Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Norwegian Cruise Line — Shares of the cruise operator rose 4% on the back of an upgrade from JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. The firm is bullish on the company, citing that its management has indicated no change in booking curves and cancellation rates, or cracks in onboard spend levels. Incyte — The pharmaceutical stock fell more than 14% after the release of phase three trial data for a skin condition treatment. Incyte said that the trials of its drug met the primary endpoints. However, the drug was effective for less than half of the participants who took it in the trials. Netflix — The streaming giant advanced 1.5% on the back of MoffettNathanson’s upgrade to buy from neutral. The firm said Netflix can monetize more than previously expected, in turn growing profit. Affirm — The buy now, pay later stock dipped 13% after CNBC reported that rival Klarna will be the exclusive provider of such loans for Walmart . This takes away a coveted partnership from Affirm, whose chief revenue officer Wayne Pommen referred to Walmart and partnerships with big merchants such as Amazon and Target as its “crown jewel partnerships.” Nvidia — Shares of Nvidia edged 1.5% higher as investors picked up shares of the chipmaking giant, which has tumbled more than 12% over the past month. Sprouts Farmers Market — The food retailer added 1% on the back of an upgrade at Deutsche Bank to buy from hold. The bank said the stock’s recent 23% pullback has provided a good entry point. It believes Sprouts’ same-store sales momentum is sustainable and sees margin expansion opportunities. Berkshire Hathaway — Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway dipped just 0.1% after it upped its stake in Japanese trading houses Mitsubishi , Itochu , Sumitomo , Marubeni and Mitsui , according to regulatory filings. — CNBC’s Jesse Pound, Lisa Han, Michelle Theobald, Alex Harring contributed reporting.
Ramsey Solutions financial expert George Kamel weighs in on Americans working past retirement age and provides advice for investors.
Retirement nest eggs and Social Security benefits are key sources of funds for many Americans as they live out their golden years in the state of their choosing.
A recently-released study from GOBankingRates looked at the financial runway that retirees would have in each state with Social Security benefits and $1.5 million socked away for retirement, finding West Virginia offered the most years before living costs would deplete their retirement savings.
The Mountain State ranked No. 1 with $1.5 million in retirement savings expected to sustain retirees there for a whopping 54 years while facing about $27,800 in living costs each year after Social Security benefits, according to the study.
The Social Security Administration (SSA) allows Americans to access their Social Security retirement benefits early starting at age 62, though payments “will be reduced a small percentage for each month before your full retirement age” if they do that, according to the SSA. One’s “full retirement age” depends on when a person was born.
GOBankingRates said it used data from a slew of sources, including the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the SSA and Missouri Economic Research and Information Center, to determine its rankings of how states stack up in terms of the amount of time that Social Security and $1.5 million in retirement would last retirees residing in them.
Overall, the study indicated that those two sources of funds would provide different amounts of years of “financial security” for retirees in states across the country. States’ cost of living after Social Security ranged from $27,803 to $87,770 per year, it found.
