Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "BoFA's"


25 mentions found


NEW YORK, June 8 (Reuters) - Bank of America Corp (BAC.N) promoted the head of its Latin America business, Alex Bettamio, to co-head of global investment banking alongside Thomas Sheehan, according to a memo seen by Reuters on Thursday. It also elevated Faiz Ahmad to jointly lead global capital markets with Sarang Gadkari. Bank of America's investment-banking revenue rose 19% to $6.2 billion in the first quarter, its second-best quarter for revenue, even as investment banking fees sank 20%. Jin Su will become the bank's sole president for the Asia Pacific region when Seguchi retires. Peter Guenthardt will lead global corporate investment banking in the region.
Persons: Alex Bettamio, Thomas Sheehan, Faiz Ahmad, Sarang Gadkari, Ahmad, Bilgi Zapparoli, Bernie Mensah, BofA's, Mark Monaco, Augusto Urmeneta, Jiro Seguchi, Jin Su, Seguchi, Peter Guenthardt, Lananh Nguyen, Lisa Shumaker Organizations: YORK, Bank of America Corp, Reuters, Sarang, Global Transaction Services, Bank of, GTS, Asia, Thomson Locations: America, U.S, Asia Pacific
The US economy is currently resilient but will face a mild recession, Bank of America's Michael Gapen said. "Unless bank stress gets worse and a credit crunch is revealed, it's harder to see where that hard landing risk is coming from," he said. A correction of labor-market imbalances is needed to bring inflation back down to the Federal Reserve's 2% target, and that typically looks like a mild recession, Gapen told Yahoo Finance on Tuesday. "The bank stress situation is in stasis – it's not getting a lot better, but it's not getting materially worse. Underneath that, the employment and other spending data show an economy that's generally resilient," he said.
Persons: of America's Michael Gapen, , Michael Gapen, Gapen, it's Organizations: of America's, Service, Bank of, Yahoo Finance
Bank of America thinks spice maker McCormick has growth-like characteristics that will push its stock higher. The firm double-upgraded the condiments stock to buy from underperform on Tuesday, with a $100 per share price target up from $75. "Across our coverage universe, investors are focused on the transition from price led sales growth to volume led. In our view, MKC holds potential to be a 'winner' in this debate," the analyst said, calling the stock a "growthy staple." MKC YTD mountain McCormick stock has ticked up more than 7% so far this year.
Persons: McCormick, Peter Galbo, MKC, Galbo, CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: of America, McCormick Locations: underperform
Tech shares see biggest-ever weekly inflow on AI boom-BofA
  + stars: | 2023-06-02 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Stocks in general saw $14.8 billion of inflows, the largest weekly inflow since February. Investors are chasing a "summer rip tide into tech and stocks", BofA analysts wrote in a note, which referred to an AI "baby bubble", though they said they themselves remain bearish due to the impact of higher interest rates causing liquidity to tighten. Cash funds, normally in demand when investors are nervous, also saw inflows of $11.3 billion, their sixth straight week of inflows, while gold funds saw $200 million of outflows, according to BofA. They describe the trade as: "Buy HSI sell AI". Reporting by Alun John; Editing by Amanda Cooper and David HolmesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: BoFa, Stocks, Cash, BofA, Alun John, Amanda Cooper, David Holmes Organizations: Technology, BofA Global, Tech, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Hang Seng Tech, Thomson Locations: China
Bank of America thinks chipmaker Broadcom can thrive in the ongoing artificial intelligence boom. The bank raised its price target on the stock to $950 from $800 and reiterated its buy rating. This outlook contributes to BofA's forecast of fiscal year 2024 sales and earnings per share of $39.4 billion and $46.59 per share, respectively. Broadcom could add more to sales and EPS thanks to AI exposure. AVGO YTD mountain Broadcom stock has added nearly 42% from the start of the year.
