Tag Archives: Stock markets

European markets open to close, data, earnings and news

Dollar index marks 110, hits highest level since 2002

The U.S. dollar index hit 110.086 in Asia’s morning trade, reaching a new two-decade high.

The Japanese yen weakened further to 140.3 after touching a 24-year low last week. The Korean won was at 1,370.87 against the greenback, a level not seen since April 2009.

CNBC Pro: This tech stock is up nearly 20% over the past year — and one pro says it’s got further to go

Tech stocks have endured a difficult year so far, with some of the biggest names deep in the red.

But one cybersecurity firm has stood out for its relative resilience, and market veteran Nancy Tengler believes the stock is just getting started.

Tengler, who is CEO and chief investment officer of Laffer Tengler Investments, said her bullishness on the firm might be construed as a “controversial,” but argued that it is in fact a safer bet within the tech space.

Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Katrina Bishop

Caixin services PMI show Chinese services activity grew in August

China’s Caixin Services Purchasing Managers’ Index for August came in at 55.0, compared with July’s print of 55.5.

The official non-manufacturing PMI for August is 52.6.

PMI readings are sequential and represent month-on-month expansion or contraction, where the 50-point mark means no change from the month before.

— Abigail Ng

CNBC Pro: Mohamed El-Erian reveals where to invest right now

With stock and bond valuations falling concurrently, investors should be looking to get out of “distorted markets,” according to Mohamed El-Erian, chief economic adviser to Allianz.

“There was a time when all asset prices went up — stocks and bonds — and we forgot about correlations. Why care about correlations when you’re being paid for holding both risk assets and risk mitigating assets? It’s a lovely world,” he told CNBC’s Steve Sedgwick Friday.

“”But the first half taught us, and what we have again learned since the middle of August, [is] that they can both go down at the same time.”

Investors seeking alternatives have a couple of options, El-Erian says.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Elliot Smith and Katrina Bishop

European markets: Here are the opening calls

European stocks are expected to open cautiously higher on Wednesday with the U.K.’s FTSE index seen 18 points higher at 7,560, Germany’s DAX 33 points higher at 13,944, France’s CAC 40 up 18 points at 6,616 and Italy’s FTSE MIB up 42 points at 23,029, according to data from IG.

Data releases include preliminary euro zone unemployment data for the second quarter as well as second quarter gross domestic product. The latest U.K. inflation numbers for July will be released as well as preliminary second quarter Dutch GDP.

Earnings come from Uniper, Carlsberg, Persimmon, Balfour Beatty, BAT and National Grid.

Read original article here

What to watch next in the U.S.-China ADR audit dispute

The U.S. and China have taken a significant first step toward keeping U.S.-listed Chinese stocks like Alibaba from being forced off U.S. stock exchanges.

Holger Gogolin | iStock | Getty Images

BEIJING — The U.S. and China recently took a significant first step toward keeping U.S.-listed Chinese stocks like Alibaba from being forced off U.S. stock exchanges.

What needs to happen next is a smooth on-ground inspection in China by the U.S. with adequate support from Chinese authorities, analysts said.

“Many implementation details probably can only be figured out by the auditing firms and the [Ministry of Finance] — together with [the China Securities Regulatory Commission] — through real-case auditing trials under this unprecedented agreement,” said Winston Ma, adjunct professor of law at New York University.

The U.S. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board said its inspectors are set to arrive in Hong Kong in mid-September, shortly after which “all audit work papers requested by the PCAOB must be made available to them.”

Audit work papers differ from the actual information on companies gathered by accounting firms.

The work papers record the audit procedure, tests, gathered information and conclusions about the review, according to the PCAOB website. It is not clear what level of highly sensitive information, if any, would be included in the work papers.

The ability of the U.S. to inspect those work papers for Chinese companies listed in the U.S. has been a years-long dispute. U.S. political and legal developments in the last two years have sped up the threat that the Chinese companies might need to delist from U.S. stock exchanges.

A turning point came in late August when the PCAOB and China Securities Regulatory Commission signed a cooperation agreement that laid the regulatory basis for allowing U.S. inspections of audit firms within China’s borders.

That’s according to statements from both government entities, which also said China’s Ministry of Finance signed the deal.

“I see this as a big ‘progress,’ meaning that both sides were willing to take steps to move this forward,” said Stephanie Tang, head of private equity for Greater China and partner at Hogan Lovells.

“The subject or the audience of this PCAOB investigation would be the audit firms,” she said, emphasizing she is not an accountant.

Need for more implementation clarity

China’s registered accounting firms are overseen by the the Ministry of Finance, making it the leader on the Chinese side of next steps, said Ming Liao, founding partner of Beijing-based Prospect Avenue Capital.

