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Investors appear to be growing more comfortable with the path for interest rates and are shifting their fixed income bets accordingly. The list of the most popular bond funds by inflows in recent weeks is dominated by large passive funds. The iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT) and Vanguard Intermediate-Term Treasury ETF (VGIT) have both been two of the 10 most popular ETFs of any type over the past month, according to FactSet's flow data. The iShares 3-7 year Treasury Bond ETF (IEI) and the Vanguard Intermediate-Term Bond ETF (BIV) have also seen sizable inflows recently. Broad bond funds will often have longer duration than short-term funds, even if there is no reference to time frame on the label.
Persons: Scott Chronert, Fitch, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Citi, Federal Reserve, Treasury Bond ETF, Treasury, Bond ETF, Bond Locations: outflows
SolarEdge Technologies — The solar stock tumbled about 19% after the company reported $991 million in revenue, missing analysts' estimates of $992 million, according to Refinitiv. CVS Health — The retail pharmacy stock gained 4% during midday trading Wednesday after the company posted strong earnings and revenue for the second quarter. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.29, topping the $1.10 expected from analysts polled by StreetAccount. Starbucks' adjusted earnings per share for the fiscal third quarter was $1, versus the 95 cents expected by analysts, per Refinitiv. Chinese tech stocks — Shares of Chinese technology stocks dropped after regulators in China proposed limits on smartphone use for minors.
Persons: SolarEdge, Norwegian's, Emerson Electric's, Pinterest, Generac, Freshworks, Genuity, Robinhood, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Pia Singh, Alex Harring Organizations: SolarEdge Technologies, CVS Health, CVS, Wall Street, Cruise, Susquehanna, Emerson, StreetAccount, Revenue, Wall, FactSet's, Starbucks, Bank of America, JPMorgan, Scotts Miracle, Gro, Scotts, JD.com, Baidu, Tencent Locations: Refinitiv, China
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
Western Alliance has put the spring's regional banking crisis in the rearview mirror and will be able to sustain its recent rally, according to JPMorgan. Shares of the bank rose more than 7% on Wednesday after the report was released. WAL 5D mountain Shares of Western Alliance rose sharply on Wednesday. But even with that rally, the stock is still down about 37% from where it ended February, before the regional banking crisis. The firm's new price target represents upside of nearly 30% from where Western Alliance's shares closed on Wednesday.
Persons: Steven Alexopoulos, Alexopoulos, FactSet's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Western Alliance, JPMorgan, Western Locations: Republic
NVDA YTD mountain Nvidia YTD performance Nvidia shares have, of course, been a stellar performer so far this year due in large part to its AI dominance. To estimate Nvidia's AI revenue opportunity, Goldman broke it down into two computing categories: training and inference. Here's a chart that shows how Goldman sees Nvidia's AI revenue opportunities shaking out from calendar year 2023 through calendar 2025 in each category. To put Goldman's AI computing revenue estimates into perspective: Nvidia's entire companywide revenue over the past three fiscal years totaled $70.5 billion. Goldman's fresh look at the AI opportunity also served as the basis for boosted earnings estimates for Nvidia.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Jim Cramer, Jim, NVDA, Goldman —, Goldman, Jensen Huang, Biden, Colette Kress, — Goldman, Jim Cramer's, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, Goldman, CNBC Locations: China
The Carnival Miracle cruise ship operated by Carnival Cruise Line is docked at Pier 27 in San Francisco, Sept. 30, 2022. Other cruise stocks also got a boost, with Norwegian Cruise Line gaining about 9% and Royal Caribbean adding 2%. Chinook Therapeutics — Shares soared 58.32% after Novartis announced it has agreed to acquire the biotech firm for up to $3.5 billion. Oracle — Shares of the IT cloud software company gained 5.99% ahead of its quarterly earnings announcement scheduled for after the bell. Wolfe Research upgraded shares to outperform from peer perform in a Sunday note, citing the company's early-mover advantage in the artificial intelligence boom.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Thoma Bravo, Morgan Stanley, Wolfe, Alessandro Maselli, Nio, Nomura, Illumina, Francis deSouza, Carl Icahn, KeyCorp, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound Organizations: Carnival Cruise, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Cruise Line, Royal, Chinook Therapeutics, Novartis, Nasdaq —, Thoma, Oracle —, Wolfe Research Locations: San Francisco, Royal Caribbean
Warner Bros Discovery and Tesla helped push the market higher this week, as the S & P 500 approached its fourth straight week of gains. Warner Bros Discovery popped 19% week to date, and still has another 47% upside — based on FactSet's average analyst price target. About 59% of the analysts covering the stock rate it a buy. Meanwhile, Tesla 's ride higher continued this week, with the electric vehicle maker climbing about 16% since Monday. Norwegian has rallied more than 41% in 2023, but just 37% of analysts covering the stock rate it a buy.
