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    Robinhood tanks after SEC chair tells Barron's that banning payment for order flow is a possibility

    Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler told Barron’s that banning the controversial practice of payment for order flow is “on the table.”
    Robinhood has said that if the PFOF model changed, the brokerage and the industry would be able to adapt.
    Shares of Robinhood were already lower on Monday after CNBC reported that PayPal is exploring ways to let users trade individual stocks.

    Shares of Robinhood dropped Monday amid several bouts of bad news for the brokerage app.
    Robinhood’s stock fell 6.9% to $43.64 per share after Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Gary Gensler told Barron’s that banning the controversial practice of payment for order flow is “on the table.”

    Arrows pointing outwards

    Gensler told the outlet that payment for order flow — the back-end payment brokerages receive for directing clients’ trades to market makers — has “an inherent conflict of interest.”
    Payment for order flow is one of Robinhood’s largest revenue sources and the way the millennial-favored stock trading app is able to provide zero-commission trading. Payment for order flow is a controversial practice that has garnered attention from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and Main Street.
    Asked for clarification, an SEC spokesperson declined to comment for this story. Gensler has for months said that an outright ban of payment for order flow is among several options the regulator could introduce.
    The SEC has said it will also consider clearer and more rigorous brokerage disclosures as another possible alternative.
    Following an epic short squeeze in GameStop’s stock in January that forced Robinhood to limit trading on certain securities, Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev was forced to testify to the U.S. House Financial Services Committee in February. Legislators criticized payment for order flow for the conflict it has with market makers like Citadel Securities.

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    “We think payment-for-order flow is a better deal for our customers, vs. the old commission structure. It allows investors to invest smaller amounts without having to worry about the cost of commissions,” Robinhood CFO Jason Warnick said during the company’s virtual roadshow before its IPO.
    Robinhood has said that if the PFOF model changed, the brokerage and the industry would be able to adapt.
    Gensler’s comments come after the SEC said Friday it is stepping up its inquiry into so-called gamification and behavioral prompts used by online brokerages and investment advisors to prod people to trade more stocks and other securities.
    Shares of Robinhood were already lower Monday after CNBC reported that PayPal is exploring ways to let users trade individual stocks.
    As part of the expansion, according to one of the sources, the payment giant hired a brokerage industry veteran to lead “Invest at PayPal” — a previously unreported division of the payments giant.
    Robinhood went public on the Nasdaq last month, hitting the public markets it seeks to democratize for amateur investors. Since the debut, shares of Robinhood have had a wild ride. After sinking on the first few days of trading, the company had a meme stock moment when it rallied 50% amid retail investor interest.
    The stock is up more than 24% in August.
    Click here to read the full Barron’s report.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: PayPal, Generac, Dave & Buster's and more

    A worker inspects a 24-kilowatt Generac home generator at Captain Electric on February 18, 2021 in Orem, Utah.
    George Frey | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Affirm, Amazon — Shares of Affirm soared more than 46% after the buy-now, pay-later company announced a partnership with Amazon. The e-commerce giant is teaming up with Affirm for its first partnership with an installment payment player on the Amazon site. Shares of Amazon rose more than 2%.

    Globalstar, Apple — The satellite services company saw shares surge about 64% on a report that Apple’s iPhone, scheduled to launch in the fall, will support satellite communications, allowing customers to call and send messages via satellite. Apple has an existing satellite phone network of 24 satellites in low Earth orbit. Securities analyst Ming-Chi Kuo said Globalstar is most likely to partner with Apple. Apple shares rose 3%.
    Baxter International, Hill-Rom — Baxter International, the healthcare products maker, saw its shares rise 2.7% after the Wall Street Journal reported it’s in advanced talks to acquire the medical technology provider Hill-Rom in a $10 billion potential deal that’s about $150 per share. Hill-Rom shares were $132.90 at the market close on Friday. They rallied nearly 10% Monday.
    Generac — The battery backup company’s shares rose 1.2% after Bank of America reiterated the stock as a buy. Hurricane Ida, which has become the fifth-largest hurricane to hit the U.S. mainland, could “serve as a positive catalyst” for the company over the next 30 days, the analyst said. Generac stock has climbed for the past eight sessions, benefiting from demand increases related to the weather disruptions.
    NetEase — Chinese gaming giant NetEase’s stock fell as much as almost 5% midday after China’s National Press and Publication Administration published a new rule for kids and teens under 18 years old in China, limiting their online video game time to just three hours per week. The agency billed the rules as a way to safeguard children’s physical and mental health.
    PayPal — PayPal shares jumped more than 3.5%% on a CNBC report that it’s exploring a stock-trading platform for its U.S. customers as it faces increasing competition from Square, Robinhood and other brokerages and financial superapps.

