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CNBC Daily Open: Disney wins proxy showdown
  + stars: | 2024-04-04 | by ( Clement Tan | In Clemtan | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Nick Caldwell, now chief product officer at Peloton, is claiming Musk and X "cheated" him and other executives out of a combined $200,000,000 in severance benefits. This lawsuit is similar to the one filed by other Twitter executives, including ex-CEO Parag Agrawal, claiming they were owed $128 million in unpaid severance. [PRO] Autos winnersA Tesla short-seller named two auto stocks that he believes have the potential to deliver 100% upside for investors.
Persons: Robert Iger, Mickey Mouse, Jerome Powell, Steve Cohen, David Einhorn, Elon Musk, Nick Caldwell, Parag Agrawal, Tesla Organizations: Walt Disney Company, New, Children's Hospital, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, CNBC, Dow Jones, Intel, Nasdaq, Fed, U.S, Elon, Twitter Locations: Children's Hospital Los, Los Angeles , California
Taiwanese authorities said they've airlifted 928 pounds of food to people stuck at a quarry. Sixty-four people were reported trapped at Heping Mine after a 7.2-magnitude earthquake hit Hualien county. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementRescue authorities in Taiwan said they'd airlifted about 928 pounds of food to a mining area where dozens are still trapped due to a 7.2-magnitude earthquake. The self-governed island's National Airborne Service also deployed drones to survey the Heping Mine region, where 64 people are believed to be stuck, officials from the Emergency Operations Center said on Thursday morning.
Persons: they've, , they'd, It's Organizations: Service, Airborne Service, Emergency, Wednesday, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Nikkei, TSMC Locations: Hualien, Taiwan, a.m, Taipei
American chip giant Intel in December 2021 said it will invest more than $7 billion to build a chip packaging and testing factory in Malaysia, with production expected to begin in 2024. Malaysia holds 13% of the global market for chip packaging, assembly and testing services, said the Malaysian Investment Development Authority in a Feb. 18 report. Exports of semiconductor devices and integrated circuits increased by 0.03% to 387.45 billion Malaysian ringgit ($81.4 billion) in 2023, amid global chip demand weakness. Malaysia Semiconductor Industry Association president Datuk Seri Wong Siew Hai said many Chinese firms diversified some of their production to Malaysia, calling the country China's "plus one." In the same month, the world's largest contract chip maker TSMC opened its first Japan factory as it diversifies away from Taiwan amid U.S.-China tensions.
Persons: Faris Hadziq, Kenddrick Chan, Aik Kean Chong, Intel's, Tan, Yinglan Tan, Datuk Seri Wong Siew Hai, Zafrul Aziz, TSMC, Ann Lim Organizations: Getty, Malaysia, LSE, London School of Economics, Political, Semiconductors, Intel, CNBC, Infineon, Ventures Partners, Malaysian Investment Development Authority, Malaysian, Malaysia Semiconductor Industry, U.S ., U.S, China -, Partnership Locations: KUALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA, Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur, South, East Asia, China, U.S, American, Penang, Another U.S, Singapore, Europe, Kong, GlobalFoundries Singapore, Klang, India, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Washington, Asia, China - U.S
CNBC Daily Open: Disney wins proxy fight
  + stars: | 2024-04-04 | by ( Clement Tan | In Clemtan | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. Korea leads AsiaKorea led stock market gains in Asia-Pacific on Thursday, with markets in Hong Kong, China and Taiwan shut for a public holiday. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is also due to visit China again later this year. [PRO] Autos winnersA Tesla short-seller named two auto stocks that he believes have the potential to deliver 100% upside for investors.
Persons: Robert Iger, Mickey Mouse, Korea's, Jerome Powell, Steve Cohen, David Einhorn, Henry V, Janet Yellen, Antony Blinken, Tesla Organizations: Walt Disney Company, New, Children's Hospital, Children's Hospital Los Angeles, CNBC, Nikkei, Dow Jones, Intel, Nasdaq, Fed, Treasury Locations: Children's Hospital Los, Los Angeles , California, Korea, Asia Korea, Asia, Pacific, Hong Kong, China, Taiwan, U.S, Yellen, China U.S
A powerful earthquake in Taiwan forced chip maker TSMC to suspend operations at some sites. That could mean production delays for companies like Apple, which relies on its chips. Worst-case scenario, disruptions to TSMC could mean production delays for its existing products and a later rollout of its new devices. AdvertisementApple and Nvidia didn't immediately return to requests for comment from Business Insider when asked how TSMC's production disruptions would impact their businesses. Analysts say halting production could also damage some of TSMC's most advanced chips, which require maintenance around the clock, further exacerbating production delays.
