenue also topping forecasts and comparable-store sales surging a better than expected 80.3%.Deckers Outdoor (DECK) – Deckers earned $1.18 per share for its fiscal fourth quarter, well above the consensus estimate of 64 cents a share. The footwear and apparel maker — which counts UGG and Teva among its brand names — also reported better-than-expected revenue, but issued a mixed outlook. Deckers rallied 6% in the premarket.Ross Stores (ROST) – Ross Stores reported first-quarter earnings of $1.34 per share, compared to an 88 cents a share consensus estimate. The discount retailer’s revenue came in well above forecasts. Results got a boost from stimulus payments to consumers and an overall improvement in the economic environment. Ross also announced a new $1.5 billion stock buyback program, and the stock added 1.4% in premarket trading.Applied Materials (AMAT) – Applied Materials came in 12 cents a share above estimates, with quarterly profit of $1.63 per share. The maker of semiconductor manufacturing equipment reported better-than-expected revenue as well. Applied Materials also gave an upbeat full-year forecast, with chip manufacturers trying to ramp up production in the face of a worldwide chip shortage. Applied Materials added 1.1% in the premarket.Kansas City Southern (KSU) – The railroad operator is expected to officially end its merger agreement with Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) today, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Wall Street Journal. Kansas City Southern will instead accept a competing bid from Canadian National Railway (CNI) after Canadian Pacific declined to raise its original bid.Moderna (MRNA) – Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine was officially approved by regulators in Japan and South Korea. Japan also gave approval to the Covid-19 vaccine produced by AstraZeneca (AZN) and Oxford University. Moderna was up 1.5% in the premarket.Carnival (CCL) – Carnival said its flagship brand — as well as its Holland America line — would resume Alaska cruises in July. Princess Cruises made a similar announcement, after the passage of new legislation by the House and Senate. The legislation temporarily waives the rule that required Alaska cruises to make a stop in Canada. Carnival shares gained 1.6% in premarket trading.Oatly (OTLY) – Oatly soared 5.9% in premarket trading following the oat milk maker’s debut Wall Street session. Oatly’s IPO was priced at $17 per share, with the first trade at $22.12 and a closing Thursday price of $20.20. More

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    Why Asian Americans on Wall Street from Goldman Sachs to Wells Fargo are breaking their silence

    Alex Chi, Goldman SachsSource: Goldman SachsA year after the pandemic began in New York City, something snapped in Alex Chi.The 48-year-old Goldman Sachs banker had been inundated with articles and video clips of horrifying seemingly random attacks on Asian Americans in his home town. Then, in late March, eight people were gunned down in the Atlanta area — most of them immigrants from Korea and China — and Chi could stand it no longer.The barrage of attacks forced a change in Chi, a partner and 27-year Goldman veteran. He became an in-house agitator of sorts, attending protests and rallying his colleagues around a simple idea: Silence is no longer an option.”The message I’ve clearly put out to other Asian Americans is this: You have to start speaking up for yourselves,” Chi said in a recent interview. “We have to use this moment as an opportunity to finally make ourselves heard and change the narrative around Asian Americans in this country.”This isn’t just the story of the political awakening of a single New York banker. It’s the story of thousands of Wall Street employees who are, many for the first time in their lives, connecting with co-workers in virtual chatrooms, over Zoom and in person to commiserate about being Asian in finance, and in America.While Asian Americans make up one of the biggest minority groups in finance, comprising roughly 15% of the employees at the six biggest U.S. banks, few have made it to the operating committees of these institutions. Just one, former Citigroup CEO Vikram Pandit, has led a top-tier bank.Chi, who became a Goldman partner a decade ago, reaching one of Wall Street’s loftiest ranks, says he is one of the first Korean Americans to do so at the 151-year-old institution.He believes Asian Americans at Goldman and beyond are now pushing back against the stereotype —rooted in a common cultural upbringing that stresses modesty and conflict avoidance and reinforced at times by workplace discrimination — that they are quiet, docile worker bees.For the broader community, some 23 million people, the past few months have been the first time Asian American issues have reached the national stage in decades. The last time this has happened was probably in the early 1980s, when the beating death of Vincent Chin galvanized an earlier generation to form affinity groups, according to historians.