Persons: Tesla, Chris Licht, Donald Trump, Itay Michaeli Organizations: Warner Bros Discovery, Warner Bros, CNN, GM, Ford, Citi, Cruise, Cruises Locations: Norwegian
Two firms specializing in artificial intelligence — UiPath and Twilio — are being underappreciated by investors, according to Frank Downing of Ark Investments. UiPath, a business process automation firm, is one of the companies that Downing views as overlooked. ARKW 1Y line He thinks this could mean fewer manual human interventions, substantially improving efficiency at UiPath for its customers. PATH 1Y line Twilio Twilio, a cloud communications platform founded in 2008, was also flagged by Downing as a potentially undervalued stock. Still, the director of research believes companies such as Twilio and UiPath are likely to capture the next wave of growth as AI is increasingly commoditized.
Persons: Frank Downing, Downing, OpenAI, ChatGPT . Downing, Siti Panigrahi, TWLO Organizations: Ark Investments, Mizuho, Microsoft, Google Locations: ChatGPT .
Multiple residential solar stocks should be in a position to outperform Wall Street's expectations this earnings season, according to Goldman Sachs. Analyst Brian Lee pointed to SolarEdge , Sunrun and Enphase as residential solar names to watch this earnings season given near-term tailwinds that can give a boost to earnings. Weakness in demand in the South could be offset by strength in California and the Northeast in the first quarter, Lee said. He has buy ratings on the three residential solar stocks. Here's how he expects each of them to do when reporting first quarter earnings: Enphase Enphase should beat on both sales and per-share earnings, Lee said.
S&P 500 companies are expected to post a 7% decline in first-quarter earnings, per FactSet. This will be the largest earnings decline since a 32% slump in the second quarter of 2020. The estimated 6.8% decline in first-quarter earnings is not just the lowest in two years, but also below the five-year earnings growth rate of 13.4% and the 10-year earnings growth rate of 8.7%, per FactSet. FactSet's analysis was based on 106 S&P companies that issued guidance on their first-quarter earnings per share. Consumer discretionary and industrials are expected to lead those reporting on-year earnings growth.
The company posted a loss of 6 cents per share, compared to analysts' estimates for a 22 cent loss. Dell's revenue also exceeded expectations, coming in at $25.04 billion versus analysts' estimates of $23.39 billion. Marvell Technology — Shares of the semiconductor company shed 6% after the company posted mixed results for the fourth quarter. Meanwhile, its revenue of $1.42 billion topped the $1.40 billion analysts had expected. Hewlett Packard also posted revenue of $7.81 billion, beating estimates of $7.43 billion.
Check out the companies making the biggest moves in premarket trading:Dish Network — The satellite company's shares fell almost 5% amid its multi-day service outage and double-downgrade from Bank of America. Revenue also beat, but Target's full-year EPS guidance came in below expectations. Arconic — Shares fell 3.5% following a downgrade to sell from neutral by Goldman Sachs. Full-year revenue guidance came in lighter than expected, but its earnings guidance topped estimates. Workday — The human resources software fell 2.4% after its revenue guidance for the first quarter came in lighter than expected.
The company reported a fourth-quarter loss of 7 cents per share compared with a 17 cent per-share loss forecasted by analysts, according to FactSet. Revenue came in line with expectations at $1 billion. Revenue came in lower than expected at $663 million compared with analysts' $742.4 million expectation. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 75 cents, one cent above the Street's estimate. Revenue came in at $13.83 billion, which is less than the $14.12 billion expected.
Airbnb — The home-sharing company gained nearly 10% in the premarket after posting fourth-quarter earnings that beat analysts' expectations. Airbnb reported earnings per share of 48 cents, compared to the 25 cents expected, per Refinitiv. Generac — Shares added more than 2% after the power generator maker reported fourth-quarter earnings results. Generac posted earnings of $1.78 per share, better than the $1.75 per share expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Analog Devices — Shares were up 6.7% in premarket trading after the company reported better-than-expected earnings for the fiscal first quarter.
HOUSTON, Feb 14 (Reuters) - A rout in natural gas prices will hurt first-quarter earnings and cash flows at gas producers as hedges - the industry's version of price insurance - were inadequate to offset the expected losses, analysts and industry experts said. About 36% of 2023 gas production was hedged at the end of September, according to consultancy Energy Aspects, which tracked 40 publicly traded gas producers. EQT Corp (EQT.N), the top U.S. producer of natural gas, last month said it expects a $4.6 billion loss on derivatives for 2022, and net cash settlements of $5.9 billion. These transactions have a producer buy an agreement to sell natural gas at one price, called a put, while also selling a put at a lower price in hopes of pocketing the premium from its buyer. Were gas prices to average $2.36 per mmcf, the company would pay out 14 cents per mmcf, reducing the gains from the hedge.
Thursday is a massive day for tech investors, as Amazon , Apple and Google-parent Alphabet are all set to report fourth-quarter earnings after the market close. Here are some key stats about Amazon's earnings report: Over the past three months, earnings estimates have fallen from nearly 22 cents per share to about 17, according to FactSet. Here are some key stats about Apple's earnings report: Over the past three months, earnings estimates have dropped from about $2 per share to roughly $1.94, according to FactSet. Alphabet Alphabet's earnings report could provide investors a clear window into the tech industry more broadly, given the company's reliance on search advertising and cloud computing. Here are some key stats about Alphabet's earnings report: Over the past three months, earnings estimates have declined by about 2 cents per share to roughly $1.18, according to FactSet.
