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    Stock markets are ignoring a ‘laundry list’ of risks, strategist says

    The Fed has raised benchmark interest rates 10 times since March 2022 in a bid to fight stubbornly high inflation.
    “If that discount rate starts to tick up because investors feel that actually the Fed isn’t done after all, then we could have quite a sizable correction, so we’re just a little bit cautious there in terms of the next few weeks and months,” Howard said.

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) May 30, 2023.
    Brendan McDermid | Reuters

    Stock markets are ignoring a “laundry list” of potential risks in their recent bull run, and a big downturn could be incoming, according to Julian Howard, investment director for multi-asset solutions at GAM Investments.
    Despite the risks associated with a steep rise in interest rates over the past 15 months, tech stocks particularly led the charge so far this year, as investors rushed to gain exposure to the AI boom.

    The Nasdaq 100 closed the Friday session up 33% on the year, while the S&P 500 is up more than 11% and the pan-European Stoxx 600 has added just under 9%.
    Yet in light of the latest round of economic data, economists are beginning to increase the probability of further interest rate hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve, with the U.S. economy and jobs market still resilient, while core inflation is proving stickier than expected.
    Howard told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” on Monday that, in light of this risk, the Nasdaq was “very expensive” at the moment, and that now is the time for investors to “wait it out rather than engaging heavily in this market.”
    “There’s this laundry list of problems, and interest rates and inflation haven’t gone away. The debt ceiling is done, and I think there’s a sense that, actually, the markets need to refocus again on inflation and rates,” Howard said.
    “The U.S. consumer is pretty ambivalent about inflation, it kind of expects higher inflation now, and that’s dangerous because that entrenches higher inflation itself, because obviously expectations lead to higher inflation.”

    Further increases in borrowing costs would also raise the discount rates — a metric used by Wall Street to value stocks by figuring out the value of future earnings. This would not bode well for the tech stocks that constitute much of the recent driving force behind U.S. equity markets, as higher discount rates typically lead to lower future cash flow.
    The Fed has raised benchmark interest rates 10 times since March 2022 in a bid to fight stubbornly high inflation.
    Some Fed policymakers had in recent weeks expressed willingness to pause the cycle of rate hikes at the central bank’s June meeting, and the market is now pricing around an 80% chance of this outcome, according to the CME Group FedWatch tool. However, several Fed officials and economists have hinted that further monetary tightening could be needed later in the year.
    “That AI tech trade started to fade in the latter half of last week, and I think that could continue, because if you think about it, long duration assets like technology stocks, they are the most sensitive to the price of money, to the prevailing discount rate,” Howard said.
    “If that discount rate starts to tick up because investors feel that, actually, the Fed isn’t done after all, then we could have quite a sizable correction, so we’re just a little bit cautious there in terms of the next few weeks and months.”

    GAM sees a bleak longer-term macroeconomic picture across major economies, with secular stagnation as a base case. It believes the “Goldilocks” environment for stocks that has prevailed since October is no longer sustainable.
    Though at odds with much of the consensus on Wall Street, Morgan Stanley also predicted in a research note last week that slower real and nominal U.S. growth will lead to sharp downgrades to earnings forecasts, which will slam the brakes on the stock rally stateside.
    The Wall Street giant expects earnings-per-share to be around 16% below both last year’s results and the current 2023 consensus, before recovering in 2024.
    Morgan Stanley strategists said a variety of “big-picture” indicators continued to recommend for investors to adopt a “defensive posture.”
    “Our U.S. cycle indicator, bank lending conditions, the yield curve, commodity prices, indices of leading economic indicators, and the unemployment rate all suggest worse-than-average forward equity returns, and better-than-average returns for high grade bonds,” they said. More

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    IMF chief says there’s no significant slowdown in lending and the Fed may need to do more

    The IMF’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told CNBC: “We don’t yet see a significant slowdown in lending.”
    Stressing that the world economy is in an “exceptionally uncertain environment, Georgieva said: “Pay attention to trends and be agile, adjusting — should the trends change.”
    A majority of major global central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have tightened their monetary policy aggressively to tame soaring inflation.

