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tv   Worldwide Exchange  CNBC  October 11, 2023 5:00am-6:00am EDT

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it is 5:00 a.m. at cnbc global headquarters and here is your "five@5." the small caps do something for the first time since july. what it could mean for the market's next move. also a busy day for fed speakers operates ahead of the november meeting, why some people say the markets are doing jay powell's work for him. a big win for novo nordisk. we have a live report from
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tel aviv. despite the massive run-up in yields, why one huge part of the investment is sitting ontown sidelines. we'll tell you why that could be changing. it's wednesday, october 11th, 2023, and you're watching "worldwide exchange" right here on cnbc. ♪ good morning. i'm frank holland. let's take a look at stock futures. it looks like the dow would open up about 50 points higher. the s&p and nasdaq solidly in the green. this follows a mostly higher session for stocksy ed that saw the russell 2000 post its fifth positive session in a row. that's the first time it did that since july. you can see right here up almost 1% year to date. but important to note, they're
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also belo e their 250-day moving average. we're checking the bond market with the 10-year coming off its lowest close since september. 4.56. this is well below its year-high that it reached earlier this month. important to note the 30-year bond, a big indicator on inflation expectations and also investor confidence well off of its highs. it hit 4.96% earlier this month. we begin with oil, wti, the u.s. benchmark trading at 85.74. brent crude, 87.43. natural gas, up 1.5% higher. now we go to a news alert from washington. they're announcing sweeping new rules on junk fees. that inabout colludes banking,
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travel, leisure, and housing. the ftc is looking to ban businesses from charging hidden and misleading fees. also the ftc is requiring them to show the full price up front. the examples include resort fees, car rentals, and much more. they're tapping others for charges for basic services for checking account balances or requesting loan payoffs. you can see bank stocks are actually higher. we're going to continue to watch the action on bank stocks. for much more, joining me now on the cnbc newsline is hugh son. good morning. thank you for being here. >> thanks. it's good to be here. >> give us a sense. this new regulation framework, what could this mean for regional banks and also banks and credit unions?
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>> this idea that people should be able to switch institutions, that they should not be trapped essentially at their banks and that they should be able to get offering through wider providers. this started in europe. it was known it was coming to the u.s. it's going to essentially propose to make it easier for folks to switch banks. that's on the one hand. that's supposed to spur competition. on the other, junk fees have been going on for a while. the banks have been proactively reducing overdraft fees in some cases from $35 to $10 or capital one reducing them and cutting them altogether. and then said they basically are doing that proactively. you know, this is -- the industry knows this is coming, and for the most part they've been dealing with it. that's how you see the stock
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reacting today. >> you mention the stock reaction. we're looking at some of the stocks. the big banks are moving fraction franceally higher. we're seeing the regional banks moving lower. these so-called junk fees, that's what the administration is calling them. how important are they to the top and the bottom line of the regional banks, again, that we see moving lower right now? >> they're a larger pro e portion of the revenue fees for smaller banks. you have jpmorgan, they collected $1.52 billion in overdraft fees, which is a huge amount. from the bank's perspective, they're saying, hey, look, you're already raising capital levels. they're going back and forth on that. you're already making it harder for us to operate in the regulation markets. that's their -- you know, their main resistance to this. they're saying when is this enough? you guys have to keep pushing us out of these regulated
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businesses. >> all right. hugh son, cnbc banking reporter. appreciate it. we turn our attention about now to another breaking story we're following this morning, secretary janet yellen speaking on the sidelines of the international monetary funds in marrakesh, morocco, saying treasury does not seen signs of broad spillovers to stabilize the global economy. yellen adding she's watching for potential economic impacts from the crisis in israel, but at this point, she's not seeing the attacks having a major impact on the economies. we'll continue to. roy the meetings and bring you the latest. we get a check of the top morning corporate stories. we have silvana with us. >> good morning. novo nordisk shares are higher saying it will stop the trial of ozempic almost a year early. the company says its independent
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monitoring committee has found the data was good enough and the treatment would succeed. novo expects to release the results of the study early next year. blackstone is in preliminary stocks with walt disney to acquire a stake in india's firm. it would make it the latest suitor where disney has been exploring a sale or joint venture. and exxonmobil is close to a 58 billion deal to buy pioneer natural for almost $250 a share. >> something to watch. pioneer shares moving almost 2.5% higher. thank you very much. coming up on "worldwide exchange," we have the one word investors have to note. but first a clash of the fed
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heads, why michelle bowman said just this morning that's putting her view at odds with tuesday's talkers. plus the climate in israel, what a major company is telling its employees as the conflict there enters a fifth day. and later, damning testimony as the sbf talri enters a second week. we have a very busy morning on "worldwide exchange." stay with us. welcome to ameriprise. i'm sam morrison. my brother max recommended you.
