ReportWire

Tag: Computers/Electronics

  • Chip designer Arm files for long-awaited IPO, as smaller transistors send costs skyrocketing

    Chip designer Arm files for long-awaited IPO, as smaller transistors send costs skyrocketing

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    Arm Holdings Ltd. filed its long-awaited initial public offering late Monday, following last year’s failed bid by Nvidia Corp. to acquire the U.K.-based chip architecture company.

    Arm has reportedly been seeking to raise $8 billion to $10 billion at a valuation of $60 billion to $70 billion, making its IPO the biggest of the year so far, and a number of large tech companies, including Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +1.10%
    ,
     Intel Corp.
    INTC,
    +1.19%

     and Nvidia
    NVDA,
    +8.47%
    ,
     are reportedly in the mix to be anchor investors. 

    In a late Monday filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, Arm said it was offering to list its U.S. traded shares on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “ARM.”

    Arm, which is owned by Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp.
    9984,
    +1.16%
    ,
    was the target of an unsuccessful $40 billion acquisition by Nvidia last year. After Nvidia scrubbed the deal and paid a $1.36 billion breakup charge following the U.S. Federal Trade Commission’s unanimous decision to block it, Nvidia disclosed it paid Arm $750 million for a 20-year license to its technology.

    At the time of the breakup, chips sales had hit record highs in 2021, surging 26.2% to a record $555.9 billion, fueled by pandemic-triggered shortages. But the chip industry has since swung to a glut.

    Arm listed Barclays, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, Mizuho, BofA Securities, Citigroup, and Deutsche Bank Securities among the IPO’s underwriters.

    Recent reports said SoftBank was in discussions to purchase the 25% stake in Arm that it does not outright own, which is held by its Vision Fund 1, ahead of the IPO.

    Read from Feb. 2022: Wall Street’s reaction to death of Nvidia-Arm deal: No duh

    Arm reported net income of $524 million, or 51 cents a share, on revenue of $2.68 billion for fiscal 2023, which ended March 31, compared with net income of $549 million, or 54 cents a share, on revenue of $2.7 billion, in fiscal 2022, and $388 million, or 38 cents a share, on revenue of $2.03 billion in fiscal 2021.

    Arm uses an architecture that is different from the once-standard x86 one built by Intel in the early days of computing. 

    The company said it has shipped more than 250 billion Arm-based chips since its started in 1990 as a joint venture between Acorn Computers, Apple
    AAPL,
    +0.77%

    and VLSI Technology. In fiscal 2023, Arm said it shipped 30.6 billion chips.

    The company said it is going public as the “resources required to develop leading-edge products are significant and continue to increase exponentially as manufacturing process nodes shrink.” Transistors are expressed in scales of nanometers, with design costs running about $249 million for a 7-nanometer chip and about $725 million for a 2-nm chip.

    “As the world moves increasingly towards AI- and [machine language]-enabled computing, Arm will be central to this transition,” the company said in the filing. “Arm CPUs already run AI and ML workloads in billions of devices, including smartphones, cameras, digital TVs, cars and cloud data centers.”

    Arm said it is working with Alphabet Inc.
    GOOG,
    +0.64%

    GOOGL,
    +0.71%
    ,
    GM’s
    GM,
    +0.45%

    Cruise, Mercedes-Benz
    MBG,
    +0.78%
    ,
    Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    +2.35%
    ,
    and Nvidia “to deploy Arm technology to run AI workloads.”

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  • ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks are losing some of their shine, but their bonds are doing fine

    ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks are losing some of their shine, but their bonds are doing fine

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    The so-called Magnificent Seven grouping of technology stocks lost some of its luster this week after four of the seven moved into correction territory, meaning their stocks have fallen at least 10% from their recent peaks.

    The corporate-bond market, in contrast, seems to like all seven names.

    The group is made up of Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    -0.65%
    ,
    Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +0.28%
    ,
    Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -0.13%
    ,
    Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    -0.10%
    ,
    Amazon. com Inc.
    AMZN,
    -0.57%
    ,
    Google parent Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    -1.89%

    GOOG,
    -1.80%

    and Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -1.70%
    .

    One caveat: Tesla has no outstanding bonds. In the past, the electric-car maker issued convertible bonds, but they have all been converted into equity.

    The group is credited with helping drive the stock market’s gains in the first half of the year, driven by excitement about artificial intelligence. But the rally has stalled in recent weeks as investors have fretted over the potential for U.S. interest-rate increases, surging Treasury yields and China worries, with property developer Evergrande filing for U.S. bankruptcy protection late Thursday.

    On Thursday, Meta followed Apple, Microsoft and Nvidia into correction territory, as MarketWatch’s Emily Bary reported. Tesla, meanwhile, is in a bear market, meaning it’s down more than 20% from its recent peak.

    ReadHave AI stocks like Nvidia reached bubble territory? Here’s what history can tell us.

    The following series of charts from data-solutions provider BondCliQ Media Services show how many bonds each company has issued by maturity and how they have traded as the stocks have pulled back.

    The first chart shows that Microsoft has by far the most bonds, mostly in the 30-year bucket. The software and cloud giant has more than $50 billion in long-term debt, according to its 2023 10-K filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Outstanding Magnificent Seven debt by maturity bucket.


    Source: BondCliQ Media Services

    This chart shows trading volumes over the last 10 days, divided by trade type. The green shows customer buying, while the red is customer selling. The blue shows dealer-to-dealer flows. Microsoft, for example, has seen almost $1.3 billion in customer buying from dealers in the last 10 days and $960 million in customer sales to dealers.

    Magnificent Seven debt trading volumes (last 10 days).


    Source: BondCliQ Media Services

    This chart shows that every name in the group has enjoyed better net buying in the last 10 days, with Microsoft leading the way.

    Net customer flow of Magnificent Seven debt (last 10 days).


    Source: BondCliQ Media Services

    This chart shows spread performance over the last 50 days for an intermediate-term bond from each of the seven issuers. Most have tightened or remained steady over the period.

    Historical spread performance of Magnificent Seven debt.


    Source: BondCliQ Media Services

    Read also: Red flags waving for tech stocks as AI bounce fades, China fears escalate

    Apple’s stock entered correction Wednesday upon falling more than 10% from its July 31 peak of $196.45. The company sells mainly discretionary products, and right now “consumers are still being pinched” and thinking more carefully about where they spend their money, according to Matt Stucky, senior portfolio manager for equities at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management.

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  • SoftBank looking to buy remaining 25% stake in Arm from its Vision Fund: report

    SoftBank looking to buy remaining 25% stake in Arm from its Vision Fund: report

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    SoftBank Group Corp. is reportedly in discussions to purchase the 25% stake in chip designer Arm Ltd. that is held by its Vision Fund 1, ahead of a highly anticipated IPO.

    Reuters reported Sunday that Japan’s SoftBank
    9984,
    +0.37%

    — which owns 75% of Arm — is negotiating a deal with VF1, the $100 billion investment fund it created in 2017, and noted that a deal could give VF1 investors a big boost after years of meager returns. Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund and Abu Dhabi’s Mubadala Investment Co. are among VF1’s largest investors.

    SoftBank is planning to launch a long-awaited initial public offering for British chip designer Arm as soon as September. That will likely be the biggest IPO of the year on Wall Street, aiming to raise $8 billion to $10 billion at a valuation around $60 billion to $70 billion.

    A number of large tech companies, including Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    -0.11%
    ,
    Intel Corp.
    INTC,
    +0.61%

    and Nvidia Inc.
    NVDA,
    -3.62%
    ,
    are reportedly in the mix to be anchor investors in Arm’s IPO.

    Last week, SoftBank reported its tech-heavy Vision Funds turned a quarterly profit for the first time in 18 months

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  • Nvidia’s stock drops below key uptrend tracker, snapping longest streak above it in 6 years

    Nvidia’s stock drops below key uptrend tracker, snapping longest streak above it in 6 years

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    Nvidia Corp.’s stock chart now shows that the stunning uptrend investors in the semiconductor maker have enjoyed this year amid all the artificial-intelligence hype may have ended.

    But as history suggests, after a long uptrend, rather than a new downtrend, investors may have to endure some whipsaw action within a relatively static trading range over the next several months before the uptrend resumes.

