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Guy, Dan, and Danny discuss the BOJ (3:00), big tech earnings (8:00), energy/crude oil/gasoline on the rise (15:15), the Fed meeting (16:00), Carvana/AMC (20:00), PMI/deflationary risks (24:00), and important earnings reports to watch next week (30:00). The co-hosts interview Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading and talk about high-frequency trading (39:00), the DTCC leakage (54:00), and MELO order type adding AI (1:03:00). About the Show: On The Tape is a weekly podcast with CNBC Fast Money's Guy Adami, Dan Nathan and Danny Moses. They're offering takes on the biggest market-moving headlines of the week, trade ideas, in-depth analysis, tips and advice. Each episode, they are joined by prominent Wall Street participants to help viewers make smarter investment decisions. Bear market, bull market, recession, inflation or deflation… we're here to help guide your portfolio into the green. Risk Reversal brings you years of experience from former Wall Street insiders trading stocks to experts in the commodity market. Check out our show notes here Learn more about Ro body: ro.co/tape See what adding futures can do for you at cmegroup.com/onthetape. Shoot us an email at OnTheTape@riskreversal.com with any feedback, suggestions, or questions for us to answer on the pod and follow us @OnTheTapePod. We're on social: Follow Dan Nathan @RiskReversal on Twitter Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter Follow Danny Moses @DMoses34 on Twitter Follow Liz Young @LizYoungStrat on Twitter Follow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMedia Subscribe to our YouTube page
On the latest episode of Boxes + Lines, Ronan and JR welcome back Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading. The group shares secrets to longevity that all founders can benefit from (staying relevant, for one!), as well as how to distill information for clients. They also discuss what goes into protecting client privacy, what changing tick sizes would mean for traders, and what would need to happen for institutional investors to get into crypto. Recorded October 05, 2022.
Recently I ran a replay video of my earlier interview with Joe Saluzzi covering how high frequency trading works -- and underscoring how it disadvantages & preys upon the unsuspecting retail investor. I ran that video because after years of seemingly turning a blind eye to the exploitation of our financial system by HFTs, the SEC has just proposed a sweeping set of rule changes designed to better level the playing field. Since the SEC posted its proposed market structure reforms for public feedback, Joe has been busy plowing through all 1,600 pages of them to make sense of it all for us. In this video, we hear his assessment. ************************************************* At Wealthion, we show you how to protect and build your wealth by learning from the world's top experts on finance and money. Each week we add new videos that provide you with access to the foremost specialists in investing, economics, the stock market, real estate and personal finance. We offer exceptional interviews and explainer videos that dive deep into the trends driving today's markets, the economy, and your own net worth. We give you strategies for financial security, practical answers to questions like “how to grow my investments?”, and effective solutions for wealth building tailored to 'regular' investors just like you. There's no doubt that it's a very challenging time right now for the average investor. Above and beyond the recent economic impacts of COVID, the new era of record low interest rates, runaway US debt and US deficits, and trillions of dollars in monetary and fiscal stimulus stimulus has changed the rules of investing by dangerously distorting the Dow index, the S&P 500, and nearly all other asset prices. Can prices keep rising, or is there a painful reckoning ahead? Let us help you prepare your portfolio just in case the future brings one or more of the following: inflation, deflation, a bull market, a bear market, a market correction, a stock market crash, a real estate bubble, a real estate crash, an economic boom, a recession, a depression, or another global financial crisis. Put the wisdom from the money & markets experts we feature on Wealthion into action by scheduling a free consultation with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors, who will work with you to determine the right next steps for you to take in building your wealth. SCHEDULE YOUR FREE WEALTH CONSULTATION with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors here: https://www.wealthion.com/ Subscribe to our YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKMeK-HGHfUFFArZ91rzv5A?sub_confirmation=1 Follow Adam on Twitter https://twitter.com/menlobear Follow us on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Wealthion-109680281218040 #trading #investing #markets ************************************************* IMPORTANT NOTE: The information and opinions offered in this video by Wealthion or its interview guests are for educational purposes ONLY and should NOT be construed as personal financial advice. We strongly recommend that any potential decisions and actions you may take in your investment portfolio be conducted under the guidance and supervision of a quality professional financial advisor in good standing with the securities industry. When it comes to investing, past performance is no guarantee of future results. Any historical returns, expected returns, or probability projections may not reflect actual future performance. All investments involve risk and may result in partial or total loss.
In the past, I've had market expert Joe Saluzzi on this program to explain the huge but hidden world of high frequency trading algorithms, payment for order flow & dark exchanges. In general, they confer an unfair advantage to the institutions that wield them and oftentimes result in outcomes that impair the prospects of regular retail investors like you and me. Well, after years of seemingly turning a blind eye to their exploitation of our financial system, the SEC has just proposed a sweeping set of rule changes designed to better level the playing field. I've already lined up Joe to come back on Wealthion in early January to make sense of these proposed changes for us. Until that time, I thought it would be useful for us all to watch this replay of Joe's previous appearance on this channel, explaining how the current exploitative technologies & practices work. He does wonderful job of making a complex subject easy for the regular investor to understand. But be warned, his description of many of the current practices powerful Wall Street players use against little guys like us may make your blood boil. ************************************************* IMPORTANT NOTE: The information and opinions offered in this video by Wealthion or its interview guests are for educational purposes ONLY and should NOT be construed as personal financial advice. We strongly recommend that any potential decisions and actions you may take in your investment portfolio be conducted under the guidance and supervision of a quality professional financial advisor in good standing with the securities industry. When it comes to investing, past performance is no guarantee of future results. Any historical returns, expected returns, or probability projections may not reflect actual future performance. All investments involve risk and may result in partial or total loss.
