Tag Archives: NVIDIA Corp

Polestar unveils $84,000 electric SUV, Polestar 3, to cement U.S. foothold

Polestar 3

Courtesy: Polestar

Swedish EV maker Polestar on Wednesday unveiled a new electric SUV that it’s counting on to expand its sales and presence in the United States.

The new model, called the Polestar 3, is a five-passenger EV that the company describes as a “performance SUV.” It’ll launch with a 111 kilowatt-hour battery and a dual-motor configuration that delivers up to 517 horsepower with an estimated 300 miles of EPA-rated range.

Priced at about $84,000, the car comes loaded with technology, including an Nvidia computer running advanced driver-assist software developed by Polestar’s part owner, Volvo Cars.

Only one version of the Polestar 3 will be available at launch, though less expensive trims are expected to follow. An optional “Pilot Pack” will add a Luminar lidar unit and other sensors needed for autonomous driving, which Polestar expects to make available in the future via an over-the-air update.  

It’s a step up in size, performance, technology and price from the company’s current model, the Polestar 2 crossover, which starts at around $48,000. The Polestar 1 was a limited-production hybrid coupe, now discontinued.

It’s also something of a step up in price from what will likely be its main competitor: Tesla’s Model Y, which costs about $70,000 in similar dual-motor trim. Another potential rival, BMW’s all-electric iX SUV, starts at about $85,000.

The Polestar 3 will be built in China, starting next year, and in the U.S. — at a Volvo Cars factory in South Carolina — starting in mid-2024. Deliveries are expected to begin in the fourth quarter of 2023.

Polestar expects to deliver 50,000 vehicles to customers around the world in 2022. Through September, it had delivered about 30,400, it said last week.

Polestar is a joint venture between Volvo Cars and Chinese automaker Geely, which has owned Volvo Cars since 2010. Polestar went public via a merger with a special purpose acquisition company in June. Its shares have fallen about 58% since.

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Silicon Valley’s next trillion-dollar companies?

Stable Diffusion’s web interface, DreamStudio

Screenshot/Stable Diffusion

Computer programs can now create never-before-seen images in seconds.

Feed one of these programs some words, and it will usually spit out a picture that actually matches the description, no matter how bizarre.

The pictures aren’t perfect. They often feature hands with extra fingers or digits that bend and curve unnaturally. Image generators have issues with text, coming up with nonsensical signs or making up their own alphabet.

But these image-generating programs — which look like toys today — could be the start of a big wave in technology. Technologists call them generative models, or generative AI.

“In the last three months, the words ‘generative AI’ went from, ‘no one even discussed this’ to the buzzword du jour,” said David Beisel, a venture capitalist at NextView Ventures.

In the past year, generative AI has gotten so much better that it’s inspired people to leave their jobs, start new companies and dream about a future where artificial intelligence could power a new generation of tech giants.

The field of artificial intelligence has been having a boom phase for the past half-decade or so, but most of those advancements have been related to making sense of existing data. AI models have quickly grown efficient enough to recognize whether there’s a cat in a photo you just took on your phone and reliable enough to power results from a Google search engine billions of times per day.

But generative AI models can produce something entirely new that wasn’t there before — in other words, they’re creating, not just analyzing.

“The impressive part, even for me, is that it’s able to compose new stuff,” said Boris Dayma, creator of the Craiyon generative AI. “It’s not just creating old images, it’s new things that can be completely different to what it’s seen before.”

Sequoia Capital — historically the most successful venture capital firm in the history of the industry, with early bets on companies like Apple and Google — says in a blog post on its website that “Generative AI has the potential to generate trillions of dollars of economic value.” The VC firm predicts that generative AI could change every industry that requires humans to create original work, from gaming to advertising to law.

In a twist, Sequoia also notes in the post that the message was partially written by GPT-3, a generative AI that produces text.

How generative AI works

Image generation uses techniques from a subset of machine learning called deep learning, which has driven most of the advancements in the field of artificial intelligence since a landmark 2012 paper about image classification ignited renewed interest in the technology.

Deep learning uses models trained on large sets of data until the program understands relationships in that data. Then the model can be used for applications, like identifying if a picture has a dog in it, or translating text.

Image generators work by turning this process on its head. Instead of translating from English to French, for example, they translate an English phrase into an image. They usually have two main parts, one that processes the initial phrase, and the second that turns that data into an image.

