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Shares of the chip giant pulled back about 2% during Tuesday's session, after announcing its latest AI chips . While Nvidia's latest announcements solidify the company's AI leadership, Wall Street anticipates some positive tailwinds for a slew of derivative players. Semiconductor derivative plays Nvidia's latest announcements could pose some major tailwinds for companies operating within the chipmaker's ecosystem. Liquid cooling The liquid cooling industry may also benefit as Nvidia harnesses the technology to cool the 72 Blackwell GPUs in its new server rack system, known as GB200 NVL72. "We believe built-in liquid cooling capabilities in addition to the power density of the system should be a positive for VRT's liquid cooling and power management businesses," he wrote.
Persons: Harlan Sur, Blackwell, Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Goldman Sachs, Toshiya Hari, Matt Bryson, Laura Chen, Oppenheimer, Rick Schafer, Amit Daryanani, Vertiv, Headwinds, Nvidia's Blackwell, Hari Organizations: Nvidia, NVIDIA, Micron Technology, MU, Micron, Taiwan Semiconductor, Wall, Marvell Technology, Blackwell, Micro Computer, Mosesmann, Devices, AMD, Data, Intel Locations: America
Micron touts HBM3E as an essential component to move the needle forward on AI advancement, and so far, analysts agree. Mosesmann's buy rating and $140 per share price target represents 50% upside from Friday's close. The analyst maintains an outperform rating on Micron stock as well as a $120 per share price target, which equates to roughly 29% upside. The firm maintains a buy rating on Micron coupled with a $112 per share price target, more than 20% above the previous close. The analysts raised his price target to $150 from $95, calling for about 61% upside moving forward.
Persons: Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann's, TD Cowen, Krish Sankar, Mehdi Hosseini, Citi's Christopher Danely, Danely Organizations: Micron Technology, Nvidia, GTC Conference, Micro, Analysts, Micron, MU, AMD
The hottest artificial intelligence event of the year kicks off next week, setting the stage for key AI players to see sharp moves. Nvidia's GTC Conference, dubbed "AI Woodstock" by Bank of America, offers an opportunity for the company to showcase its latest AI chip innovations and future vision as it labors to maintain its dominance in the field. The product is expected to offer a slew of "architectural innovations" and better performance than Nvidia's flagship H100 chip, wrote New Street's Pierre Ferragu. According to Wedbush's Matt Bryson, the new chip could benefit the liquid cooling industry that may fuel power-hungry data centers. "As such, we believe any system NVDA announces that includes liquid cooling technology could effectively dictate the path of liquid cooling moving forwards and thereby determining winners and losers in the server and cooling space," Bryson said.
Persons: Cantor Fitzgerald's C.J, Bank of America's Arya, Muse, Arya, Pierre Ferragu, Blackwell, Matt Bryson, Nvidia hasn't, Bryson, He's, Ferragu, Hans Mosesmann, Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon, Melius Research's Ben Reitzes Organizations: Bank of America, NVIDIA, Nvidia, Bank of America's, Blackwell, Devices, AMD, Intel, Micron, Broadcom, PHLX Semiconductor, Oracle Locations: San Jose , California
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia stock's bull run: Rosenblatt's Hans Mosesmann on his $1400 price targetHans Mosesmann, Rosenblatt Securities senior research analyst, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Nvidia stock's bull run, why he has a $1400 price target and buy rating on the stock, what it means for other tech stocks and the sector at large, and more.
Persons: Hans Mosesmann Organizations: Nvidia, Rosenblatt Securities
Super Micro Computer has soared more than 182% since the start of the year, but the chipmaker has even more upside potential ahead thanks to artificial intelligence tailwinds, according to Rosenblatt. Another key factor in Super Micro's growth story is its liquid cooling solutions for data centers, Mosesmann added. Traditional chipmakers have been less adept in this segment, which opens the door for Super Micro to achieve "heightened hyper-scale engagement," according to the analyst. "The anticipation of increased research coverage should further illuminate Supermicro's business model and the opportunities in its [total addressable market]." Shares of Super Micro were up nearly 3% Tuesday during premarket trading.
Persons: Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, Wells, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Micro Locations: Friday's
Its price target of $4,380 suggests nearly 18% upside from Friday's close. "We expect numbers to reset lower (again) with the downward revision a negative catalyst for the multiple, and the margin story likely being pushed out to 2025," wrote analyst Christian Carlino. Analyst Anthony Powell accompanied the move by raising his price target to $204 from $194, implying a potential 15% rally for the stock. The investment firm upgraded the airline stock to market-perform from underperform, boosting its price target to $32 from $26. His price target of $338 per share implies upside of just 5% from Friday's close.