GoBankingRates found the number of years that $1.5 million and Social Security would sustain retirees in each state was:
West Virginia: 54 years ($27,803 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Charleston is the capital and largest city of the U.S. state of West Virginia. Slightly processed using HDR technique (iStock / iStock)
Kansas: 52 years ($28,945 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Mississippi: 51 years ($29,426 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Oklahoma: 51 years ($29,666 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Alabama: 50 years ($30,207 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Missouri: 50 years ($30,327 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Arkansas: 49 years ($30,237 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Tennessee: 49 years ($30,928 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Iowa: 48 years ($31,168 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Indiana: 47 years ($31,709 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Aerial view of Indianapolis downtown with Statehouse in Indiana (iStock / iStock)
Georgia: 47 years ($31,829 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
North Dakota: 47 years ($32,190 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Michigan: 46 years ($32,310 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
South Dakota: 46 years ($32,310 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Texas: 46 years ($32,490 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Nebraska: 46 years ($32,610 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Kentucky: 46 years ($32,670 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
New Mexico: 46 years ($32,670 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Louisiana: 45 years ($33,031 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
An aerial view of downtown Baton Rouge from the State Capitol building, looking towards the Mississippi bridge and river. (iStock / iStock)
Montana: 45 years ($33,331 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Ohio: 44 years ($33,827 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Pennsylvania: 44 years ($33,872 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
South Carolina: 44 years ($34,052 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Minnesota: 44 years ($34,113 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Wyoming: 44 years ($34,173 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Illinois: 44 years ($34,233 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
North Carolina: 42 years ($35,495 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, USA Drone Skyline Aerial. (iStock / iStock)
Maryland: 41 years ($36,276 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Wisconsin: 41 years ($36,516 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Nevada: 41 years ($26,997 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Delaware: 40 years ($37,057 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Virginia: 40 years ($37,237 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Idaho: 39 years ($38,379 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Florida: 39 years ($38,379 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
WalletHub published a report on Monday that found the best U.S. states to retire in 2022. Florida was at the top of the list. Tallahassee, Florida, is pictured. (iStock)
Colorado: 39 years ($38,559 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Utah: 35 years ($42,645 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Oregon: 35 years ($42,945 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
New Hampshire: 34 years ($43,847 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Connecticut: 34 years ($43,967 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Rhode Island: 34 years ($44,387 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Arizona: 34 years ($44,628 post-Social Security cost of living per year
Maine: 33 years ($45,048 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Washington: 33 years ($45,108 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Vermont: 33 years ($45,409 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
New Jersey: 33 years ($45,829 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
The capital statehouse of New Jersey lights up as the sun sets the Delaware River in the background city of Trenton (iStock)
Alaska: 29 years ($50,997 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
New York: 29 years ($50,997 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
California: 24 years ($63,795 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Massachusetts: 23 years ($65,117 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Hawaii: 17 years ($87,770 post-Social Security cost of living per year)
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Affirm — The buy now, pay later company saw shares tumble 10% after CNBC reported that Swedish fintech firm Klarna will replace Affirm as the exclusive provider of such loans for Walmart . Klarna, which just disclosed its intention to go public in the U.S., will provide loans to Walmart customers in stores and online through the retailer’s majority-owned fintech startup OnePay. Incyte — The pharmaceutical stock dropped 9% after the release of phase three trial data for a skin condition treatment. Incyte said that the trials of its drug met the primary endpoints. However, the drug was effective for less than half of the participants who took it in the trials. Norwegian Cruise Line — The cruise operator gained 4% following an upgrade to overweight from neutral at JPMorgan. Analyst Matthew Boss said that Norwegian Cruise Line’s management indicated that a more volatile macro backdrop has not contributed to any detectable change in demand behavior to date. Netflix — The streaming titan popped nearly 4% on the back of MoffettNathanson’s upgrade to buy from neutral. MoffettNathanson said Netflix can monetize more than previously anticipated, which can help grow profit. Sprouts Farmers Market — Shares added 3% after Deutsche Bank upgraded the organic food retailer to a buy rating from hold. The bank said that the franchise’s same-store sales momentum is sustainable and sees margin expansion opportunities, while the stock’s recent pullback — shares are down 20% in the past month — offers investors an attractive entry point. Blackstone — The alternative asset manager popped 3% following an upgrade to buy from neutral at UBS. Analyst Brennan Hawken said that the stock has an “attractive long term growth profile” and that investors have a chance to invest in a “premier alts platform” at a reasonable valuation. SL Green Realty — Shares climbed 2% after Evercore ISI upgraded the real estate investment trust to outperform from in line. The firm cited better leasing activity across core Midtown Manhattan submarkets, a potential casino license and a recent sell-off as catalysts for the upgrade. Monday.com — The stock popped almost 3% after D.A. Davidson upgraded the cloud-based project management software firm to a buy rating. Analysts pointed to a recent pullback as providing a “lucky” entry point, while reiterating their confidence in the company’s cash flow durability going forward. Intel — The beleaguered semiconductor manufacturer climbed nearly 8% after a regulatory filing from Friday revealed that incoming CEO Lip-Bu Tan will purchase $25 million worth of company shares within 30 days of his appointment. Tesla — The electric vehicle stock slipped 6% following a price target cut from Mizuho . Analysts expressed their caution on weaker EV sales ahead, but they still stood by their outperform rating. Mizuho’s new price forecast of $430, down from $515, still represents 72% upside from where shares of Tesla ended Friday. Robinhood — Shares of the stock trading platform moved 4% higher. Robinhood announced a new prediction markets hub in its app. Traders can use these event contracts to bet on the outcome of upcoming events, from sports tournaments to the Federal Reserve’s upcoming interest rate decisions. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Yun Li, Jesse Pound and Nick Wells contributed reporting.
