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    Could sending criminals to prison be good for their kids?

    IN A FORTHCOMING paper in the American Economic Review, one of the discipline’s most prestigious journals, three economists conclude that “[p]arental incarceration has beneficial effects on some important outcomes for children.” Unsurprisingly the study has provoked outrage from keyboard warriors. Some are uncomfortable with the very notion that prison could have anything other than wholly malign effects. Others worry that the research, however well intentioned, gives politicians ammunition to double down on punitive penal policy. In reality, though the study has some uncomfortable findings, it should help governments devise better policy.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    PagerDuty CEO says hybrid workplaces have their own complex challenges

    In this articlePDPagerDuty CEO Jennifer Tejada told CNBC Wednesday that businesses are facing logistical challenges as organizations establish new hybrid work models for employees.”It was really easy to manage remote work when everybody was remote,” Tejada said in a “Mad Money” interview with Jim Cramer. “But now when you don’t know who’s in the office, when and which teams are co-located and which teams are not, it means that you’ve got to prepare for distribution.””It’s going to require systems that help reduce complexity and give employees access to the technology they need in the seconds that they need it,” she said.PagerDuty, a cloud IT company that offers an enterprise incident management platform, serves businesses small and large, including start-ups and more than 60 companies in the Fortune 100, Tejada said. Among its customers are Okta, Uber and Twitter.As businesses retool for flexible work environments spurred by the coronavirus pandemic, Tejada said multiple themes are emerging in how companies are thinking about digital transformation and work.PagerDuty has learned that many employees want flexibility, she said. Meanwhile, most companies using the cloud software are looking for ways to become digital-first operations and provide a way for part-time remote working, she added.PagerDuty’s stock price dropped almost 1% in Wednesday’s session, closing at $39.01.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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    PayPal CEO touts 'next generation digital wallet' after earnings beat

    In this articlePYPLThe PayPal application can be seen on a mobile phone.Felix Kästle | picture alliance | Getty ImagesPayPal shares rose as much as 5.5% in extended trading on Wednesday after reporting first-quarter earnings that were stronger than analysts had expected.Here’s how the company did:Earnings per share: $1.22, adjusted, vs. $1.01 per share expected in a Refinitiv survey of analystsRevenue: $6.03 billion vs. $5.90 billion expected by RefinitivTotal payment volume: $285 billion vs. $265 billion expected in a FactSet surveyFirst quarter net profit rose to $1.10 billion from $84 million a year earlier, and the company added 14.5 million net new active accounts, bringing its total user base to 392 million.Revenue grew 31% year over year in the quarter that ended Mar. 31, according to a statement. In the year-ago quarter, the pandemic fomented a surge in online shopping, helping to drive record payment volume for the quarter and the full year.On the company’s earnings call, CEO Dan Schulman pointed to cryptocurrency as a key growth engine for the company.”We’ve got a tremendous amount of really great results going on tactically with our crypto efforts,” said Schulman. He went on to say that half of crypto users open their PayPal app daily, suggesting that it increases engagement for users.The mobile payments company made a big push into crypto in the last six months, allowing users in the U.S. to buy, sell, and check out with cryptocurrencies.With its network of 26 million retailers, PayPal’s crypto ambitions have positioned the company as a rival to Coinbase, the country’s most popular crypto exchange.The company also announced plans to roll out a “next-generation digital wallet” in the third quarter. Schulman described the product as an “all-in-one, personalized app [that] will provide increasingly customized and unique shopping, financial services, and payments experiences.”With respect to guidance, for the second quarter PayPal sees adjusted earnings of $1.12 per share on $6.25 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had expected $1.10 in adjusted earnings per share on $6.16 billion in revenue.For the full year, PayPal expects revenue to grow 20% to $25.75 billion, and the company called for adjusted earnings to grow 21% to $4.70. Analysts polled by Refinitiv had been looking for $4.57 in adjusted earnings per share and $25.71 billion in revenue.Excluding the after-hours move, PayPal stock has risen about 5.9% since the start of the year, while the Nasdaq is up about 5.5% over the same period.This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.WATCH: Square or PayPal? #AskHalftime More

