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    How the four-day workweek gained momentum — and could change the future of work

    The idea of a four-day or shorter workweek is gaining momentum worldwide — a big thanks to the remote work boom during the Covid-19 pandemic.
    A recent study from 4 Day Week Global, a nonprofit group that has been conducting four-day week pilot programs in several countries, found that employees expressed satisfaction with their overall productivity and performance.

    “The idea of reducing work time has been around for quite some time,” said Charlotte Lockhart, founder and managing director at 4 Day Week Global. “However, it is real now. We have thousands of companies around the world that are actually reducing work time in one way or another.”
    Shortening the workweek to four days isn’t a good fit for every company, however. Alter Agents, a market research company, based in Los Angeles, found it didn’t suit their employees.
    “What happened after 10 weeks was that our most valuable metrics, which were employee health, and mental health, had declined in our [before and after] survey, ” said Rebecca Brooks, CEO at Alter Agents. “There are a lot of reasons for that, but ultimately, the goal was to make our employees’ lives easier, and we were making them more complicated.”
    Watch the video above to learn whether the four-day workweek is what working life will look like in the future.

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    You may get a 1099-K for Venmo and PayPal payments. Here’s how to prepare — and shrink your tax bill

    If you’ve accepted payments via apps such as Venmo or PayPal in 2022, you may receive Form 1099-K in early 2023, which reports income from third-party networks.
    For 2022, you may receive the form for even a single transaction over the $600 threshold, but the change doesn’t apply to personal transfers.
    Experts say it’s possible to reduce your tax liability through business deductions and retirement plan contributions.

    Charday Penn | E+ | Getty Images

    If you’ve accepted payments via apps such as Venmo or PayPal in 2022, you may receive Form 1099-K, which reports income from third-party networks, in early 2023. But there’s still time to reduce your tax liability, according to financial experts. 
    “There’s no change to the taxability of income,” the IRS noted in a release Tuesday about preparing for the upcoming tax season. “All income, including from part-time work, side jobs or the sale of goods is still taxable,” the agency added.

    Before 2022, you may have received a 1099-K if you had more than 200 transactions worth an aggregate above $20,000. But the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 slashed the threshold to just $600, and even a single transaction can trigger the form.
    More from Personal Finance:IRS warns about new $600 threshold for third-party payment reportingTax ‘refunds may be smaller in 2023,’ warns IRS. Here’s why3 lesser-known ways to trim tax bills, boost refunds before year-end
    While the change targets business transactions, not personal transfers, experts say it’s possible some taxpayers will receive 1099-Ks by mistake. If this happens, the IRS says to contact the issuer or make adjustments to your tax return.
    Either way, the IRS urges “early filers” to make sure they have all tax forms, including 1099-Ks, before submitting their return.
    Whether you work with a professional or self-prepare taxes, you need to be ready, said Albert Campo, a certified public accountant and president of AJC Accounting Services in Manalapan, New Jersey.

    Here’s what to know about reporting 1099-K payments on your return and how to reduce your tax liability.

    How to report 1099-K payments and claim deductions

    You can report 1099-K payments as income on Schedule C of your tax return, which covers profits and losses for sole proprietor businesses.
    You’ll have the chance to subtract expenses, known as business deductions, on Part II of Schedule C, including things like the costs of your products, the portion of your internet and phone bills used for business, travel, possibly your home office and other expenses. 

    Jim Guarino, a certified financial planner, CPA and managing director at Baker Newman Noyes in Woburn, Massachusetts, said it’s good to begin reviewing possible business deductions now — including gathering your receipts for each one — to get organized before tax season kicks off.
    If you’re paying for your own health insurance, there’s also a chance to deduct the cost of your premiums on Schedule 1, which reduces your adjusted gross income, Guarino said. This won’t apply if an employer provides your health coverage.

    Consider a retirement account for your business     

    Another way to reduce your tax liability is by opening and contributing to a self-employed retirement plan, which is also reported as an “adjustment to income” on Schedule 1. 
    One option is a Solo 401(k), which covers one participant and their spouse, and allows employee deferrals, which are due by Dec. 31, and employer contributions, which are due by the tax deadline.

