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    Airline executives cast doubt on European summer vacations with borders still closed

    A Delta Air Lines Airbus A330neo or A330-900 aircraft with neo engine option of the European plane manufacturer, as seen on final approach for landing at Amsterdam Schiphol AMS EHAM International airport after a transatlantic long haul flight.Nicolas Economou | NurPhoto | Getty ImagesHoping to take a European vacation this summer? You may be out of luck.Borders in much of Europe have been closed to most U.S. citizens and vice versa for more than a year because of the coronavirus pandemic. Airline executives on Thursday said they didn’t expect them to open in time for the peak summer season.Travel industry leaders have pressed the Biden administration for a plan to reopen borders, including standards for health documentation such as proof of a Covid-19 vaccine.Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said on a quarterly call that the company is focused on lifting restrictions that have hindered travel between the U.S. and U.K. but that other popular tourist destinations may take longer.The White House didn’t immediately comment.Britain this week eased its lockdown restrictions, allowing pubs, hairdressers and retail shops to reopen. France and Italy, on the other hand, reinstated temporary lockdowns last month to curb new Covid-19 infections, and vaccine distribution has been slow throughout Europe.”When you think about other parts of Europe, there may be some occasional markets open this summer based on southern Mediterranean leisure traffic that people will be interested in,” Bastian said on the call. “But I don’t think you’re going to see continental Europe opened in any meaningful way till later in the year. We’ll probably unfortunately miss much of the summer for most of continental Europe.”Delta and rivals such as American Airlines and United Airlines have said domestic travel has rebounded sharply from the depths of the pandemic, but international travel, still facing a web of entry restrictions and a lag in vaccinations, remains weak.Delta on Thursday said its domestic passenger revenue dropped 66% to $2.3 billion in the first quarter compared with the same period of 2019, but trans-Atlantic revenue was 87% less at $142 million while trans-Pacific was off 89% at $62 million.Naples, Italy, vs. Naples, FloridaU.S. carriers have refocused their once-sprawling global networks toward domestic destinations, particularly those that offer outdoor attractions such as beaches and mountains. Airlines have added service to tourist hotspots in Florida, Wyoming and Montana. They have also seen upticks in demand to beach destinations in the Caribbean and Mexico.American Airlines on Wednesday, for example, announced it would bring its summer domestic schedule to nearly the same levels as it operated in 2019.Brian Znotins, American Airlines’ vice president of network planning, told CNBC that demand for European summer vacations will be tough to generate even if borders open up in the coming season.”Usually a European vacation is planned months in advance,” he said. “So people today if they’re looking to take a trip this summer, which a lot of people are, they don’t feel very confident about booking a trip to Rome, and so they’re going to make that hotel reservation in Jackson Hole or Honolulu or Cancun.””You don’t expect to see demand just appear the day after a country opens, especially from a leisure point of view,” he said. More

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    Health-care stocks are making a comeback, Jim Cramer says

    In this articleUNHCNBC’s Jim Cramer on Thursday highlighted health stocks, a rebounding segment he said is helping to lead the market higher.After being discounted and “left for dead” amid the coronavirus pandemic, health stocks are bouncing back, he said.”I think that the left-behind health care stocks are now coming back to life at the expense of the cyclical growth plays, and you should grab one before they all really take off,” the “Mad Money” host said.The comments come after strong economic data helped carry the Dow Jones Industrial Average above 34,000 for the first time in Thursday’s session. The 30-stock index gained 305 points, or 0.9%, to close at 34,035.99, led by a spike in UnitedHealth Group shares.UnitedHealth, an insurance provider and Dow component, posted a quarterly report that topped analyst estimates. Positive action could also be found in GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, Regeneron Pharmaceuticals and Johnson & Johnson, which has been hobbled by its Covid-19 vaccine rollout, Cramer said.With the exception of Johnson & Johnson, each of these stocks have climbed double digits from their recent lows going back to the top of the year.”This cohort had fallen so out of favor that it finally represented enormous value. It was just waiting for the signal to move … [and] it happened,” Cramer said. “Given how monumental that move was, I bet it’s far from over.”Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Eli Lilly.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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    Incoming Stitch Fix CEO says the 'timing felt right' for executive transition after Covid

