4 Stocks Expected to Have the Fastest Growing Jobs in the Next 5 Years

An apocryphal quote attributed to Charles Darwin observes that it is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.

Regardless of what the ideas and constructs that have shaped and perpetuated our civilization would want us to believe, there is hardly an aspect of our modern life that is immune to or exempted from the laws of nature. At least (and hopefully at most) metaphorically, we are either running for food or running from being food often without being able to tell the difference.

Consequently, in an era of ever-increasing automation, digitization, and decarbonization, individuals and institutions more prepared to accept and embrace change would thrive in the intraspecific struggle for economic existence at the expense of their more inertial peers.

According to the Future of Jobs Report 2023 by the World Economic Forum, in the next five years, almost a quarter of jobs (23%) are expected to change through growth of 10.2% and a decline of 12.3%. Employers anticipate 69 million new jobs to be created and 83 million eliminated, amounting to a net decrease of 14 million jobs, or 2% of current employment.

According to Moody’s Chief Economist, Mark Zandi, the macro trends driving the change present challenges, such as the displacement of the majority of the existing workforce while demanding significant adaptations from the talent that is being retained and disrupting business by lowering entry barriers and switching costs to creating a level playing field.

However, on the flip side, he also highlights the enormous opportunity for improvements in productivity and efficiency, which would be instrumental in ensuring economic growth while managing a general demographic decline.

With specialization, digitization, and sustainability driving demand for talent and reshaping the global world of work at an unprecedented rate, white-collar generic and repetitive jobs are being automated away. At the same time, businesses can’t find enough specialists to design and implement artificial intelligence-led automation and blue-collar workers to take care of work that is yet to be automated.

Consequently, autonomous and electric vehicle specialists top the list of fastest-growing jobs in 2023. Close behind, AI and machine learning specialists could see only slightly less job growth, followed by environmental protection professionals.

Among the non-technological roles, heavy truck and bus drivers, vocational education teachers, and mechanics and machinery repairers look set to see around 2 million new jobs each between 2023-2027.

At the other end of the spectrum, roles like bank tellers, cashiers, and data-entry clerks would be rendered obsolete and, hence, are set to witness the fastest rate of decline in the next five years.

In the context of this fundamental shift, the following businesses which have opted to disrupt themselves and their respective industries rather than being disrupted appear best placed to keep attracting talent in the foreseeable future.

NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA) recently made headlines when its stock got its moonshot due to the widespread public interest in AI. Post its earnings release on May 24; the Santa Clara-based graphics chip maker has stolen the thunder by becoming the first semiconductor company to hit a valuation of $1 trillion.
NVDA’s 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 Nvidia’s famous chips. With each chip costing $10,000, a single algorithm that’s fast becoming ubiquitous is powered by semiconductors worth $100 million.

During a commencement speech on May 26 at National Taiwan University, NVDA CEO Jensen Huang’s message to his potential recruits was loud and clear, “You are at the beginning, at the starting line, of AI. Run. Don’t walk.”

Tesla, Inc. (TSLA)

The global e-mobility pioneer’s automotive segment includes the design, development, manufacturing, sales, and leasing of electric vehicles as well as sales of automotive regulatory credits.

In the recent earnings call, TSLA’s maverick CEO Elon Musk signaled that the automaker will target larger volumes of sales versus higher margins but said he expects the company “over time will be able to generate significant profit through autonomy.”

The company recently scored a major victory as an infrastructure provider by striking a deal with two of its rival automotive manufacturers, Ford Motor Company (F) and General Motors Company (GM) , to grant their vehicles access to more than 12,000 Tesla Superchargers across the U.S. and Canada starting early next year.

Moreover, since TSLA’s energy generation and storage segment includes the design, manufacture, installation, sales, and leasing of solar energy generation and energy storage products such as the Solar Roof and Powerwall, the stock could also be an energy transition play.

