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Spirit Airlines — Shares of the struggling airline were halted on Monday after the company filed for bankruptcy protection . The stock rose 2.8% when trading resumed. Liberty Energy , Oklo — Shares of Liberty Energy rose 5% after Trump picked CEO Chris Wright as energy secretary . Robinhood — The electronic trading platform stock gained 1% after Needham upgraded shares to buy from hold. CVS Health — Shares of the drugstore company rose 2% following a Wells Fargo upgrade to overweight from equal weight.
Persons: Tesla, Donald Trump's, Chris Wright, Wright, Baird, Barron's, Needham, Robinhood, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, , Sarah Min, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Spencer Kimball, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: Bloomberg News, U.S . Transportation Department . Spirit Airlines, Liberty Energy, Oklo, of Liberty Energy, Trump, Nvidia, Blackwell, Nasdaq, Trump's Securities, Exchange Commission, CVS, Aetna, Warner Bros, National Basketball Association, Wall Street Journal, U.S, NBA, HSBC, Moderna Locations: Wells
AdvertisementApple has increasingly used its own silicon chips in its devices in recent years. Apple says it has a "secret weapon" in its approach to making the chips that power many of its devices. The company also benefits from making chips strictly for its own use rather than being a traditional chip-maker that sells to other companies, Millet said. Apple's newest Macs are based on Apple's latest silicon chips, the M4 line. AdvertisementMillet said Apple silicon takes advantage of "three major components, the architecture, the design, and the process technology."
Persons: Apple execs, Apple's, Apple, Don McGuire Tim Millet, Tom Boger, Boger, Millet, Tim Cook, Biden's, TSMC Organizations: Apple, Indian Express, Mac, Qualcomm, Intel, Imagination Technologies, M4, BI Locations: Arizona, Phoenix , Arizona
AdvertisementThe tariffs Donald Trump proposed while campaigning could help create US semiconductor jobs. To be sure, the impacts of a tariff policy on chips could be mixed. He said that the federal government should have implemented tariffs instead to motivate global chipmakers to build more factories in the US, which would then create jobs. AdvertisementTo be sure, the impacts of a tariff policy on chips could be mixed. In August, the White House said that investments supported by CHIPS Act funding would help create 115,000 construction and manufacturing jobs.
Persons: Donald Trump, podcaster Joe Rogan, Trump, Jeff Koch, SemiAnalysis, Patrick Moorhead, Jeff Ferry, Ferry, Stephen Ezell, Ezell Organizations: US, Industry, Biden, Samsung, Coalition for, Prosperous, Semiconductor Industry Association —, Intel, Information Technology, Innovation Foundation, Apple Locations: Taiwan, China, South Korea, Prosperous America, Arizona, India, United States
In the race against the US for global tech supremacy, China has the upper hand in at least one critical area: rare earths. AdvertisementFor more than a year, Beijing has slowly been tightening its grip on critical minerals and rare earths. Now, there are fears that China could tighten the global rare earths supply chain even more. China's rare earth dominanceChina has long dominated the rare earths market due to supply, low labor costs, and lax environmental standards. In 2022, the US Department of Defense awarded $45 million to MP Materials for rare earth oxide processing, and in 2023, it awarded over $288 million to Lynas USA to set up commercial-scale rare earth oxide production facilities.
