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It's also common to draw parallels between the dot-com bubble and today's hype, leading investors to wonder if there's an AI bubble that's about to pop, too. Goldman Sachs' big AI headline of the month is "To buy, or not to buy, that is the question." The note from September 5, led by Peter Oppenheimer, suggests the answer is "to buy" but also to diversify. And the third is the application providers, which are the companies creating services for end users to harness AI. It comes from machine learning or big data workloads that various companies and governments use, Belton noted.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Peter Oppenheimer, John Belton, doesn't, Brian Colello, Nancy Tengler, that's, it's, Tengler, Wall, Larry Ellison, Colello, Belton Organizations: Service, Business, Gabelli Funds, Morningstar Equity Research, Investments, Nvidia, Companies, Microsoft, Intel, Oracle, IBM, Broadcom, AMD, Cadence Design Systems, Google, AWS, Eaton Corporation Locations: GenAI, Belton
Jensen Huang, co-founder and chief executive officer of Nvidia Corp., speaks during an event in Taipei, Taiwan, on Sunday, June 2, 2024. Asian chipmaking heavyweights extended Wall Street's rally as Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang made bullish comments about the AI darling's outlook. Stocks tied to Nvidia suppliers and semiconductor related companies rallied in Asia as the bullish investor sentiment spilled over. Contract chip manufacturer Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp jumped as much as 5% and Hon Hai Precision Industry — known internationally as Foxconn — gained over 4%. Japanese chip-related stocks also soared, including semiconductor testing equipment supplier Advantest which gained over 9%.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Goldman Sachs, Huang, Stocks, Organizations: Nvidia Corp, Nvidia, Goldman, Technology Conference, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, Hai Precision Industry, TSMC, Tokyo, SoftBank Group, Samsung Electronics, SK Hynix Locations: Taipei, Taiwan, San Francisco, Asia, South Korea
That builds on Wednesday's post-earnings rally of nearly 33%, which marked the stock's best day on record. Moderna — The stock plummeted nearly 16% after the drugmaker said it will cut $1.1 billion in expenses by 2027. Interpublic Group of Companies — The advertising stock was trading 2% lower following a downgrade from UBS to sell from neutral. U.S. Bancorp — The bank stock slipped nearly 2% despite announcing a dividend hike and a $5 billion share buyback plan. Oracle – Shares of the software company rose nearly 2% after Bernstein named it a top investment idea .
Persons: Kroger –, Kroger, Moderna, Adam Berlin, Bernstein, Yun Li, Michelle Fox, Sean Conlon, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Sarah Min Organizations: Kroger, Moderna, Gilead Sciences, Alaska Air Group, Interpublic, Companies, UBS, Amazon, Pfizer, Bancorp, Diageo, Bank of America, Wolfe Research, Oracle – Locations: Gilead, Alaska, U.S
Two of Wall Street's biggest banks are adopting new policies to mitigate overwork and burnout for their junior investment bankers. Bank of America will use a new tool to better track working hours for junior bankers, the Journal report said, and flag HR when those go above 80. But the nature of investment banking work makes it hard to believe that such guardrails will stand the test of time. He completed an internship at an investment bank in New York last summer and accepted a return offer to start full time in 2025. If senior banking staff don't unilaterally enforce the cap and take it seriously, junior bankers can feel pressure to let the rules slide for the sake of the team and their own careers.
Persons: Leo Lukenas III, Lukenas, Jamie Dimon, JPMorgan Chase, we've, they're, Moritz Erhardt, , We've Organizations: Service, Industry, JPMorgan, Street, Bank of America, Business, Bank of, Green Beret, of America Locations: New York, London
CNBC's Jim Cramer on Thursday listed the CEOs he trusts even when the market doesn't, primarily naming executives from top tech companies. Cramer said investors shouldn't doubt solid companies every time a negative data point surfaces. Cramer said he's giving Amazon 's Andy Jassy, Broadcom 's Hock Tan and Nvidia 's Jensen Huang "the benefit of the doubt." Tech stocks can be hampered by investors who don't completely understand the companies' operations or trajectories, according to Cramer. "In tech, the complexity is such that Wall Street often reaches conclusions that have little to do with reality."
