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Of those companies, 73.6% have beaten earnings expectations, FactSet data shows. Investment banks doing well, BofA not so much The major banks that posted results this week — Goldman Sachs , Morgan Stanley and Bank of America — beat earnings expectations. Bank of America shares fell more than 3% despite the company beating on both top and bottom lines. Mixed earnings picture Although nearly three-quarters of the reported earnings so far have topped expectations, the broader earnings picture is more muddled. The blended earnings growth rate, which considers the reports already out and the estimates from those still pending, sits at just 0.16%.
Persons: — Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Alastair Borthwick, Wells, Mike Mayo, Goliath, Mayo, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo's Mayo, Goldman, Ebrahim Poonawala, cyberattack, George Hill, Doug Anmuth, Jessica Reif Ehrlich, Canaccord Genuity, Chris Harvey Organizations: Investment, Bank of America —, Bank of America, Bank of America's, JPMorgan, Wells, of America, Deutsche, Netflix, NFLX's, Revenue, Microsoft, Exxon Mobil
Goldman Sachs — Goldman Sachs shares jumped 3.3% in premarket trading after the company beat Wall Street's first-quarter earnings expectations . Goldman posted earnings of $11.58 per share on revenue of $14.21 billion for the period, fueled by its trading and investment banking businesses. Analysts surveyed by LSEG had called for earnings of $8.56 per share on revenue of $12.92 billion, meanwhile. Analyst Erik Woodring thinks the market is "mis-pricing" Logitech's outlook and forecasts only 3% annual revenue growth through fiscal year 2027. Masimo — The health tech stock rose more than 2% following an upgrade to buy from hold at Stifel.
Persons: Goldman Sachs — Goldman Sachs, Wall, Goldman, LSEG, Morgan Stanley, Erik Woodring, Masimo, Rick Wise, there's, Lockheed Martin, Tal Liani, Canaccord Genuity, Coty, Charles Schwab —, Schwab, Elon Musk, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Pia Singh Organizations: Logitech —, Stifel, Wall Street Journal, Reuters, Informatica, Medical Properties, Citi, Lockheed, JPMorgan, Cisco Systems —, Bank of America, Splunk, Coty —, Revenue, Resideo Technologies Locations: Utah, South Korea
DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Goldman Sachs and Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala on Monday signed a $1 billion private credit partnership to co-invest in the Asia-Pacific region, with a particular focus on India, the institutions said in a joint statement. The separately managed account, termed the "Partnership," will be managed by Private Credit at Goldman Sachs Alternatives, with a staff based on the ground in various markets across the region. It will invest the long-term capital in "high quality companies ... across the private credit spectrum" across a number of Asia-Pacific markets. The UAE in October 2023 announced a target to invest $75 billion in India over a period of time, while Saudi Arabia set an investment target in the country of $100 billion. "India, in particular, stands out as a key market with significant opportunities in private credit, and where Goldman Sachs has strong exposure and capabilities," said Fabrizio Bocciardi, Mubadala's head of credit investments, in a press release.
Persons: United Arab Emirates — Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs, Fabrizio Bocciardi Organizations: United Arab Emirates, Monday, Private Credit, Goldman Sachs, Abu Dhabi Global Market, United Arab Locations: DUBAI, United Arab, Abu Dhabi, Asia, Pacific, India, United Arab Emirates, UAE, Saudi Arabia
Goldman posted a profit of $2 billion in the last three months of the year, up from $1.33 billion in the same period a year earlier. The New York bank saw modest improvements in its trading and investment management divisions, but saw declines in its important investment banking and advising revenues. Morgan Stanley, which also reported its fourth-quarter results on Tuesday, also posted sluggish performance in its investment bank due to the dealmaking slowdown. Investment banking fees were down 16% from 2022, and trading in commodities, currencies and fixed income was down 18%. The bank's return on common equity — a measure used by investment banks to show well they perform with their underlying assets — was 7.5% last year.
Persons: — Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Organizations: Investment Locations: New York
NEW YORK (AP) — Goldman Sachs saw its third-quarter earnings fall 33%, with the investment bank seeing muted market conditions that allowed fewer deals and market making opportunities for the firm. The bank is selling off its GreenSky business, which the bank had to write off this quarter. The bank saw a 1% rise in investment banking revenues from last year, and its trading business of bonds, currencies and commodities was down 6% in the period. The bank's return on equity, a measurement on how well an investment bank is performing with the assets they hold, was 7.1% in the quarter. Historically in the past decade or so, banks like Goldman aim to get that measurement above 10%.
