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Worries about whether artificial intelligence investments will pay off may have rocked markets recently, but Wedbush Securities tech analyst Dan Ives says the tech boom is set to continue. Nvidia shares in particular were hit in recent weeks , before rebounding last week and lifting other tech names as well. Nvidia is set to continue driving tech higher, Ives told CNBC's " Street Signs Asia " on Monday. "Everything we're seeing from … Nvidia … this party is going to continue … for the next six to eight quarters, because we're actually seeing demand accelerating," he said. Ives estimated that AI capital expenditure is set to reach around $1 trillion.
Persons: Dan Ives, Ives, CNBC's, we're Organizations: Wedbush Securities, Nvidia, Microsoft Locations: U.S
That also means that AI data centers are growing fast — as is the demand for them. That in turn is set to drive up the demand for cooling systems for data centers. We believe the demand for liquid cooling for AI data centers should sustain for the following 5-10 years, driven by continuous iteration of AI chips and rising heat dissipation requirements," Jefferies said in a Sept. 10 report. Cooling services have been said to improve power efficiency in data centers and, by extension, cost efficiency. Envicool Technology : Jefferies expects data center cooling sales in Southeast Asia to contribute one-third of such sales for the Chinese firm.
Persons: Jefferies, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Jefferies, Stock, Schneider Electric, Technology, PSU, Nvidia Locations: China, Southeast Asia
Tech stocks may have had a volatile past few weeks , but one chief investment officer is still bullish. The chief investment officer believes Nvidia's stock is "reasonably valued," based on its two to three-year outlook. "We've been doing that, and we've been pretty happy with the price we've been getting," he added. Broadcom shares fell 7% in extended trading following its results announcement, but remain up close to 47.5% year-to-date. Nineteen of 33 analysts covering the stock give it a buy or overweight rating, according to FactSet data.
Persons: Jason Ware, Jensen Huang's, Ware, CNBC's, We've, we've, Oracle Corporation Ware, it's, Leswing, Jordan Novet Organizations: Microsoft, Nvidia, Oracle, Broadcom, Oracle Corporation, Apple, Tesla Locations: Albion
While that may give some investors pause, veteran tech investor Trent Masters continues to see promise, revealing four stocks he has a "high degree of conviction" in. They are: Nvidia , Motorola Solutions , Trane Technologies and Sherwin-Williams . Trane Technologies Beyond the traditional tech plays, Masters is betting on Trane Technologies, a company specializing in heating, ventilation, air-conditioning and refrigeration systems. The average price target for Trane Technologies is $361.46, according to FactSet data, giving it a 0.8% discount. Sherwin-Williams Outside tech, Masters likes paint manufacturer Sherwin-Williams thanks to its "very strong ... business (with a) good returns profile."
Persons: Trent Masters, Sherwin, Williams, CNBC's, Jensen Huang's, Masters, — CNBC's Jim Cramer Organizations: Nvidia, Motorola Solutions, Trane Technologies, Sydney, Alphinity Investment Management, Motorola, Land Mobile
Local governments in China are still building highways, bridges and railways, as pictured here in Jiangxi province on Sept. 6, 2024. That's cutting significantly into local government revenue, especially at the district and county level, according to S&P Global Ratings analysts. watch now"Macroeconomic headwinds continue to hinder the revenue-generating power of China's local governments, particularly as related to taxes and land sales," she said. Jiangsu, Shandong, Shanghai, and Zhejiang — some of China's top provinces in tax and non-tax revenue generation — see non-tax revenue growth exceeding 15% year-on-year growth in the first half of 2024, S&P's Huang said. China's national taxation administration in June acknowledged some local governments had issued such notices but said they were routine measures "in line with law and regulations."
