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Spotify — Shares of the music streaming service company fell 2.5% after Redburn Atlantic downgraded the streaming giant to neutral from buy. Tesla — The automaker's stock fell 2.3% in Monday trading upon news that the company's year-over-year sales declined 10.9% in China last month, according to data from the China Passenger Car Association. Oil stocks — Energy stocks soared following the escalation of the Israel-Hamas conflict over the weekend. Airline stocks — On a broader level, airline names were down after several major airlines suspended service to Israel following this weekend's attacks. United Airlines slid 5.3%, while Delta Air Lines and American Airlines shed 4.5% and 5.3%, respectively.
Persons: Elizabeth, Saket Kalia, Bristol Myers, Tesla, Baird, — Datadog, Hess, Northrop Grumman, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound Organizations: General Dynamics Corp, Spotify, Atlantic, Amazon, Barclays, Therapeutics, Bristol, Bristol Myers Squibb, China Passenger Car Association, Motorola Solutions, Motorola, Bank of America, — Energy, Halliburton, CF Industries, Defense, L3Harris Technologies, General Dynamics, Airline, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, American Airlines Locations: NASSCO, Norfolk , Virginia, China, Israel, Palestine
Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 57 points, or 0.2%. Stocks were aided by a retreat in Treasury yields. The rate on the 10-year Treasury note slipped from highs last seen in 2007 after payroll processing firm ADP said that private job growth totaled 89,000 for September. The spread between the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields ended Wednesday at about 31 basis points. The 2- and 10-year yield curve has been inverted since March 2022 – meaning short-term Treasury rates are higher than long-term rates.
Persons: Clorox, FactSet, I've, Liz Young, Stocks, Dow Jones, Young, Yun Li Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Dow Locations: New York City . U.S
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading. Sphere Entertainment — Shares of the media and entertainment company climbed 11.1% in midday trading after a U2 show debuted its Las Vegas Sphere venue Friday night. Bitcoin stocks — Stocks tied to digital currency trading advanced in lockstep with a rally in crypto prices. Instacart — Maplebear, the food delivery company doing business as Instacart, fell 9.2% in midday trading. The Wall Street bank said investors should buy the dip after the stock's underperformance in the first half of 2023.
Persons: — Stocks, MicroStrategy, , — Maplebear, Gordon Haskett, Insulet, Jefferies, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Truist, Yun Li, Lisa Kailai Han, Pia Singh, Michelle Fox, Sarah Min, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Madison Square Garden, , Riot, Marathon, Discover Financial, U.S . Securities, Exchange, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Coeur Mining, Hecla Mining, Harmony, Mining, Gold Resource, Barclays, Norfolk Southern, Bank of America, Nvidia —, Nvidia, Apple, JPMorgan, UBS Locations: Las Vegas, lockstep, Coeur, Wall
Alcoa — Shares of the aluminum stock slipped 6.1% after the company said executive vice president William Oplinger would succeed Roy Harvey as CEO and president. Li Auto — U.S.-traded shares of the Chinese EV company dropped 10% following news that Huawei made moves in the increasingly competitive space. GE HealthCare Technologies — Shares of the medical technology gained 3.3%. JD.com — U.S.-listed shares of the Chinese e-commerce stock slid 2.1% as concerns over the state of the country's economy grew. Chefs' Warehouse — The specialty food distributor popped 1.6% after UBS initiated coverage of the stock at a buy.
Persons: William Oplinger, Roy Harvey, Oplinger, Nio, Li, Leonard Green, Canaccord Genuity, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Brian Evans, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Alcoa Inc, Davenport, Alcoa —, U.S, Li Auto, EV, Huawei, GE HealthCare Technologies, GE HealthCare, Williams, Sonoma —, Green Equity Investors, Partners, Dow Inc, JPMorgan, Technologies, Citi, Chefs, UBS, Hudson Technologies Locations: Riverdale , Iowa, Williams, Sonoma,
Ark Invest CEO Cathie Wood says she believes that Tesla is the "biggest AI opportunity in the world" today. She says that Tesla's autonomous taxi opportunity "is going to be a winner." "Again, this isn't the biggest AI project in the world right now. Wood gave Tesla a $2,000 price target by 2027 – representing potential upside of a whopping 650% from Tuesday's close. AI is the biggest catalyst," Wood said.
