71
71
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon workers on strike. it is prime day but that is not stopping employees at one shipping facility in minnesota, from walking off the job about one hour ago, calling for better working conditions. more job security, higher wages. we are live on the scene with the breaking headlines. >>> a new warning after a massive blackout crippleed heart of new york city. what officials are saying today. how the mayor of the city, who wants to be president by the way is defending himself for being thousands of miles away. >>> the first hurricane of the season to hit the u.s. is making its way north where we are he can track barry's past. residents begin cleanup efforts. ashley: so much to go at. fox business team coverage. jackie deangelis at the new york stock exchange. edward lawrence as always live at white house. susan li at a amazon fulfillment center warehouse in shakopee, minnesota. we begin with you, jackie. reporter: even though these were small positive gains on nasdaq and dow, hitting records psychologically s
amazon workers on strike. it is prime day but that is not stopping employees at one shipping facility in minnesota, from walking off the job about one hour ago, calling for better working conditions. more job security, higher wages. we are live on the scene with the breaking headlines. >>> a new warning after a massive blackout crippleed heart of new york city. what officials are saying today. how the mayor of the city, who wants to be president by the way is defending himself for...
64
64
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
we're all focused on amazon. this one skates right past everyone >> it got dissed by us. >> we didn't do a whole show on it there was no trillion dollar market cap ringing the bell. there was no thing we do for bitcoin in the lower right, that whole thing. >> nathan, though, you know dan, maga, that's the m in maga. >> but i think dan would say faded at this point. >> he's not here, he would hate it. >> anyway, with can we move on unh, brian kelly fade it or trade it i'm going to take a page out of carter's book and not tell you what i think. >> because you don't remember. >> take the camera off me while i look at it i'm looking at this in the beginning of the month the stock was $240, right? we've now moved up almost 30 points well over 10% move here any asset that moves up that much and particularly a stock when the volatility is relatively low to that, to me that's a fade. i'll fade it this is where you sell this one, not necessarily anything against the company, but it's just the price action. >> see this is
we're all focused on amazon. this one skates right past everyone >> it got dissed by us. >> we didn't do a whole show on it there was no trillion dollar market cap ringing the bell. there was no thing we do for bitcoin in the lower right, that whole thing. >> nathan, though, you know dan, maga, that's the m in maga. >> but i think dan would say faded at this point. >> he's not here, he would hate it. >> anyway, with can we move on unh, brian kelly fade it or...
76
76
Jul 11, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon. there is always an amazon story and there's one today. they are going to spend $700 million to retrain about a third of their u.s. work force. now, the stock's gone to $2,022. tell me about this. susan: basically, just ahead of prime day as well, where we are expecting a worker strike at a minnesota facility for them. amazon says they will retrain about a third of their work force. that's about 100,000 workers by the year 2025. stuart: $700 million. susan: it breaks down to roughly $7,000 per worker. they are saying look, we are trying to help those that -- whose jobs might be lost because of automation when it comes to robots and facilities and deliveries, that last mile delivery. we are going to try to help those 300,000 they already employ, 100,000 will get extra training. stuart: the story is surely prime days next week, two days, and the stock is back over $2,000 a share. what more is there to this story? >> spending $700 million on retraining and they didn't have to ask for a government subsidy to do it. go figure. stuart: you would
amazon. there is always an amazon story and there's one today. they are going to spend $700 million to retrain about a third of their u.s. work force. now, the stock's gone to $2,022. tell me about this. susan: basically, just ahead of prime day as well, where we are expecting a worker strike at a minnesota facility for them. amazon says they will retrain about a third of their work force. that's about 100,000 workers by the year 2025. stuart: $700 million. susan: it breaks down to roughly...
76
76
Jul 23, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 76
favorite 0
quote 0
to tim's point, the stocks had tremendous runs, at least amazon and facebook you look at amazon, into earnings now, you have to wonder, do you want to try to play it from the long side into earnings with this headline risk out there. it is interesting, quickly gene said facebook's five points out of ten which i sort of get, but you talk about stifling competition. i mean that's been -- >> amazon, that's their game. >> -- for a long, long time and it is one of the lead lines i'm reading in the doj headline. >> plus there's the political, bezos. >> no question. >> you can't think of this administration who went after at&t time warner when it was a loser there's another element here. >> yes >>> coming up, chipotle, snap, visa all on the move in after hours. their conference calls getting started. we will break down the headlines straight ahead texas instrument, the stock hitting a new high after hitting a blowout quarter. back now with two more parts of the market that are ready for take breakout. we're live from times square in new york city, much more "fast money" right after this. xfi
to tim's point, the stocks had tremendous runs, at least amazon and facebook you look at amazon, into earnings now, you have to wonder, do you want to try to play it from the long side into earnings with this headline risk out there. it is interesting, quickly gene said facebook's five points out of ten which i sort of get, but you talk about stifling competition. i mean that's been -- >> amazon, that's their game. >> -- for a long, long time and it is one of the lead lines i'm...
167
167
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 167
favorite 0
quote 0
can amazon still deliver? >> it is a good question and ask gibbon founder of nonpolitical news diagnostic and chief research officer, at ace research as well as a retail analyst thanks for joining us ladies. >> thanks for having us. i want to start with first of all did you buy anything today and do you think this a.m. disoon prime day is really going to -- stack up how it is supposed to and how it has in years past? >> you know as a new mom or gave birth about a year ago, you're certainly on amazon prime all of the time. so i'm constantly buying stuff on amazon prime for the kids, however, i think because people are -- they really push this marketing message out there so what they're trying to do especially with new prime members are people that aren't prime members yet. they want to make sure that that membership increases. so you know they have this amazon prime concert, they're really trying to go and kind of take market share away from the target customer through wal-mart mirrors. so there's that big push
can amazon still deliver? >> it is a good question and ask gibbon founder of nonpolitical news diagnostic and chief research officer, at ace research as well as a retail analyst thanks for joining us ladies. >> thanks for having us. i want to start with first of all did you buy anything today and do you think this a.m. disoon prime day is really going to -- stack up how it is supposed to and how it has in years past? >> you know as a new mom or gave birth about a year ago,...
93
93
Jul 6, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 93
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon canceled plans for its new york headquarters, but bezos is still buying an apartment there. >>> the entrepreneur who's making a killing, killing flies. (danny) let me get this straight. after a long day of hard work... ...you have to do more work? (vo) automatically sort your expenses and save over 40 hours a month. (danny) every day you're nearly fried to a crisp, professionally! (vo) you earned it, we're here to make sure you get it. quickbooks. backing you. na blend of quality probiotics. and fermented whole food botanicals, expertly curated to naturally support your gut health every day. go with align whole food blend. from the pros in digestive health. >>> amazon ceo jeff bezos just went shopping, and when the richest man in the world buys something, he buys big we got a rare inside tour of the billionaire's luxury $80 million apartment in new york city it's this week's powerhouse. >> when you step off the elevator, what is your first experience size does matter >> reporter: you're getting an exclusive look inside amazon ceo's jeff bezos' brand-new penthouse. before the ri
amazon canceled plans for its new york headquarters, but bezos is still buying an apartment there. >>> the entrepreneur who's making a killing, killing flies. (danny) let me get this straight. after a long day of hard work... ...you have to do more work? (vo) automatically sort your expenses and save over 40 hours a month. (danny) every day you're nearly fried to a crisp, professionally! (vo) you earned it, we're here to make sure you get it. quickbooks. backing you. na blend of...