    The International Monetary Fund has yet to see enough banks pulling back on lending that would cause the U.S. Federal Reserve to change course with its rate-hiking cycle.
    “We don’t yet see a significant slowdown in lending. There is some, but not on the scale that would lead to the Fed stepping back,” the IMF’s Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told CNBC’s Karen Tso Saturday in Dubrovnik, Croatia.

    The Federal Reserve in a May banks report warned that lenders are worried about conditions ahead, as trouble in mid-sized financial institutions in the U.S. caused banks to tighten lending standards for households and businesses.
    The Fed’s loan officers added that they expect the issues to continue over the next year due to lowered growth forecasts and concerns over deposit outflows and reduced tolerance for risk.
    Georgieva told CNBC: “I cannot stress enough that we are in an exceptionally uncertain environment. Therefore pay attention to trends and be agile, adjusting — should the trends change.”
    The IMF’s commentary on the pace of a slowdown in global lending comes after its Chief Economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas told CNBC in April that banks are now situated in a “more precarious situation” that would pose a risk to the international organization’s world growth forecast of 2.8% for this year.

    A majority of major global central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve, have tightened their monetary policy aggressively to tame soaring inflation. Meanwhile, the world’s global debt has swelled to a near-record high of $305 trillion, according to the Institute of International Finance. The IIF said in its May report that high debt levels and interest rates have led to further concerns about leverage in the financial system.

    ‘A little bit more’

    As the IMF is yet to see a significant slowdown in lending that would prompt the Fed to reverse its course, Georgieva said that combined with a resilient U.S. jobs report on Friday, that it could hike further.
    “The pressure that comes from incomes going up and in unemployment being still very, very low, means that the Fed will have to stay the course and perhaps in our view, they may need to do a little bit more,” she said.
    She projected the U.S. unemployment rate to go beyond 4%, up to 4.5%, from more rate hikes by the Fed after the rate rose to 3.7% in May, marking the highest since October 2022.
    On the U.S. government passing a debt ceiling bill that was signed by President Joe Biden over the weekend, she said: “what has been agreed, in the context [that] it was agreed, is broadly speaking, a good outcome.”
    “Where the problem lies is that repetitive debate around the debt ceiling, in our view, is not very helpful. There is space to rethink how to go about it,” she added.
    — CNBC’s Jeff Cox, Elliot Smith contributed to this report More

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    Is China heading for Japan-like stagnation? Economist says the worst is likely behind us

    China’s recent economic slowdown is due largely to “premature” withdrawal of policy support, Macquarie’s Chief China Economist Larry Hu said in a report Friday.
    He expects policymakers to remain accommodative, paving the way to a broader recovery.
    That means while China appears on the verge of Japan-style stagnation, the situation is temporary, the report said.

    A food delivery worker sits outside a restaurant at a shopping mall in Beijing on May 30, 2023.
    Jade Gao | Afp | Getty Images

    BEIJING — China’s economic recovery from the pandemic is set to broaden, meaning the country isn’t headed toward Japan-style stagnation just yet, according to Macquarie’s Chief China Economist Larry Hu.
    China’s recent economic data largely disappointed investors hoping for a sharp rebound in the world’s second-largest economy after the end of Covid controls in December. Youth unemployment hit a record high of above 20% in April.

    In a report Friday, Hu attributed the recent economic slowdown to a “premature” withdrawal of policy support after better-than-expected first quarter data.

    While the worst is behind us, the recovery is far from being self-sustaining.

    Chief China economist, Macquarie

    Going forward, he expects policymakers to remain accommodative given the lack of inflation and high youth unemployment — with more urgency to ease as year-on-year comparisons soften in the third quarter.
    “As the recovery broadens over time, the economy will enter another upward spiral with stronger demand and better confidence,” Hu said.

    At a meeting Friday, China’s top executive body, the State Council, called for improving the business environment and removing local barriers to market access, according to state media. The country would also extend purchase incentives for new energy vehicles as a way to boost consumption, state media reported.
    The meeting, led by Premier Li Qiang, noted the foundation of China’s economic recovery is not yet solid.

