The U.S. Dollar Is DOWN. Start Investing in These 5 Safe Haven Assets

With the latest hike, Jerome Powell and his team at the Federal Reserve raised the benchmark borrowing cost to 5.25%-5.50%, thereby ratcheting it up from nearly 0% in  16 months.

While a 2.6% rise in inflation, down from a 4.1% rise in Q1 and well below the estimate for an increase of 3.2%, and an annualized increase of 2.4% in the gross domestic product in the second quarter, topping the 2% estimate, had raised hopes that the elusive “soft landing” could be within reach, recent developments have been less than encouraging.

Despite the falling unemployment rate, the number of jobs created in July came in lower than expected, which could be symptomatic of an economy slowly but surely footing the bill of aggressive interest-rate hikes. Moreover, with a more-than-forecasted increase in wages, there are increasing concerns that interest rates could stay higher for longer.

To compound the miseries further, after placing the country on negative watch amid the debt-ceiling standoff at Capitol Hill back in May, Fitch Ratings recently downgraded U.S. long-term rating to AA+ from AAA, citing the erosion of confidence in fiscal management.

As a result, despite the salvo of interest-rate hikes, the dollar has recently weakened in relation to its peers. The dollar index, a measure of the U.S. currency against six peers, fell 0.185%. The euro edged up 0.31% to $1.0978, and the yen strengthened 0.16% at 142.31 per dollar.

Moreover, with every increase in benchmark interest rates, a selloff of long-duration fixed-income instruments, such as the 10-year treasury notes, gets triggered, which causes a slump in their market value and a consequent increase in their yields.

After benchmark 10-year yields jumped by as much as 15 basis points above the key 4% level, Peter Schiff, CEO and chief economist at Euro Pacific Asset Management, warned of a crash in Treasuries. He has also predicted the benchmark 30-year mortgage rates to soon hit 8%, a level last seen in 2000.

An increase in borrowing costs would not just raise the cost of servicing the $32.7 trillion national debt; significant markdowns prices of legacy bonds and an inability by borrowers to service them due to economic slowdown could crush the loan portfolios of struggling banks and make them go the way of the dodo, such as the Silicon Valley Bank and the First Republic Bank.

Hence, it is unsurprising that Moody’s has cut ratings of 10 U.S. banks and put some big names on downgrade watch, and HSBC Asset Management’s warning that a U.S. recession is coming this year, with Europe to follow in 2024 is gaining credibility with each passing day.

With a material risk that an apparently resilient economy could find itself regressing into a full-blown recession just as Jerome Powell’s colleagues at the Federal Reserve have stopped forecasting it, seasoned investors could be wise to seek refuge in anti-fragile assets which could see upside potential in the event of a turmoil.

Since a devaluation in domestic currency brightens the prospects of exports, one of the ways to navigate the terrain is to bet on U.S. companies generating international sales, which could benefit from an uptick in earnings.

Secondly, since the value of gold has usually been negatively correlated to the global reserve currency, the demand for yellow metal from central banks worldwide totaled 1,136 tons in 2022.

In view of the above, here are a few financial instruments that could be worthy of consideration:

QUALCOMM Incorporated (QCOM)

QCOM is engaged in developing and commercializing foundational technologies for the global wireless industry. The company operates through three segments: Qualcomm CDMA Technologies (QCT), Qualcomm Technology Licensing (QTL), and Qualcomm Strategic Initiatives (QSI).

Over the past three years, QCOM’s revenue has grown at a 24.5% CAGR, while its EBITDA has grown at a 34.4% CAGR. During the same time horizon, the company has been able to increase its net income at 46.4% CAGR.

On July 14, QCOM announced its quarterly cash dividend of $0.80 per common share, payable on September 21, 2023, to stockholders of record at the close of business on August 31, 2023.

QCOM pays $3.20 annually as dividends. Its 4-year average dividend yield is 2.32%. The company has been able to increase its dividend payouts for the past 19 years and at a 5.5% CAGR for the past five years.

