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    The Fed has embraced the 'punchbowl' and has no intention of taking it away

    The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building stands in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 18, 2020.Erin Scott | Bloomberg via Getty ImagesThe Federal Reserve has come a long way from the days of warning about “irrational exuberance.”Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan famously sent up a flare in December 1996 about stretched asset valuations triggered by wild dot-com speculation that had produced an unbridled bull market.It took three years for the warning from “The Maestro” to come true, but the statement is still considered a seminal moment in market history where a Fed leader issued such a bold warning that went unheeded.Flash forward 25 years and the attitude from the Fed is considerably different, even though market valuations look a lot like they did back around the time the dot-com bubble burst.Central bank officials repeatedly have been given the opportunity to advise caution on asset valuations, and each time they have largely passed. Other than acknowledging that prices are higher than normal in some instances, Fed speakers have largely attributed market moves as the product of an improving economy buoyed by aggressive fiscal stimulus and low interest rates that will be in place for years.Just a few days ago, San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly spoke on the issue and said the Fed has no intention of tightening policy even in the face of roaring bull markets across several asset classes.”We won’t be preemptively taking the punchbowl away,” Daly said during a virtual Q&A on Wednesday.The “punchbowl” metaphor was interesting in that the term became a bit of a pejorative following the 2008 financial crisis.Its origin in policy circles dates to William McChesney Martin, the longest-serving Fed chairman who held the position from 1951-70. The Fed’s role, Martin said, was to act as a “chaperone who has ordered the punchbowl removed just when the party was really warming up.” The statement delineated the cautionary role the Fed should be playing when it spots signs of excess.Taking away the punchbowl ‘doesn’t work now’But Daly implied that such a duty either does not exist today or is not relevant to the current situation.”That’s something that worked maybe in the past, definitely doesn’t work now, and we’re committed to leaving that punchbowl or monetary policy accommodation in place until the job is fully and truly done,” she said.Fed critics say the central bank failed to act on its “chaperone” role over the punchbowl in the years leading up to the financial crisis, allowing Wall Street’s exotic investing vehicles that capitalized on the subprime lending frenzy to tank the global economy.The embodiment of those excesses came in another famous quote, from former Citigroup CEO Chuck Prince, who in 2007, a year before the worst of the crisis would explode, said: “As long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re still dancing.”This is the problem with the Fed. They’re really good at throwing a party, but there’s always the day afterPeter Boockvarchief investment officer, The Bleakley Advisory GroupCiti would later become one of the key players in the crisis after it had to take severe writedowns on the toxic assets that littered its balance sheet.In the current scenario, the financial system is largely sound. Rather than being a liability, banks have been an asset during the Covid-19 economic crisis.It’s elsewhere that signs of excess might be found.Stocks, bitcoin, NFTsThe stock market is the easiest place to look.The S&P 500 has skyrocketed about 75% since its pandemic low on March 23, 2020, pushed higher by low interest rates, an improving economy and hopes that the worst of the crisis is over. The index is trading at about 22 times forward earnings, or a little higher than it did when the dot-com bubble popped.But there are other areas as well.Jack Dorsey, CEO, Twitter testifies at Congressional hearing, March 25, 2021.CNBCBitcoin’s price is 10 times higher than it was a year ago. Blank-check companies have flourished on Wall Street as investors pour cash into special purpose acquisition vehicles without specifically knowing where it’s going. Nonfungible tokens are the latest craze, evidenced in part by Twitter founder Jack Dorsey selling his first tweet this week for $2.9 million.At a news conference last week, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell gave at least a nod to what’s happening when he noted that “some asset valuations are elevated compared to history.” Otherwise, though, the party is on and the Fed is still pouring the champagne.That has some investing pros worried.’People do stupid things'”This is the problem with the Fed. They’re really good at throwing a party, but there’s always the day after,” said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer at Bleakley Advisory Group. “There’s always a time when the party ends and everyone is hung over. During that party, people get into accidents and people do stupid things.”For its part, the Fed said it’s going to keep short-term interest rates anchored near zero and its asset purchases pegged at a minimum $120 billion a month until it reaches a set of aggressive if somewhat squishy goals.Central bank officials want the economy not only to be running at what appears to be full employment but also for the benefits of that to be spread among income, racial and gender lines. Achieving that goal, they believe, will require allowing the economy to run hotter than normal for a while, with a tolerance for inflation a little above 2% for a period of time.Boockvar said those policies are misguided and the Fed will regret running policy with such a loose hand.”Even other central banks understand that in hockey, you go where the puck is headed,” he said. “When you keep rates at zero for a long period of time and tell people they’re staying there, it no longer is stimulative because it creates no sense of urgency to act now.”Elsewhere on Wall Street, though, the attitude is primarily to go with the flow.Mary Daly, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, poses after giving a speech on the U.S. economic outlook, in Idaho Falls, Idaho, U.S., November 12 2018.Ann Saphir | ReutersBank of America is advising clients to be a little leerier of stocks than usual and instead invest in real assets – property and commodities in the more traditional sense, but also collectibles, farm and timber assets and even wine. The firm sees real assets as “cheap” and also closely correlated to rising inflation and interest rates.”Real assets are a hedge for War against Inequality, inflation & infrastructure spending,” Michael Hartnett, the bank’s chief investment strategist, said in a recent note. He said the investing class also benefits from “themes of ‘bigger government & ‘smaller world.'”From the Fed’s perspective, Daly said she sees “pockets of concern” on valuations, but overall doesn’t see financial conditions as “frothy.””We absolutely look at financial stability indicators,” she said. “But we assess it on a broad scale, not just one specific market. We are not in a position to manage the movement of the stock market, which [is] affected by a tremendous number of things.” More

