Check out the companies making headlines in extended trading: Apple — The iPhone maker shed 2% after its closely watched Services division performed below expectations in the fiscal second quarter. Services revenue came in at $26.65 billion, lower than the $26.70 billion analysts surveyed by StreetAccount anticipated. Overall earnings and revenue during the period beat Wall Street’s expectations. Airbnb — Shares slipped more than 4%. Airbnb expects second-quarter revenue in a range between $2.99 billion and $3.05 billion, or $3.02 billion at the middle of the range. Analysts had forecast $3.04 billion in revenue. Management noted softening trends in the U.S. segment on a sequential on a year-over-year basis due to macro uncertainty. Amazon — The e-commerce giant fell about 4% after its second-quarter operating income guidance range missed analysts’ estimates. Amazon is forecasting operating income to land between $13 billion and $17.5 billion, which missed the $17.64 billion consensus call, according to StreetAccount. Meanwhile, Amazon managed to beat on both the top and bottom lines in the first quarter. Roku — The streaming company fell 3% after posting its first-quarter results. Roku reported a loss of 19 cents per share on $1.02 billion in revenue. This was slightly better than consensus estimates, which anticipated losses of 27 cents per share on revenue of $1.01 billion, according to LSEG. Block – Shares of the financial services company plunged more than 17% after its first-quarter revenue missed analysts’ estimates, posting $5.77 billion for the period. That is less than the $6.20 billion analysts had penciled in, according to LSEG. Maplebear – The grocery delivery company, which does business as Instacart, jumped 5% after giving an upbeat forecast for the current quarter. The company expects adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, for the second quarter to come in between $240 million and $250 million, while analysts polled by FactSet were expecting $234.8 million. Earnings and revenue for the first quarter came in weaker than expected, however. Twilio – The stock surged more than 7% after the cloud communications company’s first-quarter results topped Wall Street expectations. Twilio posted adjusted earnings of $1.14 per share on $1.17 billion in revenue, above the 94 cents per share and $1.14 billion in revenue analysts surveyed by LSEG were expecting. The company also forecast stronger-than-expected revenue for the second quarter. Reddit – The social media forum surged about 18%. Reddit sees second-quarter sales coming in between $410 million and $430 million, ahead of analysts’ estimates for $396 million. First-quarter results trounced the Street’s expectations, as Reddit posted earnings of 13 cents per share on revenue of $392 million. Analysts polled by LSEG sought 2 cents per share in earnings and $370 million in revenue. Atlassian – The software company tanked 15% as Atlassian’s fiscal fourth-quarter revenue outlook failed to dazzle investors. The company sees sales ranging between $1.35 billion and $1.36 billion, compared to the $1.36 billion analysts were seeking, per LSEG. Third-quarter adjusted earnings came in at 97 cents per share, while revenue was $1.36 billion, slightly above the Street’s estimates. Duolingo – The maker of the learning platform jumped 9% after providing rosy guidance. Duolingo sees second-quarter revenue ranging between $239 million and $242 million, while LSEG consensus estimates called for $234 million. Full-year revenue is expected to range between $987 million and $996 million, versus the Street’s estimate of $977 million. — CNBC’s Darla Mercado, Sean Conlon and Jesse Pound contributed reporting.
The money manager behind two of the world’s biggest actively managed exchange-traded funds sees a way for investors to stay defensive without leaving the market.
The goal: give investors downside protection while generating income.
“When the VIX [volatility] increases, that offers the opportunity for an increased amount of income to the investor of JEPI,” the J.P. Morgan Asset Management chief ETF strategist told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week. “Conversely … when the volatility declines, given that the options are written out of the money, it provides some upside in the underlying portfolio.”
JEPI fell around 3% in April while volatility gripped the market. As of Thursday’s market close, the ETF is off about 4% for the year while the S&P 500 is down almost 5%.
JEPI’s top holdings include Mastercard, Visa and Progressive according to JPMorgan’s website as of April 30.
Meanwhile, the JPMorgan Ultra-Short Income Fund focuses on fixed income instead of U.S. equity. The fund is virtually flat so far this year.
“It provides a ballast in your portfolio [and] stability for those investors that are looking to protect principle,” Maier said.
‘Hiding out to weather the storm’
ETF Action’s Mike Akins notes these ETFs are satisfying an important investment need in the market.
“This category is where people are hiding out to weather the storm,” the firm’s founding partner said on the show.
According to J.P. Morgan Asset Management, the JPMorgan Ultra-Short Income Fund had the second-highest volume among active U.S. fixed income ETFs between April 3 and 10 — which marked the year’s most volatile weekly span on Wall Street.
Correction: Jon Maier’s firm is behind the JPMorgan Equity Premium Income ETF and JPMorgan Ultra-Short Income ETF. An earlier version misstated his status.