For the fiscal third quarter that ended June 25, QCOM’s non-GAAP revenues came in at $8.44 billion, with QCT automotive posting an 11th straight quarter of double-digit revenue growth, while its non-GAAP net income amounted to $2.16 billion, or $1.87 per share.

Analysts expect QCOM’s revenue and EPS for the fiscal fourth quarter to exhibit marginal sequential increases to come in at $8.50 billion and $1.90, respectively. It corresponds to the midpoint of the company’s guidance for the quarter. Moreover, QCOM has met or exceeded consensus EPS estimates in three of the trailing four quarters.

Schlumberger N.V. (SLB)

As a global technology company, SLB primarily offers oilfield services to national oil companies, integrated oil companies, and independent operators. The company operates through four segments: Digital & Integration, Reservoir Performance, Well Construction, and Production Systems.

SLB has grown its revenue and EBITDA at 1.8% and 7% CAGRs, respectively.

On July 26, SLB and Eni S.p.A. (E), through its subsidiary Enivibes, announced an alliance to deploy e-vpms® (Eni Vibroacoustic Pipeline Monitoring System) technology. The new proprietary pipeline integrity technology, capable of providing real-time analysis, monitoring, and leak detection for pipelines around the world, can be retrofitted to any pipeline, regardless of age.

The system would be capable of providing real-time analysis, monitoring, and leak detection for pipelines around the world.

On July 6. SLB announced that it had been awarded a five-year contract by Petroleo Brasileiro S.A.- Petrobras (PBR) for enterprise-wide deployment of its Delfi™ digital platform. The award represents one of PBR’s largest investments in cloud-based technologies and sets the foundation for it to achieve its decarbonization and net-zero targets. 

During the fiscal 2023 second quarter that ended June 30, SLB’s revenue increased by 19.6% year-over-year to $8.10 billion. The company’s adjusted EBITDA increased by 28.2% year-over-year to $1.96 billion during the same period. Consequently, its non-GAAP net income increased by 44% year-over-year to $1.03 billion and $0.72 per share.

Analysts expect SLB’s revenue and EPS for the fiscal third quarter to increase by 11.6% and 23.8% year-over-year to $8.35 billion and $0.78, respectively. The company has also impressed by surpassing consensus EPS estimates in each of the trailing four quarters.

SPDR Gold Trust ETF (GLD)

GLD is a world-renowned ETF launched and managed by World Gold Trust Services, LLC. It offers investors exposure to gold, which has of late become an important component of their asset allocation strategy by acting as a hedge against volatility in equity markets, inflation, and dollar depreciation.

With $56.10 billion in AUM, all of GLD’s holdings are in gold bullion, stored in secure vaults. The physically-backed nature of this product insulates this product from the uncertainties introduced through futures-based strategies.

GLD has an expense ratio of 0.40%, lower than the category average of 0.47%. The fund’s net inflow came in at $6.82 billion over the past five years. It has a beta of 0.15.

AFLAC Incorporated (AFL)

AFLAC is involved in the marketing and administration of supplemental health and life insurance. The company operates through two subsidiaries: American Family Life Assurance Company of Columbus (Aflac) and Aflac Life Insurance Japan Ltd. (ALIJ), which belong to the Aflac U.S.  and Aflac Japan segments, respectively.

Over the past three years, AFL has grown its EBITDA and net income at 6.6% and 16.1% CAGRs, respectively.

On July 25, AFL launched its new product, Aflac Group Life Term to 120, to provide worksite life insurance, flexible living benefits, and affordable rates that won't increase across employees' lifespans. With flexible living benefits designed to make it easy to use whenever needed, the product assures customers of financial protection when needed.

During the fiscal 2023 second quarter that ended June 30, AFL’s total revenues came in at $5.17 billion, while its adjusted earnings excluding current period foreign currency impact increased by 3.6% and 10.2% year-over-year to come in at $979 million, or $1.62 per share, respectively.

