Asia-Pacific markets, Fed, Wall Street, Apple, Tesla, Japan PMI


CNBC Pro: Analysts see these 10 global renewable energy stocks rising despite higher rates with one offering 50% upside

Skyrocketing energy costs have spurred investment in renewable energy across the world.

Swiss investment bank UBS named 10 prominent renewable energy players capitalizing on the trend and are set to outperform over the next year.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Ganesh Rao

Japan’s manufacturing activity marks weakest in more than two years

The au Jibun Bank Flash Japan Manufacturing Purchasing manager’s index for December posted a reading of 48.9, marking a second consecutive month in contraction territory.

The reading inched down from November’s 49.0, and marked the weakest figure since October 2020’s figure of 48.70.

The sustained contractions in production was attributed to “weak global economic trends,” the report stated.

—Lee Ying Shan

Tesla’s Asia suppliers fall after deliveries report

Tesla’s suppliers in Asia fell after it reported its fourth-quarter vehicle production and delivery numbers for 2022 that fell short of expectations.

The deliveries report showed 405,278 total deliveries for the quarter and 1.31 million total deliveries for the year, lower than expectations to see around 427,000 deliveries for the final quarter of the year.

Japan’s Panasonic lost 1.82% in early Asia trade – South Korea’s LG Chem fell 0.17% in earlier hours and Samsung SDI shed about 2%.

Shenzhen-listed shares of Contemporary Amperex Technology, or also known as CATL, fell 1.7%. Shares of Tesla closed down 12% on Tuesday on Wall Street.

– Ashley Capoot, Jihye Lee

CNBC Pro: Wall Street is bullish on this chip giant, with Morgan Stanley giving it 55% upside

The once-hot chip sector suffered in 2022, but Wall Street looks to be turning more optimistic on semiconductor stocks for the year ahead.

Recently, several pros have urged investors to take a longer-term view on the sector, given the importance of chips in several key secular trends.

Analysts named one stock in particular they’re bullish on, citing its earnings potential and future profitability.

CNBC Pro subscribers can read more here.

— Weizhen Tan

Apple’s Asia suppliers trade mostly up in spite of production cut reports

U.S. manufacturing PMI slips at fastest rate since May 2020

The U.S. manufacturing price managers’ index, a measure of output, fell at the fastest rate in December since May 2020, according to S&P Global.

The index was 46.2 in December, down from 47.7 in November, according to data released Tuesday. Lower prices and contracting production levels weighed on the index. In addition, December saw a sharper than expected decline on new sales, with companies noting uncertainty due to the economic backdrop.

—Carmen Reinicke

Tesla sheds 13%, hits new 52-week low

The stock slipped more than 13%, hitting levels not seen since August 2020. The slide is coming off the worst annual performance for the stock – Tesla fell 65% in 2022.

—Carmen Reinicke

Apple market cap falls below $2 trillion

A selloff in Apple shares pushed the iPhone maker’s market capitalization below $2 trillion on Tuesday.

Shares shed 4% amid news that it’s reportedly cutting production on some items due to weak demand. Concerns over iPhone supply during the holiday period have mounted in recent weeks and pressured shares as shutdowns rippled through Apple’s major supplier in China.

The drop in shares contrasts a year ago, when Apple became the first U.S. company to hit a $3 trillion market cap.

Apple was the last of the mega cap technology stocks to hover above the $2 trillion level.

— Samantha Subin

U.S. will avoid recession in 2023, Goldman Sachs says

Goldman Sachs has an out-of-consensus forecast for the U.S. economy in 2023.

“Our economists continue to believe that the US will avoid recession as the Fed successfully engineers a soft landing of the economy,” analysts wrote Tuesday.

“This out-of-consensus forecast partly reflects our view that a period of below-potential growth is enough to gradually rebalance the labor market and dampen wage and price pressures,” the note said. “But it also reflects our analysis that indicates that the drag from fiscal and monetary policy tightening will diminish sharply next year, in contrast to the consensus view that the lagged effects of interest rate hikes will cause a recession in 2023.”

In addition, the bank today raised its 4Q22 GDP growth forecast by 10bp to +2.1% on the back of a surprisingly strong November Construction Spending release

“The disconnect between the resilience of the US economy in 2022 and the downdraft experienced by stocks is has been a key narrative of the past year,” Goldman said. “And, whether this disconnect continues, or the economy matches the market downdraft, or the market rebounds in the wake of an economic soft landing may be at least part of the narrative of 2023.”

—Carmen Reinicke



Read More:Asia-Pacific markets, Fed, Wall Street, Apple, Tesla, Japan PMI

2023-01-04 03:14:00

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