US

U.S. Markets Rise Despite Sharp Slowdown in Job Growth as Unemployment Falls

U.S. stocks finished higher on Thursday as investors balanced a much weaker-than-expected June jobs report against an unexpected decline in the unemployment rate, with optimism over the economy's resilience outweighing concerns about slowing hiring.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.77%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.54% and the Nasdaq added 0.39%.

The June employment report showed the U.S. economy added just 57,000 nonfarm payrolls, well below economists' expectations of 114,000 and sharply lower than May's revised 129,000. The data pointed to a significant slowdown in hiring and reinforced signs that the labor market is gradually cooling.

However, the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.2% from 4.3%, while initial jobless claims declined to 215,000 from 216,000 and came in below the 219,000 consensus forecast. The lower unemployment rate and continued strength in weekly jobless claims suggested the labor market remains relatively resilient despite slower job creation.

The mixed employment data leaves the Federal Reserve facing a delicate balancing act. Slower payroll growth supports the case for future interest rate cuts, while the lower unemployment rate reduces the urgency for policymakers to ease monetary policy immediately.

Markets also continued to digest recent comments from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, who reiterated this week that inflation remains above the Fed's 2% target and emphasized that future policy decisions will remain data dependent.

Investors will now turn their attention to upcoming inflation reports and additional labor market data for further clues on when the Federal Reserve may begin lowering interest rates.
U.S. Manufacturing Activity Weakens in June as Price Pressures Ease

U.S. manufacturing activity slowed more than expected in June, while factory price pressures eased sharply, pointing to softer momentum across the industrial sector.

The S&P Global Manufacturing PMI fell to 53.9 in June, below economists' expectations of 55.7 and down from 55.1 in May. Although the index remained above the 50-point threshold, indicating continued expansion, the weaker reading suggests growth in the manufacturing sector moderated during the month.

Meanwhile, the ISM Manufacturing Prices Index declined to 73.0 from 82.1 in May, well below the consensus forecast of 77.7. The sharp drop indicates input cost inflation eased considerably, although prices paid by manufacturers remain elevated.

The combination of slower manufacturing growth and easing price pressures may be viewed positively by Federal Reserve policymakers, as it suggests inflationary pressures within the industrial sector are beginning to moderate without a sharp contraction in economic activity.

Investors will continue monitoring upcoming labor market data and Friday's nonfarm payrolls report for further clues on the health of the U.S. economy and the outlook for Federal Reserve interest rate policy.
U.S. Stocks Trade Mixed as Weak Jobs Data Pressures Tech While Dow Holds Gains

U.S. stocks traded mixed on Wednesday as investors weighed weaker-than-expected private employment data against growing expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

At the time of writing, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80 points, or 0.15%, to 52,399.58. The S&P 500 slipped 0.05% to 7,495.76, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.29% to 26,138.87 as technology stocks underperformed.

# Weak ADP Jobs Report Signals Cooling Labor Market

Investor attention centered on the June ADP employment report, which showed U.S. private employers added 98,000 jobs, below economists' expectations of 118,000 and down from May's revised 122,000.

The softer-than-expected reading suggests the labor market is gradually cooling, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve could gain greater confidence to lower interest rates if broader economic data continue to weaken.

Markets are now turning their focus to Friday's official nonfarm payrolls report, which is expected to provide a clearer picture of labor market conditions.

# Technology Stocks Pause After Strong Rally

The Nasdaq lagged the broader market as investors took profits in technology shares following recent record highs.

Despite the modest pullback, AI-related companies and semiconductor stocks have remained among the market's strongest performers in recent weeks, supported by continued earnings optimism and robust investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure.

# Investors Await More Economic Data

In addition to labor market data, investors continue monitoring inflation trends and upcoming Federal Reserve communications for clues on the timing of potential policy easing.

While weaker employment data could support the case for lower interest rates, market participants remain cautious ahead of additional economic releases that could influence the Fed's outlook.

With Wall Street near record levels, investors are balancing optimism over potential monetary policy easing against signs of slowing economic momentum, leaving the major indexes little changed during Wednesday's session.
U.S. Private Job Growth Slows More Than Expected in June

U.S. private-sector hiring slowed more than expected in June, adding to signs that the labor market is gradually losing momentum.

According to ADP, private employers added 98,000 jobs during the month, below economists’ expectations of 118,000. The previous month’s reading was revised to 122,000.
U.S. Stocks Rise as Nasdaq Outperforms on Strength in Technology Shares

U.S. stocks traded higher on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq leading the major indexes as investors continued to favor technology stocks while digesting a fresh round of economic data and easing geopolitical tensions.

At the time of writing, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.10% to 26,104.74, outperforming the broader market. The S&P 500 rose 0.53% to 7,480.15, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 107.69 points, or 0.21%, to 52,290.43.

# Technology Stocks Continue to Lead

The Nasdaq extended its gains as investors continued buying semiconductor and artificial intelligence-related stocks. Positive analyst actions across several chipmakers and sustained optimism over AI infrastructure spending helped lift the technology sector.

The rally in growth stocks came despite mixed economic data, highlighting investors' willingness to focus on long-term earnings opportunities within the AI ecosystem.

# Investors Digest Mixed Economic Data

Markets also reacted to a series of economic releases showing the U.S. labor market remains resilient.

