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Trading Trump’s New Tariffs 4/2/25

2025/4/2
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A
Angelica Peebles
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Bill Baruch
创始人和首席投资官,拥有丰富的金融行业经验,专注于商品和股票交易。
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Dan Ives
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David Faber
知名金融记者和市场新闻分析师,多次获得艾美奖、皮博迪奖和杜邦奖。
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Joe Terranova
知名华尔街分析师和投资策略师,现任 Virtus Investment Partners 首席市场策略师。
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Mike Santoli
以超过20年的华尔街报道经验,目前担任CNBC高级市场评论员的金融专家。
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Rob Sechan
以其在财富管理和替代投资领域的卓越领导和创新精神而闻名的金融行业专家。
S
Scott Wapner
主持《Halftime Report》,领导投资委员会讨论市场趋势和投资策略。
S
Steve Weiss
活跃的投资者和金融分析师,常在 CNBC 分享投资观点和策略。
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Scott Wapner: 本期节目讨论了特朗普政府即将宣布的新关税政策对市场的影响,以及投资委员会成员就这一事件所做的投资调整。 Joe Terranova: 当前市场情绪和仓位对多头有利,但对未来走势缺乏普遍共识,市场可能呈现胶着状态。市场可能因新关税政策而出现反弹,但最终取决于其他因素,例如期待已久的减税政策,目前应采取防御性投资策略,在债券或股票中进行配置。 Steve Weiss: 亚马逊收购TikTok并非一时兴起,考虑到亚马逊的消费者触点,此举可能在广告方面带来显著收益,他支持亚马逊CEO安迪·贾西的决定。亚马逊收购TikTok并非一时兴起,其广告业务潜力巨大,亚马逊有能力充分利用现有基础设施并将其添加到工具集中。 Bill Baruch: 为了应对市场波动,他减少了对部分科技股和能源股的投资,并增加了现金持有量。他减少了对黄金矿业公司的投资,因为该公司的股价已经反映了黄金价格上涨带来的大部分收益。他减少了对炼油公司的投资,因为对石油价格的预期并不乐观。由于马斯克可能离职的消息,他增加了对Leidos Holdings公司的投资。 Rob Sechan: 亚马逊股价相对其历史估值较低,盈利势头强劲,并且在电子商务和云计算领域占据主导地位,收购TikTok将带来增量收益。市场对新关税政策的反应存在分歧,一些人认为这不会成为“清理事件”,而另一些人则持乐观态度。即使新关税政策带来积极消息,市场上涨空间也可能有限,因为企业盈利预期持续下调。市场对消费者信心的担忧可能导致股市下跌风险增加,尽管经济衰退并非其基本预期。 Dan Ives: 马斯克面临品牌危机,他需要在特斯拉CEO和对狗狗币的关注之间做出选择,他认为马斯克离开特斯拉对公司有利。马斯克离开特斯拉是必要的,虽然会留下负面影响,但长期来看对特斯拉有利。马斯克的举动对特斯拉造成了一些永久性损害,但这只是公司发展中的一个黑暗篇章,不会改变其长期发展前景。 David Faber: 关于TikTok的未来,可能会有相关声明,4月5日是最后期限。关于TikTok的潜在交易,一种可能性是稀释字节跳动的所有权,引入新的资本,从而不再受中国对手控制。即使达成协议,也可能面临反对意见,因为中国方面可能仍然参与其中。 Mike Santoli: 市场可能正在尝试形成一个“双底”形态,但需要强劲的向上反应来确认。市场关注的焦点将转向即将公布的企业盈利报告,以及市场对全年盈利的预期。

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Under Biden, Americans' cost of living skyrocketed. Food, housing, auto insurance. Lawsuit abuse is a big reason everything's more expensive today. Frivolous lawsuits cost working Americans over $4,000 a year in hidden taxes. President Trump understands the problem. That's why he supports loser pays legislation to stop lawsuit abuse and put thousands back in the pockets of hardworking Americans.

It's time to make America affordable again. It's time to support the President's plan. What counts most to you? Maybe it's spending more time with the ones you love. Or maybe doing more of what you love to do. The key to being rich is knowing what counts. At Edward Jones, our dedicated financial advisors are people you can count on for financial strategies to help support what truly matters to you.

Let's find your rich. Edward Jones, member SIPC. I'm Scott Wapner, and you're listening to CNBC's Halftime Report, the podcast, the most profitable hour of the trading day. We record this live weekdays at 12 Eastern. Listen in.

All right, Carl, thanks so much. Welcome to the Halftime Report. I'm Scott Wapner, front and center. This hour, Escalation Day. New tariffs set to be announced later this afternoon. So many questions about what the markets will do in the days and weeks ahead. We'll ask the committee joining me for the hour, Joe Terranova, Steve Weiss, Bill Baruch, Rob Seach, and along as well. We will go to the markets. Some early weakness turning green some, what, four hours before we get some more specifics here.

