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Market Movers rounded up the best reactions from investors and analysts on Nvidia . The experts, including Jim Cramer , discussed the chipmaker after Morgan Stanley named Nvidia its top artificial intelligence pick over AMD . Joseph Moore, the analyst who made the call, is also hiking his price target on Nvidia to $500 from $450, telling CNBC that the company's growing customer base could lift the stock higher. The stock finished the trading day with a small gain of 0.09%, good enough for a 10% jump on the week.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Morgan Stanley, Joseph Moore Organizations: Nvidia, AMD, CNBC
iRobot — The stock surged 19% after U.K. regulators approved Amazon's $1.7 billion acquisition of the Roomba vacuum cleaner maker. Cava Group — Cava Group shares dropped 15% during trading Friday, giving back some of its gains from its massive debut Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange. SoFi Technologies — The financial technology stock dropped more than 8% after both Bank of America and Piper Sandler downgraded it to neutral from buy, citing SoFi's recent run higher. Micron Technology — Shares dipped 1.5% after Micron Technology said a China chip ban could hurt the company. Truist Financial — Shares fell 1.6% after Odeon Capital Group downgraded Truist Financial to hold from buy, according to FactSet.
Persons: Richard Branson, iRobot, Piper Sandler, Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley, Joseph Moore, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Yun Li Organizations: Virgin Galactic —, West Pharmaceutical Services, Bank of America, — Cava, New York Stock Exchange, Technologies, Adobe, Nvidia, Devices, Micron Technology, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, — Humana, Odeon Capital Locations: China
Nvidia is the way to go to capitalize on the artificial intelligence boom, according to Morgan Stanley. "AMD has been our top pick, and we continue to be bullish on their 2024 AI opportunity; but the top pick designation is meant to highlight near term upside, which is a bigger factor for NVIDIA. NVDA YTD mountain Nvidia shares YTD Nvidia shares are already higher by 191% this year, recently topping a $1 trillion market valuation. The analyst said Nvidia remains the top AI pick for 2023, even as investors cast about for more clear beneficiaries for the trend. Moore wrote.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Joseph Moore, Moore, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, AMD, NVIDIA
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia gets price target hike amid 10% gain this week. How to play the stockJim Cramer, Joseph Moore of Morgan Stanley, Josh Brown of Ritholtz Wealth Management and Jason Snipe of Odyssey Capital Advisors on what they think about Nvidia receiving a price target hike even after its massive run.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Joseph Moore, Morgan Stanley, Josh Brown, Jason Snipe Organizations: Nvidia, Ritholtz Wealth Management, Odyssey Capital Advisors
Wall Street is focused on the potential for a bounce back within Advanced Micro Devices ' struggling personal computer and data center businesses. Arya's price target of $95 reflects the potential for an upside of 5.7% over Tuesday's close. Meanwhile, Citi's Christopher Danely said data center growth estimates for the second half seem aggressive. "We believe there could be more downside to AMD's data center business as AMD's data center revenue has only corrected 22% from its peak in 3Q22 while Intel's data center business has corrected 42%." Moore said the data center business was down 22% quarter over quarter, while PCs dropped 18% quarter over quarter and 65% year over year.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailConditions will remain challenging in next semi upcycle: Morgan Stanley's MooreJoseph Moore, Morgan Stanley semiconductor analyst, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss the recent moves in the chipmaker space, if investors will see broad inventory write-downs, and more.
Samsung's plan to cut memory chip production signals a potentially sooner-than-expected recovery for the broader memory chip market, according to Wall Street. Investors seemed to laud the news, sending shares of Micron Technology and Western Digital up about 8% each on Monday. Citi analyst Christopher Danely called the news a "huge positive" for the dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, industry. But while the cuts from Samsung should help ease some pricing pressures, caveats persist, with Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore expecting a "fairly muted" upturn from the production cuts and slow margin recovery even in 2024. "Investors are much more excited than industry contacts around this, given obvious green shoots implied from production cuts," he wrote.
Chip stocks made a breathtaking comeback in the first quarter, but don't be surprised if the rally gives up some of its gains, investors warn. The semiconductor sector on Friday wrapped up its best quarter since 2020 as investors rotated back into the downtrodden industry, with names like Nvidia notching its best quarterly stretch since 2001. The recent tear in semiconductor stocks brings the sector into overbought territory versus non-financial cyclicals, said Credit Suisse's Andrew Garthwaite in a recent note. Like many investors, Niles views Nvidia as a dominant AI play despite its rich valuation . While the stock's given those gains, many investors viewed the print as a sign of a bottom.
