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    Stock futures fall slightly as investors dwell on health of the economy

    U.S. stock futures were slightly lower Wednesday night as economic concerns dragged down investor sentiment.
    Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged lower by 74 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were also dopped 0.2% each.

    Shares of pet retailer Chewy surged after hours by nearly 20% after the company reported strong quarterly results. Apparel retailer PVH also got a lift from earnings, with shares adding more than 4%.
    Meanwhile, Hewlett Packard Enterprise fell more than 6% following slight misses on both earnings and revenue.
    In regular trading, stocks started June with declines amid choppy trading. The Dow shed 176.89 points, or 0.5%. The S&P 500 fell nearly 0.8%, and the Nasdaq Composite retreated 0.7%.
    Sentiment was heavy after JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon warned that an economic “hurricane” caused by the Federal Reserve and the war in Ukraine is brewing. He said his company is “going to be very conservative with our balance sheet.”

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    On top of that, new data suggests the economy is still running hot. The number of April job openings, released Wednesday, declined sharply from the previous month — but the findings suggest the job market remains tight. Further, the Institute for Supply Management said its manufacturing PMI came in at 56.1 for May, up from 55.4 the month before.

    “The market remained choppy with a negative bias to start the month of June,” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management. “Inflation remains a headline concern as underscored by higher oil prices and consumer concerns in the Fed’s Beige Book economic report.”
    Indeed, the central bank’s report showed the U.S. has been seeing just “slight or modest” economic growth over the past two months or so.
    “Our view is cautious as we close out the second quarter,” Haworth added. “Global central bank uncertainty and the pace of tighter monetary policy, still-tight global energy and agriculture markets — which may lead to higher prices still — and headwinds for corporate earnings growth are risks for investors moving forward.”
    Retail earnings continue this week, with Designer Brands, Lululemon Athletica and RH set to report on Thursday. Big tech names like CrowdStrike and Okta are also on deck.
    Investors are also monitoring employment data for insights into how employers and workers are managing inflation. ADP will post data from its national employment report at 8:15 a.m. ET on Thursday, shortly before the Department of Labor releases weekly jobless claims.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Chewy, MongoDB, Hewlett Packard Enterprise and more

    A dog sits in front of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) during Chewy Inc.’s initial public offering (IPO) in New York, U.S., on Friday, June 14, 2019.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in extended trading.
    Chewy — The pet retailer’s shares surged nearly 20% after hours following the company’s quarterly results. Chewy posted earnings of 4 cents per share, topping analysts’ estimates by 18 cents. Revenue of $2.43 billion came in slightly higher than estimates of $2.42 billion, according to Refinitiv.

    Hewlett Packard Enterprise — Shares of the cloud company fell more than 6% after the firm reported quarterly earnings of 44 cents per share, which missed analysts’ estimates by 1 cent per share, according to Refinitiv. Revenue for the quarter also posted a slight miss, coming in at $6.71 billion, compared to estimates of $6.78 billion.
    MongoDB — The database platform got a 5% boost in shares after it reported earnings of 20 cents per share, which beat Wall Street forecasts by 29 cents, and revenue of $285 million. Analysts expected just $267 million in revenue, according to Refinitiv.
    GameStop — The video game retailer’s shares dropped less than 1% after the company reported its quarterly results, which include revenue of $1.38 billion and a loss of $2.08 per share. GameStop recently announced it will soon launch an NFT marketplace, but it gave no update on this in its financial results.
    PVH — Apparel company PVH’s shares advanced more than 4% after reporting financial results that beat Wall Street forecasts for the most recent quarter. The maker of Tommy Hilfiger, Calvin Klein and other brands reported a profit of $1.94 per share, which is higher than estimates by 33 cents per share. It posted $2.12 billion in revenue, compared to estimates of $2.09 billion.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Salesforce, Delta, Albemarle and more

    Pedestrians pass in front of the Salesforce Tower in New York.
    Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Salesforce — Shares of the enterprise-software maker jumped 9.9% after the company’s stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings report. Salesforce also lifted its full-year earnings guidance, but reduced its guidance for revenue. The company said it’s slowing down in hiring and isn’t looking to make another big purchase at this point after its acquisition of Slack.

