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Fly News Breaks for January 13, 2020
ERIC, NEWR, DDD, GS, NVDA
Jan 13, 2020 | 10:22 EDT
Catch up on today's top five analyst upgrades with this list compiled by The Fly: 1. Nvidia (NVDA) upgraded to Hold from Underperform at Needham with analyst Rajvindra Gill citing his "positive" meeting with the company's management at CES. 2. Goldman Sachs (GS) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at JMP Securities. 3. 3D Systems (DDD) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Craig-Hallum with analyst Greg Palm saying he believes the narrative is changing at 3D Systems. With a focus on shareholder value, coupled with a return to revenue growth and a major uptick in profitability, Palm thinks shares should start to work higher. 4. New Relic (NEWR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS with analyst Jennifer Swanson saying the combination of "solid" product and an attractive total addressable market, estimates implying little improvement in execution, and valuation "30% below where it should be" based on peers creates an attractive opportunity with significant potential for shares to re-rate higher. 5. Ericsson (ERIC) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citi with analyst Amit Harchandani saying he has a more optimistic view on the pace of 5G adoption and increased his forecast for the radio access network market. This list is just a portion of The Fly's full analyst coverage. To see The Fly's full Street Research coverage, click here.
News For NVDA;GS;DDD;NEWR;ERIC From the Last 2 Days
NVDA
Apr 17, 2024 | 05:39 EDT
Barclays analyst Tom O'Malley raised the firm's price target on Broadcom (AVGO) to $1,500 from $1,405 and keeps an Overweight rating on the shares after hosting management for meetings. Broadcom is one of the unique companies that has a comprehensive view of the semis industry while also capable of providing an "intimate look" at the artificial intelligence market via custom silicon, the analyst tells investors in a research note. The firm says management highlighted the company's inroads with the consumer-facing AI world, providing a differing viewpoint versus Nvidia's (NVDA) vision of the world - pointing to a two-part market of consumer and enterprise that could grow to a 50/50 split over time. Barclays came away from the meetings "with a valuable second opinion on the future of AI and a greater appreciation for the company's many ways to win."