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Premarket stocks: Wall Street kills its darlings
  + stars: | 2022-12-30 | by ( Nicole Goodkind | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
It appears that Wall Street has also caught on to the concept. Investors are rushing to kill their darlings – er, sell their stocks– and even safe-havens like Apple (AAPL) and Intel (INTC) are getting crushed in the stampede. What’s happening: It’s been a shaky year full of economic uncertainty, geopolitical chaos, elevated inflation and a hawkish Fed. But what’s been most surprising is that market-cap titans, traditionally expected to weather storms on Wall Street well, haven’t held up against the rising macroeconomic tides. EY Parthenon projects that consumer spending will flatline in 2023 after growing 2.7% this year.
But in a year that saw investors abandon all major tech stocks, Big Blue was in the green. High gas prices, soaring inflation and the Federal Reserve's steady pace of rate increases have punished growth stocks and favored more mature, less volatile names that are viewed as more recession-resistant. Among U.S. tech companies valued at $50 billion or more, IBM was one of only two to generate positive returns in 2022. IBM beats Big Tech in 2022 CNBCIBM is "trading well above its historical range," Bernstein Research analysts wrote in a Dec. 20 note to clients. IBM's model through 2024 calls for mid-single-digit revenue growth, translating into free cash flow growth in the high single digits.
Starting with the Trump administration, the United States has been tightening the noose around China's high-tech ambitions. But why worry about older chip technology? “28 nanometer” refers to a chip technology commercially used since 2011. But it is a giant in older technology, including chips that regulate power flows in electronics. The importance of older chip technology hit the industry in the face in 2021 as a shortage of those chips prevented manufacturing of millions of cars and consumer electronics.
Tech CEOs are turning up the heat, even if it's not as blatantly "hardcore" as Elon Musk's verbiage. Major tech CEOs have been asking employees to step up throughout this year's stingier economy. Employees at Google, Amazon and others have all been asked to work harder or risk their jobs. Sign up for our newsletter for the latest tech news and scoops — delivered daily to your inbox. In October, Meta told managers to mark 15% of its employees as "needs support" in what workers dubbed "quiet layoffs," Insider previously reported.
PARIS, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Societe Generale (SOGN.PA), France's third-biggest listed bank, and U.S. investment management company Alliance Bernstein (AB.N) plan to form a joint venture focusing on global cash equities and equity research, they said on Tuesday. SocGen plans to take a 51% interest in the venture, with an option to take 100% ownership after five years, the French bank said, adding that the business would boost its profit from 2025 onwards. The joint venture will be run as a long-term partnership under the Bernstein name and will be headquartered in London. Robert van Brugge, CEO of Bernstein Research Services, will become CEO of the new entity for an initial term of five years, with Stephane Loiseau, head of SocGen's cash equities business, becoming his deputy. Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta Editing by Kirsten Donovan and David GoodmanOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
SocGen’s BNP envy carries a cost
  + stars: | 2022-11-22 | by ( Liam Proud | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +3 min
It mimics BNP Paribas’s (BNPP.PA) deal with European peer Exane, which the French group took over last year. SocGen research analysts cover around 500 mostly European stocks, according to JPMorgan, compared with AllianceBernstein’s more international coverage of roughly 800 companies. Second, the venture makes the French bank’s equities business less reliant on derivatives and structured products, which led to heavy losses in 2020. Trading cash equities and selling research typically chews up much less capital and leads to fewer blow-ups. And the wider equities trading business is increasingly dominated by larger players, especially U.S. banks.
After AMD and Intel parted ways, AMD reverse engineered Intel’s chips to make its own products that were compatible with Intel’s groundbreaking x86 software. Intel sued AMD, but a settlement in 1995 gave AMD the right to continue designing x86 chips, making personal computer pricing more competitive for end consumers. For those, AMD turned to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co., which now makes all of AMD’s most advanced chips. AMD’s data center customers include Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, Oracle, IBM and Microsoft Azure. And so now it suddenly makes sense to do more customized solutions.”Former Xilinx CEO Victor Peng and AMD CEO Lisa Su on stage in Munich, Germany, at the AMD
Qatar's energy minister told the FT he can't envisage a future with zero Russian gas flows to Europe. State energy giant recently Gazprom threatened to cut more supplies to Europe if Western price caps on Russian gas and oil are imposed. The Qatari energy minister said he couldn't envisage a future with zero flows of Russian gas to Europe. According to Kaabi, Europe's rush to secure long-term supplies of natural gas has put the region in "huge competition" with Asian importers. At last check Wednesday, European natural gas prices were up 3.33% at 117 euros ($114) per megawatt hour.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailStacy Rasgon: Memory caps and supercomputer companies will face headwinds from China restrictionsStacy Rasgon, Bernstein Research senior chip analyst, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss chip stocks falling after new China restrictions.
The Aviation Crisis Is Now Regional
  + stars: | 2022-09-19 | by ( Jon Sindreu | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Even in an aviation market that has rewarded shorter routes, regional airlines are doing terribly. This week, Cleveland-based Parker-Hannifin its acquisition of British aerospace and defense supplier Meggitt for £6.3 billion, equivalent to $7.2 billion. While it seemed like a fair price when the deal was announced last year, Wall Street analysts have since deferred their expectations for recovery at Meggitt by a couple of years. Shop visits by large jets have lagged behind due to the slow reopening of international routes. As George Zhao at Bernstein Research points out, though, it is the regional-plane rebound that has really disappointed.
Club holding Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) announces a $5 billion buyback and affirms adjusted operational EPS of $10.70, or 9.2% growth, for the full year. Club holding Starbucks (SBUX) raises guidance significantly, high single-digit earnings per share and double-digit revenues. Club holding Costco' s (COST) Kirkland doing well by the way but so are branded. Club holding Apple (AAPL) back on its ramp? As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
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