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Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: VF Corporation — Shares jumped more than 22%. VF Corporation posted adjusted earnings of 60 cents per share on revenue of $2.76 billion. That is above the 37 cents per share in earnings and $2.71 billion in revenue that analysts surveyed by LSEG were expecting. The firm also upped the midpoint of its non-GAAP earnings per share forecast for the full year. F5 posted adjusted earnings of $3.67 per share and revenue of $747 million in the fiscal fourth quarter.
Persons: LSEG, Jim Conroy, Trex, FactSet, Xerox, Horton, Corning, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Samantha Subin, Sean Conlon, Alex Harring Organizations: , Cadence, BP — U.S, BP, Pfizer, JetBlue Airways —, JetBlue, LSEG, Xerox, FactSet, PayPal, Caribbean, Ford Locations: Corning
NXP Semiconductor — Shares added 0.8% after UBS upgraded the chipmaker to buy from neutral. Amazon — Shares slumped nearly 2% after Wells Fargo downgraded the e-commerce company to equal weight from overweight, citing slowing growth and competition from Walmart. Pfizer — Activist investor Starboard Value took a roughly $1 billion stake , seeking a turnaround at the struggling company, sources told CNBC. American Express — The financial services stock fell more than 1% after JPMorgan downgraded shares to neutral from overweight. Ally Financial — The financial services stock added 1.4% on the back of a JPMorgan upgrade to overweight from neutral.
Persons: Jefferies, Wells, Coty, Ashley Helgans, Bernstein, headwinds, Ally, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox Organizations: , Semiconductor, UBS, Walmart, Pfizer —, CNBC, Jefferies, Hershey, American Express, JPMorgan, Wynn Resorts, United Locations: Wells Fargo, underperform, GLP, United Arab Emirates
Generac Holdings — Shares of the maker of power generators surged 8% as Hurricane Milton intensified into a Category 5 storm . Amazon — The e-commerce stock lost 2.9% after Wells Fargo downgraded shares to equal weight from overweight and cut its price target, citing slowing growth and competition from Walmart. Hershey – Shares fell 2% after the chocolate maker was downgraded to neutral at UBS and to market perform at Bernstein. JPMorgan downgraded shares to underweight from neutral, citing dwindling confidence in the Israel-based company grapples with share loss concerns and volume challenge. JPMorgan downgraded shares to neutral, citing limited EPS upside from here.
Persons: Milton, Wells, Chubb, Morgan Stanley, Coty, Ashley Helgans, Arcadium, Bernstein, GLP, Ciena, , Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Sean Conlon, Pia Singh Organizations: Generac Holdings, Walmart, Pfizer —, CNBC, Insurance, , Allstate, Travelers, Progressive, Hurricane, Universal Insurance, Air Products, Chemicals, Garmin —, Garmin, Jefferies, Rio Tinto, Hershey –, UBS, Butterfly Equity, JPMorgan, Apple Locations: Florida, Hurricane Milton, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, Wells Fargo, California, Israel
Investors are ignoring two major risks to the market, according to Vahan Janjigian, chief investment officer at Greenwich Wealth Management. Geopolitical tensions and weak oil prices are the second risk, Janjigian said. He has been "surprised" that the Russia-Ukraine war, the Israel-Hamas conflict and weak oil prices haven't elicited a bigger reaction from the market. The International Energy Agency said in its recently monthly reports that global oil demand has been decelerating , adding that oil consumption in China — long the "engine of global oil demand growth" — contracted in April and May this year. In June, it added that Chinese oil demand contracted for a third consecutive month , driven by a slump in industrial activity.
Persons: Vahan Janjigian, CNBC's, Janjigian, , Pfizer —, he's Organizations: Greenwich Wealth Management, U.S, International Energy Agency, IEA, IBM, Verizon, Pfizer, FactSet, Nvidia Locations: U.S, United States, U.S . Federal, Russia, Ukraine, Israel, China
Revenue of $695 million was also higher than the $686 million expected. Adjusted earnings of 5 cents per share topped the loss of 2 cents per share forecasted by analysts polled by FactSet. Additionally, Howmet increased its quarterly dividend to 8 cents per share from 5 cents per share, to be payable Aug. 26. JetBlue — Shares jumped 4% after the airline said adjusted earnings per share was 8 cents for the second quarter. Analysts expected a profit of $2.80 per share on revenue of $1.18 billion, according to StreetAccount.