43
43
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 43
favorite 0
quote 0
a house cleaning by amazon home services, again, i keep hearing amazon. what's the difference between something that realogy is doing there versus working with me, any other brokerage because at the end of the day, we can also give credit at closing and what i know buyers want is money in their pocket, not just an amazon gift card or smart home or anything else they could just buy on their own, at their own discretion. charles: that's why i did ask ryan if there were other aspects to this, perhaps some technology help, something else. listen, their stock has gone from $52 to $5 in the last six years. so we can see that there's something in that industry, something happening that's not right. it goes beyond the sagging housing market that we have seen although, you know, when it comes to housing, we are getting reports that more and more wealthy new yorkers continue this mass exodus, they are leaving and going down to your neck of the woods. >> yeah. let's also start by saying that foreign spending is down by 36% from last year. so florida's number one wit
a house cleaning by amazon home services, again, i keep hearing amazon. what's the difference between something that realogy is doing there versus working with me, any other brokerage because at the end of the day, we can also give credit at closing and what i know buyers want is money in their pocket, not just an amazon gift card or smart home or anything else they could just buy on their own, at their own discretion. charles: that's why i did ask ryan if there were other aspects to this,...
101
101
Jul 11, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 101
favorite 0
quote 0
exhibit a, amazon. it crossed the trillion dollar threshold this morning amazon didn't become this unstoppable behemoth because jeff bezos is brilliant, which he is. it got here by leveraging scale. amazon is dominant because it's so big they use that scale to get better price from the suppliers to pass on to you. we have antitrust law because when you get big enough, well, no one can compete against you bezos saw how he could use amazon's scale to dominate retail he didn't stop there he figured he could do the same thing by creating cloud computing. aws one of the largest businesses growing at a 40% clip we had the head on the show recently, he told us how the position scaled which is the dominant player in the cloud which is true. it allows them to innovate and keep prices down and compete with the competition i urge you to look at that interview. i thought it was mind blowing. i thought to myself, darn it, that guy is real smart amazon also knows the secret to maintaining scale is keeping work force
exhibit a, amazon. it crossed the trillion dollar threshold this morning amazon didn't become this unstoppable behemoth because jeff bezos is brilliant, which he is. it got here by leveraging scale. amazon is dominant because it's so big they use that scale to get better price from the suppliers to pass on to you. we have antitrust law because when you get big enough, well, no one can compete against you bezos saw how he could use amazon's scale to dominate retail he didn't stop there he...
57
57
Jul 18, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 57
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon is upset because they want a piece of the contract >> what is their beef with amazon here? they're too big, they can't do it >> they feel they had an unfair advantage. >> that's the origin of the issue here let's turn to the earnings and we'll come out later today what are you looking for >> well, it's the cloud. >> azure, right? >> they are moving the customers hardware into the cloud. we're looking for that to continue the cloud continues to grow. the legacy business is seeing a one-time upgrade because of end of support, windows 7 one of them a quick migration as a result of that we're looking for a very good quarter with microsoft >> that will pull forward? >> only 4% or 5% of sales. they're going with a 10% tax instead of 8%. that will help. >> when you look at microsoft, what sort of growth -- if we're assuming cloud is going to grow and be a bigger part of their business, what kind of growth overall in revenues are you projecting and what kind of margins will we be seeing? >> so cloud has been historically a lower margin business they cannot hire the people to keep u
amazon is upset because they want a piece of the contract >> what is their beef with amazon here? they're too big, they can't do it >> they feel they had an unfair advantage. >> that's the origin of the issue here let's turn to the earnings and we'll come out later today what are you looking for >> well, it's the cloud. >> azure, right? >> they are moving the customers hardware into the cloud. we're looking for that to continue the cloud continues to grow....
120
120
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 120
favorite 0
quote 0
so amazon was important. facebook to me, i was looking at intel. i'm always focused on the semis in general they're very much global -- truly global players they are often forward indicators of global growth. they sell to all countries so for me seeing the improvement outlook from some of the semis it was so negative for most of this year. finally seeing some positive news come out of the semiindustrsemiendu industry they have become a proxy for u.s./china trade talks and trade relations. the semiconductor etf is already back to all-time highs off those. >> yes >> you spoke about looking forward. are there earnings reports coming up in the next week or two that you think you will be hyper focused on because it could provide more of that thesis on global growth or the health of the global economy >> finishing up the big industrials coming through next week and i would say facebook being another one that will be a big one. and though google had a good report, i'm still concerned about the regulatory overhang that they have any of those companies, how
so amazon was important. facebook to me, i was looking at intel. i'm always focused on the semis in general they're very much global -- truly global players they are often forward indicators of global growth. they sell to all countries so for me seeing the improvement outlook from some of the semis it was so negative for most of this year. finally seeing some positive news come out of the semiindustrsemiendu industry they have become a proxy for u.s./china trade talks and trade relations. the...
173
173
Jul 19, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 173
favorite 0
quote 0
what do you expect out of facebook, amazon and alphabet? >> contessa, from a high level, this is a transition quarter, which is different than the wake-up quarter that netflix had. a transition quarter means there will be headwinds. but i think that the themes are on the broader f.a.n.g. will be intact at most risk next week is going to be google in part because last quarter they had a dip in their revenue. they had four years of consistent 20% revenue growth. that dipped last quarter that's not the reason why there's a head winwind they have to be more skillful at navigating questions on what potential regulation could come. google has been largely spared of these regulations and tweaks from regulatory bodies but i think ultimately that's something that investors will weigh more heavily on. and facebook is still in that camp they have regulatory questions i would put those in the headwinds camp apple is a unique case they're the only one of the f.a.n.g. companies that have exposure to china. that's about 10% of their business and that chin
what do you expect out of facebook, amazon and alphabet? >> contessa, from a high level, this is a transition quarter, which is different than the wake-up quarter that netflix had. a transition quarter means there will be headwinds. but i think that the themes are on the broader f.a.n.g. will be intact at most risk next week is going to be google in part because last quarter they had a dip in their revenue. they had four years of consistent 20% revenue growth. that dipped last quarter...
80
80
Jul 17, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
yes, amazon is formidable. you know, nobody disputes that but i think what you are seeing is bright spots in other retailers which have high table stakes and are making inroads. >> an example would be target. somebody else? >> you know we are speaking ever the new ones to the market if you think about companies like revolve, you are seeing where high customer economics, high lifetime value where repeat purchases and gross margin give you a long-term value that customer exceeds the cost of customer acquisition and they have a long runway. >> influencers could replace marketing budgets? >> it is working your go-to-market strategy could be very different and very digital. >> you used to run hudson's bay company, of course that's a retailer. it is a department store we got an interesting call today out of goldman sachs and they are downgrading ralph lauren they are worried about the department store space and sort of that wholesale model with some of these brands do you think that's warranted? >> i think that the t
yes, amazon is formidable. you know, nobody disputes that but i think what you are seeing is bright spots in other retailers which have high table stakes and are making inroads. >> an example would be target. somebody else? >> you know we are speaking ever the new ones to the market if you think about companies like revolve, you are seeing where high customer economics, high lifetime value where repeat purchases and gross margin give you a long-term value that customer exceeds the...
