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    Domino’s reports mixed third-quarter results as U.S. same-store sales increase

    Domino’s Pizza reported mixed third-quarter results Thursday morning.
    Earnings per share missed Wall Street expectations, but revenue came in above estimates.
    In the U.S., the company said same-store sales rose 2%.

    An employee carries an order for a customer at a Domino’s Pizza restaurant in Detroit.
    Sean Proctor | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Domino’s Pizza reported better-than-expected revenue for the third quarter Thursday and stood by its forecast for food cost inflation this year, even though earnings fell short of estimates.
    In the U.S., the company said same-store sales rose 2%. Domino’s has been struggling to meet the higher demand levels during the earlier days of the Covid-19 pandemic, when people were hunkering down at home and ordering in more.

    Domino’s also stood by its forecast for food cost inflation, indicating that pressure from rising costs could be easing. In the previous quarter, the company had hiked its forecast for food cost inflation to be up 13% to15%, from its previous estimate for an increase of 10% to 12%.
    Shares of Domino’s were up over 8% in pre-market trading.
    “I’m encouraged with our performance and the sequential improvements we made during the third quarter,” Domino’s CEO Russell Weiner said in a statement.
    He also said the company delivers around one out of every three pizzas in the U.S. today − similar to before the pandemic.
    Here’s how the pizza company performed compared with Wall Street estimates, according to Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: $2.79, adjusted vs. $2.97 expected.
    Revenue: $1.07 billion vs. $1.06 billion expected.

    Overseas, the company said same-store sales declined 1.8% in the third quarter when excluding the impact of foreign currency exchanges.
    The company also said it sold 114 company-owned stores in Arizona and Utah to its franchisees for $41.1 million after the third quarter ended. It said it expects to record a gain from transaction in the fourth quarter.
    For the quarter ended Sept. 11, net income fell to $100.5 million, 0r $2.79 a share, from $120.4 million, or $3.24 a share a year ago. Domino’s attributed the drop primarily to a higher provision for income taxes and lower income from operations.
    Domino’s has been hurt by rising costs and an ongoing shortage of delivery drivers that has dented sales. Shares of the Ann Arbor, Michigan-based company hit a 52 week low on Wednesday, trading at $299.41 per share. It traded as high as $567 within the last year.This is breaking news. Check back for updates.

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    America curbs Chinese access to advanced computing

    Visions of a technologically ascendent China keep American strategists up at night. They see the contours of a surveillance state implementing the will of President Xi Jinping by algorithmic edict at home and projecting computing power abroad. To erase those contours for good, on October 7th President Joe Biden’s administration announced the most sweeping set of export controls in decades. The new rules cut off people and firms in China from many advanced technologies of American origin, and from products made using these. The list includes chips used for artificial intelligence (ai), software to design advanced chips and the machine tools to manufacture them. Selling such things to China is now barred without explicit permission from America’s government. Rulebreakers risk being cut off from American tech themselves. The share prices of affected Chinese firms have sunk (see chart). China’s biggest producer of memory chips, the state-owned YMTC, has 60 days to allow American officials to inspect its operations for compliance. American companies that sell advanced semiconductor technology to China have also been hit, even as they reel from a deep cyclical slump in demand for their wares. This week it emerged that Intel, America’s chipmaking champion with Chinese sales of $21bn last year, is about to axe thousands of jobs. America has previously used similar rules to kneecap Huawei, China’s telecoms-gear giant. Jake Sullivan, Mr Biden’s national security adviser, boasted recently that export controls have forced Russia to “use chips from dishwashers in its military equipment”, which will “over time degrade [its] battlefield capabilities”. In the case of China, America’s goal is likewise no longer just to stay ahead of its rival in the tech race but to “put the high-end Chinese chip-design industry out of business”, says Greg Allen, a former defence-department official who has studied the new rules. Whether America gets its way depends on several factors. There are “real questions” about the rules’ legality, says Peter Lichtenbaum of Covington & Burling, a law firm in Washington. He expects someone to test the restrictions in court. Donald Trump’s administration was successfully sued over an executive order banning TikTok. Even legal export controls are leaky. Plugging the leaks requires more resources for the enforcers at the Commerce Department. “Their to-do list has exploded,” says Mr Allen. “Their budget has not.” And China imports $400bn-worth of chips a year, more than any other country. Though private companies and allied countries might be happy to go along with the Americans now, the amount of money being left on the table by not selling to Chinese customers may start to rankle. ■To stay on top of the biggest stories in business and technology, sign up to the Bottom Line, our weekly subscriber-only newsletter. More

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    The yen may be weak, but Japan’s tourism isn’t expected to get a ‘bona fide’ rebound without Chinese visitors

    The Japanese yen’s slump against the U.S. dollar has sparked some worry in Japan, but that could encourage more travelers to visit the country again, according to analysts — though they say a significant rebound in the tourism sector won’t happen without the return of Chinese tourists.
    After more than two years of strict Covid border controls, Japan reinstated visa-free travel to 68 countries on Tuesday. 