AGCO Corporation (AGCO) manufactures and distributes agricultural equipment and related replacement parts worldwide. The company provides telemetry-based fleet management tools, including remote monitoring and diagnostics, which help farmers improve uptime, machine and yield optimization, mixed fleet optimization, and decision support.

AGCO’s Precision Planting, Headsight, and Intelligent Ag Solutions brands provide retrofit solutions to upgrade farmers’ existing equipment to improve their planting, liquid application, and harvest operations.

On May 4, AGCO announced a capital improvement project, dubbed “Planter Accelerate,” scheduled to begin in the second quarter of this year and continue through the first quarter of 2024. The project aims to increase production capacities for Massey Ferguson and Fendt Momentum planters at its Kansas facilities in Beloit and Cawker City.

Canadian Solar Inc. (CSIQ) is a designer, developer, manufacturer, and seller of solar ingots, wafers, cells, modules, and other solar power and battery storage products internationally. The company, headquartered in Guelph, Ontario, operates through two segments: Canadian Solar Inc. (CSI) Solar and Global Energy.

On June 15, marking its first foray in the United States, CSIQ announced establishing a solar PV module production facility in Mesquite, Texas, with an annual output of 5 GW, equivalent to approximately 20,000 high-power modules per day. This follows the company’s successful track record of production in Canada, China, Brazil, Thailand, and Vietnam.

The new facility, expected to commence production around the end of 2023, represents an investment of over $250 million and will create approximately 1,500 skilled jobs once fully ramped up.

Is Ford Motor (F) the New Tesla (TSLA)?

More than a year has passed since an announcement on April 26, 2022, by Ford Motor Company (F) CEO Jim Farley, regarding the company’s intent to challenge Tesla, Inc. (T) as the global EV leader.

Since then, the Detroit automaker has made huge strides in the electric mobility space. It has pipped TSLA to the pickup segment by beginning production of its F-150 Lightning and benchmarked the Model Y for its Mustang Mach-E crossover. While TSLA is still the runaway leader, F notched 61,575 fully-electric vehicle sales to emerge as the challenger in the U.S., something the legacy automaker planned to achieve by mid-decade.

Since both rivals are expected to battle it out for a greater share of the electric-mobility pie, it is understandable why an unexpected announcement by the CEO of both companies to join hands to enlarge the pie took the industry and markets by pleasant surprise.

On Thursday, May 25, during a live audio discussion on Twitter Spaces, Jim Farley and Elon Musk announced an agreement on charging initiatives for Ford’s current and future electric vehicles. Under the agreement, current Ford owners will be granted access to more than 12,000 Tesla Superchargers across the U.S. and Canada starting early next year.

Moreover, the next generation of Ford EVs, expected by mid-decade, will include TSLA’s charging plug, enabling owners to charge their vehicles at Tesla Superchargers without an adapter while using Ford’s software.
A separate Ford spokesman later added that pricing for charging “will be competitive in the marketplace.” The companies will disclose further details closer to a launch date, anticipated in 2024.

Following this announcement, which makes F among the first automakers to explicitly tie into the TSLA network, the former’s stock rose by 6.2% on May 26, closing at $12.09 per share, while the latter’s shares also climbed by 4.7%, ending the week at $193.17.
In this article, we elaborate on why the optimism makes sense.

Firstly, as F is ramping up its production to double its EV capacity this year and looks on course to get to two million in a couple of years, with public charging of electric vehicles being a major concern for potential buyers, charging infrastructure is going to be critical for the company in order to ensure that it delivers a superior after-purchase experience to its customers.

TSLA is the only automaker that has successfully built out its own network of fast chargers, which gives the EV leader an edge over its competitors, whose partnerships with third-party companies have left much room for improvement in reliability and reach.
However, with the announcement, F has managed to more than double its existing capacity of 10,000 fast chargers with 12,000 well-located TSLA Superchargers. Moreover, leveraging TSLA’s superior NACS charging technology is F’s attempt to ensure that it is on what Elon Musk has described as “equal footing” in its completion with the incumbent.

