Fed Gov. Waller urges caution for now; cuts possible later in the year


Fed Governor Chris Waller on interest rate outlook: Caution is warranted

Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller on Friday expressed caution about current economic conditions but still sees the opportunity for interest rate cuts later this year.

Previously an advocate for rate cuts, Waller said in a CNBC interview that recent developments in the labor market as well as the uncertainty of the war with Iran require a more conservative approach.

“It doesn’t mean that I’m going to stay put for the rest of the year,” Waller said on “Squawk Box.” “I just want to wait and see where this goes, and if things go reasonably well and the labor market continues to be weak, I would start advocating again for cutting the policy rate later this year.”

Markets have almost completely doused the chance of rate reductions through the balance of 2026 and well into 2027. That’s a switch from expectations prior to the war, when traders had been looking for two or three cuts this year.

But soaring oil prices and an indeterminate time frame over how long the war will last have changed market expectations and caused a rethinking from Waller and other policymakers. Waller had dissented in January from a Federal Open Market Committee decision not to cut, but went along with the majority earlier this week for another pause.

How the Iran war and inflation are impacting the Fed

His earlier dovish position was motivated by a clearly weakening labor market, which produced nearly no net job growth in 2025. However, he noted Friday that the labor force also is not expanding, so “net zero” growth is still leaving the unemployment rate unchanged, even with a 92,000 drop in nonfarm payrolls in February.

“If we get another 90,000 jobs decline in the next jobs report, that’ll be like four negative reports out of five. To me, that’s not zero. So at that point, you need to start thinking about this labor market isn’t good,” Waller said. “I don’t think this war is going to help in any way going forward, but we’ll have to see what happens with inflation.”

Waller is generally sanguine now about inflation, which he sees being boosted by one-off effects from tariffs but otherwise moving structurally towards the Fed’s 2% goal.

“If those tariff effects don’t roll off by the second half of the year, and then inflation starts rising then, then you’re in this tricky business of like, do we worry about inflation? Take a chance on recession or not?,” he said. “So I’m really going to keep an eye on what the future labor markets look like to see whether I want to start advocating for rate cuts in future meetings, but I also want to see what happens with inflation.”

Earlier Friday, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman who, like Waller, was nominated for the job by President Donald Trump, said she believes the Fed can cut three times this year. That would take the benchmark federal funds rate below the neutral level that FOMC officials see as neither supporting nor restricting growth.

Bowman, in a Fox Business interview, took that position even though she said she expects “strong growth” this year “supported by the supply-side policies that this administration is putting into place.”

Bowman is one of just three Fed officials who see aggressive rate cuts this year, according to an update of the Fed’s “dot plot” grid released Wednesday. A total of 19 policymakers participate in the grid.

Watch CNBC's full interview with Fed Governor Christopher Waller
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Man City’s ‘statement’ win at Man Utd shows they are handling WSL title race pressure


“We are top of the league,” was the celebratory chant booming out of one corner of Old Trafford at the end of the Women’s Super League’s Manchester derby.

But it was not Manchester United’s day, it was Manchester City, on the brink of a first league title in 10 years, who were in party mood.

Kerstin Casparij kissed and clutched the City badge as she ran to the away end after scoring City’s third goal in a commanding 3-0 win, while Alex Greenwood was enthusuastically applauded at every second-half corner she took in front of the travelling fans.

The returning Japanese stars in City’s team – fresh from winning the Women’s Asian Cup – were hailed one by one after full-time as the celebrations continued long after the final whistle had been blown.

City did not just win at Old Trafford, they humiliated Manchester United and enjoyed every minute of it.

And with one hand on the WSL trophy, who can blame them?

Two more wins from their remaining three matches will guarantee them the title unless their rivals drop points and they can claim the crown early.

“The weather wasn’t helping,” manager Andree Jeglertz joked as he began his news conference away from the swirling wind and rain.

But having witnessed what he described as “one of the best” first halves of football from his side, which saw them lead 2-0 at the break, he admitted he enjoyed himself.

He said it was “amazing to watch and be a part of” a game where his players executed the gameplan with “confidence and big belief”.

“Definitely, I enjoyed that,” Jeglertz added. “It wasn’t relaxing, because it never is for a coach, but I felt we had control of the game.

“The players were enjoying finding solutions to a lot of things. They created chances. It was a fantastic game.”



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Okta (OKTA) Q4 2026 earnings


Todd McKinnon, chief executive officer of Okta Inc., during a Bloomberg Television interview, in London, UK, on Friday, April 11, 2025.