    Delta — The stock fell 5.2% after the airline said it expects sales in the current quarter to return to prepandemic levels. Delta Air Lines said greater travel demand from consumers who are willing to pay higher ticket fares helped offset the spike in energy prices.
    Albemarle, Mosaic — Materials companies typically linked to the economic cycle were among the biggest laggards in the S&P 500 as comments from JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon saying the economy is headed for a “hurricane” weighed on the market. The chemical manufacturing company Albemarle’s shares dropped 7.8%. Agriculture company Mosaic shed 6.1%.
    Travel stocks — Cruise lines, air carriers, hotels and other travel names suffered as investors worried about the health of the economy. Norwegian Cruise Line and United Airlines each fell about 4.5%, Airbnb lost 3.4% and Wynn Resorts slipped by 1.5%.
    Victoria’s Secret — Shares of the intimate apparel retailer surged 8.9% after reporting a beat on earnings in the recent quarter. Victoria’s Secret reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.11, as compared with analysts’ estimates of 84 cents. Revenue came in at $1.48 billion, falling in line with expectations.
    Tempur Sealy International — The mattress company’s shares fell 6.6% after Piper Sandler downgraded the stock to neutral from overweight. Piper said it’s concerned about slower-than-expected sales for the mattress company.

    Stanley Black & Decker — The manufacturing company saw its shares fall 3.4% after its board named Donald Allan, the current president and chief financial officer, as the company’s next CEO. Allan’s new role will take effect July 1. He will join the board and retain his title as president.
    Warner Bros Discovery — Shares of the media and entertainment giant fell 4.3% after Wells Fargo reiterated the stock at overweight. The bank said the company is a solid opportunity for “patient” investors.
    AmerisourceBergen — Shares of the drug wholesale company lost 3.1% after it reiterated full-year earnings guidance, which fell below FactSet estimates. The company also said its board authorized a new share repurchase program allowing the company to purchase up to $1 billion of its outstanding shares.
    Medtronic — The medical tech stock lost 2.4% after Atlantic Equities downgraded it to neutral from overweight, saying the valuation gap has closed between Medtronic and its peers and that the stock “no longer fully discounts recent execution issues.”
     — CNBC’s Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min and Hannah Miao contributed reporting.

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    What America’s next recession will look like

