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Honeywell posted adjusted earnings per share of $2.25, beating analysts' estimates of $2.17 per share, per LSEG. Revenue for the quarter also came in better-than-expected at $9.11 billion, compared to the $9.03 billion analysts were expecting. ServiceNow — The digital workflow firm slid 5% after it only narrowly beat analysts' revenue expectations in the first quarter. ServiceNow posted revenue of $2.6 billion, slightly higher than the $2.59 billion analysts polled by LSEG had anticipated. Caterpillar — Shares tumbled 6.5% after revenues of $15.8 billion for the most recent quarter missed analysts' estimates of $16.04 billion, according to LSEG.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Mark Zuckerberg, ServiceNow, LSEG, , Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: Facebook, Meta, Tech, Microsoft, Beverage, JPMorgan, Monster Beverage, Honeywell —, Honeywell, Revenue, Merck, Co, LSEG, — Bank of America, Southwest Airlines —, Management, StreetAccount, Machines, IBM, Bank of America, Caterpillar, Nvidia —, Nvidia, Comcast, Deutsche Bank — U.S, Deutsche Bank, CNBC Locations: NBCUniversal
Artificial intelligence has shaken up the investing landscape since the groundbreaking launch of ChatGPT in November 2022. Since then, investors have poured money into all things related to AI as they hunt for the next big winners. AI is poised to be a central theme as the technology transitions from early-stage winners to second-stage adopters. When it comes to chip stocks, Schleif also recommends taking a look at government grants. She highlighted the Global X Robotics and Artificial Intelligence ETF (BOTZ) , the First Trust Nasdaq AI and Robotics ETF (ROBT) and the Global X Artificial Intelligence & Technology ETF (AIQ).
Persons: Tesla, Nvidia —, Jay Woods, Carol Schleif, Schleif, Joe Biden, Nancy Tengler, Marguerita Cheng, BMO's Organizations: ChatGPT, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Big Tech, Nasdaq, Freedom Capital, BMO Family Office, Samsung Electronics, Intel, Investors, Tengler, IBM, Blue, Global Wealth, Robotics, Intelligence, Technology Locations: Texas, Gaithersburg , Maryland
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
Nvidia — Stock in the chipmaker slipped less than 1% before the opening bell, but the artificial intelligence play and "Magnificent Seven" leader officially entered correction territory on Tuesday. Shares have fallen 10% from an all-time closing high of $950 per share on March 25. Alibaba Group — The China-based e-commerce stock rose nearly 3% on media reports that co-founder Jack Ma touted the company's management in an internal memo to employees. GoodRx — Shares climbed nearly 4% after KeyBanc upgraded the telemedicine stock to overweight on the heels of a strong subscriber growth forecast. Deckers Outdoor — Shares slipped more than 2% after Truist downgraded the footwear stock to hold over concerns that demand for core products including Hoka is declining.
Persons: Jack Ma, Truist, Ed Bastian, , Sarah Min, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Nvidia —, Alibaba, Albemarle —, Bank of America, KeyBanc, Delta Air Lines, CNBC Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: China
BlackBerry — BlackBerry shares popped more than 9% after the company announced a partnership with Advanced Micro Devices on robotics systems. Neogen Corp — The food safety stock shed 9% after the company reported a surprise loss of 1 cent per share. The company also trimmed its previous guidance, saying it now expects revenue to range between $920 million and $910 million for the full year. Norfolk Southern announced that it reached a $600 million settlement related to its derailment in East Palestine. Nvidia — Shares fell more than 2%, putting the chipmaker on track for its fifth losing session in six.
