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    Inflation won't come down anytime soon if Tuesday's rally lasts, Jim Cramer warns

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer said that Tuesday’s market gains need to come down in order for the Federal Reserve to beat inflation as soon as possible.
    “Right now, the best outcome would be for the averages to come down quickly, so [Fed Chair Jay Powell] can get it over with,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer said that Tuesday’s market gains need to come down in order for the Federal Reserve to beat inflation as soon as possible.
    “Right now, the best outcome would be for the averages to come down quickly, so [Fed Chair Jay Powell] can get it over with,” he said.

    “Powell had better hope this run won’t last, or else those beach house prices, new construction jobs, Lennar homes, processed food stocks and oil prices won’t be going down and staying down anytime soon,” he added, referring to the homebuilder’s warning in its latest earnings call that buyers have pushed back against current housing prices with sales slowing in some markets.
    Stocks rose on Tuesday after the market was closed on Monday due to the Juneteenth holiday. While the rally was a welcome reprieve for investors after last week’s declines, many fear the comeback will be short-lived as recession fears loom over Wall Street.
    Cramer said that while he’s normally in favor of higher stock prices, the Fed needs the market to decline for inflation to also come down. The reason, he said, is that a downturned market will curb spending and keep people in the labor market.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    “In recent years, bountiful gains in the stock market have allowed the winners to spend like crazy,” he said. 
    “If Powell can get this market to go down and stay down, repealing much of those gains, then the rich are less likely to spend aggressively and a lot of people are more likely to remain in the workforce when they might otherwise have retired,” he added.

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    Cramer's lightning round: I like MP Materials

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    It’s that time again! “Mad Money” host Jim Cramer rings the lightning round bell, which means he’s giving his answers to callers’ stock questions at rapid speed.

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    American Airlines Group Inc: “Long term, I don’t like the airline. Short term, this stock is too low, given the fact that people are traveling.”

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    Marathon Oil Corp: “I like Marathon, because I like the oils. … Don’t get greedy. [Buy].”

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    T Rowe Price Group Inc: “This company is radically undervalued because it happens to be an excellent company, incredibly well-run, with a good yield.”

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    Why Jim Cramer thinks owning Sweetgreen stock is ‘a recipe for portfolio destruction'

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday warned investors not to invest in Sweetgreen, saying the stock is unlikely to perform well in an inflationary environment.
    “You’re fighting the [Federal Reserve] and the tape if you try to bottom fish in this one, and that’s a recipe for portfolio destruction,” the “Mad Money” host said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Tuesday warned investors not to invest in Sweetgreen, saying the stock is unlikely to perform well in an inflationary environment.
    “This is a bear market, not a bull market. …  In a bear market, you do not stick your neck out to pick at hated stocks,” he said.

    “Right now, Wall Street loves earnings, cash flow, dividends. Sweetgreen’s got none of these things. You’re fighting the [Federal Reserve] and the tape if you try to bottom fish in this one, and that’s a recipe for portfolio destruction,” the “Mad Money” host added.
    Cramer didn’t mince words when laying out why he believes the company’s stock is uninvestable. He reminded viewers the company’s pricey salads are unlikely to sell in an inflationary environment. 
    The possibility of a recession or a new Covid-19 variant also makes him wary of the stock, he added.
    “Sweetgreen’s an unprofitable growth story. …. I told you to avoid this stock when it came public. Told you again to avoid it in December, when it was trading at $33. Nothing that’s happened in the last six months has made me change my mind,” Cramer said.
    Shares of Sweetgreen fell 2.3% to $11.86 on Tuesday.

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    Disclaimer

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    SpaceX ramps up FCC battle over broadband usage the company says poses an existential threat to Starlink

    SpaceX on Tuesday ramped up a battle over broadband regulations with Dish Network and an affiliate of billionaire Michael Dell.
    Elon Musk’s company called for the FCC to address lingering disputes over broadband use that could interfere with its Starlink satellite internet network.
    At the heart of the dispute is use of the 12-gigahertz band, a range of frequency used for broadband communications and the frequency’s ability to support both ground-based and space-based services.