Joe, the White House says, as part of today's schedule, 8:00 p.m., global markets respond as the impact of America's renewed strength takes hold. We know how the markets have reacted so far, right? They've been lower. NASDAQ's down like 11% year to date, S&P down five, and so on and so forth as the uncertainty has ramped up. Clearing event or not, that's all that matters. I think that's what people want to know.

clearing event, sentiment and positioning works in the favor of Bulls right now on April 2nd. However, I think when we look at the first six months of this year, we reflect back on it, Bulls, Bears, I just don't understand how anyone can have such universal conviction in either direction. I literally think we're setting up for a pillow fight between Bulls and Bears.

And in that regard, yes, this could be a clearing event in terms of markets might rally into the earnings season. But ultimately, on the other side of that, am I going to get the big, beautiful tax bill that I've been promised? Because maybe that's the clearing event that markets need. So collectively, I think you put all that together. You say to yourself, how do I position in an environment where I think it's one big pillow fight and I don't understand how you could not be defensive?

defensively allocating towards whether it's bonds or equities. And I have the exposure to equities. So a clearing event benefits me. But my exposure in places like financials, it's not in technology. It's not in the mag seven. I want to get to some, I guess what we can consider breaking news. It's Pippa Stevens with an alert regarding Amazon and TikTok and a very interesting headline. What more can you tell us?

That's right, Scott. So Amazon is reportedly making a last minute bid to buy TikTok here in the U.S. That is according to The New York Times, which does cite three people familiar with those talks. Of course, Oracle and Blackstone have also been in this process. And there are open questions about whether or not China will actually sell. Now, Trump is expected to meet with senior White House officials later today.

to discuss whether or not this is a possibility. But once again, Amazon putting in a last minute bid to buy TikTok here in the U.S. Scott. OK, Pippa, thank you for that update. We'll just kick it around for a minute. We'll get back to the larger issue at hand, obviously, with the markets. But everybody owns Amazon on the desk. What do you think about that?

this headline? You know, I thought about it before and I've not been able to really conclude on it. I'm going to defer to Andy Jassy, who's gotten rid of all the vanity projects from Jeff Bezos, who was a great CEO. And so this is not just a throwaway vanity project. I think that, you know, given their consumer, the points where they touch the consumer, they could probably do quite a bit with it, particularly on the advertising front.

So I'm going to just be supportive of Jassy if this is what he thinks they should do. But it's tough to analyze. We could show meta, too, if you want. I mean, Amazon obviously getting a lift here. You'd think that meta would probably be a little bit red. In fact, it is. It's marginal move up for Amazon, marginal move down for meta. But nonetheless, I mean, this is sort of where the conversation gravitates to in relation to what Steve was talking about with the ambitions that they may have.

Ambitions, for sure. You talk about a company that grew earnings 90% last year, and I see the cloud unlocking the profitability there as a juggernaut. But as you kind of referred to, it's not quite a vanity project. It's something that they really believe in. The advertising component here has driven some of these names like Meta and Alphabet tremendously over the years. And I think Amazon is well-positioned to really capitalize

on the infrastructure they already have and be able to pivot and add this to their toolkit. Yeah, I would say that the impact on meta is inconsequential right here because it's already been assumed, I think, by meta shareholders. If you go back to the big spike when they thought they'd put it out of business, the government, and now it's in the stock that somebody's going to buy it in the U.S. But even getting more granular, what type of...

do they have in place right now that they could really utilize in order to make this even a more profitable business if they took TikTok on? You know, the other story I wanted to get to is what Eamon Javers was just talking about at the end of the previous program, this Politico headline.

that President Trump is telling his inner circle that Elon Musk is going to leave soon. That was a report that sent shares of Tesla higher midday as well. You're looking at an intraday move there. Certainly one of the better performing stocks in the market today, up near 4%, as you see. And you probably have also seen, if not heard, certainly on this program and others, on our network, the analyst Dan Ives has been

urging Elon Musk to get back to his day job, so to speak, or at least one of them, because he does have many.

As CEO of Tesla, of course, delivery numbers came out. Ives called those a disaster on every metric. That was his new note today. Dan Ives joins us on the phone here because we wanted him to react to this news. You have been, and thank you for joining us, probably one of the most vocal, if not the most vocal supporter long-term of Tesla and Musk in the analyst community, but also more recently, one of the more critical ones about

his role in the government, what it's done to Tesla sales. And I want your reaction to this headline that Politico is moving within the last hour that maybe he is going to leave soon. What do you think?

