SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Strategies & Market Trends : Technical analysis for shorts & longs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)9/24/2020 9:26:22 PM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
Home Industries Retail/Wholesale

Costco clears $4 billion in earnings for first time amid record growth, but the stock is fallingLast Updated: Sept. 24, 2020 at 5:40 p.m. ETFirst Published: Sept. 24, 2020 at 4:32 p.m. ET

By

Jeremy C. Owens

30

Strongest same-store sales growth in records dating back to 2000 push Costco to record profit for fiscal year

Email iconFacebook iconTwitter iconLinkedin iconFlipboard iconPrint iconResize icon

Referenced Symbols

COST

+0.68%

SPX

+0.29%

Costco Wholesale Corp. stopped handing out samples due to COVID-19, though some unmanned samples of dry or packaged goods have returned. GETTY IMAGES

Costco Wholesale Corp. brought in $4 billion in profit for the first time in a fiscal year, thanks to a big boost from shoppers stocking up during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Costco COST, +0.68% revealed Thursday that net revenue increased 12.5% in its fiscal fourth quarter, the best gain in nearly three years, thanks to same-store sales growing at their fastest pace this millennium. Costco has steadily experienced stronger growth in recent months as the COVID-19 pandemic has continued, as mask-wearing customers became more comfortable with in-store shopping yet still wanted to stock up on supplies for the long-term.

Advertisement

“As people are spending less on travel, air and hotel and dining out, they seem to have redirected at least some of those dollars to categories like lawn and garden, furniture, mattresses, exercise equipment, bicycles, housewares, cookware, domestics and the like,” Chief Financial Officer Richard Galanti said in a conference call Thursday.

Costco reported fiscal fourth-quarter earnings of $1.39 billion, or $3.13 a share, on sales of $53.4 billion, up 12.5% from $47.5 billion a year ago. Analysts on average expected adjusted earnings of $2.80 a share on sales of $52.1 billion, with sales expectations rising since Costco reported strong preliminary August sales earlier this month.

Same-store sales for Costco grew 11.4% in the fourth quarter, the largest year-over-year gain in FactSet records that date to 2000, and more than double the growth of the previous quarter. For the full year, same-store sales grew 9.2%, the highest growth since 2004.

For the full fiscal year, Costco revenue grew 9.3% to $163.2 billion from $152.7 billion, while net income also grew 9.3% to $4 billion from $3.66 billion.

“Costco’s consistent revenue growth across merchandise categories reinforces our view that the membership model is arguably the most attractive business model in hardline retail today,” Raymond James analysts said earlier this month in maintaining an outperform rating and $355 price target on the stock.

Costco shares dipped more than 2% in after-hours trading Thursday following the release of the report, after closing the regular session with a 0.7% gain at $347. The stock has returned 18.7% so far this year, as the S&P 500 index SPX, +0.29% has returned 1.6%.



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)10/5/2020 10:52:31 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
AT&T's 7% dividend yield makes stock a 'value trap,' analyst says in downgradePublished: Oct. 5, 2020 at 8:33 a.m. ET

By

Emily Bary

2

Email iconFacebook iconTwitter iconLinkedin iconFlipboard iconPrint iconResize icon

Referenced Symbols

T

-0.07%

SPX

1.41%

AT&T Inc. shares T, -0.07% are off 0.5% in premarket trading Monday after KeyBanc Capital Markets analyst Brandon Nispel downgraded the stock to underweight from sector weight. He sees signs of "deterioration" for AT&T's DirecTV business during August and also sees indications that the company's wireless postpaid average revenue per user has been falling on a month-over-month basis. Nispel previously expected DirecTV's subscriber losses to improve but now projects that they will be worse in the third quarter. "More broadly, we see [AT&T] as secularly and competitively challenged where 2020/2021 expectations high across most segments," he wrote in a note to clients. Nispel argued that there are "few positive catalysts for [AT&T] outside of asset sales" and that the company's roughly 7% dividend yield "makes AT&T a value trap." AT&T shares have declined 27% so far this year as the S&P 500 SPX, 1.41% has added 3.6%.

marketwatch.com



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)10/21/2020 2:31:53 PM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
Holiday shoppers are crossing themselves off the gift list.

cnbc.com

Pullback in spending less than I would expect but still a significant amount of impact given that consumers account for 70 percent of the economy.