    The key piece is making sure that the paperwork or documents are established by the end of the year.

    Jim Guarino
    managing director at Baker Newman Noyes

    “The key piece is making sure that the paperwork or documents are established by the end of the year,” Guarino said. If you’re confused about setting up the plan or how to calculate the employer contribution, it may be smart to speak with a tax professional, he said. 
    Of course, if you haven’t maxed out your workplace 401(k), it’s possible there’s still time to boost contributions for your last one or two paychecks for 2022, but “time is of the essence,” Guarino said.
    Plus, you have until the tax deadline for pretax individual retirement account contributions, which may also qualify for a deduction.  

    Keep personal and business transactions separate

    When starting a business, tax professionals say to avoid “commingling” personal and business income and expenses by keeping them separate — and 1099-K earnings are no exception.
    Campo suggests opening another bank account and credit card and using separate third-party payment network accounts for business transactions “to make your life a lot easier.”   

    Here’s why: If you receive a 1099-K for $10,000, and only $5,000 applies to your business, you’ll need to show the other $5,000 was for personal transfers through recordkeeping, he said.
    “It creates more onus on the taxpayer,” Campo said, noting that it’s better to keep personal and business accounts separate because “it’s really cut and dried.”
    It’s critical to save receipts for any business expenses you plan to deduct on Schedule C. In the case of an audit, the IRS won’t accept credit card statements as support, Campo warned. The agency wants to see copies of your receipts covering each business expense. 

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    Electric school buses are giving kids a cleaner, but costlier, ride to class

    BEVERLY, Mass. — It’s a gray November morning, and we’re on board a long, yellow school bus.
    The bus bounces over this Boston suburb’s patched streets in a way that would be familiar to anyone who ever rode a bus to class. But the bus is quiet – and not just because there are no kids on board.

    This school bus is electric.
    Right now, only a tiny fraction of the roughly 480,000 school buses in America are battery-powered. Most still use gasoline or diesel engines, just as they have for decades. But thanks to fast-maturing electric-vehicle technology – and the new incentives available under the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and the Inflation Reduction Act – electric school buses are set to become much more common over the next decade.
    “It’s like a big huge go-kart,” said the bus driver on that November day, who’s been driving school buses, mostly gas-powered, for over three decades. “When you accelerate, you move. When you stop accelerating, you stop. And you don’t hear any sound.”
    “Driving a diesel bus is not like driving a go-kart,” she said.

    Greener pastures

    Environmental activists have been working for years to try to replace diesel and gasoline school buses with new electric models. Until recently, they faced some big challenges: Only a couple of companies made fully electric school buses, prices were very high, and the need for new “refueling” and maintenance infrastructure to replace tried-and-true diesel proved too daunting for many school officials.

    That’s starting to change. Over the last couple of years, more companies — including long-established school-bus manufacturers — have begun making electric school buses, government subsidies have increased, and regulators and nonprofits have worked to educate school districts, utilities and the general public about the advantages.
    But this isn’t like selling electric vehicles to drivers. School districts have to navigate a confusing array of subsidies and restrictions — and deal with the awkward fact that right now, a new EV bus costs a lot more than a traditional diesel-powered bus (in fact, three to four times as much).
    It’s hard to make a battery-electric version of a long-haul truck, like EV startup Nikola is working on, as the batteries required to deliver the distance weigh a lot and take hours to recharge.
    But the case for a school bus — which needs only limited range of mileage, and has plenty of idle time to recharge — is much simpler. And the advantages to the traditional buses are clear.

    They’re much better, and their savings are much greater once you actually get them into the depot.

