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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Beyond Meat, Cisco, Las Vegas Sands and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Beyond Meat (BYND) — Shares of the alternative-meat maker dipped 2.4% in premarket trading after Piper Sandler downgraded the company to an underweight rating. “Beyond is an early leader in plant-based meat, but we believe its current all-channel retail momentum lags consensus expectations,” the firm said in a note to clients.

    Wynn Resorts (WYNN), Las Vegas Sands (LVS) — Macao-related casino stocks dipped again as authorities weigh tighter regulations on Macao’s gaming industry. Wynn declined 1.8%, while Las Vegas Sands slid 2.4%. JPMorgan downgraded both stocks to neutral from overweight following the governmental action, writing in a note to clients that they “don’t like the uncertainty and opacity surrounding Macao and China policy.”
    DoorDash (DASH) — Bank of America upgraded DoorDash to a buy rating, sending shares 3% higher during premarket trading. The firm’s bullish call is based on upside to 2021 estimates as well as a “robust” five-year growth opportunity.
    Cisco Systems (CSCO) — Cisco Systems gained 1.2% after several bullish Wall Street calls that followed the company’s investor day. Credit Suisse upgraded the stock to an outperform rating, saying Cisco is poised to execute on its long-term guidance while ramping its recurring revenue streams. JPMorgan, meanwhile, reiterated its overweight rating and added the stock to its analyst focus list
    Fisker (FSR) — Shares of the electric vehicle company dipped 2.7% after Bank of America downgraded the stock to neutral from buy. The firm said that while Fisker is “one of the more legitimate among the universe of start-up electric vehicle automakers,” the “competitive landscape is becoming incredibly fierce.” Bank of America also downgraded Lordstown Motors (RIDE) to underperform, sending shares down 2% in premarket trading.
    Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) — The energy stock advanced 1.3% on Thursday morning, despite a pullback in natural gas futures. Cabot’s stock has surged 25% during September amid a historic run in natural gas, which has seen prices hit their highest level in more than seven years.
    Alibaba (BABA), JD.com (JD), Pinduoduo (PDD) — U.S.-listed shares of Chinese tech stocks declined amid ongoing fears over what new regulatory measures could mean for the group. All three stocks dipped more than 1%.

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    Standard Chartered chairman still sees opportunity in China even as regulations tighten

    Investors may need to be more careful when putting money into China, but there are still investing opportunities in world’s second largest economy, according to the chairman of Standard Chartered.
    Stocks of Chinese companies have seen dramatic falls in recent months as Beijing introduces new regulations affecting sectors such as technology and education.
    Vinals also discussed inflation, which he said has an “important transitory component.”

    Tourists visit the Bund waterfront area on May 10, 2021 in Shanghai, China.
    Wang Gang | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    But overall, I think China continues to be a tremendous source of opportunity for the private sector.

    Jose Vinals
    Chairman of Standard Chartered

    “There’ve been some articles in the media about — is China becoming uninvestable? I don’t think so,” Jose Vinals told CNBC’s Hadley Gamble on Wednesday.
    A number of sectors may be “a little bit more challenged now” and investors need to look more carefully at what investments they are making, he said.
    “But overall, I think China continues to be a tremendous source of opportunity for the private sector,” he said, pointing out Beijing has slowly opened up its financial sector, granting some international firms access.
    The regulatory crackdown in China has been interpreted differently by big names in the financial world, including Ray Dalio, George Soros and David Roche.

    Inflation expectations

    Separately, Vinals said he doesn’t expect inflation to be a big problem.
    “I still subscribe to the view that inflation that we’re seeing in the United States and in other Western countries in particular … has an important transitory component,” he said.

    Read more about China from CNBC Pro

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell similarly believes that inflation will soon subside and has said he wants to see more strong employment reports before the central bank starts paring back its bond purchases.
    Vinals said many Western countries are operating below their maximum economic potential, adding the Federal Reserve is likely to hike rates early next year.
    “My baseline is that inflation will not be a big problem. But there is a risk that it may become more of a problem than we think,” he said, acknowledging that it would “complicate things” for the world.
    “But I see [inflation] more as a downside risk to the global economic recovery, than as the base case for the economic outlook,” he said.

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    Stock futures rise slightly following S&P 500's best day in more than two weeks

    A trader works at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), August 19, 2021.
    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    Stock futures edged up in overnight trading on Wednesday following a rebound on Wall Street as the market tried to avert the seasonally weak September.
    Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 30 points. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq 100 futures both gained 0.1%.