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welcome back to "worldwide exchange." taking ai look at u.s. futures, indices are solidly in the green. let's take a look at how europe is shaping up. we have our julianna tatelbaum. she's in our london newsroom with much more on the early action. julianna. >> frank, good morning. let me start out by saying we're opening today's trading session after the best trading day of the year for the stoxx 600. here's what we have right now. green for some markets, red for others. a mixed start to trade today. there's one getting hit hard and it lies in france. you have the cac 40 underperforming, down 0.7. you can see the sector i'm talking about. it's household goods that's underperforming. household goods down more than 2%. that has bounced off the lows of the morning.
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outside of household goods, rew e tail also underperforming. then a bit of a drop-off. travel and leisure down. utilities also faring well. what's going on with household goods? it's the luxury names. lvmh reports it's slowed. demand in europe and the u.s. is slow while recovery in china has been uneven. we've had recently a number of brokers downgrade luxury names in europe, but lvmh has remained a favorite. it's why we've seen such a dramatic selloff. it's filtered to other names. hu ugo boss is down.
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richemont down. massive results after the close yesterday. frank? >> julianna, thank you very much. julianna tatelbaum live in our london newsroom. we're going to turn our attention back to the u.s. the market is getting a boost from a number of fed officials. among them minneapolis fed president neel kashkari says it's possible. they may not need to raise rates, at least not as much. we heard that from raphael bostic and san francisco's mary daly as well. however, speaking in the last hour, fed governor michelle bowman says despite some progress on inflation, the bank may need to tighten policy further. right now there are increasing odds the fed does not hike rates again this year. there's an 84% chance of no hike
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in november and a 71% chance of no hike in december. let's talk with vance howard. great to have you here. let's take a look at the situation. we're on pace for a winning week, the three major indices in the green. bond yields fell and there are expectations of the fed pausing or at least not raising rates again in the next two meetings. in this current environment and also with the geopolitical uncertainty, how are you advising them to position? what are you telling them to do? >> we're still bullish. the trend about's still up. i think you have to trade the trend. you need these pullbacks or buying opportunities. you've got a tremendous amount of geopolitical risk out there, frank, as you've been watching. you've got china saber rattling with iran and israel being attacked. >> looks like we're having some
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technical difficulties. vance, we're having a bit of an issue with your feed. i think we're going to take the video off and have you keep talking. please continue and pick up and we'll let you know if we have a problem. >> what we've been telling our clients, you need to have an active approach to investing because this passive investing approach may not at work if we get -- >> all right. unfortunately i think we're having some technical difficulties with vance. we'rer going to thank vance for being here. coming up on "worldwide exchange," i speak with the head of the fourth largest pension fund in the u.s. we get its take on the 5% rate risk and what he's doing with his fund that has more than $250 billion in assets under management. much more coming up after this break.
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welcome back to "worldwide exchange." president biden said in a private phone call yesterday he urged israel's prime minister to minimize casualties as israel continues its retaliation against hamas. the call comes after president biden condemned the attacks and vowed support for its middle east ally. kelly cobiella joins us with
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more. >> reporter: the fighting continues overnight from gaza into israel and the european union is now calling for a humanitarian corridor in gaza as well as an end to the blockade on water, drinking water, food, and electricity to gaza, the u.s. somewhat responsive to that. the u.s. is in talks with israel and egypt about opening up some sort of safe passage in the south, that crossing from the south in gaza into egypt so that civilians can get a way from th bombing. people say they know that the bombing is coming, that they simply have no place safe to go. the united nations is there. there are schools there, which they're using as shelters, but the u.n. says even some of those schools, about 20 schools so far, have been damaged as well. very dire situation there.
