Opening Bell: Biden's symbolic gas cut

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10 THINGS BEFORE THE OPENING BELL

Top of the morning readers, Phil Rosen here. Yesterday I sat down with the CEO of Doodles — an NFT project of cute sketches that has topped $500 million in sales. 

He explained how he's aiming to transform the NFT collection into an entertainment brand, and that Doodles could still hold value through a recession. Get the full scoop in my latest dispatch from the conference.

That said, President Biden is sweating gas prices a lot more than the current crypto bear market.

Let's see what he's planning — and how it impacts oil markets. 

Biden announces a ban on US imports of Russian oil and gas at the White House on March 8, 2022.

1. High prices means Biden wants a holiday — a gas tax holiday, at least. 

The White House called on Congress yesterday to suspend the federal gasoline tax, though the move is largely symbolic and comes as prices at the pump weigh on his re-election ambitions and inflation squeezes Americans.

While it's possible that relatively cheaper gas actually fuels more demand — thus pushing prices up even further — oil actually slumped through most of yesterday, falling as much as 7%.

That's because the market is also digesting a wave of recession forecasts that would almost certainly lead to a diminished outlook for oil demand. 

As the White House points to war in Ukraine as reason for high gas prices and economic turmoil, the recession alarms continue to ring. 

Deutsche Bank's CEO put the odds of a global recession at 50%, and JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon has warned of an impending economic "hurricane."

Wells Fargo chief Charlie Scharf said there was "no question" of a downturn, and Citi also says the odds are high.

"We have the probability of a recession at about 40% going into next year. We wouldn't see that until next year just because the tightening that we're seeing around the Fed generally takes around 12 to 18 months to really show up in economic conditions," a Citi exec said.

Insider finance correspondent Aaron Weinman, who writes 10 things on Wall Street, went on CBS News last night to chat about Biden's gas tax holiday. See the video here.


Putin, Bortnikov

2. US stocks climbed after closing lower in Wednesday's session, while oil extended its losses. Fed Chair Powell told Congress yesterday that the central bank is "strongly committed" to taming inflation, and said a recession could be a possibility. Powell is slated for more comments today, too. Here is your morning wrap.

3. On deck today: PetroChina Company Limited, FedEx, and BlackBerry, all reporting.

4. Goldman Sachs shared where investors can make the most money when stocks eventually begin their recovery. According to bank analysts, the outlook for stocks will likely brighten toward the end of the year. Here's how they say you can know when the bottom hits.

5. Altria plunged 10% after a report said the FDA will ban Juul vaping products from the US market. Altria paid $12.8 billion for a 35% stake in Juul back in 2018 when the product boomed among teens. Now, Juul's market share of US e-cigarettes has dipped to second place — which could be a boon for other US tobacco manufacturers.

6. Vladimir Putin said Russia's trade with China, India, Brazil, and South Africa has jumped since war in Ukraine began. Trade has increased by 38%, according to the Russian president — and Moscow continues to rake in big money from oil and gas sales.

7. FTX's founder Sam-Bankman Fried bailed out BlockFi. He gave the struggling crypto lender a $250 million loan. But it wasn't the first one this month — last week the billionaire also loaned $485 million to Voyager Digital

8. These steady-returning stocks can help you profit from an approach that's overlooked but ready to stage a comeback. While the bear market craters share prices, Jefferies says that investors have sold sensibly-priced growth stocks — which puts them in a position to recover after a poor performance.

9. "Super savers" broke down the strategies they use to save more than half their income. If you want to keep more of your paycheck, use these tried and true saving tacts, from house hacking to tracking your spending habits.

Madison Hoff/Insider

10. Companies are passing higher costs to shoppers at the fastest pace since the 1950s, a new study finds. Corporate markups hit a record high in 2021, with brands on average charging about 72% more than their input costs. Researchers say reversing that surge is one way to combat soaring inflation.


Curated by Phil Rosen in New York. (Feedback or tips? Email prosen@insider.com or tweet @philrosenn.) 

Edited by Max Adams (@maxradams) and Lisa Ryan (@lisarya) in New York. 

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