Tag Archives: Marvell Technology Inc

Cramer on hot industrial stocks, and how we’re playing the tech pivot

Jim Cramer at the NYSE, June 30, 2022.

Virginia Sherwood | CNBC

The market is so possessed by tech that it can’t see the forest through the industrials. If the discourse isn’t about the slowdown in the cloud, it’s about who is pulling out of the now-private Twitter, or how disappointing it is that co-CEO Bret Taylor left Salesforce (CRM). Meta Platforms‘ (META) Mark Zuckerberg could sneeze and Amazon (AMZN) CEO) Andy Jassy cough and it’s a bigger deal than United Airlines‘ (UAL) order for 100 Dreamliners from Boeing (BA).

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My take on Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google after Nvidia’s rise

FAANG stocks displayed at the Nasdaq.

Adam Jeffery | CNBC

It’s been a great week for the portfolio. Ahead of the long holiday weekend, I know the buzz centers on Nvidia (NVDA) and how this great $465 billion company signaled a sea change when it reported a solid quarter, cut guidance — and shares rallied. That was directly contrary to the pattern before it.

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Ulta Beauty, Big Lots, Autodesk, Workday and more

Ulta Beauty store.

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading Friday.

Ulta Beauty — The beauty retailer surged 10% following better-than-expected quarterly earnings and revenue. Ulta Beauty also shared a better-than-expected outlook for the full year.

American Eagle — The stock dropped 4.2% after the retailer posted weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue. American Eagle reported $1.055 billion in revenue versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.142 billion.

Autodesk — Shares surged nearly 9% after the software company reported earnings and revenue that beat analyst expectations. Autodesk reported total net revenue of $1.170 billion that was better than Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.145 billion. The company’s earnings came in at $1.43 per share, beating expectations by 9 cents a share.

Big Lots — Shares dropped 10% after the discounter reported an earnings miss. Big Lots cited inflationary pressures while issuing weaker full-year guidance. The company’s comparable-store sales also fell more than expected.

Pinduoduo — Shares soared 10% after the Chinese e-commerce company reported quarterly results that surpassed expectations. Pinduoduo also reported a 7% in active buyers from the year-earlier period.

Dell — Shares of the IT company surged 12.5% following better-than-expected profit and revenue for the previous quarter. The computer hardware maker said it benefited from a jump in demand for desktop and laptop computers by business customers.

Red Robin — Shares of Red Robin Gourmet Burgers soared 19.6% after the restaurant chain beat on revenue estimates and shared a smaller-than-expected loss in the recent quarter. Comparable-store sales rose 19.7% year over year, beating a StreetAccount forecast of 17%.

Marvell Technology — Shares jumped nearly 5% after the company reported earnings that beat expectations. Marvell Technology reported earnings of 52 cents per share on revenues of $1.447 billion. Analysts polled by Refinitiv were expecting earnings of 51 cents per share on revenues of $1.427 billion.

Workday — Shares dropped more than 6% after the human capital management company reported earnings that came in below expectations. Workday reported earnings of 83 cents per share, which was less than Refinitiv consensus estimates of 86 cents per share.

— CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Hannah Miao and Samantha Subin contributed reporting.

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Ulta, Gap, Dell and more

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Check out the companies making headlines after the bell

Ulta Beauty — Shares surged more than 6% after hours as the beauty retailer’s quarterly report beat Wall Street estimates on the top and bottom lines. Ulta Beauty posted adjusted first-quarter earnings of $6.30 per share on revenue of $2.346 billion. Analysts had expected a profit of $4.46 per share on revenue of $2.122 billion, according to Refinitiv. The company also issued better-than-expected forward guidance for the full year.

Gap — The retail stock sank about 13% in extended trading after Gap slashed its profit outlook for the year. Old Navy weighed on results as Gap management said the segment’s lower-income customers are feeling the pressure of inflation.

Costco — Shares fell more than 2% post market despite the wholesale retailer posting better-than-expected quarterly sales. Costco saw revenue of $52.596 billion versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $51.707 billion.

Dell — The laptop maker rose more than 5% in extended trading after Dell reported a revenue beat in the first quarter. Dell posted $26.12 billion in revenue versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $25.043 billion

Marvell Technology — Shares ticked up 2.2% after hours as the semiconductor company reported strong quarterly results. Marvell reported adjusted first-quarter earnings of $50.52 per share on revenue of $1.447 billion. Analysts had expected a profit of $0.51 per share on revenue of $1.427 billion, according to Refinitv.

