Nvidia profits fail to spark share price rally; UK to join Pacific trade bloc in December – business live

Nvidia shares down 7% pre-market; UK car production falls 14%

Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets.

Nvidia shares are down 7% in after-hours trading despite actually beating analyst expectations for sales and profits.

The Silicon Valley chip designer reported sales more than doubling to $30bn (£23bn), up 122% in the second quarter compared with last year. Analysts had expected sales of $28.7bn on average.

Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive of Nvidia, said anticipation for its forthcoming Blackwell chips – which squeeze in 208bn transistors to carry out the calculations needed to train large language model – was “incredible”, and demand for its current range remained strong. He said:

Nvidia achieved record revenues as global data centers are in full throttle to modernize the entire computing stack with accelerated computing and generative AI.”

So how come shares fell after US trading hours when the company gave every signal that it believes it is still riding the crest of the artificial intelligence (AI) wave?

One might have been the lack of detail on delays that hit Blackwell chip production – although the company suggested those manufacturing issues had been sorted by TSMC, the Taiwan semiconductor manufacturer that builds Nvidia’s most advanced chips.

But another may be that the company’s growth has been so enormous that it needs to not just beat expectations to rise further, but smash them.

Henry Allen, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, said:

Although the results slightly beat expectations, their share price was down around -7% in after-hours trading, partly because it fell short of some estimates that had been looking for an even stronger release. For instance, the revenue outperformance was the smallest relative to expectations in six quarters, so this wasn’t the sort of massive beat that Nvidia has often reported over the last 18 months.

At the same time, the Q3 revenue guidance came in a touch above the average estimate ($32.5bn vs $31.9bn est.) but still well within the range of analysts’ views.

UK car production slips as carmakers prepare for new models

Back in the UK, car manufacturing numbers are down, but only as companies switch production to new models, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

The lobby group said that production dropped 14.4% in July “as model changeovers and temporary supply chain constraints restrict output”.

One of those new models is likely to be the electric Range Rover, the first electric car to be built in Britain by Jaguar Land Rover, the UK’s biggest manufacturer. Its only other electric model, the Jaguar I-Pace, is built by a contract manufacturer in Austria.

The industry produced 482,000 cars in the first seven months of the year, down 9% from 2023. The SMMT is hoping that annual production will rise above 1m cars next year as new models start production.

A chart showing that UK car production has fallen.
UK car production has fallen, but the industry hopes it will rise back above 1m cars this year. Photograph: Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT)

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the SMMT, said

Following significant growth last year, some readjustment in output was to be expected. Indeed, an ongoing degree of volatility is likely as the industry restructures to transition to zero emission vehicle production.

As the billions already committed to new models start to deliver a return, volume growth will resume, providing we seize every opportunity to enhance our global competitiveness.

The agenda

  • 10am BST: Eurozone consumer confidence (August; -13 point; consensus: -13.4)

  • 10:15am BST: European Central Bank speech by chief economist Philip Lane in Frankfurt

  • 1pm BST: Germany inflation rate (August; prev.:2.3% annualised; cons.: 2.1%)

  • 1:30pm BST: US GDP second estimate (second quarter; prev.: 1.4% annualised; cons.: 2.8%)

Employees working on the final assembly of an ASML semiconductor lithography tool with its panels removed, in Veldhoven, Netherlands, in 2019. Photograph: Bart van Overbeeke Fotografie/AS/Reuters

Back in the world of computer chips, Bloomberg News has an interesting story on another of the companies that is key to the global industry.

The Netherlands plans to limit the ability of chip toolmaker ASML to repair and maintain semiconductor machinery in China, Bloomberg reports, citing unnamed sources.

ASML makes the advanced lithography machines that are used to draw transistors onto semiconducting material at the nanometre scale. It is the only company capable of making equipment to manufacture of the world’s most advanced chips, including those with four-nanometre transistors made by Taiwan’s TSMC for Nvidia.

The reliance on ASML has made it a crucial player in the race for dominance of the most advanced chip technologies between China and allies of the US, including Taiwan. Delays or even inability to repair ASML machines could prove a setback for Chinese chipmakers.

Bloomberg reported: “The government of prime minister Dick Schoof will likely not renew certain ASML licenses to service and provide spare parts in China when they expire at the end of this year.”

A decision to limit the licences would likely further spur China’s efforts to build its own chip industry, after exports to China of certain ASML products were barred earlier this year. Chinese tech champion Huawei has been at the centre of those efforts.

