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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Rivian, Oracle, DocuSign and more

    The Docusign Inc. application for download in the Apple App Store on a smartphone arranged in Dobbs Ferry, New York, U.S., on Thursday, April 1, 2021.
    Tiffany Hagler-Geard | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell: 
    Rivian — The electric vehicle company’s stock sank 12% postmarket on Thursday after missing estimates on the top and bottom lines for the fourth quarter as it grapples with supply chain disruptions. Rivian reported a loss of $2.43 per share on revenue of $54 million, while analysts surveyed by Refinitiv expected a loss of $1.97 per share on revenues of $60 million.

    Oracle — Shares of Oracle slipped 5% in extended trading Thursday after the company met revenue but missed earnings expectations for the third quarter. The company reported earnings per share of $1.13 on revenues of $10.51 billion. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv expected earnings of $1.18 per share on revenues of $10.51 billion. The company also said two investments led to a drop in income.
    DocuSign — DocuSign plummeted 18% during extended trading on Thursday after issuing weak revenue guidance for the first quarter and fiscal year. The e-signature software maker beat analysts’ expectations on the top and bottom lines for the fourth quarter and announced a $200 million stock buyback.
    Ulta Beauty — Shares of the retailer rose more than 1% in extended trading after beating revenue estimates for the fourth quarter. The company reported revenues of $2.73 billion, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected $2.69 billion.

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    JPMorgan is winding down its Russia operations amid widening business exodus over Ukraine war

    JPMorgan Chase, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, is stepping away from Russia.
    “In compliance with directives by governments around the world, we have been actively unwinding Russian business and have not been pursuing any new business in Russia,” company spokeswoman Tasha Pelio said in an email.
    The bank’s dealings related to Russia were “limited” to “helping global clients address and close out preexisting obligations; managing their Russian-related risk; acting as a custodian to our clients; and taking care of our employees,” she added.

    JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon listens as he is introduced at the Boston College Chief Executives Club luncheon in Boston, Massachusetts, U.S., November 23, 2021.
    Brian Snyder | Reuters

    JPMorgan Chase, the biggest U.S. bank by assets, is stepping away from Russia.
    “In compliance with directives by governments around the world, we have been actively unwinding Russian business and have not been pursuing any new business in Russia,” company spokeswoman Tasha Pelio said in an email.

    The bank’s dealings related to Russia were “limited” to “helping global clients address and close out pre-existing obligations; managing their Russian-related risk; acting as a custodian to our clients; and taking care of our employees,” she added.
    The Russian invasion of Ukraine has prompted global technology, payments and retail companies to recoil from Russia amid U.S. sanctions aimed at applying economic pressure on the country. JPMorgan’s move, reported earlier by Bloomberg, follows the announcement earlier Thursday that Goldman Sachs was exiting its business in the country.
    JPMorgan has fewer than 200 employees in Russia, working mostly in the firm’s corporate and investment bank, according to the company.
    Watch: PIMCO stands to lose billions if Russia defaults on its debt

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Amazon, CrowdStrike, Micron and more

    A worker sits on a wall dividing an informal settlement from the new Amazon fulfillment center, which is under construction at RMSG Alamar Industrial Park, in Tijuana, Mexico September 7, 2021.
    Jorge Duenes | Reuters

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Amazon — Amazon shares jumped 5.4% after the company said its board of directors has approved a 20-for-1 stock split, telling investors on Wednesday that they’ll receive 20 shares for each share they currently own. The board also approved a $10 billion share buyback program.