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the shelters are overcrowded. there's not enough food or drinking water. here in israel, the number of dead continues to climb primarily because the military is going house to house in the south and they continue to find victims, and the families are still wondering what happened to their loved ones. they're handling over dna at quickly as they can, but slowly going through the number of bodies. we'rer talking about hundreds of bodies from this event on saturday and try to identify them and then notify families. so many, many families here in israel are in this terrible limbo of not hearing from their loved ones since saturday and turning over their dna and simply waiting for a phone call, frank. >> all right, kelly, thank you very much. kelly cobiella live from tel aviv. we certainly appreciate it. thank you. while the israel h/hamas wa
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continues, many are feeling the effects of the conflict. corporations with israel-based employees are telling workers to stay home as they temporarily consider shutting down operations. joining mu e now is our next guest. good morning and thank you for being here. >> good morning, frank. thanks for having me. >> we want to thank you for taking time to speak with us during this very difficult time for you and your employees and your nation. i do want to ask you, how are you doing emotionally? how's your staff doing emotionally, and how are you operations right now with so much uncertainty? >> so, you know, first and foremost our hearts go out to all the victims. over 1,200 have been murdered.
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we're overly sickened by what's going on. this is not the first time israel has operated around under a crisis mode. unfortunately israelis are used to working under crisis modes, and we're constantly thinking about worst-case scenarios when we're building companies. on a day-to-day basis, we're always thinking of worst-case scenarios, and we're building companies out of those spectrums, right? even our servers from most israel companies are now based in israel. since covid, everyone has gotten used to working remotely. this is another example of how we work remotely. so while emotionally it's very hard for everyone to work. operationally, everything works as usual. we're hoping for better days. >> i'm sure you personally have been impacted as many people in
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your nation have been. i want to ask you more about operations. you say i you're operating mostly normally and covid has prepared you o for staying at home. is there a negative impact for your nation and also the conflict? >> you know, so, business-wise, nothing has been impacted because most are not working on the israeli market. the vast majority comes from the u.s. market and some from europe. so revenue-wise and operational-wise, we are prepared for that. >> okay. >> and i think most of the companies in israel are in the states. >> we're looking at some of your partners, hbo, mcdonald's, gm, a
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number of blue chip companies. looking at your stock in recent days, your stock along with a number of other israeli-based stocks have taken a sharp decline. apparently investors are concerned about the situation. what would you tell your investors? >> you know, in the past few years, the stock has outperformed dramatically. i think our investors, especially the american investors know how our company works. they know our market, our partners. i think this will not harm the company, and i think, you know, any anything -- we're getting hundreds of emails and messages from partners, investors asking for our well-being, showing their support. so we're very confident in that. >> tal jacobson from perion network.
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> chppreciate your time. >>mu more on "worldwide exchange" coming up after this. please stay with us. ♪♪ we have great benefits from principal. so i know i'm taken care of. and not just me. but the ones who matter most to me. ♪♪ (aidyl) hi, i'm aidyl, and i lost 90 pounds on golo. but the ones who matter most to me. i struggled with weight loss and weight gain my entire life. with all the yo-yo dieting i did in the past, i would lose 20, 30, 50 pounds just to gain them over and over again. in one year, i've lost five sizes, and i'm on my way to lose another three. with golo, i can do it. (announcer) change your life at golo.com. that's golo.com.