Chris J. Ratcliffe | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Okta topped Wall Street’s fourth-quarter estimates after the bell on Wednesday as the identity management provider capitalizes on demand to secure artificial intelligence agents.

Shares rose 3%.

Here’s how the company did versus LSEG estimates:

  • Earnings per share: 90 cents adjusted vs. 85 cents expected
  • Revenue: $761 million vs. $749 million expected

Revenues for the period grew 11% from a year ago. The company reported net income of $63 million, or 35 cents per share, versus $23 million, or 13 cents, a year ago.

Okta’s first-quarter guidance came up short of analyst expectations. The company expects revenue to range between $749 million and $753 million and adjusted earnings between 84 cents and 86 cents per share. Analysts had forecast revenue of $755 million and EPS of 87 cents.

Management cited market conditions as a factor in its “prudent approach” to its forecast. The company used the same phrasing in its financial outlook last quarter.

Okta said it is benefiting from the proliferation of agentic agents and the accompanying security needs.

At the same time, cybersecurity has come under pressure from the proliferation of new AI tools. The sector sold off last month after a new security tool from Anthropic fueled widespread market panic. Okta’s stock has dropped 17% so far this year.

CEO Todd McKinnon told CNBC that agentic AI and the solutions built by vendors are a massive opportunity and reiterated his confidence in Okta’s ability to win the growing identity market.

“You have to have trust, and you have to have a reputation that you can deliver this securely,” he said. “You build up a reputation as being a piece of security infrastructure over many, many years.”

Remaining performance obligations, which is the company’s subscription backlog, rose 15% from a year ago to $4.83 billion. That also beat a StreetAccount estimate of $4.62 billion.

For the full year, Okta anticipates revenue between $3.17 billion and $3.19 billion, versus an analyst estimate of $3.17 billion.

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Expectant mothers in Cuba struggle under fuel blockade


In January 2026, the Trump administration enforced an oil and fuel blockade on Cuba, triggering severe energy shortages and widespread blackouts that have especially impacted vulnerable populations, such as expectant mothers.

The shortages of food, milk, and essential medicines are straining maternal care services, making pregnancies more difficult and uncertain.

The BBC’s Will Grant spoke to two expectant mothers facing starkly different realities as the energy crisis unfolds.

Read more about the fuel blockade on Cuba here.

Video by Blanca Estrada.



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These dividend stocks are up since war began. Street sees more ahead




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2026 NCAA Men’s Tournament: Last Time Each Elite Eight Team Reached the Final Four



And then there were eight.

We’ve reached the Elite Eight round of the 2026 NCAA Men’s Tournament, and there are several high-profile programs who have made the cut. With that in mind, here’s the last time each of the eight teams that reached this year’s Elite Eight made the Final Four.

Note: Schools are mentioned in alphabetical order.

Arizona earned a No. 2 seed in the 2001 NCAA Tournament and proceeded to go on a run to the National Championship, defeating, most notably, the No. 1-seeded Illinois Fighting Illini, fellow No. 1-seeded Michigan State Spartans and the No. 3-seeded Ole Miss Rebels. With that said, Arizona came up just short, losing to the Duke Blue Devils in the title game.

Duke Blue Devils – 2025

The Elite Eight is familiar territory for the Blue Devils under both current head coach Jon Scheyer and former coach Mike Krzyzewski. Just last year, Duke not only made the Elite Eight, but it made the Final Four, a run that included standout victories over the Baylor Bears, Arizona Wildcats and Alabama Crimson Tide, among other teams. At the same time, said trip to the Final Four became a nightmare for the Blue Devils, who blew a six-point lead with 1:14 remaining in the second half to the Houston Cougars, who won 70-67.

Illinois Fighting Illini – 2005

The Fighting Illini have made the NCAA Tournament in each of the last six seasons, but they haven’t been able to play “Connect Four” since 2005. In said season, Illinois reached the National Championship, defeating Lute Olson’s Arizona Wildcats in the Elite Eight and Rick Pitino’s Louisville Cardinals in the Final Four. Ultimately, though, the North Carolina Tar Heels beat the Fighting Illini in the title game, 75-70.

It’s been a minute for the Hawkeyes. Nevertheless, Iowa went on one of the best runs in program history in 1980 when it reached the Final Four. It was a stretch that featured wins over the Syracuse Orange and Georgetown Hoyas. However, it came to a close in the Final Four, as Iowa lost to the Louisville Cardinals.