The first wave of generative AIs was based on an approach called GAN, which stands for generative adversarial networks. GANs were famously used in a tool that generates photos of people who don’t exist. Essentially, they work by having two AI models compete against each other to better create an image that fits with a goal.

Newer approaches generally use transformers, which were first described in a 2017 Google paper. It’s an emerging technique that can take advantage of bigger datasets that can cost millions of dollars to train.

The first image generator to gain a lot of attention was DALL-E, a program announced in 2021 by OpenAI, a well-funded startup in Silicon Valley. OpenAI released a more powerful version this year.

“With DALL-E 2, that’s really the moment when when sort of we crossed the uncanny valley,” said Christian Cantrell, a developer focusing on generative AI.

Another commonly used AI-based image generator is Craiyon, formerly known as Dall-E Mini, which is available on the web. Users can type in a phrase and see it illustrated in minutes in their browser.

Since launching in July 2021, it’s now generating about 10 million images a day, adding up to 1 billion images that have never existed before, according to Dayma. He’s made Craiyon his full-time job after usage skyrocketed earlier this year. He says he’s focused on using advertising to keep the website free to users because the site’s server costs are high.

A Twitter account dedicated to the weirdest and most creative images on Craiyon has over 1 million followers, and regularly serves up images of increasingly improbable or absurd scenes. For example: An Italian sink with a tap that dispenses marinara sauce or Minions fighting in the Vietnam War.

But the program that has inspired the most tinkering is Stable Diffusion, which was released to the public in August. The code for it is available on GitHub and can be run on computers, not just in the cloud or through a programming interface. That has inspired users to tweak the program’s code for their own purposes, or build on top of it.

For example, Stable Diffusion was integrated into Adobe Photoshop through a plug-in, allowing users to generate backgrounds and other parts of images that they can then directly manipulate inside the application using layers and other Photoshop tools, turning generative AI from something that produces finished images into a tool that can be used by professionals.

“I wanted to meet creative professionals where they were and I wanted to empower them to bring AI into their workflows, not blow up their workflows,” said Cantrell, developer of the plug-in.

Cantrell, who was a 20-year Adobe veteran before leaving his job this year to focus on generative AI, says the plug-in has been downloaded tens of thousands of times. Artists tell him they use it in myriad ways that he couldn’t have anticipated, such as animating Godzilla or creating pictures of Spider-Man in any pose the artist could imagine.

“Usually, you start from inspiration, right? You’re looking at mood boards, those kinds of things,” Cantrell said. “So my initial plan with the first version, let’s get past the blank canvas problem, you type in what you’re thinking, just describe what you’re thinking and then I’ll show you some stuff, right?”

An emerging art to working with generative AIs is how to frame the “prompt,” or string of words that lead to the image. A search engine called Lexica catalogs Stable Diffusion images and the exact string of words that can be used to generate them.

Guides have popped up on Reddit and Discord describing tricks that people have discovered to dial in the kind of picture they want.

Startups, cloud providers, and chip makers could thrive

Image generated by DALL-E with prompt: A cat on sitting on the moon, in the style of Pablo Picasso, detailed, stars

Screenshot/OpenAI

Some investors are looking at generative AI as a potentially transformative platform shift, like the smartphone or the early days of the web. These kinds of shifts greatly expand the total addressable market of people who might be able to use the technology, moving from a few dedicated nerds to business professionals — and eventually everyone else.

“It’s not as though AI hadn’t been around before this — and it wasn’t like we hadn’t had mobile before 2007,” said Beisel, the seed investor. “But it’s like this moment where it just kind of all comes together. That real people, like end-user consumers, can experiment and see something that’s different than it was before.”

Cantrell sees generative machine learning as akin to an even more foundational technology: the database. Originally pioneered by companies like Oracle in the 1970s as a way to store and organize discrete bits of information in clearly delineated rows and columns — think of an enormous Excel spreadsheet, databases have been re-envisioned to store every type of data for every conceivable type of computing application from the web to mobile.

“Machine learning is kind of like databases, where databases were a huge unlock for web apps. Almost every app you or I have ever used in our lives is on top of a database,” Cantrell said. “Nobody cares how the database works, they just know how to use it.”

Michael Dempsey, managing partner at Compound VC, says moments where technologies previously limited to labs break into the mainstream are “very rare” and attract a lot of attention from venture investors, who like to make bets on fields that could be huge. Still, he warns that this moment in generative AI might end up being a “curiosity phase” closer to the peak of a hype cycle. And companies founded during this era could fail because they don’t focus on specific uses that businesses or consumers would pay for.

