Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Paul Meeks"


25 mentions found


Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMicrosoft has to show evidence that Copilot is a money maker, says Harvest Portfolio's Paul MeeksPaul Meeks, Harvest Portfolio Management co-CIO, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Alphabet and Microsoft's quarterly earnings results, whether tech investors should be wary of the macro environment, impact of AI, and more.
Persons: Paul Meeks Paul Meeks Organizations: Microsoft, Management
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAI-related semiconductors: Veteran tech investor names his favorite stocksPaul Meeks, co-CIO at Harvest Portfolio Management, says "Nvidia can go even higher," adding that his "favorite pick right now is Micron or, if I was in South Korea, it would be [SK] Hynix."
Persons: Paul Meeks Organizations: Veteran, Portfolio Management, Nvidia, Micron, SK Locations: South Korea
Semiconductor stocks are off to another hot start to the year. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) is up 28.5% in the first three months of 2024. That puts the SMH on pace for its biggest quarterly gain since the first quarter of 2023, when it jumped 30%. The stock is up more than 30% to start 2024. Shares have skyrocketed more than 39% to start 2024, helped by strong sales in high bandwidth memory necessary in AI infrastructure.
Persons: Ken Mahoney, Nvidia, Hendi, Management's Paul Meeks, Andrew Garthwaite cautioning Organizations: VanEck Semiconductor, Asset, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Apple, Devices, JPMorgan, PHLX Semiconductor, Intel, Micron Technology, Micron, UBS, Universal Locations: Taiwan
Nvidia unveils new Blackwell chip: Here's what to know
  + stars: | 2024-03-19 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia unveils new Blackwell chip: Here's what to knowPaul Meeks, Harvest Portfolio Management co-CIO and finance professor at The Citadel, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss key takeaways from Day 1 of Nvidia's AI developers conference, the unveiling of the company's new Blackwell AI chip, and more.
Persons: Paul Meeks Organizations: Nvidia, Blackwell, Management
Super Micro , Tokyo Electron Device , Meta Platforms , Tata Motors and Mitsui are among the stocks that have seen the most significant gains over the past year. According to FactSet, their share price movement correlates between 93% and 98% of the time with Nvidia's stock. Super Micro Super Micro, which makes computer servers, has benefitted directly from using Nvidia's AI chips in its products. Tokyo Electron Device Tokyo Electron Device is a distributor of Nvidia's chips in Japan. Tokyo Electron Device is a listed subsidiary of Tokyo Electron , Japan's largest chip-manufacturing equipment maker.
Persons: FactSet, Meta, Mark Zuckerberg, Paul Meeks, Meeks, , Jonathan Vanian, Weizhen Tan Organizations: Nvidia, CNBC Pro, Nvidia's, Tata Motors, Mitsui, Microsoft, Meta, Facebook, Super, Tech, Portfolio Management Locations: Tokyo, Japan
CNBC Daily Open: U.S. services activity moderates
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Sumathi Bala | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Overnight, U.S. markets were dragged lower by sharp declines in major tech stocks. China growth pushChina may need to resort to an old tactic to hit its ambitious growth target this year. AI adoption rateA global survey found AI adoption rate for businesses is yet to match the hype around the technology.
Persons: Hong, Dow, Bitcoin, Wang Dan, Jeremy Hunt, Paul Meeks Organizations: CNBC, CSI, Nikkei, Nasdaq, Apple, Hang Seng Bank, Finance, Conservative Party, Nvidia, Veteran, CNBC Pro Locations: Hong Kong, Asia, China, Beijing
CNBC Daily Open: U.S. services pace slows slightly
  + stars: | 2024-03-06 | by ( Sumathi Bala | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Dow's steep declineWall Street ended lower Tuesday as the broader market was dragged by sharp declines in major tech stocks. China growth pushChina may need to resort to an old tactic to hit its ambitious growth target this year. President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump hold commanding leads in the polls of their respective parties.
