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Along with the downgrade, Roach slashed her price target to $286 from $463. Along with the downgrade, Arya cut his price target to $23 from $35 a share. — Samantha Subin 6:15 a.m.: Apple results suggest 'best is yet to come,' support multiyear upgrade cycle The latest earnings report from Apple reaffirms analysts' confidence in the technology giant and a multiyear upgrade cycle when it launches its latest iPhone later this year. Bernstein's Mark Shmulik trimmed his price target by $5 to $210 a share but encouraged investors to use the sell-off as an entry point. His price target of $95, down from $99, implies downside of 6.6% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Henning Cosman, Cosman, — Samantha Subin, Goldman Sachs downgrades Lululemon, Goldman Sachs, Lululemon, Brooke Roach, Roach, LULU YTD, Vivek Arya, Arya, Samantha Subin, America's Wamsi Mohan, macOS, Samik Chatterjee, Citi's Atif Malik, Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi, Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak, ISI's Mark Mahaney, Bernstein's Mark Shmulik, Wells, downgrades Morgan Stanley Wells Fargo, Mike Mayo, Mayo, Morgan, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Barclays, Ferrari, Bank of America, Intel, AMD, Apple, Apple Intelligence, America's, Amazon, Web Services, North Locations: Europe, U.S, Lululemon
Investors may way to consider buying the dip in Amazon , according to some Wall Street analysts. A 'bright spot' in AWS Despite Thursday's disappointing results, many Wall Street analysts are finding the positive in the company's Amazon Web Services division. Many expect this business to continue gaining steam, with Susquehanna Financial Group's Shyam Patil referring to this acceleration as a "bright spot" in the results. Evercore ISI's Mark Mahaney referred to accelerating AWS growth as one of "three fundamental catalysts" for the stock. Bank of America's Justin Post named the stock the firm's top large cap picks, citing the AWS acceleration and opportunity within artificial intelligence.
Persons: Deutsche Bank's Lee Horowitz, Deutsche Bank's Horowitz, Mark Shmulik, Shyam Patil, Patil, Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak, Evercore, Mark Mahaney, Bank of America's Justin Post, We're, Doug Anmuth, Anmuth Organizations: Deutsche, Wall, Web Services, Susquehanna, Bank of America's
More important to Wall Street is the company's capital expenditures — or spending — as investors are demanding to see clear signs that hefty investments in AI are beginning to pay off . META 1M mountain Meta shares this month The intensified attention toward AI spending comes on the heels of Alphabet's quarterly print and during a "make-or-break" week with earnings from four tech behemoths. While Alphabet topped Wall Street estimates, its rising expenses spurred a sell-off across the sector. But Beck also sees Meta shares going higher as he raised his price target to $600. An uptick in advertising Wall Street is also keeping an eye on advertising figures this quarter, with Nowak viewing Meta as best situated to weather any uncertainty.
Persons: Wolfe Research's, Khajuria, Morgan Stanley, Brian Nowak, capex, Raymond James, Josh Beck, Beck, Wells, Ken Gawrelski, Nowak, Mark Shmulik, Deutsche Bank's Benjamin Black, bode, America's Justin Post Organizations: Meta, StreetAccount, Deutsche, America's, ~$ Locations: Paris
Alphabet investors may want to prepare for some volatility moving forward. However, shares fell about 5% as the company also reported lower-than-expected YouTube advertising revenue. On top of that, Alphabet highlighted plans to boost capital expenditures as it races to meet rising artificial intelligence demand. That is due in part to tough advertising comparisons amid the anniversary of a particular strong period for Asia and Pacific retailers. The move to 'future proof' business Some analysts and investors are reading the tea leaves with a positive tilt, however.
Persons: Ruth Porat, Sundar Pichai, Porat, Mark Shmulik, Brent Thill, Benjamin Black, Ross Sandler, Gene Munster, Goldman Sachs, Eric Sheridan, Bank of America's Justin Post, Truist's Youssef Squali, Citi's Ronald Josey Organizations: Jefferies, Deutsche Bank, Barclays, Bank of America's, DR Locations: Asia, Pacific
Big technology stocks may surprise to the upside when they report results in coming days. But even a better-than-expected quarter and companies' improved earnings and revenue forecasts may not be enough to save the market from its recent reversal, according to some professional investors. That continues Tuesday with results from Alphabet and Microsoft , followed by Meta Platforms on Wednesday and Amazon Thursday, all after the market closes. The earnings setup Heading into the earnings, many companies face easier comparisons over last year. Of the largest tech stocks, Meta Platforms is expected to show rapid revenue growth acceleration, at 21%.
Persons: Adam Sarhan, there's, Ken Mahoney, bode, Gene Munster, Bernstein's Mark Shmulik, Nvidia, Munster, Sarhan Organizations: Investments, Big Tech, Netflix, Microsoft, Meta, Federal, Asset Management, Federal Reserve Locations: what's, East, Europe
Amazon remains dominant in e-commerce and cloud computing with Amazon Web Services. "But what we've seen recently is a company simply pursuing too many ideas, with weaker ideas taking away the oxygen, capital, and most importantly focus from the truly disruptive initiatives that 'only Amazon can do.'" Amazon shares are up 50% year to date, but they've underperformed top peers by about 52% over a five-year period, he said. Amazon should "divest, seek outside funding, or trim spend" in health care and its nascent low Earth orbit satellite venture, called Project Kuiper, Shmulik wrote. He pointed to Amazon's multiyear effort to break into health care, before abandoning efforts like its Care telehealth service, Halo health and fitness band, and a joint health-care venture called Haven.