Stella Bangura, a TV presenter based in Freetown Sierra Leone and Dante Disparte, Chief Strategy Officer and Head of Global Policy at Circle in Washington are with us throughout the programme. Billionaire Elon Musk has reinstated his plans to takeover Twitter. Molly Roberts, from the Washington Post reports. The US labour market shows signs of cooling with the lowest job openings in nearly two and a half years. Institutional partner at Themis, Joe Saluzzi, gives analysis. Alex Agius Saliba who is a member of the European Parliament explains why the introduction of just one cable for all electronic gadgets is a good idea. And are driverless cars the future of transport? The BBC's Silicon Valley correspondent has been investigating.(Picture: Elon Musk in Germany. Credit: Getty Images.)
The Federal Reserve is expected to announce an increase of up to one percentage point, according to some forecasts. What repercussions will this have in the US and abroad? We ask Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading, in New Jersey. The Central Bank of Argentina has risen interest rates to 75% in an attempt to reduce rampant inflation. Carolina Millan, Bloomberg's bureau chief in Buenos Aires, tells us more. The Golden Globes are set to return to television screens in 2023 after being dropped by NBC last year due to a controversy over a lack of diversity among voters, among other things. We hear more from entertainment journalist KJ Matthews. A criminal investigation has been launched against the Governor of Florida, Ron De Santis, for sending nearly 50 Venezuelan migrants on flights from Texas to Massachusetts. Why did do that? We ask Politico's reporter in Florida, Gary Fineout. You may have heard of quiet-quitting or opting out of tasks beyond your assigned duties and becoming less invested in work. But are you familiar with quiet firing? Bonnie Dilber, recruiting manager at tech company Zapier, explains the concept. Ed Butler is joined throughout the programme by two guests on opposite sides of the world: Rhonda Vonshay Sharpe, founder and CEO of Wiser based in Virginia, and David Kuo, co-founder of The Smart Investor, in Singapore. (Picture: Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell in Washington. Picture credit: Reuters)
Forecasters say the Federal Reserve may increase interest rates in the US by 0.75 or even 1 percentage point. We talk to Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. In Argentina, the Central Bank is trying to fight inflation with interest rates as high as 75%. Carolina Millan, a reporter with Bloomberg in Buenos Aires, tells us more. A Texas sheriff has opened a criminal investigation into whether dozens of asylum seekers were illegally flown from the state to Martha's Vineyard. We hear more from Luis Fajardo, from BBC Monitoring in Miami. New York is hosting the Climate Change Week, with business and political leaders from across the world gathering to take part. We talk to Dan Zarrilli, a professor of Climate studies at Columbia University.
The US President, Joe Biden, has launched a $280bn boost for America's technology and science industries. A new bill named CHIPS (Creating Helpful Incentives to Produce Semiconductors) is aimed at increasing domestic manufacturing, and upping the country's competitive edge against China. Professor David Yoffie from Harvard Business School joins us on the programme. We're in Ankara, where Hannah Smith reports on how EU diplomats are threatening Turkey with sanctions over its relationship with Russia. We also look at how economies on different sides of the world - Sri Lanka and Nigeria - are struggling to cope with global supply pressures. Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading has the latest market news ahead of key inflation results in the US.
For the first time in two decades, one Euro has slid to match the price of one US dollar. It's a sign of how Europe and America are diverging on policy in the face of difficult global trade conditions. But analysts say parity isn't necessarily good news for US companies. Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey explains what it could mean for markets at home and abroad. With Sri Lanka's president due to resign, what legacy will his successor inherit? Geopolitical analyst Asanga Abeyagoonase joins us on the programme. Dr Marek Kubik from battery firm Fluence tells us why it's time Europe invested in energy storage. We speak to the Belgian schoolchildren who've designed a product to tackle the stigma around periods. Also, a sauce in short supply: restauranteur Didier Quemener explains why French cooks are taking Dijon mustard off the menu.
At least 50 people from Mexico, Guatemala and Honduras have been found dead in the back of a truck outside the Texas city of San Antonio. Mexico has blamed a people smuggling crisis at the border with the US. So what makes people attempt the journey? Lillian Perlmutter, a journalist based in Mexico City, gives us the latest reaction. We'll hear reaction from across the continent. The tragedy comes amid plummeting costs across North and South America, and protests in the Peruvian capital. The country's former finance minister, Alonso Segura, tells us about a growing emergency in the country. Back in the US, and a number of companies are offering their employees guaranteed access to abortions. One of them is Alloy - we hear why from founder Laura Spiekerman - and discuss the legal aspects with Robin Fretwell Wilson, a law professor at the University of Illinois. New Jersey trader Joe Saluzzi has your markets update, and Alex Bell rounds up the rest of the day's business affairs.
We hear from Alan Wolff, the former deputy directory-general of the World Trade Organisation about the deal on banning fishing subsidies - that has been achieved after more than 20 years of talks. After a tumultuous week we check in with the markets on Wall Street. Joe Saluzzi, Institutional partner at Themis Trading joins us. A BBC survey of more than 4 thousand adults in the UK shows people are cutting back on food and car journeys to save money. Nancy Marshall Genzer of our US partner programme Marketplace has been investigating how American Gen Zs are coping with the economic instability. Colombians go to the polls on Sunday in an election that commentators say will change the direction of the country - no matter who wins. Sergio Guzman, director of Colombia Risk Analysis, and Businessman Hernando Barreto give their views.