`China virus’The arrival of the coronavirus last year brought a surge in bias crimes against Asian Americans, especially in New York and California. Many of the assaults have been against senior citizens and women. The violence has shattered the sense of security for many in the group, according to the Pew Research Center.But a silver lining to the racial scapegoating that accompanied Covid-19 has been that it has unified many Americans of Asian descent, the fastest-growing minority group in the U.S. They make up a significant portion of the corporate workforce in industries including finance, technology and health care, and are an emerging force in politics.”There’s so many differences within Asians, but you’re treated as one group,” said Joyce Chang, chair of global research at JPMorgan Chase. “Now, being targeted for hate crimes, people are saying, we are being treated like a monolith, we may as well get organized.”Lillie Chin, mother of Vincent Chin who was clubbed to death by two white men in June 1982, breaks down as a relative (L), helps her walk while leaving Detroit’s City County Building in April, 1983.Bettmann | Getty ImagesChang says she studied the history of anti-Asian sentiment in the U.S. while at Columbia University in the 1980s, including the vicious 1982 killing of Chin by two bat-wielding Detroit autoworkers who mistakenly assumed he was Japanese. The killers, who blamed Japan for the decline of the U.S. auto industry, were fined $3,000 and avoided prison.Chang said the current period reminds her of that time. Both for the larger issues — in the 1980s, anxiety over Japanese economic might was common, while today the emergence of China as a global superpower has policymakers worried — as well as the response.The first use of the phrase “China virus” by former President Donald Trump on Twitter in March 2020 led directly to an increase in online and offline anti-Asian abuse, according to a recent report in the American Journal of Public Health. Trump had nearly 90 million followers before getting booted from the platform.A close-up of President Donald Trump’s notes shows where Corona was crossed out and replaced with Chinese Virus as he speaks during a White House briefing, March 19, 2020.Jabin Botsford | The Washington Post | Getty ImagesNow, people are forming pan-Asian affinity groups to help keep track of the bias attacks and boost philanthropy. One such nonprofit, the Asian American Foundation, launched this month and said it has already raised $125 million for AAPI causes over the next five years. It, along with JPMorgan and other organizations, have given money to Stop AAPI Hate, a new group that began tracking bias attacks in January 2020 after a rash of incidents in California.Initially, it was journalists in New York and San Francisco who chronicled the attacks, which began in the early days of the pandemic and ramped up this year, occurring on a daily basis at times. Then Asian American celebrities including actors and athletes amplified the coverage. Posts on social media brought home the idea that even being famous and powerful didn’t insulate people from feeling vulnerable.The movement has extended to the finance realm. At JPMorgan, Chang says that after the Atlanta shootings, attendance at an internal forum for Asian Americans had 6,100 participants, about 10 times larger than the typical attendance before the pandemic.The sentiment of many of those I spoke with was something akin to shock. Several had had superlative careers on Wall Street, and yet here they were, reliving some of the same trauma from their childhoods they had believed was a thing of the past.A demonstrator during a rally in Seattle on March 13, 2021.Jason Redmond | AFP | Getty ImagesTom Lee, co-founder of research boutique Fundstrat and a regular CNBC on-air guest, said he faced “merciless anti-Asian attacks” growing up in a small town 25 miles from Detroit. That tough childhood helped him chart his own course as one of the best-known market prognosticators in the country, he said, because he had learned to tune out noise.”It’s been easy to feel like Asians have a bit of a bull’s-eye on their backs,” Lee said in an interview.Mike Karp, CEO of Options Group, a recruiting firm that has placed thousands of traders and salespeople on Wall Street in the past three decades, put it a different way.”They thought they were part of the mainstream until this `Chinese virus’ stuff,” Karp, who is Indian American, said of his AAPI clients. “Now there’s a building resentment that people have, and they aren’t taking it anymore.”West Coast biasDistress over the violence she was seeing in San Francisco and the initial lack of national media attention moved Cynthia Sugiyama, a senior vice president at Wells Fargo, to publish a highly personal piece in March.Sugiyama says she has been overwhelmed by the response to her column, published in the San Francisco Chronicle and LinkedIn, from colleagues and others who related to her experiences being harassed as a child, and her resolve to respond to the current moment.