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    Crypto industry to get first major U.S. stadium with Miami-Dade County approving FTX for Heat home

    In this articleFTXLGiannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks drives to the basket against Bam Adebayo #13 of the Miami Heat during the second half at American Airlines Arena on March 02, 2020 in Miami, Florida.Michael Reaves | Getty ImagesA city trying to rebrand itself as the center of the crypto world could soon have a cryptocurrency exchange emblazoned on the stadium of its NBA franchise.FTX has won the naming rights to the entertainment venue currently known as American Airlines Arena, home to the Miami Heat. The deal, approved by the Miami-Dade Board of County Commissioners on Friday, is for $135 million over 19 years.The NBA still needs to approve the deal before it becomes official, FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried said in an email. The NBA did not immediately respond to requests for comment. The Heat declined to comment.The company now joins a long, and sometimes checkered, history of firms with stadium naming rights. Some brands become synonymous with their franchises, like Gillette and the New England Patriots or Staples Center and the Los Angeles Lakers.For other companies, however, the naming rights served as billboards that reminded audiences of their struggles. Sports Authority had to bail on its sponsorship of the NFL’s Broncos stadium after it went bankrupt in 2016.Enron famously had the rights to the MLB’s Houston Astros stadium before an accounting scandal brought down the company. And in Oklahoma City, Chesapeake Energy’s branding is still on the basketball arena for the NBA’s Thunder, even after the company filed for bankruptcy protection last year.The dot-com era two decades ago provides even more fodder for naming rights gone wrong. Tech company CMGI was the original sponsor of what would become Gillette Stadium, but had to scale back that agreement after its stock tanked, according to a CNN report at the time. Now-defunct companies Adelphia and PSINet also had NFL stadium naming rights near the turn of the century.Politicians and business leaders in the Miami region have worked over the past year to make the company a welcoming environment for tech and crypto firms. Francis Suarez, the mayor of the City of Miami, told CNBC last month that Miami is “positioning ourselves as a city as one of the most tech-friendly cities in America” and has announced that city employees can choose to be paid in bitcoin.Many of the commissioners and Daniella Levine Cava, the mayor of Miami-Dade County, praised the agreement that the funds from the deal that could be used for initiatives to curb poverty and gun violence. A few of of the commissioners, including Rebeca Sosa, raised concerns about awarding the rights to a young company that has a limited U.S. presence, but the deal passed with an overwhelming majority.FTX is an international cryptocurrency exchange that does not operate in the U.S and has more products than its counterpart, FTX US. Bankman-Fried said the two are separate companies and he is the majority shareholder of both.The Miami Heat have been one of the most successful NBA franchises in recent years, appearing in 5 NBA Finals since 2010 and winning two titles. More

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    ThredUp shares jump nearly 43% in first day of trading

