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Revenue from generative AI should be shared pro rata, CEO says
  + stars: | 2024-11-20 | 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 EmailRevenue from generative AI should be shared pro rata, CEO saysBill Gross, CEO of Prorata and chairman of Idealab, discusses the appeal of Prorata's algorithm amid the generative AI boom.
Persons: Bill Gross, Idealab
CFRA Research says investors should temper expectationsJustin Sullivan/GettyAccording to CFRA Research analyst Angelo Zino, investors should manage expectations around guidance for Nvidia's highly anticipated Blackwell launch. Still, Zino expects Blackwell chips will be sold out for much of 2025. "We expect Blackwell to be supply constrained through CY 25, given heightened demand from hyperscalers to support next-generation data centers. In addition to Blackwell expectations/performance concerns that will likely dominate NVDA's Q&A session on the call, we expect investors to dissect any comments on tariffs/Sovereign AI after Trump's victory," Zino said. CFRA Research rates Nvidia at "Buy" with a $160 price target.
Persons: Justin Sullivan, Getty, Angelo Zino, Blackwell, Zino Organizations: CFRA Research, Sovereign, CFRA, Nvidia
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailGoldman Sachs' top tech bankers size up the industry's dealmaking landscapeGoldman Sachs' Global Head of Internet Investment Banking, Jane Dunlevie, and Global Co-Head of Software Investment Banking, Ryan Nolan, join CNBC's Leslie Picker from the firm's Private Innovative Company Conference which convenes prominent pre-IPO companies in Las Vegas. Dunlevie and Nolan weigh in on how AI is changing dealmaking strategy and explain why they expect to see a more vibrant tech capital markets environment in 2025.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Jane Dunlevie, Ryan Nolan, CNBC's Leslie Picker, Dunlevie, Nolan Organizations: Internet Investment Banking, Global, Software Investment Banking, Innovative Company Locations: Las Vegas
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBoth open and closed source models essential to AI race, Hugging Face co-founder saysThomas Wolf, co-founder and chief science officer at Hugging Face, says both open source and closed source artificial intelligence models are going to be critical to the future of the industry.
Persons: Thomas Wolf
Several companies, from Airbnb to Snap, are now reconsidering the utility of product managers entirely, while others claim that the product manager's reign will only expand in the age of AI. Advertisement"The shift in power moved from engineering to product managers," says Hubert Palan, the CEO of Productboard, a company that provides software for product managers. "The product manager is at the center of everything," says Avi Siegel, a former product manager who's working on his own startup, Momentum. Whether their coworkers are happy about it or not, product managers are gaining recognition. "The future really does belong to product managers," says Frank Fusco, a product manager turned CEO of a software company called Silicon Society.
Persons: Elle, Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, YouTube's Neal Mohan, Gamble, Hubert Palan, doesn't, Avi Siegel, who's, Aaron, he's, ZipRecruiter, Zippia, I've, they're, Palan, Meg Watson, Watson, Brian Chesky, Paul Graham —, Frank Fusco, Fusco Organizations: LinkedIn, Procter, Hewlett, Packard, Microsoft, Apple, Google, Companies, Big Tech, Carnegie Mellon University, . News, McKinsey, Software, Spotify, Chesky, Silicon Society
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailNVIDIA's earnings report sparks massive market anticipation, with analysts focusing on AI growth and 2025's potential. Beth Kindig, Tech Analyst at I/O Fund, and Gunjan Banerji, Lead Writer at The Wall Street Journal, discuss NVIDIA's strong growth, its impact on AI, and its potential to move the broader market.
Persons: Beth Kindig, Gunjan Organizations: Tech, Wall Street
A changing ChinaIt was a different world in the late 2000s and early 2010s, when Chinese students first began surging overseas. In 2020, the US revoked visas for more than 1,000 Chinese students and researchers deemed security risks. In January this year, Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin said in a briefing that “dozens of Chinese nationals, including international students, have been forcibly deported by the US each month.” He decried it as “discriminatory,” urging the US to protect the rights of Chinese students abroad. The Covid yearsThe number of Chinese students in the US plunged during the pandemic and hasn’t rebounded since. “Since the economic sanctions and tech restrictions started in 2018, many (Chinese) students have been sent back home,” one user wrote on Weibo.
