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However, the company's revenues and profits have surged since then, and one outperforming fund manager sees the current valuation as a buying opportunity. Alibaba shares are traded in the U.S., Hong Kong and Germany. BABA 1Y line The slump in the company's share price came amid concerns of an economic slowdown in China and increased regulation of the internet sector by authorities in Beijing. Alibaba's cheap share buyback Lapping also pointed to the impact of Alibaba's share buyback program as distinct compared to many richly valued U.S. tech darlings. However, with its share price now 65% off its peak, Alibaba's compensation costs have dwindled dramatically.
Persons: Sean Peche, BABA, It's, Andrew Organizations: Ranmore Fund Management, Wall Street, Tech, Ranmore Global Equity Fund Locations: China, U.S, Hong Kong, Germany, Beijing
Shares of oil giants and European infrastructure companies can act as a hedge against inflation while also delivering strong annual growth, according to fund manager Freddie Lait. Lait manages two funds — the Latitude Horizon Fund and the Latitude Global Fund — with more than $750 million of assets collectively and holds all three stocks in both funds. BP SHEL 1Y line The fund manager explained that with oil currently around $85 per barrel, and his assumption of $70-75 long-term, his oil and gas stock picks can generate nearly double-digit annual returns for shareholders. 'Phenomenally interesting' stock Beyond energy names, Lait said his favorite inflation-linked stock is Vinci which he described as "phenomenally interesting." The company operates a mix of toll roads and civil engineering projects with long-term inflation adjustment mechanisms.
Persons: Freddie Lait, Lait, Vinci, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Latitude Investment Management, Shell, CNBC Pro, International Energy Agency, London Gatwick, Atlantic City International, Vinci Locations: Saudi Arabia's, Aramco, Burbank, United States
A number of stocks that supply Nvidia look set to gain from the AI boom, as the U.S. chip giant published another bumper quarter of earnings. Nvidia, which makes chips that are used to train artificial intelligence models, said sales had risen 265% year-on-year to more than $22 billion in its latest quarter . TSMC also makes chips for companies such as Apple and AMD . Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix make "high bandwidth memory" chips used in the latest AI chips. Japanese firm Advantest makes equipment and materials used to test AI chips during manufacturing.
Persons: TSMC, Morgan Stanley, CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Nvidia, CNBC, Samsung Electronics, Micron Technology, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Apple, AMD, SK Hynix, GPU, Street, BESI, BE Semiconductor Industries, TSMC, Intel, Samsung Locations: U.S, NVDA, Dutch
UBS has uncovered small- and medium-sized overlooked stocks across Europe that offer substantial upside potential. Of those, the five stocks below stand out for having the biggest upside potential, according to FactSet's consensus price targets. The five stocks had a high UBS "composite value score," indicating they are cheap relative to their book value. Finally, UBS screened for stocks with a relatively low short-selling in them — the practice of betting on the stocks falling. The bank had previously said small- and mid-cap companies are a "preferred" segment for investing in 2024.
Persons: Sutanya Chedda, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: UBS Locations: Europe
Two funds investing in defensive stocks are the only exchange-traded funds in the world that had a positive return every year over the past decade, CNBC Pro research has found. The two funds stood out among 8,300 equity ETFs worldwide screened by CNBC Pro using FactSet data. Over that period, the ETF more than doubled investors' money, with a cumulative total price gain of 118%. While the MSCI Healthcare index, valued in euros, dipped slightly into negative territory in 2016, 2020 and 2022, the Amundi ETF's total returns have remained positive because of the weakness in the pound sterling. However, Tabet also pointed out that the health-care sector, especially European pharma, tends to underperform in election years.
Persons: Joakim Tabet, Kepler, Tabet, Vincent Denoiseux, David Evans, Evans, Kepler Cheuvreux Organizations: CNBC, Healthcare UCITS, London Stock Exchange, TSX, Consumer Staples, CNBC Pro, Outlook Novo Nordisk, Novo Nordisk's, pharma, European pharma Locations: Canadian, Europe, Danish, Novo, U.S
The S & P 500 closed above 5,000 for the first time last week. However, investors need not fear as the rally could still have plenty of room to run, according to Capital Economics. However, Higgins continued: "valuation remains far short of what it reached then, suggesting that it has plenty more room to inflate." Capital Economics also noted the index's current rally is highly concentrated in mega-cap tech stocks like Apple and Microsoft . While acknowledging that it's impossible to predict bubbles, Capital Economics suggested that sustained modest earnings growth could see the rally continue through 2025.