Sri Lanka is experiencing severe inflation, along with food and fuel shortages. Now around a million workers have been told to work four days a week instead of five. But will it work? Officials say an extra day each weekend will save citizens money, and allow them to grow food in their gardens. But some economists fear it could spark further unrest in the country - and do little to remedy economic woes. Prominent Sri Lankan economist and political writer Asanga Abeyagoonasekera joins us live on the programme to discuss where the country is heading. The UN's Humanitarian Co-ordinator in Yemen, David Gressly, gives a stark warning about another potential fuel crisis facing the world. It's been another rough day in US and European markets, as trader Joe Saluzzi explains. Global supply chain issues have affected supplies of tampons in the US - Dana Cohen from the sanitary brand Cora can tell us why. We'll also hear about the controversy surrounding Pixar's latest film in the Middle East, with Hollywood writer Sandro Monetti.
Elon Musk - the world's richest man - has been in talks to buy social media giant Twitter since April. But the deal is stalling because of his concerns over the platform's 'bots'. His friend Ross Gerber tells us why it's so important to Mr Musk - and Twitter users. Latest figures show how Americans are spending more despite record inflation. Trading insider Joe Saluzzi analyses the numbers along with Chicago coffee businesswoman Amanda Harth, and Jill Renslow from Minnesota's Mall of America. Also, Air Asia boss Tony Fernandes says tourism on the continent is ready to take off again; and the former Canadian finance minister, Joe Oliver, has an interesting tale to tell about Vladimir Putin.
Oil giant BP booked bumper underlying profits despite a big loss on its exit from Russia. We explore whether oil firms are likely to face windfall taxes on their profits, after Italy increased such a tax, with Dr Sandy Hager, a political economist at City, University of London. Leaked documents in the US have suggested the Supreme Court could be heading towards revoking the historic Roe vs Wade judgement from the 1970s that legalised abortion in the country. Just prior to that news and the political outcry that's followed, Amazon has more quietly told staff it would contribute up to $4,000 in travel expenses for employees seeking to get abortions, as well as certain other treatments. The move will help workers in states like Texas where most abortions have now been illegalised. We hear from Anthony Johndrow, who advises businesses, including tech firms, on their social issue positioning. Plus the latest from Wall Street with Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading.
I sat down with market mechanics expert Joe Saluzzi for his latest update on how HFTs have changed the way markets operate (vs the old days when trading was done by actual humans). In Joe's opinion, most of those changes have been unfair and at the expense of the regular investor. See the YouTube Video for the charts and graphics: https://youtu.be/RE95EEygGJE
Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey analyses the latest news on the US economy. And in the first three months of 2022, Italy's economy contracted by 0.2%. Italian journalist Giada Zampano talks us through the latest data. US law enforcement officers have arrested Andrew Fahie, the premier of the British Virgin Islands, in Florida, on charges relating to drugs trafficking and money laundering. We find out more from Daniel Bruce, chief executive of Transparency International UK. Plus, the BBC's Rahul Tandon explores the removal of Disney's special status in Florida, following the company's criticism of the state's new law restricting discussion of LGBTQ issues in schools.
Russian company Gazprom says it will halt gas supplies to Poland and Bulgaria from Wednesday morning. Poland currently depends on Russian imports for around half of its gas. The country's deputy foreign minister Marcin Pzydacz tells us his government was already been prepared for this move. Plus, the World Bank's latest commodities report makes sobering reading, suggesting that high food and fuel prices could blight the global economy for years to come. We hear from its author, World Bank Senior Economist Peter Nagle. We take a look at what's been happening in the US markets with Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading, after a difficult day for tech stocks. With Elon Musk poised to take over at Twitter, the European Union's Commissioner for the Internal Market Thierry Breton tells us that the firm will be welcome to operate in the EU under new management, providing it adheres to the bloc's rules. As Delta Air Lines reveals that cabin crew will be paid for boarding as well as flight time in a landmark announcement, the president of the Association of Flight Attendant Sara Nelson says unionisation efforts by airline staff forced the company's hand. And the BBC's North America Business Correspondent Samira Hussain reports from Michigan on Ford's iconic F-150 pickup getting a fully electric makeover.
Boris Johnson has been fined by the police for attending a birthday party thrown for him during a Covid lockdown. The prime minister confirmed he had paid the fixed penalty notice for going to the hour-long gathering in the Cabinet Room on 19 June 2020. Chancellor Rishi Sunak and the PM's wife were also fined for the same event, and confirmed they had paid. All three apologised for attending, but neither Mr Johnson or Mr Sunak offered to resign. Opposition parties are calling for the Commons, which is currently on Easter recess, to be recalled. Plus, we get the latest from the US markets from Joe Saluzzi.