    Moderna rose slightly in extended trading after the company released more data on breakthrough Covid cases that supports the push for the wide use of vaccine booster shots.
    The S&P 500 gained 0.9% Wednesday amid a 3.8% jump in the energy sector, posting its biggest daily increase since Aug. 27. The blue-chip Dow advanced more than 200 points, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite rose 0.8%.
    After seven straight months of gains for the S&P 500 and a near 20% rally to records this year, many on Wall Street expect bumpier trading and lower returns for the rest of the year. History is also not in the market’s favor as September tends to be a typically negative month for stocks. The S&P 500 has fallen 0.56% during the month on average since 1945, according to data from CFRA.
    “The wall of worry is becoming increasingly challenging to climb, with rising depth and breadth of concerns and a potentially tired market,” said Mark Hackett, Nationwide’s chief of investment research.
    So far this month, the 30-stock Dow is down 1.6%, while the S&P 500 has declined 0.9%, on track for its worst monthly performance since January. The Nasdaq has fallen 0.6% this month.

    “The stress factors facing the market have not materially changed, including the Delta variant, earnings headwinds from supply chain and labor challenges, fiscal and monetary tailwind shifting to headwinds and bubbling concerns around China,” Hackett said.
    Investors will monitor the latest jobless claims data on Thursday. Economists polled by Dow Jones expect a total of 320,000 Americans filed for unemployment insurance in the week ended Sept.11, slightly up from 310,000 in the week prior.
    Traders are also bracing for a potential surge in volatility on Friday. The so-called quadruple witching will occur at the end of the week as stock and index futures and options are set to expire on the same day.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves after hours: Electronic Arts, Moderna and more

    Gamers play the video game ‘Star Wars Battlefront II’ developed by DICE, Criterion Games and Motive Studios and published by Electronics Arts on Sony PlayStation game consoles PS4 Pro during the ‘Paris Games Week’ on October 31, 2017 in Paris, France.

    Check out the companies making headlines after the bell: 
    Electronic Arts — Shares of the video game company jumped more than 2% in after-hours trading after the company announced that its highly-anticipated game Battlefield 2041 is now slated for a worldwide launch on Nov. 19.

    Moderna  — The drug maker’s stock rose slightly in extended trading after the company released more data on so-called breakthrough Covid cases that supports the push for the wide use of vaccine booster shots. The study that showed the incidence of breakthrough Covid cases was less frequent in a group of trial participants who were more recently inoculated, suggesting immunity for earlier groups had started to wane.
    Danimer Scientific — Shares of the biopolymer manufacturer rebounded about 3% after a near 15% sell-off during the regular trading session on Wednesday. The sharp decline came after short-seller Muddy Waters published a negative report on the company. Danimer “greatly misrepresented the state of its business,” including “customer relationships, product development, scalability and TAM for PHAs,” the report said.

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    FDIC teams up with Microsoft and Truist to create fund to invest in minority-owned banks

    The FDIC will this week unveil an investment fund that offers investors a way to support banks owned by and in support of people of color.
    Microsoft and Truist Financial are so-called anchor investors in the fund, each putting in tens of millions of dollars to help it launch.
    FDIC Chairman Jelena McWilliams said she and her team built the fund, which will decide how to allocate capital in a process inspired by investment show “Shark Tank.”

    Jelena McWilliams, chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Tuesday, Aug. 3, 2021.
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will unveil this week a new investment fund backed by corporate giants that will offer stakeholders a way to channel much-needed capital to banks owned by and in support of people of color.
    The new Mission-Driven Bank Fund will exclusively invest at banks that service minority, lower-income and rural communities that often suffer from a lack of long-term capital, according to documents seen by CNBC.

    The project represents the latest government-backed effort to support minority-owned banks, which have struggled in recent decades because of failed loans, competitors that are larger as a result of  mergers and acquisitions, and financial downturns that have an outsized impact on smaller banks.
    “One of the things that I heard in the beginning, and in particular for Black banks, was a lack of capital. Finding good capital to come to the banks was the No. 1 thing,” FDIC Chair Jelena McWilliams told CNBC on Monday.
    Microsoft and Truist Financial are so-called anchor investors in the fund, each putting in tens of millions of dollars to help it launch. The fund, also supported by media giant Discovery, has raised approximately $120 million to date.
    The fund’s conception and design also implicitly endorse a new school of thinking on the best ways to support minority-owned, community-focused banks that center on the importance of long-term “patient” capital.
    Longer-term investments — such as equity or debt financing — allow lenders greater flexibility to lend capital to borrowers at a profit, the main moneymaking lever for consumer and small-business banks.