Persons: CNBC's Jim Cramer, Cramer, he's, Andy Jassy, Hock Tan, Jensen Huang Organizations: Dow Jones Industrial, Nasdaq, Broadcom, Nvidia, Amazon Locations: Tan
A golden cross is a chart pattern in which a stock's 50-day moving average moves above its 200-day average. Given the more volatile backdrop, CNBC Pro screened FactSet for stocks that are forming or approaching a golden cross pattern. The health-care stock has a 50-day moving average of $103.31 and is approaching its 200-day moving average of $104.14. MarketAxess Holdings Meanwhile, the 50-day moving average of $230.11 for MarketAxess Holdings has already surpassed its 200-day moving average of $228.36, indicating possible future gains. Its 50-day moving average of $218.04 has also already passed its 200-day moving average of $215.18.
Persons: paring, Cardinal Health's Organizations: Dow Jones, Nasdaq, CNBC Pro, Health, Holdings, MarketAxess Holdings, SBA Communications SBA Communications, SBA Locations: Wednesday's
JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America are taking steps to limit junior bankers' work hours. AdvertisementTwo Wall Street banks are cracking down on young bankers' working hours, as the industry continues to grapple with a long-standing culture of overwork. On Wednesday, The Wall Street Journal reported that JPMorgan Chase plans to limit bankers' hours and that Bank of America is using a new tool to track their time on the job. JPMorgan will cap working time at 80 hours a week. It carves out one big exception: live deals, typically the most taxing part of the job, when bankers need to be on call for high-stakes work around the clock.
Persons: Peers, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, , JPMorgan Chase Organizations: JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Service, Street Journal, JPMorgan, Business
Trump Media & Technology – Shares slid more than 11% in the wake of the debate between Republican nominee Donald Trump and Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris . Dave & Buster's – The entertainment stock popped more than 13% after topping earnings estimates for the recent quarter by 15 cents a share. GameStop – The video game retailer's shares plunged more than 10% in premarket trading after the company reported a steep decline in sales. GameStop also announced an "at-the-market" stock offering of up to 20 million shares. Morgan Stanley – Shares of the major bank were down more than 1% after Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to neutral from buy.
Persons: Donald Trump, Kamala Harris, Rentokil, Rollins, Dave, Buster's, Jefferies, Stocks, Coinbase, MicroStrategy, MARA, Morgan Stanley –, Goldman Sachs, Goldman, Morgan Stanley, , Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Tanaya Macheel, Michelle Fox Organizations: Trump Media & Technology, Republican, Democratic, Trump Media, GameStop, Williams, Sonoma, Jefferies, Novartis – U.S, Bank of America, Novartis, Viking Therapeutics, JPMorgan, MARA Holdings Locations: North America, Swiss, Japan
Mission Produce — The avocado producer surged 21.6% after reporting revenue for the fiscal third quarter jumped 24% from a year ago. The company reported sales of $324 million, compared with $261.4 million in the same three-month period one year before. Boot Barn — Shares rose 6% after the Western-style retailer provided an update on its recent performance ahead of a Piper Sandler Growth Frontiers Conference presentation. Boot Barn announced preliminary consolidated same-store sales growth of 4% in its fiscal second quarter. Johnson Controls International — Shares rose nearly 2% after JPMorgan upgraded the stock to buy from neutral.
Persons: Piper Sandler, LSEG . Patterson, Alibaba, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, , Samantha Subin, Sean Conlon, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Yun Li, Scott Schnipper Organizations: Growers, Oracle, LSEG, Apple, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Juniper Networks, Revenue, UTI Energy, Hong, Reuters, Johnson, JPMorgan, Anheuser, Busch Inbev SA, Equity Locations: California, U.S, Alibaba —, China, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Wells
Apple 's high stakes September launch event left some Wall Street analysts feeling unsettled. The largest company in the U.S. announced a host of new products Monday at its California headquarters, including a new Apple Watch, AirPods and the highly anticipated iPhone 16 that harnesses AI tools called Apple Intelligence. The delayed AI launch also creates uncertainty for sales volumes over the next two quarters, Long added. UBS analyst David Vogt viewed the event as "anticlimactic," adding that Apple offered no "killer" AI application. Elsewhere, Piper Sandler's Matt Farrell reiterated his neutral rating and $225 price target, noting that a slow rollout of Apple Intelligence could actually hamper enthusiasm for the features.
Persons: Tim Long, Apple, Long, Bernstein's Toni Sacconaghi, David Vogt, Wells, Aaron Rakers, Samik Chatterjee, MoffettNathanson's Craig Moffett, Tim Cook, Piper, Matt Farrell, Brandon Nispel Organizations: Apple, U.S, Apple Watch, Apple Intelligence, Barclays, UBS, Beta Locations: California, China, Europe
Mission Produce , Calavo Growers — Shares gained 20% after the avocado producer reported a year-over-year revenue increase of 24% for the fiscal third quarter. Calavo Growers advanced around 12% after the rival producer reported adjusted earnings of 57 cents per share in its fiscal third quarter. That is more than the 43 cents per share that analysts were expecting, according to FactSet. Oracle — Shares of the database software company surged more than 11% after a fiscal first-quarter beat on the top and bottom lines. For the fiscal second quarter, the company saw growth of 4% in preliminary consolidated same-store sales.