    Robinhood — Robinhood fell about 3% following the PayPal report and later dropped as low as 8% on news that Gary Gensler, chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, said a full ban of payment for order flow is “on the table,” according to a Barron’s report. The controversial practice, in which brokerage firms receive rebates on trades routed through their clearing firm, is used by many no-fee brokers.
    Capital One — Shares of Capital One fell more than 6% after Baird downgraded the stock to an underperform rating from neutral. Good news is already priced into the stock after a massive rally this year, according to Baird. “After being vocal bulls on COF for all of 2020 and most of this year, we now feel that the risk/reward trade-off for the stock is skewed to the downside, and we recommend taking profits here,” the firm said in a note.
    Weber — The grill maker’s shares rose 4% after the company received positive endorsements from Wall Street analysts. Goldman Sachs and Bank of America initiated coverage with buy ratings and J.P. Morgan Securities rated the stock overweight, all citing Weber’s leading position as well as pricing power. The company went public earlier this month.
    Dave & Buster’s — Shares of Dave & Buster’s fell more than 4% after Stifel downgraded the stock to a hold rating from a buy. Casual dining visitation trends have slowed amid high Covid cases, according to Stifel’s analysis of mobile location data.
    Zoom Video — Shares of the video conferencing company rose nearly 2% Monday ahead of Zoom’s second-quarter earnings report. The company will release its latest results after the bell.
     — CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald, Hannah Miao, Jesse Pound and Yun Li contributed reporting

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    Stocks making the biggest moves in the premarket: Affirm, Moderna, Globalstar and more

    Take a look at some of the biggest movers in the premarket:
    Affirm (AFRM) – Affirm rocketed 41.2% in premarket trading after the digital payments specialist announced a partnership with Amazon.com (AMZN) that will allow Amazon customers to pay over time for purchases of $50 or more.

    Moderna (MRNA) – Moderna fell 2.7% in the premarket after 1 million more Covid-19 vaccine doses were pulled from circulation in Japan on contamination concerns. An initial withdrawal of 1.63 million doses had taken place last week after foreign substances were found in some batches, with contamination now linked to two deaths. Spain’s Rovi, which bottles the vaccines for markets outside the U.S., said it is investigating the issue.
    Globalstar (GSAT) – The satellite services provider soared 41.3% higher in premarket action following a report in AppleInsider that the iPhone 13 will have the ability to utilize satellite communications.
    Li Auto (LI) – Li Auto reported a smaller-than-expected loss and revenue that exceeded analysts’ forecasts for its latest quarter. The China-based electric vehicle maker also said it delivered 17,575 vehicles during the quarter, a 166% increase over a year earlier. Li Auto shares gained 2.3% in premarket trading.
    Hill-Rom (HRC) – Hill-Rom is in advanced talks to be acquired by health-care products maker Baxter International (BAX), according to people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Wall Street Journal. The potential deal for the medical equipment maker is about $10 billion or $150 per share, compared to Hill-Rom’s Friday close of $132.90. Hill-Rom rallied 8.7% in the premarket.
    Weber (WEBR) – The grill maker, which went public earlier this month, is up 3.8% in premarket trading after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage with a “buy” rating and J.P. Morgan Securities rated the stock “overweight.” The firms cited Weber’s leading position in the global market as well as pricing power.

