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Search resuls for: "Microsoft —"


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Alphabet — The Google and YouTube parent sank more than 6% premarket after results for its cloud business fell short of estimates. Boeing — Shares of the jet plane maker rose more than 3% premarket after it reported a quarterly revenue beat . Texas Instruments —The semiconductor designer and manufacturer's stock slid 5.5%, one day after fourth quarter guidance trailed estimates. Visa — The payments stock fell 1.3% before the bell after fourth quarter earnings and revenue topped analyst estimates and it raised its dividend by 16%. Revenue also beat expectations, along with fiscal second quarter and full-year revenue guidance.
Persons: Max, TXN, FactSet's StreetAccount, Wells, Hilton, Stride, , Alex Harring, Sarah Min, Fred Imbert, Yun Li Organizations: Google, YouTube, LSEG, Microsoft, Xbox, Boeing —, Boeing, Texas, Deutsche Bank — U.S, Deutsche Bank, Visa, Dynamics, General Dynamics, Mobile, Revenue Locations: Israel, FactSet
3M — The conglomerate jumped 5.8% after beating analyst expectations in the quarter and raising its earnings outlook. The company missed consensus estimates from analysts polled by FactSet on both lines in the quarter, while fourth-quarter revenue guidance was also lower than expected. It also raised its full year revenue guidance to $235 million to $238 million, greater than prior guidance of $230 million to $235 million. The Trade Desk — Shares advanced 3.2% after Loop Capital initiated coverage of the advertising technology stock with a buy rating. Criteo — The advertising technology stock traded 4.1% higher after KeyBanc initiated coverage with a buy rating.
Persons: DraftKings, Coinbase, bitcoin, Microstrategy, TrueBlue, FactSet, Hexcel, DA Davidson, Baird, Criteo, KeyBanc, Morgan Stanley, Calvin Klein, Tommy Hilfiger, , Sarah Min, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel Organizations: Spotify —, LSEG, General, General Electric, 3M, Barclays — U.S, Microsoft, Google, Marathon, Apollo Capital, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, Monday, Loop, Rio Tinto, Barclays, FMC, JPMorgan Locations: Rio
Microsoft — Shares jumped more than 3% after the maker of Windows software and Xbox video games reported fiscal first-quarter results that topped analysts' estimates. Meanwhile, analysts had forecast EPS of $2.65 on $54.50 billion in revenue, according to LSEG, formerly known as Refinitiv. Alphabet — The Google and YouTube parent fell 5% despite beating analysts' estimates on both top and bottom lines in the third quarter. Stride reported 11 cents in earnings per share, while analysts had estimated a loss of 37 cents per share, according to FactSet. Revenue also topped estimates, coming in at $480.2 million, compared to analysts' estimates of $425.2 million.
Persons: LSEG, Evan Spiegel, Stride Organizations: Microsoft —, Microsoft, Google, YouTube, StreetAccount, Visa, Texas, Revenue, Education Locations: Israel, FactSet
The company's "Customer Loyalty Index" evaluated Fortune 100 companies across a series of six metrics, excluding 40 companies that lacked sufficient data or didn't interact directly with customers. 3 company, semiconductor giant Intel, featured "some of the lowest volumes of customer service and complaint-related searches," said the report. 4, has long been known for having a cult-like fanbase, but "surprisingly" suffered in the customer service department, the report said. That means people searched online more for Apple-related support questions than most other Fortune 100 companies, DesignRush added. Coca-Cola "has some of the most satisfied customers, with some of the fewest customer service and complaint-related searches," said the report.
