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    Our guide to semiconductor companies and how their chips run our everyday lives

    The semiconductor, or chip, industry is perhaps one of the most important and complex sectors in the stock market to understand. Chips are in everything from our smartphones to cars and to all facets of computing, from PCs to massive data centers used for the cloud. Put simply, they are the bricks and mortar of the digital world. We don’t see them, but we know they magically make stuff work. Semiconductor companies are also in the news a lot lately, whether it’s the U.S. government cracking down on chip exports to China or innovations in connected cars and artificial intelligence. But that doesn’t make the industry any easier to understand, even for those familiar with the well-known players. Making things trickier: The market tends to bucket anything chip-related into broad-based investment vehicles, such as exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and mutual funds. These companies, however, are quite specialized. Despite the industry being out-of-favor right now – and our ongoing effort to scale back our once over-weighted chip holdings – we believe that investors’ portfolios should have at least some exposure to the industry. For starters, they are crucial to nearly all secular growth trends today and into the future. And trying to time the booms and busts of the cycle is incredibly difficult if not impossible to do consistently. In our portfolio, we have small positions remaining in Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Nvidia (NVDA), Marvell Technology (MRVL) and Qualcomm (QCOM) — all of which design chips for varying uses. ( We’ll get into the specifics later ). Here then is our guide to all things semiconductor. Our goal is to help you better understand where different chip-related companies sit in the supply chain, to differentiate these companies by their end markets, and to gain more insight on how money flows through the industry. After all, one company’s capital expenditure is another company’s revenue. What is a foundry model? The term foundry is industry jargon, referring to the factory where chips are made. There are four main categories in the supply chain under this model: Capital equipment makers, pure-play foundries or fabs, fabless designers, and integrated device makers. Capital equipment companies — such as Applied Materials (AMAT), Lam Research (LRCX), ASML Holdings (ASML) and KLA Corporation (KLAC) — make the machines used in the manufacturing of semiconductors. Pure-play foundries , or fabs, are companies with factories that fabricate (manufacture) chips designed by other firms (some designers have their own factories but we will touch on that below). In these monstrous facilities, you will find the capital equipment made by the capital equipment makers. That alone should provide some insight into the money flow, because when a foundry is being updated or built from scratch, a good deal of that spending is going to go into buying equipment from the capital equipment makers. When you hear commentary on a call from a foundry player about capital expenditure plans, just remember that what you’re also hearing is commentary on demand and revenue for capital equipment makers. Players in the foundry space include companies such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSM), often referred to as just TSMC, and GlobalFoundries (GFS). Fabless designers generally outsource the chips they draw up to foundries. Again, we can start to see the flow of funds, as strong guidance from a fabless designer means high demand — and therefore, a need for a greater number of chips. Of course, the more chips a company needs, the greater the order value it will place with a foundry player such as TSMC. Fabless designers include our Club holdings Nvidia, AMD, Marvell Technology and Qualcomm. Since these companies don’t need to invest in expensive fabrication facilities, they can run a more agile asset-light business model. They don’t have to concern themselves with the need to lay out significant capital in order to ensure their ability to manufacture the most cutting-edge chips. Finally, integrated device companies design and manufacture their own chips in-house, essentially designers with their own foundries. Players in this group include Intel (INTC), Micron Technology (MU), ON Semiconductor (ON) and Texas Instruments (TXN). Semiconductor supply chain Understanding the structure of the semiconductor sector can help to better understand how money flows through the industry — and therefore, help members leverage earnings and corporate updates to make more informed decisions when investing in the industry. Here are some examples. If we know that capital equipment is used in foundries, what we really know from a financial perspective is that the capital expenditures (capex) made at the foundry level are directly tied to capital equipment maker revenue. So, when TSMC discusses capex on its conference call, it’s our jobs as investors