    Similar, but not the same as, Japan

    “While the worst is behind us, the recovery is far from being self-sustaining,” Macquarie’s Hu said. “Companies are reluctant to hire due to soft consumer demand, and consumers are reluctant to spend due to weak labor market.”
    “Such a self-fulfilled downward spiral bears some resemblance to Japan’s ‘lost decades,'” he said.
    Japan’s economy grew rapidly in the 1970s and 1980s, only to stagnate when the bubble burst in the 1990s and stock and real estate prices plummeted. Japan was the world’s second-largest economy for decades, until China overtook it in 2010.

    Stock chart icon

    iShares MSCI China ETF

    “The absence of a self-sustained recovery in China today is mainly a cyclical, not structural, phenomenon,” Hu said. “History suggests that the concern on ‘Japanification’ will subside once the recovery becomes more entrenched.”
    He pointed out that previous concerns about economic recoveries in 2012, 2016 and 2019 all led to market corrections in the second quarter of those years — before the MSCI China Index turned higher.
    The iShares MSCI China ETF is down by about 4% so far this year.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    But with only four months in the books following China’s big Lunar New Year holiday, longer-term trends remain difficult to forecast.
    Case in point is China’s massive property sector, where a nascent recovery appears to have stalled.
    “Extrapolating the sales data in 1Q, one might expect new home sales to rise 10% or more this year,” Hu said. “Extrapolating the sales data in 2Q, one might expect it to fall 10% or more.”
    “The reality may be somewhere in between.” More

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    Who is keeping coal alive?