    Levi Strauss (LEVI) – The apparel maker’s shares rose 1% in the premarket after Wells Fargo initiated coverage with an “overweight rating.” Wells Fargo points to a consensus that a new denim cycle has taken hold, and the company’s position as one of the higher quality global brands.
    Catalent (CTLT) – The contract drug manufacturer struck a deal to buy nutritional supplement maker Bettera from private-equity firm Highlander partners for $1 billion. Separately, Catalent reported better-than-expected earnings and revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter, and the stock jumped 2.2% in the premarket.
    Support.com (SPRT) – Support.com surged 46.2% in the premarket after the provider of technical support saw its stock rise for the past seven sessions in a row and jump 223% over that stretch. There has been no news of significance from the company over that stretch.
    Generac (GNRC) – Generac remains on watch after rising for the past eight sessions in a row, with the maker of backup generators benefiting from demand increases stemming from weather-related disruptions. The stock has jumped 12.1% during the win streak.

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    Support.com shares soar another 40% as meme traders pile into the heavily shorted software company

    The Reddit logo is seen on a smartphone in front of a displayed Wall Street Bets logo in this illustration taken January 28, 2021.
    Dado Ruvic | Reuters

    Shares of Support.com are poised to extend their massive GameStop-style rally as Reddit-obsessed retail investors zoned in on the heavily shorted software name.
    The stock of the provider of technical support surged 45% in premarket trading on Monday, on pace for its eighth straight day of gains. Shares have skyrocketed 223% during the seven-day winning streak as Reddit traders flocked into the little-known small-cap stock.

    Nearly 60% of Support.com’s float shares are currently sold short, according to S3 Partners. That’s an extremely high level of short interest as an average U.S. stock typically has about 5% shares sold short.
    The meteoric rise is reminiscent of the epic GameStop short squeeze in January when coordinated trading on social media platform WallStreetBets resulted in monstrous moves in the stock and inflicted huge losses for short sellers.
    When a stock jumps sharply higher, it forces short sellers to buy back shares in order to limit their losses. The short covering tends to fuel the stock’s rally further.
    SPRT ticker mentions have increased 66% over the past week on Reddit’s WallStreetBets, according to alternative research provider Quiver Quantitative.
    Vinco Ventures, with ticker BBIG, is another popular target in the chatroom, Quiver Quantitative data said. The stock is up more than 60% in premarket trading after jumping 120% last week.

    Drastic moves in meme stocks tend to occur when overall trading is muted on Wall Street. Investors are mostly awaiting a key jobs report on Friday before the Labor Day weekend in a week that will likely see below-average volume.

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    Stock futures are flat as S&P 500 and Nasdaq sit at a record

    A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., on Monday, Aug. 23, 2021.
    Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    U.S. stock futures were steady in overnight trading on Sunday as investors readied for the final trading days of August.
    Dow futures rose just 11 points. S&P 500 futures were little changed and Nasdaq 100 futures traded around the flatline.

    Stocks could stay range-bound until the release of August’s jobs report on Friday. Economists polled by Dow Jones expect 750,000 jobs were created in August and the unemployment rate fell to 5.2%.
    Monday and Tuesday mark the last two trading days of August. Thus far, the S&P 500 is up 2.6% in August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Nasdaq Composite rose 1.5% and 3.1% this month, respectively.
    The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite closed at all-time highs on Friday as investors breathed a sigh of relief after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled bond tapering could start this year, but the central bank is in no rush to hike interest rates. 
    Powell said inflation is solidly around the central bank’s 2% target rate, one of the goals of the Fed’s dual mandate; however, the Fed chairman also explained why he continues to think the current inflation rise is transitory and will eventually drop to the target level.

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    Based on statements from other Fed officials, a tapering announcement could come as soon as the Fed’s Sept. 21-22 meeting. Powell said the central bank has “much ground to cover” to reach its other goal of maximum employment.