    thredUP Co-Founder & CEO James Reinhart speaks onstage during TechCrunch Disrupt San Francisco 2019 at Moscone Convention Center on October 02, 2019 in San Francisco, California.Kimberly White | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty ImagesSales of used clothing are booming online, ThredUp CEO James Reinhart told CNBC’s Squawk Alley on Friday just before the company’s shares began trading in the Nasdaq Global Select Market.The company late Thursday announced the pricing of its initial public offering of its Class A common stock at $14 a share, on the high side of estimates, and sold 12 million shares to raise $168 million.Shares rose almost 43% to $20 at the close of trading.”I think this is a category that’s big, it’s getting bigger,” Reinhart told CNBC.Nine banks, led by Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Barclays are participating in the deal.Based in Oakland, Calif., ThredUp is an online resale marketplace where consumers can buy and sell secondhand clothing, shoes and accessories. The website features about 2.4 million listings from over 35,000 brands at any given time.The secondhand market is estimated to be worth $28 billion, according to ThredUp’s annual report. The company expects it to increase to $64 billion by 2024 as more consumers shift to used clothing due to environmental concerns from fast fashion. The Coronavirus pandemic has also driven growth as consumers look to save and earn money by buying fashion at lower prices or selling clothing on the company’s platform.Last year, the company brought in $186 million in revenue, an increase of 14% from the previous year.The number of active buyers grew 24% last year, Reinhart told CNBC. In addition, 77% of its product supply comes from repeat sellers, meaning sellers who have previously sold on ThredUp before.”It’s one of the unique value propositions that we’ve been able to provide and so sellers come to us organically and we’ve never had a problem grabbing supply,” he said.When asked about post-pandemic trends and whether shoppers will continue to look to resale as people return to shopping in person, Reinhart remains undeterred in his confidence of the platform for years to come.”I think we’re still going to be in a recession [after the pandemic], and there’s still some some members of the community that are suffering and so ThredUp provides great brands and great prices,” he said, adding the stimulus checks will also spur people into purchasing used.ThredUp has about 21 partnerships with retailers like Walmart to help brands expand its product offerings.”It’s about how they can get their customers to shop more sustainably” he said. “It actually speaks to the breadth of the program that we built, and I think portends a bright future for resale, and that work in it.” More

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    China-listed stocks tank on fears of multiple disputes with U.S.

    In this articleKWEBChinese and U.S. flags outside the building of an American company in Beijing, China January 21, 2021.Tingshu Wang | ReuterssA new Securities and Exchange Commission rule that will require foreign companies to submit documentation about government affiliations and government influence is causing headaches for China investors. It’s one of several snags that is popping up between U.S. and China investors.China stocks have been in correction mode for several weeks, but the new rule is exacerbating the rout, particularly those with listings in the U.S.U.S.-listed China stocks this week:GSX down 57%Tencent Music down 36%Vipshop down 34%Baidu down 22%Bilibili down 12%Trip.com down 11%Alibaba down 6%While the new SEC rules apply to all foreign-listed companies, they are specifically aimed at China, which has repeatedly run afoul of efforts by U.S. regulators to monitor the audits of Chinese companies.This week, the SEC adopted interim final amendments to implement the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act. Under the new rules, companies will be required to submit documents to establish that they are not owned or controlled by a governmental entity in a foreign jurisdiction.Chinese companies will also have to name each board member who is a Chinese Communist Party official.If the companies fail to comply after three years, U.S. regulators could delist the companies.Jay Clayton, who headed the SEC for the past four years and recently returned to private practice, said the SEC’s move this week to begin implementation of the new law may have woken up the trading community.”Congress has now decided that Chinese companies listed in the U.S. should not continue to have an effective exemption,” Clayton wrote to me. “The audits from these companies must come into compliance” with U.S. law.Plenty of other problems for China stock investorsIt’s been a rough month for China investors.China’s CSI-300, the top 300 stocks in China, was one of the best-performing indexes in the world in the first six weeks of 2021, rising 15% and far outperforming the U.S., Europe, and almost all of Asia.Since then, immediately following the Chinese New Year, it’s been all downhill, as the index is now off 3% for the year.Brendan Ahern, who runs the Kraneshares China Internet ETF (KWEB), a fund that holds primarily U.S.-listed China stocks, says that China’s technology sector has been hit with many of the same valuation concerns that U.S. tech stocks have been hit with.”Growth names in general have been suffering with the cyclical/value rotation, and that includes China’s growth names,” Ahern told me.Is someone puking China stocks?Ahern noted that there has been huge block trades going off recently in many China names, including Tencent Music, Vipshop, and Baidu. “There is some speculation that this is a forced liquidation by some fund,” he said.Other market observers also took note of the enormous trading. Tencent Music, for example, normally trades about 17 million shares a day, but was nearing 300 million at the close of trading today.”The only logical explanation for this kind of size is there is some real fear of delisting or some of the political stuff going on between the U.S. and China,” Steve Sosnick at Interactve Brokers told me. “Someone is puking, someone is saying, ‘Get me out,’ but it’s not clear why.”Sosnick noted that Credit Suisse, Morgan Stanley, Baillie Gifford, and Nomura are among the largest shareholders of Tencent Music.Ahern’s Kraneshares Internet ETF has seen share trading north of 5 million shares a day for the past two days, twice normal trading volume, and is trading 10 million shares today.China’s regulators are not happy, eitherPressure is not just coming from U.S. regulators. In November, Chinese regulators stunned investors there by nixing Ant Group’s IPO at the last minute.Since then, Chinese officials have repeatedly expressed concerns about inflated stock prices and excessive leverage in the system.Chinese regulators have recently fined some of the largest tech giants, including social media firm Tencent Holdings, search engine Baidu, and ride hailing company Didi Chuxing, among others, for violation of China’s anti-monopoly laws, claiming it was protecting consumer interests.China backlash against apparel companiesSome traders also noted that the war of words between the U.S. and China this week had spilled over into apparel brands, and this may also be adding to the bad blood.Adidas, Nike and H&M all dropped midweek as major players in China’s social media called for a boycott of the companies over statements they had made months ago on forced labor in the Uyghur autonomous region.”The Chinese government is prepared to say to corporations and to governments around the world, ‘You desperately need access to our markets, and if you do not behave in ways that are unacceptable, we are going to punish you for that,'” Ian Bremmer, Eurasia Group President said on CNBC.Will China open up its books?Put it all together, and it amounts to a very difficult moment for U.S. investors in Chinese companies.Many China observers are hopeful that the latest move by the SEC to enforce the new U.S. law will ultimately be resolved.”I am optimistic there will be an agreement because it is in both sides interest to solve this problem,” Andy Rothman from Matthews Asia said on CNBC.But getting to that point will not be easy. China regulators have resisted turning over data largely because of sensitivity around state-owned enterprises, mostly large banks, energy, materials and industrial companies.”They do not want to open those books to U.S. government agencies, because you would know what subsidies these companies are getting from the Chinese government,” Ahern said, noting that while most Chinese tech companies are privately owned, the extent of government involvement is also not entirely clear. More

