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Cohesity just hired a new CFO and is talking about getting ready for its IPO. Data startup Cohesity is gearing up to go public as soon as its bankers give the nod, CEO Sanjay Poonen told Insider. But when it last announced it had filed confidential IPO paperwork on December 21, 2021, its timing couldn't have been worse. Before the startup could debut, the tech IPO window was slammed shut by rising inflation and interest rates, and fears of a full-blown recession. The last splashy IPO was HashiCorp on December 9, 2021, so the window has now been closed for 20 months and counting.
Persons: Cohesity, Sanjay Poonen, IPOs, He's, it's, Poonen, Eric Brown, Srinivasan Murari, he's Organizations: Microsoft, Web Services, ARM, Electronic Arts, McAfee, Google, VMware, IBM, Cisco, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, IDC, Bloomberg Locations: Informatica
Amazon does not disclose how many data centers it occupies, where they are located, or how much electricity they consume. Many of Amazon's data centers listed in the permits have been built recently and some may still be under construction. "You cannot run a data center based on the variability of solar and wind," Boston said. Any producer of renewable energy can sell one REC for every megawatt hour of renewable energy it generates. Brady, the Cushman & Wakefield data center executive, said that data centers often match their backup generation to the capacity of a data center's power supply.
Persons: Shaolei Ren, David Ward, Abraham Silverman, Sean Brady, Glenn Youngkin, Steve Helber, Terry Boston, , Ben Hertz, Wood Mackenzie, Andy Jassy Mike Blake, Amazon's, Priya Barua, We've, Barua, Blackstone, Weston Swenson, Brady, Swenson, Josh Levi Organizations: Amazon, Washington DC, Amazon Web Services, UC Riverside, Columbia University's Center, Global Energy, Cushman & Wakefield, Dominion Energy, France's, AP, Greenhouse Gas Initiative, Republican, State Corporation Commission, Boston, state's Department, Environmental, Reuters, Microsoft, Google, Apple, Clean Energy Buyers Association, Virginia's Department, Industry, Cushman &, Dominion, Data Center Coalition Locations: Virginia, New York City, Washington, Seattle, France, Ward, Northern Virginia, West Coast, Cushman & Wakefield, CBRE
For a long time, as those three companies moved first and established large initial market shares in the cloud, Oracle looked like it was being left behind. But the turning point was when Oracle launched its second-generation cloud infrastructure offering, called Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Generation 2, or OCI Gen 2, in the summer of 2020. In the second quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended November 2022), Total Cloud revenue grew 43%, with 40% growth for Cloud Applications and 53% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. In the third quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended February 2023), Total Cloud revenue accelerated back to 45%, with 42% growth for Cloud Applications and 55% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. Total Cloud revenue growth surged to 54% again, with 45% growth for Cloud Applications and 76% growth for Cloud Infrastructure.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim, it's, Larry Ellison, Oracle, Microsoft —, we're, Jim Cramer, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Oracle, ORCL, Nasdaq, Amazon Web Services, Google, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, AWS, Nvidia, Cloud Infrastructure, Management, Microsoft, Charitable Trust, Club, APPLE, CNBC Locations: China, Redwood Shores , California
The goal is to build automation tools for AI security and foster partnerships across the company. "In Q2 2023, Amazon Security created the Maverick program to ensure LLM based experiences uphold our high security standards to protect customer data and trust. The Amazon Web Services cloud unit also created an independent team focused on helping customers use generative AI, Insider previously reported . The new Maverick initiative wants to "understand GenAI risks" to Amazon and create "centralized GenAI security testing tools," according to the internal document. The second involves partnering with security teams to "create GenAI security guidance and add specific tasks to existing security mechanisms," the document added.
Persons: John, Flynn, Uber's CISO, Adam Montgomery, Maverick, Andy Jassy, LLMs, Jassy Organizations: Amazon, Amazon Security, Excellence, Amazon's, Microsoft, Google, Services, AWS
The signs of stabilization are perhaps most evident through recent better-than-feared earnings from behemoths like Alphabet and Meta Platforms as they focus on cost cuts and efficiency after 2022's rout. Meta Platforms said ad revenue rose about 12% last quarter from the prior year. Buying the '800-pound gorilla' It's hard to ignore Alphabet or Meta Platforms when investing in the advertising industry. On the digital side, Hanna Howard, a research analyst at GAMCO Investors, opts for Meta Platforms. Amazon posted a 22% increase in online advertising revenue year over year, and $10.68 billion in sales overall.
