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Dayforce said in talks to be acquired, Soho House to go private: Morning Buzz

Dayforce said in talks to be acquired, Soho House to go private: Morning Buzz

The major indexes were trending lower near noon as investors lean into a busy week headlined by Jackson Hole central bank speeches and earnings from major retailers. Geopolitical developments are adding weight as markets are monitoring the potential implications of President Trump's meeting with Ukraine's president and European leaders as Washington seeks support for a Ukraine–Russia peace initiative.
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Looking to commodities, gold was little changed, while oil prices were marginally higher.
Get caught up quickly on the top news and calls moving stocks with these five Top Five lists, and subscribe to the Fly By if you want to know how the markets will open, which stocks will be moving and why.
2. WALL STREET CALLS:
CVS Health (CVS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Wells Fargo double upgraded Cogent (CCOI) on revenue inflection point
Occidental (OXY) downgraded at Morgan Stanley, here's why
Nano Nuclear Energy (NNE) double downgraded to Sell at Ladenburg after Q3 update
BofA sees Redwire (RDW) as less attractive than space peers, starts at Underperform
3. AROUND THE WEB:
Spruce Point says it is short iRhythm Technologies (IRTC), believing that risks related to an ongoing DOJ investigation into product deficiencies that jeopardize lives are underappreciated
British motorists can lease a Tesla (TSLA) EV for about half the cost it was a year ago, as the company attempts to boost its faltering sales in the U.K., The Times reports
Citigroup's (C) Vis Raghavan, Head of Banking, has accelerated a hiring spree of former JPMorgan Chase (JPM) colleagues, FT reports
Foxconn (HNHPF) plans to manufacture data center equipment with Softbank (SFTBY) at the company's former EV factory in Ohio, Reuters reports
Six Flags (FUN) has had a 'nightmare' of a summer following its merger with Cedar Fun due to severe thunderstorms and excessive heat, new rides being delayed, competition from new rivals, quality issues and economic uncertainty, WSJ says
4. MOVERS:
TeraWulf (WULF) gains after announcing Fluidstack exercised its option to expand at the company's Lake Mariner data center campus in Western New York
Yext (YEXT) higher after CEO Michael Walrath submitted a proposal to acquire all outstanding shares of the company for $9 per share in cash
Sunrun (RUN) increases after RBC Capital upgraded the stock to Outperform
Bitmine Immersion (BMNR) lower after announcing its crypto holdings exceeded $6.612B
Critical Metals (CRML) falls in New York after publishing assay results from its Tanbreez Project in Greenland
5. EARNINGS/GUIDANCE:
INDEXES:
Near midday, the Dow was down 0.03%, or 14.98, to 44,931.14, the Nasdaq was down 0.18%, or 38.91, to 21,584.06, and the S&P 500 was down 0.10%, or 6.73, to 6,443.07.
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Trump's 401(k) move could unlock billions for crypto, says Reserve Exec
Trump's 401(k) move could unlock billions for crypto, says Reserve Exec

Yahoo

time6 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump's 401(k) move could unlock billions for crypto, says Reserve Exec

Trump's 401(k) move could unlock billions for crypto, says Reserve Exec originally appeared on TheStreet. Thomas Mattimore, co-founder of Reserve, says President Donald Trump's recent executive order opening 401(k) plans to alternative assets marks a watershed moment for innovation — with crypto standing to benefit. Reserve is a permissionless platform enabling anyone to launch, mint, and govern on-chain crypto indexes — called Decentralized Token Folios (DTFs) — that function like ETFs but with full transparency and 24/7 redemption.'This isn't just a pro crypto change, but it's a pro innovation change,' Mattimore said in an interview with TheStreet Roundtable. 'For a huge swath of the population who uses 401(k)s as their savings mechanism, they've been very limited. Crypto is the fastest growing asset, best performing asset of anything in the last decade.' Accessibility and new products Until now, most Americans have only accessed crypto through exchanges or exchange-traded funds. Mattimore said the new order could quickly expand that landscape. 'There's actually only one 401(k) provider that gives people access to native crypto assets today,' he said. 'This executive order is taking the stigma off of crypto as opposed to encouraging it.' He expects that index-style products will dominate retirement accounts, mirroring traditional markets. 'For the last 30 plus years we've seen an explosion in index investing, specifically ETFs,' Mattimore said. 'I expect that it's going to be the same for crypto over time. At Reserve, we're building DTFs, which are like ETFs in crypto.' Standards and scale Mattimore pointed to encouraging signals from regulators. 'We've seen and heard a lot from the SEC this year encouraging transparency and encouraging good acting from various different players in the space,' he said. 'For something like retirement accounts, transparency and the trustability so that people can actually understand what they're getting into is critical.' On yield-bearing products, Mattimore argued it's only a matter of time. 'Offering exposure to crypto assets without some of the staking or without some of the underlying yield just wouldn't make sense,' he said. Looking at the bigger picture, Mattimore said the inflows could be massive. 'The estimate on the size of the 401(k) accounts is seven and a half to eight trillion,' he said. 'One percent of 8 trillion is still $80 billion. That would still be quite a bit of inflows.' Ultimately, he views the policy as a turning point. 'This executive order is really removing the stigma from enabling people to get involved in this innovative sector,' Mattimore said. 'I'm really excited for rule-based index investing to come to the crypto space.' Trump's 401(k) move could unlock billions for crypto, says Reserve Exec first appeared on TheStreet on Aug 19, 2025 This story was originally reported by TheStreet on Aug 19, 2025, where it first appeared.

Metro bus ridership continues to dip. Are fears over ICE raids partly to blame?
Metro bus ridership continues to dip. Are fears over ICE raids partly to blame?