    The stock
    NVDA,
    -0.72%

    slumped 4.7% on Wednesday to close at $425.54, which was 10.4% below the July 18 record close of $474.94, following a downbeat earnings report from Super Micro Computer Inc.
    SMCI,
    +3.47%
    ,
    which counts Nvidia as a key supplier.

    Many on Wall Street believe a correction is defined by a decline of at least 10% to up to 20% from a significant recent peak. A drop of 20% or more is thought of as a bear market.

    But perhaps more important for chart followers, the stock closed below the widely followed 50-day moving average for the first time since Jan. 6, 2023. The 50-DMA had extended to $429.03 on Wednesday.


    FactSet, MarketWatch

    On Thursday, the stock bounced 0.5% in morning trading but held below the 50-DMA, which extended to $429.68, according to FactSet. Despite the recent correction, the stock was still up 192.6% year to date, while the PHLX Semiconductor Index
    SOX
    has climbed 43.7% and the S&P 500
    SPX
    has advanced 17.2%.

    Read: Nvidia is ‘domination’ and could unlock $300 billion in AI revenue by 2027, analyst says.

    The 50-DMA is used by many chart watchers as a short-term trend tracker. If the stock is above that line, it is viewed as being in an uptrend. The most time spent above that line, the stronger the uptrend.

    Until Wednesday, Nvidia’s stock closed above the 50-DMA for 146 consecutive trading sessions, according to FactSet data, which is the second-longest stretch since it went public in January 1999.

    The record stretch above the 50-DMA was 255 sessions, a streak that ended on Feb. 23, 2017, while the second-longest stretch of 143 sessions ended on Oct. 28, 2020.

    After the stock snapped the super-50-DMA streak in 2020, it waffled around the line and was little changed for the next several months before resuming the uptrend with a big spike.

    As an uptrend takes a several-month pause after the 50-DMA breaks, the 200-DMA becomes strong support.


    FactSet, MarketWatch

    As the chart above shows, after the 50-DMA broke, investors set their sights on the 200-DMA, which many view as a dividing line between longer-term uptrends and downtrends. In this case, despite a one-day dip below the 200-DMA in mid-March 2021, the line acted as strong support.

    And after the record super-50-DMA streak, the stock seesawed around the line, while having a slightly negative bias for the next few months, before the uptrend resumed in force.

    After the 50-DMA break, the 200-DMA was never threatened.


    FactSet, MarketWatch

    This time, the stock never really threatened the 200-DMA.

    In the current technical situation, one of the downside levels to keep an eye on is the bear-market threshold of 20% below the July closing high, which comes in at $379.95. Another level to watch is the 200-DMA, which currently extends to $269.63 and has been rising by $1.65 a day over the past 10 days.

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  • Apple’s Tim Cook explains why he won’t showboat around AI

    Apple’s Tim Cook explains why he won’t showboat around AI

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    “We tend to announce things as they come to market, and that’s our M.O.”


    — Apple CEO Tim Cook

    If Apple Inc.’s Thursday earnings call sounded a bit different than other recent ones from Big Tech players, perhaps that was due to a noticeable lack of artificial-intelligence discussion.

    In fact, AI didn’t come up at all on Apple’s
    AAPL,
    -0.73%

    call until an analyst brought up the topic in the question-and-answer portion, commenting that Apple executives “don’t talk too much” about their AI strategy or investments, unlike many tech peers.

    See also: Apple sees sales decline for third quarter in a row — and says performance could be similar this quarter

    “If you take a step back, we view AI and machine learning as core fundamental technologies that are integral to virtually every product that we build,” Chief Executive Tim Cook replied. AI helps power recently announced software features like live voicemails and the ability to replicate your voice digitally, as well as somewhat older features like automatic crash detection and fall detection.

    AI technology has been “absolutely critical to us,” Cook said, and Apple has “been doing research across a wide range of AI technologies, including generative AI, for years,” something the company plans to continue.

    But don’t necessarily expect Apple to start showboating around its AI efforts going forward: Cook said that Apple’s “M.O.” simply is to announce products when they’re ready for consumers.

    “Apple’s reticence in being dragged into the AI hype is on-brand,” Forrester principal analyst Dipanjan Chatterjee said in emailed comments. “A maniacal focus on what Apple does for its customers and not how it does it is rooted so deeply in the brand’s DNA.”

    In all, there were just six mentions of AI or artificial intelligence on Apple’s earnings call, all of which came during the Q&A exchange with Deutsche Bank analyst Sidney Ho. Compare that to 90 mentions of those terms on Alphabet Inc.’s
    GOOG,
    +0.10%

    GOOGL,
    +0.05%

    earnings call last week, 73 mentions on Microsoft Corp.’s
    MSFT,
    -0.26%
    ,
    and 62 mentions on Meta Platforms Inc.’s
    META,
    -0.36%
    ,
    according to MarketWatch’s review of transcripts provided by AlphaSense/Sentieo.

    Read: Microsoft and Google can’t stop talking about AI, and this chart proves it

    Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +0.55%
    ,
    which joined Apple in posting results Thursday, falls somewhere in the middle. The topic of AI garnered 34 mentions on Amazon’s call.

    Whereas Apple has been consistent with its scant mentions of the technology, Amazon executives have been ramping up the rhetoric: AlphaSense/Sentieo data shows just one AI mention on the earnings call Amazon held in February 2022, and then no mentions until the term came up 12 times on its April 2023 call. Volume was of course up considerably from there on Thursday’s call.

    See also: The ‘stabilization’ of AWS may have been the most significant number for Amazon’s earnings

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  • Apple sees sales decline for third quarter in a row — and says performance could be similar this quarter

    Apple sees sales decline for third quarter in a row — and says performance could be similar this quarter

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    Apple Inc. saw revenue fall slightly in the latest quarter, and its management expects similar performance in the current period.

    The tech giant on Thursday posted sales of $81.80 billion for the fiscal third quarter, matching the FactSet consensus but marking a decline from the $82.96 billion seen a year before. Apple logged $39.67 billion in revenue for its iPhone business, down from $40.67 billion a year before and below the FactSet consensus, which was for $40.24 billion.

    Read: Apple dubbed the most ‘boring’ buy-rated stock — and that’s actually a good thing

    Chief Financial Officer Luca Maestri expects Apple’s
    AAPL,
    -0.73%

    overall September-quarter revenue performance to be similar to what was seen in the June quarter. He anticipates that year-over-year iPhone and services revenue will accelerate from the June quarter, while the Mac and iPad businesses could post double-digit declines relative to a year earlier due to tough comparisons to that period.

    Shares of Apple fell 2% in after-hours action. The latest quarter marked the third in a row of revenue declines.

    Apple recorded $5.79 billion in June-quarter iPad revenue, down from $7.22 billion a year before and below the FactSet consensus, which called for $6.44 billion. Mac revenue came in at $6.8 billion, down from $7.38 billion a year earlier but ahead of the consensus view: Analysts were modeling $6.26 billion in Mac revenue.

    The company saw $8.28 billion in revenue within its wearables, home and accessories business. That compared with a year-before total of $8.08 billion. The FactSet consensus was for $8.31 billion.

    Services revenue increased to $21.21 billion from $19.60 billion, while analysts were projecting $20.73 billion.

    See more: Apple savings account racks up $10 billion in deposits since April debut

    Despite “a challenging smartphone market in the U.S. currently,” Chief Executive Tim Cook said on the earnings call that Apple was seeing “some really good signs in most places in the world.”

    He called out strength in emerging markets, where Apple did “exceptionally well” in the latest quarter. In China, the company swung to 8% revenue growth after logging a 3% decline in revenue during the March quarter.

    Apple also disclosed a June-quarter revenue record in India, where it recently opened its first retail stores.

    While Cook is “pleased” with Apple’s India growth, he also noted that the company’s current market share in the country is “very, very modest.”

    “So I think that it’s a huge opportunity for us, and we’re putting all of our energies in making that occur,” he said.

    The tech giant booked fiscal third-quarter net income of $19.88 billion, or $1.26 a share, compared with $19.44 billion, or $1.20 a share, in the year-prior period. Apple beat the FactSet consensus, which was for $1.20 in earnings per share.