Persons: chipmaker, Vivek Arya, BofA, Arya, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: of America, chipmaker Broadcom, Broadcom
Advance Auto Parts ' massive earnings miss has drawn strong analyst concern. Both Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan downgraded Advance Auto Parts to neutral Thursday. Advance Auto Parts reported an adjusted 72 cents per share, far below analysts polled by Refinitiv's expectations of $2.57. AAP YTD mountain Advance Auto Parts stock is down more than 50% in 2023. Bank of America also downgraded Advance Auto Parts to neutral Thursday and slashed its price target to $85 from $178.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Christopher Horvers, Horvers, Kate McShane, Elizabeth Suzuki, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: JPMorgan, AAP, Bank of America
China's electric vehicles are "much more competitive than before" — and it's likely to remain the world's largest EV market in 2025, according to BofA. BofA shares some tips on how investors can position themselves in the country's EV market. For Li Auto, it gave the U.S.-listed shares a price target of $37, or 27% possible upside. As for the EV market, BofA is bullish on its battery supply chain in particular. BofA's top pick in copper is Chinese miner Zijin Mining , which it gave a price target of 18 Hong Kong dollars, or 71% upside.
Persons: BofA, Li, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: U.S, Green, Stock, Buffett, Li Auto, Li, EV, China EV, China's, Hong Locations: China, Hong Kong
Buy on volatility, says BofA's Marci McGregor
  + stars: | 2023-05-30 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBuy on volatility, says BofA's Marci McGregorMarci McGregor of Bank of America and Merrill Lynch, joins 'Closing Bell' to offer her market forecast and the A.I.
Persons: BofA's Marci McGregor Marci McGregor, Merrill Lynch Organizations: Bank of America
Why ChatGPT could spark a new bull market
  + stars: | 2023-05-22 | by ( Phil Rosen | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Phil Rosen here, still poking around OpenAI's new ChatGPT iPhone app. The rise of ChatGPT and subsequent AI boom could solidify the recent strength in stocks as a new bull market, according to market veteran Ed Yardeni. In a recent note, the strategist said equities' strong start to the year isn't just a bear market rally, but that it indeed marks a new bull regime. If the Fed mistakenly pauses and then resumes hiking as inflation persists, the music could stop for high flying AI stocks. Mega-cap tech stocks are "overbought" and their rally could stall out soon.
What could burst the bubble is the Fed pausing rate hikes and then restarting the cycle. AI is in a "baby bubble" for now, Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at Bank of America Global Research, wrote on Friday. The Fed may be on the way to pausing its run of rate hikes at its June 14 gathering. The dot-com bubble popped nine months later. "AI = internet," wrote Hartnett.
Investors should avoid piling into mega-cap tech stocks, according to BofA's Savita Subramanian. "You don't want to buy mega-cap tech. Her views come despite a blistering rally in Big Tech stocks this year amid hype over artificial intelligence. Tech stocks have kicked off 2023 with a bang, with Big Tech shares including Meta and Amazon stock soaring in price. While Subramanian noted that AI is a bullish pocket of the tech industry, she suggested it's not a convincing enough driver for mega-cap tech stocks.
The People's Bank of China (PBOC) building in Beijing, China, on Tuesday, April 18, 2023. Source: BloombergChina's consumer price index rose 0.1% in April year-on-year, the slowest since early 2021. Economists surveyed by Reuters expected to see consumer prices rise 0.4% from a year ago and remain unchanged from the previous month. Inflation in China was led by food and services, according to the National Bureau of Statistics – food prices rose by 0.4% and service prices rose 1% from a year ago. That's a stark contrast to the latest U.S. inflation data overnight which showed consumer prices rose 4.9% in April – easing in the wake of the Federal Reserve's efforts to tame inflation by hiking rates 10 consecutive times.
Bank of America said it seeing the first sign of a stock picker's market since 2008. So far this year, $25 billion has flowed into single stocks while ETF outflows have reached $9 billion. The figures point to the "first sign of a stock picker's market since 2008," Jill Carey Hall, who leads BofA's small and mid-cap strategy, said in a weekly update capturing activity among its clients. While more money is flowing to stock pickers, their actual performance versus the rest of the market is another matter. Single stock inflows with ETF outflows from 2008 to 2023.
There are two bullish signals that suggest the stock market could trade to record highs by early next year. BofA says a bullish breakout in global breadth means the S&P 500 could surge 19% from current levels. "Bullish technical backdrop signals support the case for a higher S&P 500 into year-end and early 2024," BofA said. "Bullish technical backdrop signals support the case for a higher S&P 500 into year-end and early 2024." This bullish indicator triggered a breakout in February, and that "does not rule out S&P 500 4,900 into February 2024," Suttmeier said.
