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

Search resuls for: "Semiconductor Manufacturing"


25 mentions found


Trump's stance could have major implications for Taiwan's dominance in semiconductor chip manufacturing should any potential conflict arise between Taiwan and China. And such a scenario would likely have a cataclysmic effect on the US economy should the global chip supply chain be disrupted. And Taiwan's microchip production is anchored by the Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, or TSMC, a global powerhouse. A recent report released by the Semiconductor Industry Association revealed that America's share of global chip manufacturing is set to increase to 14% by 2032. After Trump's latest remarks about Taiwan and the potential for tighter trade curbs on China, global chip stocks fell, with notable declines for Nvidia, TSMC, and Qualcomm, among others.
Persons: , Donald Trump, Trump, Joe Biden, Biden, CJ Muse, Cantor Fitzgerald, Trump's Organizations: Service, Bloomberg Businessweek waded, Business, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, US State Department, Financial Times, Bloomberg Businessweek, Congress, China, Bloomberg, CNBC, of Commerce, BIS, of Industry, Security, Semiconductor Industry Association, Nvidia, TSMC, Qualcomm Locations: Taiwan, China, Beijing, America
Chip stocks in Asia tumbled on Thursday following a tech selloff on Wall Street amid reports the U.S. may be considering tighter export restrictions. TSMC's suppliers also took a hit, with Japanese machinery companies Tokyo Electron slumping almost 9% while Screen Holdings fell more than 8%. Any sort of tariffs and curbs to trade are going to impact these chip companies. South Korean chip stocks were not spared. Samsung Electronics slid by nearly 2%, while SK Hynix tumbled nearly 5% and SK Square plunged nearly 10%.
Persons: Biden, Organo, Ayako Yoshioka Organizations: Bloomberg, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Screen Holdings, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix, SK Square Locations: U.S, China, Asia, Tokyo
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company on Thursday beat revenue and profit expectations in the second quarter, as demand for advanced chips used in AI applications continue to surge. The firm guided second-quarter revenue to be between $19.6 billion and $20.4 billion. Today, the demand is so high I had to work very hard to meet customer demand," Wei told analysts. TSMC projects third-quarter revenue between $22.4 billion and $23.2 billion. This compares to $17.3 billion in revenue posted in the same period a year ago.
Persons: C.C, Wei Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Samsung, Intel, Apple, Nvidia, TSMC Locations: Taiwan, TSMC
Elevance expects adjusted earnings of at least $37.20 for 2024, while analysts polled by FactSet called for $37.28 per share. Second-quarter adjusted earnings and revenue came in slightly ahead of estimates. Omnicom — Shares of the corporate communications company fell 8% despite beating revenue expectations for the second quarter. Omnicom posted adjusted earnings of $1.95 per share, which came out in line with analyst forecasts polled by FactSet. Johnson & Johnson reported adjusted earnings of $2.82 per share on $24.45 billion in revenue.
Persons: Biden, ASML, Elevance, FactSet, Charles Schwab —, Cowen, Charles Schwab's, Omnicom, Datadog, Jefferies, Johnson, Johnson —, LSEG, , Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Michelle Fox Organizations: Bloomberg News, Biden Administration, Nvidia, AMD, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, VanEck Semiconductor, Qualcomm, HSBC, Hunt Transport Services, Revenue, FactSet, Reuters, UnitedHealth, Johnson, . U.S, Bancorp, U.S . Bancorp, Corporation, UBS Locations: China, ., V.F
Read previewA growth-heavy mutual fund has crushed its index in the last decade thanks to a remarkably simple investing strategy that most bottom-up portfolio managers would decry as heresy. The Hennessy Cornerstone Growth Fund (HFCGX) managed by Neil Hennessy, Ryan Kelley, and Josh Wein is in the top 3% of its category in the last 10 years, according to Morningstar. AdvertisementThis stock screen, which doesn't examine a company's management team or balance sheet, is "a little bit unorthodox," Wein acknowledged. A 4-part pathway to strong gainsThough unconventional, the four-part vetting process that serves as the backbone of the Hennessy Cornerstone Growth Fund is far from unproven. Although Wein doesn't select stocks like most other managers, he still highlighted five stocks that he's most excited about.