Persons: Woodward, FactSet, LSEG, Archer, Gamble —, Leidos, StreetAccount, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Fred Imbert, John Melloy Organizations: CNBC, Delta Airlines, Microsoft, FactSet, Inc, , Technology, Merck —, pharma, Semiconductor, Bank of America, Pfizer —, Pfizer, Varonis Systems, Howmet Aerospace, Corning, LSEG, Daniels, Midland, JetBlue —, Revenue, PayPal —, PayPal, Procter, Gamble, U.S . Pentagon Locations: FactSet .
Super Micro Computer — The server vendor dropped 15% after missing revenue expectations for its fiscal third quarter. However, Super Micro beat analysts' expectations for its adjusted earnings and hiked its revenue guidance for its fiscal 2024 year. Starbucks posted adjusted earnings of 68 cents per share on revenue of $8.56 billion. Pfizer now expects adjusted earnings of $2.15 to $2.35 per share for the full year, higher than its previous forecast of $2.05 to $2.25 per share. Yum Brands — The fast-food giant lost nearly 4% after it reported quarterly adjusted earnings and revenue that missed analysts' expectations.
Persons: Joseph Otting, , Cowen, Skyworks, SiriusXM, Goldman Sachs, Powell, Estée Lauder —, Estée Lauder, Kraft Heinz, Pinterest's, Alex Harring, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox Organizations: New York Community Bank, Super Micro, Starbucks, Pfizer, Apple, Amazon Web Services, CVS, Powell Industries, Wall, LSEG, Brands, KFC, Pizza, Taco, JPMorgan Locations: Houston, Taco Bell's
Pfizer — Shares climbed more than 2% after New York City-based Pfizer beat Wall Street's first-quarter revenue forecast and raised its full-year profit guidance. CVS expects adjusted earnings of at least $7 per share for 2024, down from previous guidance of $8.30 per share. Analysts were expecting $8.28 per share, according to LSEG. A second-quarter revenue forecast also surpassed expectations, with Pinterest forecasting sales of $830 million to $850 million vs an LSEG consensus estimate of $827 million. Fiscal third-quarter revenue of $3.85 billion missed the Street's consensus estimate of $3.95 billion, according to LSEG.
Persons: Wall, Marriott, Estée Lauder, Estee Lauder, LSEG –, Kraft Heinz —, Powell, Macheel, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: Pfizer —, New, Pfizer, CVS, Marriott, LSEG, Starbucks, AMD —, AMD, Yum, KFC, Taco Bell, Powell Industries Locations: New York City, LSEG, Houston
BlackBerry — BlackBerry shares popped more than 9% after the company announced a partnership with Advanced Micro Devices on robotics systems. Neogen Corp — The food safety stock shed 9% after the company reported a surprise loss of 1 cent per share. The company also trimmed its previous guidance, saying it now expects revenue to range between $920 million and $910 million for the full year. Norfolk Southern announced that it reached a $600 million settlement related to its derailment in East Palestine. Nvidia — Shares fell more than 2%, putting the chipmaker on track for its fifth losing session in six.
Persons: Tilray, FactSet, Goldman Sachs, Molson Coors, Molson, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Pia Singh, Yun Li Organizations: Moderna, Reuters, Merck, Boeing, New York Times, Google, American Eagle Outfitters, JPMorgan, Eagle Outfitters, Bank of America, EV, Molson, Pfizer, Neogen Corp, Norfolk Southern, Nvidia —, Netflix Locations: East Palestine
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell: American Eagle Outfitters — Shares popped 4% following an upgrade by JPMorgan to overweight from neutral. Freeport-McMoRan — Shares jumped 1.9% after Bank of America upgraded the American mining company to buy from neutral, saying it has "blue chip copper exposure." Molson Coors — Shares gained 1.9% after Goldman Sachs upgraded the brewing company to buy, saying the company can benefit as it expands its shelf space in retailers. Ally Financial — The financial services company added nearly 2% after being upgraded to buy from neutral at Bank of America. The bank's analysts believe Ally Financial may see higher earnings than anticipated, less earnings volatility and that its potential credit leverage may be underestimated.
