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    Watch Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun testify before Senate panel on whistleblower allegations

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    Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun will face questions from the Senate Permanent Subcommitee on Investigations on Tuesday over quality control concerns and whistleblower allegations.

    Boeing’s bestselling 737 Max plane has been the source of controversy since two deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019. Scrutiny of the company increased again after a door plug blew out of one of its nearly new 737 Max planes during an Alaska Airlines flight in January.
    Following the incident, company whistleblower Sam Salehpour came forward and claimed that the aerospace company put excessive stress on airplane joints, which reduced some of the planes’ lifespans. Boeing denied the claims as “inaccurate.”
    The subcommittee released new whistleblower claims Tuesday from Boeing quality assurance investigator Sam Mohawk, who alleges that the company lost track of parts that were damaged or not up to specification. Mohawk alleges that the lost parts were likely installed on airplanes in Boeing’s Washington plant where 737 Max models are made.
    The company announced March that Calhoun will step down from his post as CEO before the end of the year.
    — CNBC’s Leslie Josephs contributed to this report
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    Steve Cohen is set to make a big push into investing in AI

    Billionaire investor Steve Cohen’s Point72 plans to launch a separate, artificial intelligence-focused hedge fund to capitalize on the boom.
    The firm is aiming to raise $1 billion, with Cohen himself and Point72 employees expected to contribute.

    Steve Cohen, chairman and CEO of Point72, speaking to CNBC on April 3, 2024.

    Billionaire investor Steve Cohen’s Point72 plans to launch a separate, artificial intelligence-focused hedge fund to capitalize on the boom, according to a person close to the firm’s plans.
    The new long/short equity fund, to be launched later this year or early 2025, will be focused on AI and AI-related hardware, the person said.

    The firm is aiming to raise $1 billion, with Cohen himself and Point72 employees expected to contribute, the person added. This stand-alone public equity offering will live outside the main fund due to the need for a more-flexible net exposure, the person said.
    Point72 declined to comment. Bloomberg News first reported on the potential offering Tuesday.
    Cohen recently came out as a long-term AI bull. He has called AI a “really durable theme” for investing, comparing the rise to the technological developments in the 1990s.
    The massive rally in AI-related stocks such as Nvidia has lifted the broader market to record highs this year. The chipmaker giant has topped a $3 trillion market cap amid the increasing enthusiasm, while any stock tangentially connected to AI has experienced a runup in value.
    “I don’t see it as a bubble. I think the markets are discounting some of what we … think AI is going to do for companies,” the Point72 founder said in a CNBC interview in April.

    The Mets owner highlighted AI’s role in enhancing productivity at basically every company. Cohen said his investment firm found a way to save $25 million by using large language models such as ChatGPT to improve efficiency.
    Point72 oversees nearly $34 billion in assets as of April.

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    Gen X stands to gain the most wealth from the $84 trillion wealth transfer

    While millennials and members of Generation Z are expecting the biggest inheritances in the coming years as baby boomers pass down their fortunes, Gen Xers will likely get the largest windfalls in the near term.
    According to Wealth-X, the average age of individuals in North America set to inherit fortunes from parents worth $5 million or more is 46.1 years old.
    The findings cast a spotlight on the large wealth potential for Generation X, which has been largely overlooked in the discussion of young inheritors.

    Fg Trade | E+ | Getty Images

    Generation X may be the biggest beneficiary from the $84 trillion Great Wealth Transfer in the next 10 years, according to a new study.
    While millennials and members of Generation Z are expecting the biggest inheritances in the coming years as baby boomers pass down their fortunes, Gen Xers will likely get the largest windfalls in the near term. According to Wealth-X, the average age of individuals in North America set to inherit fortunes from parents worth $5 million or more is 46.1 years old.

    The average age of children expected to receive the most substantial inheritances — from parents worth $30 million or more — is 47.6, according to the study. The study defines members of Gen X as being between the ages of 44 and 59 today, and millennials as between the ages of 28 and 43.

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    The findings cast a spotlight on the large wealth potential for Generation X, which has been largely overlooked in the discussion of young inheritors. Wealth management firms and private banks have largely been focused on potential clients in their 20s and 30s as they wait for trillions to be passed down by families. More than half of millennials are expecting an inheritance of at least $350,000, according to Alliant Credit Union.
    The Wealth-X report suggests that wealth management firms, luxury companies and real estate firms targeting the next generation of wealthy clients should also start considering Generation X.
    “Much is often made in the media of millennial and Generation Z heirs but, in fact, Generation X will be first in line to inherit from their wealthy parent(s),” according to the report.
    The report said that for now, millennials and Gen Z “are more likely to receive sums as grandchildren, which will often be less substantial.”