159
159
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 159
favorite 0
quote 0
is it going to be a net win for amazon >> you know, we think it will be obviously amazon is showcasing not only great deals, they're showcasing their music they've been spending all week showcasing whole foods they've built a big infrastructure around this prime day, and we think it will be very successful for them. >> is there any indication that this drives new consumer spending, ed, or simply, well, i need a pair of jeans in a month so i might as well get it now because it's on sale and it's kind of a zero sum game. >> we think it does drive new business it creates that spontaneity, that need to buy now and people obviously tend to buy stuff they don't need. ultimately, you know, this is a very quiet time and we think this drives incremental sales across all of retail. >> you've got a $2,100 target on amazon obviously we're optimistic does this matter for amazon? do these 48 hours or so matter to the stock, or is it just part of a longer term, more macro trend? >> i think it's more of a big macro trend, but i think the big fly away with amazon is emphasizing to people it's important
is it going to be a net win for amazon >> you know, we think it will be obviously amazon is showcasing not only great deals, they're showcasing their music they've been spending all week showcasing whole foods they've built a big infrastructure around this prime day, and we think it will be very successful for them. >> is there any indication that this drives new consumer spending, ed, or simply, well, i need a pair of jeans in a month so i might as well get it now because it's on...
102
102
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon spent more on shipping to ramp up the amazon prime service. the first time in two years that the company has missed earnings expectations still, stock is only off by about 1.5% 19.44 is the last tick >>> google parent alphabet beating estimates on the top and bottom lines for the latest earnings report. that's giving the stock a big boost. it had continuing dominance of internet search and that stock is up by 8.2%. you heard what mark mahaney said here washington doesn't matter what comes into this. it's additional taxes they have to pay frankly, that's what the stock is reflecting. many of these stocks are reflecting that. they don't think -- >> the fine is now a tax >> where does it go though >> the money the tax? >> well, actually, i don't really know where taxes go either but the fines -- all these fines, where do they go? does it ever do any good >> they do a couple things they oftentimes pay for some of the enforcement action -- >> here's $5 billionto do an investigation -- >> if you have a department of justice, you have to pay these la
amazon spent more on shipping to ramp up the amazon prime service. the first time in two years that the company has missed earnings expectations still, stock is only off by about 1.5% 19.44 is the last tick >>> google parent alphabet beating estimates on the top and bottom lines for the latest earnings report. that's giving the stock a big boost. it had continuing dominance of internet search and that stock is up by 8.2%. you heard what mark mahaney said here washington doesn't matter...
98
98
Jul 17, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
today. >> shares of amazon in the premarket trading slightly to the upside amazon of course wrapped up the prime day and some shoppers complaining because longer than expected delivery times because so many orders flooded the site. a data company said the internet searches for canceling amazon prime or 18 times higher on monday. that suggests that some customers just want to snatch up some discounted items without making that long term long-term commitment to amazon and the annual fee. he apparently is celebrated at the close of prime day by standing on top of the amazon spears at the company's seattle headquarters. >> the stock is up $2,000. if you only knew that when. you could've bought some. when it was under hundred and i did it. let's look at the dow and s&p and the nasdaq. weave green arrows. nasdaq up 18 and half. they trade jabs over healthcare. are they trying to woo one of the biggest fans. as i going to work. in the economy may be booming. details coming up when "fbn:am" returns. [music] this is the couple who wanted to get away who used expedia to book the vacation rental
today. >> shares of amazon in the premarket trading slightly to the upside amazon of course wrapped up the prime day and some shoppers complaining because longer than expected delivery times because so many orders flooded the site. a data company said the internet searches for canceling amazon prime or 18 times higher on monday. that suggests that some customers just want to snatch up some discounted items without making that long term long-term commitment to amazon and the annual fee. he...
154
154
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 154
favorite 0
quote 0
i think it's a great breakthrough for amazon and it can't be bad for her either. >> speaking of amazon, you have prime day around the corner. it's almost been an unofficial kickoff for back to school spending it seems to be a key category and a moment that begins the spending for back to school. deloitte is also out with the back-to-school survey. overall spending relatively flat going back to school spending will be 29% compared to last year >> well, it's also the launch of the new beauty product that's coming out prime day. that will be one of the big launches do i expect them to do well? yes. amazon is taking over, along with walmart and target, back to school electronics are an online business electronics will be the big growth area. i think it will be big for amazon i think that's going to be pretty good. people have worried about the back half versus last year i'm not sure, i think the backpack is pretty close to normal the consumer is really strong. we're seeing great employment, rising wages, record employment. i just don't see how the back half is not going to be as strong eve
i think it's a great breakthrough for amazon and it can't be bad for her either. >> speaking of amazon, you have prime day around the corner. it's almost been an unofficial kickoff for back to school spending it seems to be a key category and a moment that begins the spending for back to school. deloitte is also out with the back-to-school survey. overall spending relatively flat going back to school spending will be 29% compared to last year >> well, it's also the launch of the new...
92
92
Jul 2, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
walmart, amazon, and target are all racing to deliver faster amazon spending $800 million in just one quarter to get closer to one-day shipping for prime members. walmart is expanding one-day free shipping without a membership to more cities as the time goes on, and target is offering same day shipping for $10. third, store closures. around 7,000 store closures have been announced this year, outpacing all of 2018. core sight research projects total closures could hit 12,000 by the end of the year, opening up opportunity for those left. >> that's courtney reagan. let's take a closer look at the second half of the year for retail and talk about the nike story everybody is talking about. joining us now are liz dunn, and simien siegel. so liz, just starting with you, i mean, we have seen a ton of closures again this year, even though the economy is still growing and some retailers are doing great. where would you be putting your money? >> there's a bifurcation happening between the haves and have nots. shopping is moving away from malls and towards the largest retailers. if you look at th
walmart, amazon, and target are all racing to deliver faster amazon spending $800 million in just one quarter to get closer to one-day shipping for prime members. walmart is expanding one-day free shipping without a membership to more cities as the time goes on, and target is offering same day shipping for $10. third, store closures. around 7,000 store closures have been announced this year, outpacing all of 2018. core sight research projects total closures could hit 12,000 by the end of the...
94
94
Jul 29, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
brodin likes amazon and alphabet for now. much more "mad money" ahead. i'm sitting down with the ceo to find it and i'm on the grind to help your portfolio and all your calls of rapid fire in tonight's edition of the lightning round so stay with cramer. do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. - when i see obstacles, i create opportunities. (soft music) - when i see adversity, i find a way. - when i hear never, i say now. - [announcer] southern new hampshire university is education made to fit your goals with over 200 degree programs, flexible class schedules, and some of the lowest online tuition rates in the nation. (cheering) - so when i face barriers, i can break through. - [announcer] breakthrough at snhu.edu. >>> you know me, i'm always telling you to have gold exposure if insurance against economic turmoil or inflation. in 2019 gold caught fire with the preci
brodin likes amazon and alphabet for now. much more "mad money" ahead. i'm sitting down with the ceo to find it and i'm on the grind to help your portfolio and all your calls of rapid fire in tonight's edition of the lightning round so stay with cramer. do you have concerns about mild memory loss related to aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. -...
77
77
Jul 17, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
. >>> another amazon story. the europeans, they have just opened an antitrust investigation into the company. this going to hurt them? susan: it's basically they are contending amazon has a dual role as a marketplace provider and also a seller as well. do they use data to basically enhance their own product? how do they set up the default option? why were they using this data? it's a money grab in the eu. they fined google $9 billion over the years. back taxes have to be paid by apple, amazon also. don't forget, taxes on revenue in retro active years by facebook as well. stuart: i'm just tired of this story, quite frankly. nothing ever happens. ashley: once a week. stuart: facebook is under pressure, google is under pressure, amazon's under pressure. the stocks hold up at very high levels. what do you say? >> in the case of europe, the european governments are always looking for revenue. they need tax revenue to fund these social programs and if you are a company with a lot of money, a lot of cash, perhaps they
. >>> another amazon story. the europeans, they have just opened an antitrust investigation into the company. this going to hurt them? susan: it's basically they are contending amazon has a dual role as a marketplace provider and also a seller as well. do they use data to basically enhance their own product? how do they set up the default option? why were they using this data? it's a money grab in the eu. they fined google $9 billion over the years. back taxes have to be paid by apple,...
