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ServiceTitan, a company that sells software to contractors such as plumbers and roofers, on Monday filed to go public on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol "TTAN." The filing suggests that investors could be getting more interested in next-generation software companies. Based in Glendale, California, ServiceTitan offers cloud software for advertising, scheduling jobs, dispatching, producing invoices and taking payments. ServiceTitan's revenue growth rate will stand out for people investing in cloud stocks, who have seen rates sag with few new public companies in the sector. The average growth rate for Bessemer's Nasdaq Emerging Cloud Index, the basis for the WisdomTree Cloud Computing Fund, is 16.6%.
Persons: chipmaker Cerebras, Ara Mahdessian, Vahe Kuzoyan, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Adena Friedman Organizations: Nasdaq, Revenue, Computing Fund, Investors, Battery Ventures, Bessemer Venture Partners, Iconiq, TPG, SAP, Citigroup, underwriters Locations: U.S, Glendale , California, Wells Fargo
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBitcoin rises over 16% in a week on hopes of crypto-friendly U.S. policy: CNBC Crypto WorldCNBC Crypto World features the latest news and daily trading updates from the digital currency markets and provides viewers with a look at what's ahead with high-profile interviews, explainers, and unique stories from the ever-changing crypto industry. On today's show, Will Peck, head of digital assets at WisdomTree, discusses what a national bitcoin stockpile could mean for prices and the future of crypto-focused ETFs.
Persons: explainers, Will Peck Organizations: CNBC Crypto, CNBC, WisdomTree
7 US stocks set to rally from Trump tariffs
  + stars: | 2024-11-15 | by ( Christine Ji | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +4 min
AdvertisementThere's been a lot of buzz about how president-elect Donald Trump's proposed tariffs could negatively impact some of the market's biggest names. However, for every company losing out from Trump's tariffs, there's another set to benefit from the red wave election outcome. Another big winner from tariffs and Trump policies in general is the financial sector. These businesses will experience minimal impact from tariffs while also benefitting from lower corporate taxes, which Gardner expects to go down under Trump. AdvertisementGarner and Rines shared some stocks they believe will benefit the most from Trump's proposed tariffs.
Persons: Trump's, , There's, Donald Trump's, David Bianco, Trump, Bianco, Banks, Clayton Gardner, Gardner, Samuel Rines, Rines, Biden, Garner Organizations: Service, Biden, Trump, Ford, Companies Locations: China, America, Kentucky, Tennessee
For many, the reaction among investors only reinforced the need to look at longer-term opportunities in individual stocks that haven't changed. About half of Xpeng's 20,000-plus deliveries in each of the past two months have come from its lower-priced Mona M03 car. In the consumer sector, Macquarie's top pick is Yum China , which operates Pizza Hut and KFC in China. Yum China on Nov. 4 reported third-quarter earnings, showing operating profit grew by 15% year-on-year to $371 million. "You have to be very willing to suffer the negative sentiment to invest in China," Ren said.
Persons: Donald Trump, Shanghair, Liqian Ren, Ren doesn't, Ren, Anta, Fila, CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Finance, U.S, CSI, Adidas, Fila, Baidu, Macquarie, KFC Locations: China, Hong Kong, WisdomTree, U.S
On the campaign trial, Trump threatened to impose additional tariffs of 60% or more on Chinese goods sold to the U.S. She expects a stimulus package of more than 10 trillion yuan ($1.39 billion), with about 6 trillion yuan going towards local government debt swaps and bank recapitalization. More than 4 trillion yuan will likely go towards local government special bonds for supporting real estate, Su said. That divergence in stock performance indicates China's stimulus "will be slightly bigger than the baseline scenario," said Liqian Ren, who leads WisdomTree's quantitative investment capabilities. She estimates Beijing will add about 2 trillion yuan to 3 trillion yuan a year in support.
Persons: Zhu Baoliang, Trump, Su, Yue Su, , Liqian Ren, Ren doesn't, Biden, Chris Miller, That's, China's, Zhiwei Zhang Organizations: Bund, Trump, Citigroup, U.S, Economist Intelligence Unit, National People's Congress, Huawei, Republicans, Senate, NBC, Republican Party, Emergency Economic, Trade Locations: Shanghai, China, Hong Kong, Beijing, U.S
Investors expect Beijing to announce details on fiscal support Friday. He expects Trump has a greater chance of winning, which he said would increase downward pressure on the Chinese yuan versus the U.S. dollar. While the People's Bank of China has cut interest rates, the Ministry of Finance has yet to release details on widely anticipated fiscal stimulus. China is considering more than 10 trillion yuan in debt issuance over a few years, Reuters reported Tuesday, citing sources. Whether it is 10 trillion yuan over three to five years, or 2 trillion yuan in one year, the average is about 2 trillion yuan in support a year, she pointed out.