Persons: Tilray, FactSet, Goldman Sachs, Molson Coors, Molson, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Pia Singh, Yun Li Organizations: Moderna, Reuters, Merck, Boeing, New York Times, Google, American Eagle Outfitters, JPMorgan, Eagle Outfitters, Bank of America, EV, Molson, Pfizer, Neogen Corp, Norfolk Southern, Nvidia —, Netflix Locations: East Palestine
Shares of Alphabet are on the verge of a possible breakout ahead of the company's three-day Google Cloud Next conference in Las Vegas, where artificial intelligence will be a major theme. Shortly after the trade, Alphabet shares ran into a brick wall after some advertising weakness surfaced in fourth-quarter results and was followed by a controversy over Gemini's image generator that caused the company to pull the tool. The conference is expected to show that "Google is not being left behind, not being troubled by Search," Jim said. That said, we expect Tuesday's AI conversation to be limited to how it relates to Google Cloud. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
Persons: Thomas Kurian's, Nvidia —, bottoming, Jim Cramer, Jim, Nikesh Arora, Anthropic, Dario Amodei, Ford Yao Ge, Nik Spirin, Oppenheimer, Claude, Jim Cramer's Organizations: Google Cloud, Google, Microsoft, Super, Apple, Nvidia, Management, CNBC, Amazon, Bank of America, Palo Alto, Ford, Apple's Worldwide, Getty Locations: Las Vegas, Palo Alto, Amazon, OpenAI
Donald Trump's newly public social-media company is not the next Nvidia — or Meta or Google or whatever has happened with X/Twitter. It seems, let's say, unlikely that his media company's stock price is going to stay so high forever. AdvertisementFor one thing, TMTG, which owns the conservative Twitter copycat Truth Social, makes basically nothing. Truth Social and any other business Trump Media and Technology Group spins up is pretty much guaranteed to appeal just to Trump fans. Might Trump and Truth Social be different, at least on the stock front?
Persons: Donald Trump's, Trump, Peter Thiel, Peter Kafka, aren't, Don Jr, Emily Stewart Organizations: Nvidia, Trump Media, Technology Group, Hasbro, Trump, Apple, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Republicans, White, GameStop, AMC, Business Locations: SPAC
Microsoft and OpenAI are working on a $100 billion supercomputer, according to The Information. Executives at both companies have already drawn up plans for the data center project, which would power OpenAI's artificial intelligence, according to the outlet. Related storiesMicrosoft, which has already committed more than $13 billion to OpenAI, would likely provide funding for Stargate, per the report. OpenAI currently uses Microsoft data centers to power its generative AI system ChatGPT in exchange for Microsoft having exclusive rights to resell OpenAI's technology to its own customers. AdvertisementThe supercomputer could be 100 times more expensive than the largest data centers currently in operation, per the report.
Persons: , OpenAI, Altman, It's Organizations: Microsoft, Service, Business
Here are the companies making headlines on Wall Street ahead of the opening bell. Several Wall Street analysts hiked their price target for Nvidia after the event. Disney — Shares declined less than 1% following news that filmmaker George Lucas is backing Disney CEO Bob Iger in the company's proxy fight with activist investor Nelson Peltz. Super Micro Computer — The tech stock tumbled more than 10% after a filing showed a new stock offering of two million shares. The company's full-year revenue guidance was also near the low end of Wall Street expectations.
Persons: Jerry's, bitcoin, George Lucas, Bob Iger, Nelson Peltz, Lucas, Goldman Sachs, DLocal Organizations: Nvidia, Unilever, Disney —, CNBC, Tencent Locations: San Jose , California
Google — Alphabet Class A shares were trading 5.6% higher following a Bloomberg report that said Apple is in talks with Google to license and build its Gemini artificial intelligence engine into future iPhones. Nvidia — The stock moved 2.7% higher ahead of its highly-anticipated GTC Conference , where the chipmaker is expected to announce various AI updates. HashiCorp — Shares jumped 9.8% on news that the San Francisco-based software provider has been considering options including a sale. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — The U.S.-listed shares gained 1.5% after a Reuters report , citing sources familiar, said Taiwan Semiconductor is deliberating building advanced packaging capacity in Japan. Tesla — Shares rose 3.2% even after Goldman Sachs cut its price target on Tesla by $30 to $190 as the electric vehicle maker faces issues with rising competition and slower demand.
