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    Covid cases fall sharply in U.S., Gottlieb calls vaccination campaign 'monumental achievement'

    A person walks in Times Square after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced new guidelines regarding outdoor mask wearing and vaccination during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Manhattan, New York City, New York, U.S., April 27, 2021.Andrew Kelly | ReutersNew cases of Covid-19 are dropping sharply across the U.S. as millions of people get vaccinated daily, fueling optimism that the nation may have averted the surge of infections gripping other parts of the world and is finally turning the corner on what was one of the worse outbreaks globally.As of Saturday, the 7-day average of daily new cases fell to under 50,000 for the first time since October and is down 17% from a week prior, according to a CNBC analysis of data from Johns Hopkins University. Hospitalizations and deaths from the disease are also falling.Cases are falling as more Americans get vaccinated. To date, more than 100 million people in the U.S. have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or nearly a third of the population. About 146 million people, or 44% of the population, has received at least one dose of a vaccine.Former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Scott Gottlieb on Sunday said that the precipitous drop in new Covid-19 cases in the U.S. was likely to continue, predicting a “relatively quiet summer when it comes to coronavirus spread.””Look, the situation in the U.S. continues to improve, and I think in the coming weeks we are going to see an acceleration in the decline in cases,” Gottlieb said on CBS News’ “Face the Nation.”The physician credited the mass vaccination campaign that got underway under President Donald Trump and has been continued under President Joe Biden for the country’s ability to rein in the spread of the disease. The rate of vaccine administration has declined somewhat in recent weeks after rising for months, now that most of the individuals who were most eager to receive a shot have gotten one. However, Gottlieb said continued vaccinations, even at a slower place, will lower virus transmission. “This has been a monumental achievement — rolling out this vaccine, getting that many Americans vaccinated — and it’s going to continue,” Gottlieb said. “We’ll continue to chip away at it. The rate of vaccination is going to slow in the coming weeks. But we’ll continue to pick up more people as we get into the summer.”Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House pandemic advisor, suggested last week that he expected a “significant diminution in the number of infections per day and a significant diminution in all of the parameters, namely hospitalizations and deaths” to come in a matter of weeks.The CDC has revised its public health guidance and said fully vaccinated people can attend small gatherings outdoors without wearing a mask. “Today is another day we can take a step back to the normalcy of before,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said during a press briefing about the announcement. “If you are fully vaccinated, things are much safer for you than those who are not fully vaccinated.”Biden has celebrated the decline in cases, predicting that Americans may be able to gather with friends and family to celebrate the Fourth of July.”After a long, hard year, that will make this Independence Day truly special — where we not only mark our independence as a nation but we begin to mark our independence from this virus,” he said in March.Cities and states have moved at different paces in response to the progress in controlling the spread of Covid-19. New York Mayor Bill de Blasio has said he intends to fully reopen the city on July 1, a prospect that some experts have said is plausible, while Gov. Andrew Cuomo has said he hopes that the city can open even sooner.The optimism has spread to the stock market, where U.S. indices have been powered to near record highs.To get a sense of what may be coming around the corner for the U.S., Gottlieb said it could be helpful to look at heavily vaccinated San Francisco.”About 71% of people in San Francisco have had at least one dose of the vaccine, 47% have been fully vaccinated. They are recording about 20 cases a day. They have about 20 people who have been hospitalized,” Gottlieb said.”They’ve dramatically reduced Covid in that city, and it’s largely the result of vaccination,” he added.Using financial terms, Gottlieb suggested that the gains from vaccination were “locked in” and “pretty sustainable.””We are entering warm months, when this is going to create a backstop against the spread of the coronavirus, and so we are locking in these gains,” Gottlieb said.More than 577,000 people have died in the U.S. from Covid-19 and more than 32 million have been infected. During period of December and January, public health authorities were reporting more than 200,000 new infections a day on average. Even as the health situation appears on the cusp of normality in the U.S., it is worsening in other countries with fewer resources. In India, new daily cases surpassed 400,000 on Saturday, a record.Disclosure: Scott Gottlieb is a CNBC contributor and is a member of the boards of Pfizer, genetic testing start-up Tempus, health-care tech company Aetion Inc. and biotech company Illumina. He also serves as co-chair of Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings’ and Royal Caribbean’s “Healthy Sail Panel.”Subscribe to CNBC Pro for the TV livestream, deep insights and analysis  on how to invest during the next presidential term. More

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    How to pitch and win deals with big retailers like Target, Whole Foods, Ulta Beauty from entrepreneurs who did it

    Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesApril Harris of dessert company Keeping You Sweet, Melissa Butler of The Lip Bar, and Gwen Jimmere of Naturalicious share several things in common: they are Black female entrepreneurs who have succeeded building businesses on their own, and they have succeeded in winning deals with national retail partners including Target, Ulta Beauty, Sally Beauty and Whole Foods.In recent decades, Black women have created new businesses at an unprecedented rate. There has also been more focus in recent years from the national retailers to diversify their supply chains and partner with more female and minority founders. They have as much experience, if not more, navigating the changing retail industry and dominance of the big chains as any successful entrepreneurs. Even with unique product ideas and passionate consumer bases, getting into the big retail stores wasn’t easy, and they have all learned valuable lessons, from pre-pitch research to post-pitch operations, on how to build a retail partnership that makes sense for a growing small business. They recently shared some of their early wins and misses, mistakes and hard-earned business wisdom, with CNBC.Here are 9 lessons they want to share with entrepreneurs hoping to win a pitch with their dream retail partner.1. If you aren’t a celebrity, bring proof of social mediaGwen Jimmere, founder and CEO of hair care brand Naturalicious, has been on the other side of the table: she worked at Ford in global communications and in the advertising industry before starting her own company. Ford was among the first companies to build its brand on Facebook and Jimmere says it is critical for entrepreneurs to build an online “tribe” that rallies behind their brand and can be used as part of a pitch. It demonstrates the community of consumers you can bring in for a retail partner.This is especially important for brands competing with the increasing entrance of celebrities into the consumer market, who are more likely to be immediate sales successes in stores. Retail partners will look at sales and social media presence, and Jimmere says national retailers like to see proof of the popularity of a brand on social media, at least 10,000 followers on Instagram, as an example.CNBC Small Business Playbook returnsOn May 4, join Shark Tank’s Robert Herjavec, Life is Good’s Bert Jacobs, Chamber of Commerce’s Neil Bradley, 1863 Venture Fund’s Melissa Bradley and more for the CNBC Small Business Playbook event, kicking off at 2pmET. Get actionable advice to stage a strong comeback. Register now.April Harris, founder of New Jersey-based Keeping You Sweet, which makes gluten-free and vegan cheesecakes, says you need to do the research on your existing online presence if you have not already because for these partners it can be the major point of attraction. She started in local delivery and local Whole Foods and through the latter relationship was introduced to Amazon (Whole Foods’ parent company) representatives. Amazon mentors that were brought in to work with Whole Foods supply partners showed her search results related to her that she did not even know existed, thousands of searches for her name that piqued Amazon’s interest in a potential partnership.2. Track social media by geographyFrom a retail partner’s perspective, it’s the best payout for the least work if you can bring in a community they know already follow you and buy everything you say to buy. “You have to keep those screenshots to prove it,” Jimmere says.But it is not just about the total number of follows or searches. The geography of your social footprint is key for in-store deals. Jimmere says that when she started to pitch Sally Beauty the company was impressed with her sales growth but less sure that buyers across multiple markets would come into stores to buy.”That got us into Sally Beauty because we could prove — even though they had never heard of us and were only in a few Whole Foods at that point — the geography of my tribe and how it overlapped with their stores,” she recalls. “Start saving all that social media stuff geographically,” Jimerre adds, and not only for an initial pitch, but if you want to expand your retail footprint with a partner after an initial deal.Social media approval isn’t enough to win a pitch, she says, because you need to be able to make the connection between the social media presence and how it will drive people to specific stores and move product off shelves.3. Don’t go for it all, all at once”If a small brand doesn’t have lots of money to spend on retail marketing, which is a lot of money, it may be more advantageous to get into a handful of local stores, at most, that you can easily get around to or have family or friends help you get around to, to prove you can go regional and then national,” says Jimmere, who started in her kitchen and basement as a single mom entrepreneur and is now in 1,500 stores, primarily Ulta Beauty and Sally Beauty, but also a handful of Whole Foods.Even though the grocery chain remains her smallest partnership, “Whole Foods gave me the first shot when no one knew who we were,”Jimerre says.Now with a larger staff, an operations manager and a fulfillment partner, Naturalicious can turn around a retail order in a few days when it would have taken weeks before. “If I knew then what I know now I would make sure the supply chain is running like a well-oiled machine before getting into retail,” Jimerre says. “You don’t want to be too fast to do it.”4. Be prepared to foot the bill for a whileJimmere says that in retail payout to the entrepreneur can be on a schedule of anywhere from 30 to 90 days, even 120 days, after the sale, and that means entrepreneurs need to be prepared to carry that financial burden, especially with a new deal that is taking a small business to a new scale. The first few large retail orders will be a major expense and entrepreneurs need to know they may be waiting a while for that payback check.”You really need to know your numbers,” The Lip Bar founder and CEO Butler says. “Sure you want to see the products on shelves, but as a business owner, it doesn’t make sense if it doesn’t make money. When I started pitching to go into retail I didn’t realize how much it cost.””I think the biggest mistake people make is thinking they don’t have leverage,” says The Lip Bar CEO Melissa Butler of deals with retail partners. “It’s not just about you doing everything they want you to do. … They took the meeting because you can potentially do something shape-shifting for them.”Bre’Ann WhiteButler says those long wait times before getting a payout for sales through a partner are a reason to stress knowing how much it costs to be in business with a larger retail entity rather than thinking about how much you will make. Retail opportunities by their nature mean you are losing margin, and losing direct access to the customer, so it is important to know the opportunity costs. “The single most-important thing is to be