    Mountains of coal are piled beneath azure skies at the port of Newcastle, Australia. Giant shovels chip away at them, scooping the fuel onto conveyor belts, which whizz it to cargo ships that can be as long as three football pitches. The harbour’s terminals handle 200m tonnes of the stuff a year, making Newcastle the world’s biggest coal port. Throughput is roaring back after floods hurt supply last year. Aaron Johansen, who oversees ncig, the newest, uber-automated terminal, expects it to stay near all-time highs for at least seven years. Rich Asian countries, such as Japan and South Korea, are hungry for the premium coal that passes through the terminal. So, increasingly, are developing ones like Malaysia and Vietnam.Halfway across the world the mood music is rather different. In recent weeks activists have made use of quotes from great writers, including Shakespeare (“Don’t shuffle off this mortal coil”) and the Spice Girls (“Stop right now”), to disrupt annual-general meetings of European banks and energy firms, as part of a call for an end to coal extraction. A broader chorus worries that the fuel is the biggest source of greenhouse gas, making up 42% of energy-related carbon emissions in 2022. The un says output must fall by 11% a year to keep warming less than 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. The International Energy Agency (iea), an official forecaster, argues against opening new mines and expanding existing ones. Climate wonks think that 80% of reserves must remain unburnt. This is mainly meant to happen by starving the supply chain of funding. More than 200 of the world’s largest financiers, including 87 banks, have announced policies restricting investments in coal mining or coal-fired power plants. Lenders representing 41% of global banking assets have signed up to the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, pledging to align portfolios with net-zero emissions by 2050. At the cop26 summit in 2021, the un predicted that this campaign would “consign coal to history”. As recently as 2020 the iea believed consumption had peaked a decade ago.Yet King Coal looks brawnier than ever. In 2022 demand for it surpassed 8bn tonnes for the first time. This article will look at who is greasing the wheels of the once doomed trade. We find that the market is lively, well-funded and profitable. More striking still, the motley crew bankrolling it will probably allow trade to endure well into the 2030s, lining survivors’ pockets to the detriment of the planet.It is tempting to see 2022 as exceptional. Russia cut piped gas to Europe, and Europe banned coal imports from Russia. The bloc turned to liquefied natural gas (lng) destined for Asia and thermal coal from Colombia, South Africa and distant Australia. Meanwhile, Asian countries reliant on Russia’s premium coal also diversified. Prices for top grades jumped. Europe’s poorer neighbours, priced out of the gas market, gorged on lower-grade stuff. Now the storm has abated. After a mild winter, European utility firms retain good stocks of gas and coal. But as the need to power cooling units rises in the summer, coal imports will accelerate. China’s economy has emerged from zero-covid; India’s is going gangbusters. Traders expect global use to grow by another 3-4% this year. Coal is likely to remain sought after beyond 2023. True, demand in Europe will fall as renewables ramp up. It is already low in America, where fracked gas is cheaper. Yet last year’s crunch has reminded Asia’s import-dependent countries that, when energy is scarce, coal can be a lifeline. It is cheaper and more abundant than other fuels, and once loaded on pretty basic ships can be sent anywhere—unlike lng, which requires vessels and regasification terminals that take years to build. China is planning 270 gigawatts of new coal-fired plants by 2025, more than any country has installed today. India and much of South-East Asia are following a similar path. Even with a speedy Western exit from coal, Boston Consulting Group thinks thermal coal demand will fall by just 10-18% between now and 2030. Much of the demand will be met by domestic production in China and India, the world’s biggest consumers. But imports will still be crucial. Investment banks do not expect traded volumes to drop below 900m tonnes, from 1bn last year, for much of the decade. One, Liberum Capital, thinks imports will rise over the next five years. Will the global coal market continue to meet stubborn demand? Our research suggests it will. That is because there will remain cash for three vital links in the supply chain: trading and shipping; more digging at existing mines; and new projects. Financing trade is the easy part. Modelling for The Economist by Oliver Wyman, a consultancy, suggests high prices, together with the longer journeys made by rerouted exports, buoyed the working-capital needs of coal traders in 2022 to $20bn, four times the historical average. Assuming average coal prices remain above $100 a tonne, as many analysts do, those needs will sit above $7bn until at least 2030. Commodity merchants retain access to generous sources of liquidity to finance coal purchases. One is corporate borrowing, via multi-year bank loans or bonds, which gives firms a lump sum they can use however they want. Traders can also draw on short-term, revolving credit facilities, provided by clubs of banks. Many such lines have been expanded since the start of 2022—their limits often reach several billion dollars—to help traders cope with volatile prices. Banks that impose restrictions, specifying the money should not be used to buy coal, face a high risk that traders decamp to lenient rivals. So few do. Conversations with finance chiefs at trading firms reveal that banks in countries where trading is bread-and-butter, including Singapore’s dbs and Switzerland’s ubs, still finance coal purchases. Swiss cantonal lenders are happy to help. Banks in consuming countries, like China or Japan, also oblige, as does Britain’s Standard Chartered, which focuses on Asian business. (dbs and Standard Chartered both point out they are reducing their exposure to thermal coal.) Only European lenders—particularly French ones—have exited. They are being replaced by banks from producing countries, such as Australia, Indonesia and South Africa.Back in blackSmaller, “pure-play” coal traders have faced a bigger squeeze. Banks, which never made much money from them anyway, can hardly claim to be unaware of how lent funds are put to use. Last year some traders were forced to borrow from private vehicles, often backed by wealthy individuals, at annual rates nearing 25%—about five times standard costs. Yet after months of booming business many no longer need external financing. A banker says some of his coal-trading clients saw profits grow ten-fold in 2022. One in London witnessed his total equity leap from £50m ($62m) in 2021 to £700m in 2023. To then ship the stuff to buyers, traders often need a guarantee, provided by a reputable bank, that they will be paid on time. Ever fewer lenders are keen to provide such “letters of credit”, but there are ways around this, too. Some traders charge their clients more to cover counterparty risk. It helps that exposure is limited. At today’s prices, a cargo of coal may be worth just $4-5m. By contrast, an oil tanker may carry $200m-worth of crude. Others insert trusted intermediaries in the trade, or ask for bigger guarantees on