After winning the Big Ten Tournament, Michigan earned a No. 3 seed in the 2018 NCAA Tournament and reached the Final Four. Unfortunately for the Michigan faithful, though, the Wolverines ran into the freight train that was the Villanova Wildcats, who defeated Michigan in the National Championship for their second title in three years.

After losing in the first round of the tournament in 2021 and 2023 — which saw the Boilermakers lose to the No. 16-seeded Fairleigh Dickinson Knights in the first round of the tournament, becoming just the second No. 1 seed to lose in the opening round — and being eliminated in the Sweet 16 in 2022, Purdue reached the National Championship in 2024. The Boilermakers finished the season at 34-5, with the UConn Huskies later defeating them in the title game.

The Volunteers have been a fixture in the second weekend of the tournament of late, with them reaching the Elite Eight in each of the last three seasons. With that said, Tennessee has never reached the Final Four in program history.

UConn Huskies – 2024

Following winning the national title in 2023, Dan Hurley’s Huskies became the first men’s college basketball team to repeat as national champions since the Florida Gators accomplished that feat under Billy Donovan in 2006 and 2007. UConn went 37-3 altogether and won its six NCAA Tournament games by an average of 23.3 points per contest. The Huskies later had four players selected in the 2024 NBA Draft, with two of them being picked in the first seven selections (Stephon Castle at No. 4 and Donovan Clingan at No. 7).



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Gucci-owner Kering beats on sales as new CEO maps revival


Customers shop at a GUCCI luxury store in Shanghai, China.

Cfoto | Future Publishing | Getty Images

Kering said it expects a return to growth this year even as it posted another quarter of sales declines on Tuesday, with its biggest sales driver, Gucci, continuing to lag in new CEO Luca de Meo’s first quarter at the reins. 

The company, which also owns brands Yves Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta and Balenciaga, said fourth-quarter sales fell 3% on a comparable basis to 3.9 billion euros ($4.64 billion), a slight beat according to FactSet estimates.

Its flagship label Gucci, posted a 10% decline on a comparable basis in the quarter, also slightly better than consensus, while the other houses posted flat or moderate growth year-on-year.

“2025 was not the year we wanted,” CEO Luca de Meo said on an earnings call. “It didn’t reflect the full potential of Kering, and we all know it.”

In 2025, sales fell 10% to 14.7 billion euros. Recurring operating income was down 33% from last year, with its operating margin also declining to 11.5% in the period as a result of weaker sales. 

Shares jumped as much as 14% and were last seen up 10.3%, however, the stock is down nearly 14% so far this year.

The positive sentiment spilled over into the broader luxury space, benefiting Burberry, which gained 3.4% in early trade, Hermes, last seen 3% higher, and Italy’s Brunello Cucinelli, which added 2.7%.
Shares of French luxury conglomerate LVMH were 1.4% higher, while Switzerland’s Richemont gained 2%.

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Kering shares year-to-date

Kering, like peer LVMH and other fashion players, has seen its business suffer over the past few years, following a boom in demand during Covid-19, which led to price hikes that alienated customers. Paired with weak consumer demand from China — formerly one of the sector’s main growth drivers — and strategic missteps, the fortunes of Kering and others have declined.

The appointment of Demna as artistic director of Gucci is intended to help sales and get the firm’s reputation back on track. His first collection, “La Famiglia,” was launched last year.

The market is now eagerly awaiting signs that attempts by De Meo — whose surprise appointment last year marked the company’s first outsider CEO — to turn Kering around are starting to bear fruit. De Meo was recruited from the auto industry, and his experience included turning around the struggling automaker Renault at the start of the decade.  

The start of a turnaround?

Kering shares set for best day in 17 years

“Our objective is clear, reignite desirability and prepare the next cycle of growth, house by house, product by product, client by client,” De Meo said. 

The new CEO also noted Kering is preparing to enter the wellness and longevity segment, “a space where we want to play and where we know value and growth will be created,” and added that the company’s jewelry strategy will be further unveiled in April.  

“[Kering’s] closing stages of 2025 confirm gradually reducing pressures at a time of more supportive industry conditions,” noted Jefferies analyst James Grzinic. Investors will be keen to hear more from De Meo first impressions, “with considerable cost savings potential, an inevitable area of focus,” the analyst added.

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Stocks making the biggest moves midday: SEDG, SMCI, FDX




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