    SpaceX CEO Elon Musk speaking about the Starlink project at MWC hybrid Keynote during the second day of Mobile World Congress on June 29, 2021 in Barcelona, Spain.
    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    WASHINGTON — Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Tuesday ramped up a battle over broadband regulations with Dish Network and an affiliate of billionaire Michael Dell, calling for the FCC to address lingering disputes over broadband use that could interfere with its Starlink satellite internet network.
    At the heart of the dispute is use of the 12-gigahertz band, a range of frequency used for broadband communications, and the frequency’s ability to support both ground-based and space-based services.

    In January 2021, the Federal Communications Commission issued a notice asking for comment on how to best use the 12-gigahertz band. Dish and RS Access, funded by Dell’s investment firm, published studies arguing that ground-based 5G networks could share the frequency with low Earth orbit satellite networks, such as Starlink or OneWeb.
    SpaceX filed its analysis of the Dish and RS Access studies on Tuesday, claiming it needed to correct what it called “some of the most egregious assumptions” in the reports, arguing Starlink users would see interference to the point of causing service outages for customers “74% of the time.”
    Musk’s company called on the FCC “to investigate whether DISH and RS Access filed intentionally misleading reports,” noting that the studies did not match findings from Dish two years earlier that called sharing usage “not viable.”
    A Dish spokesperson told CNBC that the company’s “expert engineers are evaluating SpaceX’s claims in the filing.”
    SpaceX isn’t alone in opposing a potential expansion of 12-gigahertz use. Telecom companies, such as AT&T, tech giants Google and Microsoft, as well as satellite network operators such as Intelsat, OneWeb and SES, all filed comments with the federal agency opposing the change.

    Senior SpaceX representatives told CNBC the company hopes its analysis will persuade the FCC to see that a decision in favor of Dish and RS Access poses what amounts to an existential threat to the company’s Starlink network.
    “Leaving the proceeding open any longer simply cannot be justified for policy or technical reasons. Over the six years the Commission has let this proceeding fester, satellite operators have been forced to spend countless hours of engineering time responding to frivolous arguments by DISH and RS Access,” SpaceX senior director of satellite policy David Goldman wrote in a letter to the FCC on Tuesday.
    SpaceX has launched about 2,700 Starlink satellites into orbit to date, with nearly 500,000 users and its manufacturing line is producing about 30,000 satellite dishes per week.
    The FCC declined CNBC’s request for comment on when it expects to issue a decision on the 12-gigahertz band.

    Spectrum rights

    Dish Networks exhibit at CES 2016 in Las Vegas.
    Justin Solomon | CNBC

    Dish and RS Access lead a coalition of companies that hold terrestrial FCC licenses in the 12-gigahertz band, with the pair of entities representing the two largest holders in that spectrum range. While Dish is most commonly known for providing satellite television services, the company has acquired broad swaths of spectrum.
    For years, Dish has contended that it would make use of its valuable spectrum rights. Recently, with an FCC deadline looming, Dish rolled out its “Project Genesis” network of 5G service, which the company says fulfilled a government requirement to offer service to over 20% of the U.S. population. Whether Dish’s network actually achieves that threshold is a matter of dispute, according to The Verge’s testing of the service.
    “DISH has never lived up to its repeated promises to deploy a new terrestrial network using the exclusive licenses already stored up in its warehouses — the Commission simply cannot gift more spectrum to any operator with this track record of broken promises and stranded consumers,” Goldman wrote in SpaceX’s letter to the FCC.
    Dish did not immediately comment on the Project Genesis network in response to CNBC.
    Dish has faced FCC repercussions over spectrum rights before. In an unrelated ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals on Tuesday, a federal judge upheld an FCC determination that Dish held “de facto control” over two other companies, Bloomberg reported. The arrangement violated spectrum auction rules by acquiring $3.3 billion in bidding credits that were intended for small businesses, according to the report.
    Read SpaceX’s letter to the FCC here.

