
Sharper tools for slicing bond opportunities
Joanna Gallegos, Bondbloxx ETFs co-founder, and Todd Sohn, Strategas Securities technical strategist, join CNBC's Dom Chu on 'ETF Edge' to make sense of the bond opportunity now and the sectors that are best weathering the uncertainty in the short term.

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The Verge
2 hours ago
- The Verge
'You can now easily pause, play, skip forward or backward, and seek via the progress bar right from the picture-in-picture window,'
Microsoft Edge's picture-in-picture mode is getting better controls. according to a blog post. I don't use Edge, but these seem like good upgrades.
Yahoo
7 hours ago
- Yahoo
The Trump-Musk feud could be one of the catalysts for a coming 10% stock correction, former JPMorgan strategist says
Marko Kolanovic predicts a stock market pullback could be in the cards. Kolanovic thinks Tesla's decline on the Trump-Musk feud could be among the catalysts that spark a decline. Other problems he sees for the market include high valuations and economic uncertainty. Former JPMorgan chief market strategist Marko Kolanovic sees a stock market pullback in the cards, and the Trump-Musk feud could be one of the triggers that sets off a decline. Speaking on CNBC on Thursday, Kolanovic predicted a coming correction of 5%-10% that could be set off by a drop in Tesla's stock price. "It's a little bit of a sideshow. It's important for certain companies, and it can spill over," Kolanovic said of the president's fallout with Musk. "Tesla is one of the biggest holdings of retail investors. There's a little ecosystem of stocks around it. I think it could be a little bit of a catalyst." In a post on X on Thursday, Kolanovic pointed to popular retail stocks such as Tesla, Palantir, and Super Micro as potential triggers of a momentum crash. Tesla stock plunged 14% on Thursday as Trump responded to Musk's criticisms of the big GOP tax and budget bill. However, Kolanovic also noted that the Trump-Musk fight would be one possible catalyst for a market pullback among many. Uncertainty in the economy and the trade war are also looming problems. "We're close to all-time highs, but we still have all the problems," Kolanovic said. "We have a trade war, we have signs of an economic slowdown." Valuations are stretched, he said, with the Nasdaq close to record highs even as rates remain elevated, and Kolanovic sees warning signs in the bond market. The risk-reward tradeoff for stocks versus bonds looks unattractive, as the 10-year Treasury yield hovers around 4.4%. That means equity investors aren't getting a great return in excess of the risk-free rate. There's also the lingering concern about Fed independence, with Trump repeatedly pressuring Powell to cut interest rates. Macro risks are mounting as well. Kolanovic pointed to the weak ADP jobs report earlier this week, which reported 37,000 new jobs compared to economists' expectations of 110,000. While the May jobs report showed higher-than-expected job growth, April and March numbers saw significant downward revisions. A correction could present a potential buying opportunity, but that's only if recession risks dissipate, Kolanovic said. Read the original article on Business Insider


CNBC
8 hours ago
- CNBC
Tesla Optimus robotics vice president Milan Kovac is leaving the company
Tesla's vice president of Optimus robotics, Milan Kovac, said on Friday that he's leaving the company. In a post on X, Kovac thanked Tesla CEO Elon Musk and reminisced about his tenure, which began in 2016. "I want to thank @elonmusk from the bottom of my heart for his trust and teachings over the decade we've worked together," Kovac wrote. "Elon, you've taught me to discern signal from noise, hardcore resilience, and many fundamental principles of engineering. I am forever grateful. Tesla will win, I guarantee you that." Tesla is developing Optimus with the aim of someday selling it as a bipedal, intelligent robot capable of everything from factory work to babysitting. In a first-quarter shareholder deck, Tesla said it was on target for "builds of Optimus on our Fremont pilot production line in 2025, with wider deployment of bots doing useful work across our factories." During Tesla's 2024 annual shareholder meeting, Musk characterized himself as "pathologically optimistic," then claimed the humanoid robots would lift the company's market cap to $25 trillion at an unspecified future date. In recent weeks, Musk told CNBC's David Faber that Tesla is now training its Optimus systems to do "primitive tasks," like picking up objects, open a door or throw a ball. Competitors in the space include Boston Dynamics, Agility Robotics, Apptronik, 1X and Figure. Kovac had previously served as the company's director of Autopilot software engineering. He rose to lead the company's Optimus unit as vice president in 2022. Musk personally thanked Kovac for his "outstanding contributions" to the business. Tesla didn't respond to a request for comment.