3 Cloud Computing Companies Racing to Push Cloud Computing Aside

Maybe you were thinking about investing into the cloud computing sector. I’m here to tell you that investing into the latest computing trend is changing, much along the lines of transportation changed the horse and buggy era when automobiles came on to the scene.

The technology research firm Forrester Research says that the Internet of Things – and the coming deluge of sensors and data – make a good bit of cloud computing passé. It will be more practical and efficient to process all of this data right on the spot where it is being collected.

In other words, data will be processed not in a centralized cloud, but at the edge of the network. Thus you get the term ‘edge computing’.

Welcome to Edge Computing

This makes sense. Think about an autonomous car. Some estimate that these data centers on wheels generate as much as a gigabyte of data every second. Doesn’t it make sense then to process all that data from radar, lidar, cameras and other sensors right there instead of sending it all up to the cloud and then wait to have an answer back to the vehicle? That’s the logic behind Nvidia’s Drive PX Pegasus artificial intelligence (AI) platform.

Peter Levine, general partner at the venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, also sees edge computing as the future. He believes that the proliferation of devices such as autonomous vehicles, drones and robots are going to require very rapid processing of data. The data needed in such a short time frame means, Levine believes, that sending data up to the cloud and back to get an answer will simply be too slow. Slow responses, for example, in autonomous cars could mean crashes and fatalities.

Of course, there are privacy issues too. Some data is just too sensitive to be sent to the cloud where it might remain on the public device it was sent to. Apple is leading the way with devising ways for its users to keep control of more of their personal data on their own devices.

Edge computing will become a big business. In October 2017, the IT research firm Gartner estimated that by 2022, half of all data generated by businesses will come from smart edge devices – IoT sensors as well as smartphones and PCs – rather than from the cloud or their own data centers. That is no doubt part of the reason behind the forecast from TrendForce that the edge computing market of products and services will enjoy a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of more than 30% from 2018 to 2022.

But that doesn’t mean cloud computing is dead. It will still play an important role. Let’s go back to the example of the autonomous vehicles. These vehicles, at the end of a day of driving, send all the data collected to the cloud. This data can then be used by the vehicle manufacturers to ‘train’ and refine their software to improve vehicle safety and performance. In other words, the cloud will still handle the most intensive data storage and processing needs.

This new reality in computing suggests to me the best way to invest in edge computing, while still keeping exposure to cloud computing, is through certain stocks.

Edge Computing Stocks

At the top of that stock list is Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT). When Satya Nadella first became the CEO, he said the company would pursue a “cloud-first, mobile-first” strategy. But in 2017, Nadella updated the strategy to say that Microsoft is all about the “intelligent cloud and intelligent edge.” The company has filed nearly 300 patents in the field.

In last quarter’s earnings report, Microsoft showed a surge in business (revenues nearly doubled) for its centralized cloud data centers. Nadella though gave a counter-intuitive reason for the surge: that growing interest in edge computing was the reason. More customers were turning to Microsoft to deal with their edge needs, which in turn fed Microsoft’s centralized cloud business.

Microsoft has a product called the Azure Stack that offers a set of public cloud services inside a data center. This gives a customer public cloud-like resources at the data center level without having to move data back and forth from the public cloud. Carnival Cruise Lines has used Azure Stack on some of its cruise ships to power many of the day-to-day operations.

It also has launched Azure IoT Edge which it says is “a dynamic software platform that delivers cloud services to edge devices, making hybrid cloud and edge IoT solutions a reality.”

Microsoft’s results in the last quarter do  seem to confirm what Peter Levine of Andreesson Horowitz said several months ago, “There’s going to be a symbiotic relationship between the edge and the cloud.”

The next company is Amazon.com (Nasdaq: AMZN), which is the biggest public cloud provider with its AWS service. It has a product called Greengrass that provides a set of computing services directly on IoT devices when public cloud services are not available. Greengrass builds on top of AWS IoT and AWS Lambda, its serverless computing service.

Then there is also Alphabet (Nasdaq: GOOG) and its platform for intelligent IoT services. Google Cloud IoT is a comprehensive set of fully managed and integrated services that allows businesses to securely connect, manage, and ingest IoT data from devices dispersed around the world at a large scale. That data can then be processed and analyzed in real time to take actions as necessary.

The bottom line is that all the major players in cloud computing are embracing edge computing in one way or another. You should embrace these stocks as investments in the future of computing.

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Nintendo Profit Is Up Over 500% on Switch Sales — But NTDOY Is Down

Source: Nintendo

Nintendo Ltd/ADR (OTCMKTS:NTDOY) released its annual earning report for 2017 and it included some staggering numbers. Strong Switch sales drove the company’s profit up more than 500% compared to the previous year. And it’s predicting more growth in 2018. In addition, Nintendo announced a new, younger, president will be taking over from the interim leader.

With the huge numbers released and indications the momentum will continue, you might expect Nintendo stock to get a shot in the arm. However, NTDOY is currently down over 3%.

Switch Sales Drive Massive Nintendo Profit Increase

Nintendo released its annual earnings report for the year ending March 31 2018, and the numbers are phenomenal. Especially when you consider the dark place the company was in just a few years back.

For the year, Nintendo generated $9.66 billion in revenue, an increase of 116% compared to 2016. And while that’s an impressive number, earnings are even more so: $1.62 billion on the year, a whopping 505% increase.

Driving that Nintendo profit were Switch sales. The company reported it sold over 15 million of the portable consoles during the year covered, bringing lifetime sales to over 17.79 million units.  Though it was actually on sale for only a month prior to the start of the fiscal year.

To put that in perspective, its previous generation Wii U console sold 13.56 million units during its entire five-year run. Sony Corp (ADR) (NYSE:SNE) is the leader in this generation of game consoles and its Playstation 4 recently hit 76 million units — but it’s been on sale for four and half years. Those strong Switch sales are the reason why Nintendo stock is up nearly 65% on the year and over 300% since the dark days of the struggling Wii U.

A New President and Momentum

The company didn’t just kill it in 2017, it has momentum.

Nintendo is forecasting that it will sell an additional 20 million Switch consoles over the next year. It also has the red hot Nintendo Labo construction sets that are expected to drive additional revenue while helping to keep Switch sales humming. As a result, Nintendo profit for 2018 is predicted to see growth of 26% for 2018.

That’s not as impressive as the 505% growth the company chalked up from 2017 — and that may have something to do with the Nintendo stock dip after the earnings report. But the company is starting 2018 in much stronger place, so triple digit growth isn’t in the cards.

In addition to the impressive Nintendo profit, massive Switch sales and guidance for 2018, the company also announced a new president.

Current president and CEO Tatsumi Kimishima is stepping down, with Shuntaro Furukawa taking his place. The current president was an interim leader, taking the place of the company’s long-term leader Satoru Itawa who died in 2015. Furukawa is 46 and has served on the Nintendo board of directors. He’s seen as a solid choice whose youth will allow consistency in leadership as the company moves out of recovery mode and moves forward.

Bottom Line for Nintendo Stock

Despite today’s dip, Nintendo stock isn’t exactly a bargain at the moment — although it still has plenty of room for upside compared to its 2007 heights.

But based on today’s earnings announcements, Nintendo profit predictions for this coming year, and the strong product lineup from the company, don’t expect it to be a cheap buy any time soon.

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