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

Search resuls for: "Brian Colello"


8 mentions found


Morningstar has urged investors to shift their focus away from the much-hyped AI chip sector. Instead, the equity research firm highlighted four traditional semiconductor makers it considers undervalued, with two picks potentially offering more than 70% upside. However, the firm's latest research note suggested that investors might find better opportunities outside the AI chip frenzy. Morningstar's top picks include Infineon Technologies and STMicroelectronics : Infineon Infineon Technologies , Germany's largest semiconductor manufacturer, stands to benefit from the increasing electrification of vehicles and the rise of electric cars, according to Morningstar. Morningstar expects Infineon shares to rise by 70% over the next 12 months to 50 euros a share ($54.90).
Persons: Morningstar, we're, Brian Colello Organizations: Nvidia, Infineon Technologies, Infineon Infineon Technologies, Infineon, Morningstar, STM STMicroelectronics, U.S Locations: United States
It's also common to draw parallels between the dot-com bubble and today's hype, leading investors to wonder if there's an AI bubble that's about to pop, too. Goldman Sachs' big AI headline of the month is "To buy, or not to buy, that is the question." The note from September 5, led by Peter Oppenheimer, suggests the answer is "to buy" but also to diversify. And the third is the application providers, which are the companies creating services for end users to harness AI. It comes from machine learning or big data workloads that various companies and governments use, Belton noted.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Peter Oppenheimer, John Belton, doesn't, Brian Colello, Nancy Tengler, that's, it's, Tengler, Wall, Larry Ellison, Colello, Belton Organizations: Service, Business, Gabelli Funds, Morningstar Equity Research, Investments, Nvidia, Companies, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle, IBM, Broadcom, AMD, Cadence Design Systems, Google, AWS, Eaton Corporation Locations: GenAI, Belton
But the next bottleneck in AI infrastructure — and one to invest in — is networking, according to tech analysts. An increase in investment in generative AI model training and inference will drive the AI networking spending growth of 34% over the next five years, said the firm. "Networking creates a performance bottleneck for generative AI model development," Morningstar's analysts said. "Well-positioned networking firms are a great second derivative play to invest in generative AI," they added. Stocks to play the trend Marvell Technology is Morningstar's top pick to play the generative AI networking trend, with the firm saying it is "attractively undervalued" currently and giving investors an "immediately opportunity" to tap rising generative AI networking investment.
Persons: There's, Clare Pleydell, William D, Kerwin, Brian Colello, Morningstar, Bouverie Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Networking, Morningstar, Liontrust Asset Management, CNBC, That's, Marvell, Arista Networks, Broadcom, Arista, Meta
In the last 15 months, Wall Street analysts have hailed generative AI as the most impactful innovation in decades and compared its theoretical impact to that of the internet. While the full impact of AI isn't clear yet, companies are under immense pressure to convince investors that they're not falling behind. "We can't envision any of these large cloud companies or consumer companies pulling back on AI spending anytime soon," Colello said. UBS"This is not always a harbinger of slowing revenue growth and a concentrated H200/B100 launch could be adding to near-term opex," Arcuri wrote in a recent note. AdvertisementDespite what Nvidia's recent performance suggests, Wall Street is notoriously tough to please.
Persons: , Morgan Stanley, Steve Sosnick, Wedbush's Dan Ives, who's, Marcelli, they're, Sosnick, Brian Colello, Colello, They're, we're, Vivek Arya, Arya, Michael Landsberg, Landsberg, Jason Draho, Draho, Timothy Arcuri, Arcuri Organizations: Service, Wall Street, Business, Nvidia, Interactive, Bulls, Bank of America, Wedbush Securities, UBS, UBS Global Wealth Management, Morningstar, Landsberg Bennett, Wealth Management
REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsNov 1 (Reuters) - Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD.O) jumped 8% on Wednesday, after an upbeat AI chip sales forecast signaled the company was making progress in its bid to catch up with market leader Nvidia (NVDA.O). The optimism over AI chip sales helped ease worries about a disappointing fourth-quarter forecast and put it on course for market value gains of nearly $13 billion, based on the $106.41 share price. CEO Lisa Su on Tuesday provided a 2024 sales forecast for the first time for the MI300 chips, designed to compete against the advanced H100 chips sold by Nvidia. That would make the MI300 the fastest product to ramp to $1 billion in sales in AMD's history. The CEO also said the MI300 chips had won commitments from "multiple, large hyperscale customers", a term that refers to large tech and cloud computing companies.
Persons: Florence Lo, Lisa Su, TD Cowen, Morningstar, Brian Colello, Samrhitha, Sriraj Organizations: Devices Inc, REUTERS, Micro Devices, Nvidia, Thomson Locations: Bengaluru
Semiconductors are looking undervalued, thanks to the selloff in some parts of the sector, according to Morningstar. That's even more undervalued than the wider tech sector, which it believes is 5% undervalued. Morningstar noted such stocks have sold off a little in September, especially in analog and mixed signal names — two types of chips in the semiconductor industry — and even in artificial intelligence chipmakers. Outside the AI sector, the firm also likes autos, expecting more chips to be used in cars, especially electric vehicles, in the years to come. That will enable the company to achieve high single-digit long term revenue growth, Morningstar said.
Persons: Morningstar, Brian Colello, Jack Keegan, it's Organizations: Nvidia, Infineon Technologies, NXP Semiconductors, Qualcomm, Morningstar, Skyworks Locations: Taiwan
There are no more "sell" ratings for Nvidia on Wall Street following its strong second-quarter earnings. Get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in business, from Wall Street to Silicon Valley — delivered daily. Morningstar Research analyst Brian Colello upgraded Nvidia to "hold" from its Wall Street-equivalent rating of "sell" in a note on Wednesday. Such growth might be unprecedented in large-cap tech, but we foresee all types of enterprises investing in AI," Colello said. According to data compiled by Bloomberg, Wall Street has 54 "buy" ratings and five "hold" ratings on Nvidia stock.
Persons: Morningstar, Brian Colello, Colello, Stifel's Ruben Roy, Roy Organizations: Nvidia, Wall, Service, Morningstar Research, Bloomberg Locations: TSMC, Wall, Silicon, Colello
Right now the cheapest stocks are in the communication services sector, where they are currently trading 43% below Morningstar's fair value estimates. Healthcare and real estate stocks also seem undervalued, trading 11% and 25%, respectively, below fair price estimates. Within the sector software stocks are trading at a 23% discount, semiconductor stocks are 12% undervalued, and hardware stocks are 15% undervalued, according to Morningstar sector director Brian Colello. On the other hand, consumer defensives and industrials seem to be starting 2023 off trading around fair value, while utilities stocks currently look about 5% overvalued. These stocks are listed below, along with each firm's ticker, market capitalization, sector, and price over fair value estimate.
Total: 8