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Hedge fund billionaire David Tepper's bet on China involved increasing his exposure to the leading e-commerce companies in the world's second-largest economy, according to the latest securities filing. Tepper's Appaloosa Management more than doubled its position in Temu parent PDD Holdings in the third quarter, according to the hedge fund's quarterly filing. Between Alibaba , PDD and JD.com , Appaloosa held roughly $2 billion of Chinese e-commerce stocks at the end of September. The quarterly hedge fund filing released Thursday showed only positions in U.S.-traded equities, including American depositary receipts, and some derivatives. PDD 6M mountain Chinese stocks like PDD Holdings have been volatile in recent months.
Persons: David Tepper's, Tepper, Stocks, Donald Trump's Organizations: Management, PDD Holdings, CNBC, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Wynn Resorts, iShares FTSE, iShares FTSE China ETF, Vistra Corp, NRG Energy, Amazon, Microsoft, UPS, Boeing, U.S . PDD Holdings, National Football League's Carolina Panthers Locations: China, PDD, Alibaba, iShares FTSE China, Lyft, U.S
The "Big Short" investor raised his stakes in Alibaba, Baidu, and JD.com but also hedged the wagers. Burry didn't add any new names to his stock portfolio but exited a couple in the period. AdvertisementMichael Burry doubled down on three of China's biggest technology companies last quarter, boosting his stakes while carefully hedging his bets. The investor of "The Big Short" fame bolstered his Alibaba position by 29% to 200,000 shares worth around $21 million at the end of September, a quarterly portfolio filing revealed on Thursday. The Scion Asset Management boss doubled his JD.com stake to 500,000 shares worth $20 million at quarter end, and purchased put options on the same number of shares.
Persons: Michael Burry, , bearish, Trump, aren't, He's, Burry Organizations: Baidu, Service, Scion Asset Management, Molina Healthcare, Shift4, Hudson Pacific Properties, American Coastal Insurance, GameStop, Nasdaq, Apple, Nvidia Locations: Alibaba, BioAlta, TheRealReal
Burry, who now manages hedge fund Scion Asset Management, boosted his stakes in a few Chinese internet companies' ADRs, according to a regulatory filing. The trader added to his Alibaba bet by 29% to a stake worth more than $21 million, making it his largest position at the end of September. The widely followed investor also doubled his stake in JD.com , pushing it to become Scion's second-biggest holding, worth $20 million. Burry also increased his stake in Chinese search engine Baidu by 67% to a bet worth $13.2 million at the end of the third quarter. Burry was depicted in Michael Lewis' book " The Big Short " and the subsequent Oscar-winning movie of the same name.
Persons: Michael Burry, Burry, Michael Lewis, Molina Organizations: Asset Management, Baidu, Alibaba, American Coastal Insurance Corporation, Molina Healthcare, U.S . Securities, Exchange Locations: JD.com
He also increased his stake in JD.com by 8.2 million shares, or 33,490%, and PDD Holdings by roughly 2.28 million shares, or 741%. Laffont also created new positions in iShares China Large-Cap ETF and KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF . Laffont also made a couple of significant increases to the fund's holdings in Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk . Facebook parent Meta still remains the fund's largest holding, while Amazon, Microsoft and Nvidia remain in the fund's top 10. The filing also showed increased bets on Eaton Corporation, a name closely tied to the artificial intelligence-related energy infrastructure boom, as well as Constellation Energy and NextEra Energy .