    Don’t miss: Apple has a juicy $40 billion opportunity ahead of it

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  • Intel stock rallies after earnings show AI data-center beat, strong PC sales

    Intel stock rallies after earnings show AI data-center beat, strong PC sales

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    Intel Corp. shares surged in the extended session Thursday after the chip maker posted a surprise profit, but while data-center sales came in better than expected, a larger beat in PC product sales drove margin improvement.

    Intel
    INTC,
    +0.55%

    shares surged around 8% after hours, following a 0.6% rise to close the regular session at $34.55.

    The company reported second-quarter net income of $1.48 billion, or 35 cents a share, versus a loss of $454 million, or 11 cents a share, in the year-ago period. After adjusting for restructuring charges and other items, Intel reported 13 cents a share, versus net income of 28 cents a share a year ago.

    Revenue fell to $12.95 billion from $15.32 billion in the year-ago period, and adjusted gross margins came in at 39.8%, the company said.

    Intel had forecast an adjusted second-quarter loss of 4 cents a share on revenue of about $11.5 billion to $12.5 billion for the current period, and adjusted gross margins of about 33.2% for the quarter.

    Analysts surveyed by FactSet, on average, expected a loss of 4 cents a share on revenue of $12.12 billion.

    The margin beat was “largely a function of revenue,” Intel Chief Financial Officer David Zinsner told analysts on a conference call, and that revenue beat was much more pronounced in Intel client, or PC, business than it was data center.

    “We had obviously beat revenue significantly, and we’ve got a good follow-through in the fixed-cost nature of our business, and so that really was what helped us outperform significantly on the gross-margin side in the second quarter,” Zinsner told analysts.

    Intel posted PC-group sales of $6.8 billion and data-center sales of $4 billion, while analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast $6.08 billion and $3.8 billion, respectively.

    Before the conference call, Edward Jones analyst Logan Purk told MarketWatch in an interview following the report that most of the improvement in Intel’s gross margin came from the unexpected amount of growth in the PC business.

    “The magnitude of client computing growth, and how the PC market is recovering faster than anticipated,” came as a surprise, Purk told MarketWatch. The analyst, who has a hold rating on Intel, said he expects sequential single-digit improvement in data center going forward.

    Still, on the call, Intel Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger hammered home the point that Intel was wholeheartedly going after the AI market, which is expected to be dominated by Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    +0.99%
    ,
    and to a lesser extent, by Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
    AMD,
    +0.92%
    ,
    which reports earnings on Tuesday.

    “We see AI being infused in everything and there’s going to be AI chips for the edge, AI chips for the communications infrastructure, AI chips for sensing devices, for automotive devices, and we see opportunities for us both as a product provider and as a foundry and technology provider across that spectrum,” Gelsinger said.

    Meanwhile, network and edge sales came in at $1.4 billion, while analysts called for $1.48 billion, and foundry services revenue rose to $232 million for the quarter, while Wall Street looked for $149.2 million.

    “In the third quarter, we do obviously at the midpoint see revenue growth sequentially and so that will be helpful in terms of gross margin,” Zinsner told analysts on the call. “We expect, again, pretty good follow-through as we get that incremental revenue.”

    Intel forecast third-quarter earnings of about 20 cents a share on revenue of about $12.9 billion to $13.9 billion and adjusted gross margins of about 43% for the current quarter. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast third-quarter adjusted earnings of 16 cents a share on revenue of $13.22 billion.

    Read: Intel may have bottomed, but earnings will show if chip maker can hope to catch up to Nvidia and AMD in AI

    Year to date, Intel shares have gained nearly 31%, while the PHLX Semiconductor Index 
    SOX,
    +1.86%

    has surged 49%, the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.64%

    has grown 18%, the Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    -0.55%

    has gained 34% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.67%

    is up more than 6%.

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  • European Commission approves Broadcom’s $61 billion acquisition of VMware

    European Commission approves Broadcom’s $61 billion acquisition of VMware

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    The European Commission has approved Broadcom Inc.’s
    AVGO,
    +0.49%

    acquisition of VMware Inc.
    VMW,
    +5.19%
    ,
    sending VMware’s stock up 2.3% premarket. Broadcom, which makes chip and infrastructure software, announced the $61 billion deal to buy VMware in May 2022, but the deal has been the subject of regulatory scrutiny ever since. It has now been granted legal merger clearance in Australia, Brazil, Canada, South Africa, and Taiwan, and foreign investment control clearance in all necessary jurisdictions, the company said Wednesday. Broadcom “looks forward to continuing to work constructively with regulators around the world. Broadcom is confident that when regulators conclude their review, they too will see that the combination of Broadcom and VMware will enhance competition in the cloud and benefit enterprise customers by giving them more choice and control over where they locate their workloads,” said the company. It still expects to close the deal in fiscal 2023. Broadcom’s stock was up 0.6% premarket.

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  • This earnings season, expect companies to keep margins high ‘the usual way, by firing people’

    This earnings season, expect companies to keep margins high ‘the usual way, by firing people’

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    Writ large, corporate America had a pretty profitable pandemic.

    Lockdowns left shoppers burning stimulus cash on AirPods and Nintendo Switches to dilute boredom and anxiety. Supply convulsions from the war in Ukraine rerouted spending from things to pass the time to things, like groceries, that were needed to survive.

    One way or another, demand for things overwhelmed the ability of workers, factories, boats and trucks to supply and ship them. And the biggest sellers of those goods—to cover their own costs, take advantage of the dislocation or both—hiked prices, leading to profit margins in 2021 and 2022 that were higher than anything seen before the pandemic.

    But in 2023, the trend reversed. Margins are falling, putting pressure on executives to keep prices elevated while cutting costs, and potentially staff, to stave off investor tantrums. And as higher prices exhaust consumers, more bearish economists insist that a recession is set to start at some point between now and the end of the year

    So when companies report second-quarter earnings this week, it’ll be something of a moment of truth for the economy. Markets will get more detail on what decisions business leaders are making to replicate two years of near-fantasyland profit, amid differing views on how much more room they have to lean on further price increases. And they’ll get the first glimpse of what executives think about the prospect of a downturn. 

    “It keeps getting disproved by the actual numbers,” Sheraz Mian, director of research at Zacks, said of the recession forecasts. “The bears keep pushing it out to the next quarter and the next quarter. “So the biggest thing I’ll be watching out for is whether we are in the same kind of trend line we’ve been seeing the last few quarters or if things really are weakening.”

    He added later: “The second half has kind of become the proving point for the bearish narrative.” 

    Q2 Earnings, Delta, JPMorgan

    For companies in the S&P 500 index overall, FactSet forecasts a 7.2% drop in per-share profit for the second quarter, according to a report from the firm on Friday. That would still be pretty bad—the biggest percentage drop since the second quarter of 2020, when the pandemic strangled the economy and sent earnings 31.6% lower. 

    But for the rest of the year, for now, Wall Street expects a comeback. They see profit inching 0.3% higher in the third quarter. And for the fourth, earnings are expected to be even better, with gains of 7.8%. 

    The first big companies to report second-quarter results this week, among them JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Delta Air Lines, will set the tone. 

    See also: Megabank profits on tap after eventful Q2 of bank failures and climbing interest rates

    Related: Jefferies upgrades JPMorgan Chase to buy from hold ahead of Q2 profit update

    Results from Delta
    DAL,
    +0.41%
    ,
    which arrive on Thursday, will be a window into whether customers feel good enough about their savings and job security to still take vacations, and whether the business backdrop is solid enough to justify more corporate travel. And as fuel costs fall, Morgan Stanley analysts said the quarter would be the first since the pandemic “with no asterisks from costs and capacity.”

    “While the Airlines have sounded extremely confident on demand all year, their visibility / confidence has only extended as far as the summer,” the analysts said in a research note. “However, we will now start to get our first glimpses into what the fall booking curve looks like, which is important to fend off the (second-half) demand bear case.”

    As a one-stop shop for financial matters, JPMorgan’s
    JPM,
    +1.56%

    results, due Friday, will offer an outline for the economy as a whole for that second half. Markets have rebounded. But higher interest rates have made it more difficult for customers to borrow money, the landscape for dealmaking remains cloudy, and worries have endured following the failure of a handful of banks earlier this year.

    Mian said that he didn’t personally buy into the case that the economy was headed for a bigger turn south, citing strength in the labor market and household finances. But he said that the pessimists still had plenty of reasons to stay pessimistic—amid weakness in manufacturing—and that they could push their forecasts for a recession out to next year even if the earnings for 2023’s second half aren’t that bad. 

