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Fly News Breaks for September 21, 2017
AMD, TSLA, NVDA
Sep 21, 2017 | 05:43 EDT
Citi analyst Atif Malik says he received several investor inquiries about Nvidia's (NVDA) relationship with Tesla (TSLA) after CNBC report yesterday that the electric carmaker is working with Global Foundries, AMD's (AMD) manufacturing foundry directly on custom built chips for self-driving cars. The analyst notes that Tesla currently uses Nvidia's Drive PX2 as part of its autopilot self-driving system. The news is not a surprise and Tesla likely wants to be more vertically integrated and examine all options for artificial intelligence hardware, Malik tells investors in a research note. Further, Tesla's current silicon team leader Jim Keller was formerly at AMD, Malik points out. He adds that Tesla at a recent Citi conference indicated it feels great about its relationship with Nvidia. The analyst estimates Tesla is less than 1% of Nvidia's overall sales currently. He keeps a Buy rating on the shares with a $185 price target. Nvidia closed yesterday down 1% to $185.84.
News For NVDA;TSLA;AMD From the Last 2 Days
AMD
Apr 18, 2024 | 07:16 EDT
TD Cowen raised the firm's price target on AMD to $200 from $185 and keeps a Buy rating on the shares. The analyst expect data center strength and "well-known softness elsewhere" when AMD reports Q1 results. The firm sees AMD as generating upwards of $10.00 in earnings per share by 2027, or a nearly 40% annual growth off of 2023. TD increased its MI300 2024 revenue estimate to $4.5B from $4B, saying ramps at several customers will continue to happen more quickly than typical. AMD remains one of its top picks.
TSLA
Apr 18, 2024 | 06:16 EDT
Deutsche Bank analyst Emmanuel Rosner downgraded Tesla to Hold from Buy with a price target of $123, down from $189. The analyst cites the "high likelihood" of Model 2 push-out and the company's change of strategic priority to Robotaxi for the downgrade. Deutsche's Buy rating was predicated on Tesla's next-generation vehicle priced at $25,000 coming late next year, which would allow the company to reaccelerate volume, margins and free cash flow, and potentially come to dominate the Western electric vehicle market, the analyst tells investors in a research note. However, pushing out the Model 2 will create "significant" earnings and free cash flow pressure on 2026 and beyond estimates, and make the future of the company tied to Tesla "cracking the code on full driverless autonomy," which represents a "significant technological, regulatory and operational challenge," says Deutsche Bank. The firm views Tesla's shift to Robotaxi as "thesis-changing," and worries the stock will need to undergo a "potentially painful transition in ownership base," with investors previously focused on electric vehicle volumes and cost advantages potentially "throwing in the towel, and eventually replaced by AI/tech investors with considerably longer time horizon."
TSLA
Apr 17, 2024 | 16:32 EDT
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TSLA
Apr 17, 2024 | 11:59 EDT
Get caught up quickly on the top news and calls moving stocks with these five Top Five lists. 1... To see the rest of the story go to thefly.com. See Story Here
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."