Investing

Wednesday's Top Analyst Upgrades and Downgrades: Amazon, Lucid, Nike, Tesla, Valero Energy, Walgreens, Wells Fargo and More

alexsl / iStock via Getty Images

The futures were trading lower as investors returned from the holiday to finish out a shortened trading week. With sparse volume and an early close on Monday, all the major indexes ended modestly higher. The Nasdaq, which ripped off a stunning 33% first-half gain, an all-time record for the tech-heavy index, led the gains Monday, up 0.21% at 13,816.77. The attention now turns to the jobs report for June on Friday, which while expected to be slowing some still remains reasonably strong. A strong report and a sustained, albeit lower, inflation print for the month virtually assures another federal funds hike in late July.

Treasury yields were modestly higher on Monday, after some big-time selling last week. The benchmark 10-year note closed at 3.86%, the highest level since early March, and all the maturities of a year or less ended over the 5% level. In addition, with the two-year closing at 4.94%, the inversion with the 10-year maturity widened the spread out to 108 basis points, the widest in 40 years.

Brent and West Texas Intermediate crude finished Monday lower, and like the equity markets, volume was low. The tailwind for the markets for the rest of this week and beyond likely will be that Saudi Arabia announced a month-long extension of its 1 million barrel-per-day oil production cut, which now will go through August. Natural gas finished Monday lower by 3.47% at $2.70, after posting a strong week to end the quarter.

Gold moved higher to start off the new quarter, closing at $1,929.60, after a second quarter to forget that saw the bullion trade over $2,000 as recently as early May. Bitcoin, which had a big second quarter, continued its winning ways on Monday by closing up 1.8% at $31,164.

24/7 Wall St. reviews dozens of analyst research reports each day of the week with a goal of finding fresh ideas for investors and traders alike. Some of these daily analyst calls cover stocks to buy. Other calls cover stocks to sell or avoid. Remember that no single analyst call should ever be used as a basis to buy or sell a stock. Consensus analyst target data is from Refinitiv.

These are the top analyst upgrades, downgrades and initiations seen on Wednesday, July 5, 2023.

ACM Research Inc. (NASDAQ: ACMR): Jefferies upgraded the shares to Buy from Underperform and lifted its $9 target price all the way to $23.40. The consensus target is $17.44. The stock closed over 13% higher on Monday at $14.83 due to the upgrade and positive commentary.

Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN): DBS Bank started coverage with a Buy rating and a $150 target price. That compares with a $140.04 consensus target and Monday’s last print of $130.22.

AutoNation Inc. (NYSE: AN): Benchmark reiterated a Buy rating on the shares while lifting the $185 target price to $200. The consensus target is just $162.75, below Monday’s close at $166.51.


Thank you for reading! Have some feedback for us?
Contact the 24/7 Wall St. editorial team.