Persons: Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Julian Robertson, Laffont, Donald Trump's, Xi Jinping, Eli Lilly Organizations: Philippe Laffont's Coatue Management, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Tiger Management, PDD Holdings, KraneShares CSI China Internet, Novo Nordisk, Novo Nordisk's ADRs, Broadcom, Microsoft, Nvidia, chipmakers Qualcomm, Devices, Taiwan Semiconductor, Facebook, Amazon, Eaton Corporation, Constellation Energy, NextEra Energy Locations: Alibaba, JD.com, iShares China, China, Novo, chipmakers
HONG KONG — Businesses and consumers in China found the annual Singles’ Day shopping festival less attractive this year due to a sluggish economy, forcing e-commerce firms to look abroad for growth. While Singles’ Day was previously a one-day event, shopping platforms in China now kickstart the festival weeks ahead to drum up sales volume. But amid China’s lagging domestic economy, dragged down by a real estate crisis and deflationary pressures, consumers no longer go all out during the shopping extravaganza. Wang said that the prices offered on e-commerce platforms during Singles’ Day are not necessarily cheaper than usual. “I used to buy a lot two or three years ago and I even purchased a mobile phone (during Singles’ Day),” he said.
Persons: Alibaba, , , , Wang Haihua, Wang, we’ve, Zhang Jiewei, ” Zhang, Shaun Rein, ” Rein, Gucci, Jacob Cooke, ” Cooke Organizations: HONG KONG —, China Market Research Group Locations: HONG KONG, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Beijing, Xi’an, Shanghai,
BEIJING — China's Singles' Day shopping festival saw consumers spend more than expected in what has otherwise been a tepid retail environment, consulting executives told CNBC. "I do think for many brands it probably will have turned out a bit better than they thought, but on a low level. Probably nobody would say we hit it out of the ballpark," said Chris Reitermann, CEO of Ogilvy APAC and Greater China. Many multinational corporations that sell consumer products in China are more cautious on the market, if not struggling, Reitermann said. But he pointed out many of the companies are still "very profitable" in the country, even if their growth has slowed to the low single digits, instead of high double digits.
Persons: Major, Chris Reitermann, Ogilvy APAC, Reitermann, Alibaba, JD.com Organizations: BEIJING, CNBC, WPP China Locations: Greater China, China, GMV
Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Performance since Nov. 1 closeThe stock market reaction Wednesday to Republican Donald Trump's victory over Democrat Kamala Harris was swift and powerful, sending the Dow , the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq to all-time highs. For the week, consumer discretionary, energy, industrials, financials, and information technology were the top five sectors. Only time will tell how the balance of power will play out and whether it's good or bad for the stock market. Barring anything catastrophic, President Joe Biden and Vice President Harris will hand Trump the baton of a healthy economy with moderating inflation and a strong stock market. Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon Disney YTDDisney reports before the bell Thursday, and its experiences business will be in focus as it has softened recently due to the recent hurricane activity that forced closures at Florida theme park locations and inflation-weary consumers.
Persons: Donald Trump, Jerome Powell, Drew Angerer, Republican Donald Trump's, Kamala Harris, Dow, Jim Cramer, Wells Fargo Morgan Stanley, Trump, Joe Biden, Harris, FactSet, Helene, Milton, we're, Disney's, Tyson, JD.com Organizations: Federal, White House, Republican, Dow, Nasdaq, Staples, Honeywell, White, Capitol, Republicans, NBC News, Trump, Depot, Disney, CPI, PPI, Home Depot, Summer, IAC, Hertz, Tyson Foods, TSN, AstraZeneca, Occidental Petroleum, Rocket Companies, Cisco, Parts Locations: Washington ,, financials, Washington, inflect, Florida, Paris
Classic luxury, which Ralph Lauren encapsulates, is resonating with Chinese consumers. "I've said it before but it bears repeating in a volatile environment, Ralph Lauren is firmly on offense," Patrice Louvet, the CEO of Ralph Lauren, said on a conference call with analysts on Thursday. Ralph Lauren classics like Polo shirts and cable-knit sweaters are a hit with Chinese consumers. Ralph Lauren targets Chinese consumers in six key cities and on local Chinese social media platforms. Sebastian Ng/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty ImagesWith its brick-and-mortar stores, Ralph Lauren has prospered by doing more with less.