Persons: Russell Hutchinson, LSEG, Piper Sandler, Hewlett Packard, Rubrik, FactSet, Patterson, Gary Kelly, Bob Jordan, Alibaba, Daniel Pinto, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Michelle Fox Organizations: Ally, Mission, Calavo, Calavo Growers, Oracle —, Oracle, Amazon Web Services, Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Hewlett, Juniper Networks, UTI, Southwest Airlines —, Elliott Investment Management, Hong, Reuters, JPMorgan Locations: U.S, Alibaba —, China, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Shenzhen
This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. For Wall Street bankers, traders, and executives, the election also stands to affect their jobs and business prospects, from US trade relations to demand for megamergers. To see where Wall Street's top leaders stand ahead of Tuesday's debate, Business Insider scoured the Federal Election Commission website for individual donations from Wall Street leaders between 2023 and August. The data showed donations from leaders across investment banking, private equity, and hedge funds, including Blackstone and Evercore. See below to find which Wall Street tycoons are voting for which candidate in 2024 presidential election, in alphabetical order:
Persons: , Donald Trump, Kamala Harris —, Richard Haass, Goldman Sachs, Trump, China —, Morgan Stanley, Harris, Joe Biden's, Biden Organizations: Service, Foreign Relations, Business, Centerview Partners, Wall Street, megamergers, Blackstone, JPMorgan, Citi, Bank of America Locations: China
I probably do not have to tell you that Nvidia has really blown up over the past few years. "If people were going to be going crazy about a stock, wouldn't it be this one?" Jack, a moderator of a subreddit dedicated to Nvidia's stock, finds some of the memes around Nvidia irksome. He said ChatGPT's capabilities reinforced his belief in his thesis around Nvidia and AI. I'm not a Nvidia true believer, but I'm apparently Nvidia curious.
Persons: Jensen Huang, Angelo Zino, Jim Cramer, Josh Brown, fanboys, Kamala Harris, I'm, Dan Ives, Huang, Daniel Williams, Williams, David, Goliath, Christopher Schwarz, that's, Axios, Felix Salmon, he's, Jack can't, It's, Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett, Buffett, There's, Schwarz, Brown, Ted Mortonson, Baird, They've, cooly, they're, Mortonson, Ives, Elvis, Zack Morris, Taylor Swift, Chappell Roan, Emily Stewart Organizations: Nvidia, Wall Street, Woodstock, CFRA Research, CNBC, Ritholtz Wealth Management, Elon, NFL, Democratic, People, Wedbush Securities, Lebron, Davids, University of California, Paul Merage School of Business, Nvidia irksome, GameStop, GameStop —, Cisco, Department, Justice, ChatGPT, Business Locations: New York City, New York, Jack, Maine, Omaha , Nebraska,
Last week, bitcoin tumbled 9% for its worst weekly performance since August 2023. Bitcoin jumped Monday evening and topped $57,000 after Wall Street's rebound from its worst week of the year. The three major averages last week posted their worst weekly performance in 2024. Bitcoin has been trading range bound for most of the year. "This relief in the equity markets could help alleviate selling pressure on bitcoin, providing a conducive environment for a recovery."