    Inheritances will be extremely concentrated at the top. In the next 10 years, 1.2 million individuals worth $5 million or more will pass down a total of more than $31 trillion in wealth, according to the report. Of that amount, nearly two-thirds, 64%, will be from the ultra-wealthy, defined as those worth $30 million or more. In other words, nearly $20 trillion will be passed down from 155,000 people in that upper echelon of wealth.
    The super-wealthy, or those worth $100 million or more, will account for nearly half the $31 trillion total being handed down. Billionaires will pass down about $5 trillion, according to the report.
    Inheritors will have different values and priorities from previous generations, which wealth managers, luxury firms and philanthropies need to adapt to. The next generation of investors are more tech influenced, more focused on the environment and social justice and more global, according to the report.
    “New technologies, the clean-energy transition and ‘impact investing’ will be a focus of many heirs’ ambitions, which may not necessarily align with a family’s existing business structures or the legacy plans of those transferring their fortunes,” the report said.

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    France’s next prime minister faces a brutal fiscal crunch

    It was a French politician, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, who coined the term “exorbitant privilege” in the 1960s. He was referring to the benefits received by America as issuer of the world’s reserve currency—namely, the ability to run high deficits comfortably. These days France is reminded that it has no such privilege. Ahead of parliamentary elections on June 30th and July 7th, its hefty deficit and growing debt are central to the campaign. On June 19th the European Commission is expected to put France into an excessive-deficit procedure (EDP), the EU’s fiscal torture chamber, meaning that the country’s politicians will have to come up with a plan to fix things.The commission’s officials have good reason to do so. France has an American-style deficit of 5% of GDP, which its central bank and the IMF expect to come down only slowly. The country’s debt-to-GDP ratio of 111% is similar to Italy’s before the euro crisis in the early 2010s, and is set to rise. S&P Global, a ratings agency, downgraded the French government’s sovereign-debt rating from AA to AA- on May 31st—before Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, gambled on snap elections that may bring the hard-right National Rally (RN) or the left-wing New Popular Front (NPF) to power, under his continuing presidency. More

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    How bad could things get in France?

    It was a French politician, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, who coined the term “exorbitant privilege” in the 1960s. He was referring to the benefits received by America as issuer of the world’s reserve currency—namely, the ability to run high deficits comfortably. These days France is reminded that it has no such privilege. Ahead of parliamentary elections on June 30th and July 7th, its hefty deficit and growing debt are central to the campaign. On June 19th the European Commission is expected to put France into an excessive-deficit procedure (EDP), the EU’s fiscal torture chamber, meaning that the country’s politicians will have to come up with a plan to fix things.The commission’s officials have good reason to do so. France has an American-style deficit of 5% of GDP, which its central bank and the IMF expect to come down only slowly. The country’s debt-to-GDP ratio of 111% is similar to Italy’s before the euro crisis in the early 2010s, and is set to rise. S&P Global, a ratings agency, downgraded France’s sovereign-debt rating from AA to AA- on May 31st—before Emmanuel Macron, France’s president, gambled on snap elections that may bring the hard-right National Rally (RN) or the left-wing New Popular Front (NPF) to power, under his continuing presidency. More

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    Boeing CEO heads for Senate grilling as new whistleblower alleges company hid bad airplane parts

    Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun faces a Senate panel over ballooning safety and quality control crises with the plane-maker.
    Boeing is under fire after a door plug blew out of one of its nearly new 737 Max planes in January during a flight.
    The Senate subcommittee released whistleblower claims on Tuesday from Boeing employee Sam Mohawk, alleging the company lost track of parts that were damaged or not up to specification.

    Dave Calhoun, CEO of Boeing, leaves a meeting with Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, in Hart Building, on Wednesday, January 24, 2024. Calhoun was meeting with senators about recent safety issues including the grounding of the 737 MAX 9 planes.
    Tom Williams | Cq-roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun plans to tell a Senate panel on Tuesday that the company’s culture is “far from perfect” as fresh whistleblower claims surface just hours before the hearing that allege the company mishandled hundreds of defective parts.
    Calhoun, who has said he will step down before the end of the year, faces questions from the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations as the company works to improve employee training and aircraft quality and to fix its tarnished safety reputation. The company has still not named a replacement for Calhoun, who took over after its previous leader was ousted for his handling of two fatal Boeing crashes.