American Eagle — The stock dropped more than 10% after the retailer posted weaker-than-expected quarterly revenue. American Eagle reported $1.055 billion in revenue versus the Refinitiv consensus estimate of $1.142 billion.

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Marvell Technology and Bausch Health are buys

Bausch Health: “We wanted to buy more today, but we ran out of time. This thing is being put on sale. There are shorts taking it all the way down. It is quite ridiculous. I wanted to be able to buy a huge slug of it today, so that’s how I feel for the [Charitable Trust].”

Accenture: “They crushed that stock. The business is fantastic. They had a great quarter. I’m saying to people [buy, buy, buy].”

Celularity: “That’s one of the higher risk stocks out there. The way I’d look at it is, be prepared to lose everything but otherwise make a lot of money if it works out.”

Manulife: “They take on too much risk, Manulife. I’m not there for the 5% [dividend yield]. I don’t need it. Too much risk in the common stock.”

Marvell Technology: “You should [keep buying more of it]. This company has two businesses: high-performance computing and 5G. We know those are the two strongest areas. It has no PC business. It has no gaming. Marvell is a stock that we’ve been buying, buying, buying for the Charitable Trust, and I think you should, too.”

Iron Mountain: “I like Iron Mountain. Good yield, very consistent business. [Buy, buy, buy].”

Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of BHC and MRVL.

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China’s Covid outbreak to disrupt tech supply chains, says Marvell CEO

The latest round of coronavirus restrictions in major Chinese cities will likely add to supply chain challenges in the technology sector, the CEO of a semiconductor company told CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday.

In an interview on “Mad Money,” Marvell Technology CEO Matt Murphy specifically pointed to Shenzhen, a city of more than 17 million people in Guangdong province that’s sometimes referred to as China’s “Silicon Valley.” Officials in the tech hub directed all businesses that don’t provide essential services to halt production or have employees work remotely for a week due to a rise in Covid cases.

“More broadly, if you look at the situation in China, the lockdowns certainly have the potential to have all kinds of disruption in the electronics industry, in particular in Shenzhen, which I’ve visited many, many times over my career,” Murphy said. “It’s a city of like 17 or 18 million people, so there will be some disruption.”

Foxconn, a supplier to Apple, has paused production at its factories in Shenzhen. It told CNBC in a statement they would remain shuttered until getting government approval to restart operations.

Shenzhen’s health orders, which also include city-wide Covid testing and public transportation closures, come as China is experiencing sees its worst coronavirus outbreak since the early days of the pandemic in 2020. Some neighborhoods in Shanghai also have gone into lockdown and schools have shifted to online instruction.

The pandemic has had far-reaching economic effects, particularly on supply chains for key electronics components such as semiconductors. A shortage of those computer chips has hurt a number of industries, including automotive as vehicle makers were forced to limit production.

Murphy noted these challenges, particularly in Southeast Asia, but said “the industry has rallied and certainly Marvell has rallied.”

“Even though we’re still supply chain constrained, if you look at our organic revenue growth — if you include Inphi plus Marvell together — we’re growing the company in the high 30% range,” Murphy said. “We’re continuing to get more supply, but demand continues to outstrip it. A lot of challenges in the world. … It’s not going away anytime soon.”

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Top Wall Street analysts say buy Rivian and Marvell

RJ Scaringe and team on opening day at Rivian’s manufacturing campus in Normal, IL.

Source: Rivian

The market volatility in recent weeks is enough to make even the most experienced investors worried, particularly as they contend with the omicron Covid variant and the prospect of tighter monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.

Wall Street’s top analysts are looking past the short-term tumult. These five stocks are potential long-term winners, according to TipRanks, which tracks the best-performing stock pickers.  

Marvell  

While the semiconductor sector has been benefitting greatly from the shift toward data centers and a digital economy, Marvell Technology (MRVL) is poised to capitalize. The semiconductor developer recently smashed its quarterly earnings, and analysts have taken a more bullish stance on its multi-year outlook. (See Marvell Risk Factors on TipRanks) 

Hans Mosesmann of Rosenblatt Securities published an upbeat report on the stock, noting that the firm saw sales growth over 30%, as well as a beat and raise on its guidance. Further, Marvell has mitigated supply chain impacts thus far.  

