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And it's already a popular business: the company reported $10.32 billion in data center revenue, reflecting a 171% increase from the same quarter a year ago. Roy also raised his price target for shares to $600, which reflects a 27.3% jump from Wednesday's close. If met, that price target equates to a more than 310% gain from where the stock finished 2022. Bank of America's Vivek Arya hiked his price target to $650 from $550, and Atif Malik of Citi now expects the stock to go to $630. In addition to the data center business, Goldman's Hari pointed to improving supply as a reason to be optimistic that there's still upside ahead.
Persons: Refinitiv, Ruben Roy, Roy, Wells, Aaron Rakers, Goldman Sachs, Toshiya Hari, America's Vivek Arya, Atif Malik, Goldman's Hari, BofA's Arya, Hari, Ross Seymore, he'd, NVDA, Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, Bank, America's, Citi, Deutsche Bank Locations: Wells Fargo
Nvidia shares climb as analysts raise targets ahead of report
  + stars: | 2023-08-15 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
REUTERS/Ann Wang/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsAug 15 (Reuters) - Shares of Nvidia (NVDA.O) rose more than 3% in hefty trading volume on Tuesday after two brokerages raised their price targets for the chipmaker, heightening already lofty expectations ahead of its quarterly earnings report next week. Over $22 billion worth of Nvidia's shares were traded as of mid-day, beating out $14 billion of trades in Tesla (TSLA.O), which is usually the Wall Street's most traded stock. Nvidia shares rose as much as 3.5% before trimming gains. Analysts on average expect Nvidia to report a 66% surge in quarterly revenue to $11.13 billion, according to Refinitiv. That compares to Nvidia's forecast for quarterly revenue of $11 billion, plus or minus 2%.
Persons: Ann Wang, They've, Dennis Dick, Timothy Arcuri, Arcuri, Morgan Stanley, Wells, Aaron Rakers, Noel Randewich, Emelia Sithole Organizations: REUTERS, Nvidia, Tesla, Triple D Trading, UBS, NVDA's, Santa, Thomson Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, Philadelphia, Wells Fargo, Santa Clara , California
AAPL YTD mountain Apple stock was trading lower after quarterly results. Apple doesn't provide official forward guidance and has not done so since 2020 over macroeconomic uncertainty. Morgan Stanley's Erik Woodring reiterated an overweight rating on Apple but lowered his price target to $215 from $220. Bank of America's Wamsi Mohan remained neutral on Apple, accompanied by a $210 price target that equates to roughly 10% upside. Rakers maintained an overweight rating on Apple stock with a $225 price target, or about 18% upside from Thursday.
Persons: Apple, Luca Maestri didn't, Apple doesn't, Morgan Stanley's Erik Woodring, Woodring, Morgan Stanley, America's Wamsi Mohan, Mohan, Citi's Atif Malik, Malik, Wells, Aaron Rakers, JPMorgan's Samik Chatterjee, Chatterjee, Goldman Sachs, Michael Ng, Apple's, Ng, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, America's
David A. Grogan | CNBCEmerging markets and ChinaSome analysts are eager to see Apple give data points on India sales. India became one of Apple's top five iPhone markets during the quarter, according to analyst estimates. If Apple stockpiled parts and has enough to make what it needs to produce, it could help margins, analysts say. Wall Street likes to see Apple's services business grow regularly and smoothly, because the margins on services are so much higher than when Apple sells hardware. Apple suggested a 5% year-over-year increase in services, and FactSet's estimates more than $20.7 billion in revenue.
Persons: Tim Cook, Valley's Allen, David A, Cook, D.A, Davidson, Tom Forte, Piper Sandler, Harsh Kumar, Kumar, Apple, Sidney Ho, Wells, Aaron Rakers Organizations: Company, Grogan, CNBC, Apple, Google, Apple Pay, Services, Deutsche Bank, Bloomberg Locations: Sun Valley , Idaho, China, India, Hong Kong, Taiwan
Two analysts raised their expectations for Apple shares, a week ahead of the technology giant's next earnings report. Deutsche Bank analyst Sidney Ho reiterated his buy rating on the Big Tech stock while raising his price target by $30 to $210. Wells Fargo analyst Aaron Rakers also upped his price target on Sunday, bringing his expected price per share to $225 from $210. The new price target from Rakers, who has an overweight rating on the stock, shows that he thinks shares could jump 17.2% over the next year. He said to expect an in-line revenue report and slight beat to expectations for earnings per share.
