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Here are Tuesday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Loop initiates MongoDB as buy Loop sees growth accelerating for the developer data platform company. JPM reiterates General Motors and Ford as overweight JPMorgan said the stocks will benefit from "lower commodities & higher production outside China." JPMorgan upgrades Assai to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said it sees improving trends and better visibility for the Brazilian wholesaler. JPMorgan upgrades Roblox to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said it sees a "compelling entry point" for the stock. JPMorgan downgrades Five Below to neutral from overweight JPMorgan downgraded Five Below due to "ongoing macro pressure."
Persons: JPM, JPMorgan, KeyBanc, Wells, D.A, Davidson, Davidson's, Berenberg, Morgan Stanley, Harley, Evercore, it's bullish, it's, Tesla, Rosenblatt, Oppenheimer, Dwight, Key, Truist, Wolfe, Warner, Price Organizations: Motors, Ford, GM, Nvidia, MU, BMO, prem, NICE, JPMorgan, Barclays, Apple, Albertsons, Catalyst Watch, NOVA, Penn Entertainment, PENN, ESPN Bet, Benchmark, Qualcomm, Warner Brothers, Warner, HBO Locations: China, Texas, U.S
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
The declines have come from just about every sector, with the exception of technology, which has seen its earnings estimates rise since October 1. A good example: IBM , which beat earnings expectations and highlighted an uptick in demand for artificial intelligence products and services. Outside of technology, earnings expectations are lower than three months ago, but are now rising again. "The market has been anticipating improving earnings expectations, and it's getting them. By that I do not mean that earnings estimates are rising, I mean they are not getting cut as much anymore," Raich added.
Persons: Nick Raich, it's, Raich, Sherwin, Williams, Heidi Petz, Kimberly, Clark, Nelson Urdaneta, that's, shipper J.B, Hunt, John Roberts, McCormick, Gamble, STMicroelectronics, Jim Fitterling, DuPont, hasn't, ASML, Andre Schulten, Baker Hughes Organizations: IBM, Treasury, Scout, Paint Stores, Insurance, Procter, Swift Transportation, Dow Inc, Texas, 3M, Gamble, FedEx, Humana, Adobe, Dupont Locations: Americas, China
Those themes can "drive earnings momentum throughout this year, especially in 2H24," Morgan Stanley's analysts led by Lee Simpson wrote in a Jan. 11 research note titled "2024 Outlook: buy on the dips." The stocks are listed in the order of Morgan Stanley's preference in the table above. ASML The Dutch semiconductor equipment maker made Morgan Stanley's list, with a 12-month price target of 700 euros ($764.26), giving it around 7.8% upside. They expect the stock to "outperform on recovery" and thus gave it a target price 48 euros, or 20.8% upside potential. VAT Group This German company was among Morgan Stanley's top stocks, thanks to its exposure to the memory segment.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Morgan, Lee Simpson, Morgan Stanley's, Besi, STMicroelectronics Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Wall Street Bank Locations: 2H24, upcycles
Jefferies upgrades Pinterest and Snap to buy from hold Jefferies sees growth upside in 2024 for both stocks. " Wolfe upgrades Ally Financial to outperform from peer perform Wolfe said in its upgrade of the financial company that it's well-positioned. "In an environment where the probability of a mild recession or soft landing both appear plausible, we believe ALLY is well positioned to outperform in either scenario and upgrade shares to Outperform." "We continue to believe that Salesforce is on track to become the next quality [growth at a reasonable price] stock." Goldman Sachs reiterates Snowflake as buy Goldman Sachs stood by its buy rating on Snowflake after earnings on Wednesday.