Analysts expect AFL’s EPS for the fiscal third quarter to increase by 27% year-over-year to come in at $1.46. Moreover, the company has impressed by surpassing consensus EPS estimates in each of the

In addition to its robust financials, the relative immunity of its demand and margins to potential economic downturns make it an attractive investment option for solid risk-adjusted returns.

VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX)

GDX is managed by Van Eck Associates Corporation. It offers exposure to some of the largest gold mining companies in the world. Since their stocks strongly correlate to prevailing gold prices, the ETF provides indirect exposure to gold prices.

GDX has an expense ratio of 0.51%. It pays $0.48 annually as dividends, and its payouts have grown at a 22% CAGR over the past five years. It saw a net inflow of $68.53 million over the past month. The ETF has a beta of 0.77.

GDX has about $11.71 billion in assets under management (AUM). The ETF’s top holding is Newmont Corporation (NEM) which has a 10.04% weighting in the fund. It is followed by Barrick Gold Corporation (GOLD) at 9.04% and Franco-Nevada Corporation (FNV) at 8.31%. The fund has 52 holdings, with 61.81% of its assets concentrated in the top 10 holdings.

Palantir Technologies (PLTR) Fails to Surpass Wall Street Estimates: Buy or Sell?

Artificial Intelligence (AI) has been the buzzword of Wall Street this year. The AI-driven rally has propelled the Nasdaq Composite by 33.7% year-to-date. Palantir Technologies Inc. (PLTR) has also ridden this AI wave, returning more than 180% year-to-date.

Earlier this year, PLTR announced the launch of its newest offering, Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP), for enterprise and military applications. AIP combines the capabilities of large language models (LLMs) like OpenAI’s GPT-4 or Google’s BERT with their proprietary software to enable responsible, effective, and compliant AI advantages for defense organizations and enterprise customers.

Commenting on AIP, PLTR’s CEO and Co-Founder Alex Karp said, “AIP will allow customers to leverage the power of our existing machine learning technologies alongside…large language models, directly in our existing platforms.” In a letter to shareholders, Karp said AIP has users in over 100 organizations, including the healthcare and automotive industries, and PLTR was in talks with more than 300 additional companies.

PLTR failed to surpass the consensus earnings and revenue estimates for the second quarter. Its EPS almost aligned with the analyst estimates, while its revenue missed the consensus revenue estimate marginally. In an interview at Bloomberg, PLTR CEO Karp stated, “We have a good chance at becoming the most important software company in the world.” He said that “demand is unprecedented” for its AI platform, AIP.

For the third quarter, PLTR expects its revenue to be between $553 million and $557 million. Its adjusted income from operations is expected to be between $135 million and $139 million. For fiscal 2023, the company raised its revenue guidance. Its revenue for the year is now expected to exceed $2.21 billion. However, the latest revenue outlook for fiscal 2023 is at the midpoint of analyst expectations of between $2.19 billion and $2.24 billion.

PLTR also raised its adjusted income from operations guidance to more than $576 million. Moreover, PLTR’s Board of Directors authorized a stock repurchase program of up to $1 billion based on what the company called “transformative” traction for its AI technology.

Commenting on its second-quarter performance, RBC Capital Markets analyst Rishi Jaluria said, “Given the heightened expectations of the stock from the retail investor base around Palantir being an AI beneficiary, these are kind of disappointing numbers.” Jaluria believes that PLTR is not truly a generative AI company, and it does not have anything truly differentiated when it comes to generative AI.

He said, “This really feels like the same Palantir services and technology that they’ve been selling, which has its value. They’re not actually adding a tremendous amount of value to be a leader in generative AI, even though they are positioning themselves as such in front of the investment community and even in front of CIOs and CEOs.” He has an underperform rating on the stock and a price target of $5.

However, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives is bullish on PLTR’s AI prospects. He stated, “That’s probably the best pure-play AI name, in terms of them monetizing not just on the government side, but on the enterprise side when it comes to AI.” Wedbush maintained an outperform rating on the stock with a price target of $25.