    Within the tech industry, large companies like Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +1.30%

    have helped lead a broader rebound this year, after pandemic-era digital demand dried up last year. Ivana Delevska, founder and chief investment officer of Spear Invest, said she expected that rebound to continue this year, as tech companies lap weaker trends in 2022 and businesses shake off their hesitation to spend on IT and cloud services and stampede toward AI.  

    “The main driver on top of easy comparisons will be AI,” she said. “This is really the biggest theme in our portfolio right now.” 

    Margins, AI and ‘firing people’

    The results for the second quarter will come as more economists point to efforts by corporations to pad or protect profit margins—largely through price increases—as one of the primary drivers of inflation over the past year. Some economists worry that executives’ efforts to keep up with investors’ higher profit expectations will come at the expense of workers.  

    “Firms will offset margin pressure in the usual way, by firing people,” Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said in a report in April.

    “The idea that margins have to fall, because they rose to unsustainable heights during the pandemic, likely will cut little ice with markets, which will reward firms taking the most aggressive action to limit the (per-share profit) hit,” he continued.

    See also: More than 216,000 global tech employees have lost their jobs since the start of 2023

    Within the S&P 500 index, last year’s overall profit margin—or the percentage of sales that end up as profit—came in at 12.12%, according to Dow Jones Market Data, in line with the record 12.19% recorded in 2021. Before those two years, the index had never produced a profit margin higher than 10.75%, records dating back to 1999 show. 

    Put another way, of the $15.45 trillion in sales that those 500 companies put up last year, $1.87 trillion went straight to profits. Every 0.1% of the S&P 500’s margins in 2023 added $1.87 billion to those businesses’ bank accounts.

    Suspicions have grown over the past year that companies were using the convulsions to the economy—like 2021’s supply-chain fiasco and the war in Ukraine—to ram through price increases and keep prices higher. Costs for things like oil, crops and shipping have fallen since. Wage growth, one of the biggest costs that businesses have passed onto consumers, has slowed, and hasn’t caught up with inflation.

    UBS analyst Paul Donovan, in February, noted that real wage growth—or wage growth that factors in the impacts from inflation—had been negative for 22 straight months. And he said on Friday that that growth had been “catastrophically bad.”

    “Despite low unemployment, workers have not been able (to) achieve their most basic aim—maintaining living standards,” he said on Friday. “While real wage growth should turn positive as inflation falls, this argues against a structural shift of power from employers to workers.”

    Efforts by executives to repeat the abnormal gains for investors through a formula of price hikes and layoffs represent a multi-pronged threat for already-struggling consumers: The prospect of losing a job, yet still having to pay up at checkout, even if weaker demand overall nudges the nation into a downturn. Some analysts also worry that the Federal Reserve’s current prescription to bring down higher prices—raising borrowing costs and engineering a slowdown in the job market, thereby weakening demand and lowering prices—will inadvertently widen economic inequality.

    Rivals’ price movements

    But industry bellwethers have plenty of sway to prop up prices and margins. Businesses, to some extent, have trained customers to expect higher prices. Industry consolidation has also allowed larger companies to bend some of the most basic laws of economics. 

    Isabella Weber, an economics professor at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, told MarketWatch in April that while mainstream theory dictates that prices reflect the laws of supply and demand, that theory doesn’t always gibe with an economy where corporate concentration has increased.

    Weber said that while recessions can pull prices lower, firms that are so-called “price makers” tend not to lower their prices as much as others. Sometimes, they may even raise prices even as demand falls, she said.

    “In our exploration of earnings calls we find that large firms with market power set their prices focusing on target returns with a careful eye on the price movements of their competitors,” she said over email. “Thus, prices are largely the outcomes of strategic interactions between firms.”

    Weber said that for decades, economists in wealthy nations hadn’t thought much about inflation, and that when it returned last year, it was thought about only in basic terms. That is, there was too much demand, or workers had too much money, or central banks were dumping too much money into the economy. Rate hikes from the Fed, the thinking went, would raise borrowing costs, cool off investment and reverse those trends.

    “Within this interpretation of inflation, there is no room for a connection between rising profits and rising prices,” she told MarketWatch. “Given this dominant mindset, pointing to the role of profits was heretic, since it implied a fundamentally different understanding of inflation.”

    “Furthermore,” she continued, “it meant questioning the policies maintained by central banks around the world, most notably austerity that causes harm to working people who are already most harmed by inflation itself. So this is as much about economics as it is about politics.”

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  • Worried that stocks are too expensive? This value approach can highlight bargains.

    Worried that stocks are too expensive? This value approach can highlight bargains.

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    At a time when many investors seem euphoric, others are warning that stock valuations have once again turned frothy. It may pay to take a look back at valuation and performance and consider your own risk tolerance.

    A value-based approach that offers lower volatility and good long-term returns can be expected to be less flashy than one focused on the hottest technology stocks. But depending on how much it bothers you when the stock market gyrates, it may be a better way for you to invest. Lower volatility might help you to avoid the type of emotional reaction that can lead to selling into a declining market or attempting to time the market, both of which tend to be losing strategies.

    Aaron Dunn is a co-head of the value equity team at Eaton Vance, which is based in Boston and is a unit of Morgan Stanley. During an interview, he explained how he and Brad Galko, who co-heads the team, select stocks for the Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunities Fund. The fund’s performance benchmark is the Russell 1000 Value Index
    RLV,
    +1.08%
    .

    First, let’s take a broad look at how aggregate forward price-to-earnings ratios have moved for exchange-traded funds tracking several broad indexes over the past 10 years:


    FactSet

    The valuations are lower than their 2020 peaks. But for all but one, the valuations still appear to be high when compared with their 10-year averages:

    ETF

    Ticker

    Current forward P/E

    10-year average forward P/E

    Current valuation to 10-year average

    SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

    SPY,
    +0.64%
    19.06

    15.93

    120%

    iShares Russell 1000 ETF

    IWB,
    +0.80%
    18.94

    16.02

    118%

    iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF

    IWD,
    +1.07%
    14.33

    13.94

    103%

    iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF

    IWF,
    +0.50%
    26.63

    19.00

    140%

    Source: FactSet

    All of the listed ETFs listed here are trading well above their 10-year average P/E valuations except the iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF, which is only slightly higher. These numbers back the notion that the broad market is expensive and that a value approach may be more reasonable. It is also worth keeping in mind that during 2022, when the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
    SPY,
    +0.64%

    declined 18.2% and the iShares Russell 1000 ETF
    IWB,
    +0.80%

    fell 19.2%, the iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF
    IWD,
    +1.07%

    pulled back 7.7% and the Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund’s Class I shares were down only 3.3%, all with dividends reinvested.

    If we look at 10-year total returns, the nonvalue indexes, so heavily weighted to the largest technology-oriented companies, have been excellent performers for investors who could remain committed through thick and thin:


    FactSet

    Fund

    Ticker

    3-year average annual return

    5-year average annual return

    10-year average annual return

    SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust

    SPY,
    +0.64%
    13.2%

    11.4%

    12.3%

    iShares Russell 1000 ETF

    IWB,
    +0.80%
    12.5%

    11.0%

    12.1%

    iShares Russell 1000 Growth ETF

    IWF,
    +0.50%
    11.2%

    14.0%

    15.0%

    iShares Russell 1000 Value ETF

    IWD,
    +1.07%
    13.7%

    7.3%

    8.7%

    Eaton Vance Value Opportunities Fund – Class I

    EIFVX,
    +0.92%
    14.8%

    8.7%

    9.7%

    Source: FactSet

    For five and 10 years, the growth-oriented approaches have shined. But for three years, which includes the 2022 disruption, the Eaton Vance Value Opportunities Fund has fared best, even outperforming its benchmark.

    A selective approach to value

    The Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund’s Class I
    EIFVX,
    +0.92%

    shares are rated four stars (out of five) within Morningstar’s Large Value fund category. The fund’s Class A
    EAFVX,
    +0.93%

    shares are rated three stars. The difference is that the Class I shares, which are typically distributed through investment advisers, have annual expenses of 0.74% of assets under management, while the Class A shares have an expense ratio of 0.99%. You can purchase Class I shares directly through brokerage platforms for a $50 fee.