“I’ve never before felt this sense of community as much as now,” Sugiyama said. “What makes this moment pivotal is that the surge in anti-Asian sentiment on one side has been met with a powerful swell on the other side from Asian Americans who are finding their voices.”Cynthia Sugiyama, head of HR communications for Wells Fargo.Source: Cynthia SugiyamaSugiyama, who manages human resources communications for a company of 264,513 employees, said that Asian American employees have flocked to internal forums to share their feelings and experiences.According to employees at some of the biggest banks, one of the main topics being discussed is the difficulty Asian Americans have climbing the corporate ladder.Wall Street hierarchyThe Wall Street model is to take in thousands of college graduates a year, placing them on the bottom of a hierarchy where analysts and associates grind out long hours in support of merger deals or trading activity. By design, few junior bankers make it to the vice president or director level, where annual compensation typically reaches several hundred thousand dollars. Fewer still make it to managing director, where pay packages often total more than $1 million a year.For instance, at JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, about 25,000 employees identify themselves as Asian. While roughly 1 in 4 of the bank’s professional workers are Asian, just 10% are senior managers. At the very top of the organization, the bank’s 18-person operating committee led by CEO Jamie Dimon includes just one Asian person, Sanoke Viswanathan.Park Ji-Hwan | AFP | Getty ImagesSome have had the realization that the playbook used by Asian Americans to reach a certain level of workplace achievement isn’t enough anymore.”Every bank is happy to hire a young Asian who will work double hard and is good at math and analysis,” said a Morgan Stanley employee who asked for anonymity to speak candidly. “As time goes on however, I noticed how most of the people I knew in Wall Street never really progressed past VP level, and many were laid off when cost-cutting rounds came.”His explanation for this phenomenon is two-fold: Parents of Asian Americans drilled a set of principles into their children — study, work hard — that gets you past the first few hurdles at an investment bank, but that doesn’t necessarily help people advance beyond that. Further, little emphasis is given to so-called soft skills like public speaking and finding mentors, things needed at higher levels, he said.Some corners of Wall Street are friendlier for Asian Americans than others, he said.When it comes to stock research, people only care if an analyst makes them money, he said. With mergers advice, however, the client is always right, and sometimes owners of mid-sized and small companies didn’t want to work with nonwhite bankers, he said. In wealth management, Asian Americans often don’t have the social connections to help them succeed.And, just as with Black and Latinx employees, Asian Americans are hindered because managers are more likely to support and promote people who look like themselves, he said.`A bit of bragging’Lee, the Fundstrat co-founder, said that in his 24 years on Wall Street before striking out on his own, he often saw the careers of Asian Americans stall. What hampers them from progressing is an aversion to drawing attention to themselves and the clubby nature of banking at higher levels, he said.”I’ve seen that the most successful people are the ones who do a bit of bragging,” Lee said. “Asians aren’t really good at that, and I think that hurts us, because it’s easy to not realize someone has a lot to offer if they aren’t bragging about it.”Tom Lee, Fundstrat Global AdvisorsScott Mlyn | CNBCDespite the general success of the cohort in the corporate setting, Lee says, Asian Americans haven’t been involved enough in other areas of civic life, especially politics.That may be changing, however. Kamala Harris, who is of Indian Jamaican heritage, became the first Asian American, Black and female vice president, and former presidential candidate Andrew Yang is a front-runner for New York mayor. Asian American voters were a key constituency in the last presidential election, casting a record number of votes in states where President Joe Biden eked out narrow victories.Still, some of the Asian Americans interviewed for this story said they felt invisible at work. Or worse, given the spike in harassment and violence, some felt like permanent foreigners despite having lived in the U.S. for decades. Most Americans can’t name a single prominent living Asian American, according to a recent survey.A big umbrellaPart of what has hamstrung an Asian American political movement is that the construct itself has always been an imperfect solution, a term created in the late 1960s to consolidate smaller cohorts to gain leverage amid the wider Civil Rights movement.Today, the term Asian American includes people from more than 20 countries across East and South Asia, each with their own languages, food and culture. People who have familial roots in China, India, the Philippines, Vietnam, Korea and Japan make up about 85% of all Asian Americans.In fact, the presence of most Asians in the U.S. can be traced to the Civil Rights movement, which established that a race-based system