CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Mixed, Talks With China Are On Or Off Depending On Who You Believe, Super Slow Spring Housing Market 4/25/25
Episode Date: April 25, 2025From 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.
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I'm Jessica Edinger, CNBC. Stocks little changed after a three-day winning streak, but trade
worries linger on Wall Street. The Dow is in the red, down 11 points, being led lower
by shares of Merck. The S&P 500 index in the green, it's up 12 points. The Nasdaq up 49
points this morning. Nvidia shares are up almost 1%.
President Trump says talks with China are on over the tariffs.
China says no they aren't.
CNBC Mad Money host Jim Cramer has this take.
I think that there are talks, but I don't think they're at the level that matters.
And I think we should just continue to think that there is going to be a day that comes
where everything is a lot more expensive.
Another take now from Hayman Capital's Kyle Bass on CNBC, his outlook on China. They are facing a banking crisis, a youth unemployment crisis, a real estate crisis.
You're asking me if we have more staying power.
We're the largest consumer in the world.
We are still 4% of the population and 26% of global GDP, and we are the largest consuming nation in the world. Certainly we can outlast China. Are there a few places where things
are going to be painful? Yes, they are. There is no easy button here. We share none of the
values of the Chinese Communist Party. The one thing we want from them is cheap stuff.
Xi Jinping has told us since 2017 that he's going to take Taiwan. And he told us four
times in four diplomatic visits
in 2024, one of these days, we're all gonna believe him.
Now I know our leadership
and our military leadership believes him.
One day Wall Street's gonna realize
that we've been trading with the enemy for too long.
Bitcoin topping $95,000 today,
it's highest since March 2nd.
Google parent Alphabet shares were higher
on stronger than expected revenue growth. But CEO Sundar Pichai says they're still trying to figure out the
business model for Waymo self-driving cars. Intel out with a soft outlook because of customer
uncertainty over tariffs. Its new CEO saying job cuts will start this quarter. Amazon's
sellers are raising prices across the platform in response to
the Trump tariffs. Canadians who were put off by President Trump's bluster and border
arrests are booking far fewer U.S. visits, according to the U.S. Travel Association.
America is visited by more Canadians than any other country on the planet in a normal
year. Vancouver-based The Travel Group tells the AP that the company's bookings to the U.S. have dried up. It's a near total collapse. The spring home selling
season has been slow. In March, existing home sales dropped to their slowest pace since
the great financial crisis in 2009. If mortgage rates could just head down towards 6 percent,
100 percent confident that we can get sales to grow this year, we are working from the
lowest bar ever. And especially purchase application data.
Last time it was this low was the 1990s. Housing wires. Logan Motashami on CNBC
new in theaters this weekend. Screen Gems horror film until dawn and Amazon
MGM's the accountant to Jessica Edinger CNBC.