    Dunn said that when selecting stocks for the fund, he and Galko take a bottom-up approach to identify quality companies. The want to see high returns on invested capital (ROIC) over the long term, as well as a “good competitive position” for a company and a strong management team.

    They also prefer companies with low debt. “We do not want to buy overlevered companies and be in a situation where we are diluting through equity raises and putting capital at risk,” he said.

    Dunn added that he and Galko look closely at free cash flow generation. A company’s free cash flow is its remaining cash flow after capital expenditures. This is money that can be used to fund expansion, acquisitions, dividend increases or share buybacks, or for other corporate purposes.

    “Philosophically, what this results in is that we hold up well in markets such as last year’s. And we find upside in stocks trading below intrinsic value,” he said.

    “We focus on finding ideas where there is a good skew for upside relative to downside,” he added.

    According to Morningstar, the fund’s active share when compared with IWD is high, at 91.45%. Active share is a measure of how much an actively managed fund differs in investment exposure from its benchmark index. If you are paying more for active management than you would to invest in an index fund, active share is something to consider. If it is low, you might be overpaying for a “closet indexer.” You can read about how Morningstar assesses active shares here.

    The fund is concentrated, typically holding between 25 and 45 companies.

    According to Morningstar’s most recent data, these were the fund’s top 10 holdings (out of 28 stocks) as of May 31:

    Company

    Ticker

    % of Eaton Vance Focused Value Opportunity Fund

    Forward P/E

    2023 total return

    Alphabet Inc. Class A

    GOOGL,
    +0.59%
    5.0%

    19.6

    32%

    Micron Technology Inc.

    MU,
    +1.79%
    4.8%

    N/A

    25%

    American International Group Inc.

    AIG,
    +1.15%
    4.3%

    8.1

    -7%

    Reinsurance Group of America Inc.

    RGA,
    -0.34%
    4.2%

    8.0

    1%

    Bristol Myers Squibb Co.

    BMY,
    +0.50%
    4.1%

    7.7

    -11%

    Wells Fargo & Co.

    WFC,
    +0.99%
    4.0%

    8.9

    4%

    ConocoPhillips

    COP,
    +2.96%
    4.0%

    10.5

    -10%

    Constellation Brands Inc. Class A

    STZ,
    +0.30%
    3.9%

    20.4

    9%

    NextEra Energy Inc.

    NEE,
    +0.67%
    3.8%

    21.9

    -13%

    Charles Schwab Corp.

    SCHW,
    -0.43%
    3.8%

    16.0

    -30%

    Source: FactSet

    Click the tickers for more about each company, fund or index.

    Click here for Tomi Kilgore’s detailed guide to the wealth of information available for free on the MarketWatch quote page.

    There is no forward price-to-earnings ratio for Micron Technology Inc.
    MU,
    +1.79%
    ,
    because the company’s combined EPS for the next 12 months are expected to be negative.

    Micron is a company in transition, caught up in diplomatic conflict between the U.S. and China, whose government directed some manufacturers in May to stop purchasing memory chips made by the company. Then again, in June, Micron highlighted its “commitment to China” when announcing a new investment in its plant in Xi’an.

    Read: Micron recovery debated by analysts as bottom is called in memory-chip market

    Dunn said downside for Micron’s stock was “mitigated” because of the company’s relatively low debt. He also said that as companies continue to adopt more cloud services and deploy artificial-intelligence technology, demand for memory chips will increase.

    While there is no current forward P/E for Micron, the stock always trades at low valuations relative to most other large tech companies. Dunn touted Micron’s strong cash flow and said the stock was “underappreciated” and remained “an interesting play on cloud and AI.”

    While it is not among the top 10 holdings listed above, Dunn highlighted Dollar Tree Inc.
    DLTR,
    +1.80%

    as an example of the type of value stock he favors. The company “was not well run” following its acquisition of Family Dollar in 2015. But he has been impressed with its more recent turnaround efforts, including improvements in how products are shipped to stores, better efficiency and “a lot of work going on with culture, how they operate, how they treat employees [and] adding some shelf space to move more product.”

    It is interesting to see NextEra Energy Inc.
    NEE,
    +0.67%

    among the fund’s largest holdings. This has been quite a strong grower over the past 10 years, with a total return of 346% as the owner of Florida Power & Light has grown along with its customer base and has become a leader in the build-out of solar-power generation.

    Dunn said the company is “still growing in the mid-single digits. For a utility company, that is a strong profile.”

    When discussing Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    +0.59%
    ,
    the fund’s largest holding as of May 31, Dunn said that “it is really an advertising business with other businesses around it” and that its P/E valuation was “not extremely taxing.” He said Alphabet had been “less aggressive with cost cutting” than other technology giants and added that the company’s “targeted search” through Google and other properties, such as YouTube, “probably provides a better return on investment than broadcast advertising, and that really is the key.”

    Don’t miss: This stock investing strategy has blown away the S&P 500. Here’s a way to refine it for quality.

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  • How to enjoy retirement without busting your budget

    How to enjoy retirement without busting your budget

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    The goal of many (or most) savers and long-term investors is to achieve financial independence. The combination of building up a nest egg, paying down debt and eventually receiving Social Security payments or another source of retirement income might put you in a comfortable position, but even people who have worked together to achieve financial independence may disagree on what to do after their careers end.

    Quentin Fottrell — the Moneyist — heard from one couple who are facing a quandary. They have been financially responsible, but as they near retirement, the wife wishes to be very careful with their combined investment portfolio, while the husband wants to begin spending a significant portion of it. They both make reasonable arguments. Here’s what they should do.

    From the Help Me Retire column: My 57-year-old husband works three shifts and is burned out. Can he retire?

    You have to get there first

    A behavioral study finds a correlation between having one specific type of conversation and taking action to build wealth.


    Getty Images

    Doing this even once might help encourage you or someone you know to begin saving and investing for the long term.

    The ‘Magnificent Seven’ stocks may not remain at the top

    Salesforce is among the companies passing a Goldman Sachs screen for growth of sales and earnings.


    Getty Images

    Even an index that includes hundreds of stocks can be heavily concentrated. Large technology-oriented companies have led this year’s 16% rebound for the S&P 500
    SPX,
    -0.29%
    ,
    following last year’s 18% decline (both with dividends reinvested). But the index is weighted by market capitalization, which means the “Magnificent Seven” — Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    -0.59%
    ,
    Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -1.19%
    ,
    two common share classes of Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    -0.52%

    GOOG,
    -0.65%
    ,
    Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +1.11%
    ,
    Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    +0.95%
    ,
    Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -0.76%

    and Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    -0.50%

    — make up 27.9% of the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
    SPY,
    -0.25%
    .

    In the Need to Know column, Barbara Kollmeyer lists companies that might turn out to be among the next Magnificent Seven, based on a Goldman Sachs screen.

    Getting back to the current Magnificent Seven, you may be surprised to see which of the stocks is cheapest — by far — per one commonly used valuation metric.

    Related: Top investment newsletters aren’t bullish on tech, Tesla or Meta Platforms. Here’s what they do like.

    A thrill ride for EV makers

    An electric Rivian R1S.


    Rivian

    There has been a lot of news in the electric-vehicle space this week. Here are lists of coverage organized by topic.

    Rising unit sales among EV makers:

    Legacy automakers report sales increases, including a tremendous increase in EV unit sales for Ford
    F,

    :

    Reaction from analysts and investors:

    In other news, Mullen Automotive Inc.
    MULN,
    -12.97%

    has started to deliver electric vehicles. Further developments for the company this week included the announcement of a stock-buyback plan and possible action against naked short sellers.

    A changing job market

    The employment numbers for June from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics showed the lowest level of job creation since late 2020. Then again, the demand for labor in the U.S. remains high, despite the Federal Reserve’s efforts to slow economic growth.

    If you are looking to make a career change, what does all this mean to you? Andrew Keshner points to a development in the employment market that may have you thinking twice about jumping ship.

    Threads and Twitter

    Meta’s Threads app has signed up as many as 50 million users in its first two days of operation, some reports say.


    AFP via Getty Images

    Meta rolled out its new Threads service on Wednesday to compete directly with Twitter and has already signed up 50 million users, according to some reports.

    Twitter CEO Linda Yaccarino was quick to respond.