Persons: Huang, P's Huang, Camille Boullenois, Laura Li, Morgan Stanley, Chetan Ahya, Robin Xing Organizations: Getty, BEIJING, Global, CNBC, NingBo BoHui Chemical Technology Locations: China, Jiangxi, Beijing, Zhejiang, NingBo, Jiangsu, Shandong, Shanghai, Asia
It's also common to draw parallels between the dot-com bubble and today's hype, leading investors to wonder if there's an AI bubble that's about to pop, too. Goldman Sachs' big AI headline of the month is "To buy, or not to buy, that is the question." The note from September 5, led by Peter Oppenheimer, suggests the answer is "to buy" but also to diversify. And the third is the application providers, which are the companies creating services for end users to harness AI. It comes from machine learning or big data workloads that various companies and governments use, Belton noted.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Peter Oppenheimer, John Belton, doesn't, Brian Colello, Nancy Tengler, that's, it's, Tengler, Wall, Larry Ellison, Colello, Belton Organizations: Service, Business, Gabelli Funds, Morningstar Equity Research, Investments, Nvidia, Companies, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle, IBM, Broadcom, AMD, Cadence Design Systems, Google, AWS, Eaton Corporation Locations: GenAI, Belton
It's also a sign of just how expensive the business of training and running AI models is getting. AdvertisementGenerative AI is a cash-guzzlerStartups like OpenAI need to raise huge amounts of capital to build smarter AI models. Just look at the spending of Big Tech firms working to improve their AI models. Consolidation has struck the AI industry in recent months, as some top startups trying to build AI models have been gutted. AI startups serious about progressing on LLMs will need to figure out the answer to this pretty quickly.
Persons: , Elon, Sam Altman, ChatGPT, It's, Justin Sullivan, OpenAI, Dario Amodei, Anthropic, Pretty, Amodei's Anthropic, Dario Amodei's Anthropic, Noam Shazeer —, Ben Bergman, Sri Muppidi, it's, Elad Gil, Gil Organizations: Service, Bloomberg, Business, SpaceX, Getty, Microsoft, Big Tech, Street, Nvidia, Apple, Amazon, Samsung, Google Locations: OpenAI, aren't
Read previewJensen Huang faces a monumental task as he takes center stage at a Goldman Sachs event on Wednesday: getting AI investors to stop panicking. However, there are signs suggesting that investors are getting pretty angsty over the future of Nvidia and AI more broadly. The markets are in a panic over AINvidia has been a powerhouse at the center of the generative AI boom. First, Nvidia's 122% year-on-year revenue growth in the last quarter was smaller than the 262% growth it recorded in the previous quarter. "I do not believe that Jensen is able to say anything that will quell investors' nerves," he said.
Persons: , Jensen Huang, Goldman Sachs, Chris Beauchamp, Jeff Chiu, Beauchamp, Bernstein, Emma Cosgrove, Huang, Blackwell, Alvin Nguyen, Forrester, Jensen Organizations: Service, Nvidia, Technology Conference, Business, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Santa, Big Tech, Blackwell Locations: San Francisco, Santa Clara
Microsoft said June quarter capex rose more than 77% year-on-year to $19 billion. Koren and his firm do not own Nvidia stock. Analysts give Nvidia upside potential of 15.8% on average, according to FactSet data on Thursday. "Nvidia will still take the lion's share of, to our estimates, $700 billion of capex over the next two and a half years. So the outlook should still be strong for Nvidia," Wang told CNBC's "Squawk Box Europe" on Wednesday.
Persons: Josh Koren, CNBC's, Koren, Yang Wang, Wang Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Google, Tech, Musketeer Capital Partners, AMD, Counterpoint Research
So it might surprise investors that the automaker believes its new path to profitability for electric vehicles will first be led by smaller, more affordable vehicles. “We’re quite convinced that the highest adoption rates for electric vehicles will be in the affordable segment on the lower size-end of the range,” he told CNBC on Thursday. Gjaja’s comments came a day after the automaker announced updates to its EV strategy that will cost up to $1.9 billion. Gjaja said the decision wasn’t taken lightly, especially the cancellation of the upcoming three-row vehicle, which Ford CEO Jim Farley and other executives had been touting as a game changer for several years. He said the Ford, in part, developed the skunkworks team to prove that Ford can compete against the Chinese automakers.