    Incoming Stitch Fix CEO Elizabeth Spaulding told CNBC on Thursday the company is confident in the timing of its executive shakeup, explaining that the coronavirus pandemic “accelerated everything” for the online styling service.Spaulding, who currently serves as president, is set to take over the reins from founder and CEO Katrina Lake on Aug. 1. Lake, who started Stitch Fix in 2011 and took it public six years later, will then transition to executive chairperson of the company’s board.While it’s not unusual for start-up founders to step down as CEO as their company matures, Stitch Fix’s announcement Tuesday nevertheless caught some industry observers and analysts by surprise. The company’s stock fell following the news.”Really, the timing felt right,” Spaulding said Thursday in an interview on “Closing Bell.” “Covid has accelerated everything for us as a business, and over the course of the last year, we’ve really been able to invest in our future.”More consumers turned to online shopping during the pandemic, especially for apparel, which plays into Stitch Fix’s core identity, Spaulding noted. The company is seeing the benefits now as the economy recovers from the Covid slowdown and consumers resume activities they shied away from.”In the last two quarters, we added more clients in those quarters than we did in all of fiscal [2020],” said Spaulding, who joined San Francisco-based Stitch Fix in January 2020 after more than two decades at Bain & Company.Stitch Fix is known for sending its clients a box of items, which employees individually select for the customer based on their preferences. Clients only pay for what they keep, and a styling fee also is applied.Source: Stitch FixOutside of clothing shipments to clients on a regular basis, Stitch Fix has added a direct-buy option in recent years.When Spaulding’s hire was announced in late 2019, a press release said part of her focus would be on “driving the next phase of Stitch Fix’s growth,” which includes the direct-buy offering.In addition to pushing forward online clothing sales, the pandemic “accelerated the roles for us as a leadership team,” Spaulding told CNBC.”It deepens the relationship of any executives going through a crisis,” she said. But the pandemic “also really allowed Katrina and I to divide and conquer and for me to play a role of shaping this next chapter and future of the business, to focus on the innovation within our model and really the table with our future team.”Spaulding noted that Lake will remain an employee of Stitch Fix, along with her role as executive chairperson of the board. “We kind of joke around we’ll be each other’s bosses,” Spaulding said.”[Lake] will be focused very heavily around social impact, both on sustainability and the role we can play in the apparel supply chain; diversity, equity and inclusion; and things around brand partnerships and things that are really areas that are her strength,” Spaulding said. “So, we kind of feel like we’re getting the best of both with each of us continuing to play a big role within the business.” More

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    American Eagle Outfitters CEO expects 'Roaring 20s'-like boom for malls post-pandemic

    In this articleAEOAmerican Eagle Outfitters CEO Jay Schottenstein said Thursday that the U.S. shopping mall “is not dead” and that the decade is shaping up to be a boon for business.The apparel retailer anticipates extending its double-digit comparable sales growth streak to 27 quarters and retaining its position as a leader in denim, Schottenstein said in a CNBC appearance.”We’re very excited, you know, about the future of the mall,” he said in a conversation with Jim Cramer on “Mad Money,” “and we think that when things get better and the pandemic goes away … we can be looking at the ‘Roaring 20s’.”Schottenstein is one of many hopeful figureheads who predict the current decade will mirror the growth of a century ago. Consumer spending, spurred in part by the latest round of stimulus checks, surged nearly 10% in March, the latest positive sign of economic expansion and growing confidence.”The sales we’re doing, like this quarter, … all the stores are comping and we’re doing it at a 50% capacity,” Schottenstein said.The comments come one day after the Pittsburgh-based retailer said business for the fiscal first quarter is exceeding projections, driven by government economic stimulus and pent-up demand, especially for jeans. Shares of American Eagle Outfitters hit new highs, continuing a rally that kicked off in late March. The company’s stock has climbed 29% since March 24.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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    Big bank stocks are 'dirt cheap' after posting earnings, Jim Cramer says

