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    Director Search CEO sees opportunity to diversify corporate boards

    In this articleFBCorporate boards have an opportunity to diversify leadership ranks in the coming years, said Ken Taylor, head of executive search platform Director Search.Taylor estimated that about 45,000 executive searches will need to be conducted within the next five years as many directors are expected to retire. This could open a door for companies to bring in more diverse members into their executive boards, he said.”There’s a lot that we should do in terms of broadening the issue of diversity and inclusion and it starts with equality and opportunity,” Taylor said in an interview Monday with CNBC’s Jim Cramer on “Mad Money.” “There’s no excuse anymore for someone to say, ‘gee, we didn’t know about that person'” when recruiting board members.Of the 272,000 directors stewarding tens of thousands of companies around the globe, more than 31,000 seats are occupied by people aged 70 or older, Taylor noted. About 43,000 of those seats are filled by women, he added.In the U.S., white individuals hold 84% of Fortune 500 board seats while they make up 60% of the population, according to Society for Human Resource Management.Taylor said this may be due in part to corporate leaders often looking within their own network to fill board seats, which can lead to homogeneous management. Many directors also sit on multiple boards, he added.Taylor noted, however, that Director Search can help make corporate boards more diverse. “We’re shifting the conversation in terms of board composition from who do we know to who should we know,” Taylor said.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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    Fauci warns against relaxing public health measures as summer approaches

    Jose Rivera with wife Stephanie Rivera watching their nieces and nephew, Ariel, Sophia and Ignacio Arminta as then visit the Santa Monica Pier as people take advantage of the warm weather during the COVID-19 Spring break in Southern California Monday. Santa Monica Pier and Promenade on Monday, March 29, 2021 in Santa Monia, CA.Al Seib | Los Angeles Times | Getty ImagesWASHINGTON — White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci warned Monday that Americans should continue to be vigilant and adhere to public health measures as warmer summer months approach.”You might remember a little bit more than a year ago when we were looking for the summer to rescue us from surges. It was, in fact, the opposite,” Fauci said during a White House coronavirus briefing.”We saw some substantial surges in the summer. I don’t think we should even think about relying on the weather to bail us out of anything we’re in right now,” he added.Fauci also said Monday that Americans should continue to get both doses of the Pfizer and Moderna Covid-19 vaccines, despite a recent study that suggests only one dose may be enough.Fauci has previously warned that while the Biden administration ramps up vaccine production and continues to administer a record-breaking number of vaccine doses, that the nation is still in a battle with the coronavirus.”When I hear pulling back completely on public health measures, saying no more masks, no nothing like that, that is risky business,” Fauci said during an interview last month with “Meet the Press.””Don’t spike the ball on the 5-yard line. Wait until you get into the end zone. We are not in the end zone yet,” he said, adding that prematurely pulling away from public health measures could prolong the pandemic.Similarly, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended that Americans continue to hold off from traveling due to coronavirus cases nationwide.”We know that right now we have a surging number of cases. I would advocate against general travel overall,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said last week. “We are not recommending travel at this time, especially for unvaccinated individuals,” she added.Last month, a slew of states across the nation relaxed restrictions to varying degrees.Arizona’s governor ended capacity limits on businesses but said they must still require masks. Texas also announced a return to full capacity businesses but dropped its mask mandate. Alabama’s governor said the state would lift its mask mandate after April 9. South Carolina lifted the state’s mask mandate in government buildings but recommended that restaurants continue to require face coverings.California will allow theme parks, outdoor sports and live events at stadiums to restart on April 1 with reduced capacity and mandatory masks.Mississippi also announced last week that businesses could operate at full capacity and dropped the state’s mask mandate.Last month, President Joe Biden urged Americans in his first prime-time address to remain clear-eyed against the disease by following public health measures. Biden also set a goal for Americans to be able to gather in small groups to celebrate the Fourth of July. More

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    Stock futures are flat in overnight trading after the Dow and S&P 500 close at records