Mosesmann rated the stock a Buy, and raised his price target to $120 from $100.  

The analyst noted Marvell is experiencing robust demand in “all key infrastructure markets (DC, Carrier, Enterprise/Networking, and Auto/Industrial), with all of them inflecting on new transitions with 5nm-based application-specific integrated circuit/merchant silicon solutions in 2H22.” These chips are precisely what the company focuses on, and their applications are anticipated to “grow sequentially” moving forward, Mosesmann said.  

Calling the stock a “favorite secular idea,” the analyst stated that over the next few years “the company sees a step up and incremental revenue from cloud optimized silicon design wins, the ramp of 5G and increased dollar content, the increase in revenue of Automotive Ethernet conductivity, and the ramp of PAM4 [pulse amplitude modulation with four levels] and ZR products to support strong revenue growth.” 

Financial aggregator TipRanks currently places Mosesmann as No. 6 out of more than 7,000 professional analysts. He has been successful on his stock picks 81% of the time and has returned an average of 79% on each rating.  

Rivian   

The last few years have been revolutionary for the auto industry, as electric vehicle (EV) producers capture the attention of consumers and investors. After going public last month to much fanfare, Rivian Automotive’s stock (RIVN) appears to have calmed down in volatility, and analysts are largely bullish. (See Rivian Stock Analysis on TipRanks) 

Among those analysts is Daniel Ives of Wedbush Securities, who considers Rivian to be an “EV stalwart in the making,” due to its trajectory in capturing a largely unpenetrated market. While other EV makers have mainly focused on sportscars and sedans, Rivian is one of the first to offer luxury SUV and Pickup models.  

Ives rated the stock a Buy and initiated coverage with a price target of $130 per share.  

Relatively little competition stands in the way of RIVN, with only General Motors (GM), Ford (F), and Tesla (TSLA) having produced or announced plans for similar vehicles. When compared with smaller companies, Ives contends that Rivian is “leading the pack.”  

The analyst noted that RIVN is properly vertically integrated, and has tens of thousands of pre-orders ready to provide consistent demand moving forward. Additionally, the company is backed by Amazon and its 100,000-vehicle fleet order, which has given investors confidence.  

Ives believes that “Rivian is set to create a new category in the EV space with its game-changing debuts, a massive Normal, Illinois factory footprint, and create a major brand within the EV market over the next decade.” 

Out of over 7,000 financial analysts giving advice, Ives is considered by TipRanks to be No. 79. His stock ratings have returned correct 69% of the time and have resulted in an average return of 46.3% each.  

Alphabet  

Technology behemoth Alphabet (GOOGL) is one of the world’s most valuable companies, and it has been investing in AI across multiple sectors, ultimately boosting its third-quarter revenue. Further, the persisting macro societal at-home trends have played into the conglomerate’s hands, with little signs of slowing.  

Ivan Feinseth of Tigress Financial Partners said that the strong emphasis on artificial intelligence have benefited Alphabet’s new Pixel 6 smartphone and its general search engine features. He also noted that Apple’s (AAPL) iOS 14.5 privacy changes had minimal impacts on GOOGL’s advertising segment, due in part by the prevalence of the Android operating system. (See Alphabet Website Traffic on TipRanks) 

Feinseth rated the stock a Buy and raised his price target to $3,540 from $3,185.  

Regarding Alphabet’s exploratory innovations, the analyst added that the firm has invested in a “cutting-edge neural network-based natural language search process MUM (Multitask Unified Model), which is a thousand times more powerful than BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers).” 

Even with its heavy investments, GOOGL has maintained enough of a strong balance sheet to satisfy its shareholders in the near term. The company expanded its $50 billion share repurchasing program to include both classes of stock and has thus far executed on $36.8 billion this year.  

Feinseth is ranked at No. 55 out of more than 7,000 analysts on TipRanks, and has seen success 70% of the time. His ratings have averaged returns of 35.7%.  

SentinelOne  

With more digitization and cloud-based solutions for large enterprises and personal operations, the threat of cyberattacks has also risen. For investors seeking a way to play the cybersecurity space, Alex Henderson of Needham & Co. named SentinelOne (S) “the fastest growing company in our coverage list.”

