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DoorDash lost 6 cents per share on $2.51 billion in revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were expecting a loss of 4 cents per share on $2.45 billion in revenue. Carvana reported $3.06 billion in revenue, well above the consensus forecast of $2.67 billion from analysts surveyed by LSEG. The company told investors to anticipate between $2.49 billion and $2.54 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by LSEG forecast $2.56 billion. Revenue topped the average analysts' estimate.
Persons: DoorDash, LSEG, Carvana, Freshworks, FactSet, Etsy, Schrodinger, Qorvo, Robinson, Jesse Pound, Tanaya Macheel, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: LSEG, eBay, Qualcomm, FactSet . Revenue, Revenue Locations: California, FactSet
Ford Motor — The automobile stock rose 2% after posting a first-quarter adjusted earnings beat and raising its adjusted free cash flow outlook for 2024. On the other hand, Ford's first-quarter revenue came in below expectations. First-quarter revenue of $14.46 billion missed consensus estimates of $14.55 billion, LSEG said. Chipotle earned $13.37 per share, excluding items, outpacing the $11.68 per share LSEG estimate, as traffic to its restaurants was robust. United Rentals — The equipment rental company added 2.4% after posting a first-quarter adjusted earnings and revenue beat.
Persons: LSEG, Ford's, Ethan Allen, Ethan Allen's, Chipotle, Lam, ServiceNow, , Christina Cheddar, Berk, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Technology, Facebook, Meta, Ford, Machines, IBM, Whirlpool, Research, Lam Research, Revenue, Churchill, United Rentals
Although revenue rose 27% to $2.3 billion, outpacing LSEG estimates, the loss of 39 cents per share was wider than expected. First-quarter earnings per share of $2.13, excluding items, bested estimates of $1.90 per share, from LSEG. Revenue came in slightly below analysts' estimates at $1.23 billion, versus $1.24 billion expected. Yelp — Shares dropped about10% after the website's first-quarter guidance for both adjusted EBITDA and revenue missed analysts' estimates. Bio Rad Laboratories — The life science equipment company's fourth-quarter earnings per share exceeded analysts' consensus estimates, FactSet said.
Persons: , Yelp, FactSet, Macheel, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Revenue, Texas, Rad Locations: LSEG, FactSet . Texas
The economy is in good shape and earnings are expanding, which spells good news for stocks, according to Stephanie Link. "We're in the sweet spot of this economy, in terms of growth," which is great news for corporate profits and points to wider stock market rally involving more stocks, Link said. "We're running at 4.2% from the Atlanta Fed GDP tracker, you've got PMIs [purchasing manager indexes] that are bottoming, new orders that are inflecting [higher]," Link said. "It means better earnings. A strong economy means better earnings, and that is what is happening.
Persons: Stephanie Link, Link, Hightower, you've, We've Organizations: Hightower Associates, Atlanta Fed
Meanwhile, analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, forecast earnings of 81 cents per share and $4.34 billion in revenue. Peloton — Shares fell more than 23% on the back of the company's bleak outlook for the current quarter and full-year sales. Peloton is forecasting sales to come in between $700 million and $725 million for the quarter. Analysts polled by LSEG expected revenue of $9.70 billion. Adjusted earnings per share came in at $2.10 versus the $1.66 expected from analysts polled by StreetAccount.
Persons: Robinson, Nextracker, Wolfspeed, MaxLinear, Qorvo, TD Cowen, Gabe Daoud Jr, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Spencer Kimball, Scott Schnipper Organizations: LSEG, , Honeywell, New York Community Bank, Regional Banking, Western Alliance, T Bank, Norfolk Southern, Ancora Holdings, Street Journal, Merck —, Merck, FactSet, StreetAccount, Revenue, Qualcomm, Citi
The Google parent topped Wall Street's expectations on the top and bottom lines, but recorded advertising revenue of $65.52 billion. Advanced Micro Devices — The semiconductor company's shares slid 4.3% after posting fourth-quarter earnings Tuesday that came out in line with consensus expectations. Starbucks – Shares of the coffee chain were higher in premarket trading even after a disappointing financial update for its fiscal first quarter. Starbucks posted earnings per share of 90 cents, falling below analysts' expectations by 3 cents, according to LSEG. Manhattan Associates — The supply chain software provider surged 11% premarket after fourth quarter earnings and revenue topped analysts' highest estimates, and issued first quarter financial guidance that also surpassed expectations.
