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These 5 tech stocks could let you play earnings season like a pro
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Jim Cramer’s daily rapid fire looks at stocks in the news outside the CNBC Investing Club portfolio. Corning : Shares of the specialty materials company popped more than 10.5% on Monday after pre-announcing better-than-expected earnings. Management is now forecasting higher revenue and earnings-per-share on the high end of previous guidance for the second quarter. The company is set to report on July 30. Shares of Corning, which makes glass for Apple devices, reached their highest levels since February 2022. Tesla : Shares of the electric vehicle leader made a huge, 27% increase last week after the company delivered better-than-expected second-quarter production and deliveries. The stock jumped another nearly 3% on Monday. Cramer called the rally a short squeeze — meaning investors betting Tesla stock would go down were forced to cover as it ripped higher. JPMorgan : The bank caught a rare downgrade, with Wolfe Research taking its rating to peer perform from outperform (hold from buy) on valuation and exposure to lower net interest income given the threat of lower Federal Reserve interest rates approaching. Cramer said he’s concerned heading into JPMorgan’s second-quarter earnings Friday since there was a big sell-off following its Q1 release in April when the bank guided flat NII for 2024. “I don’t want the stock coming in hot,” he added. Domino’s Pizza : The pizza delivery chain was upgraded to an outperform rating from a neutral (buy from hold) at Baird. The analysts also raised their price target to $580 per share from $530. Baird sees the recent 7.4% pullback in Domino’s stock over the last eight sessions as an opportunity. They cited strong fundamentals, product pipeline, and management. Cramer thought this was a fair call since Domino’s CEO Russell Weiner is “crushing it.” ServiceNow : Shares of the enterprise software company took an over 4% dive on Monday after Guggenheim downgraded the stock to sell from neutral. The analysts said the company will get a boost from its generative artificial intelligence business in the second half of this year but won’t see that momentum into 2025. Cramer said the call was contrary to CEO Bill McDermott’s stance that generative AI offerings have been resonating with customers.
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The ‘Rhapsody of the Seas’ cruise liner carrying US citizens leaves the Israeli port of Haifa to be evacuated to the Mediterranean island of Cyprus on October 16, 2023, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas.
Aris Messinis | AFP | Getty Images
Some of the world’s most well-known companies are already seeing the Israel-Hamas war weighing on operations.
On Oct. 7, militant group Hamas struck Israeli towns in a surprise attack and took more than 200 hostages. More than 7,000 people have been killed in Gaza, per Palestinian health officials, while the Israeli Defense Forces said more than 1,400 have been killed in the country.
Corporations that do business or have operations in the region have already begun seeing the war change their financial outlooks as the unrest weighs on everything from advertising dollars to tourism to supply chains. These early admissions come as world leaders grow increasingly concerned that the conflict will further intensify, with international calls for a cease-fire being rejected.
United Airlines said fourth-quarter performance could vary depending on the length of flight suspensions in Tel Aviv. Its updated range for adjusted earnings per share came in below analysts’ forecasts.
“We have unmatched geographic diversity with a large domestic network complemented by the largest long-haul international network and both are solidly profitable,” CEO Scott Kirby said earlier this month. “While this is a great attribute, it does create some short-term risk and volatility as we’re seeing right now with the transitory hit to margins this quarter as a result of the tragedy in Israel.”
United is one of several carriers including Delta Air Lines and American Airlines that have rushed to change schedules as the conflict has unfolded. Notably, El Al, the Israeli flag carrier, said it would fly on the Jewish Sabbath for the first time in more than four decades to help bring reservists abroad back to the country.
Across the travel industry, the war is on the mind of corporate leaders. Plane-maker Boeing said in a regulatory filling that the conflict could potentially affect certain suppliers, in addition to airlines.
About 1.5% of Royal Caribbean capacity in the fourth quarter had planned to visit Israel, CEO Jason Liberty said on the cruise line’s call on Thursday. A few of the adjusted sailings that were previously expected have home ports in Haifa, a city in the northern region of the country.
The company also offered free use of its Rhapsody of the Seas vessel to the U.S. government to aid in the evacuation of Americans from Israel. Between the changed itineraries and use of the ship, the company estimated it would have an impact of 5 cents per share on its earnings. The company expects to see between $6.58 and $6.63 in adjusted earnings per share for the year.