The JOLTS report showed job openings exceeded expectations in May, while consumer confidence improved modestly in June. Meanwhile, the Chicago PMI slowed from the previous month but remained in expansion territory, suggesting manufacturing activity continues to grow at a more moderate pace.

# Risk Appetite Remains Strong

Investor sentiment has also been supported by easing geopolitical tensions following the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, reducing concerns over a broader regional conflict and encouraging a shift toward risk assets.

With economic data pointing to a resilient U.S. economy and AI-related stocks continuing to attract strong investor interest, Wall Street remained on track for another positive session, led once again by the technology sector.
U.S. Job Openings Beat Expectations While Consumer Confidence Improves in June

The latest U.S. economic data presented a mixed picture on Tuesday, with job openings remaining stronger than expected, consumer confidence improving, and manufacturing activity slowing more than anticipated.

# Labor Market Remains Resilient

The JOLTS Job Openings report showed available positions totaled 7.594 million in May, slightly above economists' expectations of 7.280 million and essentially unchanged from April's 7.585 million.

The stronger-than-expected reading suggests labor demand remains resilient despite signs of a broader economic slowdown, supporting the view that the U.S. job market continues to hold up.

# Consumer Confidence Rebounds

The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index rose to 91.2 in June from 90.6 in May, although it came in below the consensus forecast of 94.4.

The increase indicates improving consumer sentiment, but the weaker-than-expected reading suggests households remain cautious amid ongoing concerns about inflation, interest rates, and the economic outlook.

# Chicago PMI Signals Slower Manufacturing Activity

The Chicago PMI declined sharply to 56.7 in June from 62.7 in May, despite coming more than expectations of 55.7.

Although the index remained above the 50-point threshold, indicating continued expansion in business activity, the sizeable month-over-month decline points to moderating growth in the manufacturing sector.

# Market Takeaway

Overall, the data suggests the U.S. economy remains resilient. The labor market continues to show strength, consumer confidence improved modestly, and manufacturing activity stayed in expansion territory despite slowing from the previous month. The mixed results are unlikely to materially alter expectations for the Federal Reserve, with investors continuing to focus on upcoming inflation and employment data for further clues on the path of monetary policy.
US Stocks Climb as Easing U.S.-Iran Tensions Boost Risk Appetite

U.S. stocks traded higher on Monday as investors welcomed signs of easing geopolitical tensions after the United States and Iran agreed to halt military attacks and resume diplomatic talks, improving overall market sentiment. The prospect of reduced conflict in the Middle East helped fuel a broad risk-on move across Wall Street while easing concerns over potential disruptions to global energy supplies.

At the time of writing, the S&P 500 was up 0.53% to 7,393.33, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 317.74 points, or 0.61%, to 52,193.85. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 0.86% advance to 25,515.96, led by renewed buying in technology and growth stocks.

Technology shares led the market higher as investors returned to growth stocks following last week's volatility. Meanwhile, market participants continue to monitor upcoming U.S. economic data and Federal Reserve commentary for further clues on the outlook for interest rates.

For now, improving geopolitical sentiment and a stronger appetite for risk are providing the main tailwinds for U.S. equities, with all three major indexes trading comfortably in positive territory as the session continues.
U.S. stocks traded little changed on Friday as investors weighed encouraging consumer sentiment data against persistent inflation concerns and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's policy outlook.

The S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and Nasdaq all hovered near the flatline after the University of Michigan's June survey showed consumer sentiment and future expectations improved more than anticipated. One-year inflation expectations also eased to 4.6% from 4.8%, offering a modest sign that consumers expect price pressures to moderate.

However, gains remained limited after this week's inflation data showed Core PCE holding at 3.4% year-over-year, well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target. The persistent inflation backdrop has reinforced expectations that the Fed will maintain a cautious stance on interest rates.

Technology stocks remained mixed following this week's sharp semiconductor rally, while investors continued to monitor incoming economic data for further clues on the outlook for inflation, monetary policy, and corporate earnings.
U.S. consumer sentiment improved more than expected in June, suggesting households have become somewhat more optimistic about the economic outlook despite persistent inflation.

The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index rose to 49.5 in June, exceeding the consensus forecast of 48.9 and improving from 44.8 in May. The Consumer Expectations Index also increased to 50.7 from 44.1, beating expectations of 49.3 and indicating stronger confidence in future economic conditions.
U.S. consumers' short-term inflation expectations eased slightly in June, offering a modest sign that inflation concerns may be stabilizing despite remaining well above the Federal Reserve's target.

The University of Michigan's one-year inflation expectations index came in at 4.6% in June, matching economists' forecasts and improving from 4.8% in May. While the decline suggests consumers expect price pressures to moderate somewhat over the next year, the reading remains elevated by historical standards.
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S&P 500

U.S. Markets Rise Despite Sharp Slowdown in Job Growth as Unemployment Falls

U.S. stocks finished higher on Thursday as investors balanced a much weaker-than-expected June jobs report against an unexpected decline in the unemployment rate, with optimism over the economy's resilience outweighing concerns about slowing hiring.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.77%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.54% and the Nasdaq added 0.39%.

The June employment report showed the U.S. economy added just 57,000 nonfarm payrolls, well below economists' expectations of 114,000 and sharply lower than May's revised 129,000. The data pointed to a significant slowdown in hiring and reinforced signs that the labor market is gradually cooling.