Yeah, I think clock struck midnight for Musk. I mean, it reached a tipping point in terms of what we've seen with his brand crisis tornado. And he started to make that move with that all hands meeting, you know, after me and you spoke. And I think ultimately there was a moment of truth and he had to basically pick. I still believe he stays with Doge in some form, but I don't believe he could stay CEO of Tesla.

and continue to go down this path with Doge. And I think he had a pick, and I think this is the right move for Tesla, and that's our view. I mean, you got to the point where you called this, in your most recent note, a, quote, full-blown crisis, that he needs to stop, in your words, a political firestorm.

Do you think that this is sufficient enough, if it is in fact going to happen, to solve this crisis, as you put it?

Oh, yeah. Look, will there be scars, a black eye, stitches? Yeah. But if he does this, and I believe it's a matter of when, not if, this stops Tesla over time from becoming a political symbol. And you're talking about, which is why it's been so frustrating to shareholders, one of the best disruptive technologies, if not the best, in the world, but yet...

That must, day by day, essentially was a third rail issue. And he needed to do this. We talked about it was really by May. And I think now as this comes out, I think it's been a $100 at least overhang on the stock.

Part of the narrative around the Wisconsin Supreme Court outcome was that, you know, it was not only a win for the liberal candidate, but a rebuke of Musk and his involvement, both his time and his financial assets in that race. Which leads me to ask you whether you think that there has been some degree of irreparable damage caused by his involvement with Doge and otherwise.

Look, I think there's definitely some permanent damage. But given our view of autonomous robotics, where Tesla is going to be over the coming year, I view it as just a dark chapter relative to Tesla. But I don't think that changes the long-term story. But as we talked about, it must continue to go down this path. It was the path of no return.

And that's why him starting to make this move, and we'll see as the news comes out, it's the best thing that ever could have happened for Tesla shareholders on the day that you have no rose-colored glasses, an absolute disaster train wreck, one cute delivery number. He needs to get back home immediately.

being CEO of Tesla, and I think that's ultimately the path he takes. All right, we'll leave it there. I appreciate you so very much joining me on the phone, reacting with us to this. Shares are at the highs of the day, as you see, up 4%. You're a shareholder. Your reaction here? This isn't what we want to see. I mean, we've been waiting for this, and I think Dan and I have said it right, the clock struck midnight.

You don't want to stay welcome too long in the White House under Trump. And I think an exit here would be the right time for him. Get back to business. He's an innovator. He's a disruptor. That's why we're invested in the stock. We do believe tech at the end of the day. It's not what you're doing for me now. It's what you're going to do for me in the future. He needs to keep building for the future there.

Joe, you guys still own it in the T. Yeah, no, the momentum is so negative here. At the end of April, I think you suspect what ultimately will be done with this position, but I don't know. I'm not sure how this reverses, though, the fact that registrations are down so significantly. And it's not just in the United States. It's in Europe. It's around the world. It's clear that...

view id has moved into the lead in terms of market share so okay this this might be a according to dan eyes this might be a much needed step but i don't know if this is the elixir that reverses the negative sentiment the lack of sales

that we're seeing right now for this company. Also keep in mind the administration is not prioritizing decarbonization like the previous administration. So it's not as if you have someone standing up there at the bully pulpit saying let's go out and buy EVs like we did in the previous administration.

I think this might be ceremonial more than anything else. You look at the decline in numbers, obviously the delivery numbers, as Dan Ives was talking about, were not good. Overseas, even worse. France down 37 percent year on year. Sweden down 68 percent. Finland down 39 percent. Belgium down 69 percent.

You have a thought on that, all that? I do. Look, the brand damage here is permanent. There are many other options outside the US. Keep in mind that Budweiser still hasn't recovered.

over the last two years and change from their basically flawed advertising with Dylan. And that's not so identifiable with the brand. Here it's one to one. So there are too many headwinds, they far outweigh the tailwinds. Where he's venturing in terms of robotics is extremely competitive, extremely, I want to emphasize that.

To me, he's lost the edge in terms of being, not in terms of being brilliant, he is, but then his politics aren't going to go away. You're delusional if you think they are. His position in the White House may, but his politics aren't going away. And autonomous driving is still a long time away. But we know this is not valued as a car company. You mentioned robotics, you mentioned autonomous.

But it's the data, the data that these companies carry has value. And I don't think there's permanent damage here. I think that we'll start to be removed from it. We'll disagree on that. Let me just move real quick because I want to get back to that news that we began the show with, really, this report of a possible—

transaction between Amazon and TikTok, if there's a big high profile deal to potentially be had, you can bet that David Faber probably has details on it. In fact, he sat down at our desk here at Post9. What do you know? You know, I've been tracking this one for forever, literally since the summer of 2020, in fact.

towards the end of the first Trump administration when they were banning TikTok and there were lots of efforts being made, as you well know, Scott, as well, to buy what has only become an even more popular app in the four and a half plus years since then. As our viewers are probably aware, a bill was passed in Congress essentially saying, hey, the app has to find a new home that is completely not controlled by a foreign adversary, in this case, the Chinese, of course. And

President Trump, upon regaining office, put a 90-day moratorium or so on that. So we're coming up on the date by which some deal needs to be done. What I'm hearing today, in addition, of course, what we're hearing from The New York Times in terms of Amazon's interest—and I was hearing this this morning, Scott—is that we may get an announcement involving the future of TikTok today, along with perhaps so much else that's coming at us.