Secondly, opening up 12,000 Superchargers in its network of currently 45,000 connectors worldwide at 4,947 Supercharger Stations could benefit TSLA in multiple ways.

White House officials announced in February that TSLA has committed to open up 7,500 of its charging stations by the end of 2024 to non-Tesla EV drivers. The agreement with F would help the company make progress on that front.

By diversifying from being a competitor to doubling up as an infrastructure provider, the EV leader has hedged its bets to benefit from the increasing presence of legacy automakers in the electric mobility space.

While the company is expected to dominate EV sales in the foreseeable future, the revenue from its Supercharging stations, which is included under the “services and other” segment, is also expected to witness remarkable growth due to increased network utilization by non-Tesla EV drivers.

Lastly, but perhaps most importantly, this partnership could be the initiation of the strategic masterstroke that impacts the entire EV ecosystem. As discussed earlier, while TSLA uses NACS charging technology, the rest of the industry has adopted relatively-slower CCS charging.

With two-leading EV manufacturers joining hands and F being ‘totally committed’ to a single U.S. charging protocol that includes the Tesla plug port, EV strategies of other auto manufacturers, such as GM and STLA, could come under increased pressure.

According to Jim Farley, the others “are going to have a big choice to make. Do they want to have fast charging for customers? Or do they want to stick to their standard and have less charging?”

In this context, it wouldn’t be surprising if Musk’s statement, “Working with Ford, and perhaps others, can make it the North American standard, I think that consumers will be all better for it,” turns out to be the beginning of yet another victory lap for the illustrious CEO.

Stocks to Keep an Eye on Following Memorial Weekend

Every year, on the last Monday of May, the United States honors its heroes who made the ultimate sacrifice while serving in the United States Armed Forces. And how does a nation celebrate its martyrs who fell defending the core principles of liberty, democracy, and free markets? You guessed it; by exercising the freedom to choose and lead the good life.

Moreover, with the long weekend coinciding with the onset of summer, most Americans look forward to spending time outdoors. And that can only mean one thing: increased consumption. Think camping, cookouts, weekend trips, and home improvement projects.

All that activity translates to increased expenditure for businesses in relevant categories. A few have historically witnessed boosted top-line performance and an uptrend in stock prices at this time of the year.

Moreover, with still enough pent-up demand from the pandemic to go by and a jump of 0.8% in spending in April, with personal consumption expenditure beating estimates to rise 0.4% for the month despite 10 consecutive interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve, history seems more than likely to rhyme, if not repeat itself.

Here are a few stocks that could benefit from the holiday tailwind.

Tesla, Inc. (TSLA)

The global e-mobility pioneer’s automotive segment includes the design, development, manufacturing, sales, and leasing of electric vehicles as well as sales of automotive regulatory credits.

Although the company has recently increased the price of the vehicles in the U.S., China, Canada, and Japan, they remain lower than at the start of the year due to several rounds of price cuts worldwide.

In the recent earnings call, TSLA’s maverick CEO Elon Musk signaled that the automaker will be targeting larger volumes of sales versus higher margins but said he expects the company “over time will be able to generate significant profit through autonomy.”

Moreover, since TSLA’s energy generation and storage segment includes the design, manufacture, installation, sales, and leasing of solar energy generation and energy storage products such as the Solar Roof and Powerwall, the stock could also be a home-improvement play this Memorial Day.

In 2022, TSLA’s price return during the fortnight around Memorial Day amounted to 4.3%, compared to 3.4% for the S&P 500.
Continue reading "Stocks to Keep an Eye on Following Memorial Weekend"

Chart Spotlight: Tesla (TSLA)

Shares of Tesla (TSLA) just split 3:1 and now trades around $300 a share.

From here, the EV stock could accelerate well above $900 again, near-term - all thanks to substantial catalysts.