other wares being bought by the client. Some governments in recipient countries provide the guarantee themselves, or even pay upfront. Outside South Africa, where rail strikes have paralysed transport, there is plenty of infrastructure on land to move coal about. Soon there will be even more. Global Energy Monitor, a charity, reckons that India plans to more than double its coal terminals to 1,400 (today the planet counts 6,300). Seaborne logistics are more restricted: pressured by green shareholders, some shippers have started to shun coal. But smaller ones, often Chinese or Greek, have stepped in. Traders report no difficulty in insuring the cargo. Even sanctions-hit Russia is exporting most of its coal, using the same mix of obscure traders and seafarers, based in Hong Kong or the Gulf, that it employs to ship its oil to Asia. Financing more digging at existing mines—the second link in the supply chain—is no problem either. Last year coal production hit a record 8bn tonnes. It is not quite business as usual. Since 2018 many mining “majors” (large, diversified groups listed on public markets) have sold some or all of their coal assets. Yet rather than being decommissioned, disposed assets have been picked up by private miners, emerging-market rivals and private-equity groups. New owners have no qualms about making full use of mines. In 2021 Anglo American, a London-based major, spun off its South African mines into a new firm that instantly pledged to crank up output. Like traders, the miners have been printing money. Australia’s three biggest pure-play coal producers went from posting net debt of $1bn in 2021 to $6bn in net cash last year. They have repaid most of their long-term borrowing, so have no big deadlines to meet soon. “The conversation has gone from ‘How do I refinance my debt?’ to ‘What do I do with my extra cash?’,” says a finance chief at one of them. Coal miners can still borrow money when needed. Data compiled by Urgewald shows that they secured an aggregate $62bn in bank loans between 2019 and 2021. According to the charity’s research, Japanese firms (smbc, Sumitomo, Mitsubishi) were the biggest lenders, followed by Bank of China and America’s jpMorgan Chase and Citigroup. European banks also featured in the top 15. During this period coal miners, mainly Chinese, also managed to sell $150bn worth of bonds and shares, often underwritten by Chinese banks. The liquidity is not drying out. Urgewald calculates that in 2022 60 large banks helped channel $13bn towards the world’s 30 largest coal producers.This is possible because the coal-exclusion policies of financial firms are wildly inconsistent. Many do not kick in until 2025. Some cover only new clients. Others prohibit financing for projects, but not general corporate loans that miners may use to dig for coal. Policies that do restrict such lending often do so only for miners that derive lots of their revenue from coal, typically 25% or 50%. Many big firms, including Glencore, a Swiss commodities giant which produces 110m tonnes a year, fall below such thresholds. Some policies are vaguely worded to allow for exemptions. Although Goldman Sachs, a bank, promises to stop financing thermal-coal mining companies that do not have a diversification strategy “within a reasonable timeframe”, it has reportedly continued to lend to Peabody, a huge Australian miner that derived 78% of its revenue from coal sales in 2022 (it may have helped that the firm recently launched a modest solar subsidiary). Out of 426 large banks, investors and insurers assessed by Reclaim Finance, another charity, only 26 were deemed to have a coal-exit policy consistent with a 2050 net-zero scenario. Even fewer have said they will exit completely. Most of China and India’s state-owned banks have said nothing at all. In short, few banks are ready to hurt their top line or their country’s supply. Analysts reckon that this will help existing mines meet demand until the early 2030s. At this point, there may finally be a crunch. Western banks, many of which periodically revise their policies, will gradually tighten the screws. The paucity of new projects today—the third link in the chain—means there may not be enough fresh supply when old mines stop producing. Although finance for new projects is getting harder to attain, it is still available. As Western banks retreat, other players are coming to the fore. Capital expenditure by Western miners has been feeble for years. Having spent big in the 2000s, many suffered when prices crashed in the mid-2010s. Even though they are making hefty profits again, the majors prefer to buy rivals, reopen old mines or return capital to shareholders rather than launch new ventures. The investment drought is most severe in coal. Building a pit from scratch can take more than a decade. Years are spent obtaining permits, which in the West are increasingly refused. Financing for new projects in rich countries is a particular hurdle. Last year Adani Group, an Indian firm that runs Carmichael, a mega coal mine being built in Queensland, had to refinance out of its own pocket $500m in bonds it had issued for the project. Some opportunistic pots of money will continue to target juicy profits, especially if prices rise. The first deep coal pit to be dug in Britain in decades is ultimately owned by emr Capital, a private-equity firm incorporated in the Cayman Islands. Peter Ryan of Goba Capital, an investment firm in Miami, expects its coal assets, which span the whole supply chain, to grow eight-fold by 2030. The picture in Asia, though, is different. Banks are still on the scene. Asian investors are starting to back new mines at home. Family offices, set up to invest the fortunes of the rich, are increasingly interested. Any business dynasty in Indonesia, where mining is the backbone of the economy, has to have some coal in its holdings, says a trader who sources his wares there. In India obscure property firms are bidding for land that may be mined for coal. Eventually companies from the same countries may come to dig mines overseas, with banks following them. Chinese forays in the West will remain rare; Indian and Indonesian firms, which already own an archipelago of coal assets in Australia, are bound to increase their footprint.The coal market of the 2030s will thus look very different. “From ownership and operation to funding and consumption, coal will be a developing-market commodity,” predicts a boss of a mining major. Supply constraints will keep prices high, but the cast of exporters cashing in will shrink. Colombia and South Africa, which serve Europe, will no longer have a market. Russia will find it harder to flog cargoes to China, despite discounts. All three will export less coal for less money. Australia will appease critics by focusing on the most efficient coal: it may export lower volumes, but charge more. Indonesia could become the swing exporter, like Saudi Arabia is for oil today. It will sell more of its basic coal—often for more money. Although coal is on a downward slope, its goodbye is likely to be an uncomfortably long one. By the 2040s demand may finally crater for good, as enough renewables come on stream. Yet even then some countries may choose to keep their options open. More energy shocks will come. “And when there is one, the commodity no one wants is the one we need to use again,” says a big trader who serves Asia. “That feature of coal could stay for ever.” ■ More