of laws was unjust.After an initial wave of immigration to the continental U.S. in the 1850s, Asians were seen as a “yellow peril” and explicitly excluded from coming to the U.S. for nearly a century by laws including the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882.That changed after the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 opened up migration from Asia, Southern Europe and Africa, instead of solely favoring Western and Northern Europeans. The law would forever change the complexion of the country and happened only after the Civil Rights Act by President Lyndon Johnson.President Lyndon Johnson signs the liberalized U.S. Immigration bill into law. Attending the ceremony on Liberty Island, (L-R) are: Vice President Hubert Humphrey; first lady Lady Bird Johnson; Mrs. Mike Mansfield (wife of the Senate Majority Leader); Muriel Humphrey; Sen. Ted Kennedy and Sen. Robert Kennedy, on October 4, 1965.Bettmann | Getty ImagesWhen Johnson signed the landmark immigration legislation in 1965, he was quoted as saying that the previous system “violated the basic principle of American democracy, the principle that values and rewards each man on the basis of his merit.”Seminal momentBack at Goldman Sachs, Chi realized he had a part to play after the horror of the Atlanta shootings, at least within the confines of his 40,300-person firm. Some managers hadn’t been aware of the violence against Asian Americans, particularly in public areas like subway platforms.Now, amid the company’s push to encourage more employees to return to Goldman’s headquarters in lower Manhattan, workers were speaking up, telling managers that they didn’t feel safe. Employees got permission to expense rideshares for their commute, and the bank invited public safety experts to offer advice, Chi said.”In the past, they would’ve just sucked it up and done what they needed to do,” Chi said. “Now, our Asian American community here is speaking up, and they’re going to their managers and saying, `I’m not comfortable. Have you seen what’s going on?'”CEO David Solomon meets with Asian partners and senior leaders of Goldman Sachs’ Asian NetworkDavid Solomon | Goldman SachsChi also reached out directly to CEO David Solomon, who quickly set up a roundtable meeting where he listened to senior Asian American executives airing their concerns. When Solomon shared a photo of the event on social media and the bank’s internal homepage, it opened up the firm to many more discussions where managers acknowledged they hadn’t known what their Asian American employees were going through, Chi said.”When I walked out of that room with one of my partners, we turned to each other and said, `Wow, this is a seminal moment, because here we are with our CEO, talking very openly about Asian American issues,” Chi said. “That’s never happened before.”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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    Unvaccinated Americans are less worried about traveling than vaccinated Americans are, study says

    Vaccinated and unvaccinated Americans have different attitudes about the idea of traveling this spring, according to the findings from a marketing technology company. And they’re not different in the way you might assume.With travel bookings surging, data from New York-based Zeta Global indicates that unvaccinated Americans appear more comfortable traveling — and to more densely-populated places — than vaccinated people.Vaccinated people waiting longer to travelZeta Global conducted a survey of 3,700 U.S. consumers in mid-March and combined the results with information on those respondents’ hotel and airport visits in February and March.      In the survey, 67% of vaccinated respondents said they will not travel until the end of May, but only 59% of unvaccinated Americans indicated they would wait that long. Vaccinated care more about health measuresMore than 80% of vaccinated people who took the survey said they were concerned about the public health restrictions in place at intended destinations, compared with only 38% of unvaccinated travelers who shared that concern.It’s possible that vaccinated people feel more comfortable traveling when there are health restrictions in place, while unvaccinated travelers are more interested in how local restrictions will limit their trip, said David Steinberg, Zeta Global’s CEO.The survey indicated that 62% of unvaccinated travelers are “not at all” concerned with public health restrictions at their travel destinations, while only 19% of vaccinated travelers said the same.Traveling to different placesZeta Global’s data showed the top destinations for travelers overall in February and March were New York City, Denver, Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, Philadelphia and two cities in Florida — Orlando and Tampa.However, trends diverged when broken down by travelers’ vaccination status, said Neej Gore, the company’s chief data officer.Top destinations for vaccinated travelersMinneapolis-St. PaulColumbus, OhioWashington D.C.BostonBaltimoreCincinnatiIndianapolisSource: Zeta Global, hotel and flight visitation”Vaccinated