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

Search resuls for: "UBS —"


25 mentions found


In a country roiled by recession worries, those at the top of New York City — for better or worse — couldn't give a single gilded shit. For New York City, a brush with death called for a time of decadence. "New York City's restaurants and bars are experiencing an uneven pandemic recovery nearly four years after COVID-19 struck our city," Andrew Rigie, the executive director of the New York City Hospitality Alliance, said. AdvertisementIf a pandemic can't defeat New York City, a little inflation certainly isn't going to do it. And what that looks like is the affluent in New York City eating caviar, and poorer Americans eating cereal.
Persons: Steve Jobs, it's, Jennifer Saesue, Saesue, Fish Cheeks, Z, bistros, James Murphy, us Carbone, Casas — Cruz, Cipriani, Jean, Georges Vongerichten, Bongo, Andrew Rigie, Corey Mintz, we're, WK Kellogg, Gary Pilnick, Gary Pilnick's Organizations: Grand Prospect Hall, New, New York City, Apple, Mastercard, Chefs, Casas, Soho House, Bangkok Supper, Village, IBA, Hospitality Alliance, Nationwide, National Restaurant Association, Nasdaq, The University of Michigan Consumer, UBS, New York Locations: New York City, New York, Rome, Xinjiang, New, Manhattan, Coqodaq, Las Vegas, York, Bangkok, Hell, TouchBistro, Brooklyn, The Bronx
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
The database software maker posted adjusted earnings of 86 cents per share on revenue of $458 million. Analysts had called for earnings of 47 cents per share and $433 million in revenue, according to LSEG. DocuSign reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 76 cents per share on revenue of $712 million for the period. According to analysts surveyed by LSEG, Wall Street had expected earnings of 64 cents per share on $699 million in revenue. Eli Lilly — Shares slipped 1% premarket after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration delayed approving its Alzheimer's drug, donanemab.
Persons: MongoDB, DocuSign, Deutsche, Li, Morgan Stanley, LSEG, Eli Lilly —, , Sarah Min, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound Organizations: RBC, Li Auto, Deutsche Bank, Navy, UBS — U.S, UBS, Marvell Technology, Broadcom, Revenue, Textron —, Bank of America, Textron, New York Community Bancorp, Moody's, U.S . Food, Drug Administration, Costco —, LSEG Locations: Swiss, U.S
Data center capacity constraints could one day eat into Nvidia's revenue potential, according to UBS analysts. "A major factor that we believe will probably start coming into play is data center capacity — which we do think starts to hurt revenue, albeit maybe more in 2026 than in 2025," Arcuri said, in a separate report. For the fourth quarter, UBS expects Nvidia to report data center revenue of $19.45 billion, which would entail sequential growth of 34%. It also expects revenue and earnings per share, as well as data center revenue, to increase in 2025 and 2026. According to FactSet, average estimates for data center revenue are around $17.06 billion and $20.4 billion in total revenue for the fourth quarter.
Persons: Timothy Arcuri, Carlos Colorado, Arcuri Organizations: UBS, UBS —, Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon Locations: Colorado, U.S
In its second quarter, the materials company posted earnings of 36 cents per share, greater than the 26 cents per share anticipated by analysts polled by StreetAccount. In its fourth quarter, the company posted adjusted earnings of 87 cents per share, compared to guidance of 85 cents to 87 cents in earnings per share. The company said it was committed to announcing a $3.5 billion share buyback for the first half of the year. The insurance service company reported adjusted earnings of $7.44 per share, topping the FactSet consensus estimate of $7.05 in earnings per share. Analysts polled by FactSet were expecting earnings of $1.08 per share on revenue of $1.24 billion.
