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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Campbell Soup, Moderna, Western Digital and others

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Campbell Soup (CPB) – The food producer’s shares rallied 3.7% in the premarket after Campbell reported an adjusted quarterly profit of 70 cents per share, 9 cents above estimates. Sales also beat forecasts, and the company raised its full-year sales outlook. Campbell also maintained its prior earnings forecast, noting it now expects core inflation to run hotter than its previous outlook.

    Thor Industries (THO) – The recreational vehicle maker’s stock surged 6.9% in premarket trading following better-than-expected quarterly results. Thor earned $6.32 per share, well above the $4.77 consensus estimate, amid strong demand for its products. Thor also said it is seeing signs of improved supply chain issues.
    Moderna (MRNA) – Moderna added 1.6% in the premarket after a modified version of its Covid-19 booster shot prompted a stronger immune response than the company’s original vaccine against the omicron variant. Data will be submitted to U.S. regulators in the coming weeks.
    Western Digital (WDC) – Western Digital said it is reviewing strategic alternatives, including a possible split of its flash memory and disk drive businesses. Activist investor Elliott Management, which owns 6% of Western Digital, has been pushing for those changes. Shares jumped 3.8% in premarket action.
    Roku (ROKU) – Shares of the video streaming device maker rallied 8.1% in the premarket after a Business Insider article highlighted talk inside Roku about possibly being acquired by Netflix (NFLX).
    Hasbro (HAS) – Hasbro will be successful in pushing back a board challenge from activist investor Alta Fox, according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to Reuters. Alta Fox has been critical of various aspects of the toymaker’s strategy and wants Hasbro to spin off its Wizards of the Coast unit.

    Credit Suisse (CS) – Credit Suisse warned of a likely second-quarter loss, due to the negative impacts of the Russia/Ukraine war, monetary tightening and other financial market conditions. The bank did not specify how large such a loss may be. Credit Suisse slumped 6.1% in the premarket.
    Novavax (NVAX) – Novavax soared 15.7% in premarket trading after it won an endorsement of its Covid-19 vaccine from an FDA advisory panel. The full FDA will now consider whether or not to approve the vaccine.
    DocuSign (DOCU) – DocuSign shares rallied 4.6% in premarket action after the electronic signature technology company announced an expanded global partnership with Microsoft (MSFT). The deal enhances the integration of DocuSign technology into Microsoft software applications.

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    Crypto poses a threat to the safety of global payment systems, fintech boss warns

    Cryptocurrencies are a “threat to the safety of our payment schemes,” Anne Boden, CEO of U.K. digital bank Starling, warned Tuesday.
    Regulators are concerned about the financial system becoming more entwined with the volatile world of crypto.
    Roughly $400 billion has been erased from the combined value of all cryptocurrencies in the past month.

    Starling CEO Anne Boden.
    Harry Murphy | Sportsfile for Web Summit via Getty Images

    AMSTERDAM — The boss of Goldman Sachs-backed digital bank Starling has doubled down on criticisms of crypto, calling digital currencies a threat to the safety of payment infrastructure.
    “It is very dangerous,” Anne Boden, who founded Starling in 2014, warned Tuesday at the Money 20/20 fintech conference in Amsterdam. Based in Britain, Starling offers fee-free checking accounts and loans through an app. The firm was last privately valued at £2.5 billion ($3.1 billion) and counts the likes of Goldman and Fidelity as investors.

    “A lot of [crypto] wallets are being connected directly to payment schemes,” Boden said. “This is a threat to the safety of our payment schemes around the world.”
    Major payment players are embracing cryptocurrencies — credit card giants Mastercard and Visa opened their networks to digital assets, for example, while PayPal also lets users trade bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. Regulators are concerned about the financial system becoming more entwined with the volatile world of crypto.
    Roughly $400 billion has been erased from the combined value of all cryptocurrencies in the past month, as investors were rattled by the collapse of terraUSD, a popular so-called stablecoin that was meant to always be worth $1.

