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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Levi Strauss, WD-40, fuboTV & more

    Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:Levi Strauss (LEVI) – Levi Strauss reported quarterly profit of 34 cents per share for its latest quarter, 9 cents a share above consensus. Revenue also came in above Wall Street forecasts with help from a 41% rise in digital sales. The apparel maker raised its revenue forecast for the first half of this year, betting on a rebound in-store traffic as vaccines roll out. The company’s stock jumped 5.7% in premarket trading.WD-40 (WDFC) – WD-40 fell 8 cents a share short of estimates, with quarterly earnings of $1.24 per share. The lubricant maker’s revenue also came in below analysts’ projections. The company said supply chain issues hurt its ability to meet customer demand, and its stock tumbled 7.9% in the premarket.Boeing (BA) – Boeing asked some customers to temporarily stop flying 737 Max jets to correct a potential electrical issue.FuboTV (FUBO) – FuboTV won the streaming rights to the Qatar World Cup 2022 qualifying matches involving the 10 teams in the South American Football Confederation. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The stock surged 6.2% in the premarket.Bridgetown Holdings (BTWN) – The SPAC backed by billionaire investors Peter Thiel and Richard Li is in advanced talks to take Indonesia-based travel services company Traveloka public, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to Bloomberg. Bridgetown shares added 3.5% in premarket trading.Honeywell (HON) – Honeywell shares rose 1.3% in premarket action after Deutsche Bank upgraded the stock to “buy” from “hold,” noting underperformance so far in 2021 as well as Honeywell’s favorable exposure to the current state of the economic cycle. JPMorgan Chase also named Honeywell a “top pick,” citing similar reasons.Okta (OKTA) – Okta shares rose 2.5% in premarket trading after a 7.2% gain Thursday. That followed a meeting with analysts at which the maker of identity management software reiterated its guidance for the year and introduced two new products that could expand its addressable market.Amazon.com (AMZN) – Amazon workers at an Alabama warehouse appear to be on the way to rejecting unionization, with about half of the approximately 3,200 ballots counted. So far, the tally shows workers voting against a union by a more than 2-1 margin, although Reuters reports about 500 ballots have already been challenged.Southwest Airlines (LUV) – Southwest is recalling more than 2,700 flight attendants from leaves of absence, in anticipation of a rebound in summer travel demand. That follows the recall of more than 200 pilots by the airline last week.PriceSmart (PSMT) – PriceSmart reported higher quarterly profit and sales compared to a year ago, though the discount retailer’s results were below estimates from the few analysts that cover the company. PriceSmart said the pandemic continues to weigh on its business in certain markets.Sogou (SOGO) – China regulators are set to clear the purchase of the country’s third-largest search engine by tech giant Tencent Holdings, according to people with knowledge of the matter who spoke to Reuters. Tencent is planning to pay $3.5 billion for the 60% of Sogou that it does not already own. Sogou shares jumped 6.2% in premarket action.Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) – The restaurant chain’s stock remains on watch after rising for the past six sessions in a row. The stock was up 1.6% yesterday after Wedbush analyst Nick Setyan reiterated an “outperform” rating on data indicating that same-restaurant sales growth is near the high end of the company’s forecast. Chipotle shares have nearly doubled over the past 12 months.AT&T (T) – AT&T said it would record a non-cash gain of $2.8 billion for the first quarter related to its pension plan, as distributions exceed a threshold that would have required it to remeasure its pension obligations. More

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    Germany edges toward national lockdown; considers Russia's Sputnik vaccine