Persons: — Goldman Sachs, Goldman, , , David Solomon Locations: New York
Wall Street analysts have rolled out a slew of top picks that they say investors must own as the second half of 2023 gets underway. They include First Solar, Torrid , Boston Beer, ServiceNow and Boston Scientific. ServiceNow Wells Fargo analyst Michael Turrin is expecting a big second half from the workflow software solutions company. First Solar There's no shortage of positive catalysts "brewing" as the second half kicks off, according to Goldman Sachs analyst Brian Lee. First Solar — Goldman Sachs, buy rating "Catalysts brewing into 2H23 set up well for more positive estimate revisions.
Persons: Roth, Bill Kirk, seltzer, Seltzer, Bud Light, Kirk, Boston Beer, Wells, Michael Turrin, We're, Turrin, ServiceNow, Goldman Sachs, Brian Lee, Lee, — Roth, … We're, Mgmt Organizations: CNBC, Boston Beer, Boston Scientific, Boston, Bank of America, 2Q, Scientific, Barclays, BSX Locations: Boston, Wells
TipRanks recognized the 10 best analysts in the utilities sector who delivered significant returns and edged past their peers through their recommendations. TipRanks' algorithms calculated the statistical significance of each rating, the average return and the analysts' overall success rate. Top 10 analysts from the utilities sectorThe image below shows the most successful Wall Street analysts from the utilities sector. Based on his buy recommendation, the analyst generated a profit of 161.7% from July 21, 2020 to July 21, 2021. Julien Dumoulin-Smith — Bank of America SecuritiesJulien Dumoulin-Smith has the 10th spot on the list, with a success rate of 57%.
Persons: Patrick T, Fallon, TipRanks, Shelby Tucker, Tucker, Frederic Bastien — Raymond James Frederic Bastien, Black, Benjamin Pham —, Benjamin Pham, Pham, Mark Jarvi —, Mark Jarvi — CIBC Mark Jarvi, Robert Catellier —, Robert Catellier, Alberto Gandolfi — Goldman Sachs, Alberto Gandolfi, Nelson Ng, Jan, Patrick Kenny, Kenny, Neil Kalton, Wells, Julien Dumoulin, Smith — Bank of America Securities Julien Dumoulin, Smith Organizations: Fluence, Siemens, AES Company, AES Alamitos Battery Energy Storage, AFP, Getty, RBC, Energy, Benjamin Pham — BMO Capital BMO Capital, Mark Jarvi — CIBC, Pinnacle, Drax Group, Robert Catellier — CIBC, RBC Capital RBC Capital, Bank In, National Bank, Secure Energy Services, Smith — Bank of America Securities, Sunrun Locations: Long Beach , California, Canadian, Canada, Danish, Methanex
It has a market-weight rating on six sectors: consumer discretionary, energy, industrials, information technology, materials, and real estate. Goldman SachsGoldman's favorite sectors haven't changed since late April: it's still overweight consumer staples, energy, healthcare, and communication services. Morgan StanleyMorgan Stanley's top sectors are consumer staples, healthcare, and utilities, which reflects its defensive outlook about stocks. The firm is neutral about communication services, energy, financials, industrials, materials, real estate, and tech (excluding cyclicals). It has a neutral "perform" rating on almost all other sectors, including communication services, consumer staples, energy, financials, healthcare, materials, and real estate.
Persons: — Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Oppenheimer, Truist —, BofA, Savita Subramanian, Goldman Sachs, it's, Morgan Stanley Morgan Stanley's Organizations: Investors, Bank of America, BMO Capital Markets, Tech Locations: Charlotte
In payments, specifically, its made progress via Apple Pay, the Apple Wallet, and the Apple Card. On Monday, Apple took another step deeper into financial services, announcing the launch of a high-yield savings account (4.15%) via its Apple Card. And now, as Goldman tries to salvage what's left of its consumer dreams, Apple continues to roll on. What's not clear, though, is what type of terms Goldman gets for serving as the back-end partner partner. Click here to read more about the top eight executives shaking up payments, including a key leader at Apple Pay.
