The boogeymen continue to be fictional, despite endless attempts to drum up fear and hasten the departure of millions of scared investors. I’m calling the endless negative prattle the “Bear Bilge,” the stuff thrown at us that seems so cerebral and intellectual, but just turns out to miss the mark. I’m being plenty genteel in that summary. I won’t stay that way. You know my thesis by now. There are dozens of commentators who come on-air and posit the “hard landing” scenario for the economy, making it clear that we are indeed on the eve of destruction. These Cassandras are from two camps. The first is made up of negative analysts who dug in their heels and overstayed their welcome. The second group is wealthy hedge fund managers and individuals who see no harm in generating chills simply because they don’t think they are doing so. They regard their fear-mongering as first class advice that can’t possibly have consequences. I get that. If the market crashes they will be lauded for a lifetime. if it percolates, big deal — they didn’t tell you to sell, they just told you not to buy. This “heads I win, tails you lose” mentality is rarely questioned because the media often shares the same bias. The impossibility of any company doing anything right, or as right as the market seems to judge, serves as the only homily worth offering. The sole exception is Warren Buffett who, aside from owning Apple (AAPL), provides no agenda beyond being a happy warrior and a buyer of a second-rate oil company. Sure, he deserves to get away with it, but a lot of his armor stems from history not from current events. It’s not like he’s endorsing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s every move, or any move, and he’s the most optimistic of the opining lot. You can see why this is. The Fed has not distinguished itself over the years, with only former Chair Alan Greenspan getting an undeserved free pass. We remember Ben Bernanke, who led the central bank from 2006 to 2014, as the man who saved us from the housing crash, but not the one who caused the crash with endless rate hikes. We slam Powell as the man who kept rates too low for too long without ever considering that every other nation did the same. But we are the only one with great growth and falling inflation in the entire universe. Those who deride Powell never dare to discuss the disaster of the People’s Republic of China, with its once-inconceivable inability to generate any sort of growth even via inflation. An economy that’s one-quarter based on property can’t afford to have no gain in property values as has been the case for most of the year. An economy that’s trying to pivot and become like that of the U.S. — which is 60% service and not 30% as China sports currently — has failed miserably to do so even as it’s been the stated goal for a multitude of years. Sometimes deflation can be as hard to uproot as inflation. Right now what you own in China is going down in value, not unlike a car after it leaves the lot in our country. So why spend at all? It didn’t take long to dispel so many of the boogeymen. Earnings season kicked off with spectacular numbers from Wells Fargo (WFC), JPMorgan (JPM) and PepsiCo (PEP). Wells was expected to take in 10% in net interest income, now it expects to gain 14%. You couldn’t have a bigger delta for its most important line item. JPMorgan showed it is a true growth stock, with beats on the top and bottom lines, and has a ridiculous price-to-earnings multiple of 10. It used to be a big deal for PepsiCo to grow at 4%. Now if it doesn’t grow by 8% we are disappointed. Thank heavens it’s growing at 10%. The gains are no longer just in Frito-Lay. They are in carbonated beverages, too. The emphasis isn’t on good tasting versus good for you. The emphasis is on growth itself. Oh, and weren’t we supposed to fear higher utilization rates for UnitedHealth (UNH)? But what if it’s ready for those rates? Does that count? I’d say it does. So does the market. But let us deal with the bigger issues of the day, the things that were supposed to make equities more dangerous and the 2-year Treasury a more lovey blanket. The first? We had the dichotomy of “hard landing” versus “soft landing.” The cognoscenti swore to us that Powell would haplessly cause the plane to crash. We were just trying to figure out how well they foamed the runaway. The soft landing camp never told us what that really entailed. Shifting in the overhead compartments? But what if there was no landing. What if we just kept on flying because Powell was and is simply better than we thought. So what if he has the charisma of non-participating character. What do we want? Vin Diesel? Powell has set us on a course that plays for time and acknowledges that he’ll be bailed out of any real collapse in employment by the hundreds of thousands of admittedly blue-collared jobs that the multiple rounds of federal largesse will soon bring us. I have been harping of late on how hard it’s been to get