    A healthcare worker cares for a Covid-19 patient in the ICU ward at the Robert Bosch Hospital in Stuttgart, Germany, on Tuesday, Jan. 12, 2021. Chancellor Angela Merkel warned that Germany faces hard lockdown measures into late March if authorities fail to contain a fast-spreading variant of the coronavirus.Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesLONDON — Germany is a step closer to nationwide lockdown Friday as Chancellor Angela Merkel moved to standardize restrictions across the different states.”The infection protection law will be amended to provide the federal state with the necessary power,” a government spokesperson said in Berlin on Friday.The update to the law is expected to be approved by lawmakers next week and a lockdown could be imposed shortly after.Earlier on Friday, German health authorities said they were worried about surging coronavirus infections in the country and said a nationwide lockdown is needed to put an end to the ongoing third wave.Germany has faced high Covid infection rates since last October and, despite an improvement in the month of February, the number of new cases has been rising since late March.”Many citizens recognize the need to break this wave with additional measures and the majority are in favor of stricter rules. It needs one lockdown to break the current wave,” Jens Spahn, German health minister, said at a press conference Friday.This third wave of the coronavirus is putting pressure on the country’s health system at a time when the regional and federal governments are clashing over the right measures to take.”The number of intensive care patients is increasing far too quickly. Doctors and nurses have been under constant stress for months and rightly sound the alarm,” Spahn said.”We have to break the third wave as quickly as possible. That means: reducing contacts and reducing mobility. This is the only way to prevent further increases.”The country reported over 30,000 new Covid cases on Wednesday and around 26,000 on Thursday.German officials have been divided over the right approach to tackle rising cases, while citizens have become frustrated with the different arrangements among various regions.Speaking to CNBC earlier this week, Germany’s Finance Minister Olaf Scholz said: “If we could come to similar measures in all the places this would help a lot and make it more understandable.”It comes as German health authorities push for a ramp up in vaccinations in the country, which has already started paying off. On Thursday, the daily inoculation number neared 720,000 in comparison with roughly 317,000 a week ago, according to data from the health ministry.”I think we will come to a situation where, at the end of this month, it will be 4 to 5 million doses a week,” Scholz told CNBC.Sputnik VSpeaking at Friday’s press conference, the health minister confirmed that contract negotiations to purchase the Russian-developed vaccine Sputnik V are taking place now, according to Reuters. Spahn added that there is nonetheless a question mark about whether these vaccines would be available in the coming months.The European Medicines Agency began assessing the Russian shot in early March and will decide whether to recommend it for use in the 27 EU member states. Although the regulator is using an urgent method to check the efficacy of Sputnik V, it is unclear when it could get final approval.Authorities in Germany have previously said they would consider using the Russian vaccine if the EMA were to conclude that the shot was effective at preventing the Covid-19 virus. More

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    Dick's Sporting Goods just opened a massive store with a virtual driving range and outdoor track. Here's a look inside

    In this articleDKSNKESource: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRDick’s Sporting Goods on Friday is holding the grand opening of the biggest store it has ever built.Called House of Sport, this new format has a ton of features. The retailer’s goal was to create a space where visitors not only come to buy sneakers but to spend an afternoon playing sports and other physical activities. The more than 100,000-square-foot space is at the Eastview Mall in the Rochester suburb of Victor, New York. It includes an indoor rock climbing wall, golf driving bays, a putting green and a health-and-wellness shop, as well as an outdoor track and a turf field — all things that Dick’s is testing for the first time.Dozens of big-name brands, including Yeti and Vans, have dedicated spaces within the store to show off new products. They sit alongside Dick’s private labels DSG, Calia and VRST. Nike has the most space of all, including an area near the mall’s entrance for the Jordan brand. It’s the most room Dick’s has ever given Nike within a store.Dick’s is already planning to open its second House of Sport this year in Knoxville, Tennessee.According to Ed Stack, executive chairman, chief merchant and former CEO, more stores will be opening in other states with this format in coming years.”The vision that I laid out for this concept was that we wanted to build the store, … the experience, that would put Dick’s Sporting Goods out of business,” Stack said in a recent interview.”This is the biggest innovation we’ve ever done,” he said. “This is the biggest leap forward in any concept that we’ve done. And I think we got it right.”According to Stack and Dick’s CEO Lauren Hobart, certain elements of House of Sport are going to slowly be incorporated into more of Dick’s current locations, based on how well they’re received. The mini health-and-wellness juice shops or the space dedicated to cleats, for example, could become features in dozens of the retailer’s other stores.The company said it plans to allow local sports teams to use its field for meetups, and it has a conference room that can be booked for other types of gatherings.”Between the service model that we put in [House of Sport], the experiences, the games, the product … we really look at this as it’s almost like starting a brand new company,” Stack said.Here’s a glimpse inside — and outsideSource: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRBeyond the footwear department, there’s a space dedicated to cleats, and it holds more than 380 pairs of shoes.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRThe rock climbing wall soars 30 feet and can be booked in advance online.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRA mini health shop inside sells local juice, snacks, vitamins, yoga gear and other wellness products.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRIn the baseball department, Dick’s brought in batting cages with an automatic pitching machine for customers to test products.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRNext to the golf merchandise are three virtual driving bays, which can be booked for special occasions.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PRA 17,000-square-foot portion of the parking lot has been turned into a track and turf field. Dick’s plans to convert the area into an ice skating rink during the winter.Source: Dick’s Sporting Goods PR More

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    Fake news on social media is hampering vaccine efforts in Papua New Guinea