However, the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.2% from 4.3%, while initial jobless claims declined to 215,000 from 216,000 and came in below the 219,000 consensus forecast. The lower unemployment rate and continued strength in weekly jobless claims suggested the labor market remains relatively resilient despite slower job creation.

The mixed employment data leaves the Federal Reserve facing a delicate balancing act. Slower payroll growth supports the case for future interest rate cuts, while the lower unemployment rate reduces the urgency for policymakers to ease monetary policy immediately.

Markets also continued to digest recent comments from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, who reiterated this week that inflation remains above the Fed's 2% target and emphasized that future policy decisions will remain data dependent.

Investors will now turn their attention to upcoming inflation reports and additional labor market data for further clues on when the Federal Reserve may begin lowering interest rates.
U.S. Stocks Trade Mixed as Weak Jobs Data Pressures Tech While Dow Holds Gains

U.S. stocks traded mixed on Wednesday as investors weighed weaker-than-expected private employment data against growing expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

At the time of writing, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80 points, or 0.15%, to 52,399.58. The S&P 500 slipped 0.05% to 7,495.76, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.29% to 26,138.87 as technology stocks underperformed.

# Weak ADP Jobs Report Signals Cooling Labor Market

Investor attention centered on the June ADP employment report, which showed U.S. private employers added 98,000 jobs, below economists' expectations of 118,000 and down from May's revised 122,000.

The softer-than-expected reading suggests the labor market is gradually cooling, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve could gain greater confidence to lower interest rates if broader economic data continue to weaken.

Markets are now turning their focus to Friday's official nonfarm payrolls report, which is expected to provide a clearer picture of labor market conditions.

# Technology Stocks Pause After Strong Rally

The Nasdaq lagged the broader market as investors took profits in technology shares following recent record highs.

Despite the modest pullback, AI-related companies and semiconductor stocks have remained among the market's strongest performers in recent weeks, supported by continued earnings optimism and robust investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure.

# Investors Await More Economic Data

In addition to labor market data, investors continue monitoring inflation trends and upcoming Federal Reserve communications for clues on the timing of potential policy easing.

While weaker employment data could support the case for lower interest rates, market participants remain cautious ahead of additional economic releases that could influence the Fed's outlook.

With Wall Street near record levels, investors are balancing optimism over potential monetary policy easing against signs of slowing economic momentum, leaving the major indexes little changed during Wednesday's session.
U.S. Stocks Rise as Nasdaq Outperforms on Strength in Technology Shares

U.S. stocks traded higher on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq leading the major indexes as investors continued to favor technology stocks while digesting a fresh round of economic data and easing geopolitical tensions.

At the time of writing, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.10% to 26,104.74, outperforming the broader market. The S&P 500 rose 0.53% to 7,480.15, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 107.69 points, or 0.21%, to 52,290.43.

# Technology Stocks Continue to Lead

The Nasdaq extended its gains as investors continued buying semiconductor and artificial intelligence-related stocks. Positive analyst actions across several chipmakers and sustained optimism over AI infrastructure spending helped lift the technology sector.

The rally in growth stocks came despite mixed economic data, highlighting investors' willingness to focus on long-term earnings opportunities within the AI ecosystem.

# Investors Digest Mixed Economic Data

Markets also reacted to a series of economic releases showing the U.S. labor market remains resilient.

The JOLTS report showed job openings exceeded expectations in May, while consumer confidence improved modestly in June. Meanwhile, the Chicago PMI slowed from the previous month but remained in expansion territory, suggesting manufacturing activity continues to grow at a more moderate pace.

# Risk Appetite Remains Strong

Investor sentiment has also been supported by easing geopolitical tensions following the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, reducing concerns over a broader regional conflict and encouraging a shift toward risk assets.

With economic data pointing to a resilient U.S. economy and AI-related stocks continuing to attract strong investor interest, Wall Street remained on track for another positive session, led once again by the technology sector.
US Stocks Climb as Easing U.S.-Iran Tensions Boost Risk Appetite

U.S. stocks traded higher on Monday as investors welcomed signs of easing geopolitical tensions after the United States and Iran agreed to halt military attacks and resume diplomatic talks, improving overall market sentiment. The prospect of reduced conflict in the Middle East helped fuel a broad risk-on move across Wall Street while easing concerns over potential disruptions to global energy supplies.

At the time of writing, the S&P 500 was up 0.53% to 7,393.33, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 317.74 points, or 0.61%, to 52,193.85. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 0.86% advance to 25,515.96, led by renewed buying in technology and growth stocks.

Technology shares led the market higher as investors returned to growth stocks following last week's volatility. Meanwhile, market participants continue to monitor upcoming U.S. economic data and Federal Reserve commentary for further clues on the outlook for interest rates.

For now, improving geopolitical sentiment and a stronger appetite for risk are providing the main tailwinds for U.S. equities, with all three major indexes trading comfortably in positive territory as the session continues.
U.S. stocks traded little changed on Friday as investors weighed encouraging consumer sentiment data against persistent inflation concerns and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's policy outlook.

The S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and Nasdaq all hovered near the flatline after the University of Michigan's June survey showed consumer sentiment and future expectations improved more than anticipated. One-year inflation expectations also eased to 4.6% from 4.8%, offering a modest sign that consumers expect price pressures to moderate.