Persons: Cathie Wood, Tesla, CNBC's, Wood, Elon Musk, we're, , Yun Li Organizations: Reuters, Innovation Locations: United States, Tuesday's
Pinterest — Shares climbed more than 3% during premarket trading after management said at the company's first investor day that it expects year-over-year revenue growth to accelerate following a slowdown in 2022 and 2023. General Mills — The Cheerios and Yoplait maker rose 1% during premarket trading after reporting fiscal first-quarter results that were slightly above Wall Street expectations and reiterating its outlook for fiscal 2024. Instacart — Shares of the grocery delivery company were down nearly 4% one day after its stock market debut. Coty — The cosmetics maker gained nearly 6% during premarket trading after raising its full-year outlook for 2024, citing momentum in fragrances at its prestige brands, including Burberry, Calvin Klein and Gucci. Bausch Health — The pharmaceutical stock gained more than 5% before the market open after Jefferies upgraded it to buy and raised its price target to $16.
Persons: Davidson, Mills —, Instacart, Coty, Calvin Klein, Gucci, Bausch, Goldman Sachs, , Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh, Samantha Subin Organizations: Dollar, JPMorgan, Citi, D.A, Burberry, Bausch Health, Jefferies, Bloomberg
Nucor — The steelmaker fell 6.1% after offering worse-than-expected guidance for third-quarter earnings, with the company pointing to pricing and volume challenges. Core & Main — The infrastructure stock retreated 4.1% a day after it announced a secondary stock offering. The bank said Apellis has a favorable risk/reward ahead of third-quarter earnings. The Wall Street firm said the resumption of loan repayments introduce bookings risk to food delivery. The Wall Street firm said its pessimistic outlook was changing despite recent underperformance in the reinsurance space.
Persons: Stellantis, Chris Rondeau, Rondeau, Craig Benson, Nucor, Raymond James, Needham, Charles Shi, Lam, Goldman Sachs, Apellis, MoffettNathanson, Estée Lauder, Goldman, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Pia Singh, Brian Evans, Lisa Kailai Han Organizations: UAW, General Motors Wentzville, General Motors, Ford, United Auto Workers began, Workers, CNBC, LSEG, PTC Therapeutics, Medicines Agency's, Medicinal Products, Arm, Investment, Bloomberg News, Apple, Dexcom, ASML Holding, Lam Research, Taiwan Semiconductor, Adobe, Bank of America, JPMorgan, Apellis Pharmaceuticals, Waste Systems Locations: Wentzville , Missouri, New Hampshire, Wells, underperform
Oracle — Shares dipped more than 12% a day after the software company posted disappointing earnings and revenue guidance for its fiscal second quarter. Oracle's revenue, which came in at $12.45 billion, was weaker than the $12.47 billion forecast by analysts. WestRock — The stock rose 4.8% following news that the paper and packaging company will go through with a merger with Smurfit Kappa. The Wall Street firm said shares may be oversold after the company experienced a temporary outage on its payment processor Square. Elsewhere, Morgan Stanley reiterated its overweight call on Exxon, saying the company was a top pick in its category.