to read those comments through to demand for Applied Materials and Lam Research. When Nvidia discusses supply and demand dynamics, it provides insight into what it will need from a TSMC-type foundry or manufacturing facility. If there is an inventory glut, then the last thing Nvidia wants is more chips; that means fewer orders with TSMC and vice versa. Of course, in that same line of thinking, when cloud providers such as Club holdings Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Alphabet (GOOGL) discuss investments, it means they need chips. These companies’ capex is linked to revenue at fabless designers like Nvidia and AMD. We recently saw this dynamic at play when Meta Platforms (META) announced that 2023 capex spending would increase versus 2022 due to data center investments. The news tanked Meta stock due to what Wall Street believes to be undisciplined spending. However, it provided a boost to the semiconductor stocks that would realize Meta’s spending as revenue. If you hear the economy is slowing and the cloud providers say they want to “digest past investments,” they are really saying that they spent a lot of money recently and are going to pump the breaks on additional investments in cloud capacity. In your head, you need to say, “OK, cloud providers are slowing spending, which means less demand for Nvidia. If Nvidia is going to see less demand for the next few quarters then it may need to reduce orders from TSMC. And if TSMC is going to receive fewer orders, it may need cut capex — and as a result, demand for Lam Research’s equipment may decline in the near-term.” Of course, there are a lot of moving parts and timing the flow of funds is incredibly difficult. But that is how one needs to think at a high level. Remaining on the cutting edge requires always looking ahead, and companies must balance spending slowdowns with continued investment in the long term, which is why gauging the stages of the semiconductor investment cycle is so difficult. Nvidia may be seeing a glut of 30-series chips, but the company stills need to work on ramping production of its 40-series chips to be ready once the inventory glut is worked through. TSMC may not be seeing as much demand for 7-nanometer chips, but it needs to be in a position to start producing 5-nanometer and 3-nanometer chips after that. The company can’t stop spending entirely. Without going into it too deeply, the smaller the chip size, the more densely packed the transistors. This results in more speed, less power consumption, and less heat, which would also mean less effort/power consumption/cost to control temperature levels. Types of semiconductor chips Just because two companies may be lumped together based on their places within the foundry business model does not mean they should be viewed as peers or even direct competitors. Despite both being fabless designers, Qualcomm, which focuses heavily on connectivity solutions, should not be likened to fellow fabless designer Nvidia, whose main focus is on graphics processing units (GPUs). Here is a high-level overview of the different kinds of chips that should help members better understand some of the terms thrown around when discussing this industry and a jumping-off point for those that want to research more on their own. Memory : The two main categories of memory chips are NAND and DRAM. Both markets are essentially oligopolies — meaning a few players control the supply. Samsung, Micron and SK Hynix pretty much own the DRAM market. In the NAND market, Samsung and Micron are also big players, in addition to Kioxia (formerly Toshiba), Western Digital (WDC), SK Hynix and Intel. NAND generally refers to a type of flash memory whereas DRAM stands for dynamic random access memory. As you can tell, this industry can get very technical, confusing, and frustrating very fast for those not familiar with the terms. Flash memory (again, think NAND) refers to a type of non-volatile storage medium. Non-volatile simply means that your data won’t be lost once the power goes off. The most common use for flash memory that you may have seen the last time you purchased a personal computer is in solid-state drives (SSD), where all the files are stored on your computer. To really simplify things, when you hear NAND or flash memory, just think of the solid-state drive storage on a consumer PC. (Now you might be asking yourself what an SSD is. Basically, it’s the storage device that is fast replacing traditional hard disk drives (HDDs) seen in older computers. Whereas HDDs have a spinning disc on which data is written, SSDs have no moving parts, making them faster and more secure — though you will pay up for that of course. DRAM is what’s known as a volatile memory, meaning that it will retain data only so long as there is power. Oftentimes when you hear the term RAM or see memory listed on your PC specs, this is what is being referred to. Unlike flash, which stores data and files over long periods even when the power is off, DRAM is “working memory” that is called upon only when needed by a computer