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)12/18/2020 4:39:35 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
Batteries that could make fossil fuels obsolete:

bbc.com

»»»»»»»»»

Headline is a bit overblown but the stat that most traditional power generation plants will reach end of operational life in 2035 is the more interesting bit of info.

Depending on what the replacement is a massive infrastructure, national scale build is coming.

Still could be fusion instead of solar and wind. Pick your bet?



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)1/8/2021 4:00:29 PM
From: Johnny Canuck1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Return to Sender

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
AUTOS

Global semiconductor shortage causes Ford and Nissan to cut vehicle production

PUBLISHED FRI, JAN 8 20213:49 PM EST

Michael Wayland@MIKEWAYLAND

SHAREShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email

KEY POINTS

Ford and Nissan on Friday confirmed they are trimming vehicle production due to a shortage of semiconductorsThe production disruptions highlight a growing concern for the global automotive industry in 2021.Semiconductors are extremely important components in new vehicles.

A Ford Escape sports utility vehicle (SUV) undergoes final inspection during production at the Ford Motor Co. assembly plant in Louisville, Kentucky, U.S., on Tuesday, April 28, 2015.

Luke Sharrett | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Ford Motor and Nissan Motor on Friday confirmed they are cutting vehicle production at plants in the U.S. and Japan due to a shortage of semiconductors, highlighting a growing concern for the global automotive industry in 2021.

Ford will idle an SUV plant in Kentucky next week, while Nissan is reducing production at a plant in Japan. Both companies said they are working closely with suppliers to resolve and monitor the situation for any additional impacts.

Automakers and parts suppliers began warning of a semiconductor shortage late last year after demand for vehicles was increasing faster than expected following a two-month shutdown of production plants due to the coronavirus pandemic.

Semiconductors are extremely important components of new vehicles for everything from infotainment systems to other more traditional parts such as power steering. They’re also readily used in consumer electronics.

German automaker Volkswagen last month said it adjusted production at facilities in China, North America and Europe due to a shortage in the supply of semiconductors, according to Reuters. America’s largest automaker, General Motors, has not had to cut output but the company is closely monitoring the situation, according to spokesman David Barnas.

WATCH NOW

VIDEO02:50

Wedbush Securities discusses the outlook for Asian chipmakers

“We are aware of the increased demand for semiconductor microchips as the auto industry continues its global recovery,” he said in an emailed statement. “Our supply chain organization is working closely with our supply base to find solutions for our suppliers’ semiconductor requirements and to mitigate impacts on GM production.”

Ford’s impacted plant, the Louisville Assembly Plant, builds the Ford Escape and Lincoln Corsair SUVs, and employs about 3,900 hourly workers. It will move up a previously planned weeklong shutdown later in the year to next week due to the shortage, according to Ford spokeswoman Kelli Felker.

“We are working closely with suppliers to address potential production constraints tied to the global semiconductor shortage,” she said in an emailed statement.

The affected Nissan facility, the Oppama Plant in Japan, builds the Note, a subcompact car that’s not sold in the U.S. Lloryn Love-Carter, a Nissan spokeswoman in the U.S., said the company’s domestic production has not been impacted by the semiconductor shortage.