Persons: , TSMC, Chris Miller, Nvidia didn't, Bum, Brian Tan, Miller Organizations: Apple, Bloomberg, Service, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Nvidia, The New York Times, Business, Citi Group Locations: Taiwan, Hsinchu, United States
An aerial view shows workers taking down a collapsed building in eastern Taiwan's Hualien county following an earthquake/Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co evacuated some production lines after a major earthquake hit Taiwan early Wednesday. The island was rocked by a massive earthquake that collapsed buildings and prompted tsunami advisories from Japan and the Philippines. A TSMC spokesperson said safety systems were operating normally. "To ensure the safety of personnel, some fabs were evacuated according to company procedure," the person said in a statement, adding that the company was confirming the details of the impact. Shares of TSMC fell 1.5% in early trading.
Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Locations: Taiwan's Hualien, Taiwan, Japan, Philippines
Intel shares closed down 8% on Wednesday after the company disclosed long-awaited financials for its semiconductor manufacturing, or foundry, business, revealing an operating loss of $7 billion in 2023. It was the first time Intel had reported revenue totals for its foundry arm alone, separating it from the products business, which reported $11.3 billion in operating income in 2023. Intel said Tuesday that it expects its foundry losses to peak in 2024 and break even halfway between the current quarter and the end of 2030. "NOW is when the real work begins," the analysts wrote in a Tuesday investor note. "With a multi-year execution cycle still ahead, we continue to prefer nearer-term AI beneficiaries, NVDA and AMD," the analysts wrote.
Persons: Cantor Fitzgerald, Intel's, , Kif Leswing Organizations: Intel, AMD
Spotify Technology – The music-streaming company popped more than 8%. Bloomberg reported that Spotify is upping prices for its premium subscription service within several markets, including the U.S. Ford Motor announced that first-quarter U.S. sales rose 7% from a year ago, while electric vehicle sales jumped 86%. SoFi Technologies – Shares of the financial technology company rose 4.7% after Needham initiated coverage with a buy rating . GE Aerospace – GE Aerospace surged more than 6%, a day after the conglomerate once known as General Electric completed the spinoff of its power business.
Persons: Ulta, Dave, Buster's, Wells, Tesla, Nelson Peltz, Needham, , Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound Organizations: Intel, Spotify Technology, Bloomberg, Spotify, U.S, Cal, Disney – Disney, Signet, Ford, Ford Motor, GE Aerospace – GE Aerospace, Electric, GE Vernova, New York Stock Exchange Locations: Cal, Maine
Intel — Shares fell more than 4% after the company disclosed a growing operating loss in its semiconductor manufacturing business. Tesla — The electric vehicle maker slipped roughly 1% after Guggenheim and Deutsche Bank slashed their price targets on the stock. The target cuts follow Tesla reporting much weaker-than-expected first-quarter delivery numbers . Dave & Buster's — Shares jumped 5% after the restaurant and entertainment chain increased its share repurchase authorization by $100 million, bringing the total available share repurchase authorization to $200 million. Ally Financial — Shares slipped 2% following a downgrade to underweight from neutral at Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Tesla, Buster's, Wells, Morgan Stanley, Richard Shane, Hakyung Kim, Brian Evans, Lisa Han, Jesse Pound Organizations: Intel —, Intel, Guggenheim, Deutsche Bank, Paramount, The New York Times, Cal, Maine Foods
Chipmakers and governments, including the US government, have in recent years invested billions in efforts to diversify chip production, but many experts worry that process is not happening fast enough. TSMC produces an estimated 90% of the world’s most advanced semiconductor chips, which power countless devices people rely on daily. Still, even an hours-long shutdown of certain chip production could take weeks to recover from. The race to diversify chipmakingWednesday’s earthquake will likely only add pressure to efforts underway for years to grow chipmaking capacity outside of Taiwan. Experts say it’s a sign that the diversification of the chip supply chain is not moving quickly enough to account for the risks of remaining concentrated in Taiwan.