The security technology firm recently posted impressive quarterly earnings, beating and raising guidance above Wall Street consensus estimates. SentinelOne has been expanding its distribution reach due in part to partnerships with managed security service providers. The company has also made further inroads into more substantial commercial firms. (See SentinelOne News Sentiment on TipRanks) 

Henderson rated the stock a Buy and declared a price target of $82.  

The analyst noted that “the multi-tenant, micro-services based, API-driven platform is particularly well suited to integrate into the operating environment of MSSPs, allowing SentinelOne to service this massive end-market opportunity in a cost-effective manner.” 

This past quarter saw new customers rapidly adopt SentinelOne’s complete product suite, as well as a higher rate of customers renewing their subscriptions.  

However, because the six-month lock-up period for its shares recently ended, the stock may still be affected by increased volatility in the near term. Despite this, Henderson anticipates SentinelOne will continue to benefit from the high popularity of its Cloud Workload service and other new product offerings, ultimately driving long-term upside.  

Out of over 7,000 financial analysts on TipRanks, Henderson is rated as No. 50. His success rate stands at 72%, and his stock ratings have returned him an average of 44.1%.  

Waste Connections  

When a pandemic hits, it affects just about every industry, even waste removal services. However, Waste Connections (WCN) has since pulled its business back to pre-pandemic levels, due in part by a wave of mergers and acquisitions aiding in inorganic growth, a loyal customer base, and strong wage incentives protecting it from an ongoing labor shortage. (See Waste Connections Insider Trading Activity on TipRanks) 

Hamzah Mazari of Jefferies Group elaborated on these positives in his recent report, stating that “WCN was stayed ahead of the curve when it comes to wages and continues to pay their drivers above market, which has helped with retention and employee quality.” Moreover, he does not foresee M&A “cooling off anytime soon.”  

Mazari rated the stock a Buy and decided on a bullish price target of $154 per share.  

The analyst noted that the waste removal firm has been mitigating inflation properly, after hiking its pricing up to 6%, a peak level beyond its previous high in 2008. WCN has a strong installed base in which it has cultivated trust through accountability. This allows the company more pricing-related leverage.  

As far as supply constraint concerns go, Waste Connections has been running a strategy in which it places orders for fleet and equipment far in advance, so as to put itself “at the front of the line.” In regard to the high wages its drivers and employees enjoy, these costs can be reduced in the second half of the next year if gross margins are too tight, thus relieving pressure.  

Financial aggregator TipRanks places Mazari at No. 443 out of over 7,000 analysts. His stock picks have been correct 62% of the time, and they have returned him an average of 39.6% each. 

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What Jim Cramer is watching in the market Tuesday, including why the selling has returned

Jim Cramer on CNBC’s Halftime Report.

Scott Mlyn | CNBC

(This article was sent first to members of the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer. To get the real-time updates in your inbox, subscribe here.)

What I am looking at November 30, 2021:

  • Second thoughts about omicron related to downbeat talk by Moderna’s Noubar Afeyan co-founder of Moderna (MRNA) who says the strain poses serious threats and Bancel’s interview with the FT was much more downbeat then when he was on CNBC… told FT “material drop” in effectiveness… But still using several months time frame to solve things… lots of money on the line for Moderna… I have Dr. Topol on Mad Money tonight who has been the most right of the commentators save Gottlieb…
  • Square (SQ)… sell to hold at Bank of America, but still need visibility on cash app… Dorsey all in – will we get a mid-quarter update tomorrow?… focus turns to Afterpay…. Fits into Seller and Cash App systems…
  • Piper says Edwards Lifesciences (EW) is the best beat and raise story… I think it is better than Medtronic, which missed badly…
  • When will the activists come for 3M (MMM) which has so badly underperformed?
  • Ford (F)  will pass GM in number of EV sold according to Morgan Stanley’s Jonas in 2021… calculates Mustang Mach-E selling 2,800 cars per month profitably,  150,000 next year-3.5% of volume…. I am convinced that is low
  • Factory output in China up for first time in a while according to November numbers… coincides with improving Baltic freight… should spur another Caterpillar (CAT) run… tiresome
  • Oil bear market?… Club members get ready to buy some Chevron (CVX) which makes a ton of money above $70…
  • Marvell Technology (MRVL)…BMO goes $70 to $80 on price target—remember high perf computing an 5G… Club name, reports this week… tends to sell off on the news…
  • Walmart (WMT)…Guggenheim says don’t panic on loss of CFO Brett  Biggs… 1.5% dividend… 22 times 2022 earnings estimate… deserves premium…
  • Dollar Tree (DLTR) downgrade to neutral at Goldman Sachs… cites slowing low end consumer, declining traffic…expected improvements now priced in.   Further growth limited?
  • Solaredge (SEDG) downgraded by Morgan Stanley… up 17% in 3 months percent… more balanced risk reward so buy to hold.
  • JPMorgan analyst Tusa trashes General Electric (GE) again… says plan is far from original… no change, net leverage -despite better pension performance… neutral rating but he is relentless
  • 10-year at 1.69% last week, now at 1.42%… Is the world stopping?
  • Wedbush cuts Twitter (TWTR) price target from $69 to $52… lower multiples…internal candidate as CEO not a surprise