Persons: , Neil Hennessy, Ryan Kelley, Josh Wein, Morningstar, It's, Wein, " Wein, they're, Hennessy, They're Organizations: Service, Cornerstone Growth, Business, Hennessy Cornerstone Growth, Urban Outfitters, Emcor
Shortly after the opening bell, we will be initiating a position in Advanced Micro Devices , buying 150 shares at roughly $184.35. Following the trade, Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust will own 150 shares of AMD, representing 0.80% of the portfolio. In his Sunday column, Jim called this the new reason to own AMD. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim, MI300X, Lisa Su, Su, , Ben Reitzes, Jim Cramer Organizations: Devices, AMD, Charitable Trust, Broadcom, VMWare, Oracle, Club, Microsoft, Micron, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Nvidia, Silo, Melius, FactSet, IDC, Gartner, CNBC Locations: Europe, Wednesday's Homestretch
Earnings season is revving up, and Bank of America has picked out a series of stocks to buy in advance of their quarterly reports. CNBC Pro combed through top research from Bank of America to find buy-rated stocks ahead of earnings. Other positive catalysts include "higher power prices, upward revisions to transmission revenues [and] accretive asset sales," Pereira wrote. Meanwhile, competition remains fierce from the likes of Nvidia , but Arya said he's standing by Broadcom's "best-in-class management team." … It commands ~83% market share & we think it stands to further dominate the space as metal card issuance soars.
Persons: Arthur Pereira, Pereira, Vivek Arya, Arya, Broadcom's, Cassie Chan, Chan, CompoSecure, … EDU, CMPO Organizations: Bank of America, CNBC, Broadcom, Eletrobras, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Oriental Education & Technology, VMware, Nvidia, New, Taiwan Locations: U.S, China
This number could surge by 47% to about 1.16 million millionaires by 2028, UBS predicts, leading the 56 global markets the bank analyzed in its report. AdvertisementThe US was home to nearly 22 million millionaires last year, per UBS. That number is expected to grow 16% to 25.5 million millionaires over the next five years. UBS attributes Taiwan's wealth growth to its semiconductor chip industry, which is "set to reap the rewards of the boom in artificial intelligence." The rise of the chip behemoth has created an entire tech ecosystem in Taiwan, much of which is centered on hardware.
Persons: , TSMC, Ma Tieying Organizations: Service, UBS, Business, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, chipmaker, Apple, Nvidia, New York Stock Exchange, DBS Locations: Taiwan, Swiss, China
Commercial and residential buildings are illuminated at dawn in Seoul, South Korea, on Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023. Japan's Nikkei 225 surged to a fresh high on Thursday, crossing the 42,000 mark for the first time. Other Asia-Pacific markets rose on the back of a U.S. Big Tech rally and greater confidence on Federal Reserve rate cuts. Chip stocks were among the biggest winners of the U.S. trading session. In Asia, investors will be watching for any spillover optimism in the region's tech stocks, particularly in Japan, where chip related companies have lifted the Nikkei 225 to record highs.
Persons: Topix Organizations: Nikkei, Big Tech, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Bank of Locations: Seoul, South Korea, Asia, Pacific, U.S, Japan
In terms of revenue, LegalZoom now expects between $675 million and $685 million for the full year. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — The chip stock advanced 3% following the company's revenue results . Though the company's reported T$207.87 billion for the month of June was a 9.5% decrease from last month, it was a 32.9% increase from the year-ago period. For January through June this year, the company reported T$1.27 trillion, which is a 28% increase from the same period last year. Carvana — Shares of the online car seller added 5% after Needham upgraded the stock to buy from hold.
Persons: LegalZoom.com, Dan Wernikoff, Jeffrey Stibel, LegalZoom, Carvana, Needham, robotaxi, , Alex Harring, Fred Imbert, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Darla Mercado Organizations: Intuit —, Intuit, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Baidu, Street Journal, Shanghai, Mastercard, Visa, Bank of America, Manchester United, BioSciences, Analysts, Illumina, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Argus, UBS, Science, AMD, Silo Locations: China, Shanghai, Hoka, Europe
Though Goldman increased its price target, the investment bank remains neutral on Tesla, with the new price target implying about 5% downside from Tuesday's close of $262.33. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — Shares of the company, which makes semiconductor chips for AI giants including Nvidia and Apple, added 2%. Taiwan Semiconductor reported revenue from April-June this year of T$673.51 billion, as compared to the T$654.27 billion expected by analysts polled by LSEG, according to Reuters. 3M Company — Shares declined 1.2% after 3M announced its finance chief Monish Patolawala is leaving the company "to pursue another opportunity." The analyst's $77 price target implies a rise of 10.2% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, Goldman, Monish Patolawala, Carvana, Needham, Jefferies, LegalZoom.com, Dan Wernikoff, LegalZoom, Lisa Han, Alex Harring, Spencer Kimball Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Nvidia, Apple, Taiwan Semiconductor, LSEG, Reuters, 3M, Walmart —, Spotify Technology
A logo of Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC) is seen during the TSMC global RnD Center opening ceremony in Hsinchu on July 28, 2023. (Photo by Amber Wang / AFP)TSMC , the world's largest contract chipmaker, reported strong growth in second-quarter revenue on Wednesday that handily beat market forecasts, on the back of booming demand for artificial intelligence (AI) applications. It is not a direct comparison as TSMC provides monthly revenue data only in Taiwan dollars, but gives quarterly revenue figures and its outlook on its quarterly earnings calls both in U.S. dollars. On its most recent earnings call in April, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co forecast second quarter revenue in a range of between $19.6 billion to $20.4 billion. For June alone, TSMC reported that revenue rose 33% year-on-year to T$207.87 billion.