Persons: Susan Li, Rohit Kulkarni, Gene Munster, Paul Meeks, Meeks, Morningstar's Ali Mogharabi, Hanna Howard Organizations: Apple, Google, Roth Capital Partners, Street, Meta, Intelligence, Amazon, Independent Solutions Wealth Management, GAMCO Investors, Munster, Web Services
Elon Musk has loaded up on Nvidia GPUs for X, xAI, and Tesla. Meanwhile, Chinese tech titans are reportedly scrambling to buy $5 billion worth of the chips. But there are signs emerging that there may not be enough of Nvidia's chips to go around, with multiple top executives warning that demand is massively outpacing supply. Soaring demandThe massive increase in interest in artificial intelligence has been a key factor driving demand for Nvidia's semiconductors. Perhaps the strongest sign that demand for Nvidia's chips is soaring came in May, when it released stellar second-quarter revenue forecasts that smashed Wall Street's expectations by 50%.
Persons: Elon Musk, Biden, Tesla, Adam Selipsky, Matthew Prince, there's, Barron's Organizations: Nvidia, titans, Service, Soaring, New, Research, Financial Times, Elon, Twitter, Web Locations: Wall, Silicon
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHow AWS is designing its own chips to help catch Microsoft and Google in generative A.I. raceDespite its firm footing as the world's biggest cloud provider, Amazon Web Services got a slow start to the generative AI race. AWS released its large language model, Titan, months after Microsoft's reported $13 billion investment in ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Google's release of Bard. But AWS is also designing its own custom AI microchips, shown to CNBC in an exclusive tour of its Austin chip lab. Now analysts say AWS may gain a long term advantage in AI by offering an alternative to Nvidia GPUs.
Persons: OpenAI, Bard Organizations: Microsoft, Google, Web Services, AWS, CNBC, Nvidia Locations: ChatGPT
Amazon can build on its already stellar year as revenue from its cloud business picks up steam once again, according to boutique equity research firm Redburn. The analyst cited the potential for Amazon Web Services — the company's cloud computing business — to see growth reignited after a slowdown. AWS holds leading market positions in areas such as databases, data warehouses, data lakes and machine learning, Haissl said. AWS reported 12% growth in the second quarter, surpassing analysts' forecast by 200 basis points, according to the note. Haissl also expects AWS revenue to grow by more than 20% and 30% in the third and fourth quarters of this year, respectively.
Persons: Alex Haissl, Haissl, Gartner, , Michael Bloom Organizations: Amazon Web, AWS, Amazon Locations: Thursday's, 2Q23
He told Insider he's making the move to help combat cybersecurity on a broader scale. Igor Tsyganskiy, chief technology officer and president, is leaving the world's largest hedge fund after seven years, Insider has learned. Prior to Bridgewater, Tsyganskiy ran database.com, a division of Salesforce.com, and was the cofounder of Tealeaf Technologies, which was sold to IBM. Bell recently told Insider that AI would give Microsoft the upper hand to "finally turn the tables on the attackers." "Basically, end-to-end strategy on how Microsoft approaches the cybersecurity sector is my job," Tsyganskiy told Insider.
Persons: Igor Tsyganskiy, Tsyganskiy, Greg Jensen, Bridgewater's, Oliver Radwan, Kevin Brennan, Ray Dalio, Nir Bar Dea, Bridgewater, Charlie Bell, Bell Organizations: Bridgewater, Microsoft, LinkedIn, Tealeaf Technologies, IBM, Web Services Locations: Bridgewater, Bay Area, Connecticut, Westport , Connecticut, Salesforce.com
Examining overbought or oversold stock levels could be helpful signals for investors looking to add or reduce exposure in a position. When evaluating these names, Bespoke reviewed the standard deviations above or below each stock's 50-day moving average. If a stock is one or more standard deviation above its 50-day moving average, it's classified as overbought. If it's more than one standard deviation below its 50-day moving average, it's oversold. Two or more standard deviations away from the 50-day moving average is classified as an "extreme" overbought or oversold reading.