Jefferies analyst Brent Thill believes there are several unknowns in PLTR’s business. He considers that the timing recovery of its U.S. government business, its U.S. commercial growth's durability, and its AI platform's pricing strategy could cause near-term choppiness in the financials. He has a hold rating on the stock with a price target of $17.

Here’s what could influence PLTR’s performance in the upcoming months:

Robust Financials

PLTR’s revenue for the second quarter ended June 30, 2023, increased 12.7% year-over-year to $533.32 million. Its adjusted income from operations rose 25.2% over the prior-year quarter to $135.04 million. The company’s adjusted free cash flow increased 57.7% year-over-year to $96.03 million. Its adjusted EBITDA rose 27.2% over the prior-year quarter to $143.43 million.

In addition, its adjusted net income attributable to common stockholders came in at $119.55 million, compared to an adjusted net loss attributable to common stockholders of $21.12 million. Also, its adjusted EPS came in at $0.05, compared to an adjusted loss per share of $0.01 in the prior-year quarter.
Favorable Analyst Estimates

Analysts expect PLTR’s EPS for fiscal 2023 and 2024 to increase 300% and 7.3% year-over-year to $0.24 and $0.26. Its fiscal 2023 and 2024 revenue is expected to increase 16% and 18.9% year-over-year to $2.21 billion and $2.63 billion.

Its EPS and revenue for the quarter ending September 30, 2023, to increase 500% and 17.1% year-over-year to $0.06 and $559.37 million, respectively.

Stretched Valuation

In terms of forward EV/EBITDA, PLTR’s 60.82x is 300.3% higher than the 15.19x industry average. Likewise, its 16.08x forward EV/S is 454.1% higher than the 2.90x industry average. Its 74.96x forward non-GAAP P/E is 220.9% higher than the 23.36x industry average.

Mixed Profitability

In terms of the trailing-12-month gross profit margin, PLTR’s 78.75% is 63.4% higher than the 48.20% industry average. Likewise, its 21.35% trailing-12-month levered FCF margin is 193.3% higher than the industry average of 7.28%.

PLTR’s trailing-12-month net income margin is negative 12.87% compared to the 2.01% industry average. Likewise, its trailing-12-month Return on Common Equity is negative 10.04% compared to the 0.23% industry average. Furthermore, the stock’s negative 5.93% trailing-12-month EBIT margin compares to the industry average of 4.48%.

Solid Historical Growth

PLTR’s revenue grew at a CAGR of 34.8% over the past three years. Its total assets grew at a CAGR of 29.5% over the past three years. Moreover, its levered FCF grew at a CAGR of 88.5% over the past three years.

Bottom Line

The buzz around artificial intelligence has helped PLTR skyrocket this year. Its recently launched platform, AIP, is garnering attention as it will allow enterprises and defense and military organizations to integrate large language models (LLMs) with machine learning and AI to aid decision-making. AIP was launched with no pricing strategy, and according to PLTR’s CEO, it is aimed to “just take the whole market.”

The company told analysts that its new AI-related pilot programs are underway, but it’s still being determined when these programs will generate revenues. Without a revenue-generating timeline from its AIP platform, PLTR could witness investor interest in its AI platform fading slowly. On the other hand, the stock trades at an expensive valuation.

Given its mixed profitability, it could be wise to wait for a better entry point in the stock.

Stock Market Gets “Fitch Slapped”

Please enjoy this updated version of weekly commentary from the Reitmeister Total Return newsletter. Steve Reitmeister is the CEO of StockNews.com and Editor of the Reitmeister Total Return.Click Here to learn more about Reitmeister Total Return


SPY – The S&P 500 (SPY) seems to have hit a wall at 4,600 thanks in part to the surprising downgrade of US debt by the Fitch ratings service. Not only is that taking place, but investors also go served up the 3 key monthly economic reports that have market moving impact. Steve Reitmeister reviews this latest news to update his market outlook, trading plan and preview of 7 top picks. Get full details below…

 

Forgive my inner child for laughing so hard at this. But one of the greatest investment terms was coined this week in that the market got “Fitch Slapped”.