Persons: Aly Song, That's, , Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Harris, Ting Lu, Biden, Zhu Bin, Zhu, Trump, Liqian Ren, Ren, Xi Jinping, Lan Fo'an, Zong Liang, WisdomTree's Ren Organizations: Reuters, U.S, Investors, National People's, Trump, Nomura, Nanhua, CNBC, U.S ., WisdomTree, People's Bank of, Ministry of Finance, Finance, Bank of China Locations: Yiwu, Zhejiang province, China, Reuters BEIJING, Beijing, U.S, United, People's Bank of China
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSchwartz: People don't want the economy shut down; I don't think this will last longJeremy Schwartz, Global Chief Investment Officer at WisdomTree Inc, highlights the need for automation amid port strikes, expects a quick resolution, supports faster rate cuts, and notes rising commodity prices as both inflation risks and portfolio diversifiers.
Persons: Jeremy Schwartz Organizations: Schwartz, Global Chief, WisdomTree Inc
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWisdomTree CEO cautions investors against fixating on 2025 until the election outcome is knownJonathan Steinberg, WisdomTree founder and CEO, joins 'Money Movers' to discuss how capital flows have changed following the Fed's rate cut, why the election could pose risks to market performance, and much more.
Persons: Jonathan Steinberg Organizations: fixating
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWisdomTree: Small-caps will outperform as the market gets 'showered' with rate cutsJeff Weniger of WisdomTree says the Fed rate cuts are bullish for equities, and that he is seeing a rotation into small-caps.
Persons: Jeff Weniger, WisdomTree
New York CNN —For much of the last two years, the 2-year US Treasury yield has traded above the 10-year yield. Still, there are plenty of instances when the yield curve uninverted and a recession wasn’t right around the corner. The most recent prior case of the yield curve uninverting was September 2019. (Disinversion and uninversion are both used to refer to a yield curve that returns to being in positive territory.) One reason she isn’t on edge is because the yield curve was inverted for a much longer stretch of time compared to other recent recessions.
Persons: that’s, Marco Giacoletti, ” “, Kristina Hooper, Hooper, ” Kevin Flanagan, , Claudia Sahm, Sahm, Flanagan Organizations: New, New York CNN, Treasury, Federal Reserve, Fed, University of Southern California Marshall School of Business, CNN Locations: New York
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe're worried 'the Fed will be too slow' in cutting, says WisdomTree's Jeremy SchwartzJeremy Schwartz, WisdomTree global chief investment officer, joins CNBC's 'Money Movers' to discuss his reaction to today's CPI report, why some argue 50 basis points is out of reach, and more.
Persons: We're, WisdomTree's Jeremy Schwartz Jeremy Schwartz, WisdomTree Organizations: CPI
PDD 's tumble of nearly 30% last week on disappointing quarterly results is a reminder that China's consumer has largely moved on from its years of double-digit growth. "The reaction of its stock price is out of touch with its fundamentals," he said in Mandarin, translated by CNBC. "The entire Chinese consumer market is weak, yes, [but] PDD management's very peculiar comments caused the share price decline," he said. Chen Lei, chairman and co-CEO of PDD, warned multiple times on the earnings call about future declines in profit. Revenue grew by 21%, while adjusted earnings nearly doubled from a year ago.
Persons: PDD, Charlie Chen, Chen Lei, Morgan Stanley, Wang Xing, Trip.com, Liqian Ren, Ren, Joey Wat, Banks, Morgan, Richard Xu, Xu Organizations: China Renaissance Securities, CNBC, JPMorgan, Hong, Management, KFC, Yum, Savings Bank of Locations: Asia, Hong Kong, U.S, China, WisdomTree, Beijing, Yum China, Hong, Savings Bank of China
Subscription revenue growth grew 17%. With respect to guidance, Workday is now looking for an adjusted operating margin of 25.25% in the 2025 fiscal year, compared with the 25% forecast it provided in May. In September 2023, Workday said it was targeting a 25% adjusted operating margin for fiscal year 2027 and subscription revenue growth between 17% and 19%. Deutsche Bank analysts led by Brad Zelnick increased their 12-month price target on Workday stock to $275 from $265. "The increased 30% operating margin target was the big upside surprise as it is now committed both sooner and greater than most were expecting," the analysts wrote.