    Minority bank advocates hope that more million-dollar corporate deposits or a greater number of certificates of deposit will buy smaller banks enough time to not only generate profits but also to help rectify race-based economic inequities.
    McWilliams said her early work on the fund included conversations with small bank CEOs about how the federal government could best help them in their mission to boost homeownership and business formation among communities of color.

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    “This fund is supposed to leverage the investments from others under the brand of the FDIC,” she said, “and then allow every dollar to be multiplied exponentially for the benefit of homeowners and small businesses and credit in the communities where it is needed the most.”
    Founded in the aftermath of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the FDIC is perhaps best known as one of the nation’s top bank regulators, and it insures American consumers against sudden deposit losses at member banks. In an effort to prevent “bank runs” through deposit insurance, the FDIC ensures that member banks meet a variety of financial stability metrics.
    Then-President Donald Trump nominated McWilliams to lead the FDIC, and the Senate confirmed her appointment in May 2018.
    The FDIC will have no role in managing the fund since doing so could pose legal headaches and potential conflicts of interest for the bank regulator.
    Still, the idea for the fund was first pitched by McWilliams, who said she was inspired a few years ago during a flight. Flicking through her seatback television, she eventually tuned to ABC’s popular investing show “Shark Tank.” Reruns of “Shark Tank” also air during prime time on CNBC.
    “As I saw different investors pitching their themes to the sharks, I thought, ‘Well, why don’t we have a “Shark Tank”-like fund for minority depository institutions?'” McWilliams recalled. “As soon as I landed, I called up Brandon [Milhorn], who’s my chief of staff here. And I said, ‘Brandon, I want us to have a “Shark Tank” for minority banks.'”
    “And he’s like, ‘Oh dear Lord! How are we going to do that?'”

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Years later the fund is ready to launch. Investors will have a new way to drive capital to two special classes of lenders known as Minority Depository Institutions and Community Development Financial Institutions, collectively known as “mission-driven” banks.
    The FDIC defines an MDI as any bank it insures for which 51% or more of its voting stock is owned by minority individuals, or a majority of its corporate board are members of a minority group and the community that it serves consists predominantly of minority groups.
    The Treasury Department certifies every MDI and CDFI, which must show that at least 60% of their total lending, services and other activities benefit low-income communities. As of March 2021, the FDIC insured 142 MDIs and 172 CDFIs.
    Bank leaders hoping for an investment from the Mission-Driven fund will submit pitches to the committee and the forthcoming manager, who will decide whether to provide the lender with an equity investment, debt financing, loss-sharing agreements or other capital.
    “Supporting mission-driven banks aligns perfectly with Microsoft’s commitments to address racial injustice and inequity,” Anita Mehra, Microsoft’s corporate vice president of global treasury and financial services, said in prepared remarks. “We look forward to the seeing the continued opportunities this will help provide for mission-driven banks and the communities they serve.”
    “MDIs and CDFIs play crucial roles serving the needs of minority and rural neighborhoods, and Truist has an established history of partnering with these organizations. We’re extending this commitment through an innovative approach to capital investments and we believe this will significantly enhance these institutions’ ability to provide positive outcomes for our communities,” said Truist CEO William H. Rogers Jr.
    Small community banks tend to generate a significant percentage of their available capital through customer deposits. But unlike equity ownership or debt financing, deposits can be redeemed by savers at any time and are considered liabilities on a bank’s balance sheet.
    That inability to make loans can have disastrous consequences when economic conditions sour, said Michael Pugh, chief executive of Carver Federal Savings Bank, a community bank that has prioritized service to New York City’s Black communities since 1948.
    During the pandemic, “41% percent of Black-owned businesses at a national level closed,” Pugh said Monday. “Many of those businesses went under because, frankly, they just did not have the access to capital to survive a catastrophic situation.”

    People walk by a store going out of business along 125th street in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City, August 7, 2020.
    Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

    Black communities have for decades been underserved by the U.S. banking sector.
    In a 2016 complaint, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau alleged that BancorpSouth unlawfully denied Memphis-area Black applicants certain mortgage loans. The CFPB also asserted that the bank forced its employees to review applications from people of color faster than those from white applicants and not to provide minority applicants with credit assistance.
    Three years later, a review of more than 7 million 30-year mortgages led the University of California at Berkeley to conclude that Black and Latino borrowers pay “0.079% and 0.036% percentage points more in interest for home-purchase and refinance mortgages, respectively, because of discrimination.”
    National data showed in 2020 that 75% of white households owned the home in which they lived. Just half of Hispanic households could say the same, while only 45.3% of Black households owned their residence.
    “The reason that patient capital is needed is because the institutions like Carver — the work that we’re doing, is very much focused on rebuilding by revitalizing communities,” often a yearslong process, Pugh said. “If you don’t have the equity investment, then you don’t have the capital and your lending opportunities become constrained.”