Sainsbury’s to create 1,000 new jobs as it converts Homebase to supermarkets

A customer passes by a Homebase store in High Wycombe, northwest of London, in 2018. Photograph: Andy Rain/EPA

Sainsbury’s has said it will create 1,000 new UK jobs after reaching a deal to buy 10 Homebase stores to convert them to supermarkets.

The total investment, including buying the leases and spending on fitting them out, will be £130m, Sainsbury’s said in a statement to the stock market.

The first of the Homebase stores will reopen as supermarkets next summer, with all of them to be completed by the end of next year.

Homebase – once actually part of Sainsbury’s – has been owned by private equity fund Hilco Capital since 2018, when it paid £1 for the retailer as it went through an agreement with creditors that resulted in 1,500 job losses. Sky News last month reported that Hilco was considering a sale to The Range, a Devon-based homeware chain that bought out the remains of the Wilko brand.

Simon Roberts, Sainsbury’s chief executive, said:

Sainsbury’s food business continues to go from strength to strength as we push ahead with our Next Level Sainsbury’s plan. We have the best combination of value and quality in the market and that’s winning us customers from all our key competitors and driving consistent growth in volume market share.

We want to build on this momentum which is why we are growing our supermarket footprint. Our ambition is to be customers’ first choice for food and these new stores will showcase some of the best that Sainsbury’s supermarkets have to offer to even more communities around the country.

Nvidia share price recovers to 1.9% decline in pre-market trading

Nvidia shares were down by 7% early this morning in trading before Wall Street stock markets open, but they have recovered somewhat. Now they are down by only 1.9%.

Analysts have had time to digest the results, and some are emphasising the message that the chip designer’s performance was still very impressive – even if it did not blow past the most optimistic estimates as it has done in the past.

Blayne Curtis and Ezra Weener, analysts at Jefferies, a US investment bank, have upgraded their price target after the results. They said they were happy with indications that delays to the new Blackwell chip are sorted, and the current Hopper model is still selling well.

Hopper demand remains strong and the company noted the Blackwell ramp was a key topic of discussion with expectations of several billion in revenue starting in 4Q – on time despite fears of more significant delays. The delay was fairly well understood already but the company did note a change to the Blackwell GPU mask to improve production yield.

Overall, AI spend levels won’t be without a debate but the story is back on track with the Blackwell delay fears now in the rearview and several billion dollars of Blackwell layering onto continued growth in Hopper in the back half.

Lindsay James, investment strategist at Quilter Investors, a fund manager, said:

Whilst there is no question that the appetite for the company’s product range remains strong, ahead of the delayed shipments of the latest chip design in Q4, expectations will change little following this release, likely taking a little hot air out of the stock as a result. However, with earnings set to more than double in this fiscal year and the valuation not excessive in light of this growth, there is something for both the stock bulls and the bears to sink their teeth into.

UK to enter trans-pacific partnership trade bloc on 15 December

The UK will officially enter a new trading bloc on 15 December, after ratification by Peru completed the requirements to join.

The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) will eventually give British exporters tariff-free access to 11 countries, although it will only apply at first to the six who have ratified it: Japan, Singapore, Chile, New Zealand, Vietnam and now Peru.

The UK’s business department on Thursday said that “the agreement could boost the UK economy by around £2bn annually” – albeit by 2040. It was seen as a key trade achievement by the previous Conservative government.

But don’t think of it as an economic game-changer to make up for the dent to trade with the EU after Brexit. The Observer’s political editor, Toby Helm, on Sunday reported:

Last year, as the Tories presented entry into the Trans-Pacific Partnership as a cornerstone of post-Brexit “global Britain”, the Office for Budget Responsibility said it would add just 0.04% to GDP in the “long run”, which it defined as 15 years of membership.

The spending watchdog also said that two separate bilateral deals between Britain and Australia and New Zealand, also hailed as landmark trade agreements following Brexit, “might increase the level of real GDP by a combined 0.1% by 2035”.

Douglas Alexander, the minister of state for trade policy, said businesses should contact the government to ask about possible benefits. He said:

This is good news for UK businesses, who are now one step closer to being able to take advantage of the opportunities our membership of CPTPP will bring.

We’re extremely grateful to all the CPTPP partners that have already ratified our accession – Japan, Singapore, Chile, New Zealand, Vietnam and now Peru – and look forward to more doing so over the coming months.

The eurozone economy is on track to improve, according to a measure of economic sentiment from the European Commission.

The economic sentiment indicator, based on responses from businesses and households, rose from 95.8 points in July to 96.9 in August. That was higher than the flat reading expected by economists.