Persons: , , Mallie Prytherch, , , Donald Trump’s, ” Prytherch, Trump, Prytherch, Joe Biden, Wang Wenbin, Li Jing, hasn’t, Mirka Martel, Steven Hon, didn’t, Hon, Marianne Craven, they’ve Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Education consultancies, State Department, of International Education, University of Hong Kong’s, Contemporary, Beijing, World Trade Organization, Games, America, Fulbright, Trump, Tsinghua University, CNN, Institute of International Education, Education, , Ivy League Locations: Hong Kong, United States, China, India, America, Contemporary China, , Beijing, cybersecurity, Macau, Weibo, Canada, Australia, American
More than a third of all U.S. adults have a side hustle, recent data shows. The people who make the most money have something in common: lots of emotional intelligence. "A gigantic portion of [side hustle] work involves emotional intelligence pretty heavily," says M.K., who ran Austin-based customer experience consulting firm The Heart Company for eight years before joining Indeed. The more you understand what other people need in their lives, the more you can build your product or service to be a useful solution, he notes. "I think [emotional intelligence] is going to be a big pillar of the future of work, especially with AI taking care of a lot of operational things," M.K.
Persons: Kyle M.K, they'll Organizations: The Heart Company Locations: Austin
Trump’s turn to bask in Musk’s reflected glory
  + stars: | 2024-11-20 | by ( Stephen Collinson | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +12 min
Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX visionary, has spent the last two weeks basking in Trump’s reflected glory at Mar-a-Lago. He’s around so much it’s almost like he’s family, and he even made it into a photo of Trump’s extended clan. Trump’s growing cultural cloutTrump’s visit to Musk’s launchpad was also the latest occasion since the election when he has inserted himself into high-profile photo-ops. The hit perhaps reflects Trump’s starry-eyed infatuation with Musk’s amazing array of spaceships and limitless ambition. With Musk, Trump might get more than he bargained for.
Persons: Donald Trump, Elon Musk, Robert F, Kennedy Jr, , , , Trump, Rushmore, Donald Jr, Texas Sen, Ted Cruz, Ronny Jackson, Musk, it’s, ” Trump, Greg Autry, Vivek Ramaswamy, Chandan Khanna, It’s, Kena Betancur, Joe Rogan, Theo Von, Musk’s launchpad, who’s, Anna Moneymaker, Kim Jong Un, MAGA, Elton John, DOGE, Andrew Harnik, Tim Pawlenty, CNN’s Erin Burnett, “ Trump, Volodymyr Zelensky, Emmanuel Macron, Kim Organizations: CNN, Elon, SpaceX, Texas, White, Trump, University of Central, of Government, Fox News, Tesla, UFC, Madison, Getty, YouTube, Barstool Sports, Republican Party, House Republicans, Hyatt, Minnesota Gov Locations: Texas, Washington, New York, Great State of Texas, He’s, Trump, Gulf of Mexico, United States, University of Central Florida, AFP, Novi , Michigan, Korean, Washington ,, Mar, Minnesota, Russia, Paris
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMeta is leading the race to monetize generative AI, says Morgan Stanley analystBrian Nowak, head of U.S. internet research at Morgan Stanley, says Meta is winning the race to monetize generative artificial intelligence and machine learning, though more innovation and use cases are needed in the segment.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Brian Nowak, Meta
Here are Wednesday's biggest calls on Wall Street: Loop reiterates Nvidia as buy The firm said it's standing by the stock heading into earnings on Wednesday. "We see more upside potential and are moving up our target price to $51 from $30. Pivotal reiterates Netflix as buy Pivotal raised its price target on Netflix to a Street high $1,100 from $925. Goldman Sachs reiterates Microsoft as buy Goldman said it's standing by the stock following the company's Ignite Conference in Chicago on Tuesday. Citi downgrades Target to neutral from buy The firm downgraded the stock following earnings on Wednesday morning and says it's losing share.
Persons: NVDA, hasn't, Bernstein, Robinhood, HOOD, Tyson, Paul, Apple, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Piper Sandler, Piper, Morgan Stanley, it's, DELL, qtr, Guggenheim, Oppenheimer, JPMorgan Chase, Cava Organizations: Nvidia, Deutsche Bank, Gaming, Leisure Properties, Deutsche, Netflix, Bank of America, Walmart, Microsoft, Adobe, JPMorgan, Dell, of America, Underperform, Trump, Barclays, Newell Brands, Citi, Target, TGT, HSBC Locations: Chicago
Stock futures are near flat Wednesday night as investors parsed the all-important earnings release from artificial intelligence darling Nvidia . Investors kept a close eye on after-the-bell earnings from Nvidia, the chipmaker that has dazzled Wall Street for more than a year as a key AI beneficiary. While the company beat expectations for the third quarter and issued strong guidance, shares shed more than 1%. On the other hand, Snowflake jumped more than 19% after the data analytics software company beat expectations for the third quarter. That action follows a mixed day on Wall Street, with the S&P 500 ending near flat.
