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Third Point slashed and dissolved its stakes in some key megacap technology holdings, while opening a fresh position in Tesla during the third quarter. Regulatory filings released Thursday revealed that the Dan Loeb-run hedge fund opened a stake worth roughly $105 million in the electric vehicle behemoth during the period. Tesla shares rallied more than 32% during the period, and they have surged more than 24% in November as investors bet that the company will benefit from CEO Elon Musk's close relationship with President-elect Donald Trump . MSFT YTD mountain Apple shares this year Beyond these key Magnificent Seven players, Loeb liquidated positions in both Verizon Communications and ridesharing giant Uber Technologies . Along with Tesla, Loeb revealed a new position in Brookfield Corp worth about $251 million and fresh stakes in Flutter Entertainment and CVS Health .
Persons: Dan Loeb, Elon Musk's, Donald Trump, Tesla, Loeb Organizations: Tesla, Microsoft, Meta, Apple, Verizon Communications, Uber Technologies, Brookfield Corp, CVS Health, Intercontinental Exchange Locations: China
BEIJING — Chinese electric car brand Zeekr announced new batteries on Tuesday, which it says boast the fastest charge in the world. Zeekr said that the new battery could achieve the same charge performance even in negative 10 degree Celsius (14 degrees Fahrenheit) weather in about 30 minutes. Comparatively, Elon Musk's Tesla says its supercharger allow the company's vehicles to charge up to 200 miles in 15 minutes. Chinese automaker Nio has also offered the alternative of a three-minute battery swap. The subscription service automatically changes out the battery of designated car models with a charged one at specific swap stations.
Persons: Zeekr, Elon Musk's Tesla, Nio Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Technology Holding Locations: BEIJING, U.S
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewThe record market rally has stalled in recent weeks, just as skeptics of stocks became believers. Advertisement9 stocks to put in your portfolio nowAlthough the market's path forward is murky with the pivotal US election season coming up, investors shouldn't fret. A team of BMO strategists headlined by Belski unveiled their latest US strategy portfolios in a June 3 note. For reference, the US tactical equity portfolio surged 4.9% last month, roughly in line with the S&P 500, and has outperformed by 0.9% this year and 2.8% in the last 12 months.
Persons: , Brian Belski, hasn't, Ed Clissold, Ned Davis, he's, David Lundgren, Belski Organizations: Service, BMO Capital Markets, UBS, Business, Ned, Ned Davis Research, BMO, Microsoft, Netflix, Nvidia Locations: Montreal, BMO's US
Dan Loeb's Third Point largely bought into the big technology space during the first quarter, offering a sign of confidence in further gains after a big rally. That can indicate expectations of more room to run within megacap tech and "the Magnificent Seven." He raised his Amazon stake by more than 20%, making the e-commerce stock his second-largest holding at about $920 million. The big tech name, which joined the Dow Jones Industrial Average earlier this year, gained close to 19% in the first quarter. Outside of tech, he opened stakes in names including Goldman Sachs and Cinemark during the quarter.
Persons: Dan Loeb's, It's, bode, Loeb, Warburg Pincus, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Microsoft, Google, Dow Jones, Columbia, UC, Berkeley, Meta, Jefferies, Citigroup, United States Steel, DuPont de Nemours Locations: New York, McKesson
ValueAct Capital on Wednesday unveiled a stake in Flutter Entertainment , the Dublin-based parent company of sports betting firm Fanduel. It is possible that ValueAct previously had some other exposure to Flutter. The hedge fund previously had a position in The Stars Group, which was acquired by Flutter in 2020. While the ValueAct stake in Flutter is small, Gordon Haskett analyst Don Bilson pointed out in a note to clients that UBS also reported a stake in the gaming company. UBS has previously worked with ValueAct to build stakes in individual stocks for the hedge fund, Bilson said.