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it's around 5:30 a.m. in the new york city area. there's a lot more on "worldwide exchange." stocks are dovish out of the federal chief speaking today. house republicans are voting
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over replacing kevin mccarthy as speaker of the house and the ramifications that choice may have on the global stage. and the fresh task of the ipf market as birkenstock plays it safe. it's wednesday, october 11th, 2023. you're watching "worldwide exchange" right here on cnbc. ♪ welcome back to "worldwide exchange." i'm frank holland. we pick up a check on u.s. stock futures with all three major inabout disease coming off a third day of straight gains f. they're solidly in the green. the dow would open up about 50 points higher. the win streak even longer for your the small cap. the russell 2000 rising more than 1% yesterday. you see it right there, its fifth straight day of gains, putting it back in positive
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territory, you see it right here. importantn't to note, the small caps are trading below their two-day moving average. we'll have comments from michelle bowman that despite progress on inflation, the central bank will probably need to tighten monetary policy further to restore price stability. we also want to get a check on the bond market this morning following bowman's comments. we begin with the benchmark ten year at 4.56. still well below its year-high. also important ornlt to know the 30-year, this is a good gauge on expectations of inflation and also investor confidence. we also wantlet to look at the energy market. we begin with wti, down, taking a dip lower than when we started the show, down more than a third of a percent, trading at 85.63 a barrel and brent crude, 87.32.
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still up over 1%. that's a look at the u.s. markets. now we're going to get a check on some of this morning's top corporate stories. our silvana henao is here with those. >> good morning. birkenstock is set to begin trading on the new york stock exchange today pricing its stock at $46 a share with an $8.6 billion value. a third of that cash is going to repay debt, with the rest going to private equity owner. europe's internal market commissioner is giving elon musk 24 hours to respond about to concerns over misinformation being spread on his x platform regarding the war in israel. the letter comes after dozens of researchers, news organizations, and other groups have documented
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a rise of misleading, false, and questionable content on x, creating confusion about the current conflict. failure to comply with the commissioner could lead to fines worth about 6% of x's annual revenue. and in the second week of the trial, damning testimony from sam bank man freed's ex-girlfriend and former ceo of the sister company alameda research. caroline ellison who has already pleaded glet to a number of charges and is cooperating with prosecutors says bankman-fried directed her to commit her crimes and is the man solely responsible for the loss of billions of dollars in customer funds. her testimony will continue today, frank. >> all right. silvana, thank you very much. turning our attention now to washington d.c., where house republicans are slated to cast their votes to pick their next candidate for house speaker
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behind closed doors today. this vote coming just over a week after the vote to remove kevin mccarthy. emily wilkins joins us now. emily, good morning. what can we expect in today's proceedings? >> well, good morning, frank. there's a lot of uncertainty how today is going to unfold. we do know the house republicans as you said, they're going to vet this morning on who they want their nominee for speaker to be. last night members heard from jim jordan and steve scalise. they made their pitch on why they should wind up being the speaker nominee. neither currently has enough votes to win the gavel. members are pretty divided between who they actually support. a lot haven't even said who they will back. congressman mike garcia who representing the district that voted for biden in 2020 and, therefore, is very critical to the republicans keeping the house in 2024, said he could back either candidate. >> i think both of them understand the big picture here and this is a fight to save our
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country. i don't have doubt both of them are going to be able to raise money, both of them will be able to go to the swing districts an ld help people out and fight the good fight. >> kevin mccarthy whose name was floated by several members hoping for a comeback says he does not want to be nominated for speaker today, that it's going to be a race between scalise and jordan. that's not the only thing republicans have to decide on. right now whoever gets the majority backing them becoming the candidate for speaker, but republicans, they do not want another 15 rounds of votes for speaker like we saw in january. so members could decide to stay behind closed doors until one candidate gets 217 votes. that is the amount needed to become speaker. so it's not clear how long it's going to take to actually elect a speaker. some lawmakers say it's go toung be done today. others have said it could take much longer. frank? >> emily, obviously it's like a lot of geopolitical issues playing out right now. how is the crisis in israel