Persons: Sidney Ho, AAPL, Ho, Apple, Wall, Wells, Aaron Rakers, Rakers, Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Deutsche Bank, Big Tech
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailThere's still questions around demand in some markets for semiconductors: Wells Fargo's Aaron RakersAaron Rakers, Wells Fargo analyst, joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk TSMC, the PC market, where the A.I. trade stands today and more.
Persons: Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers Aaron Rakers, Wells Locations: Wells Fargo
A group of stocks including Advanced Micro Devices are set to benefit now that the dollar is weakening, according to a stock screen from CNBC Pro. CNBC Pro reviewed the five biggest monthly declines in the dollar s over the past five years, using the U.S. ICE Dollar Index and FactSet data. On a median basis, the chip stock gained more than 24% during the past five largest monthly declines in the dollar. Over the past five largest monthly dollar declines, First Solar advanced more than 18% on a median basis. Nvidia also stands to gain when the dollar is weaker, having already jumped more than 11% in earlier periods of dollar weakness.
Persons: It's, Wells Fargo, Aaron Rakers, Goldman Sachs, CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: CNBC Pro, U.S, ICE, AMD, Nvidia, Deere & Company, General Electric Locations: FactSet
The tech giant on Monday unveiled its Vision Pro mixed reality headset, which will retail for $3,499. Davidson downgraded Apple stock to neutral , insisting that any positive bump from the Vision Pro announcement was already priced into the stock's current trading levels. that if Apple's Vision Pro could achieve a ~25% ship share this would leave us to est. He raised his price target to $210 from $185, implying upside of about 17% from Monday's close. To be sure, he maintained Apple as a top pick and with a price target of $190.
Persons: Apple's, D.A, Davidson, Wells, Aaron Rakers, Rakers, Goldman Sachs, restating, Michael Ng, Samik Chatterjee, Chatterjee, Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi, Sacconaghi, Morgan Stanley's Erik Woodring, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, Apple's, JPMorgan Locations: Wall, Monday's
Most Wall Street analysts like what they're seeing from Apple , viewing the iPhone maker's better-than-expected results as a sign of resilience and its continued ability to deliver even in a tough environment. Apple rose 2% in the premarket after posting earnings that beat expectations, driven by stronger-than-expected iPhone sales. Chatterjee has an overweight rating on Apple and a price target that implies upside of 14.6%. Softening demand 'casts a cloud' Despite the company's better-than-feared results, some analysts do expect volatility ahead. UBS analyst David Vogt reiterated his buy rating on the stock but said softening demand "likely casts a cloud on the stock near term."
Samsung's plan to cut memory chip production signals a potentially sooner-than-expected recovery for the broader memory chip market, according to Wall Street. Investors seemed to laud the news, sending shares of Micron Technology and Western Digital up about 8% each on Monday. Citi analyst Christopher Danely called the news a "huge positive" for the dynamic random access memory, or DRAM, industry. But while the cuts from Samsung should help ease some pricing pressures, caveats persist, with Morgan Stanley's Joseph Moore expecting a "fairly muted" upturn from the production cuts and slow margin recovery even in 2024. "Investors are much more excited than industry contacts around this, given obvious green shoots implied from production cuts," he wrote.
The firm has a price target of $65, which implies 9.6% from the stock's closing price on Tuesday. Meanwhile, JPMorgan said that it is "starting to see some light at the end of the tunnel" for Micron as inventory levels begin to improve. The firm has a price target of $75, implying 26.5% upside from Tuesday's close price. His price target of $46 implies shares falling by almost a third from their closing price on Tuesday. Micron shares have rallied more than 18% in 2023, but have tumbled 27.7% over the last 12 months.