    A health worker prepares to do tests for Covid-19 coronavirus outside a makeshift clinic in a sports stadium in Port Moresby on April 1, 2021.Gorethy Kenneth | AFP | Getty ImagesMisinformation on social media is hindering Papua New Guinea’s vaccination efforts.Many people are hesitant about inoculation due to false information being spread about the vaccines even as coronavirus cases are surging, according to the PNG’s Covid-19 response controller.The country reported 1,730 cases and 12 deaths between March 29 and April 4, according to a joint report from the World Health Organization and the PNG national health department.Infection cases saw a fresh surge in February and PNG has reported 7,839 cases so far, data from Johns Hopkins University showed. However, the consensus is that the actual number is much higher, concealed by low testing capacity and other logistical difficulties.”We have been lulled into sort of a sense of complacency, false sense of security that we have gotten over that first wave, that we were dreading,” David Manning, PNG’s Covid-19 national pandemic response controller, told CNBC’s Will Koulouris.Located north of Australia, Papua New Guinea is an island country that’s heavily forested and has a population of fewer than 9 million people.Of course, this is attributed to vaccine hesitancy, and you can attribute that to a lack of awareness.David Manningnational pandemic response controller, Papua New GuineaThe National Capital District, home to PNG’s capital, Port Moresby, has the highest number of reported cases, followed by the Western province where the infection rate is also climbing.A combination of events — funerals, holidays and the resumption of schools — led to the “continuous transmission of the virus,” William Pomat, director of PNG’s Institute of Medical Research, told CNBC last week.Vaccine hesitancySo-called “vaccine nationalism” has made it difficult for small, developing nations like PNG to access shots to inoculate their population. Many of them rely on an international vaccination initiative called Covax but that program’s vaccine supply is facing delays from India, which is also struggling to contain a surge in cases at home.PNG rolled out a vaccination drive last week using about 8,000 doses of AstraZeneca’s Covid-19 shots that were donated by neighboring Australia. More doses are reportedly expected in the coming weeks from China and India.The island-nation has vaccinated fewer than 600 people so far, putting it way behind schedule, according to Manning.”Of course, this is attributed to vaccine hesitancy, and you can attribute that to a lack of awareness — basically, information around, if there are any side effects of the vaccine and the false news that’s being propagated through social media,” he said, adding there’s comparatively less pushback from vaccine skeptics in urban areas.Battling misinformationManning said Facebook reached out to PNG asking how the social network could help dispel some of the misinformation being spread, but he did not expand on the details of that conversation.Facebook launched a public education campaign in PNG this week to help users there learn how to identify and combat health misinformation. It will run for five weeks and include graphics and videos in multiple languages.CNBC Health & ScienceRead CNBC’s latest coverage of the Covid pandemic:Researchers identify five new cases of ‘double mutant’ Covid variant in CaliforniaJapan to place Tokyo, other areas under ‘quasi-emergency’ state as Covid cases surge Officials rush to defend AstraZeneca Covid vaccine after UK, EU blood clot guidance”For this campaign, we are focusing our efforts further to target Covid-19 and vaccine related misinformation, ensuring that Papua New Guineans are able to scrutinise what they are seeing against official public health resources,” Mia Garlick, director of public policy for Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Islands at Facebook said in a statement Wednesday.”This campaign also adds on to a prompt we launched in Papua New Guinea last week toprovide local users with Covid-19 prevention tips,” Garlick added.Stressed health-care infrastructureThe outbreak is putting excessive stress on PNG’s already poor health-care infrastructure.International organizations such as Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) have warned of an imminent collapse. Many frontline health-care workers, who are already few in numbers, are falling ill with Covid-19, experts said.”If they get sick, then we won’t have anyone standing — not only for Covid, but other diseases and so on,” said Pomat from the Institute of Medical Research.He explained that Covid testing is only being done for those who “might show up (at) a health facility when they are showing symptoms, and those who are volunteering to go in.”Even then, hospitals and medical facilities are running out of components needed to carry out those tests.While PNG is working with its development partners, including Australia, to secure supply of more test kits and components, it has also implemented tighter social restrictions. For example, shops have been asked to deny entry to people not wearing masks while inter-provincial travel is strictly regulated.Manning said the pandemic response needs to be tailored to PNG’s coastal communities as well as the highlands region where even at the best of times, it’s tough to deliver health care, police or government services.”So we’ve now shifted our focus from a national response to a provincial response, and working closely with those provincial health authorities that are currently being inundated with surges,” he said. More

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    Meet a family that travels the world full time on a yacht for $2,500 a month