Americans are choosing locations in the Northeast and Midwest,” Gore told CNBC, adding that the unimmunized traveled to places in the South and spots along the West Coast. Top destinations for unvaccinated travelersHoustonMiami-Fort LauderdaleLos AngelesSalt Lake CitySan AntonioSeattle-TacomaAustin, TexasLittle Rock, Ark.Source: Zeta Global, hotel and flight visitationApril travel data, however, showed a shift in traveler habits. Unvaccinated people headed to densely populated cities, while those who were vaccinated went to wide-open spaces, according to travel data compiled by Zeta.”Las Vegas is the city with the biggest relative change,” said Gore, referencing data which showed the number of unvaccinated travelers visiting Las Vegas hotels tripled in April from the month prior, while the number of vaccinated visitors decreased there.Similarly, the number of unvaccinated travelers who went to Florida in April increased (+6%), yet decreased among vaccinated travelers (-16%).Unofficially known as “Big Sky Country,” Montana attracted more vaccinated than unvaccinated Americans last month.Mike Kemp | In Pictures Ltd. | Corbis Historical | Getty ImagesThe Florida trends are primarily a result of incoming travel to Miami and Fort Lauderdale, said Zeta Global. Travel there was up 77% for unvaccinated travelers and down 33% for vaccinated travelers.While the Northeast and Midwest remain popular destinations for vaccinated travelers, “vaccinated respondents are currently traveling more to the Northwest,” said Gore, based on data showing an increase in vaccinated travelers to Oregon, Washington, Montana and the Dakotas.Trips to those states did not increase among unvaccinated people, except for Oregon, which the company said is mostly owing to increased travel to Portland by both groups.Northeasterners flying lessAdobe’s 2021 Digital Economy Index, which came out last month, showed regional variations in summer travel habits. The report showed Northeasterners are flying less than other Americans, with March flight bookings originating from the region at only 56% of pre-pandemic levels, a number which falls short of booking rebounds originating in the West (63%), South (70%) and Midwest (75%).Adobe’s research indicates Northeasterners’ flight purchases are more closely tied to regional vaccination rates. For every 1% increase in vaccinations in the Northwest, there was a 3.2% increase in flight bookings, the highest of any region in the United States.It is those who are unvaccinated who should be afraid of traveling.Harry SeveranceDuke University School of Medicine”The Northeast was hit hard in the early days of the pandemic, likely driving residents to self-restrict when it came to things like travel and social interactions,” said Taylor Schreiner, director of Adobe Digital Insights.The area, however, is densely populated, said Schreiner, so “feasible alternatives for seeing family and friends” exist.”A large portion of the U.S. population is within driving distance to New York,” he said, which makes “the opportunity cost of not flying lower.”‘Increased risk’ for unvaccinatedHarry Severance, an adjunct assistant professor at Duke University School of Medicine, said people who were vaccinated early are more likely to be concerned about contracting Covid-19 and have greater knowledge about the acute and chronic effects of the disease.”Thus, I suspect that this group would retain a significant concern over contracting the disease, even post-vaccination,” he said.Severance said that thought process is changing, as evidence demonstrates vaccinated people have “little susceptibility” to Covid-19 infections, and if they do get sick, infections are typically mild with a “significantly reduced capability of further spreading the disease.””It is those who are unvaccinated who should be afraid of traveling,” he said.”Those who are unvaccinated are putting themselves at increased risk if they gather in large groups of likewise unvaccinated persons,” said Severance, “especially if these groups are assembling from across the country, as the risk of being exposed to different Covid variants is increased.” More

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    Medical cannabis firm backed by Snoop Dogg begins trading in London

    Recording artist Snoop Dogg speaks onstage during day one of TechCrunch Disrupt SF 2015 at Pier 70 on September 21, 2015 in San Francisco, California.Getty ImagesLONDON — Medicinal cannabinoid company Oxford Cannabinoid Technologies (OCT), which enjoys backing from rapper Snoop Dogg and tobacco giant Imperial Brands, launched on the London Stock Exchange Friday.The British company, which specializes in pain-alleviating cannabinoid drug development, raised gross proceeds of £16.5 million ($23.4 million) in its initial public offer, with an initial market value of just over £48 million ($69.1 million).The share price hovered at around 5 pence at midday Friday, after initially opening closer to 8 pence earlier in the session.Snoop Dogg, real name Calvin Broadus Jr., has invested in multiple cannabis start-ups including OCT through his venture capital firm