Not completely clear, but April 5th is the deadline. So, of course, that is looming regardless of whether it is as soon as today. And while The New York Times is reporting this on Amazon, and they do say that it sort of may not be taken as seriously by those involved,

I've been tracking a deal that has perhaps more of a chance, which is simply one in which you would essentially dilute down the ownership of ByteDance below 20%, allow many of the current owners of ByteDance to step up, bring in new capital, and essentially say it is no longer controlled by a Chinese adversary. Oracle would still be involved in that. Again, people may recall that Oracle is where the servers are housed for TikTok.

But it's interesting to note the presence of Amazon and the benefits that might accrue to them as a result of taking control of TikTok shops and the user data that they get from that. And what has essentially become a very popular way to buy things in terms of live shopping on that platform than QVC, but for the modern age.

And I am also aware of another strategic, my sources will not, that unnamed at this point, not quite as large as Amazon, but another major player that also has interest,

All of the players apparently down in D.C., many of them told to show up today, is what I've been told, in part because there may be something that comes out later or there may be further negotiating necessary. You've talked about this so many times along the way, as you've said. I mean, Steve Mnuchin, the former Treasury Secretary, was a name that was in the mix. Totally interesting. Bobby Kotick was a name in the mix. That's correct, way back when. Big venture names were in the mix. What I hear you saying here, though,

is that, yes, we've seen this headline regarding Amazon, but the buyer is still, potential buyer, is still very far from certain, even as the decision could be closer and closer if not today. That's true. And then you could, even if you were to get an announcement along the lines of what we've been sort of expecting more

would be the case of diluting down ByteDance, having many of the current owners step up, bringing in some new capital. You still might get opposition to that. Remember, this was passed by the Congress and signed by President Biden. You might get opposition saying, well, the Chinese are still involved. You still haven't thwarted perhaps their ability to spy on

on users of the service. And so even if you do get a deal, Scott, it's not completely clear to me that you wouldn't have an Amazon perhaps be trying to say, hey, we're the better alternative, or again, another company do the same. So I guess in some ways it may be far from done, but we may certainly get some clarity about what's gonna happen in the service. - But what's to stop Trump from pushing the timeline back again? Anything? - Ask David, I don't know. - I don't know, Steve. I'm looking back at the original order

in terms of the extension of up to 90 days. And I don't know what the ability is to extend it another 90. My expectation would be that is possible. - Yeah. - Yeah. - David, what about Larry Olsen and Oracle? There's such a familiarity, especially going back to the first administration. I mean, the expectation was that Larry's gonna ultimately end up in a strong position here. - Well, and Oracle obviously already is the host of, remember they all, Project Texas, moving everything to Texas.

You're right, I think, Joe. That is certainly an expectation that they have some influence there. And who the new money might be that is brought in, again, I just don't have a lot of clarity around this. And as so many other things in terms of this administration, things change very quickly. I just can't see the president walking away from that relationship, which is perceived to be a close relationship with Larry Ellison at the last minute. He probably, speaking of the president, probably...

has a as good a relationship is not if not a better relationship with Amazon for that matter than he's ever had. Right. Relative to at least Jeff Bezos. Certainly a better relationship with Bezos than was had in the first administration. I mean, by the way, if it were to be an Amazon deal, it is worth noting Amazon could host all of that, of course, on AWS. So it conceivably would be something investors want to keep in mind. Yeah. I mean, you paid, you know, tens of millions of dollars for a documentary.

on the first lady, and you've made yourself more present in the Trump orbit than you ever have prior, I think the relationship has grown, to say the least. And maybe it's grown to the point where

Eric and Donnie Jr. are out there raising capital to participate in the transaction. Who knows? I don't know. Or even the yet-to-be-run U.S. Sovereign Fund may want to take a piece of TikTok. I mean, why not? All right. The art of the deal. Thanks for coming over here. Sure thing, Scott. And tell us more about this. Anything you get, you have a seat right there waiting. Rob Seachin, you own Amazon as well.

And we haven't heard from you yet. I appreciate you being patient as we get through this. But what's your thought if, in fact, that's the way this goes? Listen, we just added Amazon this year. Scott, it's down a bit. It's outperforming some of the rest of the Mag 7. We added it because it was cheap relative to its history and a 40 percent discount to that history. It's not cheap relative to its discretionary peers, though.

When we look at the opportunistic opportunities that we see in growth, Amazon continues to show healthy earnings momentum, and it's on pace to see high-teens EPS growth. And it dominates these secular opportunities in e-commerce and cloud computing. And what I see as it relates to your question is a scramble for assets in this space.