However, there’s uncertainty around implementation of the agreement as it only established a framework, analysts said.

“Our accounting firms still don’t know how to proceed,” said Peter Tsui, president of the Hong Kong-based Association of Chinese Internal Auditors. That’s according to a CNBC translation of his Mandarin-language remarks Thursday.

Stock picks and investing trends from CNBC Pro:

He said questions remain over what information the firms should share in order to remain compliant with Chinese regulation.

“Give [us] some guidelines,” Tsui said.

Tsui said the inspections should go smoothly if it’s just a matter of accountants on both sides, and there is no political interference on the U.S. side. He said the big four accounting firms — KPMG, PwC, Deloitte and EY — are members of the association.

China’s Ministry of Finance has yet to release a public statement on the audit cooperation agreement. The ministry did not immediately respond to a CNBC request for comment.

One development Prospect Avenue Capital’s Liao is watching is whether U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping meet in-person this fall for the first time under the Biden administration. That could speed up a final agreement on the audit dispute, he said.

“In the end, resolving the audit work paper problem relies on political interaction between China and the U.S.,” Liao said in Chinese, according to a CNBC translation. “With trust, this problem can very easily be resolved.”

A decision by the year’s end

The PCAOB said it will make a determination in December on whether China was still obstructing access to audit information.

U.S. regulators will likely “start to know in October or November” what determination the PCAOB will make on whether U.S.-listed Chinese companies might be headed for delisting, Gary Gensler, chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, told CNBC’s David Faber in late August.

Alibaba and many other U.S.-listed Chinese companies have started in the last few years to issue shares in Hong Kong — partly seen as a way to hedge against a potential delisting from U.S. stock exchanges. Since Chinese ride-hailing company Didi’s U.S. IPO in the summer of 2021, Beijing has also increased its scrutiny of Chinese companies wanting to list overseas.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

The combined political uncertainty has slowed the flow of Chinese IPOs in the U.S., especially of larger companies.

Since July 1, 2021, 16 Chinese companies have listed in the U.S., excluding special-purpose acquisition companies, according to Renaissance Capital. Back in 2020, 30 China-based companies had listed in the U.S., the firm said then.

By value, the five largest U.S. institutional holdings of U.S.-listed Chinese stocks are: Alibaba, JD.com, Pinduoduo, NetEase and Baidu. That’s according to Morgan Stanley research dated Aug. 26.

Read original article here

Lululemon, Broadcom, Starbucks and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Lululemon (LULU) – Lululemon rallied 9.5% in the premarket after reporting better-than-expected quarterly results and issuing an upbeat outlook. The athletic apparel and leisurewear maker said it continues to see strong sales momentum.

Broadcom (AVGO) – Broadcom rose 2% in premarket trading after quarterly earnings and revenue exceeded analyst forecasts. The chip maker also issued a stronger-than-expected revenue forecast for the current quarter. CEO Hock Tan said Broadcom expected strong demand across all its end markets to continue this quarter.

Starbucks (SBUX) – Starbucks named Laxman Narasimhan as its new chief executive officer. Narasimhan was most recently CEO of Lysol and Enfamil maker Reckitt Benckiser, and has served in executive positions at PepsiCo. Narasimhan will join Starbucks on October 1 as incoming CEO and take over for interim CEO Howard Schultz in April 2023.

Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) – The housewares retailer’s stock slid 5.5% in premarket trading, setting it up for a possible fourth straight negative session. Bed Bath & Beyond – popular among “meme stock” traders – unveiled a number of steps on Wednesday designed to shore up its finances.

PagerDuty (PD) – PagerDuty shares jumped 5.8% in premarket action following a better-than-expected quarterly report and strong guidance. The operations management software company saw a 7.1% increase in total paid customers compared with a year earlier and a 37.5% surge in the number of customers providing annual recurring revenue exceeding $100,000.

Shell (SHEL) – Shell CEO Ben van Beurden is preparing to step down next year, after nearly a decade in that job, according to two company sources who spoke to Reuters. The sources say the energy producer has identified four candidates to succeed van Beurden. Shell gained 1.4% in off-hours trading.

Beyond Meat (BYND) – Investment firm Baillie Gifford reported a 6.61% stake in the maker of plant-based meat alternatives as of August 31, compared with a 13.38% stake on December 31, 2021. Beyond Meat rose 1% in the premarket.

Rocket Lab USA (RKLB) – The space rocket company’s stock added 2.9% in premarket action after successfully test firing a reused Rutherford first stage engine for the first time. The Rutherford engine is a liquid propellant rocket engine designed and manufactured by Rocket Lab.