    These days it is hard to turn a corner without bumping into predictions of an American recession. Big banks, prominent economists and former officials are all saying that a downturn is a near certainty as the Federal Reserve wrestles inflation under control. Three-quarters of chief executives of Fortune 500 companies are braced for growth to go negative before the end of 2023. Bond yields and consumer surveys are flashing red. Google searches for “recession” are soaring. The track record is certainly ominous. As Larry Summers, a former treasury secretary, has observed, whenever inflation has risen above 4% and unemployment has dipped below 4%—two thresholds that, when breached, indicate economic overheating—America has suffered a recession within two years. It is well across both thresholds now. For much of last year the Fed and investors alike believed that inflation would fade as the pandemic subsided. No one believes that now. There is broad agreement that, supply snarls and energy-price surges notwithstanding, demand is also excessive, and that tighter monetary policy is needed to return it to a normal level. The question is how tight, and therefore how much the economy could suffer: the higher the Fed has to raise rates, the more punishing the downturn will be. Investors are pricing in pain, as indicated by the fall in stocks since the start of the year.If America does slip into a recession, how might it play out? One way of trying to divine the path of a downturn is to consult history. America has suffered 12 recessions since 1945. Many observers point to similarities between today’s predicament and the early 1980s, when Paul Volcker’s Fed crushed inflation, causing a deep recession in the process. Others look at the downturn that followed the energy crises of the 1970s, echoed by the surge in oil and food prices today. Still others point to the dotcom bust in 2000, mirrored by the collapse in tech stocks this year.But these parallels have serious flaws. Inflation is nowhere near as entrenched as at the start of Mr Volcker’s era. Growth is far less energy-intensive than in the 1970s. And the economy faces more complex crosswinds now than it did after the bust of 2000. The unusual nature of the deep covid-induced downturn in 2020, and the roaring recovery in 2021, when fiscal and monetary stimulus flooded the economy, limits the relevance of past episodes.A better way to think about a recession, if it comes, is to look at America as it is today. Consider three different facets: the real economy, the financial system and the central bank. All three, working in concert, suggest that a recession would be relatively mild. Households and businesses’ balance-sheets are mostly strong. Risks in the financial system appear to be manageable. The Fed, for its part, has been too slow to respond to inflation, but the credibility it has built up over the past few decades means it can still fight an effective rearguard action. There is, however, a sting in the tail: when the recession ultimately ends, the consequences of the past few years of living dangerously with inflation may make for a sluggish recovery.Start with the resilience of the real economy, which may well be the most important line of defence in a downturn. The general population is on a sound financial footing, a welcome change from the overextended consumers of the past. Household debt is about 75% of gdp, down from 100% on the eve of the global financial crisis of 2007-09. Even more striking is how much less Americans pay annually to service their debts. Because so many have shifted to cheaper mortgages as interest rates have fallen in recent years, their annual debt payments now add up to about 9% of disposable income, about the lowest since data were first collected in 1980.Moreover, many households have larger-than-normal cash buffers thanks to the stimulus payments of the past two years, plus their reduced spending on travel, restaurants and the like at the height of the pandemic. Overall, Americans have excess savings of about $2trn (9% of gdp) compared with before covid. They have started to use some of this cash as living costs rise, but still retain a useful cushion.In any recession one big concern is how many people will lose their jobs. Unemployment tends to rise during recessions: the average post-1945 downturn in America, excluding the brief covid recession, pushed up the jobless rate by three percentage points (see chart 1). A rise in unemployment seems all the more economically necessary today, as a way to relieve some of the upward pressure on wages and dampen inflation. Could things play out differently, though? The labour market has, by some measures, never been so tight: a record 1.9 jobs are available for every unemployed person. This has fuelled optimism that companies could, in effect, cancel their job ads without firing people. Jerome Powell, chairman of the Fed, has expressed this hope. “There’s a path by which we would be able to moderate demand in the labour market and have vacancies go down without having unemployment going up,” he said on May 4th. In practice, though, the labour market is unlikely to adjust so smoothly. Mr Summers has drawn attention to the concept of the Beveridge Curve, which portrays a basic relationship: the more vacancies there are, the lower the unemployment rate. Since the onset of the pandemic the curve has shifted outwards (see chart 2). In other words, it now seems to require more vacancies to get to the same unemployment rates as in the past—an indication of faltering efficiency in the economy’s ability to match the right people with the right jobs. One possible explanation is that some people are still reluctant to work because of the health risks from covid. Another is regional variation: some states, like Utah and Nebraska, have giant needs for workers but not enough people are willing to move to them.Whatever the precise reason, the implication is that it is too optimistic to think that the Fed’s tightening can reduce vacancies without also reducing employment. Yet that does not mean that Mr Powell is all wrong. The Beveridge Curve could also move back as the recovery progresses and more people re-enter the workforce. Say the unemployment rate increases by two percentage points instead of the average three during recessions. That would take the rate to about 5.5%, lower than the average of the past three decades. Though painful for those who end up on the dole, it would be a good outcome as far as recessions go. By contrast, 11% of Americans were out of work by the time Mr Volcker was done with his tightening. Hurting me softlyEven if most people are fairly well insulated from a recession, they are still likely to curtail their spending as the economy goes south. Belt-tightening would, in turn, translate into less revenue for businesses. A key question is how those lower earnings will interact with high debt levels: unlike households, companies have ramped up their borrowing over the past decade. Non-financial business debt stands at about 75% of gdp, not far from a record high.Reassuringly, many companies sought to lock in rock-bottom rates during the pandemic. In 2021 companies reduced debt coming due this year by about 27%, or $250bn, mainly by refinancing their existing debt at lower rates and for longer durations. That makes them less sensitive to an increase in interest rates.Less reassuringly, riskier companies also took advantage of easy money. Bonds that are rated bbb, the lowest rung of investment-grade debt, now account for a record 57% of the investment-grade bond market, up from 40% in 2007. When a recession strikes, the ratings on many of these bonds could slip a notch or two. And when bonds go from investment-grade to speculative, or junk, status, they become far less appealing for a universe of investors such as pension funds and insurance firms. That increases the chances of a flight to safety when the mood sours. Even so, thanks to the starting point of low funding costs, there are limits to how bad things might get. In a pessimistic scenario—where a recession collides with higher input costs and rising interest rates—s&p, a rating agency, forecasts that about 6% of speculative-grade corporate bonds will go into default next year. That would be well up from the 1.5% rate now, but half the 12% rate hit in 2009. Intriguingly, the sector today holding the most low-quality debt is media and entertainment, featuring many