Others in the field believe that startups pioneering these technologies today could eventually challenge the software giants that currently dominate the artificial intelligence space, including Google, Facebook parent Meta and Microsoft, paving the way for the next generation of tech giants.

“There’s going to be a bunch of trillion-dollar companies — a whole generation of startups who are going to build on this new way of doing technologies,” said Clement Delangue, the CEO of Hugging Face, a developer platform like GitHub that hosts pre-trained models, including those for Craiyon and Stable Diffusion. Its goal is to make AI technology easier for programmers to build on.

Some of these firms are already sporting significant investment.

Hugging Face was valued at $2 billion after raising money earlier this year from investors including Lux Capital and Sequoia; and OpenAI, the most prominent startup in the field, has received over $1 billion in funding from Microsoft and Khosla Ventures.

Meanwhile, Stability AI, the maker of Stable Diffusion, is in talks to raise venture funding at a valuation of as much as $1 billion, according to Forbes. A representative for Stability AI declined to comment.

Cloud providers like Amazon, Microsoft and Google could also benefit because generative AI can be very computationally intensive.

Meta and Google have hired some of the most prominent talent in the field in hopes that advances might be able to be integrated into company products. In September, Meta announced an AI program called “Make-A-Video” that takes the technology one step farther by generating videos, not just images.

“This is pretty amazing progress,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on his Facebook page. “It’s much harder to generate video than photos because beyond correctly generating each pixel, the system also has to predict how they’ll change over time.”

On Wednesday, Google matched Meta and announced and released code for a program called Phenaki that also does text to video, and can generate minutes of footage.

The boom could also bolster chipmakers like Nvidia, AMD and Intel, which make the kind of advanced graphics processors that are ideal for training and deploying AI models.

At a conference last week, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang highlighted generative AI as a key use for the company’s newest chips, saying these kind of programs could soon “revolutionize communications.”

Profitable end uses for Generative AI are currently rare. A lot of today’s excitement revolves around free or low-cost experimentation. For example, some writers have been experimented with using image generators to make images for articles.

One example of Nvidia’s work is the use of a model to generate new 3D images of people, animals, vehicles or furniture that can populate a virtual game world.

Ethical issues

Prompt: “A cat sitting on the moon, in the style of picasso, detailed”

Screenshot/Craiyon

Ultimately, everyone developing generative AI will have to grapple with some of the ethical issues that come up from image generators.

First, there’s the jobs question. Even though many programs require a powerful graphics processor, computer-generated content is still going to be far less expensive than the work of a professional illustrator, which can cost hundreds of dollars per hour.

That could spell trouble for artists, video producers and other people whose job it is to generate creative work. For example, a person whose job is choosing images for a pitch deck or creating marketing materials could be replaced by a computer program very shortly.

“It turns out, machine-learning models are probably going to start being orders of magnitude better and faster and cheaper than that person,” said Compound VC’s Dempsey.

There are also complicated questions around originality and ownership.

Generative AIs are trained on huge amounts of images, and it’s still being debated in the field and in courts whether the creators of the original images have any copyright claims on images generated to be in the original creator’s style.

One artist won an art competition in Colorado using an image largely created by a generative AI called MidJourney, although he said in interviews after he won that he processed the image after choosing it from one of hundreds he generated and then tweaking it in Photoshop.

Some images generated by Stable Diffusion seem to have watermarks, suggesting that a part of the original datasets were copyrighted. Some prompt guides recommend using specific living artists’ names in prompts in order to get better results that mimic the style of that artist.

Last month, Getty Images banned users from uploading generative AI images into its stock image database, because it was concerned about legal challenges around copyright.

Image generators can also be used to create new images of trademarked characters or objects, such as the Minions, Marvel characters or the throne from Game of Thrones.

As image-generating software gets better, it also has the potential to be able to fool users into believing false information or to display images or videos of events that never happened.

Developers also have to grapple with the possibility that models trained on large amounts of data may have biases related to gender, race or culture included in the data, which can lead to the model displaying that bias in its output. For its part, Hugging Face, the model-sharing website, publishes materials such as an ethics newsletter and holds talks about responsible development in the AI field.

“What we’re seeing with these models is one of the short-term and existing challenges is that because they’re probabilistic models, trained on large datasets, they tend to encode a lot of biases,” Delangue said, offering an example of a generative AI drawing a picture of a “software engineer” as a white man.