Western countries have placed further sanctions on Russia, after President Putin ordered troops into two breakaway regions of eastern Ukraine, after recognising their independence from Kyiv. The retaliatory moves include the UK blocking several Russian banks, and Germany suspending approval of the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline. We hear what some of the key diplomatic players involved have been saying, and speak to Yaroslav Trofimov, Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent at The Wall Street Journal down the line from the Ukrainian capital. Plus, where can European countries source natural gas if getting it from Russia is no longer an option? We hear from Bloomberg correspondent Simone Foxman, who has been at a meeting of the world's leading gas exporters in Qatar's capital Doha. Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey tells us how the markets have reacted to rising tensions over Ukraine, while Shaistah Akhtar from British law firm Mishcon de Reya tells us how sanctions such as those imposed by the UK government on Tuesday will be felt in Russia. And after India stops short of criticising Moscow over Monday's escalation, we speak to SOAS international relations professor Avinash Paliwal about the commercial and military considerations that New Delhi is weighing as it formulates its response to the crisis.
The Ukrainian government has said its websites and banks have been hit by cyber attacks. Two state-owned banks, PrivatBank and Oschadbank, had been targeted by “massive” denial of service attacks and other failures which interrupted banking services. We hear from Reuven Aronashvili, Co-Founder of cybersecurity firm CYE. After three days of losses, the US markets kicked back upwards again thanks to what most investors saw as an easing of tensions on the Russia Ukraine borders. We hear from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Plus the biennial Singapore Airshow started this morning. Organisers are expecting fewer trade visitors due to Covid travel restrictions, and the event is not open to the public. But it is a chance for the world's biggest aerospace players to show off to a select audience the projects they've been working on. The BBC's Nick Marsh was there.
After a 90-year run at the top, GM slipped behind Toyota in terms of car sales in the US in 2021. Paul Eisenstein from TheDetroitBureau.com tells us what caused the swing. Plus, reaction to Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes being found guilty on several counts of fraud. LA Times columnist Michael Hiltzik tells us why he thinks more investors will fall prey to deception in the future. As Apple briefly becomes the first publicly traded company to be valued at more than US$3 trillion, Wall Street Journal markets reporter Hardika Singh tells us why the tech giant is still going strong. Plus, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading gives us his take on today's movements in markets in the US.
Omicron is having an impact on the global workforce. To try and tackle the problem in the US, health authorities have halved the recommended isolation period for people who test positive for Covid-19, but don't exhibit symptoms. Joshua Hausman of the University of Michigan recently wrote an article for the Atlantic about the wider impact of the pandemic on workers in the US, and gives us his thoughts on how long the effect might last. Also in the show, we get a view on the day's trading on Wall Street from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading.
As new coronavirus measures are passed in England, including face masks and mandatory covid passes, we speak to the BBC's political correspondent, Rob Watson. Plus, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey brings us the latest news from the financial markets.
The Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell, has said that the rise in Covid-19 cases and the emergence of the Omicron variant poses risks to employment and economic activity and increased uncertainty for inflation - we get analysis from Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey. Plus, high street fashion giant Inditex has appointed the founder's daughter as its new chair. The firm owns brands including Zara and Massimo Dutti, and we find out what's behind the appointment of Marta Ortega from Dan Dombey of the Financial Times in Madrid. Also in the programme, authoritarian regimes are thought to be working closer than ever to keep each other afloat, with plenty of help from the West's financial system. We hear from Frank Vogl, who helped found the global anti-corruption organisation Transparency International. And we get wider context from the historian, journalist and author, Anne Applebaum. Plus, scientists have struggled for a long time to learn as much as they'd like about the world of infrasonic sound. These acoustic waves can travel a really long way but as they're below the range of human hearing you need to be able to place sensors where you can pick up various sources of infrasound. Now a team of research collaborators from the US, the UK, South Africa and the Netherlands has cracked it - use a seabird to do your recording for you. We hear from Olivier den Ouden at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute.
The movers and shakers up and down the markets with Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading.
The aircraft engine maker Rolls Royce has secured funding to develop small modular nuclear reactors, aimed at producing green electricity. Tom Samson is chief executive of Rolls Royce SMR and explains the background, while South African energy analyst Chris Yelland is sceptical. Plus, Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey on the day's trading on Wall Street.
The UK's largest commercial port says the supply chain crisis has caused a logjam of shipping containers. The Port of Felixstowe, which handles 36% of the UK's freight container traffic, blamed the busy pre-Christmas period and haulage shortages. In Shenzhen, China, two tropical storms in quick succession and covid lockdowns have caused a bottleneck. In Longbeach, California, the harbour has some 87 ships idle offshore waiting to dock. We hear from shipping giant Maersk, which is re-routing some of its biggest ships away from the Felixstowe. Maritime trade expert Lori Ann LaRocco explains why this is all happening in so many places at the same time. Plus, Joe Saluzzi on the day's trading on Wall Street.
Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey on rising energy prices. Plus, Colin Paterson is on the red carpet for the new James Bond film, which finally premieres in London, 2 years late.
Journalist John Dennehy is in the capital San Salvador, plus Joe Saluzzi talks markets.
Dan Cooper of tech site Engadget explains the significance of a new South Korean law requiring app stores such as those of Google and Apple to allow alternative payment methods. We get a look on the day's trading in New York from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading.