Persons: Berenberg, Eli Lilly, Lilly, Wells, BTIG, Jefferies, Bernstein, Burger, Wolfe, TD Cowen downgrades Okta, Cowen, Stifel, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Bilibili, BILI, Baird, Pat Shanahan, Wells Fargo, Salesforce, Goldman Sachs, Snowflake, DUK Organizations: pharma, Nvidia, NVIDIA, Jefferies, SNAP, BK, UBS, Service Corporation, Deutsche Bank, Lattice Semiconductor, Apple, JPMorgan, Nokia, Infineon, Watch, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Barclays, GE Healthcare, Airbus, Bank of America, Duke Energy, HSBC, Molson Coors Locations: FTCH, North America, China
One part of artificial intelligence will have an increasing role to play, according to Morgan Stanley. The theme, which it called "Edge AI," involves running AI algorithms directly on a user's device, be it a smartphone, laptop or wearable, among other things. Edge AI can help save costs, reduce latency (or lag time), among other benefits, Morgan Stanley said. MediaTek Morgan Stanley said MediaTek , the largest chip design house in Asia, is gearing up for Edge AI. Xiaomi Morgan Stanley said Xiaomi is a key beneficiary, given its first-mover advantage in Edge AI.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Apple Morgan Stanley, Apple, DELL, Dell, MediaTek Morgan Stanley, MediaTek, Qualcomm Morgan Stanley, STMicroelectronics, Xiaomi Morgan Stanley, Xiaomi, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Edge, Apple, Dell, PCS, Qualcomm, Hong Locations: Asia, Taiwan, Hong Kong
Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Wednesday: UBS reiterates Advanced Micro Devices as buy UBS said it's standing by its buy rating on the chipmaker after its earnings report on Tuesday. Goldman Sachs downgrades ZoomInfo Technologies as buy Goldman downgraded the stock after its "mixed" earnings report citing lower visibility. UBS upgrades JD.com to buy from neutral UBS said shares of the Chinese retailer are attractive. " UBS reiterates Apple as neutral UBS said its checks show Apple's iPhone wait times are lower. TD Cowen reiterates Carvana as market perform TD said it's cautious heading into the used car company's earnings report on Thursday.
Persons: it's, TD Cowen, Piper Sandler, Piper, Polestar, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Bernstein, Price, Cantor Fitzgerald, VinFast, Cantor, it's bullish, JD, Mizuho, Robinhood, HOOD, Carvana Organizations: UBS, Devices, EV, Technologies, Bank of America, of America, UAW, Barclays, Ford, General Motors, Meta, JPMorgan, Boeing, Goldman, NRG Energy, Guggenheim, Management, Clear Messaging, Deutsche Bank, Deutsche, Apple, BP, UW Locations: Asia, Europe, North America
STMicro beats third quarter sales forecasts
  + stars: | 2023-10-26 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +1 min
REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsOct 26 (Reuters) - European chipmaker STMicroelectronics (STMPA.PA) beat expectations on Thursday for third quarter sales, helped by demand from the automotive sector. However, the company, whose clients include Tesla (TSLA.O) and Apple (AAPL.O), said it expects a drop in sales in the fourth quarter. Third quarter net revenues rose 2.5% year on year to $4.43 billion, beating the average of $4.38 billion expected by analysts in an Refinitiv poll. STMicro said it expects fourth quarter sales to fall about 3% year on year to $4.30 billion. STMicro on Thursday added it projects a gross margin of 46% in the fourth quarter, give or take 200 basis points.
Persons: Sarah Meyssonnier, Jean, Marc Chery, STMicro, Olivier Sorgho, Clarence Fernandez, Sonali Paul Organizations: REUTERS, Apple, Automotive, Electronics, Thomson Locations: Montrouge, Paris, France, U.S, China
Based in upstate New York, GlobalFoundries isn't a household name because it's manufacturing semiconductors that are designed and sold by other companies. "Look at every electronic device in your house, and I would bet you money that every one of those devices has at least one GlobalFoundries chip in it," Thomas Caulfield, GlobalFoundries CEO, told CNBC. GlobalFoundries chips are inside everything from smartphones and cars to smart speakers and Bluetooth-enabled dishwashers. Although GlobalFoundries' chips are considered legacy nodes, the process and resources needed are still incredibly complex. GlobalFoundries' Fab 8 in Malta, New York, where Equipment Engineering Manager Chris Belfi led CNBC's Katie Tarasov on a tour on September 5, 2023.