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Google shuts down Translate service in China

Google pulled its search engine from China in 2010 because of heavy government internet censorship. Since then, Google has had a difficult relationship with the Chinese market. The end of Google Translate in China marks a further retreat by the U.S. technology giant from the world’s second-largest economy.

Budrul Chukrut| SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

Alphabet’s Google on Monday said it shut down the Google Translate service in mainland China, citing low usage.

The move marks the end of one of its last remaining products in the world’s second-largest economy.

The dedicated mainland China website for Google Translate now redirects users to the Hong Kong version of the service. However, this is not accessible from mainland China.

“We are discontinuing Google Translate in mainland China due to low usage,” Google said in a statement.

Google has had a fraught relationship with the Chinese market. The U.S. technology giant pulled its search engine from China in 2010 because of strict government censorship online. Its other services — such as Google Maps and Gmail — are also effectively blocked by the Chinese government.

As a result, local competitors such as search engine Baidu and social media and gaming giant Tencent have come to dominate the Chinese internet landscape in areas from search to translation.

Google has a very limited presence in China these days. Some of its hardware including smartphones are made in China. But the New York Times reported last month that Google has shifted some production of its Pixel smartphones to Vietnam.

The company is also looking to try to get Chinese developers to make apps for its Android operating system globally that will then be available via the Google Play Store, even though that’s blocked in China.

In 2018, Google was exploring re-entering China with its search engine, but ultimately scrapped that project after backlash from employees and politicians.

American businesses have been caught in the middle of continued tensions in the technology sphere between the U.S. and China. Washington continues to fret over China’s potential access to sensitive technologies in areas such as artificial intelligence and semiconductors.

In August, U.S. chipmaker Nvidia disclosed that Washington will restrict the company’s sales of specific components to China.

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Salesforce will keep working on security after Uber hack

Marc Benioff, founder, chairman and co-CEO of Salesforce, speaks at an Economic Club of Washington luncheon in Washington on October 18, 2019.

Nicholas Kamm | AFP | Getty Images

Salesforce co-CEO Marc Benioff said the cloud software company has much more to do in the area of cybersecurity following an attack at Uber involving Salesforce’s Slack chat app.

Uber said on Monday that it believed a hacking group dubbed Lapsus$ was behind a cyberattack last week and noted that other victims of the group’s attacks this year included Cisco, Nvidia, Okta and Samsung. Microsoft also said that Lapsus$ had accessed one of its accounts.

related investing news

Pro Picks: Watch all of Monday’s big stock calls on CNBC

According to Uber, the attacker probably bought a company contractor’s password on the dark web after a malware attack, and the contractor accepted a two-factor authentication request. The attacker downloaded some Slack messages and posted a note to a Slack channel that “many of you saw,” the ride-sharing company said.

Hackers often use so-called social engineering, which involves exploiting trusted individuals rather than just going after hardware and software.

“There’s no finish line when it comes to security and social engineering,” Benioff said during a press conference at Salesforce’s Dreamforce conference in San Francisco on Tuesday. “There’s things that we’re going to need to do to help our customers prevent these kinds of issues.”

Salesforce has seen its systems exploited in the past. In 2007, a hacker reportedly obtained email addresses stored in Salesforce and used them to go after clients of Automatic Data Processing and other Salesforce customers. And in June, Salesforce’s Heroku unit said a hacker had obtained account passwords and some source code.

“We’ve been through almost every possible situation,” Benioff said. “There’s a lot for us to do in perpetuity, and we’re going to just keep working on it.”

Most of the company’s engineering team works on security and trust, said Bret Taylor, Salesforce’s other co-CEO. Taylor said that trust was one of Salesforce’s original values when the company was founded in 1999.

WATCH: Salesforce was born in the 2001 recession, says chairman and co-CEO Marc Benioff

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How Powell and the Fed may react to FedEx warning

CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Friday said that FedEx’s warning of worsening economic conditions suggests the Federal Reserve is doing better in its inflation effort than expected — meaning the central bank could take a step back after its meeting next week.

“If Fed chief Jay Powell watched our interview last night … he might discover that he’s made more progress whipping inflation than he might realize,” Cramer said.

“Maybe Powell will hit us with another 75 basis point hike right here and then say maybe it’s time to take a more measured approach in order to assess how things are going,” he added.

The “Mad Money” host’s comments came after FedEx, a bellwether company for the state of the economy, warned on Thursday of a decline in global shipments and an impending world recession.