Meaning that the Fitch ratings downgrade for US debt slapped the investment world into submission this week. Not just a long overdue softening of stock prices as the S&P 500 (SPY) retreated from recent highs. There was also a reversal of course of long term bond rates as they headed higher once again.

Beyond that we also got served up the Big 3 economic reports this week. So there is much investment news to digest to plot our course in the days and weeks ahead.

Market Commentary

Plain and simple, the Fitch downgrade of US debt was the “Easy Button” excuse for a long overdue sell off. I don’t believe anyone is terribly worried about a debt crisis occurring any time soon.

That’s because there are several other large developed countries with as high if not higher levels of government debt vs. GDP. One of them will most certainly topple before the US like Japan, Italy, Spain, UK etc.

Yes…when those problems start to bubble up, THEN it’s time to get worried about US debt problems coming next which would be bad news for both the stock and bond market. In the meantime we are still in the midst of a new bull market where some recent gains needed to be taken off the table.

With the Fed looking ready to end the rate hike cycle, investors just want to make sure that the soft landing doesn’t devolve into a recession. To help us gauge that investors will look closely at the Big 3 economic reports this week.

First up was ISM Manufacturing on Tuesday. The 46.4 is no doubt a weak showing. But investors care more about the direction of things and what that means for the future.

As such, that reading was a step up from 46.0 in the previous month. Plus New Orders jumped from 45.6 to 47.3 which points to things getting better in the future.

On Thursday we got the ISM Services reading at 52.7 when 52.0 was expected. On top of that the New Orders was a healthy 55.0 which points to even better readings down the road.

However, if I were to point to a negative in these reports, both showed a noticeable drop in the Employment readings: 44.4 and 50.7 respectively. Combine that with the JOLTs report this week showing another reduction in job openings and it could be a sign that the jobs market is about to weaken.

Remember the changed language from the Fed at the late July meeting. They no longer expect a recession to emerge before their fight against high inflation is over. However, they do still predict a softening in economic growth and a slight increase in the unemployment rate.

That employment piece is a hard plane to land because often when the unemployment rate starts to rise…it keeps getting much worse than expected. That will means investors will probably be most focused on the employment part of the economic picture to best determine how bullish or bearish they want to be.

So that brings us around to the final, and most important part of the Big 3 economic reports. That being the Government Employment Situation report on Friday morning.

This was pretty much a Goldilocks type result. Not too hot…not too cold…just right.

The inline showing explains why stocks are bouncing Friday morning after a spate of recent weakness. However, it is was not all rainbows and lollipops.

The blemish is that the Fed has been very focused on wage inflation which has been too sticky. Indeed it stuck at +4.4% year over year when investors expected it slow down to 4.2%.

Even the month over month reading was higher than expected at +0.4% which points to nearly 5% annualized pace. This single point could have the Fed being a bit more stubborn with their hawkish rate plans.

Trading Plan

At this moment there is no reason to doubt that the bull market is still in place. However, stocks have been going up virtually non stop since March. That puts us in overbought territory…which makes now the perfect time place in which to see a 3-5% pullback before advancing higher.

This is healthy and normal. What pros often call “the pause that refreshes”.

I think the 50 day moving average (yellow line below) at 4,400 is a likely short term destination for stocks on the downside. This would help frame a comfortable 200 point trading range with 4,600 on the high side.

 

chart of 50-Day-Moving-Average-8-4-23

 

Note that I don’t think the S&P 500 ends the year much higher than the 4,600 level we just touched. Rather, most of the large caps leading that index have already had their fun. Instead I see the gains broadening out with small and mid caps taking charge.

Remember that the Russell 2000 small cap index is still about 15% under its all time highs. Compare that to the idea that small caps outperform large caps over the long haul. Meaning its time for some reversion to the mean and these deserving stocks getting more investor attention.

What To Do Next?