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    How Texas' tough winter exposed U.S. power grid problems

    Texas had a rough winter in 2021.In mid-February, with temperatures dropping to the single digits, demand for electricity hit a record high throughout Texas. Supply ran short, causing the state’s electric grid operator to implement rolling power outages. At the height of the crisis, more than 4.5 million customers lost power. The freak winter storm caused neighboring states such as Louisiana, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Kansas to also impose rolling blackouts.Texas residents shivered in the cold, as outages lasted for days at a time. They lost access to water. Some resorted to turning on their cars in their garages to keep warm then died due to carbon monoxide poisoning.The historic breakdown was a wake-up call — if the power grid in Texas was so fragile, what about the rest of the United States? The U.S. has faced a 67% increase in weather-related power outages since 2000, according to data from Climate Central. Part of the problem is an aging infrastructure. Most of today’s power grid was built in the 1950s and ’60s, with the hopes that it would last for 50 years.Watch the video above to find out what happened in Texas’ power outage and how it’s a warning sign for the U.S. power grid. More

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    WHO warns against sales of counterfeit Covid vaccines on the dark web

    Small bottles labelled with “Vaccine” stickers stand near a medical syringe in front of displayed “Coronavirus COVID-19″ words in this illustration taken April 10, 2020.Dado Ruvic | ReutersThe World Health Organization warned against counterfeit Covid-19 vaccines sold on the dark web during a press conference Friday.”We urge all people not to buy vaccines outside government-run vaccination programs. Any vaccine outside these programs may be substandard or falsified, with the potential to cause serious harm,” said WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.The WHO’s top official said the group is also aware of reports of “criminal groups” reusing empty vaccine vials and tampering with the Covid vaccines supply chain.CNBC Health & ScienceRead CNBC’s latest coverage of the Covid pandemic:CDC director warns of possible Covid surge as U.S. cases increase by 7% WHO warns against sales of counterfeit Covid vaccines on the dark webCovid live updates:  Latest news on the coronavirus pandemic”We urge the secure disposal or destruction of used and empty vaccine vials to prevent them from being reused by criminal groups,” Tedros said. He asked countries and individuals to watch for suspicious vaccine sales and report them to national authorities. “Information flow is essential to mark, to map global threats and protect confidence in vaccines,” he said.WHO emphasized that any harm from falsified vaccines does not reflect the safety of genuine vaccines.Law enforcement in the U.K. cataloged more than 6,000 cases of Covid-related fraud amounting to £34.5 million (US$48 million) in the past year, the BBC reported.Americans have lost $382 million to fraud linked to the coronavirus pandemic, according to the Federal Trade Commission. More than 217,000 people have filed a Covid-related fraud report with the agency since January 2020. More

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    CDC director warns of possible Covid surge as U.S. cases increase by 7%