Persons: chipmaker, TSMC, ” TSMC, , David Bader, ” Bader, facilites, wasn’t, Joe Unsworth, Foxconn —, Angelo Zino, Joe Biden Organizations: New, New York CNN, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Apple, Qualcomm, Nvidia, AMD, Institute for Data Science, New Jersey Institute of Technology, Barclays, Tech, United Microelectronics Corporation, Micron Locations: New York, Taiwan, chipmaking, China, United, Japan, Germany, United States, Arizona
The 7.2-magnitude earthquake shows the vulnerability of TSMC, the world's top chipmaker, to natural or geopolitical events. AdvertisementTaiwan experienced its worst earthquake in 25 years on Wednesday morning, disrupting the operations of companies including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, or TSMC. It's the world's largest chipmaker and is, by some estimates, the producer of 90% of the world's most advanced processor chips. Overall, a war over Taiwan could hit the world's economy to the tune of $10 trillion — or about 10% of global GDP — Bloomberg forecast. April 3, 6:41 p.m. SGT: An earlier version of this story misstated the magnitude of the earthquake that struck Taiwan.
Persons: , TSMC Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Service, Bloomberg, — Bloomberg, Taiwan Stock Exchange Locations: Arizona, Japan, Germany, Taiwan, Hsinchu, Beijing, Washington, China
The boom in demand for artificial intelligence leads back to this global chip supplier, according to Susquehanna. Analyst Mehdi Hosseini upped his estimates on the semiconductor manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing as wafer average selling prices improve, saying that "all AI roads originate from TSM." The firm joins JPMorgan in asserting that "all AI roads" lead to the global chipmaker. Taiwan Semiconductor is coming off a strong start to 2024. Taiwan Semiconductor, a supplier to chip giants such as Nvidia , Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm , could rally another 27% based on the firm's $180 price target.
Persons: Mehdi Hosseini, TSM Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor, JPMorgan, Susquehanna, Semiconductor, Nvidia, Devices, Qualcomm Locations: Susquehanna, TSM, U.S
Intel shares fell 4% at one point in extended trading on Tuesday after the company revealed long-awaited financials for its semiconductor manufacturing business, commonly called the foundry business, in a SEC filing. Intel said its foundry business recorded an operating loss of $7 billion in 2023 on sales of $18.9 billion. That's a wider loss than the $5.2 billion Intel reported in its foundry business in 2022 on $25.7 billion in sales. "Intel Foundry is going to drive considerable earnings growth for Intel over time. 2024 is the trough for foundry operating losses," Gelsinger said on a call with investors on Tuesday.
Persons: Patrick Gelsinger, Gelsinger Organizations: Intel, SEC, Nvidia, AMD, Microsoft, Intel Foundry Locations: American
Japan said Tuesday it has approved up to 590 billion yen ($3.89 billion) in additional subsidies for chipmaker Rapidus Corporation, as the country plays catch up with other nations on semiconductor manufacturing. Rapidus Corporation was founded in 2022 by the Japanese government and eight domestic companies to develop and manufacture advanced semiconductors. Toyota Motor Corporation, Sony Group are among the companies that have invested billions of yen in Rapidus. Rapidus has received 330 billion yen from the Japanese government between 2022 and 2023 to mass produce 2-nanometer chips in Chitose, Hokkaido, from 2027. TSMC and Samsung currently produce 3-nanometer chips, while Rapidus is currently constructing an advanced semiconductor plant in Chitose.
Persons: Rapidus Organizations: chipmaker Rapidus Corporation, Japan's Ministry, Economy, Trade, Industry, Rapidus Corporation, Toyota Motor Corporation, Sony Group, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, South, Samsung Electronics, Samsung, IBM Locations: Japan, Rapidus, Chitose , Hokkaido, Chitose .
Cameco — Shares rose more than 5% after Goldman Sachs initiated coverage of the uranium producer with a buy rating, saying there is more than 25% upside. Microsoft — Microsoft shares rose 0.7% following a report from The Information, citing unnamed sources, saying Microsoft and OpenAI are planning a $100 billion data center project. Super Micro Computer shares rose 2.5%. Universal Health Services — Shares fell after Universal Health Services said in a regulatory filing its subsidiary Pavilion Behavioral Health was ordered to pay $60 million in compensatory damages and $475 million in punitive damages. MicroStrategy — Shares slipped more than 3% after Michael Saylor, executive chairman of MicroStrategy, sold nearly 4,000 shares of MicroStrategy stock last week, according to a regulatory filing .
Persons: Cameco, Goldman Sachs, Semtech, Robinson, Brandon Oglenski, Bill Holdings, Wells, Bill, Tesla, Tommy Bahama, Michael Saylor, InterDigital's, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Lisa Kailai Han, Alex Harring, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound Organizations: Micron Technology —, Bank of America, Microsoft, Western Digital, Micro Computer, Hunt Transport, C.H, Barclays, . Oxford Industries, Citi, Universal Health Services, Behavioral Health Locations: North America
Semiconductor stocks are off to another hot start to the year. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) is up 28.5% in the first three months of 2024. That puts the SMH on pace for its biggest quarterly gain since the first quarter of 2023, when it jumped 30%. The stock is up more than 30% to start 2024. Shares have skyrocketed more than 39% to start 2024, helped by strong sales in high bandwidth memory necessary in AI infrastructure.
