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    As the dollar jumps to two-year highs, the 'Fast Money' traders deliver winners and losers

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    Wall Street may be underestimating the dollar’s jump to two year highs.
    “With each passing day the dollar goes higher. That creates more of a headwind for the multinationals in the market in general,” “Fast Money” trader Guy Adami said on Tuesday. “A stronger dollar, as counterintuitive as it may be, is not good for the market.”

    On Wednesday, the dollar index hit its highest level since March 25, 2020. The index is up 10% over the last year. The timing comes in conjunction with fourth quarter earnings season.
    The greenback’s move is also notable against the Japanese yen (JPY), where it’s also at a two decade high.
    “If you repatriate that money and you get fewer dollars for whatever the currency you’re repatriating,” said trader Karen Finerman. “To me, that would be McDonald’s which actually at this point now has a little more than half of their business outside of the U.S. So, they would not be the beneficiary. They would be the victim.”
    But some groups may thrive. Trader Steve Grasso experts some pockets including utilities to weather a stronger dollar.
    “They have a predictable demand and with them predictable earnings as well. No one likes the lights going off in your house once you have lights in our house,” he said. ‘Whether it’s the yield play or whether it’s the predictability nature of it, those things are usually bought going into recession or a rising rate environment.”

    The Utilities Select Sector SPDR fund, which tracks the sector, is up more than 7% so far this year.
    Grasso also sees retailers benefitting from budget shopping performing well.
    “The old standbys: Dollar Gen [and] Dollar Tree. Both of those names have a history of splitting stocks. Both of those names have been outperforming. Both of those names have skyrocketed in stock price,” he added.
    For all trader disclosures, go to cnbc.com/fast-money/.
    Disclaimer

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    Stock futures rise as investors digest more earnings reports

    Stock futures rose in overnight trading as investors digested more quarterly reports from the likes of Tesla and United Airlines.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average added about 70 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 futures ticked up 0.3% and Nasdaq 100 futures gained 0.5%.

    First-quarter reports drove after-hours moves Wednesday. Tesla rose about 5% after better-than-expected earnings, while United added more than 7% after the airline forecasted a profit in 2022.
    Stocks are coming off a mixed regular trading session Wednesday. The Dow rose 280 points, or 0.8%, boosted by strong earnings from Procter & Gamble, while the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite was dragged down 1% by Netflix’s post-report plunge. The S&P 500 finished flat.
    Netflix shares on Wednesday posted the biggest one-day decline since 2004 after the streamer reported its first subscriber loss in more than a decade. Other streaming companies like Disney and Roku also fell, and other tech stocks were lower.
    “It continues to be a pretty bifurcated market,” said Dave Grecsek, managing director in investment strategy and research at wealth management firm Aspiriant. “Some of the more defensive, value-style companies are enjoying good returns. The flipside is some of those more growth-style tech names are going to be struggling.”
    Investors are awaiting quarterly reports from companies like AT&T, American Airlines and Snap on Thursday.
    Weekly jobless claims are also slated for release Thursday morning.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Tesla, United, Carvana and more

    An aerial view shows the Tesla Fremont Factory in Fremont, California on February 10, 2022.
    Josh Edelson | AFP | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell: 
    Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle maker rose 4% in extended trading after a better-than-expected earnings report. Tesla posted earnings of $3.22 per share on revenue of $18.76 billion. Analysts expected a profit of $2.26 per share on revenue of $17.8 billion, according to Refinitiv.

    United Airlines — The airline stock rose 5.6% after hours despite first-quarter results missing estimates. United reported an adjusted first-quarter loss of $4.24 per share on revenue of $7.57 billion. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had expected a loss per share of $4.22 on revenue of $7.68 billion. However, United issued its strongest second-quarter guidance in history and said it expects to be profitable in 2022.
    CSX — Shares of the rail transportation company added 2.2% in extended trading after a quarterly revenue beat. CSX posted revenue of $3.41 billion versus $3.3 billion expected, according to Refinitiv.
    Carvana — Shares sunk about 24% after hours following a wider-than-expected loss per share. Carvana posted a loss of $2.89 per share versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.44 per share.
    Lam Research — The semiconductor stock fell 1.8% in extended trading after a weak quarterly report. Lam Research reported adjusted third-quarter earnings of $7.40 per share on revenue of $4.06 billion. Analysts had expected a profit of $7.51 per share on revenue of $4.25 billion, according to Refinitiv.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Netflix, M&T Bank, Baker Hughes, IBM and more

    IBM’s logo seen displayed on a smartphone.
    Rafael Henrique | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Wednesday:
    Netflix — Shares of the streaming giant sank 35% after Netflix reported a loss of 200,000 subscribers in the most recent quarter. Netflix cited increasing competition, password sharing and the situation in Ukraine among the reasons for the dip. The news led to a wave of downgrades from major Wall Street firms.