Persons: Molson, Goldman Sachs, Ally, — CNBC's Michelle Fox Organizations: Eagle Outfitters, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Molson Coors —, Ally, Google, Pfizer Locations: Freeport
Instead, the veteran wealth manager is now looking for stocks in growth sectors that look "reasonably valued." He said the pharmaceutical, real estate, energy and financial sectors were on his radar, and named four stocks that stand out. Pfizer Pharmaceutical company Pfizer — well known for its Covid-19 vaccine — is betting on cancer drugs , following its $43 billion acquisition of Seagen last year . Over the last 12 months, shares of Comerica are up around 28%, although they are down 7.5% year-to-date. According to Factset data, analysts' average price target on the stock is $59.45, giving it around 15% potential upside.
Persons: David Dietze, Dietze, , Schlumberger —, Dietze's, SLB Organizations: Nvidia, Wealth Management, Pfizer Pharmaceutical, Pfizer, CNBC Pro, Schlumberger, Comerica Locations: Seagen, U.S, SLB, Canada
It was more than double the value of the next-largest deal, a Japanese healthcare merger that clocked in at $22 billion. And, for its part, Seagen tapped advisors at two boutique firms: Centerview and MTS Health Partners. "We want to be the preeminent healthcare bank. Last year, during a healthcare M&A boom that's expected to continue this year, the bank onboarded 14 new staffers, including the partners, a company spokesperson said. Advertisement"We are absolutely in growth mode looking to have high-quality bankers who are capable of generating business off of this platform without all the accoutrements of a big bank," Weisenfeld continued.
Persons: Seagen, Andrew Weisenfeld, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Dealogic, Weisenfeld, , Curtis Lane, Bear, Daun Chung, Ryan Stewart, Reed Alexander Organizations: Service, Pfizer, Guggenheim, Centerview, MTS Health Partners, MTS, Goldman, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Partners, CTI, New, Bear Stearns, London Stock Exchange, Seagen, Medicines, Novartis, Chase Securities, Health Partners, Guggenheim Securities, Triple, SVB Securities, Solomon Partners, Citigroup Locations: Wall, New York City, Seattle
Pfizer reported adjusted earnings of 10 cents per share, while analysts polled by LSEG expected a loss of 22 cents per share. On the other hand, the company's $14.25 billion revenue was lower than the $14.42 billion consensus estimate. Revenue came in at $24.92 billion versus the $25.43 billion expected from analysts polled by LSEG. F5 — Shares jumped 8% after the cybersecurity company reported an earnings and revenue beat in the fiscal first quarter. The manufacturing services provider reported earnings of $1.30 per share, better than the $1.15 earnings per share forecast from analysts polled by FactSet.
Persons: Batya Levi, Pfizer, LSEG, Jefferies, Sanmina, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound Organizations: UBS, Pfizer, Oppenheimer, United Parcel Service, LSEG, General Motors, GM, JetBlue Airways —, Whirlpool —, FactSet Locations: Masimo, FactSet .
Ulta Beauty — The beauty stock rallied nearly 11% after posting third-quarter results that surpassed analysts' estimates. Samsara — Samsara shares popped 16% after the cloud company posted better-than-expected quarterly results and shared stronger-than-expected guidance. The chip company posted third-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's estimates but shared weaker-than-expected guidance for the current quarter. Ambarella — Shares slipped 1% after Ambarella reported third-quarter gross margins of 62.6%, down from 63.5% in the year-ago period. Otherwise, the semiconductor design company posted quarterly results that topped estimates.
Persons: Tesla, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Dell, Altimmune, Ambarella, Jefferies, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Brian Evans, Jesse Pound Organizations: Disney — Disney, Trian Fund Management, Pfizer, Paramount Global, Street Journal, Paramount, Apple, Marvell Technology, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, LSEG, JPMorgan, Norfolk Southern, Bank of America, CSG Locations: Texas, China, Wells Fargo, Norfolk, Ohio
Pfizer — Shares dropped 4.2% after the drugmaker said it would halt development of its twice-daily experimental weight loss pill. Marvell Technology — The semiconductor stock fell more than 5% after Marvell issued lower-than-expected revenue guidance for the fourth quarter. Ulta Beauty — The stock gained nearly 12% after the beauty products retailer reported third-quarter earnings that beat analysts' expectations. Ulta reported earnings of $5.07 per share, higher than the $4.95 per share analysts polled by LSEG were expecting. Dell — Stock in the computer maker fell nearly 6% on the heels of a mixed third-quarter earnings report.
