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Wednesday, June 10, 2026

First Guideline on Cardiovascular-Kidney-Metabolic Syndrome Released

 

  • A new U.S. guideline covers the prevention, detection, evaluation, and management of cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome.
  • CKM syndrome is defined as a health disorder stemming from connections among heart disease, kidney disease, diabetes, and obesity.
  • Healthy lifestyle and weight management are strongly recommended for all patients, and GLP-1 drugs and other medications are also recommended starting in the early course of the condition.

The first dedicated U.S. guideline for cardiovascular-kidney-metabolic (CKM) syndrome makes a big push to unite primary and specialty care in managing large swaths of the population.

The American Heart Association (AHA) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC) now stress interdisciplinary collaboration among cardiologists, endocrinologists, nephrologists, and primary care clinicians caring for patients at various stages of or at risk for CKM syndrome in the new guideline, which was published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

CKM syndrome is defined as a health disorder stemming from connections among heart disease, kidney disease, diabetes, and obesity. Nearly 90% of U.S. adults are said to have at least one CKM syndrome risk factor (e.g., excess weight, high blood pressure, abnormal lipids, high blood glucose, or reduced kidney function).

"The multisystem interplay highlighted in the CKM syndrome definition further supports the avoidance of siloed subspecialty care for the management of the component conditions within CKM syndrome, emphasizes the importance of screening for CKM syndrome in both primary care and relevant subspecialty clinics, and underscores the value of interdisciplinary collaboration," noted Chiadi Ndumele, MD, PhD, of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, and co-authors.

The CKM syndrome framework was first introduced by the AHA in 2023. The new guideline replaces the one on overweight and obesity from 2013.

"Heart, kidney, and metabolic conditions don't occur in isolation -- they are deeply connected," said Ndumele in a press release. "This guideline calls for earlier screening and care, focusing on prevention and coordinated action to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease before serious complications develop or a major cardiac event occurs."

The AHA and ACC say that, for starters, staging for CKM syndrome is now strongly endorsed in all youths and adults alike, with important assessments including metabolic risk factors, kidney function, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) status (class I recommendation).

Of note, the PREVENT outcome-specific equations are to be used to quantify 10-year risk related to CKM syndrome and to inform prevention strategies in people without CVD (class I); as for calculating 30-year risk, the PREVENT equations get a weaker recommendation (class IIa).

The guideline further describes how implications for monitoring and treatment vary depending on where a given person falls within the five-stage CKM syndrome framework.

For example, among adults without CKM syndrome (CKM stage 0), lipids, glycemia, and kidney function should be assessed at least every 5 years to ensure timely identification of CKM syndrome risk factors for optimal CVD prevention (class I). Recommended monitoring frequency increases to at least once every 2 to 3 years in individuals with overweight/obesity or prediabetes (CKM stage 1; class I), and once a year once metabolic risk factors and/or chronic kidney disease (CKD) enter the picture (CKM stage 2-3; class I).

Meanwhile, for all adults with or at risk for CKM syndrome, it is recommended that body mass index and waist circumference be measured at least annually to identify the risk for CKM stage progression (class I). It is also noted that blood pressure should be measured at least once a year, though a more focused blood pressure guideline already exists.

Additionally, healthy lifestyle and weight management are emphasized to avoid advancing CKM syndrome stages.

Add-on pharmacotherapy is also listed for some groups starting with the earliest stage of disease. GLP-1 receptor agonists are weakly recommended for CKM stage 1 for weight loss and improving blood sugar (class IIa) and non-GLP-1 medications are noted as reasonable for the purpose of weight loss (class IIb).

By CKM stage 2 or 3, SGLT2 inhibitors or GLP-1 receptor agonists are more strongly endorsed in patients who have type 2 diabetes with CVD or increased risk for CVD per the PREVENT risk equations (class I).

Meanwhile, for people with CKD and type 2 diabetes or CKD and albuminuria, renin-angiotensin system inhibitors and SGLT2 inhibitors are promoted as first-line therapy (both class I). If albuminuria persists among patients with CKD and type 2 diabetes, a nonsteroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonist or a GLP-1-based therapy may be added for further kidney and cardiovascular protection (both class I).

"The recommended approach is aligned with the overarching premise of targeting individuals at the highest absolute risk for the most intensive treatments," wrote Ndumele and colleagues. "As such, individuals with CKD and T2D [type 2 diabetes] or CKD and albuminuria represent key benefit groups at high baseline absolute risk, with population-based analyses demonstrating that the overwhelming majority of individuals with CKD and T2D or albuminuria have a 10-year PREVENT-CVD score ≥7.5%."

The CKM guideline was developed by the AHA and the ACC in collaboration with the American Diabetes Association, the Obesity Association, and the American Society of Nephrology.

Disclosures

Over 40% of S&P 500 stocks trade below their 200-day MA amid selloff

 Market breadth within the S&P 500 (SP500) has weakened in recent weeks, even as the benchmark index remains above a key long-term technical threshold. According to current market data, 205 companies in the index are trading below their respective 200-day moving averages, representing roughly 41% of S&P 500 constituents.

The 200-day moving average is widely followed by investors as an indicator of a stock’s long-term trend and overall market health. A growing number of stocks falling beneath that level can signal deteriorating momentum beneath the surface, even when headline indexes appear relatively resilient. 

While the broader S&P 500 continues to hold above its own 200-day moving average, the index has slipped below its shorter-term 20-day moving average amid a recent bout of market volatility. The move highlights increasing near-term selling pressure following the latest market pullback. 

The divergence between the index and a significant portion of its underlying components suggests that weakness has become more widespread, with investors closely monitoring whether market breadth stabilizes or continues to deteriorate in the weeks ahead. 