processor to perform a given function. The more intense the function, the more DRAM you might need, which is why a computer used for intense video editing or gaming will require more DRAM than one used to simply surf the web and check emails. Microprocessors : The three main processors to know are the central processing unit (CPU), the graphics processing unit (GPU), and the newer data processing unit (DPU). The CPU like those made by Intel and AMD, which essentially have a duopoly — two players control the supply — is basically the brains of a computer. It is responsible for retrieving instructions/inputs, decoding those instructions, and sending them along in order to have an operation carried out to deliver the desired result. As Nvidia put in a past blog post , if the CPU is the brain, then the GPU is the soul. GPUs are more specialized than CPUs and are good at taking on many tasks at once. Whereas a CPU will process data sequentially, a GPU will break down a complex problem into many small tasks and perform them at once. This is why we are seeing their prevalence grow in data centers. While the CPU remains essential, adding a GPU allows for an acceleration in data processing. With more data being transmitted, stored, and processed than ever before — as cloud computing is increasingly adopted and work on deep learning and artificial intelligence advances — speed is crucial. The GPU is essentially a duopoly owned by Nvidia and AMD. A DPU like those made by Marvell Technology and Nvidia is a newer type of processor that is becoming increasingly relevant as data centers become more complex. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a blog post , “This is going to represent one of the three major pillars of computing going forward. The CPU is for general-purpose computing, the GPU is for accelerated computing, and the DPU, which moves data around the data center, does data processing.” Everything else : To be sure, there are many different types of chips that fall outside of the memory or microprocessor classifications. Examples include those used for 5G, WiFi, Bluetooth, radiofrequency chips, near field communication chips (NFC), application-specific integrated circuit chips (ASICs), and so on. These chips are made by companies like Qualcomm, Marvell Technology, Broadcom (AVGO), ON Semiconductor, NXP Semiconductor (NXPI), and others. Rather than a deep dive into each one — something beyond the scope of this foundry industry analysis — we simply want to highlight that the term semiconductor applies to a broad array of chips designed for different purposes and exposed to different end markets that each have their own demand drivers. Bottom line When investing in the chip industry, it is crucial to understand a target company’s exposure. You don’t necessarily need an engineering level of understanding of how the chips work or are designed, but you do need to have an idea of what end market the company sells into and who the customers are. From there, you can begin to study the relevant end markets to better understand demand trends. Remember, at the end of the day, your primary question and the goal of your research is to understand where the money is flowing. That’s true for all investments but especially so when it comes to semiconductors. Because they are literally everywhere but almost never seen, it’s not as easy as saying, “Apple is going to sell a lot of iPhones this quarter.” Chances are nobody will be sitting around the Thanksgiving table talking about how excited they are for the next-generation memory and microprocessors to drop. However, when you do hear about that new gadget everyone can’t wait to get their hands on, ask yourself, “What semiconductors are sitting inside it?” Despite being a boom/bust industry, sales do tend to increase over the years, and demand throughout the cycle increases thanks to the growing prevalence of semiconductors in our daily lives, with more chips jammed into each device in smaller and smaller form factors. The iPhone, for example, didn’t always have light detection and ranging (LiDAR) technology, but it does now to support new features and that means another chip packed in the handset. While we do see secular growth on longer timeframes, the industry still suffers from brutal boom and bust dynamics. Supply and demand drives all industries, but the semiconductor industry in particular is incredibly sensitive to it. Chipmakers have significant pricing power when demand outstrips supply, as we’ve seen in recent years; new cars will literally sit in the lot collecting dust as manufacturers wait for a key chip. But we see that pricing power turn on a dime once supply exceeds demand, leading to less pricing power and inventory gluts that must be addressed before the next cycle can kick off. (Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust is long AMD, NVDA, MRVL, QCOM, AMZN, GOOGL, META and AAPL. See here for a full list of the stocks.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust’s portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.