    CrowdStrike — Shares for the cybersecurity company gained 12.5%, after it disclosed strong quarterly profit and revenue in its earnings report Wednesday. CrowdStrike also has an upbeat forecast for the 2023 fiscal year, saying it will pursue market share as cybersecurity concerns rise.
    Asana — The collaboration software company’s stock cratered 22.1%. On Wednesday, Asana forecast losses that were greater than analysts’ expectations for the first quarter. The firm also announced a narrower-than-expected loss for its most recent quarter, as well as revenue that exceeded analysts’ estimates.
    Genesco – Genesco shares soared 7.4%, as the footwear retailer reported better-than-expected quarterly revenue and profit. Same-store sales for the firm rose 10% and online sales spiked 36%, compared with the same year-ago period.
    Baker Hughes, Halliburton, Chevron— The three energy companies rose together as a group, boosted by demand for greater energy production after the U.S. banned Russian oil. The number of oil rigs working dropped to 250 last year, from 1,077 in 2018, according to industry data from Baker Hughes. Oil field services companies Baker Hughes and Halliburton rose 8.7% and 8.9%, respectively. Chevron gained 2.7%.
    SolarEdge Technologies, Sunrun, Enphase — The three solar stocks declined as a group, after the sector rallied earlier in the week from rising oil and gas prices. SolarEdge slid 6.3%, Sunrun dipped 1.7%, and Enphase declined 0.6%.

    Micron Technology, Advanced Micro Devices — Some semiconductor stocks dropped together. Micron Technology’s stock tumbled 4.7%, and Advanced Micro Devices dropped 4.1%. Despite strong demand, chipmakers are facing supply chain issues for key materials stemming from the Russia-Ukraine conflict.
    — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting.

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    Crypto poses serious 401(k) risks, Biden administration warns

    Cryptocurrencies and other related investments like NFTs pose “significant risks” to 401(k) investors, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.
    The agency warned employers to proceed with extreme care before adding them to a retirement plan, since doing so may breach their legal obligations.
    Financial companies have been marketing crypto to 401(k) plans in recent months, the bureau said.

    Xinhua News Agency | Xinhua News Agency | Getty Images

    Cryptocurrencies, such as bitcoin and other digital assets like non-fungible tokens, pose “significant risks and challenges” to 401(k) investors, including fraud, theft and financial loss, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.
    The labor agency warned that employers that add crypto investments to their company 401(k) plans may easily run afoul of their legal obligations to workers who are plan participants.

    That counsel comes as financial services firms have begun marketing such investments as retirement-plan options in recent months, playing off growing popularity, the bureau said.
    More from Personal Finance:Here’s what to know about managing your debt in retirementRetirees likely shielded from inflation hit on some expenses’Nowhere to hide’ for consumers as inflation hits food, gas, housing
    “At this early stage in the history of cryptocurrencies … the U.S. Department of Labor has serious concerns about plans’ decisions to expose participants to direct investments in cryptocurrencies or related products, such as NFTs, coins and crypto assets,” Ali Khawar, acting assistant secretary at the Employee Benefits Security Administration, wrote Thursday.
    Employers who offer a 401(k) plan have a fiduciary duty relative to the investments they make available. That legal duty requires them to prudently select investments and monitor them on an ongoing basis.
    This duty has been the crux of a flurry of 401(k) lawsuits filed over the past decade or so, which have alleged workers lost money due to excessive costs and losses from unwise fund choices.

    Relative to crypto in 401(k) plans, the Labor Department outlined several risks and challenges in a compliance memo on Thursday.

    Crypto is speculative, volatile and hard to value, and it may be challenging for investors to make an informed investment decision, according to the bureau. Other properties — like losing the asset forever in the event of forgetting a password — also pose hazards, the agency said.
    Regulation may also change swiftly, the Labor Department said. President Joe Biden on Wednesday issued an executive order calling on the government to examine crypto’s risks and benefits. However, many crypto proponents viewed the order positively.
    “The big question coming into the executive order was whether it was going to be balanced, whether it was going to talk about both the risks and the opportunities of crypto,” Matt Hougan, chief investment officer at Bitwise Asset Management, told CNBC. “It’s pretty close to the outcome we were all hoping for.”