    Sue Gander
    Director at the World Resources Institute

    Not only do electric school buses, or ESBs, help the environment — by not expelling diesel fumes or other emissions —they’re also better for the children they carry, particularly those suffering from chronic respiratory conditions such as asthma.
    Like other electric vehicles, ESBs are also likely to have lower maintenance costs over time than their internal-combustion counterparts.
    Plus, the buses’ large batteries can store and deliver energy to power buildings and other devices, whether temporarily in an emergency or as part of a larger renewable-energy strategy.

    Driving up costs

    All of those advantages come with a price tag, however.
    ESBs are expensive: Battery-electric versions of small “Type A” school buses cost roughly $250,000, versus $50,000 to $65,000 for diesel; full-size “Type C” or “Type D” buses can range from $320,000 to $440,000 in electric form, versus about $100,000 for diesel.  
    “They’re much better, and their savings are much greater once you actually get them into the depot,” Sue Gander, a former U.S. Environmental Protection Agency official, told CNBC in a recent interview. “But the upfront is such that, without [government] incentives, you can’t break even [in comparison to diesel buses].”
    Gander leads the World Resources Institute’s Electric School Bus Initiative, a project funded in part by the Bezos Earth Fund established by Amazon’s founder, Jeff Bezos. The initiative works with school officials, utility companies and ESB manufacturers to try to accelerate the adoption of zero-emission school buses.
    “We think for the next three or four years, as costs come down, as scale goes up, we’ll need to have those incentives in place to make the numbers work,” she said.
    And like other electric vehicles, ESBs will require new infrastructure: At minimum, a school district or bus operator will need to install chargers and retrain their mechanics to service the new buses’ battery-electric drivetrains and control systems.

    A Thomas Built electric school bus in Beverly, Massachusetts.
    John Rosevear | CNBC

    For small school districts, and those in low-income areas, the costs and challenges can be daunting.
    Duncan McIntyre is trying to make it easy, or at least easier, for school districts to go electric. After years in the solar-energy business, he founded a company, Highland Fleets, that aims to make the switch to electric buses simple and affordable for school districts and local governments around the country.
    “You’ve got more expensive equipment, but it operates much cheaper,” he said, noting that — as with other EVs — the costs of charging and maintaining an electric school bus are considerably lower than with gas or diesel buses.
    The last piece, he says, “which everyone overlooks, is that those bus batteries can send power back to the grid to meet peak demand. And that’s an energy market’s opportunity to create additional revenue.”

    Government incentives

    The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law passed late last year includes $5 billion in subsides for low- and zero-emission school buses over the next five years.
    The EPA, charged with administering those subsidies, said in September about 2,000 U.S. school districts had already applied for the subsidies, with over 90% of those applications requesting electric buses. (The remainder were seeking subsidies for low-emissions buses powered by propane or compressed natural gas, the agency said.)
    Not all of those applications, which combined amount to nearly $4 billion in subsidies, will be approved immediately. The EPA awarded about $1 billion in funds in October, giving priority to low-income, rural, and tribal communities. It expects to distribute another $1 billion in 2023.
    California offers state-level subsidies, through its Air Resources Board, of up to $235,000 per bus, plus an additional $30,000 per bus for charging equipment. The agency set aside $122 million for the program this year.
    Colorado has made available $65 million in funding for a similar program. And New York, Connecticut, Maryland and Maine all moved to set up similar programs this year, with New York the first to target a 100% electric school bus fleet by 2035.
    The money is helpful, but Gander said school districts still need to think through all of the aspects of going electric.
    “It’s really about supporting school districts, helping them understand where do electric buses fit into my fleet at the moment? And how do I plan for continuing to add them in to my fleet as I go along?” Gander said. “How do I develop the infrastructure? How do I access the funding and financing that’s out there? And how do I involve the community in this process?”

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    Covid and flu hospitalizations increase as holidays approach, while RSV retreats in some states

    Hospitalizations for Covid and the flu are rising in the U.S.
    Nearly 26,000 people were admitted to hospitals with the flu during the week ending Dec. 3, an increase of 32% compared with the week prior.
    Hospitalizations of people with Covid have increased about 14% week over week, to more than 4,800 admissions per day on average.
    As respiratory illnesses surge, about 80% of hospital beds are currently occupied in the U.S.