    More reaction:

    Consumer spending may spike

    U.S. shoppers have been taking it slow during a period of high inflation, but the overall economy has been stronger than expected even as the Federal Reserve continues tightening its monetary policy.

    The coming flurry of July sales events at Amazon, Walmart Inc.
    WMT,
    -2.30%

    and Target Corp.
    TGT,
    -0.60%

    could signal a turnaround for consumers, as James Rogers reports.

    Financial crime

    Lukas I. Alpert writes the Financial Crime column. Have you ever wondered how you might steal a lot of cash from a company that is likely to have rather tight accounting controls in place? This week Alpert explains how the manager of an Amazon warehouse managed to scale the heights of criminal achievement to collect $10 million — and a 16-year jail sentence.

    Also read: Silver dealer ordered to pay $146 million in case of 500,000 missing coins

    Want more from MarketWatch? Sign up for this and other newsletters to get the latest news and advice on personal finance and investing.

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  • Can the coming AI boom help Micron outrun negative China effects?

    Can the coming AI boom help Micron outrun negative China effects?

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    Micron Technology Inc. could be approaching a big new semiconductor cycle as it predicts a huge boost from artificial intelligence, but there could be a roadblock in the path.

    Micron
    MU,
    +0.42%

    reported a third-quarter loss and a 57% drop in revenue Wednesday, after the chip industry’s oversupply hit the memory-chip maker hard. On the bright side, Micron Chief Executive Sanjay Mehrotra said he believed the memory industry “had passed its trough” and that the company’s margins should improve as the supply-demand balance is gradually restored.

    Another big issue for the stock right now, though, is China’s decision to recommend that “operators of critical information infrastructure in China should stop purchasing Micron products.” Mehrotra told analysts on the company’s conference call that the decision will impact about 50% of its products sold in China.

    “We currently estimate that approximately half of that China-headquartered customer revenue, which equates to a low double-digit percentage of Micron’s worldwide revenue, is at risk of being impacted,” Mehrotra said on the call. “This significant headwind is impacting our outlook and slowing our recovery.”

    More from Therese: AI has given a big boost to stock of this lesser-known Silicon Valley computer maker

    He said Micron will work with its long-term customers who are not impacted by China’s decision, and hopefully will increase its share with those customers.

    On the plus side, Micron expects to see a substantial boost to its memory business as a result of companies gearing up to run generative AI on their own servers or clouds. “Generative AI [is] becoming a big opportunity and we look at it for 2024 as a big year for AI and for memory and storage, and Micron will be well-positioned,” in the data center with its products, Mehrotra said. He added that it is “very, very early innings for AI,” which is really pervasive. “It’s everywhere.”

    Full earnings coverage: Micron CEO calls bottom in memory-chip market, but weak PC, smartphone forecasts cut into expected AI gains

    He said it will be in both cloud and enterprise server applications, and due to confidentiality of data, enterprises will be building their own large language models, adding that the DRAM (dynamic random access memory) content required for AI in servers is driving higher demand for memory and storage in servers. In super cluster configurations, for example, the DRAM content can be as much as 100 times higher.

    Investors appeared to maintain some caution about when the AI impact will kick in, even as some analysts have forecast that AI demand will lead to a general supercycle for many hardware companies. Micron’s shares see-sawed in after-hours trading Wednesday, ending the extended session up about 3%.

    See also: Will generative AI complete the cloud transition? One prominent executive thinks so.

    In a note ahead of the company’s earnings, Raymond James analyst Srini Pajjuri said that the impact from China “should be short-lived given the commodity nature of Micron’s products.”

    Right now, it’s too early to say how long China may be a drag for Micron, but if Mehrotra is right, investors should take heart that the company is going to be another beneficiary of the coming AI boom.

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  • Micron CEO calls bottom in memory-chip market, but weak PC, smartphone forecasts cut into expected AI gains

    Micron CEO calls bottom in memory-chip market, but weak PC, smartphone forecasts cut into expected AI gains

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    Micron Technology Inc. shares rose in the extended session Wednesday after the memory-chip maker’s chief executive called the bottom on the sector, and quarterly results came in better than expected.

    Micron
    MU,
    +0.42%

    shares had jumped more than 5% after hours following the release of results, but by the end of the company’s conference call with analysts, the stock was up less than 2%. Shares finished Wednesday’s session with a 0.4% gain to close at $67.07, while the S&P 500 index
    SPX,
    -0.04%

    declined less than 0.1%.

    The Boise, Idaho-based company forecast an adjusted loss of $1.26 to $1.12 a share on revenue of $3.7 billion to $4.1 billion for the fourth quarter, while analysts surveyed by FactSet had estimated a loss of $1.07 a share on revenue of $3.88 billion for the fourth quarter, and a loss of $4.65 a share on revenue of $15.32 billion for the year.

    Read: Snowflake stock rallies as ‘blizzard’ of AI product announcements make Wall Street happy

    In the near term, Micron Chief Executive Sanjay Mehrotra told analysts on the call that while sales forecasts received a considerable boost from larger-than-expected AI sales, forecasts for PC, smartphone and standard server sales are looking worse than feared, and will eat into those gains. All told, however, the CEO told analysts that supply reductions are beginning to stabilize the market.

    Micron Chief Financial Officer Mark Murphy said the company took about $400 million in inventory write-downs in the third quarter, contributing to negative gross margins of 16%, an improvement of 15 percentage points sequentially. When Micron reported its worst loss ever a quarter ago, the company had taken a $1.4 billion inventory charge. When Micron started flashing signs of negative margins earlier in the year, many analysts saw that as signs of a bottom on the horizon.

    Read: Is Micron selling memory chips for less than they cost to make? That may mean the bottom is near.

    Micron makes two types of memory chips: DRAM, or dynamic random access memory, the type of memory commonly used in PCs and servers; and NAND, the flash memory chips used in smaller devices like smartphones and USB drives. After prices for memory soared early in the COVID-19 pandemic, companies overbought large stores of chips to avoid shortages, creating a glut.

    “As we have said before, AI servers have six to eight times the DRAM content of a regular server and three times the NAND content,” Mehrotra told analysts on the call. “In fact, some customers are deploying AI compute capability with substantially higher memory content.”

    For the third quarter, Micron reported third-quarter loss of $1.9 billion, or $1.73 a share, versus net income of $2.63 billion, or $2.34 a share, in the year-ago period.

    The adjusted loss, which excluded stock-based compensation expenses and other items, was $1.43 a share, versus net income of $2.59 a share in the year-ago period.

    Revenue dropped to $3.75 billion from $8.64 billion in the year-ago quarter, as a two-year shortage of chips, triggered by the COVID pandemic, flipped quickly, but unevenly, into a glut around this time last year. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had forecast a loss of $1.61 a share on revenue of $3.65 billion.

    “We believe that the memory industry has passed its trough in revenue, and we expect margins to improve as industry supply-demand balance is gradually restored,” Mehrotra had said in an earlier statement.

    Read: Nvidia stock falls after CFO says no material impact from prospective wider ban on AI chip sales to China

    The CEO also called a recent order by the Chinese government to stop using Micron chips because of alleged serious, but unspecified, risks “a significant headwind that is impacting our outlook and slowing our recovery.”

    On the call with analysts, Mehrotra said he expects to see a “record total addressable market in calendar 2025 along with a return to more normalized levels of profitability.”

    Leading up to earnings, analysts had said that Micron is “at the bottom of this deep downturn,” but “China complicates the recovery plan.” For the year, Micron shares are up 34%, compared with the S&P 500’s 14% gain.

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  • Nvidia, AMD stocks fall on report of new U.S. ban on AI chip exports to China

    Nvidia, AMD stocks fall on report of new U.S. ban on AI chip exports to China

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    Shares of Nvidia Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. slumped in the extended session Tuesday following a report that the Biden administration is considering a new ban on sales of AI chips to China.

    Nvidia shares
    NVDA,
    +3.06%

    A fell 3% after hours, following a 3.1% gain to close at $418.76, while AMD shares
    AMD,
    +2.68%

    also fell 3%, after a 2.7% gain in the regular session to close at $110.39.

    Late Tuesday, the Wall Street Journal reported the Commerce Department could further block sales of AI chips to China unless U.S. companies first obtain a special license.

    The ban would follow upon similar actions last year that threatened $400 million in Nvidia sales, but the company found a workaround in supplying a version of products that avoided the ban.