Persons: University's, Snowflake, Dow, Beth Hammack, Austan Goolsbee, Jeff Schmid Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Stock, Nvidia, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Investors, Dow, University's Stern School of Business, Traders, Cleveland Federal, Chicago Fed, Kansas City, Intuit Locations: New York City, New
Simply put, the leading maker of AI chips again fell victim to the curse of high expectations. Through its Nvidia AI Enterprise service, Nvidia is in the process of building out a potentially massive software business. Now, as we start this next generation, we'll be seeing models run on 100,000 Blackwell chips — and scaling is still in effect. Huang's argument is that going beyond 100,000 Blackwell chips will yield even more capable models. It's a fair question to ask because Nvidia's stock has historically taken a pretty big hit when its customers – such as cloud-computing providers – start uttering that phrase.
Persons: That's, Nvidia's, Blackwell, Colette Kress, Hopper, Kress, Jensen Huang, Huang, there's, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Akio Kon Organizations: Nvidia, Revenue, Enterprise, Devices, Intel, Hopper, Blackwell, Microsoft, Meta, CNBC, Nvidia Corp, Summit Japan, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: U.S, Tokyo, Japan
McMillan encourages employees to pitch new AI solutions. AdvertisementAs part of his role, McMillan co-chairs an AI steering group formalized earlier this year, with Global Director of Research Katy Huberty. Related storiesInside the 8-step processAlthough pitching AI solutions is open to anyone at the firm, there is some leg work involved. AdvertisementThe AI steering group meets every other week to listen to the pitches, usually going through five or six proposals. Every other week, the AI steering committee meets to review the status of these projects.
Persons: Jeff McMillan, Morgan Stanley's, Morgan Stanley, McMillan, who's, he's, Research Katy Huberty, AskResearch, you've Organizations: ChatGPT, Global, Research, Workers
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailShift from simple chatbots to more complex AI systems, SambaNova co-founder saysKunle Olukotun, co-founder and chief technologist at SambaNova Systems, discusses the outlook for artificial intelligence.
Persons: Kunle Olukotun Organizations: SambaNova Systems
Nvidia to report third-quarter earnings after the bell
  + stars: | 2024-11-20 | by ( Kif Leswing | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang arrives at the launch of the supercomputer Gefion, at the Vilhelm Lauritzen Terminal in Kastrup, Denmark, Oct. 23, 2024. Nvidia reports fiscal third-quarter earnings Wednesday after the market closes. Here's what Wall Street is looking for, per LSEG consensus estimates:Revenue : $33.16 billion: $33.16 billion Earnings per share: 75 cents, adjustedHow Nvidia sees the current quarter shaping up is even more important than the results. Wall Street expects Nvidia to forecast 82 cents per share on $37.08 billion in sales. In August, Nvidia said it expected about "several billion" in Blackwell sales during the January quarter.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Blackwell Organizations: Nvidia, Vilhelm, Microsoft, Google, Oracle, Blackwell Locations: Kastrup, Denmark
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailSchwab's Jon Beatty: We see a bull market for financial services spaceJon Beatty, Charles Schwab head of advisor services, joins CNBC's 'Halftime Report' to discuss AI, market opportunities, and the future of the 60/40 portfolio.
Persons: Jon Beatty, Charles Schwab
Business spending on generative AI surged 500% this year, from $2.3 billion in 2023 to $13.8 billion, according to data released by Menlo Ventures on Wednesday. The report also found that OpenAI ceded market share in enterprise AI, declining from 50% to 34%. Anthropic doubled its market share from 12% to 24%. Although OpenAI and Anthropic dominated companies' AI model use, he said, people are "juggling models" and that habit is "not a well-understood piece of data." Meta 's market share stayed at 16% and Cohere's share remained at 3%.