Persons: Apple, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Bloomberg, Google, Nvidia, Conference, HSBC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor, Tesla Locations: San Francisco, U.S, Taiwan, Japan
Investors see the event as a bellwether for artificial intelligence, as Nvidia is expected to unveil new products and updates. Alphabet , Apple — Shares of the Google parent company gained nearly 7% following a Bloomberg report that said Apple was discussing licensing Alphabet's Gemini artificial intelligence engine into the iPhone. Apple climbed roughly 2%. PepsiCo — The beverage stock rose nearly 4% after an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley . PepsiCo's business fundamentals should bottom out early this year and then rebound in the second half, according to Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Apple, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Uber, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Nvidia —, Conference, Investors, Nvidia, National Association of Realtors, realtors ., , Google, Bloomberg, Apple, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Reuters, Bank of America, PepsiCo, Technologies Locations: San Francisco, Japan
"In addition to NVDA, investors have been focused on a broadening of the AI trade. We expect there will likely be three broad, subsequent stages of the AI trade," Hammond wrote. Goldman foresees a second phase that focuses on companies that build and maintain the infrastructure around AI. "Based on performance and valuation, investors have already started to price subsequent phases of the AI trade. An equal-weighted basket of Phase 2 stocks is up 14% during the past 6 months, largely driven by valuation expansion.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Ryan Hammond, Hammond, Goldman foresees, Goldman, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Broadcom, Foundry, Keysight Technologies, Palo Alto Networks, Intuit, Adobe, Nvidia —, Pinterest, Tenet Healthcare
Over the past month, a notable shift in performance has occurred among the 11 sectors of the S & P 500 . Understanding the S & P 500 sectors The 11 sectors of the S & P 500 represent the various industries powering the U.S. economy. For example, last year, the market-cap-weighted S & P 500 gained 24.2% while the equal-weighted index advanced only 11.6% in 2023. .SPXEW .SPX 1M mountain The equal-weighted S & P 500 over the past month compared with the S & P 500. Encouragingly, overall earnings estimates for the S & P 500 also have gone up recently.
Persons: , It's, Wells, Linde, Russell, Labor Department —, Genuity, Canaccord, Encouragingly, Eaton, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Victor J Organizations: Big Tech, Financial, Coterra Energy, DuPont, Tech, Communication Services, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Club, Tesla, Linde, Wolfe Research, Labor Department, Fed, RBC Capital Markets, RBC, Bank of America, Eaton, CNBC, Visitors, New York Stock Exchange, Blue, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Tuesday's, U.S
Many observers are arguing that some pockets of the market, mainly in the AI trade, have moved too far, too fast and are ripe for pullbacks. Meanwhile, we'll be keeping an eye on Club holding GE Healthcare's appearance Tuesday at Oppenheimer's MedTech and Services conference. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, industrials, there's, we'll, Oppenheimer's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Nvidia, Club, Linde, Nasdaq, FMC Corp, Procter, Gamble, Truist, Energy, EQT Corp, Boeing, of Justice, Alaska Airlines, Howmet Aerospace, Tech, Oracle, GE, Services, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: Albemarle, Newmont
Crypto stocks — Stocks connected to cryptocurrencies rose as Bitcoin hit a fresh record high and topped $71,000. PDD Holdings — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese ecommerce company added 4.5% following an upgrade by Jefferies to buy. Duolingo — Duolingo shares rose more than 1% after JPMorgan initiated coverage of the online learning platform with an overweight rating, citing expectations for "premium" revenue growth. Xcel Energy ­— Xcel Energy shares added‎ about 2%. New York Community Bancorp — Shares of the regional bank ticked up 1% in premarket trading.
