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Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Meme stocks — Meme stocks roared for a second day with GameStop surging more than 65% and AMC popping over 70%. AMC's Tuesday rally came even after the movie theater said it completed a $250 million stock sale during Monday's wild trading. Sony — U.S.-listed shares jumped 5.3% after quarterly revenue came in at 3.5 trillion yen, topping the consensus expectation of 2.89 trillion yen from analysts polled by LSEG. On Holding — The shoe maker jumped 16% after first-quarter earnings came in well ahead of analysts' expectations. Boston Beer Company — Shares added 1% after the beer brewer was upgraded by Jefferies to buy from hold.
Persons: United, Newell Brands, Roth, , Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans Organizations: GameStop, AMC, Sony —, LSEG, Vodafone — U.S, United Airlines —, Barclays, Boston Beer, Jefferies, JPMorgan Locations: Europe
Cava — Shares jumped 4.4% after Argus upgraded the Mediterranean food chain to buy from hold, saying investors should buy the dip. Cava has a "long runway to growth," the firm said. Nvidia — Shares rose 1.7% as the "Magnificent Seven" leader tried to claw its way out of correction territory . Earnings came in at 45 cents per share, 9 cents ahead of the 36 cents expected by analysts polled by LSEG. Alibaba — Shares rose 1.2% on news that Jack Ma, co-founder of the China-based e-commerce company, touted Alibaba's management and talked about the potential for AI in an internal memo to employees.
Persons: Truist, Cava —, William Blair, Vital, Jefferies, Wednesday's, Albemarle, Jack Ma, Samantha Subin, Michelle Fox Theobald, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Hoka, Argus, Nvidia, Vital, Mizuho, Zillow, National Association of Realtors, GoodRx Holdings, Delta Air Lines, LSEG, Bank of America, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: Cava, China
Since they are AR glasses, users can see digital content imposed over the real-world view they see in front of them. Oppo, a Chinese firm and one of the world's biggest smartphone makers, announced the Oppo Air Glass 3 at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. BARCELONA – Oppo on Monday unveiled a prototype set of augmented reality (AR) glasses with a voice assistant, underscoring how electronics giants are trying to infuse artificial intelligence across their products to stand out. The Air Glass 3 needs to be tethered to an Oppo smartphone. Oppo said that its latest AR glasses are equipped with a voice assistant which is powered by the Chinese tech giant's own large language model (LLM) called AndesGPT.
Persons: Oppo, Alibaba — Organizations: Mobile, BARCELONA, Oppo, Baidu, Tech, Apple, IDC Locations: Barcelona, China
Roblox said it lost 52 cents per share, narrower than the 55-cent estimate from analysts polled by LSEG. Yum Brands — Shares slipped 1.3% after the KFC, Taco Bell and Pizza Hut parent reported fourth-quarter earnings and revenue that missed expectations. Uber earned 66 cents per share and saw $9.94 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG expected 17 cents and $9.76 billion. The company also announced a special dividend of 18 cents per share on top of its regular first-quarter dividend of 15 cents per share. Fortinet beat analyst consensus estimates on both lines in the quarter, pulling attention away from its weak earnings guidance.
Persons: Alibaba, Roblox, Uber, LSEG, Chipotle, Ford, Enphase, Sonos, Fortinet, Walt Disney, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, KFC, Taco Bell, CVS, Enphase Energy, FactSet, Warner Bros, Discovery, Fox, ESPN, Walt Disney Locations: Israel
Adjusted earnings per share for the fourth quarter came in at 54 cents, slightly below the 55 cents expected from analysts polled by FactSet. Yum Brands — The restaurant stock added 3% despite Yum Brands' adjusted earnings and revenue miss for the fourth quarter. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 77 cents, topping the consensus estimate of 62 cents, according to FactSet. The company added about 300,000 net digital-only subscribers quarter over quarter, but advertising revenues came in below the company's guidance. Chipotle Mexican Grill — Shares added 8% a day after the fast-casual restaurant chain reported stronger-than-expected adjusted earnings and revenue.