Persons: Bernstein, Evercore, Piper Sandler, Brian Mullan, Mullan, — Jesse Pound, Aaron Kessler, — Michelle Fox, JPMorgan downgrades Holley, Holley, Christian Carlino, Carlino, HLLY, hasn't, — Lisa Kailai Han, AvalonBay, Anthony Powell, Powell, AVB, Lisa Kailai Han, Joshua Shanker, Morgan Stanley, bullish Tesla, Tesla, Adam Jonas, Jonas, Russell Quelch, Quelch, MSCI, Arun Viswanathan, Viswanathan, Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, Michael Linenberg, Linenberg, David Vernon, David Raso, Raso, Assuredness, Fred Imbert, ~$ ~$ Organizations: CNBC, Airlines, Southwest Airlines, Deutsche Bank, JetBlue, Caterpillar, Foods, . Restaurant, Seaport Research, Booking Holdings Seaport Research Partners, Booking Holdings, JPMorgan, Barclays, Bank of America, AIG, of America, Tesla Network, RBC, Ball Corporation, Markets, Ball Corp, Aerospace, BAE Systems, Ball, Micro Computer, Super Micro Computer, Micro, ASM, Spirit Airlines, Bernstein, Spirit, Boeing Max, ISI, CAT Locations: Southwest, Friday's
NVDA YTD mountain NVDA has surged in 2023 Ahead of earnings Wednesday, analysts are weighing in on the forthcoming report and how to trade the earnings. Oppenheimer's Rick Schafer maintained an outperform rating on Nvidia and raised his price target to $500 per share up from $420. Elsewhere, Citi analyst Atif Malik reiterated both a buy rating and a $520 per share price target in a note last week. However, Deutsche Bank analyst Ross Seymour is more cautious on Nvidia stock heading into earnings, and reiterated a hold rating in Tuesday note. Seymour maintains a $440 per share price target, which forecasts roughly 2% upside from the stocks current trading levels.
Persons: Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, Oppenheimer's Rick Schafer, " Schafer, Wolfe, Chris Caso, " Caso, Atif Malik, Wall, Malik, Ross Seymour, Seymour, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Rosenblatt Securities, Wolfe Research, Citi, Deutsche Bank, LT
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAI is 'the real deal' and an everything cycle that's never been seen before: Rosenblatt's MosesmannRosenblatt Securities analyst Hans Mosesmann joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss how Rosenblatt is looking at valuations, why Rosenblatt's raised the price target on Nvidia stock to $800, and more.
Persons: Rosenblatt's, Hans Mosesmann, Rosenblatt Organizations: Rosenblatt's Mosesmann Rosenblatt Securities, Nvidia
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWall Street previews highly-anticipated Nvidia earnings. How the pros are playing the stockMark Newton of Fundstrat, Hans Mosesmann of Rosenblatt Securities, Josh Brown of Ritholtz Wealth Management, Brian Belski of BMO Capital Markets and Lee Munson of Portfolio Wealth Advisors discussed Nvidia as the chipmaker prepares to announce its much-anticipated second-quarter earnings Wednesday.
Persons: Mark Newton of Fundstrat, Hans Mosesmann, Josh Brown, Brian Belski, Lee Munson Organizations: Rosenblatt Securities, Ritholtz Wealth Management, BMO Capital Markets, Nvidia
Market Movers rounded up the best reactions on Nvidia from investors and analysts. The experts discussed the chipmaker as it prepares to release its second-quarter financial results Wednesday. This comes after Nvidia catapulted to a $1 trillion market cap in the days following their last earnings report. Rosenblatt Securities upped its price target to $800 per share , the highest on Wall Street. Hans Mosesmann, the analyst who made the call , told CNBC Friday that 'an AI cycle the likes never seen before will help Nvidia nearly double in value.'