    After more than two years of strict Covid-19 border controls, Japan reinstated visa-free travel to 68 countries on Tuesday.
    Maki Nakamura | Digitalvision | Getty Images

    The Japanese yen’s slump against the U.S. dollar has sparked some worry in Japan, but that could encourage more travelers to visit the country again, according to analysts — though they say a significant rebound in the tourism sector won’t happen without the return of Chinese tourists.
    After more than two years of strict Covid border controls, Japan reinstated visa-free travel to 68 countries on Tuesday. 

    Package tours are no longer necessary, the Japan National Tourism Organization (JNTO) reported. 
    The daily entry limit of 50,000 people and the on-arrival PCR test at the airport have been scrapped. However, it is still mandatory for travelers from all countries and regions to submit a negative Covid test certificate or proof of vaccination, JNTO said.  
    With the easing of restrictions and the depreciating yen, tourism to the country will return quickly — especially from Asia, said Jesper Koll, director of financial services firm Monex Group told CNBC.
    Koll said that although travelers from Europe and the U.S. are important in aiding Japan’s tourism recovery, “the bulk of the enthusiasm and the bulk of travel” still come from countries like Singapore, the Philippines and Thailand. 
    “The cheapness of the yen obviously increases the probability of tourism contributing greatly to the economy,” Koll said. “As the restrictions get rolled back further, and the capacity of inbound flights open up, I expect that we will see inbound spending and inbound tourism accelerate very, very quickly.” 

    In 2019, Japan welcomed 32 million foreign visitors and they spent about 5 trillion yen, but inbound spending is now only one-tenth of that, according to a Goldman Sachs note from September. 
    The investment bank estimated that inbound spending could reach 6.6 trillion yen ($45.2 billion) after a year of full reopening, as travelers will be encouraged to spend more because of the weak yen.
    “Our ball-park estimation points to potentially larger inbound spending of ¥6.6 tn (annual) post full reopening versus the pre-pandemic level of ¥5 tn, partly helped by the weak yen,” the note said. 
    The Japanese currency plunged to a fresh 24-year low and was at 146.98 against the greenback during London’s trading hours on Wednesday.
    Japanese officials intervened in the forex market in September when the dollar-yen hit 145.9.
    “I don’t think the yen has been as cheap as it is now in living memory,” said Darren Tay, Japan economist at Capital Economics, said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Tuesday. “Tourists were already clamoring for borders to reopen … So I think the weak yen will serve as another motivating factor” for them to travel to Japan again. 
    Although flight ticket prices to Japan have increased since the announcement was made, tourists will still get a bang for their buck when they spend in Japan, Koll said.
    “You can eat twice as many hamburgers, twice as much sushi for your dollar here in Japan compared to the United States, and even compared to the rest of Asia,” he added. 

    Chinese tourists ‘hold the key’

    The outlook for Japan’s tourism recovery looks promising, but “the overall impact on Japan’s economy may not be a net positive” as Chinese tourists have yet to return, Tay said.
    “Chinese tourists actually make up a large amount of what foreign tourists spent back in 2019 … They’re still pursuing a zero-Covid strategy so they won’t be returning anytime soon,” he said. 

    Goldman Sachs said Chinese tourists, who made up 30% of foreign visitors to Japan in 2019, could return only in the second quarter of 2023. 
    Once China fully reopens, inbound spending from Chinese visitors has the potential to increase from 1.8 trillion yen in 2019 to 2.6 trillion yen — 0.5% of Japan’s gross domestic product, said Yuriko Tanaka, economist at Goldman Sachs. 
    “Chinese visitors hold the key to a bona fide rebound in inbound spending,” Tanaka said.

    Without visitors from China, it could take some time before inbound spending in Japan returns to pre-pandemic levels, Koll said. But strong demand from the rest of Asia could drive inbound spending to return “relatively quickly” to over $3 trillion by March 2023.

    Outlook for yen 

    As markets expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to hike interest rates by 75 basis points in November, the yen will continue to weaken as the dollar continues to strengthen, said Koll. 
    “You’ve got the widening interest rate differential [between Japan and the U.S.], and the Federal Reserve is not done yet. There is at least one more interest rate hike in the cards,” he said. 
    He added that yen could weaken further toward the 155 level, strengthening only next spring — and that wouldn’t be the result of action from Japan, but of the Fed signaling that it has “stepped enough on the brake.”