Persons: Jefferies, Duolingo, Oppenheimer, Gamble —, , Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: PDD Holdings —, Jefferies, JPMorgan, Energy, Xcel Energy, Barclays, Nvidia, New York Community Bancorp, Netflix, Procter, Gamble, Truist Locations: Temu, China
Oracle — Shares added 1.6% ahead of the software giant's fiscal third-quarter earnings report due after the bell. Analysts polled by FactSet are expecting earnings per share of $1.38 and revenue of $13.29 billion. New York Community Bancorp — The regional bank stock dropped 4.8%, extending losses after Friday's more than 6% drop. Moderna — The stock jumped more than 8% in midday trading, putting it on track for its biggest one-day gain since December. Duolingo — Shares rose 3.6% after JPMorgan initiated coverage of the online learning platform with an overweight rating, forecasting "premium" revenue growth that could substantially drive up Duolingo's valuation.
Persons: FactSet, Lam, Coinbase, Microstrategy, Jefferies, Eli Lilly, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh Organizations: Oracle, Nvidia, Semiconductor, Lam Research, New York Community Bancorp, Moderna, P Biotech, Xcel Energy, Barclays, JPMorgan, PDD Holdings
ChatGPT uses more than half a million kilowatt-hours of electricity daily, The New Yorker reported. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The publication reported that the average US household uses around 29 kilowatt-hours daily. Dividing the amount of electricity that ChatGPT uses per day by the amount used by the average household shows that ChatGPT uses more than 17 thousand times the amount of electricity. "You're talking about AI electricity consumption potentially being half a percent of global electricity consumption by 2027," de Vries told The Verge.
Persons: , buzzy, Alex de Vries, de Vries, Vries, OpenAI Organizations: Yorker, Service, New Yorker, Dutch National Bank, Joule, Big Tech, Nvidia —, Cisco, New Street Research, CNBC, Samsung, Microsoft, Consumer Energy Solutions Locations: New, Kenya, Guatemala, Croatia
Marvell Technology — The chip company sank more than 11% on light first-quarter earnings and revenue guidance. Marvell Technology said it anticipated adjusted earnings of 23 cents per share for the first quarter, below the 40 cents expected by analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. Samsara posted $276 million in revenue, compared to analysts' expectations for $258 million, per LSEG. DocuSign reported adjusted earnings of 76 cents per share on revenue of $712 million for the period. Analysts polled by LSEG had called for earnings of 64 cents per share on $699 million in revenue.
Persons: Carvana, Eli Lilly —, Goldman Sachs, MongoDB, NYCB, DocuSign, LSEG, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Nvidia —, Nvidia, Marvell Technology, LSEG, RBC Capital Markets, Costco, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Broadcom, Textron — Textron, Bank of America, Old Navy, New York Community Bancorp, Moody's Investors Service, Amylyx Pharmaceuticals, UBS — U.S, UBS, Auto, Deutsche Bank Locations: U.S, Swiss, China
Read previewFund manager Randy Gwirtzman may be hungry for fast-growing stocks, but he's no gambler. Gwirtzman carefully handpicks his stocks and then is patient with them, even if they're on the market's bad side. How to maximize returns while limiting riskWhen searching for stocks, Gwirtzman keeps his strategy simple. AdvertisementInstead of straying away from riskier stocks, Gwirtzman and his co-manager take steps to mitigate risk. Another way Gwirtzman manages risk is by strategically selling when an investment hits a certain price target or valuation threshold.