Persons: Deng Xiaoping, , Rick Waters, Donald Trump's, Louise Loo, Zongyuan Zoe Liu, Chris Tang, Nick Vyas, USC Marshall's Randall R, Vyas, he's Organizations: European Union, World Trade Organization, US Department of Defense, Materials, US, White, Nvidia, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Oxford Economics, Greater China, Council, Foreign Relations, Soviet, Bloomberg, AMD, USC, Kendrick, Supply Chain Institute, Bureau of Industry, Security Locations: China, US, Beijing, Japan, USA, Eurasia, Washington, Taiwan, Greater, Soviet Union, North Korea, North Vietnam
Sovereign AI is "more driven by the industry naming it that, than it is from the policymakers' side," Gow said. On Wednesday, Denmark laid out a landmark white paper outlining how companies can use AI in compliance with the incoming EU AI Act — the world's first major AI law. How regulation fueled a mindset shiftThat's not to say regulations haven't proven an important factor in getting tech giants to think more about building localized AI infrastructure within Europe. The concept of AI sovereignty is also getting buy-in from local European tech firms. Orange hasn't yet selected a partner for these sovereign AI model ambitions.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Chris Gow, Anthropic's Claude, Filippo Sanesi, Sanesi, hasn't, , Cisco's Gow, Rather, " Gow, Gow, It's, David Hogan, Hogan, OVHCloud's Sanesi, Qwant, Bruno Zerbib, Zerbib Organizations: Reuters, Portugal — Tech, CNBC, Data, of Justice, EU, General Data Protection, U.S, Sovereign, Nvidia, Orange Locations: Reuters LISBON, Portugal, Brussels, U.S, Europe, OVHCloud, Italy, Italia, Denmark, Berlin, Paris, French
Here's what needs to go right for Intel, the only US-based manufacturer of powerful chips. AdvertisementUS policymakers are still betting that Intel is the nation's best shot at manufacturing chips. Intel needs to balance the booksIntel plans to spin out its semiconductor manufacturing business into an independent subsidiary called Intel Foundry, separating the manufacturing process from its chip-design business. Not everyone is convinced that government intervention will help Intel get back on track in chip manufacturing. The report said they also discussed a potential merger between the company's chip design business and a competitor like AMD or Marvell.
Persons: , Dow, It's, they're, Alistair Barr, Stacy Rasgon, Patrick Moorhead, Moorhead, they've, Logan Purk, Edward Jones, Dan Morgan, Pat Gelsinger, Morgan, Rasgon, Daniel Newman, hasn't, Newman, Gina Raimondo, Donald, it's, Mark Warner, Semafor Organizations: Wall Street, Intel, Service, Dow Jones, Nvidia, Business, Qualcomm, AMD, Dow, Bernstein Research, TSMC, Intel Foundry, Synovus, Futurum Group, Act, Google, Microsoft, Apple, New York Times, Commerce Department, Sen, Marvell, Warner Locations: Taiwan, Washington
Generative AI wasn't part of the lexicon for most of us during President-elect Donald Trump 's first four years in the White House. At a high level, generative AI is a cutting-edge form of technology that will shape the next decade and beyond. While the AI field has been around for decades, generative AI applications can create new content, including computer code, human-like text and images, in response to user prompts. Those that lead in generative AI will very likely shape the world as we know it. With 5G, Trump didn't just hope the U.S. could just fun faster than everyone else.
Persons: Donald Trump, ChatGPT, Kamala Harris, Trump, Elon Musk, OpenAI, JD Vance, Vance, Joe Biden's, Trump's, OpenAI's Sam Altman, Alphabet's Sundar Pichai, Jim Cramer, it's, Jim, they're, Jim Cramer's, Callaghan Organizations: Trump, Billionaire, Republican, Big Tech, Republican Party's, GOP, 5G, Mobile, Sprint, Verizon, Nvidia, Microsoft, Huawei, Biden, Deutsche Bank, South China, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, Apple, Washington, Intel, Eaton, Trust, CNBC, Convention Center, Callaghan O'hare Locations: Ohio, U.S, United States, America, We've, China, Taiwan, South, Beijing, Palm Beach, West Palm Beach , Florida
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailExpect further restrictions on chipmaking equipment and AI in second Trump term: Wolfe's Chris CasoChris Caso, Wolfe Research senior analyst, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss what the incoming Trump administration could mean for the chips sector, effectiveness of the CHIPS and Science Act, and more.