However, the indicator remains below its long-term average – hardly surprising when the largest economy, Germany, is still struggling markedly.

Economic sentiment in the eurozone picked up in August, according to the European Commission. Photograph: European Commission

The Commission’s measure of consumer confidence fell slightly, to -13.5 points. That was down from -13.4 points the month before.

Nvidia has been the biggest beneficiary of the hype around artificial intelligence, on the basis that it is the main “picks and shovels” play: rather than trying to take part in the gold rush yourself, be the person who owns the tools for the rush.

But another measure of whether that hype can be maintained will be the latest fundraising by OpenAI. It was the company that kicked off the investment frenzy when it released ChatGPT in late 2022, a chatbot that can speak and provide answers in a way that seems on a level with humans (albeit with the same human bluster and fallibility).

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman speaks at a Microsoft conference in May. Photograph: Jason Redmond/AFP/Getty Images

The company, run by Sam Altman, has already achieved a valuation of $86bn, but it is reportedly seeking investment that will put it above the $100bn mark, Bloomberg News and the Financial Times reported. The FT said:

The San Francisco-based company is talking to venture capital firms including Thrive Capital, which is set to invest $1bn and lead the round, as well as other investors, according to two people with knowledge of the situation.

According to one investor in the company, OpenAI stock has recently traded on the secondary market at a price that implies a valuation of more than $110bn.

That investment would be good news for Nvidia, as much of that money will probably go directly to it to buy graphical processing units (GPUs), the specialised chips designed for computer gaming that turned out to be ideal for training AI systems.

Altman’s most recent post on X (from three weeks ago) was very complimentary about Thrive’s boss, Josh Kushner. But then again it’s probably worth being nice when a billion dollars is reportedly on the table…

i have been fortunate to work with many great investors; there is no one i’d recommend more highly than josh. https://t.co/7oshACICGq

— Sam Altman (@sama) August 8, 2024

European big company share prices have risen to their highest level in six weeks, even if they have hardly been set alight.

The Euro Stoxx 600 index gained 0.4% to reach its highest since 15 July. Since then shares have plunged in that early August slump, and then more than recovered.

The Euro Stoxx 600 index has edged up to a six-week high. Photograph: Refinitiv

European tech stocks have risen by 0.8% on Thursday morning. Reuters reported:

European semis are taking Nvidia’s results in their stride, with STMicro, ASML and ASM International up between 0.7%-1.3%.

Drax to pay £25m fine for inaccurate data on source of wood for controversial generator

Kalyeena Makortoff

Kalyeena Makortoff

Drax power station is controversial because some activists dispute the claim that burning wood pellets can be classed as enviromentally sustainable and ecologically sound. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer

The power generator Drax has agreed to pay £25m after the energy industry regulator found submitted inaccurate sustainability data on the sourcing of wood pellets used as its massive plant in North Yorkshire.

The investigation by Ofgem, which was launched last year, concluded that there was “an absence of adequate data governance and controls in place” on the sourcing of wood from Canada between April 2021 the end of March 2022.

Drax, which is the recipient of significant UK government subsidies, has faced continued scrutiny over the sustainability of its wood-burning power generation business.

Around 80% of the wood pellets used in Drax’s biomass plants are sourced from forests in the US and Canada.

Ofgem said there was no evidence to suggest that that the breach was deliberate, saying instead that it was “technical in nature”.

The regulator also said the data ultimately fell outside of the criteria used to determine the amount of public funding that Drax receives and would not impact its government subsidies. At least 70% of biomass has to come from sustainable sources in order for companies to receive government funding.

Drax has agreed to pay £25m towards a voluntary redress scheme to settle the matter, and resubmit its profiling data for Canadian-sourced wood pellets. It will also hire an independent auditor to produce data for its annual biomass report for the year to March.

However, Ofgem’s findings are likely to fuel further criticism around government support for Drax’s and its biomass operations, which have increasingly come under scrutiny from MPs and environmental campaigners.

HSBC shuffles bosses ahead of new chief executive’s start

Georges Elhedery, HSBC’s incoming chief executive, in an interview in 2017. Photograph: Tom Arnold/Reuters

HSBC’s new boss Georges Elhedery will not start his new job officially until Monday, but it looks like the customary reshuffle at the top under a new chief executive is already underway.

Elhedery, who is still technically the UK-listed bank’s chief financial officer until then, is replacing Noel Quinn, who in April made the unexpected announcement that he was stepping down after an “intense” five years in charge.