However, gains remained limited after this week's inflation data showed Core PCE holding at 3.4% year-over-year, well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target. The persistent inflation backdrop has reinforced expectations that the Fed will maintain a cautious stance on interest rates.

Technology stocks remained mixed following this week's sharp semiconductor rally, while investors continued to monitor incoming economic data for further clues on the outlook for inflation, monetary policy, and corporate earnings.
U.S. stocks traded mixed on Thursday as investors digested a fresh batch of economic data that reinforced the resilience of the U.S. economy while keeping expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts in check. The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged higher 0.1%, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.1% and the Nasdaq fell 0.6%.

Economic reports painted a mixed but generally constructive picture. First-quarter GDP was revised sharply higher to an annualized 2.1%, beating expectations and signaling stronger economic momentum than previously estimated. Initial jobless claims also surprised to the downside, falling to 215,000, indicating the labor market remains healthy. Meanwhile, durable goods orders declined 4.5% in May, though the drop was slightly smaller than the expected 5.0% decline after April's strong surge.

Technology stocks remained under pressure following this week's semiconductor-led selloff, weighing on the Nasdaq despite Micron's blockbuster quarterly results and stronger-than-expected guidance released after Wednesday's close. Investors continue to balance optimism surrounding AI-driven growth against concerns that resilient economic data could keep interest rates elevated for longer.

Overall, markets remained cautious as stronger economic fundamentals were offset by continued weakness in the technology sector and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's next policy move.:::
U.S. stocks moved modestly higher on Wednesday as investors weighed mixed economic data and easing geopolitical concerns. The S&P 500 gained 0.2%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3%, and the Nasdaq advanced 0.1%.

Market sentiment was supported by signs that tensions in the Middle East may be stabilizing, helping to reduce uncertainty across global markets. Lower oil prices also provided relief for investors concerned about inflationary pressures and the potential impact of higher energy costs on economic growth.

Economic data released during the session painted a mixed picture. U.S. business activity remained resilient, with both manufacturing and services PMIs exceeding expectations earlier this week, reinforcing confidence in the broader economy. However, the housing market showed signs of weakness, as May new home sales fell 7.3% month-over-month to an annualized pace of 580,000, well below market forecasts.

The combination of steady economic growth and softer housing activity has left investors balancing optimism about corporate earnings against uncertainty surrounding future Federal Reserve policy. Markets continue to monitor incoming economic data for clues on the timing of potential interest-rate cuts.

Despite recent volatility in technology and semiconductor shares, the broader market remained supported by resilient economic fundamentals and improving risk sentiment, allowing major indexes to post modest gains.
Tech Stocks Lead Premarket Selloff as Weak South Korean Data Rattles Global Markets

U.S. stock futures moved sharply lower in premarket trading, signaling a weaker start to the trading session as technology stocks faced renewed selling pressure. Nasdaq futures led the decline, falling 2.5%, while S&P 500 futures dropped 1.3% and Dow futures lost 0.5%.

The weakness appears concentrated in the technology sector, with investors reacting to concerns about slowing demand across parts of the global semiconductor supply chain. Recent reports showing softer-than-expected South Korean technology exports and semiconductor shipments have raised questions about the pace of growth in the AI and electronics markets, prompting profit-taking in many technology and chip-related stocks.

South Korea is widely viewed as a key barometer for global technology demand because of its large semiconductor and electronics industries. As a result, weaker technology trade data from the country often influences sentiment toward U.S. chipmakers and AI-related companies.

The decline comes after a strong rally in technology stocks this year, leaving the sector vulnerable to any signs of slowing growth or softer demand expectations. Semiconductor shares, which have been among the market's biggest winners, are likely to remain in focus as investors reassess earnings expectations and capital spending trends.

Despite the premarket weakness, broader economic fundamentals remain relatively stable, with recent U.S. labor market and consumer data continuing to point to a resilient economy. However, today's futures action suggests investors are taking a more cautious stance toward high-growth technology names following the latest signals from Asia's semiconductor supply chain.
U.S. Stocks Mixed as Dow Advances While Technology Shares Retreat

U.S. equities finished mixed, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising 184 points (+0.36%) to 51,749, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.28% and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.96% as investors rotated out of high-growth technology stocks.

Technology shares weighed on the broader market despite continued optimism surrounding artificial intelligence spending. Profit-taking in several large-cap growth names pressured the Nasdaq after a strong rally earlier in the year. Concerns about elevated valuations and the Federal Reserve's higher-for-longer interest rate outlook also contributed to weakness in the technology sector.

The Dow outperformed thanks to strength in industrial, financial, and defensive stocks. Investors appeared to favor companies with more stable earnings profiles as Treasury yields remained elevated following last week's Federal Reserve meeting.

Recent economic data continue to point to a resilient U.S. economy. Retail sales have remained solid, jobless claims stayed near historically low levels, and manufacturing indicators showed signs of improvement. While the data support the economic growth outlook, they have also reduced expectations for near-term interest rate cuts.

Markets are additionally monitoring geopolitical developments, including ongoing diplomatic discussions between the United States and Iran in Switzerland. Hopes for de-escalation have helped ease concerns about energy supply disruptions, contributing to lower oil prices and reducing inflation fears.