Persons: Chris Caso Chris Caso, Trump Organizations: Trump, Wolfe Research
What Trump tariffs could mean for AI darling Nvidia
  + stars: | 2024-11-08 | by ( Samantha Subin | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Wall Street is questioning how potential tariffs on imports under a Trump administration could affect artificial intelligence darling Nvidia and the broader industry . Earlier this year, Trump accused Taiwan of stealing the chipmaking business from the U.S. and said he would impose tariffs as president. NVDA 5D mountain Shares over the last week If the administration implements tariffs, Ives believes Nvidia could gain some workaround given its integral status. That could come in the form of excluding some of its next AI chips and graphics processing units from the tariff wave expected in spring 2025. Many investors also view Trump as a proponent of AI innovation.
Persons: Trump, Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Jensen Huang, Dan Ives, Ives, Hua Cheng, Elon Musk, Musk, Mizuho's Jordan Klein Organizations: U.S, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing, NVIDIA, Nvidia, Wedbush Securities, Bank of, Blackwell Locations: Taiwan, U.S, Mirova
As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Donald Trump, Tesla, Elon Musk, Trump, Gary Gensler, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: NBC, Senate, Treasury, Federal Reserve, Trump, Tesla, Club, Justice Department, Apple, DOJ, FTC, Microsoft, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, SEC, Jim Cramer's Charitable, CNBC Locations: China, Taiwan, Mexico
What a second Trump term means for Intel
  + stars: | 2024-11-06 | by ( Emma Cosgrove | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
He's also expressed opposition to the CHIPS Act, which Intel is counting on. Related Video How to invest in AI stocksTrump is a vocal supporter of US manufacturing, and Intel could benefit from this. Trump has been a vocal opponent of the Biden administration's CHIPS and Science Act and Intel insiders have noticed. With a Trump win, could the company miss out on a potential $8.5 billion in financial support from this legislation? Related stories"This country can become rich with the use, the proper use of tariffs," Trump told podcaster Joe Rogan recently.
Persons: Donald Trump's, He's, , Trump, It's, Pat Gelsinger, Gelsinger, Biden, podcaster Joe Rogan, Ben Thompson, TSMC, Rogan Organizations: Intel, Service, Trump, Trump Administration, Biden, Act, Bloomberg, Commerce Department, Apple Locations: China, Taiwan
Intel’s getting kicked out of the Dow
  + stars: | 2024-11-01 | by ( ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +1 min
Intel’s shares (INTC) have declined 54% this year, making it the worst performer on the index and leaving it with the lowest stock price on the price-weighted Dow. The stock fell about 1% in extended trading on Friday, while Nvidia (NVDA) was up 1.5%. Launched in 1968, the Silicon Valley pioneer sold memory chips before switching to processors that helped launch the personal computer industry. In the 1990s, “Intel Inside” stickers turned commodity electronic components into premium products and eventually became ubiquitous on laptops. The company’s 10-for-one stock split in June also helped pave the way for its addition to the index, making its soaring shares more accessible to retail traders.
Persons: Dow, TSMC, OpenAI Organizations: CNN, Intel, Dow Jones, Nvidia Locations: chipmaking, ChatGPT
Eutelsat, the world's third-biggest satellite operator by revenue, launched 20 satellites for its communications network on Sunday, using Elon Musk's SpaceX in its first move since the merger of two European companies last year. A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket took off, with Eutelsat satellites from California's Vandenberg Space Force Base at 0513 GMT. "This is the first OneWeb launch of the satellites since the merger," CEO Eva Berneke told Reuters in an interview. The Paris-based group formed by the merger in September last year of France's Eutelsat and Britain's OneWeb has a constellation of over 600 low earth orbit satellites that cater to broadcasters, telecom companies and radio stations. It sits there until India gets open, the day it gets open, we'll start building," Berneke said.