El Al Airlines airplane flying on February 2023.
Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images
“I would … like to recognize the incredible effort from our shoreside teams and crew on board Rhapsody of the Seas who have been working tirelessly with the U.S. Department of State to help safely evacuate Americans from Israel,” Liberty said. “My heartfelt gratitude goes out to all involved.”
Still, Liberty said the cruise line’s customer base is sticky, so it may become more of a question of where they are going to travel rather than if they are going to cancel their plans.
“They’re going to go somewhere with us,” he said. “That’s what we’re focused on making sure they’re doing.”
Technology companies were among those seeing the conflict affect the workforce, advertising spending and supply chains.
Snap said in its latest earnings release that it saw pauses in spending from a “large number of primarily brand-oriented advertising campaigns” immediately after the war began. That has weighed on revenue quarter to date.
While the company said some of the campaigns that initially paused have now resumed, the company has also seen others that didn’t originally stop advertising now pause. Snap said it would be “imprudent” to offer formal guidance on what to expect for the current quarter “due to the unpredictable nature of war.”
Meta finance chief Susan Li said the Facebook and Instagram parent has seen softer advertising spending so far in the quarter, correlating in timeline with the start of the conflict. Li noted that it isn’t necessarily due to any one event, but cooler spending has aligned in the past with the start of conflicts such as the Russian invasion of Ukraine last year.
“This is something that we’re continuing to monitor,” Li told analysts during the company’s earnings call on Wednesday. “We’ve reflected the latest trends and advertiser reaction that we’ve seen into our Q4 outlook — which, again, we think reflects the greater uncertainty and volatility in the landscape ahead.”
Align Technology is expecting increased headwinds from the uncertainty and potential supply chain issues tied to the conflict, according to Chief Financial Officer John Morici. He said the fourth-quarter operating margin, when adjusted for generally accepted accounting principles, should be down from the prior quarter as the company offers severance to adjust to headcount changes in this situation.
Multiple corporations including Aon and West Pharmaceutical noted a continued focus on supporting employees and their family members who live and work in the region. Israel is known in part for its vibrant startup and technology scene, with entrepreneurs now wondering how to push forward in the new normal, especially as citizens get called to serve in reserve units.
ServiceNow CEO William McDermott said during the company’s call with analysts on Wednesday that employee Shlomi Sividia was among those murdered at the Supernova Music Festival. He said Sividia was “highly respected, admired and a good friend to many.”
“We stand in solidarity with our team and with their families. Terrorism has caused the unfathomable humanitarian crisis that now engulfs millions of people in Israel and Gaza,” McDermott said. “Our hearts pray for the innocent on all sides. Even with optimism in short supply, we choose to honor the dream of a peaceful and prosperous future for the Middle East region.”
Companies specializing in defense have also been on alert as another international conflict breaks out.
General Dynamics, the biggest U.S. artillery shell producer, had already been ramping up artillery production to meet needs amid the war in Ukraine, according to finance chief Jason Aiken. Now, the company is working to increase production to as high as 100,000 units per month, up from 14,000.
“I think the Israel situation is only going to put upward pressure on that demand,” Aiken said during General Dynamics’ Wednesday earnings call.
— CNBC’s Robert Hum, Morgan Brennan and Leslie Josephs contributed reporting.