Persons: John Higgins, Higgins Organizations: Capital Economics, Economics, Apple, Microsoft Locations: London
European semiconductor equipment stocks are likely to outperform as spending on artificial intelligence chips rises over the next decade, according to Bank of America. The continent's chip stocks produce the high-tech machines needed to manufacture the latest generation of chips. ASML ASML , the dominant supplier of lithography equipment used to manufacture advanced logic and memory chips, remains Bank of America's "top pick in EU Semicaps." The bank forecasts strong demand from leading chipmakers using ASML 's extreme ultraviolet lithography machines required to produce next-generation AI accelerators and high bandwidth memory modules. The investment bank said ASM 's exposure to new transistor architectures called "gate-all-around" appears to be critical for improving AI chip performance.
Persons: Didier Scemama Organizations: Bank of America, AMD, Nvidia, EU, America's, Analysts, ASM International Bank of America, ASM International, ASM, BE Semiconductor Industries, HB, Intel, Micron Locations: Europe
The enthusiasm for Japan's stocks was reflected on Tuesday when its benchmark index Nikkei 225 climbed to a 34-year high. Will its bull run continue though, and how should investors play this Asian market? Here’s what Wall Street and other pros say, and how to invest — including the stocks to buy. Jeremy Schwartz, global chief investment officer at WisdomTree, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Asia” on Friday that Japanese stocks are a “catalyst-rich” asset class. How – and what – to invest Global investors may find it more accessible to invest in Japan markets via exchange-traded funds.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Jesper Koll, Monex, Jeremy Schwartz, CNBC’s, , buybacks, ” Schwartz, Eastspring, Oliver Lee, Morgan Stanley’s, Morningstar, Kao, industrials, CNBC's Ganesh Rao Organizations: Nikkei, Eastspring Investments, , Tokyo Stock Exchange, Ivailo Locations: Japan, China, Tokyo
Goldman Sachs has identified three "attractive" value stocks that could see significant share price appreciation over the next 12 months. The Wall Street bank's analysts see over 50% upside potential in British Airways parent International Consolidated Airlines Group , agricultural machinery maker CNH Industrial , and health technology company Philips . Goldman Sachs said all three companies stand out amongst their European peers for their cheap valuations compared to earnings growth prospects. IAG-GB 1Y line Philips Goldman recommends buying Philips and expects the shares to be up 51% over the next 12 months. CNH Industrials Goldman Sachs upgraded CNH to buy last month.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, John Sawtell, Goldman's, Patrick Creuset, Creuset, Philips Goldman, Roy Jakobs, CNH Industrials Goldman Sachs, Michael Bloom Organizations: British Airways parent International Consolidated Airlines Group, Philips, CNBC Locations: Europe, United States
Investors should prefer the Canadian TSX Composite benchmark index in 2024 to the S & P 500 , according to Bank of America. Last year, while inflation was moderating, the TSX underperformed the S & P 500 by 16 percentage points. However, the Canadian index beat the S & P 500 in 2022 when inflation was investors' prime concern. According to FactSet, the P/E currently stands at 15.75x, lower than the 20.28x of the S & P 500. Canadian investors can access the index through the near-identical iShares Core S & P/TSX Capped Composite Index ETF and BMO S & P/TSX Capped Composite Index ETF .
Persons: Ohsung Kwon, FactSet, Kwon, SPX Organizations: Canadian, Bank of America, TSX, of America's, BMO, U.S Locations: of America's Canada, 15.75x, United States, Canada, Yom Kippur, Vietnam
Gibson, a senior research analyst at financial services firm MST Marquee, has set a price target of 11,000 Japanese yen ($74) for Nintendo's stock. This represents a 31% upside over the current price. He told the investment bank's clients that Nintendo could delay the Switch 2 launch if the momentum for the current console remains strong. The analyst has rated Nintendo a buy but set a conservative price target of 8,400 yen. However, if the new console fails to gain traction with consumers, Gibson cautioned that Nintendo's stock is likely to miss his price target.