Persons: Johnson, DesignRush, Warren Buffett Organizations: Google, Lowe's Intel Corporation Apple, Cola Company PepsiCo, Allstate Corporation Microsoft Johnson, Home Depot, Intel, Apple, Microsoft, Cola, PepsiCo Locations: DesignRush
Monday Monday proved to be a harbinger for the rest of the week, beginning with purchases of GE Healthcare (GEHC) and Stanley Black & Decker (SWK). GE Healthcare and Stanley Black & Decker appeared especially attractive, leading us to buy 100 shares and 150 shares, respectively. For GEHC, we wanted to take advantage of what we believe was an unwarranted decline in the medical technology company's stock price. Our purchase of Starbucks represents another buying-into-post-earnings-weakness situation, as we did with Microsoft and Stanley Black & Decker earlier in the week. That's why on Thursday we took our Nvidia price target to $600 per share from $450, implying roughly 27% upside.
Persons: Jerome Powell's Jackson, Here's, Stanley Black, Decker, SWK, Nikesh Arora, Jim Cramer, that's, Locker, Locker's, , Jim Cramer's, Jim, Angela Weiss Organizations: Federal, GE Healthcare, Microsoft, Palo Alto Networks, Big Tech, Amazon, Starbucks, Broadcom, Devices, Nvidia, Charitable, AMD, CNBC, Traders, New York Stock Exchange, AFP, Getty Locations: Danaher, New York City
Bletchley Park is the home of the World War Two Codebreakers, who in 1941 helped break the secret code used by the German government to direct ground-to-air operations on the Eastern front. The U.K. government will host the world's first artificial intelligence safety summit in Bletchley Park, the home of the codebreakers who cracked the code that ended World War II. The renowned Bletchley Park building was the home of the World War II Codebreakers, who in 1941 helped break the secret Enigma Code used by the German government to direct ground-to-air operations on the Eastern front. The U.K. tech sector has been flagging of late, following drops in venture capital investment. The U.S. is by far the world leader when it comes to AI, with massive firms ploughing resources into the technology.
Persons: , Rishi Sunak, OpenAI, Bard, Alan Turing, Turing, Sunak, Bejiing Organizations: Microsoft, Google, Baidu Locations: Bletchley, Bletchley Park, Britain, China, The U.S, EU
Microsoft took down a string of embarrassing and offensive travel articles last week. The company said the articles were not published by "unsupervised AI" and blamed "human error." Last week, Microsoft took down a string of articles published by "Microsoft Travel" that included a bizarre recommendation for visitors to Ottawa to visit the Ottawa Food Bank and to "consider going into it on an empty stomach." "This article has been removed and we have identified that the issue was due to human error," a Microsoft spokesperson said. Based on the examples I found, whatever human controls Microsoft had in place were so minimal as to be functionally useless.
Persons: Paris Marx, isn't, Lucia Moses, Kai Xiang Teo Organizations: Microsoft, Morning, Ottawa Food Bank, MSN, CNET Locations: Ottawa, Montreal, Canada, Anchorage, Tokyo
For a long time, as those three companies moved first and established large initial market shares in the cloud, Oracle looked like it was being left behind. But the turning point was when Oracle launched its second-generation cloud infrastructure offering, called Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Generation 2, or OCI Gen 2, in the summer of 2020. In the second quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended November 2022), Total Cloud revenue grew 43%, with 40% growth for Cloud Applications and 53% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. In the third quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended February 2023), Total Cloud revenue accelerated back to 45%, with 42% growth for Cloud Applications and 55% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. Total Cloud revenue growth surged to 54% again, with 45% growth for Cloud Applications and 76% growth for Cloud Infrastructure.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim, it's, Larry Ellison, Oracle, Microsoft —, we're, Jim Cramer, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Oracle, ORCL, Nasdaq, Amazon Web Services, Google, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, AWS, Nvidia, Cloud Infrastructure, Management, Microsoft, Charitable Trust, Club, APPLE, CNBC Locations: China, Redwood Shores , California
Coatue Management's Philippe Laffont trimmed his exposure to top holding Nvidia in the second quarter, while raising his bet on Microsoft, according to the firm's latest 13F regulatory filing to the SEC. Laffont, a so-called Tiger Cub for previously working under Julian Robertson at Tiger Management, showed in a Monday filing that Coatue trimmed its stake in Nvidia by 6.7%. Instead, Coatue raised the size of its position in its No. 2 holding, Microsoft — another key AI beneficiary. Electric vehicle play Separately, Laffont raised his bets on the future of electric vehicles.