    The logo of Nvidia Corporation is seen during the annual Computex computer exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan May 30, 2017. 
    Tyrone Siu | Reuters

    The semiconductor, or chip, industry is perhaps one of the most important and complex sectors in the stock market to understand. Chips are in everything from our smartphones to cars and to all facets of computing, from PCs to massive data centers used for the cloud. Put simply, they are the bricks and mortar of the digital world. We don’t see them, but we know they magically make stuff work. More

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    Brooklyn Nets part ways with head coach Steve Nash after 2-5 start

    The Brooklyn Nets parted ways with head coach Steve Nash on Tuesday.
    The Nets have started the season 2-5 despite a high-paid roster that includes Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and Ben Simmons.
    Brooklyn reportedly plans to hire suspended Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka to take over the job.

    Brooklyn Nets head coach Steve Nash reacts to a call during the second quarter of the game against the Indiana Pacers at Barclays Center on October 31, 2022 in New York City.
    Dustin Satloff | Getty Images

    The Brooklyn Nets parted ways with head coach Steve Nash on Tuesday, following the star-laden team’s 2-5 start to the NBA season. The decision was mutual, according to the team.
    “I wish the Nets all the success in the world and the Nash’s will be rooting for our team as they turn this season around,” Nash said in a message posted to his Twitter account Tuesday.

    Nash, a Hall of Fame player who won two NBA MVP awards, has coached the Nets since 2020, leading them on two unsuccessful playoff runs.
    Jacque Vaughn will take over as interim head coach, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania. The Nets plan to hire suspended Boston Celtics coach Ime Udoka to take over the job full time, he added, citing sources. The Celtics suspended Udoka for the season for violating team policies that reportedly involved an inappropriate relationship with a female staffer. Udoka led the Celtics to the NBA Finals earlier this year, ultimately losing to the Golden State Warriors.

    Celtics head coach Ime Udoka (left) did not agree with a referee (right) in the second quarter during a game between the Boston Celtics and the Golden State Warriors, Game Six of the NBA Finals at the TD Garden in Boston on June 17, 2022.
    Jim Davis | Boston Globe | Getty Images

    Nets General Manager Sean Marks said it was “an immensely difficult decision” to part ways with Nash, but that, after evaluating the beginning of the season, the change was deemed necessary.
    “We want to thank Steve for everything he brought to our franchise over the past two-plus seasons,” Marks said in a statement. “Since becoming head coach, Steve was faced with a number of unprecedented challenges, and we are sincerely grateful for his leadership, patience and humility throughout his tenure.”
    The team has struggled both on the court and off, despite a roster of high-paid stars including Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving and Ben Simmons. Durant reportedly pushed for Nash’s ouster in the offseason as rumors swirled that he may leave the team.

    NBC Sports reported that both Durant and Irving were unhappy with the team leadership. Irving, who refused to get a Covid vaccination, wasn’t offered a long-term contract extension.
    Irving drew criticism from Nets owner Joe Tsai over the weekend after he promoted an antisemitic film and book on social media Thursday.

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    Disney+ subscribers are getting early access to exclusive merchandise, and it’s already selling out

    On Tuesday, Disney launched a limited test to see if its streaming subscribers will buy up exclusive merchandise themed to Disney+ shows and films.
    Subscribers have access to a handful of products from Star Wars, “Black Panther,” “Lightyear” and “Frozen” until Nov. 8, before the general public.
    Already, the site has sold out of several products.

    In this photo illustration a close-up of a hand holding a TV remote control seen displayed in front of the Disney+ logo.
    Thiago Prudencio | SOPA Images | LightRocket | Getty Images

    Can Disney convert its binge watchers into binge buyers?
    The company launched a limited test Tuesday to see if its streaming subscribers will buy up exclusive merchandise themed to Disney+ shows and films. Until Nov. 8, subscribers have access to a handful of products from Star Wars, “Black Panther,” “Lightyear” and “Frozen” before the general public is given access. The items include apparel, toys and collectibles.