aware of the numbers.Your business might not get paid for six months, are you capable of footing the bill?” Butler cautions.5. Understand that a coveted deal can be a costly oneEntrepreneurs may bite off more than they can chew in attempting to scale for a big retail partner, but many don’t realize those national chains often charge entrepreneurs in several costly ways that can make or break a business.In-store displays, for example, can cost from $30,000 for the “cardboard” fixtures to as much as $300,000 for the permanent, prominent branded shelfs, and it is the brands not the retail partners who pay.”It’s not cheap and you pay per store,” Jimmere says. Any time there is a promotion, you are paying for those discounts as well. You do want to have the premium placement in stores because those are the prime areas where people are spending the money, but you will be paying for it, she says.Retail partners can also charge a late delivery fee if the product doesn’t arrive on the agreed upon schedule.Butler and Jimmere said entrepreneurs need to remember that the national retailer is taking, on average, anywhere from 40% to 60% of the sales, and there can be those display charges and late charges which, if not effectively negotiated ahead of time or managed through efficient production, can reduce your cut of sales before you ever get the check.6. Don’t be intimidated, negotiate everythingIn one of Jimmere’s early attempts to win a deal with a large retail partner she was told that negotiating was not allowed. “It’s not true,” she says, and she warns small brands to not get so overly excited about the scale of a potential partner that they accept terms which may weigh on their business.”I think the biggest mistake people make is thinking they don’t have leverage,” Butler says. You have to pitch to a retail partner’s needs and their customer needs, and show how your brand will stand out in a saturated market, but “it’s not just about you doing everything they want you to do. … They took the meeting because you can potentially do something shape-shifting for them,” she says.”Depending on the terms, you may not even make money on every sale, and I didn’t even know that in the beginning,” Jimmere says. “Do not let anyone tell you nothing is negotiable or get so excited about having your brand in a store that you forego profit in lieu of being able to have bragging rights. At the end of the day, what matters is that you can sustain the business,” she says.There are many consumers who would never have heard of Naturalicious if partners like Ulta weren’t good about promoting brands in stores, and that can ultimately lead consumers to come back to your direct sales channel in the future. But Jimmere, whose company is now doing $2.4 million in sales, says getting into a big retail network is not necessarily going to result in a doubling or tripling of revenue immediately. Sometimes, a big advantage is the discovery your brand is able to add from the in-store customer experience, though that comes at a cost too: you don’t get the customer data that do through your direct channel.7. Accept that the hardest part may be getting a meetingFor all the persistence in making calls and getting lucky with unexpected connections at industry events, several entrepreneurs said they have needed to work with a brokerage partner to break through with big retailers. Jimerre and Butler both worked with brokers who knew the big firms like Ulta and Target well and knew how and why their products could be sold into these channels.Jimmere says persistence and networking can pay off. She made the calls herself to Whole Foods in her area and she met a key Ulta emerging brands division contact at an industry conference, but getting into Sally Beauty wasn’t working by just submitting to the company online. “Imagine how many pitches they get. The stuff goes into a black hole most of the time.”When Butler first made the decision to pursue retail partners she directly reached out to a lot of buyers, but says now it was not necessarily the best way to go. “Things do get lost and they get lots of pitches,” she says. Butler found that working with an external sales group was the most effective way of breaking through with a retailer like Target because of the trust already established as an agent placing brands with the company. Even though there is a cost to that middle-man relationship, “They will get you in front faster, and they should get paid for their work,” she says.Those brokerage deals can be based on a percentage of sales or a retainer, but both Jimmere and Butler said working with brokers who understand these retail partners and are passionate about how their products fit into these companies plans, has been a key part of growing partnerships.8. Walk the aisles, know the partner before pitchingHarris says it took Keeping You Sweet about three months to break through on her own with Whole Foods, and she started with one store in Newark, New Jersey. She said walking the aisles and learning the web site of a Whole Foods, or whatever dream retailer you want to be in, is critical before a first pitch if you are going it alone.Her products are designed for gluten intolerance, which is a huge market linked to many medical conditions, as well as for people that need to avoid refined sugar, like diabetics, and those allergic to egg or dairy or choosing vegan as a lifestyle, in the case of her vegan cakes. But none of those consumer and health advantages would have been an advantage at Whole Foods if they already had a competitor offering the exact same products.”Go into the store before you pitch them. The first thing is to make sure it is something they need or don’t already have in store, or are not even thinking about,” Harris says.Businesses need to tailor the pitch to the nuances and goals of the retail partner. Whole Foods and Ulta Beauty, both of which Jimerre sells through, have completely different consumer goals in mind. Ulta is looking for “prestige, if not luxury,” she says, which ends up in details like Naturalicious packaging having shiny gold caps. Whole Foods is very big on supporting local businesses, and the best ways into its supply chain are at first to think small, before ever contemplating regional or national deals with it or its parent company Amazon.9. Save even more than you think you will needJimerre was able to save money for her business dream while working for Ford and in the advertising industry, but looking back she says that she wished she had saved even more.”I always tell people to stack money up when working in corporate, in a 9-5 job. That is your initial investor,” she says. She thinks that would have helped her lean less on family and friends and business credit cards in the early days of her business, which is a common route of funding, according the the Kansas City Fed, for Black female entrepreneurs who struggle to be approved for traditional capital from banks and investors.  