    That lending, Pugh said, is critical in a bank’s ability to grant mortgages or provide funding to small businesses that “drive the economic engines of our nation.” As both an MDI and a CDFI, Carver reinvests 80 cents of every dollar it receives in deposits back into Harlem, Brooklyn and Queens.
    An FDIC survey found last year that 13.8% of Black households in America don’t have bank accounts at all, compared with 5.4% of the overall population.
    Lenders contend that these differences reflect the fact that minorities tend to have less cash on hand and lower credit scores. Their critics argue the disparities represent historical and structural problems that banks have a moral obligation to help solve.
    “Banks, if you kind of think about the overarching premise, we take in deposits, and then we lend that money out,” Pugh said. “And we should be doing it in a responsible way to help support the communities that we serve.”
    Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to “Shark Tank.”

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Wynn, SoFi, Diamondback Energy and more

    A worker cleans an escalator on Las Vegas Boulevard in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., on Tuesday, March 17, 2020.
    Joe Buglewicz | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Casino stocks — Casino stocks were under pressure for a second day Wednesday amid heightened scrutiny from the government of Macau and as Chinese health authorities reported a Covid-19 outbreak. Wynn Resorts fell 6%, while MGM Resorts and Las Vegas Sands lost roughly 2%.

    EOG Resources – Shares of the exploration and production company surged more than 8% as commodity prices rallied on Wednesday. Every component within the S&P 500 energy sector advanced at least 1%, with Diamondback Energy and Marathon Oil each up more than %7. Occidental rose over 6%. West Texas Intermediate crude futures, the U.S. oil benchmark, gained about 3% following a larger than expected U.S. inventory draw.
    Weber — Shares of the grill maker jumped more than 7% after reporting its first quarterly results since it began trading publicly in August. Weber recorded sales growth of 19% from a year earlier and projected full-year sales above current Wall Street forecasts.
    Canadian National Railway — Shares of the railroad company rose 2% after the company said that its planned merger with Kansas City Southern was officially canceled, with Canadian National set to receive $1.4 billion in termination fees. Kansas City Southern has now entered into a new merger agreement with Canadian Pacific. Those stocks both rose slightly on Wednesday.
    Just Eat Takeaway — Shares of the food delivery service company slipped more than 4.5%. The decline came after Amazon and Deliveroo announced a partnership that will offer free food delivery in the U.K. to Amazon Prime members.
    SoFi — Shares of the fintech company rose 6.5% after Mizuho began coverage with a buy rating. The Wall Street firm assigned the stock a $28 price target compared to Tuesday’s close of $14.50. Mizuho said it sees a cycle of “increased engagement, boosting revenue and profits” for Sofi.

    Sage Therapeutics — The drug maker’s stock jumped over 3% after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration granted it fast-track status for its experimental treatment of Huntington’s disease. Sage is expected to begin the second phase of a trial for the treatment before the end of the year.
    Citrix Systems — Citrix shares rose more than 2% a day after Bloomberg News reported that the workplace software maker is working with advisers to consider a possible sale of the company. The company could end up deciding to remain independent but will gauge potential interest in the company over the next few weeks, according to the report.
    Yum China — Yum China lost nearly 6% after it warning that the spread of the delta variant could hit its third-quarter profits by 50% to 60%. The restaurant operator closed or limited service at more than 500 restaurants in August, due to outbreak of the variant in China, it said.
     — CNBC’s Hannah Miao, Pippa Stevens, Maggie Fitzgerald, Jesse Pound and Yun Li contributed reporting

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    House Democrats' capital gains tax proposal is better for the super rich than Biden plan

    House Democrats proposed a top 25% federal tax rate on capital gains and dividends. It would apply to single taxpayers with over $400,000 of income and married couples with over $450,000.
    President Joe Biden had called for a 39.6% top rate on the top 0.3% of taxpayers, who have more than $1 million of annual income.
    The richest Americans tend to generate more wealth from appreciated stock and other assets. They also pass on larger inheritances than lower earners.

    NICHOLAS KAMM | AFP | Getty Images

    The uber rich may be cheering House Democrats’ proposed tax reforms on investment income relative to the Biden administration’s earlier plan.
    The White House called for a 39.6% top federal tax rate on long-term capital gains and dividends — nearly double the current 20%.