    A woman takes a selfie with the ‘Charging Bull’ statue on February 17, 2021 in New York City.ANGELA WEISS | AFP | Getty ImagesStock futures held steady in overnight trading Monday after the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the S&P 500 both closed at record highs with strong economic data boosting hope for a smooth recovery.Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average and S&P 500 futures were little changed. Nasdaq 100 futures edged up 0.2%.Wall Street rallied to record levels on Monday after a blowout jobs report and a surge in the gauge of services industry activity showed the economic rebound gained momentum amid accelerated vaccine rollout.”Vaccinations are rolling out at a record clip, and historic stimulus efforts from Congress have all paved the way for continued positive market momentum,” said Chris Larkin, managing director of trading and investing product at E-Trade Financial.Bond yields had another quiet session with the 10-year Treasury yield held steady at 1.71%, easing fears of rising inflation.Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester told CNBC Monday that she is largely unconcerned by this year’s run-up in government bond yields.”I think the higher bond yields are quite understandable in the context of the improvement in the economic outlook. The increase has been an orderly increase,” Mester said. “So I’m not concerned at this point with the rise in yields. I don’t think there’s anything for the Fed to react to.”Investors continue to assess President Joe Biden’s $2 trillion infrastructure proposal and its chance to become reality. While politicians on both sides of the aisle support funding to rebuild American roads and bridges, disagreements over other priorities and the ultimate size of the bill remain. There’s also debate over Biden’s plan to raise the corporate tax to 28% in part to fund the plan.Biden said Monday he is not worried that a corporate tax hike would hurt the economy. Conservative Democrat Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia reportedly said he opposes the proposed tax hike to 28%. More

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    Janet Yellen calls for a global minimum tax on companies. Could it happen?

    CORPORATE TAXATION is one of the thorniest issues in international economic policy. Janet Yellen, President Joe Biden’s treasury secretary, and a former head of the Federal Reserve, is duly weighing in. On April 5th she grabbed the attention of the occupants of corner offices worldwide with a speech to the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. The headline was a call for countries to agree on a global minimum tax rate for large companies.Such a levy, Ms Yellen said, would help “make sure the global economy thrives based on a more level playing field”, and would help end a “30-year race to the bottom”. Though the idea of a minimum tax raises hackles in tax havens in the Caribbean, parts of Europe and farther afield, many other big economies will welcome America’s renewed commitment to multilateralism on tax after the prickly unilateralism of the Trump years.Over the past decade, growing corporate-tax avoidance has met with a growing backlash. Breakneck globalisation allowed multinationals to replace fears of double taxation with the joys of double non-taxation, using havens to game the system. By exploiting mismatches between countries’ tax laws, taxable profits could be cut or even made to disappear. The game became easier with the rise of intangible assets, which can be shifted between jurisdictions more easily than buildings or machinery. Big tech has been a big beneficiary: the five largest Silicon Valley giants paid $220bn in cash taxes over the past decade, just 16% of their cumulative pre-tax profits.Numerous sets of talks aimed at resolving the problem have been held under the auspices of the OECD, a club of mostly rich countries. Progress, however, has been slow. Frustrated, dozens of countries—from Belgium and Britain to India and Indonesia—have introduced or proposed “digital-services taxes” (DSTs) on the local sales of foreign firms with online platforms. The Trump administration said these levies discriminated against American business and threatened tariffs.Yet the Trump administration had agreed to the idea of a minimum tax; indeed it enacted its own version as part of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act in 2017. Mr Biden is pushing new reforms. He wants to raise the domestic federal corporate rate (partially reversing Donald Trump’s cuts) from 21% to 28%—and, crucially, increase the rate on American firms’ overseas profits from 10.5% to at least 21%, calculated on a country-by-country basis so that it captures all tax havens.The hope is that the receipts help fund a planned $2trn-plus upgrade to the country’s infrastructure. Republicans in Congress and groups representing big business complain that higher tax rates dent American competitiveness. That argument is blunted if other large economies agree to set a floor for the global rate.The minimum tax is one of two “pillars” at the centre of the OECD-brokered negotiations. Talks were reasonably constructive, even with Team Trump, say officials. But queasiness over setting a floor persists, particularly among the EU’s lower-tax members, such as Ireland, with its lean corporate-tax rate of 12.5%. Were a global minimum set at 21%, American firms operating in Ireland—of which there are many—would have to pay top-up tax of 8.5% to their government, on top of the 12.5% paid to Dublin, undercutting the Irish advantage.Moreover, most countries want negotiations over the two pillars kept together—and the second pillar is much less tractable. It involves finding a mutually acceptable way to carve up taxing rights over the profits of firms in markets where they have customers but lack a physical presence (as is often the case for firms like Amazon and Facebook outside America).Earlier this year it was reported that Ms Yellen had dropped the Trump administration’s proposal to let American companies opt in to any new system for allocating taxing rights (why any company would choose to do so is unclear). That removed a large obstacle to a deal, but by no means the only one. Many of the firms targeted by DSTs pay an outsize share of their taxes to America’s government. To strike a deal, Ms Yellen will have to be unusually willing to share with other countries.The most optimistic voices talk of agreement on both pillars being sealed by the end of June. Many doubt that is possible. It took years to agree on plucking and chucking lower-hanging fruit, such as tax trickery involving intra-company loans, or the “Double Irish with a Dutch Sandwich”, which channelled profits through EU-based subsidiaries to tax havens like Bermuda and the Cayman Islands.A key variable is the rate at which the global minimum is set. Some officials think that, after all the horse-trading, it could be little more than the Irish rate of 12.5%—not very different from the average cash-tax rate that American tech firms actually pay. As for the reallocation of taxing rights, even its champions accept it may not skim much more than $10bn in extra revenue globally. The OECD estimates that corporate profit-shifting robs exchequers of $100bn-240bn a year.Meanwhile, the Biden administration continues to flex muscle, even as it speaks with a softer voice than its predecessor. It is pressing on with plans to impose tariffs of as much as 25% on certain goods from six countries with DSTs, including Britain and Turkey. This is, perhaps, a tactic to encourage others to reach a deal at the OECD. If so, it is to be hoped that it works. The alternative is a global tit-for-tat as national tech levies become the norm. ■ More