    It’s not the first time Boden has warned about the dangers of the crypto space. She has previously sounded the alarm about the risk of consumers falling victim to fraud as a result of investments in crypto.
    “Customers are being scammed,” the Starling chief said Tuesday. “We’re spending far more of our time protecting customers from the scammers than we are trying to promote crypto.”

    Asked whether Starling would ever offer crypto, Boden said it was unlikely to happen in the next couple of years, adding crypto companies have a lot of catching up to do when it comes to anti-money laundering controls.
    In April, the U.K.’s Financial Conduct Authority published the findings of a review that found online-only challenger banks aren’t doing enough to tackle financial crime.
    The regulator didn’t name any names, but Starling confirmed it was among the firms whose systems were scrutinized, with a spokesperson saying the company has been “extremely vocal” about fighting fraud.

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    Credit Suisse issues profit warning for second quarter, citing Ukraine war and rate hikes

    Credit Suisse said despite the trading revenues benefiting from the spike in volatility, the impact of these conditions, combined with “continued low levels of capital markets issuance” and widening credit spreads, have “depressed the financial performance” of the investment bank in April and May.
    This is “likely to lead to a loss for this division as well as a loss for the Group in the second quarter of 2022,” the trading update said.

    A sign above the entrance to the Credit Suisse Group AG headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, on Monday, Nov. 1, 2021.
    Thi My Lien Nguyen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Credit Suisse said on Wednesday that it is likely to post a loss for the second quarter as the war in Ukraine and monetary policy tightening squeeze its investment bank.
    In a trading update early Wednesday morning, the embattled lender said the geopolitical situation, significant monetary tightening from major central banks in response to soaring inflation, and the unwinding of Covid-19 era stimulus measures had caused “continued heightened market volatility, weak customer flows and ongoing client deleveraging, notably in the APAC region.”

    Credit Suisse said despite the trading revenues benefiting from the spike in volatility, the impact of these conditions, combined with “continued low levels of capital markets issuance” and widening credit spreads, have “depressed the financial performance” of the investment bank in April and May.
    This is “likely to lead to a loss for this division as well as a loss for the Group in the second quarter of 2022,” the trading update said.
    The bank’s shares fell more than 5% shortly after markets opened on Wednesday.

    Credit Suisse has endured a string of scandals and mishaps in recent years, leading some shareholders to call for a change in leadership. Chairman Axel Lehmann told CNBC in May, however, that CEO Thomas Gottstein has his full backing to continue with the “rebuilding” of the company.
    Gottstein took the reins in 2020 following the resignation of predecessor Tidjane Thiam over a protracted spying scandal.

    The bank reported a net loss for the first quarter of 2022 and announced a management reshuffle as it continues to grapple with litigation costs relating to the Archegos hedge fund collapse.

    “We would note that our reported earnings will also be affected by continued volatility in the market value of our 8.6% investment in Allfunds Group,” the bank added.
    Spanish wealthtech platform Allfunds Group, which launched on the Euronext Amsterdam in April 2021, has seen its share price plunge 52% year-to-date.
    Credit Suisse said 2022 will remain a year of “transition” for the bank, vowing to accelerate cost-cutting across the group, and will provide further details at its Investor “Deep Dive” on June 28.
    The bank aims to operate a group common equity tier one capital ratio, a measure of bank solvency, of 13.5% in the near-term, in line with its goal of 14% by 2024.

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    Even if oil hits $150 a barrel, J.P. Morgan's Marko Kolanovic predicts stocks will reclaim 2022 highs

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    J.P. Morgan’s Marko Kolanovic predicts oil is surging higher — but so are stocks.
    Kolanovic, who serves as the firm’s chief global markets strategist and co-head of global research, believes the U.S. economy is strong enough to handle oil prices as high as $150 a barrel.

    “There could be some potential further spikes in oil, especially given… the situation in Europe and the war. So, we wouldn’t be surprised,” he told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Tuesday. “But it could be a short-lived spike and eventually, sort of, normalize.”
    WTI crude is trading around three month highs, settling up 0.77% to $119.41 a barrel on Tuesday. Brent crude closed at the $120.57 mark. The bullish move came as Shanghai reopened from a two month Covid-19 lockdown, opening the door for higher demand and more upside.
    “We think the consumer can handle oil at $130, $135 because we had that back in 2010 to 2014. Inflation adjusted, that was basically the level. So, we think the consumer can handle that,” said Kolanovic, who has earned top honors from Institutional Investor for accurate forecasts multiple years in a row.
    His base case is the U.S. and global economy will avoid a recession.