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    ‘Not just a fad’: Firm launches fund designed to capitalize on A.I. boom

    A major ETF firm provider is betting the artificial intelligence boom is just starting.
    Roundhill Investments launched the Generative AI & Technology ETF (CHAT) less than 20 days ago. It’s the first-ever exchange-traded fund designed to track companies involved in generative AI and other related technologies.

    “These companies, we believe, are not just a fad. They’re powering something that could be as ubiquitous as the internet itself,” the firm’s chief strategy officer, Dave Mazza, told “ETF Edge” this week. “We’re not talking about hopes and dreams [or] some theme or fad that could happen 30 years in the future which may change the world.”
    Mazza notes the fund includes not just pure play AI companies like C3.ai but also large-cap tech companies such as Microsoft and AI chipmaker Nvidia.
    Nvidia is the fund’s top holding at 8%, according to the company website. Its shares are up almost 42% over the past two months. Since the beginning of the year, Nvidia stock has soared 169%.
    “This [AI] is an area that’s going to get a lot of attention,” said Mazza.
    His bullish forecast comes amid concerns AI is a price bubble that will pop and take down the Big Tech rally.

    In a recent interview on CNBC’s “Fast Money,” Richard Bernstein Advisors’ Dan Suzuki — a Big Tech bear since June 2021 — compared the AI rally to the dot-com bubble in the late 1990s.
    “People jump from narrative to narrative,” the firm’s deputy chief investment officer said on Wednesday. “I love the technology. I think the applications will be huge. That doesn’t mean it’s a good investment.”
    The CHAT ETF is up more than 8% since it started trading on May 18.

    Disclaimer More

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    Time is running out to repay Covid-era 401(k), IRA withdrawals — and claim a tax refund

    The CARES Act, a federal pandemic-relief law, allowed investors to withdraw up to $100,000 in coronavirus-related distributions from 401(k) plans and individual retirement accounts in 2020.
    These CRDs carried tax benefits. If an investor repaid all or part of a distribution within three years, they could claim a tax refund for the income taxes paid on the withdrawal.
    That three-year clock is running out for many people.

    Pixdeluxe | E+ | Getty Images

    The three-year clock started the day after they received the funds — meaning the deadline for many people is fast approaching.
    “I’d think the majority of the distributions were taken right around this time through the end of [2020],” said Sean Deviney, a certified financial planner based in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
    That’s because it likely took a few weeks or months for employers and retirement plan administrators to set up the infrastructure to facilitate the distributions, said Deviney, a financial advisor and director at Provenance Wealth Advisors.