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    Netflix talks with Google about ads as Sarandos is set to address Cannes this week

    Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos is scheduled to cap off a week of panels with a talk on Thursday at the Cannes Lions festival.
    In April, Netflix said it would offer a cheaper ad-supported option after it reported losing subscribers for the first time with competition intensifying in the streaming space.
    Netflix has met with Google, Comcast and NBCUniversal, and Roku to discuss potential marketing partnerships, sources told CNBC.

    LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 12: CEO of Netflix Ted Sarandos attends Netflix’s FYSEE event for “Squid Game” at Raleigh Studios Hollywood on June 12, 2022 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Charley Gallay/Getty Images for Netflix)
    Charley Gallay | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

    CANNES, France – As the world’s biggest advertising conference gets underway here this week, all eyes will be on Netflix for clues on how the streaming giant plans to break from its ad-free business model to offer a cheaper subscription for the first time.
    Netflix Co-CEO Ted Sarandos is scheduled to cap off a week of panels with a talk on Thursday at the Cannes Lions festival, which is returning after a two-year hiatus during the pandemic and has named Sarandos its “Entertainment Person of the Year.” The panel comes amid expectations that demand will grow for cheaper, ad-supported streaming subscriptions as inflation pressures people to cut costs.

    Attendees will also be looking for clues on who Netflix will partner with for its foray into the advertising world, which it plans to ramp up quickly to start selling ads as early as the fourth quarter. Sources told CNBC that Netflix has met with Google, which makes most of its revenue from ads. It has also met with Comcast/NBCUniversal and with Roku to discuss ad-sales partnerships, as previously reported by The Information. NBC Universal and Google declined to comment.

    “We are still in the early days of deciding how to launch a lower priced, ad-supported option and no decisions have been made. So this is all just speculation at this point,” Netflix said in a statement.
    The company is looking to secure a marketing partners in the next two to three months and quickly hire a senior executive and assemble a team to manage the relationship with its partners, according to a source who requested anonymity.
    Making the ad dollars flowing into streaming entertainment is top of mind for many festival attendees. In April, Netflix said it would offer a cheaper ad-supported option after it reported losing subscribers for the first time with competition intensifying in the streaming space. Sarandos’ talk at Cannes was scheduled before Netflix announced its coming move.
    Read more: Netflix reconsiders the ideas that made it unique

    Disney+ is also preparing to launch an ad-supported service later this year. Paramount+ has an ad-supported tier and free ad-supported Pluto. The newly merged Discovery Warner Brothers with a combination of its streaming services expected, and Roku, with its growing ad business. CNBC’s parent company NBC Universal also already offers a cheaper ad-supported subscription for its Peacock service.
    The company will need to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of each of the potential partners. Google, for example, has the advantage of being the world’s largest ad giant, but has less experience with entertainment content despite its recent push into the space.
    Comcast does not have the global reach as Google, but its NBC Universal unit is a leader in selling ads for that premium TV content. The cable giant’s Freewheel ad tech platform is also used by many media companies and could offer Netflix its programmatic ad-buying tools. Plus, NBC Universal just expanded partnership with Apple to sell its ads, establishing precedent for it partnering to sell ads for premium content at scale.
    Read more: Netflix’s binge-release model is under new scrutiny
    Another option is Roku, a longtime partner of Netflix that was previously spun off from the streaming giant. As the largest TV operating system in the U.S., Roku has the advantage of its scale in the U.S., Canada and Mexico and its insight into ad-supported subscription trends.
    The potential partnerships would continue a long history of rivals teaming up in the media industry. As a content distributor and an entertainment company, for example, Comcast regularly strikes distribution deals with rivals to its NBC Universal. And Roku partners with streaming apps while offering its own free ad-supported alternative in the Roku Channel.
    The stakes are high for Netflix. Its stock is down nearly 50% since it warned of its contracting subscriber base. Offering a cheaper ad-supported service is one way to stop the cancellations from continuing as people look to trim costs, but Netflix has to ensure the advertising experience won’t turn off viewers.
    Disclosure: CNBC is owned by Comcast’s NBCUniversal.