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Here are Wednesday’s biggest calls on Wall Street: Bernstein reiterates Tesla as underperform Bernstein said after the automaker’s shareholder meeting that it sees trouble ahead. “Elon Musk reiterated several times that the next 12 months will be difficult for Tesla, and attributed his caution to macro issues, which is inconsistent with the relative constructive outlook for the broader auto industry. We believe Tesla’s challenges instead stem from its limited model lineup, and that 2024 could be even more challenging.” Guggenheim initiates MSG Entertainment as buy Guggenheim said the entertainment company is “well positioned to grow.” “Initiating at BUY, $37 PT; Consumer Tailwinds, Unique NY Concentrated Venue Portfolio – MSGE Is Well Positioned to Grow.” Bank of America upgrades AppLovin to buy from neutral Bank of America said it sees accelerating revenue growth for the mobile tech company. “We upgrade AppLovin to Buy based on the view that its new machine learning engine (Axon 2.0) will accelerate revenue growth in 2023.” Redburn upgrades BioNTech to buy from neutral Redburn said the biotech stock is very attractive. “The valuation of BioNTech, however, has moved significantly. For much of the last few years, we have argued BioNTech is meaningfully overvalued, but with the pendulum swinging in the other direction, leaving 58% potential upside, we upgrade to Buy from Neutral.” Guggenheim upgrades Visteon to buy from neutral Guggenheim said it sees “supply-chain revenue upside” for the auto supplier. “We believe VC now has the most potential supply-chain revenue upside in our coverage with clear visibility to improvement in 1-2 quarters.” Credit Suisse upgrades iQIYI to outperform from neutral Credit Suisse said in its upgrade of the Chinese online video platform company that it likes its “strong” margins. “We are increasingly convinced about IQ’s profitability outlook and leading position: (1) its unique strength in content innovation/project selection should sustain its leadership in a market that increasingly focuses on premium content; (2) consecutive quarters of strong margin beat proves an effective ROI-driven strategy.” Stifel initiates EVgo as buy Stifel said the battery charging company is “well positioned in a fast charging business.” ” EVgo is a leading EV charging company based in Los Angeles. The company currently operates the second largest DC fast charging network after Tesla, and appears well positioned to be a leading player going forward.” Read more about this call here. Barclays upgrades Wynn to overweight from equal weight Barclays said the “best is yet to come” for the casino operator. “Macau fundamentals have moved well ahead of shares, while Las Vegas is likely more resilient than appreciated.” Read more about this call here. Mizuho downgrades WeWork to neutral from buy The firm said its prior buy rating was “wrong” on shares of WeWork and that “macro headwinds have been exacerbated.” “We now see our base case business assumptions, specifically occupancy targets, as unachievable, leading to higher cash burn and eventually driving the need for outside capital. We do not see FCF positive till YE25.” Citi adds a positive catalyst watch on Advance Auto Parts Citi said the auto parts retailer is a “turnaround” story. “AAP sets up well as a turnaround story as 1Q will likely be close to the trough for the business combined with inexpensive valuation, favorable industry dynamics, and a new CEO announcement expected. Evercore ISI upgrades Norfolk Southern and Old Dominion to outperform from in line Evercore said Norfolk and Old Dominion have “quality” business models. “As such, we are upgrading both Norfolk Southern (NSC) and Old Dominion (ODFL) to Outperform from In Line as we look to relative valuation and quality business models both in times of expected choppy performance, but also as we begin to contemplate the eventual emergence from what has now been a nearly 16-month ‘freight recession.’” Barclays reiterates Alphabet as overweight Barclays said Alphabet will continue to flex its AI “prowess strongly.” “We see shares continuing to outperform based on an improving ad market in 2Q, higher incremental margins, and this AI sentiment shift getting follow-through.” Stephens reiterates Walmart as overweight Stephens said it’s standing by its overweight rating heading into Walmart earnings Thursday. “We continue to think Walmart is positioned to be a relative winner in the food and consumer discretionary sector, with a well established low price position in the marketplace, continual improvements in assortment and customer experience and a management team that is laser focused on execution and capital allocation.” Bank of America reiterates ServiceNow as buy Bank of America said the software company is well positioned for AI. ” ServiceNow has continued to land larger customers over time and has seen consistent expansion activity.” Stephens reiterates Western Alliance as overweight Stephens said it’s standing by its overweight rating on the regional bank. “Yesterday afternoon, WAL filed a presentation that included a QTD update on several topics. WAL reiterated deposit flow stabilization as of March 20th and further noted QTD deposit growth at 5/12 had exceeded the Company’s $2 bil. dollar guided target.” Read more about this call here. Credit Suisse downgrades Knight-Swift and Werner to neutral from outperform Credit Suisse downgraded several trucking companies on Thursday and says it’s turning more cautious. “We have become increasingly cautious on the trucking cycle as low rates persist. With trucking stocks posting solid year-to-date gains, we advocate trimming exposure; we lower our EPS estimates across the board and downgrade Knight-Swift (KNX) and Werner (WERN) to Neutral.”