Persons: Coatue Management's Philippe Laffont, Cub, Julian Robertson, Coatue, Laffont, Nikola Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, SEC, Tiger Management Locations: Amazon, ChargePoint
Alphabet — The Google parent popped more than 6% after topping Wall Street's second-quarter earnings expectations, fueled by growth in its cloud-computing segment. Microsoft, however, did beat Wall Street's estimates, reporting earnings of $2.69 per share on $56.19 billion in revenue. Snap topped second-quarter expectations, reporting a narrower-than-expected loss of 2 cent a share on $1.07 billion in revenue. Wells Fargo also said that its board approved a previously announced dividend hike to 35 cents from 30 cents per share. The company topped earnings but fell short on revenue expectations, reporting adjusted earnings per share of 63 cents on $29.92 billion in revenue.
Persons: Ruth Porat, Refinitiv, Wells Fargo, popper, , Sarah Min, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Google, Microsoft, Boeing, Texas, — Texas, Teladoc Health, Dish, Bloomberg News, Fisher, Pacific Locations: Mountain View , California, Banc, California
Microsoft — The Xbox owner saw its shares slide 3.7% after issuing quarterly revenue guidance that fell short of analysts' expectations. Microsoft did report earnings and revenue that beat Street estimates for the calendar second quarter, however. Alphabet — Shares of the Google parent rose 5.8% after Alphabet beat analysts' revenue and profit in the second quarter. Boeing's revenue of $19.75 billion topped analysts' estimates of $18.45 billion, according to Refinitiv. The company also reported an 82-cent-loss per share, while Refinitiv analysts had estimated a loss of 88 cents per share.
Persons: Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley, Lauren Schenk, Chubb, Spotify's, selloff, PacWest, Warburg Pincus Organizations: Microsoft, YouTube, Boeing, Texas, Texas Instruments, FactSet, Visa, Spotify, Deutsche Bank, Warburg, Centerbridge Locations: Banc, California
The company posted earnings of $1.44 per share on $74.6 billion of revenue. Analysts called for earnings of $1.34 per share, adjusted, and revenue of $72.82 billion, per Refinitiv. Still, the company posted earnings of $2.69 per share, compared to the $2.55 per share anticipated by analysts, per Refinitiv. Wells Fargo — Shares of the bank jumped 3% in extended trading after Wells Fargo announced a $30 billion share buyback program. Teladoc said it lost 40 cents per share in its second quarter, beating analysts' estimates for a 41 cent loss per share, per Refinitiv.
Persons: Ruth Porat, Wells, Robert Half —, Refinitiv, Teladoc Organizations: Google, Revenue, Microsoft, Texas, — Texas, FactSet . Texas, NASA, Management Locations: Mountain View , California, United States
keep Big Tech booming? Nasdaq futures are up on Tuesday morning, ahead of a Big Tech earnings bonanza that kicks off when Microsoft and Alphabet report second-quarter results after the closing bell. Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley’s chief U.S. equity strategist, apologized to clients on Monday, writing that his pessimistic stock market calls failed to spot the surge in A.I.-related stocks. On the other hand, Marko Kolanovic, JPMorgan Chase’s chief market strategist, is unconvinced that tech fervor will help the markets avoid a sharp decline this year. All eyes will be on Microsoft and Alphabet, which are at the forefront of commercializing generative A.I., the technology behind chatbots like ChatGPT that have captured the public’s imagination.
Persons: Mike Wilson, Morgan Stanley’s, Marko Kolanovic, Organizations: Big Tech, Nasdaq, Microsoft, Nvidia, Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase’s, Google
Cramer says keep it simple and wait for prices to drop
  + stars: | 2023-07-24 | by ( Julie Coleman | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
CNBC's Jim Cramer preached a straightforward message on Monday: Keep it simple, stupid. Cramer urged investors to bide their time and wait for a swoon in a company's price before buying. Cramer also highlighted beverage and food giant PepsiCo , along with travel and leisure front-runners, Boeing and American Express . "I think this is a matter of keeping it simple, stupid," Cramer said. But if a company is not overbought, Cramer urged investors to wait for a swoon after a company's earnings report, or a market-wide dip.