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playing to this vote? >> well, frank, obviously the house is completely paralyzed. there's not really anything they can do right now on the floor. they can't pass a resolution. they can't pass additional funding until they get a speaker in place. so that's definitely put pressure on lawmakers to come to some sort of decision here. yesterday we heard president biden say, hey, when congress gets back, when about the senate comes back next week, he is going about to be sending a request. and lawmakers will have to figure out whether they want to pass funding for israel separate from another funding request from ukraine. how they bundle that together, what it looks like, beforer any of that happens, they have to decide on a speaker. >> emily wilkins live in d.c. emily, thank you very much. for much more on today's speaker vote and the dysfunction, let's bring in our next guest. great to have you here. emily gave us the setup. give us a sense. how do you view this vote for
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speaker on the republican side at least? are you expecting it to take a long time, and who are you expecting to come out as the winner? >> the first thing, frank,s is the procedure al vote, which sounds like they'll increase the threshold to make it 217. the interesting part here is jim jordan is pushing for that raising the threshold to 217. steve scalise wants to keep it at the simple majority. for scalise, he thinks it will be easier to get this earlier on and that would create pressure on the conference to coalesce around him. while jordan recognizes scalise would have a better chance of getting the simple majority, but he thinks the longer they keep it behind closed doors, the pressure would build and he would be able to pick off people
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to get to 217. so like everything in washington, process trumps substance. >> i do want to ask you. you believe if jim jordan is selected, that reduces the odds of us having a government shutdown. explain that. why is that? >> it's really interesting. while kevin mccarthy was still in power, we were in a short-term negative of a shutdown but long-term positive they would get by the april 30th before the sequester would kick in, that they would hit the numbers that they would have for the spending numbers in the debt level. with the change in speakership, mccarthy, though, he struggled with how to manage the hard right part of his conference, he actually in his heart agreed with the democrats and senate republicans on the big ticket items like fy 24 spending.
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but jordan and scalise, but particularly jordan, do not. they probably would be happy with accepting the 1% cut, but where jordan came out with a plan last night, what he told the conference was, let's take a clean cr from november 17th when the current one expires all the way up to april 30th, and instead of using shutdown as the leverage, let's use the leverage of the 1% sequester. mccarthy offered that and they revolted. that's because they trust jordan more than mccarthy will stick with that. >> of course we have the conflict in israel and also funding for the war in ukraine. how does this impact both of those? again, this is the first time in history the speaker of the house has been removed. >> sure. emily, i think, you know, pointed out rightly that this adds pressure once they make the
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formal request, which is expected next week for the israeli aid. the house republicans are warning them not to comply. it seems to us a beacon that politically it makes sense for biden about to combine them inaboutishly or at least to urge his allies in congress to push for that, even if they have to separate it to move the israeli aid quickly. trying that at first would show that, one, the contract between republicans and democrats, and, two, it would send a message overseas. >> stephen myrow, thanks for being here. turning now to a market flash this morning, it's on walgreens, shares moving higher right now. our bertha coombs joining us with much more on this story. good morning. >> good morning. walgreens is announcing that veteran health care executive
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tim wentworth will be its new ceo. walgreens' chair saying the board wanted someone with deep health care experience and went woct had that. he was a ceo of a company acquired by cigna in 2018. he stayed on and served as head of cigna's health services division and then retired in 2021. now, wentworth told me that the chance to lead an iconic brand like walgreens lured him back to the c-suite. he said it's a massive platform. that i touch almost 10 million people a day. it needs someone that can come in tand take the great team tha they have. the announcement comes five days after roz brewer stepped down. le there was home care and
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others that pressured profits at a time when covid sales have lagged. last quarter walgreens earnings missed for the first time in three years. tomorrow wentworth gets a frommer start with the new fiscal year. he starts on october 23rd. frank? >> bertha, thank you very much. our bertha coombs with that market flash. again, walgreens shares moving 1% higher. our weeklong series, diving sectors and rising rates, it rolls on. we're going to talk to the kr ceo of one of the largest . thion plans in the u.swi his strategy, higher for longer. we're back with more "worldwide exchange" coming back in a moment. (vo) explore the world the viking way