Harris has opportunities to expand with more grocery chains and with Amazon as well, but she is holding off for now due to challenges in scaling, and the need to secure additional financing to purchase more equipment and hire more staff. Without that funding in place, she remains concerned about taking on any new relationships, though she remains determined to secure the financing at some point and expand her partnerships.Harris says that after her initial sales success as a local business she submitted many applications for financing but has received as many as two dozen rejections. “I wasn’t expecting to be rejected,” she says. Her credit was good and her orders were “through the roof” by the time she was seeking additional funding in 2019 to buy more equipment, but she has had to max out credit cards and borrow from family and friends. “Totally bootstrapping,” she says.  More

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    Audiences for award shows are in steep decline. This chart shows how far viewership has fallen

    In this articleNFLXDISZoom In IconArrows pointing outwardsThe Academy Awards are the biggest night for Hollywood, but fewer and fewer people outside that circle are tuning into the event.Last Sunday, viewership for the annual Oscars telecast plunged to a new low, with 10.4 million people watching to find out which film took home the best picture prize, according to Nielsen data. That’s a nearly 56% drop from the 23.6 million viewers that turned on their TVs for the program last year.The Academy’s third hostless show in a row scored a 2.12 rating among adults 18-49, a key demographic for advertisers, a 60% drop from 2020.The drop in both metrics is not entirely surprising, as award shows, in general, have faced declining viewership in recent years. And few of the nominees were considered mainstream, given movie theaters have been largely shuttered for a year due to the pandemic.The Emmy Awards, which aired in September, saw the lowest viewership of any such ceremony in the Television Academy’s history. The show drew only 5.1 million total viewers, down 14% from last year’s event, according to Nielsen.The Grammys, too, saw staggering declines. This year’s award ceremony drew 9.23 million viewers, a 51% drop from the 18.69 million who tuned into the program in 2020.So, are people becoming bored with big award ceremonies or are they just watching them differently?Some argue that the inundation of too many live award show ceremonies has saturated the market and made top-tier award shows like the Grammys, Emmys and Oscars less exciting to viewers.The Golden Globes, the Video Music Awards (VMAs), Billboard Music Awards, Country Music Awards, BET Awards, People Choice Awards, Critics Choice awards and countless other ceremonies have all been televised in recent years. With such little curation, it wouldn’t be surprising if viewers started to feel fatigued.Not to mention, younger viewers, many of whom have cut cable, aren’t as willing to sit through the traditional 16 to 20 minutes of commercials per hour that comes with a live TV telecast. A three-hour show like the Oscars can mean an hour worth of ads.There are also some who bemoan Hollywood, in particular, for using its award ceremonies to make political and social statements. Regina King, who opened Sunday’s Oscars, used her time to allude to how Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty on three charges stemming from the killing of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, last year.”Now, I know that a lot of you people at home are going to reach for your remote when you feel like Hollywood is preaching to you, but as a mother of a Black son, I know the fear that so many live with and no amount of fame or fortune changes that,” she said.Then there are the nominees themselves. Nielsen’s data shows that in the years where certain, more commercially popular, movies were nominated, more people tuned in. 2019′s ceremony, which hit 29.6 million viewers, featured nominees from popular films like “Black Panther,” “Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse,” “Bohemian Rhapsody” and “A Star is Born.”Similarly, even a decade ago, when “Avatar,” “Up,” “Inglorious Basterds,” “District 9,” “The Hurt Locker” and “The Blind Side” were all nominated for best picture, ratings hit 41.6 million.Of course, there’s the possibility that people are watching these award ceremonies, but are watching the programs differently. The Nielsen data doesn’t include figures for viewers who opted to watch any of the major award shows on streaming platforms.Dan Rayburn, a media and streaming analyst, said one barrier is that the streaming industry hasn’t yet agreed on a set definition of what a viewer is. Each streaming service has a different way of reporting how many people have watched a particular movie, TV show or live program. This can make it difficult to make comparisons between platforms and between those platforms and traditional cable providers.Oscars 2021 coverage from CNBCRead more about this year’s Academy Awards:‘Nomadland’ wins best picture at the 93rd Academy AwardsThe Oscars were a well-intentioned mess that flopped despite an elite producing teamAcademy Awards ratings plummet to all-time low as viewership drops below 10 millionNetflix snags 7 awards, nearly doubling its all-time Oscars tallyChloe Zhao becomes second woman to win best director at Academy AwardsAs women directors enter the Oscar spotlight, here are 13 filmmakers to watch More

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    Take a look inside Astra's rocket factory, as the company prepares to go public