leisure companies such as cruise lines. A recession would sap demand for their services. But as worries about covid recede, there is also a pent-up desire to get out and have fun again. The paradoxical result is that a swathe of low-rated companies may be positioned to fare better than most during a downturn.How well fortified is the financial system? Headlines in recent years about Basel 3 capital-adequacy standards for banks may have caused more than a few pairs of eyes to glaze over. But these rules have served a purpose, forcing large financial firms to hold more capital and more liquid assets. Banks went into 2007 with core loss-absorbing equity worth about 8% of their risk-weighted assets. Today, it is more like 13%, a much plumper margin of safety. “A recession would not look like it did after the financial crisis. The system is just not levered like it was back then,” says Jay Bryson of Wells Fargo, a bank.New threats have, inevitably, emerged. Prudential regulations have pushed risky activities into darker corners of the financial system. Non-bank lenders, for instance, issued about 70% of all mortgages last year, up from 30% a decade ago. Ideally, that would spread risks away from banks. But bank lending to these non-banks has also boomed, creating a web of opaque linkages. Insurers, hedge funds and family offices—in effect investment firms for the ultra-rich—have also taken on additional risks. They carry more debt than 15 years ago and are among the biggest investors in lower-rated corporate bonds.Emblematic of the new kind of danger are collateralised loan obligations (clos). These are typically created by syndicating loans, pooling them and then dividing them into securities with different ratings depending on their payment profiles. The value of outstanding clos has reached about $850bn, making it the biggest securitised credit sector in America. And high-risk leveraged loans form a growing share of clos, which are partly converted into investment-grade assets through the alchemy of securitisation. The parallels with the dodgy mortgage-backed securities of the 2000s are obvious. Yet the similarities can also be overstated. The clo market is about half the size of the riskiest mortgage-securities market in the early 2000s. clos connect investors to a wide range of sectors, not just property. They also tend to be longer-term investments, more resistant to market ups and downs.Moreover, an important stabiliser for the financial system will be the relative solidity of America’s most important asset market: property. An exuberant surge in house prices over the past two years means a decline in sales and values may be on the cards. But property is also dramatically undersupplied. Sam Khater of Freddie Mac, a government-backed mortgage firm, estimates that America has a shortage of nearly 4m homes because of a slowdown in building over the past 15 years. It is far better for the financial system to enter a recession with a giant under-investment backlog than with an over-investment hangover, as was the case in 2007.The final factor in assessing the impact of a recession is monetary policy. As of March the median forecast by members of the Fed’s rate-setting committee was that inflation would fall to close to 2% in 2024 without interest rates having to exceed 3%. It seems a fair bet that rates will go quite a bit higher than that. James Bullard, the relatively hawkish president of the St Louis Fed, reckons that the central bank will need to increase rates to 3.5% by the end of this year. A simple rule of thumb, which combines the real neutral rate of interest (the rate, adjusted for inflation, that neither stimulates nor restrains growth) and expected inflation, suggests higher nominal rates may be needed. If the real neutral rate is 0.5%, then the Fed would probably want to hit a real rate of about 1.5% to rein in inflation. Add on short-term inflation expectations of about 4% per year, as indicated by consumer surveys at present, and that suggests that the Fed may need to lift the nominal rate to 5.5%. “There is a substantially greater probability that we’ll need higher rates than the Fed now envisions or the market now predicts,” says Mr Summers.Put differently, the Fed is embarking on a journey with a clear destination (low inflation), an obvious vehicle (interest rates) but hazy guesses about how to get there (how high rates must go). It will know the correct path only by moving forward and seeing how the economy reacts. It has barely taken its first steps, raising rates by three-quarters of a percentage point over the past three months and setting out a plan for shrinking its assets. But it may be pleased with the results so far, clearly visible as financial markets rush to price in future tightening. For all the Fed’s missteps of the past year, investors still have respect for it, a precious legacy of the past four decades, starting with Mr Volcker’s leadership, in which it kept a lid on inflation. Equities, which were looking bubbly, have tumbled in value. The impact on mortgages has been dramatic: 30-year fixed rates have risen above 5%, the highest in more than a decade. Yet credit spreads have widened only somewhat, an indication that lending markets are not too stressed. Taken together, this looks like an orderly sell-off and an early success for the Fed. Although inflation expectations, as measured by bond pricing, still point to annual inflation of 3% over the next five years, they have come down by about half a percentage point since March.Mr Bullard’s case for optimism is that much of the work of taming inflation can be done by resetting expectations at a lower level. The real economy would then not need to bear the weight of the adjustment. The key objective for the Fed is therefore to prove to investors that its vows to quash inflation are credible. “It is more game theory and less econometrics,” he says. The Fed’s record over the past couple of months, since belatedly training its sights on inflation, opens up the possibility that it may be able to tame prices without a punishingly high increase in rates. That, in turn, would make for a lighter recession.Why worry, then? For one thing, even a mild recession hurts. Imagine the unemployment rate does rise by two percentage points, as in our relatively hopeful scenario. That would imply job losses for about 3m Americans. The political consequences may be even more dramatic. The recession in 1990 shows up as a mere blip in economic trends, but it helped pave the way for Bill Clinton’s victory over George H.W. Bush. A mild recession in 2023 could put paid to Joe Biden’s beleaguered presidency, perhaps helping usher Donald Trump back into the White House.This will make the policy response to a looming recession much more controversial. If, as expected, the Republicans seize control of Congress from the Democrats in mid-term elections this November, there would be little chance of a muscular fiscal stimulus as growth slows. Republicans would see little reason to bail out Mr Biden, especially if the financial system holds up.The task of easing would fall squarely on the Fed. But having just fought to contain an overheating economy and bring inflation to heel, the central bank would be queasy about revving up demand too much. And if the current cycle of rate increases stops at a low level, the Fed would not have much room to cut rates anyway. The next step would be once again to unleash quantitative easing (ie, purchasing assets such as government bonds in order to lower longer-term interest rates). It would, however, be fearful of the optics of “printing money” so soon after whipping inflation and just as a contentious election campaign gets under way.The upshot is that policymakers are likely to have a limited arsenal if the next recession is just round the corner. Given the strengths of the economy today—flush consumers, solid businesses and safe banks—the next downturn ought to be mild. But even a mild recession must be followed by an upturn for the economy to return to full health. And with fiscal policy on the sidelines and monetary policy badly hobbled, the chances are that America would face a painfully slow recovery. After two years of focusing on high inflation, low growth may move back to centre-stage as the economy’s principal problem. ■For more expert analysis of the biggest stories in economics, business and markets, sign up to Money Talks, our weekly newsletter. More