Persons: Anthropic, OpenAI, Tim Tully, Claude, Tully, that's, Mistral's, Google's, Anthropic's Claude, , chatbots Organizations: Menlo Ventures, Menlo, CNBC, Google, Microsoft Locations: Anthropic
European markets are expected to open higher Wednesday as markets keep an eye on a spike in tensions in the Ukraine-Russia war. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 index is expected to open 4 points higher at 8,106, Germany's DAX up 46 points at 19,108, France's CAC up 23 points at 7,252 and Italy's FTSE MIB up 118 points at 33,567, according to data from IG. Asia-Pacific markets were mostly lower overnight after a mixed day on Wall Street amid the mounting geopolitical tensions. U.S. stock futures ticked higher on Tuesday evening, as investors looked toward a key earnings report from tech giant Nvidia . Traders are looking for more details on demand for Nvidia's Blackwell AI chips, which CEO Jensen Huang last month characterized as "insane."
Persons: Germany's DAX, Nvidia's, Jensen Huang Organizations: France's CAC, IG, Global, West ., Nvidia, Traders, Nvidia's Blackwell, Nasdaq Locations: Ukraine, Russia, U.S, West, West . Asia, Pacific, Severn Trent, British
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailXpeng: have to 'do whatever it takes' to stay competitive despite tariffsBrian Gu of Xpeng talks about his company's AI strategy, believing that it will improve driving systems and customer experience. He still sees Europe as a key market despite tariff risks, and is focusing on building up local capacity within Europe.
Persons: Brian Gu, Xpeng Locations: Europe
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailRisk that Nvidia's 'over-earning' will come to an end over next few quarters, says strategistWilliam de Gale, lead portfolio manager BBGT & Islamic BBGT Funds at BlueBox Asset Management, discusses Nvidia and the global tech and AI investment space from the Sohn Investment Conference in London.
Persons: William de Gale Organizations: BBGT, Islamic, Asset Management, Nvidia, Sohn Investment Locations: London
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
Charles Liang, chief executive officer of Super Micro Computer Inc., during the Computex conference in Taipei, Taiwan, on Wednesday, June 5, 2024. Shares of Super Micro soared more than twentyfold over a two year period from early 2022 until their peak in March of this year. Super Micro has been one of the primary beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence boom, due to its relationship with Nvidia . On Monday, Super Micro announced that it was selling products featuring Nvidia's next-generation AI chip called Blackwell. Less than two weeks after the index changes were announced, Super Micro reached its closing high of $118.81.
Persons: Charles Liang, Ernst & Young, Nvidia's Organizations: Super, Computer Inc, Micro Computer, BDO, Nasdaq, SEC, Ernst, Deloitte, Touche, Micro, Mizuho, Nvidia, Super Micro, Dell, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Hindenburg Research, Street, Department of Justice Locations: Taipei, Taiwan
Future growth will have to come from Blackwell, its next-generation chip that has just started shipping to end-users such as Microsoft , Google and OpenAI. More important than Nvidia's third-quarter results will be what the company says about demand for the Blackwell chip. In August, Nvidia said it expected about "several billion" in Blackwell sales during the January quarter. Nvidia reported 122% growth in sales in the most-recent quarter. That was lower than the 262% year-over-year growth it reported in the April quarter and the 265% growth in the January quarter.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Frank Lee, Lee, Blackwell, Raymond James, Srini Pajjuri, ChatGPT, LSEG, Huang Organizations: Nvidia, HSBC, Microsoft, Google, Blackwell, Nintendo Locations: Vilhelm, Kastrup, Denmark, NVDA
AdvertisementWith the threat of cutbacks, some government workers might look to shift to the private sector. Experts advise networking and making résumé adjustments for transitioning to private sector roles. She said she's already seen an uptick in inquiries from federal workers looking to beef up their résumés and explore life in the private sector. Stepped-up job growth in the private sector could worsen problems that some government agencies have had in attracting people, according to Poulson, the attorney. He said he would advise public sector workers who have a choice to consider how careers in government often span many power shifts in politics.
Persons: Donald Trump, Ayanna Jackson texted, revamps résumés, Jackson, she's, Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy, , Laura Labovich, Labovich, You've, haven't, Richard Poulson, Willig, they've, Lisa Simon, Simon, it's, Poulson Organizations: White, AEJ Consulting, Department of Government, Williams, Davidson, Revelio Labs, Trump Locations: Washington, DC, Philadelphia
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