    The Sueiros had it all — great careers, a community of friends and kids enrolled in a top-notch international school in Boston.Will was a corporate accountant, and Jessica ran a graphic design business from home. Life was “comfortable, uneventful and routine,” said Jessica Sueiro.”Life was good” for the Sueiro family before they began traveling the world full-time, but they wanted adventures and a world education for their kids, said Jessica Sueiro.Courtesy of Jessica SueiroHowever, they were overscheduled and depleting their finances with expenditures of around $10,000 a month — not on “a pampered life” of fancy cars or weekend ski trips, said Sueiro, but on rent, private school tuition and an “image” that required presentable clothing and regular haircuts.”We had the lifestyle that we dreamt of,” said Sueiro. “But once we had it, we were not convinced it was the correct path for our family.”A ‘leap into the unknown’The family took a “test trip summer” to Paris to see if they could survive in a foreign land, said Sueiro.”Not only could we survive, but we thrived,” she told CNBC. “We lived on much less, and we were so happy.”So —  with two kids, aged 6 and 10 —  the Sueiros sold 85% of their belongings, got international health insurance, opted for paperless bills and left Boston in 2014 to “leap into the unknown,” she said.  Since then, the family has visited more than 65 countries, with members going to all seven continents, said Sueiro. The Sueiro family has lived in surf hostels, yurts, treehouses, pod hotels, boats, an RV and now a catamaran, said Jessica Sueiro.Courtesy of Roam GenerationDuring the first three years, the Sueiros lived in locations for nine to 12 months at a time, renting furnished homes and traveling extensively, said Sueiro. The family lived in a 21-foot RV for the next 2 1/2 years, moving constantly and visiting every country in Europe, plus Morocco.They had just arrived in Japan when the pandemic struck. They eventually returned to France, where they have long-stay visas, and bought a 38-foot catamaran, where they have been living since August 2020.Yacht life for $2,500 a monthThe Sueiros had very little sailing experience when they bought their boat, which makes traveling via water harder than over land — at least for now, said Sueiro.She said she believes eventually “sailing will turn into a much easier and cost-efficient way to travel,” despite boats having a “reputation of costing a fortune.””Our monthly budget since we became full-time travelers has always hovered around $2,500 per month,” said Sueiro, which includes medical insurance but not schooling or business expenses. “Right now … we are a bit lower than that.”There have been accusations that our children are not educated properly, that we must have family money, that we are lost souls.Jessica SueiroAfter the initial cost of purchasing and equipping the boat, the “bills have leveled out,” and the family’s largest recurring expenses are food, school, medical and boat insurance, SIM cards and periodic boat repairs, she said. The general rule, she added, is to factor in 10%-30% of the boat purchase price for yearly repairs and upgrades.”There are a lot of assumptions about this type of lifestyle … the No. 1 by far is that one must be rich,” said Sueiro. “I cannot speak for others, but I can tell you that we work a lot … we are also very frugal.”Jessica and her husband worked remotely for the first three years before establishing WorldTowning, a travel coaching company for long-term travelers. Their group tours are restarting this fall and are almost sold out, she said.The hardships of a nomadic lifestyleThe Sueiros had $10,000 worth of belongings (including computers) stolen in Belgium. They’ve been verbally assaulted in Norway and stuck in a rainy ravine in Turkey — at night.”However, our biggest ongoing hardship … is the judgment on how we live,” said Sueiro, adding that this has come from educators, potential employers, doctors and business clients.  “In addition, there have been accusations that our children are not educated properly, that we must have family money, that we are lost souls, irresponsible and much more,” she said.Largo Sueiro has attended private school in Costa Rica and Ecuador.Courtesy of Roam GenerationThe kids have attended private and public schools and been homeschooled (“or as we call it worldschooled”). Both want to attend university in the U.S. and the oldest, Avalon (age 16), is preparing by taking courses through online universities, said Sueiro.”Will and I adopted a philosophy of ‘no one gets a vote on how we live our life,'” she said, adding that the current shift to remote work is softening attitudes toward alternative lifestyles.Inspired by a movieThe Careys were a “regular family” living in a three-bedroom house in Adelaide, Australia —  until they were inspired to sail the world after watching a documentary about Laura Dekker, the youngest person to circumnavigate the globe alone.The couple saved for more than two years, took sailing courses and bought a 47-foot boat “sight unseen” in Grenada, an island country in the Caribbean.The Careys worked for the Australian government, had a mortgage and credit card debt before they began sailing the world, said Erin Carey.Courtesy of Roam Generation”We basically jumped on board, and we did everything our own way,” said Erin, with a laugh. “We ran aground, our engine cut out … we had to get towed.”Despite being “non-sailors,” the couple and their three young sons sailed around the Caribbean before crossing the Atlantic Ocean 18 months later, she said.The family returned to their house in Australia at the beginning of the pandemic, but quickly realized land life wasn’t for them. The family was “always rushing” to school and sports activities, and the kids read less and stayed in the house more, said Carey.We’re a family of five, and we probably spend about $4,000 a month.Erin Carey”We weren’t spending any time as a family,” she said. “There were very few moments at home where we actually really felt alive.”The Careys sold their home and returned to their boat in the Azores in March this year. The pros and cons of boat lifeDespite the freedom and adventure, Carey said it’s normal to get sick of the lifestyle because “it’s super hard living on a boat.”Cramped living quarters, blocked toilets and no hot showers or cars (“we’ve got to lug our groceries everywhere”) are just the beginning. “Rolly anchorages,” a boating term for a rocking boat, prevent quality sleep.But days aren’t rushed. The kids take courses through Acellus, an online school, for two hours each morning while Carey runs a PR agency called Roam Generation from their yacht. Then the family may go on a hike or to a museum, or the kids play or fish with other kids in the marina. They’ve started reading again, she said.”Kids on boats, for some reason, are really exceptional,” said Carey, who uses a private Facebook group called Kids4Sail to connect with other boating families.Courtesy of Roam GenerationAre kids rare in the community? Not at all, said Carey.The “cruising” community is well-connected, and families with “boat kids” seek one another out.”Often people will change their plans and go to where the kid boats are because happy kids make this lifestyle so much better,” Carey said.  Cruising: Not just for the ultra-wealthyTo finance living full time on a boat, some people save up money to sail for a predetermined amount of time, while others sell or rent out their houses. Others run location independent businesses from their boats. Many are retired.”We’re a family of five, and we probably spend about $4,000 a month,” she said. “There are people doing it on literally $500 a month, and then obviously there are people living on superyachts.”Carey, whose family eats out several times a week and occasionally hires a car, said she believes what they spend is “pretty average” for cruising families.Courtesy of Roam GenerationWithout a mortgage or a car, Carey said “living on the boat is cheaper than living in our house back home.” However, “things on boats break all the time … so you have to be prepared.””Your sail rips, there goes $5,000,” she said. “They say boat stands for ‘Bring Out Another Thousand.'”Carey said that while cruising is “a lot more difficult” in the Covid era, boat sales are “through the roof.” While the coronavirus caused some to return home, it spurred many others to embark on a live-aboard lifestyle.    Carey is researching going to the Mediterranean next, then sailing back to the Caribbean around Christmas.  Cruisers (here celebrating Halloween in Grenada) are largely highly educated and driven people, yet “topics like wealth, social status or employment rarely arise,” said Carey.Courtesy of Roam Generation”I think that’s the beauty of boat life, it is so unknown,” she said. “I actually really like that I literally have no idea where we’ll be in three months.”Carey said while boat life is hard, you “just have to be really determined and tenacious to figure out a way to make it work.”Read moreYou might be surprised how much it costs to charter a yacht right now More