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    Jim Cramer says these 14 stocks are ‘about to pop’

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday offered investors a list of stocks that he believes could bounce soon.
    Markets have declined considerably this year due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, soaring inflation, the Fed’s rate hikes and recession worries.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday offered investors a list of stocks that he believes could bounce soon.
    “The S&P [500]’s down almost 25% for the year, and we’ve gone eleven months since the bear market began. The average bear market only lasts for about 13 months. So maybe we have an expiration date coming up and soon, some of these are going to pop,” he said.

    To come up with the companies, he reviewed the S&P 500’s new 52-week low list. Here are his picks:

    KeyCorp
    Bank of America
    JPMorgan Chase
    Accenture
    ServiceNow
    Domino’s Pizza
    Yum! Brands
    Generac
    Stanley Black & Decker
    S&P Global
    American Tower
    Crown Castle
    SBA Communications
    Mid-America Apartment Communities

    Markets have declined considerably this year due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, soaring inflation, the Fed’s rate hikes and recession worries.
    Cramer said that despite the market’s downturn, PepsiCo’s revenue and earnings beat for its latest quarter reported Wednesday proves that beaten-down stocks of exceptional companies can bounce. 
    Shares of PepsiCo gained 4% on Wednesday.
    “I’m just trying to give you a more constructive perspective based on the prism of PepsiCo, a pathetic also-ran that suddenly turned into a big winner, and I think PepsiCo, by the way, is just getting started,” he said.

    Arrows pointing outwards

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    Jim Cramer says to avoid stocks in the ‘house of pain’ Nasdaq 100 index

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

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday warned investors to avoid the stocks in the Nasdaq 100 and highlighted the worst performing stocks during the third quarter.
    “These seven biggest losers from the third quarter are simply representative of the House of Pain the index has become,” he said.

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday warned investors to avoid the stocks in the Nasdaq 100 and highlighted the worst-performing stocks during the third quarter.
    “These seven biggest losers from the third quarter are simply representative of the House of Pain the index has become. By the way, if you’re living in a house of pain, you should move,” he said.

    Cramer acknowledged that there are a few stocks in the index that he believes are still great, but maintained that the index is ultimately filled with “woe and hurt.”
    Here are his quick takes on the index’s biggest losers:

    Arrows pointing outwards

    1. Okta
    Cramer said that the current environment is “brutal” for the company, and he doesn’t believe that’ll change anytime soon.
    2. Charter Communications

    He said on Tuesday that while the company is profitable, its lack of growth means that its stock is going nowhere.
    3. Zoom
    Cramer said that the company’s earnings momentum is too low and the company’s market capitalization is too high. “You don’t pay $22 billion for a one-trick pony,” he said.
    4. Match
    “Those guys suffer from an inability to forecast, a problem that seems to afflict the whole dating industry,” he said.
    5. Intel
    The company is likely struggling with the slowing personal computer market, he said.
    6. Comcast
    Cable companies are struggling because the market wants no part in it, Cramer said.
    7. Adobe
    Cramer said that while he believes Adobe’s a “fantastic” company, the bears have no patience for software firms with slowing growth rates.

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Disclosure: CNBC is owned by Comcast’s NBCUniversal. 

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    Cramer’s lightning round: Western Union is not a buy

    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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    Plug Power Inc: “It’s losing money. And when a stock is losing money, it goes down.”

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    Cameco Corp: “They did a really lousy deal with [Westinghouse Electric.] … I would never have done that deal if I were them.”

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    Western Union Co: “I used to believe in them. … But they have no growth whatsoever. We can’t own stocks that have no growth in a period of Fed tightening.”

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    Roblox Corp: “It’s a fabulous company, but it doesn’t make money, and that’s a problem.”

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    Amazon changes rockets for launch of prototype Kuiper internet satellites, pushing mission to 2023

    Amazon is swapping rides for the first prototype satellites for its Project Kuiper internet network, the company announced Wednesday.
    The move from ABL’s RS1 rocket to ULA’s Vulcan rocket effectively delays the first in-space test of Kuiper satellites to the first quarter of 2023.
    Project Kuiper is Amazon’s plan to build a network of 3,236 satellites in low Earth orbit, to provide high-speed internet to anywhere in the world.

