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Thursday, 05/18/2023 11:01:11 AM

Thursday, May 18, 2023 11:01:11 AM

Post# of 76351
CNBC morning news..

1. Power surge

Investors liked what they heard coming out of debt ceiling negotiations in Washington on Wednesday (more below), if the day’s stock market gains are any indication. The Dow surged over 400 points, while the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 each jumped more than 1%. Regional banks also popped after what’s now months of turmoil. On Thursday, markets will have plenty more to digest, courtesy of Walmart’s earnings, as well as several economic data points, including weekly jobless claims, existing home sales for April and the Philly Fed’s manufacturing survey for this month.

2. Easing default fears

At least President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy agree on one thing: They think the United States government won’t default on its debt. Both leaders said as much Wednesday, with just a few weeks to go before the U.S. is set to run out of cash to pay its bills. Negotiations between the White House and McCarthy’s camp have intensified, and they will need to produce some kind of deal within days in order for Congress to pass a bill and get it to Biden’s desk ahead of a default, which economists estimate could result in millions of jobs lost and a big hit to the U.S. gross domestic product.

3. Walmart beats

Walmart boosted its outlook for the year as the largest U.S. retailer continued to benefit from consumers’ focus on necessities like groceries over items like televisions. The discounter also beat Wall Street’s expectations on the top and bottom lines, as revenue jumped nearly 8% for the post-holiday quarter. E-commerce sales in the U.S. jumped 27%. The results came after fellow retail giants Target and Home Depot warned that customers are spending less on expensive and discretionary items and focusing more on essentials. Walmart said it’s experiencing a similar dynamic as shoppers are buying smaller pack sizes for products, while the pace of spending slowed down as the quarter wore on.

4. Google's A.I. ad plan

Artificial intelligence will soon make its way into Google advertising and YouTube content. The Alphabet-owned tech giant has approved the use of generative AI to automate ads and ad-supported services, CNBC’s Jennifer Elias reports, citing internal documents. Google is also testing a large language model called PaLM 2 to help create youth content for YouTube. The Google plans are the latest moves in the tech world to capitalize on rapidly expanding AI capabilities to bolster stagnant revenues and crunched profit margins, particularly as ad spending slows down.

5. Deutsche Bank settles Epstein case

German financial giant Deutsche Bank has agreed to pay $75 million to victims of late sexual predator Jeffrey Epstein to settle a lawsuit, CNBC’s Eamon Javers and Dan Mangan report. The settlement comes as JPMorgan Chase, the largest bank in the U.S., faces separate litigation over its links to Epstein, who had cultivated relationships with a variety of rich and powerful men and institutions, facilitating big-money deals and philanthropic connections, even after he had been convicted of sex crimes. JPMorgan has said it isn’t liable in the case. Epstein became a customer of Deutsche Bank in 2013, after JPMorgan cut off its banking relationship with him.

— CNBC’s Mike Calia wrote this newsletter. Hakyung Kim, Emma Kinery, Christina Wilkie, Melissa Repko, Jennifer Elias, Dan Mangan and Eamon Javers contributed

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