Persons: Ralph Lauren, , Ralph Lauren's, I've, Patrice Louvet, Xi Jinping's, Neil Saunders, Edward Berthelot, Martin, Louvet, Ralph Lauren doesn't, Zers, Sebastian Ng, Olivia Plotnick, Roll, Donald Trump's, It's Organizations: Service, New, GlobalData, McKinsey, Getty, Wai, China Locations: Asia, China, New York City, China China, Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Milan, China —, Beijing, Chengdu
China's e-commerce giants stopped reporting Singles Day GMV in 2022 during the pandemic. Singles Day GMV this year as of Oct. 30 was 845 billion yuan ($119.1 billion), according to research firm Syntun. Subsidies boost appliancesHelping boost sales this Singles Day are China's subsidies for trade-ins of home appliances, launched in late July. They predict 4% to 5% growth in Singles Day GMV, with sales in the home appliance category supported by the trade-in program. "Something that kind of came out of nowhere, into all of a sudden really, really big numbers."
Persons: Alibaba, Jacob Cooke, JD's, ByteDance's Douyin, Cooke, Louis Vuitton, we've, UOB Kay Hian, JD.com, Dave Xie, Oliver Wyman, Xie, There's, Liang, Chiikawa, Taobao, Tmall Organizations: Visual China, Getty, Alibaba, Technologies, CNBC, Louis Locations: Lianyungang, Jiangsu Province, China, BEIJING, Asia, Alibaba, British
As China's biggest shopping festival of the year gets underway, analysts are starting to favor Chinese logistics companies as a way to play the online shopping trend. The JPMorgan report initiated coverage of U.S.-listed ZTO Express , which the analysts said is China's largest express parcel player with more than 20% of the market. ZTO YTD mountain ZTO Express shares in the U.S. in 2024. Morgan Stanley is less bullish, rating J & T equal-weight while citing competitive risks in China and potential challenges in Southeast Asia. "Cuts on overseas profitability outlook has weakened our investment thesis," the Morgan Stanley analysts said.
Persons: JD.com, Morgan Stanley, ZTO, Morgan Stanley's, Nomura, Jet Li, Li, Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, YTO Express, STO Express, Yunda, T Global Express Ltd, ZTO's, ZTO Express, J, T Global Express, HK, Nomura, Hong Kong, Hong, CNBC Locations: Hong Kong, U.S, China, Southeast Asia, T Global Express Hong Kong
Hsu, founder and chairman of Rayliant Global Advisors, told CNBC's Pro Talks that Alibaba , JD.com , and Pinduoduo are among his top picks. If signs of consumption growth return to China, he suggested the stock could climb to $200 per share or double from current levels. BABA 1Y line Hsu said he views JD.com similarly to Alibaba, with his preference between the two mainly driven by valuation metrics. PDD Pinduoduo underperformed the broader Chinese stock market this year and has fallen by 14% so far this year. Baidu Not all Chinese technology stocks are equally attractive.
Persons: Jason Hsu, Hsu, CNBC's, BABA, CNBC's Tanvir Gill, JD.com, They've, , Evelyn Cheng Organizations: Rayliant Global Advisors, Baidu, Alibaba's, Wall Street, China Equity ETF, Google Locations: China, Beijing, Alibaba's New York
Humana , Cigna – Shares of both companies moved in opposite directions after Bloomberg, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that Cigna resumed merger talks with Humana. Humana gained more than 4% while Cigna fell a similar amount. UPS – Shares fell nearly 2% after a downgrade to underweight from equal weight at Barclays. Southwest Airlines – Shares dipped more than 1% before the market open. ASML – Shares fell more than 1% after Bernstein lowered its price target on the Dutch semiconductor equipment stock.