    From left: Artist renderings of the launches of an RS1 rocket and a Vulcan rocket.
    ABL Space; United Launch Alliance

    Amazon is swapping rides for the first prototype satellites for its Project Kuiper internet network, the company announced Wednesday, a move that delays launching the pair of spacecraft to early next year.
    The tech giant is moving its Kuipersat-1 and Kuipersat-2 from the RS1 rocket in development by ABL Space to the debut flight of the Vulcan rocket from United Launch Alliance, the joint venture of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

    A year ago Amazon announced that ABL’s RS1 would carry the prototypes to orbit in late 2022, but the rocket is still in development, with a prior debut launch yet to lift off.

    Sign up here to receive weekly editions of CNBC’s Investing in Space newsletter.

    Instead, the Amazon satellites will hitch a ride on the first launch of ULA’s Vulcan, which is planned for the first quarter. ULA has been waiting on two major pieces for Vulcan’s debut: a pair of BE-4 engines being built by Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and the Peregrine lunar lander of Astrobotic — a spacecraft previously booked on the flight.
    Reuters first reported Amazon’s switch of rocket-delivery systems.
    Amazon isn’t ditching ABL entirely, however, saying it plans to retain two launches with the rocket company for future missions. ABL President Dan Piemont confirmed the plans to continue working with Amazon, telling CNBC in a statement that his company finished work on a custom Project Kuiper spacecraft adapter earlier this year. He also emphasized that ABL has a backlog of missions from customers including the U.S. Space Force and Lockheed Martin.

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    Trump SPAC stock jumps after Google adds Truth Social to Play Store

    Google added Donald Trump’s Truth Social app to its Play Store, making it available on Android phones.
    Shares of Digital World Acquisition Corp., the company set to take Trump’s media firm public, jumped after the news.
    DWAC has sought to delay the merger as it faces legal and financial obstacles.

    The Truth social network logo is seen displayed behind a woman holding a smartphone in this picture illustration taken February 21, 2022.
    Dado Ruvic | Reuters

    Shares of Digital World Acquisition Corp., the company aiming to take former President Donald Trump’s media company public, jumped during after-hours trading after Google added the Truth Social app to its Play Store.
    The platform had previously been barred from the Play Store for content moderation concerns. Google said the app violated its policies for moderating user-generated content.

    “Apps may be distributed on Google Play provided they comply with our developer guidelines, including the requirement to effectively moderate user-generated content and remove objectionable posts such as those that incite violence,” a Google spokesman said.
    Truth Social has agreed to enforce content moderation policies, which include removing or blocking users who publish posts that incite violence, according to Google. Twitter had banned Trump in January 2021 “due to the risk of further incitement of violence,” after hundreds of his supporters attacked the U.S. Capitol. That action spurred Trump to create Truth Social.
    Truth Social is now available to the 44% of smartphone users in the U.S. who use an Android. Before the app was unbarred, Android users had to access Truth Social on their phone web browser or by “sideloading” it through another website. The app has been available on Apple’s App Store. Google reinstated Parler, a platform similar to Truth Social, to the Play Store in September after the app was substantially modified to comply with Google’s policies.
    CNBC has reached out to DWAC and Trump Media and Technology Group.
    The news comes days after DWAC, a so-called blank check company, further pushed a vote to delay its merger with Trump Media. DWAC, led by CEO Patrick Orlando, has thus far failed to garner the necessary 65% of shareholders to extend the merger deadline. DWAC is set to liquidate Dec. 8 if an extension is not approved.

    The merger has faced obstacles, both legal and financial. DWAC’s private investors were set to provide $1 billion to Trump Media upon the merger’s completion. But at least $138 million of that money was withdrawn, and the company moved its address to a UPS Store. 
    The DWAC-Trump Media deal is the subject of a Justice Department probe into potential securities violations for discussions between the two companies prior to the merger announcement last fall.
    Trump founded Truth Social after he was barred from Twitter over his tweets on Jan. 6, 2021, when his followers stormed the U.S. Capitol in a violent attempt to block Congress from confirming Joe Biden’s victory in the presidential election.
    DWAC’s shares took a leg down last week after Elon Musk revived his deal to buy Twitter, where Trump had about 80 million followers. Musk has said he would let Trump back on Twitter. Trump has about 4 million followers on Truth Social.
    Meanwhile, a whistleblower from within Trump Media, William Wilkerson, has provided the SEC with internal documents. He filed a complaint with the regulator, alleging securities violations.
    “One way or another, this company is going to go bankrupt,” Wilkerson recently told the Miami Herald. “I don’t think the company is going to be approved by the SEC.”
    DWAC has also warned that further damage to Trump’s reputation could imperil the company. Trump, who is considering another run for president in 2024, is facing a federal criminal probe into whether he illegally kept and stashed sensitive national security documents after he left the White House.
    Shares of DWAC, which closed Wednesday at $15.96, have fallen about 69% so far this year.

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