Check out the companies making headlines in midday trading: Advanced Micro Devices — The chipmaker’s stock gained more than 2%. Advanced Micro Devices announced plans to buy server builder ZT Systems in a cash-and-stock deal totaling $4.9 billion. HP — Shares slid more than 3% after Morgan Stanley downgraded the personal computing company to equal weight from overweight, citing limited upside potential. Sweetgreen — The salad chain dropped 6% after Piper Sandler downgraded Sweetgreen to neutral from overweight, saying the risk/reward for the stock is now more balanced. Analyst Brian Mullan issued the rating change on the back of a softening outlook on the fast-casual sector, but he noted that his long-term view on Sweetgreen remains bright. Estée Lauder — The beauty stock added about 1%. Estée Lauder offered disappointing guidance for the 2025 fiscal year. The company also announced that its CEO Fabrizio Freda will retire at the end of fiscal 2025. FuboTV — The sports-focused streaming stock rallied 33%. A U.S. judge on Friday temporarily blocked sports streaming service Venu from launching. FuboTV had alleged in the suit that the joint sports streaming service from Disney, Warner Bros. Discovery and Fox was anticompetitive. Taylor Morrison Home — The stock added 3% following an upgrade at BTIG to buy from neutral. The firm said it has increased confidence in the homebuilder’s long-term goals. General Motors — The industrial giant’s stock inched higher by less than 1%. GM said it is laying off more than 1,000 salaried employees globally in its software and services division following a review to streamline the unit’s operations. The layoffs include roughly 600 jobs at General Motors’ tech campus near Detroit. Dutch Bros — Shares of the coffee chain dipped 3% after Piper Sandler downgraded the stock to neutral from overweight. Dutch Bros could be hurt by softening traffic to fast-casual restaurants, according to the investment firm. Zim Integrated Shipping Services — The marine shipping stock popped 23% after raising its full-year outlook for adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization. The company said to expect between $2.6 billion and $3 billion for adjusted EBITDA in the full year, higher than its previously forecast range of $1.15 billion to $1.55 billion. Zim also said it earned $1.93 billion in revenue during its second quarter. Shake Shack — Shares slipped 3% after Piper Sandler downgraded the burger chain to neutral from overweight. The firm cited a worsening industry backdrop. McDonald’s — The burger giant jumped 3% after Evercore ISI hiked its price target to $320 from $300. “We are increasingly bullish on McDonald’s US business for 2024 with some relative market share trend improvement occurring recently which we believe will continue through 2H24,” analysts wrote in a Monday report. The firm kept its rating of outperform on McDonald’s. — CNBC’s Alex Harring, Michelle Fox, Yun Li, Sarah Min, Hakyung Kim and Jesse Pound contributed reporting.
Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway outperformed the S & P 500 in 2024 and pulled off its best year since 2021. Class A shares of the Omaha-based conglomerate rallied 25.5% last year, beating the S & P 500’s 23.3% return. Berkshire shares topped $700,000 during the year and posted their ninth positive year in a row. BRK.A 1Y mountain Berkshire Hathaway The strong performance came even as the “Oracle of Omaha” halted Berkshire’s stock buyback program as the share price with the stock getting pricier and pricier. Instead, the conglomerate relied on solid operating earnings this year, supported by strong investment income and underwriting earnings within auto insurer Geico. $325 Billion Cash Interest and other investment income reached $8 billion in the first three quarters of 2024, compared to the prior year’s $4.2 billion. A big factor was Berkshire’s gigantic war chest — some $325 billion as of the end of September, nearly double the $168 billion level at the end of 2023. Higher interest rates, albeit off their peak, still enabled the conglomerate to earn a competitive return on the cash hoard. The legendary, 94-year-old investor amassed such a jaw-dropping amount of cash in 2024 by selling down his two largest holdings, Apple and Bank of America , a move that surprised many. He was in a selling mood for most of 2024, offloading $133 billion worth of stock in the first three quarters of the year. Winning Geico Geico, Berkshire’s insurance crown jewel and what Buffett his called his “favorite child,” continued its turnaround story in 2024. The insurer recorded an underwriting profit of $5.7 billion in the first three quarters of 2024, more than doubling the $2.3 billion total in the same period of 2023. As recently as 2022, Geico suffered a $1.9 billion pretax underwriting loss as it sacrificed market share to competitor Progressive due to the slow adoption of telematics . Telematics software programs allow insurers to collect clients’ driving data, including their mileage and speed, to help price policies. Geico helped offset the weakness in Berkshire’s other insurance operations, including Berkshire Hathaway Primary Group and Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance Group, which both experienced an underwriting loss in the third quarter of 2024. ‘Wishful Thinking’ While Berkshire outpaced the S & P 500 last year, Buffett has tempered expectations for future outperformance citing its enormous size. He noted that it’s very difficult for any investments to move the needle because of the sheer amount of cash Berkshire is working with. Buffett said Berkshire’s group of diversified, quality businesses — from BNSF Railway to See’s Candy —should provide “slightly better” performance than the average U.S. company, but anything more than that is unlikely. ‘With our present mix of businesses, Berkshire should do a bit better than the average American corporation and, more important, should also operate with materially less risk of permanent loss of capital,” Buffett said in his 2023 annual letter. “Anything beyond ‘slightly better,’ though, is wishful thinking.” Still, Buffett’s long-term track record is unparalleled. Berkshire, which cuts across 40 industries and 60 companies, has doubled the average annual return of the S & P 500 since Buffett first took control back in the 1960s.
