More stories

  • in

    Chinese EV maker Nio says it's gradually resuming production after Covid halt

    Chinese electric car company Nio said Thursday it is gradually resuming production at a facility several hours’ drive west of Shanghai.
    Nio said Saturday it had suspended production due to the impact of Covid-related restrictions on its supply chain.

    In February 2020, Nio got a lifeline of financing support led by the government of Hefei city, where the electric car start-up has established its China headquarters.
    Qilai Shen | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Chinese electric car company Nio said Thursday it is gradually resuming production at a facility several hours’ drive west of Shanghai, after temporarily halting operations due to the Covid outbreak.
    Nio said Saturday it had suspended production after Covid-related restrictions in Changchun, in north China, and Hebei, near Beijing, halted production at suppliers’ factories. The company subsequently said it would raise prices for its SUVs in May due to high raw materials prices.

    Now, the supply chain issues have recovered slightly, the company said, and the Hefei production base is gradually resuming production. It noted that future production plans still depend on the recovery of its supply chain.
    Mainland China’s worst Covid outbreak in the last several weeks has prompted travel restrictions and lockdowns from the eastern metropolis of Shanghai to the northern province of Jilin, where the capital Changchun is home to auto factories.
    German automaker Volkswagen said Thursday its factories in Changchun and Shanghai remained closed.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stock futures are little changed ahead of major bank earnings Thursday

    Stock futures were little changed Wednesday evening as investors awaited quarterly earnings results from the biggest U.S. banks.
    Dow Jones Industrial Average futures and S&P 500 futures inched higher by 0.01%. Nasdaq 100 futures added 0.09%.

    In regular trading the Dow advanced about 344 points, or 1%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite advanced 1% and 2%, respectively, each snapping a three-day losing streak as investors shrugged off the latest CPI report, which showed inflation levels not seen since 1981.
    The reversal came after an initial batch of quarterly results from companies including Delta, Fastenal and and BlackRock, which came in better than expected. Investors have been eager to see how well companies have managed mounting inflationary pressures.
    Meanwhile, JPMorgan shares lost more than 3% Wednesday after the company posted a $902 million charge for building credit reserves for anticipated loan losses, and $524 million in losses tied to Russia-linked market upheaval.
    Still, despite Wednesday’s rally, all of the major averages are still in the red for the week. The Dow and Nasdaq are down more than 0.4%, while the broad-market S&P is down nearly 0.1%.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    “Given the extreme level of geopolitical crisis [and] sharpest Fed pivot, the market has been resilient,” said Sylvia Jablonski, CEO and chief investment officer at Defiance ETFs. “Returns are going to be lower but there is still an argument to be made for investing in equities – there is almost nowhere else to go. We will have to see how earnings go – how much companies talk about inflation, supply chain issues impacting margin, and rest of year outlook.”

    “I believe that earnings are going to beat expectations yet again,” she added. “If this happens, we could see a reversal of these bearish daily trends.”
    Starting 7 a.m. Thursday, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup will post their first-quarter earnings. Investors will be looking monitoring how banks weathered macro headwinds during the quarter, particularly a flattening yield curve.
    JPMorgan’s experience may not necessarily bode well for them, but there are still good signs for its Wall Street rivals. The company’s trading desks managed to take advantage of volatile markets created by the Ukraine conflict: The bank’s fixed income and equities operations posted about $1.3 billion more in revenue than analysts had expected.
    JPMorgan also posted a boost in interest income from loan growth and rising rates, which is a good sign for consumer banking rival Wells Fargo. Wells has been an analyst pick this year for its greater-than-average sensitivity to rising rates.
    “The bar is low for bank earnings with expectations for Q1 earnings declining about 1%,” said Stephanie Lang, chief investment officer at Homrich Berg. “Beating this low bar could move shares higher with the bright spot being net interest income as interest rates have moved higher.”
    U.S. Bancorp, PNC Financial and Ally Financial are also scheduled to report earnings Thursday.
    In economic data, retail sales, import prices and jobless claims are all set to come out at 8:30 a.m.
    — CNBC’s Hugh Son contributed reporting.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: JPMorgan, Delta Air Lines, PayPal

    The JP Morgan Chase & Co. headquarters, The JP Morgan Chase Tower in Park Avenue, Midtown, Manhattan, New York.
    Tim Clayton – Corbis | Corbis Sport | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    JPMorgan Chase – Shares fell 3.2% as JPMorgan Chase reported a $524 million hit from market dislocations caused by sanctions against Russia due to the war in Ukraine. The bank posted better-than-expected earnings and revenue in the first quarter, but profit fell 42% from the year prior.