The CNBC Investing Club is now the official home to my Charitable Trust. It’s the place where you can see every move we make for the portfolio and get my market insight before anyone else. The Charitable Trust and my writings are no longer affiliated with Action Alerts Plus in any way.

As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Typically, Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If the trade alert is sent pre-market, Jim waits 5 minutes after the market opens before executing the trade. If the trade alert is issued with less than 45 minutes in the trading day, Jim executes the trade 5 minutes before the market closes. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. See here for the investing disclaimer.

 (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long F, MRVL.)

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Jim Cramer says ‘run with the bulls’ and buy these winning stocks

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Wednesday offered investors a basket of stocks he believes can continue to succeed irrespective of Federal Reserve policy.

“Forget the big picture stuff. There are two things you need to keep track of when you’re picking stocks right now: The sector and the company, which includes the people running it,” the “Mad Money” host said.

The bottom line, Cramer said, is investors have two choices. The first is listening to the “Fed-obsessed experts,” he said. The second is to “forget about the money supply or the central bank and just run with the bulls. It’s not like they’re hard to find in this fabulous market.”

Semiconductors

A sign is posted in front of the NVIDIA headquarters on May 10, 2018 in Santa Clara, California.

Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Cramer said he believes the entire chip industry is “in bull-market mode” with a number of companies doing well, such as NXP Semiconductors, Marvell Technology and Qualcomm.

“But I prefer AMD and Nvidia because they make incredible products and they have fabulous leadership,” Cramer said, noting that AMD, under CEO Lisa Su’s direction, is looking to finalize an acquisition for Xilinx.

Nvidia, similarly, is trying to complete a deal for Arm Holdings, Cramer noted. If it clears the necessary regulatory hurdles, Cramer said Nvidia “will become the most important semiconductor company of our time.”

Financials

Many of the country’s largest banks offer investors “the greatest bargains” relative to the rest of the stock market, Cramer said. That’s especially true when considering they “could be just a few months away from a new rate hike cycle,” Cramer said. Banks benefit from higher rates.

Cramer said his favorites right now are Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo.

“Morgan Stanley’s not a bank anymore: It’s a wealth advisory service that happens to do some investment banking on the side. That means it’s bank light. I like that,” Cramer said.

Wells Fargo, on the other hand, offers a “turnaround story” after scandal-ridden years, Cramer said, adding he believes in CEO Charlie Scharf to keep delivering improvements.

“One day I expect Wells Fargo to return to the high $50s [per share], where it was when all hell broke loose. Until then, just stay the course,” Cramer said.

Retail

A medical worker wears a protective face mask outside Best Buy in Union Square in New York City.

Noam Galai | Getty Images

Cramer said he believes it’s not too late to purchase shares of Best Buy and Bed Bath & Beyond. The former’s digital transformation and tech membership program should allow for additional success, Cramer said, while the latter is another example of a turnaround story.

“They have all the tech you need in terms of shopping and buying,” Cramer said of Bed Bath & Beyond. “But what they really have is something I like to call ‘whimsy,’ something that you could only really find at Costco until recently. I think CEO Mark Tritton will take Bed Bath for a multi-year run.”

Agriculture

Cramer said the “most unknown bull market” out there is agriculture.

“I’ve long been a fan of AGCO, but that Deere conference call last week [was] magnificent,” Cramer said. “I scoffed at Cathie Wood, the best money manager of 2020, when she said she was buying Deere for its tech — I owe her an apology. I apologize. She nailed it. The technology Deere talked about is truly revolutionary; it will save farmers billions of dollars in wages because everything is pretty autonomous. Deere’s still a buy.”

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