    Read more about energy from CNBC Pro

    But at a financial conference last week, JPMorgan Chase Chairman and CEO Jamie Dimon told investors he’s preparing for an economic “hurricane” which could be a “minor one or Superstorm Sandy.”

    Kolanovic contends its vital to be ready for all possibilities.
    “We do forecast some slow down,” he said. “Nobody is saying that there are no problems.”
    His firm’s official S&P 500 year-end target is 4,900. But in a recent note, Kolanovic speculated the index would end the year around 4,800, still on par with all-time highs hit on Jan. 4. Right now, the S&P is 16% below its record high.
    ‘We don’t think investors will stick in cash’
    “We don’t think investors will stick in cash for the next 12 months, you know, waiting for this recession,” Kolanovic said. “If we continue to see [the] consumer especially on the services side holding up — which we do expect — then we think investors will gradually come back into equity markets.”
    Kolanovic’s top call is still energy, a group he has been bullish on since 2019.
    “Actually, valuations went lower despite the stock price appreciation,” Kolanovic said. “Earnings grow faster, so multiples are actually lower now in energy than they were a year ago.”
    He’s also bullish on small caps and high-beta technology stocks that have gotten crushed this year.
    Disclaimer

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    Stock futures dip following two straight days of gains on Wall Street

    Stock futures fell marginally in overnight trading Tuesday after two consecutive days of gains on Wall Street.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 55 points. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures both declined just 0.2%.

    Investors shrugged off some signs of an economic slowdown ahead of a key inflation reading. The S&P 500 gained nearly 1%, rising for a second straight day. The 30-stock Dow advanced more than 260 points, Tuesday, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 0.9%.
    Target cut its profit guidance on Tuesday, saying it plans to get rid of excess inventory. The development highlighted risks about economic growth amid surging inflation. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Federal Reserve’s GDPNow tracker showed a growth rate of just 0.9% for the second quarter, down from 1.3% last week.
    “[The] market could continue to reflect concerns around financial conditions tightening and earnings growth slowing,” Lauren Goodwin, economist and portfolio strategist at New York Life Investments, said in a note.
    All eyes will be on Friday’s consumer price index reading for May. Many believe the print will be crucial for the path of Fed policy and whether the central bank will keep raising rates in 50-basis-point increments.
    The stock market has had a roller-coaster year as the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes stoked recession fears. The S&P 500 is off nearly 14% from its all-time high reached in January. The equity benchmark briefly dipped into bear market territory on an intraday basis last month.

    “The question is whether this slower implied pace of tightening is attributable to the belief that the Fed will meet its policy goals or because the economy will be tipping into recession,” said Gargi Chaudhuri, head of iShares investment strategy at BlackRock. “We believe the US will avoid a recession.”
    A slew of retailers and consumer companies will report quarterly earnings Wednesday, including Campbell Soup, Ollie’s Bargain Outlet and Five Below.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Target, Kohl's, Peloton and more

    FILE PHOTO: Shoppers exit a Target store during Black Friday sales in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., November 26, 2021. 
    Brendan Mcdermid | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Target — Shares of the retailer fell 2.3% after the company said it will take a short-term hit to profits as it cancels orders and marks down unwanted merchandise. CEO Brian Cornell said the big-box retailer wants to clear room for merchandise including groceries and back-to-school supplies.