HFT Expert Joe Saluzzi explains how our unfair markets exploit investors like you. Institutional trader and market structure expert Joe Saluzzi explains how the plumbing of today's financial markets works, exposing the unseen parties that profit off of the unsuspecting majority of investors. Dark pools, high frequency trading algorithms, pay for performance -- there's an arms race underway in which both the regulators and general public are hopelessly outgunned. There's an invisible war being waged in the financial markets every day. Tremendously deep-pocketed and politically-connected players use Big Data, dark exchanges and microsecond trading advantages to exploit daily trading activity. See the YouTube Video for the charts and graphics: https://youtu.be/nAu6Ixzopo0
SCHEDULE YOUR FREE PORTFOLIO REVIEW with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors here: https://www.wealthion.com/ Institutional trader Joe Saluzzi continues his revelations of the invisible arms race occuring every day in the financial markets that seeks to exploit regular investors like you and me. Joe Saluzzi: Dark Pools, HFTs and Flash Crashes: The Stock Market's Shark-Infested Waters. [If you haven't yet watched Part 1 of this interview, watch it first here: https://youtu.be/nAu6Ixzopo0] In this Part 2 of our interview with market structure expert Joe Saluzzi, Joe gets into the specifics of dark pools, high frequency trading, what was responsible for the recent flash crash in gold -- and why the likelihood of seeing more such flash crashes in the markets going forward is high. See the YouTube Video for the charts and graphics: https://youtu.be/6XkPWfhlMsM
SCHEDULE YOUR FREE PORTFOLIO REVIEW with Wealthion's endorsed financial advisors here: https://www.wealthion.com/ Institutional trader Joe Saluzzi continues his revelations of the invisible arms race occuring every day in the financial markets that seeks to exploit regular investors like you and me. Joe Saluzzi: Dark Pools, HFTs and Flash Crashes: The Stock Market's Shark-Infested Waters. [If you haven't yet watched Part 1 of this interview, watch it first here: https://youtu.be/nAu6Ixzopo0] In this Part 2 of our interview with market structure expert Joe Saluzzi, Joe gets into the specifics of dark pools, high frequency trading, what was responsible for the recent flash crash in gold -- and why the likelihood of seeing more such flash crashes in the markets going forward is high. See the YouTube Video for the charts and graphics: https://youtu.be/6XkPWfhlMsM
HFT Expert Joe Saluzzi explains how our unfair markets exploit investors like you. Institutional trader and market structure expert Joe Saluzzi explains how the plumbing of today's financial markets works, exposing the unseen parties that profit off of the unsuspecting majority of investors. Dark pools, high frequency trading algorithms, pay for performance -- there's an arms race underway in which both the regulators and general public are hopelessly outgunned. There's an invisible war being waged in the financial markets every day. Tremendously deep-pocketed and politically-connected players use Big Data, dark exchanges and microsecond trading advantages to exploit daily trading activity. See the YouTube Video for the charts and graphics: https://youtu.be/nAu6Ixzopo0
A Panama-flagged ship has been hijacked by armed men in the Gulf of Oman and ordered to sail to Iran. We get the latest from Richard Meade is the editor of of Lloyds List, the shipping intelligence service, who confirmed the incident. New York is to become the first city in the US to mandate proof of vaccination to allow people to enter indoor venues such as theatres, restaurants and gyms. We hear from Andrew Rigie is the executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance. Plus, the latest on Wall Street from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey.
New York's attorney general has reached a $1.1bn settlement with a number of pharmaceutical firms over their alleged role in the prescription opioid epidemic. We hear more from Carl Tobias, a Professor of Law at the University of Richmond. Plus, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey brings us the latest from the financial markets.
United Airlines has placed its biggest aircraft order to date in a bet on a revival of the travel industry as the economy recovers from the pandemic. The BBC's Theo Leggett tells us more. Plus, we get the latest on the US stock markets from Joe Saluzzi in the US.
In what to many seems to be a vacuum at the heart of the government response to the crisis charities have stepped in to fill the gap. In the capital Delhi, members of the Shahi Bagh Wali mosque have been distributing oxygen cylinders to patients in urgent need. We hear from Pavinda Nanda of the United Sikhs a charity affiliated to the United Nations. Plus, Joe Saluzzi brings market reaction to remarks about inflation made by Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen.
Alphabet which owns Google and Youtube has released its latest quarterly results which show advertising revenue rising at an unexpectedly sharp pace as we hear from the New York Times' technology correspondent, Mike Isaac. And consumer confidence is up, according to The Conference Board, an independent research group; Kathy Bostjancic from Oxford Economics tells us why. Plus, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in Jersey brings us a markets update.
Johnson & Johnson has decided to delay the rollout of its vaccine in Europe after authorities in the US raised fears over a possible link to blood clots. We speak to Krishna Udayakumar, a professor of medicine and director of the Duke Global Health Innovation Center in North Carolina. And we hear how US markets reacted to the news from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Plus, as drone racing is becoming increasingly popular, we speak to Nicholas Horbaczewski, founder of the professional Drone Racing League.
Another financial lender has warned it could lose billions after a crisis at a US investment fund sent shockwaves through markets. Japan's Mitsubishi UFJ joins the banks Credit Suisse and Nomura in disclosing big potential losses in recent days.At the centre of this is the previously little-known company, Archegos Capital Management. Despite all the concern over what has been happening at Archegos and its creditors, the equity markets appear to be taking it all in their stride with the main indices little moved during the days trading. Jamie Robertson asks Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading in New Jersey if there were problem that might not yet be visible beneath the surface.