    People enjoy themselves on the beach on March 04, 2021 in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. College students have begun to arrive in the South Florida area for the annual spring break ritual.Joe Raedle | Getty ImagesThe U.S. could suffer another surge in Covid-19 cases unless pandemic safety measures are maintained, the head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned Friday.The nation is recording a seven-day average of about 57,000 new Covid-19 cases per day, a 7% jump over the last week, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said during a White House news briefing on the pandemic. New hospitalizations are up “slightly” at roughly 4,700 admissions per day, she said.”I remain deeply concerned about this trajectory,” Walensky said. “We have seen cases and hospital admissions move from historic declines to stagnations and increases. We know from prior surges that if we don’t control things now, there is a real potential for the epidemic curve to soar again.”CNBC Health & ScienceRead CNBC’s latest coverage of the Covid pandemic:CDC director warns of possible Covid surge as U.S. cases increase by 7% WHO warns against sales of counterfeit Covid vaccines on the dark webCovid live updates:  Latest news on the coronavirus pandemicOn Monday, the CDC again advised against travel, while Miami Beach, Florida, business owners fretted about spring break chaos. Miami Beach officials declared a state of emergency and ordered a rare curfew over the weekend, an effort to avoid spreading Covid-19 and stop large crowds and unruly behavior in the popular tourist destination.U.S. health officials have been pushing Americans to get vaccinated as quickly as possible, especially as highly contagious and potentially more deadly variants continue to spread. New variants are especially a concern for public health officials as they could become more resistant to antibody treatments and vaccines.Last week, White House chief medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said B.1.1.7, the highly contagious and potentially more deadly variant first identified in the U.K., likely accounts for up to 30% of Covid-19 infections in the United States.While variant cases are growing, the pace of vaccinations in the U.S. has rapidly increased and has been averaging about 2.5 million doses per day in the past week, Walensky said. Roughly 87.3 million Americans have received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine and about 47.4 million are fully vaccinated, according to data compiled by the CDC.Walensky urged the public to “take this moment very seriously,” adding people should continue to wear masks, stay 6 feet apart and avoid crowds or traveling. “We can turn this around, but it will take all of us working together,” she added.— CNBC’s Will Feuer contributed to this report. More

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    Do you need to wear masks after Covid vaccine? New NIH-backed study hopes to answer that

    In this articleMRNANurses draw vaccine doses from a vial as Maryland residents receive their second dose of the Moderna coronavirus vaccine at the Cameron Grove Community Center on March 25, 2021 in Bowie, Maryland.Win McNamee | Getty ImagesA new study backed by the National Institutes of Health aims to help doctors and public officials figure out what people can and cannot do after they get vaccinated against the coronavirus, including whether they will still need to wear masks and practice social distancing.The study, funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease within the NIH, will test the Moderna Covid-19 vaccine’s ability to prevent infection of the coronavirus, limit the amount of virus in the nose and reduce transmission from inoculated people to close contacts.”We hope that within the next five or so months we’ll be able to answer the very important question about whether vaccinated people get infected asymptomatically and if they do, do they transmit the infection to others,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House’s chief medical advisor, said at a news briefing Friday.CNBC Health & ScienceRead CNBC’s latest coverage of the Covid pandemic:CDC director warns of possible Covid surge as U.S. cases increase by 7% WHO warns against sales of counterfeit Covid vaccines on the dark webCovid live updates:  Latest news on the coronavirus pandemicThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said fully vaccinated people can gather indoors with other fully vaccinated people and some unvaccinated people without any precautions like wearing masks or maintaining distance. Vaccinated people should still mask up and practice social distancing in public, according to the CDC’s initial guidance.Scientists still don’t know whether immunized people can get asymptomatic infections or act as carriers that spread the virus to others. As more and more Americans get vaccinated, this NIH study aims to answer those questions.The randomized, controlled study will follow 12,000 college students aged 18 to 26 years old at more than 20 U.S. universities over five months. Preliminary study sites opened Thursday.Study participants will be randomly split into two groups. Six thousand students will be vaccinated right away with Moderna’s two-shot vaccine spread 28 days apart while. Six thousand will be vaccinated four months later as an initial control group.The students will swab their nose daily to test for coronavirus infection, complete electronic questionnaires and provide blood samples periodically.Around 25,000 individuals identified as “close contacts” of participants will also participate in the study and provide nasal swab and blood samples. Researchers will use the close contacts to measure the degree of virus transmission from vaccinated individuals.More than 133 million Covid vaccine doses have been administered in the U.S. as of Thursday morning, according to the CDC.President Joe Biden on Thursday set a new goal of 200 million coronavirus vaccine shots in his first 100 days in office. More