Persons: Hans Mosesmann, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Nvidia, Rosenblatt Securities, CNBC, Trust
The week ahead will "revolve around three things," Infrastructure Capital Management CEO Jay Hatfield remarked on the week ahead. "Nvidia's earnings, Nvidia's earnings and, to a lesser degree, Jackson Hole." Nvidia earnings Many investors expect Nvidia will beat expectations for the second quarter when it reports results next Wednesday . More commentary from Jackson Hole If Nvidia is the key microeconomic event next week, Jackson Hole will dominate macroeconomic discussion. Powell delivers his address at the annual central bank forum hosted by the Kansas City Fed next Friday morning.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Jay Hatfield, Jackson, Management's Yung, Yu Ma, Hans Mosesmann, Hatfield, Powell, Ross Mayfield, Ray Farris, Fed Governor Bowman, Michael Bloom Organizations: Federal, Infrastructure Capital Management, Dow, Nasdaq, Treasury, Fitch, Federal Reserve, BMO, Nvidia, Rosenblatt Securities, Infrastructure Capital Management's, Kansas City Fed, Fed, Infrastructure Capital, Credit Suisse, Richmond Fed, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, PMI, New, Body, Devices, Autodesk, Chicago, . Kansas City Fed Manufacturing, Intuit, Ulta Locations: , Wyoming, China, Infrastructure Capital Management's Hatfield, Powell, . Kansas, Michigan
Rosenblatt is getting more bullish on Nvidia , hiking its price target on the chip giant to a Street high ahead of next week's earnings release. Analyst Hans Mosesmann lifted his price target on the chipmaker to $800 from $600 a share, reflecting 82% upside from Tuesday's close. "With unmatched strengths in compilers, libraries, and vertical optimizations, NVDA can overcome hardware specification challenges and drive recurring software revenue streams," Mosesmann wrote in a Wednesday note. "While early innings, we view NVDA as a high-conviction story thriving amid uncertainty given secular AI, autonomous driving, and metaverse tailwinds." Mosesmann expects Nvidia to top estimates for the July quarter and anticipates earnings in the upcoming calendar year will range well into the high teens.
Persons: Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, Mosesmann, metaverse, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia
Even after surging more than 192% this year, the tailwinds for this under-the-radar artificial intelligence play are far from over, according to Rosenblatt. The target represents 25% upside from Wednesday's close. Super Micro's AI revenue accounts for 30% of sales, and Mosesmann expects that to continue accelerating. Its total addressable market is projected to surpass $178 billion by 2027, and fuel sales at a compounded annual growth rate exceeding 20%. Key to Super Micro's advantage is its green IT innovation and high-efficiency "resource-saving architecture" that can trim costs, energy consumption and data center e-waste, Mosesmann said.
Persons: Rosenblatt, Hans Mosesmann, SMCI, Mosesmann, Michael Bloom
Huang said Nvidia was also working with Microsoft and Alphabet Inc (GOOGL.O) to offer its supercomputers, used to create new AI products, as a service. Nvidia's new rental service, called DGX Cloud, could give many more developers the chance to access tens of thousands of its chips at once. Biotech firm Amgen Inc (AMGN.O) and software firm ServiceNow Inc (NOW.N) have started using the service, Nvidia said. Nvidia also launched a service called AI Foundations to help companies train their customized artificial intelligence models. Nvidia said it was working with ASML Holding (ASML.AS), Synopsys Inc (SNPS.O) and TSMC to bring it to market.
Nvidia shares opened up more than 12% Thursday morning, a day after the chipmaker reported a beat on the top and bottom line. Nvidia reported $6.05 billion in revenue for the fiscal fourth quarter and adjusted EPS of 88 cents, edging out the Wall Street consensus. Nvidia's AI play is "accelerating in a way that will have disruptive implications" for both its competitors and "the world at large," Rosenblatt Securities' Hans Mosesmann said in a Wednesday note. Caso hiked Nvidia's price target from $210 to $275. And in an about-face, Goldman Sachs' Toshiya Hari upgraded Nvidia to a buy rating and set a $275 price target.
Intel slashes dividend by over 65%, to 12.5 cents
  + stars: | 2023-02-22 | by ( Rohan Goswami | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger pictured during the 'Chips for health' event at the Grischa Hotel at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on May 24, 2022. Intel cut its quarterly dividend by more than 65%, from 36.5 cents to 12.5 cents, the chipmaker announced Wednesday, weeks after the company implemented a wide-ranging set of cost cuts. "Prudent allocation of our owners' capital is important to enable our IDM 2.0 strategy and sustain our momentum as we rebuild our execution engine," CEO Pat Gelsinger said in a press release announcing the cut. Intel guided to a 15 cent non-GAAP loss per share but didn't issue full-year guidance, citing economic uncertainty. "No words can portray or explain the historic collapse of Intel," Rosenblatt analyst Hans Mosesmann wrote after the earnings report.