Sixteen black families living in a suburb of Chicago are to be given twenty-five thousand dollars each, in the first reparation for housing discrimination ever carried out in the United States. The families live in Evanston – an area that has pledged to distribute ten million dollars over a decade. Robin Rue Simmons, the Alderman of Evanston’s Fifth Ward who led the campaign, discusses how this is just the beginning of a broader reparations movement for African Americans as restitution for centuries of slavery and discrimination.Today, Gamestop posted the 9th consecutive quarter sales loss. However its e-commerce sales jumped 175% in the last quarter. Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading tells us why the company did not live up to expectations. Also in the programme, the BBC's Justin Rowlatt explores whether China is on the verge of taking a tougher stance against coal, both at home and abroad. Plus from Delhi, the BBC's Arunoday Mukharji reports on the rise of the electric motorbike.
France, Germany, Spain and Italy want further clarification before reinstating the jab, as the European Medicines Agency is expected to give its verdict tomorrow. We speak to Natasha Loder, health policy editor at The Economist. And we get an update from Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey on the day's movements on Wall Street.
A new report from the World Health Organization has found that a third of all women experience physical or sexual violence at some point in their lives. The report is the largest ever study of violence against women, and includes data from the years 2000 to 2018. In Mexico thousands marched in the capital Mexico City angry that the president Andrés Manuel López Obrador, know as AMLO, has failed to live up to his promises on women's rights. Plus, we get the latest from the US markets from Joe Saluzzi.
Bakes’ Takes Podcast Show Notes Saturday February 20, 2021 :24 1) From Roaring Kitty to dead cat bounce 2) They’ve mopped up the kerosene, your matches don’t matter 3) Congress beats dead horses :46 Why I do this—Bobby, Jack, please listen in. ‘87 crash, journey, technical analysis first, fundamentals second, not right or wrong, just works for me. read WSJ, Barron’s Economist, listen to podcasts, devour relevant newsletters, monitor what Google alerts bring. Point you to them, but if you don’t want to do that, please know that I’ll do it for you and I eat home cooking, I have no conflicts. 2:03 Not investment advice. Please conduct, and share, your own due diligence. 2:18 Bakes’ Take—Fan Mail! Calls! Questions! Mike! Bobby voice memo question-WSB/Reddit is a flash in the pan, here’s why 3:24 They’ve mopped up the kerosene, your matches don’t matter. SPAC w/ Epic/Fortnite? 5:13 20 years of short profits wiped out, 20 years for next set up imo 6:09 "even a dead cat will bounce if it falls from a great height" $22 launch pad to $483 to $40 qualifies, $35-$43 floor, bounce $65-$77 ceiling IMO? 7:25 Bobby-How to combat FOMO, sit on your hands, always another train coming, 5-10% above base breakout 9:03 TBF—will discuss more later, $16.81 2/12/21, THE breakout, 5-10% 10:09 Bobby voice memo question—Bitcoin only crypto?, “new way to interact with money”, bubble burst/lower prices 12:20 GBTC looked better than ETHE especially at $15 in Oct. 12:58Ethereum--#2, 19% of Bitcoin’s market cap, decentralized finance (DeFi) focus 13:50 Charlie-1) How can it be a currency with this volatility? Cryptoasset more accurate, 12 years old or so, dollar as contrast, Congress—GME hearings, no Churchills, No Lincolns, unwatchable, government constant growth, debt exploding, dollar depreciating in our hands 16:32 2) Government regulate Bitcoin? Central bank power? How control a blockchain/abstract ledger? It does threaten them, main point 18:14 3) Biden infrastructure—see #1, think largely priced in 18:50 PAVE—best looking right now, on my monitor list, will alert you if I buy 19:32 Great call on URNM—thank you 19:42 Bakes’ Take—Bitcoin is THE leader, TSLA didn’t buy Ethereum for balance sheet, decide % of your assets you are comfortable, keep it small, buy 10% or so on down days, Charlie—even with volatility, how will government regulate? Fight FOMO—another train WSB/Reddit—flash in pan might be too harsh, very hard to find next GME, recalibrate expectations Infrastructure—will watch PAVE and others, think already in prices, sell the news? Like shorter videos—working hard to present something worthwhile daily Bakes’ Take—What’s your take? Please share this with your RH or RR friends, send your other stocks/ideas and I will offer strategy for them as well. Please stay tuned. Bakes’ Takes—My Themes/Groups 22:25 My tweet Friday--That is a breakout folks, (ProShares Short 20+ Yr TRS/TBF). Interest rates are going up, bond prices are going down. Full disclosure: I have a position. #BakesTakes_ https://www.gemini.com/cryptopedia/what-is-bitcoin-and-how-does-it-work Bakes’ Take—Podcasts of the Week! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/on-the-tape/id1545205930 25:28 On the Tape Podcast—Danny Moses, Guy Adami, Dan Nathan Hosts, Joe Saluzzi and Sal Arnuck Guests Whole show is great, but last 20 minutes Joe and Sal suggest payment for order flow be eliminated, horrible for RobinHood, Bernie Madoff proposed initially? https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-algebra-of-wealth/id1498802610?i=1000509654182 27:15 Scott Galloway—3 mins. AAPL likely buy PTON, 48 mins. Get to HQ! 29:13 Bakes’ Take—Diversify accounts away from RH 29:23 Bakes’ Take—Reporters of the Week! Dr. Makary is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and Bloomberg School of Public Health, chief medical adviser to Sesame Care, and author of “The Price We Pay.” If medication slashed cases 77%-“Miracle pill”. 55% of Americans have natural immunity. 15% have had vaccine. Gottlieb-25 0 million doses, 150 million Americans end of March. Population fatality .15%. Lady Gaga-shut up. 31:28 Bakes’ Take—Our lives and country are good and getting better, great. For stocks, Biden stimulation with our herd immunity pent-up demand, paradoxically negative. Bakes’ Take—Charts/Tweets of the Week! Bakes’ Takes--Newsletters of the Week 32:16 Please also subscribe to my Bakes’ Takes YouTube Channel, the audio is the same but the charts that I reference are on the screen. Follow us on Twitter @BakesTakes_ and other social media. Please, please use your voice memo app, tape your question(s) and email to bakes@bakestakespodcast.com or write if you prefer. I will also keep you anonymous is you’d like. Thank you for listening, Mike Wilson is my producer. Have a great week. Bakes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b323QGBSW3U 32:53 Brad Paisley—No I in Beer 33:03 Much needed levity—The Best of Ralphie May on ESPN’s Mohr Sports https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K325TfH0RQ0 New episode
Guy, Dan and Danny discuss the inflation data we got this week (0:40), debt markets (8:21), bitcoin/crypto (20:35) and break down the Robinhood/GameStop frenzy in light of this week's hearing on Capitol Hill (31:09). The co-hosts interview Themis Trading's Joe Saluzzi and Sal Arnuk (36:14), looking at market structure and we dive deeper into this week's hearing. Shoot us an email at contact@riskreversal.com with any feedback, questions, or suggestions going forward and follow us @OnTheTapePod. Follow the co-hosts: Dan Nathan is @RiskReversal on Twitter and you can subscribe to his email list at RiskReversal.com. Follow @GuyAdami on Twitter. Follow Danny Moses @DMoses34 on Twitter.