Persons: Amber Wang, TSMC Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Center, TSMC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Apple, Nvidia, Revenue, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Locations: Hsinchu, AFP, Taiwan
Unionized workers at Samsung Electronics said Wednesday they would go on an indefinite strike, an escalation of a rare labor dispute that could disrupt the technology giant’s world-leading chip business. An estimated 6,500 workers walked off the job on Monday for a planned three-day strike over pay and working conditions. The Nationwide Samsung Electronics Union decided to extend the strike after “hearing no word” from the company, according to Lee Hyun Kuk, the vice president of the union, which represents 28,000 workers, or a fifth of the Samsung’s global work force. The union said it has been negotiating with Samsung since January over vacation days and wages. “As the strike goes on, the management’s blood will dry out and they will eventually come to the negotiating table on their knees,” the union said in a statement.
Persons: Lee Hyun Kuk Organizations: Samsung Electronics, Nationwide Samsung Electronics Union, Samsung, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company
Shares of upstream chip companies TSMC and ASML have surged on the back of Nvidia's gains. TSMC's market cap briefly crossed $1 trillion on Monday. The stock price of ASML — Europe's third-most valuable company — crossed 1,000 euros apiece. AdvertisementTech giant Nvidia has been riding the artificial intelligence wave that made it one of the world's most valuable companies. Now, Nvidia's suppliers and upstream partners are riding on the hype, too.
Persons: Organizations: Service, Tech, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, New York Stock Exchange, Business
In today's big story, we're looking at how new AI tools are helping workers bluff their way through interviews . Some people have built homemade AI tools to help interviewees, releasing them online for free. A startup developing AI-powered tools for job seekers, Final Round AI offers an AI résumé builder, a cover letter writing service, and a mock interview tool. He's not the only one looking to AI to change the interview process. Others say banning AI chatbots in interviews is like prohibiting calculators during math tests — if workers can use the tech in their jobs, why not in the interview process, too?
Persons: , I'm Jordan Parker Erb, Dan DeFrancesco, Alo, They're, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Rob Price, Michael Guan, He's, Rebecca Zisser, Rob, BI's Melia Russell, Melia, Guan, Jerome Powell, William McChesney Martin, Powell, Chip Somodevilla, Joe Biden's, Howard, Alan Howard's, Brevan Howard, Tyler Le, Francisco's, Leonid Shteyn, execs, Joe Arden, Joe Biden, Harvey Weinstein, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen, Lisa Ryan Organizations: Service, Business, Reserve Bank, Markets, Getty, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Apple, of America, Paramount, NATO, Prosecutors Locations: Silicon Valley, Washington , DC, U.S, New York, London
The U.S. chips industry is expected face a shortage of 67,000 technicians, computer scientists and engineers by 2030, while the broader U.S. economy is set to have a gap of 1.4 million such workers, according to a 2023 study from the Semiconductor Industry Association. A wafer sorter inside the GlobalFoundries semiconductor manufacturing facility in Malta, New York, on June 18, 2024. The company creates chips for everyday products from electronics and phones to autos, in addition to components for space and defense. The GlobalFoundries semiconductor manufacturing facility in Malta, New York, on June 18, 2024. Morgan Woods, 28, started out in Malta, New York, at GlobalFoundries' fab facility as a technician in 2021.