Discover my current portfolio of 3 hand picked stocks packed to the brim with the outperforming benefits found in our POWR Ratings model.

Plus I have added 4 ETFs that are all in sectors well positioned to outpace the market in the weeks and months ahead.

This is all based on my 43 years of investing experience seeing bull markets…bear markets…and everything between.

If you are curious to learn more, and want to see these 7 top picks for today’s market, then please click the link below to get started now.

Steve Reitmeister’s Trading Plan & Top Picks >

Wishing you a world of investment success!

Steve Reitmeister… but everyone calls me Reity (pronounced “Righty”)
CEO, StockNews.com & Editor, Reitmeister Total Return

 


SPY shares were trading at $451.30 per share on Friday morning, up $2.46 (+0.55%). Year-to-date, SPY has gained 18.90%, versus a % rise in the benchmark S&P 500 index during the same period.


 

About the Author

Steve is better known to the StockNews audience as “Reity”. Not only is he the CEO of the firm, but he also shares his 40 years of investment experience in the Reitmeister Total Return portfolio. Learn more about Reity’s background, along with links to his most recent articles and stock picks.

 

Will United Parcel Service (UPS) Soar Despite Ongoing Controversy?

 The past few weeks have been challenging for logistics giant United Parcel Service, Inc. (UPS) as it faced the prospect of a crippling labor strike if the company did not agree to a new contract containing the demands put forward by the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, the labor union representing the nearly 330,000 workers of UPS.

 The Teamsters have been demanding better pay, especially for part-time employees, and improved working conditions. The workers were scheduled to go on strike from August 1, 2023, without an agreement. However, UPS and Teamsters reached an agreement on July 25, 2023, potentially avoiding the strike, which could have crippled U.S. supply chains and impacted the economy.

 Earlier in June, UPS announced its agreement with Teamsters on new heat safety measures, which build upon the company's important actions in February. The company has agreed to equip newly purchased U.S. small package delivery vehicles with air conditioning starting January 1, 2024. After equipping over 95,000 package cars with a cooling fan, UPS will install a second fan in vehicles without air conditioning by June 1, 2024.

 It also agreed that exhaust heat shields will be included in the production of new package cars and will be retrofitted into existing package cars within 18 months of contract ratification. Despite these agreements, UPS and Teamsters remained at odds over pay and benefits for part-time workers that comprise a significant part of UPS’ workforce.

 The deadlock was finally broken a few days before the potential strike as UPS and Teamsters reached a preliminary labor deal that included raises for full- and part-time workers. Under the tentative agreement, all UPS union employees would receive a $2.75-an-hour raise this year and a $7.50-an-hour pay increase over the next five years. Its part-time workers’ pay would start at $21 an hour, up from the $16.20 per hour currently.

 Teamsters General President Sean O’Brien said the agreement was worth $30 billion. In a statement, O'Brien said, “We’ve changed the game, battling it out day and night to ensure our members won an agreement that pays strong wages, rewards their labor, and doesn’t require a single concession. This contract sets a new standard in the labor movement and raises the bar for all workers.”

 UPS CEO Carol Tomé said, “Together, we reached a win-win-win agreement on the issues that are important to Teamsters leadership, our employees, and to UPS and our customers. This agreement continues to reward UPS’s full- and part-time employees with industry-leading pay and benefits while retaining the flexibility we need to stay competitive, serve our customers and keep our business strong.”

 The five-year agreement is subject to union members' voting and ratification from August 3 till August 22. UPS released its second-quarter earnings with its EPS coming 4 cents above the consensus estimate, while its revenue missed the Street estimates by $1.06 billion.

 After its second-quarter earnings report, UPS lowered its revenue estimate by $4 billion. It now expects its fiscal 2023 revenue to be $93 billion, and the company also lowered its adjusted operating margin to 11.8%, down from the previous estimate of 12.8%. It expects a capital expenditure of $5.3 billion.

 UPS’ stock has gained 4.8% in price year-to-date. However, it has declined by 7.4% over the past year.