    Healthcare workers treat a Covid-19 patient on the Intensive Care Unit (ICU) floor at Hartford Hospital in Hartford, Connecticut, U.S., on Monday, Jan. 31, 2022.
    Allison Dinner | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Covid and flu hospitalizations are increasing, while respiratory syncytial virus appears to be retreating in some states, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Friday.
    As millions of people prepare to travel and gather for the holidays, public health officials are concerned that the worst is still ahead.

    Hospitals this winter are facing the simultaneous threat of Covid, flu and RSV for the first time. Circulation of flu and RSV was very low during the pandemic due to widespread masking and social distancing implemented in response to Covid.
    But as most people return to normal life, traveling and gathering largely unmasked, all three viruses are circulating widely. Public health officials have said many people are probably more vulnerable to flu and RSV this year because they weren’t infected the past two years, which means their immunity is lower.
    With Covid, many people are no longer up to date on their vaccines, which means their immunity is falling at a time when more infectious omicron subvariants have risen to dominance.
    “The past several years have certainly not been easy, and we now face yet another surge of illness,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, director of the CDC, told reporters Monday. “Another moment of overstretched capacity and really one of tragic and often preventable sadness.”
    More than 25,000 people were admitted to hospitals with the flu during the week ending Dec. 3, an increase of 32% compared with the week prior, according to a report published by the CDC on Friday.

    CNBC Health & Science

    Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:

    The hospitalization rate for the flu remains at the highest level for this time of year in a decade, according to the CDC. At least 13 million people have fallen ill with the flu, 120,000 people have been hospitalized, and 7,300 people have died.
    Hospitalizations of people with Covid have increased about 14% week over week to more than 4,800 admissions per day on average, according to CDC data. More than 50% of those hospitalized with Covid are ages 70 and older.
    Walensky on Monday strongly encouraged everyone who is eligible to get their Covid booster and flu shot. There is no vaccine for RSV.
    The CDC director also encouraged people to wear masks to help reduce the spread of respiratory illnesses, particularly those who live in areas with high Covid community levels.
    As respiratory illnesses surge, about 80% of hospital beds are currently occupied in the U.S., according to data from the Health and Human Services Department. About 76% of children’s hospital beds are currently occupied, according to the data. But in eight states, more than 90% of pediatric beds are occupied.
    Outpatient visits for respiratory illnesses resembling the flu, defined as a fever plus cough or sore throat, are high across 43 states right now, according to CDC data.
    RSV, on the other hand, appears to have peaked in some states. The weekly hospitalization rate for infants younger than six months remains higher than every year since 2018, according to a CDC surveillance system that tracks data from 58 counties in 12 states.
    But the rate of admissions has dropped 53% since this season’s peak in early November, according to the data.
    The weekly RSV hospitalization rate for seniors has dropped about 17% since the peak in November, according to the data.
    “We have seen signs that RSV may have peaked in some areas like the South and Southeast and may be leveling off in the mid-Atlantic, New England and Midwest,” Walensky told reporters Monday.
    Children’s hospitals in November called on the Biden administration to declare a public health emergency in response to surging rates of RSV and flu admissions.
    Children and the elderly are more vulnerable to flu and RSV. In the case of Covid, the elderly and older adults are more vulnerable, while people who are younger generally face a lower risk of severe illness.

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    Cramer’s lightning round: Alphabet is not making enough money

    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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    Morgan Stanley: “I want you to hold it. I think it’s terrific at $89.”

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    SLB: “[Russia] pretty much made a deal between our Western allies and us that allows them to overproduce [oil], which is going to cause Schlumberger to roll down another maybe $5, $6 before we’re interested in buying it.”

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    Alphabet Class A: “The company has got to cut costs, cut costs, cut costs. … It is not making enough money.”

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    Sprout Social Inc: “Another enterprise software company. Next. But I promise to go back and look at it again.”