Persons: Pfizer, Andrew Nowinski, Nelson Peltz, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Tesla, Coinbase, Ulta, LSEG, Jessica Fye, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Pfizer —, Paramount Global, Wall Street Journal, Apple, Disney —, Trian Fund Management, Marvell Technology, Marvell, Invest, Nasdaq, Dell —, Wall, LSEG, JPMorgan Locations: , Wells Fargo
Chevron , Hess — Chevron shares slumped more than 2% after the oil giant said its buying smaller rival Hess in an all-stock deal totaling $53 billion, or $171 a share. Hess shares moved slightly higher. Walgreens Boots Alliance — The pharmacy operator rose nearly 3% after JPMorgan upgraded Walgreens Boots Alliance shares to overweight from neutral. Salesforce — The software giant lost nearly 2% after Piper Sandler downgraded shares to neutral from overweight, citing heightened execution and M & A risks. Bank of America downgraded Alcoa to a neutral rating and slashed its price target, citing concerns of a near-term earnings decline.
Persons: Hess, Stonepeak, Piper Sandler, Roche, , Jesse Pound Organizations: Hess, Chevron, Apple, Global Times, Walgreens, Alliance, JPMorgan, Roivant Sciences, Pfizer, Telavant Holdings, Citi, Evercore, Alcoa, Bank of America Locations: Chevron, China
Pfizer — Shares rallied 3.61% following an upgrade by Jeffries to buy from hold. The firm sees an attractive buying opportunity after Pfizer cut its full-year guidance last week on slumping vaccine sales. Alignment Healthcare — Shares soared 17.22% after being upgraded to strong buy from outperform by Raymond James. Tal Education — The education technology stock popped 6.73% after UBS upgraded shares to a buy rating, citing an attractive valuation and tailwinds from Tal Education's nonacademic tutoring business. Greenbrier — Shares of the transportation services company gained 3.81% Monday morning after Susquehanna upgraded the stock to a positive rating.
Persons: Dow, Lululemon, Jeffries, Novavax, Raymond James, Morgan Stanley, Jim Ratcliffe, Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al Thani, Glazer, Tal Education's, Charles Schwab —, Schwab, Albemarle —, Albemarle, Bascome, Henry Schein —, Yun Li, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Samantha Subin, Alex Harring, Pia Singh, Lisa Han Organizations: Dow Jones Indices, Activision, Microsoft, Pfizer —, Pfizer, Moderna, News Corp, Reuters, Street, Street Journal, Systems, Manchester United, Tal Education, UBS, Liontown, Greenbrier —, Susquehanna Locations: BioNTech, Greenbrier
Gap — The retail stock climbed nearly 4% after Barclays upgraded Gap to overweight from equal weight. Incyte — Shares rose 2% after Incyte beat analysts' expectations in its latest results. The pharmaceutical company reported second-quarter revenue of $954.6 million, exceeding the FactSet consensus estimate of $909.7 million. ZoomInfo Technologies — Shares sank by nearly 20% in premarket trading after the data company reported a weak outlook for third-quarter revenue. Arista Networks — Shares advanced 13.6% in premarket trading after the company reported after the bell Monday that its quarterly earnings topped analysts' expectations.
Persons: Michael Perito, Perito, Estee Lauder, Adrienne Yih, Incyte, Herve Hoppenot, Dara Khosrowshahi, Merck, Monday's, Macheel, Alex Harring, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: SoFi Technologies, Barclays, Body, Caterpillar —, Caterpillar, Merck —, Pfizer, Toyota, Refinitiv, Arista Networks —, Arista, Revenue Locations: China, Monday's, Jakafi, Refinitiv
Drugmakers are jockeying to capitalize on the next major innovation coming to the blockbuster weight loss industry: effective, convenient and potentially affordable obesity pills. But for now, one experimental oral drug from Eli Lilly appears to have an edge over pills from Novo Nordisk and Pfizer — even though it may not win U.S. approval first. Pills are also typically cheaper than injections, though it's unclear if that will be the case with the obesity pills. None of the three drugmakers has provided estimates for how much the new obesity pills would cost. Eli Lilly is still in the middle of phase three clinical trials on its oral drug, orforglipron, meaning it's likely to hit the market later.