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    SeatGeek terminates deal to go public with Billy Beane's SPAC due to market volatility

    General Manager Billy Beane of the Oakland Athletics.
    Michael Zagaris | Oakland Athletics | Getty Images

    Ticketing platform SeatGeek and black-check firm RedBall Acquisition Corp. decided to terminate their $1.35 billion take-public deal amid a roller-coaster market.
    The move was a result of current unfavorable market conditions, particularly impacting growth technology companies, according to SeatGeek and the SPAC backed by Billy Beane of the Oakland Athletics as well as Brooklyn Nets star Kevin Durant.

    “Given the volatility in the public markets, together, we determined that a termination of the business combination was in the best interest of all parties,” SeatGeek CEO and co-founder Jack Groetzinger said in a statement. “We have a tremendous amount of respect for the great team at RedBall and appreciate their partnership throughout the process.”
    The oversaturated SPAC market is continuing to get crushed, as speculative stocks with little earnings fall further out of favor in the face of rising rates. This SeatGeek merger joined a growing number of deals that were abandoned in the tough environment, including Forbes’ $630 million deal with former Point72 executive Jonathan Lin-led SPAC Magnum Opus.
    SPACs stand for special purpose acquisition companies, which raise capital in an initial public offering and use the cash to merge with a private company and take it public, usually within two years. The market enjoyed a record year with more than $160 billion raised on U.S. exchanges in 2021, nearly double the prior year’s level, according to data from SPAC Research.
    After a year of issuance explosion, there are now almost 600 SPACs searching for an acquisition target, according to SPAC Research. As the market gets increasingly competitive, some announced deals failed to come to fruition.
    CNBC’s proprietary SPAC Post Deal Index, comprised of SPACs that have completed their mergers and taken their target companies public, has tumbled more than 40% this year.
    Goldman Sachs as well as some other big banks are scaling back their business in the SPAC market as a regulatory crackdown worsened the outlook for the space.

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    Binance raises $500 million fund to invest in 'Web3' as crypto slides into bear market

    Binance Labs, the company’s venture arm, has raised $500 million for a fund dedicated to investing in Web3 start-ups.
    Web3 is a movement in tech that aims to create a new version of the internet based on blockchain technology.
    Bitcoin and other digital currencies have plunged sharply since reaching all-time highs in November.

