Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "AP Technology"


25 mentions found


Stock Chart Icon Stock chart icon The Dow, all-timeThe average was created by Charles Dow in 1896 with just 12 industrial stocks. Paired with the Dow Jones Transportation Average , the two were collectively meant to offer a gauge for the broader economy. The sole caveat: No utility or transportation stocks are included, given the existence of the Dow Jones Utility Average and Transportation Average. 1972: Dow hits 1,000It may be hard to imagine given the recent achievement, but the Dow traded below 1,000 until the early 1970s. The Dow saw its worst year since 2008 in 2022, though 2023's rebound allowed the index to erase those losses.
Persons: Spencer Platt, Dow, Charles Dow, There's, Richard Nixon, Alcoa Esmark, Du Pont, Dow didn't, Walt Disney, Eastman Kodak Merck Alcoa ExxonMobil Phillip Morris, T General Motors Sears, Morgan, Phillip Morris, Walmart Du Pont J.P, Morgan Chase Walt, Donald Trump, General Electric Nike American Express Goldman Sachs, Morgan Chase, Johnson, Joe Biden, Trump, Goldman Sachs, Gamble Amgen, Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Getty, Dow Jones, Dow Jones Transportation, P Global, Dow, CNBC, General Foods, Harvester, Chevron, Procter, Gamble, Alcoa, Manville, ExxonMobil, Illinois Glass American Tobacco General Electric Procter, General Foods Sears Roebuck AT, T General Motors Texaco Bethlehem Steel, T General Motors Texaco Bethlehem Steel Goodyear Union Carbide Chevron Honeywell United Technologies Chrysler International Harvester US, Nickel Westinghouse Electric Eastman Kodak International, Woolworth, Oasis, Eastman Kodak Merck Alcoa ExxonMobil, Express General Electric Procter, Gamble AT, T General Motors, T General Motors Sears Roebuck Bethlehem Steel Goodyear Texaco Boeing Honeywell Union Carbide Caterpillar IBM United Technologies Chevron International, Walt Disney, Morgan Chase Westinghouse, Apple, Microsoft, Sears and Union Carbide, Eastman Kodak Johnson, Johnson Alcoa ExxonMobil, American Express General Electric Merck AT, T, Goodyear Procter & Gamble Caterpillar Hewlett, Packard Sears, Chevron Honeywell Union Carbide Citigroup IBM United Technologies, Walmart, Morgan Chase Walt Disney, Visa, Travelers, Nike, General Electric Nike American Express, General Electric Nike American Express Goldman Sachs Pfizer Apple Home Depot Procter, Gamble Boeing IBM Travelers Caterpillar Intel United Technologies Chevron, Morgan Chase UnitedHealth, Cisco Systems Johnson, Johnson Verizon, Cola McDonald’s, Du Pont Merck Walmart ExxonMobil Microsoft Corporation Walt Disney, Exxon Mobil, Walgreens Boots Alliance, Goldman Sachs Nike American Express Home Depot Procter, Gamble Amgen Honeywell, Apple Intel Travelers Cos Boeing IBM, Caterpillar Johnson, Johnson Verizon Chevron, Cisco Systems, Walgreens, Alliance Coca Cola Merck Walmart Dow Microsoft Walt Disney Locations: New York City, T General Motors Texaco Bethlehem Steel Goodyear, America
The investment arm of the Mormon church revealed some of its holdings in a 13F filing Wednesday. These are the top 10 holdings of the church's stock portfolio as of March 31. AdvertisementThe Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has an investment portfolio of over $100 billion that includes $55 billion invested in publicly traded stocks. AdvertisementThe church, widely known as the Mormon church, reports its stock holdings on a quarterly basis, and a recent 13F filing revealed its top holdings as of March 31. These are the church's top 10 stock holdings at the end of the fourth quarter, as well as the changes in each position.
Persons: , of Jesus Christ, Eli Lilly Vincent Kessler, Seth Wenig, Ethan Miller, Apple Justin Sullivan, Microsoft Satya Nadella, Sean Gallup Organizations: Service, of Jesus, Securities and Exchange Commission, Advisors, Reuters, JPMorgan AP, UnitedHealth, Mastercard Reuters, Nvidia, Microsoft, Getty
Viking Global shifts Big Tech holdings in first quarter
  + stars: | 2024-05-15 | by ( Alex Harring | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Ole Andreas Halvorsen's Viking Global appeared to relocate money within megacap technology in the first quarter. Viking Global zeroed out a position of nearly 3.3 million shares in Alphabet during the first three months of 2024, regulatory fillings show. It's nearly 1.6 million shares at a total value of more than $670 million. With that increase, Viking Global holds more than 1.9 million shares, or more than $1.2 billion. Outside of tech, Viking Global began holding Clorox , Dollar Tree , Skechers and Las Vegas Sands during the period.