    Disney, Paramount — Shares of streaming video companies fell after Netflix reported a loss in subscribers for the first time in more than a decade. Disney dropped 5.6%, Roku fell 6.2%, and HBO Max owner Warner Bros. Discovery was off about 6%.Paramount (formerly ViacomCBS) declined 8.6%.
    M&T Bank — Shares for the regional bank surged 8.8% after M&T Bank exceeded earnings expectations. M&T Bank reported earnings of $2.73 per share, which was above $2.19 per share expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv.
    Procter & Gamble — Shares of the Procter & Gamble rose 2.7% after the consumer packaged goods company reported better-than-expected results for its fiscal third-quarter and hiked its full-year revenue guidance.
    IBM — IBM surged 7.1% after beating on revenue and earnings in the recent quarter. The company reported an adjusted quarterly profit of $1.40 per share, 2 cents above a Refinitiv estimate. Revenue rose 7.7% over the year-ago quarter, with sales to Kyndryl lifting revenue growth by 5 percentage points.
    Omnicom Group — Shares for the advertising company spiked 4.5% after Omnicom topped earnings expectations on Tuesday despite taking a hit to its investment in Russian businesses. Omnicom reported earnings of $1.39 per share and revenues of $3.41 billion. In comparison, analysts surveyed by FactSet were forecasting earnings of 1.30 per share and $3.286 billion.

    Baker Hughes — The oilfield services stock slid 3.8% after Baker Hughes missed estimates for the first quarter. The company reported 15 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $4.84 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting 20 cents per share and $5.02 billion in revenue. CEO Lorenzo Simonelli said in a release that the results “reflect operating in a very volatile market environment.”
    ASML — Shares for the semiconductor equipment maker jumped 2.7% after ASML reported an earnings beat for its most recent quarter. Strong demand from chip makers to boost production supported the company.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Hannah Miao, Jesse Pound and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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    Goldman executive who helped create Marcus brand leaves for real estate investing start-up Cadre

    Goldman Sachs consumer bank branding chief Dustin Cohn has joined real estate investing start-up Cadre as chief marketing officer, CNBC has learned.
    The departure of Cohn, who is credited with helping name the firm’s consumer division Marcus in 2016, is the latest in a wave of exits from the New York-based bank in the past 14 months.
    After poaching Cohn from Goldman — which is both an investor and partner in Cadre — the start-up will begin to ramp up marketing and introduce new products aimed at smaller investors, Williams said.
    An IPO could be 12 to 18 months away, he said.

    Dustin Cohn, chief marketing office of Cadre
    Source: Cadre

    Goldman Sachs consumer bank branding chief Dustin Cohn has joined real estate investing start-up Cadre as chief marketing officer, CNBC has learned.
    The departure of Cohn, who is credited with helping name the firm’s consumer division Marcus in 2016, is the latest in a wave of exits from the New York-based bank in the past 14 months.

    Cohn joins other former executives including Omer Ismail and David Stark in leaving Goldman amid plans to scale its retail banking business. Some left to help direct competitors, as was the case of Ismail and Stark, who took flight to assist Walmart in the creation of a fintech start-up. Others, like former Marcus chief Harit Talwar, have stepped down to make way for a new generation of leaders.
    Cohn, who called his departure from Goldman “completely amicable,” is joining an 8-year-old start-up at a critical juncture, according to Cohn and Cadre co-founder Ryan Williams.
    Cadre, which allows individuals to take stakes in commercial real estate, is one of the more prominent players in a group of start-ups seeking to broaden access to asset classes once considered the domain of institutional investors or rich families.
    The start-ups hope to achieve what Robinhood did for stocks and what Coinbase did for crypto — tapping the potential of millions of ordinary Americans to create or widen a retail investing category.
    “My goal for Marcus was creating awareness that this new consumer business even existed for this mass affluent audience,” Cohn said Tuesday in an interview. “For me, Cadre is a very similar opportunity in the world of commercial real estate, where the average investor really doesn’t know much about it to begin with, let alone that they actually have access at these low fees and low entry points.”

