From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
WEAK JOBS REPORT
The market ended the week slightly higher, despite Friday’s disappointing jobs report for September that fell far short of analyst expectations. U.S. employers added 194,000 payrolls in the month, even fewer than August’s revised print of 366,000 and a far cry from the expectation of 500,000 new jobs. There were reasons for optimism buried in the Department of Labor’s report: average earnings were up, significant upward adjustments were made to August and July reports, and pandemic-caused staffing fluctuations in the education sector “distorted the normal seasonal hiring and layoff patterns,” according to the BLS. But the weak top-line number suggests that the persistent labor shortage combined with the delta wave is continuing to hamper employers’ ability to hire.
GLOBAL ENERGY CRUNCH
U.S. crude oil prices crossed the $80-per-barrel threshold this week, the highest level since 2014 amid a growing global energy crunch that portends higher prices across the board for consumers this winter. The price at the pump is a buck higher than it was this time last year. U.S. coal prices are at a two-year high. And natural gas prices in this country have hit the highest level since 2008. In the UK, natural gas prices are up some 400 percent year-to-date, leading Vladimir Putin this week to step in and say he’d boost Russia’s plentiful gas supply to Europe ahead of the colder months. Energy stocks benefited from a broad rally on rising commodity prices, while airline stocks took a beating on higher fuel costs. JetBlue, American, Delta, and United all ended the week down more than 5 percent.
FACEBOOK UNDER FIRE
Facebook’s no good, very bad autumn continued with a global, hours-long outage on Monday that took its entire suite of apps offline for billions of users around the world, illustrating how dependant much of the internet’s infrastructure has become on the company that’s now at the center of a cascade of controversies over its effects on society. Just as Facebook was able to get its services back online, a whistleblower, who revealed her identity on 60 Minutes last weekend, appeared before Congress to highlight the internal research that is turning into perhaps the company’s worst scandal to date. Frances Haugen, a former Facebook data scientist, testified that the company harms younger users, creates divisions among its user base, and undermines democracy — its most recent high on Sept. 1. But JPMorgan said this week that the dip is a buying opportunity and that the bank sees the stock rising as much as 35 percent.
PEDAL TO THE METAL
General Motors unveiled detailed plans for its transformation from an automaker to a “platform company” that will “redefine how people and goods are moved,” as CEO Mary Barra put it to investors. Barra said GM plans to double annual revenue by 2030 with a focus on electrification, robotaxis, and EV charging infrastructure. The stock barely budged during Barra’s announcements, but then soared higher for a weekly gain of 7 percent. Meanwhile, Elon Musk announced at Tesla’s investor conference that he is moving the company’s headquarters from California to Texas, making good on a threat from last year when Musk called California’s COVID lockdowns “fascist” and said he’d fold up shop. Tesla will continue to expand its production facility in California as it simultaneously builds out a new factory in the Lone Star State.
SQUID GAME MANIA
Netflix shares ended the week on a positive note, buoyed by its global smash hit, Squid Game, which is now on track to be the streamer’s most popular show ever. The sheer scale of Squid Game’s impact on the all-important metric of international subscriber growth — the South Korean series is currently No. 1 in 90 countries — should become more apparent when Netflix releases third-quarter earnings on Oct. 19. In the meantime, the stock hit a new all-time high this week and is up 22 percent so far this year.
After an intense hours-long meltdown Monday, stocks closed higher in a last minute, stunning comeback. At one point, the Dow shed over 1,000 points, the tech-heavy Nasdaq was down close to 5% and inching toward correction territory, and the S&P 500 briefly hit a correction earlier in the day. During most of Monday's session, stocks were on track to mark their worst months since March 2020, and for the Nasdaq, since October 2008. Philip Palumbo, Founder, CEO and Chief Investment Officer of Palumbo Wealth Management, joined Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss today's stunning market comeback, whether there's more room for stocks to fall, his 2022 market predictions, and more.
Bobby Zagotta, CEO of Bitstamp USA, joins Cheddar News' Closing Bell, where he discusses what he expects to see from Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies amid a volatile period in the market, and explains how his crypto exchange is helping investors.
Markets started the week on a rocky note: the major indexes at most points during the day were double digits off of their highs, on the path to their worst performances since March 2020 and for the Nasdaq, since October 2008. Investors were skittish about the Federal Reserve's meeting this week, where the central bank is expected to announce more details about its plans to hike interest rates and taper asset purchasing this year. Art Hogan, Chief Market Strategist at National Securities, joined Cheddar News' Closing Bell to discuss today's market meltdown, why investors were feeling pressure, what to expect from the Fed, and more.
AT&T announced it's offering two tiers of high-speed internet, 2 gigs, and 5 gigs, to its fiber customers in more than 70 metro regions. AT&T Consumer CEO Thaddeus Arroyo joined Cheddar to talk about the newly available speed upgrades for 5.2 million of its customers, and where the rollout goes from here. "Over the course of 2022, we'll rapidly continue to retrofit the rest of the base," he said. "And importantly now is, as we build-out, we've talked about building out to cover 30 million homes and businesses by the end of 2025, we're going to continue to ensure that every new location that we stand up has this multi gig capability."
Autonomous driving tech company Waymo is partnering with transportation and logistics business J.B. Hunt. The two firms are teaming up to bring autonomous shipping to the highways. Head of commercialization for trucking at Waymo, Charlie Jatt, joined Cheddar to discuss how the companies are combining their strengths. "We, of course at Waymo, are working on the technology side of affairs, and J. B Hunt brings critical operational and commercial expertise," Jatt said. "And together we're going to work to deploy the first fully autonomous Class 8 truck hauling goods for one of their customers in the coming years in Texas."
Amid a rough week for Peloton's stock, as well as its image — its bikes being the cause of death for two fictional TV characters now — an activist investor is calling for a change in upper management. Chief investment officer of Blackwell, Jason Aintabi, petitioned in a letter that Peloton’s CEO, John Foley, must be fired. Joining Cheddar to discuss the ultimatum, Hatem Dhiab, a portfolio manager and managing partner at Gerber Kawasaki Wealth and Investment Management noted the conditions leading to the demand for Foley's removal. "The stock is basically 85 percent below the high," he said. "I think there is some change that needs to happen, and that's just the reality."
Talent Resources Sports is partnering with ABG Entertainment to host Sports Illustrated The Party during the weekend of Super Bowl LVI, featuring musical performances by Kygo, Jack Harlow, and other guests. David Spencer and Mike Heller, co-CEOs and founders of Talent Resources Sports, joined Cheddar to discuss the details behind putting on the event. “We’re just really pumped that after all of the things that got canceled people will finally have a place to let some steam off in such an exciting moment, such a charged moment with the Super Bowl,” Mike Heller said about putting on the live event after previous COVID-related cancellations.