Persons: Ken Mahoney, Nvidia, Hendi, Management's Paul Meeks, Andrew Garthwaite cautioning Organizations: VanEck Semiconductor, Asset, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Apple, Devices, JPMorgan, PHLX Semiconductor, Intel, Micron Technology, Micron, UBS, Universal Locations: Taiwan
There was a surge in sales of ASML’s advanced chipmaking tools to China last year — ahead of the Dutch ban. In the fourth quarter of 2023, China accounted for 39% of ASML’s total revenue, according to the company. For 2023 as a whole, China’s share of ASML’s revenue was 29%, doubling from 14% in 2022. “China’s access to [these high-end chipmaking] machines is key to its commercialization of 7-nanometer logic chips,” they added. “China has been aggressively buying semiconductor equipment to build out production lines in both advanced and mature nodes,” according to Jefferies.
Persons: Xi Jinping, Mark Rutte, ASML, ” Xi, Rutte, Wang Wentao, Geoffrey van Leeuwen, ” Wang, , ” Jefferies, Jefferies Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Dutch, United, , Dutch Trade, Huawei, China’s Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation Locations: Hong Kong, China, Netherlands, Beijing, United States, Europe
Piper Sandler is concerned the S & P 500 is due for a correction, and it has dumped Nvidia from its model portfolio. The S & P 500 is on pace to close out its best quarter since 2019. "We believe the SPX is vulnerable to a 5%-10% pullback/correction in the coming weeks," Johnson added. .SPX 1D mountain S & P 500 Significantly, Johnson removed Nvidia from his model portfolio, the AI beneficiary that has soared more than 80% this year and has been one of the primary drivers of gains in the S & P 500. As a whole, the Wall Street firm reduced the equity exposure in its model portfolio to 90% from 98%.
Persons: Piper Sandler, Craig Johnson, Johnson, It's Organizations: Nvidia, Dow Jones, Micron Technology, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Wall
Investors looking to bet on the artificial intelligence boom may want to take a look at Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing , according to JPMorgan. Analyst Gokul Hariharan reiterated his overweight rating on the semiconductor maker, a supplier to chip majors such as Nvidia , Advanced Micro Devices and Qualcomm , saying that "all roads in AI semis lead" to the company. Within the next three to four years, Hariharan expects Taiwan Semiconductor to maintain its greater-than 90% market share of AI-connected processor silicon. By 2026, he forecasts the company's revenues can hit $119 billion, driven by robust growth in high-performance computing as AI training and inference demand grows. A solid setup for the company's 3 nanometer process technology for chipmakers such as Nvidia should also benefit revenues.
Persons: Gokul Hariharan, Hariharan Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, JPMorgan, Nvidia, Devices, Qualcomm, Taiwan Semiconductor, SOX, AMD, Broadcom, Marvell, Hariharan Locations: Taiwan
All that changed three years ago, when a global chip shortage and rising geopolitical tension turbocharged growth at TSMC. TSMC set up the Newcomer Training Center inside a sprawling science park in the city of Taichung in central Taiwan in 2021. “After many years, what we want to do is to gradually reduce assignees [and] increase the local hires.”The Newcomer Training Center opened in 2021. The soaring demand, particularly for chips that power AI, has created a shortage of talent for the semiconductor industry. Countries compete for this talent.”TSMC’s Ho said a shortage of talent is one of the main challenges the company faces.
Persons: Taiwan CNN —, , TSMC, Joe Biden, , Marcus Chen, ” Lora Ho, John Mees, Stewart Randall, ” TSMC’s Ho, Ho, Kristy Hsu, , it’s, ” Ho, “ It’s, — CNN’s Juliana Liu Organizations: Taiwan CNN, Moore’s, Apple, Nvidia, AMD, CNN, , Training, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, IC, Taiwan ASEAN Studies Center, Economic Research Locations: Taichung, Taiwan, TSMC, Arizona, fabs, United States, Japan, Germany, China, Washington, Kumamoto, Phoenix , Arizona, Dresden, Europe
A logo hangs on the building of the Beijing branch of Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation (SMIC) on December 4, 2020 in Beijing, China. When asked by Representative Michael McCaul if SMIC broke U.S. export rules to produce the sophisticated chip, Alan Estevez, who oversees export policy, said "potentially yes. Questions have surfaced about whether SMIC illegally obtained U.S. tools to make the chip. That comes amid growing pressure from China hardliners to take action against the two companies since Huawei unveiled a new phone powered by a sophisticated chip manufactured at SMIC in August. When asked about SMIC's ability to produce the chip for Huawei using American tools, Estevez said, "I can't talk about any investigations that may or may not be going.