    Hundreds of thousands took distributions

    Data suggests hundreds of thousands of people took coronavirus-related distributions — and that few have repaid it.
    Nearly 6% of investors in workplace retirement plans took a CRD in 2020, according to internal administrative data from Vanguard Group. That amounts to about 268,000 people out of 4.7 million retirement investors for whom Vanguard provided administrative services that year.
    However, less than 1% of people who took a CRD had repaid it by the end of 2021, according to Vanguard’s most recent data.

    Most people forgot about what they did last week, let alone three years ago.

    Sean Deviney
    director at Provenance Wealth Advisors

    “People have completely forgotten about it,” Deviney said of the distributions. “Most people forgot about what they did last week, let alone three years ago.”
    Savers with the ability to repay a distribution stand to get a sizable tax benefit. Plus, they’d be investing money back into a retirement account that carries tax-preferred investment growth, Deviney said.

    Amended return necessary to claim refund

    Investors who repay all or part of their CRD by the three-year deadline must file an amended tax return to claim a tax refund, according to the IRS.
    Investors had the option to spread their income-tax liability over three years. For example, let’s say an investor took a $9,000 distribution in 2020. The individual had the option to report that income in chunks: $3,000 on federal tax returns for 2020, 2021 and 2022. This person would have to file an amended tax return for each year.

    If this same investor had reported the full $9,000 of income from a CRD on their 2020 tax return, just one amended tax return would be necessary.
    What’s more, investors don’t have to repay funds to the account from which the distribution originated, said Sarah Brenner, director of retirement education at Ed Slott & Co.
    “This is an important point to keep in mind because many individuals may no longer have the retirement account from which the CRD came,” she wrote. “For example, they may have changed jobs and no longer participate in the plan from which they received the CRD.”
    If repayment to a workplace plan is unavailable, investors can generally do so in an IRA, experts said.   More

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    Crypto bill from Republicans lays out clear roles for SEC and CFTC

    Reps. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., and Glenn Thompson, R-Pa., introduced a bill that proposes a more clear delineation of authority between the SEC and the CFTC on crypto issues.
    It would provide a pathway to registration and explicitly allow crypto securities to be traded on alternative trading systems, both under the SEC’s purview.
    The CFTC would oversee the crypto spot commodity market under existing law.

    Rep. Patrick McHenry, a Republican of North Carolina and ranking member of the House Financial Services Committee, speaks during a hearing in Washington, D.C.
    Andrew Harrer | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Republican lawmakers released a draft bill on Friday that would provide crypto assets and exchanges a clearer regulatory plan, allowing digital assets to be traded on more conventional trading platforms and introducing a division of authority between the top two U.S. financial regulators.
    The discussion draft was co-authored by Reps. Patrick McHenry, R-N.C., and Glenn Thompson, R-Pa., and would grant the Commodity Futures Trading Commission explicit spot market authority over crypto commodities under existing law.

    related investing news

    The Securities and Exchange Commission would regulate digital-asset securities.
    The bill would “prohibit the SEC” from preventing an alternative trading system, or ATS, from listing crypto securities and would require the SEC to “modify its rules to allow broker-dealers to custody digital assets,” according to a draft summary.
    The bill proposes a clearer pathway for the registered offer and sale of digital assets. The SEC has based several enforcement actions against American crypto entities — including Gemini, Genesis and Kraken — by arguing the companies engaged in the unregistered offer and sale of securities.
    A key carve-out for DeFi — or decentralized finance — assets would allow SEC-certified assets to be exempt from registering as securities.
    Crypto exchanges have been calling for regulatory clarity in the wake of expansive enforcement actions that have left companies and developers scrambling to move operations beyond the U.S. Crypto exchanges Coinbase and Gemini have both announced off-shore exchange operations.