Persons: Dow, Bitcoin, Wang Dan, Joe Biden, Donald Trump, Jerome Powell, Powell, Paul Meeks Organizations: CNBC, Nasdaq, Apple, Hang Seng Bank, Capitol, Nvidia, Veteran, CNBC Pro Locations: China, Beijing
Nvidia may have enjoyed a red-hot run on the back of the artificial intelligence craze, but many other tech stocks have also benefited. CNBC Pro speaks to fund managers to find out the best alternatives to Nvidia that investors can consider. ASML will also continue to benefit "because without ASML there's no TSMC, without TSMC there's no Nvidia," Cvetanovski said. Ray Wang, principal analyst and founder of Constellation Research, also named TSMC, saying that it "always wins." Super Micro Computer Meeks, who is co-chief investment officer at Harvest Portfolio Management, says Super Micro Computer is his favorite alternative AI stock to play right now.
Persons: Paul Meeks, Taiwan's TSMC, TSMC, Cvetanovski, ASML, Ray Wang, Vertiv, Meeks, astronomically, Wang, Meta —, Sam Altman's Organizations: Nvidia, Veteran, CNBC Pro, Tech, CNBC, Semiconductors, Sydney, Pella Funds Management, Generations Fund, Devices, Constellation Research, AMD, Portfolio Management, Microsoft, Big Tech, Cisco, Meta, Google Locations: Pella, United States
But the tides have shifted in recent months as investors overlook the $2.6 trillion company for rosier AI opportunities. "Everybody's waiting for Apple to come along," said Max Wasserman, co-founder and senior portfolio manager at Miramar Capital. "Great cash flow, great balance sheet, but they're just not demonstrating that they're going to be the new leader in AI." Apple's AI story Last month, Apple pulled the plug on its decade-long autonomous vehicle project in what many on Wall Street viewed as a move to divert resources toward AI prospects. Another way Apple could satisfy the need for AI progress is through a merger or acquisition of a company with large-scale AI capabilities, Meeks said.
Persons: Max Wasserman, they're, Tim Cook, haven't, CFRA Research's Angelo Zino, Wasserman, That's, Paul Meeks, Miramar's Wasserman, Melius Research's Ben Reitzes, Rosenblatt's Barton Crockett, Meeks, hasn't, Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Miramar Capital, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Union, Huawei, Accounting, Portfolio Management, Apple's, Conference Locations: China
Here's a breakdown of how Super Micro got to this point, and where investors and analysts expect it to go. What to know about Super Micro Computer Creating servers isn't a new objective for the California-based company. Other shareholders such as Vendig have opted to take a breather on buying shares until the next earnings call. Those headwinds may not hit until 2025 but could hurt the stock if Super Micro fails to differentiate itself. "Super Micro was in the right place at the right time when generative AI took off, there really wasn't a competitor," he said.
Persons: hasn't, Paul Meeks, Brian Vendig, we've, Shreya Gheewala, Matt Bryson, Sylvia Jablonski, Jablonski, Vendig, Wedbush's Bryson Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, Computer, Management, MJP Wealth, AMD, Intel, Wedbush Securities, Micro, Super Micro, Super Locations: California
The chipmaker surged 16% on Thursday after posting robust earnings and guidance , contributing to the stock's 59% year-to-date run as investors feast on artificial intelligence stocks. NVDA 1Y mountain Nvidia shares over the last year Nvidia's impressive stock run brings its valuation to elevated levels. That's left some analysts questioning whether earnings upside is already priced in to shares as others wonder how long this astonishing growth cycle can last. Those worries eased after the chipmaker offered its first set of blockbuster earnings numbers, cementing its formidable AI position. NVDA 5D mountain Nvidia shares this past week "It gives me confidence that this story lasts much longer," Harvest's Meeks said.