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    Norwegian Cruise Line CEO on how the company's cruise ships can safely set sail once again

    In this articleAPR-CONCLHNorwegian Cruise Line CEO Frank Del Rio said Monday he is confident the cruise line operator can safely set sail this summer for the first time in more than a year. Earlier in the day, the company sent a proposal to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on how Norwegian Cruise ships could travel once again in July. The proposed measures include requiring passengers and workers on board its ships to be fully vaccinated weeks in advance of disembarking and capping on-board capacity at 60%. Capacity would be increased by 20% every 30 days afterward.”I challenge you to tell me of another venue anywhere that has this kind of iron-clad health and safety protocols in place … cruise ships will de facto become the safest place on earth,” Del Rio told CNBC’s Jim Cramer in a “Mad Money” interview. “We want to start in the safest manner possible and that is … everybody on board has to be vaccinated.”The company’s proposal and Del Rio’s comments come more than a year after the CDC placed a no-sail order on cruises due to Covid-19 outbreaks on multiple ships around the world. Norwegian saw revenues plunge by 80% in 2020 as the pandemic response upended the travel and vacation industry. Executives hope to resume operations and gradually welcome more and more guests over time.”It’s time to get back to cruising,” Del Rio said. “I don’t want to say that I’m daring the CDC to do anything, but I want to hear any feedback that suggests that this is not the best way to come back and cruise again.”Shares of Norwegian shot up 7% on Monday to close at $29.71 per share.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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    March jobs report gives the Fed room to keep interest rates low, Jim Cramer says

    Investors shouldn’t worry about the Federal Reserve raising interest rates after the release of the latest U.S. jobs report, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said. Businesses hired 916,000 workers last month, according to data from the Labor Department released Friday. However, the report also showed average hourly earnings declined by 4 cents in March. Wages will be a key component for the Fed to gauge inflation, the “Mad Money” host said. “Professional money managers crave growth without wage inflation, and that’s just what we got … nirvana for stocks,” Cramer said. “This kind of labor report gives Fed Chairman Jay Powell the green light to keep holding rates low.””I like [Powell’s] hand more than that of the inflationistas right now because nothing is more important to stocks and bonds than that nonfarm Labor Department report that we got just Friday,” Cramer said.Cramer also pointed to a decline in oil prices as a reason for the Fed to keep rates at historically low levels. West Texas Intermediate futures dropped more than 4% on Monday. These elements will let Powell stick to his plan of keeping rates low until the economy recovers from last year’s pandemic downturn, according to Cramer. The comments came after stocks rallied to open the first full week of the second quarter. The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average each jumped more than 1% to fresh record highs. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite outperformed the Dow and S&P 500, surging 1.7%, and it’s now about 3% off its February record.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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    'Beat the S&P handily' by owning equal portions of cyclicals and growth, top strategist Art Hogan says