Persons: Li, Willis Towers Watson, Gil Shwed, DocuSign, FactSet, Rambus, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh Organizations: LSEG, StreetAccount, GE HealthCare Technologies, FactSet, Li Auto, Deutsche Bank, Spotify Technology, DuPont de Nemours, BP —, BP, Simon Property Group, Simon Property, United Parcel Service, UBS, Software Technologies, UBS — U.S, FMC Locations: StreetAccount ., FactSet ., Mississippi, Dalton , Georgia, Dalton, Swiss
The compan y posted adjusted earnings of $2.49 per share on revenue of $9.35 billion. Analysts anticipated $2.22 per share on revenue of $8.93 billion, according to LSEG. The company's revenue of $3.42 billion also beat analysts' forecasts of $3.40 billion. Chegg expects revenue between $173 million to $175 million, lighter than the $180.1 million consensus estimate, per StreetAccount. UPS -- Shares of the delivery company rose more than 1% after UBS upgraded the stock to buy from neutral.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Tesla, Li, amortization, Rambus, Macheel, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Spotify, LSEG, UBS —, JPMorgan, UBS, BP, Deutsche Bank, StreetAccount, UPS Locations: Swiss, StreetAccount .
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Nio — The Chinese automaker climbed about 3% after reporting a smaller-than-expected loss in the third quarter. Nio has taken steps to bring down costs recently, including a 10% cut to its workforce last month. CVS Health — Shares gained 4% after CVS said it would overhaul the way it prices prescription drugs . GitLab — The software company's shares jumped more than 12% a day after the company reported better-than-expected results for the fiscal third quarter.
Persons: Nio, GitLab, Adecoagro, Albemarle —, Piper Sandler, , Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: Apple, Bank of America, CVS, FactSet, UBS —, UBS, Suisse, Nokia, Ericsson —, Ericsson's, Ericsson, Albemarle Locations: China, U.S, Monday's, Ericsson's U.S, Sweden, Finland
The company posted its first adjusted operating profit and said revenue grew 32% year over year. CVS Health —The pharmacy stock climbed 3% in premarket trading after the company provided higher-than-expected revenue guidance for 2024. The auto parts retailer posted earnings of $32.55 per share, topping the FactSet consensus estimate of $31.57 per share. Smucker — Shares of the snack food company rose 3% in premarket trading after J.M. Adecoagro — The Latin American agriculture stock rose 2.3%.
Persons: GitLab, Johnson, Johnson — Johnson, Piper Sandler, AutoZone, Smucker, Adecoagro, , Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: CVS Health, CVS, FactSet, Rockstar, Nokia, Ericsson —, Ericsson, UBS, Bank of America, Suisse Locations: Finland, Sweden, Adecoagro
The caller was UBS (UBS) chairman Colm Kelleher. “I was definitely not expecting the phone call,” Ermotti told CNN on the sidelines of a conference in Geneva last month. UBS paid 60% less than the beaten-down value of Credit Suisse shares just before its last-ditch rescue over a weekend. Even if Credit Suisse had none of that painful baggage, the sheer size of the two banks makes the merger an enormous undertaking. “The fact that UBS was asked to be part of the solution (to Credit Suisse), that was the ultimate success,” Ermotti told CNN.
Persons: Sergio Ermotti, Colm Kelleher, Ermotti, ” Ermotti, Anke Reingen, Roger Federer, , , Morgan Stanley, ” Kelleher, Michael Buholzer, it’s, Katrin Koch, Tom Naratil, , Merrill Lynch, Stefan Wermuth, Oswald Gruebel, ” Christopher Wheeler, Fabrice Coffrini, Organizations: Switzerland CNN, UBS, Credit Suisse, CNN, Bank of America, JPMorgan, HSBC, RBC Capital Markets, RBC, Ermotti’s, Banca, Citi, UBS —, Bloomberg, New York Times, Getty Locations: Geneva, Switzerland, Swiss, Zurich, Lugano, Singapore, Europe, Middle East, Africa, New York, AFP
Revenue was $547.5 million, topping the $524.7 million expected. Planet Fitness — Shares rallied 12.4% after the gym chain topped expectations for both earnings and revenue for the third quarter. Vivid Seats beat analysts' expectations for third-quarter revenue, while also offering strong guidance on the measure for 2023 and 2024. Tripadvisor — Shares of the travel website operator jumped 9.5% after the company beat third-quarter earnings and revenue expectations. Hims & Hers Health also raised its full-year guidance and announced a $50 million share repurchase program.