Persons: Ole Andreas Halvorsen's, Halvorsen, Julian Robertson Organizations: Big Tech, Viking, Microsoft, Tiger Management, Viking Global, Las Vegas Sands, U.S . Bancorp, MetLife, Deere Locations: Ole Andreas Halvorsen's Viking, Viking, Apple, Las, U.S, Stryker
Trimming Apple One surprising move from the conglomerate was selling about 10 million Apple shares (just 1% of its massive stake) in the fourth quarter. Second, it could have been Buffett's investment deputies Todd Combs and Ted Weschler who trimmed the Apple stake in order to fund other purchases. There's a chance that Buffett might reveal at the annual meeting the mystery bank stock that Berkshire has been buying for two quarters straight . Berkshire now owns more than 70 million of the tracking stock. "You need higher prices, or it doesn't work," Buffett said at Berkshire's 2023 annual meeting.
Persons: Warren Buffett's, Buffett, Todd Combs, Ted Weschler, Debbie Bosanek, Warren, Berkshire Hathaway, SIRI, Bob Bakish, Berkshire's, You've Organizations: Berkshire Hathaway, CNBC, Apple, Oracle, Securities and Exchange Commission, Verizon, Berkshire, Liberty, Liberty Media Corp, Liberty Media, Liberty Media Sirius, Paramount, Paramount Global, Skydance Locations: Berkshire, Woodstock, Omaha , Nebraska, Omaha, Chevron, New York, The Omaha
Therefore, investors would be more incentivized to buy companies that have a strong record of dividend payments. The strategist expects more companies to add dividends payouts going forward, as firms begin to increasingly understand the appeal for investors. The stocks had to meet the following criteria: Buy-rated by Citi Research 3-year dividend per share with a compound annual growth rate above 5% Above median expected dividend growth Potential dividend per share upside Reasonable payout ratio Reasonable dividend yield One name on the list was Visa , which currently has a dividend yield of 0.7%, according to Citi Research. Semiconductor firm Lam Research also made the list, with a dividend yield of 0.9%. More than half of analysts covering the stock rate it a buy or strong buy and see a potential upside of nearly 6%.
Persons: Scott Chronert, Chronert, TD Cowen, Bryan Bergin, Riley, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Federal Reserve, Citi, Fed, Citi Research's, Citi Research, Visa, LSEG, Mastercard, Semiconductor, Lam Research, Research Locations: Asia, Europe
While a market correction can be bad for a portfolio, CNBC Pro has some ideas for how to weather a downturn. The average analyst surveyed by LSEG also has a buy rating with an upside showing shares can rally about 18% in the next year. In addition to having a buy rating, the typical analyst polled by LSEG anticipates shares climbing nearly 21%. It also has the second-highest earnings per share growth rate at nearly 265%. But the average analyst has a buy rating on the stock with a price target suggesting shares can jump nearly 16%, per LSEG.
Persons: catalyzing, Ventas, LSEG, Steve Sakwa, Sakwa Organizations: CNBC Pro, Gross, Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Resorts
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailPortfolio manager explains why he is underweight U.S. mega-cap tech stocksBrian Arcese of Foord Asset Management thinks the market is "ahead of itself" and explains why he isn't planning to increase exposure to U.S. mega-cap technology names.
Persons: Brian Arcese Organizations: Foord, Management
To guard against stubborn inflation and higher-for-longer interest rates, investors should focus on quality companies with high pricing power and adjust their duration risk in bonds, according to Wall Street strategists and portfolio managers. Pricing power Companies with high pricing power tend to outperform when inflation is elevated because they have the ability to defend their profit margins by passing along higher costs to their end market customers. "In equities, you should prefer companies that have pricing power, i.e. "When inflation is the predominant risk in markets, correlations between stocks and traditional bonds tend to be high. BlackRock's iShares strategy team recently argued that investors should take advantage of spikes in bond yields while they can and reinvest their cash.