As the Dow Jones records another high, we get analysis from Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading in New Jersey.
Amazon founder Jeff Bezos is to step down as chief executive of the e-commerce giant that he started in his garage nearly 30 years ago. He will become executive chairman, a move he said would give him "time and energy" to focus on his other ventures. But what affect did his departure have on the markets? We hear from Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading in New Jersey. Plus, Caroline Lucas, the UK's only Green Party MP gives her take on the theory of Natural Capital, which explores the idea of putting a price on natural resources.
US markets are still digesting last week's attack on the US Capitol, as we hear from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Also in the programme, some of the world's biggest corporate names withdraw their support - and cash - from President Trump. We discuss what this means for the Donald's finances with Max Abelson of Bloomberg.
German authorities have extended strict lockdown measures to the end of January. We get reaction from a small business that will be affected. The BBC's Andrew Walker has the latest World Bank predictions for the world economy. And in the US, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading brings us the latest from the financial markets.
The US's considers further travel restrictions to stop coronavirus - we speak with journalist Jeremy Hobson in the US about the intricacies of how people in the US are feeling. And financial assistance on a national scale is still buoying US stock markets, as Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading explains.
The proposal comes from a bipartisan group of senators for Covid-19 financial relief who hope to break the deadlock and allow Congress to come to an agreement about financial relief measures for US citizens. But there is doubt as to whether it will work, as we hear from Al Weaver, reporter at The Hill newspaper in Washington DC. We also get an update from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey on the day's movements on Wall Street.
President-elect Joe Biden has introduced the first people he has chosen for his cabinet, among them the first female director of national intelligence and the first Latino head of homeland security. We discuss how the appointments, if confirmed, are likely to be received, and what significance they hold for Biden's administration. The Dow Jones market index reached a record-breaking 30,000 points today. But how significant is that? We speak to Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Our regular workplace commentator, Stephanie Hare, offers tips for people who are losing their job during the pandemic. Also in the programme, we hear how many musicians are receiving no income from streaming services, as guitarist Tom Gray, founder of the Broken Record campaign, explains. Sasha Twining is joined throughout the programme by Nicole Childers, executive producer of Marketplace on American public radio, who's in LA and by Mehmal Sarfraz, co-founder of The Current PK and writer for The Hindu newspaper, from Lahore. (Picture: Joe Biden. Credit: Getty Images)
President-elect Joe Biden has introduced the first people he has chosen for his cabinet. We run through who's been nominated, and hear how markets reacted to earlier news that Janet Yellen has been chosen to be the new administration's treasury secretary. The Dow Jones market index reached a record-breaking 30,000 points today. But how significant is that? We speak to Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Also in the programme, we hear how many musicians are receiving no income from streaming services, as guitarist Tom Gray, founder of the Broken Record campaign, explains.
President-elect Joe Biden has vowed to defend the Affordable Care Act, the public health insurance scheme passed when he was vice-president, as the US Supreme Court considers a case attempting to strike down the law. MaryBeth Musumeci of the Kaiser Family Foundation in Washington, DC, explains why Obamacare is under threat. Plus, we get the latest market moves on Wall Street with Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersery.
Joe Biden says it is clear he is winning enough states to take the US presidency, despite key results still outstanding. We get the latest reaction from the markets with Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey.
The Bank of England's chief economist Andy Haldane has said working from home risks stifling creativity and cuts people off from new experiences. But is this true? Mandy Gilbert, chief executive of Creative Niche in Toronto, explains how this might be happening. And we'll have a regular take on the day's trading in the US with Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading.
Are politicians in Washington too preoccupied with a possible Supreme Court nomination to think about the need for a second stimulus package? We ask Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading. Also, we consider how agricultural tariffs, imposed by President Trump in his trade battle with China, may have impacted the vote amongst American farmers in Florida in a report from journalist Heather van Blokland.