Read original article here

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.

Read original article here

Stock futures flat ahead of key August jobs report due Friday

U.S. stock futures were flat Friday morning as investors await a key jobs report for August due Friday that will give more information about the state of the economy.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 63 points, or 0.2%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures both slipped 0.17% lower. Shares of retailer Lululemon jumped nearly 10% in late trading after reporting quarterly results that beat Wall Street’s expectations.

Earlier Thursday, the Dow and the S&P 500 ended the day higher, snapping four days of losses to kick off the first trading day of September. The Nasdaq Composite slipped, posting its first five-day losing streak since February, weighed down by falling semiconductor stocks.

All three major averages are set to end the week lower after slumping in the last days of August, on course to notch their third negative week in a row. Stocks have been weighed down by hawkish comments from Federal Reserve officials signaling that interest rate hikes aren’t going away anytime soon. Now, traders are watching to see if stocks will retest the June lows, especially since September is historically a poor month for the market.

“A half a day rally right before we have a jobs number tomorrow could just be simply that people didn’t want to be as short as they were over the last couple of days,” said Brian Kelly, founder of BKCM LLC, on CNBC’s “Fast Money.”

Read original article here

Miner Piedmont unveils plans for new lithium refining plant in push for domestic EV supply chains

Piedmont Lithium announced Thursday that it plans to build a new lithium refining plant in Tennessee, as the U.S. rushes to develop domestic supply chains for raw materials critical to the energy transition.

Thursday’s announcement comes on the heels of the largest climate funding package in U.S. history, which President Joe Biden signed into law in August. The package includes incentives to jumpstart domestic supply chains for electric vehicle batteries, although Piedmont said plans for the plant were in development prior to the Inflation Reduction Act.

Now that the company has selected the site in McMinn County, it will begin the process of securing the necessary permits, which can be lengthy. Still, the company is targeting construction beginning in 2023, with production starting in 2025.

When fully operational, the plant will produce 30,000 metric tons of lithium per year, making it the largest lithium refining facility in the U.S, according to the company. Piedmont said it will churn out enough material to supply roughly 500,000 electric vehicles annually.

Piedmont currently has no active mines in the U.S., so once the facility is up and running it will process spodumene concentrate from Piedmont’s international operations in Quebec and Ghana.

Eventually, the company hopes to use lithium that’s mined domestically. The company has plans for a mine as well as another plant in North Carolina, although CEO Keith Phillips said it’s challenging from a permitting perspective, since both the mine and the plant are on the same site.

Albemarle runs the only meaningful lithium mine in the U.S., which is in Silver Peak, Nevada. Additionally, only 2.1% of lithium is refined in the U.S., according to data from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. China dominates the industry, refining more than half of global lithium supply.

Should Piedmont’s North Carolina mine and plant secure the required permits, however, the company forecasts its lithium output doubling, with the company supplying one million electric vehicles per year.

Piedmont Lithium’s announcement also comes as automakers are rushing towards vast electric vehicle fleets. By some forecasts, there simply won’t be enough lithium to meet demand in the foreseeable future. The International Energy Agency estimates that in order to meet the goals set forth in the Paris Agreement, lithium demand will grow by over 40 times by 2040.

Building new mines takes years. They’re capital intensive and can face permitting challenges. There are also those opposed to new mines, who argue that the world should instead focus on existing production.

Piedmont’s Phillips noted that in just the last year $33 billion has been announced for electric vehicle battery manufacturing plants in the U.S, which would require 500,000 metric tons of lithium annually.

“That is more than all the lithium hydroxide produced in the world currently, so clearly the industry is facing a critical resource shortage,” he told CNBC. “Anyone who can produce material to supply this market – especially domestically in the United States – will be in a favored position.”

Piedmont plans to invest around $600 million developing the Tennessee facility.

Read original article here

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.

Read original article here

Stock futures fall after Wall Street closed out August with losses

U.S. stock futures fell on Thursday morning after the major averages closed out August with losses and investors considered the Federal Reserve’s fight against inflation.

Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell by 140 points, or 0.44%. S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures declined 0.71% and 1.19%, respectively.

Those moves follow four straight days of losses in the major averages. On the final day of August, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slid nearly 0.9%. The S&P 500 lost about 0.8%, and the Nasdaq Composite fell roughly 0.6%.

The Dow closed the month down about 4.1%, while the S&P and Nasdaq recorded losses of 4.2% and 4.6%, respectively.

Investors are debating whether stocks will again challenge the June lows in September, a historically poor month for markets, after weighing recent hawkish comments from Fed officials who show no signs of easing up on interest rate hikes.