Stocks closed down on Friday as Wall Street digested the news, with the major averages recording their fourth losing week in the past five weeks.

Cramer also previewed next week’s slate of earnings. All earnings and revenue estimates are courtesy of FactSet.

Monday: AutoZone

  • Q4 2022 earnings release at 6:55 a.m. ET; conference call at 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $38.5
  • Projected revenue: $5.16 billion

Cramer said he’s interested in knowing if company officials see an end to the car shortage.

Tuesday: Nvidia

  • GTC Financial Analyst Q&A at 1 p.m. ET

Cramer said he’s sticking with Nvidia despite the stock’s recent tumbles. “That’s how Nvidia behaves — you get terrifyingly swift moves down followed by long rallies.”

Wednesday: General Mills, Salesforce, Lennar, KB Homes

General Mills

  • Q1 2023 earnings release at 7 a.m. ET; conference call at 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1
  • Projected revenue: $4.72 billion

The company will likely be a winner because it’s a best-of-breed food stock in an uncertain economic environment, Cramer predicted.

Salesforce

  • Investor Day at 4 p.m. ET 

Cramer said that while he doesn’t expect to hear anything that could motivate him to buy the stock, he’s still bullish long term.

Lennar

  • Q3 2022 earnings release at 4:30 p.m. ET; conference call on Thursday at 11 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $4.86
  • Projected revenue: $8.97 billion

KB Home

  • Q3 2022 earnings release between 4:10 to 4:20 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.66
  • Projected revenue: $1.88 billion

Cramer said he expects both Lennar and KB Home to be soft due to soaring mortgage rates.

Thursday: Costco, FedEx, Qualcomm

Costco

  • Q4 2022 earnings release at 4:15 p.m. ET; conference call at 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $4.17
  • Projected revenue: $70.8 billion

Cramer said he hopes the stock goes down so that the Investing Club can buy more.

FedEx

While the company could reveal more information on its latest quarter, its trajectory likely won’t change since it already reported disappointing results in its preliminary announcement, Cramer said.

Qualcomm

  • Automotive Investor Day at 3 p.m. ET

Cramer said that the company will show off the “new Qualcomm” during the event.

Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Costco, Salesforce, Nvidia and Qualcomm.

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Nio says Nvidia chip restrictions won’t hurt them

Chinese electric car company Nio said it doesn’t expect U.S. restrictions on Nvidia to affect the start-up’s business operations.

Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

Li said Wednesday there are many companies in China with artificial intelligence training chips, and that Nio is evaluating opportunities to work with different companies.

But he said the U.S. restrictions would not affect Nio’s long-term strategy.

Last week, automaker Geely said it won’t be affected by the new restrictions, as did autonomous driving start-ups WeRide and Pony.ai.

Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

Earlier this week, Chinese financial news site Caixin reported that He Xiaopeng, chairman of electric car start-up Xpeng, said the restrictions would bring challenges for all autonomous driving algorithm training on cloud computing platforms.

But he said the company has bought enough of the high-tech products to meet demand for the coming years, according to the report. Caixin cited He’s post on a personal WeChat account, which is similar to a private Facebook news feed post.

Xpeng did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

— CNBC’s Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.

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China’s electric car companies are safe from the U.S. Nvidia chip ban

Nvidia has found success in China by selling automotive chips to the country’s electric car companies. But the U.S. semiconductor giant has been restricted from sending some products to China. So far, electric vehicle makers do not seem to be affected.

Budrul Chukrut | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

BEIJING — U.S. restrictions on Nvidia chip sales to China won’t affect Chinese electric car companies, as they’re using auto systems that don’t include the sanctioned products.

Chipmaker Nvidia’s shares have plunged around 13% this week after the company disclosed new U.S. restrictions on its exports to China, affecting about $400 million in potential sales in the current quarter.

In China, the Nvidia Drive Orin chip has become a core part of electric automakers’ assisted driving tech. These semi-autonomous driving systems are an important selling point for the companies in what has become a fiercely competitive market in China. Some automakers are also using Nvidia’s Xavier chip. Automotive is a relatively small but fast-growing part of Nvidia’s business.

However, the new U.S. restrictions target Nvidia’s A100 and H100 products — and these chips’ sales are part of the company’s far larger data center business. The products are graphics processors that can be used for artificial intelligence.

“There shouldn’t be any restrictions on Xavier and Orin, and Xpeng, Nio and others would continue to ship with those chips,” said Bevin Jacob, partner at Shanghai-based investment and consulting firm Automobility.