Today we're talking housing — but before we get to that, the big thing to watch today is President Joe Biden's meeting with congressional leaders. Joe Raedle/Getty ImagesThe housing market seems to be taking a page from the labor market's playbook right now. Daryl Fairweather, Redfin's chief economist took to Twitter last week to describe the sluggish sector:"Homeowners are quiet quitting the housing market." In effect, more and more homeowners are choosing to stay put with their low mortgage rates locked in, rather than trying to finance a new home at rates that are hovering around 20-year highs. That's due mostly to high rates causing homes to sit on the market longer than usual, which leads to accumulating inventory.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMillennial homeowners shift toward renovating instead of selling, says BofA's Liz SuzukiLiz Suzuki, Bank of America Securities senior analyst, joins 'Power Lunch' to breakdown new numbers surrounding millennial homeowners, renovation projects, and the housing market.
Which brings us to a fantastic story about Wells Fargo's decision to reorganize how it serves its ultra-rich clients. And while many understood some changes were necessary, nearly everyone agreed the bank didn't go about it the right way. Read more about Wells Fargo's chaotic reorganization of its private bank. It's the latest move in what has been an active 12 months for the bank's tech division. The accounting firm had signed off on financial statements from Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and First Republic, the Financial Times reports.
Kristopher Fador is Bank of America's new chief information security officer, succeeding Froelich. Craig Froelich is taking the helm as the chief information officer of architecture, developer experience, and policy, a newly created role at Bank of America. Froelich previously served as chief information security officer for the nation's second-largest bank, a role he held for more than eight years. He also spent time in Hong Kong for BofA, leading regional information security teams, according to his LinkedIn. At Goldman Sachs, for example, CIO Marco Argenti has made developer experience a key focus of his strategy.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailStock market bulls hard to find amid high rates and banking fallout, says BofA's SubramanianSavita Subramanian, BofA Securities, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss Subramanian's thoughts on the earnings season thus far, if there will still be a 'reckoning' in corporate earnings and more.
Shares of First Republic dropped more than 40% in pre-market trading today, while JPMorgan stock ticked 2.9% higher. Let's check in on Russia's wartime economy. To the surprise of many forecasters, Russia's economy has held up better than expected as it carries on into the second year of its war on Ukraine. And leaked documents, first reported by the Washington Post, suggest that Russia can fund its war for at least another year. Specifically, US intelligence says Moscow can rely on its sovereign wealth fund to help pay for its war efforts, as well as higher corporate taxes and ramped-up imports.
Things are calmer now, but seven traders who spoke to Reuters, some heading rates desks at big global banks, said March's mayhem continues to reverberate, with fears of further volatility in traditionally stable bond markets muting activity. Investors rely on government bond markets to translate central bank interest rates into a stable benchmark for borrowing costs, from corporate loans to household mortgages. Yield shifts in government bond markets have become bigger - occasionally hitting 20 bps a day - since central banks started ramping up rate hikes last year to tame surging inflation. For some, March's turmoil is the latest sign of how post-2008 regulations constraining dealer balance sheets are affecting bond market functioning. Others noted markets were leaving behind an era of low volatility for good as rates rise.
LONDON, April 28 (Reuters) - Uncertainty over the economic outlook and the banking sector prompted investors to move money back into cash and gold in the week to Wednesday, according to BofA Global Research. But the current environment is tricky to trade, as evidenced by a push into perceived risky assets such as tech stocks and the largest inflows into Chinese equities in well over a year, BofA's note, which cited data from EPFR, said on Friday. There were $52.3 billion of inflows to cash funds in the week, a resumption of inflows after one-off outflows a week earlier, and also $200 million of inflows to gold. There have been $634 billion of inflows into cash in the year to date compared to $11 billion for the whole of 2022. Meanwhile, in the week to Wedensday there were $6.1 billion of inflows to Chinese equity funds, the most since January 2022, and $1.2 billion of inflows to tech funds, the most since November 2022.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThe market going into summer could be volatile, says BofA's Jill Carey HallJill Carey Hall, Head of Small and Mid-Cap Strategy at Bank of America Global Research, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the earnings season so far, and her market outlook for the rest of the year.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBofA's Stephen Suttmeier: We have a lot of stability for equitiesStephen Suttmeier, chief equity technician at BofA Securities, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss the potential for a bullish breakout, trends in stocks versus bonds, and the April technicals.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNvidia will compete for chip market share with the cloud players, says BofA's Vivek AryaVivek Arya, BofA Securities senior semiconductor analyst, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss Microsoft's chip manufacturing pursuit, the early stages of generative A.I. and large data models, and more.
Total: 25