Persons: cryptocurrency, bitcoin, Bitcoin, Wall, MicroStrategy Organizations: Metrics, Nasdaq
Over the past year, Wall Street's largest names — including Goldman Sachs , Bank of America , Morgan Stanley , Wells Fargo to JPMorgan Chase — ramped up their generative artificial intelligence efforts with the aim of boosting profits. MS YTD mountain Morgan Stanley YTD AI use cases for key businesses Morgan Stanley was among the first on Wall Street to publicly embrace the technology, unveiling two AI assistants for financial advisors powered by OpenAI. Launched in September 2023, the AI @ Morgan Stanley Assistant gives advisors and their staff quick answers to questions regarding the market, investment recommendations, and various internal processes. If it does, that would be welcome news for shareholders after Morgan Stanley's wealth segment missed analysts' revenue expectations in the second quarter . However, As long as these costs don't outweigh return on investment (ROI), we're happy with Wells Fargo and Morgan Stanley's moves to innovate.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Wells, JPMorgan Chase — ramped, Jamie Dimon, Alexandra Mousavizadeh, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Jeff McMillan, Morgan, McMillan, It's, Morgan Stanley's, Evident's Mousavizadeh, Banks, Mousavizadeh, Tracy Kerrins, Morgan Stanley's McMillan, He's, Morgan Stanley's OpenAI, Teresa Heitsenrether, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: Bank of America, JPMorgan, Citi, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, CNBC, Google, Deutsche Bank, BNP, Mistral, TD Bank Group, Big, Wall, New York Stock Exchange, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Wells Fargo, Silicon, management's, Wells, New York
The higher end of the company's revenue outlook for fiscal 2025 was also above estimates. UiPath — The stock rose more than 8% following the software company's better-than-expected second-quarter results. Broadcom — Shares of the chipmaker fell 7% after the company's revenue guidance for the current quarter was less than expected . Guidewire Software — Shares jumped more than 7% after the company surpassed the Street's expectations. Samsara estimated adjusted earnings of between 16 cents and 18 cents per share and revenue of $1.224 billion to $1.228 billion.
Persons: UiPath, Smartsheet, Guidewire, FactSet, , Jesse Pound, Sarah Min, Michelle Fox Theobald Organizations: Broadcom —, Broadcom, Reuters, Blackstone, JPMorgan Locations: Vista
However, given that September has historically been the worst month of the year for the market, we're layering in some technical analysis to identify some buy levels. We published our prior buy levels analysis on June 26. Clearly, we should have been a bit more conservative in our buy levels, however, in our defense shares only traded below $162 for two days. However, we must be mindful that a move there would once again mean we've broken below the 200-day moving average. Below that and we're looking for the 200-day moving average to hold at around $89 apiece.
Persons: we're, we've, that's, wouldn't, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, Mark Zuckerberg, Emily Chang, Jason Henry Organizations: Microsoft, Nvidia, Club, CNBC, Meta, Inc, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Menlo Park , California
For fiscal 2024, Dick's is now expecting diluted earnings per share to be between $13.55 and $13.90, up from previous guidance of $13.35 to $13.75 per share. At the midpoint, Dick's only raised its earnings guidance by about 18 cents, even though its fiscal second-quarter earnings came in 54 cents higher than expected. At the low end, Dick's earnings guidance falls a bit short of the $13.79 that analysts had expected, according to LSEG. Dick's maintained its sales guidance of $13.1 billion to $13.2 billion, which also fell flat compared with the $13.24 billion that analysts were looking for, according to LSEG. Dick's is slated to discuss its results with analysts and share more insights on its guidance at 8 a.m.
Persons: Lauren Hobart, Dick's, didn't, Walmart –, there's Organizations: Sporting Goods, LSEG, Target, Walmart, Federal
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNBC Pro Talks: Mike Khouw on getting the most out of options and how to trade market turbulenceCNBC Pro Talks features one-on-one interviews with Wall Street's top investors, smartest traders and rising stars. CNBC's Dominic Chu finds out what makes them tick, what makes them money, and how you can follow in their footsteps.
Persons: Mike Khouw, Wall, CNBC's Dominic Chu Organizations: CNBC
American Eagle missed Wall Street's sales targets for a second quarter in a row on Thursday, but profit grew by nearly 60% thanks in part to lower product costs. During the quarter, American Eagle's intimates line Aerie saw revenue grow 9% while its namesake brand grew by 8%. The gross margin expansion was led by "favorable product costs," indicating American Eagle spent less to make its assortment during the quarter. During the quarter, American Eagle made some strides in achieving that goal. It posted operating income of $101 million, an increase of 55%, while its operating margin grew 2.4 percentage points to 7.8%.
Persons: Mike Mathias, I've, Jay Schottenstein, Matthias, Jennifer Foyle, Foyle Organizations: Eagle, LSEG, Finance, CNBC, Federal Reserve, Labor, American Eagle Locations: Northeast
In today's big story, viewers are opting for free TV, and that's throwing a massive wrench in Hollywood's plans . AdvertisementBut first, what's on (free) TV? The big storyChanging channelsGetty Images; iStock; Natalie Ammari/BIIf the best things in life truly are free, Hollywood is about to learn a brutal lesson. But what's really caught people's attention over the past year has been "free, ad-supported TV" or FAST services. Figuring out how to make money from free TV is a big enough problem.