Persons: Mason Morfit, ValueAct, Walt Disney, Gordon Haskett, Don Bilson, Bilson Organizations: Capital, Walt, Securities and Exchange Commission, Stars, UBS, New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, Seagate Technology Holdings, Paycom Locations: Dublin, ValueAct
Despite broad concerns surrounding the health of regional banks, Ole Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global bought into one key name in the sector in the fourth quarter. The move came near the end of a turbulent year for regional banks after the shuttering of Silicon Valley Bank , First Republic Bank and Signature Bank led investors to question the regionals' business model. Shares of U.S. Bancorp climbed more than 30% in the fourth quarter, but the stovck still ended the year down about 1%. The sector took a hit this year following New York Bancorp 's dismal fourth quarter earnings , which showed a loss, a large reserve against weaker future credits and slashed the dividend. Halvorsen went even further and zeroed out stakes in Microsoft and Arm Holdings , the British chip and software designer that went public last September.
Persons: Ole Andreas Halvorsen's, Halvorsen, Julian Robertson, InsiderScore, Lamb Weston Organizations: Ole Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global, Viking Global, . Bancorp, Silicon Valley Bank, First Republic Bank, Signature Bank, U.S . Bancorp, Regional Banking, New York Bancorp, Viking, Tiger Management, Devices, Microsoft, Arm Holdings, Mastercard, Electric, Colgate, Palmolive Locations: Ole Andreas Halvorsen's Viking, Minneapolis, Silicon, U.S, Deere
Daniel Sundheim's D1 Capital made a handful of notable changes to its technology holdings in the fourth quarter, including closing out a position in a key artificial intelligence play. Sundheim also zeroed out his stake in software stock Salesforce , while trimming Microsoft and Facebook parent Meta by more than 60% and 20%, respectively. The role of large-cap tech stocks in driving up the market was so apparent that a group was dubbed the "Magnificent 7" for its outsized gains. Outside of big tech, Sundheim added to Mastercard and Philip Morris stakes. On the flip side, he dissolved stakes in a number of well-known stocks including Hilton , Las Vegas Sands , Liberty Media and Yum Brands .
Persons: Daniel Sundheim's, Sundheim, Philip Morris Organizations: Nvidia, Facebook, Meta, Viking Global, Mastercard, WWE, UFC, Lexeo Therapeutics, Hilton, Liberty Media, Yum Brands, Rivian, Electric Locations: Amazon, Vegas Sands
Tesla is facing pressure in China from the country’s top electric-vehicle company BYD. WSJ unpacks the business and manufacturing strategy of BYD and Tesla to uncover what the competition in China reveals about the race to own the global EV space. That is the conundrum investors face as they size up the latest EV brands pitching their growth prospects in New York. Lotus Technology is in the final stages of a merger with a Nasdaq-listed special-purpose acquisition company that values it at $5.5 billion. Zeekr Intelligent Technology Holding , which raised money in February at a $13 billion valuation, filed its registration statement earlier this month for a U.S. initial public offering.
Persons: Tesla Organizations: Cheslik, Lotus Technology, Nasdaq, Technology, U.S Locations: China, New York
Nov 28 (Reuters) - Investment holding company Alibaba Health Information Technology Ltd (0241.HK) said on Tuesday it would buy entire stake in AJK Technology Holding Ltd from a unit of Alibaba Group Holding (9988.HK) for HK$13.51 billion ($1.73 billion). Alibaba Health would issue 2.56 billion consideration shares at an issue price of HK$4.50 and pay the U.S. dollar equivalent of HK$2 billion in cash to the Alibaba Group unit, Taobao Holding Ltd.AJK Technology is an offshore holding vehicle incorporated under the laws of the Cayman Islands. The completion of the deal is subject to approvals from independent shareholders and the stock exchange. ($1 = 7.7957 Hong Kong dollars)Reporting by John Biju in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi MajumdarOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: John Biju, Shilpi Majumdar Organizations: Investment, Health, Technology, HK, AJK Technology Holding, Alibaba, Taobao Holding, AJK Technology, Thomson Locations: Cayman Islands, Hong Kong, Bengaluru
Thursday, Oct. 26, 2023: Cramer says buy more shares of this technology holdingJim and Jeff discuss why they'd like to buy more shares of this technology stock in the Charitable Trust after the company reported its quarterly earnings Wednesday. Jim also says they may buy more of this industrial if the price drops. Finally, Jim reacts to this automobile holding in the Trust after it reached a tentative deal with the UAW.