The firm has a price target of $65, which implies 9.6% from the stock's closing price on Tuesday. Meanwhile, JPMorgan said that it is "starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel" for Micron as inventory levels begin to improve. The firm has a price target of $75, implying 26.5% upside from Tuesday's close price. His price target of $46 implies shares falling by almost a third from their closing price on Tuesday. Micron shares have rallied more than 18% in 2023, but have tumbled 27.7% over the last 12 months.
With the market experiencing outsized swings, investors may want to stay away from stocks disliked by analysts, at least in the near term. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 1.2% last week. .DJI 5D mountain Wild week for the Dow Given this backdrop, CNBC Pro set out to find the most disliked Dow stocks by analysts. The average price target on the stock implies upside of roughly 15%, but the stock has fallen 15.7% year to date and is the worst-performing Dow stock in 2023. Analysts on average rate the stock a hold, with more than 12% of them assigning it a sell rating.
Nvidia has breezed through the banking turmoil, and is the S&P 500's best performer with a 81% rise year-to-date. The chipmaker has added $87 billion in market value since Silicon Valley Bank was taken over by regulators. "We are at the iPhone moment of AI," CEO Jensen Huang said this week amid the ChatGPT buzz. At about $654 billion, Nvidia is valued almost six times as much as its longtime rival Intel. NVIDIA stock has significantly outperformed the US stock market.
If there's one takeaway from Nvidia 's developer conference, it's the computing firm's dominant leadership in artificial intelligence, according to Wall Street analysts. Investors piled into Nvidia shares this year as they sought ways to play the growing AI trend. NVDA 1Y mountain Nvidia shares 1-year The event only added to their confidence in the stock. to a multi $Tn+ IT/Infrastructure as a service industry TAM from narrower chip-only industry opportunity," Arya wrote to clients on Tuesday. JPMorgan's Harlan Sur reiterated an overweight rating, saying Nvidia's "dominant AI leadership" is clear following the event.
It's time to buy shares of Nvidia as excitement around artificial intelligence shows no signs of waning, Morgan Stanley said. Analyst Joseph Moore upgraded shares to overweight from equal weight, saying in a Thursday note to clients AI developments outweigh persisting challenges in areas such as gaming. NVDA YTD mountain Nvidia shares so far this year After a difficult year, semiconductor stocks have rallied in 2023, with Nvidia shares up nearly 75% as of Thursday's close, following a 50% slump in 2022. "NVIDIA valuation is high, but not dramatically out of line with peers; and at the limit ,high investment in NVIDIA products is even bad for the rest of compute, as budget compression is met with high AI spending requirements," Moore said. Along with the upgrade, Moore lifted his price target on shares to $304 from $255 a share, implying 19% upside from Thursday's close.
Strong overall results from Nvidia and more artificial intelligence developments outweigh the chip stock's gaming center miss in its recent quarterly print, analysts say. The chipmaker on Wednesday posted better-than-expected quarterly results , driven by growth in its data center business that includes AI chips. CEO Jensen Huang added during a call with analysts that AI is at an "inflection point," leading businesses to purchase its chips for machine learning software. And, while the company's gaming business is unlikely to rebound to its pandemic heights, it looks "largely derisked" going forward, wrote Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore. He added that this segment could become a steady 10% growth business for the chip maker.
Wall Street analysts are starting to worry about chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices following Intel's terrible earnings results . Morgan Stanley named AMD its top pick in December knowing that there would be some risk early in the year. Earnings expectations Even though Morgan Stanley expects a weak first-quarter guidance, it still has an overweight rating and $77 price target on AMD shares. Morgan Stanley models December revenue of $5.54 billion, down 0.4% on the quarter and up 14.8% on the year. "We continue to see a long runway of potential data center gains, including potential to get traction in data center GPU over time."
Micron Technology reported surprisingly weak quarterly results, raising concern among Wall Street analysts. On Wall Street, many analysts say the stock remains a buy, though they expect the semiconductor name will still face challenges ahead. His $65 price target implies the stock can jump more than 26%. The analyst reiterated a hold rating, as well as a $55 price target that implies 7% upside from Wednesday's closing price. He lowered his price target to $46, down from $49, implying shares could fall another 10% from Wednesday's closing price.