 Here’s what could influence UPS’ performance in the upcoming months:

Disappointing Financials

 UPS’ total revenue for the second quarter ended June 30, 2023, declined 10.9% year-over-year to $22.06 billion. Its adjusted operating profit decreased 18.4% over the prior-year quarter to $2.92 billion. The company’s adjusted operating margin came in at 13.2%, compared to 14.4% in the prior-year quarter.

 Its adjusted net income declined 24.1% year-over-year to $2.19 billion. In addition, its adjusted EPS came in at $2.54, representing a decline of 22.8% year-over-year.

Mixed Analyst Estimates

 Analysts expect UPS’ EPS and revenue for fiscal 2023 to decline 17.9% and 3.7% year-over-year to $10.63 and $96.59 billion, respectively. Its EPS and revenue for fiscal 2024 are expected to increase 9.9% and 4.3% year-over-year to $11.68 and $100.77 billion, respectively.

Mixed Valuation

 In terms of forward non-GAAP P/E, UPS’ 17.14x is 4.3% lower than the 17.90x industry average. Its 11.20x forward EV/EBITDA is 0.4% lower than the 11.25x industry average. Likewise, its 14.33x forward EV/EBIT is 8.5% lower than the 15.66x industry average.

 On the other hand, in terms of forward Price/Book, UPS’ 7.19x is 175.6% higher than the 2.61x industry average.

High Profitability

 In terms of the trailing-12-month net income margin, UPS’ 10.90% is 74.9% higher than the 6.23% industry average. Likewise, its 16.23% trailing-12-month EBITDA margin is 20% higher than the industry average of 13.53%. Furthermore, the stock’s 4.88% trailing-12-month Capex/Sales is 67% higher than the industry average of 2.93%.

Solid Historical Growth

 UPS’ revenue grew at a CAGR of 9.7% over the past three years. Its EBITDA grew at a CAGR of 16.7% over the past three years. Moreover, its EPS grew at a CAGR of 35.8% over the past three years.

Bottom Line

 The agreement UPS reached with Teamsters will cost it $30 billion in additional spending over the five-year contract period, increasing its costs significantly.

 Additionally, the threat of the strike still lingers as many union members could vote against the ratification as they were not pleased with the $21 per hour pay for part-time workers. They were expecting a wage of around $25 per hour.

 Furthermore, UPS faces stiff competition from FedEx Corporation (FDX). Given the mixed analyst estimates and valuation, waiting for a better entry point in UPS shares could be wise.

NVIDIA (NVDA) vs. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD): Which Stock Is Proving to Be the Better Long-Term AI Buy

After its earnings release on May 24, the Santa Clara-based graphics chip maker NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) stole the thunder by becoming the first semiconductor company to hit a valuation of $1 trillion.

NVDA has also blown away Street expectations ahead of its quarterly earnings release on August 23, with profits for the current quarter expected to be at least 50% higher than analyst estimates and the momentum expected to continue in the foreseeable future.

On the other hand, since its humble beginnings as a supplier for Intel Corporation (INTC), Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. (AMD) has come a long way. During its earnings release for the second quarter, despite persistent weakness in the PC market, the company’s result topped analyst estimates.

While NVDA has carved its niche and cornered a significant share of the GPU domain through advancements in parallel (and consequently accelerated) computing which began back in 2006 with the release of a software toolkit called CUDA, Chair and CEO Dr. Lisa Su is widely credited with AMD’s turnaround and transition from being widely dismissed due to performance issues and delayed releases to being the only company in the world to design both CPUs and GPUs at scale.

The New (Perhaps Only) Game in Town

As a general-purpose technology, such as the steam engine and electricity, Artificial Intelligence (AI) that has already been touching and influencing all facets of our life, including how we shop, drive, date, entertain ourselves, manage our finances, take care of our health, and much more.

However, late in November of last year, when OpenAI opened its artificial intelligence chatbot, ChatGPT, to the general public, all hell broke loose. The application took the world by storm. It amassed 1 million users in five days and 100 million monthly active users only two months into its launch to become the fastest-growing application in history.

