Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading: Peloton Interactive — Shares climbed 15% after the fitness company announced CEO Barry McCarthy will step down while it seeks a permanent CEO. Peloton also set a restructuring plan that will cut 15% of its staff, or about 400 employees. Once a pandemic darling, Peloton has seen its shares slide. The stock is down 47% year to date. Qualcomm — Shares rose more than 5% after the chipmaker on Wednesday posted $2.44 per share in adjusted earnings in its latest quarter, topping analysts’ estimates of $2.32 per share, according to LSEG. The top end of Qualcomm’s revenue forecast for the current quarter was higher than the Street’s expectations, with the company citing demand for smartphones that require the most advanced chips. Wayfair — Shares added 5.5% after the home furniture retailer’s sales topped analyst estimates, and reduced its losses after letting go of 13% of its workforce at the start of the year, the company said Thursday. Still, Wayfair’s sales slid in the first quarter. Carvana — The used car seller spiked 36% after posting first-quarter revenue Wednesday of $3.06 billion, above analysts’ consensus estimate of $2.67 billion. On Thursday, Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock to overweight and said shares could soar 50%. Cigna — The insurer moved 1% higher after first-quarter adjusted earnings of $6.47 per share topped the $6.22 expected from analysts polled by LSEG. Revenues of $57.25 billion also beat the $56.52 billion consensus estimate. Moderna — Shares rose 2% after the drugmaker posted a narrower-than-expected loss of $3.07 in the first quarter, versus the $3.58 loss expected from analysts polled by LSEG. Revenue came in at $167 million, topping the $97.5 million consensus estimate. Cardinal Health — The drug distributor shed 2% after fiscal third quarter revenue of $54.91 billion fell short of analysts’ consensus estimate of $56.05 billion, according to LSEG. But Cardinal topped adjusted earnings expectations. Nio — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese electric vehicle maker rose 5% after Nio said it delivered 15,620 vehicles in April, more than double the year-earlier period. DoorDash — Shares dropped 7% one day after the food delivery service said it lost 6 cents per share on $2.51 billion in revenue in the first quarter, wider than the LSEG analyst consensus estimate for a loss of 4 cents per share but above the average forecast of $2.45 billion in revenue. Etsy — The online marketplace lost 13.5% after first-quarter adjusted earnings of 48 cents per share missed the 49 cents a share expected from analysts polled by LSEG. Zillow — The stock tumbled 6% after the real-estate marketplace issued weak guidance for the current quarter. Zillow estimated second-quarter revenue of $525 million to $540 million, versus $559.2 million expected from analysts polled by FactSet. eBay — Shares slipped nearly 4% one day after the online commerce platform issued weak guidance for the second quarter, anticipating between $2.49 billion and $2.54 billion in revenue while analysts polled by LSEG had estimated $2.56 billion. Shake Shack – The hamburger chain added 4% after first-quarter adjusted earnings of 13 cents per share topped the 10 cents per share projected by analysts, according to LSEG. Revenue of $291 million was in line with estimates. Freshworks — The software development company plunged 27% after projecting second-quarter revenue of $168 million to $170 million and full-year revenue of $695 million to $705 million. Analysts polled by FactSet expected $172.1 million for the quarter and $708.3 million for the year. Qorvo — The semiconductor company sank nearly 10% after issuing weak guidance in its fiscal first quarter, expecting earnings of 60 cents to 80 cents per share versus the $1.27 expected from analysts polled by FactSet. — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Lisa Han, Pia Singh and Tanaya Macheel contributed reporting.
Investors may want to consider adding exposure to the world’s second-largest emerging market.
According to EMQQ Global founder Kevin Carter, India’s technology sector is extremely attractive right now.
“It’s the tip of the spear of growth [in e-commerce] … not just in emerging markets, but on the planet,” Carter told CNBC’s “ETF Edge” this week.
His firm is behind the INQQ The India Internet ETF, which was launched in 2022. The India Internet ETF is up almost 21% so far this year, as of Friday’s close.
‘DoorDash of India’
One of Carter’s top plays is Zomato, which he calls “the DoorDash of India.” Zomato stock is up 128% this year.
“One of the reasons Zomato has done so well this year is because the quick commerce business blanket has exceeded expectations,” Carter said. “It now looks like it’s going to be the biggest business at Zomato.”
Carter noted his bullishness comes from a population that is just starting to go online.
“They’re getting their first-ever computer today basically,” he said, “You’re giving billions of people super computers in their pocket internet access.”
“I think the best case scenario is we’re going to continue to see mortgage rates hover around six and a half to 7%,” said Jordan Jackson, a global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. “So unfortunately for those homeowners who are looking for a bit of a reprieve on the mortgage rate side, that may not come to fruition,” Jordan said in an interview with CNBC.
Mortgage rates can be influenced by Fed policy. But the rates are more closely tied to long-term borrowing rates for government debt. The 10-year Treasury note yield has been increasing in recent months as investors consider more expansionary fiscal policies that may come from Washington in 2025. This, combined with signals sent from the market for mortgage-backed securities, determine the rates issued within new mortgages.