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    Hilton CEO: Business travel is back to about 50% of pre-Covid levels, but some markets are stronger

    Hilton CEO Christopher Nassetta told CNBC on Wednesday there are reasons to be optimistic about the recovery of corporate travel following a prolonged coronavirus-related slowdown.”This is as good as I’ve felt since the pandemic started in terms of where we are and what I see in forward-looking trends and bookings in the business,” Nassetta said in an interview on “Closing Bell.”Leisure travel has been propelling the industry’s recovery so far, and Nassetta said he expects to see record numbers in that category this summer. However, a return of business travelers is crucial for a complete rebound in the hospitality sector.”Business travel, while it’s lagging, it’s coming back. It’s probably about half the levels that we saw at the prior peak,” Nassetta said. “Group and events are lagging that, but they’re coming back.”One particular reason to be hopeful, Nassetta said, is that the hotel operator is experiencing stronger corporate bookings in markets where the pandemic situation has improved.”As businesses are starting to reopen offices and an expectation of in the fall kids going back to school, people start to travel for business again, and they start to congregate in meetings,” he said. “In fact, if you look at markets even in the U.S. and certainly China … where they’re further along, we already see business travel back to effectively 75% of volume levels that we saw in [2019].”Many companies plan to adopt more flexible work arrangements post-pandemic. Given that change, there have been questions about how traveling for meetings and conferences fits into that hybrid-work equation. Some have suggested business travel will never fully recover.On Tuesday, Jamie Dimon expressed dissatisfaction with remote work and videoconference meetings during an event for The Wall Street Journal CEO Council. The JPMorgan Chase chairman and CEO said he was “about to cancel” all his Zoom meetings.”We want people back to work, and my view is that sometime in September, October it will look just like it did before,” Dimon said. He also said JPMorgan has lost business to competitors in some instances during the pandemic when rival bankers traveled for in-person meetings.Companies that suffered financially during the pandemic will have to build up their travel budgets over time, Nassetta said. But in general, he said, he feels there is a broad desire to cut back on virtual meetings and conferences.”The anecdotal evidence, as I talk to our big customers and as I talk to friends who run businesses and the like, is that there’s a huge amount of pent-up demand to get out and travel for business and to get out for group meetings and events, just because it’s been so long since they’ve done it,” he said.Shares of Hilton fell more than 4% Wednesday after the company reported worse-than-expected quarterly earnings. The company’s stock is up about 10% year to date. More

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    Jim Cramer says investors must resist the urge to give up on 'FAANG' stocks

    In this articleFBFCXCNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday advised that retail investors stick by their technology holdings that can weather a future downturn as value stocks outperform growth stocks.”They’re currently out of favor in the Wall Street fashion show. I’m telling you it’s temporary,” the “Mad Money” host said. “You have to resist the urge to believe that ‘FAANG’ is finished and dump it on the obituary chatter.”FAANG is an acronym for Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Google-parent Alphabet. They were among the biggest winners at the height of the Covid-19 pandemic last year. But with the economy recovering and social distancing policies easing, cyclical names like Freeport-McMoRan and Cleveland-Cliffs are making massive gains compared to the tech giants. Only two of those Big Tech stocks — Facebook and Alphabet — are outperforming the S&P 500 in 2021. Apple and Netflix, meanwhile, are down year to date. Still, Cramer said the entire group is worth owning for the long-haul.”This is the year to own Facebook and Alphabet, the advertising plays,” he said. “Other years were better for Netflix or Amazon or Apple, so don’t assume they all deserve to trade together.”Zoom In IconArrows pointing outwardsCramer also said that while names like Freeport-McMoRan and Cleveland-Cliffs are up sharply this year, they still face certain challenges. Freeport-McMoRan is up nearly 60% in 2021, and Cleveland-Cliffs has rallied 38.7%.”Each of them has been threatened by recessions and foreign competition. At times, Cleveland-Cliffs and Freeport have had to go hat in hand for money to survive,” he said. “The FAANG stocks, they don’t have to do that.”To be sure, Cramer recommends investors maintain a diversified portfolio with exposure to both cyclical and growth stocks. “If you’re incredibly nimble, you can swap out of these stocks and then swap back in near the bottom; however, that’s way too hard for me and for many people to pull off,” he said.Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Facebook, Amazon, Alphabet and Apple.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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    Clarida says the Fed is 'a long way from our goals' and tightening policy

    Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Richard Clarida told CNBC on Wednesday that he thinks the central bank should keep its ultra-loose policy in place even as the U.S. economy storms back from its pandemic-era tumble.In a “Closing Bell” interview, Clarida said he expects the economy to grow close to 7% for the full year, which would be the fastest pace since 1984.He added that the jobs picture continues to improve, but still needs to progress considerably before the Fed will feel comfortable pulling back on all of the help it has provided since Covid-19 ended the longest expansion in U.S. history.”We’re still a long way from our goals, and in our new framework, we want to see actual progress and not just forecast progress,” Clarida said.Last year, as the economy was held back due to efforts to combat the virus, the Fed adopted a new strategy in which it won’t raise interest rates in reaction to a tightening labor market. Instead, the Fed said it will allow inflation to run somewhat hot as long as the longer-run average is around its 2% goal.That has had substantial ramifications for policy as the Fed has continued to keep short-term borrowing rates near zero and is buying at least $120 billion of bonds each month. Clarida and his fellow officials have indicated that policy won’t change under the current conditions, even if inflation heats up as expected in the coming months.”As we go into next year and beyond, if there are unforeseen, persistent upward pressures on prices that would move inflation to a level inconsistent with our mandate, we would use our tools to bring it down,” he said. “We don’t see overheating as our baseline. Of course, in any outlook there’s risks.”Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who chaired the Fed from 2014 to 2018, suggested Tuesday that somewhat higher rates might be in order to keep the economy from overheating. Treasury officials rarely offer views on rates, so the comments drew notice in the financial markets.Later in the day, she walked back those remarks, saying she wasn’t making a prediction or trying to offer advice to the Fed. She added that she doesn’t think inflation will become a problem and believes the central bank can act if it does.”She indicated that she was not predicting or giving us advice on policy, and I’ll take her at her word on that,” Clarida said.He added that market pricing indicates little fear of runaway inflation and said that there are both upside and downside risk for the economy now.Consequently, he thinks the Fed should maintain its pace of asset purchases even with its balance sheet nearing $8 trillion and an economy that is posting growth numbers rarely seen since the Great Depression.”Remember, the shock was very severe, the hole was very deep,” he said. “Having rapid growth is actually welcome when you have eight and a half million Americans who don’t have a job, who did 13 months ago.”Other Fed officials share viewsClarida’s remarks came during a busy day for Fed speakers.Central bank officials stuck primarily to the script as expressed through the post-meeting statement last week and Chairman Jerome Powell’s remarks afterward at his news conference.They largely see a quickly improving economy that will come with some near-term inflation pressures that probably won’t last. Current policy is likely to remain in place, absent some substantial changes in conditions – primarily that the expected upturn in inflation will come due to easy comparisons to last year’s anemic levels and some supply chain logjams that ultimately will ease.Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said he expects policy “to remain accommodative for some time.” He expects inflation to stay low primarily because expectations, which he sees as the primary driving force, also remain muted.Likewise, Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said the current policy level is appropriate. He cautioned, however, that “policymakers will need to be vigilant” in watching for signs of inflation, primarily wages and prices responding to improving labor market conditions.Despite maintaining a sanguine view on inflation, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman said she thinks gross domestic product could grow more quickly and unemployment fall more rapidly than current Fed outlooks suggest. However, she thinks inflation will remain tame and sees current central bank policy as appropriate.Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester also said there are “upside risks to my forecast,” but added that she expects “to be deliberately patient unless there is clear evidence that inflation pressures will push inflation to exceed our desired path.”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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    Stocks making the biggest moves after the bell: Etsy, Zynga, Sunrun & more