Persons: David Gibson, Gibson, Mario, That's, isn't, Jefferies, Atul Goyal, Goyal, Junko Yamamura, — CNBC's Arjun Kharpal Organizations: Nintendo, Super Nintendo, Universal Parks & Resorts, Mario Bros, CNBC, Citi Locations: United States, Germany, Florida
The Nikkei 225 index , one of Japan's most important stock market benchmarks, could surge more than 50% over the next two years, according to Tokyo-based advisor Jasper Koll. The Nikkei 225 currently stands at just over 36,000 points, meaning Koll's target represents a potential upside of around 50% in the next two years. Hong Kong investors have the CSOP Nikkei 225 Index ETF available. This ETF tracks the MSCI Japan index, which is a different index from the Nikkei 225 but holds about 70% of the same stocks. European, UAE, and Singapore-based investors can access the MSCI Japan index through the iShares MSCI Japan UCITS ETF.
Persons: Jasper Koll, Monex, Koll, CNBC's, JP Morgan Japan, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway Organizations: Nikkei, JP Morgan, Berkshire, KIM, Japan, Japan Hedged Equity Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Berkshire, that's, Swiss, Hong Kong, U.S, UAE, Singapore
There are opportunities in the banking sector despite a rise in volatility and concern over steep losses at some lenders, according to fund manager Cole Smead. The stock makes up 1.36% of the Smead Value Fund . He believes UniCredit's share buybacks while the shares trade below book value will drive book value growth higher than the current 8% return on equity. "When you buy back shares below book, there is a multiplier effect on book value growth," Smead explained. The fund manager expects UniCredit will trade above book value over the next 12-18 months and use its stock to pursue further acquisitions.
Persons: Cole Smead, Switzerland's, Julius Baer, Smead, CNBC's, RoE, UniCredit Organizations: Smead Capital, Western Alliance Bank, KBW, New York Community Bancorp, Investors, Western Alliance Bank's, CNBC Pro Locations: Europe, U.S
Investment bank Jefferies has revealed its top stock picks that are exposed to major themes like innovation, new products, and emerging markets. The investment bank forecasts Prudential shares will rise 118% to 18,000 British pence over the next 12 months. The investment bank expects Hong Kong-listed shares of Alibaba to rise to 128 Hong Kong dollars ($17), which implies an 84% upside potential. The investment bank expects shares to rise 57% over the next 12 months. The investment bank believes ASML's current valuation of 33 times forward earnings is too low since it forecasts 49% earnings growth over the next two years.
Persons: Jefferies, Prudential Jefferies, Prudential's, Anil Wadhwani, Eddie Wu, Wu, Alibaba's, Joe Dickerson, Dickerson, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Prudential, Jefferies, Hong, U.S, HSBC Jefferies, HSBC, ASML Semiconductor, DexCom Locations: U.K, Asia, China, India, Africa, Hong Kong, Alibaba
As the U.S. presidential election comes into the spotlight, Goldman Sachs has assessed the potential impact on global markets by changes in regulation, taxation, and other government policies. However, it sees U.S. subsidiaries of foreign companies potentially gaining if Trump delivers on a cut to corporation taxes. On average, European companies generate 25% of sales in the U.S., but most come from U.S.-based businesses rather than exports from the EU, according to Goldman Sachs. As these companies run substantial U.S. operations and assets, Goldman also sees them as benefiting from potential U.S. corporate tax cuts under Trump. However, they flagged that Biden has mentioned increasing the rate of corporate tax, "which would have an impact on US-exposed companies."
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Donald Trump, Trump, DAX, Sharon Bell, Joe Biden, Goldman, Biden, Michael Bloom Organizations: U.S, Ukraine, Trump, Eurostat, Stocks, Intercontinental Hotels Group, Boeing, Aero, BAE Systems, Kerry Group, Goldman, Republican Locations: United States, U.S, Europe
As China's electric vehicle market goes from strength to strength, investors worldwide are showing a growing interest in getting involved. The chief investment officer singled out BYD , which recently beat Tesla to become the top global EV maker, as a "favorite" car maker, and battery-making giant Contemporary Amperex Technology ( CATL ). But significant hurdles remain for retail investors before they can be part of China's EV growth story. However, the veteran investor pointed out that ETFs with concentrated positions remain viable options for those seeking exposure to the Chinese EV growth potential. The fund also has a 5% position in Chinese EV maker BYD, according to FactSet data.