The combination of stable economic growth, moderating energy prices, and a cautious Federal Reserve has created a mixed environment for investors. While cyclical and value-oriented sectors benefited from the backdrop, high-growth technology stocks faced renewed pressure.

Looking ahead, investors will continue watching inflation data, Federal Reserve commentary, and developments in global geopolitical hotspots for further clues on the direction of interest rates and equity markets. For now, market leadership appears to be broadening beyond technology as investors seek opportunities across a wider range of sectors.
U.S. Stocks Rally as Strong Economic Data and Easing Geopolitical Risks Lift Sentiment

U.S. stocks moved higher on Thursday as investors welcomed a series of encouraging economic reports and continued to benefit from improving geopolitical conditions, pushing major indexes closer to record territory.

The S&P 500 gained 0.79% to 7,479, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 0.62% to 51,811. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 0.93% rise to 26,263, supported by continued strength in semiconductor and artificial intelligence-related stocks.

Market sentiment was boosted by stronger-than-expected economic data that pointed to a resilient U.S. economy. The Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index rose to 10.3 in June, surpassing expectations of 9.8 and rebounding sharply from May's -0.4 reading. The return to expansion territory suggests manufacturing activity is improving despite concerns about slowing growth in some sectors.

Labor market data also remained constructive. Initial jobless claims fell to 226,000 from 230,000 the previous week, indicating layoffs remain limited. While continuing claims rose modestly to 1.81 million, the overall data continued to support the view that the labor market remains healthy and capable of supporting consumer spending.

Investors were further encouraged by signs that inflation pressures may remain manageable. Lower energy prices following the recent U.S.-Iran agreement have reduced concerns about supply disruptions and helped improve the inflation outlook. Brent crude oil has retreated significantly from recent highs, easing pressure on consumers and businesses alike.

At the same time, recent data has suggested that economic growth is moderating rather than contracting. While housing activity has weakened amid elevated borrowing costs, consumer spending remains relatively strong and manufacturing activity has shown renewed momentum. This combination has strengthened hopes that the U.S. economy can achieve a soft landing without slipping into recession.

Technology shares continued to attract buyers as optimism surrounding artificial intelligence investment remained a major market theme. Several semiconductor companies have received bullish analyst updates this week, including Applied Materials, Lam Research, Micron Technology, AMD, Arm Holdings, and KLA, reinforcing expectations that AI infrastructure spending will remain a powerful driver of corporate earnings and capital investment.

Overall, markets appear increasingly confident that economic growth can remain positive while inflation continues to ease. Strong labor market conditions, improving manufacturing activity, resilient consumer demand, and lower geopolitical risks have combined to support risk appetite, helping major U.S. equity indexes extend their advance despite ongoing uncertainty about the timing of future Federal Reserve policy moves.
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NASDAQ:TSLA

Tesla Shares Slide Despite Delivery Beat as Rivian Rally Shifts EV Investor Focus

Tesla shares fell around 8% on Thursday even after the electric vehicle giant reported a much stronger-than-expected second-quarter delivery performance, while Rivian gained about 8% following its own delivery update and increased full-year guidance.

Tesla delivered 480,126 vehicles during the second quarter, up 25% year over year and well above Wall Street expectations of roughly 405,000 vehicles. The results marked the company’s strongest second quarter on record and its first annual delivery growth after two years of declining sales. The company also reduced inventory by delivering more vehicles than it produced, another positive signal for investors.

Despite those impressive figures, investors appeared to lock in profits after Tesla’s recent rally. Market participants also focused on the sustainability of the delivery rebound, with some questioning whether aggressive incentives and inventory drawdowns could pressure margins in upcoming earnings. The reaction reflected a classic “sell the news” move rather than disappointment with the headline delivery numbers.

Meanwhile, Rivian provided another positive surprise. The EV maker delivered 12,194 vehicles in the second quarter, beating both its own guidance and analyst expectations. More importantly, management raised its 2026 delivery forecast to 65,000–70,000 vehicles, citing strong demand for its R1 lineup and the early success of its new R2 SUV.

Rivian’s stronger outlook may also have contributed to Tesla’s weakness by reinforcing the view that competition in the U.S. EV market is intensifying. While Tesla remains the industry’s dominant player by volume, Rivian’s improving execution and confidence in future demand shifted some investor attention toward the smaller automaker’s growth story.

Investors will now turn their focus to upcoming quarterly earnings, where both companies will need to demonstrate that stronger deliveries can translate into healthy margins and sustained profitability.
Tesla Rises After Jefferies Raises Price Target

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) gained 2.2% after Jefferies raised its price target on the electric vehicle maker to $375 from $350 while maintaining a Hold rating.

The higher target reflects improving confidence in Tesla's long-term growth opportunities, particularly in autonomous driving, robotics, artificial intelligence, and energy storage. While the analyst maintained a neutral stance, the increased valuation suggests Tesla's strategic initiatives are gaining greater recognition on Wall Street.

Investor sentiment has increasingly shifted beyond Tesla's traditional automotive business toward the company's AI-driven projects, including robotaxis, Full Self-Driving technology, and the Optimus humanoid robot program. These initiatives are viewed as potential long-term growth drivers that could diversify revenue beyond vehicle sales.