Economists at Fannie Mae say the Fed’s management of its mortgage-backed securities portfolio may contribute to today’s mortgage rates.
In the pandemic, the Fed bought huge amounts of assets, including mortgage-backed securities, to adjust demand and supply dynamics within the bond market. Economists also refer to the technique as “quantitative easing.”
Quantitative easing can reduce the spread between mortgage rates and Treasury yields, which leads to cheaper loan terms for home buyers. It can also provide opportunities for owners looking to refinance their mortgages. The Fed’s use of this technique in the pandemic brought mortgages rates to record lows in 2021.
“They were extra aggressive in 2021 with buying mortgage-backed securities. So, the [quantitative easing] was probably ill-advised at the time.” said Matthew Graham, COO of Mortgage News Daily.
In 2022, the Federal Reserve kicked off plans to reduce the balance of its holdings, primarily by allowing those assets to mature and “roll-off” of its balance sheet. This process is known as “quantitative tightening,” and it may add upward pressure on the spread between mortgage rates and Treasury yields.
“I think that’s one of the reasons the mortgage rates are still going in the wrong direction from the Federal Reserve’s standpoint,” said George Calhoun, director of the Hanlon Financial Systems Center at Stevens Institute of Technology.
Jason Wilk, the CEO of digital banking service Dave, remembers the absolute low point in his brief career as head of a publicly-traded firm.
It was June 2023, and shares of his company had recently dipped below $5 apiece. Desperate to keep Dave afloat, Wilk found himself at a Los Angeles conference for micro-cap stocks, where he pitched investors on tiny $5,000 stakes in his firm.
“I’m not going to lie, this was probably the hardest time of my life,” Wilk told CNBC. “To go from being a $5 billion company to $50 million in 12 months, it was so freaking hard.”
But in the months that followed, Dave turned profitable and consistently topped Wall Street analyst expectations for revenue and profit. Now, Wilk’s company is the top gainer for 2024 among U.S. financial stocks, with a 934% year-to-date surge through Thursday.
The fintech firm, which makes money by extending small loans to cash-strapped Americans, is emblematic of a larger shift that’s still in its early stages, according to JMP Securities analyst Devin Ryan.
Investors had dumped high-flying fintech companies in 2022 as a wave of unprofitable firms like Dave went public via special purpose acquisition companies. The environment turned suddenly, from rewarding growth at any cost to deep skepticism of how money-losing firms would navigate rising interest rates as the Federal Reserve battled inflation.
Now, with the Fed easing rates, investors have rushed back into financial firms of all sizes, including alternative asset managers like KKR and credit card companies like American Express, the top performers among financial stocks this year with market caps of at least $100 billion and $200 billion, respectively.
Big investment banks including Goldman Sachs, the top gainer among the six largest U.S. banks, have also surged this year on hope for a rebound in Wall Street deals activity.
Dave, a fintech firm taking on big banks like JPMorgan Chase, is a standout stock this year.
But it’s fintech firms like Dave and Robinhood, the commission-free trading app, that are the most promising heading into next year, Ryan said.
Robinhood, whose shares have surged 190% this year, is the top gainer among financial firms with a market cap of at least $10 billion.
“Both Dave and Robinhood went from losing money to being incredibly profitable firms,” Ryan said. “They’ve gotten their house in order by growing their revenues at an accelerating rate while managing expenses at the same time.”
While Ryan views valuations for investment banks and alternative asset manages as approaching “stretched” levels, he said that “fintechs still have a long way to run; they are early in their journey.”
Financials broadly had already begun benefitting from the Fed easing cycle when the election victory of Donald Trump last month intensified interest in the sector. Investors expect Trump will ease regulation and allow for more innovation with government appointments including ex-PayPal executive and Silicon Valley investor David Sacks as AI and crypto czar.
Those expectations have boosted the shares of entrenched players like JPMorgan Chase and Citigroup, but have had a greater impact on potential disruptors like Dave that could see even more upside from a looser regulatory environment.
Gas & groceries
Dave has built a niche among Americans underserved by traditional banks by offering fee-free checking and savings accounts.
It makes money mostly by extending small loans of around $180 each to help users “pay for gas and groceries” until their next paycheck, according to Wilk; Dave makes roughly $9 per loan on average.
Customers come out ahead by avoiding more expensive forms of credit from other institutions, including $35 overdraft fees charged by banks, he said. Dave, which is not a bank, but partners with one, does not charge late fees or interest on cash advances.
The company also offers a debit card, and interchange fees from transactions made by Dave customers will make up an increasing share of revenue, Wilk said.
While the fintech firm faces far less skepticism now than it did in mid-2023— of the seven analysts who track it, all rate the stock a “buy,” according to Factset — Wilk said the company still has more to prove.
“Our business is so much better now than we went public, but it’s still priced 60% below the IPO price,” he said. “Hopefully we can claw our way back.”