Persons: That's, Hua Cheng, heightening, Paul Meeks, Ken Mahoney, Greg Bassuk, Nvidia's, Goldman Sachs, Hari, Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon, Jensen Huang, Harvest's Meeks, Tim Arcuri, Cheng of Mirova, Huang Organizations: Nvidia, Portfolio Management, AXS Investments, UBS Locations: Mirova, Charleston , South Carolina
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia 'uber-bull' Paul Meeks discusses what signal would make him reduce his positionPaul Meeks of Harvest Portfolio Management says that while there still is upside for Nvidia, the rally won't last forever and so he is watching out for this metric as a sign it is time to become more conservative on the stock.
Persons: Paul Meeks Organizations: Nvidia, Management
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe need to see some real uptake in Microsoft Copilot in 2024, says tech investor Paul MeeksPaul Meeks, veteran tech investor and professor at the Baker School of Business at The Citadel, joins "Squawk Box' to discuss the earnings results by Microsoft and Alphabet, the decision by a Delaware judge to void the $56 billion compensation package of Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and more.
Persons: Paul Meeks Paul Meeks, Elon Musk Organizations: Microsoft Copilot, Baker School of Business, The, Microsoft, Tesla Locations: Delaware
On Monday, Alphabet closed at a market capitalization of $1.91 trillion, less than $100 billion away from a $2 trillion market cap and trailing Microsoft and Apple with market capitalizations last at $3.03 trillion and $2.91 trillion, respectively. Beyond Alphabet Alphabet is close to entering the $2 trillion club, but other prominent mega-cap tech companies are making progress, too. Amazon's market cap finished Monday at $1.64 trillion. The managing partner also sees Meta Platforms as a future $2 trillion market cap candidate. The maker of sophisticated graphics processing units reached a $1 trillion market cap for the first time only in 2023, when it climbed almost 240%.
Persons: Paul Meeks, Meeks, Merrill Lynch, bode, Gene Munster, Dan Ives, Ives, they're, Deepwater's Munster, Wedbush's Ives, Jensen Organizations: Microsoft, Apple, Merrill, Merrill Lynch Investment, Deepwater Asset Management, Amazon Web Services, Munster, Nvidia Locations: U.S
Microsoft earnings due out later this month could serve as the next major test for artificial intelligence as investors hunt for signs that the buzzy technological innovation is actually boosting companies' bottom lines. Nvidia has been an exception, blowing past Wall Street's guidance for the past few quarters due to AI tailwinds . The remarks led some Wall Street analysts to fret over a delayed ramp-up in AI availability. "There are going to be some outliers, but for the most part there is more risk-reward related to AI going into this earnings period." More loosely, Wall Street analysts have expressed concerns about AI monetization and expectations across the sector heading into the fourth-quarter reporting period.
Persons: Paul Meeks, Merrill Lynch, Piper Sandler, OpenAI, Amy Hood, Copilot, Micrsoft, Meeks, Amy Kong, Nancy Tengler, Gene Munster, Corient's Kong, Wolfe, Alex Zukin, Dubravko, Michael Bloom Organizations: Microsoft, Merrill, Merrill Lynch Investment, Nvidia, Wall, Baker School of Business, The, Investments, Asset Management, Munster, Wall Street, Tech Locations: OpenAI, hasn't
The company's stunning progress garnered the love of Wall Street, with analysts upping their price targets on the stock to account for future growth and naming it among their top AI picks. Nvidia's 'iPhone moment' Few could have predicted the frenzy ChatGPT would create when it debuted in late 2022, but no company could have been better prepared for the excitement than Nvidia. What to expect in 2024 Many on Wall Street don't foresee Nvidia hype dying down in the new year. In fact, many investors expect shares to keep rising as long as the company can smash expectations and guide higher. That's a feat many on Wall Street expect the company to accomplish, with the consensus price target implying another 35% upside for shares, according to FactSet.