Persons: GlobalFoundries, it's, Thomas Caulfield, They're, GlobalFoundries isn't, Caulfield, Abu, Moorhead, Jerry Sanders, Katie Tarasov, Carlos Waters, Daniel Newman, couldn't, TSMC, China's, STMicroelectronics, Hui Peng Koh, that's, Chris Belfi Organizations: HK GM LMT, GlobalFoundries, CNBC, Bluetooth, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Devices, AMD, Chartered Semiconductor, Nasdaq, Futurum, U.S, Semiconductor Manufacturing International, Samsung, fabs, United Microelectronics, we've, Upstate Locations: New York, China, U.S, Singapore, Germany, France, Malta , New York, Dresden, Malta, Vermont, South Korea, Taiwan, TSMC, Crolles, Chengdu, Upstate New York, Europe, Koh, Arizona, Asia
Morgan Stanley named a raft of European stocks with strong balance sheets, lots of cash or high shareholder returns. High cash flow and shareholder returns The bank also screened for companies with "resilient high free cash flow." "Self-financing companies should be better able to weather any prolonged macroeconomic weakness, deploying capital effectively and seizing opportunities that come along the way," Morgan Stanley said. "Cash-rich companies with high free cash flow yields should also have better downside protection, while providing upside potential if management is able to deploy its cash effectively," the bank said. Those firms also have "positive free cash flow and net income growth expected over the next 2 years," the bank said.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Burberry, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: CNBC, JD Sports, Sanofi, Airbus, MTU Aero Engines, SAP, WPP, Publicis Groupe, InterContinental Locations: Europe
[1/2] Volkswagen's factory is seen in Sao Bernardo do Campo, Sao Paulo state, Brazil June 28, 2023. Demand for chips has risen dramatically in the car industry in line with electric vehicle production and the need for increasingly complex software. Volkswagen and Franco-Italian chipmaker STMicroelectronics (STMPA.PA) announced plans last July to co-develop a new semiconductor, marking VW's first direct relationship with a second- and third-rank semiconductor supplier. Volkswagen has not struck a direct supply relationship with TSMC - the world's biggest contract manufacturer of semiconductors - but meets with them every few weeks to communicate its demand situation, Schnake said. The carmaker also plans to reduce the variety of chips required in its vehicles to simplify the supply chain, which will also help simplify its software offering, Schnake added.
Persons: Campo, Leonardo Benassatto, chipmakers, Karsten Schnake, Dirk Grosse, Taiwan's TSMC, Schnake, Victoria Waldersee, Jan Schwartz, Bill Berkrot Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, NXP Semiconductors, Infineon Technologies, Renesas Electronics, Volkswagen, Intel, Thomson Locations: Sao Bernardo, Sao Paulo state, Brazil, Berlin, Germany
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi has looked to woo American semiconductor firms to invest in his country. India's chip strategyIndia's chip strategy consists of two major parts. At SemiconIndia, the American chip firms in attendance spoke about their investments in India and announced new ones, highlighting India's focus on attracting foreign companies. Last month, Micron announced plans to set up a semiconductor assembly and testing facility in the state of Gujarat in India. The chip manufacturing tie-up between Vedanta and Foxconn reportedly relied on technology from European semiconductor firm STMicroelectronics.
Persons: Narendra Modi, Anna Moneymaker, Modi, Ajit Manocha, Jefferies, Manocha, , Mark Papermaster, Sanjay Mehrotra, Ashwini Vaishnaw, Young Liu, Foxconn, hasn't, Liu, Anil Agarwal, Pranay Kotasthane, haven't, Kotasthane Organizations: Indian, Getty Images, U.S, Micron, Cadence, Applied Materials, AMD, SemiconIndia, U.S ., Vedanta, CNBC, TV18, Takshashila Locations: U.S, Taiwan, South Korea, U.S . New Delhi, India, America, SemiconIndia, Bangalore, Gujarat, Vedanta
July 27 (Reuters) - European chipmaker STMicroelectronics <STMPA.PA> on Thursday projected improvement in third-quarter sales as it slightly beat market expectations for the second quarter, defying earlier downbeat statements by some of its peers. STM said it expects third-quarter net revenues of $4.38 billion, a touch above the $4.32 billion it posted in the third quarter last year. STM's second-quarter sales rose 12.7% year-over-year to $4.33 billion, slightly above a consensus from Refinitiv data, which had expected $4.27 billion. It now expects revenues in 2023 of $17.4 billion, give or take $150 million. In April, it guided for a range of 17.0 billion to $17.8 billion.