    Astra VP of manufacturing Bryson Gentile, left, and CEO Chris Kemp take a protective cover off a rocket fairing half.Michael Sheetz | CNBCALAMEDA, California — Rocket builder Astra wants to simplify the launch business, with the soon-to-be-public company on a quest to both cut manufacturing costs while dramatically increasing the number of launches to a daily rate.Astra is preparing to go public by the end of June through a merger with SPAC Holicity, in a deal that will infuse as much as $500 million capital into the company. In the meantime, Astra is expanding its headquarters on the San Francisco Bay while the company prepares for its next launch this summer.A SPAC, or special purpose acquisition company, raises capital in an initial public offering and uses the proceeds to buy a private firm and take it public.CNBC toured Astra’s growing facility earlier this month, a visit which was joined by chairman and CEO Chris Kemp and vice president of manufacturing Bryson Gentile.Benjamin Lyon, executive vice president of engineering, along with senior vice president of factory engineering Pablo Gonzalez and vice president of communications Kati Dahm, also attended.The company’s leadership features a variety of backgrounds from the space and tech industries: Kemp from NASA and cloud software provider OpenStack, and Gentile from SpaceX. Meanwhile Lyon came from Apple, Gonzalez from Tesla, and Dahm from electric vehicle maker NIO.An overview of Astra headquarters’ location on the San Francisco Bay in Alameda, California.Google MapsAstra’s facility uses infrastructure left over from the U.S. Navy’s former Air Station Alameda. The company first started out with about 30,000 square feet. It’s now expanding into about 250,000 square feet of space – including all the way out to the edge of the bay, where a newly built city ferry terminal connects Alameda to downtown San Francisco, a 10-minute ride away.The main area of the company’s headquarters, about 25% of its footprint, features an open space for much of its rocket development and assembly.Astra has also put all its equipment on wheels, with the company’s leadership emphasizing the flexibility it wants to maintain as it builds out its production capabilities.The production floor of Astra’s headquarters in Alameda, California.Michael Sheetz | CNBCIts near-term goal is to reach orbit, the next hurdle after its most recent launch broke the barrier to space in December. The next Astra launch is planned for this summer, which will also be the first to generate revenue for the company.Astra’s rocket stands 40 feet tall, and is capable of carrying up to 100 kilograms to low Earth orbit – putting it in the category of small rockets, a category currently led by Rocket Lab.But Astra’s emphasis is on keeping the price of the rocket as low as possible, with pricing as low as $2.5 million per launch versus Rocket Lab’s Electron at about $7 million per launch.A closer look at half an Astra rocket nosecone, also known as a fairing.Michael Sheetz | CNBCThe company emphasized the cost-cutting methods its implemented into its approach, with Astra believing that it’s feasible to get to a production rate of one rocket per day within a few years. The company’s staff compares its rocket to building a small Cessna aircraft.One example of that Astra showed off during the tour was how it builds it fairings – the nosecone of the rocket that protects satellites during launch.The company said the first fairing it used was made of composite carbon fiber, which is typical in the space industry given how light and stiff the material is. But the carbon fiber fairing cost $250,000, necessitating a different solution since the company wants to eventually get the total cost of its rocket down to less than $500,000.Astra chose to build its second fairing out of metal, which it got down to about $130,000. Yet the company needed to go further.Vice president Gentile explained how the company now uses aluminum tubing to give the fairing its strength, combining that with a dozen petals, which are thin, curved pieces of metal. That’s reduced the cost of the fairings to $33,000.Astra plans to get under $10,000 per fairing, by stamping it rather than riveting it together.Members of Astra’s leadership team gatherered around a rocket interstage in production, from right: VP of manufacturing Bryson Gentile, SVP of factory engineering Dr. Pablo Gonzalez, VP of communications Kati Dahm, founder and CEO Chris Kemp, EVP of engineering Benjamin Lyon.Michael Sheetz | CNBCAnother long-term hurdle for the company will be working with regulators to quickly get licenses for launches if it’s able to reach a daily rate. Astra’s leadership said it is working very closely with the Federal Aviation Administration on how to streamline the licensing process, and noted that it wants to have a dozen or more spaceports around the world as well.Astra’s mission control center for launches.Michael Sheetz | CNBCAstra is also streamlining the operational aspect of its launches, reducing the number of people in its mission control to less than 10 and only needing six people for setting up the rocket at the physical launch site.Its goal is to reduce the number of people in mission control to just two, effectively a pilot and a co-pilot, by automating most of its processes.Astra’s outdoor work yard, where pieces of its rocket ground support equipment are assembled and prepared for launches.Michael Sheetz | CNBCIts rocket system, including the strongback which lifts the vehicle vertical for a launch, all packs into a few shipping containers.First, Astra rolls a strongback out of the container and into the factory. Then, an overhead crane drops the rocket straight onto the strongback. Finally, the whole system is rolled into a container and then shipped off.Astra has three strongbacks in assembly, with more to come.The thick doors that lead to one of Astra’s rocket engine testing bays, which previously was a U.S. Navy engine testing facility.Michael Sheetz | CNBCThe former naval facility also features two engine testing areas, with thick reinforced concrete walls.The evening before the CNBC tour Astra conducted testing on the upper stage of a rocket. This made the engine bay a chilly spot to visit, thanks to the below-freezing temperatures of a liquid oxygen tank.Inside an Astra testing bunker, where senior manager Andrew Pratt shows a pair of fuel tanks connected to a rocket upperstage from testing the night before.Michael Sheetz | CNBCDuring a hot fire test, when one of Astra’s Delphin rocket engines is fired up, the inside of the chambers reaches 1,200 degrees Fahrenheit. Astra representatives said the company can conduct as many as 10 to 15 tests of a rocket’s first stage in a day, or more than 30 upper-stage tests in a day.Looking back down the exhaust tunnel of Astra’s testing bay.Michael Sheetz | CNBCAstra will continue to expand its current footprint in Alameda, including a lease for a 500-foot pier and plans for an ocean launch platform that it would be able to load up with a rocket in the bay.The view behind Astra’s headquarters in Alameda, California, looking out across the San Francisco Bay.Michael Sheetz | CNBCKemp told CNBC in February that Astra’s plan for “daily space delivery” is fully funded through 2025, thanks to the SPAC capital.Astra CEO Chris Kemp shows part of the area the company plans to use to expand its headquarters.Michael Sheetz | CNBC More