Since the launch of ChatGPT late last year, no one in the tech world can seem to stop talking about artificial intelligence. CEO Sundar Pichai announced Thursday that the company will launch its LaMDA language model and new AI features "very soon ." But it's not just technology companies rethinking AI. We combed through earnings transcripts available through FactSet to find out what some of the biggest tech companies are saying about the latest craze and who could benefit the most. Preparing for an 'AI arms race' in tech There's no question that Microsoft stands to gain from ChatGPT and the AI push on Wall Street.
Microsoft 's earnings report earlier this week was largely considered dissatisfying to analysts. The company beat analyst expectations on per-share earnings while missing analysts' revenue estimate in its fiscal second quarter , Refinitiv data shows. But analysts who cover the stock weren't entirely beating up on it, pointing to AI as a bright spot in the earnings report. Analysts and company management have argued AI will improve existing products such as Azure and Bing. He said AI company Nvidia will have "derivative focus," while Arista Networks is well positioned as AI's fabric gets expanded.
Weak outlook, reduced estimates, significant oversupply. Looking for an imminent bottom in global tech demand is proving very elusive, at least if you look at Micron's earnings report. "These are the most challenging conditions for the memory market since the financial crisis," Chris Caso at Credit Suisse said, after he looked over Micron's numbers. "Losses mount over significant oversupply," Joseph Moore at Morgan Stanley said. "In a rapidly deteriorating memory environment driven by inventory corrections/demand weakness across nearly every end market, pricing continues to be the biggest headwind to memory profitability/earnings," Harlan Sur at JPMorgan warned.
The latest results from Nvidia suggest a gaming bottom is in sight for the battered semiconductor stock, according to analysts. The chipmaker on Wednesday posted a mixed quarter, with earnings falling slightly below analysts' expectations . Nvidia's gaming division reported a 51% decline in sales as the PC gaming market slows from pandemic-era growth and retailers grapple with a glut of inventory. Bank of America's Vivek Arya reflected similar sentiment, viewing the current period as an "inflection quarter" for the chip stock. Analysts see particular strength in the company's data center business, which saw sales rise 31% year over year.
Keysight Technologies is underrated and ready to grow within more technology spaces than the market has given it credit for, Wells Fargo said Thursday. Aaron Rakers initiated Keysight with an overweight rating, calling it an "instrumental play on digital transformation." Rakers said the company has the potential to increase margin by bringing up software mix. It was spun out from Agilent Technologies, which Rakers said did not invest in the company enough for it to reach its potential. To be sure, the company faces the risk of not being able to gain further market growth or increase margins.
Investors dumping tech stocks after their dismal earnings results this past week are going back to old economy names for the hottest stock picks. Disappointing quarterly reports from mega-cap tech stocks signified lower growth ahead from the once darling tech sector. Shares of Amazon tumbled nearly 15% last week through Friday after the online retail giant reported quarterly revenue that missed estimates. Apple was the rare "bright spot" among big tech earnings, according to Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers. The S & P 500 stocks that surfaced in our screen exclude tech, and have been around for 100 years or more.
Apple 's quarterly results proved to analysts that the iPhone maker's stock is the place to hide when a recession hits. Wells Fargo's Aaron Rakers called Apple the "bright spot amid mega-cap carnage" in a note to clients Thursday as the company shared "better-than-feared" results even in this troublesome macro environment. Credit Suisse's Shannon Cross said the stock is a "safe haven" and "relatively safe port in the storm" in a note to clients Thursday. JPMorgan Chase's Samik Chatterjee said the results underscore Apple's resilience and should further entice investors to buy the stock. "Amid a sea of large-cap earnings debacles, Apple's results appear to be a relative victory," wrote Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWe think Nvidia's data center business is poised for pretty attractive growth, says Wells Fargo's RakersAaron Rakers, Wells Fargo managing director and equity analyst, joins 'The Exchange' to discuss which companies could benefit from Meta's massive spending on the metaverse, his thoughts on AMD and how Rakers would handicap the health of Meta.
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