Persons: It's, there's, Eli Lilly, Pfizer — Organizations: Novo Nordisk, Pfizer, CNBC, Food and Drug Administration Locations: U.S, orforglipron
Lucid Group — Lucid shares jumped 9% after the electric vehicle maker said it will provide powertrain and battery systems to British luxury automaker Aston Martin. Davidson upgraded the stock to buy from neutral, noting WSFS could benefit from a higher-for-longer interest rate environment. UBS upgraded the pharmaceutical stock to buy from neutral, saying the potential for other vaccines for the company isn't fully appreciated by investors. Alphabet — Shares of Alphabet fell 1.8% after UBS downgraded the tech giant to neutral from buy. Tesla — The electric vehicle maker dropped 2.8% after Goldman Sachs downgraded Tesla to neutral from buy.
Persons: Aston, Davidson, WSFS, Tesla, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: Aston Martin, D.A, Regional Banking, Pfizer, Cruise, Moderna — Moderna, UBS, Barclays Locations: Royal Caribbean
Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:Tesla — Shares dropped 1.9% after Goldman Sachs became the latest Wall Street bank to downgrade the electric vehicle maker to neutral from buy. Goldman cited the difficult pricing environment for electric vehicles, as well as the stock's recent run up, for the call. Moderna — The drugmaker gained 2.5% following an upgrade by UBS to buy from neutral. Alphabet — The Google parent slid 1.4% after being downgraded by UBS to neutral from buy. PacWest — The regional bank jumped nearly 6% following the announcement that Ares Management acquired $3.5 billion specialty finance portfolio from PacWest.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Aston Martin Organizations: Moderna, UBS, Google, Pfizer, Ares Management Locations: South Burlington , Vermont
GlaxoSmithKline on Wednesday said its vaccine to protect adults ages 60 and older from respiratory syncytial virus, or RSV, remained effective across two seasons of the disease. The shot was also 78.8% effective against severe RSV disease after two seasons, compared with 94% after one season. The London-based company said high efficacy was similarly maintained in older adults with underlying conditions, who are most at risk of severe RSV. The committee will form a recommendation on when and how often the company's RSV shot — and a vaccine from rival Pfizer — should be administered in the U.S. Pfizer's RSV shot became the second to win approval shortly after.
Persons: , drugmaker Organizations: GlaxoSmithKline, Northern Hemisphere, GSK, Pfizer, Centers for Disease Control, CDC, U.S, The, Drug Administration Locations: London
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. DraftKings — Shares of the sports gambling platform soared 8% in midday trading. Earlier on Monday, UBS upgraded the stock to buy from neutral on strong growth in new states. Zions Bancorporation — The bank stock jumped 6.7% after Hovde Group initiated coverage of Zions at outperform, with a $40 price target, according to FactSet. Norfolk Southern — Norfolk Southern gained less than 1% during midday trading.
Chegg — Chegg shares tumbled 42% in premarket trading after CEO Dan Rosensweig said he expects artificial intelligence is "having an impact on our new customer growth rate." However, its adjusted earnings per share and revenue for the first quarter beat estimates, per Refinitiv. NXP Semiconductors — Shares of the chip maker jumped about 5% after the company beat analysts' expectations for first-quarter revenue and operating income. However, its first-quarter revenue beat analysts' expectations, according to Refinitiv. The company is also planning an up to $2 billion share buyback after its annual general meeting.
Tesla — The electric-vehicle maker soared 7% after reporting record revenue and an earnings beat. Wall Street analysts cited upbeat comments about its reopening in Macao on the company earnings call for their positive outlook on the stock. Levi Strauss topped analysts' revenue estimates and beat earnings projections by 5 cents a share. Total segment revenues fell short of expectations, while distributable earnings beat estimates by 12 cents a share. American Airlines — The airline gained 1.5% after its fourth-quarter profits beat Wall Street's expectations, thanks to strong holiday demand and high fares.
Analysts called for earnings of 10 cents per share on $1.83 billion in revenue, according to Refinitiv. Though United Rentals missed analysts' expectations for per-share earnings, it was in-line with Wall Street's forecasts for revenue, per FactSet. The company forecasted 2023 revenue to range between $13.7 billion and $14.2 billion, surpassing analysts' estimates, according to FactSet. Sherwin-Williams earned an adjusted $1.89 per share last quarter, topping estimates by 2 cents, according to Refinitiv. Tractor Supply's EPS came in at $2.43 versus analysts' estimate of $2.35 per share, according to Refinitiv.
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