    Disney’s test comes just before the busy holiday season and as the streaming wars continue to intensify. The company has more than 150 million subscribers worldwide. But with growth slowing, offering perks such as early access to exclusive merchandise could lure in new subscribers or keep current ones from leaving.
    Already on Tuesday, the site had sold out of products including $400 Ahsoka Tano lightsabers signed by voice actor Ashley Eckstein, $50 Ahsoka Tano special edition dolls and a $375 lightsaber set featuring Anakin Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi hilts from “Revenge of the Sith.”
    Customers can make purchases on the ShopDisney website or by scanning a QR code within Disney+ with their smartphones.
    The company already offers some discounts to Disney+ members at its theme parks and resorts, and more benefits could be on the way if the test proves fruitful.

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    Fox earnings lifted by advertising revenue from free streaming service Tubi

    Fox Corp. said Tubi, its free ad-supported streaming service, saw revenue growth of nearly 30% during its first fiscal quarter.
    Fox acquired Tubi in 2020 and said it invested $50 million in the service this past quarter.
    Tubi had its highest viewing time in the last quarter at 1.3 billion hours.

    Pete Davidson attends TUBI’s “The Freak Brothers” Experience at Fred Segal on December 06, 2021 in Los Angeles, California.
    Kevin Winter | Getty Images

    Fox Corp.’s bet on its free, ad-supported streaming service Tubi appears to be paying off for the company. 
    On Tuesday, the company reported earnings for its first fiscal quarter, noting that Tubi helped boost its advertising revenue. The service offers on-demand movies and TV shows, as well as channels that replicate the traditional pay-TV format.

    “In a quarter when digital advertising revenue appeared to be under pressure, Tubi posted standout revenue growth of almost 30%,” to about $165 million, said Fox CEO Lachlan Murdoch. 
    Fox said its advertising revenue in the quarter was also propelled by political ads leading into the midterm elections. Overall, revenue for the period was up 5% from a year ago to $3.19 billion. 
    On a call with investors, Murdoch said that Tubi’s revenue for the first time surpassed the advertising revenue generated by Fox Entertainment “in a meaningful way.” Driving that was the 50% increase in total viewing time, marking Tubi’s highest ever quarterly viewership at 1.3 billion hours, Murdoch said. 
    The boost in ad revenue from Tubi comes as Fox’s linear TV networks have been hurt by cord-cutting, and as many fear a downturn in the advertising market due to economic headwinds and a potential recession.
    Fox is among the media companies that acquired a free streaming service in recent years to boost advertising revenue as the streaming wars took off with subscription services such as Netflix and Walt Disney Co.’s Disney+. 

    Fox bought Tubi in 2020 at an estimated valuation of $490 million. Comcast Corp. acquired Xumo that same year for an undisclosed amount, while Paramount Global acquired Pluto, a main competitor to Tubi, for $340 million in 2019. 
    Paramount has premium streaming service Paramount+, which includes an ad-free and cheaper ad-supported options. But it has said in recent quarters Pluto’s viewership continues to rise and add to its overall streaming growth. The company reports earnings on Wednesday.
    Media companies have been scrambling to add more paying subscribers to their streaming platforms, with Netflix, Disney+ and Warner Bros. Discovery’s HBO Max investing heavily in content budgets. More recently, they’ve also turned to cheaper subscription options that are supported by ads.
    Meanwhile, services like Tubi and Pluto have quietly generated advertising revenue for media companies.
    Fox management said Tubi was on track to continue growing revenue in the next quarter, adding that the company invested roughly $50 million in the streamer during the quarter. 
    Murdoch called the investment “very modest” when compared with premium subscription streaming services. He added the company will continue to invest in Tubi, which it sees it as a “safe investment” that has the potential to become the winner in the free, ad-supported streaming category. 
    Disclosure: CNBC is owned by Comcast Corp.

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    Taylor Swift holds all top 10 spots in Billboard Hot 100 as she announces first major tour in nearly 5 years

    Taylor Swift has taken the top 10 sopts of the Billboard Hot 100 with songs from her album “Midnights.”
    Swift is the first artist to ever achieve the feat.
    She also announced the “Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour,” her first major tour in nearly five years.