Persons: Cindy Schultz, Lockheed Martin, Pradheepa Raman, Raman, Morgan Woods, Woods, GlobalFoundries Organizations: Semiconductor Industry Association, Deloitte, Bloomberg, Getty, General Motors, Lockheed, CNBC, Workers, GM, U.S Locations: U.S, Malta , New York, New York, Vermont
Picture Alliance | Picture Alliance | Getty ImagesBEIJING — China dominates the supply chain for many of the world's critical minerals, but so far it's held off on sweeping restrictions on at least one: tungsten. Almonty claims the forthcoming mine in South Korea has the potential to produce 50% of the world's ex-China tungsten supply. "We see in the U.S., in Europe, they ask their suppliers for a China-free supply chain," said Michael Dornhofer, founder of metals consulting firm Independent Supply Business Partner. watch nowBack in January, U.S.-based research firm Macro Ops said: "We're approaching an inflection point in tungsten supply. Other non-Chinese companies in the tungsten supply chain are going to South Korea.
Persons: Lewis Black, Biden, Black, Yadong, Almonty, Michael Dornhofer, Dornhofer, Brandon Beylo, he's, Mark Seddon, Warren Buffett Organizations: Saxony Minerals, ., Getty, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Nvidia, Almonty Industries, China's Ministry of Commerce, Independent Supply, Energy, Security Holdings, European, Chinese Communist Party, U.S . Bureau of Industry, Security, Department of Commerce, CNBC, Argus, IMC, IMC Group Locations: Germany, BEIJING, China, Canada, South Korea, U.S, Europe, United States, South Korea China, North Korea, Africa, Myanmar, Daegu
Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, AMD, and most other chip designers rely on Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company to make these crucial components. And its location on the island of Taiwan, which China claims, puts the tech industry and AI's future in a precarious geopolitical position. AdvertisementChris Miller is the author of "Chip War: The Fight for the World's Most Critical Technology." When people understand the true significance of TSMC, they're often pretty shocked at how precarious the chip situation is. But suppose you think there's some chance that it happens.
Persons: Chris Miller, we're, TSMC, couldn't, That's, they've, they're, There's, Jensen Huang Organizations: Service, Apple, Nvidia, Qualcomm, AMD, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Locations: Taiwan, China, Russia, Ukraine, South China, Philippines, Beijing, Taiwan Strait, Washington, Tokyo
A screen displays stock figures at the Taiwan Stock Exchange Corp. headquarters in Taipei, Taiwan, on Monday, Jan. 15, 2024. The Taiwan Weighted Index has surged 28% so far this year, powered by stocks along the AI value chain. While Taiwan may lead Asian markets, Japan seems to be the favored market going forward, among analysts who spoke to CNBC. While most Asian markets are in positive territory year-to-date, three stock markets — Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines — fell into negative territory. The CME FedWatch tool indicates that 61% of traders expect the Fed to cut rates by 25 basis points in the September meeting.
Persons: Foxconn —, Hai Precision Industry —, Rahul Ghosh, Rowe Price, Ghosh, Ben Powell, Powell, Neel Kashkari, Ken Orchard Organizations: Taiwan Stock Exchange Corp, Bloomberg, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Hai Precision Industry, Intelligence, Nikkei, CNBC, BlackRock Investment Institute, Bank of Japan, Federal, U.S, Fed, Minneapolis Federal Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Asia, Pacific, Japan, BlackRock, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Jakarta, Philippine, U.S
Work is getting really weird
  + stars: | 2024-07-01 | by ( Dan Defrancesco | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +7 min
The big storyBizarro workplaceLorenzo Matteucci for BILet's be honest: Work has gotten really weird. Workers hiring shadow stand-ins can be unqualified for their jobs, overwhelmed, greedy, or just lazy. Shadow stand-ins are typically paid a fraction of the salary earned by the actual employee. One employee also described to Rob struggling to deal with a shadow stand-in's sub-par work and eventually "firing" them. Getty Images; Alyssa Powell/BIMeanwhile, the people who are doing all the work themselves are having a tough time getting any recognition.
Persons: , Lorenzo Matteucci, Rob Price, Rob, Alyssa Powell, BI's Aki Ito, Roaring Kitty, Bain, Chris Miller, Greg Peters, Ted Sarandos, Peters, Chelsea Jia Feng, Coach's, David Rosenberg, Donald Trump's, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Hallam Bullock, Grace Lett, Annie Smith, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Business, BI, Super, Facebook, Workers, Corporations, Getty, GameStop, McKinsey, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Netflix, Walgreens, CVS, Rite, Wimbledon Locations: Chicago, India, Pakistan, China, Taiwan, New York, London
One fund has a formula that has enabled it to consistently beat the S & P 500 : the Hennessy Cornerstone Growth Fund. The fund uses a formula-based strategy for investing, according to its portfolio managers Neil Hennessy, Ryan Kelley, and Joshua Wein. "We're trying to combine value with momentum and some growth," Kelley said. Stocks the fund owns Most of the stocks in the outperforming fund aren't actually in tech but in the industrials, consumer, financials and health-care sectors — because of the formula they use. It is the only name which survived in the recent rebalancing to the current batch of 50 stocks, said Wein.