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, Eli Lilly, I've, Tesla Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, Nasdaq, Adobe, Caterpillar, PepsiCo, Boeing, American Express, Wall, Netflix
Here's the latest AI developments at Salesforce, Apple and Microsoft — along with our take on the news. A generative AI experience built into Apple devices, however, would be an entirely new feature for users. Apple's smart assistant Siri would be the natural place to implement generative AI within the Apple ecosystem. The company promotes both generative AI tools as a way to improve productivity . We've long believed this to be true – and that's why we greeted Salesforce's price-hike announcement last week with open arms – but Wednesday's incremental generative AI updates reinforce our conviction.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Microsoft's, Jim Cramer, ChatGPT, Bing, OpenAI's ChatGPT, BARD, Siri, Salesforce, Einstein, Morgan Stanley's, Jim Cramer's, Jim, Chino Organizations: Microsoft, Apple, Big Tech, Nasdaq, Barclays, Bloomberg, Google, Einstein, CNBC Locations: Wall, Silicon Valley, Wells Fargo
The company reported an adjusted $4.37 per share and $42.4 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv estimated $4 a share and $38.96 billion. Wells reported an adjusted $1.25 per share and $20.53 billion in revenue, while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $1.16 per share and $20.12 billion. Citi -- Citi stock added nearly 2% in premarket trading after beating on earnings. Analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $1.30 per share and $19.29 billion. The company reported an adjusted $6.14 per share and $92.9 billion in revenue while analysts polled by Refinitiv forecasted $5.99 and $91 billion.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Wells, Sarah Min Organizations: JPMorgan, Refinitiv, Citi, BlackRock, Northland Capital Markets, Microsoft, UBS, UnitedHealth, Alcoa Locations: New York, U.S, New York's
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
Khan first emerged in antitrust circles for her critiques of how antitrust enforcement overlooked potential abuses by Amazon . The ruling means the parties are closer to being able to complete their merger by their July 18 deadline. "In the coming days we'll be announcing our next step to continue our fight to preserve competition and protect consumers." It's not the first time a judge has looked dubiously on the FTC's antitrust enforcement theories under Khan. WATCH: Judge denies FTC request for preliminary injunction to stop Microsoft-Activision deal
Persons: Lina Khan, Lina Khan's, Khan, Joe Biden, Jacqueline Scott Corley, Corley, Microsoft's, we'll, It's, Matt Stoller, Stoller, , Microsoft — Organizations: Energy, Securities and Exchange Commission, Federal Trade, Microsoft, Activision Blizzard, FTC, Activision, PlayStation, Nintendo, U.K, Competition, American Economic Liberties, Twitter, Biden, CNBC, YouTube Locations: Rayburn
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:JetBlue Airways — JetBlue Airways declined 1.3% in premarket trading after the company said it would end its partnership in the northeastern U.S. with American Airlines and focus on Spirit Airlines . Meta Platforms — The social media giant added about 2% in premarket trading after the launch of Threads, a direct competitor to Twitter. Sweetgreen — Sweetgreen jumped more than 4% after Bank of America upgraded the stock to buy from neutral. Keurig Dr Pepper — Shares added nearly 2% after being upgraded by Morgan Stanley to overweight from equal weight. Shares rose nearly 0.9% in premarket trading.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, — Sweetgreen, Dr Pepper —, Morgan Stanley, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Michelle Fox, Jesse Pound Organizations: JetBlue Airways — JetBlue Airways, American Airlines, Spirit Airlines, Twitter, Meta, Bank of America, Microsoft, Citi, Textron — Citi, Textron
AT&T is deploying an OpenAI-based tool to help employees with their work. AT&T said Microsoft had helped it develop the generative AI tool safely. AT&T has created a ChatGPT-based tool called Ask AT&T for employees to use internally. The blogpost said AT&T had worked with Microsoft to ensure the tool was secure for corporate data, something that has been a concern for companies with ChatGPT. As AT&T said in the blogpost, generative AI tools are "not magic or infallible" and it was ultimately up to employees to check the tool's results were "accurate and appropriate."