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    GrowGeneration Corp: “We had that one. We nailed that. We got that right in a buy, we got that right in a sell, and what we did is we never looked back.”

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    Walt Disney Co: “I think Disney is a triple buy.”
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Alphabet, Disney and Morgan Stanley.

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    Jim Cramer says Costco is a buy, Lululemon is a wait-and-see

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday advised investors how to approach the stocks of two retailers that reported earnings this week.
    “Two sets of expectations. One too high, the other too low. That’s the tale of Lululemon and Costco. The former was overestimated; the latter was underestimated,” he said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday advised investors how to approach the stocks of two retailers that reported earnings this week.
    “Two great retailers. Two sets of expectations. One too high, the other too low. That’s the tale of Lululemon and Costco. The former was overestimated, the latter was underestimated,” he said.

    related investing news

    10 hours ago

    Here are his thoughts on both stocks.

    Lululemon Athletica

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    Shares of Lululemon tumbled over 12% on Friday. The athletic apparel company reported a beat on third-quarter sales and profit on Thursday after the close, but issued a softer-than-expected guidance for the fourth quarter.
    Cramer said that the main problem with Lululemon was that its strength was already baked into its stock price going into the quarter, which means that it tumbled when the company failed to report perfect results.
    “Unfortunately, this kind of selling usually doesn’t stop after just one day. If you like Lulu — as I still do, by the way — I recommend waiting until next Tuesday to see if this selling that started today abates,” he said.

    Costco Wholesale

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    Shares of Costco inched up 0.33% on Friday. The company missed Wall Street expectations on its top and bottom lines for its latest quarter after the close on Thursday, but indicated in its earnings call that a special dividend and membership fee increase are likely coming.

    Unlike Lululemon, Wall Street underestimated the company’s ability to churn out a solid quarter, according to Cramer.
    “I think you should be buying Costco if you don’t already own it. The expectations have been wrenched out, and the upside awaits,” he said.
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Costco.

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    Supreme Court takes Coinbase appeal over crypto lawsuits

    The Supreme Court agreed to hear an appeal by the major cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase.
    Coinbase is seeking to have two customer lawsuits against the company resolved by private arbitration, not by a federal court.
    A federal appeals court has refused to stay both cases at the district court level while the crypto firm seeks to reverse orders denying it the right to arbitrate the disputes.
    One suit involves a Dogecoin sweepstakes contest.

    The Supreme Court on Friday agreed to hear an appeal by the major crypto exchange Coinbase, which is seeking to have two customer lawsuits against the company resolved by private arbitration, not by a federal court.
    “We are gratified the Supreme Court agreed to hear our appeal, and we look forward to its resolution of this matter,” a Coinbase spokesperson said.

    related investing news

    7 hours ago

    The issue the high court will take up in Coinbase’s case relates to the highly technical question of whether a party in a lawsuit can be forced to continue to defend the case in proceedings in a federal district court, even as it asks an appeals court to send the dispute to an arbitrator.
    But the case might be the first taken by the Supreme Court involving a cryptocurrency company.
    “It’s the first one I’ve known of, for sure,” said Glenn Chappell, an attorney for Abraham Bielski, one of the Coinbase customers who is suing the company.
    “It may very well be the first one,” he said.

    People watch as the logo for Coinbase Global Inc, the biggest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange, is displayed on the Nasdaq MarketSite jumbotron at Times Square in New York, April 14, 2021.
    Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

    He and Bielski’s other lawyers had opposed Coinbase’s request to have the Supreme Court take the case.

    “We don’t think that companies like Coinbase should be entitled to an automatic stay of litigation after a district court has already determined their arbitration is unlawful,” Chappell said.
    But, he added, “We definitely still welcome the ability to advocate on behalf of consumers in the matter.”
    Bielski sued Coinbase after he was scammed out of more than $31,000 from his account at the company by someone not connected to Coinbase. His would-be class action lawsuit alleges that the Electronic Funds Transfer Act requires Coinbase to credit customer accounts for stolen cryptocurrency.