Persons: Stocks, Brad Conger, Sonu Varghese, Jason Pride, Pride, Rick Rieder Organizations: Dow Jones, Treasury, Street, Callaghan, Co, Big Tech, Carson Group, Securities, U.S ., Glenmede Trust Locations: Hirtle, BlackRock
Wells Fargo Securities' Chris Harvey hiked his S & P 500 year-end price target by about 20% this week. Harvey, who once referred to himself during a CNBC interview as " not a real positive guy ," raised his official 2024 S & P 500 target to 5,535 on Monday. That's good for growth. That's good for momentum, and it's good for large caps," Harvey added. Harvey's S & P 500 2023 year-end target was 4,420.
Persons: Chris Harvey, Harvey Organizations: Wells Fargo Securities, CNBC, Labor Department Locations: Wells Fargo
Pictured here is a Nio battery swapping station in Haikou, Hainan province, China, on May 9, 2023. Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty ImagesBEIJING — Chinese electric car company Nio has been expanding its battery swap partnerships in a bid to gain an edge on the infrastructure side of the EV ecosystem. Nio also announced agreements earlier this year to work with two local battery companies on battery swap services. While having a large network of battery charging stations helps address those concerns, battery swapping is a faster method as it takes only a few minutes. CLSA's Luo said businesses also prefer to invest in normal charging stations than swap stations because they make a higher return.
Persons: Nio, , JAC —, Ding Luo, Shen Fei, Shen, it's, Le, William Li, Shay Natarajan, Luo, Ford Organizations: Bloomberg, Getty, Chery, CNBC, Battery, Nissan, Sino Auto, Mobility Impact Partners, General Motors Locations: Haikou, Hainan province, China, BEIJING, U.S, San Francisco, Kyoto, Japan, Madrid, Spain, Europe, North America
Andrew Slimmon, a senior portfolio manager at Morgan Stanley Investment Management, says we're still in the early stages of an economic recovery from 2022's earnings recession and the bear market that followed. Slimmon oversees the US and global long-equity strategies, portfolios that aren't biased toward any one area such as growth or value stocks. And in this environment, value stocks are expected to outperform dramatically, he said. Below is a Morgan Stanley equities chart demonstrating where value stocks trade relative to their fair value. They haven't fully sold off and remain expensive relative to the market, he noted.
Persons: Andrew Slimmon, we're, Slimmon, Morgan, it's Organizations: Morgan Stanley Investment Management, Business, US, Morgan Stanley, Morgan Stanley Investment
For instance, the iShares MBS ETF (MBB) has a net expense ratio of 0.04% and a year-to-date total return of -1.24%. Vanguard's MBS ETF (VMBS) also carries an expense ratio of 0.04% and a total return of -1.08% in 2024. Stocks in developed markets have had the closest correlation with U.S. equities, while emerging markets equities are less correlated, the research firm found. ETFs that play on that theme include the Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets ETF (VWO) , which has an expense ratio of 0.08%, and the iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (IEMG) , with an expense ratio of 0.09%. VWO has a year-to-date total return of 1.33%, while IEMG's total return for the period is 1.6%.
Persons: Charles NeSmith, Morningstar, Andrew Herzog, Herzog, Cash, Amy Arnott, There's, NeSmith, VWO Organizations: Nasdaq, Communications, Financial, Mortgage, Investors, MBS, Morningstar, Commodities, Vanguard FTSE, Markets Locations: Plantation , Florida, Plano , Texas, U.S
Retail traders bought billions of dollars worth of cash equities over the past week on net, according to data compiled by JPMorgan's Peng Cheng. With those gains, he said traders bought into Apple and Alphabet , which have both largely sat out of the broader market rally this year. By comparison, investors bought more than half a billion dollars of Alphabet when accounting for outflows. Neither tech stock made the list of top 25 securities by retail net inflows in the previous week. Outside of big tech, Cheng noted that retail investors snapped up shares of beat-down Boeing , which is facing a crisis surrounding its 737 Max 9s after a door panel blew out midflight.
Persons: JPMorgan's Peng Cheng, Cheng, SPX, Max, LSEG Organizations: Retail, Nvidia, Meta, Apple, Trust, outflows, Boeing, Dow Jones, Broadcom, Costco Locations: Japan
But despite the struggles of the largest stocks in the sector, Block (SQ) appears to breaking above a key resistance level. The key with a head and shoulders pattern is to wait for the "trigger", which is when the price actually breaks through the neckline. Here we can see that the recent breakout above the neckline was preceded by a price gap higher in February. Immediately after the price gap, SQ dropped down to around $75, a level which was retested again in early March. With inverted head and shoulders breakout on the weekly chart, and clearly defined risk levels on the daily chart, Block may just be worth investors' attention.