    Taylor Swift performs on the stage in concert at Mercedes-Benz Arena on May 30, 2014 in Shanghai, China.
    Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    Taylor Swift said Tuesday she’s heading back out on tour, as she occupies all of the top 10 spots of the Billboard Hot 100 with songs from her new album “Midnights.”
    She is the first artist to ever achieve the Billboard feat. Her album has enjoyed massive success since its midnight release on Oct. 21. The song “Anti-Hero” has the top spot, followed by “Lavender Haze” and “Maroon.” Two official music videos for “Bejeweled” and “Anti-Hero” have combined over 60 million views on YouTube since the album’s release.

    Swift also announced her next tour, her first in nearly five years. “Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour” is scheduled for 27 dates at U.S. stadiums beginning in March. Swift said international dates will be announced soon. She described it as “a journey through all the musical eras of my career.”
    Her “Reputation” tour in 2018 broke records at the time.
    Along with “Midnights,” Swift has yet to tour with her albums “Folklore” and “Evermore” which were released in 2021. She also released “Red (Taylor’s Version)” and “Fearless (Taylor’s Version)” the same year, as she looks to reclaim the rights to her early works.
    Swift has an ongoing feud with music executives Scooter Braun and Scott Borchetta. Borchetta’s Big Machine Records released all of her album’s through 2017’s “Reputation.” She said their business practices were exploitative.
    “For years I asked, pleaded for a chance to own my work. Instead I was given an opportunity to sign back up to Big Machine Records and ‘earn’ one album back at a time, one for every new one I turned in,” Swift wrote in a Tumblr post in 2019.
    “Midnights” was released under Republic Records, a subsidiary of Universal Music Group, and was produced by Swift and Bleachers’ Jack Antonoff.

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    Watch SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy, the world’s most powerful rocket, launch a Space Force mission

    [The webcast is scheduled to begin at 9:26 a.m. ET. Please refresh the page if you do not see the video player above.]
    Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Tuesday is set to launch the first Falcon Heavy mission in over three years, a towering rocket that is the most powerful currently in operation.

    SpaceX’s rocket is launching the classified USSF-44 mission for the U.S. Space Force, which is also the first operational national security mission for Falcon Heavy. Its most recent launch was the Space Test Program-2 (STP-2) mission in June 2019, which carried experimental satellites on a demonstration flight for the Pentagon.
    The mission is scheduled to liftoff at 9:41 a.m. ET from a launchpad at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

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    While Falcon Heavy’s base is reusable, the company only intends to land the side pair of the three rocket boosters – with the central core dropping into the ocean like traditional rockets do, to meet the Space Force’s high-performance requirement for this mission.

    The Falcon Heavy rocket for the USSF-44 mission rolls out to the launchpad on Oct. 31, 2022.

    The hiatus in Falcon Heavy launches — the company has completed three since the rocket’s debut in February 2018 — is largely due to the readiness of customers on its schedule.
    This USSF-44 mission was originally scheduled for late 2020, and two other Falcon Heavy missions scheduled for this year, another for the Space Force and the other for NASA, have customer payloads that are also not ready yet. There’s a backlog of about a dozen missions for Falcon Heavy still to come.
    SpaceX continues to launch its Falcon series of rockets at a high rate, with Tuesday’s mission set to be the company’s record 50th launch this year. But the company at the same time continues work on the even larger Starship rockets it hopes will replace them.

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    Self-driving truck startup TuSimple fires its CEO over improper ties to a Chinese firm

    TuSimple fired its CEO, Xiaodi Hou, after an internal investigation found improper dealings with and possible tech transfer to a Chinese startup.
    The Chinese company, hydrogen truck maker Hydron, is led by a TuSimple co-founder.
    The Wall Street Journal reported that the SEC and FBI are investigating.