all of these dollars to those who need them. The state regulations confounded many who thought that we would have already done the bulk of hiring and would probably be on the side of the firing. Instead, I put all of the spending to date on infrastructure, semiconductors and climate change at about 10%, with 90% about to hit the economy just when the Bear Bilge swore to us that we had to crash. You don’t foam the runway with trillions in federal spending. You simply don’t land at all. The genius of Powell is that he has played for time so well. We are finally getting the intractable items in the consumer price index — cars and rent — to come down. No, we don’t have deflation, just disinflation. The consumer has shifted her pattern of buying to going out and going away — two paths we’ve never seen before so we have no way to gauge their impact. The bears therefore presume the worst. I just say that the retailers have had a hard go because we never thought that anything could change our conspicuous consumption. Who knew that the xenophobes would even travel abroad? But that’s not all we learned. We had come to believe that the biggest of the boogeymen, commercial real estate, had become the ticking time bomb, or some other crank cliché. (Can we retire canary in a coal mine now that we almost never deep mine?) But then we listened to what we expected would be two of the three biggest offenders — JPMorgan and Wells, with only Bank of America awaiting — and we found the loan losses ridiculously low and the reserves dubiously high, making us think that we are going to have to blast some of these negativists with a couple of left hook roundhouses to the temple. But no one will actually do that because the media mogul fear complex can’t resist. You must resist. I know that next week Goldman Sachs (GS) will report and that once-rigorous-now-hapless entity will have to do some serious real estate reserve writing, if not outright write-offs, but the containment to that once-hallowed firm might be shocking but true. The bears just aren’t delivering on the goods on any key negative issue. Of course, the biggest worry to this market is its two-tiered nature: The mega-cap techs versus all the rest. The sense is that the mega-caps have to come back to Earth at some point. I can’t tell you how tempted I am to say that it’s the UnitedHealths and JPMorgans that will play catch-up. But even I, with card carrying bullish credentials, can’t argue for that cause. Nor do I like the leapfrogging of one artificial intelligence play over another, even as we own most of the lot. What has Alphabet (GOOGL) done to deserve its rally? You buy it simply because its CEO now gets that there is actual wood to chop when it comes to its bloated table of employment — not because it’s been chopped. The whole turnaround from a gentle to a precipitous decline in growth and then a pivot to upward revisions based on ChatGPT seems fanciful but enjoyable, certainly not as investible as thought. I like it because it seems to have regained its e-commerce crown. Microsoft (MSFT) owns so much of everything, including video games after its purchase of Activision Blizzard (ATVI), that I can’t come up with a reason to slag it. Although its CFO Amy Hood will most definitively. She won’t have the strong dollar to kick around anymore, though, as that earnings slayer has at last cooled off. Apple makes too much sense not to stay higher. Its ubiquitous nature seems to know no bounds and the fact that the iPhone 14 remains in play is a good sign, not a bad one. There is that much demand still for what we would call an old model. Of course, only those of us who have worn the Vision Pro know what awaits . And those who have not will play the needed role of antagonists. They will get away with their pessimism typically because they are telegenic, an interesting credential, to use a less-than-loaded term. Tesla (TSLA)? It’s Cybertruck will find adherents among the non-truck buyers, so no need to fret about that stock’s multiple. I am beginning to fret about Meta Platforms (META), if only because the Vision Pro is Tim Cook’s pro tennis entry to Mark Zuckerberg’s pickleball contestant. And then there is Nvidia (NVDA). It’s tough to ask for an encore to the $4 billion guide-up for this current quarter. The fact is though, you must think about the nature of computing as going from the multitudinous central processing unit (CPU) to the unique graphics processing unit (GPU), with Intel (INTC) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) ceding their actual existential need to that of Nvidia. You just don’t need a lot of CPUs in the new regime. What I suspect will happen soon will be a series of articles about how artificial intelligence is simply an overused term for recommendations (“If you like Colgate, you might like its tooth brush, or if you like Clive Cussler, welcome to Stephen King.”) Sure there will be lots of talk about how it displaces many people, but it hasn’t