    Friday’s gains added to a strong week for the major averages. The Dow finished up 0.9%, while the S&P 500 added 1.5% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 2.8% last week.
    With the Fed’s Jackson Hole meeting in the rearview, investors are now focused on the direction of stocks for the final months of the year. The S&P 500 is up more than 20% in 2021 but the market is also absorbing peak policy stimulus, peak earnings acceleration and peak reopening momentum.
    Oil futures were up marginally as the commodity proved to have a minimal reaction to Hurricane Ida. WTI Crude futures rose 0.8%.
    Cloudera and Zoom Video report earnings after the bell on Monday.

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    The economy that covid-19 could not stop

    HAVING IMPRESSED the world by taming the virus last year, Vietnam is now in the middle of its worst outbreak of covid-19 by far. Parts of the country are in strict lockdown and a swathe of factories, from those making shoes for Nike to those producing smartphones for Samsung, have either slowed or shut down, disrupting global supply chains. Yet integration with global manufacturing has helped keep Vietnam’s economy humming during the pandemic. In 2020 GDP rose by 2.9% even as most countries recorded deep recessions. Despite the latest outbreak, this year could see faster growth: the World Bank’s latest forecasts, published on August 24th, expect an expansion of 4.8% in 2021.This performance hints at the real reason to be impressed by Vietnam. Its openness to trade and investment has made it an important link in supply chains. And that in turn has powered a remarkable and lengthy expansion. Vietnam has been one of the five fastest-growing countries in the world over the past 30 years, beating its neighbours hands down (see chart 1). Its record has been characterised not by the fits and starts of many other frontier markets, but by steady growth. The government is even more ambitious, wanting Vietnam to become a high-income country by 2045, a task that requires growing at 7% a year. What is the secret to Vietnam’s success—and can it be sustained? Vietnam is often compared to China in the 1990s or early 2000s, and not without reason. Both are communist countries that, shepherded by a one-party political system, turned capitalist and focused on export-led growth. But there are big differences, too. For a start, even describing Vietnam’s economy as export-intensive does not do justice to just how much it sells abroad. Its goods trade exceeds 200% of GDP. Few economies in the world, except the most resource-rich countries or city states dominated by maritime trade, are or have ever been so trade-intensive.It is not just the level of exports but the nature of the exporters that makes Vietnam different to China. Indeed, its deep connection to global supply chains and high levels of foreign investment makes it seem more like Singapore. Since 1990 Vietnam has received average foreign direct investment inflows worth 6% of GDP each year, more than twice the global level—far more than China or South Korea have ever recorded over a sustained period. As the rest of East Asia developed and wages there rose, global manufacturers were lured by Vietnam’s low labour costs and stable exchange rate. That fuelled an export boom. In the past decade, exports by domestic firms have risen by 137%, while those by foreign-invested companies have surged by 422% (see chart 2). But the widening gap between foreign and domestic firms now poses a threat to Vietnam’s expansion. It has become overwhelmingly dependent on investment and exports by foreign companies, while domestic firms have underperformed. Foreign firms can continue to grow, providing more employment and output. But there are limits to how far they can drive Vietnam’s development. The country will need a productive and efficient services sector. As living standards rise it may become less attractive to foreign manufacturers over time, and workers will need other opportunities.Part of the drag on domestic enterprise comes from state-owned firms. Their importance to the country’s activity and employment has shrunk (see chart 3). But they still have an outsize effect on the economy through their preferential position in the banking system, which lets them borrow cheaply. Banks make up for that unproductive lending by charging other domestic firms higher rates. Whereas foreign companies can easily access funding overseas, the average interest rate on a medium- and long-term bank loan in Vietnamese dong ran to 10.25% last year. Recent research by academics at the London School of Economics also suggests that productivity gains in the five years after Vietnam joined the WTO in 2007 would have been 40% higher without state-owned firms. To fire up the private sector, the government wants to nurture the equivalent of South Korea’s chaebol or Japan’s keiretsu, sprawling corporate groups that operate in a variety of sectors. The government is “trying to create national champions,” says Le Hong Hiep, a senior fellow at the ISEAS-Yusof Ishak Institute in Singapore, and a former Vietnamese civil servant.Vingroup, a dominant conglomerate, is the most obvious candidate. In VinPearl, VinSchool and VinMec, it has operations that spread across tourism, education and health. VinHomes, its property arm, is Vietnam’s largest listed private firm by market capitalisation.The group’s efforts to break into finished automotive production through VinFast, its carmaker, may be most important for the economic development of a country that is usually known for intermediate manufacturing. In July the company’s Fadil car, which is based on the design for Opel’s Karl make, became Vietnam’s best-selling model, beating Toyota. VinFast has grand ambitions abroad, too. In July it announced that it had opened offices in America and Europe and intended to sell electric vehicles there by March 2022. Fostering national champions while staying open to foreign investment is not easy, however. VinFast benefits from a bevy of tax reductions, including a large cut in corporation tax for its first 15 years of operation. In August, local state media also reported that the government was considering reinstating a 50% reduction in registration fees for locally built automobiles that expired last year. But the country’s membership of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, and a range of other trade and investment deals, means that it cannot offer preferential treatment to domestic producers. It must extend support to foreign firms that make cars in Vietnam, too. (By contrast, China’s trade policy, which prefers broad but shallow deals, does not constrain domestic policy in quite the same way.)Vietnam may also hope to rely on another source of growth. The economic boom has encouraged its enormous diaspora to invest, or even to return home. “There aren’t a lot of economies that are experiencing the sort of thing that Vietnam is,” says Andy Ho of VinaCapital, an investment firm with $3.7bn in assets. His family moved to America in 1977, where he was educated and worked in consulting and finance. He returned to Vietnam with his own family in 2004. “If I were Korean, I might have gone back in the 1980s, if I were Chinese I might have gone back in 2000.” Its successful diaspora makes Vietnam one of the largest recipients of remittances in the world; $17bn flowed in last year, equivalent to 6% of GDP. The setback from covid-19 aside, it might seem hard not to be rosy about a country that appears to be in the early stages of emulating an East Asian economic miracle. But no country has become rich through remittances alone. As Vietnam develops, sustaining rapid growth from exports of foreign companies will become increasingly difficult, and the tension between staying open to foreign investment and promoting national champions will become more acute. All of that makes reforming the domestic private sector and the financial system paramount. Without it, the government’s lofty goal of getting rich quick may prove beyond its reach. More