    After poaching Cohn from Goldman — which is both an investor and partner in Cadre — the start-up will begin to ramp up marketing and introduce new products aimed at smaller investors, Williams said.
    While it might be simpler to focus only on big-money investors like family offices or endowments, that wouldn’t align with Cadre’s mission, said Williams, who had stints in the financial industry before co-founding Cadre in 2014.
    “I grew up working class in Baton Rouge, Louisiana,” Williams said. “I never had access to the asset class but through my experiences at Goldman and Blackstone more recently, I just saw how lucrative the space was, but how inaccessible it was for most individuals.”

    Ryan Williams, co-founder and chief executive officer of RealCadre LLC (Cadre), listens during the Skybridge Alternatives (SALT) conference in Las Vegas, Nevada, May 9, 2019.
    Joe Buglewicz | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Cadre initially began with bigger investors and required a $250,000 minimum stake; after taking that down to $25,000, the company hopes to lower minimums closer to $2,500, according to the CEO.
    The company’s investment committee focuses on three categories of real estate in roughly 15 U.S. markets: multifamily apartment buildings, industrial properties like warehouses, and niche office space like suburban buildings, Williams said.
    Cadre said it has closed more than $4.5 billion in real estate deals and produced returns of more than 18% across property sales. Unlike some of the competitors in the space, Cadre hasn’t lost investor money yet, Williams said.
    “We’re not taking crazy risks like others do, and we think that’s the right way for people to get access to the asset class,” Williams said. “We’ve never lost investor principle or capital.”
    An IPO could be 12 to 18 months away, after the company introduces new products including ways to invest in real estate debt or even new categories like timber farms, Williams said. Cadre commissioned a study of 1,181 consumers, finding that almost three-quarters were interested in investing in commercial real estate, but that nearly all had never done so.
    Meanwhile, Cohn’s departure also comes at a crucial point for the Marcus brand.
    Starting with personal loans and deposits, Goldman has added credit cards and home renovation loans to its portfolio and is working on a digital checking account for the masses. Then, late last year, the company announced it was tweaking its branding to more prominently display the Goldman name, calling it Goldman Sachs Marcus.
    Cohn, who said that he “personally named Marcus,” called the change a validation of his tenure at the bank. Back in the 2015 timeframe, the Goldman name “conjured up some of the negativity that people have towards Goldman Sachs,” he said.
    “Here we are, almost seven years later, and the Goldman Sachs brand is at an all-time high with these consumers,” Cohn said. “A big part of that is because we gave them valuable products to help them achieve their goals.”

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Netflix, Procter & Gamble, Baker Hughes and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Netflix (NFLX) – Netflix plummeted 26.8% in the premarket after reporting it lost 200,000 subscribers during the first quarter. The streaming service had projected subscriber additions of 2.5 million. Netflix also said it was exploring an ad-supported version.

    Walt Disney (DIS), Roku (ROKU), Warner Brothers Discovery (WBD) – Other streaming-related companies saw their stocks fall in sympathy with Netflix. Disney slid 5% in the premarket, Roku tumbled 6.7% and Warner Brothers Discovery lost 4.3%.
    Procter & Gamble (PG) – The consumer products giant’s stock gained 1.1% in premarket trading after a top and bottom-line beat. Procter exceeded estimates by 4 cents with adjusted quarterly earnings of $1.33 per share and saw its biggest year-over-year sales gain in two decades as demand remained high for household products, even in the face of higher prices. Procter also raised its organic sales guidance.
    Baker Hughes (BKR) – The oilfield services company fell 5 cents short of estimates with adjusted quarterly earnings of 15 cents per share, and revenue also missed forecasts. Baker Hughes said its results reflected a volatile operating environment, and the stock fell 2% in premarket action.
    Lululemon (LULU) – Luluemon added 2.2% in the premarket after the apparel maker announced a five-year plan to double revenue. The plan focuses on quadrupling international sales and doubling revenue from its men’s and digital operations.
    IBM (IBM) – IBM reported an adjusted quarterly profit of $1.40 per share, 2 cents above estimates, with revenue also coming in above analyst forecasts. IBM’s results got a boost from strong hybrid cloud platform business. IBM shares rallied 2.7% in premarket trading.

    ASML (ASML) – ASML’s latest quarter beat analyst forecasts on the top and bottom lines, with the Amsterdam-based semiconductor equipment maker reporting strong demand from chip makers trying to ramp up production. ASML shares jumped 5.4% in the premarket.
    Teva Pharmaceutical (TEVA) – Teva shares slid 4.8% in premarket trading after the FDA sent a rejection letter in response to a new drug application for a schizophrenia treatment. Teva said it is studying possible next steps and will work with the FDA to address the agency’s concerns.
    Omnicom (OMC) – Omnicom reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter, despite what the ad agency operator called “uniquely challenging global events.” Omnicom took a $113.4 million charge relating to its investment in Russian businesses. Shares added 3.7% in premarket action.