The stock's advance also comes as broader technology and AI-related shares continue to attract investor interest. Markets remain focused on companies with exposure to artificial intelligence and automation trends, areas where Tesla is making substantial investments.

Despite ongoing challenges in the global EV market, including increased competition and pricing pressure, investors appear encouraged by Tesla's ability to leverage its software, AI, and manufacturing capabilities across multiple industries.

Jefferies' higher price target suggests analysts see improving long-term value creation potential, even as near-term execution and demand trends remain key areas of focus. The stock's gain indicates investors welcomed the more optimistic outlook and continue to view Tesla as a major participant in the evolving AI and autonomous technology landscape.
Tesla Gains as HSBC Reiterates Hold Rating Amid Focus on AI and Autonomous Driving

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) shares rose 1.2% on Monday as investors reacted to a fresh analyst update from HSBC, which reiterated its Hold rating on the electric vehicle maker.

The modest gain came despite the neutral stance from HSBC, suggesting investors remain focused on Tesla's longer-term growth opportunities in artificial intelligence, autonomous driving, and robotics rather than near-term vehicle delivery trends.

Tesla shares have experienced increased volatility in recent months as the company navigates slowing EV demand in some markets while accelerating investment in its Full Self-Driving platform, robotaxi ambitions, and Optimus humanoid robot program. Supporters argue these initiatives could unlock significant new revenue streams beyond traditional vehicle sales.

The reaffirmed Hold rating reflects a balanced view of Tesla's prospects, with analysts recognizing the company's technological leadership while remaining cautious about valuation and execution risks. With the stock gaining 1.2% despite the neutral recommendation, investors appear to be looking beyond current challenges and positioning for potential catalysts related to autonomous driving and AI-powered products.

Market attention is expected to remain focused on upcoming developments surrounding Tesla's robotaxi rollout, software progress, and broader AI strategy, which many investors view as key drivers of the company's future growth.
Tesla Falls 3.8% Despite Piper Sandler Reaffirming Overweight Rating

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) shares declined 3.8% today despite receiving continued support from Piper Sandler, which reiterated its Overweight rating on the electric vehicle maker.

The stock's decline came amid broader weakness in growth and technology shares, as investors weighed interest-rate expectations and concerns about the near-term outlook for the automotive sector. Tesla has also faced increased scrutiny in recent months over vehicle demand trends, competitive pressures in key markets, and the pace of its transition toward autonomous driving and AI-related initiatives.

Despite these concerns, Piper Sandler's reaffirmed Overweight rating signals continued confidence in Tesla's long-term growth prospects. Many bullish analysts view Tesla as more than an automaker, pointing to opportunities in autonomous driving software, robotics, energy storage, and artificial intelligence as potential drivers of future value creation.

Investors remain focused on the company's upcoming product launches, progress in self-driving technology, and efforts to expand profitability following industry-wide pricing pressures over the past year. While vehicle sales growth has slowed compared with previous years, supporters argue that Tesla remains one of the best-positioned companies to benefit from the long-term electrification and automation trends reshaping transportation.

Today's decline appears to reflect broader market sentiment rather than a change in analyst views. The reaffirmed Overweight rating suggests that at least some Wall Street firms continue to see attractive long-term upside potential despite the stock's recent volatility.

As Tesla continues to balance automotive execution with ambitious AI and autonomous driving initiatives, investors are likely to remain highly sensitive to both macroeconomic developments and company-specific updates in the months ahead.
Tesla Holds Wall Street Support Despite Recent Pullback

Tesla (TSLA) shares slipped about 1%, but Wall Street remains optimistic about the electric vehicle giant's long-term prospects. TD Cowen reiterated its Buy rating on the stock and maintained a $490 price target, implying meaningful upside from the current share price near $418.

The reaffirmed rating suggests analysts continue to look beyond Tesla's near-term challenges, including slowing EV demand growth, increased competition, and ongoing concerns about vehicle deliveries. Instead, many investors remain focused on the company's long-term opportunities in autonomous driving, artificial intelligence, robotics, and energy storage.

Tesla's Full Self-Driving technology and planned robotaxi initiatives remain key parts of the bullish investment thesis. Supporters argue that Tesla is evolving from a traditional automaker into a broader AI and technology company, potentially opening new revenue streams beyond vehicle sales.

The maintained Buy rating also reflects confidence in Tesla's ability to leverage its scale, manufacturing expertise, and technological advantages to strengthen its competitive position over time. While the stock has experienced significant volatility in recent months, analysts continue to view Tesla as one of the most important companies in the EV and AI ecosystems.

Today's decline appears to be driven more by broader market weakness and profit-taking than by any significant change in Tesla's long-term outlook. The latest analyst reiteration indicates that Wall Street remains largely constructive on the company's future growth potential.
Tesla stock volatile as strong earnings overshadowed by weak outlook

Shares of Tesla, Inc. (TSLA) showed mixed and volatile performance this week, as solid earnings were offset by concerns over future growth and heavy investment plans.

