Organized Labor’s Wins in 2023 May Spur More Strikes in 2024
1 hr 31 min ago
Organized labor had its most active year in two decades, with big wins by auto workers, Teamsters, and screen actors likely to inspire unionized workers to continue holding management’s feet to the fire in 2024.
“I suspect the success of the UAW, Teamsters, etc. will lead to continued activism and the prospect of disputes if the labor market stays strong,” Harvard University labor economist Lawrence F. Katz said in an email.
Next year’s calendar of major contract expirations includes communications workers at AT&T (T) in April, Hollywood crew members in July, and dockworkers and Boeing (BA) machinists in September.
Read more about why the tables turned in unions’ favor this year and what the surge in activism could bring in 2024.
Nvidia Introduces Slower Gaming Chip in China To Comply with New US Export Rules
2 hr 6 min ago
Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) shares were lower Friday after the semiconductor maker introduced a slower gaming chip in China to comply with new U.S. restrictions on technology sales to that country.
The company released the GeForce RTX 4090D Series graphics processing unit (GPU) on its Chinese website, saying it “delivers a quantum leap in performance, efficiency, and [artificial intelligence] AI-driven graphics,” and “an exceptional experience for gamers and creators.”
However, the chip’s performance via power draw is 5.9% lower than the model Nvidia announced last year, and the core count was also cut.
Nvidia has been the leading maker of chips for AI applications, and that’s shown in its stock price, which skyrocketed to an all-time high in May and then kept climbing. However, shares hit a speed bump in October after the company reported that the new U.S. government restrictions were taking effect immediately and would affect its products.
Still, shares have since rebounded, and even with Friday’s decline of more than 1%, they continue to trade near their record high.
UnitedHealth Sells Its Brazilian Operations to a Private Investor
3 hr 11 min ago
UnitedHealth Group (UNH) shares were up slightly after the big health insurance provider said it has agreed to sell its operations in Brazil to a private investor.
Terms of the agreement and the name of the buyer were not disclosed, although an earlier report by Reuters said the purchaser was Brazilian entrepreneur Jose Seripieri Filho. The company said it expects the transaction to close in the first half of next year.
UnitedHealth indicated in a securities filing that upon completion of the deal, it would be taking an approximately $7 billion charge, “the majority of which is non-cash and due to the cumulative impact of foreign currency translation losses.”
Shares of UnitedHealth Group hit an all-time high at the end of November before losing ground this month, but they remain in positive territory for the year.
Nvidia Made Headlines, But These Stocks Made Investors More Money
3 hr 50 min ago
The year belonged to Nvidia (NVDA), the chipmaker that earlier this year became only the seventh U.S. company to reach a market capitalization of $1 trillion. Nvidia’s share price surged 239% this year, making it the best-performing stock in the S&P 500. Trailing just behind: Meta Platforms (META), up 198%, vindication for investors who held on through a bumpy 2022.
But even these leading Magnificent Seven stocks couldn’t outpace everyone. Here are a few of the smaller stocks that quietly led the market this year.
Carvana Co. (CVNA): The used car dealer’s shares started the year at about $4.75, a far cry from their all-time high of $361 in August 2021. This year brought bluer skies for the company, which was thought to be on the verge of bankruptcy at the end of 2022. After restructuring its debt and cutting costs, the company’s stock rebounded to close at $54.91 yesterday, representing a 1,058% return.
Affirm Holdings (AFRM): Buy now, pay later provider Affirm was flying high in 2021, trading for as much as $164 a share in October of that year. But the mood soured in 2022 and the stock sank to finish the year at $9.10. Its 2023 hasn’t made up for that disastrous year—it traded at about $48.75 on Friday—but the stock has risen 431%, making it the best-performing stock in the Russell 1000.
Coinbase Global (COIN): The cryptocurrency exchange is just one of several crypto stocks to outpace Nvidia in 2023. Bitcoin started the year at a 2-year low of $16,500 after being pummeled by rising interest rates, waning enthusiasm among retail investors, and the implosion of FTX, a leading exchange. Bitcoin has since surged more than 150%, bringing Coinbase, the largest U.S. crypto exchange, and Bitcoin miners with it. Coinbase has gained 427% this year, while miners Marathon Digital Holdings (MARA) and Riot Platforms (RIOT) returned 722% and 419%, respectively.
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF): The retailer hasn’t just topped Nvidia’s performance with its 292% return, it has done so with a product far less buzzy than artificial intelligence: clothes. The company has repeatedly outperformed Wall Street’s expectations this year as it embraced e-commerce and expanded its offerings to appeal to a broader base of Gen Z and Millennial shoppers.
Fisker Stock Soars on Surging EV Deliveries
4 hr 59 min ago
Shares of Fisker (FSR) jumped Friday morning after the company said it had delivered 4,700 vehicles in 2023, its first year of making deliveries.
The company delivered more than 3,000 vehicles in the fourth quarter, a 300% increase from the 1,097 cars it shipped in Q3, according to a business update released Friday. The company also said it had delivered its first vehicles in Canada in the fourth quarter and handed over its first Fisker Ocean Sport to a buyer in the U.K.
The company has scaled back its ambitions significantly throughout 2023. At the beginning of the year, it said it would make more than 42,000 cars. According to Friday’s update, the company produced 10,142 vehicles in the year, in line with the guidance it provided at the beginning of December.
Shares were up 25% at about $1.85 on Friday morning. Still, they’ve lost nearly 75% of their value this year and are 93% off their all-time high.
Stocks Making the Biggest Moves Premarket
6 hours ago
Gains:
- Fisker Inc. (FSR): Shares of the electric vehicle maker jumped 11% after it said it had delivered 4,700 vehicles in 2023 and increased deliveries by 300% in the fourth quarter compared with Q3.
- JD.com Inc. (JD): Shares of the Chinese e-commerce company rose 1% after it won an antitrust lawsuit against rival Alibaba. A Chinese court fined Alibaba 1 billion yuan ($140 million) for exploiting its market dominance to the detriment of JD.com.
- Nvidia (NVDA): Shares of the chipmaker inched up 0.3% following reports the company was set to release the Nvidia RTX 4090D, a new gaming chip with reduced processing power designed specifically to comply with restrictions on the export of advanced microchips to China.
- UnitedHealth Group Inc. (UNH): Shares rose about 0.3% after the insurance company said it had agreed to sell its Brazil unit to a private investor for an undisclosed sum.
Losses:
- Lyft Inc. (LYFT): Shares of the ride-hailing company fell 3% after Nomura downgraded the stock to “reduce” from “neutral,” citing limited growth potential, shrinking market share, and low profitability.
- Uber Technologies Inc. (UBER): Shares of Lyft’s competitor fell about 1% after Nomura downgraded the stock to “neutral” from “buy.”
Stock Futures Little Changed Heading Into Last Session of 2023
6 hr 37 min ago
Futures contracts connected to the Dow Jones Industrial Average were effectively flat in premarket trading.
S&P 500 futures were also unchanged.
Nasdaq 100 futures gave up earlier gains to trade about 0.1% lower a little over an hour before markets opened.