“We are working closely with our supplier partners to monitor the situation and assess any potential impact on our North America operations,” she said in an emailed statement.

cnbc.com



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)2/10/2021 7:11:41 PM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
TECH

Why there’s a chip shortage that’s hurting everything from the PlayStation 5 to the Chevy Malibu

PUBLISHED WED, FEB 10 20214:35 PM ESTUPDATED WED, FEB 10 20214:45 PM EST

Kif Leswing@KIFLESWING

SHAREShare Article via FacebookShare Article via TwitterShare Article via LinkedInShare Article via Email

KEY POINTS

A chip shortage that started in a surge in demand for personal computers and other electronics for work or school from home during the pandemic now threatens to snarl car production around the world.Semiconductors are in short supply because of big demand for electronics, shifting business models which include outsourcing production, and effects from former President Donald Trump’s trade war.Chips are likely to remain in short supply in coming months as demand remains higher than ever.

A close up image of a CPU socket and motherboard laying on the table.

Narumon Bowonkitwanchai | Moment | Getty Images

A chip shortage that started as consumers stocked up on personal computers and other electronics during the Covid-19 pandemic now threatens to snarl car production around the world.

On Tuesday, GM said that it would extend production cuts in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico until the middle of March. They join a long list of major automakers, including Ford, Honda and Fiat Chrysler, which have warned investors or slowed vehicle production because of the chip shortage.

But it’s not just the automotive industry that’s struggling to get enough semiconductors to build their products. AMD and Qualcomm, which sell chips to most of the top electronics firms, have noted the shortage in recent weeks. Sony blamed the chip shortage for why it’s so hard to get a PlayStation 5 game console.

Chips are likely to remain in short supply in coming months as demand remains higher than ever. The Semiconductor Industry Association said in December that global chip sales would grow 8.4% in 2021 from 2020's total of $433 billion. That’s up from 5.1% growth between 2019 and 2020 -- a notable jump, given how large the absolute numbers are.

Semiconductors are in short supply because of strong demand for electronics, shifting business models in the semiconductor world that created a bottleneck among outsourced chip factories, and effects from the U.S. trade war with China that started under former President Trump.

A huge boom in electronics sales

The Covid-19 pandemic has spurred demand for consumer electronics.

The first wave involved people buying PCs, monitors and other gear for working or going to school remotely. Then, last fall, home entertainment gadgets like game consoles, TVs, smartphones and and tablets started flying off the shelves.

Living room with a Sony PlayStation 5 home video game console and DualSense controller alongside a television, taken on Novemebr 3, 2020.

Phil Barker | Future Publishing via Getty Images

PC sales were up 4.8% in 2020 to 275 million units, with over 10% growth in the holiday season, according to Gartner data. That reversed a years-long decline, and is the highest annual growth in the PC market since 2010.

Other gadgets sold well, too. The Consumer Tech Association, an American trade group, said that 2020 was the biggest year on record with nearly $442 billion in retail sales revenue, and is projecting big demand for game consoles, headphones, and smart home products in 2021.

All these devices include a ton of chips — not just the central processor which can cost tens or hundreds of dollars, but also less expensive little chips for controlling the display, or managing power, or operating a 5G modem.

“The current chip shortage all starts with the unprecedented demand for personal computers and peripherals as the globe worked and attended school from home,” said Patrick Moorhead, founder of Moor Insights, a firm that studies the semiconductor industry.

Electronic industry giants that have reported record sales say that they could’ve been even better if there was enough supply. Apple, which recently reported a blowout $111 billion quarter, told analysts it didn’t have enough supply of its new iPhones to meet demand. CEO Tim Cook told Reuters that “semiconductors are very tight.”

AMD CEO Lisa Su, which makes the processor at the heart of Sony’s and Microsoft’s new consoles, said last month that it expects shortages through the first half of the year, at least. “The industry does need to increase the overall capacity levels,” Su said.

Business shift to outsourcing slams factories

The shortage is highlighting a structural change in the semiconductor industry. Many of the top semiconductor companies are now “fabless,” which means that they only design the chips and the technology in them. Other companies, known as foundries, are largely contracted to actually make the chips.