Persons: , it's oversold, Paul Hickey, We're, Jim Cramer, Jim, Larry Williams, we'll, Jim Cramer's, Justin Tallis Organizations: Charitable, Investment, Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Big Tech, Data Center, Facebook, Meta, Amazon, Amazon Web Services, CNBC, Getty Locations: MSFT, EU
Wells Fargo Investment Institute is getting more bullish on Amazon as the e-commerce retailer's Amazon Web Services and North American retail segments "near inflection points." Wells Fargo Investment Institute's focus list aims to beat the S & P 500 over a roughly one-year period on a total return basis. AMZN YTD mountain Shares have rallied more than 65% this year Amazon shares have rallied more than 65% this year. "More importantly, we see re-acceleration in growth, even a modest one, in core AWS functions over the next few years as a key catalyst for the stock," Pfeffer wrote. Wells Fargo is also gaining more confidence in Amazon's retail business in North America, as it builds up regional utilization and benefits from lower transportation rates and shipping costs.
Persons: Lawrence Pfeffer, Wells Fargo's, it's, Pfeffer, Wells Fargo, Michael Bloom Organizations: Investment Institute, Web Services, O'Reilly Automotive, Wells, Wells Fargo Investment, Amazon Locations: Wells, American, Wells Fargo, North America
[1/2] The logo of Amazon is seen at the company logistics center in Lauwin-Planque, northern France, November 15, 2022. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol/File PhotoNEW YORK, Aug 8 (Reuters) - Amazon.com (AMZN.O) is in talks about joining other technology companies as a cornerstone investor in SoftBank Group Corp's (9984.T) Arm Ltd ahead of its initial public offering (IPO), people familiar with the matter said on Tuesday. Amazon's potential involvement in the IPO, which has not previously been reported, underscores Arm's significance in cloud computing. Amazon Web Services, the internet giant's cloud business, makes its own processing chip called Graviton, using Arm's design. Arm has been in talks with about 10 technology companies, including Intel (INTC.O), Alphabet (GOOGL.O) and Nvidia (NVDA.O), about an investment ahead of its IPO, Reuters has reported.
Persons: Pascal, SoftBank, Echo Wang, Anirban Sen, Jeffrey Dastin, Stephen Nellis, Matthew Lewis Organizations: REUTERS, Web Services, Nasdaq, Reuters, Intel, Nvidia, San, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, New York, San Francisco
As second-quarter earnings season winds down, RBC Capital Markets is looking back at some companies that experienced the biggest earnings surprises due to the latest technology trend transforming the globe. "Artificial Intelligence remains a key focus for many companies, with significant investments in AI technologies and services," wrote RBC analyst Jonathan Atkin. AI discussion dominated the earnings of companies across industries, including technology, with some companies posting strong quarterly surprises as a result of the trend. In its latest earnings, Amazon touted some of its AI plans, including custom AI chips and its Bedrock platform . Many Wall Street analysts have cheered the Facebook and Instagram parent's recent cost-cutting initiatives and AI investments, in addition to a rebound in its advertising business.
Persons: Jonathan Atkin, Wall, workloads, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: RBC Capital Markets, Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, RBC, Amazon, Intel, Oracle
On Tuesday, the White House convened school administrators, educators and companies to explore how best to protect schools and students' information from cyberattacks. At least eight K-12 school districts across the country experienced significant cyberattacks in the last academic year, the White House said, leading to disruptions in learning. The White House announced a series of actions from federal agencies and commitments from companies to help school districts secure their digital information. Amazon Web Services committed $20 million to fund a cyber grant program for school districts and state departments of education. It will also conduct free security reviews for U.S. education technology companies that provide "mission-critical applications" for K-12 schools.
Persons: Biden, Miguel Cardona, Cardona, Cloudflare, PowerSchool Organizations: White, Government, Office, White House, Federal Communications Commission, Universal Service Fund, Infrastructure Security Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation, National Guard Bureau, CNBC, Web Services, Google Locations: cyberattacks, U.S
In one quarter — one off-cycle quarter that didn't feature a no new iPhone — Apple (AAPL) delivered a whopping $81.8 billion in sales. I came up with "own it, don't trade it" for Apple because there have been so many quarters like this one. The people who sold Apple shares on Friday no doubt sold it on their Apple devices. I would be more worried if Apple's customer satisfaction went down than I am that iPhone sales lagged. Apple CEO Tim Cook speaks during Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) at the Apple Park campus in Cupertino, California, on June 5, 2023.