Persons: WestRock, Wolfe, Baird, Goldman Sachs, Corinne Jenkins, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Brian Evans Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Oracle, LSEG, Smurfit Kappa, Apple —, Casey's, FactSet, Health, P Global, BBB, CVS, Bank of America, Goldman, Food, Drug, Exxon Mobil —, U.S, Texas, Exxon Locations: U.S
But the company posted $33.85 billion in quarterly revenue, under the $34.13 billion anticipated by analysts. Planet Labs — The satellite imagery stock slipped 2.6% in premarket trading after delivering a weaker quarterly report than expected on Thursday. DocuSign — The electric signature stock advanced 2.4% premarket on the heels of a stronger-than-expected quarterly report released Thursday. The Wall Street firm said Snowflake is in an advantageous position with "best-in-class growth rates" and is set to benefit from increased demand for artificial intelligence applications. The Wall Street firm cited First Solar's strong growth message during its investors day.
Persons: Kroger, LSEG, DocuSign, Davidson, Snowflake, Mizuho, RH —, Gary Friedman, , Yun Li, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Planet Labs, LSEG, Deutsche Bank, Mizuho, Gilead Sciences, Bank of America Locations: Gilead
Fiscal second-quarter earnings per share came in at $2.68, versus the $2.54 expected from analysts polled by Refinitiv. PagerDuty — The stock declined 7.7% after PagerDuty issued third-quarter earnings guidance that missed analysts' expectations. The company expects earnings per share between 13 cents and 14 cents for the quarter, below a StreetAccount consensus of 15 cents per share. The company's earnings per share came out at $1.71, however, which was lower than analysts' expectations of $1.76, according to StreetAccount. The database software maker posted adjusted earnings of 93 cents per share on revenue totaling $423.8 million for the second quarter.
Persons: Lululemon, Papa John's, PagerDuty, Baird, Precious, Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley, Dell, Roz Brewer, Tesla, — MongoDB, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Broadcom, VMware, Refinitiv, Revenue, Dell Technologies, Walgreens, Alliance Locations: San Jose , California, China
Check out the companies making the biggest moves midday:Nordstrom — The department store retailer sank 8.6% even after topping fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue expectations. Earnings came in 40 cents ahead of the 44 cents expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv. Revenue was $1.79 billion, versus the $1.77 billion expected. Gap's revenue was $3.55 billion, below the $3.57 billion expected. Earnings per share came in at 33 cents for its second quarter, versus the 32 cents expected, according to Refinitiv.
Persons: Nordstrom, Ulta, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Michael Bloom Organizations: Refinitiv, Hawaiian, National Weather Service, NBC, Hasbro, Bank of America, Revenue, Intuit —, Refinitiv . Revenue, Marvell Technology, Marvell, Analysts, AMC Locations: Maui, Refinitiv
Founded by brothers Julian and Felix Baker in 2000, the health care hedge fund focuses on biotech and life sciences investing. The biotech stock with a focus on neuroscience has surged more than 84% this year. Baker Bros. doubled down on its bet in Kymera Therapeutics , which it raised by more than 51%. The hedge fund also took new stakes in ImmunoGen , which has more than tripled this year, soaring 216%, and Day One Biopharmaceuticals , which is down by 34%. The hedge fund lowered its exposure to the biotech company, which develops treatments for cancer, by 5%.
Persons: Baker, Tisch, Julian, Felix Baker, Seagen, Yun Li Organizations: Baker Bros, Advisors, Yale, Acadia Pharmaceuticals, Kymera Therapeutics Locations: InVitae, Invitae, Acadia, ImmunoGen
Hedge funds beefed up A.I. bets in the second quarter
  + stars: | 2023-08-15 | by ( Samantha Subin | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +5 min
2023 has been the year for artificial intelligence stocks, and hedge funds in the second quarter beefed up their bets on the growth sector despite its sharp run up this year. Doubling down on Big Tech Despite the uptick in tech shares by the end of the first half, many hedge funds amped up their bets on Alphabet during the second quarter. David Tepper's Appaloosa bet big on AI winners , growing positions in Alphabet, Amazon , Meta Platforms and Microsoft during the period. Betting on chip stocks Nvidia shares have popped 200% as the company triumphs as AI chipmaker to beat this year. Beyond these pure-play AI bets, Coleman added to semiconductor Lam Research .