94
94
Jul 25, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
has amazon destroyed retail? the head of the online second quarter results, we will debate that very question stay tuned you are watching "squawk box" right here on -- cnbc these folks don't have time to go to the post office they use stamps.com all the services of the post office only cheaper get a 4-week trial plus postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride ♪ which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. ♪ flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. >>> if you look at amazon, although there are benefits to it they've destroyed the retail industry across the united states there is no question they've limited competition. their areas where they've really hurt small businesses. >> that was secretary steven mnuchin right here on "squawk box" yesterday blaming amazon for the decline of american reta
has amazon destroyed retail? the head of the online second quarter results, we will debate that very question stay tuned you are watching "squawk box" right here on -- cnbc these folks don't have time to go to the post office they use stamps.com all the services of the post office only cheaper get a 4-week trial plus postage and a digital scale go to stamps.com/tv and never go to the post office again. who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride ♪ which took...
111
111
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon did miss on earnings, revenue was ahead. first time in five quarters that amazon did not post a record profit, taking a hit from shipping costs the thesis on amazon's print is that they really care about one thing and that is increasing gmv and getting it to people quickly. >> so the cost rose 36% on shipping that was a big jump from the 20% in recent quarters moved to one day shipping. they said they saw better customer response. revenue growth of 20% was better than expected. so investors are going to have to decide whether that top line growth was good enough 37% aws, that's the cloud revenue growth was, i guess, a little light, a little lighter than it has been first time under 40% but it still is the dominant player here in cloud. >> by far, doing $8 billion a quarter now what we know from alphabet is $8 billion a year run rate for their web services or cloud-based company that's accelerating, though. listen, the standout thisalphab the standout in the early going here, re-establishing the fact they can do above 20% whe
amazon did miss on earnings, revenue was ahead. first time in five quarters that amazon did not post a record profit, taking a hit from shipping costs the thesis on amazon's print is that they really care about one thing and that is increasing gmv and getting it to people quickly. >> so the cost rose 36% on shipping that was a big jump from the 20% in recent quarters moved to one day shipping. they said they saw better customer response. revenue growth of 20% was better than expected. so...
218
218
Jul 19, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 218
favorite 0
quote 1
amazon restaurants. immediately grub hub stock caught fire and multiple analyst told us this is a major positive they are looking for after all, if you can out last amazon, got to be in great shape. stands to reason not so fast. i think the buyers are getting ahead of themselves. they were never a major player to begin with. one less competitor, of course they still got plenty of other rivals and frankly, you can read amazon's decision not so much as they gave up but how about this? as an indictment of the whole industry you have to remember grub hub's margins are under serious pressure for sometime and spending a fortune to fend off door dash, post mates and everybody else that piled in the business that's not a good sign, people in april we stopped by grub hub's head quarters to give the ceo to tell his us side of the story and willing to talk. i asked him if all the ad spending was worth it. here is what he said. >> so you think about it this way. you know your ltv, lifetime value of your customer onc
amazon restaurants. immediately grub hub stock caught fire and multiple analyst told us this is a major positive they are looking for after all, if you can out last amazon, got to be in great shape. stands to reason not so fast. i think the buyers are getting ahead of themselves. they were never a major player to begin with. one less competitor, of course they still got plenty of other rivals and frankly, you can read amazon's decision not so much as they gave up but how about this? as an...
84
84
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon is the enemy? before microsoft, before amazon, seattle in the '80s was a dying timber town. there was no wealth there at all. microsoft came, amazon came, they created the wealth. they created literally millions and millions of millionaires. now as you're seeing just in fact how mobile money is and the more difficulties administrators and bureaucrats make it to create jobs because seattle's minimum wage is just one example, more money not just leaves seattle but leaves america writ large. >> the positive is that the reporter said it only at the end, they are going to bellevue and will create a 40-story plus building over there. they are still focusing on washington area. to add to all of this, apple, just within the past two weeks, announce they hare doing this five-year expansion plan in the united states and specifically within seattle, i know it's not amazon, but apple announced they would be adding 2,000 jobs. hopefully that could offset some of the loss from amazon overall. i still think it's good. you have amazon investing in bellevue, they will build a light rail syst
amazon is the enemy? before microsoft, before amazon, seattle in the '80s was a dying timber town. there was no wealth there at all. microsoft came, amazon came, they created the wealth. they created literally millions and millions of millionaires. now as you're seeing just in fact how mobile money is and the more difficulties administrators and bureaucrats make it to create jobs because seattle's minimum wage is just one example, more money not just leaves seattle but leaves america writ...
65
65
Jul 18, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 65
favorite 0
quote 0
kohl's is now accepting amazon packages, returns. i was just talking about retail headline, i was like wow. different story. foot traffic. we'll see. this could be good because of foot traffic. again, you don't know. stuart: okay. right now, i have to say good-bye to michelle and to joel. thanks for being with us. we appreciate it. nice plug for microsoft. you're all right. what are you doing tomorrow? >>> check that big board, please. we have the dow now down 60 points, 27,150. >>> protests against the governor of puerto rico turning violent. police launched tear gas into the crowds. some cruise lines are avoiding the island all together because of the unrest. you can see it on your screens. >>> jon stewart going after rand paul in an interview on fox news, this after the kentucky senator delayed passage of the 9/11 victims compensation fund. bret baier joins us in our 11:00 hour this morning. >>> the house votes today on a bill that would raise the federal minimum wage to 15 bucks an hour. okay. the cbo says that would cost 3.7 mil
kohl's is now accepting amazon packages, returns. i was just talking about retail headline, i was like wow. different story. foot traffic. we'll see. this could be good because of foot traffic. again, you don't know. stuart: okay. right now, i have to say good-bye to michelle and to joel. thanks for being with us. we appreciate it. nice plug for microsoft. you're all right. what are you doing tomorrow? >>> check that big board, please. we have the dow now down 60 points, 27,150....
83
83
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon, fresh all-time highs, underperforming last six months. take it now. >> grasso. >> you know what has no impact with trade or anything going on? match.com. >> match >> match group. >> what match? >> match group. >> whoa. >> up 71% year-to-date if you want to hold back, wait until it reaches 75. >> are you on that >> steve knows a lot about that. >> final drad? >> soar industries. >> interesting. >> for a >>> my mission is simple, to make you money i'm here to level the playing field for all investors. there is always a bull market somewhere and i promise to help you find it. "mad money" starts now. >> hey, i'm cramer welcome to "mad money. welcome to cramerica other people want to make friends, i'm trying to make you money. my job is to entertain, educate, teach you, explain it all. call me or tweet me @jimcramer that's it. okay i have had enough, right i keep hearing at today's rally dow gaining 77
amazon, fresh all-time highs, underperforming last six months. take it now. >> grasso. >> you know what has no impact with trade or anything going on? match.com. >> match >> match group. >> what match? >> match group. >> whoa. >> up 71% year-to-date if you want to hold back, wait until it reaches 75. >> are you on that >> steve knows a lot about that. >> final drad? >> soar industries. >> interesting. >> for a...