Here is what we have learned today about the jostling behind the scenes (via a statement from the bank reported Reuters). The resignation of Nuno Matos in particular is interesting: he was seen as a potential candidate to take the top chief executive job.

Out:

  • HSBC chief executive of wealth and personal banking Nuno Matos will resign.

  • John Hinshaw, HSBC group chief operating officer, has also decided to leave the group to pursue other opportunities.

In:

  • Stuart Riley is appointed to the expanded HSBC global chief information officer role, which will assume responsibility for data and innovation.

  • Suzy White, HSBC global banking and markets chief operating officer, has been appointed global chief operating officer on an interim basis.

European stock markets are basically unmoved this morning, despite the money on the move in the US after Nvidia’s results.

A reminder that we are still just about in August, when much of the investment world takes a holiday. Of course, that can lead to dramatic volatility as we saw this month.

Today we appear to have the opposite though. In a rare occurrence, none of the major stock market indices have stirred. Here are the opening snaps from Reuters:

  • EUROPE’S STOXX 600 FLAT

  • BRITAIN’S FTSE 100 FLAT; GERMANY’S DAX FLAT

  • FRANCE’S CAC 40 FLAT; SPAIN’S IBEX FLAT

  • EURO STOXX INDEX FLAT; EURO ZONE BLUE CHIPS FLAT

Nvidia shares down 7% pre-market; UK car production falls 14%

Good morning, and welcome to our live coverage of business, economics and financial markets.

Nvidia shares are down 7% in after-hours trading despite actually beating analyst expectations for sales and profits.

The Silicon Valley chip designer reported sales more than doubling to $30bn (£23bn), up 122% in the second quarter compared with last year. Analysts had expected sales of $28.7bn on average.

Jensen Huang, founder and chief executive of Nvidia, said anticipation for its forthcoming Blackwell chips – which squeeze in 208bn transistors to carry out the calculations needed to train large language model – was “incredible”, and demand for its current range remained strong. He said:

Nvidia achieved record revenues as global data centers are in full throttle to modernize the entire computing stack with accelerated computing and generative AI.”

So how come shares fell after US trading hours when the company gave every signal that it believes it is still riding the crest of the artificial intelligence (AI) wave?

One might have been the lack of detail on delays that hit Blackwell chip production – although the company suggested those manufacturing issues had been sorted by TSMC, the Taiwan semiconductor manufacturer that builds Nvidia’s most advanced chips.

But another may be that the company’s growth has been so enormous that it needs to not just beat expectations to rise further, but smash them.

Henry Allen, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, said:

Although the results slightly beat expectations, their share price was down around -7% in after-hours trading, partly because it fell short of some estimates that had been looking for an even stronger release. For instance, the revenue outperformance was the smallest relative to expectations in six quarters, so this wasn’t the sort of massive beat that Nvidia has often reported over the last 18 months.

At the same time, the Q3 revenue guidance came in a touch above the average estimate ($32.5bn vs $31.9bn est.) but still well within the range of analysts’ views.

UK car production slips as carmakers prepare for new models

Back in the UK, car manufacturing numbers are down, but only as companies switch production to new models, according to the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT).

The lobby group said that production dropped 14.4% in July “as model changeovers and temporary supply chain constraints restrict output”.

One of those new models is likely to be the electric Range Rover, the first electric car to be built in Britain by Jaguar Land Rover, the UK’s biggest manufacturer. Its only other electric model, the Jaguar I-Pace, is built by a contract manufacturer in Austria.

The industry produced 482,000 cars in the first seven months of the year, down 9% from 2023. The SMMT is hoping that annual production will rise above 1m cars next year as new models start production.

UK car production has fallen, but the industry hopes it will rise back above 1m cars this year. Photograph: Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT)

Mike Hawes, chief executive of the SMMT, said

Following significant growth last year, some readjustment in output was to be expected. Indeed, an ongoing degree of volatility is likely as the industry restructures to transition to zero emission vehicle production.

As the billions already committed to new models start to deliver a return, volume growth will resume, providing we seize every opportunity to enhance our global competitiveness.

The agenda

  • 10am BST: Eurozone consumer confidence (August; -13 point; consensus: -13.4)

  • 10:15am BST: European Central Bank speech by chief economist Philip Lane in Frankfurt

  • 1pm BST: Germany inflation rate (August; prev.:2.3% annualised; cons.: 2.1%)

  • 1:30pm BST: US GDP second estimate (second quarter; prev.: 1.4% annualised; cons.: 2.8%)

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