Casa Verde. The firm has also backed plant-based food companies such as Outstanding Foods and tech names like Klarna, Robinhood and Reddit.Cannabinoids are naturally occurring compound chemicals found in the cannabis sativa plant, and are commonly used for medicinal purposes to treat symptoms such as chronic pain. OCT’s strategy is to develop cannabinoid pharmaceuticals for the non-addictive treatment of pain conditions. CEO John Lucas told CNBC on Friday that the company plans to use the proceeds of its IPO to develop four new drugs.”The key here is about getting cannabinoids into the hands of patients and the way you do that is through the drug development process,” Lucas told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe.””The medical cannabis, the problem with that is that physicians cannot prescribe it, so we want a drug product that we can get into the hands of physicians, into the hands of patients.”In its listing announcement, OCT said its “primary market focus is the total addressable pain market, which is estimated to be worth at least £42.5 billion by commercialisation of the first drug produced by OCT, currently anticipated to be in 2027.” More

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    'I'm not buying it': One strategist says Wall Street is wrong to be bullish on European stocks

    A photo taken on December 29, 2020 shows the skyline of Frankfurt am Main, western Germany, with (RtoL) the Frankfurt Cathedral, the Main Tower with the Helabas head office, and the Commerzbank Tower.DANIEL ROLAND | AFP | Getty ImagesLONDON — Not everyone is bullish on Europe for the remainder of the year.Peter Toogood, chief investment officer at financial services firm Embark Group, believes European stocks may well keep pace with U.S. stocks in the coming months, but that’s not to say he shares Wall Street’s optimism for the region.Analysts at Morgan Stanley say Europe is well-placed to outperform all major regions this year for the first time in more than two decades. The investment bank believes U.S. markets are likely to be “choppier” in the months ahead, citing rising inflation, growing pressure on profit margins and a possible slowing of quantitative easing.Meanwhile, there is a “compelling” case for Europe to be the best-performing region due to attractive valuations, stronger earnings-per-share growth and the launch of the EU’s massive post-Covid recovery fund.Separately, analysts at Goldman Sachs have identified “inexpensive” stocks in Europe for the rest of the year, while JPMorgan has named “cheap” stocks to buy in the region if the market dips.When asked whether he agreed with the view that European equities could soon decouple from the U.S., Toogood told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Friday: “No I don’t … I’m not buying it this time.””I’ll happily acknowledge that we’ll keep up … There’s going to be a Covid bounce, notionally, they are getting their act together, there is the recovery coming but it is going to be very late. We are going to be into the autumn and winter soon where I’m sorry (but) Covid is not going to go away,” he continued.”So, no, I’m not buying it. I think they have come too late to the party in terms of the vaccines; very sadly, and therefore the recovery is delayed,” Toogood said.To date, around 33% of EU citizens have received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine, according to statistics compiled by Our World in Data. By contrast, nearly 48% of the U.S. population has received at least one vaccine dose.’What are you buying when you buy in Europe?’The International Monetary Fund said last month that Europe’s economic recovery from the coronavirus pandemic was on track to return to pre-crisis levels in 2022. The forecast was conditional on the region’s Covid-19 vaccine campaign, and as uncertainty persists over how the health crisis will evolve.”I think the second problem remains: What are you buying when you buy Europe?” Toogood said, noting possible exceptions in the region among some “very strong” consumer brands.”The banking sector? No, not really. I don’t see interest rates going anywhere in Europe for a very long time and they’ve been withdrawing globally, if anything. Most of the Europeans, in terms of banks and activities, are heading inward.”Read more about China from CNBC ProGoldman Sachs picks the Chinese cloud stocks to buy as internet users soarForget high-flying tech stocks. Here’s a ‘safer way’ to play China’s fintech boom, fund manager saysGoldman Sachs picks the ‘inexpensive’ China stocks to buy right now”There’s a massive discount gap but that’s because a lot of the stocks in the U.S. are priced more highly because they simply grow better. There are no FAANGs in Europe I’m afraid,” he continued, referring to the acronym for Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google-parent Alphabet.”So, there is trouble for the indices in Europe and the U.K. … That’s the reality. We haven’t got the disruptors and we don’t have the exciting industries. It’s Asia and America where that action sits,” Toogood said.— CNBC’s Lucy Handley contributed to this report. More