Persons: Marin Gjaja, We’re, , Warren Buffett, Gjaja, Jim Farley, ” Farley, Ford, ” BofA’s John Murphy, John Lawler, Lawler, ” Gjaja, ” There’s, we’ve, ” Ford, Thursday, Organizations: DETROIT, Ford, CNBC, North America, EV, , ICE, Wall Street, GM, General Motors Locations: U.S, Europe, North, California, China,
Every weekday the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer holds a "Morning Meeting" livestream at 10:20 a.m. "We're debating maybe taking some profits into the quarter," Marks said, adding that big-ticket items like appliances aren't selling well right now given the weaker consumer. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Stocks, Jerome Powell's dovish Jackson, Powell, Jeff Marks, Evercore, Blackwell, Marks, Jim Cramer's, Jim Organizations: CNBC, Federal, Tech, Nvidia, Broadcom, Devices, Club, AMD
In this article F Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTA banner advertises the Ford Mustang Mach-E electric vehicle at a Ford dealership on August 21, 2024 in Glendale, California. So it might surprise investors that the automaker believes its new path to profitability for electric vehicles will first be led by smaller, more affordable vehicles. "We're quite convinced that the highest adoption rates for electric vehicles will be in the affordable segment on the lower size-end of the range," he told CNBC on Thursday. Gjaja's comments come a day after the automaker announced updates to its EV strategy that will cost up to $1.9 billion. He said the Ford, in part, developed the "skunkworks" team to prove that Ford can compete against the Chinese automakers.
Persons: Mario Tama, Marin Gjaja, Warren Buffett, Gjaja, Jim Farley, Farley, Ford, BofA's John Murphy, John Lawler, Lawler, There's, we've, Michael Wayland Organizations: Ford, Getty, DETROIT, CNBC, North America, EV, Wall Street, GM, General Motors Locations: Glendale , California, U.S, Europe, North, California, China
NVDA YTD mountain Nvidia Wall Street is bullish heading into Nvidia's earnings results next week, figuring any hiccups to its next generation AI chips does little to dim the earnings potential of a company that essentially has a monopoly on the market. Economists polled by FactSet anticipate PCE to show increases of 0.2% month on month and 2.6% from the year-earlier period. Wall Street anticipates that stocks could go higher from here, though the road from now to the end of the year could be bumpy. Other notable earnings results include tech names Salesforce and CrowdStrike, as well as consumer names such as Campbell Soup, Dollar General and Ulta Beauty. Earnings: Nvidia , Bath & Body Works , J. M. Smucker , Salesforce , CrowdStrike , NetApp , HP Thursday Aug. 29 8:30 a.m.
Persons: Nvidia's, chipmaker, they've, Harsh Kumar, Piper Sandler, Blackwell, Jensen Huang, Jim Cramer, Kumar, Louis Navellier, Jerome Powell, Jackson, Powell, FactSet, David Miller, Miller, Kamala Harris, Donald Trump, He's, Campbell, Lululemon Organizations: Nvidia, Blackwell, Navellier, Associates, Federal Reserve, PCE, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, U.S, Catalyst Funds, Ulta, Dallas Fed, Richmond Fed, Body, HP, Autodesk, PCE Deflator, Chicago PMI Locations: Russia, Ukraine, Chicago, Michigan
Bank of America has identified several stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs) poised to benefit from the growth in artificial intelligence. The Wall Street bank surveyed its fundamental equity team of 130 analysts, covering approximately 3,400 companies, to identify the companies that stand to gain from AI across various sectors. The bank believes the development of AI is the third major tech cycle over the past five decades. The earlier cycles are the growth of the internet and mobile phone devices. "Despite AI capital expenditure potentially reaching [$1 trillion plus] in the near term, we're only in 1996 relative to the internet," said Bank of America analysts led by Alkesh Shah, who compiled the stock picks, on Aug 5.
Persons: Alkesh Shah, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: of America, Budweiser, Anheuser, Busch InBev, ASM International, SAP Locations: U.S, Orange, British
Tokyo CNN —Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida will not run for a second term as leader of the long-ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) next month following a series of political scandals that have fueled calls for him to resign. The most obvious first step, to show that the LDP will change, is for me to step aside,” he said. Concerns about Japan’s economy, including the weakening of the yen against the US dollar, have also undermined confidence in Kishida’s economic policies. He had previously denied he would step down as party leader despite public criticism and sinking disapproval ratings. His decision to quit comes a month before LDP elections are slated, with the date in September yet to be announced.