Persons: Alessandro DiNello, Badri Kothandaraman, Alibaba, Amgen, Chipotle, Sonos, Walt Disney, Walt Disney's, Discovery, Fox, Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Sarah Min, Hakyung Kim Organizations: LSEG, New York Community Bank, Moody's Investors, New, Community, Enphase Energy, FactSet, Revenue, Yum Brands, KFC, Taco Bell, LSEG . Revenue, Leerink Partners, CVS, New York Times, Warner Bros, Discovery, Fox, Walt Disney's ESPN, Walt Disney, Disney, Cirrus Locations: LSEG ., Israel, Alibaba —, FactSet, FactSet .
The top-performing U.S.-listed Chinese stocks for 2023 weren't well-known internet names. But topping PDD were three stocks that basically doubled or more for the year: ACM Research , New Oriental Education and Ehang . Overall market struggled Individual stock gains contrast with a steep decline for Chinese stocks overall. The outperforming mainland Chinese stock index was the Beijing Stock Exchange 50 Index, up by about 15% in 2023, according to Wind. Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that ZKH is listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
Persons: Alibaba, it's, Dong, Goldman Sachs, Ehang, Allen Chang, EHang, Goldman, Hollysys Organizations: PDD Holdings, ACM Research, New Oriental Education, Nvidia, Wings Logistics, United Arab Emirates, Auto, Technologies, Ascendent, Partners, New York Stock Exchange, U.S, CSI, Beijing Stock Locations: China, New, Hong Kong, ., United Arab, Shanghai, Beijing
Pfizer — Shares dropped 4.2% after the drugmaker said it would halt development of its twice-daily experimental weight loss pill. Marvell Technology — The semiconductor stock fell more than 5% after Marvell issued lower-than-expected revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Ulta Beauty — The stock gained nearly 12% after the beauty products retailer reported third-quarter earnings that beat analysts' expectations. Ulta reported earnings of $5.07 per share, higher than the $4.95 per share analysts polled by LSEG were expecting. Dell — Stock in the computer maker fell nearly 6% on the heels of a mixed third-quarter earnings report.
Persons: Pfizer, Andrew Nowinski, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Tesla, Coinbase, Ulta, LSEG, Jessica Fye, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Pfizer —, Paramount Global, Wall Street Journal, Apple, Disney —, Trian Fund Management, Marvell Technology, Marvell, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, Wall, LSEG, JPMorgan Locations: , Wells Fargo
Ulta Beauty — The beauty stock rallied nearly 11% after posting third-quarter results that surpassed analysts' estimates. Samsara — Samsara shares popped 16% after the cloud company posted better-than-expected quarterly results and shared stronger-than-expected guidance. The chip company posted third-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's estimates but shared weaker-than-expected guidance for the current quarter. Ambarella — Shares slipped 1% after Ambarella reported third-quarter gross margins of 62.6%, down from 63.5% in the year-ago period. Otherwise, the semiconductor design company posted quarterly results that topped estimates.
Persons: Tesla, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Dell, Altimmune, Ambarella, Jefferies, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Jesse Pound Organizations: Disney — Disney, Trian Fund Management, Pfizer, Paramount Global, Street Journal, Paramount, Apple, Marvell Technology, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, LSEG, JPMorgan, Norfolk Southern, Bank of America, CSG Locations: Texas, China, Wells Fargo, Norfolk, Ohio
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. BJ's Wholesale Club — Shares retreated 4.6% in premarket trading after the company revised its expectation for comparable store sales in the fourth quarter amid shifting consumer behavior. Applied Materials — Shares slid 7.2% on Friday, a day after Reuters reported , citing sources, that the semiconductor company was under a Justice Department probe. Gap — The retailer soared 18.5% in premarket trading Friday. Marriott Vacations Worldwide — Shares of the timeshare company lost 2.5% after a Bank of America downgrade to underperform from neutral.
Persons: Alibaba, FactSet, Ross, Expedia, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min Organizations: BJ's Wholesale, Tenet Healthcare, Novant Health, Reuters, Justice Department, Ross, LSEG, Evercore ISI, Pacific Biosciences, UBS, biosciences, Barclays, Marriott, Bank of America Locations: Alibaba —, Carolina, California, GitLab
Cisco Systems — Shares dropped 11.3% after the company's earnings guidance for the current quarter came out below analyst estimates, driven by a slowdown in new product orders. Children's Place — Shares of Children's Place plunged 25.8% after retailer quarterly adjusted earnings of $3.22, trailing the FactSet consensus estimate of $3.49. Walmart — Shares dropped more than 7% after the big box retailer gave disappointing guidance . Walmart said it expects adjusted earnings per share of $6.40 to $6.48 for the year, slightly lower than analysts were anticipating. Advance Auto Parts — The auto parts retailer tumbled 4% after Bank of America downgraded the stock to underperform from neutral.
