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In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBofA's Vivek Arya raises target for Nvidia, expects it to be a winner in A.I. raceVivek Arya, Bank of America Securities, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss his bullish case for Nvidia.
Nvidia can lead the 'A.I. arms-race,' Bank of America says
  + stars: | 2023-02-14 | by ( Alex Harring | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +1 min
He said the company could specifically stand to benefit from generative AI, which is focused on creating new outputs based on data already understood by the system. ChatGPT is one of the best-known examples of generative AI. "NVDA's full-stack of accelerated silicon/systems/software/developers positions it uniquely to lead the nascent generative AI arms-race among global cloud and enterprise customers," he said in a note to clients Tuesday. And generative AI should increase the total addressable market of its accelerator business to $62 billion by 2027. To be sure, Arya said generative AI is in its "requisite hype cycle," so predicting an adoption pace means making lots of assumptions.
AMD shares popped about 3%. On Wall Street, several analysts reiterated AMD shares as a buy despite the continued overhangs in the chipmaking industry, and project upside for the stock. Goldman Sachs also maintained a buy rating on AMD, saying that despite broader market challenges, the company is on track towards a positive market share trajectory. 'Partly cloudy' results Deutsche Bank analyst Ross Seymore reiterated a hold rating on the stock, citing its "partially cloudy" fourth-quarter results. AMD shares have benefited from January's market and tech shares rally, jumping 16.03% since the start of 2023.
Wall Street analysts are starting to worry about chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices following Intel's terrible earnings results . Morgan Stanley named AMD its top pick in December knowing that there would be some risk early in the year. Earnings expectations Even though Morgan Stanley expects a weak first-quarter guidance, it still has an overweight rating and $77 price target on AMD shares. Morgan Stanley models December revenue of $5.54 billion, down 0.4% on the quarter and up 14.8% on the year. "We continue to see a long runway of potential data center gains, including potential to get traction in data center GPU over time."
The companies are rated buy by at least 70% of the analysts covering them. Cabot, which yields 2.1%, has nearly 22% upside to the average price target. First Merchants, along with its 3.1% yield, has nearly 18% upside to its consensus price target. Of all names on the list, Broadcom has the highest dividend yield, at 3.2%. Lastly, payments company Visa has an 0.8% dividend yield and 12% upside, based on the consensus price target.
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Weak outlook, reduced estimates, significant oversupply. Looking for an imminent bottom in global tech demand is proving very elusive, at least if you look at Micron's earnings report. "These are the most challenging conditions for the memory market since the financial crisis," Chris Caso at Credit Suisse said, after he looked over Micron's numbers. "Losses mount over significant oversupply," Joseph Moore at Morgan Stanley said. "In a rapidly deteriorating memory environment driven by inventory corrections/demand weakness across nearly every end market, pricing continues to be the biggest headwind to memory profitability/earnings," Harlan Sur at JPMorgan warned.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailQ4 or Q1 is the bottom of the cycle for semi stocks, says Bank of America's AryaVivek Arya, Bank of America managing director, joins 'TechCheck' to discuss the most 'obvious trade' over the next several years, what will happen to these stocks in the next year and the implications of the recent TSMC investment in the U.S.
The latest results from Nvidia suggest a gaming bottom is in sight for the battered semiconductor stock, according to analysts. The chipmaker on Wednesday posted a mixed quarter, with earnings falling slightly below analysts' expectations . Nvidia's gaming division reported a 51% decline in sales as the PC gaming market slows from pandemic-era growth and retailers grapple with a glut of inventory. Bank of America's Vivek Arya reflected similar sentiment, viewing the current period as an "inflection quarter" for the chip stock. Analysts see particular strength in the company's data center business, which saw sales rise 31% year over year.
Intel is planning major layoffs that are likely to affect thousands of jobs, per Bloomberg. The US introduced export controls which could limit the sales of semiconductors made using US technology. Staffers in Intel's sales and marketing division could see jobs cuts affecting around 20% employees, the report said. The news of layoffs follows a drop in demand for processors for personal computers, or PCs, and an industry-wide sell-off following a spate of new curbs the US has aimed at restricting technology sales to China. These curbs also affected US companies like Intel: Intel stock was down 5.4% Friday and is down around 7.9% since then.
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