    In this articleJPMWFCGSBig bank earnings are out and the results were positive enough to quell one concern about their valuations, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Thursday.The stocks of large financial institutions like JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have surged from last summer, far outgaining the market. Cramer, himself an alum of Goldman Sachs’ investment shop, said their quarterly numbers had to be strong enough to support their current valuations.”We’ve got one less thing to worry about now that earnings season’s gotten rolling. The banks are doing pretty darned good, even if their stocks don’t necessarily reflect that fact,” the “Mad Money” host said.JP Morgan, Goldman and Wells Fargo all posted results on Wednesday, followed the next day by Citigroup and Bank of America. Despite each company showing top and bottom-line beats in the first quarter this year, their stock trades diverged in the wake of their reports.After reviewing the reports, Cramer doubled down on his conviction that the banks are worth getting behind.”I am still bullish on the financials, especially the investment banks like ‘Goldman Slacks’ and the turnaround plays like Wells Fargo,” he said. “After these numbers, the banks have gotten dirt cheap. Believe me, they will not stay that way.”Below is a round-up of Cramer’s reaction to earnings reports from the five financial giants:Goldman SachsEarnings: $18.60 per share vs. $10.22 per share expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.Revenue: $17.7 billion vs. $12.6 billion expected.”The numbers were so strong, I’m bringing back the old [nickname] … I’m calling them ‘Golden Slacks,'” Cramer said. “If it traded at 10-times earnings, this would be a $413 stock … I’m betting that is where it’s headed, especially now that Goldman’s allowed to buy back stock.”JPMorganEarnings: $4.59 per share vs. $3.10 per share expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.Revenue: $33.12 billion vs. $30.52 billion expected.”To me, this was the second-best report yesterday, although the market seemed to disagree as investors sold the news. But make no mistake, the numbers were fantastic,” he said. “I think the pullback in JP Morgan stock is a buying opportunity, plain and simple, and clearly somebody agrees because the stock started rebounding today.”Wells FargoEarnings: $1.05 in earnings per share versus 70 cents a share expected, according to Refinitiv.Revenue: $18.06 billion versus $17.5 billion expected.”Wells Fargo roared yesterday because this is viewed as more of a turnaround story than a banking story, which is why we actually own it for my charitable trust,” Cramer said. “I keep telling you it’s a better buy than JP Morgan because the expectations are much lower for Wells, and yesterday they absolutely cleared that low bar.”CitiEarnings: $3.62 a share, vs. $2.60 a share expected, according to Refinitiv.Revenue: $19.3 billion, vs. $18.8 billion expected”Just like the banks that reported yesterday, Citi’s got a lot of strength on the investment banking side, but traditional consumer banking was a lot less impressive,” he said. “If I had to rank this quarter, you know what, I’d put it right below JP Morgan’s.”Bank of AmericaEarnings: 86 cents a share, vs. 66 cents a share expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv.Revenue: $22.9 billion, vs. $22.1 billion expected.”It got the worst reaction from the market. I’m going to say that the market’s wrong. It tumbled nearly 3% today. I thought it was insulting,” Cramer said. “There was nothing particularly surprising in the quarter itself. Do not despair. If we get a couple of rate hikes, this is the one to own, and we’re going to get them eventually.”Disclosure: Cramer’s charitable trust owns shares of Wells Fargo.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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    NFL picks Caesars, FanDuel, DraftKings for first wave of sports betting partnerships

    In this articleCZRDKNGLawrence Guy #93 of the New England Patriots sacks Jimmy Garoppolo #10 of the San Francisco 49ers during the first quarter of the NFL game at Gillette Stadium on October 25, 2020 in Foxborough, Massachusetts.Matt Stone | MediaNews Group | Getty ImagesThe National Football League is officially open for sports betting, announcing sportsbook partnerships with top companies Caesars, FanDuel, and DraftKings.The agreements allow the sports betting firms to use NFL intellectual property and use its trademarks for betting promotions. The betting companies will also operate in a content-sharing model with the NFL — for example, the betting sites will be able to use material such as NFL highlights and Next Gen Stats data, which will help them set betting lines. The firms may create their own promotional content to be featured on NFL properties.Financial terms were not made available, but according to a person familiar with the agreements, the five-year pacts could be worth just under $1 billion combined over the life of the deal. But the NFL has rights to opt-out after the third and fourth year of the agreements, the person added.Caesars will keep its league sponsorship as “Official Casino Sponsor” allowing it to leverage NFL trademarks at its casino properties. The company purchased William Hill sports bookmaker for $3.7 billion last September. Meanwhile, DraftKings and FanDuel get more brand exposure on league media properties, including the NFL Network and NFL RedZone channels.The agreements fall under tier one deals for NFL, and the league is expected to announce another wave of sports betting partnerships but with lesser content options and more restrictions. The NFL agreed to a data rights deal with Genius Sports earlier this month. Hence, the sports betting companies need to purchase Genius’ data to operate their NFL bets.The league also agreed to media rights deal in March with partners NBCUniversal, Fox Sports, ESPN, CBS Sports and Amazon. The 11-year deal is worth over $100 billion.After the announcement Thursday afternoon, DraftKings stock was up 4% to $60 per share in after hours, while Caesars was slightly down at roughly $93 per share. More