Persons: Chipmakers, Taiwan's TSMC, Jean, Marc Chery, Olivier Sorgho, Jacqueline Wong, Kim Coghill Organizations: Texas, NXP Semiconductors, Industrial, Electronics, Thomson
In this article 2317-TW Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTThis month, Foxconn pulled out of its joint venture with Vedanta. In May 2021, it formed a joint venture with Yageo Corporation, which makes various types of electronic components. Foxconn looked to India for its joint venture with Vedanta because the country's government is looking to boost its domestic semiconductor industry and bring manufacturing on shore. This month, Foxconn pulled out of its joint venture with Vedanta. Foxconn and Vedanta wanted to license the technology from STMicro and India wanted the firm to have a stake in the joint venture, but the European chipmaker did not, Reuters reported.
Persons: Foxconn, Gabriel Perez, Neil Shah, Shah, BMI's Perez, Vedanta Organizations: Vedanta, Getty, BMI, Fitch Group, CNBC, Samsung, Micron, Hai Technology, Yageo Corporation, Counterpoint Research, Reuters Locations: India, EU, Mainland China, STMicro
"We expect AI excitement to continue (hence our Positive industry view)," said the Barclays analysts led by Simon Coles in a note to clients on June 28. The below table highlights the European chip stocks covered by Barclays, the date of their earnings, and the bank's 12-month price target for each. The stock has potential upside of 37.3%, according to Barclays' analysts; the second-highest on their list. The bank's analysts are optimistic about the company's revenue exposure and anticipate a strong quarter driven by the auto sector. Barclays puts Infineon's upside potential at 40% — the highest on its list of chip stocks.
Persons: Simon Coles, ASML, telco, STMicroelectronics Organizations: Barclays, Samsung, Nokia, ASM, Infineon Locations: Asia, China, EUV, STMicro, 2024E
BENGALURU, July 18 (Reuters) - India's Vedanta is awaiting government approval for incentives under a modified semiconductor production plan to begin construction of a plant in the country's western state of Gujarat, for which its has tapped technology and equity partners, a top executive said on Tuesday. The group already has a partnership with Taiwan's Innolux for display fab manufacturing, he added. After Foxconn pulled out, Vedanta said it had lined up partners for the venture, without giving details. Separately, Gujarat is holding talks with Foxconn over a semiconductor plant, while the Taiwanese company had said it intends to apply for incentives under India's semiconductor production plan. Reporting by Sethuraman NR and Aleef Jahan in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza and Maju SamuelOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Taiwan's, Anil Agarwal, Taiwan's Foxconn, Foxconn, Vedanta, Foxconn's pullout, Aleef, Savio D'Souza, Maju Samuel Organizations: Vedanta Semiconductors, Reuters, Sethuraman, Thomson Locations: BENGALURU, Gujarat, Bengaluru
BENGALURU, July 12 (Reuters) - India's Vedanta will enter the market for the manufacturing of chips and displays this year, group chairman Anil Agarwal said on Wednesday, days after its joint-venture partner Foxconn (2317.TW) pulled out of the $19.5 billion chipmaking project. Foxconn separately intends to apply for incentives under India's semiconductor production plan. In an address to the shareholders, Agarwal said Vedanta will "this year, subject to government approval" begin its foray to setup its semiconductor and display units. After Foxconn pulled out, Vedanta said it has lined up partners for the venture, without giving any further details. Volcan Investments, Vedanta's holding company and Foxconn had signed a pact last year to set up semiconductor and display production plants in Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home state Gujarat in western India.
Persons: Anil Agarwal, Foxconn, Agarwal, Vedanta, Narendra Modi's, Foxconn's pullout, Tanvi Mehta, Nivedita Bhattacharjee, Louise Heavens Organizations: Volcan Investments, Reuters, JV, Sethuraman NR, Thomson Locations: BENGALURU, Volcan, Gujarat, India, Bengaluru, New Delhi
Apple has long depended on China for manufacturing, but the relationship is getting complex. Two recent developments suggest India's push to become a viable alternative to China — and benefit Apple — are mixed. "Foxconn has determined it will not move forward on the joint venture with Vedanta," Foxconn said in a statement to Reuters. That's a critical blow to Modi, who set out chip manufacturing as a strategic part of his ambitions to level up India. Vedanta chairman Anil Agarwal tweeted that the joint venture meant "India's own Silicon Valley is a step closer now."