    Delta Air Lines — The airline stock rose 6.2% as Delta forecast a return to profit in the current quarter. Delta posted a narrower-than-expected loss per share in its fiscal first quarter and beat consensus revenue expectations.
    American Airlines — Other travel stocks jumped after Delta’s report. American Airlines soared 10.6%, Southwest Airlines jumped 7.5%, and Norwegian Cruise Line added 6.2%.
    PayPal Holdings, Walmart – Walmart on Tuesday after the bell announced it hired PayPal chief financial officer John Rainey. Rainey will replace Brett Biggs, who was CFO since 2015. PayPal fell about 2.9%, while Walmart shares rose 2.6%.
    Fastenal – Shares rose 2.2% after a stronger-than-expected quarterly earnings report. The company reported profit of 47 cents per share on revenue of $1.7 billion. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv expected a profit of 45 cents per share on revenue of $1.69 billion.
    Charles Schwab – The brokerage company advanced 4.7% after Morgan Stanley named it a “top pick” and said rising rates will boost the stock. The firm’s price target on BlackRock implies upside of about 65%.

    Warner Bros. Discovery – Shares rose 5.4% after Bank of America initiated the media stock with a buy rating. The firm said the merger of the two media companies creates a “powerhouse.”
    Gap – The retail stock surged 8.2% after a report from Activist Insight speculating the company could be a potential activist target. CNBC has not confirmed the report.
    — CNBC’s Samantha Subin and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Apollo's head of sustainable investing says we need to speed up the transition toward clean energy

    (Click here to subscribe to the Delivering Alpha newsletter.)
    Geopolitical tensions in Ukraine have had a massive impact on global energy supply chains and prices this year, reminding the world how reliant we are on fossil fuels and how far we are from a true shift toward clean energy. That shift will require $131 trillion in energy transition investments by 2050, according to the International Renewable Energy Agency. 

    To find out how all this capital will be deployed, Leslie Picker sat down with Apollo Global Management’s Olivia Wassenaar for the Delivering Alpha newsletter. Wassenaar helms Apollo’s sustainable investing platform and also co-leads natural resources at the firm. Her team has invested $19 billion in the energy transition and decarbonization and has committed $50 billion more over the next five years. 
     (The below has been edited for length and clarity. See above for full video.)
    Leslie Picker: Given the discussions that you’re having in and out of the boardrooms, do you think that the war in Europe has exacerbated this transition to clean energy? Or do you think it’s actually slowed it as people realize, “Wait a minute, we can’t transition this quickly without making sure that we are still able to fulfill the needs of traditional sources of energy.” 
    Olivia Wassenaar: I do think everything that’s going on has made us all realize that we do need to speed up the transition. This is something that has been at work for the last several decades and yet in many ways, it still feels like we’re at Ground Zero. When we look at the amount of capital for the next 10, 20, 30 years that needs to get invested in the energy transition, we estimate it’s about $4.5 trillion a year to get us where we need to be in the future.
    Picker: You think then that you can do both at the same time, effectively, ensure that nations especially in the U.S. and Western Europe are able to meet their short-term energy goals while also focusing on the long-term? Or do you think that the two actually get muddled given the crisis nature of the situation?