Persons: Kingsley Jones, Jevons, CNBC's, BYD, Tesla, Kingsley, Li Auto, BATT, Jones, BATT CGRO Organizations: Jevons Global, Technology, BMW, Hyundai, Honda, China EV, Battery Technology, China Growth, BATT, BYD, CNBC, Alpha, CGRO Locations: Hong Kong, China, U.S, Europe, BYD, Australia, Canberra, Xiaomi
While demand for artificial intelligence applications is seeing rapid growth, several non-tech companies are well-positioned to benefit directly from the AI boom over the next few years, according to Scotiabank. This is because although GPUs, the specialized chips that power AI applications, are more efficient, they consume more than twice as much electricity to operate compared to non-AI chips such as CPUs. The Scotiabank analysts named six stocks that they think are well-positioned to capitalize on surging demand for data centers and renewable energy from AI applications. Meanwhile, earlier this week, fellow data center firm Equinix launched a new cloud service that will allow companies to manage their Nvidia AI supercomputing infrastructure to build AI applications. Due to their massive, power-hungry data centers, Scotiabank noted that the tech companies are the largest corporate consumers of renewable power.
Persons: Equinix, AI's Organizations: Scotiabank, Analysts, Digital Realty, Digital, Nvidia, supercomputing, JV, Big Tech, Google, Microsoft, NextEra Energy, NextEra Energy Partners, Brookfield Renewable Partners, Big
Switzerland-listed car parts manufacturer Autoneum's share price could increase by over 70% in the next year, according to Vontobel. The investment bank raised its price target on Autoneum to 215 Swiss francs ($248), representing a potential 74% upside from the current share price of 123.80 francs. However, Autoneum's organic sales grew only 7.2%, lagging the broader recovery, according to the car parts maker's full-year revenue results, released Monday. CHF= 1Y line When excluding negative currency effects that lowered sales by 7.2%, Autoneum's 2023 revenue was 2.43 billion Swiss francs, meeting the company's own guidance. In contrast to Vontobel's bullish outlook, Swiss bank UBS has a neutral view of the stock, with a price target of 110 CHF — 10% below the current share price.
Persons: Vontobel, Arben Hasanaj Organizations: BMW, Ford, Renault, Mercedes, GM, Volvo, UBS, Locations: Switzerland, Zurich, Asia, Swiss
Shares of the Indian media house fell 34% on Tuesday, while investors shrugged off the impact on the $124 billion Japanese media and technology giant Sony. ZEEL-IN 1Y mountain What are analysts saying about Zee shares, moving forward? Citi sharply slashed its price target on Zee's stock from 340 Indian rupees to 180 Indian rupees. Zee has not stated whether it will pursue the merger while the litigation with Sony could hinder improvements in operations or explore a merger with other players," the analysts added. Similarly, Elara analysts added, "Possibility of any other strategic/financial partner buying majority stake in Zee could provide respite to valuation multiples."
Persons: Motilal Oswal, Zee, Motilal, Aliasgar Shakir, Karan Taurani, Pulkit Chawla, Emkay, Zee's, Punit Goenka, Chawla Organizations: Zee Entertainment, Sony, Zee, Citi, Wall, Reliance, Disney Star India, Motilal Oswal, Star, Disney, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Reliance Industries, Media, Elara, RIL, Zee Management, Quintillion Business Media, Bloomberg News, NDTV Locations: India, Zee
The Wall Street bank named the following five companies in its European "Conviction with Catalysts" list of stock ideas that offer strong upside potential. Enav Topping the list with the biggest upside potential is Enav , an air traffic controller company based in Italy. UCB Barclays believes Belgian biopharmaceutical company UCB can beat 2023 sales expectations thanks to its new psoriasis drug Bimzelx. Although the drug has struggled in the U.S. over side effect warnings, Barclays sees signs of healthy global demand. Volkswagen Barclays believes Volkswagen offers turnaround potential in 2024 after a disastrous 2023 and 2022.