Persons: Paul Meeks, Karl Freund, Freund, They've, Kim Forrest, Meeks, there'll, Ken Mahoney, Forrest, they've Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, Research, Bokeh Capital Partners, Intel Locations: Nvidia's
After 2023's blowout run, it's hard to recall the once gloomy investing setup for technology stocks last December. As the calendar year turns, don't expect technology stocks to match 2023's blowout gains, but the year's performance is no fluke. AI stocks may dominate tech-focused investing, but don't sleep on the other emerging themes. GOOGL YTD mountain Alphabet shares in 2023 Both companies have rolled out new initiatives in the months since. Arm Holdings made headlines this year as one of the first major companies to go public , reviving the IPO market after a roughly two-year drought.
Persons: behemoths, Jay Woods, Mark Zuckerberg, didn't, chipmakers, David Waddell, Everybody's, Copilot, Paul Meeks, Gene Munster, Alphabet's, Meeks, Morgan Stanley, Andrew Slimmon, They're, Slimmon, CNBC's, Wall, Nvidia's, He's, Mahoney, Ken Mahoney, it's, Brent Fredberg, Munster's, Management's Albert Tsuei, Tsuei, William Blair's Jonathan Vo, Keith Weiss Organizations: Federal Reserve, Treasury, Freedom, Microsoft, Waddell & Associates, Oracle, Arista Networks, Morgan, Morgan Stanley Investment, Meta, Nvidia, Devices, Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprises, Broadcom, Holdings, Micron Technology, Brandes Investment Partners, Micron, Samsung, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, MGM Resorts, Johnson, Okta, UBS, Management's, Palo Alto Networks, Palo Alto Locations: British, Clorox
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe strong 'typically get stronger' in the tech sector, says veteran tech investor Paul MeeksPaul Meeks, veteran tech investor and The Citadel Baker School of Business professor, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, what's driving the latest tech stocks rally, the impact of Fed's rate hike campaign, and more.
Persons: Paul Meeks Paul Meeks Organizations: Citadel Baker School of Business
A strong advertising market may be starting to feel the pressure from geopolitical risks erupting aboard and a higher-for-longer interest rate environment. But comments from some major technology players last week led to increasing questions that some investors have struggled to shake off. META 5D mountain Meta shares in recent trading sessions That concern added to declines in other ad-focused technology names, with Alphabet dropping nearly 10%. Instead, Tengler favors companies such as Amazon and Microsoft , which offer some, but less concentrated, exposure to advertising. Technology investor Paul Meeks is also shying away from the most popular advertising players — and big technology as a whole — until he sees a better setup for interest rates.
Persons: Susan Li, Gene Munster, Laffer, Nancy Tengler, Paul Meeks, Meeks, Roth, Rohit Kulkarni, Kulkarni, Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Meta, YouTube, Federal, Investments, Microsoft, Technology Locations: Israel, Munster, Ukraine
Market volatility looks here to stay: Yields are still rising, a war is raging, and it's uncertain whether interest rates will stay higher for longer. Go for bonds Though volatility in the bond market has led to losses, some fund managers are saying that it's time to get back into this asset class, given that yields are high. Money market funds typically include short-term Treasurys. Bond yields move inversely to prices — that means a peak in interest rates may signal that bond prices have bottomed. When interest rates rise, bond prices typically fall as existing bonds with lower yields become less attractive.
Persons: Investors, David Katz, Katz, Bryn Jones, there's, Jones, Hide, Paul Meeks, Meeks, Steven Glass, Glass, Marsh McLennan, he's, they're, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Treasury, Bank of America, Matrix Asset, CNBC Pro, gilts, U.S . Federal, Treasury Bond ETF, Pella Funds, Group, ASM, Taiwan's Locations: Israel, United States, China, U.S, Pella, Germany, Netherlands
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAlphabet is a pretty compelling buy 'right now, today', says veteran tech investor Paul MeeksPaul Meeks, veteran tech investor and professor at The Baker School of Business at The Citadel, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss quarterly earnings results from Alphabet and Microsoft, with both companies reporting better expected earnings and revenue but Google's cloud revenues missing estimates, the impact of rate hikes and other factors facing the tech sector, and more.