    Binance is the world’s biggest cryptocurrency exchange, handling $490 billion of spot trading volumes in March 2022.
    Akio Kon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Binance, the world’s largest cryptocurrency exchange, is launching its own venture capital fund.
    The company’s venture arm, Binance Labs, said Wednesday it has raised $500 million for its debut start-up fund, securing backing from venture capital firms DST Global and Breyer Capital as well as unnamed family offices and corporations. It comes after Andreessen Horowitz last week announced a mammoth $4.5 billion fund to invest in crypto start-ups.

    Binance Labs plans to use the capital to invest in companies building “Web3.” Though still an ill-defined term, Web3 loosely refers to a hypothetical future iteration of the internet that’s more decentralized than online platforms today and incorporates blockchain, the shared digital ledgers behind most major cryptocurrencies.
    The launch of Binance’s new fund arrives at a time when bitcoin and other digital currencies are down sharply. Bitcoin has plunged more than 50% since reaching an all-time high of nearly $69,000 in November. That’s taken a toll on publicly-listed crypto companies like Coinbase, whose shares have plunged 69% since the start of 2022. Investors fear the slump will feed through to privately-held crypto start-ups.
    While start-up valuations of $1 billion or more are “slowing down a bit,” there’s “no current impact in early-stage private markets,” Ken Li, Binance Labs’ executive director of investments and M&A, told CNBC.
    Binance Labs is hoping to capitalize on the recent plunge in digital assets to find founders building what it sees as the next big thing in tech. Its bets will be split into pre-seed, early-stage and growth equity, and the fund will invest in tokens as well as shares.
    “We are looking for projects with the potential to drive the growth of the Web3 ecosystem,” Li said. Such projects may include infrastructure, nonfungible tokens, and decentralized autonomous organizations. Binance estimates there are currently around 300,000 to 500,000 active Web3 developers, a number it hopes to grow “substantially.”

    Binance has made a series of high-profile equity investments in the past year. This is the first time the company has formally raised a VC fund with financing from external investors.

    Binance Labs’ investment portfolio includes business news magazine Forbes and Sky Mavis, the company behind popular nonfungible token game Axie Infinity. It was also an investor in Terraform Labs, the embattled Singapore-based start-up behind failed stablecoin project Terra.
    Binance Labs “always does its due diligence and has strong conviction in its investment strategy,” Li said. “We know that investing in early stages involves risks,” he added. “The industry is still young and was younger back then.”
    Binance is also planning to take a $500 million stake in Twitter to support Elon Musk’s bid to acquire the social media service, a move the firm hopes will boost its aim of “bringing social media and Web3 together.”
    Founded in 2017 by Chinese-Canadian entrepreneur Changpeng Zhao, Binance is the world’s biggest digital currency exchange. The firm handled $490 billion of spot trading volumes in March, according to CryptoCompare data.
    In an interview with CNBC earlier this year, Zhao said Binance had “billions ready to invest” in Web3. The trend has been met with skepticism from some notable figures in tech, including Musk and Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey. Zhao said he’s a believer in the concept, but that it will take time to make it a reality.
    “Exactly how it’s going to shape up, what exactly Web3 looks like, which company, which projects — nobody knows,” he said.
    “Before Facebook started, nobody could predict that,” Zhao added. “We’ll just have to see what turns out.”

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Capri Holdings, Salesforce, Weibo and others

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Capri Holdings (CPRI) – The parent of luxury brands, like Michael Kors, Versace and Jimmy Choo, saw its stock surge 11% in the premarket after posting better-than-expected quarterly numbers before giving back nearly all those gains. Capri earned an adjusted $1.02 per share, 20 cents above estimates, and managed to expand profit margins in the face of pandemic-related issues. However, the company issued a lighter-than-expected revenue forecast for the full year.

    HP Inc. (HPQ) – HP beat estimates by 3 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of $1.08 per share. The computer and printer maker’s revenue also topped Street forecasts. HP raised its profit outlook, benefiting from strong commercial customer demand despite supply chain disruptions.
    Salesforce (CRM) – Salesforce rallied 9.1% in the premarket after beating analyst estimates by 4 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of 98 cents per share. The business software giant also beat revenue forecasts and raised its full-year guidance amid continued strong demand.
    Victoria’s Secret (VSCO) – Victoria’s Secret jumped 6.8% in premarket trading despite posting a mixed quarter. The intimate apparel retailer’s adjusted earnings of $1.11 per share for its latest quarter beat the 84-cent consensus estimate, and revenue matched forecasts. Current-quarter earnings guidance fell below some forecasts. The company was able to negate the bottom-line impact of supply chain issues and muted consumer spending.
    Weibo (WB) – The China-based social media company reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. The company added users and called its ad business “relatively resilient” in the face of the country’s Covid lockdowns. Weibo jumped 5.5% in premarket action.
    Ambarella (AMBA) – Ambarella slid 3.8% in premarket trading after the chipmaker issued a current-quarter revenue forecast below analyst estimates, due to the negative impact from China’s Covid lockdowns. Ambarella posted a top and bottom-line beat for its latest quarter.