    Investors may want to avoid playing favorites.Art Hogan of National Securities said Monday that owning equal amounts of growth and cyclical stocks will produce major advantages as stocks break out.”Nothing is going to be binary this year,” the firm’s chief market strategist told CNBC’s “Trading Nation.” “Having a balance between those two and rebalancing every couple of months puts you in a position to beat the S&P handily.”The S&P 500 and Dow are kicking off the week in record territory. The S&P 500 gained 1.4% to close at 4,077.91, while the Dow jumped 373.98 points to 33,527.19, both all-time highs. The benchmark tech-heavy Nasdaq also raced higher, up 1.7% to 13,705.59.”We get to a point often times in markets where we think it’s either/or. And, most of 2020 was mostly technology,” Hogan said. “Post-Labor Day, we’ve seen this rotation out of growth and into economically sensitive cyclicals. That’s not a trade that goes on forever, either.”Hogan, who oversees $20 billion in assets, released his official S&P 500 year-end forecast of 4,300 on Jan. 4. With the index 5% away, he said Monday that it may get there much sooner — particularly due to daily U.S. vaccine doses in the millions.”In the wake of that comes the hope for better economic activity, and clearly we’re starting to see that in some of the March economic data,” he added. “Clearly, March data is proving out that the earnings estimates for the S&P 500 are likely conservative.”His thesis is that an “explosion of economic activity” will put inflation fears in check due to the bullish impact it will have on corporate earnings across the board. According to Hogan, it will contribute to healthy, broad-based market upside.On the cyclical or economically sensitive side, his top play is financials. Hogan speculated it could be 2021’s best performing S&P group.”Financials [are] obviously very dependent on GDP growth. We’re going to see a whole lot more of that this year,” said Hogan, who also sees key benefits from rising interest rates.To play a booming market on the growth side, he listed semiconductors as his top spot.”There’s going to be a very long haul for us to get back to producing the number of semis we need, and that number grows every day,” Hogan said. “We’ve seen a shortage of semiconductor chips adversely affecting all sorts of industries including automobile makers. … They’re very cyclical, but they have a great growth component to them.”Disclaimer More

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    CEO of Kayak's parent says vaccine passports would make it safer for people to travel

    As more people are immunized against the coronavirus, so-called vaccine passports would make it safer for people to travel, according to Glenn Fogel, the CEO of travel company Booking Holdings.”I’m not sure why people still object to it, in terms of making it safer for people to travel,” Fogel said in an interview on CNBC’s “The Exchange.”The Biden administration has indicated that it wants to set up a system of providing documentation of a person’s vaccination status, which can help make it easier to tell who’s protected against the virus and who’s not, but it’s unclear how this will play out. Several airlines have also voiced their support for documenting vaccinations.However, there are critics of vaccine passports for a number of reasons, ranging from privacy concerns to scientific reasons to equity issues.On Friday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said vaccinated people are at a “low risk” from travel.Fogel said he would like to see vaccinated people begin to travel again. “The industry has been so devastated, travel’s been so hurt by this terrible, tragic crisis, and we need every single thing that can help get [the travel industry] going and is allowing people to travel, because [the vaccines] are absolutely proven to be safe.”Booking Holdings owns brands such as Kayak, Agoda, Booking.com, Priceline.com and OpenTable.”The idea of a Covid passport that says you’re fully vaccinated [means] you’re a safe traveler, you can go places where other people may not be allowed to go,” said Fogel.On Monday, the company offered a $50 post-trip credit for travelers who book a trip by the end of May and travel before the year is over. The company also still offers increased flexibility to cancel travel plans if necessary. The promotion is aimed at getting people to start booking summer travel.”We’re seeing prices starting to go up too, which of course is the assumption of demand, which is why I continue to advocate [people to] go out, look at what you want, go get it now,” Fogel said.Rising vaccination rates will also help. Since the coronavirus vaccine distribution began in December, over 165 million doses have been administered to people in the United States, according to the CDC.For now, Americans may be more comfortable traveling within the U.S. due to varying Covid restrictions, he said. According to a Booking.com survey, 69% of people said they would prefer to travel closer to home for the foreseeable future.”There’s not going to be a huge amount of international travel,” he said. “In terms of people staying close to home, certainly there’s still that feeling of uncertainty and wanting to be close to home, but I think that’s going to extend out and as people feel safer to travel, they’ll start going for longer trips.”Booking Holdings’ stock closed Monday up 1.1% at $2,409.18. More