    TuSimple, partly owned by UPS, makes self-driving trucks, a technology that may be among the innovations to help lower longer-run inflation in the transport sector.
    Source: TuSimple

    Self-driving truck startup TuSimple has fired its CEO, Xiaodi Hou, after an internal investigation found improper dealings and possible tech transfer to a Chinese firm led by TuSimple’s now-departed co-founder, the company said Monday.
    The San Diego-based startup’s operations chief, Ersin Yumer, will serve as interim CEO and president while TuSimple’s board of directors searches for a permanent successor. Hou was also the company’s chief technology officer.

    Shares of TuSimple fell sharply following the news, closing down over 45% on Monday.
    TuSimple said in a regulatory filing Monday that based on an investigation by its board of directors, it believes some of its employees spent paid hours in 2021 working for Hydron, a Chinese startup developing autonomous hydrogen-powered trucks. Those employees shared confidential information with Hydron before a nondisclosure agreement was signed, TuSimple said.
    The board’s investigation began in July and is ongoing, the company said.
    In a statement posted to LinkedIn on Monday, Hou said that he was removed “without cause” and that he is confident he will be “vindicated” in time.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    “I have been completely transparent in both my professional and personal life and I fully cooperated with the Board because I have nothing to hide,” Hou wrote. “I want to be clear that I fundamentally deny any suggestions of wrongdoing.”

    The company’s relationship to Hydron is under investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Securities and Exchange Commission, according to a report Monday by The Wall Street Journal. Investigators are examining whether TuSimple’s leadership failed to make required disclosures about its transactions with Hydron and whether the dealings harmed TuSimple investors, according to the report.
    A representative for TuSimple declined to comment on the specifics of the Journal’s report.
    Hou co-founded TuSimple in 2015 and became its CEO in March of this year. Shortly after taking the top job, he told CNBC that he wanted to be an “evangelist” for the potential of autonomous trucking.
    “Who is the best person to lead this company? It’s me! Because I am a relentless decision-making machine who is backed by the technical background,” Hou said in an interview with CNBC on March 30. 

    Hydron was founded in 2021 by Mo Chen, another co-founder of TuSimple who had previously served as its executive chairman. Hydron initially announced plans to build electric trucks powered by hydrogen fuel cells in North America, but its operations have so far been mostly in China.
    TuSimple will report its third-quarter results on Monday after the market closes but has delayed its conference call to Tuesday morning.

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    ‘Hold your nose and sell’ to brace for a possible market downturn, Jim Cramer says

    Monday – Friday, 6:00 – 7:00 PM ET

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday warned investors that they should trim some of their positions to prepare for a possible market decline.
    “According to the S&P oscillator I’ve followed for ages, we’re very overbought right now,” he said. “You have to hold your nose and sell something because we’re due for a pullback.”

    CNBC’s Jim Cramer on Monday warned investors that they should trim some of their positions to prepare for a possible market decline.
    “According to the S&P oscillator I’ve followed for ages, we’re very overbought right now,” he said. “You have to hold your nose and sell something because we’re due for a pullback.”

    The S&P 500 Short Range Oscillator, one of his longtime favorite market indicators, helps signal when the market has become overbought and possibly due for a pullback, or too oversold and due for a bounce. In other words, it helps predict when the market will pivot.
    The Oscillator is over 8%, which means the market is incredibly overbought and due for a pullback, according to Cramer.
    Stocks notched a significant comeback in October, though they fell on Monday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 13.95% in its best month since 1976, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite rose roughly 8% and 3.9%, respectively, this month.
    “In this environment, you need some health, and consumer product stocks to start, then you pick up the industrials when you think the Fed’s almost done tightening,” Cramer said. “And you stick with the banks no matter what.”
    On the other side, tech names are likely to be sold off in droves after seeing a disastrous earnings season, according to Cramer. He named Meta Platforms, Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Tesla, Microsoft and semiconductor stocks as the most likely to be sold in the impending sell-off.

    “The tyranny of tech has been overthrown, and nobody wants to go near these things,” he said.
    Disclaimer: Cramer’s Charitable Trust owns shares of Meta, Alphabet, Apple, Amazon and Microsoft.

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