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    Lowe's expands into the metaverse with a tool to help visualize projects

    Lowe’s is offering customers a chance to use metaverse assets to help visualize building projects.
    The home improvement retailer is making 500 assets available for free on its own metaverse hub.
    “There is just a huge appetite from our customers to use emerging technology,” Lowe’s executive Seemantini Godbole told CNBC in an exclusive interview.

    Lowe’s Metaverse Open Builder.
    Courtesy: Lowe’s

    It seems like every company is getting into the metaverse these days. Lowe’s doesn’t want to miss out on the opportunity to use it to help builders imagine projects. 
    But unlike other retailers that chose a particular virtual platform or game like Fortnite or Roblox, Lowe’s metaverse assets – including free downloads of 500 product assets, including items such as chairs – are available on its own hub.

    “It’s all emerging, and it’s all up for exploration,” Lowe’s executive vice president and chief brand and marketing officer Marisa Thalberg told CNBC in an exclusive interview. The retailer decided not to choose one metaverse platform but rather “a kind of an agnostic and kind of democratized approach,” she said.
    While other brands have found immediate ways to make money in the metaverse, even on an experimental basis, Thalberg said “this isn’t about immediately jumping in and trying to make an event or immediately commoditizing it.”
    Rather, she told CNBC, “our goal really is to take this new frontier and help people use their imaginations and help them make their virtual spaces as exciting and inspirational and enjoyable as their real world spaces. And that’s the only benefit we seek to obtain at this point.”
    At least that’s the only stated benefit. As the first major home improvement retailer to enter the metaverse and make its applicable assets available for free, no doubt a key goal is watching consumer behavior to eventually capitalize on the opportunity that might exist. The assets are based on real products the company currently sells online and in its stores. 

    Lowe’s Metaverse Open Builder.
    Courtesy: Lowe’s

    Analysts see a big breakthrough coming for the metaverse. By 2026, a quarter of consumers will spend at least one hour per day in the metaverse, said consulting and research firm Gartner estimates. Morgan Stanley estimates the total addressable market for advertising and e-commerce opportunities could be worth $8.3 trillion in the metaverse, with $697 billion in home and home related spending. The firm lists walking through “home renovation plans” as an example.

    “Just last year, it was estimated that about $100 billion were spent on virtual goods inside gaming platforms. That doesn’t even include NFTs,” said Futures Intelligence Group CEO and chief metaverse officer Cathy Hackl.
    Metaverse participants have, in some cases, already paid thousands of dollars for unique non-fungible tokens to outfit aviators from luxury and fashion brands like Gucci, Balenciaga, Dolce & Gabbana and Ralph Lauren. Gucci saw 19 million visitors to its Gucci Garden on Roblox. Dolce & Gabbana sold an NFT called “The Glass Suit,” with an accompanying physical garment, for over $1 million.
    For its part, Lowe’s is releasing a free, limited NFT collection of boots, hardhats and other related accessories for builders on the Decentraland platform to the first 1,000 participants.
    Seemantini Godbole, Lowe’s executive vice president and chief information officer, told CNBC in an exclusive interview the retailer is applying many of the principles it currently uses for shoppers for this metaverse project.
    “What we have noticed in our current mediums like Lowes.com and in our stores … people like to experiment and while they’re shopping and getting inspired they like to put things together in the virtual world before they start their project,” she said. “It’s the same idea for the metaverse. That you want them to experiment, feel and understand how it’s going to look before they start the project in the real world.” 