Persons: , Randy Gwirtzman, Gwirtzman, downturns, Laird Bieger Organizations: Service, Business, Nvidia, Discovery Fund, Baron Discovery Fund Locations: riskier
Nvidia — Semiconductor companies rose broadly as a group, with the VanEck Semiconductor ETF gaining 1.5% in the premarket. Intel shares rose 1.7%. Kroger — Shares rose 6% after the supermarket chain reported fourth-quarter better-than-expected earnings. Analysts expected a profit of 50 cents per share on revenue of $1.67 billion, according to LSEG. Victoria's Secret expects $6 billion full-year revenue, less than the $6.2 billion expected from analysts polled by FactSet.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Mizuho, LSEG, Tesla, NYCB, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh Organizations: Nordisk —, Nvidia — Semiconductor, VanEck Semiconductor, Nvidia, Micron Technology, Stifel, Broadcom, Intel, Kroger, Eagle Outfitters, Citi, York Community Bancorp, FactSet, York Community Locations: Danish, American
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Monday disputed talk of sector bubbles, saying investors should be prepared to buy if there's a sell-off and undervalued stocks pull back. "I will be ready to buy if this market sells off," he said. He opined about the burgeoning artificial intelligence sector, saying that despite its current popularity, investors may not yet conceive of how influential this new technology will be. Cramer also pointed to Nvidia — which recently closed above the $2 trillion market cap — and said the company hasn't been overvalued. "I'm not fretting, I'm just expecting, and I have my shopping list of what to buy on weakness for the charitable trust."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, hasn't, Wall, Nvidia's, , Eli Lilly, I'm Organizations: Nvidia, Novo Nordisk
Apple shares tumbled on Monday after European regulators hit the tech giant with a big antitrust fine over music streaming. The European Commission dished out a $1.95 billion fine — claiming Apple violated competition laws in the music streaming market. Apple and Spotify have rival audio streaming services. "New AI services should compel users to upgrade iPhones, driving a Supercycle in 2025," the analysts said in a note to clients Monday. Melius also sees upside to Apple Services due to AI-infused software features.
Persons: , Jim Cramer, Jim, Tim Cook, Apple, we're, Melius, Jim Cramer's, Scott Eells Organizations: Apple, European, European Union, Spotify, European Commission, Big Tech, Microsoft, Nvidia, Nvidia's, Huawei, India . Club, Apple Music, Research, Apple Services, CNBC, Nasdaq, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Europe, American, China, India, New York
That's Super Micro Computer , a Nasdaq-listed company which makes AI systems and graphics processing unit servers. Navellier, who has held shares of Super Micro Computer for over two years, told CNBC's " Street Signs Asia " that "Super Micro is hotter than Nvidia. There are only two companies that dominate in that area, according to him: Nvidia and Super Micro Computer. Wall Street analysts have also recently been giving Super Micro Computer their votes of confidence. Super Micro Computer received a 71% buy rating from analysts covering the stock, according to FactSet data.
Persons: there's, Louis Navellier, That's, CNBC's, Navellier, Rosenblatt, , Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Nvidia, Navellier, Associates, Nasdaq, Super, Computer, Micro, Wall Street, Bank of America
On the other hand, if you find a great company with a broken stock, the price will eventually follow the strong fundamentals. We didn't see anything on the earnings release or hear anything on the conference call that led us to believe otherwise. Look no further than Danaher 's fourth-quarter earnings release and price reaction. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: Jim Cramer, aren't, it's, Omaha Warren Buffett, Patience, Nelson Peltz, Jim, he's, isn't, Jim Cramer's Organizations: CNBC, Bulls, Microsoft, Nvidia, Palo Alto Networks, Palo Alto, Palo, Investors, GE Healthcare, Abbott Labs, Omaha, Disney, ESPN, Charitable Trust, Investing, Broadcom, VMware, Jim Cramer's Charitable Locations: New York City, GLP1, cybersecurity
In the wake of Nvidia 's rapid ascension, CNBC's Jim Cramer on Monday picked companies he thinks could have a chance at breaking $1 trillion in market capitalization. Valued at a little more than $730 billion according to FactSet, drug maker Eli Lilly is Cramer's top contender. At $905 billion, Berkshire Hathaway comes in first and Tesla , which is worth a little more than $611 billion, comes in third, according to FactSet. Broadcom , which is currently worth about $606 billion according to FactSet, has potential because of its enterprising CEO Hock Tan, who Cramer said is adept at making acquisitions. "If that's the case, Nvidia might need to crack the $5 trillion mark before Broadcom crosses the $1 trillion threshold."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, they're, Eli Lilly, Berkshire Hathaway, Cramer, Warren, Tesla, it's, Hock Tan Organizations: Nvidia, Nvidia —, Broadcom Locations: Berkshire
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