Persons: Emmanuel Cau, Enav, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Barclays, UCB Barclays, Belgian, UCB, ABN Amro Dutch, ABN Amro, ABN, Vivendi, Volkswagen Barclays, Volkswagen Locations: Italy, U.S
The biopharmaceutical sector is expected to offer a safe haven from macroeconomic and earnings concerns ahead of final quarterly results from companies, according to Morgan Stanley. Morgan Stanley, however, cautioned that the outlook for drug pricing reform in the U.S. poses risks for the sector. Shares of Indivior , argenx , AstraZeneca , Merck , Lonza, Sweden's Sobi, Novo Nordisk and Sandoz Group were among those listed by Morgan Stanley with a "buy" rating. In a bull case where Sublocade hits $2.2 billion in sales by 2030, Morgan Stanley sees shares rising further to 3,500 British pence. Novo Nordisk Shares of Novo Nordisk , a leader in diabetes and obesity drugs, offer a 9.4% upside, according to Morgan Stanley.
Persons: Morgan Stanley, Mark D Purcell, Sweden's, Sublocade, Thibault Boutherin, Morgan, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: Barclays, Bank of America, AstraZeneca, Merck, Lonza, Novo Nordisk, Sandoz Group, AstraZeneca AstraZeneca, British pharma, EU Locations: U.S, argenx, Novo, Indivior
The anti-obesity drug market is expected to remain in focus this year after a bumper 2023 for weight loss drugmakers Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly , according to Berenberg. GLP-1 drugs encourage the production of hormones that cause weight loss through reduced appetite. Nevertheless, Berenberg's analysts believe the bigger, underappreciated, near-term opportunity lies with companies preparing to launch generic versions of the first-generation GLP-1 drugs. Under-the-radar picks Sartorius and SKAN Group, Berenberg's "under-the-radar" pick, are also expected to benefit from manufacturing generic GLP-1 drugs. The investment bank sees Sartorius benefiting from the growing commercialization of GLP-1 drugs and forecasts shares to rise by 27% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Eli Lilly, Novo, Sandoz, Berenberg Organizations: Novo Nordisk, , Nordisk, Novo Nordisk's Victoza, SKAN Locations: Germany, Europe, Sandoz, United States
Yet, shares in some companies are trading at steeper discounts than they have in recent history, presenting an opportunity for investors. The recent gains have led to bulls and bears claiming the stock market is overheated , making stock-picking a significant challenge. Amazon shares also featured on the CNBC Pro's stock screen despite rising by about 75% in 2023. The e-commerce giant's shares still remain more than 15% below their high in 2021 despite the company's continued growth. Analysts expect the stock to rise 18% over the next 12 months.
Persons: Intesa Organizations: CNBC Pro, FactSet, CNBC, Nvidia, AstraZeneca, Isuzu, ARC Resources, Tourmaline Locations: Swedish
Bank of America has upgraded wind energy giant Ørsted from "neutral" to "buy" citing an improved risk-reward profile for the battered stock. However, Bank of America analysts expect Orsted's fortunes to improve in 2024 and have raised their price target from $15.06 per share to $22.80, representing nearly 20% upside from current levels. The upgrade and price target boost come after the stock has already staged a more-than-50% recovery from its November lows. Its remaining U.S. exposure consists primarily of the Sunrise Wind project off Long Island, which still needs state contract approval, according to the bank. Even if Sunrise Wind falls through, the analysts believe the downside to Ørsted shares would be manageable.
Persons: Ørsted, Peter Bisztyga Organizations: of America, Bank of America, Street Locations: Denmark, U.S, Britain, Long
Overseas stocks are significantly undervalued compared to the U.S. stock market and present an opportunity for investors in 2024, according to Ritholtz's Josh Brown. The fund had a total return of 20% in 2023, compared to 26% for the S & P 500. The MSCI index is currently priced at 12.8 times earnings, compared to the S & P 500's 20 times, according to Morningstar data. Yet Brown, who co-founded Ritholtz in 2011, believes overseas stocks could still outperform if central banks cut interest rates. Correction: This article has been updated to reflect that Ritholtz's Josh Brown said global stocks' discount to the S & P 500 is double its historic average.
Persons: Ritholtz's Josh Brown, Brown, CNBC's, ACWI, Josh Brown Organizations: Wealth Management, U.S, ETF, Morningstar Locations: Japan, Europe, U.S
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