Los Angeles Times

time7 minutes ago

  • Los Angeles Times

Metro bus ridership continues to dip. Are fears over ICE raids partly to blame?

Ridership across Metro's transit system plunged in June after federal immigration authorities conducted dramatic raids across Los Angeles County, sowing fear among many rail and bus riders. Last month, the transit agency's passenger numbers on buses continued to dip, although the reasons are not fully clear. Ridership on rail crept up roughly 6.5% in July after a decrease of more than 3.7 million boardings across the rail and bus system the month before. Bus ridership accounted for the bulk of the June hit, with a ridership drop of more than 3.1 million from May. In July, bus boardings continued to decrease slightly by nearly 2%. While it's possible that concerns over safety have persisted as immigration raids continued to play out in the Los Angeles region, a drop in bus ridership from June to July in years past has not been uncommon, according to Metro data. A review of the number of boardings from 2018 shows routine dips in bus ridership during the summer months. The agency said 'there is a seasonal pattern to ridership and historically bus ridership is lower in July than June when schools and colleges are not in regular session and people are more likely to take time off from work.' June saw a roughly 13.5% decline from the month before — the lowest June on record since 2022, when boardings had begun to climb again after the pandemic. The reduction in passengers was not felt along every rail line and bus route. Metro chief executive Stephanie Wiggins noted during a board of directors meeting last month that the K Line saw a 140% surge in weekday ridership in June and a roughly 200% increase in weekend ridership after the opening of the LAX/Metro Transit Center. Metro has struggled with ridership in recent years, first when the pandemic shuttered transit and then when a spate of violence on rail and buses shook trust in the system. Those numbers started to rebound this year and before June's drop, had reached 90% of pre-pandemic counts. But financial challenges have continued. Metro, which recently approved a $9.4 billion budget, faces a deficit of more than $2.3 billion through 2030. And federal funding for its major Olympics and Paralympics transportation plan to lease thousands of buses remains in flux. Maintaining ridership growth is critical for the the agency. More than 60% of Metro bus riders and roughly 50% of its rail riders are Latino, according to a 2023 Metro survey. The decline in June's ridership was due in part to growing concerns that transit riders would be swept up in immigration raids. Those fears were magnified when a widely shared video showed several residents apprehended at a bus stop in Pasadena. Three of the men who were arrested at the stop by federal agents are plaintiffs in a lawsuit against the Trump administration. They spoke earlier this month at a news conference in favor of the 9th U.S. Court of Appeals decision to uphold a temporary restraining order against the immigration stops and arrests. Pedro Vasquez Perdomo, a day laborer, said he was taken by unidentified men while waiting at the bus stop to go to work like he did every day. He said that he was placed in a small space without access to a bathroom or adequate food, water and medicine. Vasquez Perdomo said the experience 'changed my life forever' and called for 'justice.' Closures at stations during the raids and D Line construction beneath Wilshire Boulevard also affected June's numbers, according to Metro officials.

A tech bailout? Trump admin in talks about taking 10% stake in chipmaker Intel
A tech bailout? Trump admin in talks about taking 10% stake in chipmaker Intel

USA Today

time7 minutes ago

  • USA Today

A tech bailout? Trump admin in talks about taking 10% stake in chipmaker Intel

An Intel deal would be one of the largest government interventions in private industry since the U.S. auto industry's bailout under President Obama. WASHINGTON ― The Trump administration is in talks for the federal government to take a 10% equity stake in the troubled chipmaker company Intel, White House officials confirmed. The discussions, which come as Intel has struggled to open manufacturing centers planned in the United States, would be one of the largest government interventions in the private industry since the bailout of the U.S. auto industry under former President Barack Obama. "It's a creative idea that has never been done before to ensure that we're both reassuring these critical supply chains while also gaining something of it for the American taxpayer," White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters at an Aug. 19 press briefing when asked about the government potentially acquiring stake in Intel. Leavitt said U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutick is "ironing out the details." Any deal between the U.S. and Intel would likely require approval from the company's board of directors. During an interview earlier in the day on CNBC's "Squawk Box," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the federal government would take an equity stake in Intel in exchange for billions in federal grants awarded to the company by the Biden administration. "The stake would be a conversion of the grants and maybe increase the investment into Intel to help stabilize the company for chip production here in the U.S.," Bessent said. Former President Joe Biden's Chips and Science Act, signed into law in 2022, included $39 billion in subsidies to boost U.S. semiconductor manufacturing. President Donald Trump has repeatedly attacked the incentives as giveaways. Bloomerg News, which first reported on the discussions, said a 10% stake in the chipmaker would be worth around $10.5 billion ‒ an amount that would nearly match the $10.9 billion in federal grants Intel has received for commercial and military production. The greatest beneficiary of the Biden law was Intel, which announced several projects with help from the incentives including a sprawling semiconductor facility outside Columbus, Ohio, that the company hoped would become "the largest semiconductor manufacturing site on the planet." The Ohio project has been marred by delays, however. Intel's first Ohio plant was originally set to open in 2025, but financial challenges forced the company to delay that opening to 2030 or 2031. Lutnick told CNBC that the U.S. wants a return on any "investment" in Intel. "We should get an equity stake for our money," the Commerce secretary said in a separate interview with the network. "Instead of just giving grants away." The Intel arrangment wouldn't be the first time Trump has secured U.S. stake of private companies during his second term. As part of a merger between Japanese-based Nippon Steel and U.S. Steel that Trump approved in June, Nippon granted his administration a "golden share" in the company. Contributing: Max Filby, Columbus Dispatch; Reuters Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.

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