    “Much has been said about Boeing’s culture. We’ve heard those concerns loud and clear. Our culture is far from perfect, but we are taking action and making progress,” Calhoun plans to tell the subcommittee, according to written testimony ahead of the hearing.
    The subcommittee released whistleblower claims on Tuesday from Sam Mohawk, a quality assurance investigator at Boeing, alleging the company lost track of parts that were damaged or not up to specification and that “those parts are likely being installed on airplanes.” The parts Mohawk flagged were in Boeing’s Renton, Washington, plant, where the company makes its best-selling 737 Max.
    Mohawk said he was retaliated against and that he was told by supervisors to hide evidence from the Federal Aviation Administration, according to a memo shared by the committee on Tuesday. Dozens of important parts were stored outside during an FAA inspection, including 42 rudders as well as winglets and stabilizers, Mohawk alleged in claims with the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the memo said.
    A Boeing spokeswoman said that the company received the claims Monday night and that staff are reviewing them.
    “We continuously encourage employees to report all concerns as our priority is to ensure the safety grof our airplanes and the flying public,” she said.

    The FAA said it has seen an increase in the number of reports from Boeing staff since the door-plug blowout in January.
    “We thoroughly investigate every report, including allegations uncovered in the Senate’s work,” the agency said Tuesday. The FAA declined to comment on the specifics of the latest allegations.
    Mohawk is not testifying before the Senate subcommittee’s hearing, which starts at 2 p.m. ET.
    The hearing and new whistleblower claims are further complicating matters for Boeing. The company already faces potential U.S. prosecution after the Justice Department said last month that the plane-maker violated a 2021 settlement tied to 737 Max crashes in 2018 and 2019 that claimed 346 lives. That agreement, which protected the company and its executives from facing criminal charges tied to the crashes, would have expired just days after the blowout of the Alaska Airlines door panel in January. The Justice Department has until July 7 to decide whether to prosecute.
    Several victims’ family members are expected to attend Tuesday’s hearing. Relatives of Max crash victims met with Justice Department officials late last month to urge the U.S. to prosecute.
    “Boeing made a promise to overhaul its safety practices and culture. That promise proved empty, and the American people deserve an explanation,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., the subcommittee’s chairman, upon announcing the hearing earlier this month.

    The FAA has taken a hard line against Boeing, with FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker saying the regulator will keep inspectors on the ground at the company’s facilities until the agency is satisfied with safety improvements.
    The FAA had already halted Boeing’s ability to increase production of the Max, its bestselling plane. Whitaker last month said it would likely be several months before lifting that restriction.
    Boeing’s aircraft output has suffered from the resulting crisis, forcing big customers such as Southwest Airlines and United Airlines to adjust their growth and hiring plans.
    Boeing’s lower production and deliveries have hurt its cash flow, and the company warned investors last month that it would burn instead of generate cash this year.
    Boeing’s shares are down more than 30% so far this year as of Monday’s close, compared with a nearly 15% gain in the S&P 500.
    The company is trying to stamp out quality flaws on jets and reduce so-called traveled work in which production steps are completed out of order, something it has done to address defects. Last month Boeing pointed to a host of other changes to encourage workers to speak up about problems in its factories after several whistleblowers raised concerns about quality issues and retaliation.
    Separately, Boeing is facing supply chain issues. Spirit AeroSystems, a major supplier for both Boeing and Airbus, said last week that titanium entered the supply chain with falsified documents. The supplier said that despite the falsified documentation, more than 1,000 tests confirmed that the material is “airplane-grade titanium.”
    Boeing has been trying to purchase fuselage supplier Spirit, a deal Calhoun said is “more than likely” to be finalized in the first half of the year. More

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    Warren Buffett buys Occidental shares for 9 straight days, pushes his stake to nearly 29%

    Warren Buffett walks the floor and meets with Berkshire Hathaway shareholders ahead of their annual meeting in Omaha, Nebraska, on May 3, 2024.
    David A. Grogan

    Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway has scooped up more shares of Occidental Petroleum over each of the past nine trading sessions, driving his gigantic stake in the Houston-based oil and gas producer to almost 29%, according to regulatory filings.
    The Omaha, Nebraska-based conglomerate purchased Occidental shares every trading day from June 5 to Monday, totaling an additional 7.3 million shares with purchase prices slightly under or above $60, filings showed.