displaced anyone yet. If it were so powerful wouldn’t it be doing so? The articles won’t buy the “it’s a matter of time” logic and the reversal in Nvidia’s stock on Friday was breathtaking enough to allow the bears out of the den. All of that said, the bullish genie has unleashed the enterprise software hoards, the highest multiple group that has been dormant for ages. Now they are flying — Datadog (DDOG), Cloudflare (NET), Atlassian (TEAM) and the like. That means we are about to see a huge wave of issuance from that venture capitalist-loved sector. Meanwhile Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan’s stunning defeat in the Microsoft-Activision case will lead to a ton of mergers. You can’t block everything. With that defeat, it’s time for the zealot with rigor, Jonathan Kanter from the Justice Department, to assert himself and tell corporate America how to do a deal that can pass muster. He can’t stop Khan, who has no rigor whatsoever, but he can blunt her errant ways with unassailable doctrine. So, put it all together and a more robust M & A market and a better IPO market — you heard it hear first —will take up the slack of the banks and put down the monotony of endless price target boosts from sycophantic analysts. At last they will be busy with new issuance. Now, the good news for the bears is that the next phase of the earnings season could be rocky. Look how the banks opened up and then just collapsed on the altar of State Street’s hideous numbers. Go figure how that piddling institution could erase the gains of Wells and Morgan, but it’s a reminder of how good news is still shunned as an outlier. To me, let’s get the overbought worked off. Let’s go toe-to-toe with the bears and our own mistakes as I did so in an incredibly naked fashion this last Monthly Meeting . Let’s bet that we will tread water until it’s clear that the we don’t have much to fear from the Fed or a recession — and earnings will be good enough to inspire some buying where stocks haven’t run, and some selling where a beat-and-raise is already in the stock price. (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. 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Visitors around the ‘Charging Bull’ statue near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US, on Thursday, June 29, 2023.
Victor J. Blue | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The boogeymen continue to be fictional, despite endless attempts to drum up fear and hasten the departure of millions of scared investors. I’m calling the endless negative prattle the “Bear Bilge,” the stuff thrown at us that seems so cerebral and intellectual, but just turns out to miss the mark.
I’m being plenty genteel in that summary. I won’t stay that way.
You know my thesis by now. There are dozens of commentators who come on-air and posit the “hard landing” scenario for the economy, making it clear that we are indeed on the eve of destruction. These Cassandras are from two camps. The first is made up of negative analysts who dug in their heels and overstayed their welcome. The second group is wealthy hedge fund managers and individuals who see no harm in generating chills simply because they don’t think they are doing so. They regard their fear-mongering as first class advice that can’t possibly have consequences. I get that. If the market crashes they will be lauded for a lifetime. if it percolates, big deal — they didn’t tell you to sell, they just told you not to buy.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella speaks at the company’s Build developer conference in Seattle on May 7, 2018.
Grant Hindsley | Bloomberg | Getty Images
If there’s one company that has popularized artificial intelligence in the past year, it’s the small but richly funded startup OpenAI, the entity behind viral chatbot ChatGPT.
This week at its Build conference for software developers, Microsoft made extensive use of its collaboration with the startup, in which it’s invested billions.
Front and center on Tuesday, the first day of the show, was a conversation onstage between Greg Brockman, OpenAI’s co-founder and president, and Kevin Scott, Microsoft’s technology chief and the person credited with building the unusually close relationship between the two companies.
“You heard it from Greg,” Scott told the crowd assembled at the Seattle Convention Center in Washington near the end of the talk. “You all are the ones who are going to make AI great.”
Toward that end, Microsoft announced a slew of products for developers that draw on OpenAI’s technology:
A forthcoming chatbot promises to help developers work with data and prepare it for analysis.
Developers will be able to build plugins that work inside of ChatGPT and the chatbots inside Microsoft’s own products, including one that will debut in Windows next month.
Developers who receive coding suggestions through the GitHub Copilot feature will gain access to a chatbot inside of the Windows Terminal command-line program.