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Here are the biggest calls on Wall Street on Friday: Barclays names Dick’s a top pick Barclays named the sporting goods store a top pick and says it sees accelerating growth. “We view 2022 as the new solid foundation from which DKS can now reaccelerate • its growth algorithm through: 1) sustainable positive comp growth driving market share gains, 2) gross and operating margin expansion as it exits a period of supply chain disruption.” HBSC upgrades AT & T to buy from hold HSBC said in its upgrade of the stock after its earnings report that investors should buy the dip. “But a slowdown in market momentum has been widely flagged (by all operators) for months, and AT & T’ s absolute growth in mobile subs remained solid.” Read more about this call here . Bank of America reiterates Alphabet as buy Bank of America says it’s bullish heading into Alphabet earnings next week. “We think 1Q could show cost improvement upside, while in-line search results could be a modest positive for market share concerns (we think street will see better evidence of cost cutting and margin improvement by 2Q).” JPMorgan reiterates Amazon as a best idea JPMorgan says it’s bullish heading into the e-commerce giant’s earnings report next week. “We’re modeling continued e-comm share gains in 2023 as AMZN & other retailers gain share in key under-penetrated categories such as grocery, CPG, apparel & accessories, & furniture/appliances/equipment.” Morgan Stanley reiterates Blackstone as overweight Morgan Stanley says the alternative investment management company is “resilient.” “We believe BX is best positioned to navigate the backdrop, capitalize on dislocation with $190b dry powder & propel earnings power.” Argus upgrades Dollar General to buy from hold Argus said in its upgrade of the dollar store company that it’s “rare retailer.” “We are raising our rating on Dollar General Corp . to BUY from HOLD and setting a one-year price target of $250. DG is a rare retailer that is growing square footage and posting positive comparable sales. Our five-year growth rate is 11%.” UBS initiates Bill.com as buy UBS said in its initiation of the software billing company that shares are attractive at current levels. “Since we’re a bit more constructive than the Street and negativity already seems embedded in BILL shares (amongst worst performing software stocks YTD), we view risk/reward as biased upward at these levels.” Piper Sandler downgrades Big Lots to underweight from neutral Piper said in its downgrade of Big Lots that it sees demand slowing. “Big ticket discretionary demand appears to be deteriorating (despite easier y/y compares), and we are worried about companies with break-even EBITDA (or worse).” Morgan Stanley downgrades Seagate to equal weight from overweight Morgan Stanley said in its downgrade of Seagate that it sees a recovery pushout for the hard disc data drive company. “As a result, we believe path to outperformance has also been pushed out, with risk more elevated near term.” Wells Fargo names Starbucks a top pick into earnings Wells says Starbucks is a “best idea” heading into earnings on May 2 and the “China inflection adds upside.” “Shares are -2% post-Q1 & we see improving Q2 risk/reward behind ongoing domestic strength (positive Q2 traffic; Ex 29), a likely China inflection (vs. a very low Q2 bar) & anticipated upside to the FY23 outlook.” Cantor Fitzgerald initiates CVS as buy Cantor said in its initiation of the stock that it’s underappreciated. “We are initiating coverage of CVS Health with an Overweight rating and 12-month price target of $87; Investors are underestimating the power of the flywheel CVS is piecing together, in our opinion.” Cantor Fitzgerald initiates UnitedHealth as buy Cantor said in its initiation of the healthcare company that it sees near-term earnings upside. ” United is ahead of the market in using commercial product innovation to solve for the problem of employers wanting to hold price trends, while providers are looking for a three-year step-up from historical averages.” Benchmark initiates Sea Limited as buy Benchmark initiated the Singapore-based internet tech company with a buy and says it sees rapid growth ahead. “We believe that SE should remain a key beneficiary of Southeast Asia’s fast growing digital economy in years to come.” Benchmark initiates Grab Holdings as buy Benchmark said in its initiation of the Asian internet company that it’s a “significant market consolidator” “As part of our industry launch of Southeast Asia Ecommerce, we are initiating coverage of GRAB, a leading platform player offering mobility, delivery, fintech and enterprise services in SEA (Southeast Asia Ecommerce).” JPMorgan upgrades XPO to overweight from neutral JPMorgan said in its upgrade of the logistics company that it likes the company’s recent management changes. “Our estimates remain unchanged but we are upgrading to Overweight with a higher, yet still discounted, multiple compared to peers as we believe this strategic hire should help unlock the potential at XPO which is still not completely reflected in the stock.” Read more about this call here. Goldman Sachs reiterates Philip Morris as buy Goldman says the tobacco company is an “earnings compounder with attractive valuation.” “Ultimately, we believe mgmt’s Q2 guide is conservative and therefore we see a nice set up for a potential beat and raise quarter. This, in addition to PM’s Investor Day in September, should be positive catalysts for the stock.” Read more about this call here. Morgan Stanley reiterates Spotify as overweight Morgan Stanley raised its price target on the stock to $160 per share from $130 and says “price increases, margin expansion, and market share” will drive the stock. “We continue to see streaming music & audio as an attractive growth market and remain OW WMG and SPOT.” Wells Fargo reiterates Microsoft as overweight Wells says expectations are “mixed” heading into earnings next week, but that the firm is standing by the stock. “While optimizations and macro are likely to impact FQ3 results, we see favorable offsets forming beyond, inc. MSFT’s ability to both consolidate spend from incumbent categories (productivity, biz apps, security) & gain share in newer ones.” Truist downgrades Tesla to hold from buy Truist said in its downgrade of the stock that it was surprised by the company’s “willingness to accept lower margins.” “What surprised us is TSLA’s stated willingness to reduce price further, accepting still lower automotive margins, to broaden & deepen its ability to generate revenue from AI projects, most notably FSD.” Goldman Sachs reiterates ServiceNow as buy Goldman says it’s bullish heading into the work flow solutions company’s earnings report next week. “We expect investors to put more weight on NOW’ s 1Q results, despite it being a seasonally weak quarter, as they look for signs of continued durability.” Truist initiates CyberArk as buy Truist initiated the cyber security company with a buy and says it has a first mover advantage. ” CYBR is a leader in Privilege Access Management, which is becoming a critical layer of cybersecurity and center of identity security. The company’s transition to a subscription-based model has resulted in strong visibility and durability of its business as well as higher customer lifetime value.” Baird reiterates McDonald’s as outperform Baird says it’s bullish heading into earnings next week. “We see potential for Q1 comps/EPS to exceed estimates (perhaps already priced in?), and we continue to believe MCD can fuel solid operating momentum in the balance of 2023 despite possible economic headwinds.” Stephens upgrades Pool Corp. to overweight from equal weight Stephens said in its upgrade of Pool that it sees an “attractive entry point” for the pool company. “The stock could tread water in the ultra-near-term as seasonally it is still too early to fully gauge activity levels, which could keep investors waiting. However, we think 20x next year’s earnings for a best-in-class, high quality compounder that consistently puts up 25%-30% ROIC, consistent market out-performance and strong FCF is an attractive entry point.” Stephens initiates SentinelOne as overweight Stephens initiated the cyber security company with an overweight and says it has “best-in-class growth.” ” SentinelOne’s platform addresses many of the highest priority areas of security spending.” JPMorgan reiterates Charles Schwab as overweight JPMorgan says Charles Schwab could be worth more if it were to “de-bank.” “While earnings would fall materially were Schwab to de-bank, we believe Schwab would trade at a higher (possibly meaningfully higher) multiple, which would/ could justify a higher value than the stock is trading at today. … .Schwab could feasibly de-bank. Schwab is not a bank, but rather is a broker that operates a bank, and as such we see it feasible that Schwab could operate without a bank.”
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With many stocks in a bear market, equities could be undervalued by 15%, according to Morningstar’s chief U.S. strategist. Dave Sekera told CNBC last week that markets are overestimating the impact of inflation on the U.S. economy, leaving many stocks below their fair value. “We actually think the U.S. market is pretty undervalued here, trading at about a 15% to 20% discount to fair value,” he said Thursday, although his comments were before the 5.5% jump in the S & P 500 later that day. “I think the market is probably overestimating just how much of a stagnant environment we’re going to be in for the economy and still pricing in inflation much longer than what we see.” The S & P 500 rallied 5.9% last week for its best week since June , although stocks fell slightly Monday. Sekera believes multiple headwinds facing the economy that were present earlier in the year will start to recede at the beginning of next year, including energy prices and interest rates. “With the economy being relatively sluggish, that could give the Federal Reserve the room it would need, not only to stop making monetary policy tighter, but switch gears in the second half of the year and start to loosen monetary policy,” he added. In such an environment, Morningstar’s Sekera believes the following six companies with a “wide economic moat” will have the pricing power needed to pass through cost increases and maintain profit margins. Compass Minerals tops the list, with shares expected to rise by 81.8% to $80 over the next 12 months. It is currently trading at $44. The small-cap company produces deicing salt from the world’s largest salt mine in Ontario, Canada. According to Morningstar, the mining company has access to a deep-water port which enables it to ship its products at a lower cost than competitors. Medical device maker Zimmer Biomet and technology companies ServiceNow , Salesforce and Amazon also featured on the list, with Morningstar expecting most to rise by at least 50% from their current share prices. It gives Zimmer Biomet 51.4% potential upside, Amazon upside of 48%, Salesforce 52% upside, ServiceNow upside of 57%. Morningstar analysts also believe 3M is a “cheap stock” trading at $133 and expect shares to rise by 37.6% to $183. Senior analyst Joshua Aguilar maintained his price target for the company despite it pointing toward multiple headwinds in its third-quarter earnings.