Persons: Johnson, Warby Parker, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Cigna, Humana, Bernstein, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Wall Street Journal, Johnson, Boeing, Bloomberg, Humana, , Barclays, Amazon, Southwest Airlines, Elliott Investment Management, CNBC Locations:
Piper Sandler reiterates Tesla as overweight Piper says it's sticking with Tesla heading into earnings later this week. Morgan Stanley initiates BioAge Labs at overweight Morgan Stanley says the biotech company is well positioned. " Goldman Sachs upgrades Warby Parker to buy from neutral Goldman sees customer growth for the eyewear company. Morgan Stanley reiterates Home Depot as overweight Morgan Stanley raised its price target on Home Depot to $450 per share from $380. Morgan Stanley downgrades ServiceNow to equal weight from overweight Morgan Stanley said that expectations are already priced in to the stock.
Persons: John Donovan, Piper Sandler, Tesla, Piper, it's bullish, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Warby Parker, Needham, Reddit, Gary Friedman, Jack Preston, Baird, TD Cowen, Cowen, Prologis, Goldman, Craig Felenstein, Jim Bombassei, Morgan Stanley downgrades ServiceNow Organizations: Deutsche Bank, GE Vernova, Deutsche, General Electric, BioAge, Barclays, UPS, FedEx, Dominion, Goldman, Nvidia, AMD, Mohawk Industries, JPMorgan, China EV, Catalyst, Bank of America, Fortune Locations: GitLab, NVDA, Europe, U.S, Las Vegas, China
Reddit — Shares rose more than 2% after Jefferies initiated research coverage with a buy rating and a Sreet-high price target. Rio Tinto , Arcadium Lithium — The two minerals stocks moved in opposite directions after the companies announced a deal for Rio Tinto to buy Arcadium for $5.85 per share. Shares of Rio Tinto dipped 1.2%, while shares of Arcadium surged 30%. GitLab — Shares rose 5% after Morgan Stanley initiated research coverage of the software stock with an overweight rating . Chewy — Shares rose nearly 2% after TD Cowen initiated research coverage of the pet products retailer with a buy rating.
Persons: Jefferies, Blackstone — Piper Sandler, Morgan Stanley, Sanjit Singh, Nio, TD Cowen, — CNBC's Sean Conlon, Lisa Han, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Boeing, Department, Rio Tinto, Federal, Cruise, Citigroup, Citi Locations: Rio, Arcadium, Nio —
China stocks – U.S.-listed shares of Chinese companies fell after China's state planner Zheng Shanjie failed to announce any new economic stimulus plans . Online video company Bilibili tumbled more than 13%, while automaker Nio and Temu parent PDD each fell more than 9%. E-commerce companies JD.com and Alibaba also fell nearly 9% and 7%, respectively. Wells Fargo – The bank rose more than 1% after Wolfe Research upgraded the lender to outperform from peer perform. Humana – Shares rose nearly 1% after Bernstein upgraded the health insurer to outperform from market perform.
Persons: Zheng Shanjie, Bilibili, Nio, Alibaba, Young Liu's, Liu, Wells, Bernstein, Oppenheimer, LSEG, , Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: U.S, Wynn Resorts, China, MDU Resources, Nvidia, Blackwell, Wolfe Research, Microsoft –, PepsiCo –, Gatorade, Frito, PepsiCo Locations: China, Las, Macau, Wells
China stocks – U.S.-listed shares of Chinese companies fell after Beijing's economic planning agency failed to announce any new major stimulus plans . Online video company Bilibili fell 13%, while automaker Nio and Temu parent PDD tumbled about 6% each. Humana — Shares jumped 2.8% after Bernstein upgraded the beaten-down health insurance company to outperform, even though it substantially decreased its price target. Roblox — Shares fell 4% after Hindenburg Research disclosed a short position on the gaming platform, alleging the company inflated metrics. BTIG upgraded Affirm to buy , with analyst Vincent Caintic lauding the company's growth compared to traditional payment companies like American Express.
