CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Mixed, Inflation Ticked Higher In October, Goodbye FreeVee 11/13/24
Episode Date: November 13, 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 by CNBC's Jessica Ettinger.
Transcript
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I'm Jessica Edinger, CNBC. We have mixed markets on Wall Street this morning. Inflation came in
as expected for last month, ticking up to 2.6 percent. We've got the Dow now in the green,
up 111 points, a quarter percent. It's back above 44,000. It's being led higher by shares
of Home Depot, which are up more than 2%. The S&P 500 index up four points.
The Nasdaq in the red, it's down just a point, though.
October's inflation rate was higher than September's.
Year over year, 2.6, as expected, but two tenths hotter than the rearview mirror.
Two tenths hotter than the rearview mirror.
That is basically a very important
issue to pay attention to, considering that this really has been out of all the inflation metrics
following a linear path down pretty much every month this year. So we see that pop.
CNBC's Rick Santelli. The cryptocurrency called Dogecoin spiked after President-elect Trump
announced the Department of Government Efficiency will be created, DOGE, to be run by Tesla and Twitter now ex-CEO Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy.
Bitcoin is higher. It's pushing $91,000 now as its rally continues.
Mortgage demand stalled last week as the housing market digests a Trump
presidency. Applications to buy a home were up just 1% last week from the same week a year ago.
Mortgage rates are a full 1% lower now than they were a year ago. About half of all U.S. states
have under $3 a gallon gas. AAA says the national average for a gallon of regular? $3.07. Under the Biden
administration, the U.S. became the world's biggest oil producer. But with supply so high,
demand so low, and prices down, investors don't necessarily want any more production in the
incoming Trump administration. While President-elect Donald Trump has said he wants to drill, baby
drill, it's really unclear whether or not the industry will actually heed that call because, of course,
the market already looks oversupplied. We had OPEC out with its monthly oil report bringing
down its demand forecast. And so it's not as if executives want to increase their output so much
into a market that's already pretty well supplied for 2025. CNBC's Pippa Stevens. Amazon shutting down its ad-supported
streaming service called FreeV. It launched five years ago. It was free. Content will be moved to
Prime Video, which is not free. Holiday sales are forecast to be up this year, but it'll be below
average growth, according to the new S&P Global Ratings U.S. Holiday Retail Sales Outlook,
which says budgets are pressured for families and
there are five fewer shopping days this year between Thanksgiving and Christmas, just 27
this year instead of last year's 32. Paramount says the return of the series Yellowstone for
part two of its final season on Sunday night delivered the show's biggest audience ever.
Krispy Kreme has been handing out free dozen glazed donut boxes
to the first 500 people at each participating store today.
It is World Kindness Day.
Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
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