The Tesla, Inc. reported first-quarter results that beat profit expectations but missed on revenue, highlighting ongoing pressure in its core automotive business. (Guardian)

Despite the earnings beat, investor sentiment turned cautious. Reuters reported that Tesla plans to significantly increase capital expenditures—exceeding $25 billion in 2026—as it accelerates investments in AI, robotics, and autonomous driving, raising concerns about near-term profitability. (Reuters)

Additional pressure came from weaker demand trends. Reports highlighted lower-than-expected vehicle deliveries and intensifying competition, particularly from Chinese manufacturers, as well as the impact of reduced EV incentives in key markets. ([Guardian][1])

At the same time, strategic developments added complexity to the outlook. Business Insider noted that Tesla is pursuing a potential $2 billion AI hardware acquisition, reinforcing its shift toward AI-driven growth beyond traditional automotive operations. (Business Insider)

Market reaction reflected these mixed signals. While the stock initially rose after earnings, it later declined and remained under pressure, with recent trading around the mid-$370 range and noticeable volatility. (Robinhood)

Overall, Tesla’s stock performance this week reflects a transition phase: strong current profitability is being overshadowed by concerns about slowing core demand and the risks associated with aggressive long-term investments in AI, robotics, and autonomous technologies.

Tesla Summon got insanely good in FSD v14.3.2 — Navigation? Not so much

Tesla Full Self-Driving v14.3.2 began rolling out to some owners earlier this week, and there are some notable improvements that came with this update.

(teslarati.com)

Tesla isn't joking about building Optimus at an industrial scale: Here we go

Tesla's Q1 2026 report confirms a 5.2 million square foot Optimus factory expansion at Gigafactory Texas, targeting 10 million robots per year, with Fremont's Model S and X lines converted to a 1 million unit pilot line. Public sales targeted for end of 2027 at $20,000 to $30,000.

(teslarati.com)

Tesla Q1 Earnings: What Elon Musk and Co. will answer during the call

Tesla is set to hold its Earnings Call for the first quarter of 2026 on Wednesday, and there are a lot of interesting things that are swirling around in terms of speculation from investors.

(teslarati.com)

Tesla expands Unsupervised Robotaxi service to two new cities

Tesla has taken a major step forward in its autonomous ride-hailing ambitions.

(teslarati.com)
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NASDAQ:AAPL

Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) rose 1.5% on Friday, recovering some of Thursday's losses after Morgan Stanley reiterated its Overweight rating, reaffirming confidence in the company's long-term growth outlook.

Apple shares came under pressure on Thursday after the company announced price increases for select products, as investors weighed the potential impact of higher prices on consumer demand. However, Friday's rebound suggests the market has become more optimistic that Apple's pricing power will help offset rising component costs and protect profit margins.

Morgan Stanley maintained its bullish stance, highlighting Apple's resilient ecosystem, expanding high-margin services business, and continued opportunities tied to AI-enabled devices and future hardware upgrades. The firm believes the company's strong brand loyalty positions it well to implement price increases without significantly hurting demand.

The combination of renewed analyst support and confidence in Apple's ability to preserve profitability helped lift investor sentiment, allowing the stock to recover part of the previous session's decline.
Apple Gains as Bank of America Reiterates Buy Rating

Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) rose 0.7% on Thursday after Bank of America reiterated its Buy rating on the stock and maintained a $380 price target.

The bullish stance reflects continued confidence in Apple's long-term growth prospects despite ongoing concerns about smartphone demand and increasing competition in the consumer technology market.

Investors have recently focused on Apple's expanding artificial intelligence strategy, services business, and efforts to diversify its hardware ecosystem. The company continues to benefit from one of the world's largest installed device bases, supporting recurring revenue growth through subscriptions and digital services.

Bank of America's reaffirmed Buy rating suggests the firm sees additional upside potential as Apple continues to monetize its ecosystem, expand AI capabilities across its products, and generate substantial cash flow for shareholders.

While macroeconomic uncertainty and consumer spending trends remain important factors to monitor, the analyst's positive outlook helped support shares as investors remained constructive on Apple's long-term growth story.
Apple Falls 3% Despite Generally Supportive Analyst Commentary

Apple (AAPL) shares fell nearly 3% even as Wall Street analysts largely maintained constructive views on the stock, suggesting investors were focused more on broader market concerns and near-term growth questions than on today's analyst updates.

Several major firms reiterated their existing ratings, while some became more optimistic about Apple's long-term prospects. Most notably, Morgan Stanley raised its price target to $360 from $330 while maintaining an Overweight rating, implying substantial upside from current levels. Maxim Group also increased its target to $350 from $310 while reiterating a Buy rating.

The overall tone of today's analyst commentary remained cautiously positive. Bullish firms continue to point to Apple's expanding services ecosystem, growing artificial intelligence opportunities, and the potential for future hardware upgrade cycles. However, some analysts maintained more neutral positions, reflecting concerns about slowing iPhone demand, competitive pressures in AI, and uncertainty surrounding consumer spending.

The market's reaction suggests investors are currently placing greater weight on execution risks and valuation concerns than on incremental target-price increases. After Apple's strong performance over the past year, expectations remain elevated, making it difficult for analyst reiterations alone to drive the stock higher.

For long-term investors, the key takeaway from today's reports is that many analysts continue to see meaningful upside potential despite near-term volatility, with several targets remaining well above the current share price.
Apple Outperforms Broader Market Selloff as Investors Remain Confident in Long-Term Outlook

Apple declined just 1.2% on Friday and gained an additional 0.1% in after-hours trading, significantly outperforming the broader technology sector during a session that saw the Nasdaq plunge more than 4%.