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    Bitcoin 'tribalism' is holding the crypto industry back, Ripple CEO says

    “Tribalism” around bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is holding back the entire $2 trillion market, Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse has said.
    “I own bitcoin, I own ether, I own some others,” Garlinghouse said. “I am an absolute believer that this industry is going to continue to thrive.”
    Bitcoin “maximalism” has meant the crypto industry has “fractured representation” in Washington, D.C., according to Garlinghouse.

    Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse speaks during the Milken Institute Global Conference in Beverly Hills, California, on Oct. 19, 2021.
    Kyle Grillot | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    “Tribalism” around bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies is holding back the entire $2 trillion market, according to the boss of blockchain firm Ripple.
    “Polarization isn’t healthy in my judgement,” Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse said in a CNBC-hosted fireside chat at Paris Blockchain Week Summit last week.

    “I own bitcoin, I own ether, I own some others. I am an absolute believer that this industry is going to continue to thrive.”
    “All boats can rise,” Garlinghouse added.
    Garlinghouse, a former Yahoo executive, compared the crypto industry today to the dotcom era of the late 1990s and early 2000s.
    “Yahoo could be successful and so could eBay … They’re solving different problems,” he said. “There’s different use cases and different audiences and different markets. I think a lot of those parallels exist today.”

    There are now tens of thousands of cryptocurrencies in circulation, worth a combined $2 trillion, according to CoinGecko data.

    Some digital coins have attracted quite a dedicated following — not least bitcoin, whose hardcore advocates are often referred to as “maximalists.”
    Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey and MicroStrategy CEO Michael Saylor are among the so-called maximalists who support only bitcoin and not other cryptocurrencies.
    Garlinghouse said such maximalism has meant the crypto industry has “fractured representation” when it comes to lobbying U.S. lawmakers.
    Last month, President Joe Biden signed an executive order calling on the government to examine the risks and benefits of cryptocurrencies.

    “The lack of coordination in Washington, D.C., amongst the crypto industry, I find to be shocking,” he said.
    Ripple is often linked with XRP, a cryptocurrency the company uses for cross-border payments.
    The company owns a majority of the 100 billion XRP tokens in circulation, which it periodically releases from an escrow account to keep prices stable.
    Ripple is in court with the Securities and Exchange Commission over allegations that it illegally sold over $1 billion worth of XRP in an unregistered securities offering. The company argues XRP should be considered a virtual currency, not a security.

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    S&P 500, Nasdaq futures fall as Netflix shares tank on disappointing results, outlook

    Stock futures dipped in overnight trading as investors digested disappointing Netflix earnings and looked ahead to a new batch of companies set to report Wednesday.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 40 points. or 0.12%. S&P 500 futures dipped 0.4% and Nasdaq 100 futures sank 0.9%.

    Shares of Netflix plummeted 25% in extended trading after reporting a loss of 200,000 subscribers in the first quarter. The news led shares of streaming companies Disney, Roku, Warner Bros. Discovery and Paramount to fall and could further worry investors about buying technology stocks ahead of earnings. Meanwhile, IBM’s stock rose 3% after hours following a beat on earnings and revenue.
    All the major averages saw strong gains during regular trading, posting their best day since March 16. The Nasdaq Composite bounced back 2.15%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 499.51 points, or 1.45% and the S&P 500 gained 1.61%.
    Tuesday’s stock market rally was broad-based with 10 out of 11 sectors ending the session in the positive, led by consumer discretionary. Some of the biggest gains came from Microsoft and Alphabet, which rose 1.7% and 1.8%, respectively, while airline stocks jumped after TSA lifted mask mandates on planes in response to a Florida court ruling.
    Meanwhile, the 10-year Treasury yield hit above 2.94%, its highest level since December 2018. Oil prices fell about 5% after the International Monetary Fund cut its economic growth forecasts and warned of risks from higher inflation.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    “I just think today we’re in a market where different things are shining,” Ally Invest’s Lindsey Bell told CNBC’s “Closing Bell” on Tuesday. “We’ve got a great earnings season so far and today the market is focusing on that. They’re focusing on the VIX that’s coming down and of course, oil prices — the fall in oil prices helps the inflationary story.”

    Investors are looking ahead to a new group of earnings on Wednesday, with Procter & Gamble set to report before the bell, followed by Tesla and United Airlines after the market closes.
    Aside from earnings, investors are awaiting existing home sales data slated for release Wednesday.

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