Persons: Max —, Morgan Stanley, Max, StreetAccount, Tripadvisor, Sanmina, Goldman Sachs, D.R, Horton —, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: StreetAccount, Revenue, National Association of Realtors, BioMarin Pharmaceutical, Reuters, Elliott Investment Management, BioMarin, Air Products, Chemicals, UBS, Credit Suisse Locations: Swiss
Uber — Shares of the ride hailing company rose 2% after Uber's third-quarter gross bookings of $35.3 billion topped the company's guidance of $29 billion to $30 billion. Planet Fitness — The gym chain climbed 8.8% after beating expectations on both lines for the third quarter and raising its outlook for the year. Planet Fitness reported 59 cents in earnings per share, excluding items, and $277.6 million in revenue. Analysts surveyed by FactSet anticipated 55 cents in earnings per share on revenue at $268.2 million. It also cut its price target on Peloton to $4 from $13 per share, implying about 20% downside from Monday's close.
Persons: FactSet, Tripadvisor, Coterra, Sanmina, DigitalOcean, Goldman Sachs, , Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: UBS —, UBS, Credit Suisse, LSEG, Energy, , Deutsche Bank Locations: Switzerland
Salesforce — The cloud software company saw its stock jump 3% after it announced quarterly results and guidance that surpassed Wall Street's expectations. Dollar General — The discount retail chain plunged 12.2% Thursday after reporting second-quarter earnings per share of $2.13, which was lower than the StreetAccount consensus estimate of $2.47. Ciena — The network equipment stock surged nearly 16% after topping Wall Street's fiscal third-quarter earnings expectations on the top and bottom lines. Okta — Okta shares surged 13.5% after the access management company topped analysts' second-quarter earnings expectation and issued a strong full-year outlook. Victoria's Secret — The intimate apparel stock popped nearly 7% even after missing second-quarter earnings expectations on both the top and bottom lines.
Persons: Salesforce, Marc Benioff, CrowdStrike, Ciena, Morgan Stanley, Shopify, StreetAccount, Chewy, UGI, Raymond James, , Macheel, Sarah Min, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Aphria Inc, U.S . Department of Health, Human Services, Tilray Brands, Cronos, Revenue, Technologies, Arista Networks, Citi, Refinitiv, StreetAccount, Signet, UBS — U.S, Suisse Locations: Leamington , Ontario, Switzerland
Check out the companies making the biggest moves before the bell:Dollar General — The discount retailer tumbled 15.3% after reporting second-quarter earnings per share of $2.13, missing the StreetAccount consensus estimate of $2.47. Revenue also missed, coming in at $9.80 billion versus the $9.93 billion expected. Campbell Soup — Shares added about 1% after the company reported revenue of $2.07 billion, beating the $2.06 billion expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. Second-quarter adjusted earnings per share came in at 31 cents, versus the 22 cents expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. However, its revenue guidance for the third quarter of $2.74 billion to $2.76 billion fell short of the $2.79 billion expected from analysts, per StreetAccount.
Persons: Campbell, Shopify, Morgan Stanley, Salesforce, Goldman Sachs, Cronos, Tilray, Okta, SkyWest, Raymond James, Refinitiv, , Jesse Pound, Alex Harring Organizations: Revenue, Refinitiv, UBS — U.S, UBS, Cronos, Tilray, U.S . Department of Health, Human Services, Arista Networks, Citi, Arista, postmarket Locations: Austin , Texas, Swiss
A Moscow court has banned UBS and Credit Suisse from disposing of shares in their Russian subsidiaries. Russia witnessed an exodus of Western companies after it invaded Ukraine. A Moscow court has banned two major Swiss banks — UBS and Credit Suisse — from trying to wriggle their way out of their Russian subsidiaries, Reuters reported on Tuesday, citing court documents. Moscow-based Zenit Bank requested the ban, citing concerns about losing money should the two Swiss banks exit, per the news agency. Zenit also requested the court to seize funds belonging to UBS and Credit Suisse, but the application was not granted, per Reuters.