OpenAI released ChatGPT to the broad world in November, sparking lots of interest from consumers. Soon after that, companies such as Atlassian, Morgan Stanley and Salesforce rushed to show off integrations of OpenAI’s GPT-4 large language model, which powers the chatbot. GPT-4 and alternatives from the likes of Amazon and Google have been trained on extensive internet data sets and have become capable of spitting out chunks of natural-sounding text.
It’s a popular form of what has come to be called generative AI, which can take human input and respond with a computer-generated output.
“Every layer of the software stack is going to be changed forever and no better place to start than the actual developer stack,” Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said during his Build keynote on Tuesday. “We as developers, how do we build is fundamentally changing.”
It’s critical for third-party developers to keep enriching Microsoft’s own software properties, such as the Microsoft 365 productivity software bundle. Such work might help Microsoft’s Teams communication app, for example, become a more obvious hub for an increasingly wide selection of processes and tasks that companies need to carry out. That can make companies less likely to switch to alternatives such as Google Workspace.
Microsoft highlighted dozens of plugin developers on Tuesday, including Adobe, Asana, Canva, Cloudflare, Redfin, Spotify and TripAdvisor. A demonstration showed the Windows chatbot turning on a Spotify playlist, creating a company logo with Adobe Express and sending the logo to a person’s colleagues over Teams in response to a series of typed messages.
At the same time, Nadella has pushed for Microsoft to incorporate GPT-4 directly into Teams and older Microsoft products, such as the Bing search engine, often resulting in bots branded with the name Copilot. The Copilot term emphasizes collaboration with people, in contrast with (for example) the Autopilot advanced-driver assistance system for Tesla vehicles.
“We are adding Copilot into everything,” Scott Guthrie, executive vice president of Microsoft’s cloud and AI group, told CNBC in an interview last week. “It’s less of a top-down mandate, although we’re certainly pushing top-down. I think it’s something where we’ve actually evangelized internally and really got every team excited about. And we are building a common stack across Microsoft that the entire company is building on top of.”
Analysts responded favorably to the developer onslaught.
“The pace of MSFT’s GenAI innovation remains stunning to us,” Mizuho analysts with a buy rating on Microsoft stock wrote in a Wednesday note to clients.
Brockman hinted to developers that the cost of GPT-4, which runs in Azure, could come down.
“I think we did a 70% price reduction two years ago,” he told Scott. “Basically, this past year, we did a 90% cost reduction. A 10x cost drop — like, that’s crazy, right? And I think we’re going to be able to do the same thing repeatedly with new models. And so GPT-4 right now, its expensive, it’s not fully available. But that’s one of the things that i think will change.”
The logo of NVIDIA as seen at its corporate headquarters in Santa Clara, California, in May of 2022.
Nvidia | via Reuters
TipRanks is celebrating a decade of simplifying investment decisions through its data-driven research tools: Here is a list of the 10 best analysts on Wall Street.
To come up with this list, TipRanks analyzed every stock recommendation made by analysts in the past decade. The ranking is based on the analysts’ ability to generate returns with stock ratings and price targets.
TipRanks’ algorithms calculated the average return and statistical significance of each rating, as well as the analysts’ overall success rate. Each rating made during the past decade was measured over a one-year period.
TipRanks used its Experts Center tool to identify the top ten analysts who have a high success rate, defying the general market trend and outperforming their peers.
Mark Lipacis ranks No. 1 out of the 8,371 analysts tracked on TipRanks. The five-star analyst has an overall success rate of 73%. Lipacis’ best rating has been on chipmaker Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA). His buy rating on NVDA stock from Feb. 8, 2016 to Feb. 8, 2017, generated a return of 374.8%.
Jason Seidl is second on the list and has a success rate of 73%. Seidl’s top recommendation has been Daseke (NASDAQ:DSKE), which provides flatbed and specialized transportation and logistics solutions. The analyst generated a profit of 327.7% through his buy recommendation on DSKE from May 7, 2020 to May 7, 2021.