Persons: Bill Ackman's, Dan Loeb's, David Tepper's, Baupost's Seth Klarman, Philippe Laffont's Coatue, Tiger Global's Chase Coleman, Mark Zuckerberg's, Dan Sundheim's, Ole Andreas Halvorsen, Loeb, Coleman, Sundheim, Baupost, Keith Meister's, Laffont, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Brian Evans Organizations: Big Tech, Microsoft, Tiger Cub, Management, Apple, Amazon, Facebook, Meta, Nvidia, Devices, Viking, Taiwan Semiconductor, Micron Technology, AMD, Intel, Qualcomm, Broadcom, Marvell Technology, Materials, Global, Lam Research, Netflix, Viking Global, NXP Semiconductors, Semiconductor Locations: Apple, Amazon
Dan Loeb's Third Point added new positions in key artificial intelligence beneficiaries in the second quarter, but still underperformed the broader market. As of June 30, he had a position in Amazon worth about $535 million that made the online retailer and web services provider the third-largest position in his fund. He also bought shares of Nvidia , adding up to a position worth about $212 million. Third Point was higher by just 1.1% in the second quarter, paring its loss in 2023 to 3% so far. Meanwhile, the S & P 500 was ahead 8% in the second quarter, and is higher by 16% on the year.
Persons: Dan Loeb's, Tepper, Loeb, underexposure, Tesla —, , Yun Li Organizations: SEC, Taiwan Semiconductor, Nvidia, Microsoft, Activision, Care, Meta, AMD, Google Locations: U.S
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:Capri , Tapestry — Capri soared more than 57%, while Tapestry slid 3.2% in premarket trading. AppLovin — AppLovin shares popped 25.8% in early morning trading after the company posted strong second-quarter results and optimistic third-quarter revenue guidance. The game developer said it expects $780 million to $800 million in revenue for the third quarter, exceeding the $741 million expected by analysts. AppLovin reported earnings of 22 cents per share for the second quarter, while analysts expected 7 cents, according to Refinitiv. The amusement park company reported earnings of 25 cents per share on revenue of $444.0 million.
Persons: Kate Spade, Versace, Jimmy Choo, Michael Kors, AppLovin, Sonos, Refinitiv, Walt Disney, — Illumina, Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh Organizations: Capri Holdings, Capri, Wynn, Wynn Resorts, Walt Disney —, Disney, Six Locations: Alibaba, China
The company reported an adjusted $2.11 per share on revenue of $8.31 billion, while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $1.98 and $7.58 billion. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv had penciled in a loss of 33 cents per share on $175 million of revenue. Palantir Technologies — Palantir Technologies slid 3.4% after the data analytics company reported its second-quarter results. Beyond Meat reported an adjusted loss of 83 cents per share on $102.1 million in revenue, while Refinitiv forecasted 86 cents and $108.4 million. Paramount Global — The media conglomerate's shares climbed more than 2% in premarket trading after the company reported a quarterly earnings and revenue beat.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, NASH, Banks, Moody's, Eli Lilly, EchoStar, Charlie Ergen, Refinitiv, Lucid, Palantir, Hims, Simon & Schuster, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Sagimet, Goldman, T Bank, Citizens Financial, Bank of New York Mellon, Truist, JPMorgan Chase, Telsey, Refinitiv, Novo Nordisk —, Dish, United Parcel Service, behemoth, UPS, Palantir, Paramount Global, Paramount, KKR Locations: New York, Banks —
The company earned €168 million in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv expected €672 million. The company reported adjusted net income and revenue that beat expectations for the second quarter. Viatris reported revenue of $3.92 billion, while analysts polled by StreetAccount called for $3.86 billion. PayPal – PayPal stock climbed 2% after launching its first stablecoin, PayPal USD, backed by the U.S. dollar on Monday. Analysts polled by FactSet are forecasting an adjusted 5 cents per share on $534.2 million in sales.