Jacob, however, did warn that there could be “close scrutiny” in the future on U.S. firms shipping chips relating to artificial intelligence and autonomous driving to China.

Xpeng declined to comment. Nio, Li Auto, Huawei and Jidu — a new electric vehicle brand backed by Baidu and Geely — did not respond to requests for comment.

The new U.S. rules are designed to reduce the risk of supporting the Chinese military, according to the U.S. government, Nvidia said in its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday. But it’s unclear what prompted this specific policy move or what could drive future ones.

In another positive sign for the chipmaker, the U.S. will allow Nvidia to continue developing its H100 artificial intelligence chip in China, the company said Thursday.

“The U.S. government has authorized exports, reexports, and in-country transfers needed to continue NVIDIA Corporation’s, or the Company’s, development of H100 integrated circuits,” Nvidia said in a filing Thursday.

The company said second-quarter revenue for its automotive business was $220 million, up 45% from a year earlier.

“Our automotive revenue is inflecting, and we expect it to be our next billion-dollar business,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in an earnings call in late August, according to a StreetAccount transcript.

WeRide, an autonomous driving technology start-up, said in a statement that “there is no immediate impact from the ban.”

“We believe both the supply and demand side in the industry will work closely together to handle the constantly changing business environment to safeguard the continuous development of technology,” the company said in a statement to CNBC.

Pony.ai, another autonomous driving start-up, said it is not affected, as did automaker Geely.

— CNBC’s Kif Leswing contributed to this report.

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Hormel Foods, Campbell Soup, Ciena and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Hormel Foods (HRL) – Hormel fell 4.2% in the premarket after issuing a mixed batch of quarterly results and guidance. The food producer’s quarterly revenue beat forecasts, but earnings were slightly short. The same was also true for its full-year outlook as Hormel expects higher operational costs to persist.

Campbell Soup (CPB) – Campbell Soup lost 2.4% in the premarket after its quarterly profit and sales matched Wall Street estimates. Campbell issued an upbeat forecast, saying it expects continued elevated demand for its soup and other food products.

Ciena (CIEN) – Ciena tumbled 11.6% in premarket trading after the networking equipment maker missed estimates on the top and bottom lines for its latest quarter. Ciena is still seeing strong customer demand but its sales continue to be impacted by component shortages.

Lands’ End (LE) – The apparel retailer’s stock slid 8.3% in premarket action in spite of a narrower-than-expected quarterly loss and sales that beat consensus. Lands’ End cut its full-year outlook as global supply chain challenges elevate expenses.

Signet Jewelers (SIG) – Signet jumped 4% in premarket trading after its quarterly profit beat estimates, even amid a bigger-than-expected drop in same-store sales. The company also affirmed its prior full-year guidance.

Okta (OKTA) – Okta skidded 16.1% in the premarket despite better-than-expected quarterly results and an improved outlook. The identity management software company said it was running into unexpected integration issues following its acquisition of rival Auth0 last year.

Pure Storage (PSTG) – Pure Storage rallied 5.7% in premarket trading after the data storage company reported upbeat quarterly earnings amid mixed results from its industry rivals.

Nutanix (NTNX) – Nutanix shares surged 16.3% in premarket action as the cloud computing company beat analyst forecasts for its latest quarter. The company also saw an increase in billings and annual recurring revenue.

Five Below (FIVE) – Five Below gained 3.2% in the premarket despite top and bottom line misses for its latest quarter. The jump in the discount retailer’s shares comes after Chief Financial Officer Kenneth Bull said Five Below is poised to benefit this coming holiday season from consumer efforts to save money in the face of high inflation.

MongoDB (MDB) – MongoDB shares slumped 16.8% in premarket trading after the cloud computing company predicted a wider-than-expected loss for the second half of the year. MongoDB reported a smaller loss in its most recent quarter than analysts anticipated, and revenue beat forecasts as well.

Nvidia (NVDA) – Nvidia slid 4.3% in the premarket after the graphics chip maker warned it expects a sales hit of as much as $400 million from new U.S. licensing requirements. Those rules will impose restrictions on shipments of its most advanced chips to China. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) said some of its chips would be impacted by those new requirements, and its stock fell 2.6% in off-hours trading.

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Stock futures lower following the S&P 500’s third straight losing day

European markets flat as global investors wait for Fed

European markets were muted on Wednesday as new hawkish comments from a U.S. Federal Reserve policymaker kept investors hesitant.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 index was flat in early trade, with telecoms shedding 0.5% while household goods gained 0.2%.