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    Warren Buffett says Robinhood is catering to the gambling instincts of investors

    Warren Buffett at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting in Los Angeles, California. May 1, 2021.Gerard MillerLegendary investor Warren Buffett believes millennial-favored stock trading app Robinhood is contributing to the speculative, casino-like trading activity in the stock market and benefitting from it.Robinhood has “become a very significant part of the casino aspect, the casino group, that has joined into the stock market in the last year or year and a half,” Buffett said at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting on Saturday.The “Oracle of Omaha” also said he is looking forward to reading Robinhood’s pre-initial public offering SEC S-1 filing as the company nears it public debut, expected in the first half of 2021. The company, which pioneered zero-commission trading, is seen as the main gateway for young investors to access the markets.”American corporations have turned out to be a wonderful place for people to put their money and save but they also make terrific gambling chips,” said Buffett. “If you cater to those gambling chips when people have money in their pocket for the first time and you tell them they can make 30 or 40 or 50 trades a day and you’re not charging them any commission but your selling their order flow or whatever…I hope we don’t have more of it.”Robinhood — whose mission is to “democratize investing” — is often criticized for its gamification of investing. The Silicon Valley start-up found itself in the middle of a firestorm in January amid the short squeeze in GameStop, which was partially fueled by Reddit-driven retail investors. The app has take steps to disband this reputation, be eliminating the confetti animation when investors make their first trade.Buffett said he was unhappy to learn short-term stock options activity in Apple’s stock was surging. He said he expected a lot of that activity is coming through Robinhood.Robinhood’s user growth has been explosive in 2020 and 2021. Millions of new investors jumped into the market during the pandemic, and millions more have joined in 2021. The stock trading app Robinhood added nearly 6 million clients in the first two months of the year, according to estimates from JMP Securities.”There’s nothing illegal about it, there’s nothing immoral but I don’t think you’d build a society around people doing it,” said Buffett.”The degree to which a very rich society can reward people who now know how to take advantage essentially of the gambling instincts of not only the American public but the worldwide public, it’s not the most admirable part of the accomplishment,” said Buffett.Berkshire Hathaway’s Vice Chairman Charlie Munger was less gentle with his description of Robinhood.”I think it’s just God awful that something like that brought investments from civilized men and decent citizens,” Munger said. “It’s deeply wrong. We don’t want to make our money selling things that are bad for people,” Buffett’s right-hand-man added.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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    Charlie Munger calls bitcoin 'disgusting and contrary to the interests of civilization'

    Charlie Munger at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting in Los Angeles California. May 1, 2021.Gerard Miller | CNBCBerkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charlie Munger’s distain toward bitcoin has only intensified amid the digital asset’s record run this year.”Of course I hate the bitcoin success,” the 97-year-old Munger said during a Q&A session at Berkshire’s annual shareholder meeting Saturday. “I don’t welcome a currency that’s so useful to kidnappers and extortionists and so forth, nor do I like just shuffling out of your extra billions of billions of dollars to somebody who just invented a new financial product out of thin air.””I think I should say modestly that the whole damn development is disgusting and contrary to the interests of civilization,” said Munger, a legendary investor in his own right.Warren Buffett, who avoided the initial question on bitcoin earlier, responded to Munger’s answer: “I’m alright on that one.” The “Oracle of Omaha” said he didn’t want to comment directly on the digital token because he didn’t want to get grief from everyone who is long.The world’s largest cryptocurrency enjoyed a head-turning rally this year, topping $60,000 apiece in April as involvement from Tesla to major Wall Street banks made bitcoin mainstream. Tesla recently made a $1.5 billion bet on bitcoin and now accepts the digital currency as a method of payment for its cars. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley are looking to offer their wealthy clients some exposure to bitcoin.Bitcoin last traded above $57,000, up from about $30,000 at the start of 2021, according to Coin Metrics.Munger has long criticized bitcoin for its extreme volatility and a lack of regulation. At the annual shareholders meeting for Daily Journal in February, Munger said bitcoin is too volatile to serve well as a medium of exchange.”It’s really kind of an artificial substitute for gold. And since I never buy any gold, I never buy any bitcoin,” Munger said then. “Bitcoin reminds me of what Oscar Wilde said about fox hunting. He said it was the pursuit of the uneatable by the unspeakable,” he added.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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    Biden's tax plan targets big companies, so why is small business worried?