Persons: Eva Berneke, France's, OneWeb, Berneke Organizations: Elon, SpaceX, Vandenberg Space Force Base, Reuters, Telstra, U.S Locations: Paris, India, Saudi Arabia
US efforts to produce semiconductor chips will continue regardless of who wins the election. AdvertisementNo matter who wins the presidential election this November, President Joe Biden can rest easy knowing one thing: The US's chip manufacturing push isn't going anywhere. The US has seen its share of overall chip production fall from 37% of the world's supply in 1990 to 12%. While many factories remain under construction, the federal funding has already helped boost US chip production. According to a report published last year by the trade and lobbying group Semiconductor Industry Association and Oxford Economics, the US semiconductor industry will face a shortage of 67,000 workers by 2030, including technicians, computer scientists, and engineers.
Persons: Harris, Trump, , Joe Biden, Biden, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, Stephen Ezell, Anna Kelly, Kelly, Arizonans, Chris Miller, Mark Muro, Dylan Patel, SemiAnalysis, Ezell, Muro Organizations: Service, Trump, Information Technology, Innovation Foundation, ITIF's Center for Life Sciences, Biden, Republican, Intel, American Enterprise Institute, Brookings Metro, Apple, Nvidia, Democratic, Semiconductor Industry Association, Oxford Economics Locations: Arizona, USA, China, Taiwan
Asian chip stocks fell on Wednesday after Dutch semiconductor equipment maker ASML posted disappointing sales forecasts, driving down global stocks in the sector. South Korean chipmaking heavyweight SK Hynix, which manufactures high bandwidth memory chips for AI applications for Nvidia, traded 1.6% lower. Net bookings for the September quarter were 2.6 billion euros ($2.83 billion), the company said — well below the 5.6 billion euro LSEG consensus estimate. Nvidia fell 4.7% and AMD lost 5.2%. In its June-quarter earnings presentation, ASML said that 49% of its sales come from China.
Persons: ASML, Foxconn —, Roger Dassen, — Ryan Browne Organizations: Tokyo, Renesas Electronics, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Hai Precision Industry, SK Hynix, Nvidia, Samsung Electronics, Nikkei, AMD, Bloomberg, Biden Locations: Korean, Taiwan, ASML, Veldhoven, Netherlands, China
Beijing Reuters —Intel products sold in China should be subject to a security review, the Cybersecurity Association of China (CSAC) said on Wednesday, alleging the US chipmaker has “constantly harmed” the country’s national security and interests. “It is recommended that a network security review is initiated on the products Intel sells in China, so as to effectively safeguard China’s national security and the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese consumers,” CSAC said. Last year, CAC barred domestic operators of key infrastructure from buying products made by US memory chipmaker Micron Technology Inc (MU) after deeming the company’s products as having failed its network security review. A similar security review on Intel products could negatively impact the company’s revenues, over a quarter of which came from China last year. “This poses a great security threat to the critical information infrastructures of countries all over the world, including China … the use of Intel products poses a serious risk to national security,” CSAC said.
Persons: ” CSAC, , Dan Coatsworth, AJ Bell Organizations: Beijing Reuters, Intel, Cybersecurity Association of China, Cyberspace Administration of China, CAC, Micron Technology Inc, Washington, US National Security Agency, NSA, Nvidia Locations: Beijing, China
AdvertisementThe US's efforts to produce more semiconductor chips have encountered some challenges over the past few years, but the tide may be turning. In 2022, President Joe Biden signed the CHIPS Act into law, which included $39 billion in manufacturing incentives for chip production in the US. Last year, TSMC announced that the official opening of its first Arizona fab would be pushed back from 2024 to 2025. TSMC's production of Apple chips is good news for Americans hoping to land jobs in the industry, Patel said. He said he thinks TSMC's production of Apple chips would bode well for the future.