    Read: AMD launches new data-center AI chips, software to go up against Nvidia and Intel

    Both Nvidia and AMD have launched new AI chips this year: Nvidia in March and AMD earlier in the month. Last year’s release of Open AI’s ChatGPT generative AI — with billions of dollars invested by Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    +1.82%

    — resulted in an explosion of interest in artificial-intelligence technology, prompting luminaries to herald the technology as the biggest thing in tech since … you name it.

    Read: Bill Gates says AI is only the second revolutionary tech advancement in his lifetime

    News of the possible ban happened to follow a claim earlier in the day from Baidu Inc.
    BIDU,
    +3.09%

    on the Chinese search company’s blog, which said its Ernie 3.5 version AI outperformed ChatGPT’s earlier version “in comprehensive ability scores,” and its latest iteration, GPT-4, which was released in mid-March, “in several Chinese-language capabilities.”

    Baidu’s claim appeared to be based upon performance metrics published in China Science Daily. On Wall Street, ADRs of Baidu were down 0.7% after hours, following a 3.1% gain to close at $143.90.

    As of Tuesday’s close, Nvidia shares were up 187% in 2023, and AMD shares were up 70% for the year.

    Read: Snowflake adds partnerships with Nvidia and Microsoft for AI double play

    Shares of Super Micro Computer Inc.
    SMCI,
    +4.47%
    ,
    which have benefited from AI, also declined 3% after hours, while shares of Intel Corp.
    INTC,
    +2.28%
    ,
    which supplies chips to data centers, saw shares decline 1% after hours.

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  • Intel to build $25 billion advanced chip plant in Israel, Netanyahu says

    Intel to build $25 billion advanced chip plant in Israel, Netanyahu says

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    Intel Corp. plans to build a “huge and unprecedented” $25 billion advanced chip manufacturing plant in Israel, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu announced Sunday.

    The agreement in principle would see a factory in Kiryat Gat open by 2027, according to a statement from Israel’s Finance Ministry.

    “This is the largest investment ever in the State of Israel,” Netanyahu’s office said in a tweet Sunday. “It is an expression of great confidence in the Israeli economy and reflects the strength of the free economy we have built, and the technological economy we’re developing here.”

    Intel has operated in Israel since 1974, and has a number of facilities there.

    An Intel
    INTC,
    +1.54%

    spokesperson confirmed the company’s “intention to expand manufacturing capacity in Israel” in support of Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger’s “IDM 2.0” strategy, which includes expanding manufacturing capabilities around the world.

    Intel is looking to reduce its reliance on Asian chip manufacturing to avoid potential snags in the global supply chain. Last week, the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company announced a $4.6 billion semiconductor assembly and test facility in Poland.

    Intel shares rallied to their best week in 14 years Friday, as analysts and investors expressed excitement about opportunities for AI to drive stronger growth.

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  • Apple’s new Vision Pro headset will cost $3,499, arrive in 2024

    Apple’s new Vision Pro headset will cost $3,499, arrive in 2024

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    Apple Inc. officially showed off its mixed-reality headset Monday, with the new Vision Pro device supporting 3-D content and featuring a price tag of $3,499.

    The Vision Pro, Apple’s
    AAPL,
    -0.76%

    first major new product category in eight years, will be available early next year and feature the ability for users to control the device with their hands, eyes and voice, a distinguishing feature of the headset in the current market. Chief Executive Tim Cook previewed the widely anticipated device during the keynote address of Apple’s WWDC developer event Monday.

    See also: Here are all the new software features coming to Apple’s iPhone this year

    Apple had been rumored for years to be developing a mixed-reality headset, which merges immersive augmented reality with real-life surroundings. Cook has long been excited about AR technology, and Monday’s event gave a sense for how he sees the theme playing into the business going forward as he announced WWDC’s “one more thing.”

    “It’s the first Apple product you look through and not at,” he said, adding that Vision Pro represents “spatial computing” and brings “a new dimension to powerful personal technology.”

    Users will be “no longer limited by a display,” Cook claimed.

    See also: Apple CEO Tim Cook explains why consumers would want a mixed-reality headset

    One key feature of the Vision Pro is the ability to see apps overlaid across real-world surroundings. Users will be able to determine how immersed they want to be by tweaking settings on a digital crown.

    The device will also allow users to rely only on their eyes, hands and voice to control content. Users can flick to scroll through options and tap their fingers together to select something with gestures that Apple says are subtle. Apple showed off how users will be able to arrange apps like FaceTime and Safari and then turn to the side to switch from one app to another. Their eyes will still be visible to people engaging with them in the real world.

    The company highlighted panoramic photos and noted that users will be able to capture “spatial” 3-D videos and photos using the headset. Apple teased that people would be able to make the surroundings of a plane disappear if they opted to watch 3-D video while flying.

    Robert Iger, Walt Disney Co.’s
    DIS,
    +0.25%

    CEO, appeared onstage to call the launch a “momentous event” that could help make Disney’s vision “a reality” through the advent of deeply immersive and personal stories. The Disney+ app will be available “on day one” through Vision Pro.

    Apple explained that users can either plug the Vision Pro in or use an external battery that will provide roughly two hours of use. The display has “more panels than a 4K TV for each eye.” The Vision Pro relies on Apple’s custom processing, including a new R1 chip that the company says helps reduce latency issues, which have plagued other devices.

    Users will be able to set up digital personas as part of the new visionOS operating system for the device.

    With the Vision Pro, Apple is wading into a market for augmented- and virtual-reality devices that has been underwhelming thus far as products from Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    -0.45%

    and others have failed to pick up meaningful traction with consumers. VR devices dominate the market, according to third-party data from IDC, but overall shipments plunged more than 50% in the latest quarter amid economic pressures and a general cooling of interest.

    Read: Apple debuts new 15-inch MacBook Air for $1,299, adds new Mac Pro and Studio PCs

    While Apple is sitting on a number of multibillion-dollar businesses now, the company’s current big moneymakers weren’t seen as slam dunks when they launched. Evercore ISI analyst Amit Daryanani noted that critics dinged the early iPhone for a lack of third-party apps and keyboard and pointed to fading interest in watch-wearing more generally at the time the Apple Watch debuted.

    Whether Apple can succeed again in making a once-questioned product category mainstream remains to be seen with the Vision Pro. The company could sell over 10 million units in the first five years, according to Daryanani, but that would make the device Apple’s slowest to ramp in the 21st century.

    See more: Apple could be cooking up 3 more $10 billion-plus businesses, one analyst says

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  • Here are all the new software features coming to Apple’s iPhone this year

    Here are all the new software features coming to Apple’s iPhone this year

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    Users of Apple Inc.’s iPhone will soon be able to more easily screen calls, check-in with loved ones and exchange contact information.

    Apple
    AAPL,
    +0.43%

    executives teased the elements of its forthcoming iOS17 software update at the keynote address of its WWDC event Monday, which also brought the introduction of new Macs.

    Consumers will gain the ability to choose how they come up when they call others through a new “poster” feature. Users will be able to customize posters with photographs and fonts, and have these appear in another person’s contacts app.

    The company is also changing up how calls work by adding a way for people to pick up calls while they’re in the middle of receiving a voice mail. A new on-device live-voicemail feature will show transcripts of a voice mail while it’s in progress, so people can determine that a call isn’t spam or is important enough to stop what they’re doing before they pick it up.

    Users will also gain the ability to leave a message when using FaceTime, Apple’s video-calling app.

    See also: Apple’s stock at all-time highs ahead of WWDC headset reveal

    Within iMessage, Apple will offer the ability for people to share their locations within a conversation and check in with loved ones. People will be able to set up a check-in option that can notify loved ones when they get home and offer alerts about battery, cell service, and location if they end up running late.

    Apple is also enhancing the Stickers feature within iMessage with the ability to create “live stickers” from photos. Further, it’s tucking iMessage apps like Stickers behind a menu so they don’t initially clutter the message screen.

    Within iMessage, Apple will make it easier for people to jump to the top of long group threads and swipe to reply to a given message.

    Apple is introducing a NameDrop feature that lets people share contact information just by tapping their phones together. It’s also augmenting AutoCorrect with in-line predictions that go beyond one word and the ability for people to teach autocorrect their preferences better.