    Kohl’s — The department store’s stock jumped 9.5% on news that it’s in negotiations with the parent company of The Vitamin Shoppe to purchase Kohl’s for $60 a share, which values Kohl’s at roughly $8 billion. Franchise Group’s stock gained 4.8%.
    Peloton — The at-home fitness company’s shares closed down 0.4% after it announced Jill Woodworth, its chief financial officer, will leave the company after four years. Liz Coddington, a former executive at Amazon and Netflix, will take her place starting June 13.
    Apple — Apple shares rose about 1.8% following the iPhone maker’s WWDC event on Monday, where it announced its M2 chip, a buy now/pay later offering and updates to CarPlay.
    BuzzFeed — Shares of the media company bounced 2.7% after plummeting about 41% Monday following the expiration of its IPO lockup period.
    GitLab — The cloud-based software provider’s stock surged 28% on a smaller-than-expected loss in the latest quarter. GitLab also beat revenue estimates and shared strong revenue guidance for the current quarter.

    J.M. Smucker — Shares of the food company rose 5.8% after earnings and revenue in the latest quarter beat analysts’ estimates. Adjusted earnings per share came in 35 cents above analysts’ forecasts.
    United Natural Foods — Shares of the food wholesaler dropped 3.2% despite United Natural’s fiscal third-quarter results beating expectations. The company reported $1.10 in adjusted earnings per share on $7.24 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting 97 cents in earnings per share on $7.1 billion of revenue. Company executives said on an investor call that inflation remains elevated.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound and Yun Li contributed reporting.

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    Bipartisan crypto regulatory overhaul would treat most digital assets as commodities under CFTC oversight

    Sens. Cynthia Lummis and Kirsten Gillibrand said Tuesday that they are ready to debut the first major attempt from Capitol Hill to create a regulatory framework for crypto.
    The Lummis-Gillibrand bill, the product of months of Capitol Hill collaboration, amounts to a regulatory overhaul that would classify the vast majority of digital assets as commodities.
    The Responsible Financial Innovation Act would empower the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to regulate most existing digital assets.

    U.S. Capitol building in Washington, D.C.
    Liu Jie | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

    Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand and Cynthia Lummis introduced the first major bipartisan legislation aimed at taming the “Wild West” crypto market on Tuesday that would classify digital assets as commodities like wheat or oil and empower the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to rein in the nascent industry.
    Gillibrand, a Democrat from New York who sits on the Senate Agriculture Committee, and Lummis, a first-term Republican from Wyoming on the Banking Committee, said the Responsible Financial Innovation Act is the culmination of months of collaboration in the House and Senate and represents a critical first attempt to structure the markets for digital assets with long-awaited legal definitions. 

    Their offices touted the bill as “landmark bipartisan legislation that will create a complete regulatory framework for digital assets that encourages responsible financial innovation, flexibility, transparency and robust consumer protections while integrating digital assets into existing law.” 

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    The cornerstone of the legislation is how it defines the vast number of digital assets available to American investors and consumers. 
    With few exceptions, the bill designates digital currencies as “ancillary assets,” or intangible, fungible assets that are offered or sold in tandem with a purchase and sale of a security. 
    Aides to Gillibrand and Lummis said their proposed law treats all digitals assets as “ancillary” unless they behave like a security a corporation would issue to investors to build capital.  
    Cryptocurrencies and other digital coins won’t be treated like traditional securities under the Securities and Exchange Commission’s scrutiny unless the holder is entitled to the privileges enjoyed by corporate investors like dividends, liquidation rights or a financial interest in the issuer, the aides told reporters. 

    They added that the bill is a product of months of discussion with fellow senators, including Republicans Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and Pat Toomey, as well as Democrats like Ron Wyden. 

    “My home state of Wyoming has gone to great lengths to lead the nation in digital asset regulation, and I want to bring that success to the federal level,” Lummis said in a press release. “As this industry continues to grow, it is critical that Congress carefully crafts legislation that promotes innovation while protecting the consumer against bad actors.” 
    Gillibrand said their bill will “provide clarity to both industry and regulators, while also maintaining the flexibility to account for the ongoing evolution of the digital assets market,” according to the press release.
    The CFTC and SEC together regulate wide swaths of the U.S. markets and act as two powerful Wall Street watchdogs. The former oversees the purchase and sale of raw commodities like corn, coffee, gold and oil, while the latter polices companies, executives and securities that seek to raise capital from the public.
    While it is up to Congress to decide how government agencies police U.S. markets, the SEC and its chairman, Gary Gensler, had for more than a year led the public crusade in support of tighter crypto rules. 
    “Currently, we just don’t have enough investor protection in crypto finance, issuance, trading, or lending,” Gensler told lawmakers in September. “Frankly, at this time, it’s more like the Wild West or the old world of ‘buyer beware’ that existed before the securities laws were enacted.” 