– Elliot Smith

Morgan Stanley says the ‘smart’ EV industry is tech’s next big thing. Here are its top stock picks

Morgan Stanley says tech supply chains are about to experience growth in the next big thing: smart tech features — from EV batteries to chips and self-driving tech.

The investment bank named its top stock picks that’s set to benefit from this trend.

Pro subscribers can read the story here.

— Weizhen Tan

Fed’s Kashkari says his biggest fear is inflation will be more persistent or hotter than anticipated

Federal Reserve bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari says his biggest fear is that markets are underestimating how high inflation will go or how persistent it would be, adding that the Fed might need to be more aggressive than anticipated.

“The big fear I have at the back of my mind is if we’re wrong and markets are wrong, and that this inflation is much more embedded at a much higher level than we appreciate or markets appreciate,” he said, commenting on market expectations of inflation coming back down to 2% within the next two years.

“Then we’re going to have to be more aggressive than I anticipate, probably for longer, to bring inflation back down,” he said, speaking at an event at the University of Pennsylvania.

Kashkari also pointed towards supply-side shocks driving “half to two-thirds” of the nation’s high inflation.

“The more help we get from the supply side, the less the Fed has to do, and the better we’re able to avoid a hard landing,” he said. He did add, however, there’s some evidence that supply chains are beginning to normalize.

Kashkari is already considered the most hawkish of the U.S. central bank’s 19 policymakers, and expects the Fed to need to lift its policy rate — now at a target range of 2.25% to 2.5% — another two full percentage points by the end of next year.

–Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Citi names the energy stock with the ‘strongest balance sheet’

The energy sector has been a big winner in this year’s volatile stock market.

But one stock still stands out for its “strongest balance sheet,” according to Citi. It also delivered a set of second-quarter earnings that handily beat its major listed peers.

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— Zavier Ong

Hawkish Fed?

Many are expecting hawkish talk from Fed officials later this week, which could spark a sell-off in risk assets. Some fear that the central bank’s continuous and aggressive tightening will tip a slowing economy into a recession.

“I fully expect Fed Chair Jay Powell and other Fed officials to remain hawkish,” said Invesco chief global market strategist Kristina Hooper, in an e-mail. “Aggressive rhetoric would be very likely to send stocks down globally in the near term, as markets are walking on eggshells, so asset owners should be prepared for short-term volatility.”

— Yun Li

Nordstrom shares tumble

Shares of Nordstrom dropped more than 13% in extended trading after the company slashed its financial forecast for the full year. Nordstrom said it’s challenged by excess inventory as well as a slowdown in demand.

“Customer traffic and demand decelerated significantly beginning in late June, predominantly at Nordstrom Rack,” CEO Erik Nordstrom said in a press release.

The company did report fiscal second-quarter earnings and sales ahead of analysts’ estimates, however.

— Yun Li

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This week is all about Powell, but don’t overlook any great earnings reports

Wall Street is collectively bracing for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech later this week, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Monday after the major U.S. stock indexes tumbled.

Powell’s address — set for 10 a.m. ET Friday as part of the Fed’s annual Jackson Hole symposium — is by far the biggest event on the calendar, according to the “Mad Money” host. The reason is investors are trying to gauge how hawkish the U.S. central bank may be in the coming months, and the Fed chief’s commentary is expected to offer clues on the matter.

While Friday’s speech is highly important to the market, Cramer stressed that he’s not ignoring corporate earnings and the economic insights they offer. He said reports last week from the likes of Cisco Systems and Target have been far better than feared, and he’s keeping his eye on many more this week.

Here is what Cramer is watching, with all earnings and revenue estimates compiled by FactSet:

Tuesday: Macy’s, Dick’s Sporting Goods, Toll Brothers and Intuit

Macy’s

  • Q2 earnings before the bell; conference call scheduled for 8 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: 86 cents
  • Projected sales: $5.49 billion

Dick’s Sporting Goods

  • Q2 earnings before the open; conference call scheduled for 10 a.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: $3.59
  • Projected revenue: $3.07 billion

Toll Brothers

  • Q3 earnings release after the close; conference call set for 8:30 a.m. ET Wednesday
  • Projected EPS: $2.30
  • Projected revenue: $2.51 billion

“I bet Macy’s has a decent story to tell about the right clothes at the right time. Dick’s is selling all the best sporting goods at good prices, and Toll Brothers is only making homes that it can reap huge profits on. All three should have gotten much better on that supply chain front, too, versus when they spoke last,” Cramer said.