Persons: Byron Allen, Tesla, Elon Musk, Mondelez, Morgan Stanley, , Macheel, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Google, StreetAccount, Paramount Global, Paramount, AMD, Microsoft, Boeing, Starbucks, Technologies, Manhattan Associates Locations: LSEG, Delaware
Electronic Arts — The stock declined 3.3% after its fiscal third-quarter revenue came in below estimates. Google ad revenue came in at $65.52 billion, short of analysts' expectations for $65.94 billion, per StreetAccount. Starbucks' fiscal first-quarter adjusted earnings came in at 90 cents per share on revenue of $9.43 billion. This fell short of analysts' expectations for 93 cents in earnings per share and revenue of $9.59 billion, per LSEG. Revenue came in at $194 million, reflecting a 53% increase from a year earlier.
Persons: Elon Musk's, Richard Tornetta, Laxman Narasimhan, Stryker, Skyworks, Liam Griffin, Robert Half, FactSet, Teradyne, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Microsoft, LSEG, Electronic Arts, EA, Google, Starbucks, AMD, Powell Industries Locations: Delaware, Asia, North America, LSEG
Adjusted earnings came in at 71 cents per share, while revenue was $25.17 billion. IBM surpassed analysts' expectations in the fourth quarter , posting adjusted earnings of $3.87 per share on revenue of $17.38 billion. Las Vegas Sands posted $2.92 billion in revenue for the fourth quarter, while analysts polled by LSEG called for $2.90 billion. Adjusted earnings missed the mark, however, coming in at 57 cents a share, while analysts predicted 61 cents a share. ServiceNow — The software company slipped 1%, even as the company posted fourth-quarter beats on the top and bottom lines.
Persons: LSEG, ResMed, Lam, — CNBC's Scott Schnipper, Brian Evans Organizations: LSEG, Machines, IBM, Vegas Sands, Wall, United Rentals, Lam Research, Columbia Banking, Columbia Locations: Vegas, Lam, FactSet
"Not only are we seeing exuberance by investors, but certainly we're seeing exuberance by analysts," Yardeni said. "They dramatically increased their earnings expectations for Nvidia ," and that drove down the stock's forward P/E multiple to the 20s from the 80s. "But look, it's a hot stock, and it's probably going to remain a hot stock as long as AI delivers. I think it's going to take somewhat longer for AI to deliver as much as the market seems to expect." What's more, investors are expecting too many interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in 2024, Yardeni said.
Persons: Ed Yardeni, Yardeni, it's, we're, — Scott Schnipper Organizations: Federal Reserve, Nvidia, Cisco
Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chairman Charlie Munger, who died Tuesday at age 99, once offered what turned out to be sage advice to his buddy and investment legend Warren Buffett: live life backwards. Munger years ago told the somewhat younger Buffett, 93, how he should live his life, according to CNBC's Becky Quick, speaking on CNBC's "Closing Bell: Overtime." Munger told Buffett, "he should write his obituary the way he wants it written, and then live his life accordingly," Quick said. "Look at things, and live backwards."
Persons: Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, Munger, Buffett, Becky Quick, Quick Organizations: Berkshire Hathaway
December is the time of the season when investors seldom have to worry about stock market performance, particularly in years that come before a presidential election. "Trading in December is holiday-inspired and fueled by a buying bias throughout the month," Hirsch recently told subscribers. "However, the first part of the month tends to be weaker as tax-loss selling and yearend portfolio restructuring begins." December does even better for small-cap stocks, at least going back to 1979, delivering the year's second-highest monthly return. That small cap return is usually back end loaded, however, only starting around the middle of the month.