Persons: Tim Cook, Luca Maestri, Tim, Jensen, da, Huang, Andy Jassy, Roku, Jassy, Goldman Sachs, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Josh Edelson Organizations: Apple, ESPN, Amazon, Web Services, Nvidia, Services, Walmart, Oracle, Amazon Web, Google, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC, Apple's Worldwide, AFP, Getty Locations: Indonesia, India, Philippines, Mexico, Turkey, Texas, New Jersey, Cupertino , California
FILE PHOTO-The logo of Amazon is seen at the company's logistics center in Bretigny-sur-Orge, near Paris, France, November 25, 2022. Online retail giant Amazon's shares closed at a near one-year high and added more than $109 billion to its market value. "The second quarter is a game-changing quarter for Amazon; we would call it an-all clear moment," said SVB MoffettNathanson analyst Michael Morton. The surge in Amazon's stock reflected analysts' increased estimates for its earnings. But its services business was a bright spot and helped Apple top profit expectations for the June quarter.
Persons: Benoit Tessier, SVB, Michael Morton, , Dan Coatsworth, AJ Bell, Aditya Soni, Samrhitha, Joice Alves, Noel Randewich, Chavi Mehta, Amanda Cooper, Saumyadeb Organizations: REUTERS, Google, Microsoft, Wall Street, Amazon, Refinitiv, Apple, Thomson Locations: Bretigny, Paris, France, Apple's, Bengaluru, London
FILE PHOTO-The logo of Amazon is seen at the company's logistics center in Bretigny-sur-Orge, near Paris, France, November 25, 2022. Online retail giant Amazon was set to add about $120 billion to its market value, based on premarket movements. "The second quarter is a game-changing quarter for Amazon; we would call it an-all clear moment," said SVB MoffettNathanson analyst Michael Morton. But its services business was a bright spot and helped Apple top profit expectations for the June quarter. "It is time for Apple to launch something new and innovative, not just another variation of its core products."
Persons: Benoit Tessier, SVB, Michael Morton, , Dan Coatsworth, AJ Bell, Aditya Soni, Samrhitha, Joice Alves, Amanda Cooper, Saumyadeb Organizations: REUTERS, Google, Apple, Microsoft, Wall Street, Amazon, Thomson Locations: Bretigny, Paris, France, Apple's, Bengaluru, London
AMZN 1D mountain Amazon popped after strong earnings JPMorgan's Doug Anmuth reiterated an overweight rating on Amazon and raised his price target to $180 price target, implying roughly 40% upside from Thursday's $128.81 close. Anmuth said on Friday that the second-quarter results and third-quarter outlook will help lift shares higher, and also pointed to strength in Amazon Web Services. Goldman Sachs analyst Eric Sheridan also hiked his price target to $180 from $165, keeping his buy rating on the stock. Bank of America's Justin Post, meanwhile, raised his price target to $174 from $154, implying a 35% gain from Thursday's close. Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak increased his price target on Amazon to $175 to $150 and reiterated his overweight rating.
Persons: Doug Anmuth, Anmuth, AMZN, Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Sheridan, headwinds, Bank of America's Justin Post, Citi's Ronald Josey, Josey, Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak, Nowak, Michael Bloom Organizations: Wall, Amazon, Web Services, Bank of America's, Amazon Web Services, 3Q Locations: Thursday's
Amazon stock rallies after blowout quarter
  + stars: | 2023-08-04 | by ( Annie Palmer | In Annierpalmer | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +3 min
Amazon shares rallied 8% on Friday, a day after the company reported blowout second-quarter earnings and issued upbeat guidance. Amazon notched its biggest profit beat since 2020, boosted by CEO Andy Jassy's aggressive cost-cutting efforts. For the third quarter, Amazon said it expects sales of between $138 billion and $143 billion, topping consensus estimates of $138.25 billion, according to Refinitiv. Wall Street cheered the results, lauding the strong results for Amazon Web Services and improving retail margins. Morgan Stanley analysts characterized the shift as the "next retail flywheel" for Amazon.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Andy, Bernstein, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, CFRA Organizations: Amazon.Com Inc, Amazon, Revenue, Analysts, Amazon Web Services, Amazon executives Locations: Seattle , Washington , U.S, Refinitiv, America
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. Stick with Apple and Amazon Club name Apple (AAPL) tumbled 3% during Friday trading, one day after mostly solid quarterly results . Palo Alto reports its quarter after the closing bell on Aug. 18, two weeks from Friday. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, payrolls, Dow Jones, Jeff Marks, we're, Fortinet, we've, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Apple, Big Tech, Federal, Amazon, Record, Amazon Web Services, Management, Alto Networks Locations: Alto, Palo Alto
For the second quarter, Amazon's revenue grew 11% to $134.4 billion, beating estimates of $131.5 billion from analysts polled by Refinitiv. In recent months, Amazon Web Services (AWS) saw its sales growth slow as wary businesses scrutinized their cloud bills. The unit beat estimates of around $21.7 billion in second-quarter cloud sales, increasing them 12% to $22.1 billion. Its rivals posted bigger jumps off smaller bases: 28% growth in Alphabet's June-quarter cloud revenue and a 26% quarterly increase for Microsoft's Azure. Longer-term, Amazon aims to turn one unit, its $35 billion in yearly gross business-to-business e-commerce sales, into $100 billion, Jassy told analysts.
