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AI is very power-intensive — and its power needs are only set to rise in the coming years. Morgan Stanley Investment Management's Aaron Dunn says the "next big bottleneck" for the hyperscalers — which are doing a lot of the cloud computing for AI applications — is either power or fiber. And that's why Dunn is "pretty bullish" on utilities, naming one stock to play it: CMS Energy . "And so these utilities … have a very favorable opportunity to draw solid earnings growth and good returns for them," Dunn concluded. Their power consumption is set to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 11% through 2030, the bank said.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley Investment Management's Aaron Dunn, CNBC's, Dunn, Eaton Vance, BofA, — CNBC's Pia Singh Organizations: Morgan, Morgan Stanley Investment, Morgan Stanley U.S . Value, CMS Energy, CNBC, Emerson, Nvidia Locations: United States
One investor, however, has set his sights on another company offering a "value angle" on both semiconductors and artificial intelligence. Micron makes dynamic random access memory chips and NAND flash memory chips. DRAM, or dynamic random access memory, is a type of semiconductor memory needed for data processing. Micron is the third-largest player in the memory sector, coming after just South Korea's SK Hynix and Samsung , he added. Wolfe Research said Micron will likely benefit from a strong recovery in 2025 in both the DRAM and NAND space.
Persons: Aaron Dunn, CNBC's, Dunn, Morgan Stanley, you've, Goldman Sachs, Wolfe Organizations: Nvidia, Google, Micron Technology, Micron, Morgan, Value, South Korea's SK Hynix, Samsung, MU, UBS, Bank of America, Wolfe Research Locations: Morgan Stanley's
That was exacerbated as interest rates went up," Aaron Dunn, portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley's U.S. Value Fund, told CNBC's "Street Signs Asia" on Friday. When pressed on what stocks make good plays, Dunn responded with four names, adding: "There's a lot of opportunities out there to pick up really good companies on the cheap." It made up 2.4% of his U.S. Value Fund as of Oct. 31. Dollar Tree Elsewhere, the value investor is bullish on value store, Dollar Tree , which made up almost 3% of the U.S. Value Fund holdings, as of Oct. 31. Year-to-date shares are now up nearly 1% but this is " well under its intrinsic value," Dunn said.
Persons: , Aaron Dunn, CNBC's, Dunn, Morgan Stanley, – they've, Clorox Organizations: Morgan, Value, Agricultural, FMC Corporation, . Value, FMC, Alcoa Corp Aluminum, Alcoa, . Value Fund Locations: Morgan Stanley's, Alcoa, China
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 20 (Reuters) - U.S. equity funds registered huge withdrawals in the week ending Oct. 18, hit by a surge in bond yields and escalating geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Investors sold $4.57 billion of U.S. equity funds on a net basis during the week, logging outflows for the fifth consecutive week, according to LSEG data. Reuters Graphics Reuters GraphicsUtilities and tech topped sectoral outflows, booking $931 million and $707 million of outflows each. Reuters Graphics Reuters GraphicsInvestors also liquidated about $3.66 billion of bond funds, compared with about $1.13 billion of net purchases in the previous week. U.S. short/intermediate investment-grade, and high yield funds saw $2.4 billion and $1.93 billion worth of net selling, respectively.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Gaurav Dogra, Patturaja, Dhanya Ann Thoppil Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, REUTERS, Investors, Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics U.S, Treasury, Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics Utilities, Reuters Graphics Reuters, Thomson Locations: New York City, U.S, Bengaluru
Equity funds record largest ever weekly outflows -BofA
  + stars: | 2022-12-23 | by ( Lucy Raitano | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
U.S. value funds and passive equities also recorded record weekly net outflows, of $17.2 billion and $27.8 billion respectively, the bank said. BofA said "tax loss harvesting" was behind the record outflows, a strategy that involves selling assets at a loss to offset capital gains taxes. Local emerging market bonds drew their first net inflow since April, while emerging market equities recorded a third week of inflows, adding a net $3.2 billion. On a sector basis they favour value over growth, and industrials and banks over tech and private equity. Bond funds recorded net outflows of $10 billion, prompting a small drop in BofA's "Bull & Bear" indicator to 3 from 3.1 last week - which was its highest since March 15th.
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