
Citi says the healthcare ecosystem is on the verge of its 'Netflix moment'
Citi initiated Teledoc and Livongo Health as buy on Tuesday, and analyst Daniel Grosslight wrote "we believe that a new era of healthcare technology investing has emerged, with a concatenate increase in innovation and disruption. Legacy technology underinvestment and pain points have boiled over (accelerated by COVID-19), and in our view, the healthcare ecosystem is on the verge of its 'Netflix moment.'" Both stocks are down almost 2% in early trading. — Michael Bloom
Tech stocks continue their struggles from Monday afternoon
After a brief bounce in the opening minutes, tech stocks are once again heading south. Shares of Amazon dropped 2.7%, while Netflix lost 2.9%. Facebook and Microsoft both slid more than 1%. — Jesse Pound
Cramer advises investors to be patient after Monday's turnaround in stocks
CNBC's Jim Cramer urged investors to be cautious after yesterday afternoon's steep reversal, particularly in large tech stocks.
"You don't just snap out of that in one day. There are too many people who bought at the top who are trying to figure out, 'Lord get me back to even,'" Cramer said on "Squawk on the Street." "Let this play out."
The "Mad Money" host said it's not clear which theme of stocks will emerge as the predominant trade, underscoring the need for investors to be patient. "Will it be the companies that do better because people think a vaccine is upon us? I can't buy into that theory but that was the theory yesterday afternoon," he said. — Kevin Stankiewicz
Wells Fargo tanks 8% after posting first quarterly loss since 2008 and slashing dividend
Shares of Wells Fargo plunged as much as 8% minutes after the opening bell on Tuesday. The bank posted its first quarterly loss since the Great Recession as the bank set aside $8.4 billion in loan loss reserves tied to the coronavirus pandemic. The bank had a net loss of $2.4 billion in the second quarter, or a loss of 66 cents a share, worse than the 20 cents a share loss expected by analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Meanwhile, Wells Fargo cut its quarterly dividend to 10 cents a share from 51 cents previously. – Yun Li, Hugh Son
Nasdaq massive reversal should serve as reality check, Bespoke says
The drastic intraday reversal in the Nasdaq Composite on Monday raised eyebrows on Wall Street. The tech-heavy benchmark went from rising nearly 2% to hit an all-time high to finishing the day more than 2% lower. Such a reversal (when the Nasdaq swings more than 2% while hitting a record) only happened two other times, going back to 1985, according to Bespoke Investment Group. Those two days were on Jan. 24 and March 7 of 2000, right before the burst of the tech bubble, the firm said. "Although the Nasdaq was up the following day both times, you don't need us to remind you what happened over the long-term from there," Bespoke said in a note Tuesday.
Many on Wall Street have sounded the alarms that the Nasdaq's comeback rally has gone too far, too fast. It was the first major U.S. equity benchmark to reclaim a new high after the coronavirus sell-off, soaring 15% this year. "Given the nonstop rally of late in the Nasdaq and earnings season on the horizon, Monday's reversal should at least serve as a reality check that the market isn't a one-way street," Bespoke said. –Yun Li
Tech stocks fall at the open
The Nasdaq opened in the red on Tuesday as major tech stocks including Apple and Microsoft fell. The index was down 0.7% after the opening bell, while the Dow and S&P 500 registered smaller losses. — Jesse Pound
New biggest Tesla bull on the Street
Piper Sandler raised its target on Tesla to a new Street high of $2,322, implying a 55% rally ahead for shares of the electric vehicle maker. The new target firmly establishes Piper as the Street's biggest bull, prompting CEO Elon Musk himself to respond to the call. Tesla shares jumped more than 4% during premarket trading on Tuesday.
CNBC PRO subscribers can read more here. — Pippa Stevens
Here are Tuesday's biggest analyst calls of the day: Netflix, Tesla, Mastercard, Spotify & more
- Goldman Sachs initiated Visa and Mastercard as buy.
- Credit Suisse upgraded Hanesbrands to outperform from neutral.
- UBS downgraded Spotify to sell from buy.
- UBS downgraded Netflix to neutral from buy.
- Piper Sandler raised its price target on Tesla to $2,322 from $939.
- Deusche Bank added a catalyst call buy on Stanley Black & Decker.
- BMO upgraded Harley-Davidson to outperform from market perform.
- SunTrust downgraded Carnival to sell from hold and Royal Caribbean and Norwegian to hold from buy.
- Northcoast downgraded Lyft to neutral from buy.
- Wedbush upgraded Wayfair to outperform from neutral.
- Macquarie downgraded Royal Caribbean, Carnival, and Norwegian to neutral from outperform.
Pro subscribers can read more here. — Michael Bloom
Consumer price index rose faster than expected in June
The U.S. consumer price index rose 0.6% in June. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expected an increase of 0.5%. The Labor Department said in a release that rising gas prices accounted for more than half of last month's increase. — Jesse Pound
UBS double downgrades Spotify
UBS cut its rating on Spotify to sell from buy, saying that the stock's climb in recent months has gone too far. Shares of the streaming audio company were down 3.1% in premarket trading amid light volume. CNBC Pro subscribers can read more about the call here. — Jesse Pound
Citigroup beats estimates
Shares of Citigroup gained 1.8% in premarket trading after the bank reported a surge in trading revenues for the second quarter that helped it beat Wall Street expectations. The bank reported earnings of 50 cents per share on $19.77 billion of revenue. Analysts expected earnings of 28 cents per share and $19.12 billion of revenue, according to Refinitiv. — Jesse Pound, Fred Imbert
Wells Fargo slashes dividend
Shares of Wells Fargo dropped more than 2% in premarket trading after the bank announced that it was cutting its dividend to 10 cents per share and reported a $2.4 billion loss for the second quarter. This was the first quarterly loss since the financial crisis. Wells Fargo previously paid a quarterly dividend of 51 cents per share. — Jesse Pound, Hugh Son
Cruise stocks down in premarket after downgrades
Shares of Carnival dipped 1.5% in premarket trading on Tuesday, while Norwegian Cruise Line and Royal Caribbean slid about 1% each after SunTrust downgraded these cruise line operators due to expected delays in their restarting plans. The Wall Street firm slashed its ratings on Carnival to sell and Norwegian and Royal Caribbean to hold, saying cruising in any meaningful way in North America for the major brands will not resume until at least the second quarter of 2021. –Yun Li
JPMorgan shares jump after record trading revenue drives strong earnings
Shares of JPMorgan rose 2.5% in premarket trading on Tuesday after the bank reported better-than-expected second-quarter earnings bolstered by a 79% surge in trading revenue. The bank posted earnings of $4.69 billion, or $1.38 a share, exceeding the $1.04 per share estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Revenue of $33 billion exceeded the $30.3 billion estimate. Shares of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Bank of America climbed at least 1% each in premarket following JPMorgan's strong trading results. — Yun Li, Hugh Son
Stock futures point to a higher open
The market is set to open Tuesday's session in the green as traders digest corporate earnings from big U.S. banks. Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped about 140 points, indicating an opening gain of 150 points. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.3% and 0.1%, respectively. The S&P 500 will attempt to erase 2020 losses on Tuesday after briefly turning green in Monday's roller-coaster session. The equity benchmark is now down 2.3% on the year after losing 0.9% in the previous session. A big rollover in technology shares took the market down on Monday. — Yun Li
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Stock market live updates: Market dips, tech stocks falling, JPMorgan jumps on record trading - CNBC
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