139
139
Jul 16, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 139
favorite 0
quote 0
can we say that prime day is doing what amazon wants it to do >> yeah. i think in certain ways amazon is winning i think one area where it really does have leverage and what shineses through on prime day is its massive membership base. that's this loyalty aspect of the prime membership, these people that pay $119 a year to get things like free shipping and whatnot. walmart can't compete with that. there's pros and cons to being paying prime member. we see those shoppers on average, a prime customer, they spend more, so that's very valuable to amazon i think those are the people that are really turning up over this 48-hour event, those paying prime customers. >> those are paying prime customers. what about people new to prime will this get more people to join up? >> amazon for the five years they have done -- this is the fifth year of them doing the prime event. each year they said we added more and more paying prime members. they use today as a tool to add more and last year was the first time the company disclosed how many of those members they have, wh
can we say that prime day is doing what amazon wants it to do >> yeah. i think in certain ways amazon is winning i think one area where it really does have leverage and what shineses through on prime day is its massive membership base. that's this loyalty aspect of the prime membership, these people that pay $119 a year to get things like free shipping and whatnot. walmart can't compete with that. there's pros and cons to being paying prime member. we see those shoppers on average, a...
0
0.0
Jul 9, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
the details and what it means for its chances against amazon when we continue after this. hi walter. join us for a walk? i'd love to, but my legs and feet are so tired and achy. walter, you need revitive ! it's the circulation booster! it really got me moving. i use my revitive every day! to relieve my aching legs and feet. it's so easy.... drug free.... and its electrical muscle stimulation really improves the circulation in my legs. i'm back walking this guy everywhere. check it out online. revitive ... fda cleared... clinically tested. only revitive relieves aches and pains, increases oxygen rich blood, and strengthens leg muscles. we've gotta do this. don't suffer any longer! order revitive medic with a 60 day money back guarantee. with free shipping and free returns. someone got revitive. order now and we'll send you our most popular treatment boosting accessories. a $50 value absolutely free! go to revitive.com or call... get moving today! >>> welcome back now, based on stock price, walmart's 2016 purchase of jet.com seems to be paying af. however, in an in depth rep
the details and what it means for its chances against amazon when we continue after this. hi walter. join us for a walk? i'd love to, but my legs and feet are so tired and achy. walter, you need revitive ! it's the circulation booster! it really got me moving. i use my revitive every day! to relieve my aching legs and feet. it's so easy.... drug free.... and its electrical muscle stimulation really improves the circulation in my legs. i'm back walking this guy everywhere. check it out online....
58
58
Jul 5, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 58
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon has that network. they have this fleet of cars and motorcycles and bikes delivering packages across cities why couldn't they do that with food delivery ate tougher business than you would have thought >> here to discuss a little further gerald storch former ceo of toys "r" us and hudson bay. thanks for joining us. great to see you in term of your bread and butter in the retail industry, to what extent was amazon's growth in that area supported by their later innovations whether it be video online or aws? >> well, as a retailer, we had to make money. they were losing a lot of money. but, i had done deals with jeff bezos. i've been his partner. been his competitor. he's very fierce i would never under estimate amazon they have changed the world of arresting. even when they were smaller, everyone chased after them the net effect has been is that retailing is not the business it was back then. it requires far more capital investment to compete because you have to have both great stores better than ever whi
amazon has that network. they have this fleet of cars and motorcycles and bikes delivering packages across cities why couldn't they do that with food delivery ate tougher business than you would have thought >> here to discuss a little further gerald storch former ceo of toys "r" us and hudson bay. thanks for joining us. great to see you in term of your bread and butter in the retail industry, to what extent was amazon's growth in that area supported by their later innovations...
68
68
Jul 17, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 68
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon's prime event we don't know how the full thing wrapped up it was the longest by 12 hours amazon has told us so far that worldwide sellers, predominantly small and medium sized businesses saw the biggest 24 hours sale day in amazon's history. amazon's first 24 hours of prime day sales were 79% higher than last year according to e-receipts adobe analytics says they saw a 64% increase in sales versus an average monday in july compared to last year's 54% growth on prime day. even the niche retailers saw a 30% increase on online sales based on an analysis of pain views, the echo show 5, fire tv stick with alexa remote and kindle paper weight were the top sellers. it makes sense because those were drastically discounted on amazon's sales day events. walmart during prime day, the page views there indicat instapot, the apple watch 3, the vizio 54 inch 4k tv were the big sellers. when you have a big peak and a swell of packages coming through the system at the same time, deliveries could be slower >> you need to tell sorkin about the exchange we did. >> the shoe store. >> you know about
amazon's prime event we don't know how the full thing wrapped up it was the longest by 12 hours amazon has told us so far that worldwide sellers, predominantly small and medium sized businesses saw the biggest 24 hours sale day in amazon's history. amazon's first 24 hours of prime day sales were 79% higher than last year according to e-receipts adobe analytics says they saw a 64% increase in sales versus an average monday in july compared to last year's 54% growth on prime day. even the niche...
39
39
Jul 25, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 39
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon changed everything. they changed it for the better and the reason, they stayed on top, because they have been able to continue to innovate. ironically, that's a risk for the stock moving forward because in order to maintain that valuation, they have to keep innovating. that's one of the reasons you are seeing, for example, amazon now enter the real estate business. this is the number one risk for these companies moving forward. lack of innovation and even more acutely, government. i got microsoft from 1999 to 2016 under the antitrust activations from the federal government, the stock was stagnant. only a government can hurt a company like that. >> you love government, don't you? >> investors certainly don't. >> to add on to your point, if you are looking at the numbers, when you talk about amazon's web services, you saw deceleration, she made the comparison to microsoft and how much growth they had but microsoft also had some deceleration, too. overall, that is what drives a lot of the profits. there was
amazon changed everything. they changed it for the better and the reason, they stayed on top, because they have been able to continue to innovate. ironically, that's a risk for the stock moving forward because in order to maintain that valuation, they have to keep innovating. that's one of the reasons you are seeing, for example, amazon now enter the real estate business. this is the number one risk for these companies moving forward. lack of innovation and even more acutely, government. i got...
77
77
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 77
favorite 0
quote 0
i want to ask about alphabet and amazon. first, jack brewer, jump in here. >> twitter had big plans for streaming, likely sports and gaming. fantasy sports continues to rise, legal gambling continues to rise, being able to chat amongst the platforms could be a revenue source for twitter. what's your opinion on that? >> in terms of their increasing their overall basically usage? they have soccer, they have football. they're doing all kinds of things to basically increase the number of usage in terms of time. as we mentioned before, the average user is only a couple of seconds and they're trying to get to the point where people will kind of listen for an entire game. maria: everybody wants live. >> you can work in the advertising from there. >> and gambling. maria: people want live and l gambling. >> in my opinion, that's a big area of growth for twitter to capitalize on. there's a lot of money going into gaming platforms. no social media platform has gotten their hands around the gaming side and that's what's going to control
i want to ask about alphabet and amazon. first, jack brewer, jump in here. >> twitter had big plans for streaming, likely sports and gaming. fantasy sports continues to rise, legal gambling continues to rise, being able to chat amongst the platforms could be a revenue source for twitter. what's your opinion on that? >> in terms of their increasing their overall basically usage? they have soccer, they have football. they're doing all kinds of things to basically increase the number...
115
115
Jul 12, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 115
favorite 0
quote 0
quickly, guy, your take a amazon >> the move to the downside i think was important. here we are right back to levels we saw again, joe will correctly say he's been doing the show for how many years, 47 years, and you've done really well we try to get to the ins and outs of trading. i think you stay into earnings and sell it again. i think you have another opportunity for another move toward the all-time high and you get out ahead of earnings on the 25th. >> my point before was do you think all of your participants on fast money have been sufficiently bullish and i do not think they've been sufficiently -- my only point was when i started the business is dow as 800 and it's now 27,000 so the way that these bears always stay in vogue when the market has gone from 800 to 27,000 -- i'm not saying they are, i'm saying in general it's much more el leks wael attractive to stay bearish and all you had to do was stay and you would be at 27,000 so your default position should be long stocks coming up, the dow crossing 27,000 >> be long, have a nice day. >> i'm not saying be lo
quickly, guy, your take a amazon >> the move to the downside i think was important. here we are right back to levels we saw again, joe will correctly say he's been doing the show for how many years, 47 years, and you've done really well we try to get to the ins and outs of trading. i think you stay into earnings and sell it again. i think you have another opportunity for another move toward the all-time high and you get out ahead of earnings on the 25th. >> my point before was do...
