The first astronaut spaceflight launch from US soil in almost a decade is ready for liftoff this Wednesday.
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Stock futures jumped Tuesday and paced toward a higher open when traders return from the Memorial Day holiday weekend in the U.S., as hopes for an effective coronavirus vaccine combined with optimism over updates around states’ reopenings. Contracts on each of the S&P 500, Dow and Nasdaq rose more than 1.5% shortly after 7 a.m. ET Tuesday.
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Giverny Capital recently released its Q1 2020 Investor Letter, a copy of which you can download below. You should check out Giverny Capital’s top 5 stock picks for investors to buy right now, which could be the biggest winners of the stock market crash. There weren’t a lot of funds who could deliver these kinds […]
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The financial regulations require hedge funds and wealthy investors that exceeded the $100 million equity holdings threshold to file a report that shows their positions at the end of every quarter. Even though it isn't the intention, these filings to a certain extent level the playing field for ordinary investors. The latest round of 13F […]
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Insider Monkey has processed numerous 13F filings of hedge funds and successful value investors to create an extensive database of hedge fund holdings. The 13F filings show the hedge funds' and successful investors' positions as of the end of the first quarter. You can find articles about an individual hedge fund's trades on numerous financial […]
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In this article we will check out the progression of hedge fund sentiment towards Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC) and determine whether it is a good investment right now. We at Insider Monkey like to examine what billionaires and hedge funds think of a company before spending days of research on it. Given their 2 […]
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The release late Friday, May 22, of clarified rules on the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) cleared up some aspects of the program, left some others uncertain but also drove home the point that for the first recipients, the end of the money isn't that far away.The primary purpose of the clarification issued by the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) was to reiterate earlier interim rules about qualifications and payback provisions for the PPP, which was designed to allow companies to help keep employees on the payroll rather than on the unemployment rolls. As the SBA rule released on May 22 notes, the eligible costs covered by PPP were to compensate for eight weeks of payroll expenses. With the first funds disbursed under the PPP on April 3, the 56-day period of payroll protection could be ending later this week for the first batch of recipients.The PPP has been cited by some trucking market observers as keeping capacity on the road that might otherwise have disappeared under the weight of a collapse in demand. In various webinars and reports, lawyers, financial advisors and others who have worked with trucking companies to get funds under PPP were advising early on that recipients had better have their records in order to be able to show that when it came time for their eligibility for loan forgiveness to be determined, they would pass the SBA standards. The approval process for loan forgiveness is to ensure that the funds disbursed under PPP were going to meet the key goal of the program – making sure 75% of the money went to keep pay flowing into workers' hands. The SBA released its loan forgiveness application earlier this month.The details of the rule clarification did not impress the trucking law firm of Scopelitis Garvin Light Hanson & Feary. In an alert sent out on Saturday, May 23, the firm said the interim financial rule sent out "does not provide much by way of additional guidance." That additional guidance would have been on top of a series of other SBA interim rules sent out on a somewhat regular basis since the program began. The overriding question all along for companies that borrowed under PPP was whether they would use those funds in a way that would allow their loan to be forgiven. In other words, could they take a loan and turn it into a grant?The guidelines released on May 22, which follow up on earlier notices, review the procedure to have the loan forgiven: borrower completes a form; lender reviews the application; and lender makes a decision on forgiveness. The lender is supposed to let the borrower know within 60 days whether forgiveness is granted. The SBA then would send the money along to the lender. The latest SBA document spends a great deal of time discussing what constitutes acceptable payroll costs. Some of the key questions addressed:– If an employee is furloughed during the eight weeks but gets paid during that time, is that eligible for forgiveness? Yes, as long as the costs aren't more than $100,000 per employee, the cap on salaries eligible for coverage under PPP.– Is compensation paid out as "hazard pay" or other bonuses –somewhat common in the trucking industry during the pandemic– eligible to be covered under PPP? Yes. – Are owner-operators of a business eligible to have their loan forgiven? Yes. The document gives a fairly complicated answer to that question, and there are different ways of getting there, but yes, they are eligible. The calculation though is not straightforward. – Besides pay, what is eligible? As was noted in other clarifications by SBA, such things as rent or mortgage payments are eligible with the provision that they don't exceed 25% of the loan. One area that does not appear to be covered, much to the chagrin of smaller fleets, are lease payments or truck loan payments. – What is the definition of a full-time employee? One who works 40 hours or more. If the worker puts in 30 hours, that is considered a 0.75 employee for purposes of loan forgiveness. (Note that this is not in the wording of the original CARES Act that established PPP. It is an SBA definition.)The rule published by SBA also deals in such questions as pay reductions and how they are calculated into the eligible base for borrowing and forgiveness.The second document released by SBA on May 22 reiterated that the agency continues to hold the power to investigate loans or borrowers it believes do not meet the goals of the PPP, which is to protect the pay of non-public smaller companies. "SBA may review any PPP loan," the document states, spelling out several criteria that it might look at – eligibility, loan amounts and what it's used for, and whether the borrower is entitled to loan forgiveness. Under the provisions set elsewhere, it's the lender that determines the forgiveness, not the SBA. As the document says, lenders are expected to perform a "good faith review" to determine eligibility for loan forgiveness.And in case there was any doubt, the SBA answers a firm "no" to the question: "If SBA determines that a borrower is ineligible for a PPP loan, can the loan be forgiven?"See more from Benzinga * Cross-Border Summit Hits On International Trade, Cargo Visibility, USMCA * Air France-KLM bids adieu to A380 jumbo jet * Freight markets remain stable – On The Spot (with video)(C) 2020 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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The financial regulations require hedge funds and wealthy investors that exceeded the $100 million equity holdings threshold to file a report that shows their positions at the end of every quarter. Even though it isn't the intention, these filings to a certain extent level the playing field for ordinary investors. The latest round of 13F […]
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The company paid President and Chief Executive Officer Paul Stone $700,000, and Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer Jamere Jackson $600,000 as retention bonuses, Hertz said in a filing to the U.S. regulators. Last week, the board of the company, which counts billionaire investor Carl Icahn as its largest shareholder with a nearly 39% stake, allowed it to seek chapter 11 protection in a U.S. bankruptcy court in Delaware. Since the virus outbreak, a large portion of Hertz’s revenue, which comes from car rentals at airports, have evaporated.
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