Persons: Tesla, Zach Kirkhorn, Vaibhav Taneja, Taneja, BioNTech, Refinitiv, Tyson, Berkshire Hathaway, Warren, StreetAccount, Andrew Mok, Sovos, Campbell, Sovos Brands, Campbell Soup, Morgan Stanley, Benjamin Swinburne, Oppenheimer, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin Organizations: Refinitiv, Berkshire, Warren, UBS, Sovos, PayPal, U.S, FactSet Locations: Gruenheide, Germany, BioNTech –, stablecoins, U.S
3M posted $7.99 billion in revenue, beating analysts' estimates of $7.87 billion, according to Refinitiv. Elsewhere, RTX reported second-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street expectations, posting $1.29 in adjusted earnings per share on $18.32 billion in revenue. The home appliance company posted revenue of $4.79 billion, lower than the consensus estimate of $4.82 billion, according to Refinitiv. It did beat on earnings expectations, reporting adjusted earnings of $4.21 per share, higher than the $3.76 estimate. The company notched adjusted earnings per share of $3.29, while analysts estimated $2.70 per share.
Persons: Refinitiv, RTX, it's, Biogen, Morgan Stanley, FactSet, General Motors, Invesco, Andrew Schlossberg, BTIG, Sherwin, Williams, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Tanaya Macheel, Brian Evans, Alex Harring Organizations: Spotify, Alaska Air, Pratt & Whitney, Airbus, General, GE, Whirlpool, Revenue, LG Electronics, LG Energy, GM, Refinitiv, UPS, Teamsters, Xerox –, Xerox, Packaging Corp, America, Secure
Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccines are seen on a table on May 7, 2021 in Los Angeles, California. Johnson & Johnson —The stock jumped 6%, lifting the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average, after the the health care posted second-quarter revenue and adjusted earnings that topped Wall Street's expectations. Johnson & Johnson also lifted its full-year guidance as sales from the company's medtech business jumped. Discover Financial Services — Shares tumbled 14% after the company's second-quarter results missed analysts' estimates on both top and bottom lines. MarketAxess — The electronic trading platform rallied 5.6% after releasing its second-quarter results.
Persons: Johnson, Johnson Covid, Tesla, Abbott, Zions, Estee Lauder, StreetAccount, , Yun Li, Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Michelle Fox Organizations: Netflix, Refinitiv, American Airlines –, American Airlines, IBM, Johnson, Dow Jones, Abbott, Discover Financial, Federal Deposit Insurance, Barclays Locations: Los Angeles , California, China, Freeport
JPMorgan Chase — Shares fell slightly even after the bank reported stronger-than-expected results for the second quarter, as it benefited from higher interest rates and better-than-expected bond trading. Wells Fargo — Wells Fargo shares rose slightly after the Wall Street firm topped second-quarter expectations. The Wall Street firm also said AT&T's exposure to cable may limit the upside for shares. Alcoa — The aluminum stock fell 4.9% following a downgrade to neutral from overweight by JPMorgan. Eli Lilly — The pharmaceutical stock rose 3% in midday trading.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Wells, UnitedHealth, Eli Lilly, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Organizations: JPMorgan, JPMorgan Chase —, Elevance, Citigroup —, JetBlue Airways, American Airlines — JetBlue Airways, American Airlines, Microsoft, UBS, Blackrock —, Alcoa, Progressive Locations: Wells, York
The agreement has the potential to add incremental orders from Uber Eats to 70% of Domino's stores, the company said. DraftKings — Shares of the sports betting app rallied about 5% following an upgrade to buy by analysts at Bank of America. Bank stocks — Bank stocks jumped after consumer prices came in lighter than expected. SunPower — Shares jumped 9.4% after the solar power company was upgraded by Raymond James to strong buy from outperform. Beyond Meat shares added 4% in the previous session.