Persons: UBS —, Vladimir Putin, Jeffrey Sonnenfeld Organizations: UBS, Credit Suisse, Zenit Bank ., Service, Credit Suisse —, Reuters, Zenit Bank, Zenit, Carlsberg, Danone, Yale School of Management Locations: Moscow, Zenit Bank . Russia, Ukraine, Wall, Silicon, Russia, Intergrain, Luxembourg, Russian
News Corp — The media company's shares jumped nearly 4% after reporting an earnings beat in the fiscal fourth quarter. Meanwhile, the company's revenue of $2.43 billion missed analysts' forecast of $2.49 billion. Chip stocks — Semiconductor shares dropped more than 2% Friday, putting the sector on pace for a weekly decline of 4.5%. The decline comes after shares rose nearly 3% in the previous session on the back of the company's earnings announcement. Kura Oncology — The biotech company's shares rose 4% after Bank of America initiated coverage of Kura with a buy rating in a Friday note.
Persons: Refinitiv, Alibaba, Krispy, Morgan Stanley, DigitalOcean, , Alex Harring, Yun Li Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, News Corp, News, UBS —, UBS, Credit Suisse, Swiss National Bank, — Semiconductor, VanEck Semiconductor, NXP, Lam Research, Materials, Nvidia, Semiconductor, FactSet, Wynn Resorts, Caesars Entertainment, JPMorgan, Mizuho, Capri Holdings, Kura Oncology, Bank of America, Holdings Locations: Shanghai, China, U.S, Coinbase, Kura
UnitedHealth — Shares of the health insurance giant gained about 4% after the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services on Friday announced updated payment rates. The Wall Street firm said Marqueta is facing a "multitude of headwinds" without an ironed-out renewal deal with Block. Extra Space Storage , Life Storage — Shares of Extra Space Storage fell 5% after the company said it would acquire Life Storage in an all-stock transaction for $145.82 per share, an 11.2% premium to where Life Storage closed Friday. Shares of Life Storage shares rose 3%. Ovintiv – The oil and natural gas exploration and production company saw shares jump 10% after announcing it will acquire certain Midland Basin assets from EnCap Investments for about $4.3 billion.
A Bed Bath & Beyond store in the Brooklyn borough of New York, US, on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023. Bed Bath & Beyond Inc. said it would shutter another 87 stores in addition to the 150 closures it announced in August. Juniper Networks — The cloud computing network provider added 1.3% on the back of an upgrade to outperform from in line by Evercore ISI. Crocs — Shares rose 3% after B. Riley initiated coverage of the stock as a buy, saying the shoe company is underappreciated. Interpublic Group of Companies — The advertising agency gained 3% following an upgrade to buy from neutral by Bank of America.
Philip Morris International — The tobacco maker gained 1.8% following an upgrade by JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. Walmart — Shares of the retail giant rose about 1.5% in premarket trading after Evercore ISI upgraded Walmart to outperform from in-line. Fluence Energy — The energy storage company popped 5.7% following an upgrade by Goldman Sachs to buy from neutral. Peabody Energy — Shares of the major coal producer slid 0.8% after the company confirmed a fire at its Shoal Creek Mine. UBS — U.S.-listed shares of the Swiss bank rose more than 2% in premarket trading, a day after UBS announced Sergio Ermotti would return as CEO to oversee the takeover of Credit Suisse.
UBS announced on Wednesday that the former CEO would replace Ralph Hamers from April 5, as the Swiss bank undertakes the mammoth task of integrating fallen rival Credit Suisse into its business. Incoming UBS CEO Sergio Ermotti on Wednesday said his return to the helm was "a call of duty," as the Swiss veteran takes on the task of restoring order to the country's battered financial reputation . Kelleher emphasized that Ermotti's task — the successful integration of Credit Suisse into UBS — was "essential for both banks' clients, people and investors, for Switzerland and for the global financial system in general." Asked by CNBC during Wednesday's press conference about his motivation for returning to UBS, Ermotti said there was "a call of duty aspect" to his decision. "I'm fully aware that we need to work very hard here to avoid any consequence for the taxpayers in Switzerland.