    President Joe Biden speaks while visiting Smith Flooring, a small minority-owned business, to promote his American Rescue Plan in Chester, Pennsylvania, on March 16, 2021.Andrew Caballero-Reynolds | AFP | Getty ImagesSeveral top policy priorities in President Biden’s agenda seek to rein in the wealth and power of the biggest companies. But as the debate moves to Capitol Hill and the president’s spending ambitions have surprised in magnitude, small business policy experts have a growing sense it could be too much too soon, and Main Street could become a financial casualty in several important respects at a time when many operations are just getting back on their feet after the pandemic.New business formation data is heading in the right direction and that is a signal of confidence in the economic recovery.”The foundation is established for a great economic recovery and bounce back to pre-pandemic levels, but toying with tax rates at a time like this has a dampening effect,” said Karen Kerrigan, president of the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council.CNBC Small Business Playbook returnsOn May 4, join Shark Tank’s Robert Herjavec, Life is Good’s Bert Jacobs, Chamber of Commerce’s Neil Bradley, 1863 Venture Fund’s Melissa Bradley and more for the CNBC Small Business Playbook event, kicking off at 2pmET. Get actionable advice to stage a strong comeback. Register now.The highest-profile proposals include a corporate tax hike to 28% at a time when companies like Amazon have in recent years paid an effective tax rate of zero. Many independent contractors are also concerned about the labor protections in the PRO Act, which could require gig economy players like Uber and DoorDash to treat independent contractors as employees. The administration is being more vocal about its targeting of the gig economy.No big Biden policy surprises, but questionsThese proposals should not come as a surprise — they were part of Biden’s platform while running for the presidency. And ambitious spending initiatives on infrastructure and America’s workers can lead to benefits in the form of economic growth and support from the government in future funding of employee benefits.”The proponents of the president’s proposals will pitch the broad economic benefits,” said Kevin Kuhlman, vice president of federal government relations at the National Federation of Independent Business, and there are small business sectors where spending could result in growth such as broadband and infrastructure projects. But even if these projects last for a few years they are temporary, he said, while the impact of tax changes could be permanent. “They definitely view infrastructure spending very positively, but the timing is everything, and when coming off a year of devastation, and just digging out of a big economic hole, they just fear what the broader effects of tax increases will be,” Kerrigan said. “Is it just the opening salvo? We are spending a lot money. There will be more tax increases to pay the piper beyond what we know about today, and that is a big concern,” she added. Corporate tax hike and small businessAnthony Nitti, national tax partner at RubinBrown, said business owners who have been paying attention should not be waking up shocked after Biden’s most recent tax policy unveiled this week. There were no big surprises in the latest tax proposals, but there were a few additions and omissions which are notable.For many small businesses, it will be good news that the president did not highlight any increase in the payroll tax contributions for Social Security, where a doubling from the current level has been under consideration at higher income levels. “We didn’t see that in the latest proposal,” Nitti said. “Business owners will be relieved.” There also was no new talk of changes to the pass-through deduction for businesses set up as S corporations and partnerships, which could be phased out at higher levels of income. But if the pass-through treatment which allows for a 20% deduction of business income is not revised, and C corporations are subject to a higher corporate tax rate, there could be a reversal in the way small businesses incorporate in the future, Nitti says.S corps and partnerships could end up in an advantageous tax position relative to a C corp if the corporate tax rate does rise to 28% — if Congress settles at 25%, the math would change. But with the 20% income deduction available to pass-through entities, even with a top tax rate near-40%, the structure could be more appealing. Cutting the corporate tax rate to 21% under Trump eliminated benefits of the pass-through structure, but that could “change dramatically,” Nitti said.Kuhlman said there are big concerns about the C corp issue for the smallest corporations because the corporate tax hike is not being discussed in terms that would be graduated for smaller companies with lower levels of income. “The target here is the largest corporations, many listed as paying no corporate tax, but the problem with that is that two-thirds or even more than that of corporations are small businesses,” Kuhlman said, noting that the majority of C corps have receipts of less than $1 million.Capital gains taxes and business ownershipEliminating the current rate on long-term capital gains for individuals with taxable income in excess of $1 million means it would go to the same level as the top ordinary income rate of 39.6%, which would be close to double the 23.8% top rate under current law and would have big implications for any sale of a business for an owner above the taxable income threshold.In a recent analysis Nitti wrote for Forbes, he concluded that for businesses currently set up as C corporations — and more went to this structure after the 2017 tax law changes — when coupled with the proposed increase in the corporate rate from 21% to 28%, the combined top rate on shareholders would rise from approximately 40% to near 60%.”If I’m a business owner, I’m walking away from this week with two thoughts: I don’t know if my business is going to be in the right structure, and if I don’t plan on continuing to hold the business for the long-term, I better expedite my exit strategy if capital gains is truly going to double in the future,” Nitti said.The Biden administration said there will be protections for farms and family-owned businesses passing between generations, but experts say it remains unclear what specific policy details will protect these entities.”Tax policy is the biggest negative from my perspective. Small to mid-sized businesses want to operate in a policy environment of stability,” Kerrigan said. “The back and forth over tax rates makes it difficult to plan.”The PRO Act and employee benefitsSome of the tax proposals focused on wealthy individuals will be a negative for the minority of small business owners in the highest income brackets, and many independent contractors might not have that as a top concern, but it is the PRO Act, which seeks to classify more freelancers as employees, that is the Biden policy priority widely disliked by this segment of the small business community. A recent Alignable survey found that 45% of small businesses said it would destroy their business.”It seems that these policies are targeted at large corporations, but the problem is the burden falls on smaller businesses,” Kuhlman said. He said the “ABC test” used to qualify employees under the PRO Act would hurt independent contractors and franchisees, as well as any business that requires the flexibility of using independent contractors.There is a push and pull in other progressive policy initiatives as well. President Biden’s support for the earned income tax credit and child tax credit can benefit small businesses by alleviating wage pressure, but those benefits can be diminished when set against the president’s support for raising the federal minimum wage to $15, as well as sick and family leave benefits which can place more funding requirements on employers.The latest proposals do provide a more complete picture of what the administration is seeking, but these multiple elements of employee benefits that can flow through to employers in the form of increased labor costs leave the small business sector, at least for now, “with more questions than answers,” according to Kuhlman. While the general public support for Biden’s policy may focus more on the infrastructure benefits from spending, small business owners are more accustomed to looking at the cost side and being sensitive to it. “There is some concern about how balance sheet doesn’t exactly line up and the government will need to come back for more,” he said. More

