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The Magnificent 7 is dead! Long live the BATMMAAN stocks

American has another $1 trillion stock: Broadcom.

David Crowther
Updated 12/17/24 6:49AM

Broadcom shares have soared in both of the last 2 trading sessions, adding more than $300 billion to the semiconductor company’s market cap, after it reported that its AI revenue had jumped 220% in the past year, pushing Broadcom’s valuation through the $1 trillion milestone to join the members of the “Magnificent 7” in the exclusive club.

Though not a household name in the same way as Apple, Tesla, and Microsoft, Broadcom has quickly become a favorite of investors as it benefits from booming demand for generative-AI infrastructure.

The news means that the Magnificent 7 moniker might be a little outdated — we’d suggest that the “BATMMAAN” stocks might be a better acronym for the behemoths that now account for nearly $19 trillion worth of collective market value, dominating America’s stock market.

While most of the companies on this list are wildly different in their core competencies — Amazon’s e-commerce efforts are a world away from Broadcom’s chipmaking business — each has been swept along by the demand for AI in various ways. For example, Meta, Alphabet, Apple, Microsoft, and Tesla have each espoused the benefits of AI in their social-media platforms, search engines, smartphones, software, and vehicles. Amazon, Nvidia, and Broadcom, meanwhile, have focused on the physical hardware behind much of the AI boom — think servers, data centers, and chips.

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Nintendo climbs for third day as China ramps up its memory production

Nintendo shares are climbing on Tuesday, marking the company’s third straight session of gains — something it hasn’t done since early March. The Mario maker’s US-listed ADRs were up about 4% in Tuesday morning trading.

The return of the Switch 2 game bundle appears to have stoked investor optimism in the company’s console sales, while China’s accelerating memory production plans could alleviate some of Nintendo’s pain from the “RAMpocalypse.” For the better part of a year, memory prices have surged as AI demand hoovers up compute power. That’s squeezed video game console makers — and the broader consumer electronics industry.

Tracking the performance of Nintendo ADRs against memory giant Micron helps put this move in perspective. Nintendo is a big memory consumer, and not in the front of the line in terms of securing supply. Micron, obviously, benefits from its offerings being in high demand.

Tuesday’s price action is just a drop in the bucket, and comes as part of a recent stretch where the stock market’s high-flyers are having their wings clipped while beaten-up laggards rally.

In its first-quarter results on Monday, Chinese DRAM producer CXMT said it’s ramping up production and issued bullish guidance. The company is planning an IPO later this year, and it could be China’s biggest of the year.

For Nintendo, more global memory production could see rising costs start to deflate, improving margins in a vital year for its new console.

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Snowflake shares rise after BofA raises price target, predicts strong earnings next week

Snowflake shares jumped after Bank of America Securities analysts raised their price target for the cloud data warehousing company to $205 from $195, with a “buy” rating.

BofA analysts wrote that Snowflake will have a strong quarter because “the robust demand it was seeing heading into this year should continue unabated.” The report called the stock a “a share gainer in the attractive and growing AI business intelligence opportunity.”

Snowflake shares are down about 20% year to date. In November, shares hit a 52-week high of $280.67.

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Standard Chartered to replace “lower-value human capital,” cutting jobs “in favor of the machines”

Standard Chartered is announcing a major “it’s not you, it’s me” corporate makeover with a 15% cut of its administrative roles (roughly 8,000 jobs) by 2030 in favor of automated systems.

“It is not cost-cutting, but it is replacing, in some cases, lower-value human capital with the financial capital and the investment capital that we are putting in,” said CEO Bill Winters.

Congratulations to Standard Chartered employees who survive this culling; obviously, your CEO thinks you’re at least medium-value human capital.

Defending the strategy at a press briefing in Hong Kong, Winters explicitly rejected framing the large layoffs as a standard budget-slashing initiative.

He noted that the bank does not view the transition as an unmitigated loss of staff, but rather “job role reductions in favor of the machines,” which will “accelerate as we go full-bore into AI.”

The operational downsizing aims to boost profitability and increase overall income per employee by 20% over the next two years.

The bank joins a long list of companies that have announced job cuts in concert with plans to lean more into AI. Per CNBC, the subsequent performance of these stocks varies significantly, with some up more than 40% and others down just as much, or worse.

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Hyperliquid Strategies spikes on report that the SEC will soon greenlight an “innovation exemption” for tokenized stocks

Shares of Hyperliquid Strategies are soaring in early trading after Bloomberg reported that the Securities and Exchange Commission is slated to release an “innovation exemption” that formalizes rules around the trading of tokenized stocks.

In what Bloomberg dubbed a “surprise move,” the SEC is slated to permit tokenized stocks (crypto wrappers for traditional shares) even if the public companies don’t consent to their creation.

Hyperliquid Strategies is a digital asset treasury company that holds hype tokens and provides liquidity on the DeFi exchange Hyperliquid.

Tokenized securities offer faster settlement and expanded trading hours, though without the same market depth that typically prevails with traditional exchanges and with a higher potential for price fragmentation.

Per the report, which cites people familiar with the matter, these platforms would need to provide their third-party holders with voting rights and dividends in order to list these tokens. As such, the platforms would effectively be required to hold the underlying securities they’d be offering tokenized access to.

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