Persons: Neil Hennessy, Ryan Kelley, Joshua Wein, Kelley, Wein, They've, We're, aren't Organizations: Cornerstone Growth Fund, CNBC Pro, Micro Computer, Urban Outfitters Locations: United States
A 2-year-old startup founded by Harvard dropouts has just raised $120 million in venture funding to try and build a competitive chip and take on Nvidia in artificial intelligence. Co-founder and CEO Gavin Uberti said that as AI develops, most of the technology's power-hungry computing requirements will be filled by customized, hard-wired chips called ASICs. "We're making the biggest bet in AI," Uberti said in an interview. Other chip startups taking on Nvidia include Cerebras Systems, which is building a physically larger AI chip, and Tenstorrent, which is using a trendy technology called RISC-V to build AI chips. Venture capitalists invested $6 billion in AI semiconductor companies in 2023, up slightly from $5.7 billion in 2022, according to data from PitchBook.
Persons: Gavin Uberti, Uberti, we'll, Peter Thiel, Stanley Druckenmiller, Kyle Vogt, we've, Robert Wachen Organizations: Nvidia, Harvard, Apple, Venture Partners, Cerebras Systems, Semiconductors, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Venture Locations: Cupertino , California, PitchBook
Sure enough, the next day began a historic ascent of Apple stock, an in-your-face rally that many thought made no sense. There's a coalescence of two themes, high speed, accelerated computing and increasingly intelligent AI, and neither works without Nvidia chips. I know that it seems impossible to ponder Nvidia's stock going any higher or passing Apple and Microsoft and staying ahead of it. Ask yourself, does any company match Jensen and Nvidia right now? I say let others be baffled over the Apple versus Microsoft versus Nvidia conundrum.
Persons: WWDC, Tim Cook, Tim, Claude, hasn't, Moore, Elon Musk, Nvidia's, Jensen Huang, Jensen, Ben Franklin, Franklin, Da Vinci, — Jensen, Steve Jobs, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Jim Cramer Rob Kim Organizations: Apple, Developers, Microsoft, Club, Dell, HP Inc, PC, Micron, Nvidia, Computers, Intel, AMD, Pentium, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Franklin Institute, Oracle, Google, GTC Conference, Cisco, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: Philadelphia, Rome, Jensen
India has undergone a massive infrastructure push and has made significant strides in connecting and modernizing its highways, railways and airports. He's going to double down on that," said Samir Kapadia, CEO of India Index and managing principal at Vogel Group. "Along with creating physical infrastructure, India needs to remain steadfast on the structural reforms ... Increase foreign investmentsFrom veteran emerging markets investor Mark Mobius to global strategist David Roche, market experts remain bullish on India. Foreign direct investments into the country needs to however pick up pace to further drive economic growth and development, analysts told CNBC.
Persons: Vikram Singh, Narendra Modi, Modi, Reema Bhattacharya, Verisk, Modi's, he's, Samir Kapadia, Nirmala Sitharaman, Santanu Sengupta, Goldman Sachs, Sengupta, Richard Rossow, Kapadia, Sumedha Gupta, Vivek Prasad, Prasad, Mark Mobius, David Roche Organizations: Bharatiya Janata Party, BJP, Infrastructure, India Index, Vogel Group, Nurphoto, CNBC, Center for Strategic, International Studies, Padget Electronics, Dixon Technologies, Bloomberg, Getty, Research, India Electronics, Semiconductor Association, Economist Intelligence Unit, Centre, Monitoring, National Stock Exchange of, World Federation of Exchanges Locations: India, Asia, China, Mumbai, Noida, PwC India, National Stock Exchange of India
The market is underestimating one corner of artificial intelligence, according to Morgan Stanley. The innovation in the sector is set to drive AI chip capabilities, said Morgan Stanley. Morgan Stanley says it sees "outsized winners" in Japan, South Korea and the European Union. Taiwan TSMC : Morgan Stanley noted the Taiwanese semiconductor firm is a major provider of CoWoS technology, a type of packaging technology. Japan Morgan Stanley says it favors Disco and Advantest the most out of all the companies in Japan that are producing equipment for advanced packaging.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, That's, Amkor, TSMC, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Engineers, European Union, United, Semiconductor Assembly, Test Services, Apple, ACM Research, SK Hynix, SK Hynix's Locations: Japan, South Korea, United States, Arizona, Taiwan
Total: 25