CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Mixed, DNC Starts, Investors Wait For Retail Earnings & Jackson Hole Summit, GM Cuts Jobs 8/19/24
Episode Date: August 19, 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 Edinger, CNBC. The S&P 500 index coming off its best week of the year and stocks are mixed on Wall Street. The Dow up 112 points. The S&P 500 index starts the new week up six points. The Nasdaq's down two points. keep telling me is it's remarkable how quickly we've gone from panic and fear to all is well
out there. And what we saw last week is that there was quite a reversal in that trade where people
started once again betting that stocks would go up. The Wall Street Journal's Gunjan Banerjee on
CNBC this morning. Oil prices down again today. The U.S. is pushing for that Gaza ceasefire.
Investors have their ears on politics this week.
The Democratic National Convention beginning today in Chicago.
Democratic delegates expected to throw their support behind Vice President Kamala Harris
and her running mate, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, for the official nomination.
And this week is full of earnings reports coming from retailers as investors wait to hear
whether Fed Chair Jay Powell telegraphs that an interest
rate cut is coming next month when he speaks at an economic summit in Jackson Hole, Wyoming on Friday.
Lowe's, Target, TJX, Ross. And it's going to be tough to be Target. Warning, headline comes out,
always is great. Company then talks it down. Stock goes down. You feel like a chump. I'm
trying to avoid that. Lowe's, I think that Lowe's is a little more do-it-yourself,
a little less contractor,
which actually should cut against them
because the do-it-yourself stuff has not been selling well.
But then this is the classic example.
You want to get out of the stock ahead of a Jackson Hole speech?
They all seem to be saying, hold on.
Yes.
Cavalry's going to come and you're going to say,
why did I sell my Lowe's?
CNBC Mad Money host Jim Cramer with CNBC's Carl Quintanilla.
GM making fresh job cuts, possibly as many as 1,000 people.
General Motors is laying off more than 1,000 salaried employees globally in its software and services division.
That includes roughly 600 job cuts at GM's tech campus near Detroit. In a statement, the spokesman from GM
didn't confirm the number of layoffs but said the company is simplifying quote for speed and
excellence and prioritizing the investments that will have the greatest impact. The shares are up
about a quarter of a percent as we digest that news. CNBC's Kelly Evans. Estee Lauder's forecast
is bleak. The CEO of the beauty giant is stepping down. Egg prices are up again. This
time it's the bird flu that's really cutting into supply. Egg prices up 19% in July compared with
the same month a year ago in the latest CPI data. A frail rate stoppage looms in Canada this week.
Two rail companies have issued lockout notices in a battle with labor north of the border. Picket lines meantime at AT&T today.
More than 17,000 AT&T workers across the southeastern U.S. officially hitting the picket lines.
The union representing the workers is accusing the telecom company of not bargaining in good faith
and sending negotiators who did not have any authority to make decisions. The striking workers include technicians, customer service representatives, and wire installation workers.
CNBC's Bertha Coombs.
Disney's 20th Century Fox thriller Alien Romulus, a big number one win over the weekend at the box office,
dethroning Disney Marvel's Deadpool and Wolverine.
Disney movies have taken 42 percent
of the summer ticket sales so far, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
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Shark Tank, tonight starting 7 Eastern, CNBC.