Eli Lilly (LLY) reported mixed fourth-quarter results Thursday morning, but we're looking through the stock's post-earnings sell-off because there's no change to the pharmaceutical giant's bright long-term potential. Bottom line There's definitely some noise surrounding Eli Lilly's results, including sales of its key diabetes drug Mounjaro. Eli Lilly began its rolling submission to the FDA in late 2022. None of them undercut the multiyear Eli Lilly investment story, making Thursday's stock sell-off an attractive buying opportunity. It is a "very complicated" process to make that kind of drug, Ricks said, so it cannot just scale up overnight.
Advanced Micro Devices — Shares of chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices jumped 7.9% after the company reported earnings that beat Wall Street's expectations, according to Refinitiv. AMD also showed relative strength after competitor Intel's disappointing quarter, analysts said. Snap — Shares of the social media company plunged 14% after the firm reported quarterly revenue that missed Wall Street's expectations, according to Refinitiv. Stryker — Shares rallied about 7% after the company reported adjusted fourth-quarter earnings of $3 per share, above FactSet's estimate of $2.84. The Chili's parent company reported 76 cents in adjusted earnings per share on $1.02 billion in revenue.
The three major averages are heading toward a positive week during a frenzy of fourth-quarter earnings. For instance, Nvidia is on pace to rise more than 13% this week, while Seagate Technology is up more than 17%. Here are the top ten biggest gainers: Western Digital , a semiconductor producer on the list, rose 14.2% this week. It is also one of the few stocks analysts anticipate will continue its rally—it has a target upside of 11%. Out of the big winners this week, analysts are the most optimistic about Tesla.
Total revenue rose 0.7% to $30.55 billion in the quarter. Cable revenue grew 1.4% to $16.64 billion, narrowly missing analysts' estimates of $16.67 billion. Comcast lost 440,000 video subscribers in the quarter, fewer than Factset's estimated loss of 548,000, as the trend of cable TV cord-cutting continued. The company also lost 26,000 broadband customers in the quarter, compared with Factset's estimated loss of 40,000 customers. NBCU advertising sales grew 4% to $2.86 billion, and theme parks revenue grew 12% to $2.11 billion.
Capital One — The financial stock dipped more than 1% in extended trading after the company posted an earnings miss. Texas Instruments — The chip stock rose under 1% in extended trading after the company reported quarterly results that came in above expectations. Texas Instruments reported earnings of $2.13 per share, beating expectations of $1.98 per share, according to FactSet. Canadian National Railway — Canadian National Railway saw its shares dip more than 4% in extended trading, even as its quarterly results beat expectations. The company reported an EPS of 2.10 in Canadian dollars, compared to FactSet's estimate of C$2.08.
World Wrestling Entertainment — The wrestling entertainment stock surged 21% after WWE announced that founder Vince McMahon is returning to its board of directors and that the company is exploring strategic moves. R1 RCM — Shares of the healthcare technology firm soared more than 11% after the company raised its revenue outlook for 2023. Costco Wholesale — Shares of the big-box retailer jumped more than 6% after it reported solid sales numbers for December. First Solar — Shares of First Solar rose more than 4% after Wells Fargo upgraded it to overweight, saying Europe's energy crisis and the Inflation Reduction Act in the U.S. will boost demand for solar energy. Bed Bath & Beyond — Shares plunged 20% after the retailer warned it was running out of cash and was considering bankruptcy.
Enterprise-software giants ServiceNow and Salesforce are set to be beneficiaries of a recession in 2023, according to tech fund manager Jeremy Gleeson. The two Silicon Valley giants sell software services that aim to make businesses' sales, customer service, and operational workflows more efficient. Gleeson, who manages the £1.1 billion ($1.5 billion) tech fund AXA Framlington Global Technology Fund, said both firms would benefit from companies looking to reduce costs during a recession by automating parts of their operations. Salesforce shares closed at $130 on Wednesday. JP Morgan analysts believe the company is set to outperform its peers despite the "worsening macro environment".
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:CarMax (KMX) – The auto retailer's stock slumped 12.7% in the premarket after its quarterly profit and revenue fell well short of estimates. Micron Technology (MU) – Micron shares fell 2.9% in premarket trading after the chip maker reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that fell short of Wall Street forecasts. Tyson fell 1% in premarket action. Global Business Travel Group (GBTG) – The American Express spin-off was rated outperform in new coverage at Evercore ISI, which expects the business travel platform to benefit from its leading position in the industry and from a rebound in business travel recovery. Global Business Travel Group rose 1.6% in premarket trading.
Traders work on the trading floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) below GameStop signage in New York, August 8, 2022. Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Thursday. GameStop — Shares of the video game retailer and meme stock jumped more than 8% even after the company reported a wider-than-expected loss for the third quarter. The enterprise artificial intelligence software company reported a loss of 11 cents per share on revenue of $62.4 million. Analysts polled by Refinitiv were forecasting a loss of 16 cents per share on revenue of $60.9 million.
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