Persons: Carl Eschenbach, Zane Rowe, Rowe, We're, Brad Zelnick, Piper Sandler, Jerome Powell, Carl Eschenbach didn't, Julie Biel Organizations: Deutsche Bank, Citi, Evercore ISI, Computing Fund Locations: Davos, Switzerland
A wild week of trading on Wall Street ended with the S & P 500 back roughly where it started, but the lessons learned by whipsawed investors over those five days could determine what happens next. The S & P 500 had its worst day since 2022 on Monday, and then its best since 2022 on Thursday. But with the S & P 500 ending the week down less than 0.1% in a calm session on Friday, the market seems to have stabilized. .SPX 5D mountain The S & P 500 finished the week nearly flat. And I think that has to do with investors really being a little bit skeptical about some of this equity market volatility."
Persons: Tim Hayes, Ned Davis, Gennadiy Goldberg, didn't, Jeremy Schwartz, Peter Berezin, aren't, Wellington, Frank Gretz, RJ O'Brien, Tom Fitzpatrick, Fitzpatrick Organizations: Wall, Treasury, Ned, Ned Davis Research, TD Securities, CNBC, Japan —, Nikkei, Bank of Japan, BCA Research, Wellington Shields, Associates Locations: Japan
Wharton School Professor Jeremy Siegel no longer thinks it's vital for the Federal Reserve to implement an emergency interest rate reduction, but still wants policymakers to cut quickly and aggressively. "Obviously, I wanted to shake things up," Siegel said of his call for an intermeeting move. However, those expectations have been volatile as investors watch how quickly the Fed thinks it should ease policy. An emergency cut under these circumstances is "just not the way Jay Powell does things," Siegel said. "But Jay Powell has done things way too slow, certainly on the way up, and I just want to make sure he doesn't make the same mistakes on the way down."
Persons: Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, Jerome Powell, Powell, Jay Powell Organizations: Wharton, Federal Reserve, CNBC Locations: WisdomTree
As Japanese stocks plummet, confirming a bear market, there are opportunities in small-cap and domestic-focused companies, according to fund manager Richard Kaye. 'Yen is just getting normal' Kaye believes the Yen's appreciation is a return to normalcy rather than an anomaly. "If you look even on Friday in all the bloodbath, domestic names, small cap names [were] actually outperforming," he noted. Indeed, the MSCI Japan Small Cap index has fallen 8.6% since July 11, outperforming the 14.4% decline in the MSCI Japan index on a local currency basis. In U.S. dollar terms, the losses, while proportionate, are smaller, with ETFs such as the iShares MSCI Japan Small-Cap ETF falling by 2.1% compared to the iShares MSCI Japan ETF, which is down 8.9% over the same period.
Persons: Richard Kaye, Kaye, Yen, CNBC's, They've, Warren, sayonara, I've Organizations: Growth, Toyota, Sony, U.S ., Japan ETF, Kobe, U.S, Mitsubishi, Mitsui, Sumitomo Locations: Comgest, Japan
Wharton's Jeremey Siegel on Monday called on the Federal Reserve to make an emergency 75 basis-points cut in the federal funds rate after Friday's disappointing jobs report. On Friday, the jobs report showed slower growth than expected and an unemployment rate that moved higher to 4.3%, its highest since October 2021. That unemployment figure "blew through" the central bank's target unemployment rate of 4.2%, said Siegel, chief economist at WisdomTree. Siegel isn't concerned that an emergency cut will send the markets into a downward spiral. If the Fed does not make an emergency cut before September's meeting, the market will react badly, Siegel predicted.
Persons: Wharton's Jeremey Siegel, Monday, , Siegel, Alan Greenspan, They've, we're Organizations: Federal Reserve, University of Pennsylvania's Wharton School Locations: WisdomTree
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSchwartz: Fed is looking at wrong inflation data, should be cutting ratesJeremy Schwartz, Global Chief Investment Officer of WisdomTree, discusses the market sell-off and the direction of the economy.