    Long-term capital gains tax applies to assets like stocks and homes that have grown in value and owned for at least one year; taxpayers owe money on the appreciation when they sell an asset. A dividend tax applies to distributions of profits that companies make to their stockholders.
    Biden’s policy would only apply to the richest Americans — the top 0.3%, or those with $1 million or more of income. It’d be among the highest rates on capital gains and dividends in the developed world.

    But House Ways and Means Committee legislation unveiled Monday would tax capital gains and dividends at a much lower top rate, of 25%. The House proposal would apply to single filers with at least $400,000 of income and married couples with $450,000.
    Put another way: Biden’s plan would have raised the top federal tax rate by 98% (relative to current law) for the richest Americans, while the House proposal increases it by 25%. The House plan would also raise taxes for a broader swath of people.
    “This change is FANTASTIC for the uber-wealthy,” Jeffrey Levine, an accountant and certified financial planner, who serves as chief planning officer at Buckingham Wealth Partners, wrote in a tweet.  

    “For the ‘merely’ affluent taxpayer though? Not so much,” he added.
    An existing 3.8% Medicare surtax and state levies would come on top of any change to the federal rate.

    Investment income

    The wealthy get more of their income from investments versus wages relative to low- and middle-earners.
    For example, the top 0.1%, who earn $3.4 million or more, get more than half their annual income from capital gains, dividends and interest; a quarter is from wages and benefits, according to a Tax Policy Center analysis from 2019.
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    By comparison, wages and benefits account for about 60% to 70% of annual income for taxpayers outside the richest 1%, according to the analysis.
    “[The House proposal] is obviously not as punitive from their standpoint as the original proposals were,” James Hines Jr., an economics professor and research director of the Office of Tax Policy Research at the University of Michigan, said of the wealthy.
    Of course, wealthy Americans may not be cheering either proposal; they’d likely prefer their tax rate not increase at all, Hines said.

    Capital gains at death

    The plans also differ in how they’d tax inheritances that have appreciated significantly in value.
    Biden’s plan would tax an asset’s appreciation upon its owner’s death. This would aim to prevent the super wealthy from continually passing stock and other financial assets to the next generation for little or no tax.
    (Capital gains less than $1 million for single filers and $2.5 million for married couples would be exempt.)
    The House plan preserves the status quo, which doesn’t impose this tax at death. Existing law also lets heirs receive an asset at its current value, erasing the paper gain and thereby diluting their future tax bill if they sell.
    The wealthiest families receive the largest inheritances — $719,000, on average, at the time of inheritance, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances. (The average for all Americans is $46,000.)
    The inheritances aren’t necessarily attributable to capital gains. But a significant portion of economic gains for the richest Americans are attributable to unrealized capital gains, according to the Federal Reserve. About 41% of the top 1% have an unrealized capital gain.
    Of course, final legislation could ultimately change from both the House and Biden proposals as Democrats try to raise money for up to $3.5 trillion of education, healthcare, childcare, climate, paid leave and other measures.
    “We’re now in the second or third inning,” said Leon LaBrecque, an accountant and certified financial planner at Sequoia Financial Group.

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    Goldman Sachs is acquiring buy now, pay later fintech GreenSky for $2.2 billion

    Goldman Sachs is acquiring digital lender GreenSky for $2.24 billion as the investment bank pushes further into consumer finance.
    The all-stock deal for GreenSky, called the biggest fintech platform for home improvement loans in a release announcing the deal, is expected to close by the first quarter of 2022, the companies said on Wednesday.
    GreenSky shares jumped 44% in premarket trading before they were halted.

    David Zalik, founder and CEO of GreenSky.
    Chris Hamilton | GreenSky

    Goldman Sachs is acquiring digital lender GreenSky for $2.24 billion as the investment bank pushes further into consumer finance.
    The all-stock deal for GreenSky, called the biggest fintech platform for home improvement loans in a release announcing the transaction, is expected to close by the first quarter of 2022, the companies said on Wednesday. GreenSky shares jumped 44% in premarket trading before they were halted.

    “We have been clear in our aspiration for Marcus to become the consumer banking platform of the future, and the acquisition of GreenSky advances this goal,” Goldman CEO David Solomon said in the release. “GreenSky and its talented team have built an impressive, cloud-native platform that will allow Marcus to reach a new and active set of merchants and customers.”
    The move helps Goldman ramp up in consumer finance, a huge opportunity outside of its historic domain of investment banking, trading and wealth management for the rich. Goldman began in retail banking five years ago with its Marcus brand of loans, and has since added automated investing and personal finance, as well as partnerships with Apple, Jetblue and Amazon.
    The bank said the GreenSky deal bulks up its customer base and gives it access to GreenSky’s network of more than 10,000 merchants.
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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