The market sell-off is not over yet as consumer and corporate confidence take a dive on tariff uncertainty, according to Deutsche Bank. “We see the selloff in US equities as having further to go,” Binky Chadha, chief strategist at Deutsche Bank, wrote Saturday. “With trade policy uncertainty likely to continue to weigh, at least until April 2, we expect positioning to continue to unwind.” “A move to the bottom of the positioning band which is where it went to in the last trade war, would take the S & P 500 down to 5250,” Chadha added. The S & P 500 level highlighted by Chadha points to another 6.9% decline from Friday’s close of 5,638.94. The benchmark was last about 8% below the all-time high it reached just last month. .SPX YTD bar S & P 500 At the center of the strategist’s call are concerns of an economic slowdown amid tariff uncertainty that are unlikely to abate for at least the next several weeks. The latest earnings season showed CEOs are slashing capital expenditures and cutting their earnings forecasts. Chadha also expects the idea of a “Trump put” — in which the president will ease on his policies that have destabilized the market — will not be realized until a marked turn lower in Trump’s approval ratings. “Compared to the level of consumer confidence, the current approval rating is high, implying plenty of room for downside with negative growth or inflation developments likely to speed the catch down,” Chadha wrote. “We expect the net approval rating has to turn more significantly negative, at least -5%, before the administration starts to consider responding.” Still, Chadha — who held one of the more bullish outlooks heading into 2025 — said that it’s “too early to throw in the towel” on his year-end target of 7,000, a move that’s more than 24% higher from Friday’s close. He thinks stocks can bounce back sharply in the latter part of the year if there’s a resolution on tariff uncertainty. On Monday, at least, the broad index rose slightly as it tries to claw back its recent losses. The move came after the latest U.S. retail sales report showed consumers are still spending though at a slower pace than expected. “While the risks have grown, for now we maintain our year-end S & P 500 target of 7000,” he said.
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on March 14, 2025 in New York City.
Michael M. Santiago | Getty Images
The market sell-off is not over yet as consumer and corporate confidence take a dive on tariff uncertainty, according to Deutsche Bank.
“We see the selloff in US equities as having further to go,” Binky Chadha, chief strategist at Deutsche Bank, wrote Saturday. “With trade policy uncertainty likely to continue to weigh, at least until April 2, we expect positioning to continue to unwind.”
“A move to the bottom of the positioning band which is where it went to in the last trade war, would take the S&P 500 down to 5250,” Chadha added.
The S&P 500 level highlighted by Chadha points to another 6.9% decline from Friday’s close of 5,638.94. The benchmark was last about 8% below the all-time high it reached just last month.
S&P 500
At the center of the strategist’s call are concerns of an economic slowdown amid tariff uncertainty that are unlikely to abate for at least the next several weeks. The latest earnings season showed CEOs are slashing capital expenditures and cutting their earnings forecasts.
Chadha also expects the idea of a “Trump put” — in which the president will ease on his policies that have destabilized the market — will not be realized until a marked turn lower in Trump’s approval ratings.
“Compared to the level of consumer confidence, the current approval rating is high, implying plenty of room for downside with negative growth or inflation developments likely to speed the catch down,” Chadha wrote. “We expect the net approval rating has to turn more significantly negative, at least -5%, before the administration starts to consider responding.”
Still, Chadha — who held one of the more bullish outlooks heading into 2025 — said that it’s “too early to throw in the towel” on his year-end target of 7,000, a move that’s more than 24% higher from Friday’s close. He thinks stocks can bounce back sharply in the latter part of the year if there’s a resolution on tariff uncertainty.
On Monday, at least, the broad index rose slightly as it tries to claw back its recent losses. The move came after the latest U.S. retail sales report showed consumers are still spending though at a slower pace than expected.
“While the risks have grown, for now we maintain our year-end S&P 500 target of 7000,” he said.