Persons: Paul Meeks Paul Meeks Organizations: The Baker School of Business, The, Microsoft
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailAlphabet shares plummet after cloud revenue falls short. What the pros say to do nextJim Cramer, veteran tech investor Paul Meeks, Michael Morris of Guggenheim Securities, Stephanie Link of Hightower Advisors and Jason Snipe of Odyssey Capital Advisors discussed Alphabet after the company reported third-quarter results that beat on the top and bottom lines but missed on cloud revenue estimates.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Paul Meeks, Michael Morris, Stephanie Link, Jason Snipe Organizations: Guggenheim Securities, Hightower Advisors, Odyssey Capital
Washington's tightened grip on artificial intelligence chip sales to China could have long-term implications for Nvidia , 2023's famed AI darling. Through Wednesday's close, Nvidia, the dominant AI player, had lost 7% this week, while Advanced Micro Devices and Marvell Technology slumped more than 2%. What it means for Nvidia Nvidia said in an SEC filing this week that the latest government curbs could hinder its new product development timeline, and a handful of chip models. The major aim of the latest U.S. restrictions is to prevent China from harnessing advanced semiconductor chips to strengthen its military. To be sure, Nvidia isn't the only company slated to feel the pressure from the latest export curbs.
Persons: Greg Bassuk, Atif Malik, Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore, Malik, America's Vivek Arya, Harlan Sur, Goldman Sachs, Toshiya Hari, Paul Meeks, Meeks, Charles Shi, JPMorgan's, Raymond James, Srini Pajjuri, Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, U.S . Commerce Department, Devices, Marvell Technology, Commerce Department, Micron Technology, AXS Investments, Nvidia Nvidia, SEC, United, United Arab Emirates, Citi, Intel, Investments, Bank, America's, JPMorgan Chase, Lam Locations: China, Boise , Idaho, Vietnam, Saudi Arabia, United Arab, Freemont , California
2023's surge in technology stocks fizzled in September as rising rates put a heavy dent in the artificial intelligence-fueled rally . Over the next few weeks, Deepwater Asset Management's Gene Munster is keeping an eye on September's consumer price index and nonfarm payrolls report ahead of the start of big technology earnings later in the month. "The good news is that this should right itself once the September quarter earnings come up." Sean Sun, a portfolio manager at Thornburg Investment Management, likened the earnings season to a "gut check" on AI beneficiaries. But these drawdowns could offer opportunities for long-term investors to snatch up technology bets at bargain prices, said Nancy Tengler.
Persons: what's, behemoths, Street's, Gene Munster, Erika Klauer, Sean Sun, Paul Meeks, Nancy Tengler, Meeks, Klauer Organizations: Nasdaq, Reserve, Enphase, Lucid, ASML, Netflix, Apple, Microsoft, Devices, Nvidia, Tech, Thornburg Investment Management, Laffer, Investments, ServiceNow, Adobe, Broadcom, Oracle, Meta, Jennison, AMD
Wall Street may be underestimating the potential for one major investing area to underpin generative artificial intelligence models: data. Now, as Wall Street has begun evaluating the secondary and tertiary winners of this long fight, investors may want to search for the data companies that also could triumph. Finding the data winners Engineers rely on data to train AI models, improve their performance and create a productive and relevant technology used by millions of consumers. "Right now, AI for them is an expense because they've got to train the models," he said. The median Wall Street price target on Oracle implies about 24% upside for the stock, which has already jumped 28% in 2023.
Persons: Raimo Lenschow, Paul Meeks, they've, Meeks, Snowflake, Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Nasdaq, Barclays, Solutions Wealth Management, Oracle, ServiceNow, Intuit, Companies, HSBC Locations: Salesforce
Total: 25