Persons: Biden, SMIC, Michael McCaul, Alan Estevez, Estevez, Trump, Donald Trump Organizations: Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corporation, Visual China, Getty, Commerce Department, Huawei, SMIC Locations: Beijing, China
India wants to be among the world's top five semiconductor producers in the next five years, said Ashwini Vaishnaw, minister of electronics and information technology, railways and communications. The chip industry "is a very complex market, and global value chains and global supply chains are extremely complex in the current context," Vaishnaw said on CNBC's Street Signs Asia on Friday. As of December, Taiwan holds about 46% of global semiconductor foundry capacity, followed by China (26%), South Korea (12%), the U.S. (6%) and Japan (2%), according to market intelligence firm TrendForce. I call it 'trust shoring' because there is a global trust in India," Vaishnaw said. "A lot of our chips are designed in India, and that presence in India is also creating opportunities for a number of Indian companies."
Persons: Ashwini Vaishnaw, Vaishnaw, Narendra Modi, Frank Huang, Rajeev Chandrasekhar Organizations: Qualcomm, CNBC, Tata Electronics, Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, PSMC, Economic Times Locations: India, Taiwan, China, South Korea, U.S, Japan, Chennai
Investors see the event as a bellwether for artificial intelligence, as Nvidia is expected to unveil new products and updates. Alphabet , Apple — Shares of the Google parent company gained nearly 7% following a Bloomberg report that said Apple was discussing licensing Alphabet's Gemini artificial intelligence engine into the iPhone. Apple climbed roughly 2%. PepsiCo — The beverage stock rose nearly 4% after an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley . PepsiCo's business fundamentals should bottom out early this year and then rebound in the second half, according to Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Apple, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, Uber, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Nvidia —, Conference, Investors, Nvidia, National Association of Realtors, realtors ., , Google, Bloomberg, Apple, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Reuters, Bank of America, PepsiCo, Technologies Locations: San Francisco, Japan
Google — Alphabet Class A shares were trading 5.6% higher following a Bloomberg report that said Apple is in talks with Google to license and build its Gemini artificial intelligence engine into future iPhones. Nvidia — The stock moved 2.7% higher ahead of its highly-anticipated GTC Conference , where the chipmaker is expected to announce various AI updates. HashiCorp — Shares jumped 9.8% on news that the San Francisco-based software provider has been considering options including a sale. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing — The U.S.-listed shares gained 1.5% after a Reuters report , citing sources familiar, said Taiwan Semiconductor is deliberating building advanced packaging capacity in Japan. Tesla — Shares rose 3.2% even after Goldman Sachs cut its price target on Tesla by $30 to $190 as the electric vehicle maker faces issues with rising competition and slower demand.
Persons: Apple, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Bloomberg, Google, Nvidia, Conference, HSBC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Taiwan Semiconductor, Tesla Locations: San Francisco, U.S, Taiwan, Japan
Worker walks outside the new semiconductor plant by Japan Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (JASM), a subsidiary of Taiwan's chip giant TSMC, in Kikuyo of the Kikuchi district, Kumamoto prefecture. Taiwan's TSMC is looking at building advanced packaging capacity in Japan, according to two sources familiar with the matter, a move that would add momentum to Japan's efforts to reboot its semiconductor industry. Taiwan's TSMC is looking at building advanced packaging capacity in Japan, according to two sources familiar with the matter, a move that would add momentum to Japan's efforts to reboot its semiconductor industry. One option the chipmaking giant is considering is bringing its chip on wafer on substrate, or CoWoS, packaging technology to Japan, according to one of the sources who was briefed on the matter. Demand for advanced semiconductor packaging has surged globally in tandem with the artificial intelligence boom, spurring chipmakers including TSMC, Samsung Electronics and Intel , to boost capacity.
Persons: TSMC Organizations: Japan Advanced Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, TSMC, Samsung Electronics, Intel Locations: Japan, Kikuyo, Kikuchi, Kumamoto prefecture, Taiwan's, Taiwan
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