Intuit

  • Q4 earnings release after the close; conference call at 4:30 p.m. ET Tuesday
  • Projected EPS: 98 cents
  • Projected sales $2.34 billion

Cramer said he’s expecting a “terrific quarter” from Intuit, driven by “good growth in tax returns and also all the things they do for small business.”

Wednesday: Nvidia, Salesforce, Snowflake, Splunk and Box

Nvidia

  • Q2 earnings after the bell; conference call slated for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 50 cents
  • Projected sales: $6.7 billion

Salesforce

  • Q2 earnings after the close; conference call set for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.03
  • Projected revenue: $7.69 billion

“Nvidia preannounced and missed not that long ago versus an already-lowered forecast. The same thing could happen again — rough time for these chips,” said Cramer, whose Charitable Trust owns both Nvidia and Salesforce shares. “I think Salesforce will complain about the strong dollar again, but don’t forget that it does a ton of business at Dreamforce and that conference is back in person this September.”

Snowflake

  • Q2 2023 earnings release after the close; conference call set for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 7 cents
  • Projected revenue: $721 million

Splunk

  • Q2 2023 earnings after the bell; conference call scheduled for 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: loss of 36 cents
  • Projected sales: $749 million

Box

  • Q2 2023 earnings after the close; conference call set for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 27 cents
  • Projected revenue: $245 million

“There are lots of other software companies reporting that people are worried about, like Snowflake, Splunk and Box. I think they’re doing fine, but it just might not matter because of this general malaise” in the market, Cramer said.

Thursday: Dollar General, Dollar Tree, Ulta Beauty, Gap, Affirm, Dell and Workday

Dollar General

  • Q2 earnings before the open; conference call set for 10 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $2.94
  • Projected sales: $9.4 billion

Dollar Tree

  • Q2 earnings before the bell; conference call slated for 9 a.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.60
  • Projected revenue: $6.79 billion

Dollar General and Dollar Tree should “please the market to no end because investors have decided that we’re headed into a recession and the hedge fund playbook says you have to own one or both of these two stocks” in that situation, Cramer said. “I don’t like mindlessly following the playbook, but it’s not wrong here. My preferred one, by the way, is Dollar General if they have the merchandise.”

Ulta Beauty

  • Q2 earnings release after the close; conference call set for 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $4.95
  • Projected sales: $2.21 billion

“Both Estee Lauder and Target, which has embedded Ultas [in some stores], raved about how the chain’s doing. I think now we’re in a mask-off world, which is great for skin care. Ulta will shine,” Cramer said.

Gap Inc.

  • Q2 earnings after the bell; conference call scheduled for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: Loss of 5 cents
  • Projected sales: $3.82 billion

Affirm

  • Q4 earnings after the close; conference call set for 5 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: Loss of 62 cents
  • Projected revenue: $355 million

Dell Technologies

  • Q2 2023 earnings release after the bell; conference call scheduled for 5:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: $1.79
  • Projected sales: $26.87 billion

Gap, Affirm and Dell all fall into what Cramer called the “troublesome” reports category for their own reasons.

“Gap could have still one more difficult quarter,” he said. “I’m not sure how good Affirm will be given how the market has turned against buy now, pay later. I think CEO Max Levchin will try to spin a good yarn, but it’s an awfully hard tape to pull that off in. Then there’s Dell. I bet it’s gonna report a solid number that will actually help tech, something we very well need by the time we get to [Thursday].”

Workday

  • Q2 2023 earnings after the close; conference call set for 4:30 p.m. ET
  • Projected EPS: 79 cents
  • Projected sales: $1.52 billion

“I think Workday had a good quarter, and maybe because it’s on the eve of Jackson Hole, it will be as irrelevant as [Monday’s] sell-off,” Cramer said.

Friday: Powell speech

“Wall Street is starting to have less confidence in the idea that the Fed will soon pivot to a more dovish posture. I think Jay Powell can afford to be a little less ruthless with the rate hikes here, but the market clearly disagrees,” Cramer said. “We’ll find out who’s right on Friday — we need to slog through the whole week to get to the Fed’s guillotine. But even if the guillotine blade falls, we can ride through the turbulence and do some buying on the way down after this incredibly difficult two-day sell-off.”

Disclosure: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of NVDA, CRM and CSCO.

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