Persons: Bilibili, Nio, Young Liu, Blackwell, Bernstein, Roblox, David Byrnes, Byrnes, Jefferies, there's, BTIG, Vincent Caintic, CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh, Sean Conlon, Alex Harring Organizations: U.S, Vegas Sands, Wynn Resorts, MDU Resources, Super, Nvidia, CNBC, Hindenburg Research, Waters, Jefferies, American Locations: China, Vegas, Macau
After all of these years, after all of the rather incredible rallies and gains in the stock market from so many groups, the typical morning still starts with a bevy of negativity. We hear about OpenAI and its brilliant $167 billion valuation , but we don't see any stock available to public-market investors. I have been furious at myself for thinking the Chinese government couldn't do anything about the country's struggling stock market. The Chinese stock market has been rallying nicely since the stimulus announcements. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: , Elon Musk, he's, isn't, Carl Quintanilla, David Tepper, holler, That's, that's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Spencer Platt Organizations: Federal Reserve, Walmart, Fed, SpaceX, Nike, Walgreens, CVS Health, Club, GE Healthcare, Wynn Resorts, Chinese Communist Party, Apple, PDD Holdings, JD.com, Baidu, Diamondback Energy, Exxon Mobil, CNBC, New York Stock Exchange, Getty Locations: U.S, China, , New York City
Beijing's rare stimulus blitz unleashed newfound optimism from hedge fund investors, who have been piling into beaten-down Chinese stocks like never before. Hedge funds started flocking to Chinese stocks after the government announced a flood of stimulus measures in a bid to revive growth and avoid a deep slump in the world's second largest economy. The high-profile investor even said he's raising his usual allocation limit and is not hedging his big China bet. He dove into Chinese internet stocks last quarter as Burry's hedge fund, Scion Asset Management, made Alibaba its top holding at the end of June. KWEB 5D mountain KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF Beijing's big stimulus also prompted BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager, to upgrade Chinese stocks to overweight — with a caveat.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, David Tepper, Tepper, Burry It's, bullish, Nick Wilcox, Michael Burry, Stanley Druckenmiller, he's Organizations: Appaloosa Management, CNBC, China . Man, Man, Scion Asset Management, Baidu, CSI China, BlackRock, U.S Locations: China, Taiwan
People walk on a pedestrian bridge displaying the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock indexes on January 02, 2024 in Shanghai, China. Exchange-traded funds overseas that track Chinese stocks continued their stimulus-triggered rally Wednesday even as mainland markets were shut for a week-long holiday. Mainland Chinese markets, including Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges, will remain closed until Oct. 8. "I am bullish on Chinese equities; this time is different," Scott Rubner, tactical specialist at Goldman Sachs, said in a note. "I have never seen this much daily demand for Chinese equities: I do not even think we have gone back to benchmark index weights yet."
Persons: Scott Rubner, Goldman Sachs, David Tepper, JD.com Organizations: Exchange, Hong Kong Stock Exchange, Management, CNBC Locations: Shanghai, Shenzhen, China, Mainland, Beijing
Tesla — Shares declined about 4% after the electric vehicle company fell short of third-quarter delivery estimates . Chinese stocks — Chinese stocks continued to rally on the back of sweeping stimulus measures in the country. Lamb Weston Holdings — Shares of the french fry giant rose more than 2% after its fiscal first quarter topped estimates. Analysts surveyed by LSEG expected 72 cents per share in earnings and $1.56 billion in revenue. The company posted revenue of $2.79 billion, versus a FactSet estimate of $2.84 billion.
Persons: Humana, That's, JD.com, Davidson, Lamb, Lamb Weston, LSEG, CNBC's Lisa Han, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Sean Conlon Organizations: Nike, Exchange, KraneShares CSI China Internet, Baird, Lamb Weston Holdings —, Barclays, Endeavor Energy Resources, Conagra
Humana – Shares plunged more than 22% after the healthcare company announced dire preliminary Medicare Advantage data for 2025. China stocks – Shares of Chinese companies continued to gain amid the broader stimulus rally . Diamondback Energy – The oil stock rose 3% following an upgrade to overweight from equal weight at Barclays. Energy stocks – Shares of energy companies rose following Iran's missile attack on Israel . APA Corp and Marathon Oil both rose more than 2%, and Occidental Petroleum rose more than 1%.