Tesla — Shares dropped 2.8% after Berenberg lowered its earnings estimate for Tesla by around 25% for 2023 following the company's price cuts for its electric vehicles. Ford Motor Company — Shares fell nearly 1.4% after the company announced price cuts for its electric Mustang Mach-E crossover. The move in Ford comes after Tesla said earlier this month it would trim prices to counteract dwindling demand. AMC Entertainment — Common shares of the theater chain fell by more than 7% after AMC announced a shareholder meeting in March for a potential change to its capital structure. The preferred or "APE" shares, which trade at a large discount to the common shares, jumped by more than 16%.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves in the premarket:JPMorgan — The bank reported fourth-quarter earnings and revenue before the bell that topped Wall Street expectations. JPMorgan slid nearly 3% in permarket trading. Wells Fargo — The bank slid nearly 4% after reporting shrinking profits, weighted down by a recent settlement and the need to build-up reserves. Salesforce — The software company slid 1.4% in the premarket after being downgraded by Atlantic Equities to neutral from overweight. Deutsche Bank downgraded the shares Friday.
But first, dark days on Wall Street. Two of the most high-profile firms on Wall Street — Goldman Sachs and BlackRock — made job cuts that impacted thousands of workers. All of that is to say, after a good run of things on Wall Street, the tide is starting to turn. I called a Wall Street recruiter to pick their brain on advice they'd give to those who just lost their jobs. Wall Street did not have a good showing on a list of the best places to work.
A confluence of global factors has meant the MSCI World index of large and mid-cap stocks finished the year down by nearly 20 % . In January alone, after a year of negative returns, the index rose 60% of the time by an average of 4.6%. The S & P 500 since 1929 CNBC also analyzed the S & P 500 since 1929, which showed a similar picture. That will bring the S & P 500 down to 3,600 from its current level of around 3,800 points. As for the month of January, after a year of negative returns, the U.S. index performed very similarly to the MSCI World index.
Goldman Sachs — Goldman Sachs shares slumped 1% amid news that the Wall Street firm will cut up to 8% of its workforce. The layoffs are slated to come in January and hit all areas of the Wall Street firm, CNBC reported, citing people familiar with the matter. The Wall Street firm cited recent underperformance in net adds as well as growing macro headwinds to advertising revenues. Lincoln National — Shares dropped more than 4% after Lincoln National was downgraded to underperform from hold at Jefferies, according to StreetAccount. JD.com and Alibaba shares rose more than 1% .
Big 4 accounting firm EY told US staff they will not be receiving holiday bonuses this year, per the FT. The accounting giant said this was due to "the changing economic environment." EY scrapping its holiday bonuses due to economic uncertainties stands in stark contrast to its euphoria in the fiscal year ended-2022, which the firm's global leaders called "one of the most successful years in the history of the organisation," the FT reported. And it's not just EY that's cutting back — companies across the board are shifting their strategies amid fears of an impending recession. EY did not immediately respond to a request from Insider sent outside regular business hours.
WASHINGTON— Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s asset-management arm agreed Tuesday to pay $4 million to settle a regulatory investigation into how it managed mutual funds and other products that pick stocks based on environmental, social and governance criteria. The Securities and Exchange Commission said Goldman marketed the ESG funds and a similar investment strategy without always following a consistent framework spelled out in its compliance plans. That meant Goldman violated an SEC compliance rule that requires investment advisers to implement plans designed to prevent potential regulatory violations. Goldman neither admitted nor denied the SEC’s allegations.
Hasbro — Shares of the toy company dipped 2.3% after the company reported third-quarter earnings that missed expectations. Salesforce — Salesforce shares gained 5.2% after Starboard Value revealed to CNBC that it has taken a "significant" stake in the software giant. Carnival Corporation — Shares of the cruise company jumped more than 12% after one of Carnival's subsidiaries began an offering of $1.25 billion of senior priority notes due 2028. Goldman Sachs — Goldman Sachs rallied 3% after beating third-quarter analyst expectations for profit and revenue on better-than-expected trading results. Lockheed Martin — Shares of the aerospace company jumped 8.5% after Lockheed reported third-quarter earnings of $6.87 per share excluding items, which was higher than a Refinitiv estimate of $6.66 per share.
Cloud technology has now percolated through nearly every nook and cranny of Wall Street, affecting everything from investment banking to risk management and marketing. What's motivated the recent trend stems from two things that typically elicit change at financial firms: saving money and moving faster. But at least 30 Wall Street firms and well-known fintechs have publicly sided with one provider as a primary partner. "If you look at Wall Street, they have tens of thousands of people in back offices. Take Citibank, which accidentally wired $900 million to Revlon lenders in what is considered one of the largest blunders ever on Wall Street.
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