    Lowe’s Metaverse Open Builder.
    Courtesy: Lowe’s

    Godbole said many of these metaverse assets had already been created as 3D digital versions of physical products available for purchase, to help online shoppers visualize the real-life dimensions and features. Lowe’s is already using virtual and augmented reality technology to allow shoppers to design an entire kitchen online or map their home’s floor plan using their smartphone as examples.
    “There is just a huge appetite from our customers to use emerging technology” like the VR and AR tools Godbole said. “We are applying some of those lessons in the metaverse.”
    Right now, Lowe’s isn’t offering a physical good with the purchase of a virtual one, or any link back to its website from any metaverse platforms, Godbole said. But that could change.
    “In the future, we could absolutely think about, how do all these different things link, and make sure that [metaverse users] are able to shop these items on Lowe’s dot com or in our stores,” she said.
    Thalberg acknowledged that the typical metaverse participant “skews really young,” likely younger than the typical Lowe’s shopper or homeowner today.
    “But if you look at kids who’ve used platforms like Minecraft and Roblox, a lot of what they do there, is fascinatingly enough, build and design. This idea of being able to build and decorate and design and improve is kind of core to how these spaces are emerging,” she said. “And so if we catch them young, that’s great, but we see a real utility too, as we look to a huge wave of millennial new homeowners who aren’t afraid of technology.”

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    Naomi Osaka launches media company in partnership with Lebron James

    Naomi Osaka is launching a media production company in partnership with The SpringHill Company, a media conglomerate created by Lebron James.
    The production company, called Hana Kuma, will produce scripted and nonfiction content.
    An announcement says Hana Kuma will highlight “empowering” and “culturally specific” stories.

    Tennis Player, Naomi Osaka poses for a photo with LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers after the game on April 4, 2019 at STAPLES Center in Los Angeles, California.
    Andrew D. Bernstein | National Basketball Association | Getty Images

    Four-time Grand Slam winner Naomi Osaka is launching a media production company in partnership with The SpringHill Company, a media conglomerate created by Lebron James.
    The production company, called Hana Kuma, will produce scripted and nonfiction content, starting with a New York Times documentary about Patsy Mink, the first woman of color elected to U.S. Congress, according to a press release. The announcement says Hana Kuma will highlight “empowering” and “culturally specific” stories.

    “There has been an explosion of creators of color finally being equipped with resources and a huge platform,” Osaka said in the release. “In the streaming age, content has a more global perspective. You can see this in the popularity of television from Asia, Europe and Latin America that the unique can also be universal. My story is a testament to that as well.”
    The SpringHill Company, founded by NBA star James and business partner Maverick Carter, will provide production and strategic resources to Hana Kuma, the release said. Hana Kuma also has partnerships with crypto exchange platform FTX and health platform Modern Health.
    In May, Osaka launched an athlete representation agency called Evolve.

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    Broadway will lift its audience mask mandate starting July 1

    All 41 Broadway theaters in New York City will adopt the “mask optional” policy.
    Audience members are still encouraged to wear masks in the theaters.
    The policy will be reevaluated monthly and a protocol for August will be announced in mid-July.

    The audience is given phantom masks to wear during the re-opening night performance of”Phantom Of The Opera” on Broadway at The Majestic Theatre on October 22, 2021 in New York City.
    Bruce Glikas | Getty Images

    Broadway theaters will drop their audience mask mandate beginning July 1, the Broadway League announced Tuesday.
    While all 41 Broadway theaters in New York City will adopt the “mask optional” policy, audience members are still encouraged to wear face coverings in theaters.

    The organization said the policy will be reevaluated monthly and a protocol for August will be announced in mid-July.
    “Millions of people enjoyed the unique magic of Broadway by watching the 75th Tony Award Ceremony recently. Millions more have experienced Broadway LIVE in theatres in New York City and throughout the U.S., since we reopened last fall,” Charlotte St. Martin, president of the Broadway League, said in a press release. “We’re thrilled to welcome even more of our passionate fans back to Broadway in the exciting ’22-’23 season that has just begun.”
    The heavily trafficked Manhattan district went dark in March 2020 as part of public venue restrictions related to Covid-19. The first shows to return took the stage roughly 18 months later, with vaccine and mask mandates in place for most audience members.
    Broadway dropped vaccination checks for audience members on April 30 as other facilities likewise loosened restrictions. The group of theaters hosted roughly 240,000 attendees the week ended June 12.

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