74
74
Jul 22, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 74
favorite 0
quote 1
i mean, we think you'll see a strong earnings faang names specifically amazon. that's front and center. i think you'll also see strength in terms of facebook you know, going forward. and i think that really is the key alphabet will be the trifecta we think a strong earnings from faang this week. >> which of these would be the most important one to watch this week >> i think no doubt it will be amazon look at microsoft last week on the cloud side, a lot of strength you're seeing, the question for amazon you're seeing strength on prime, can you also see it on cloud that's really the key to see the stock going up another 15, 20% i think you will see on amazon then a big focus if you look, you have regulatory head winds across the board can these companies fundamentally improve themselves that's why it's a key week for tech in our opinion to see new highs. >> big tech regulation is obviously front and center for many of these companies. which of those faang companies in your mind is the most exposed or has the most potential issue with regulation coming from the gov
i mean, we think you'll see a strong earnings faang names specifically amazon. that's front and center. i think you'll also see strength in terms of facebook you know, going forward. and i think that really is the key alphabet will be the trifecta we think a strong earnings from faang this week. >> which of these would be the most important one to watch this week >> i think no doubt it will be amazon look at microsoft last week on the cloud side, a lot of strength you're seeing, the...
102
102
Jul 12, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon there is a $4 trillion market for retail goods and amazon only has a small fraction netflix recognizeswhat you wan when you want it game changer. why do i still like this alpha bit? isn't that played out? no, no, no it dominates just the moment you want to buy something so the ad vertizers love it. there is a balance sheet of beauty and people working to avenge something new to plant or compliment search and maybe the autonomous driving vehicles, these are just examples. they are about growth. i know that it seems rather commercial to do what i want done here, but i also think that given how poor income growth has been for so many people in this country, it is important to augment the saving side. there is no time like the prese present. one thought i like, you know i believe gold and silver are terrific insurance components to any portfolio. we'll discuss this later in this show but a highly unusual yet totally blessed by me idea is to buy gold or silver coins for people or pieces of gold or silver, the actual i bought slivers of silver for my kids from a dealer and forget about them pret
amazon there is a $4 trillion market for retail goods and amazon only has a small fraction netflix recognizeswhat you wan when you want it game changer. why do i still like this alpha bit? isn't that played out? no, no, no it dominates just the moment you want to buy something so the ad vertizers love it. there is a balance sheet of beauty and people working to avenge something new to plant or compliment search and maybe the autonomous driving vehicles, these are just examples. they are about...
84
84
Jul 26, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 84
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon shares are lower after record run of earnings come to an end. something tells me it is temporary condition. jeff bezos don't care about share price. his focus is world domination. we have jackie deangelis, and rob luna. jackie, listen, i think the numbers are phenomenal we've seen so far. >> they are. even the weakest link, amazon, one of the reasons they missed they reinvested $800 million back in the company. bezos said in order to grow and deliver what we promised users the one day delivery, we need facilities in check. we, top of this. aws, that is the shining star, future. charles: that is the cloud business. >> the cloud business. growth was 37%. a little less than 41% than we saw previously but still -- charles: getting more competitive there. google for first time i notice bragging about their cloud business. before i go to rob on the investment part of this, technology accounts nine billion dollars, up 25%. fulfillment, 9.3 billion, up 17%. marketing up 48%. amazon spent the money to build the empire. they're not worried about minutia a
amazon shares are lower after record run of earnings come to an end. something tells me it is temporary condition. jeff bezos don't care about share price. his focus is world domination. we have jackie deangelis, and rob luna. jackie, listen, i think the numbers are phenomenal we've seen so far. >> they are. even the weakest link, amazon, one of the reasons they missed they reinvested $800 million back in the company. bezos said in order to grow and deliver what we promised users the one...
50
50
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon has shown an ability to go into so many different businesses. >> amazon has amazon web services, too, which is the base behind all the services it provides. uber has nothing like that. if my competition is coming up on uber's heels very fast and furiously. stuart: if i buy uber stock, you better turn bullish on me. >> i will be neutral. stuart: facebook releasing its annual report on work force diversity, says that it wants to double its number of women globally and black and hispanic employees in the united states. are they detracting or distracting from their privacy concerns? i notice the stock is back to $200 a share. >> you looking for me to say something negative about facebook wanting to hire more -- stuart: no, i'm not. >> that's not a hand grenade i'm interested in jumping on this morning. i think it's a great move on facebook's part. stuart: is this diversity move a distraction away from their privacy concerns? does it matter? obviously not, because the price of the stock is 200 bucks a share. >> they've got concerns, they are going to hear from, you know, from the lef
amazon has shown an ability to go into so many different businesses. >> amazon has amazon web services, too, which is the base behind all the services it provides. uber has nothing like that. if my competition is coming up on uber's heels very fast and furiously. stuart: if i buy uber stock, you better turn bullish on me. >> i will be neutral. stuart: facebook releasing its annual report on work force diversity, says that it wants to double its number of women globally and black and...
64
64
tv
eye 64
favorite 0
quote 0
one council auld amazon's founder enemy of the city. it would have cost amazon more than $12 million a year. the rationale, amazon was driving up wages, housing prices so much it was largely responsible for seattle's homeless problem. so it should pay to build subsidized housing for poor. a venture capitalist told the city council that they are chasing jobs away. >> amazon has been unfairly blamed for challenges that we as a region experienced, that we would have experienced regardless of amazon. reporter: amazon just issued a release showing what it has done for seattle over 25-year history. $4.5 billion in capital investment. it has paid out to employees $32 billion in wages which of course is spent locally. now the company is looking across lake washington to bellview. it announced plans for a 43 story story next to twin 15-story towers. it has five other sites under development. >> city staff met with amazon. we want to make sure that they feel welcome in bellevue. reporter: clearly amazon does feel welcome over in bellevue. in fact
one council auld amazon's founder enemy of the city. it would have cost amazon more than $12 million a year. the rationale, amazon was driving up wages, housing prices so much it was largely responsible for seattle's homeless problem. so it should pay to build subsidized housing for poor. a venture capitalist told the city council that they are chasing jobs away. >> amazon has been unfairly blamed for challenges that we as a region experienced, that we would have experienced regardless of...
86
86
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 86
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon has created this event. macy's played, nordstrom's played already, walmart and target will be huge players. all across the board, people say now i've got to have real product for july it can't just be clearance i'm going to compete i'm going to kick off back to school, and i'm going to do some business against amazon. everybody still loses market share to amazon at walmart and target because that's where the business goes, but everybody plays the game. >> is this new money that's being spent or are we just pulling forward money that would otherwise be spent >> are you always going to buy that go pro either way >> i was eventually going to -- i wanted to buy this go pro. right, if i'm the example, it's pulling it forward at a cheaper price. i would have probably gotten this go pro sometime in the fall, maybe for the holidays for the kids or whatever it is but now the go pro's on sale, and i want it. >> that's a fair point as to whether there's a potential kind of pull forward impact there is, but i think when
amazon has created this event. macy's played, nordstrom's played already, walmart and target will be huge players. all across the board, people say now i've got to have real product for july it can't just be clearance i'm going to compete i'm going to kick off back to school, and i'm going to do some business against amazon. everybody still loses market share to amazon at walmart and target because that's where the business goes, but everybody plays the game. >> is this new money that's...