Persons: Patrick Spence, Macy's, Alibaba, Williams, Children's, Piper Sandler, John David Rainey, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh Organizations: General Motors — General Motors, United Auto Workers, Sonoma, Cisco Systems —, Cisco, Alto Networks, Palo Alto Networks, billings, Walmart, CNBC, Bank of America, Citi Locations: U.S, Sonoma
Here are some of the other stocks in Goldman's conviction list. Aside from TSMC, Goldman's conviction list stocks in this category include Chinese tech giant Hon Hai Precision Industry and Japanese electronics manufacturing company Ibiden . AI-empowered names The bank's conviction list stocks in this category include Chinese machine industry player Envicool , Japanese video game publisher Bandai Namco Entertainment and industrial equipment company Keyence . Goldman has an 83,000 yen price target on Keyence, giving it an upside of 56.7%. Stocks that are both Goldman named Chinese tech giants Alibaba and Baidu as its conviction list stocks that are both in the business of enabling and empowering AI.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Daiki Takayama, TSMC, Goldman, Hai —, Envicool, Alibaba, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Sheila Chiang Organizations: Taiwanese Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, New, Companies, Precision Industry, Bandai Namco Entertainment, Bandai Namco, Baidu, Alibaba Locations: Asia, New Taiwan
Alibaba — Shares lost 1% after outgoing CEO Daniel Zhang unexpectedly quit its cloud business. In June, the company had said Zhang was leaving as chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group to focus on the cloud intelligence unit. Qualcomm — The semiconductor stock jumped 7.4% premarket after saying Monday it will supply Apple with 5G modems for smartphones through 2026. The Wall Street firm said the slide in the Band-Aid maker has created an attractive entry point. The Wall Street firm called software and services revenue the "biggest value driver" for Tesla.
Persons: Alibaba —, Daniel Zhang, Zhang, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, , Smucker, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox Theobald, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Kif Leswing Organizations: Tenable Holdings, JPMorgan, Alibaba Group, Qualcomm, Apple, Deutsche Bank, Oracle, Hostess Brands, Meta, Wall Street
Tesla — Shares of the electric vehicle maker jumped 6% after Morgan Stanley upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight. Kenvue — Shares of the Band-Aid maker gained 3% after being upgraded by Deutsche Bank to buy from hold on Sunday. The Wall Street firm called Kenvue a high-quality company and believes the stock's slide has created an attractive entry point. Nubank – The U.S.-traded shares of the Brazilian financial firm rose nearly 6% after JPMorgan upgraded Nubank to overweight from neutral. Discovery and Paramount also traded higher on the news, rising 2.2% and 1.9%, respectively,AstraZeneca — The pharmaceutical company's shares lost nearly 3% midday Monday.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Adam Jones, — Smucker, Alibaba, Daniel Zhang, Zhang, Nubank, Warner, Pascal Soriot, Immatics, — CNBC's Alexander Harring, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, Hostess Brands, Tenable Holdings, JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank, Alibaba Group, Wall Street, Meta, Qualcomm, Apple, Media, Disney, Charter Communications, Warner Bros . Discovery, Paramount, AstraZeneca, Reuters, Mail, Moderna —, Moderna Locations: Shanghai, U.S, Brazil
AppLovin said it anticipates revenue to range between $780 million and $800 million, ahead of the $741 million expected by analysts, per Refinitiv. Alibaba — U.S.-traded shares rose 4.3% Thursday after the Chinese company beat analysts' expectations and posted its biggest year-over-year revenue growth since 2021. In the June quarter, the company posted revenue of 234.16 billion yuan versus 224.92 billion yuan expected, per Refinitiv. Earlier this week, Fleetcor posted adjusted earnings of $4.19 per share on revenue of $948.2 million. Analysts polled by FactSet called for earnings of $4.17 per share on revenue of $945 million.