Persons: TSMC, Biden, It's, , Tim Culpan, Culpan, Tim Cook, Dylan Patel, SemiAnalysis, Mark Muro, Apple, Harris, Joe Biden, Arizona hasn't, it's, Morris Chang, Patel, Muro, bode Organizations: Apple, Service, Brookings Institution, Biden, Management, Workers, Brookings Institute, Semiconductor Industry Association Locations: Arizona, Taiwan, Phoenix
CNBC's Jim Cramer critiqued the market action Tuesday and advised investors not to trade when stocks react immediately to earnings reports, as some of these moves are not necessarily warranted. He said the action occurred as a part of the "quarterly re-pricing process" of earnings season. While he's against painting with broad strokes when it comes to earnings season, Cramer said he's not suggesting that there aren't important benchmarks and details worth paying attention to. "There are so many people playing with so much money — professionals who pay people fortunes to figure this stuff out — let them fight to set the price," Cramer said. "For regular investors like you, trying to trade that initial post-earnings action is just an easy way to lose money four times a year, like clockwork."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Stocks, Cramer, he's Organizations: Dow Jones, Nasdaq Locations: Dutch
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty ImagesShares in semiconductor equipment maker ASML fell 15.6% Tuesday after the Dutch company published disappointing sales forecasts in results a day early. ASML said it expects net sales for 2025 to come in between 30 billion euros ($32.72 billion) and 35 billion euros, at the lower half of the range it had previously provided. Net bookings for the September quarter came in at 2.6 billion euros ($2.83 billion), the company said — well below the 5.6 billion euro LSEG consensus estimate. Net sales, however, beat expectations coming in at 7.5 billion euros. In its June-quarter earnings presentation, the Dutch company said that 49% of its sales come from China.
Persons: ASML, Christophe Fouquet, AMSL ASML, Roger Dassen, Dassen Organizations: Nurphoto, Getty, Nvidia, Devices, Broadcom, Wall Street Locations: China, U.S
As CEO of one of the world's largest industrial conglomerates, Honeywell 's Vimal Kapur doesn't think about AI like most individuals. "There is always a trend which makes your skills obsolete, every five years," Kapur said at the recent CNBC Evolve: AI Opportunity Summit in New York City. The AI opportunity for Honeywell is creating a new labor pool that can learn and work alongside AI and accumulate and deploy institutional knowledge much faster. "The future belongs to companies with 'first-order' data sets," he told CNBC "Closing Bell Overtime" anchor Jon Fortt at the Evolve: AI Opportunity event. "Data and data sets are the next frontier for AI," Delangue said.
Persons: Kapur, It's, it's, Jake Loosararian, Jon Fortt, Clément Delangue, Delangue, Katherine Forrest, Paul, Weiss, Garrison, Honeywell's Kapur Organizations: Honeywell, Labor, Nvidia, Gecko Robotics, CNBC, Amazon, Google Locations: New York City, industrials, Rifkind, Wharton
In addition to this, our teams are joining the local taskforces to try to restore the most basic services and bring further supplies to Spruce Pine,” The Quartz Corp said in a statement. The Quartz Corp facility near Spruce Pine, North Carolina, is seen during a CNN flyover of the area on Monday, September 30. And while quartz is abundant around the world, the kind of ultra-high-purity quartz mined in Spruce Pine is not. The Spruce Pine mines provide an estimated 80% to 90% of the world’s high-purity quartz — experts say the exact amount is proprietary and unknown — supplying semiconductor manufacturers like chipmaking giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. However, Wang said that despite the scale of the devastation in Spruce Pine, there is still reason for optimism.
Persons: Hurricane Helene, Helene, , , Seaver Wang, Spencer Bost, ” Bost, ’ ” Sibelco, , Sibelco, that’s, Gregory Allen, David Bader, CSIS’s Allen, Wang, ” Wang Organizations: New, New York CNN, Quartz Corp, Breakthrough Institute, Downtown, CNN, Belgian, Wadhwani Center, AI, Technologies, Center for Strategic, International, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Institute for Data Science, New Jersey Institute of Technology Locations: New York, North Carolina, Hurricane, Spruce Pine, United States, Sibelco, Silicon, Downtown Spruce, Norwegian, Spruce, Spruce Pine , North Carolina,
Making the most advanced semiconductors requires cutting-edge lithography scanners to print the small, complex circuit designs onto microchips. But the Dutch government has banned the sale of its most advanced equipment to China. "Recreating advanced lithography systems that took ASML decades to develop and commercialize is a tall order for any individual Chinese company," Triolo said. SHANGHAI, CHINA - NOVEMBER 8, 2023 - Visitors learn about lithography machines at the booth of ASML at the 6th CIIE in Shanghai, China, November 8, 2023. Meanwhile, the U.S. is not only restricting China's access to chips, but trying to boost its own industry thus further widening the technological gap.