All these Mag7 companies are competing with each other. They're customers with one another. And I have to think that them getting active here is important from a data standpoint. It's important from an e-commerce standpoint. And as David just said, it's important from a cloud computing standpoint. So I view this as an incremental positive if they were able to get something done.

All right. Let's get back to the story of the day. And that is the expected announcement at 4 o'clock this afternoon in the Rose Garden of these additional tariffs and whether it, in fact, is going to be the clearing event that some are hoping for, even as, you know, there are plenty of suggestions out in the market today that some don't think it will be. Rob, what is your thought on that? I have another target reduction today on the S&P, this time SOCGEN.

calls it a clear crisis of confidence. They take it to 6,400 from 6,750. And JPMorgan's trading desk doesn't believe that, in fact, it will be a clearing event. We still maintain our tactically bearish view, given that we don't see a clearing event, but the beginning of trade war escalation.

You know, along those lines, Scott, we continue seeing EPS estimates getting cut. So the upside from here, even with a positive announcement, is probably a rebound to recent highs. We're certainly not calling for the S&P to reach 7,000.

We're unlikely to see the market get pulled higher by multiple expansion. But the counterargument there is that this announcement offers clarity and animal spirits pick back up. And the potential for good things down the line obviously still exists with deregulation, tax cuts. But that might be a little longer term. So in the intermediate term, you have

you know the other catalyst that sentiment has is Joe said at the beginning the program turn uniformly bad

ISM showing stagflation light, CEO confidence the worst in years, consumer sentiment pulling that 180. And, you know, just this all on this trade is uncertainty. But what is going well is the jobs data is still showing solid hiring. There's been no drop in openings or quits.

There's no big increase in layoffs. So you have a little bit of a tug of war there. But I think the telltale thing is what the market is sniffing out. And that's this tug of war between equal weight discretionary and staples. And it's really good at sniffing out changes in the outlook.

for the consumer. And we've seen significant underperformance of discretionary versus staples. And so it raises the question, is there this potential downside because of confidence in consumption? And does that, and I think it does, increase the odds of a recession, although that's not our base call. So you might get some clarity, but I think the upside's capped. Our poll is still for a lot of volatility.

I mean, is that generally speaking how we see it here? More volatility, the upside being capped, or are you more, I guess, constructive than that perspective? I'm much more constructive. I think, Joe, you might have mentioned it earlier, a lot of the pessimism that's really flourished in this market.

I do think when we rallied out of the hole a week ago, there was a lot of positivity that the White House was really trying to offensively place. I think there is a bit more tacticalness than what we're seeing or what maybe believed. The auto tariffs last week, I think coming ahead of this announcement,

helped flush things down. As well, they were really floating more of a blanket 20% tariff. And I think the market has already begun to discount that. The fact that we've made new lows

this week and responded, I think is a positive thing. But I think people are becoming a little offsides and not pricing for upside. You're seeing the targets, the Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley. Yeah, a lot of people are bringing them in. I said yesterday, when you lose your Denny, then you've done it. Because he reduced his target as well. By the way, Jonathan Krinsky at BTIG, just before we came on the air with a note suggesting that tactical conditions are still favorable.

that the risk-reward favors stocks going up and the GLD going down. Gold's been off to the races, as you know, up and to the right. Stocks have been...

from the left down to the right. And maybe the conditions have just gotten too negative on that note. - It's just interesting to me that you can use analysts, strategists lowering their price targets on the S&P as a buy point, but you don't use it when they're raising their targets to the moon as a sell point because it's too enthusiastic. So you sort of got to pick your poison and what you want to use. Too many indicators, look.

The market, I would say, I don't believe it's really oversold here. I do think that there typically is a relief rally. We may see it, but we don't know what the tariff plan is going to be. As a matter of fact, Trump didn't know what it was going to be because all reports are that they're still working on it today.

So to make the assumption that 25% is going to stick and that's going to be here and that, we just don't know. Now, assume that because there'll be some certainty, allegedly with that, after 4 o'clock today going tomorrow, the market should rally. But then you do have the impact of inflation because they are inflationary. And for jobs growth, as Rob points out, when you get rid of deport, a lot of the...

undocumented people that are here, that labor, you've got to back and fill with U.S. citizens. That's a good thing, but it will raise labor costs, and we don't have the government numbers in there. So unemployment will go up. So the factors are there for the intermediate term that I believe will keep the market with a lid on it and probably push it down as earnings come out and guidance comes out in the second quarter.

for the quarter. We've had a bunch of news already and we have one more item for you before we take a break. Angelica Peebles joins us now with the news alert. Angelica.