The generative AI-powered application’s capability to provide (surprisingly) human-like responses to user requests equally fascinated and concerned individuals, businesses, and institutions with the possibilities of the technology. A large language model or LLM powers ChatGPT. This gives the application the ability to understand human language and provide responses based on the large body of information on which the model has been trained.

NVDA is reaping the rewards for all that invisible work done in the field of parallel computing. Parallel computing was ideal for artificial neural networks' deep (machine) learning. As a result of that head start in the AI tech race, its A100 chips, which are powering LLMs like ChatGPT, have become indispensable for Silicon Valley tech giants.

To put things into context, the supercomputer behind OpenAI’s ChatGPT needed 10,000 of NVDA’s famous chips. With each chip costing $10,000, a single algorithm that’s fast becoming ubiquitous is powered by semiconductors worth $100 million.

However, AMD isn’t too far behind either. According to Dr. Su, Data Center is the most strategic piece of business as far as high-performance computing is concerned. AMD underscored this commitment with the recent acquisition of data center optimization startup Pensando for $1.9 billion.

At the premiere, AMD’s ambitions to capitalize on the AI boom were loud and clear, with the launch of MI300X (a GPU-only chip) as a direct competitor to NVDA’s H100. The chip includes 8 GPUs (5nm GPUs with 6nm I/O) with 192GB of HBM3 and 5.2TB/s of memory bandwidth.

AMD believes this will allow LLMs’ inference workloads that require substantial memory to be run using fewer GPUs, which could improve the TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) compared to the H100.

The Road Ahead

The optimism surrounding both companies is justified.

With NVDA’s presence in data centers, cloud computing, and AI, its chips are making their way into self-driving cars, engines that enable the creation of digital twins with omniverse that could be used to run simulations and train AI algorithms for various applications.

On the other hand, AMD has also been training its guns to exploit the burgeoning AI accelerator market, projected to be over $30 billion in 2023 and potentially exceed $150 billion in 2027.

AMD is one of the few companies making high-end GPUs needed for artificial intelligence. With AI being seen as a tailwind that could drive PC sales, the company announced plans to launch new Radeon 7000 desktop GPUs at its quarterly earnings release. It is being speculated that the GPU will come with two 8-pin PCIe power connectors and four video out ports, including three DisplayPort 2.1 and one HDMI 2.1.

Caveats

AMD existed as both a chip designer and manufacturer, at least until 2009. However,  significant capex requirements associated with manufacturing, amid financial troubles in the wake of the Great Recession, compelled the company to demerge and spin off its fab to form GlobalFoundries Inc. (GFS), which has been focused on manufacturing low-end chips ever since.

Today, both NVDA and AMD operate as fabless chip companies. Hence, both companies face risks of backward integration by companies such as Apple Inc. (AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), and Tesla Inc. (TSLA) with the wherewithal to develop the intellectual capital to design their own chips.

Moreover, almost all of the manufacturing has been outsourced to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Ltd. (TSM), which has yet to diversify significantly outside Taiwan and has become the bone of contention between the two leading superpowers.

With geopolitical risk being the potential Achilles heel for both companies, their efforts toward geographical diversification also receive much-needed political encouragement through the Chips and Science Act.

Dr. Su, who also serves on President Biden’s council of advisors on science and technology, pushed hard for the passage of the Act. It is aimed at on-shoring and de-risking semiconductor manufacturing in the interest of national security by setting aside $52 billion to incentivize companies to manufacture semiconductors domestically.

Bottom Line

Given its massive importance and cornucopia of applications, it’s hardly surprising that Zion Market Research forecasts the global AI industry to grow to $422.37 billion by 2028. Hence, this field has understandably garnered massive attention from investors who are reluctant to miss the bus on such a watershed development in the history of humankind.

Hence, in view of product diversification, increasing traction in the GPU segment, and relatively higher valuation comfort, investors in AMD could benefit from more sustained upside potential compared to NVDA.