On Wednesday, Cleveland Federal Reserve President Loretta Mester said she expects interest rates to rise above 4% before the central bank can start pulling back. The current fed funds rate is 2.25%-2.50.

“If we retest the lows, I think it happens in September,” SoFi’s Liz Young said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime.”

However, she added, “I think in order to do so, something would have to get materially worse than it was on June 16,” when stocks bottomed, such as earnings revisions that come in worse than investors are expecting.

Read original article here

S&P 500 is flat as Wall Street tries to avoid a fourth day of losses

Stocks wavered on Wednesday as Wall Street struggled to snap a three-day losing streak and investors continued to digest inflation-fighting comments from Federal Reserve officials.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average ticked up by 2 points, churning at the flat line. The S&P 500 moved higher by 0.1% and the Nasdaq Composite added 0.2%.

The moves put the Dow and S&P about 7% and 10%, respectively, above their mid-June lows. The Nasdaq is now more than 12% above its summer low.

What began as a strong month for the three major averages is on pace to end on a weaker note. The Dow and S&P 500 are currently on pace to finish August about 3% lower. The Nasdaq is set to end down about 4%.

Investors had been debating for weeks whether the economy is in a recession or heading toward one, and many thought an economic downturn would give the Fed reason to ease up on its rate hiking plan. Powell reiterated in his Jackson Hole speech Friday, however, that the central bank is committed to get inflation under control and will continue to raise rates even in a recessionary environment.

“Markets were counting on limited rate increases and quick rate cuts,” said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial Network. “The speech was clear, however, that the increases will be larger, and the cuts more delayed, than anyone expected.”

Stocks have been selling off heavily since Friday. On top of Powell’s comments, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester said Wednesday that she sees benchmark interest rates rising above 4% by early next year. On Tuesday, New York Fed President John Williams called for “somewhat restrictive policy to slow demand.”

As jarring as the latest rout may be for investors, there may be some positive signs emerging.

“This volatility is really healthy and constructive,” Jeff Kilburg, chief investment officer of Sanctuary Wealth, told CNBC. “It doesn’t feel good, and the velocity that the Fed has injected into this de-risking process has taken the breath away of a lot of investors but… There are a lot of signs that are more optimistic than negative” – like the rise in Treasury yields, he said.

“For the market to go from 3,600 to 4,300 in 19 trading sessions, that is not sustainable,” he added. “Seeing the market come back and the S&P 500 filling volume around 4,000 is really constructive and allows us to have a foundation taking another leg higher  with the backdrop of earnings season which is better than expected and the consumer sentiment slowly upticking.”

Read original article here

Baidu claims its robotaxis have grabbed 10% of a ride-hailing market

Chinese tech giant Baidu’s robotaxis have grabbed about 10% of the ride-hailing market in a Beijing suburb, the company said Tuesday

Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

BEIJING — In less than two years, Chinese tech giant Baidu’s robotaxis have grabbed about 10% of the ride-hailing market in a suburb of Beijing city, the company said during an earnings call Tuesday.

Baidu’s U.S.-traded shares fell 6.5% overnight to $137.69 each. Shares are down by more than 7% for the year so far.

The Chinese company said it has more than 100 robotaxis operating in the suburb, with each vehicle running more than 20 trips a day on average. Local rules require human staff to sit in the vehicle with passengers.

In Beijing, Baidu cannot yet operate its robotaxi business on public roads in the central part of the city. According to information from the company, the only part of Beijing where Baidu can charge fares for rides on public roads is in a suburb called Yizhuang.

The region is roughly a 30-minute drive south from the center of China’s capital city. The area is home to many corporations including e-commerce giant JD.com’s headquarters.

Baidu began offering free robotaxi rides in Yizhuang in October 2020, and received approval to collect fares in November 2021.

However, CNBC checks of the Baidu robotaxi app have showed rides remain heavily subsidized, even as of Wednesday.

A half-hour trip from JD.com’s headquarters to a residential area within Yizhuang displayed a fare of 5.36 yuan (79 cents) — and a 48.24 yuan discount.

A check of start-up Pony.ai’s robotaxi app showed the fare for the same route was completely subsidized. Pony.ai received approval to charge fares for its robotaxis in Yizhuang around the same time that Baidu did.

Read more about China from CNBC Pro

Baidu’s robotaxi business, branded Apollo Go, operates in more than ten cities in China. Apollo Go can charge fares in seven of those cities, the company said.

In Tuesday’s earnings release, Baidu said it ran 287,000 public robotaxi rides in the second quarter, up 46% from the first quarter.

Of that second quarter total, robotaxi rides in Yizhuang accounted for more than 60%, according to CNBC’s calculations.

Read original article here