Persons: Fumio Kishida, Kishida, , , Joe Biden’s Organizations: Tokyo CNN, Japanese, Liberal Democratic Party, LDP, . Locations: Japan, Kishida, Ukraine
But leaving their dog, Koda, behind started to get too difficult for them. Last April, they took Koda on her first road trip from Connecticut to Florida. Paul Salley and Brianna FeehanFrom finding dog-friendly accommodations and eateries to ensuring that Koda is comfortable on the road, Salley and Feehan now center their trips around her. For their first road trip to Florida, Apple Maps estimated their journey would take 18 hours. AdvertisementFor longer trips with Koda, they set a maximum budget of $6,000 for seven weeks.
Persons: , Paul Salley, Brianna Feehan, Koda, we're, Feehan, Koda Feehan, Salley, there's, Gladys Tsoi, Koda Koda, they've Organizations: Service, Business, Apple, Forbes, American Airlines Locations: Connecticut, Florida, Salley, Airbnb, Wyoming, Los Angeles, Alabama, New York, Wyoming . Alabama, New York City, LA, Hong Kong, Japan
Depreciation costs could lead to AI stock price declines and valuation scrutiny, according to Baird's Ted Mortonson. AdvertisementThe lurking problem is that the useful lifetime of AI GPU chips can be a lot shorter than many expect, especially as AI chips go through an ever-accelerating innovation cycle, leading to higher-than-expected depreciation expenses that ultimately drag down profits. For example, the bank expects Alphabet to record $28 billion in depreciation costs in 2026, which is 24% more than current consensus estimates of $22.6 billion. AdvertisementBut even that has its limits because of how quickly Nvidia is releasing new GPU chips. And for Mortonson, it all comes back to the return on invested AI capital.
Persons: Ted Mortonson, , doesn't, outlays, Ross Sandler, Baird, Morton, Sandler, Mortonson, there's Organizations: Barclays, Service, Companies, Nvidia, Business
It's caused tension in our marriage because my spouse and I clash over our expenditure on our kids. However, now that I'm married with kids, mocking my frugal upbringing has become a bit of a family joke. We constantly clash over how much we spend on the kids. Left to his own devices, my husband could easily spend between $500 and $700 on each child. In an ideal world, kids wouldn't bully each other for not wearing the "right" label.
Persons: , Dunkin, Uber, I'm, I'd, I've Organizations: Service, Business Locations: Europe
What are the economics of war?
  + stars: | 2024-08-07 | by ( Gaelle Legrand | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
Last March, Thierry Breton, the EU's commissioner for internal market, advocated for a shift of the European defense industry toward a war economy. Europe is facing an "existential threat," he said, as the Commission announced a new defense strategic plan, with a minimum of €1.5 billion ($1.6 billion) subsidy to boost the continent's war machine. In Germany, arms maker Rheinmetall inaugurated a new factory in February that will produce artillery ammunition, explosives and rockets. Aerospace and defense company Kongsberg also opened a new anti-ship and cruise missile manufacturing plant in Norway last June. Watch the video above to learn more about the economics of war.
Persons: Thierry Breton Organizations: Commission, Rheinmetall, Aerospace, Kongsberg, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute Locations: Europe, Germany, Norway, Stockholm
download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementThe tech slide follows a dramatic sell-off in Asia, with Japan's main stock market index, the Nikkei 225, ending 12.4% lower and other AI heavyweights such as SoftBank slid hard. By the end of the year, the company expects to spend up to $40 billion on AI research and product development. That's because AI's been touted as a technology as revolutionary as the internet and smartphones by tech luminaries like Bill Gates. If others really start to believe that's the case, it could mark the beginning of the end for the AI rally.
Persons: , Jensen, Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway, SoftBank, Sundar Pichai, Susan Li, AI's, Bill Gates, Goldman Sachs, Jim Covello, Daron Acemoglu, it's, Blackwell, Elliott, Dan Ives Organizations: Service, Tech, Business, Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Nikkei, Google, Big, Investors, Meta, Elliott Management, Financial Times Locations: Asia
Read previewChina's baby bust could see its urban pet population outnumbering the number of toddlers by 2030, investment bank Goldman Sachs wrote in a July 28 report. According to Goldman Sachs' forecasts, China will have more than 70 million urban pets by 2030. AdvertisementThe rise in pet ownership, the bank said, could help push China's pet food market to $12 billion by 2030. People having more pets than babies shouldn't be surprising considering how China is presently grappling with a demographic crisis. China's population shrank again in 2023, with the number of deaths exceeding the number of births by 2.08 million people.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Lin Zhang, Zhang, Zheng Mu, Zheng, Cash, haven't, Bihan Chen, Emily Huang, Huang, Ann, Hunter van Kirk Organizations: Service, Business, country's National Bureau of Statistics, University of New, Zhang, National University of Singapore, National Association of Realtors, NAR, Bloomberg Intelligence Locations: China, country's, University of New Hampshire, Europe, East Asia
Wall Street to Big Tech: Is AI ever going to make money?
