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Here are Tuesday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Morgan Stanley reiterates Walmart as overweight Morgan Stanley said that Walmart+ could be worth $45 billion. Morgan Stanley upgrades Amgen to overweight from equal weight Morgan Stanley said the biopharma company is a defensive stock. Morgan Stanley reiterates Microsoft as overweight Morgan Stanley said Microsoft has an attractive valuation. Morgan Stanley downgrades Zoom to equal weight from overweight Morgan Stanley said there's a lack of near term catalysts for the stock. Morgan Stanley names Taiwan Semiconductor as a catalyst driven idea Morgan Stanley said it's bullish heading into semiconductor company's analyst meeting on Thursday.
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailLonger sale cycles for cloud software companies have investors feeling hesitantMariann Montagne, portfolio manager at Gradient Investments, joins 'Power Lunch' to share three software stocks worth trading: Snowflake, Datadog, and ServiceNow.
Analysts see 2022 earnings per share growing by 67%, and the stock advancing 42% from current levels. Energy stocks EQT and Diamondback Energy also made the list. EQT's earnings are expected to grow by 420% in 2022, and 81% of analysts covering the stock rate it a buy. Diamondback's earnings per share are also expected to more than double, and nearly three-quarters of analysts have buy ratings on the stock. Energy stocks have gotten a boost this year from rising oil prices.
The rapid descent into new lows for the S & P 500 this week has dragged down nearly every stock, including some of the favorite names of Wall Street analysts. The stocks in the table below are trading within 5% of their 52-week low, but have a buy rating from more than 70% of Wall Street analysts that cover them. The stocks have an average price target upside of 20% or more, and earnings growth expectation for 2022 of at least 10%. To be sure, using currents earnings growth estimates could prove to be a misstep in the current market environment. Analysts currently see the stock trading nearly 70% below its fair price, with earnings growth of 52% coming up.
Here are the people leading the e-commerce company through its next phase. Leinwand was previously senior vice president of engineering at Slack, and before that he was CTO at ServiceNow. Tia Silas, chief talent officerTia Silas, Shopify's chief talent officer. John Asante, chief information-security officerJohn Asante, Shopify's chief information-security officer. Bobby Morrison, chief revenue officerMorrison joined Shopify as chief revenue officer — a new role for Shopify, reporting to the COO — in August.
His startup, Aisera, uses machine learning and natural language processing to resolve customer service, IT, sales, and operations problems by integrating with a host of enterprise applications like Zendesk, Salesforce, Amazon Web Services, and ServiceNow. The startup also offers a conversational AI service, or a chat service, in multiple languages that is meant to quickly resolve certain issues. Funding for AI, machine learning, and data analysis grew to $115 billion in 2021, according to PitchBook data. For example, Dave uses Aisera's conversational AI for its around-the-clock customer service, allowing the startup to resolve customer questions before handing off to a human if the question is more complicated. "Thanks to Shelly, Chegg's global service desk technicians can better focus on solving complex issues and proactive support."
With this in mind, CNBC Pro set out to find Wall Street's favorite stable stocks. If a stock has a beta of less than 1, it tends to be less volatile than the broader market. Health care names Bio-Rad Laboratories and Zoetis have the highest potential upside of any stock on the list, FactSet data shows. The tech giant has a five-year beta of 0.94 and has buy ratings from 82% of analysts covering it. The video game maker has a five-year beta of 0.76 and has buy ratings from 55% of analysts covering it.
Benchling, which makes cloud R&D software for life sciences companies, boomed during the pandemic. Benchling has grown in size and valuationBenchling makes cloud software to help life sciences companies make their research and development more efficient. He sees a huge opportunity to bring life sciences companies into the cloud, especially given that there aren't many other software companies serving that specific market. The company's new CTO and product chief will be key to making that happen. Shawna Wolverton, chief product officer at Benchling BenchlingWolverton, meanwhile has experience in helping build out Salesforce's platform, which in turn fostered an ecosystem around the cloud giant's products.
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