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Benzinga’s Bulls And Bears Of The Week: Boeing, Netflix, Pfizer And More

* Benzinga has examined the prospects for many investor favorite stocks over the past week. * The bullish calls this past week included a COVID-19 stock and a leading video streamer. * That same streamer, a aerospace giant and a utility stock were among the week's bearish calls. The big three U.S. indexes lost a little more ground in a week that saw a tech giant in the crosshairs and not one but two big mergers in the oil patch. While the new earnings reporting season ramped up and wrangling over fiscal stimulus continued, the first COVID-19 treatment crossed the finish line in the United States.Also in the past week, there was friction between a retail colossus and one government and between the electric vehicle leader and another. A video-streaming service shut down, and the ride-sharing companies lost in court.Through it all, Benzinga continued to examine the prospects for many of the stocks most popular with investors. Here are a few of this past week's most bullish and bearish posts that are worth another look. Bulls The coronavirus vaccine in development by Pfizer Inc. (NYSE: PFE) and BioNTech SE (NASDAQ: BNTX) is poised for an emergency use authorization application, according to Shanthi Rexaline's "Pfizer's COVID-19 Vaccine Candidate Primed For .5B In 2021 Sales: Analyst."In "Netflix Analysts Positive On 2021 Lineup, Pricing Power Despite Subscriber Miss," Chris Katje discusses why underlying trends at Netflix Inc. (NASDAQ: NFLX) remain solid and the expectation of price increases in the coming year to better compete with its competitors.In Wayne Duggan's "'Firing On All Cylinders': Analysts React To Snapchat's Huge Quarter," see why one analyst believes the blow-out third-quarter at Snap Inc. (NYSE: SNAP) may signal that the online advertising business has recovered. What are the long-term prospects?"Why BofA Is Bullish On Kohl's" by Jayson Derrick examines the bullish signal a top analyst saw in a recent investor presentation from Kohl's Corp. (NYSE: KSS). Can a strong balance sheet and ongoing initiatives help this department store operator return to pre-pandemic operating levels?For additional bullish calls in the past week, also have a look at these posts: * Why These Companies Could Benefit From Google's Antitrust Lawsuit * Which US Auto Stock Will Grow The Most By 2025? * Jim Cramer Likes These Stocks If Joe Biden Wins The Election Bears "Netflix Driving Into A 'Dead End,' Munster Says" by Shivdeep Dhaliwal says that a prominent tech investor questions whether the media services provider's stock can continue on the path of appreciation. See how he believes Netflix needs to evolve its business in order to avoid a "dead end" and keep delivering solid returns.Chris Katje's "Fastly's TikTok Dependence Becoming 'Bigger Issue,' Analyst Says In Downgrade" is focused on the major risks that Fastly Inc. (NYSE: FSLY) faces. Is the cloud computing services provider too dependent on TikTok revenue? What do analysts expect going forward?Digital payment and fintech companies Paypal Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: PYPL) and Square Inc. (NYSE: SQ) are having a solid 2020 but have become extremely...

Bloomberg

Apollo Investor Revolt Swells Over Black’s Epstein Ties

(Bloomberg) — It keeps getting worse for Leon Black.Over the past week, Black’s giant investment firm, Apollo Global Management Inc., has confronted one question after another about his decades-long relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.First, his own board ordered an external review prompted by Black himself. Then a Pennsylvania pension fund paused new investments — and the state of Connecticut has done the same. One major consultant — a gatekeeper to $160 billion of investor commitments — has urged clients to hold off, and another is considering taking similar action.Clients who for years enjoyed some of the best returns on Wall Street are reconsidering their ties to Apollo amid renewed scrutiny over Epstein, spurred by a New York Times report earlier this month and given fresh attention from an unsealed deposition of Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell.Investors distancing themselves from the firm show how serious the issue has become for Black and his general partners. Some clients aren’t convinced that the review, which will be handled by law firm Dechert LLP, will be enough to clear Black’s name, according to people familiar with the matter.A freeze in new money could hurt Apollo at a time when it’s trying to raise $20 billion for several new funds. The pandemic-spurred turmoil in the credit markets is a prime investing opportunity for the firm, which is known for buying struggling businesses. Apollo is seeking to take advantage of market dislocations as well as invest in private debt, people with knowledge of the matter said in April.Black’s growing troubles reflect the changing politics of the investing world, where major funds have become more sensitive to environmental, social and governance matters. The new focus means that even the prospect of lucrative returns may not be enough of a lure in the midst of a scandal.“While performance is always going to be an important factor, increasingly it’s not the only factor,” said Gerald O’Hara, an analyst at Jefferies Financial Group Inc. “In some respects, there’s some willingness to sacrifice performance for a company that’s run with good governance, good ethics.”Investment adviser Aksia told clients not to give new money to Apollo, Bloomberg reported Friday, while Connecticut said it is halting new investments with the firm. Earlier in the week, the Pennsylvania Public School Employees’ Retirement System said it would stop making additional investments in Apollo for now, and consultant Cambridge Associates is considering not recommending the firm to its pension and endowment clients.While Black faced pressure in the immediate aftermath of Epstein’s arrest last year, investor angst was rekindled by a New York Times report that he had wired at least $50 million to Epstein after his 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution from a teenage girl. The article didn’t accuse Black of breaking the law. Apollo shares have fallen about 12% since the story was published on Oct. 12.“We are firmly committed to transparency,” Apollo said Friday in a statement, noting that Black has been communicating regularly with investors. “Although Apollo never did business with Jeffrey Epstein, Leon has requested an independent, outside review regarding his previous professional relationship with Mr. Epstein.”In a letter to Apollo’s limited partners this month, Black said he deeply regretted having had any involvement with Epstein. Black said he had turned to him for matters such as taxes, estate planning and philanthropy, and that nothing in the Times’ report was inconsistent with an earlier description of their ties.Read more: Leon Black’s Epstein Links Threaten Apollo’s FundraisingIt will be tough for investors to cut ties completely with Apollo as private equity funds typically lock up capital for years — a trade-off many are willing to make with the promise of high-flying returns. And unless the inquiry unearths something more damning, clients may ultimately decide to look the other way, said three investors who asked not to be identified.It’s particularly unappealing for clients to pull away given the firm’s stellar returns. Apollo’s flagship private equity fund, which opened to investors in 2001, has delivered annual gains of 44%, Bloomberg reported in January.But even yield-starved investors looking to pump more money into private equity may choose to go elsewhere in future, as rivals flood the market with new offerings.“It’s a very competitive race for capital and one thing that we continue to see in fundraising is it is in many ways more similar to a political process than a capital-raising process,” said Sarah Sandstrom, partner at Campbell Lutyens, which helps private equity firms raise money. “You are telling your story, creating relationships with investors.”(Adds previous comment from Black in 12th paragraph.)For more articles like this, please visit us at bloomberg.comSubscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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