Persons: Kate Spade, AppLovin, Alibaba, Versace, Jimmy Choo, Michael Kors, Wynn, Refinitiv, Jefferies, Truist, Nick McKay, Fleetcor, FactSet, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Yun Li, Alex Harring Organizations: Disney —, Disney, Capri Holdings, Capri, Wynn, , Penn Entertainment, Disney's ESPN, Wedbush Locations: Marina, Sands, Singapore, Alibaba —, Wednesday's
China's tech crackdown wiped $1.1 trillion off the valuation of its Big Tech firms. China's economy is struggling to recover after three years of on-off COVID-19 lockdowns. China cracked down on the country's tech sector in 2020, taking down its Big Tech, whose market value has been wiped by $1.1 trillion. But now, authorities are laying out the red carpet for the same firms because the economy is in deep trouble. Local governments in China are wooing tech giants with at least five recent deals to build on the so-called "platform economy," the South China Morning Post reported on Sunday.
Persons: NetEase, Yin Li, Kuaishou, Yin Yong, Daniel Zhang, Lei Jun, Alibaba, Jack Ma Organizations: Big Tech, Morning, China Morning Post, Sunday, Communist Party Locations: China, Beijing, Hangzhou, Tianjin, Shenzhen
Jack Ma's Alibaba and Ant Group collectively lost $850 billion in value since their peak in 2020. They came under pressure following Ma's criticism of Beijing, which spurred a regulatory crackdown. On Friday, Beijing announced a $985 million fine for Ant Group, signaling an end to the crackdown. In April, he was appointed an honorary professor at the University of Hong Kong. Alibaba shares in Hong Kong were up 3.1% at 86.90 Hong Kong dollars apiece at midday, buoyed by news of the fine.
Persons: Jack Ma's Alibaba, Jack Ma, Ma, , Ant — Organizations: Ant Group, Ant, Michelin, University of Hong, Hong Locations: Beijing, China's, Alibaba, China, Bangkok, Thai, Hong Kong, Hangzhou, University of Hong Kong, Japan, New York
Rivian Automotive — The electric vehicle maker popped more than 16% after Wedbush raised its price target on shares to $30 from $25, citing an improved outlook. Levi Strauss — Shares of the jeans maker slumped 6.7% after the company cut its full-year profit forecast on Thursday. Levi Strauss now expects an adjusted $1.10 to $1.20 per share compared to a previous range of $1.30 to $1.40. First Solar — The solar company climbed 4.6% after receiving a five-year revolving line of credit as well as a guarantee for a $1 billion facility. The firm said it sees sales of TG Therapeutics' treatment for relapsing forms of multiple sclerosis, Briumvi, to come in above expectations for the second quarter.
Persons: Alibaba, Wedbush, Levi Strauss —, Levi Strauss, Cantor Fitzgerald, DraftKings, Jefferies, CNBC's Hakyung Kim Organizations: Reuters, Ant Group, JPMorgan, Therapeutics, TG Therapeutics, Food and Drug Administration Locations: Chicago , Illinois, Alibaba —, Thursday's
The Levi Strauss & Co. label is seen on jeans in a store at the Woodbury Common Premium Outlets in Central Valley, New York, U.S., February 15, 2022. Check out the companies making the biggest moves before the bell:Levi Strauss — The apparel retailer fell 7.7% after slashing its profit outlook for the year postmarket Thursday. Levi now expects adjusted earnings per share of $1.10 to $1.20 for the year, down from $1.30 to $1.40 previously. Alibaba — U.S. listed shares of the Chinese ecommerce retailer gained about 3% before the opening bell. First Solar - Shares added 1.7% after the solar company secured a five-year revolving credit and guarantee facility worth $1 billion.
Persons: Levi Strauss, Levi, Alibaba, Ant, Wanxiang, JPMorgan Chase, Tesla, Twitter, , Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Organizations: Woodbury, and Drug Administration, Medicare, Reuters, Ant Group, JPMorgan, Bloom, Bloom Energy, RBC Capital Markets, Costco —, Costco, Meta Locations: Central Valley , New York, U.S, Alibaba —, China, Shanghai
A Nvidia Corp. HGX H100 artificial intelligence supercomputing graphics processing unit (GPU) at the showroom of the company's offices in Taipei, Taiwan, on Friday, June 2, 2023. China's artificial intelligence stocks fell Wednesday after the Wall Street Journal reported that the U.S. is planning to impose new curbs on shipments of AI chips to China. According to the Journal, U.S. chip makers such as Nvidia will be affected by the move which could happen as early as July. China's CSI artificial intelligence index fell 3% on that news on Wednesday in Asia. The Shenzhen-traded shares of Inspur Electronic Information Industry slumped 10% and Chengdu Information Technology of Chinese Academy of Sciences dropped nearly 8%.