Weak outlook, reduced estimates, significant oversupply. Looking for an imminent bottom in global tech demand is proving very elusive, at least if you look at Micron's earnings report. "These are the most challenging conditions for the memory market since the financial crisis," Chris Caso at Credit Suisse said, after he looked over Micron's numbers. "Losses mount over significant oversupply," Joseph Moore at Morgan Stanley said. "In a rapidly deteriorating memory environment driven by inventory corrections/demand weakness across nearly every end market, pricing continues to be the biggest headwind to memory profitability/earnings," Harlan Sur at JPMorgan warned.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMorgan Stanley: It's going to be challenging for the whole memory chip sector, there's too much inventoryMorgan Stanley semiconductor analyst Joseph Moore discusses Micron's latest results, and whether the industry will be able to move past the supply and demand issues that have plagued it the past few years.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia's biggest businesses have product cycles around the corner: Cowen's bull case for NVDAMatt Ramsay, Cowen, and Joseph Moore, Morgan Stanley, join 'TechCheck' to discuss Cowen's price target on Nvidia, Moore's bullish argument for AMD and more.
Morgan Stanley highlighted stocks that may be good contenders that are "ripe for repurchase" after investors have realized their tax losses. Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak cut his price target on Alphabet last month to $125 from $135. Meanwhile, Disney , which whiffed on Wall Street's expectations for top and bottom lines , is also on Morgan Stanley's list. Advanced Micro Devices also caught Morgan Stanley's attention. Shares have taken a beating in 2022, toppling over by 47%, but Morgan Stanley remains positive.
Chip Outlook Depends on Tech Giants Not Cutting Too Deeply
  + stars: | 2022-11-18 | by ( Dan Gallagher | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
In what has been a confusing week for the chip industry, one thing is clear: its near-term fate may be in the hands of the same tech giants who are under a lot of pressure to slash their own costs. Quarterly results from Nvidia and a production cut warning from Micron, both on Wednesday, seemingly painted two different pictures. Nvidia managed to beat Wall Street’s estimates for its key data center and videogames businesses while also sounding an optimistic note for 2023, because of new products for both segments. Micron, on the other hand, says it plans to slash production in order to produce less DRAM memory next year than it will this year, as part of an effort to address oversupply caused by the rapid deterioration of major chip markets such as PCs and smartphones. Morgan Stanley’s Joseph Moore , who has covered Micron for more than a decade, called the move “unprecedented” in a note to clients.
The latest results from Nvidia suggest a gaming bottom is in sight for the battered semiconductor stock, according to analysts. The chipmaker on Wednesday posted a mixed quarter, with earnings falling slightly below analysts' expectations . Nvidia's gaming division reported a 51% decline in sales as the PC gaming market slows from pandemic-era growth and retailers grapple with a glut of inventory. Bank of America's Vivek Arya reflected similar sentiment, viewing the current period as an "inflection quarter" for the chip stock. Analysts see particular strength in the company's data center business, which saw sales rise 31% year over year.
There's a wide range of stock ready to pop regardless of what direction the market goes, according to Morgan Stanley. They include Epam Systems , Bill.com , SLB, Microchip Technology and Ingersoll Rand. Bill.com Holdings Bill.com has showed "solid execution yields resilient growth in a worsening macro," analyst Keith Weiss said following the company's earnings report earlier this month. Microchip Technology Shares of the semiconductor supplier are too attractive to ignore, analyst Joseph Moore said earlier this month. Bill.com "Solid Execution Yields Resilient Growth in a Worsening Macro ... Amid this macro warning sign, mgmt.
Wall Street expects these "tenbagger" stocks that enjoyed a meteoric rise over the past decade to continue their big gains. The term was first coined by legendary investor Peter Lynch, an avid baseball fan who compared a stock's growth prospects to two home runs and a double in the sport. With that in mind, CNBC Pro searched for tenbagger stocks from the past decade that analysts believe will continue to make outsized gains. What's more, they have a 2022 estimated earnings per share growth rate of more than 20%, and an estimated annual long-term EPS growth rate of more than 20%. Its 2022 earnings per share growth estimate is 66%, while its annual long-term share growth is forecasted to be 26%.
The fourth quarter is finally here, much to the relief of many investors who took a beating in the previous three-month period. Stocks were battered last quarter as the Federal Reserve doubled down on its aggressive monetary policy stance to fight persistently high inflation. Wall Street analysts are to here to help, recommending several stocks that could do well going forward. On top of that, 75% of analysts covering the stock rate it as a buy, FactSet data shows. Both stocks have buy ratings from nearly two-thirds of analysts covering them.
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