CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Lower, Paramount Global Cutting Jobs, Expedia Warns of Slower Travel Demand 8/9/24
Episode Date: August 9, 2024From Wall Street to Main Street, the latest on the markets and what it means for your money. Updated regularly on weekdays, featuring CNBC expert analysis and sound from top business newsmakers. Ancho...red and reported by CNBC's Jessica Ettinger.
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I'm Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
Stocks are lower to start Friday morning trading on Wall Street after yesterday's rally.
The major averages are on pace for a losing week.
It would be the fourth losing week in a row for the S&P and the Nasdaq,
but that S&P 500 index is coming off its best day since 2022 yesterday.
The numbers, the Dow down 94 points, the S&P 500 index down three points, the Nasdaq
down eight points this morning. The market reaction shows you how vulnerable it is to positive or
negative news coming through, right? And I worry that this is going to continue and you should
expect volatility ahead. Cities, Bietta Manthe on CNBC. Paramount Global
reported disappointing revenue in the last quarter. Shares were higher though on word it's cutting 15
percent of its workforce. It owns the Paramount Movie Studio, CBS Television, BET Showtime,
Nickelodeon, Comedy Central and so many more properties. As you've seen sort of all of these
what we call legacy
media companies, they've all told investors they're going to get to profitability and streaming.
And they all are. I mean, you mentioned Paramount, Disney announced its first combined profit. Like
they're all improving, but it's how they're improving. They're improving by slashing the
amount of programming, cutting back on marketing and jacking the price on consumers.
They're not doing it because consumers are like so in love and willing to pay more and spending
so much time. Like it's a pretty depressing way of making money. Lightshed's Rich Greenfield on CNBC.
Taiwan's semi shares were higher on better than expected quarterly results. Expedia shares popping on its quarterly results,
even though the travel booker is warning about slowing travel demand, just like pretty much all
of the travel companies. Expedia, just the latest to raise those red flags. Airbnb and booking
holdings, just some of the companies that are warning that consumers are trading down to cheaper
options or they're booking trips at the very last minute. Disney flagging weakness
in its parks division, while Hilton CEO says Americans have less disposable income and capacity
to do anything, and that includes travel. CNBC's Frank Holland. Investors are watching a broad
consumer pullback as the economy settles back to normal after the pandemic recession, followed by
excessive spending and revenge travel when things opened back up. Right now, the consumer is really spending way, way higher than the growth
in income. And as a result, the consumers are having to deplete their savings. And the only
people with savings are really the rich people. The stock market wealth that they generated with
the rise in the stock market has really helped a lot of people, but those tend to be the rich people.
And the poor people are having to go to second jobs and third jobs in order to make ends meet
and dip into their credit cards.
Milken Institute economist Bill Lee on CNBC.
Video game maker Take-Two Interactive shares were popping on a strong growth outlook.
The Disney Fan Expo continues into the weekend.
D23 is on in Anaheim, California. New in theaters,
Neon's horror thriller Cuckoo, Sony's romance It Ends With Us, and Lionsgate's video game-inspired
Borderlands. Jessica Ettinger, CNBC. I just love this game. So excited to share with the world.
The Olympics from Paris on NBC and Peacock.