    Wassenaar: We do absolutely need to transition to cleaner fuels over time, but you’re right in that it’s something that is not going to happen overnight. And so, we look at some things that are bridge fuels. For example, something like LNG is very critical for taking lower carbon fuels to areas that are currently burning higher carbon fuels such as coal and diesel, for example. So, it is very much a transition. It is an area where we will see evolution over time and I do think it’s important to acknowledge that.
    Picker: In terms of investment, there’s a statistic that’s been thrown out there saying that the annual clean energy investment globally will need to be about $4 trillion to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050. That 4 trillion will need to take place probably within the next five years on an annual basis that is a lot of money going into one area. Do you think that that will come from private capital? And where else? And what role specifically does private capital play in that investment?
    Wassenaar: I think there’s a really big role for private capital to play here and that’s something that really excites me when I look at what Apollo is doing. We’ve looked at it and over the last five years we’ve invested about $19 billion into the energy transition and decarbonization. And as we look at where we think we can invest going forward, we’ve targeted $50 billion over the next five years. And that’s in all different forms of capital, that’s across the capital structure, and that’s really throughout the climate ecosystem, as we look at different ways to really invest capital and drive change here.
    Picker: What about the role of private capital in traditional sources of energy? I ask because in recent years, we’ve heard laments from LPs and others looking at the role that private capital has played in fossil fuels and high carbon emitters. And people have really shown that in recent years. And so, I’m curious if that increases your hurdle in making a new investment in some of the browner sources of energy, which, as we’ve discussed, have become increasingly more of a necessity recently, or if you were much more focused these days on clean energy instead?
    Wassenaar: One of the areas of focus for us has really been in helping traditional energy companies really achieve their own transition and their own targets here. So, for example, last year, we invested in an environmentally friendly compression company that helps oil and gas companies as they compress natural gas to emit less carbon. And for us, we view that as a quintessential investment in the transition to really, sort of help these companies be where they need to be. 
    Picker: Given the dynamic at play, and we’ve seen recently, several multibillion-dollar climate funds raised both from an infrastructure standpoint, a private equity standpoint, some private credit funds raising – I know that’s been a focus of yours as well. Given the increased intention to clean energy and clean energy-adjacent companies and investments, are you seeing a valuation differential between those types of investments versus traditional energy companies? And where do you see opportunity between the two?
    Wassenaar: I actually love seeing that there’s so much capital going to this space. As we discussed before, there is such a giant need for capital here, so this is a situation where really the more the merrier. There is just really so much to do. As I think about valuations and where we’re focused, absolutely, there are parts of the value chain in the broader ecosystem where you are seeing really high valuations. Where we’ve tried to focus at Apollo is areas where there is value and where there is also real opportunity. So, for example, for us, we have spent a lot of time looking at some of the services in and around the energy transition. So, for example, you know, rather than just investing in a wind farm, things that we have invested in are wind logistics businesses, businesses that do the operation and maintenance, so things like rotating out blades or gearbox maintenance, the staging in and around assembling a wind farm. These are the types of things that we feel are really priced right for private equity, where you can see a private equity rate of return but are also still very critical services in and around the energy transition.
    Picker: What about private debt? Are these businesses the type that they’re looking for sources of credit, alternative sources of credit at this point in time? Are they profitable enough to seek it? And to get that from you?
    Wassenaar: The answer is it depends. You know, we see some companies that just aren’t ready yet. But for the most part, we are really seeing a growing up with this business. I worked on my first solar deal back in 2008 and it’s amazing to me the difference we see in the industry between then and now. And I remember we weren’t sure if you get financing on panels, what the lifecycle was, things like that. Bankability was a really big question. As we look at where the sector is today, we’ve just seen such a massive evolution, that especially in things like wind and solar, there is absolutely the ability to finance these as well as other businesses like biofuels, bioenergy, batteries, etc. There are some businesses that are newer, that are earlier stage, that may have a technology risk component, that may not be the right recipient of debt at this point. But we are very much at Apollo having early-stage conversations with these companies to make sure that we are well set up to be a provider of capital if and when they reach the stage in their development that that’s something they’re looking to do.
    Picker: When people think of natural resources, these days, they think of inflation and it’s been one of the few areas, at least from the commodity side of things that’s seen somewhat of a tailwind from what’s going on in the macro environment. What does it mean, though, for your portfolio companies? Is the story that simple, just the fact that these companies have exposure to natural resources, their margins are going to do better? Or is it more complicated behind the scenes?
    Wassenaar: It is absolutely more complicated, and every company is a little bit different, but we do very much see the impacts of inflation really throughout our portfolio. And gosh, I was with one of my businesses last week in Texas, and just talking about the ability to get trucks, right. So, they’ve got supply chain issues and on top of that, the price of the trucks versus where they were last year, and versus what we had in the budget has gone up materially. And so, you look at this and say, this is a services business, they absolutely need to get their employees and their equipment from one destination to another. And being able to source and obtain trucks is very critical to what they do. But just the way which we think about it is so different from a year ago. 
    Picker: You’ve actually been interested in sustainability before it was cool. You’ve been interested in this area for a really long time and kind of grew up through your career in finance, studying sustainability. Can you give us a sense of how the market has really changed in this area, given your long history in looking at it?
    Wassenaar: It has changed so much, but all in a really good way…it’s been a long 15 plus years here, as you’ve seen. Some of these companies go up and down. There were some trouble years from a financing perspective but what I love today is it has very much become mainstream. When we look at our current natural resources fund at Apollo, 60% of the natural resources fund today is in energy transition and decarbonization related businesses, which is really incredible if you think about a mainstream private equity fund that targets 20% plus rates of return, not venture capital, private equity, and this is an area that we should deploy a significant amount of capital. For me, coming from early days of the World Bank and having seen the sector for so many years, it really has been a wonderful transition to witness. More