Persons: Jeremy Schwartz Organizations: Schwartz, Global Chief
WisdomTree CEO: crypto will be 'mainstream' in upcoming years
  + stars: | 2024-07-29 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWisdomTree CEO: crypto will be 'mainstream' in upcoming yearsJonothan Steinberg, WisdomTree founder and CEO joins 'Money Movers' to discuss the key trends of the asset management space and the future of 'tockenization.'
Persons: Jonothan Steinberg
AdvertisementAccording to Osterweis, investors should expect increased cyclicality going forward. Now, with increased investment in AI and several initiatives to revitalize domestic manufacturing, Osterweis believes the US could see a return to shorter expansion periods. AdvertisementInvestors can buckle up for more frequent economic fluctuations by increasing their concentration in quality growth equities. Investing in quality growth businesses not only drives strong returns but also protects against the ups and downs of business cycles. Osterweis also sees AI as a sustainable trend and recommends investors continue holding semiconductor companies.
Persons: , John Osterweis, Goldman Sachs, Management Offshoring, Osterweis Organizations: Service, Business, Capital Management, Osterweis, Infrastructure Investment, Jobs, Bank of America, Companies, Big Tech, Microsoft, Management, Nvidia, VanEck Semiconductor, Trust Nasdaq Semiconductor Locations: Rust, Mexico, China, East Asia, reindustrialization
China must "adapt to the new round of scientific and technological revolution and industrial transformation," an official English-language communique said. It also said China would "improve the new system for mobilizing resources nationwide to make key technological breakthroughs." The readout affirmed Beijing's commitment to balancing development with ensuring national security, and did not otherwise reveal policy changes. "I would highlight 'innovation and managed markets' as the top two keywords in the Third Plenum," Xu said. Regarding the latest plenary meeting, "we think any market-oriented reform will be measured and carried out insofar as it doesn't compromise national security," Xu said.
Persons: Hector Retamal, Liqian Ren, Tianchen Xu, Xu, Biden Organizations: AFP, Getty, BEIJING —, Communist Party's, Economist Intelligence Unit Locations: Beijing, China, WisdomTree, U.S
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSchwartz: Mega-caps are much more expensive than small-caps but aren't in a bubbleJeremy Schwartz, Global Chief Investment Officer at WisdomTree, discusses market breadth, small caps vs. small caps, and interest rates.
Persons: Schwartz, Jeremy Schwartz Organizations: Global Chief
"Since India is a strong secular growth market, we would say the mid and small-cap [market] is the place to be. Against that backdrop, he named one ETF to play this small-cap corner of the market: the iShares MSCI India Small-Cap ETF . For investors who want to invest in large-cap stocks, he recommends the iShares MSCI India ETF . A third ETF that Jayaraman likes is the WisdomTree India Earnings Fund , which tracks an index that measures the performance of companies traded in India that are profitable. While both funds invest in emerging market stocks, the International Opportunities Fund also has stocks of companies in developed countries outside the United States.
Persons: Arjun Jayaraman, Jayaraman Organizations: CNBC, Markets Fund, International, Fund, U.S Locations: India, United States
Investors may want to consider hedging their emerging market plays, according to one exchange-traded fund expert. Ben Slavin, global head of ETFs and managing director at BNY, said that while there have been notable inflows into Indian, European and Japanese ETFs, investors should account for the strength of the U.S. dollar. The iShares MSCI Japan ETF (EWJ) gives investors exposure to Japanese equities but does not account for fluctuations between the Japanese yen and the U.S. dollar. The WisdomTree Japan Hedged Equity Fund (DXJ) , which gives exposure and accounts for fluctuations, has grown more than 20% in that same time frame. And ETFs have those different options available for investors to allocate one way or the other," Slavin said.
Persons: Ben Slavin, Slavin, CNBC's Organizations: U.S ., Japan Hedged Equity Locations: Japan
The tech momentum trade driving market gains is likely to continue, says WisdomTree's Jeremy Siegel. AdvertisementThe tech momentum trade that has powered the stock market higher over the past year-and-a-half is likely to continue on for a lot longer than most expect, according to WisdomTree economist Jeremy Siegel. "I think that momentum trade on the tech and AI-related is still there. It takes a lot of bad news to break a momentum trade and we just haven't gotten it," Siegel said. "My forecast for three to five years on the entire stock market is 5% after inflation rate of returns.
Persons: WisdomTree's Jeremy Siegel, Siegel, , Jeremy Siegel, Carson Group's, Wharton …, overvalued Organizations: Service, CNBC, Nvidia, Broadcom, it's
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