Persons: Pascal Rossignol, Brian Olsavsky, Olsavsky, Andy Jassy, Arun Sundaram, Sundaram, Jassy, Thomas Monteiro, Investing.com, Monteiro, Refinitiv, Chavi Mehta, Jeffrey Dastin, Noel Randewich, Arun Koyyur, Aurora Ellis, Chris Reese Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Refinitiv, Amazon Web Services, CFRA Research, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, Alphabet's, Bengaluru, Jeffrey Dastin San Francisco
Amazon's outlook brightens on cloud, consumer sales lift
  + stars: | 2023-08-03 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
Facing an array of challenges, Amazon has aimed to keep its mantle as the world's biggest cloud provider and online retailer. Despite this, Amazon sped up revenue growth in the second quarter. Sales increased 11% to $134.4 billion, compared to estimates of $131.50 billion from analysts polled by Refinitiv. AWS beat estimates of around $21.7 billion in second-quarter cloud sales, increasing them 12% to $22.1 billion. The company forecast current-quarter net sales in the range of $138 billion and $143 billion.
Persons: Pascal Rossignol, Long, Andy Jassy, Refinitiv, Chavi Mehta, Arun Koyyur, Aurora Ellis Organizations: REUTERS, Amazon.com Inc, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Refinitiv, Amazon Web Services, Thomson Locations: Lauwin, France, Bengaluru
Wall Street analysts are bullish on Amazon heading into earnings. Here's how several analysts are trading Amazon ahead of its latest earnings report. Bank of America is also bullish, maintaining its buy rating and $154 price target into earnings, which suggests roughly 20% upside. "We continue to see an attractive set-up on the stock based on our Triple Trough Thesis (trough multiple, trough margin, and trough revenue growth). On Monday, the firm reiterated its buy rating and $145 price target, which suggests 13% upside from Wednesday's close.
Persons: StreetAccount, Morgan Stanley, Brian Nowak, Nowak, Lloyd Walmsley, Walmsley, Justin Post, Amazon's, Mark Mahaney's, Mahaney, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Amazon Web Services, UBS, Bank of America, AWS, Triple, Citi Locations: 1Q23
Amazon will report second-quarter earnings after the market close on Thursday. In the first quarter, AWS sales increased roughly 16%, the slowest growth since 2015, when Amazon began breaking out cloud revenue. AWS rivals Microsoft and Alphabet last week reported solid results in their cloud businesses, beating analysts' revenue expectations. Last week, Amazon hosted an AWS Summit, where the company announced updates related to generative AI, including a service that uses the technology to transcribe and summarize doctors' patient visits. Also during the quarter, Amazon hosted its annual Prime Day discount bonanza, which it touted as its "biggest ever."
Persons: Andy Jassy, it's, Brian Olsavsky, workloads Organizations: Amazon, Seattle, Refinitiv Revenue, Web, Services, Evercore, Microsoft, Apple, Meta Locations: Seattle, Israel
Amazon cloud revenue rise 12%, topping analysts' estimates
  + stars: | 2023-08-03 | by ( Jordan Novet | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Amazon said Thursday that revenue from its cloud unit increased 12% year over year in the second quarter, a speedier pace than analysts had predicted. Revenue for the quarter came to $22.1 billion, beating the $21.79 billon consensus among analysts surveyed by StreetAccount. AWS operating income has now declined for three consecutive quarters. Google and Microsoft are also moving quickly to make money as companies look to take advantage of generative AI following the rise of startup OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot. AWS CEO Adam Selipsky told CNBC in June that the generative AI "race" has just started.
Persons: Gartner, Adam Selipsky Organizations: Amazon, Revenue, StreetAccount, StreetAccount . Revenue, Amazon Web Services, AWS, Microsoft, Center, Google, OpenAI Service, CNBC Locations: StreetAccount .
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