The foundries are run by companies like TSMC in Taiwan or Samsung in South Korea -- and as it turns out, they were already making chips as fast as they could. If a company cut orders in the early days of the pandemic, they had to get back in line.

Carmakers aren’t directly competing with high-tech companies for the same chip supply. Car chips are usually based on older chip manufacturing technologies and don’t need the bleeding edge.

The Ford company logo is displayed on a sign outside of the Chicago Assembly Plant on February 03, 2021 in Chicago, Illinois.

Scott Olson | Getty Images

But the shortage isn’t just in the fastest chips — it’s in everything.

“The shortage in the semiconductor industry is across the board,” said incoming Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon last month. “Not only leading nodes but legacy nodes,” referring to chip manufacturing technology.

Cars now include scores of tiny chips, many of which perform functions like power management. Cars also use a lot of microcontrollers, which can control traditional automotive tasks like power steering, or are the brain at the heart of an infotainment system. Car makers also usually use “just-in-time” production, which means they avoid having extra parts in storage.

“The problem is even if that 10-cent chip is missing, you can’t sell your $30,000 car,” Gaurav Gupta, semiconductor analyst at Gartner said.

“If the chip that powers the in-car dials or automatic braking are delayed, then so will the rest of the vehicle,” Bryce Johnstone, director of automotive segment marketing at chip designer Imagination Technologies previously told CNBC.

Now the automotive industry is realizing it’s a lower priority than the electronics companies at the foundries. In 2020, only 3% of TSMC’s sales were from automotive chips, compared to 48% for smartphones.

Tech companies are “the volume guys. They have higher margins. And they never cut down their orders and have long-term contracts with the foundries,” Gupta said. “Now that this auto demand peaked faster that the OEMs had expected, autos can’t get back in the queue.”

The foundries are aware of the issue. TSMC, which is seen as the most advanced and important foundry, said that it was trying to help the auto companies, and said it would spend as much as $28 billion this year to increase its capacity.

“While our capacity is fully utilized with demand from every sector, TSMC is reallocating our wafer capacity to support the worldwide automotive industry,” TSMC said in a statement in January.

Car manufacturers also use automotive-grade chips, which are painstakingly “qualified” against binders of industry standards to make sure they’re durable and reliable. “It is more difficult for the industry to alternatively transition its production lines and supply chains elsewhere,” Trendforce, a consulting group covering the semiconductor industry, wrote in a report last month.

Trump’s trade war

Last last year, the U.S. placed restrictions on Semiconductor Manufacturing International (SMIC), the biggest foundry in China, barring it from getting advanced chip manufacturing gear, and making it much harder to sell its finished products to companies with U.S. ties. Customers needed to shift their orders to competitors like TSMC, Gupta said.

SMIC executives acknowledged that the U.S. move has prevented it from using its full capacity when it said geopolitical factors would prevent it from seizing “this year’s rare market opportunity,” referring to the chip shortage.

Some companies also decided to stockpile essential chips ahead of the U.S. deadline, using up production capacity last year. For example, Huawei stockpiled critical radio chips ahead of sanctions, Bloomberg News reported.

Stockpiling was also driven by supply concerns as Covid swept across the world. SK Hynix, a major memory chip maker, said last July it saw a surge of sales driven by “growing anxiety about IT supply chain in general.”

Some companies that stockpiled chips are reaping the benefits now. Toyota said on Wednesday that it doesn’t expect to reduce its rate of production because it had stockpiled four months worth of chips to ride out the shortage. Toyota raised its full-year earnings forecast by 54%.



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)11/23/2021 11:28:38 AM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
Increasing retail thefts.

cnbc.com

Indicating an economy under stress or just supply shortages?



To: Johnny Canuck who wrote (53198)11/23/2021 12:09:16 PM
From: Johnny Canuck  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 69207
 
Top 3 Canadian large caps to buy in November

talkmarkets.com