  • in

    JPMorgan Chase reports $524 million hit from market dislocations caused by Russia sanctions

    Here are the numbers: Adjusted earnings of $2.76 a share vs $2.69 estimate.
    Revenue: $31.59 billion vs. $30.86 billion estimate
    In remarks, CEO Jamie Dimon said he saw “significant geopolitical and economic challenges ahead due to high inflation, supply chain issues and the war in Ukraine.”

    Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO of JP Morgan Chase.
    Adam Jeffery | CNBC

    JPMorgan Chase said Wednesday that first-quarter profit fell sharply from a year earlier, driven by increased costs for bad loans and market upheaval caused by the Ukraine war.
    Here are the numbers:

    Adjusted earnings: $2.76 a share vs $2.69 estimate.
    Revenue: $31.59 billion vs. $30.86 billion estimate, according to Refinitiv.

    Profit fell 42% from a year earlier to $8.28 billion, or $2.63 a share, the New York-based bank said. Adjusted earnings of $2.76, which excludes a 13-cent impact tied to Russia, exceeded the $2.69 estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Revenue fell a more modest 5% to $31.59 billion, exceeding analysts’ estimate for the quarter.
    Shares of the bank dipped 3.2% in premarket trading.
    The quarter illustrated how quickly events have changed the industry’s outlook. A year ago, JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon predicted a long-running economic expansion and banks were reaping benefits as billions of dollars in loan loss reserves were released. Now, amid rampant inflation and the worst European conflict since World War II, Dimon called attention to the possibility of recession ahead.  
    JPMorgan said it took a $902 million charge for building credit reserves for anticipated loan losses, compared to a $5.2 billion release a year earlier. The bank also booked $524 million in losses driven by markdowns and widening spreads after Russian’s invasion of its neighbor.
    Combined, the two factors sapped 36 cents from the quarter’s earnings, the bank said.