Persons: Uber, DraftKings, it's, Lazard, Jefferies, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, KeyCorp, Lucid, FactSet, Raymond James, Pavel Molchanov, Stellantis, Holley, JPMorgan, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Michael Bloom Organizations: Domino's, Bank of America, TV, Jefferies, Bank, — Bank, Citigroup, Goldman, Comerica, Acadia Healthcare, Holley Inc, , JPMorgan Chase Locations: Zions, U.S, New Mexico, Acadia
An exterior view of the Advance Auto Parts store at the Sunbury Plaza. Check out the companies making the biggest moves before the bell:Advance Auto Parts — Advance Auto Parts declined 2.4% in the premarket after Atlantic Equities on Monday downgraded the stock to underweight, and cut its price target to $50. Meta Platforms — Shares of the social media company rose about 1% in premarket trading. Fisker — The electric vehicle maker's stock rose less than 1% after the company announced a $340 million convertible note offering, with the potential to increase it to $680 million. Charles Schwab — Shares of the brokerage firm rose 1.9% in premarket trading after JMP upgraded Schwab to market outperform from market perform.
Persons: Sam Hudson, Carl Icahn, Mark Zuckerberg, Fisker, Charles Schwab —, JMP, Schwab, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Jesse Pound Organizations: Advance, Journal, Shockwave Locations: Sunbury
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. General Mills — Shares dropped 3.9% following mixed fiscal fourth-quarter results. The Betty Crocker and Cheerios owner beat Wall Street expectations on earnings, reporting $1.12 in adjusted earnings per share against a Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.07 per share. The Wall Street bank said Pinterest is making the strategic move to outsource monetization to third-parties to overcome its attribution and scale challenges, including a partnership with Amazon. ZoomInfo — Shares of the software company added 3.9% in premarket trading after Needham initiated coverage of ZoomInfo with a buy rating.
Persons: Mills, Betty Crocker, Biden, Wells, Pinterest, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Needham, ZoomInfo, Yun Li, Jesse Pound Organizations: Safeway, Nvidia, Street Journal, iShares Semiconductor, Amazon Locations: San Anselmo , California, China
People walk by a Dollar Tree store on December 11, 2018 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. FedEx — The delivery company fell 1.7% after quarterly revenue missed expectations and announced CFO Mike Lenz would retire on July 31. Adjusted earnings were better than expected at $4.94 per share against the anticipated $4.89, while forward guidance was around flat. Advanced Micro Devices — Shares of the chipmaker pulled back nearly 5%, on track for their biggest intraday loss in two weeks. Dollar Tree — Shares of Dollar Tree popped more than 3% after the discount retailer reiterated its fiscal second-quarter 2023 earnings guidance.
Persons: Mike Lenz, MicroStrategy, Tesla, Rivian, Goldman, OneSpaWorld, Walt Disney, Needham, Laura Martin, Bob Iger, Raymond James, Uniqure, hemophilia, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min, Brian Evans Organizations: Federal Trade Commission, Amazon, FedEx, Securities and Exchange Commission, Barclays, GlaxoSmithKline —, Petrobras —, Walt Disney —, AMD Locations: Brooklyn, New York City, bitcoin, Netherlands
The Wall Street firm said it believes there will be "significant improvement" in the company's return on invested capital over the next two to three years. Domino's Pizza — The pizza chain gained 6.46% after Stifel upgraded the stock to buy from hold. The Wall Street firm said investors should buy the weakness in Target shares, which are down 15% over the past month. The Wall Street firm said it was bullish long term, but believes the stock price has been seeing appreciation much stronger than experienced in the broader market. The Wall Street firm also boosted its price target to $40 from $36, suggesting upside of more than 20% from Wednesday's close.
Persons: Kroger —, Kroger, Rodney McMullen, Bernstein, Lennar, Oppenheimer, Corning, John Wiley, Mizuho, Patterson, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound, Sarah Min Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Cava Group, Deutsche Bank, Stifel, , Technologies, Corning —, Citi, Corning, Management, UTI Energy, Patterson Locations: Wednesday's
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