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welcome back to "worldwide exchange." one huge part of the investment community is still sitting on the sidelines despite the massive run-up. my next guest says that could all be about to change. stephens myers, the deputy comptroller for the new york city retirement system has the fourth largest public pension plan in the u.s. with approximately $257 billion in assets under management, serving about 800,000 current and retired public sector/sector
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workers. stephen, good morning. great to have you here. >> good morning, franks. let's talk about the run-up. you have the geopolitical conflict. but when you look at the rising rates, is this a concern or is this an opportunity? >> i think it's both. i think it's a concern that when rates move this dramatically, this fast, oftentimes something breaks. we've seen that over the course of my last 40-year career that these abrupt moves can cause problems in the market race. i think bonds, obviously with base rates higher, the significant amount of yield that you can invest just through u.s. treasury investments. on top of that, you have investment grade and high yield credit spreads which have won now a little bit. it's about 125 over base rates and high yield about 420 over. so we actually will i think that those levels are compelling and
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that fixed income is attractive at these levels. >> steven, i notice you said this could be an opportunity to step in. it sounds like you haven't already. you see a lot of pension funds. they haven't gotten into bonds despite yields higher. why higher? >> that's a great question, frank. we're in bonds, so we're a long-term strategic investor. we actually adhere to a strategic allocation that we actually set every three to five years over the market or economic cycle and that process is ongoing at this point. we've had some legislative changes in new york state which also applies to the city where we're going to increase our allocation to assets meaning private equity, infrastructure, core, real estate, hedge funds, and the like. >> i'm looking at some of your allocations. you have 7.5% in two areas that
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are pretty interesting right now. 4.1% on opportunistic fixed income and the other 3.3% in tips. right now are you looking to possibly expand your portfolio and give us a sense. exactly what is opportunistic fixed income? >> it's a fancy way of saying alternative credit or private credit. we actually like that area a lot. typically i those are floating rate obligations. credit spreads are widened out. you can achieve 10%, 12% over time, and we are looking to increase our allocations there. the other asset class you mentioned, tips candidly has underperformed expectations despite the fact that we've had high inflations peaking at 9% to the tune of 2022. what we've experienced is that tips tend tole respond more to inflation expectations longer term, and yet they still have a duration exposure that's made it challenging. so despite the fact we've had
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historically high inflation in recent history, they actually underperformed last year. so we tend to favor core fixed income over tips. we like credit, as i said, both public credit, high yield investment trade as well as high market. >> you're about to make investment decisions. you have a lot of obligations to your members. we mentioned 800,000 of them. are you more bullish on equities or bonds and when we look at bonds, is it short-term or long-term? >> i'd say relative to where they were priced, they're attractive. base rates moving higher pro e provides a nice balance for the portfolio. although what we've seen, we've seen an increased roup between equity and prices. it was a little bit challenging last year in which you had equity sell off and bonds sell
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off significantly. a lot had to do with the selloff of rates. in march of 2020 we had 10-year as low as 51 basis points, so that's -- there's not a lot of room for price appreciation there and not a lot of carry. so with base rates moving higher, carries increase for solvereign debt as well as yiel. it helps make the payments to our beneficiaries, planned beneficiaries. >> steven meier from the new york retirement system. thank you very much for being here. we appreciate your time and insight. coming up on "worldwide exchange," we have the one word that every investor needs to know today, plus rbc's amy wu silverman why the significant seven need to hold the line for the broader markets. as we head to break, cnbc is sharing hispanic hair garage. here's our supply chain
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♪ ♪ every day, businesses everywhere are asking: is it possible? with comcast business... it is. is it possible to help keep our online platform safe from cyberthreats? absolutely. can we provide health care virtually anywhere? we can help with that. is it possible to use predictive monitoring to address operations issues? we can help with that, too. with the advanced connectivity and intelligence of global secure networking from comcast business. it's not just possible. it's happening. yellen adding she's watching for the po e ten chal impact from the conflict in israel but does not see any major economic impact at least at this point.