Hey, Scott, the Wall Street Journal is reporting that the FDA has missed a deadline to make a decision on full approval of Novavax's COVID-19 vaccine. The vaccine has been allowed to be used under emergency authorization, of course, during the pandemic. And the agency was reportedly supposed to make a decision yesterday, and they have not made that decision. Remember, Friday, the FDA's top vaccine regulator was pushed out of the agency. And so this would have been their first major decision following the

Following his departure, of course, yesterday, there were also tons of layoffs across the agency. So we'll have to see what happens next. We've reached out to Novavax for comment, and we'll report back when we hear more. Scott. Okay. Angelica, thank you very much for that. That's Angelica Peebles. We have more committee moves coming up. We've gotten through a lot already of stuff going on in this market today. It is a very, very busy news day. We have calls of the day as well as our quarterly report still to get to. Markets are green. We're back in two.

Under Biden, Americans' cost of living skyrocketed. Food, housing, auto insurance. Lawsuit abuse is a big reason everything's more expensive today. Frivolous lawsuits cost working Americans over $4,000 a year in hidden taxes. President Trump understands the problem. That's why he supports loser pays legislation to stop lawsuit abuse and put thousands back in the pockets of hardworking Americans.

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All right. We're 30 minutes into the program here. Stocks are green. More moves to get to. Bill Baruch, you're going to start us off. So you have a lot of sales here. Astera Labs, Core Mining, Mobileye, Marathon Petroleum. So you're going to sit on this cash. But why did you get out of these specific names now?

All together raises about 5% cash. We did this before Friday really rolled over. And ultimately, having that flexibility going into this week is something that we want. Let's start with A-Lab and Mobileye. The two of them, they're narratives that we like, the connectivity in semiconductors, as well as autonomous driving.

They are more speculative though, in volatility that we just do not want in the portfolio anymore. Not only that, when you take a look back at the tech names that we own, we still have a lot of exposure to big MAC7 names. And we may look to lean into those as leadership because their valuations right now have come down and we like that. So we've raised in that cash, we may lean into a buying opportunity this week or next week. As for cohort mining, I mean, gold has had a tremendous move this year. It's setting new record highs as I'm talking right now.

I do a lot in the metal space. I run a metals CTA, a metals fund. I mean, we're up 17% year-to-date on that thing. And gold's going to continue to move, but it's likely to pull back a bit. Coor has not captured that. So in an individual stock portfolio, Coor is a very well-run company. Mitchell Krebs, he's the CEO of that company. Terrific pedigree. He's done a great job bringing that into the 2022, 2024, 2025 and positioning for this move in metals.

But I think a lot of their gains in the near term have been captured last year. And then as for Marathon Petroleum, its seasonality, quarter one is good for refiners. Marathon Petroleum has returned a lot of cash to shareholders. But I'm not so upbeat on oil right now. One of the things that's got us through this pullback in equities is 11% energy exposure.

So we're just dialing that back a little bit right here strategically. Okay. Other moves directly related to the Politico report that the president is telling, according to this report, his inner circle that Elon Musk will be leaving soon. You bought...

Lidos on that news. Yeah, so I owned Lidos. I know. As you recall, I shaved it going back when all this started. And you finally sold it or you still had a little bit? I still had a little bit. Okay. All right, so you added to it. So I did add...

And the story is just that. With Musk leaving, you'll see more of a focus on Doge. And at this point, given the cabinet meeting that was reported in the journal a week or two ago, they've then put the power of decisions as to who to cut in the hands of the cabinet ministers. So...

So the people who the cabinet ministers in the with the DOD, I think, will be more responsible. Keep in mind that Leidos has 30 percent of their workforces embedded with the government. And the reason that was done initially by the Clinton administration and gone through so that when they want to get rid of people, that they didn't have to work with the federal unions. So

Look, Leidos performs critical functions, particularly with the VA. In addition to their commercial business, we all go through their scanners at airports. And they're in cyber, so they're in great areas. And with the focus of Musk now leaving, that overhang leaves, stocks extremely cheap. Yeah, well, stocks, highs of the day.

And Joe, we didn't get a chance to mention this at the top. It does play into the tariff story more broadly, the way people are feeling about the economy, where interest rates could continue to go. This, if I recall, is your third...

buy of the TLT. So loading up on that particular tactical trade. Yes. And this is not an expression of, I think, equities go lower. This is an expression of the tariffs have an effect. Yields go lower. Well, this is an expression that the tariffs are going to have a deflationary effect, not so much an inflationary effect. And really, you have to think about what's the effect on the rest of the world? I'm not sure we're correctly doing that.

Look at sentiment, look at positioning as it relates to the Treasuries. I still think it's looking for a higher yield and for lower price of itself. OK, we will get the headlines now with Angelica Peoples. Hi, Angelica. Hey, Scott. The Senate Commerce Committee may subpoena the U.S. Army in order to obtain a helicopter safety memo. The committee's chair said today that it could be issued if the Army doesn't hand over the report by Friday.

which details why the military branch regularly failed to use a safety system on flights around Reagan Washington National Airport. The U.S. Army has yet to comment, though it said earlier this week that it would speak directly with lawmakers.