According to MarketClub, the short- and intermediate-trends are positive. The RSI, Fast Stochastics, and Williams’ %R are all pivoting well off recent lows.

TSLA Chart With Trade Triangles

Source: MarketClub

Electric vehicle demand is only accelerating. Not only do global leaders want millions of EVs on the road, California is about to prohibit the sale of gas-powered cars.

In fact, “The rule, issued by the California Air Resources Board, will require that 100 percent of all new cars sold in the state by 2035 be free of the fossil fuel emissions chiefly responsible for warming the planet, up from 12 percent today. It sets interim targets requiring that 35 percent of new passenger vehicles sold in the state by 2026 produce zero emissions. That would climb to 68 percent by 2030,” according to The New York Times.

Historically, investors love TSLA stock splits. The last time TSLA split – in August 2020 – the stock price surged 60% from the day of the announcement until its execution. Continue reading "Chart Spotlight: Tesla (TSLA)"

Tesla, Twitter, and Elon Musk

In this episode, Cathie Wood, CEO of ARK Investment Management, joins Melissa Francis and Magnifi by TIFIN to discuss her views on Tesla, Twitter, and Disruptive Innovation.

Watch the Full Interview at Magnifi by TIFIN

Melissa Francis
Welcome everyone today. We're here to talk about Magnifi by TIFIN a marketplace, where you can harness real-time proprietary data to help individual investors and financial advisors find, compare, and buy investment products like stocks and ETFs mutual and model portfolios to grow and preserve your wealth. I'm Melissa Francis. I know just a little bit about this subject matter. I'm a former CNBC MSNBC Fox business and Fox news anchor. And you will remember if you've watched us before we talked about the best crypto investment strategies with Anthony Scaramucci, the best bond with the bond king himself, Jeffrey Gunlock, and the best private equity strategies with Marty Neite. Now we have a very special guest that I am super excited about to talk about stocks, um, and everything hot out there, Kathy Wood. She's the CEO of arc. She is a board member of TIFIN, which is Magnifi's parent company, Kathy.

Melissa Francis
So thank you so much for being here. I wanna drill down on your latest blog because there were so many good nuggets in there, and I found some of them kind of counterintuitive. So I wanna get into those, but first, if I could take you to the hot story of the day, which of course is Twitter. And I wanted to ask you, um, looking at where things stand today, and I know as fast-moving, it keeps changing, but, um, if you were Elon Musk, what would your next move be? What would you do from here?

Kathy Wood
Well, he's got a $54, I guess it's $54 and 20 cent offer out there. Uh, so I think he'll buy it his time. It will be interesting to see if other bidders, uh, show up. I'm uh, I'm hearing that there are some, so let's see. Not, not quite sure it's still quite fluid, right?

Melissa Francis
Yeah, no. And he says that if this doesn't work, he has plan B what do you think that is?

Kathy Wood
Goodness, I don't know if it would be something a little more hostile. Just I have no idea, you know, uh, Elon Musk is, has his own mind and, and is, uh, and I'm sure thinking very creatively about this.

Melissa Francis
If he does succeed and you, or him again, what would you do with the company? What do you think they need to correct?

Kathy Wood
Well, one of the things that, uh, I think has hampered Twitter is its advertising model and this is what scares, uh, analysts out there. Oh my gosh. You know, uh, he's going to upend the advertising model, uh, because advertisers don't like to be, uh, to have their ad shown next to questionable content, which is something different for everyone, right? Uh, and so this idea of perhaps a subscription service is a possibility or a tipping service, uh, but certainly open sourcing. The algorithm will be the first thing he'll do, uh, so that, uh, the there's transparency associated with what is and is not censored.

Melissa Francis
So do you think that's a good or a bad thing for the company? I mean, it might be a good thing for freedom of speech or however, may you, you may look at it politically, but if you were a shareholder, is it a good idea for him to get that out there? So everybody knows how the algorithm really works?