As company share prices bounce around, many investors on the stock market take the 'buy the dip' approach - buying company shares when they are low, in the belief that they will rise again soon. It seems to be working for the moment, as government financial stimulus could end up in the right place at the right time, says Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Also, the United Nations warns on businesses ruining the biodiversity of the world. Finally, the World Trade Organisation calls the US's tariffs on China 'a breach' of international trade rules - but nobody can do anything about it for the moment, as the BBC's Samira Hussain in New York reports.
We hear the latest markets news from Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey and as President Trump travels to Wisconsin to visit the city of Kenosha - the latest focus of violent street clashes - we speak to Nick Collins, a businessman who's part of a group called Kenosha for Trump.
19,000 jobs at American Airlines could be at risk without US assistance for the airline. Plus, we hear about the day's losers and movers on the US stock market with Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading in New Jersey.
The Standard & Poor's index soars as stock markets reacts to investor confidence, says stock expert Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. Plus, we speak with reporter Anne-Elisabeth Moutet about France's new rules to impose mask-wearing in offices. And we hear about why the world's biggest retailer, Walmart, has seen sales surge once again.
US investors react to Joe Biden choosing Kamala Harris as election running mate, plus Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading tells us how things stacked up on the stock markets in the face of a potential Russian coronavirus vaccine
On today’s programme we take a look at the US jobs market, as the latest monthly figures are published, and New York Times reporter Emily Badger explains why the end of the federal enhanced unemployment benefit system disproportionately hits black Americans. We’ll also wrap up the week on the US markets with Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading in New Jersey. And we'll hear from our sister programme Marketplace about how the coronavirus pandemic is shifting attitudes towards service robots.
A court in Malaysia has sentenced former Prime Minister Najib Razak to 12 years in jail after finding him guilty on all seven counts in the first of several multi-million dollar corruption trials. We hear more about the a global web of fraud and corruption. Plus - we get the latest from the US markets from Joe Saluzzi.
A study shows 1 in 4 people in India may have Covid 19 - we get the latest from India's viral epicentre: Dr Jerryl Banait is working with patients in the country. Plus, on the frontline of fakery, Imran Ahmed, CEO for the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, tells us why coronavirus misinformation is as viral online as it is in real life. We get the latest on the US stock markets with Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading. Finally, we speak with Fela Kuti and Burna Boy on the increasing economic power in the Afrobeats music industry.
Virgin Atlantic has finalised a rescue deal worth £1.2bn and it says it should protect thousands of jobs threatened by the virtual collapse of air travel during the pandemic. We get more details from the BBC’s Theo Leggett. Plus, Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading in New Jersey brings us the latest news from the financial markets.
The World Health Organisation has acknowledged "evidence emerging" of the airborne spread of coronavirus, after a group of scientists signed a letter urging the organisation to update its guidance on the disease’s transmission. One of the signatories, Joe Allen, an Assistant Professor of Exposure Assessment Science at Harvard University in the US, explains his concerns to Rob Young. Also in the programme, Deutsche Bank will pay a $150 million penalty to a New York regulator, mainly for failing to properly monitor its relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, as Kadhim Shubber of the Financial Times explains. And we’ll get the view on the day’s trading on Wall Street, from Joe Saluzzi of Themis Trading.
We hear from Mexico City, where a 'powerful' earthquake shook buildings - BBC Mundo's Marcos Gonzalez Diaz updates us on the response to the after-effects. Police in Nigeria say they have rescued 300 people who were locked in a rice-processing factory and forced to work throughout a coronavirus lockdown - from Abuja, editor-in-chief of the Daily Trust, Naziru Mikailu, tells us more. Plus, we analyse the latest on the day's stock market moves with Joe Saluzzi in New Jersey.
President Donald Trump has signed an executive order introducing police reforms. It offers federal grants to improve police practices and comes amid anger over the killing of African Americans by police officers. Mr Trump said the police played an essential role in society, which must be protected and he said he would not support attempts to defund and dismantle police forces. However, activist and Yale University academic Philip McHarris tells us why he believes defunding the police is the way forward. Plus we get the latest from the US markets from Joe Saluzzi from Themis Trading.
Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin and Federal Reserve Chair, Jerome Powell, gave evidence to the Senate banking committee over how the nearly $3 trillion federal rescue programs was rolled out. Joe Saluzzi rounds up the day on Wall Street.
A market update from Joe Saluzzi at Themis Trading in New Jersey
Robert Mugabe is due to be replaced by the man he sacked as Vice-President, Emmerson Mnangagwa. But he's not the only one who's got his eyes on the top job. Nkosana Moyo is a former Minister of Industry and he aims to run in the next elections as the candidate of the Alliance for People's Agenda. And, Joe Saluzzi, Co-Founder of Themis Trading in New Jersey, gives us an update on Wall Street.
What’s the cost of a nanosecond? For most of us in our everyday lives, its nothing. But to high frequency traders, it could mean thousands of dolllars. But why is this? And how did this happen? Joe Saluzzi is hear with us to talk about what high frequency trading is, and the negative impact it could have in the stock market.
Cash Flow listener hits the mark and sends in further supportive evidence of the android meme. Bob Neveritt confirms Joe Saluzzi's testimony on Bloomberg TV in his discussion on high frequency trading as being "ficticious".
Cash Flow listener hits the mark and sends in further supportive evidence of the android meme. Bob Neveritt confirms Joe Saluzzi's testimony on Bloomberg TV in his discussion on high frequency trading as being "ficticious".