Persons: OpenAI's ChatGPT, Bard chatbots, Organizations: Nvidia Corp, Wall Street Journal, Journal, Nvidia, CSI, Industry, Chengdu Information Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, China, Asia, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Hong Kong, U.S
Atmus Filtration Technologies — Shares of the air filtration company rose more than 2% after a slew of analysts initiated coverage with bullish ratings, including JPMorgan. The bank said Atmus trades at a "deep discounted valuation vs. peers, despite >80% of aftermarket mix, while its planned expansion into industrial filtration should bridge the valuation gap vs. direct filtration peers over time." Avis Budget — Shares added 3.5% in light volume following an upgrade by Morgan Stanley to overweight from equal weight. Philip Morris International — Shares of the tobacco company rose 1.5% in premarket trading after Citi upgraded Philip Morris to buy from neutral. Carnival — Shares moved 1.5% higher in the premarket, building on gains made last week when it was the S&P 500's best performer.
Persons: Daniel Zhang, Eddie Wu, Alibaba's, Eli Lilly, Morgan Stanley, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Avis, Philip Morris, , Jesse Pound Organizations: Alibaba, Holding, JPMorgan, Avis Budget, Citi, Warner Bros Discovery Locations: Beijing, China,
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Goldman Sachs — Shares declined 2.2% in midday trading. Avis — The car rental company surged more than 6%. Chevron , ExxonMobil — Energy giants Chevron and ExxonMobil slipped more than 2% each in midday trading. Dice Therapeutics — Shares surged 37% after Eli Lilly said it was acquiring the biopharmaceutical company for $2.4 billion.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Avis —, Morgan Stanley, Avis, Jay Sole, Rivian, Eli Lilly, Alibaba, Daniel Zhang, Wells, Biden, , Jesse Pound, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: UBS, Bank of America, Chevron, ExxonMobil — Energy, ExxonMobil, U.S . West Texas, Nike —, Rivian, Ford, GM, Intel, Bloomberg, Wall, JPMorgan Chase Locations: China, Brent, U.S, Germany, Wells Fargo, New York City
Sale signs inside the Bath and Body Works store in Edmonton. Walmart also reported stronger-than-expected adjusted earnings and revenue, according to Refinitiv. Take-Two Interactive Software — The video game company surged 14% after posting better-than-expected revenue for its fiscal fourth quarter. Bath & Body Works — The retailer of body care and fragrance saw its stock surge nearly 10% in premarket after the company posted stronger-than-expected earnings and revenue for the latest quarter. Bath & Body Works also raised its full-year earnings guidance.
Walmart — Shares of the big box retailer rose slightly after the company reported an earnings and revenue beat for the fiscal first quarter. However, its adjusted earnings guidance for the fiscal second quarter came in lower than expectations. Bath & Body Works — The retailer's shares jumped more than 9% after its fiscal first quarter earnings topped expectations. Take-Two Interactive — Shares surged almost 13% and hit a new 52-week high following the company's earnings announcement Wednesday. To be sure, the company's guidance for bookings in the first-quarter and full-year fell below Wall Street's expectations.
The Wall Street firm anticipates U.S. retail sales could be down close to 20%. The Wall Street firm said growth in the drugs has "significantly outperformed" its expectations. Alibaba — Shares of the Chinese e-commerce giant rose 2%, rebounding from a near 6% selloff in the previous session. Chipotle — Shares rose 1% after Citi said it was optimistic about the restaurant chain's earnings report later this month. They will look for insight on whether Tesla is planning more price cuts on key models such as the Model 3 and Model Y.
On Monday, Alibaba co-founder Jack Ma visited a private school he founded in Hangzhou, China. Ma first vanished from public view after angering authorities in 2020 amid Beijing's tech crackdown. The private school caters to students from kindergarten to high school. Ma returned to China amid signals that Beijing may be taking a friendlier stance toward private enterprises after more than two years of a widespread tech crackdown. His visit follows a top Chinese central banker's comments in January that Beijing's tech crackdown was coming to a close.
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