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Duolingo — Shares soared more than 18% after the language learning app guided toward a better-than-expected revenue forecast. Duolingo estimates second-quarter revenue will come in between $239 million and $242 million, while analysts polled by LSEG expected $234 million. Full-year revenue is expected to come in a range between $987 million and $996 million, higher than the consensus call of $977 million. Apple — Shares shed 4% after the iPhone maker reported fiscal second-quarter services revenue of $26.65 billion, while analysts had expected $26.70 billion, according to StreetAccount. This number still represented an annual increase of 11.65%. However, Apple’s earnings and revenue for the quarter beat analysts’ estimates. Amazon — The e-commerce stock dipped just 0.4% on the back of its first-quarter earnings print . Amazon posted better-than-expected earnings and revenue for the quarter, but gave soft guidance for the current period. Amazon is forecasting operating income to land between $13 billion and $17.5 billion, which fell short of the $17.64 billion consensus call, per StreetAccount. The company also said tariff and trade policies could affect its guidance. Nvidia — The semiconductor giant advanced 2%. The Information reported the company is tailoring chips for sale in China after the U.S. export ban. Take-Two Interactive Software — Shares of the video game manufacturer fell more than 5% after the company announced that the new version of Grand Theft Auto would not be released until May 26, 2026. The game was previously slated for this fall. Atlassian — Shares sank 6% after management issued weak fiscal fourth-quarter guidance. The software company expects revenue in the period to land between $1.35 billion and $1.36 billion, versus the $1.36 billion consensus estimate, per LSEG. Atlassian beat on both the top and bottom lines for its third quarter. Roku — The streaming platform’s shares dropped 6% on the back of its first-quarter results. Roku reported $1.02 billion in revenue, slightly beating the consensus prediction from FactSet of $1.01 billion. However, the company’s adjusted EBITDA of $56 million came in below consensus estimates of $57 million. Block — The payments stock tumbled 20% after Block reported disappointing first-quarter revenue and issued weak guidance due to macro uncertainty. Block posted top-line results of $5.77 billion, while analysts surveyed by LSEG had projected $6.20 billion. Maplebear — Shares of the grocery delivery company, which does business as Instacart, rallied 13% on strong second-quarter guidance. Maplebear called for adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, or EBITDA, to come in between $240 million and $250 million during the period, while analysts polled by FactSet forecast $234.8 million. That overshadowed slight misses on both top and bottom lines in the first quarter. Five Below — The discount retailer stock gained about 12% after the company increased its first-quarter net sales guidance. Five Below now expects around $967 million, compared to its previous forecast of $905 million to $925 million. GoDaddy — The domain registrar company tumbled more than 7% after issuing weaker-than-expected top-line estimates for the current quarter. GoDaddy expects revenue to range between $1.195 billion and $1.215 billion in the second quarter. Analysts surveyed by FactSet estimated $1.21 billion. Dexcom — The maker of glucose monitoring systems surged 15% after posting first-quarter revenue that narrowly topped expectations. Dexcom posted revenue of $1.04 billion, while FactSet consensus estimates sought $1.02 billion. The company also announced a $750 million share repurchase program. — CNBC’s Pia Singh and Lisa Kailai Han contributed reporting.
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Global investors are undergoing a structural rethink of their exposure to U.S. markets, according to economic expert Rebecca Patterson.
Patterson, who served as Bridgewater’s chief investment strategist, contends they’re gradually reducing exposure to U.S. assets and the impact could be significant. Her prediction comes after having conversations with participants in last week’s World Bank and International Monetary Fund meetings in Washington.
“There are a large number of foreign investors who are worried not only about tariffs, but just about America’s reliability as a partner,” Patterson said Monday on CNBC’s “Fast Money.”
Outside of the Trump administration’s tariff policy, she finds foreign investors and policymakers are losing faith in the U.S. on broader fears about the potential weaponizing of capital markets to achieve its economic goals.
That may put global investors’ U.S. holdings at risk, according to Patterson. Foreigners held more than $31 trillion of U.S. assets as of last June, according to the most recent U.S. Treasury data. That’s an increase of $4.4 trillion from the prior year. The gains came as U.S. markets reached all-time highs, thanks in part to megacap tech and the artificial intelligence trade.
“They are looking at a huge U.S. allocation that has built up over the last several years and saying, ‘maybe we should have a little bit less, just trim off the tops’ — basically, have a risk premium on U.S. assets because we have so much uncertainty,” she said.
Even a small reduction in global participation could present a problem for U.S. markets, Patterson warns.
“Pretend you’re the chief investment officer of a major overseas pension fund or sovereign wealth fund. I’m going to take 2% off my U.S. stocks, 2% off my U.S. bonds, a 4% shift,” she said. “That’s $1.2 trillion that is going to be leaving the U.S. now.”
A potential $1.2 trillion sell-off represents 2.3% of the S&P 500‘s total market capitalization, as of Thursday’s close. Still, Patterson emphasizes the capital flight will not happen overnight.
“These investment committees will take months to think about things. They’ll have a meeting, they’ll have a board approve it and then it gets implemented. But what this is, is a slow bleed of support out of the U.S. markets, either going back to home markets or into new opportunities, or things like gold,” said Patterson.
U.S. stocks have broadly underperformed other global equities so far in 2025, with the S&P down 4.7% in that time. Europe’s broad-based STOXX 600 index has gained 3.9% this year, while the MSCI AC Asia Pacific Index has risen 2.8% over the same period, per FactSet.