    Dimon said that he built up credit reserves because of “higher probabilities of downside risk” in the U.S. economy, specifically from the impact of high inflation and the Ukraine conflict.  
    “We remain optimistic on the economy, at least for the short term – consumer and business balance sheets as well as consumer spending remain at healthy levels – but see significant geopolitical and economic challenges ahead due to high inflation, supply chain issues and the war in Ukraine,” Dimon said.
    The bank’s provision for credit losses, which includes the $902 million reserve build, was $1.46 billion, more than double the $617.5 million expected by analysts.
    JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, is closely watched for clues to how Wall Street fared during a tumultuous first quarter. On the one hand, investment banking fees were expected to plunge because of a slowdown in mergers, IPOs and debt issuance in the period. On the other hand, spikes in volatility and market dislocations caused by the Ukraine war may have benefited some fixed income desks.
    That means there may be more winners and losers on Wall Street than usual this quarter: Firms that navigated the choppy markets well could exceed expectations after analysts slashed estimates in recent weeks, while others could disclose trading blow-ups.
    JPMorgan said last month that its trading revenue dropped 10% through early March, but that turbulence tied to the Ukraine war and sanctions on Russia made further forecasts impossible.
    “The markets are extremely treacherous at the moment; there’s a lot of uncertainty,” Troy Rohrbaugh, JPMorgan’s global markets chief, said during the March 8 conference. “The full ramifications of the current conditions are still uncertain.”
    Another area of focus for investors is how the industry is taking advantage of rising interest rates, which tend to fatten banks’ lending margins. Analysts also anticipate improving loan growth as Federal Reserve data show banks’ loans grew 8% in the first quarter, driven by commercial borrowers.
    Still, while longer-term rates rose during the quarter, short term rates rose more, and that flat, or in some cases inverted, yield curve spurred concerns about a recession ahead. Banks sell off when investors worry about recession as that could create a surge in loan losses as borrowers fall behind.
    JPMorgan said last month that it was unwinding its Russia operations. Dimon said in his annual shareholder letter that while management isn’t worried about its Russia exposure, it could “still lose about $1 billion over time.”
    Shares of JPMorgan have dropped 16.9% this year before Wednesday, worse than the 10.6% decline of the KBW Bank Index.
    Rival banks Goldman Sachs, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo are scheduled to report results Thursday.
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Delta, JPMorgan, BlackRock and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Delta Air Lines (DAL) – Delta rallied 6.6% in the premarket after reporting a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss and predicting a current-quarter profit. The airline also said monthly revenue exceeded pre-pandemic levels for the first time in March.

    JPMorgan Chase (JPM) – The bank reported adjusted quarterly earnings of $2.76 per share, 7 cents shy of estimates, with revenue exceeding Wall Street forecasts as well.  However, JPMorgan’s profit was down 42% from a year ago as deal volume slowed and trading revenue declined, and the stock fell 1.1% in the premarket.
    Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) – The housewares retailer reported an adjusted quarterly loss of 92 cents per share, compared with analyst expectations of a 3-cents-per-share profit. Bed Bath & Beyond instituted price hikes during the quarter, but it was not enough to offset a surge in shipping costs and other adverse factors. Bed Bath & Beyond shares tumbled 8% in premarket trading.
    BlackRock (BLK) – The asset management firm reported an adjusted quarterly profit of $9.52 per share compared with the $8.75 consensus estimate. Revenue was essentially in line with forecasts. BlackRock was helped by a jump in inflows as assets under management rose to $9.57 trillion from just over $9 trillion a year earlier.
    Antares Pharma (ATRS) – The specialty pharmaceutical company’s stock soared 48.7% in premarket trading after agreeing to be bought by Halozyme Therapeutics (HALO) for $960 million, or $5.60 per share, in cash.
    PayPal Holdings (PYPL) – PayPal Chief Financial Officer John Rainey is leaving the payments company to take the same role at Walmart (WMT), effective June 6. Rainey will replace Brett Biggs, who was CFO since 2015. PayPal slid 3.5% in premarket action.

    Sierra Oncology (SRRA) – The drug developer agreed to be bought by GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) for $1.9 billion, sending its shares surging by 37.5% in the premarket, while Glaxo shares rose 1.1%.
    Charles Schwab (SCHW) – The brokerage firm’s stock gained 1% in premarket trading after Morgan Stanley named it a “top pick,” saying Schwab will benefit from rising rates and that it has an attractive valuation compared to its peers.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stock futures inch higher following highest inflation data in decades

    Stocks futures were flat in overnight trading as investors weighed the latest inflation data for March.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 20 points or 0.06%, while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were flat.