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    The IMF marks up the global recovery

    ON APRIL 6TH the IMF raised its forecasts for the global economic recovery. The cause? Vaccination programmes and a healthy dose of fiscal stimulus in rich countries. So robust is America’s recovery expected to be that by 2024 it will have overtaken the level of output that had been forecast before the pandemic. The rich world is projected to be about 1% below its pre-pandemic path. By contrast, in 2012, five years after the global financial crisis began, rich-country GDP was still a tenth below the fund’s pre-crisis forecast. The poorest countries, though, are set to bear deeper scars this time.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    Coinbase’s listing may break records

    THE NEXT big listing on Wall Street will be a disappointment—at least for cryptocurrency purists. When Coinbase, a marketplace for such digital monies, starts trading on April 14th, it will be on a boring, conventional stock exchange, and not—as might befit one of the world’s biggest crypto firms—on a buzzy blockchain, as the technology that powers the likes of bitcoin is called. Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More

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    Totting up bitcoin’s environmental costs

    AS COINBASE’S IPO shows, cryptocurrencies have many fans. But they have detractors, too. Environmentalists, in particular, fret about how much energy bitcoin uses. In a paper in Nature Communications, a group of academics led by Dabo Guan of Tsinghua University and Shouyang Wang at the Chinese Academy of Sciences examine bitcoin’s energy use in China. They conclude that, in the absence of legal curbs, bitcoin could by 2024 become a “non-negligible” barrier to China’s efforts to decarbonise its economy.Listen to this storyYour browser does not support the element.Enjoy more audio and podcasts on More