Persons: Cramer, Jim, Jeff Organizations: UAW
Wednesday, Oct. 25, 2023: Cramer is looking to add more shares after recent earnings resultsJim and Jeff discuss why these technology holdings are a 'buy' after their earnings reports. Jim dissects why this other tech stock is sinking despite its better-than-expected quarterly results. Finally, Jim explains why you can't trust the current market when bonds are taking a hit.
Persons: Cramer, Jeff, Jim dissects, Jim
But the amount of cybersecurity expertise on boards remains relatively low, at a time when boards are under increased scrutiny for security failings. In responses to that survey from 472 corporate board directors, 76% said their board had at least one cybersecurity expert, including 19% who said their board had at least three directors with cybersecurity expertise. The other 25 directors’ experience comes from either having held a senior government role in cybersecurity or from having led and/or founded a cybersecurity company. Whatever a board’s composition, most directors aren’t very confident in their board’s ability to handle a cybersecurity incident. Cybersecurity company leader: Nineteen directors have founded and / or led cybersecurity or data security companies.
Persons: Jamil Farshchi, don’t, , , Shamla Naidoo, Netskope, Naidoo, ” Naidoo, aren’t, Shankar Arumugavelu, Nir Zuk, Zuk Organizations: WSJ Pro Research, Securities and Exchange, Pro Research, National Association of Corporate, Business Machines, WSJ, Seagate Technology Holdings, Verizon, Palo Alto Networks, Juniper Networks Locations: cybersecurity, FactSet
For investors worried over how expensive the entire stock market has gotten, some stocks are more concerning than others. Among those expensive stocks, we filtered for names that are also hated by analysts because of their valuations. Take a look at the list of Wall Street's 10 most expensive stocks and what analysts have to say about them. Seagate Technology Holdings also made the list of stocks trading more expensive to their historic levels. Only 30% of analysts covering Seagate rate it a buy, and analysts believe the stock run has just about topped out, according to FactSet data.
Organizations: CNBC, Intel, Dow Jones, Investment, Seagate Technology Holdings, Seagate, Barclays, Company, Digital Realty Trust, Business Machines
Analysts say its new product launches could mark a first step in the company's come-back efforts to rival Apple. "It (Huawei) can manage the psychological expectations of the target consumer group before Apple's press conference," said Ivan Lam, an analyst at Counterpoint. Sino-U.S. friction has worsened in recent years as Washington tries to restrict China's access to key technologies including cutting-edge chip technology, and Beijing looks to reduce its reliance on American tech. The U.S. Commerce Department said late Thursday it's working to obtain more information "on the character and composition" of the new Huawei chip that may violate trade restrictions. White House National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters on Air Force One the U.S. government is trying to get more information about the Huawei chip.