Persons: retested, David Keller Organizations: Nvidia, Apple, CMT
Goldman Sachs has refreshed its "conviction list" of top picks in Asia Pacific for March, adding some key stocks and removing others. Here are two of the latest additions to Goldman Sachs' conviction list: Xero Goldman analyst Kane Hannan said he was positive on the outlook for New Zealand-headquartered accounting software company Xero . Goldman Sachs has a price target of $152 on the stock, giving it potential upside of around 12%. Hyundai Motor Another addition to Goldman's conviction list is South Korean automobile manufacturer Hyundai Motor . Meanwhile, the Wall Street bank removed Singapore-headquartered bank OCBC and Japanese conglomerate Sony from its conviction list as it no longer deems them "a top investment idea."
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Xero Goldman, Kane Hannan, Hannan, Intuit's Quickbooks, Sage, Kota Yuzawa, Yuzawa, Goldman, Michael Bloom Organizations: Asia, Hyundai, South, Hyundai Motor, Won, Sony Locations: Asia Pacific, U.S, Mar, New Zealand, Australia, South Korean, Singapore
Jeremy Grantham, famed investor with a history of calling bear markets, issued a bearish long-term outlook for the stock market on Tuesday, seeing the dramatic rally in artificial intelligence-related stocks as a speculative bubble. He foresaw the dot-com bubble bursting in 2000 and the 2008 bear market, and he also correctly called the bear market in 2022. The S & P 500 has rallied since late October 2023 to hit consecutive record highs, powered by megacap technology names. Dominant AI chipmaker Nvidia has rallied another 81% this year, following a near 240% advance in 2023. Grantham, now 85, believes the full effects of technological revolutions like AI often don't materialize until after an initial bubble bursts.
Persons: Jeremy Grantham, Grantham, Van Otterloo Organizations: Co, Nvidia Locations: Boston, Grantham, Mayo
Tengler named several attractively valued stocks she called the "picks and shovels" of AI, including Emerson Electric , L3Harris Technologies , Visa , Walmart and McDonald's . These companies are expected to boast continued strong growth and stock performance, aided by AI, she said. "Generative AI is much more compelling of a story than then the internet was in many ways," in terms of fueling productivity and growth, Tengler said. Walmart, another of Tengler's top "old economy" AI plays, has gained 14.4% so far this year, double the broader market. "They've benefited from embracing not just robotics and digitization, but generative AI in their e-commerce business and in improving margins," Tengler said of Walmart.
Persons: Nancy Tengler, Tengler, Berenberg, Emerson, L3Harris, Seth Seifman, They've, they've Organizations: Investments, Nvidia, Meta, Emerson Electric, L3Harris Technologies, Visa, Walmart, Aerospace, Defense Department, JPMorgan, Broadcom, Amazon, Microsoft Locations: Arizona, Friday's, Melbourne , Florida
Despite the odds, active managers turned in a better-than-expected performance in 2023, according to a report out today by S & P Global. The bad news: the long-term performance of active managers remained dismal. The majority (60%) of large-cap fund managers underperformed the S & P 500 in 2023, according to S & P Global. While that may not seem like an impressive performance, it is slightly better than the historic average of 64% that underperform the S & P 500. Surprising, because 2023 was a tough year for active managers.
Persons: Dow, Anu Ganti, Dow Jones, Ganti Organizations: P, Dow Jones, U.S, Dow Jones Indices Locations: U.S
Wealth manager Brian Vendig is bullish on stocks this year, and says there are opportunities for investors outside of 2023's headline-makers. Three stocks on his radar right now are Super Micro Computer , Palo Alto Networks and PepsiCo . Super Micro Computer Vendig said Super Micro Computer was his choice to ride "the wave of the AI frenzy." "This stock has traded in lockstep with Nvidia because Nvidia chips are typically housed in Super Micro servers," Vendig explained. Palo Alto Networks The wealth manager also likes cybersecurity company Palo Alto Networks.
