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Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via Email'Pretty low' expectations for Europe's third-quarter earnings season, fund manager saysClare Pleydell-Bouverie, fund manager at Liontrust Asset Management, discusses the macroeconomic outlook in the U.S. and Europe and says that the expectations for Europe’s third-quarter earnings season are “pretty low.”
Persons: Clare Pleydell Organizations: Liontrust Asset Management Locations: U.S, Europe
Pleydell-Bouverie: Neutral policy with 25-point cuts ahead.
  + stars: | 2024-10-10 | 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 EmailPleydell-Bouverie: Neutral policy with 25-point cuts ahead. Clare Pleydell-Bouverie, Fund Manager at Liontrust, expects modest Fed rate cuts as inflation cools and emphasizes Tesla's Robotaxi event as a key catalyst for the company's future in autonomous driving.
Persons: Clare Pleydell
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
Liontrust Asset Management's Clare Pleydell-Bouverie is looking beyond the headline-makers, however, to other companies set to gain from AI adoption. She said AI is set to remove "a lot of waste out of people's jobs," and bring about a "phenomenal productivity uplift." 'Higher customer conversion' Pleydell-Bouverie also said consumer-facing companies like French beauty and cosmetics label L'Oreal stand to gain from the adoption of AI. "They've pioneered beauty tech as an industry," she said, adding that the company's generative AI beauty assistant system has a 60% higher customer conversion than in-store advisors. The analysts have an average price of $450.25 on L'Oreal, giving it slightly downside potential.
Persons: Clare Pleydell, CNBC's, Bouverie, They've Organizations: Big Tech, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, Microsoft, Liontrust Global Technology Fund, Technology, JPMorgan Chase, JPMorgan, L'Oreal, Euronext Locations: Euronext Paris, U.S
Chipmaker Nvidia is clearly the poster child for artificial intelligence, according to one portfolio manager — but she says another firm is being overlooked. "[We] think of Nvidia as the poster child for AI chips, and they are. But, [Broadcom] was another company that posted over a billion in revenue from AI chips," Pleydell-Bouverie told CNBC's Pro Talks . For the first quarter , Broadcom said revenue came in at $11.96 billion , topping analysts' forecasts of $11.72 billion. AVGO YTD mountain Year-to-date share movement in Broadcom Pleydell-Bouverie flagged that the company has a "leading position" in segments like custom ASICs (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits).
Persons: , Clare Pleydell, Bouverie, CNBC's, Hock Tan, Bernstein, Stacy Rasgon, Fred Imbert Organizations: Nvidia, Broadcom Inc, Broadcom, Nasdaq, Broadcom Pleydell, Circuits, Liontrust Global Technology Fund, Technology
Many companies are in the AI infrastructure buildout phase right now. That's because, in order to enable AI applications, companies have to make the switch from "general purpose computing to accelerated computing," she said. "You can't run AI on traditional compute, it would be prohibitively expensive, and far too energy intensive," said Pleydell-Bouverie. That's a 35% increase from last year, she said, and all this incremental investment is being directed to AI initiatives. And the world is "only in the first five minutes of this AI infrastructure buildout," she added.
Persons: Clare Pleydell, Bouverie, Meta Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Meta, Liontrust Asset Management, CNBC Pro, Google, Apple, JPMorgan, Liontrust Global Technology Fund, Technology
Cadence Design Systems , a U.S. company that provides electronic design software to chip makers, has been "completely missed" by investors, according to Clare Pleydell-Bouverie, fund manager at Liontrust. Liontrust's Global Technology Fund , with $265 million in assets, is invested in both stocks with around 3.3% allocated to each as of April 30. "Cadence is going to be the key enabler of this, and that's been completely missed by the market." Pleydell-Bouverie also pointed out that Cadence benefits from a "dual growth driver" — companies designing more chips to bring AI capabilities to consumers and Cadence using AI to improve its own chip design process and efficiency. Analysts remain broadly bullish on the stock, however , with 67% rating it as a buy and 28% maintaining a hold rating.
Persons: Clare Pleydell, CNBC's Arabile, Bouverie, Blackwell, that's Organizations: Cadence Design Systems, Cadence, Liontrust's Global Technology Fund, Palladium, Nvidia Locations: U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNBC Pro Talks: Beyond Nvidia: Outperforming fund manager reveals the top AI stocks to buyClare Pleydell-Bouverie, who co-manages Liontrust Asset Management’s global tech, innovation and dividend funds, revealed her favorite ways to play the themes of artificial intelligence, Big Tech and more.
Persons: Clare Pleydell Organizations: Big Tech
As the hype surrounding artificial intelligence shows no signs of abating, one tech fund manager is set to reveal her top ways to play the AI theme. On Wednesday's Pro Talks, Pleydell-Bouverie — who co-manages Lionstrust's global tech, innovation and dividend funds — will name companies that are "selling the picks and shovels for AI" and are "already making money." Pleydell-Bouverie manages the Liontrust Global Innovation, Liontrust Global Dividend and Liontrust Global Technology funds. Over the year to the end of March, all three funds have beaten their benchmark indexes, with the Liontrust Global Technology Fund rising 51.9%, compared to the MSCI World Information Technology Index's 39.1%. Learn more from our previous Pro Talks: Should investors buy the dip in Lululemon?
Persons: Clare Pleydell, Bouverie —, Bouverie Organizations: Liontrust, Management, Big Tech, Tech, Liontrust Global Technology, Liontrust Global Technology Fund, Technology, CNBC, Nvidia Locations: London, Singapore
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailDespite its high valuation, Nvidia is undervalued, says Clare Pleydell-BouverieClare Pleydell-Bouverie, Fund Manager at Liontrust Asset Management, discusses the Fed, tech stocks, and AI-enabled plays.
Persons: Clare Pleydell Organizations: Nvidia, Asset Management
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