Persons: Huai, Leping Huang, ASML, John Lee, Paul Triolo, Triolo, Lee, Camille Boullenois Organizations: Nurphoto, Getty, Huatai Securities, East, West Futures, Technological, China, DGA Group, ., Chips, Semiconductor Industry Association, Boston Consulting Group Locations: HUAI'AN, CHINA, Jiangsu province, China, U.S, . Netherlands, SHANGHAI, Shanghai, Taiwan
The last major semiconductor shortage happened during the Covid-19 pandemic amid supply chain disruption and a rise in demand for consumer electronics as people were forced to stay and work at home. These GPUs which are housed in data centers are critical for the training of huge AI models which underpin applications like OpenAI’s ChatGPT. Bain said demand for GPUs and AI consumer electronics could be the cause of a chip shortage. The semiconductor supply chain is spread across multiple companies. “Geopolitical tensions, trade restrictions, and multinational tech companies’ decoupling of their supply chains from China continue to pose serious risks to semiconductor supply.
Persons: Bain, Anne Hoecker, TSMC, ” Bain Organizations: Bain & Co, Technology, Nvidia, Qualcomm, Samsung, Microsoft, Bain, CNBC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Samsung Electronics, Washington Locations: Americas, Taiwan, Netherlands, U.S, China
As things stand, Intel is the only US chip firm with plants, known as fabs, that are capable of making advanced semiconductors. TSMC is set to open a fab in Arizona next year, while reports suggest Sam Altman is seeking to raise funds to create chip manufacturing plants. Intel's customers in China include Alibaba and TikTok parent company ByteDance, which have been subject to scrutiny from the US government. "Intel's ties to key businesses in China are typical for a high-tech firm," he said. As Intel and the US consider plans to increase manufacturing capacity at home, the company's China ties will loom large in the global chip race.
Persons: , Joe Biden, Biden, Forrester's, Alvin Nguyen, HWA CHENG, Sam Altman, Pat Gelsinger, Gelsinger, Forrester's Nguyen, it's, Stacy Rasgon, Bernstein, Rasgon Organizations: Service, Intel, Business, Qualcomm, Street Journal, Bloomberg, China Intel, HWA, Getty, Nvidia, AMD, New York Times, The Times, South Korea's SK Hynix, Intel Capital, Financial, Financial Times, Yahoo Locations: chipmaking, Washington, Intel's Arizona, China, AFP, Taiwan, Arizona , New Mexico, Oregon, Arizona, Chengdu, Dalian, South, Beijing
Or maybe South Korea, where Samsung has built an impressive so-called foundry business making semiconductors for other companies. AdvertisementThe US company took a major step recently when it separated its Foundry business from its chip-design business. Intel's Foundry business won't really be able to challenge TSMC until it gets several big customers. Intel's Foundry business just needs way more of these customers. How would Intel's Foundry business perform as a separate company, split off from the design parts?
Persons: , Jerry Sanders, Ian King, TSMC, Globalfoundries, it's, AMD's Sanders, Apple, Ian King's, Raimondo, Gina Raimondo, Bernstein, Stacy Rasgon, that's, Rasgon Organizations: Service, Business, Intel, Samsung, Nvidia, Qualcomm, AMD, Apple, Reuters, TSMC, Foundry, Intel's Foundry, CNBC, Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Locations: Taiwan, South Korea, China, Europe
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