Persons: , Natalie Ammari, upend, Insider's Lucia Moses, what's, Andy Kiersz, Fox's Tubi, Gen Z, that's, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, cofounders, John Overdeck, David Siegel, Carter Lyons, Scott Hoffman, Warren Buffett's, Berkshire Hathaway, Buffett, Noah Berger, Chelsea Jia Feng, Jensen Huang, Alyssa Powell, Banks, Sam Altman's, Kamala Harris, Tim Walz's, Dana Bash, Dan DeFrancesco, Hallam Bullock, Milan Sehmbi, Amanda Yen Organizations: Service, Business, Tech, Hollywood, Nielsen, Netflix, Paramount, Pluto, Comcast, Warner Bros . Discovery, YouTube, Getty, Big Tech, Chelsea, Menlo Ventures, CNN Locations: Berkshire, A16z, New York, London
Salesforce shares jumped more than 4% in extended trading Wednesday after the enterprise software giant beat sales and earnings expectations in the second quarter. Salesforce Why we own it : Salesforce is a leading enterprise software tool for companies across all industries, helping employees to better communicate with colleagues internally and with their customers. Salesforce's new AI tools — which it is calling autonomous AI sales agents — may be the company's answer to this negative thesis. The next task for Salesforce is proving these new AI products will become a material driver of revenue growth. For the third quarter, Salesforce forecasts revenues of $9.31 billion to $9.36 billion, which is below the $9.4 billion estimate.
Persons: cRPO, , Marc Benioff, It's, they're, Benioff, Salesforce, Brian Millham, Amy Weaver, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim, David Paul Morris Organizations: Revenue, LSEG, SAP, Microsoft, Salesforce, Club, Nvidia, Federal, Management, CNBC, Bloomberg, Getty Locations: Americas, San Francisco , California
Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Cava Group — Shares of the fast-casual restaurant chain popped more than 21% on stronger-than-expected quarterly results . Cava posted earnings of 17 cents per share on $233 million in revenue in the fiscal second quarter. That topped LSEG estimates calling for earnings per share of 13 cents and revenue of $220 million. Ross Stores — The off-price retailer's stock price added 1.4% after the company beat earnings estimates by 9 cents a share in the second quarter. Ross matched revenue estimates of $5.25 billion, per LSEG.
Persons: Cava, Warby Parker, Nicholas Jones, Goldman Sachs, Bill.com, Ross, Tesla, Jerome Powell's, Piper Sandler, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound, Brian Evans, Samantha Subin, Lisa Kailai Han, Michelle Fox Organizations: Intuit —, Intuit, FactSet, JMP Securities, Warby's, UBS, Ross Stores, LSEG, Nvidia, Federal, Investors, VanEck Semiconductor Locations: Cava, Vegas, Macau
Shares of Snowflake closed down more than 14% on Thursday after the data cloud analytics company released fiscal second-quarter 2025 earnings that beat Wall Street's estimates but showed decelerating product revenue growth compared to past quarters. The company reported $829.3 million in product revenue, which accounts for most of Snowflake's sales, up 30% year over year. They said the company's smaller product revenue beat and deceleration in growth will not inspire weary investors. "A 2% product revenue beat in Q2, down from 5% in Q1, with product revenue growth dipping further to 29.5% YoY," likely sows "enough doubt in the investor conversation to keep shares under pressure in the near-term," the analysts wrote in a note Thursday. "True, 30% y/y product growth is slower than the 33-34% level we saw the past 2 quarters.
Persons: Sridhar Ramaswamy, Morgan Stanley, Snowflake's, — CNBC's Michael Bloom Organizations: LSEG, Barclays Locations: Toronto
Wall Street's enthusiastic reaction Tuesday to solid earnings from Palo Alto Networks reinforced our belief that the cybersecurity stock is getting overextended. However, that doesn't mean he's any less bullish on Palo Alto in the long run. PANW YTD mountain Palo Alto Networks YTD Wall Street analysts echoed our bullish sentiments. At least two dozen research firms — including Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, and Goldman Sachs — raised their price targets on Palo Alto, according to FactSet data. To be sure, not everyone on Wall Street is convinced that Palo Alto has significant growth ahead.
Persons: clawing, Jim Cramer, Jim, management's, billings, Wells Fargo, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs —, Palo, Nikesh Arora, Arora, Morgan Staley, Jim Cramer's, Alfred Dunhill, David Cannon Organizations: Palo Alto Networks, Palo Alto, Club, JPMorgan, Management, Palo, UBS, CNBC, Getty Locations: Palo Alto, Palo, Wells, Wells Fargo, United States, St Andrews, Scotland
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