Persons: Brian Vendig, Vendig, PepsiCo Vendig Organizations: MJP Wealth, CNBC, Micro Computer, Palo Alto Networks, PepsiCo, Super, Computer, Nasdaq, Nvidia, Alto, Pepsi Locations: billings
Nvidia's 76% gain this year underscores the concentrated stock market led by mega-cap tech. Despite concerns, the growth of AI stocks isn't a hype cycle, according to Defiance ETFs' CEO. The Defiance Quantum ETF holds leading AI players, spanning sectors like quantum and cloud computing. It's a concentrated stock market, with a handful of mega-cap technology names continuing to lead the gains as they profit off the development of AI. But investor concerns are mounting over whether it's getting shaky at the top.
Persons: it's, Franklin Templeton Organizations: Nvidia, Business
Here's a breakdown of how Super Micro got to this point, and where investors and analysts expect it to go. What to know about Super Micro Computer Creating servers isn't a new objective for the California-based company. Other shareholders such as Vendig have opted to take a breather on buying shares until the next earnings call. Those headwinds may not hit until 2025 but could hurt the stock if Super Micro fails to differentiate itself. "Super Micro was in the right place at the right time when generative AI took off, there really wasn't a competitor," he said.
Persons: hasn't, Paul Meeks, Brian Vendig, we've, Shreya Gheewala, Matt Bryson, Sylvia Jablonski, Jablonski, Vendig, Wedbush's Bryson Organizations: Nvidia, Devices, Computer, Management, MJP Wealth, AMD, Intel, Wedbush Securities, Micro, Super Micro, Super Locations: California
The S & P 500 is about to do something unusual that has typically been followed by strong gains ahead. There have been only been 28 instances in which the S & P 500 has risen over the first two months of the year. The S & P 500 hit record highs in recent weeks, prompting questions about whether it can continue advancing or is due for a correction. With last week's advance, the S & P 500 officially finished 15 of the last 17 completed trading weeks in the green. The S & P 500 went on to finish that year up by a whopping 27.3%.
Persons: what's, Henry Allen, Allen, Madonna Organizations: Carson Group, Deutsche Bank, Bretton Locations: U.S
Large-cap fund managers are starting to shy away from several of the biggest companies in the S&P 500, according to a recent report from UBS. By bailing on those three names and top performers like Nvidia (NVDA), money managers are swimming against the tide. That's why large-cap stock-pickers tend to fade the biggest companies, according to UBS. 10 stocks that fund managers loveBy contrast, fund managers' largest relative overweight positions are in sectors like industrials, financials, healthcare, and materials, Palfrey noted. Below are the 10 companies that are seeing the biggest improvements in sentiment from large-cap fund managers, as measured by the net number of funds adding positions to them.
Persons: Patrick Palfrey, Palfrey Organizations: UBS, Microsoft, Apple, Business, Nvidia
Not for herself, but for the stocks she scoops up for Thrivent's Large Cap Growth fund — even when growth shows signs of slowing. On a total return basis, investors in the fund have netted 48% in the last 12 months, according to FactSet. Thrivent Large Cap Growth climbed to the 18th percentile among more than 1,200 growth funds in 2023, up from the 73rd percentile in the disastrous 2022, Morningstar data shows. Maybe that's because as an analyst, Brunner's background was in large cap consumer staples and large cap retail and discretionary stocks, after starting out covering specialty apparel retailers. "It's just a really exciting spot to be in," Brunner said of studying growth stocks.
Persons: Lauri Brunner, Wall Street's, Brunner, Brunner doesn't, Thomas, Jensen Huang, Amazon's Organizations: Amazon, Meta, Morningstar, FAF Advisors, RBC Capital, Thrivent, Tech, University of St, Nvidia, Microsoft, Netflix, Walmart Locations: Thrivent, it's
Apple is probably shutting down its electric car project in favor of some big bets on artificial intelligence, according to UBS. AAPL YTD mountain Apple shares this year The UBS report came after Bloomberg reported on Tuesday that the iPhone maker is reportedly axing its decade-long venture to build an electric vehicle. Among the potential upcoming AI announcements, Vogt is bracing for Apple CEO Tim Cook to debut a new processor in the iPhone 16 supporting AI, and a new AI or large language model feature on the iOS 18 operating system. UBS also anticipated updates to "Siri" and "Messages" that would enable new features, such as summaries of incoming texts. There are some financial downsides to Apple in halting its car venture, Vogt said.
Persons: David Vogt, Vogt, Tim Cook, Siri, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Apple, UBS, company's, Bloomberg
Total: 25