    The purchases brought Berkshire’s holding to over 255 million shares, representing a 28.8% stake. Occidental is Berkshire’s sixth-biggest stock holding, and the conglomerate has become Occidental’s biggest institutional investor by far.
    Berkshire also owns $10 billion of Occidental preferred stock and has warrants to buy another 83.9 million common shares for $5 billion, or $59.62 each. The warrants were obtained as part of the company’s 2019 deal that helped finance Occidental’s purchase of Anadarko Petroleum.
    The stock closed at $60.2 Monday, making Buffett’s warrants “in the money.” A full redemption of the preferred equity could lift Berkshire’s ownership of Occidental above 40%.
    Buffett has clarified that he wouldn’t take full control of the oil company, once known for being founded by legendary oilman Armand Hammer. There had been speculation of a takeover after Berkshire received regulatory approval to purchase as much as a 50% stake. 
    ‘Read every word’
    The “Oracle of Omaha” previously said he started buying Occidental after reading a transcript of the oil company’s earnings conference call.

    “I read every word, and said this is exactly what I would be doing,” Buffett told CNBC.
    Occidental CEO Vicki Hollub is “running the company the right way,” he added.
    Occidental also pays a 1.5% dividend yield. The stock is about flat this year after dipping 5% in 2023.
    The legendary investor said he took advantage of the elevated volatility in the market in early 2022 to acquire 14% of the energy firm, worth more than $7 billion, in just two weeks.
    “I find it just incredible. You couldn’t do that with Berkshire. … Overwhelmingly, large companies in America, they became poker chips,” Buffett said in 2022. “Imagine trying to [buy] 14% of the farms in this country; 14% of the apartment houses; 14% of the auto dealerships, or just anything, when already 40% were locked up some other place.”

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    Sen. Warren warns Powell against weakening banking regulations: ‘Do your job’

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren is accusing Fed Chair Jerome Powell of doing the financial industry’s bidding in considering changes to Basel III Endgame regulations.
    In a letter first obtained by CNBC, Warren asked Powell for a response to reports that “you are advocating for slashing in half” the increase in capital required under the proposals.
    Bank CEOs and their lobbying groups have said the increases are unnecessarily aggressive and would force the industry to curtail lending.

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., speaks during the Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on security in Afghanistan and in the regions of South and Central Asia, in the Dirksen Building in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 26, 2021.
    Tom Williams | CQ-Roll Call, Inc. | Getty Images

    Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., is accusing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell of doing the financial industry’s bidding by considering changes to a sweeping set of regulations aimed at boosting the capital cushion that large American banks would be required to hold.
    In a June 17 letter first obtained by CNBC, Warren asked Powell for a response to reports that “you are advocating for slashing in half” the increase in capital required under the proposals, known as the Basel III Endgame.

    “I am disappointed by press reports indicating that you are personally intervening—after numerous meetings with big bank CEOs—to delay and water down the Basel III capital rules,” said Warren.
    Last year, three U.S. banking regulators including the Federal Reserve unveiled the proposed rules, a long-expected regime shift around bank capital and risky activities such as trading and lending. The regulations incorporate new international standards created as a response to the 2008 global financial crisis.
    “These rules are critical and long overdue, particularly in the wake of the Silicon Valley and Signature Bank failures, and as risks from the weak commercial real estate market and other economic threats ripple through the banking system,” Warren said.
    Bank CEOs and their lobbying groups have said the increases are unnecessarily aggressive and would force the industry to curtail lending.
    In March, Powell told lawmakers that he expected “broad and material changes” to the proposal in the wake of the industry’s campaign against the rules. JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon coordinated efforts to weaken the rules, urging CEOs to appeal directly to Powell, The Wall Street Journal reported last month.

    “It now appears that you are directly doing the bank industry’s bidding, rewarding them for their extensive personal lobbying of you,” Warren said in her letter. “Taking orders from the industry that caused the 2008 economic meltdown would sacrifice the financial security of middle-class and working families to line the pockets of wealthy investors and CEOs.”
    She further criticized Powell, saying “regulatory rollbacks” under the Fed chair allowed the regional banking crisis of 2023 to happen and “enriched Jamie Dimon and his Wall Street cronies.”
    Warren urged Powell to allow a Federal Reserve Board vote on the original, tougher Basel proposal by the end of this month. The window to finalize and approve the rules ahead of U.S. elections in November is closing, and analysts have said that the proposal could be delayed or killed if Donald Trump is reelected president.
    “Instead of doing Mr. Dimon’s bidding, you should do your job and allow the Board to convene for a vote on a 16% capital increase by June 30th, as global regulators determined was necessary to prevent another financial crisis,” Warren said.
    When asked for a response to Warren’s letter, a Fed spokesperson had this statement on Tuesday morning: “We have received the letter and plan to respond.”

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