CNBC Business News Update - Market Open: Stocks Mixed, Walmart With Strong Results, Under Armour Cutting Jobs 5/16/24
Episode Date: May 16, 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.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Jessica Edinger, CNBC, Wall Street mixed. The Dow is eyeing 40,000, all three major averages.
The Dow, the S&P 500 index and the Nasdaq opened at fresh record highs this morning.
The Dow is down out of the gate 17 points, 39,890. The S&P 500 index up three points,
building on that record high it opened with.
Same with the NASDAQ, up nine points now.
Walmart shares were higher.
It reported strong quarterly results.
Its biggest earnings beat in three years.
It's winning over higher income shoppers who just don't want to spend more on the same thing somewhere else.
The prices there are really like Eddie, you know, crazy.
They're insane.
I mean, you can't believe aisle after aisle the bargains in Walmart.
French bread down a dollar, prices down for a private brand soda,
big prices down for frozen pot pies.
These are just examples.
Boneless, skinless chicken.
They are the inflation fighter.
CNBC Mad Money host Jim Cramer.
Fewer people applied for unemployment benefits last week. Very close to expectations. 222,000 continuing claims. 1,794,000. That is definitely a little bit hotter
than expectations. So we continue to remain under 1.8 million. The last time we were over that was
the last week in March. CNBC's Rick Santelli. Investors
watch that continuing claims number because it gives hints on how long it might be taking people
to find the next job after they're out of work. The longer it takes, of course, the worse the
economy may be getting. But the numbers are strong. Unemployment still near a 50-year low.
Meantime, Under Armour, whose shares are sitting at $6 apiece at the open this morning,
it says it's cutting jobs, says the retailer,
says sales in North America are forecast to plunge this year.
For a company that has had folks like Tom Brady involved in it,
currently Steph Curry,
why they haven't been able to break out of this challenging period?
Is it a product issue? Is it a distribution issue?
The problem is that they don't have a lot of must-have product.
I don't know how much product Tom Brady would sell,
but I think they may have missed some opportunities with Steph Curry,
both from a product and from a marketing perspective over time.
Williams trading analyst Sam Poser on CNBC
with Squawk Box anchor Andrew Ross Sorkin.
This as home retailer Wayfair.com
looks to open its first physical store and hire people.
Brick and Mortar is making a comeback.
The first Wayfair mega store opens next week near Chicago.
Other companies that started online only
and eventually built stores include Warby Parker, Everlane, and Figgs.
It is round one today at the PGA Championship, one of the majors in professional golf.
The winner takes home more than $3 million.
Airlines and airports bracing for one week from today, forecast to be one of the busiest ever Memorial Day travel weekends.
Jessica Ettinger, CNBC.
CNBC. Live ambitiously.