Persons: Jeffrey Hirsch, Hirsch, outsized, Dow Industrials, Russell Organizations: Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Nvidia, Tesla, Meta, Microsoft Locations: Decembers
"We view this bullish breadth day as a sign that the 4Q rally for U.S. equities from ... late October can continue," Suttmeier wrote. The S & P 500 median return the next day was a muted -0.05%. But 10 days later, the median return was 1.44%; 20 days later the index was usually ahead a median 2.24%; and after 30 days it was a median 3.28% higher. After 65 days, median returns were better still, with the benchmark index surging another 6.21% from that original "90% up" day. One time, the maximum return after 65 days was 30.51%, and the maximum loss 65 days after such a "90% up day" was 16%.
Persons: Stephen Suttmeier, BofA, Suttmeier Organizations: Bank of America, New York Stock Exchange
The S & P 500 is up more than 7% in November, but JPMorgan wrote to clients this week that the rebound is just a head fake. The biggest bank in the country thinks stocks are expensive and consumer spending is set to slow. Rather, "a significant part of this move was technical in nature, driven by momentum strategies and short covering." The hurdles for the stock market are manifold, according to JPMorgan. Instead, JPMorgan recommends a defensive posture in its model portfolio, underweighting stocks and bonds and overweighting cash and commodities.
Persons: Marko Kolanovic, Kolanovic, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan
Morgan Stanley thinks Meta Platforms is the "cleanest" generative artificial intelligence play in 2024 as the bank focuses on return on invested capital (ROIC) in its AI stock coverage into next year. Analysts led by Brian Nowak assembled a list of potential AI stock winners for 2024, extending from large caps down to smaller companies that offer similarly bullish outlooks. "AI investments, testing and early capabilities continue to grow across the sector," Morgan Stanley wrote. Among smaller stocks, Uber Technologies was also recommended by Morgan Stanley, which has an overweight rating on the ride-sharing provider. "Uber's scale and liquidity gives drivers higher earnings power and riders lower wait times," Morgan Stanley wrote.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Brian Nowak, Nowak, Monday's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Wall, Nvidia, Microsoft, Facebook, Technologies
Dish Network — Shares dropped 6.2% premarket after the company missed Wall Street's expectations on both revenue and earnings, driven by substantial losses in its pay-TV retail wireless subscribers. Dish lost 26 cents per share in the third quarter, while analysts expected earnings of 5 cents per share, according to LSEG, formerly Refinitiv. Nvidia — The semiconductor stock added 1.1% premarket Monday, lifted by Bank of America's optimism about Nvidia's quarterly earnings due Nov. 21. Affiliated Managers Group — Shares of the asset manager company gained 2.5% third quarter earnings and revenue topped analyst estimates. AMG posted revenue of $525.2 million, exceeding analysts' estimate of $509.4 million.
Persons: Tesla, RingCentral, Schuster, SATS, Jane, FactSet, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Theobald, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Reuters, Hilton, Paramount, CBS, Bank of America, Dish, Citigroup —, CNBC, Citigroup, Bora Bora, Nvidia, Bank of, UBS, Dominion Energy, Barclays Locations: Berlin, China, Albemarle
Insulet — Shares added nearly 10% after beating both earnings and revenue estimates in the third quarter. Revenue came in at $432.7 million, while analysts polled by FactSet anticipated revenue of $414.3 million. Expedia — Stock in the travel booking company surged 9% after beating both revenue and earnings estimates in the third quarter. Paramount Global — The media conglomerate stock ticked up nearly 6% following a third-quarter earnings beat . Floor & Decor Holdings — The flooring retailer slipped more than 15% after missing third-quarter revenue forecasts.