    Read: Apple could be cooking up 3 more $10 billion-plus businesses, one analyst says

    The company is rolling out two new apps, including one for journaling. People will be able to collect photos, music, and written notes into moments. A new StandBy app will turn a locked iPhone into a smart display that users can customize based on their preferences and the time of day.

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  • Asia stocks hit by slide in China factory activity, jitters over U.S. debt-ceiling vote

    Asia stocks hit by slide in China factory activity, jitters over U.S. debt-ceiling vote

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    BEIJING (AP) — Asian stock markets sank Wednesday ahead of a vote by Congress on a deal to avert a government debt default, while a downturn in Chinese factory activity deepened, adding to signs global economic activity is weakening.

    Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong and Sydney retreated. Oil prices declined.Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index edged up less than 0.1% on Tuesday as President Joe Biden and U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy tried to line up votes in support of their deal to allow the government to borrow more. Without…

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  • Why Intel’s stock is falling as Nvidia leads the rest of the semiconductor sector on a massive surge

    Why Intel’s stock is falling as Nvidia leads the rest of the semiconductor sector on a massive surge

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    Chip stocks experienced a significant surge Thursday in the wake of Nvidia Corp.’s upbeat commentary on AI-fueled demand — with one notable exception.

    Shares of Intel Corp.
    INTC,
    -5.52%

    were down more than 5% in afternoon trading Thursday, leading Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    -0.11%

    laggards by a wide margin, on a day when Nvidia Corp.’s
    NVDA,
    +24.37%

    stock was up 26% and the PHLX Semiconductor Index
    SOX,
    +6.81%

    was ahead 6%.

    Read: Chip index heads for highest close in 13 months as Nvidia momentum lifts semiconductor stocks

    Nvidia delivered a stratospheric beat on its quarterly revenue outlook Wednesday afternoon, with executives discussing how spending on artificial intelligence is already starting to drive sizable financial benefits for the company. That discussion has Wall Street thinking that many other chip makers will also be able to capitalize on the same wave of interest in the hot technology — shares of Monolithic Power Systems Inc.
    MPWR,
    +17.46%
    ,
    Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
    AMD,
    +11.16%

    and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
    2330,
    +3.43%

    TSM,
    +12.00%

    all joined Nvidia in gaining by double-digit percentages in Thursday’s session.

    Intel, though, was a key outlier. Nvidia’s commentary seemed to make investors more worried that Intel is behind the curve on what some see as a massive technological revolution.

    Nvidia CFO on record-breaking forecast: ‘The inflection point of AI is here’

    Intel’s revenue and profits from central processing units look “even more at risk” after Nvidia’s report, while Intel doesn’t have “any real” competitive position in graphics processing units or generative-AI compute, wrote Mizuho’s Jordan Klein, a desk-based analyst associated with the company’s sales team and not its research arm.

    Nvidia’s earnings call “will reinforce the negative view that [Intel] and all their CPU share is a major loser and share donor to GPU, ASICs and lower power ARM design chips on the way,” Klein added.

    While Nvidia GPUs typically would run alongside CPUs from either Intel or AMD, Nvidia has been making inroads in CPUs. Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress said on Nvidia’s call that the company has seen “growing momentum for Grace with both CPU-only and CPU-GPU opportunities across AI and cloud and supercomputing applications.”

    Read: ‘Ride the Nvidia wave.’ Wall Street says the ‘undeniably pricey’ stock can keep roaring.

    Nvidia is perceived to be ahead of the pack in AI-related computing technology, but AMD is at least in a better position than Intel, with more of a one-stop shop across CPUs and GPUs. That’s likely why AMD’s stock is riding on Nvidia’s coattails Thursday, up more than 10% in afternoon action.

    AMD is “the only other real GPU supplier,” Klein wrote, though the company “could lose CPU spend in process and [has] a far way to go to catch [Nvidia].”

    In his view, it “will take some time for more advanced and higher performance GPU and software platform to ramp and really drive upside potential” at AMD. “But seeing how fast and much [Nvidia] benefited, few will want to wait and see how long that takes for AMD.”

    A more clear beneficiary, he noted, is Taiwan Semiconductor, whose stock was up more than 12% Thursday. You “cannot get any of these GPUs, inference, etc. without their fabs,” according to Klein.

    As for Intel, Klein likes that the company is approaching a second-quarter bottom and positioned to capitalize on a personal-computer refresh, but he said its stock “feels totally stuck at best and could get shorted.”

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  • Nvidia barrels toward rare $1 trillion valuation after putting a dollar figure on AI boost

    Nvidia barrels toward rare $1 trillion valuation after putting a dollar figure on AI boost

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    Nvidia Corp. headed toward market-capitalization gains of nearly $200 billion in after-hours trading Wednesday, which could put the chip maker within sight of becoming only the seventh U.S. company to top a valuation of $1 trillion.

    Nvidia shares
    NVDA,
    -0.49%

    jumped 25% in the extended session Wednesday, after executives predicted that revenue would exceed the company’s record by more than 30% in the current quarter. The audacious forecast arrived as tech companies look to jump on advances in artificial intelligence that are largely powered by Nvidia’s computing gear.

    Nvidia ended Wednesday’s session with a market cap — the total value of all shares in existence — of roughly $754.3 billion, according to FactSet. A 25% increase would add nearly $189 billion to that total, putting the company within striking distance of $1 trillion. Only six U.S. companies have ever attained a $1 trillion market cap: Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +0.16%

    and Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    -0.45%

    are currently worth more than $2 trillion apiece; Google parent Alphabet Inc.
    GOOGL,
    -1.35%

    and Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +1.53%

    have valuation of more than $1 trillion; and Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    +1.00%

    and Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    -1.54%

    have both touched the $1 trillion plateau previously.

    For more: From U.S. Steel’s $1 billion market cap to Apple’s $1 trillion — a brief history of valuation milestones

    Nvidia’s market cap was ahead of both Meta and Tesla as of Wednesday’s close, with both worth less than $650 billion, showing the potential fleeting nature of such a valuation. Nvidia’s record market cap is $834.4 billion, established on Nov. 29. 2021, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    If Nvidia’s gains hold through Thursday’s trading session, the company could challenge for the largest one-day market-cap gain in history. The biggest currently on record was Amazon’s $191.2 billion increase on Feb. 4, 2022, according to Dow Jones Market Data, followed closely by a $190.9 billion gain by Apple on Nov. 10, 2022. Nvidia also stands to gain more than rival Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
    AMD,
    +0.14%

    is worth in total — AMD ended Wednesday’s session with a market cap of $174.4 billion.

    Nvidia is closing in on the rare $1 trillion plateau because of huge gains in its stock this year, as hopes and hype about generative AI have flooded the tech sector. After OpenAI debuted its ChatGPT AI offering, and investor Microsoft quickly integrated the chatbot into many of its services, expectations for the technology have exploded.

    Despite the hype, most companies have avoided providing hard figures for revenue gains expected from AI. Nvidia’s fiscal second-quarter forecast — which calls for roughly $11 billion in sales, nearly 33% higher than Nvidia’s previous quarterly record of $8.28 billion — could be seen as the first sign of a wave of fresh spending coursing through the tech sector.

    Other companies have indicated that they will be forced to spend to develop their technology before reaping large financial rewards from it. Microsoft, for example, disclosed to investors last month that capital expenditures are increasing as it builds AI capabilities into its Azure cloud-computing platform — spending that is largely going toward Nvidia.

    Full earnings coverage: Nvidia stock soars toward all-time high as AI push leads executives to predict record revenue

    That is a rather typical path for large jumps in tech spending: Companies that make the necessary hardware see gains before the companies that use that gear can develop offerings that take advantage of it. Other gear makers joined Nvidia in the sharp move higher in after-hours trading Wednesday, including AMD, which gained more than 10%; chip maker Marvell Technology Inc.
    MRVL,
    -1.31%
    ,
    which increased more than 5%; and networking specialist Arista Networks Inc.
    ANET,
    +0.53%
    ,
    which added about 5%.

    Alphabet and Microsoft stocks both increased around 2% in after-hours trading, and software companies that have made AI a core part of their offerings also saw gains. Palantir Technologies Inc.
    PLTR,
    -3.24%

    and C3.ai Inc.
    AI,
    +2.54%

    shares both increased more than 8%, for example.

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