88
88
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 88
favorite 0
quote 0
i do take a look at ebay versus amazon. year to date, ebay is outperforming amazon. if you look at the 52-week view, though, amazon is outperforming ebay by about four percentage points. we are joking about amazon prime day, you said it's 48 hours for the first time. i think there's a lot of analysts who say obviously this is good for amazon but it's also probably going to benefit target and walmart are trying pretty hard to keep pace. you can order a lot of stuff on an app on your phone, they will run it out to your car if you want. i'm not kidding. stuart: i want. i want. deirdre: why not. stuart: to immigration. nationwide i.c.e. raids in cities, new york, los angeles, rounding up illegal immigrants for deportation, but it reportedly only happened in a handful of neighborhoods. we are talking to the mayor of miami, florida. i want to know what happened in his city over the weekend. we'll be right back. ♪ - did you know that americans that bought gold in 2005 quadrupled their money by 2012? and even now many experts predict the next gold rush is just beginning. s
i do take a look at ebay versus amazon. year to date, ebay is outperforming amazon. if you look at the 52-week view, though, amazon is outperforming ebay by about four percentage points. we are joking about amazon prime day, you said it's 48 hours for the first time. i think there's a lot of analysts who say obviously this is good for amazon but it's also probably going to benefit target and walmart are trying pretty hard to keep pace. you can order a lot of stuff on an app on your phone, they...
173
173
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 173
favorite 0
quote 1
i think they have to understand that amazon's amazon. they can pick up kind of the rest of it if you will. dagen: which retailer does the best job riding on amazon's coat tails. walmart would be the obvious one. >> i would say walmart. i would say target has done a phenomenal job. they're using retail stores more than a lot of other retailers will use them because of the sortments. -- assortments. a lot of retailers are using the actioam xiom if we take the stot of the h equation, we reduce co. >> i'm a regular amazon prime shopper. i didn't know it was amazon prime day. are they advertising -- i mean, how come i didn't get an e-mail about this. you have to turn on "mornings with maria." are they advertising this in a way i'm missing. >> good question. i've been getting hit. they've been blitzing me over the last several days, weeks. the big announcement was june 25th where they announced exactly when it would be. you kind of knew if you're an amazonophile. then they hit you with it's going to be 48 hours this year instead of 36. they ma
i think they have to understand that amazon's amazon. they can pick up kind of the rest of it if you will. dagen: which retailer does the best job riding on amazon's coat tails. walmart would be the obvious one. >> i would say walmart. i would say target has done a phenomenal job. they're using retail stores more than a lot of other retailers will use them because of the sortments. -- assortments. a lot of retailers are using the actioam xiom if we take the stot of the h equation, we...
103
103
Jul 8, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 103
favorite 0
quote 0
>> we still like amazon because of the cloud, you know, focus they have where aws. as you know, they're the leader in infrastructure service. last quarter they grew that segment by about 41% we would expect amazon to continue to morph itself away from what we consider their core business as they kind of expand out into these other thing you guys have well documented their efforts into getting into the pharmaceutical distribution business they have gotten into all kinds of things. so to me the future for them is really the cloud because that is by far the most exciting aspect of their business. it actually encompasses a very small portion of their sales that is an area we feel very strongly about in regards to amazon going into the future i ask you that on a morning when apple got downgraded to a cell at rosen blat and they're talking about the fundamentals of the company deteriorating over the next 6 to 12 months >> i think you're right. apple is by far the company that will be under the most heat. you've had a couple of brokerage firms downgrade them as you mention
>> we still like amazon because of the cloud, you know, focus they have where aws. as you know, they're the leader in infrastructure service. last quarter they grew that segment by about 41% we would expect amazon to continue to morph itself away from what we consider their core business as they kind of expand out into these other thing you guys have well documented their efforts into getting into the pharmaceutical distribution business they have gotten into all kinds of things. so to me...
0
0.0
Jul 5, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 0
favorite 0
quote 0
as opposed to offering a one-time toaster >> if we're now analogizing if that's a word. >> it is >> amazon prime, costco gold, and spotify to a toaster what, does that tell us about those businesses >> or our consumption. you open a bank account and you fall asleep. you never leave. >> unless they charge me a fee >> even if they charge you a fee, when was the last time you changed banks? >> the reason why is because i've always found the situation that i paid the least amount of fees on or zero fees no matter how much i have to transfer. >> do you bank-hop that much >> i don't bank-hop. i always find a product within my banking organization that allows me to have a fee-free situation. >> i had to change upon marriage and let me tell you, it took a lot of in-person long, drawn out. good luck. >> i hoped he was worth it [ laughter ] >> my wife and i both have separate >> so do we. >> separate banks. >>> topic for you. here's a new school. bitcoin has rebounded big time this year. and a new study shows just how energy intensive the crypto currency can be. cambridge researchers shows us that t
as opposed to offering a one-time toaster >> if we're now analogizing if that's a word. >> it is >> amazon prime, costco gold, and spotify to a toaster what, does that tell us about those businesses >> or our consumption. you open a bank account and you fall asleep. you never leave. >> unless they charge me a fee >> even if they charge you a fee, when was the last time you changed banks? >> the reason why is because i've always found the situation that...
80
80
Jul 24, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 80
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon down 1. these are not meaningful downside moves in light of what could be otherwise ominous headlines. >> you don't believe that if the government really put pressure on amazon and said, you know, this marketplace of yours, we don't like it. or if they go to apple which is dependent on services long-term, they made that a strategic part of their strategy, if they said this app store, you have to open it up. those -- anything like that or any push in that direction i would think would have an impact >> certainly the app stores are an area of vulnerability across apple and google i think if we think through what has been the traditional framework by which the government pursued antitrust, it's been largely grounded in consumer price and choice. with the app stores, you have things that do demonstrate kind of common carrier characteristics which have been long regulated >> what is the lesson of the at&t/time warner transaction that was one transaction where most people who studied anti trust wou
amazon down 1. these are not meaningful downside moves in light of what could be otherwise ominous headlines. >> you don't believe that if the government really put pressure on amazon and said, you know, this marketplace of yours, we don't like it. or if they go to apple which is dependent on services long-term, they made that a strategic part of their strategy, if they said this app store, you have to open it up. those -- anything like that or any push in that direction i would think...
71
71
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 71
favorite 0
quote 0
prime bring any good news to amazon stock >> i like amazon amazon and disney are charitable trust stocks forever i believe in both. i don't want to trade them yo you have to own them and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round. >> announcer: the lightning round is sponsored by t.d. america air america air ameritrade america air ♪♪ ameritrade >>> just because you love the product, it doesn't mean you should love the stock. i love levi strauss. you're dressed for a lack of success with it plummeting 12% today on hideous guidance. levis came public on march 21st. the first belig deal of the yea and primed the pump for the big ipo cycle. levi is the company has a storied history and kicking around since 1853. it has terrific management we had on the show chip burg, ceo seasoned executive so it made sense why the stock immediately went to a premium after pricing at $17 it spiked up to $22.20 at the open and closed at $23.66 big success. they were trading at 22 times earnings which was more expensive than the average apparel stock, not totally unhinged but this
prime bring any good news to amazon stock >> i like amazon amazon and disney are charitable trust stocks forever i believe in both. i don't want to trade them yo you have to own them and that, ladies and gentlemen, is the conclusion of the lightning round. >> announcer: the lightning round is sponsored by t.d. america air america air ameritrade america air ♪♪ ameritrade >>> just because you love the product, it doesn't mean you should love the stock. i love levi...