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    Market's biggest bull warns software is a crowded trade and delivers a new top play

    The market’s biggest bull predicts the S&P 500 will rally another 7%, but he warns a popular trade won’t be along for the ride.
    Wells Fargo Securities’ Chris Harvey recently cut software to underweight from neutral and declared it a crowded trade. He based the decision on technicals and earnings fundamentals and high valuations.

    “From a valuation point of view, you’re paying about a 75% premium to the market for software and that’s too rich,” the firm’s head of equity strategy told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday.
    The Dow Jones US Software Index is up 28% over the last five months.
    “It is a work from home play,” said Harvey. “We just don’t think there’s a whole lot of opportunity in the short term.”
    He finds the opposite is true for media and entertainment.
    “When we downgraded software, we did upgrade media and entertainment,” said Harvey. “If we look at the media and entertainment space, you’re seeing better upward revisions, better growth opportunities. But you’re only paying a 15% premium.”

    He boosted his media and entertainment group rating to overweight from neutral and listed it as his top market play.
    “There’s a lot of money to be spent. There’s still a lot of pent-up demand,” he said. “The media and entertainment space offers a much better opportunity to capitalize on that reopening play.
    Not only does he see strong fundamentals and improving sentiment, Harvey contends advertising is making a comeback in the diverse group, which includes everything from cable companies and big cap tech names.
    The S&P 500 Media & Entertainment Index is up 4% over the last month and 34% so far this year.