    In this articleETSYRUNZNGAFDSCheck out the companies making headlines after the bell on Wednesday:Etsy — Shares of Etsy slid 7% despite the company its results beating top and bottom-line estimates for the first quarter. The e-commerce company earned $1 per share, compared to the 88-cent per share profit analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting. Revenue came in at $551 million, also ahead of the expected $530 million.Sunrun — The solar company’s stock gained more than 3% in extended trading on the back of Sunrun’s first-quarter results. The company lost 12 cents per share on $334.8 million in revenue. Analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting the company to lose 9 cents per share and report $322.3 million in sales.Fastly — Shares of Fastly dropped more than 14% after the company posted disappointing results for the previous quarter. The content delivery company lost 12 cents per share excluding items and reported revenue of $84.9 million. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv expected an 11 cent loss and $85.1 million in revenue.Zynga — Zynga shares gained 5% after the release of the company’s latest quarterly update. The game developer reported first-quarter bookings of $720 million, compared to the $684.6 million print analysts surveyed by FactSet were expecting.Moderna — Shares advanced 1% after the company said its Covid booster shot generates a promising immune response against variants found in South Africa and Brazil. The early data is based on results from an ongoing clinical trial.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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    Peloton stock sheds $4 billion in market value in 1 day over its treadmill debacle

    In this articlePTONMaggie Lu uses a Peloton Tread treadmill during CES 2018 at the Las Vegas Convention Center on January 11, 2018 in Las Vegas, Nevada.Ethan Miller | Getty ImagesPeloton shares closed Wednesday down nearly 15%, wiping $4.1 billion off its market value in one day, after the fitness equipment maker apologized for not voluntarily recalling both its treadmill machines over safety concerns sooner.Since March 18, Peloton’s market cap has shed $7.4 billion. That was the day Peloton CEO John Foley revealed that an accident involving a Peloton treadmill had resulted in a child’s death. The company has since been in back-and-forth discussions with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission regarding dozens of reported injuries tied to its machines.Peloton’s stock was a huge winner in 2020, with shares surging more than 400% for the year. Peloton’s market valued peaked in mid-January at $49 billion. Investors rallied behind Peloton as it saw tremendous growth during the early days of the Covid pandemic.Consumers were looking for ways to exercise at home while gyms were shut down, and Peloton quickly became the option of choice for those who could afford its high-end cycles and treadmills. Peloton’s 2020 revenue surged to $1.8 billion, from $915 million a year earlier.But 2021 has been a different story. The stock is down 45% so far this year. Some of the decline has come as investors no longer favor companies that benefited from stay-at-home trends. Stocks such as Zoom and Netflix have started to fade as well. However, Peloton’s decline is deeper due to the treadmill debacle.On Wednesday, Peloton shares hit an intraday low not seen since September. The stock closed the day at $82.62.”We view this as another sign that Peloton’s voice and platform grew faster than its business, and it is still working to grow into its fame,” BMO Capital Markets analyst Simeon Siegel said in a note to clients. “With a still ~$30 billion market cap … Peloton’s market value looms much larger than its expected results.””We believe one can argue more of Peloton’s market value has been created by its marketing department than by its engineers or instructors,” Siegel said.Siegel has an underperform rating on Peloton shares, with a price target of $45.On the whole, though, Wall Street analysts are having a difficult time reaching a consensus over which way shares will go next. Some, in fact, see the dip as a chance to buy.”In the years ahead, we will recall this moment in Peloton history as the proverbial buying opportunity,” said Stifel’s Scott Devitt.Peloton said Wednesday it should have acted more quickly to resolve the issue with the treadmill. It said it’s working on a repair that will be offered to treadmill owners in the coming weeks. It had been working toward debuting its less expensive treadmill model in the United States later this year, but it’s unclear if the company will move forward with those plans.”I want to be clear, Peloton made a mistake in our initial response to the Consumer Product Safety Commission’s request that we recall the Tread+,” Foley said. “We should have engaged more productively with them from the outset. For that, I apologize.”Peloton is set to report quarterly earnings after the market close on Thursday.Read the full statement from the CPSC here.— CNBC’s Christopher Hayes contributed to this reporting. More