  + stars: | 2024-08-02 | by ( Clare Duffy | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +7 min
New York CNN —There’s been one big question on the minds of Wall Streeters this tech earnings season: When will anyone start making actual money from artificial intelligence? But Big Tech still has relatively little to show for all their billions spent in terms of significant revenue gains from AI or profitable new products, and investors are starting to get antsy. Shares of both Google and Microsoft dipped following their earnings reports, a sign of investors’ discontent that their huge AI investments hadn’t led to far-better-than-expected results. She added: “Gen AI is where we’re much earlier … We don’t expect our gen AI products to be a meaningful driver of revenue in ’24. As an example of just how long it can take AI products to come to fruition, take Tesla’s AI-based “full self-driving” technology.
Persons: New York CNN — There’s, ChatGPT, , Morgan Stanley, Keith Weiss, Steven Ju, Sundar Pichai, Goldman Sachs, , ” D.A, Davidson, Gil Luria, Meta, Amy Hood, , Susan Li, that’s, ” Luria, we’re, Jim Covello, Tesla, FSD, Google’s Pichai, Mark Zuckerberg, — Luria Organizations: New, New York CNN, Big Tech, UBS, Google, Microsoft, CNN, Meta Locations: New York, Silicon Valley
Linde Why we own it: The industrial gas supplier and engineering firm has a stellar track record of consistent earnings growth. We're not the only investors who have come to covet the company's ability to deliver steady earnings growth regardless of the economic conditions. But if there is a worsening of economic conditions, Lamba said Linde will take action quickly to protect profits. "That was just a very solid quarter," Jim Cramer said Friday. Guidance For the third quarter, Linde expects adjusted EPS in the range of $3.82 to $3.92, implying 5% to 8% growth compared with the year-ago period.
Persons: Linde, LSEG, . Linde, , We're, South America —, Sanjiv Lamba, Lamba, Matthew White, White, Jim Cramer, Jim Cramer's, Lin, Jim, Rolf Schulten Organizations: Revenue, Products, Linde, LIN, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Linde's, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: North America, America, South America, U.S, It's, Arizona, Americas, Europe, Middle East, Africa, Linde's Asia, China, Leuna, Germany
Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., displays the new Blackwell GPU chip during the Nvidia GPU Technology Conference on March 18, 2024. Current interest in artificial intelligence revolves around two key terms — large language models (LLMs) and generative AI. Not all chip firms are benefitting from the boom in artificial intelligence, earnings show, underscoring the complexities of the semiconductor supply chain and dominance of some companies over others in different parts of the sector. But Nvidia's rival AMD has brought its own chip to market, called the MI300X AI chip, for AI purposes and is beginning to see the rewards. Chip manufacturing and tool companies appear to be benefitting too from the boom in AI.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Meta, ASML Organizations: Nvidia Corp, Blackwell, Nvidia, Technology, Google, Tech, Microsoft, AMD, Samsung, Qualcomm, CNBC
Apple Intelligence, the company's forthcoming artificial intelligence system, could spur a fresh cycle of iPhone upgrades and hardware sales. One question Cook was willing to partially address was about the company's spending on AI servers. "Embedded in our results this quarter is an increase year over year in the amount we're spending for AI and Apple Intelligence," Cook told CNBC's Steve Kovach on Thursday. The rise in Apple's capital expenditure is tiny compared to its mega-cap peers, such as Microsoft, Google , and Meta . Zuckerberg also wants to ensure that Apple won't fully control the next major technology shift, if it turns out to be AI.
Persons: Tim Cook, Luca Maestri, Cook, CNBC's Steve Kovach, Mark Zuckerberg, Zuckerberg Organizations: Apple Intelligence, OpenAI, CNBC, Apple, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Nvidia
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