Former President Biden's health secretary, Xavier Becerra, is entering the race to succeed California Governor Gavin Newsom. Becerra made the announcement today, joining a field of candidates that includes former Congresswoman Katie Porter and potentially former Vice President Kamala Harris, who has yet to make an announcement about her future.

and Nintendo has revealed more details for the Switch 2 console. Nintendo said the new device will be bigger and faster, and will come with a dedicated button to allow players to chat with friends. The Switch 2 will hit store shelves on June 5th for just under $450. Scott, back over to you. All right. Thank you so much. Intellica People's up next. We'll do our Calls of the Day.

Under Biden, Americans' cost of living skyrocketed. Food, housing, auto insurance. Lawsuit abuse is a big reason everything's more expensive today. Frivolous lawsuits cost working Americans over $4,000 a year in hidden taxes. President Trump understands the problem. That's why he supports loser pays legislation to stop lawsuit abuse and put thousands back in the pockets of hardworking Americans.

It's time to make America affordable again. It's time to support the President's plan.

Are you still quoting 30-year-old movies? Have you said cool beans in the past 90 days? Do you think Discover isn't widely accepted? If this sounds like you, you're stuck in the past. Discover is accepted at 99% of places that take credit cards nationwide. And every time you make a purchase with your card, you automatically earn cash back. Welcome to the now. It pays to discover. Learn more at discover.com slash credit card based on the February 2024 Nelson report.

we'll do calls of the day we start today with stifle they do reiterate their buy of service now but they cut the price target to 950 from 1175. it's a decent reduction there and they say it is due to taking a more conservative approach those are their words to a quote heightened degree of uncertainty my first reaction to this i mean you can opine on the stock what it means if the

If an analyst is taking down a price target because of a heightened degree of uncertainty, then you might as well take the price target of every single stock within the S&P 500 and beyond down due to a heightened degree of uncertainty because we all know that there is a...

heightened all at once, heightened degree of uncertainty. And that is the only certainty. Yes, that's true. And that's where I began the show by saying I'm not sure how you could have such strong conviction about anything right now. In the case of ServiceNow, though, I think the real concern here surrounds government contracts

Department of Defense, what the Doge efforts are ultimately going to be. And this was a company that was growing its revenue plus 20% over multiple quarters. You had investors paying a premium for that. Now you're seeing the deceleration in growth. We're going back towards

the mid teens rather, that's not good enough. Street wants to see it in the 20s. - You want to take Northern Trust while you're at it too. Speaking of price targets going down, this one did too, but by four bucks to 112 from 116. However, the analyst at Wolf is not positive on this name. Underperform is the reiteration there. Also down, the price target is at Morgan Stanley.

This one, I think Northern Trust has the ability to kind of have the pause that refreshes. And that's really what's going on right now in this stock. The revenue growth has accelerated for sure. And management has emphasized that they are focusing on reducing costs. They have a target of 2025 of 5% cost reductions.

I think if they're able to hit that margin, stay strong, revenue growth stays strong, and you see a resumption of what's been a very bullish pattern over the last five quarters. Rob, take Comerica. The target was also cut from 72 to 67. Raymond James still likes the stock. What about you?

- We still like it too. This Dallas regional has a strong commercial lending franchise and a sticky deposit base. We agree with them that the macro environment necessitates a more modest expectation for a lot of regional banks given the economic and rate uncertainty. However, we think that they'll continue to benefit from a recovery in net interest margins because of the steeper yield curve and lower deposit costs.

And their loan portfolio also skews towards fixed rates, which should support revenue growth and offset the headwind that Raymond James is talking about. Bill, give me 20 seconds on AT&T. Target gets bumped by a buck. Wolf likes it. Outperform is the call. It's a big position for you. That's why. It's our number 10 name. It's benefited from barbell approach as communications get spread out. Some of that risk, a little defensive. But at the end of the day, AT&T.

They are the major owner of the fiber lines in the U.S. How you get all that AI data spread around through fiber, they're really going to capitalize on that. All right, quick break, and then the quarterly report. We will talk to the traders about what has worked and what did not in Q1. Back after this.

Let's go through our quarterly report. Bill, we start with you. We just did AT&T, which is your biggest winner, by the way, in the quarter. So good stuff on that. Amgen and AbbVie up 19% and 18% respectively. Rob is next, but he has both of those stocks too. What do you do with those health care names here? They're the only two health care names that we own. So we're really not doing it. We're sticking with them.