Persons: FactSet, Apple, Expedia, LSEG, Block, Fortinet, Carvana, DraftKings, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, Apple, Paramount Global, Paramount, Holdings, FactSet
SolarEdge — The solar stock cratered 23% after SolarEdge posted a dismal third-quarter report and outlook for the current quarter's revenue. SolarEdge lost 55 cents per share, excluding items, while analysts polled by LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv, forecast a gain of 89 cents per share. The company guided revenue for the current quarter to between $300 million and $350 million, well under the $688 million anticipated by analysts. Qualcomm surpassed analysts' estimates in its fiscal fourth quarter, reporting adjusted earnings of $2.02 per share on revenue of $8.67 billion. Etsy beat analysts' estimates for earnings in the third quarter but fell short of Wall Street's expectations on revenue.
Persons: SolarEdge, LSEG, Josh Silverman, Etsy, Roku, Roku's, DoorDash, Clorox, Sarepta, FactSet, Darla Mercado, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Scott Schnipper Organizations: LSEG, Revenue, Qualcomm —, Qualcomm, Electronic Arts, Arts, Wall Street, Tandem Diabetes Care, Ritz, Therapeutics Locations: FactSet
Arista Networks reported $1.83 in earnings per share, excluding items, on $1.51 billion in revenue. Analysts polled by FactSet had estimated $1.58 in earnings per share on $1.48 billion in revenue. The company posted a loss of 53 cents per share, while analysts called for 67 cents per share, per LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. Analysts called for $1.20 per share in earnings and revenue of $5.02 billion, per FactSet. The company also gave fourth-quarter revenue guidance ranging between $442 million and $462 million, while analysts called for $451.7 million.
Persons: FactSet, FactSet's, Tenet, Pinterest, LSEG, Darla Mercado, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Arista Networks, Lattice Semiconductor, Revenue, Tenet
People walk outside the Bank of England in the City of London financial district, in London, Britain, January 26, 2023. Valuations for U.S technology stocks may be too high given the current macroeconomic backdrop and spike in rates, according to the Bank of England. "Given the impact of higher interest rates, and uncertainties associated with inflation and growth, some risky asset valuations appear to be stretched," the BoE's financial policy committee said Tuesday. "Stretched risky asset valuations increase the likelihood of a greater correction in prices if downside risks to growth materialise." To be sure, this isn't the first time that a central bank has warned of valuations over the years, but as a general rule, central bankers would rather not offer an opinion on any specific market price.
Persons: BoE, premia, Ben Bernanke, Lehman, Alan Greenspan, Greenspan's, — CNBC's Scott Schnipper Organizations: Bank of England, Microsoft, Nvidia, Lehman Brothers Locations: City, London, Britain, U.S
Bearish views on the stock market culminated in the sale of an estimated record of $40 billion of S & P 500 stock index futures over the past five sessions, but that selling pressure is about to ease, according to a note from the Goldman Sachs trading desk. Hedge funds that use a managed futures strategy (Commodity Trading Advisors, or CTAs) recently unwound positions in S & P 500 futures at the greatest speed and magnitude "on record," Goldman said. With most of those positions now squared away, however, Goldman claims "we are closer to the end of this sell pressure than not." Goldman said lower risk, lowest cost trades are available in one-month call options on the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust , Health Care Select Sector SPDR Fund , Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund and SPDR S & P 500 ETF Trust . Greater returns might come from stocks that Goldman added to its "conviction list" Monday, such as Nvidia , Cintas and Quanterix Corp. (Goldman removed Salesforce and Johnson Controls from the "conviction list" this week.)
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Salesforce, Michael Bloom Organizations: Trading Advisors, Dow Jones, ETF Trust, Health, Fund, Consumer, Trust, Nvidia, Quanterix Corp, Johnson
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Sphere Entertainment — Shares of the media and entertainment company climbed 11.1% in midday trading after a U2 show debuted its Las Vegas Sphere venue Friday night. Bitcoin stocks — Stocks tied to digital currency trading advanced in lockstep with a rally in crypto prices. Instacart — Maplebear, the food delivery company doing business as Instacart, fell 9.2% in midday trading. The Wall Street bank said investors should buy the dip after the stock's underperformance in the first half of 2023.