Persons: Ann Wang, Ivan Lam, Jake Sullivan, Rick Meckler, Taiwan's TSMC, Ben Blanchard, Jeanny Kao, Brenda Goh, Jason Xue, Yelin, Sam Nussey, Miyoung Kim, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, REUTERS, Rights, Huawei, Apple, U.S, China's, Analysts, Reuters, Bank of America, Street, Washington, U.S . Commerce Department, National, Air Force, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Texas, Cherry Lane Investments, Tokyo, ASE Technology, Luxshare Precision Industry, Semiconductor, Technology, Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp, Thomson Locations: Hsinchu, Taiwan, Rights TAIPEI, U.S, Beijing, China, Asia, Japanese, iPhones, Shenzhen, Shanghai, Yelin Mo, Tokyo
Shares of Apple suppliers fall on reports of China iPhone curbs
  + stars: | 2023-09-08 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Taiwan's TSMC (2330.TW), the world's largest contract chipmaker and a major Apple supplier, dropped about 0.7%, outpacing a fall of about 0.3% in the benchmark index (.TWII). China could well expand its curbs on officials' use of iPhones, said Allen Huang, executive director of Mega International Investment Services Corp in Taipei. In China, Luxshare Precision Industry (002475.SZ), maker of connector cables for the iPhone and MacBook as well as AirPods, which also owns factories capable of making iPhones, fell 1.5%. Japanese chip equipment maker Tokyo Electron (8035.T) dropped 4% on Friday. Nearly a fifth of Apple's revenue is generated in China, where thousands of workers are employed by the company and its suppliers.
Persons: Ann Wang, Taiwan's TSMC, Allen Huang, Huang, Tim Cook, Ben Blanchard, Jeanny Kao, Brenda Goh, Sam Nussey, Edmund Klamann, Clarence Fernandez Organizations: Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, REUTERS, Rights, Apple, company's, Staff, Reuters, ASE Technology, Co, Largan, Mega International Investment Services Corp, Huawei Technologies, Luxshare Precision Industry, Huawei, Tokyo, Thomson Locations: Hsinchu, Taiwan, Rights TAIPEI, China, outpacing, Taipei, iPhones, Beijing, Shanghai, Tokyo
Here's a breakdown of the news, and how the headlines impact our investment approaches to the companies. Morgan Stanley likes PANW PANW YTD mountain Palo Alto Networks' year-to-date stock performance. Despite concerns around overall tech spending, Morgan Stanley said that companies still want to streamline their cybersecurity spending. Meta's stock has, of course, been on a tear since bottoming under $89 per share back in November. (Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust is long PANW, META, GOOGL and AAPL.
Baupost's Seth Klarman added to his technology holdings in the first quarter, including Google parent Alphabet and Coinbase , to take advantage of the big rebound in the sector, according to a new regulatory filing. Meanwhile, Klarman hiked his Coinbase bet by nearly 80% to $29 million. The cryptocurrency exchange was one of the biggest winners in the first quarter, jumping more than 90% to rebound from a dismal 2022. And just like Buffett, Klarman pivoted to technology in recent years to take advantage of growth stocks' leadership in the market. He gained $1.6 billion from hedging last year, which helped offset losses on the long side, the FT reported.
May 8 (Reuters) - Memory chip firm Western Digital Corp (WDC.O) forecast fourth-quarter revenue below Wall Street estimates and a bigger current-quarter loss, signaling that memory chip demand will take longer to recover as cloud spending also shrinks. Seagate Technology Holdings (STX.O), which makes hard disks for storage like Western Digital, last month said it was seeing a "more elongated customer inventory correction" and that it expects demand recovery to begin only towards the end of 2023. While memory chipmakers have been cutting production to alleviate oversupply and prop up memory chip pricing, a weak global economic outlook has clouded the hopes for a quicker recovery. Western Digital expects fourth-quarter revenue between $2.40 billion and $2.60 billion. However, Western Digital reported third-quarter revenue of $2.80 billion, beating estimates of $2.70 billion.
Seagate continued to sell hard drives to Huawei despite tightened export controls imposed on Huawei in 2020, the Commerce Department said. Photo: Justin Sullivan/Getty ImagesTwo subsidiaries of Seagate Technology Holdings PLC have agreed to pay $300 million for violating export restrictions placed on Huawei Technologies Co. over fears the Chinese telecommunications company posed a threat to U.S. national security. The data-storage equipment provider continued to sell hard drives to Huawei despite tightened export controls imposed on Huawei in 2020, the U.S. Commerce Department said Wednesday.