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    Here's how investors can spot the next Bernie Madoff

    Bernie Madoff exits federal court March 10, 2009, in New York.Mario Tama | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesBernie Madoff was perhaps the starkest reminder that financial advisors can go rogue — and, when they do, people stand to lose a lot of money.Fortunately, there are steps investors can take to limit their risk.Madoff, who died in prison Wednesday at age 82, was the mastermind of the biggest investment fraud in U.S. history. His Ponzi scheme swindled tens of thousands of people of as much as $65 billion over four decades.He’d been serving a 150-year prison sentence after pleading guilty in 2009.More from Personal Finance:What the market debut of Coinbase means for everyday investorsFamilies must file a 2020 tax return to get the new $3,000 child tax creditHere’s how Americans are using their $1,400 stimulus checksMadoff’s death, reportedly of natural causes, is a sobering reminder of the investor-protection shortfalls that persist more than a decade after his fraud was exposed, according to investor advocates.”Nobody is immune from fraud,” said Andrew Stoltmann, a Chicago-based attorney who represents consumers in fraud cases. “If Bernie Madoff can do it, anybody can do it.”Lessons from the ‘Madoff bomb’There are a few enduring lessons from Madoff’s multibillion-dollar fraud. Ensuring investor money is being held by a third party and being cautious of consistently stable investment returns are among the two biggest, according to investor advocates. Ensuring a financial advisor uses a reputable, third-party custodial firm like Fidelity or Charles Schwab to hold investor money is essential, Stoltmann said.That makes it much harder for an advisor to steal money or take advantage of a client, since the assets aren’t held in-house, he said. Clients write checks to a third party, not the advisory firm.”Where you custodied your assets simply wasn’t a topic that anyone really considered, until the Madoff bomb hit,” according to Stoltmann. “Had that happened, the scam wouldn’t have been able to proliferate.”Think of this as a firewall like two-factor authentication — the custodial firm has certain procedures for withdrawing money, which often involve contact with the client, he said.Customers can check their regular account statements for this information. They can also call the custodian or log on to a custodian’s website for verification.Investment promises or guarantees are another telltale fraud signal, according to financial experts.For example, the SEC charged the Woodbridge Group of Companies and owner Robert Shapiro in 2017 for running a “massive” Ponzi scheme. The $1.3 billion fraud bilked more than 7,000 people, mostly seniors, and enticed them with promised returns of 5% to 10% a year on real-estate investments.Shapiro pled guilty in 2019 and was sentenced to 25 years in prison. The SEC alleged that he’d used at least $21 million for his own benefit, to charter planes, pay country club fees, and buy luxury vehicles and jewelry.”The promise is the red flag,” Stoltmann said.Consistently stable returns for investments other than, say, government bonds are also another lesson of the Madoff scandal, he added.”I don’t care if it’s a 3% return or a 10% return,” Stoltmann said. “The lack of variance is a [big] red flag.”LimitationsRegulators have upped their scrutiny of advisors and brokers to identify investment fraud, experts said.But occasionally a crook slips through the cracks — sometimes in dazzling fashion.Matthew Piercey, a broker from Palo Cedro, California, who pleaded guilty to co-running a $35 million Ponzi scheme, tried fleeing the FBI in November by using a submersible to hide underwater.Bernie Madoff leaves federal court in New York on March 10, 2009.Jin Lee/Bloomberg via Getty ImagesSome have gone so far as trying to fake their own death. About a decade ago, Marcus Schrenker, an Indiana advisor and pilot, did so by crashing a plane in Florida after parachuting to safety and then speeding away on a motorcycle to avoid prosecution for allegedly stealing $1.5 million from clients.”What [the Madoff scandal] taught us is the limitation of a system that relies on investors to protect themselves,” said Barbara Roper, director of investor protection at the Consumer Federation of America.The bulk of his investors were institutions and wealthy individuals — clients who, in the eyes of regulators, are thought to be sophisticated, Roper said.Bad actorsThere are some surefire red flags for consumers that their money manager has broken bad.  Financial regulators have online databases consumers can reference for background information on specific individuals and firms.The Securities and Exchange Commission has one, the Investment Adviser Public Disclosure website, for financial advisors. The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority’s resource, BrokerCheck, lists brokers. (A person may appear in both.)Saul Loeb | AFP | Getty ImagesFirst, check to see that the person appears in either system and that they are licensed or registered with a firm. This means they have met a minimum level of credentials and background to work in the industry, Stoltmann said.”If not, it could be some guy cold-calling from his mom’s basement,” he said.It also makes sense to Google the advisor or broker’s name to see if any news articles about past indiscretions or lawsuits appear.The regulatory databases will also list any disclosures, complaints, arbitrations or settlements involving the individual.”If you have one or two complaints, there are likely dozens of other times the advisor has engaged in chicanery but hasn’t gotten caught,” Stoltmann said.Check for nefarious financial behavior like sales abuse practices, unsuitable recommendations, and excessive or unauthorized trading, Roper said.”There are plenty of people out there who don’t have a problem,” she said. “So why not be safe and avoid those who do?”Finding a fiduciary investment advisor can also help clients who want long-term financial planning to reduce financial conflicts of interest that may be present in the advisor’s business model, she said.Just because red flags aren’t initially present doesn’t mean consumers should let their guard down.Madoff is the perfect example.”With Madoff, you could’ve done all those things and it wouldn’t have protected you,” Roper said of the common warning signs. “He was like the darling of the financial world [before his con was exposed].”Hyper trading activityLosing money isn’t necessarily a red flag, in and of itself, especially if it occurs in a down market.But it might be a bad sign if an investor’s portfolio is tracking well below customary stock and bond benchmarks, according to George Friedman, an adjunct professor at the Fordham University School of Law and a former FINRA official.”At some point you start asking questions,” he said.Hyper trading activity, as outlined in an investor statement, is another telltale sign. Such account churning generates fees and commissions for advisors but financially harms the client.Proprietary investments — for example, owning a mutual fund run by your brokerage firm — aren’t necessarily a fraud signal, but may be a sign that an advisor or firm is making money at your expense, Friedman said.”I’d review account statements every month,” he said. “If you see something funny or unusual, that’s a flag.”Of course, investor statements could be doctored to hide such information.Cure-all elixirUnsatisfactory or delayed responses to client questions should prompt clients to escalate their case to the firm’s compliance department.Being asked to communicate outside of an advisory firm’s official channels, like company e-mail, is also a major red flag, Roper said.And, importantly, understand your investments and only place your money with reputable money managers, she said.”If you can’t understand it, it’s a bad sign,” Roper said. “If the [investment] prospectus seems designed to confuse rather than clarify, it’s a bad sign.””People want to believe there’s some great investment opportunity out there they’ve just lucked into,” she added. “It’s as old as time, the persuasive con artist who can talk someone into buying the cure-all elixir.” More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after the bell: DraftKings, QuantumScape, PPG & more