Kathy Wood
Well, I think even Jack Dorsey thought that Twitter was beginning to tie itself in knots over censorship. And, so he was trying to figure out what can we do to overcome this monster really. And, uh, so I think they do need to do something. Um, uh, many people would describe what's happened to te uh, Twitter as, uh, becoming us pool. Now we don't think that we use Twitter. Uh, it's, it's become quite important to our business as have other social media, uh, platforms. Uh, and so we know that we can unfollow someone, uh, that is hampering our research or our ability to engage with others in a civil way. Um, but I, I think that, um, I think that even Jack was saying, okay, we need a change. We have to change what we're doing. And I think he and Elon probably are aligned, uh, and this idea of an open-source algorithm, a shift away from the advertising model towards something, uh, more or subscription-based and, you know, more transparency. I mean, uh, Ark is radically transparent. Everything we do, uh, is transparent and it has done nothing but help our business. Sure. You've got, uh, people out there who are, um, denigrating our work. Uh, but we know those people as, as we drill into what they're saying, they're not doing any research. We're really interested in engaging with people who are doing real research. Uh, and I think transparency, uh, would make that make, uh, our experience with Twitter even better.

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Melissa Francis
Yeah. The fact that you're not afraid to engage like that and to, you know, hear from those who might pose you shows how confident you are about what you're doing. You have to wonder about a company that wants to hide what they're doing. Let me ask you though, on, on the Twitter front, um, so what do you think the company's worth? I mean, I know I wanna talk to you about your Tesla target, but as you look at what Elon's willing to pay, um, what do you think if you had to put a price target on the stock two years down, or four years down the road, what would you say?

Kathy Wood
Well, I think there's so much uncertainty right now that I couldn't give you one. Um, based on their existing model, our compound annual rate of return expectation, uh, for Twitter is, uh, roughly 25%. Now, their model's going to change. There are going to be a lot of dislocations. We have a lot of very short-term-oriented shareholders who are probably now have moved into Twitter to make a fast buck, 54, uh, 20, $54, and 20 cents. Uh, but the model's going to change. And so we will revisit once we understand what's going on, we will revisit the upside to the model. And we do think that, uh, uh, a lot can be done to improve the model. So, it may take more time than even our five-year investment time horizon.

Melissa Francis
So it, if you, if Elon Musk does get control of the company, would you adjust that upward? Do you think it has more potential with him in charge or would it be more of a wait and see, how would you feel?

Kathy Wood
We probably would have more confidence in the platform, uh, would want to hear what Elon, um, uh, has, in mind in terms of perpetuating the platform. Uh, I'm sure he does not want to run it as a charitable organization or a nonprofit. So we'd like to see how he thinks it could become a very transparent, but also self-sustaining, uh, model. And, you know, he's very creative and I think that it is our global town square and, and that a lot of people would miss it. Uh, so, uh, I think there would be a lot of people, very supportive and very open to his ideas.

Melissa Francis
So putting politics aside entirely, and just thinking about pure money as a shareholder, you would be in favor of Elon Musk taking over?

Kathy Wood
Well, I do think that, uh, the route Jack was going, which we supported was opening up the algorithm or open-sourcing it in some way. Um, and, and so I think this is a continuation of that. We also think one of the reasons we have held Twitter is because we believe, uh, it is a verification platform, you know, the little blue check, and we believe that it could become a verification platform for NFTs as well. Uh, and so, you know, there, there are a few call options here, and, uh, there are verification algorithms we think are well respected out there. And, uh, so I think, uh, Elon would also build on that.

Melissa Francis
Wow, fascinating stuff. That's great. I'm sure you just made some news there without question before we stray too far from Elon, because he is such a fascinating character. I know that you put a 20, 26 target on Tesla of $4,600. How did you work that math and how do you feel about that call?

Watch the Full Interview at Magnifi by TIFIN