    Representatives for Lummis and Gillibrand said they worked with the SEC on their plan, and spent weeks trying to remedy concerns voiced by the regulator’s attorneys that the legislation would cede too much power. 
    They also said that fees collected from digital asset issuers would play an important role in augmenting the CFTC’s budget to take on what’s expected to be a deluge of regulatory oversight. 
    While Gillibrand and Lummis have experience working with the CFTC and SEC, respectively, it was unclear as of Tuesday morning what each institution thinks of the new legislation. Neither the CFTC nor the SEC immediately responded to CNBC’s requests for comment. 
    Input from both agencies is critical to the legal debate in the U.S. on how to define cryptocurrencies and other digital assets. 
    The Gillibrand and Lummis bill, for example, defines a “digital asset” as a natively electronic asset that confers economic or proprietary access rights or powers and includes virtual currency and payment stablecoins. 
    It later defines virtual currency as a digital asset that is used “primarily” as a medium of exchange, unit of account or a store of value and is not backed by an underlying financial asset. 

    The industry has hired more than 200 officials and staff from the White House, Congress, Federal Reserve and political campaigns, according to the Tech Transparency Project. Meanwhile, crypto executives have contributed more than $30 million toward federal candidates and campaigns since the start of the 2020 election cycle, according to Federal Election Commission data.
    Both Lummis and Gillibrand want to work with their peers to develop their respective states into blockchain and crypto havens. 
    In the Empire State, New York City Mayor Eric Adams invested his early paychecks in bitcoin and ether, while Rep. Ritchie Torres, a Democrat representing the Bronx, said in March that his city “should and must embrace crypto if it is to remain the financial capital of the world.” 
    Wyoming, meanwhile, edited its laws in 2019 to create a novel type of bank charter called a special purpose depository institution to accommodate crypto start-ups and trading platforms and remains on an aggressive track to diversify into finance and away from old-school industries like coal and gas. 
    Staff for both senators touted key features of the bill in a call with reporters, including certain tax exemptions that would shield stablecoin holders from having to report income changes each time they make a purchase with digital currency. 
    Those disclosures would inform investors about issuers’ experience developing digital assets, the price history of issuers’ prior assets, anticipated costs, and descriptions of the management teams and liabilities of each issuer. 
    Even though staffers described the bill as a mix of input from politicians on both sides of the political aisle, they acknowledged its size and complexity could force lawmakers to break it up and attempt to pass its components piece by piece.

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    Bitcoin drops 6% to again trade below $30,000 as selloff resumes

    A bystander uses a Bitcoin ATM in San Salvador, El Salvador, on May 16, 2022.
    Alex Pena | Anadolu Agency | Getty Images

    Bitcoin fell below $30,000 again Tuesday as the cryptocurrency’s recent selloff resumed.
    The largest cryptocurrency by market cap slumped more than 6% to $29,434, according to Coinbase. Bitcoin had gained more than 4% to trade above $31,000 in the previous session. Ether dropped 6.6% to around $1,737 Tuesday.

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    Bitcoin has lost more than half of its value from an all-time high of $68,982 reached in November. The digital token had suffered eight straight weeks of losses and dropped below $30,000 last month after the Terra collapse.
    Cryptocurrencies have been moving in lockstep with equities, which have had a rough year amid fears of rising rates, surging inflation and the risk of a slower economy or outright recession. The S&P 500 has fallen more than 13% in 2022, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has been hit harder, down 23% this year.
    “BTC’s increased correlation with equity, stagnated transactions growth … and the emergence of ETH as a store of value rival could weaken BTC’s dominance,” Bernstein analyst Gautam Chhugani, said in a recent note.
    Still, some on Wall Street see a rebound in bitcoin on the horizon. JPMorgan’s Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou said last month that he sees about 30% upside for bitcoin after the recent washout.

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