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In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia's stock will continue working higher, says Wells Fargo's Aaron RakersAaron Rakers, Wells Fargo managing director and technology analyst, join 'Power Lunch' to discuss Nvidia ahead of earnings.
Persons: Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers Aaron Rakers, Wells Organizations: Nvidia Locations: Wells Fargo
Expectations are high for Nvidia's earnings. Momentum behind Nvidia's Blackwell ramp Wall Street majors view Nvidia's Blackwell platform — which should be generally available in the January quarter — as a multibillion-dollar revenue opportunity for the chipmaker. Nvidia had said in August that it expected about "several billion" in Blackwell sales during the January quarter. According to Piper Sandler analyst Harsh Kumar, Nvidia could deliver between $5 billion and $8 billion of Blackwell revenue in the January quarter. Analysts are also largely undeterred by recent concerns about a recent report from The Information that Nvidia's Blackwell NVL-72 server racks are experiencing issues with overheating.
Persons: Blackwell, Nvidia's, Piper Sandler, Harsh Kumar, Kumar, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Toshiya Hari, Nvidia's Blackwell NVL, Vivek Arya, Hopper, Atif Malik, Hari, Nvidia's Hopper, Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers, Ruben Roy, Roy Organizations: Nvidia, Blackwell, Citi, Nvidia's Blackwell, Bank of America, HSBC, Hopper, Data, Elon
Investors should consider using the pullback in Micron Technology to snatch up shares, according to several Wall Street analysts. His $175 price target implies upside of more than 22% from Wednesday's close. Goldman Sachs analyst Toshiya Hari also viewed the drop as a buying opportunity, citing expectations for growth in AI compute and high-bandwidth memory market share gains. Hari has a price target of $158, signaling 11% upside over the next 12 months. MU 1D mountain Micron shares fall on in-line guidance Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers reiterated his overweight rating and $190 price target, implying more than 33% upside.
Persons: Christopher Danely, Goldman Sachs, Toshiya Hari, Hari, Harlan Sur, Bernstein, Mark Li, Timothy Arcuri, Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers, Vivek Arya Organizations: Micron Technology, MU, Micron, UBS, Bank of Locations: Wednesday's, CY25, ramping HBM
Deutsche Bank maintained a hold rating on Nvidia ahead of earnings next week, while Wells Fargo raised its price target. The firm downgraded shares to neutral from buy while lowering its price target to $35 from $55. He has a $850 price target on shares, indicating shares pulling back nearly 6% from Monday's close. The analyst raised his price target on the stock to $1,150 from $974, implying upside of more than 27%. He also raised his price target to $78 from $68, implying upside of 19% from Monday's close.
Persons: Wells Fargo, Roth, Roblox, Eric Handler, Handler, — Hakyung Kim, Tesla's, Elon Musk's, Tesla, Dan Levy, Levy, Hakyung Kim, Jefferies, Boston Beer, Samuel Adams, seltzer, Kaumil, Boston Beers, Seltzer, Gajrawala, Ross Seymore, NVDAs, Seymour, Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers, Rahul Krotthapalli, Krotthapalli, Fred Imbert Organizations: CNBC, Nvidia, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, Roth Capital Partners, Barclays, Jefferies, Boston Beer, Boston, Deutsche, Fitness Locations: Monday's, Boston
AAPL 1D mountain Apple shares on Friday More substantive updates on Apple's latest AI offerings in both hardware and services are expected to come during its Worldwide Developers Conference in June. According to JPMorgan's Samik Chatterjee, the focus during the event will primarily be on the AI features Apple will include in its iOS 18 software. Mohan holds a buy rating on shares and slightly increased his price target to $230 from $225. "We think Apple can deliver AI upside without the AI capex we see elsewhere," Evercore ISI analyst Amit Daryanani wrote in a Thursday note following the earnings. "Apple is accelerating investments in Generative AI and [is] set to introduce new features at its most important developer conference ever."
Persons: Apple didn't, Wall, JPMorgan's Samik Chatterjee, Wamsi Mohan, Mohan, Amit Daryanani, Morgan Stanley's Erik Woodring, Woodring, Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers, Rakers, America's Mohan, Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Worldwide Developers Conference, of America, America's Locations: WWDC
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThere's still questions around demand in some markets for semiconductors: Wells Fargo's Aaron RakersAaron Rakers, Wells Fargo analyst, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk TSMC, the PC market, where the A.I. trade stands today and more.
Persons: Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers Aaron Rakers, Wells Locations: Wells Fargo
Most Wall Street analysts like what they're seeing from Apple , viewing the iPhone maker's better-than-expected results as a sign of resilience and its continued ability to deliver even in a tough environment. Apple rose 2% in the premarket after posting earnings that beat expectations, driven by stronger-than-expected iPhone sales. Chatterjee has an overweight rating on Apple and a price target that implies upside of 14.6%. Softening demand 'casts a cloud' Despite the company's better-than-feared results, some analysts do expect volatility ahead. UBS analyst David Vogt reiterated his buy rating on the stock but said softening demand "likely casts a cloud on the stock near term."
Samsung's plan to cut memory chip production signals a potentially sooner-than-expected recovery for the broader memory chip market, according to Wall Street. Investors seemed to laud the news, sending shares of Micron Technology and Western Digital up about 8% each on Monday. Citi analyst Christopher Danely called the news a "huge positive" for the dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, industry. But while the cuts from Samsung should help ease some pricing pressures, caveats persist, with Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore expecting a "fairly muted" upturn from the production cuts and slow margin recovery even in 2024. "Investors are much more excited than industry contacts around this, given obvious green shoots implied from production cuts," he wrote.
The latest results from Nvidia suggest a gaming bottom is in sight for the battered semiconductor stock, according to analysts. The chipmaker on Wednesday posted a mixed quarter, with earnings falling slightly below analysts' expectations . Nvidia's gaming division reported a 51% decline in sales as the PC gaming market slows from pandemic-era growth and retailers grapple with a glut of inventory. Bank of America's Vivek Arya reflected similar sentiment, viewing the current period as an "inflection quarter" for the chip stock. Analysts see particular strength in the company's data center business, which saw sales rise 31% year over year.
Investors dumping tech stocks after their dismal earnings results this past week are going back to old economy names for the hottest stock picks. Disappointing quarterly reports from mega-cap tech stocks signified lower growth ahead from the once darling tech sector. Shares of Amazon tumbled nearly 15% last week through Friday after the online retail giant reported quarterly revenue that missed estimates. Apple was the rare "bright spot" among big tech earnings, according to Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers. The S & P 500 stocks that surfaced in our screen exclude tech, and have been around for 100 years or more.
Apple 's quarterly results proved to analysts that the iPhone maker's stock is the place to hide when a recession hits. Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers called Apple the "bright spot amid mega-cap carnage" in a note to clients Thursday as the company shared "better-than-feared" results even in this troublesome macro environment. Credit Suisse's Shannon Cross said the stock is a "safe haven" and "relatively safe port in the storm" in a note to clients Thursday. JPMorgan Chase's Samik Chatterjee said the results underscore Apple's resilience and should further entice investors to buy the stock. "Amid a sea of large-cap earnings debacles, Apple's results appear to be a relative victory," wrote Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi.
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