Below are the 10 S&P 500 stocks trading furthest below their respective 200-day moving averages. 

  1. Intuit (INTU), 46.79% below 200-day MA
  2. Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD), 43.40% below 200-day MA
  3. Baxter International (BAX), 41.76% below 200-day MA
  4. PDD Holdings (PDD), 41.15% below 200-day MA
  5. CoStar Group (CSGP), 40.85% below 200-day MA
  6. Tractor Supply (TSCO), 37.46% below 200-day MA
  7. Church & Dwight (CHD), 35.31% below 200-day MA
  8. Coinbase Global (COIN), 34.88% below 200-day MA
  9. Zoetis (ZTS), 33.37% below 200-day MA
  10. Fidelity National Information Services (FIS), 30.77% below 200-day MA

S&P 500 Funds: (SPY), (VOO), (IVV), (RSP), (SSO), (UPRO), (SH), (SDS), (SPXU), (FXAIX), (VFIAX), (VFFSX), and (SWPPX).

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/topstocks/over-40-of-s-p-500-stocks-trade-below-their-200-day-ma-amid-selloff/ar-AA25jBAc

JPMorgan upgrades Illumina to Overweight from Neutral and raises its price target to $185 from $125

 JPMorgan upgrades Illumina to Overweight from Neutral and raises its price target to $185 from $125, citing customer stickiness and favorable recent survey results.

https://finviz.com/stock?t=ILMN&p=d

'Tectonic shift' away from the traditional 60/40 allocation – Morgan Stanley's Wilson

 Morgan Stanley’s chief U.S. equity strategist, Mike Wilson, says the market’s ability to absorb a wave of equity and debt offerings signals underlying financial health, despite the rapid pace of new deals hitting investors.

Wilson expressed confidence that there is sufficient capital in the market to handle the recent surge in IPO activity, characterizing the current environment as “another kind of bonanza year” that, while not matching the 2021 peak, demonstrates robust investor appetite.

In an interview with Bloomberg TV, Wilson pointed to a striking liquidity statistic to explain market resilience.

“Companies distribute income whether through buybacks or dividends, and they do about $1.7T a year,” he noted, adding that continuous inflows from retail investors, pensioners, and other asset owners further support market depth.

Wilson acknowledged that clustering multiple deals in a single quarter can create temporary “digestion problems” for the market. However, he maintained that “there’s plenty of liquidity out there” to manage these short-term disruptions, with the substantial capital returning to shareholders providing a buffer for new offerings.

The strategist identified a broader trend reshaping investor behavior: a “tectonic shift” away from the traditional 60/40 portfolio allocation between stocks and bonds. With the bond market enduring a four-year bear market, Wilson said investors are reallocating toward asset classes that offer better inflation protection.

“The average asset owner is pretty smart. They figured out that the biggest risk going forward is inflation,” Wilson explained.

He noted that maturing bond proceeds are increasingly flowing into equities (SP500), (COMP:IND), (DJI), gold (XAUUSD:CUR), silver (XAGUSD:CUR), and other real assets rather than back into fixed income.

This shift toward inflation-protected assets is driving the market’s capacity to absorb new offerings, according to Wilson.

Investors are moving toward allocations that “look more like 60/20/20 or even 70/30,” he said, reflecting a fundamental reassessment of portfolio construction in an inflationary environment.

U.S. markets tracking ETFs: (DIA), (DDM), (DOG), (DXD), (SDOW), (SPY), (VOO), (IVV), (RSP), (SSO), (UPRO), (SH), (SDS), (SPXU), (QQQ), (QQQM), (TQQQ), (QID), and (SQQQ).

Bond ETFs: (AGG), (BND), (VCIT), (MUB), (MBB), (JNK), (LQD), and (HYG).

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/savingandinvesting/there-is-a-tectonic-shift-away-from-the-traditional-60-40-allocation-morgan-stanley-s-wilson/ar-AA25iDJa

Visa partners with OpenAI, unveils new AI, token, stablecoin capabilities across payments network

 


  • Federal judge grants preliminary approval to Visa, Mastercard interchange fee settlement with merchants
  • Visa introduced these capabilities at its Payments Forum to power secure agentic and programmable commerce across its network

DOJ subpoenas major banks over alleged 'debanking': WSJ



The U.S. Justice Department has issued subpoenas to major banks, including JPMorgan ‌Chase and Bank of America, seeking information ‌on whether they improperly closed customer accounts for political reasons, the ​Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday.

The subpoenas, some dating back to last year, were from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Washington, D.C., headed by Jeanine Pirro.



They ‌requested banks to ⁠provide lists of individuals who were allegedly "debanked," along with details explaining why their ⁠accounts were closed, the report said.

Pirro's office is also seeking information from Wells Fargo, the report added, ​citing people ​familiar with the matter.

JPMorgan ​did not immediately respond ‌to Reuters' request for comment. Bank of America and Wells Fargo declined to comment.

The reported subpoenas add to President Donald Trump's pressure on major banks and their regulators. Last year, he signed an executive ‌order directing the industry to ​ensure it was not denying ​financial services to ​some controversial industries in a practice commonly ‌described as "debanking".

The Office of ​the Comptroller of ​the Currency had found in a review last year that the nine largest U.S. banks ​had placed restrictions ‌in the past on providing financial services.

Novo’s Wegovy Pill Already Has a 10,000-Person UK Waiting List

 


Chemist4U already has a waiting list of more than 10,000 customers interested in Novo Nordisk A/S’s Wegovy pill, which the online pharmacy said it expects will reach the UK market soon.

About three-quarters of those waiting for a consultation on the tablets have never taken weight-loss shots, Chemist4U Chief Executive Officer James O’Loan said in an interview on Wednesday. He said he expects approval of the pill in a matter of weeks.