Persons: Foxconn, , China's, Luxshare, JP Morgan, Tim Cook, Modi, Madhuri Dixit, Mukesh Ambani, Narendra Modi, That's, Europe's, Anil Agarwal, Agarwal Organizations: Apple, Apple ., Tata Group, Bloomberg, Vedanta, Reuters Locations: China, India, Asia, China's hawkishness, Taiwan, Vietnam, Beijing, Mumbai, iPhones, Karnataka, Modi's, Gujarat, Cupertino
Foxconn (2317.TW) withdrew from the JV with the Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate on Monday, in a setback to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's chipmaking plans for India. "Foxconn is committed to India and sees the country successfully establishing a robust semiconductor manufacturing ecosystem." India expects its semiconductor market to be worth $63 billion by 2026, but Modi's plan has so far floundered. The $3 billion ISMC project is stalled because Tower is being acquired by Intel, while another $3 billion plan by IGSS was also halted because it wanted to re-submit its application, Reuters has reported. Like Foxconn, the Indian government has said the breakup of the JV had "no impact" on India's semiconductor plans, adding that both companies were "valued investors" in the country.
Persons: India Foxconn, Foxconn, Narendra Modi's chipmaking, Modi, IGSS, Ann Wang, Vedanta, Anil Agarwal, Vedanta's, Yimou Lee, Ben Blanchard, Tanvi Mehta, Aditya Kalra, Jacqueline Wong, Sonali Paul, Alexander Smith Organizations: India, JV, Vedanta, TW, Semiconductors, IGSS Ventures, ISMC, Intel, Reuters, REUTERS, Vedanta's, Vedanta Ltd, Vedanta Resources, Thomson Locations: chipmaking, India, TAIPEI, MUMBAI, Singapore, New Taipei City, Taiwan, Vedanta's India, Vedanta's London, Taipei, Mumbai, New Delhi, Pandya, Bengaluru
He then expanded his empire across India, Zambia, Namibia, Ireland and South Africa and later entered the oil and gas sector. London-headquarted Vedanta Resources controls the India unit, Vedanta Ltd. Agarwal took Vedanta Resources private in 2018. Vedanta's gross debt stood at $6.8 billion as of April end, after the company completed 75% of its debt reduction commitment. FOXCONN JVVedanta-Foxconn had sought incentives from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government and several Indian states for its Foxconn JV to manufacture semiconductors. Relations between Zambia and Vedanta broke down several years ago and culminated in the state appointing a liquidator for the KCM assets in May 2019.
Persons: Foxconn, Anil Agarwal, VEDANTA, Agarwal, Agarwal's, Akarsh Hebbar, Moody's, Narendra Modi's, Paul Kabuswe, Vedanta, Tanvi Mehta, Aditya Kalra, Sonali Paul Organizations: Vedanta, Resources, India's, Forbes, JV, Reuters, Thomson Locations: DELHI, Mumbai, India, Zambia, Namibia, Ireland, South Africa, London, Tamil Nadu, Odisha
July 11 (Reuters) - Chipmaker GlobalFoundries (GFS.O) has shelved its plan to appoint former Amazon executive Tim Stone as chief financial officer, it said on Tuesday, two months after choosing him. It said current CFO David Reeder will remain in the role through the end of the year as it looks for a new candidate. GlobalFoundries had in May named Stone, who was at Amazon (AMZN.O) for more than 20 years and served as CFO for AWS and Devices businesses. The chipmaker counts companies including Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O), STMicroelectronics (STMPA.PA), Qualcomm (QCOM.O) and Lockheed Martin (LMT.N) among its customers. Reporting by Chavi Mehta in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee and Arun KoyyurOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Tim Stone, David Reeder, GlobalFoundries, Stone, Lockheed Martin, Chavi Mehta, Nivedita Bhattacharjee, Arun Koyyur Organizations: Amazon, AWS, Ford Motor, Devices, Qualcomm, Lockheed, Global, IDC, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru
Foxconn withdraws from $19.5 bln Vedanta chip plan in India
  + stars: | 2023-07-10 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Here is a timeline of how events have unfolded since the signing of the $19.5 billion joint venture:* Feb. 14, 2022: Foxconn partners with Vedanta to make semiconductors in India in a bid to diversify its business. * Sept. 13, 2022: Vedanta and Foxconn sign pacts to invest $19.5 billion to set up semiconductor and display production. * Sept. 14, 2022: Vedanta's Anil Agarwal says the Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate does not see funding problems for the JV. * May 31, 2023: Reuters reports that Vedanta-Foxconn JV proceeding slowly as talks to involve STMicroelectronics (STMPA.PA) are deadlocked. * July 10, 2023: Foxconn drops Vedanta chip JV, without specifying a reason.