    ‘We want to get more aggressive’

    “Opportunities still abound, and we want to get more aggresssive on that cyclical trade,” added Harvey.
    Last Tuesday, Harvey increased his S&P 500 year-end price target to 4,825 from 3,850, a Wall Street high. Despite his bullishness for the final four months of the year, he gave a less optimistic outlook for 2022 — delivering a 4,715 target. Harvey believes a the record year will be followed by a hangover of sorts.
    But for now, he’s firmly in the risk-on camp.
    “We want more cyclical exposure,” Harvey said. “We want more exposure to what we consider high Covid-beta plays because we do think the economy is going to move forward.”
    On Friday, the S&P 500 and tech-heavy Nasdaq closed at all-time highs. The S&P 500 closed over 4,500 for the first time. Meanwhile, the Dow is about a half percentage point away from its record high.
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    Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Dell, Peloton, Workday and more

    Dell CEO Michael Dell delivers a keynote address during the 2013 Oracle Open World conference on September 25, 2013 in San Francisco, California.
    Justin Sullivan | Getty Images

    Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading.
    Peloton – Shares of the cycle maker tumbled 8.6% after a disappointing quarterly report. The company reported revenue growth in its fiscal fourth quarter that slowed down drastically, while posting a wider-than-expected loss as costs from its treadmill recall mounted. Peloton also offered up an underwhelming revenue outlook for its first quarter.

    Dell Technologies — Shares of the company ticked 4.5% lower despite its better-than-expected quarterly results. Dell reported adjusted quarterly earnings of $2.24 per share, 21 cents above estimates, with revenue also topping analyst projections.
    HP — Shares of the tech hardware company slipped 0.6% after the technology company’s quarterly revenue missed expectations. Morgan Stanley also downgraded HP to equal weight from overweight. The firm said in a note to clients that the near-term outlook for HP’s products could hold back the stock.
    Gap — Gap shares added 0.6% following an earnings beat. The apparel retailer reported quarterly adjusted earnings of 70 cents per share on revenue of $4.21 billion. Analysts expected earnings of 46 cents per share on revenue of $4.13 billion, according to Refinitiv.
    Workday — Shares of Workday soared 9.1% after the software company beat on the top and bottom lines of its quarterly results. Workday reported earnings of $1.23 per share on revenue of $1.26 billion. Wall Street expected earnings of 78 cents per share on revenue of $1.24 billion, according to Refinitiv.
    Big Lots — Shares of Big Lots dropped 4.9% after the discount retailer missed Wall Street estimates for its latest quarter. Big Lots reported earnings of $1.09 per share, 3 cents shy of consensus analyst expectations, according to Refinitiv. The company also missed revenue estimates. Big Lots’ comparable store sales slid a greater-than-expected 13.2%.

    Hibbett  — Hibbett shares sunk 9.2% even after the athletic apparel retailer reported better-than-expected quarterly revenue and earnings. Hibbett earned $2.86 per share, almost double the $1.44 Refinitiv consensus estimate. The company also raised its full-year forecast.
    Marvell Technology — Shares of Marvell Technology fell 3% despite an earnings beat. The company reported adjusted earnings of 34 cents per share, while analysts projected earnings of 31 cents per share, according to Refinitiv. Marvell Technology’s second-quarter revenue was in line with Wall Street estimates.
    Ollie’s Bargain Outlet — Ollie’s shares sunk 6.7% following quarterly results that fell short of expectations. Ollie’s reported adjusted quarterly earnings of 52 cents per share on revenue of $416 million. Analysts expected earnings of 55 cents per share on $436 million, according to Refinitiv.
    VMWare — VMWare shares fell 6.7% even after the software company’s quarterly earnings report beat on top and bottom line estimates. The company reported adjusted quarterly earnings of $1.75 per share, topping the $1.64 consensus estimate, while revenue was slightly above Wall Street forecasts. However, cloud business revenue fell short of some analysts’ forecasts.
    AutoZone, Advance Auto Parts — Shares of AutoZone and Advance Auto Parts retreated more than 2% each after Morgan Stanley downgraded the stocks to equal weight. A “mid-cycle” period should lead to less upside for retail stocks, the firm said.
    — CNBC’s Maggie Fitzgerald, Yun Li and Jesse Pound contributed reporting

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