    Coinbase also is engaged in a bruising courtroom battle with the SEC over the very issues that apparently prompted the McHenry-Thompson bill. The crypto exchange received a Wells notice, a warning of impending enforcement action, from the SEC earlier this year.
    The draft bill will likely be reshaped and modified in coming weeks and months, but it represents a powerful vote of support from two influential Republican members. More

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Lululemon, SentinelOne, T-Mobile, MongoDB and more

    A boarded up T-Mobile location in New York, after looting occurred the previous night, June 2, 2020.
    Dan Magan | CNBC

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Lululemon — The athleisure apparel company rallied 11.3% on strong fiscal first-quarter earnings results. The company posted a top- and bottom-line beat and a 24% year-over-year increase in sales. Lululemon also raised its guidance for the full year.

    related investing news

    Wireless phone providers, Amazon — Shares of wireless phone service providers struggled after a report from Bloomberg News that Amazon is weighing offering wireless service to Prime members. Amazon later said in a statement it’s not planning to add wireless “at this time.” Shares of AT&T and Verizon fell more than 3% each, while T-Mobile lost 5.6%. Amazon traded 1.2% higher, while Dish Network popped 16%.
    MongoDB — Shares of the data developer rocketed 28% after the company forecast strong fiscal first-quarter earnings and boosted its full-year guidance. MongoDB also surpassed Wall Street’s estimates for the recent quarter, with adjusted earnings coming in at 56 cents per share, nearly three times the Refinitiv consensus estimate of 19 cents per share.
    SentinelOne — The cybersecurity stock sank more than 35% after SentinelOne’s revenue fell short of expectations. SentinelOne posted revenue of $133.4 million, below a FactSet forecast of $136.6 million. The company cited macroeconomic pressure as a contributor to slowing sales growth in a shareholder letter and cut its full-year revenue guidance.
    Broadcom — Shares of the chipmaker added 2.8% on the back of better-than-expected quarterly results. Broadcom earned $10.32 per share on revenue of $8.73 billion. Analysts expected a profit of $10.08 per share on revenue of $8.71 billion. Bank of America also reiterated a buy rating on the stock and raised its price target, citing an undervalued artificial intelligence segment.
    Dupont de Nemours — The chemicals products stock added 7.3% after DuPont reached a settlement with the U.S. Water Systems to rectify PFAS-related claims in drinking water. PFAS stands for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. Chemours Co. and Corteva, also involved in the settlement, rose 24.1% and 3.8%, respectively.

    Zscaler — Zscaler shares gained 5.4% on fiscal third-quarter results that beat Wall Street’s expectations and better-than-expected guidance. Earnings per share came in at 48 cents, 6 cents above a Refinitiv consensus.
    Five Below — The value retailer’s shares jumped 7.8% following a mixed earnings report for the previous quarter. Bank of America reiterated its buy rating on Five Below shares in a Friday note, citing the company’s “recession resilience.”
    The Trade Desk — The online ad company saw its shares jump over 1% after a Morgan Stanley upgrade to overweight from equal weight. The bank said The Trade Desk is a top pick poised to thrive in a stabilizing market for sales. Its $90 price target represents a more than 20% upside for the stock.
    PagerDuty — Shares slumped 17.1% after the IT cloud company issued second-quarter revenue guidance that missed expectations. PagerDuty sees revenue for the quarter as high as $105.5 million. Analysts polled by StreetAccount expected guidance around $108 million.
    Dell — The tech stock climbed 4% after the company posted quarterly earnings and revenue that beat Wall Street expectations. Dell posted a profit of $1.31 per share for the latest quarter, beating a Refinitiv estimate of 86 cents. Revenue of $20.92 billion also came in higher than an estimate of $20.27 billion.
    Samsara — The cloud company popped nearly 28% after reporting a smaller-than-expected first-quarter loss and lifting its full-year sales guidance. Samsara reported a loss of 2 cents a share on $204.3 million in revenue. That’s above the expected loss of 5 cents a share and $191.9 million in revenue, according to FactSet.
    FibroGen — Shares rose 3.2% following an upgrade to buy from hold by Stifel. The firm said the company is focused on the development of two potentially “first-in-class” drugs.
    Ginkgo Bioworks — The biotech stock dropped 3.6% on the back of a downgrade to sell from neutral by Goldman Sachs. Goldman said the company could see slower growth in new programs given the macro environment and cooling spending.
    — CNBC’s Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans and Alex Harring contributed reporting. More