Quinn Bolton ranks No. 3 on TipRanks’ top 10 analysts list with a success rate of 68%. Bolton’s best rating in the past decade has been on ACM Research (NASDAQ:ACMR), a semiconductor equipment manufacturing company. Through his buy recommendation on ACMR, Bolton generated a return of 608.4% from Aug. 19, 2019 to Aug. 19, 2020.
Dan Payne, in fourth place, has an overall success rate of 69%. Payne’s best call has been on Birchcliff Energy (TSE:BIR), an intermediate oil and natural gas company. His buy recommendation on BIR stock generated a return of 372.9% from Oct. 6, 2020 to Oct. 6, 2021.
Scot Ciccarelli bags the fifth position and has a success rate of 74%. Ciccarelli’s best recommendation has been Five Below (NASDAQ:FIVE), a discount store chain. His buy recommendation on FIVE resulted in a return of 249.4% from March 18, 2020 to March 18, 2021.
Sixth-place analyst Rick Schafer has a success rate of 73%. Similar to Lipacis, Schafer’s best recommendation has been NVDA. The analyst generated a profit of 190.7% from Aug. 19, 2019 to Aug. 19, 2020.
Ross Seymore grabs the seventh position and sports a success rate of 77%. Seymore’s best recommendation has been Ambarella (NASDAQ:AMBA), a fabless semiconductor design company. Seymore generated a return of 150% from Nov. 5, 2012 to Nov. 5, 2013.
Patrick Brown ranks No. 8 with a success rate of 75%. The five-star analyst’s top call has been on Saia (NASDAQ:SAIA), a trucking company. Brown generated a profit of 211.2% through his buy call from April 17, 2020 to April 17, 2021.
Colin Rusch has the ninth position on the list. The analyst has a 55% overall success rate. Rusch’s best call has been on Westport Fuel Systems (NASDAQ:WPRT), a company engaged in the manufacturing and supply of alternative fuel systems and components. His buy rating on WPRT generated a whopping return of 800% from March 18, 2020, to March 18, 2021.
Shaul Eyalranks No. 10. The analyst has an overall success rate of 68%. Eyal’s best rating in the past decade has been on Cloudflare (NYSE:NET), a cloud-based security solutions provider. Based on his buy recommendation on NET, Eyal generated a return of 384.2% from Feb.14, 2020 to Feb. 14, 2021.
Bottom line
Investors can follow top analysts’ views to make informed investment decisions. These analysts generated significant returns from their recommendations in the past decade and have notable success rates.
See all the analysts who made it to the top 100 list. We will return soon with the top 10 research firms of the past 10 years.
The Nasdaq just wrapped up its fifth straight week of gains, jumping 3.3% over the last five days. It’s the longest weekly winning streak for the tech-laden index since a stretch that ended in November 2021. Coming off its worst year since 2008, the Nasdaq is up 15% to start 2023.
The last time tech stocks enjoyed a rally this long, investors were gearing up for electric carmaker Rivian’s blockbuster IPO, the U.S. economy was closing out its strongest year for growth since 1984, and the Nasdaq was trading at a record.
This time around, there’s far less champagne popping. Cost cuts have replaced growth on Wall Street’s checklist, and tech executives are being celebrated for efficiency over innovation. The IPO market is dead. Layoffs are abundant.
Earnings reports were the story of the week, with results landing from many of the world’s most valuable tech companies. But the numbers, for the most part, weren’t good.
Applemissed estimates for the first time since 2016, Facebook parent Metarecorded a third straight quarter of declining revenue, Google‘s core advertising business shrank, and Amazon closed out its weakest year for growth in its 25-year history as a public company.
While investors had mixed reactions to the individual reports, all four stocks closed the week with solid gains, as did Microsoft, which reported earnings the prior week and issued lackluster guidance in projecting revenue growth this quarter of only about 3%.
Meta was the top performer among the group this week, with the stock soaring 23%, its third-best week ever. In its earnings report Wednesday, revenue came in slightly above estimates, even with sales down year over year, and the first-quarter forecast was roughly in line with expectations.