    ChargePoint Holdings (CHPT) – ChargePoint’s adjusted loss for its latest quarter was 21 cents per share, 2 cents more than analysts were anticipating. The electric vehicle charging network operator’s revenue topped forecasts. ChargePoint also issued lighter-than-expected revenue guidance for the current quarter and full year, as it deals with global supply constraints. The stock fell 2.3% in premarket action.
    Li Auto (LI) – The China-based electric vehicle maker delivered 11,496 vehicles in May, up 166% from a year earlier. Li shares added 2% in the premarket.
    Nio (NIO) – Nio delivered 7,024 vehicles in May, a 4.7% rise from a year earlier. The China-based electric vehicle maker also said vehicle deliveries are up 11.8% for 2022 compared with the first five months of 2021. Nio rose 1.6% in premarket trading.
    Xpeng (XPEV) – Xpeng delivered 10,125 electric vehicles last month, 78% more than a year ago, with year-to-date deliveries more than doubling compared with a year earlier. The China-based company’s stock added 1.3% in the premarket.

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    Chinese electric car start-up WM Motor files to go public in Hong Kong

    Although China’s electric car market is the largest globally and a fast-growing one, automakers such as BYD and Tesla dominate sales.
    Chinese start-ups such as Nio and Xpeng — both listed in the U.S. and Hong Kong — have made headlines, but still have a small portion of the market.
    WM Motor has sold even fewer cars. The company said in the filing that as of Dec. 31, it has sold 83,495 electric cars since its first model launched in September 2018.

    Chinese electric car company WM Motor, or Weltmeister, filed Wednesday to go public in Hong Kong. Pictured here is one of the company’s cars in a shopping mall in Shanghai.
    Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Chinese electric car start-up WM Motor filed Wednesday to go public on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.
    Also known as Weltmeister, the electric car company disclosed its annual losses doubled over the last three years to 8.2 billion yuan ($1.2 billion), while revenue more than doubled during that time, rising by about 170% to 4.7 billion yuan in 2021.

    The public version of the filing did not include pricing information.
    Although China’s electric car market is the largest globally and a fast-growing one, automakers such as BYD and Tesla dominate sales. Chinese start-ups such as Nio and Xpeng — both listed in the U.S. and Hong Kong — have made headlines, but still have a small portion of the market.
    WM Motor has sold even fewer cars. The company said in the filing that as of Dec. 31, it has sold 83,495 electric cars since its first model launched in September 2018.
    Xpeng launched its first model around the same time, and said its cumulative deliveries reached 137,953 as of the end of December. Nio said its cumulative deliveries totaled 167,070 as of the end of December, although it launched its first car about a year before its start-up rivals.

    WM Motor CEO Freeman Shen told CNBC in January he expected demand for electric vehicles in China this year to nearly double from last year. He said, however, chip shortages and Covid-related supply chain disruptions would increase costs for companies making the cars.

    WM Motor’s SUVs and sedans sell in a price range of about 160,800 yuan to 280,000 yuan, the filing showed. That’s similar to Xpeng’s price range.
    The company said in Wednesday’s filing its competitive advantages include a focus on the mainstream market, self-owned manufacturing facilities and strong research and development capabilities.
    As of the end of last year, the filing showed WM Motor spent 20.7% of revenue on research and development, while Xpeng reported it spent 19.6% of revenue on such research.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    However, Xpeng has more than triple the headcount at 13,978 employees versus WM Motor’s 3,952, filings showed for the end of last year.
    WM Motor said it had 1,141 employees in research and development, or 28.9% of a total headcount. Manufacturing workers accounted for the greatest share, at 54.1%.
    For comparison, Xpeng said its sales and marketing team accounted for the greatest share of its employees, at 45%. A total of 5,271 research and development employees accounted for 38% of headcount.

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