Traders work at the New York Stock Exchange on Dec. 31, 2024.
NYSE
Crypto trades jumping. Roaring Kitty boosting meme stocks. Broader market ripping on no apparent catalysts.
Animal spirits are on the run at the dawn of 2025 trading.
Many speculative pockets of the stock market surged in early trading Thursday, the first session of the new year, right after the S&P 500 closed out the best two-year run since 1998.
Stocks tied to the price of bitcoin jumped as the cryptocurrency climbed back over $96,000. Microstrategy added 4% premarket after climbing more than 360% in 2024. Crypto-related companies Coinbase, Robinhood, Mara Holdings and Riot Platforms also traded higher after a big 2024.
Elsewhere, retail traders active on social media were busy playing a guessing game after online personality Roaring Kitty posted another cryptic message on X of a short clip of the late musician Rick James. Some believe the meme stock leader, AKA Keith Gill, was referring to Unity Software, whose stock soared 10% in premarket, while others think he’s back touting his original favorite GameStop, whose shares also caught a bid in premarket.
Meanwhile, semiconductor stocks — 2024’s big winners — helped lead the market again after the artificial intelligence trade lost some steam at the end of last year. Broadcom jumped 2% Thursday, while Nvidia gained 1.6%.
What’s more, golf stock Topgolf Callaway Brands jumped 8.5% on the back of an upgrade at Jefferies to buy from hold. The investment bank said shares of the golf equipment maker looked oversold and raised its price target to 65% above where the stock closed the year.
With a pickup in market speculation, broad stock futures were on the rise to kick off 2025. Dow futures advanced as much as 300 points. S&P 500 futures added 0.8%, and Nasdaq-100 futures rose 1%.
Thursday’s dramatic moves resembled the initial rallies on the back of Donald Trump’s election victory in November, as investors bet his pro-business policies would drive companies and the economy to strong growth. Those gains slowed toward the end of 2024 as concern grew that the president-elect’s protectionist policies could stir inflation or disrupt chains, and as the Federal Reserve signaled fewer interest rate cuts in 2025.
“Many investors assume that the incoming administration’s push for deregulation will unleash ‘animal spirits,'” Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, said in a recent note to clients. “But what if it only accelerates the concentration of monopoly power in the hands of a few, diluting the efficacy of broad economic measures and leaving behind even larger swaths of the populace?”
Check out the companies making headlines in premarket trading. Synaptics — The semiconductor company climbed 5.9% after announcing a partnership with Google on Edge AI. Through the collaboration, Google’s machine learning core will be integrated on Synaptics’ Astra hardware. Nvidia — Shares of the chip maker popped 1.7%, marking a positive start to the new trading year after being one of the best performers of 2024. Loop Capital told clients that Nvidia is in a “nirvana” moment and is showing signs that its rally can be sustained. China stocks — U.S.-listed shares of Chinese stocks struggled, with the iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI) sliding 1.4%. Chinese stocks led losses in Asia after a purchasing managers’ index missed economist expectations. Xpeng and JD.Com also both retreated by more than 1%. Crypto stocks – Stocks tied to the price of bitcoin rose, as the cryptocurrency climbed back over $96,000 and investors shrugged off losses from the final trading session of 2024. Coinbase and MicroStrategy each advanced about 4%. Miners Mara Holdings , Riot Platforms and Bitdeer were higher by more than 3% each. Uber , Norwegian Cruise Line — Both stocks traded higher after Goldman Sachs added the pair to its conviction buy list for January. Uber advanced 1.4%, while Norwegian popped 2.4%. Topgolf Callaway Brands — The golf stock jumped 8.5% on the back of an upgrade at Jefferies to buy from hold. The firm said shares appeared oversold. It raised its price target to $13 from $11, suggesting 65% upside ahead. Cloudflare — The cloud cybersecurity company jumped 5.6% after Goldman Sachs double upgraded the stock to buy from sell. The firm also nearly doubled its price target, citing “several positive catalysts” heading into 2025 including in sales and marketing productivity improvements and edge compute solutions. US Bancorp — The bank stock added 1.8% on the heels of a D.A. Davidson upgrade to buy from neutral. The firm said the bank is “turning a corner” and should see positive operating leverage return to a level above 0.5%. RTX — Shares rose 1.5% following Deutsche Bank’s upgrade to buy from hold and price target hike. The Wall Street firm said the defense company previously known as Raytheon Technologies is a “better earnings compounding story” than its peers. The price target, raised to $140 from $131, implies more than 20% upside from Tuesday’s close. — CNBC’s Tanaya Macheel, Sarah Min, Pia Singh and Michelle Fox contributed reporting