The key to the rally was CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s pronouncement in the earnings statement that 2023 would be the “Year of Efficiency” and his promise that “we’re focused on becoming a stronger and more nimble organization.”
“That was really the game-changer,” Stephanie Link, chief investment strategist at Hightower Advisors, said in an interview Friday with CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
“The quarter itself was OK, but it was the cost-cutting that they finally got religion on, and that’s why I think Meta really took off,” she said.
Zuckerberg acknowledged that the times are changing. From the year of its IPO in 2012 through 2021, the company grew between 22% and 58% a year. But in 2022 revenue fell 1%, and analysts expect growth of only 5% in 2023, according to Refinitiv.
On the earnings call, Zuckerberg said he doesn’t expect declines to continue, “but I also don’t think it’s going to go back to the way it was before.” Meta announced in November the elimination of 11,000 jobs, or 13% of its workforce.
Link said the reason Meta’s stock got such a big bounce after earnings was because “expectations were so low and the valuation was so compelling.” The stock lost almost two-thirds of its value last year, far more than its mega-cap peers.
Apple, which slid 27% last year, gained 6.2% this week despite reporting its steepest drop in revenue in seven years. CEO Tim Cook said results were hurt by a strong dollar, production issues in China affecting the iPhone 14 Pro and iPhone 14 Pro Max, and the overall macroeconomic environment.
“Apple is navigating what is, of course, a very difficult environment quite well overall,” Dan Flax, an analyst at Neuberger Berman, told “Squawk Box” on Friday. “As we move through the coming months and quarters, we’ll see a return to growth and the market will begin to discount that. We continue to like the name even in the face of these macro challenges.”
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, who succeeded Jeff Bezos in mid-2021, took the unusual step of joining the earnings call with analysts Thursday after his company issued a weaker-than-expected forecast for the first quarter. In January, Amazon began layoffs, which are expected to result in the loss of more than 18,000 jobs.
“Given this last quarter was the end of my first full year in this role and given some of the unusual parts in the economy and our business, I thought this might be a good one to join,” Jassy said on the call.
Managing expenses has become a big theme for Amazon, which expanded rapidly during the pandemic and subsequently admitted that it hired too many people during that period.
“We’re working really hard to streamline our costs,” Jassy said.
Alphabet is also in downsizing mode. The company announced last month that it’s slashing 12,000 jobs. Its revenue miss for the fourth quarter included disappointing sales at YouTube from a pullback in ad spending and weakness in the cloud division as businesses tighten their belts.
Ruth Porat, Alphabet’s finance chief, told CNBC’s Deirdre Bosa that the company is meaningfully slowing the pace of hiring in an effort to deliver long-term profitable growth.
Alphabet shares ended the week up 5.4% even after giving up some of their gains during Friday’s sell-off. The stock is now up 19% for the year.
Ruth Porat, Alphabet CFO, at the WEF in Davos, Switzerland on May 23rd, 2022.
Adam Galica | CNBC
Should the Nasdaq continue its upward trend and notch a sixth week of gains, it would match the longest rally since a stretch that ended in January 2020, just before the Covid pandemic hit the U.S.
Investors will now turn to earnings reports from smaller companies. Some of the names they’ll hear from next week include Pinterest, Robinhood, Affirm and Cloudflare.
Another area in tech that flourished this week was the semiconductor space. Similar to the consumer tech companies, there wasn’t much by way of growth to excite Wall Street.
AMD on Tuesday beat on sales and profit but guided analysts to a 10% year-over-year decline in revenue for the current quarter. Intel, AMD’s primary competitor, reported a disastrous quarter last week and projected a 40% decline in sales in the March quarter.
Still, AMD jumped 14% for the week and Intel rose almost 8%. Texas Instruments and Nvidia also notched nice gains.
The semiconductor industry is dealing with a glut of extra parts at PC and server makers and falling prices for components such as memory and central processors. But after a miserable year in 2022, the stocks are rebounding on signs that an easing of Federal Reserve rate increases and lightening inflation numbers will give the companies a boost later this year.