Our fear coming into the year is that healthcare was going to underperform and what kind of questions were going to be in government there. They've really risen out of this as defensive names. AbbVie continues to pad revenues with moving away from Humira. Sky Rizzi, Rindvog continue to do great. There's a lot of...

optimism around Amgen and their obesity drug, Maritime. I think that there's really great tailwinds here, and I think that both of them can continue to do this. The biotech stocks have gotten hammered recently.

maybe there is a reversal now of what was earlier optimism. You don't worry about that. The trade's been ugly lately. No matter what it did for the entirety of Q1, biotechs have been rolling over lately. - Yeah. We are underweight healthcare. We're only about a 6% to 7% position in healthcare with these two names.

Do we move the puck somewhere else and take a little bit less risk and something that could be a little more stable? You look around, you get Johnson & Johnson news the next day or something. But I think for us right here, holding these two names, they've been in our portfolio for well over a year or two. So I'm going to stick with it. Okay. Rob, you've had, as I said, Amgen and Abbey, nice winners. Bob is your biggest, up 56%. 3M's done quite well. Salesforce down 20%. Broadcom down 28%. You know,

Software, chips, what's your take on those names? So you know that we trimmed Broadcom earlier in the year. It's down 30% since we trimmed it in January. It's still up 175% for us since we bought it. It remains a core holding, fundamentally sound, great secular growth opportunity, and we're

you know it's it's really attractive price wise relative to the semi space. As relates to sales force you know a little bit of a tough start year a little bit tough. To. But it's a 50% discount to its 10 year average in a 24 times. P. E. and it's a 10% discount. Good software peers. They will emerge as a leader in a I monetization. I can tell you I run a big company. And

And this is one of the most powerful software tools that we have at our disposal. You got like 25 couches behind you. We know you run a big company, Rob. We know exactly what you're doing. We're back with Santoli next.

All right, we're back to the markets. Commentator Mike Santoli has his midday word as, you know, we're all thinking the same thing. Stock market's trying to get a little move here into 4 o'clock. On one level, you could say the market is sort of pulling a little more neutral. We've rallied right up to a 21-day average. You can try to execute the playbook. ♪♪

You got a little IPO here. Yes, it's a REIT, a REIT-going public right behind us, thus the bell. Self-storage REIT, very exciting. No, you could sort of see if you could execute the playbook of correction, retest, double bottom. We front-loaded a lot of the pain. We've been dealing with and simulating these issues for a while. Sell the rumor, buy the news. I get all that logic.

that logic. It makes sense. We've reset sentiment and positioning enough. We obviously need to know the details and we obviously need a much more forceful upside response than we got the last time. The last time we sort of topped out 57.50 or 57.75 in the S&P. It wasn't really enough. You gained back only 40% of what you lost. So that's where we are right now, I think, is sort of that figuring out if we can figure out what tonight means for setting earnings expectations and then deciding where that got priced

and where it didn't. So we'll see. We got earnings close. I mean, the attention really is going to shift right into it. That's right. And I think that's what the market craves. How are expectations? I mean, numbers have come down. They've come down for the first quarter. They started out at like 11% annualized growth. They're down like 7%.

You know, they always beat by a few percentage points. So that's still a good number. The question is whether people have really held off on revising the rest of the year. At this point, to me, that's where the real swing could come. All right. We'll do finals next. Mike, thanks. I'll see you at three. Are you following the Halftime Report podcast? What are you waiting for? Look for us in your favorite podcasting app. Follow the Halftime Podcast now.

A big guest coming up tomorrow. Good timing, too. Brad Gerstner, Altimeter Capital, will join us tomorrow. A halftime report exclusive, 12 noon Eastern. Today on Closing Bell, by the way, we'll take in the final stretch with a great lineup. Jeremy Siegel of the Wharton School. Tom Lee will be here on set with us, too. Richard Fisher, the former Dallas Fed president. Dan Greenhouse, Lucy Baldwin of Citi. And we're going to be busy over that last hour. You can bet on that. Rob Seachin, why don't you start us off?

Sure. Gilead, one of the best performing names and one of the best performing sectors this year, still has a reasonable valuation of 14 times. OK.

Okay, thank you very much. Bill Baruch, Amazon, it's our top position. I think it's with or without TikTok. I think this is ready to rally. Big support here, and it's had really good volume on its up days, so I think we're going to see it higher. All right, Weiss. Alphabet, begrudgingly, instead of going into more cash. Look, the stock's already so beaten up, the market rallies after this. It should participate. Give you a technology name, first time this year probably, Semi Equipment, KLA Corp. Thank you. The exchange is now.

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Under Biden, Americans' cost of living skyrocketed. Food, housing, auto insurance. Lawsuit abuse is a big reason everything's more expensive today. Frivolous lawsuits cost working Americans over $4,000 a year in hidden taxes. President Trump understands the problem. That's why he supports loser pays legislation to stop lawsuit abuse and put thousands back in the pockets of hardworking Americans.

It's time to make America affordable again. It's time to support the President's plan.