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    Live music concerts are starting to reemerge in the Covid-19 recovery. Here's what you can expect if you go

    A concert at Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre outside Denver.John P Kelly | The Image Bank Unreleased | Getty ImagesWhen Riley Cash, 31, of Denver, received his second vaccine shot earlier this month, the next big event on his agenda was a concert at nearby Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre.The outdoor venue reopened this month with limited capacity and four nights of shows from a band named Lotus.The fact that concerts were already coming back was a surprise, Cash said. But after a year of working from home, he was eager to go see one of his favorite acts live.The tickets cost about $91 per person, more than Cash was expecting. But he said he considers himself and his friend lucky for being able to get tickets within a couple of days after they went on sale.More from Personal Finance:Hotel rates on the rise as travel demand ticks upWhen it comes to finding love, this much debt is a deal breaker Here’s what post-pandemic travel might look like”I just want to go and do something,” he said.Some smaller and outdoor concert venues are starting to open up and offer limited capacity shows with the hopes of finding attendees who feel the same.Anecdotally, those venues say they are having an easy time filling the seats they are able to offer.”We haven’t had a single show that we have put on sale that hasn’t blown out right away,” said spokesman Brian Kitts at Red Rocks, which is located near Morrison, Colorado.The outdoor yoga series that Red Rocks offers has also sold out quickly, he said.While it still feels like a long way from other indoor forms of entertainment like opera and ballet being able to reopen, the initial sales of the available events have shown a stronger start than anticipated, Kitts said.That’s a big deal for the city owned venue, which lost about $52 million last year.”Nobody saw this coming,” Kitts said.”On any given night, we’ve got 400 people working in the venue, and all of those jobs were gone just overnight,” he said.Dixie Strange, 30, at an Aug. 22, 2020, morning yoga session at the Red Rocks Amphitheatre in Morrison, Colorado.Mark Makela | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesAs the show season starts, ticket prices have generally not gone up, to the credit of the bands and promoters, Kitts said.But new Covid-19 protocols are in place.There are no temperature checks at the door, nor requirements to show proof of vaccine or a negative Covid-19 test.But other precautions have been created. There is six feet of space between groups of ticket holders, who now only occupy every other row. Masks are required in indoor spaces, such as bathrooms or the visitor’s center.The venue has also implemented touchless payment systems for all transactions.We haven’t had a single show that we have put on sale that hasn’t blown out right away.”Brian KittsRed Rocks spokesmanSome of the concert dates that were canceled in 2020 have flipped to 2021. Still, there new acts are clamoring to get on the calendar for as late as October or even November, Kitts said.”We will never again take for granted the ability to gather communally and see a concert or go to a sporting event,” Kitts said.While some venues report strong initial ticket sales, a recent survey from Bankrate.com found that only 16% of adults have bought tickets for a live event.Concerts or music festivals were most popular, with 8% of respondents. That was followed by live theater or comedy, 6%; pro sports or college games, 5%; or other live events that require tickets, 2%.One reason for the lackluster survey results, which are from late March, may be that consumers are still smarting from the money they lost from last year’s events, said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate.com.”We found last year that basically half of people who had tickets to these events last year lost money,” Rossman said. “And I think that a lot of people are shy as a result.”Buying tickets now amounts to a “calculated risk” that you will be able to get your money back or a credit if events cannot go on as planned.But Bankrate.com found that when people do purchase tickets, they are spending $227 on average for concerts and music festivals, $191 for comedy or live theater, and $387 for games and sporting events.Some of those costs may include added safety protocols.For some venues, implementing those processes has been key to helping to lure attendees back in the door.Rhett Miller performs at City Winery NYC on April 3, 2021, in New York City.Taylor Hill | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty ImagesAt City Winery in New York City, seating capacity will be expanded to 150 up from the current 100 attendees per show starting on May 1.That date will also usher in a new vaccine-only policy for concert goers, who can show proof using the CLEAR app and filling out a questionnaire in advance. Those who have not received the inoculation can circumvent the rule by getting a Covid-19 test in advance or on site on the day of the event.”We’re very excited about pushing this forward so there’s a psychological comfort of being in a bubble knowing that everyone around you has also gotten vaccinated,” said Michael Dorf, CEO and chairman of City Winery.Even so, the concert venue does not plan to loosen up on protocols, particularly with regard to wearing masks, until the government gives the OK, Dorf said.City Winery has grappled with different capacity rules and restrictions in its other locations in cities like Nashville, Tennessee; Atlanta and Chicago.To see the ecosystem of live music start to reemerge was deeply powerful and very moving.Michael DorfCEO and chairman, City WineryBut one constant remains the same: fan appetite to see live music again.”Anything that we can put on sale right now … is enthusiastically sold out very quickly,” Dorf said.Like a lot of venues, City Winery has struggled in the past year amid the shutdown as it faced ongoing rent, utility bills and payroll.But it has tried to keep its ticket prices, which are mostly dictated by how much the artists are paid, in check. Multiple night shows have helped to make up for limited ticket sales due to lower capacity.As the pandemic continues to fade, Dorf said he also hopes that those restrictions go with it.The introductory joke he tells audiences before each show is always the same, he said.”Please don’t get used to so much space out there,” Dorf said. “We will be crowding you and jamming you in here as soon as we possibly can safely.”The biggest pay off has been to see the joy the performers feel getting back onstage and the audiences get from witnessing it.”To see the ecosystem of live music start to reemerge was deeply powerful and very moving,” Dorf said. More