April 19 Reuters) - Seagate Technology Holdings (STX.O) has agreed to pay a $300 million penalty in a settlement with U.S. authorities for shipping over $1.1 billion worth of hard disk drives to China's Huawei in violation of U.S. export control laws, the U.S. Department of Commerce said on Wednesday. Seagate sold the drives to Huawei between August 2020 and September 2021 despite an August 2020 rule that restricted sales of certain foreign items made with U.S. technology to the company. Seagate shipped 7.4 million drives to Huawei for about a year after the 2020 rule took effect and became Huawei's sole supplier of hard drives, the Commerce Department said. The other two primary suppliers of hard drives ceased shipments to Huawei after the new rule took effect in 2020, the department said. Even after "its competitors had stopped selling to them ... Seagate continued sending hard disk drives to Huawei," Matthew Axelrod, the Commerce Department's assistant secretary for export enforcement said in a statement.
Investor Jenny Harington said she sees a clearer earnings story in Charles Schwab than big technology names that others have rushed back to this year. Meta shares have gained more than 70% so far this year but, after slumping 64% in 2022, is still more than $100 below where they ended 2021. Meanwhile, Palo Alto shares now trade above where they ended 2021 after climbing almost 38% this year to make up for 2022's 25% decline. "It's really, really, really hard to see where growth is coming," Harrington said. "For me, when you're saying, 'What's the safety trade?,' and I'm saying I don't like the mega-caps because I don't even know what their earnings really should be."
And in these moments of economic uncertainty and market volatility, investors should look to buy up the stocks of companies with the highest-quality balance sheets. The Club's Big Tech holdings — Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL), Meta Platforms (META), Apple (AAPL), Microsoft (MSFT) and Amazon (AMZN) — check that box. Alphabet was the group's biggest gainer Wednesday, climbing 2.3%, followed by Meta and Microsoft, which rose 1.9% and 1.8%, respectively. META 5D mountain Meta Platforms (META) five-day performance. The benefits of a sturdy balance sheet are manifold, especially when it comes to the cash piles Big Tech companies have accumulated.
Factbox: Tech firms leading job cuts in Corporate America
  + stars: | 2023-01-04 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +9 min
Jan 9 (Reuters) - Big Tech firms are leading a string of layoffs across corporate America as companies look to rein in costs to ride out the economic downturn. Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O):The software giant laid off under 1,000 employees across several divisions in October, Axios reported, citing a source. However, Bloomberg later reported Twitter was reaching out to dozens of employees who lost their jobs, asking them to return. HP Inc (HPQ.N):The computing devices maker said it expected to cut up to 6,000 jobs by the end of fiscal 2025. CNN:Warner Bros Discovery-owned (WBD.O) CNN's top boss Chris Licht informed employees in an all-staff memo that job cuts were underway.
Cramer's lightning round: Seagate is not for this market
  + stars: | 2022-12-01 | by ( Krystal Hur | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Loading chart...Seagate Technology Holdings PLC : "I don't want you to buy any more, because it's just not a high-quality enough stock during this period in the cycle. Loading chart...Target Corp : "We're going to think short-term, then we're going to sell it. I'm in the money-making business, not in the selling business." The enterprise software market is not where I want to be." Disclaimer: Cramer's Charitable Trust owns shares of AMD.
The world's biggest solar producers employ forced Uyghur labor, according to new research. The alleged use of forced Uyghur labor could threaten the growth of the global solar supply chain. The rest of the solar panel parts, like solar cells and solar panels, are assembled in other plants across China, the researchers wrote. China's dominance of the global solar supply chain could slow down the world's transition to clean energyMany countries, including the US, rely on Chinese imports for most of its panels, according to Bloomberg. China's dominance of the global solar market may expose the solar supply chain to a greater risk of disruptions from geopolitical disputes, extreme weather, and shifts in the economy, Seaver Wang, a researcher involved in the study, told Insider.
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