85
85
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 85
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon embraced her message of self-acceptance and of course this is a push by amazon to push further into cosmetics challenging alta and sephora. >> i don't know anythingabout makeup. >> what? you wear it every day. sure you do. >> try not to wear -- >> everybody wears makeup. >> i need as much help as i can get. >> really? its he hard to reveal the top states for business in the top of the hour. with a rundown of all of the diabolical hints we've had here's a look at yesterday's s& 500. through the at&t network, edge-to-edge intelligence gives you the power to see every corner of your growing business. from finding out what's selling best... to managing your fleet... to collaborating remotely with your teams. giving you a nice big edge over your competition. that's the power of edge-to-edge intelligence. >>> welcome back you're watching "squawk box" live from the nasdaq market site in times square. >>> good morning u.s. equities futures at this hour down 72 on the dow. those are some of the worst levels we've seen since we came in anyway this morning the s&p indicated down about 10.
amazon embraced her message of self-acceptance and of course this is a push by amazon to push further into cosmetics challenging alta and sephora. >> i don't know anythingabout makeup. >> what? you wear it every day. sure you do. >> try not to wear -- >> everybody wears makeup. >> i need as much help as i can get. >> really? its he hard to reveal the top states for business in the top of the hour. with a rundown of all of the diabolical hints we've had here's...
70
70
Jul 30, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 70
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon is huge in the cloud. the stock is down 8 bucks, 1903. >>> facebook says its digital currency, the proposed libra could help law enforcement. do we have anymore on this, why they're saying that? susan: basically facebook is trying to sell libra to regulators saying it is okay people thought and do say cryptocurrencies is a haven for money launderers, i will is lit activity, drug dealers as well. david marcus, the head of colibra and libra at facebook says if you look at blockchain technology which is behind crypto, it's a public ledger of transactions, you have to put information out there in the public. using that information you can trace people, to help law enforcement track down who is using this, the bad guys in all of this. but of course, you know, we heard from the president and saying that if you want enact libra you better get a chart, a new currency at play around the world. stuart: before we close out this block, i do want to thank my colleague and friend mike murphy sticking with us religiously
amazon is huge in the cloud. the stock is down 8 bucks, 1903. >>> facebook says its digital currency, the proposed libra could help law enforcement. do we have anymore on this, why they're saying that? susan: basically facebook is trying to sell libra to regulators saying it is okay people thought and do say cryptocurrencies is a haven for money launderers, i will is lit activity, drug dealers as well. david marcus, the head of colibra and libra at facebook says if you look at...
75
75
Jul 10, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 75
favorite 0
quote 0
so amazon did what it knows best, crunched the numbers. >> we had lots of data, from external sources, data we gathered and data from the responses that the locations gave to us. >> on workforce, transportation, education. >> we knew it was going to be competitive. >> in crystal city, matthew kelly, saw amazon as a catalyst for his firm's plans to develop the millions of square feet of office space it owns. >> we were offering things they were looking for, in terms of workforce, infrastructure, labor pool. >> it took a coordinated push by the company and state and local government. >> we said one of the ways we provide value is by investing in our human capital. >> virginia's bid was the only one that included a new college campus next door. >> what was unique about virginia was the commitment to developing the long-term talent pipeline and virginia is also a great place to do business. >> so they get through all of that analysis and they get to september, a year into the process and they realize, they can't come up with 25,000 people to hire in one place it's too much of a task for a
so amazon did what it knows best, crunched the numbers. >> we had lots of data, from external sources, data we gathered and data from the responses that the locations gave to us. >> on workforce, transportation, education. >> we knew it was going to be competitive. >> in crystal city, matthew kelly, saw amazon as a catalyst for his firm's plans to develop the millions of square feet of office space it owns. >> we were offering things they were looking for, in terms...
47
47
Jul 15, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
but today is amazon prime day. tomorrow will be amazon prime day as well, and there are these protests all across the country. legitimate at this point? or is amazon just being targeted here? >> it's both, right? not one of these things that has to be one or the other. certainly there's an opportunity for employees who have been denied reasons who have legitimate complaints about their working conditions, who have legitimate complaints about the waps treats employees to say all eyes on amazon right now and we'll take this opportunity to stage job protests and make our voices heard but as i wrote about last week, in the axios market newsletter, you're seeing this pushback to the minimum wage hikes all over the place. walmart employees, target employees when they got minimum wage increases they said this is nice but not enough. we haven't gotten a raise in 10, 15, 20 years and now you want to give us an extra dollar more while we see booming profits coming from the company we deserve a bit more so i think you'll see
but today is amazon prime day. tomorrow will be amazon prime day as well, and there are these protests all across the country. legitimate at this point? or is amazon just being targeted here? >> it's both, right? not one of these things that has to be one or the other. certainly there's an opportunity for employees who have been denied reasons who have legitimate complaints about their working conditions, who have legitimate complaints about the waps treats employees to say all eyes on...
55
55
Jul 11, 2019
07/19
by
FBC
tv
eye 55
favorite 0
quote 0
reporter: amazon is getting a clear showout for thinking ahead. i would be remiss, jpmorgan chase has a partnership with mit. at&t has a partnership with notre dame university. other large companies are trying to figure this out. it is not for altruistic purposes. connell: so many industries. one you would think of, ours as half a joke. i was at hong kong, in hong kong at "wall street journal" tech conference. they had the artificial intelligence news anchor there. there was no deirdre bolton. >> that is google is working on, have the computer make the appointment with the hairdresser. it sounds completely natural. the front end, direct customer relations will be handled in automated, computer or a.i. fashion. connell: crazy world. >> those studies, the oxford study, they talk about the pace of change, if the pace of change is matched by retraining then we're okay. if the pace of change goes too fast, then you will have more people out of jobs because they -- connell: you can't keep up with it. we have to go. thanks, lance, deirdre, appreciate it.
reporter: amazon is getting a clear showout for thinking ahead. i would be remiss, jpmorgan chase has a partnership with mit. at&t has a partnership with notre dame university. other large companies are trying to figure this out. it is not for altruistic purposes. connell: so many industries. one you would think of, ours as half a joke. i was at hong kong, in hong kong at "wall street journal" tech conference. they had the artificial intelligence news anchor there. there was no...
1
1.0
Jul 11, 2019
07/19
by
CNBC
tv
eye 1
favorite 0
quote 0
amazon hits the right note and american eagle jumps on the cbd bandwagon. that's all ahead in rapid fire advanced safety technology on a full line of vehicles. now, at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379 a month, for 36 months, and we'll make your first month's payment. experience amazing. - my degree from snhu has helped me tremendously. (gentle music) the flexible class schedules allow me to go to work full-time, run my catering business and be a mom and parent. when i reached this accomplishment, it was like, it's here, it's happening, it's now. souwe, atern new hampshire university, are the ones who succeed. we are the ones who break through. >>> welcome back let's catch you up on a few stories that should be on your radar today. it's rapid fire. here with their takes are leslie picker bill, you're supposed to be in that chair today >> that chair? >> youwant to switch >> no, i'm -- no, no, wait i'm hooked up to the chair can't do that. >> i was going to say. i know our director can handle it alan can handle anything
amazon hits the right note and american eagle jumps on the cbd bandwagon. that's all ahead in rapid fire advanced safety technology on a full line of vehicles. now, at the lexus golden opportunity sales event. lease the 2019 es 350 for $379 a month, for 36 months, and we'll make your first month's payment. experience amazing. - my degree from snhu has helped me tremendously. (gentle music) the flexible class schedules allow me to go to work full-time, run my catering business and be a mom and...