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    Pimco faces potential losses over exposure to more than $1 billion in Russian debt

    PIMCO headquarters in Newport Beach, California
    Scott Mlyn | CNBC

    Pimco’s billion-dollar exposure to Russian debt came under pressure as the country, which invaded its neighbor Ukraine amid international outrage, faces risk of a sovereign default.
    The asset manager’s $140 billion Pimco Income Fund (PIMIX) held $1.14 billion worth of Russia government international bonds as of the end of 2021, according to the fund’s annual report. The fund, co-run by chief investment officer Dan Ivascyn, also had written $942 million of credit-default swaps protection on Russia by the end of last year.

    These CDS enable investors to swap credit risk and Pimco, who sold these securities, will have to pay out should Russia default on its debt.
    The fund is off by 5.1% so far this year, slightly more than a Bloomberg benchmark bond index.
    Pimco’s Total Return bond fund and Emerging Markets bond fund also held similar positions tied to Russia.
    The Financial Times first reported on Pimco’s Russia exposure earlier Thursday. Pimco declined to comment.
    These positions could inflict huge losses on Pimco as Russia could be edging closer to a sovereign debt default amid massive sanctions by the U.S. and other countries over the war in Ukraine.

    Earlier this week, rating agency Fitch downgraded Russia’s sovereign rating by six notches further into junk territory to a C grade, saying a default is “imminent.”
    Moody’s and S&P have also slashed the country’s sovereign rating to “junk” status, saying Western sanctions could undermine Russia’s ability to service its debt.

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    There is 'nowhere to hide’ for consumers as inflation hits food, gas, housing

    Shelter, gasoline and food were the largest contributors to inflation in February, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.
    These categories are also the biggest components of household budgets. They accounted for 63% of total expenses for the average household in 2020.
    Grocery bills and housing costs are rising at their fastest annual rate since April 1981 and May 1991, respectively. Energy costs (which include gasoline) are up the most since July 1981.

    David Sacks | Getty Images

    Consumer prices are rising at their fastest pace in decades — and that inflation has been most acute in household staple items like food, housing and transportation, making it hard to escape the budgetary sting.
    The Consumer Price Index jumped 7.9% in February relative to a year earlier, the largest 12-month increase since January 1982, the U.S. Department of Labor said Thursday.

    The index measures price fluctuations across a broad basket of goods and services. A $100 basket a year ago would cost $107.90 today.
    Shelter, gasoline and food were the largest contributors to the increase in overall prices in February, the Labor Department said. (The price index jumped by 0.8% over the month.)

    These three categories were the three largest components of household budgets in 2020, respectively. Together, they accounted for 63% of total expenses, according to most recent Labor Department data.
    “There’s nowhere to hide,” said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for Bankrate. “This is hitting everybody.”
    Inflation “is most pronounced on items that are necessities,” he added.

    (Gasoline is part of the broader “transportation” category, which also includes public transit costs and vehicle purchases. Car sales have also spiked over the last year.)
    More from Personal Finance:How to save money at the grocery store as food prices riseRetirees likely shielded from inflation hit on some expensesThe Great Resignation is still in full swing
    Of course, inflation doesn’t impact all consumers equally. For example, a consumer who commutes by car and has to fill up a gas tank may feel higher prices more acutely than one who works from home or uses public transportation. And American workers have gotten big raises in the past year, reducing (though not always overriding) the sting of higher prices.
    The Federal Reserve is also expected to start raising interest rates next week in an attempt to tame inflation.

    The big three

    Household grocery bills swelled by 8.6% in the last 12 months, the largest jump since April 1981, according to the Labor Department.
    Costs for all major food groups increased in February; dairy and fruits and vegetables saw prices rise at their fastest monthly pace in over a decade.
    Gasoline price are up 38% in the last year. That statistic doesn’t include the recent run-up due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, which pushed prices at the pump to more than $4 a gallon, on average, on Sunday — the highest since 2008.
    Overall energy costs (which include items beyond gasoline) are up the most since July 1981, on an annual basis.