Micron Technology — The semiconductor manufacturer added 5.3% after management said it was planning a bigger headcount reduction than previously expected. Carnival — Shares gained 3.6% after being upgraded by Susquehanna to positive from neutral. The move comes a day after the stock gained 6.1% following an upgrade by Wells Fargo to equal weight from underweight. Urban Outfitters , Burlington Stores , Foot Locker , Ross Stores — Shares of major retailers declined Wednesday after UBS downgraded the group to sell from neutral. Petco — Shares of the pet health and wellness company gained 5% after CEO & Chairman Ron Coughlin disclosed a 61,000 share purchase.
Lululemon – Lululemon shares surged more than 16% before the Wednesday open after posting a strong holiday quarter and sharing upbeat guidance for the current fiscal year. The athleisure wear company reported adjusted earnings of $4.40 a share on $2.77 billion in revenue and said same-store sales climbed by 27%. Carnival Corp — Shares of the cruise line climbed 2.5% in premarket trading after Susquehanna upgraded Carnival to positive from neutral. Micron fiscal second quarter results missed analyst expectations on both the top and bottom lines, according to Refinitiv consensus estimates. Paychex Inc. — Shares of the payroll services company were up nearly 3% premarket ahead of fiscal third-quarter earnings due after the close on Wednesday.
Swiss regulator FINMA on Thursday defended its decision to instruct Credit Suisse to write down its AT1 bonds — a controversial part of the lender's emergency sale to UBS — saying it was a "viability event." The regulator said the loan Credit Suisse received from the Swiss National Bank last week, backed by the federal government, meant the conditions for a writedown had been met. The regulator instructed Credit Suisse to write down 16 billion Swiss francs of AT1 bonds, widely regarded as relatively risky investments, to zero, while equity shareholders will receive payouts at the stock's takeover value. "As Credit Suisse received extraordinary liquidity assistance loans secured by a federal default guarantee on 19 March 2023, these contractual conditions were met for the AT1 instruments issued by the bank." The Swiss federal government enacted an emergency ordinance to guarantee the additional liquidity assistance from the SNB to Credit Suisse, in order to ensure the successful implementation of the UBS takeover.
Among the key things to remember was reopening the steam room at exactly 3:30 p.m. after its cleaning. Hayley has all the details from rich clients as well as industry analysts about why this whole thing could spell disaster. It's still early days, but the UBS-Credit Suisse deal might be the best example of something that makes sense on paper, but doesn't work in reality. Read more about why UBS acquiring Credit Suisse could lead to more headaches than huge wins for the Swiss wealth behemoth. And since we're talking BBQ, I'm required to share the funniest tweet in the history of Twitter.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:Tesla — The electric vehicle maker rose 2% after Moody's assigned it a Baa3 rating and removed its junk-rated credit. First Republic — The beleaguered bank jumped nearly 19% in premarket trading, following a 90% plunge so far this month as investors focused on its large amount of uninsured deposits. Regional banks — Regional banks were also higher on the heels of First Republic's rise and as investors continued to digest the likelihood of expanded federal insurance. UBS — U.S.-listed shares of the Swiss-based bank were up 4%, a day after gaining 3.3% following its agreement to buy Credit Suisse for $3.2 billion. Foot Locker — Its shares rose more than 4% after Citi upgraded the retailer to "buy" from "neutral."
The recent falls in the stock of European financial stocks have presented a buying opportunity, according to RBC Capital Markets. However, RBC analysts say insurers are fundamentally different from banks, and the circumstances that led to SVB's collapse could not occur at an insurance company. Shares of Just Group in particular are expected to double over the next 12 months to £1.60 ($1.96) from its current share price of £0.79, according to RBC. "While bank customers can choose to withdraw their deposits there is no ability for an annuitant to withdraw." While the insurance firms only hold high-quality investments, as required by law, RBC analysts concede that there is a small risk if the underlying assets fail or if people live longer than anticipated.
Total: 25