Jan 27 (Reuters) - Intel Corp (INTC.O) was set to erase nearly $10 billion in market value on Friday after the U.S. chipmaker stumped Wall Street with dismal earnings projections, fanning fears around a slump in the personal-computer market. The company predicted a surprise loss for the first quarter and its revenue forecast was $3 billion below estimates as it also struggled with slowing growth in the data center business. The company has been steadily losing market share to rivals like AMD, which has used contract chipmakers such as Taiwan-based TSMC (2330.TW) to make chips that outpace Intel's technology. Intel, which plans to cut $3 billion in costs this year, generated $7.7 billion in cash from operations in the fourth quarter and paid dividends of $1.5 billion. With capital expenditure estimated to be around $20 billion in 2023, analysts said the company should consider cutting its dividend.
The company predicted a surprise loss for the first quarter and its revenue forecast was $3 billion below estimates as it also struggled with slowing growth in the data center business. "No words can portray or explain the historic collapse of Intel," said Rosenblatt Securities' Hans Mosesmann, who was among the 21 analysts who cut their price targets on the stock. The company has steadily been losing market share to rivals like AMD, which has used contract chipmakers such as Taiwan-based TSMC (2330.TW) to make chips that outpace its technology. "AMD's Genoa and Bergamo (data center) chips have a strong price-performance advantage compared to Intel's Sapphire Rapids processors, which should drive further AMD share gains," said Matt Wegner, analyst at YipitData. With capital expenditure estimated to be around $20 billion in 2023, analysts say the company should consider cutting its dividend.
Intel stock tumbles over 10% after brutal results
  + stars: | 2023-01-27 | by ( Rohan Goswami | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Pat Gelsinger, CEO, of Intel Corporation, testifies during the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation hearing on semiconductors titled Developing Next Generation Technology for Innovation, in Russell Senate Office Building on Wednesday, March 23, 2022. Intel shares continued to slide on Friday, falling 10% in premarket trading, after the company reported dismal quarterly and full-year results. The chipmaker's tepid quarterly numbers, with a 32% year-over-year revenue decline and a net loss of $664 million for the fourth quarter of 2022, took both analysts and investors by surprise. Analysts did not mince words, cutting price targets almost across the board. Rosenblatt maintained its sell rating for Intel and lowered its price target from $20 to $17.
Intel's 'historic collapse' sparks selloff in chip stocks
  + stars: | 2023-01-27 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
"No words can portray or explain the historic collapse of Intel," said Hans Mosesmann, analyst at Rosenblatt Securities, who was among the 16 analysts who cut their price targets on the stock. "AMD's Genoa and Bergamo chips have a strong price-performance advantage compared to Intel's Sapphire Rapids processors, which should drive further AMD share gains," said Matt Wegner, analyst at YipitData. Intel's results are also expected to sharply reduce the cash flow available to the company at a time when the CEO is trying to revive the business by expanding contract manufacturing and building new factories in the United States and Europe. "It is now clear why Intel needs to cut so much cost as the company's original plans prove to be fantasy," Bernstein analysts said. Reporting by Aditya Soni, Nivedita Balu and Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by Krishna Chandra EluriOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
JPMorgan cuts price target to $28 from $32, reiterates underweight rating. Mizuho cuts price target to $29 from $32, reiterates neutral rating. Wells Fargo cuts price target to $26 from $32, reiterates equal weight rating. Barclays cuts price target to $27 from $30, keeps equal weight rating. Cowen cuts price target to $26 from $31, keeps market perform rating.
Jan 27 (Reuters) - Intel Corp (INTC.O) saw about $8 billion wiped off its market value on Friday after the U.S. chipmaker stumped Wall Street with dismal earnings projections, fanning fears around a slump in the personal-computer market. The company predicted a surprise loss for the first quarter and its revenue forecast was $3 billion below estimates as it also struggled with slowing growth in the data center business. The company has been steadily losing market share to rivals like AMD, which has used contract chipmakers such as Taiwan-based TSMC (2330.TW) to make chips that outpace Intel's technology. Intel, which plans to cut $3 billion in costs this year, generated $7.7 billion in cash from operations in the fourth quarter and paid dividends of $1.5 billion. With capital expenditure estimated to be around $20 billion in 2023, analysts said the company should consider cutting its dividend.
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