    Shelter costs like rents are up 4.7% in the last year, the most since May 1991. While that percentage increase was smaller than in other categories, housing costs account for more than a third of the average household budget — giving it an outsized dollar impact.
    “That comparatively benign increase … is likely to put the biggest squeeze on household budgets for the remainder of the year,” McBride said.
    A 5% increase in a $1,000-a-month apartment lease amounts to much more money than a 20% rise in something that costs $5, for example ($50 a month versus $1, respectively). And a lease locks in that price over a fixed term.

    Why inflation?

    Elevated inflation began emerging in spring 2021 as the U.S. economy came out of its pandemic hibernation.
    Consumers had pent-up demand after staying home for months to reduce the spread of Covid-19. Households were flush with cash; they’d been unable to spend on things like entertainment and travel, and had savings from stimulus checks and enhanced unemployment benefits the federal government issued to prop up the economy.
    High consumer demand stressed supply lines already beleaguered by virus-related disruptions. Higher prices followed, though were initially concentrated in just a few categories. Many economists and federal officials thought the phenomenon would be temporary.

    However, inflation has persisted. Consumers may see costs rise even faster in the next few months, according to financial experts.
    That’s likely to be true of gasoline and other categories negatively affected by the war in Ukraine. Further, the supply-chain snarl “may be worsened by prolonged economic consequences” of the conflict, according to Jason Pride, chief investment officer of private wealth at Philadelphia-based Glenmede Trust Company.
    He expects prices to rise at a more modest 4% to 5% annual rate by the end of 2022.

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    Goldman Sachs shutters Russia business, first major Wall Street bank to leave after Ukraine war

    Goldman Sachs says it is exiting Russia, becoming one of the first major global investment banks to do so after the country invaded its neighbor Ukraine last month.
    Most big U.S. banks had modest operations in Russia, a geographically large nation with a relatively small economy. Goldman was estimated to have $940 million in total exposure, or less than 10 basis points of its total assets, according to Bank of America analysts.
    While New York-based Goldman is shuttering its operations in Russia, it still facilitates trades in debt securities tied to the nation.

    David M. Solomon, Chairman and CEO of Goldman Sachs, speaks during the Milken Institute’s 22nd annual Global Conference in Beverly Hills, April 29, 2019
    Mike Blake | Reuters

    Goldman Sachs says it is exiting Russia, becoming the first major global investment bank to do so after the country invaded its neighbor Ukraine last month.
    The bank said Thursday in an e-mailed statement that it is working to wind down operations in Russia.

    “Goldman Sachs is winding down its business in Russia in compliance with regulatory and licensing requirements,” said a bank spokeswoman. “We are focused on supporting our clients across the globe in managing or closing out pre-existing obligations in the market and ensuring the well-being of our people.”
    The move is the latest sign of Russia’s increasing isolation in the third week of President Vladimir Putin’s campaign to overthrow the government of Ukraine. Tech firms including Apple and Google and payments firms like Visa and Mastercard were among the first to pull back from Russia, followed by retail brands including McDonald’s and Starbucks.  
    Most big U.S. banks had modest operations in Russia, a geographically large nation with a relatively small economy. Citigroup had the biggest exposure as of year-end 2021 at $9.8 billion, according to filings. Goldman was estimated to have $940 million in total exposure, including $650 million in credit, or less than 10 basis points of its total assets, according to Bank of America analysts.
    Meanwhile, banks including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Morgan Stanley don’t disclose their Russia exposure in filings, suggesting limited dealings with the country, according to the analysts.
    Citigroup had disclosed plans to sell its Russia operations last year as part of a strategic overhaul, well before the conflict began. But the war has forced it to run its consumer banking operations there on a “more limited” basis and could reportedly force Citigroup to simply shutter the business.

    While New York-based Goldman is closing its operations in Russia, it still facilitates trades in debt securities tied to the nation, according to Bloomberg, which first reported the bank’s move.
    “In our role as market-maker standing between buyers and sellers, we are helping our clients reduce their risk in Russian securities which trade in the secondary market, not seeking to speculate,” the bank said.
    With reporting from CNBC’s Jim Forkin.

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