Persons: Bernstein, Andy Jassy, Mark Shmulik, , Google —, Shmulik, Jeff Bezos, Jassy, Bezos, irrelevance Organizations: Amazon Web, Microsoft, Google, Amazon Locations: New York, Haven
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailTikTok's regulatory scrutiny may be an opportunity for Meta, says Mighty Capital's SC MoattiBernstein's Mark Shmulik and Mighty Capital's SC Moatti, join 'Closing Bell: Overtime' to discuss META earnings as the company posted better-than-expected revenue.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailShmulik: You don't have to reach far to find good value in the communications services and large-cap Internet namesBernstein's Mark Shmulik discusses the outperformance of the communication services sector this year, and focuses in on Meta and how it could take back share from rivals in the ad market.
The latest round of job cuts at Meta Platforms is boosting Wall Street's confidence in the upside potential for earnings in the months and year ahead. It's another round of eliminations after Meta's announcement in November that it would be laying off 13% of its workforce. Despite the blow to workers, Wall Street views the latest round of layoffs as a sign that Meta Platforms is following through on these efficiency plans. Post called the company in a Tuesday note a "rare EPS upside story," saying that the cuts should set Meta up to generate higher profitability once the economy reaccelerates. Although Wall Street broadly praised the latest efficiency move from Meta, some analysts say there's more work to do.
But even with these near-term headwinds, analysts remain confident in the long-term thesis for the e-commerce giant and its growth trajectory. The results from Amazon come on the heels of a difficult 2022 that saw the e-commerce bellwether shed roughly half its value and post its slowest year of growth . At the same time, revenue for its Amazon Web Services division fell short of Wall Street's estimates and showed slowing sales growth as business spending dwindles. Moderating growth within the company's cloud unit marked one of the biggest concerns for analysts, but nowhere near a shock. Revenue growth came in at 20% for the quarter, and below the already slow 27.5% growth rate the company experienced in third quarter.
Analysts are willing to overlook Alphabet' s disappointing quarter in lieu of its artificial intelligence push and focus on costs. Shares of the search giant fell more than 4% after the company missed Wall Street's expectations for the fourth quarter. But, analysts lauded the company's focus on artificial intelligence as it faces mounting pressures from popularized Microsoft-backed chatbot ChatGPT . Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai said the company plans to release its LaMDA language model with search components "very soon." GOOGL 1D mountain GOOGL falls after earnings Analysts also cited some confidence in the company's push to reengineer its cost structure and reduce inefficiencies.
Watch CNBC's full interview with Bernstein's Mark Shmulik
  + stars: | 2023-02-02 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWatch CNBC's full interview with Bernstein's Mark ShmulikMark Shmulik, Bernstein analyst, joins 'TechCheck' to break down Meta as the stock skyrocketed after beating on earnings.
Improving Reels engagement is boosting analysts' confidence in the short-form video platform's ability to compete with TikTok. META 1D mountain Meta Platforms shares surged more than 28% Thursday, on pace for their best day since 2013. Looking ahead, some analysts believe that Reels plays a dominant role in improving Facebook's efficiency. Easing TikTok tensions As for TikTok, some analysts say Reels is in position to overtake the short-form video leader that finds itself under increasing pressure as calls for a nationwide bans grow. JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth views improving Reels engagement trends and artificial intelligence investments as a way to temper threats from TikTok.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailInvestors have been looking for tech to trim those overhires, says Bernstein's Mark ShmulikBernstein's Mark Shmulik joins 'TechCheck' to discuss warning signs of tech layoffs, overhiring in tech as the cost of capital increases, the value of Google's innovation build-out and the risks associated with misspending.
Amazon 's disappointing quarterly results signaled to analysts that even the giants aren't immune to a macro slowdown. Analysts trimmed price targets and estimates to reflect a broader macro slowdown at the e-commerce giant following the results, with analysts at Deutsche Bank and Wolfe Research saying it's time to "batten down the hatches." However, most analysts remain bullish on the company's long-term trajectory, maintaining their outperform and buy ratings on the stock. That said, analysts across the board trimmed price targets and estimates to reflect the broader macro pressures. He trimmed his price target on the stock to $137 from $157 a share, suggesting 23% upside ahead for the stocks.
Meta 's third-quarter results have Wall Street analysts split on the struggling tech stock. Morgan Stanley's Brian Nowak downgraded shares of Meta to equal weight from overweight after the results , and slashed its price target to $105 from $205. Cowen's John Blackledge downgraded Meta to market perform from outperform, and lowered his price target to $135 from $205 prior, citing the higher opex and capex trajectory. JPMorgan's Doug Anmuth slashed his Meta price target to $115 per share from $180, noting that it's unclear when the Facebook parent will see a return on its big metaverse and AI investments. Meanwhile, AllianceBernstein's Mark Shmulik, who maintained an outperform rating while lowering the price target to $135 from $195, said the "shocking cost guidance overshadows reasonable core."
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFacebook and Instagram are the two most downloaded apps worldwide this quarterBernstein's Mark Shmulik joins 'TechCheck' to discuss the decision to name Meta their top pick, citing improvements to revenue trajectory and global engagement while also acknowledging the company's need to cut spending.
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