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blackstone in early talks to acquire stakes in india's arm as they join a venture partner for its digital and tv business. shares of both companies up fractionally right now. the president of country garden resigning as they grapple with debt and liquidity concern. shares of that stock, however, up, just about 4% right now in hong kong. and exxonmobil reportedly set to buy pioneer natural resources for nearly $60 billion or about 250 a share, which would make it the largest deal this year and exxon's biggest purchase since they bought mobil back in '99. shares of pioneer up almost 2.5%. novo nordisk is announcing it's halting its trialle saying it's found enough good data to ensure the treatment will succeed. those shares up more than 3%. all right. here's what to watch today. weekly mortgage app in producer price index on tap this morning
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and another busy day of fed speak with governor christopher waller and bostic and susan collins all delivering speeches. those fed speeches a key focus along with fresh inflation data and strong speculation heading toward another rate hike pause. joining us now, amy wu silverman. amy, good morning. it's always great to have you here. we mentioned there's a lot of dove issuing fed speak. with that in mind, what's your w.e.x. word of the day? >> it's a little bit of the opposite of that. it's tail-risk. the remember i say that, obviously the geopolitical events in the last few days have really changed the tail possibilities that are in the mar market. er when we first saw russia/ukraine happen, we saw it spike to 35.
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we haven't seen anything so far. >> amy being a bit of a contrarian. we've seen stocks rally a little bit. they're the best performer out of all of the indices. what do you make of that? is that the easing of the bond yield pressure. >> look. i think that has a lot to do with it. i do think growth versus value small cap versus large cap, these kinds of trades are ones that invests have been hoping works for a long time. it's something our own strategists have called for from a valuation perspective. i think it's a little too early to tell right now. we've seen them go ahead and lose momentum. we'll have to see if that continues now. i do think when you look at it, it's also just a question at this point of valuation. >> you know this time during the day we like to focus on moves looking ahead. with the idea that bond yields
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are moving, what picks are you looking at that are more investable in light of more bond yields. >> yeah. you know what's interesting is conversations we've had with clients since last week and today. there's just this question of have we really seen a bottom in these rate-sensitive sectors? you saw these massive selloffs last week in your tlt, in your utilities, in a lot of consumer areas that would be hit hard as the rates go higher. frankly the geopolitics plays into this because there's some question whether the rate easing will happen more. i do think people are starting to ask, look, have we seen a bottom and if that's the case are the same rate sensitive sectors i mentioned before, the ones we can finally have an upside, and people are starting to look at that. >> both moving. i've got to ask you about the mega cap names, the magnificent
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seven, nvidia, alphabet, et cetera. right now, what's your view on them? >> look, these are names where when you look at option sentiment, more than less they're sanguine. i think the risk out of china has caused a downside to the hedges. on the overall basis, you're not seeing screaming or warning signs. a lot of what we talk about is just math. that constitution of names, the magnificent seven, are what will hold your line. if they're still okay, it's hard to see how you'll have a brutal selloff in the market. >> amy wu silverman, always great to have you here and have your time and insight. >> thank you. taking a look, in the green. looks like the dow would open up 60, 65 points higher. both the s&p and nasdaq up just under a quarter of a percent in the premarket, but as always, we
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say it's pretty early right now. now we're going to toss things over to "squawk box." thank you for watching. this is a clustomer. it happens when marketers group all their customers together. mailchimp uses real-time behavior data so you can personalize email for every customer. turn clustomers into customers, with intuit mailchimp. you're probably not easily persuaded to switch turn clustomers mobile providers for your business. but what if we told you it's possible that comcast business mobile can save you up to 75% a year on your wireless bill versus the big three carriers? it's true. plus, when you buy your first line of mobile, you get a second line free. there are no term contracts or line activation fees. and you can bring your own device. oh, and all on the most reliable 5g mobile network nationwide.
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good morning. israel says it's bringing troops to the gaza strip. we'll bring you the latest as the conflict enters day five. in corporate news walgreens has picked a replacement for roz brewer. we've got details on that straight ahead. and the white house is cracking down on junk fees. it would apply to hotels, concerts, and even banks. it's wednesday, october 11th, 2023, and "squawk box" begins right now. ♪
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good morning. welcome to "squawk box" right here on cnbc. we are live from the nasdaq market site in times square. i'm becky quick along with andrew ross sorkin. we are here today. joe is out for the next several days. we have been taking a look at what's been happening with equi. you're looking at green arrows once again this morning. dow futures are up by about 60 points. the nasdaq indicated up by about 51. then you've got treasury yields that i believe have been pulling back slightly if you want to take a look at some of this. yeah, the 10 year is actually now back to 4.56%. the 2-year is back to

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