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    Coinbase sought to compel arbitration. But a California federal district court judge ruled that the arbitration agreement Bielski had with the company was not valid under that state’s law, which allowed his case to proceed in district court.
    In the other lawsuit taken up by the high court on Friday, Coinbase customers sued the company in California district court claiming that Coinbase’s promotion of a Dogecoin sweepstakes in June 2021 violate state law.
    As in Bielski’s case, a district judge refused Coinbase’s request to send the sweepstakes-related case to arbitration.
    The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in both cases denied Coinbase’s request to put the lawsuits on hold at the district court level as the company pursued appeals seeking to overturn the rulings denying it arbitration.
    Neal Katyal, an attorney representing Coinbase at the Supreme Court, in his petition asking the justices to hear the company’s appeal said that there is a deep split among lower federal appeals courts on the question the court will decide.
    Six federal appeals circuits have held that an appeal of a denial of a motion to compel arbitration “automatically” stays proceeding in a district court, Katyal wrote.
    But, “Three circuits … have held the opposite,” he added. “The circuits will remain divided unless this Court intervenes.”
    “Coinbase must now devote significant time, energy, and resources to burdensome putative class actions in two District Courts even though the Ninth Circuit is likely to conclude that neither case belongs in federal court to begin with,” Katyal wrote.

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    Cramer’s week ahead: Don’t let the Fed’s meeting obscure investing opportunities

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday advised investors to keep their eyes peeled for chances to improve their portfolios next week.
    “These big macro numbers and important Fed meetings are a drag – I know. They obscure the actual opportunities out there,” he said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday advised investors to keep their eyes peeled for chances to improve their portfolios next week.
    “These big macro numbers and important Fed meetings are a drag – I know. They obscure the actual opportunities out there. I want you to keep your eyes open for ideas and not be blinded by the [Federal Reserve] light,” he said.

    related investing news

    8 hours ago

    Stocks tumbled to end the week down on Friday, roiled by investors’ worries about a possible recession. Two key economic events take place next week, including the release of the November consumer price index report and the Federal Reserve’s December meeting.
    Wall Street expects the Fed to raise interest rates by 50 basis points.
    “We need to see a cooler consumer price index, with the Fed only raising interest rates by 50 basis points and then saying they’ll take some time to assess the situation before they tighten again,” Cramer said.
    He also previewed next week’s slate of earnings. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.
    Monday: Coupa Software, Oracle

    Coupa Software

    Q3 2023 earnings release at 4:03 p.m. ET; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: 17 cents
    Projected revenue: $252 million

    Cramer predicted that the stock will fall if the company doesn’t prioritize profitability over growth.
    Oracle

    Q2 2023 earnings release at 4 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.17
    Projected revenue: $11.95 billion

    “At 16 times earnings, I just don’t see how much there is to lose,” he said.
    Tuesday: Eli Lilly

    2023 guidance call at 9 a.m. ET

    Investors who don’t already own shares of Eli Lilly should wait to buy until after the call, Cramer advised.
    Wednesday: Lennar

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:30 p.m. ET; conference call on Thursday at 11 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $4.88
    Projected revenue: $9.98 billion

    He predicted that the company will likely report a “terrific” quarter, which would be bad news for the Fed’s battle against inflation.
    Thursday: Adobe

    Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:05 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $3.50
    Projected revenue: $4.53 billion

    Cramer said that it’s too soon to buy shares of Adobe.
    Friday: Darden Restaurants, Accenture
    Darden Restaurants

    Q2 2023 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $1.43
    Projected revenue: $2.43 billion

    The company will likely report a solid quarter, he predicted.
    Accenture

    Q1 2023 earnings release at 6:45 a.m. ET; conference call at 8 a.m. ET
    Projected EPS: $2.92
    Projected revenue: $15.58 billion

    “If you think, as I do, that companies will cut back on digitization going forward in order to attempt to save money, you might want to avoid Accenture,” Cramer said.
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Eli Lilly.

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