Persons: — Stocks, MicroStrategy, , — Maplebear, Gordon Haskett, Insulet, Jefferies, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Truist, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Madison Square Garden, , Riot, Marathon, Discover Financial, U.S . Securities, Exchange, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Coeur Mining, Hecla Mining, Harmony, Mining, Gold Resource, Barclays, Norfolk Southern, Bank of America, Nvidia —, Nvidia, Apple, JPMorgan, UBS Locations: Las Vegas, lockstep, Coeur, Wall
CNBC Daily Open: Long-term prospects look dim
  + stars: | 2023-09-29 | by ( Yeo Boon Ping | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Michael Nagle | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. What you need to know todayThe bottom lineA smattering of positive developments helped investor sentiment yesterday. According to the latest survey by the American Association of Individual Investors, which measures retail investors' sentiment for stocks over the next six months, overall bearishness climbed from 34.6% last week to 40.9%. — CNBC's Scott Schnipper contributed to this report Correction: An earlier version of this report misspelled Rick Rieder's name.
Persons: Michael Nagle, Treasurys, yield's, it's, , Brent, — CNBC's Scott Schnipper, Rick Rieder's Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Bloomberg, Getty, CNBC, . West Texas, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, AMD, American Association of, Alpha, Treasury, Federal Reserve Locations: New York
Artificial intelligence is capable of helping solve some of the world's biggest problems and could potentially surpass the intelligence of humankind, according to SoftBank's Masayoshi Son. "Mankind was the smartest animal on the earth — AI is going to surpass, and surpass big time." The SoftBank founder and CEO called himself a "big believer" in AI, adding that Arm is a "core" beneficiary of the AI revolution. Arm's initial public offering Thursday may bring an end to a nearly two-year-long drought in large-scale technology initial public offerings. I'm optimistic that AI is going to solve the issues that mankind couldn't solve in the past."
Persons: Masayoshi, SoftBank's, CNBC's David Faber, Mankind, Son, he's, , Scott Schnipper Organizations: Arm Holdings, Nasdaq, Federal Reserve, University of California, Forbes, Yahoo Locations: Tokyo, Berkeley
Bullish sentiment among individual investors regarding the outlook for stocks over the next six months surged to 42% in the latest week, from 33.1% last week, and the first time the measure's been above the historical average (37.5%) since early August, according to the latest American Association of Individual Investors survey. Bearish sentiment sank to 29.6%, a four-week low, vs 34.5% last week. Neutral sentiment fell to a seven-week low of 28.2% from 32.4% last week. Bullishness also climbed in the weekly Investors Intelligence poll of financial newsletter editors and advisors earlier this week, rising to 49.3% from 43.1% last week. Bearishness rose a touch, to 21.9% from 20.8%, while those in the correction camp narrowed to 28.8% from 36.1%.
Persons: Bullishness, contrarians, — Scott Schnipper Organizations: American, of, Intelligence
But the company posted $33.85 billion in quarterly revenue, under the $34.13 billion anticipated by analysts. Planet Labs — The satellite imagery stock slipped 2.6% in premarket trading after delivering a weaker quarterly report than expected on Thursday. DocuSign — The electric signature stock advanced 2.4% premarket on the heels of a stronger-than-expected quarterly report released Thursday. The Wall Street firm said Snowflake is in an advantageous position with "best-in-class growth rates" and is set to benefit from increased demand for artificial intelligence applications. The Wall Street firm cited First Solar's strong growth message during its investors day.
Persons: Kroger, LSEG, DocuSign, Davidson, Snowflake, Mizuho, RH —, Gary Friedman, , Yun Li, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Planet Labs, LSEG, Deutsche Bank, Mizuho, Gilead Sciences, Bank of America Locations: Gilead
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