    Tuesday’s inflation data showed consumer prices rise 8.5% in March from the previous year — the highest level since 1981 — further fueling concerns of tighter monetary policy from the Federal Reserve. Core CPI rose 0.3%, slightly below expectations.
    “I think it’s very likely inflation peaked,” Guggenheim Partners Global Chief Investment Officer Scott Minerd told CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Tuesday. “If it didn’t peak in March, we’re in the process of peaking.” 
    The 10-year Treasury hit a new three-year high, topping 2.82% before pulling back to 2.727%.
    After rallying earlier in the day the major averages closed Tuesday’s session in the negative. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 87.72 points, or 0.26%, to 34,220.36. The S&P 500 slipped 0.34% to 4,397.45, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.30% to 13,371.57.

    Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

    Seven sectors ended the day in the negative led by financials. Technology also struggled, with Microsoft and Meta closing down about 1%. Nvidia fell 1.9% and Advanced Micro Devices fell 2.3%, continuing a string of losses in the semiconductor industry.

    Oil prices jumped as China relaxed some Covid-19 lockdowns which could have hard-hit demand. The international benchmark Brent crude rose 6.26% to $104.64 per barrel, while West Texas Intermediate crude futures jumped 6.69% to $100.60 per barrel. The moves sent energy stocks rising with Marathon Oil and Occidental Petroleum ending the day up 4.2% and 2.1%, respectively.
    Meanwhile, the dollar index rose 0.39% and hit a high of 100.332, its highest level since May 2020. Gold also added 1.43% and settled at $1,976.1.
    Investors are looking ahead to the start of earnings season on Wednesday, which begins with JPMorgan and Delta Airlines.

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More

  • in

    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Chipotle, PG&E, Marathon Oil and CarMax

    A person wearing a protective mask enters a Chipotle restaurant in San Francisco, California, U.S., on Monday, April 19, 2021.
    David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    CarMax — CarMax shares plummeted 9.5% after reporting a beat on revenue but a miss on earnings for the latest quarter. The auto retailer earned 98 cents per share, below the $1.25 per share consensus estimate.

    CrowdStrike — Shares of the cybersecurity company jumped more than 3% after Goldman Sachs upgraded the stock to a “buy” from “neutral.” The firm said the strength of CrowdStrike’s business has been overlooked recently and that it’s “well positioned in the sweet spot of demand.”
    PG&E — Shares of the utility company rose 3.1% after it reached settlements to pay $55 million for two fires in Northern California. As part of the agreement, PG&E will not face any criminal prosecution.
    Cisco Systems —  Shares of the network technology company fell 2%, lagging behind the broader market, after Citi downgraded Cisco to sell from neutral. A Citi analyst said in a note to clients that Cisco was losing market share to its rivals.
    Hewlett Packard Enterprise — Shares of Hewlett Packard Enterprise dipped 2.5% after Morgan Stanley downgraded the stock to underweight from equal weight and said it expects the stock to underperform over the next year.
    Chegg — Shares of Chegg dropped 8.4% following a downgrade by KeyBanc Capital Markets. Analysts downgraded Chegg to sector weight from overweight, saying the company reported lower growth in the U.S. in its first quarter.

    Chipotle — Shares of the restaurant chain rose 1.4% after Citi initiated coverage of the stock with a buy rating. The firm said Chipotle is a “best-in-class growth leader.” 
    Albertsons — The food retailer’s stock sank 8.1% after reporting earnings for the recent quarter. Albertsons beat on revenue and reported earnings of 75 cents per share, 11 cents above consensus estimates.
    Oil stocks — Energy stocks rose on Tuesday as oil prices, which have seesawed in recent weeks, jumped back above $100 a barrel. Marathon Oil, Devon Energy and Occidental Petroleum jumped about 4.2%, 3.7% and 2.1%, respectively.
    — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Hannah Miao, Tanaya Macheel and Sarah Min contributed reporting

    WATCH LIVEWATCH IN THE APP More