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Wall Street expects these “tenbagger” stocks that enjoyed a meteoric rise over the past decade to continue their big gains. Identifying a tenbagger, or an investment that surges 10-fold from its purchase price, is the ultimate goal for professional stock pickers. The term was first coined by legendary investor Peter Lynch, an avid baseball fan who compared a stock’s growth prospects to two home runs and a double in the sport. According to history, since 1980, there have been 175 occurrences when a stock jumped 10-fold over a five-year period, according to a Monday note from AllianceBernstein. The firm found that tech names were most represented in the list of tenbaggers, and that they generated the highest average returns. These are followed by consumer cyclicals and health care products. “On net, our analyses find that Tech has historically provided disproportionate opportunity for alpha generation and 10-baggers, particularly over a 5-year period. Over longer time-frames, 10-baggers are more prevalent across the broader market, but tech’s big winners win much bigger than other sectors,” AllianceBernstein’s A.M. (Toni) Sacconaghi, Jr. wrote. With that in mind, CNBC Pro searched for tenbagger stocks from the past decade that analysts believe will continue to make outsized gains. Of course, they may not advance another 10 times from here, but analysts like their prospects. Not only have these names posted a compound total return greater than 1,000% over the past 10 years, they’re also forecasted to jump more than 20% to their consensus 12-month price targets, according to FactSet data. What’s more, they have a 2022 estimated earnings per share growth rate of more than 20%, and an estimated annual long-term EPS growth rate of more than 20%. Here are five tenbagger names Wall Street likes. Tesla enjoyed a meteoric rise that generated returns of over 11,000% in the past decade. Despite the eye-popping gains, Wall Street expects the stock can climb even further from here — roughly 37% in the next 12 months. The electric vehicle maker is expected to grow earnings per share by 81% in 2022. Its estimated annual long-term growth estimate is also forecasted to be about 28%. Tesla could emerge a winner among electric vehicle makers as it raises capacity, Piper Sandler’s Alexander Potter said in a note this week. The analyst, who has an overweight rating on Tesla, said the electric vehicle company could soon cut prices as it raises manufacturing capacity in its facilities in Shanghai and Tesla, and burns through its backlog. “We think the order backlog is 310k+ units, with book-to-bill trending < 1.0 for the past four months. Tesla’s capacity will only keep rising, foretelling eventual price cuts, in our view. As noted elsewhere in our work, we think price cuts could drive periodic sell-offs in the coming months, but overall, when Tesla cuts price, the real losers will be Tesla’s peers (not Tesla itself),” Potter wrote. Advanced Micro Devices surged more than 2500% over the past decade. Analysts expect that the semiconductor company will enjoy roughly 50% upside over the next 12 months. It’s forecasted to grow 2022 earnings per share by about 28%, while the annual long-term growth estimate stands at about 35%. While AMD missed third-quarter earnings expectations this week, Morgan Stanley analysts remained overweight on the stock, saying that the worst is behind the stock. “Continued PC weakness into 4q weighs on numbers, and the dust hasn’t completely cleared, but modest data center growth in 4q should be a relief; we like the stock for next year server gains,” Morgan Stanley’s Joseph Moore said in a Wednesday note. Monolitic Power Systems has a more than 1900% 10-year compound total return. Over the next 12 months, the stock is predicted to jump another 35%. Its 2022 earnings per share growth estimate is 66%, while its annual long-term share growth is forecasted to be 26%. Other stocks include Fortinet and ServiceNow .
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