Persons: Foxconn, Narendra Modi's chipmaking, Vedanta, Vedanta's Anil Agarwal, Chandrasekhar, Tanvi Mehta, Alexander Smith Organizations: Vedanta, Indian, JV, Reuters, Thomson Locations: DELHI, India, Gujarat
TAIPEI/BENGALURU, July 10 (Reuters) - Taiwan's Foxconn said on Monday it has withdrawn from a $19.5 billion semiconductor joint venture with Indian metals-to-oil conglomerate Vedanta, in a setback to Prime Minister Narendra Modi's chipmaking plans for India. Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics maker, and Vedanta signed a pact last year to set up semiconductor and display production plants in Modi's home state of Gujarat. "Foxconn (2354.TW) has determined it will not move forward on the joint venture with Vedanta," the electronics maker said in a statement, without elaborating on the reasons. India, which expects its semiconductor market to be worth $63 billion by 2026, last year received three applications to set up plants under a $10 billion incentive scheme. These were from the Vedanta-Foxconn joint venture, a global consortium ISMC which counts Tower Semiconductor (TSEM.TA) as a tech partner and from Singapore-based IGSS Ventures.
Persons: Taiwan's Foxconn, Narendra Modi's chipmaking, Vedanta, Foxconn, Modi, STMicro, IGSS, Munsif, Ben Blanchard, Aditya Kalra, Louise Heavens, Jason Neely, Alexander Smith Organizations: Vedanta, Apple, Reuters, IGSS Ventures, Intel, Thomson Locations: TAIPEI, BENGALURU, India, Gujarat, Singapore, Bengaluru, Taipei, New Delhi
BENGALURU, July 7 (Reuters) - India's metals-to-oil conglomerate Vedanta Ltd (VDAN.NS) said on Friday that it would take over from its holding company the ownership of a joint venture with Taiwan's Foxconn that was set up to make semiconductors. Vedanta also said it would also take over a display glass manufacturing venture from Volcan Investments, Vedanta's holding company. Moreover, Vedanta's disclosures last year related to the deal made it seem like it was running the project. It later clarified that Volcan Investments would take the helm. Still, India's marker regulator, after an investigating, penalised Vedanta last week, saying it had broken regulations by initially making it appear it had partnered with Foxconn.
Persons: Taiwan's, Vedanta, Ashish Chandra, Savio D'Souza Organizations: Vedanta, Volcan Investments, TW, Reuters, Foxconn, Thomson Locations: BENGALURU, Volcan, Foxconn, Gujarat, India, Bengaluru
The Philadelphia chip index (.SOX) dropped 0.9%. Last year, U.S. officials had ordered Nvidia to stop exporting its top two AI chips to China to limit the country's technological capability. Months later, Nvidia launched a new advanced chip called A800 in China to meet export control rules. "A handful of tech companies pack a huge punch on Wall Street due to their sheer size, so any wobble in confidence reverberates on indices." The Philadelphia chip index (.SOX) has surged more than 44% so far this year, far ahead of the benchmark index's (.SPX) 14% rise.
Persons: chipmakers, Biden, Colette Kress, Susannah Streeter, Hargreaves Lansdown, Medha Singh, Akash Sriram, Arun Koyyur, Vinay Dwivedi Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, Intel, U.S ., Commerce Department, Wall, AMD, Nordic Semiconductor, Thomson Locations: China, U.S, Philadelphia, Milan, Bengaluru
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