Persons: PDD, Alibaba, Lamb Weston –, Lamb, Betty Jiang, Diamondback, Dan Arnold, Rich Steinmeier, Davidson, , Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Nike –, Nike, Li Auto, Baidu, Diamondback Energy, Barclays, Endeavor Energy Resources, LPL, LPL Financial, Baird, Energy, APA Corp, Marathon Oil, Occidental Petroleum Locations: China, Israel
Investors have been watching tech stocks keenly in the past year, amid a significant bout of volatility in the sector. Morningstar's top strategist, however, has an underweight on the sector and is staying clear of several Big Tech names. On Oracle, Sekera believes the market is "overestimating the long-term growth for their cloud business." Morningstar has a one star rating on the the stock. 'Hitting on all cylinders' There is one Big Tech stock that Sekera still likes: Microsoft .
Persons: David Sekera, CNBC's, Morningstar, Sekera, — CNBC's Jordan Novet Organizations: Big Tech, U.S . Markets, Tech, Apple, Oracle, IBM, Morningstar, Microsoft, Baidu, Yum Locations: U.S, China, Yum China
The S&P 500 is up about 1.5% in September. Below are our investors of the month for September. AdvertisementStocks had a tough first week of September, with the S&P 500 tumbling more than 4%, thanks partly to a mediocre August jobs report. As of Friday, the S&P 500 was up around 1.5% in September, bucking the month's historical downward trend. Below are our investors of the month for September, including managers of the top US-focused and international-focused funds, as well as the "Holy Shit" fund of the month, which is the best-performing overall fund.
Persons: , Stocks, Dow Jones, Malcolm R, Fobes, Peter Hubbard, Benoit Autier, Jeff Klearman Organizations: Service, Federal Reserve, Google Finance, Investor, Focus, Nvidia, Broadcom Investor, Invesco, Dragon China Locations: Lipper, China
The e-commerce giant's shares in Hong Kong are around 18% higher this week. Chinese tech stocks, including beaten-down names like Alibaba, rallied this week, hitting highs not seen in more than a year after China's central bank announced measures to stimulate the world's second-largest economy. Prior to the cuts, investors had been cautious on Chinese tech stocks like Alibaba and Meituan which are sensitive to the economy and consumer in China. However, big-name investor have started to strike a bullish tone on Chinese stocks. Despite the latest upswing, Chinese tech stocks remain significantly off their all-time highs hit in 2021.
Persons: Alibaba, David Tepper, Evelyn Cheng Organizations: Hong, Hang Seng Tech, Hong Kong, People's Bank of, Billionaire, CNBC, U.S . Federal Reserve, Baidu Locations: U.S, Hong Kong, People's Bank of China, China
David Tepper is growing even more bullish on Chinese stocks amid the nation's new fiscal stimulus measures. Tepper views China's stock market as more attractive than the US stock market due to valuation differences. AdvertisementIt's a buy "everything" moment for Chinese stocks after the country launched a fiscal stimulus bazooka this week, according to billionaire investor David Tepper. But Tepper believes Chinese stocks have plenty of room to run higher, even after the recent surges. On US markets, Tepper said he is not following his buy "everything" mantra with Chinese stocks and is being more selective in buying US stocks.
Persons: David Tepper, Tepper, , Pan Gongsheng, Donald Trump, he's Organizations: Service, CNBC, Fed, Federal, People's Bank of China, PDD Holdings, Tencent Holdings, Management, Wynn Resorts, Vegas Sands, Baidu, China Internet Locations: China, Vegas
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