    In this articlePPGAADKNGQSThe entrance from the elevators, designed to resemble a tunnel entering a stadium, is pictured at the new DraftKings office in Boston on March 25, 2019.David L. Ryan | The Boston Globe via Getty ImagesCheck out the companies making headlines after the bell on Thursday:QuantumScape — Shares of the electric vehicle battery manufacturer ticked up 3% after the company responded to a report from short-seller Scorpion Capital. In the report, the firm called QuantumScape a “pump and dump SPAC” scam. QuantumScape said that Scorpion stands to financially benefit from a decline in its shares. QuantumScape’s stock dropped more than 12% during the regular session earlier in the day. DraftKings — DraftKings shares rose 3% after the company announced it penned a deal with the NFL to become one of the league’s official sports-betting partners. DraftKings also renewed its daily fantasy football partnership with the league.Alcoa — Shares of the aluminum producer climbed 2% after the company reported better-than-expected first-quarter results. Alcoa posted earnings per share of 79 cents on revenue of $2.87 billion. Analysts polled by FactSet expected earnings per share of 45 cents on revenue of $2.63 billion.PPG Industries — PPG shares popped 5% after the company logged first-quarter results that topped analyst predictions. The company reported earnings per share of $1.88 on revenue of $3.88 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet predicted earnings per share of $1.57 on revenue of $3.67 billion. More