Persons: Andy Markus, , Markus Organizations: Microsoft, Morning, ChatGPT, Companies
Macron told CNBC France will "invest like crazy" into A.I. "I think we are number one [in AI] in continental Europe, and we have to accelerate," French President Emmanuel Macron told CNBC's Karen Tso last week. watch nowWhile the U.S is seen as the leader in AI by many measures, France hopes to catch up. Underscoring the potential and hype of AI developments, four-week-old French startup Mistral AI raised 105 million euros to fund the company. I think we need a global regulation," Macron said.
Persons: Emmanuel Macron, Macron, Nathan Laine, Karen Tso, OpenAI's, Bruno Le Maire, Jean, Noel Barrot, Paris, Anton Dahbura, Rishi Sunak, Dahbura, Organizations: Viva Tech, CNBC France, Bloomberg, Getty, PARIS —, French Finance, Digital, CNBC, European Union, Johns Hopkins Institute, Autonomy, Microsoft, OpenAI, Nvidia, Global, EU, Organisation for Economic Co Locations: A.I, PARIS — France, Europe, China, U.S, France, Germany, Britain
The FTC just filed a new lawsuit to seek to stop Microsoft's purchase of Activision Blizzard. Microsoft has been trying to win the OK from global regulators for the nearly $70 billion purchase. This suit, filed in federal court in San Francisco, seeks to stop the deal from closing. "We welcome the opportunity to present our case in federal court," Brad Smith, Microsoft's vice chair and president, said in a statement Monday. "By filing in federal court to enjoin the transaction, the FTC is showing that it won't back down in the face of Microsoft's escalatory tactics."
Persons: Brad Smith, Matt Kent Organizations: FTC, Activision Blizzard, Microsoft, Activision, Morning, Federal Trade Commission, Sony, PlayStation, Nintendo, UK's, Public Citizen, Public Locations: San Francisco, China, Japan, Brazil, South Korea
Lauren Goodwin says investors should keep in mind that AI's eventual impact remains unknown. She said to invest thematically, focus on quality, and look at adjacent industries AI will rely on. Stocks like Nvidia and Microsoft — leaders in the AI space — have alone contributed to about 43% of the index's gains. "The excitement about generative AI has distracted investors from the possible risks of a looming recession," Goodwin said in a note on Tuesday. "The direct winners from AI technology may not be known yet.
Persons: Lauren Goodwin, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Goodwin Organizations: Nvidia, Microsoft, New York Life Investments, Nasdaq Artificial Intelligence, Robotics, Intelligence, iShares Robotics, Companies, X Data, Digital Infrastructure ETF, Computing Fund
But when it comes to artificial intelligence, particularly Siri, Apple has gone from leader to laggard. Siri was introduced to the world in 2011 – 12 years ago – and was lauded at the time as a breakthrough in AI technology. Open-source technology allows developers to collaborate and contribute to a project, leading to faster and more efficient development cycles. Still, Google, which has a long history of open-source involvement, publishes hundreds of AI research papers yearly. While that's helpful (especially for selling Macs to AI developers), it's not the kind of kumbaya sharing that the open-source community relies on.
Nuveen investment chief Saira Malik is still forecasting a recession in the next year. Malik also shares four top stocks investors can buy to set themselves up for long-term success. "The consumer — which I would have said was holding up very well — I'm worried about tighter banking conditions, tighter banking credit on the consumer," Malik said. Additionally, the labor market is now showing cracks, even though the unemployment rate remains historically low at 3.5%. 4 stocks set to outperform in a downturnDespite her concerns about the economy, Malik doesn't see a massive market sell-off coming.
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