The relative strength suggests investors continue to view Apple as one of the safer large-cap technology holdings amid increasing market volatility. While high-growth semiconductor and AI-related stocks came under heavy pressure following stronger-than-expected U.S. employment data and rising Treasury yields, Apple's more defensive business model helped limit selling pressure.

Investor sentiment may also have been supported by continued optimism surrounding Apple's artificial intelligence strategy, upcoming product cycle, and massive cash generation capabilities. Unlike many AI-linked companies that trade at elevated growth valuations, Apple benefits from a large installed base of loyal customers, recurring services revenue, and one of the strongest balance sheets in corporate America.

A research note circulating in the market showed Wedbush analyst Dan Ives maintaining an Outperform rating on Apple with a $400 price target, implying substantial upside from current levels. Dan Ives has remained one of Wall Street's most bullish Apple analysts, frequently highlighting the company's AI opportunities, ecosystem strength, and potential for a multi-year upgrade cycle driven by AI-enabled devices.

The stock's ability to hold relatively steady while the Nasdaq suffered one of its sharpest declines in over a year may indicate that investors are rotating toward higher-quality technology companies as concerns grow about interest rates remaining elevated for longer. In an environment where speculative growth stocks face increasing pressure, Apple appears to be benefiting from its reputation as a technology leader with durable earnings, strong free cash flow, and resilient consumer demand.

While broader market volatility may continue in the near term, Friday's trading demonstrated that investors remain willing to own Apple even during periods of significant weakness across the technology sector.

Apple Manufacturing Academy accelerates AI use in U.S. supply chains - Apple

Apple’s Manufacturing Academy hosted its inaugural Spring Forum, bringing together U.S. manufacturers to accelerate the use of AI in supply chains.

(apple.com)
Apple Rises 3.4% in Pre-Market as Record iPhone and Services Quarter Overshadow Memory Cost Warning

Apple shares are up 3.4% in pre-market trading tody, after the
company delivered its best March quarter in history, topping estimates across every major category and issuing guidance that dramatically beat expectations.

Revenue came in at $111.2 billion, up 17% year-over-year, beating the $109.66 billion consensus, while EPS of $2.01 topped estimates of $1.95 and grew 22% from the prior year. iPhone revenue surged 22% to $57 billion, a March quarter record, with CEO Tim Cook citing extraordinary demand for the iPhone 17 lineup as the primary driver. (9to5Mac, heygotrade)

Services continued its relentless march higher. Services revenue grew 16.3% to $30.98 billion, setting a new all-time record and beating the $30.4 billion estimate, with double-digit growth in both developed and emerging markets and all-time records across every major category within the segment. Greater China was a standout, with revenue growing 28% to $20.49 billion against an $18.9 billion expectation, a number that will silence near-term concerns about China demand erosion. (Yahoo Finance)

The Q3 guidance was the real catalyst for after-hours and pre-market enthusiasm. Apple guided Q3 revenue growth of 14% to 17%, against analyst expectations of just 9.5% growth to $103 billion, a massive beat that pushed shares sharply higher during the conference call. (StockAnalysis)

There are two near-term headwinds worth watching. Cook warned that significantly higher memory costs are expected to impact gross margin in the June quarter and beyond, driven by the global AI data center build-out creating a memory component shortage. Supply constraints on Mac mini and Mac Studio are also expected to persist for several months. (heygotrade)

The earnings call also marked a significant leadership moment. Cook confirmed he will transition to executive chairman on September 1, with hardware SVP John Ternus becoming CEO, and Apple announced the end of its formal net cash neutrality target, authorizing a new $100 billion buyback and raising the quarterly dividend 4% to $0.27 per share. (heygotrade)

After the results were released, shares initially dipped as much as 1.24% before rebounding to a gain of 5.36%, ultimately settling around 1.86% by the end of after-hours trading, with pre-market extending the gains further as investors digested the blowout Q3 guidance.

Formula 1® returns to the U.S. this weekend, streaming live on Apple TV - Apple

Formula 1® returns to the U.S. this weekend with the Miami Grand Prix, streaming exclusively on Apple TV with every session available live.

(apple.com)
Apple announced significant progress in its environmental initiatives, reporting that 30% of materials used in products shipped in 2025 were recycled—its highest level to date. The company also achieved key sustainability milestones, including eliminating plastic from packaging and transitioning بالكامل to fiber-based alternatives, as well as using 100% recycled cobalt in its batteries and recycled rare earth elements in magnets.

As part of its broader “Apple 2030” strategy to achieve full carbon neutrality, the company said its greenhouse gas emissions remain over 60% below 2015 levels despite business growth. Apple also expanded renewable energy use across its supply chain, with suppliers generating more than 20 gigawatts of clean energy, while advancing water conservation efforts by replenishing over half of its corporate water usage.

The company highlighted innovations in recycling technology, including new systems to improve material recovery from old devices, and noted that its newly launched MacBook Neo features 60% recycled content, making it its lowest-carbon laptop to date. Apple added that it continues to scale zero-waste operations across facilities and suppliers, reinforcing its push toward a more sustainable product lifecycle.
Apple has expanded its American Manufacturing Program, adding new partners including Bosch, Cirrus Logic, TDK and Qnity Electronics to strengthen its U.S. supply chain.

The company plans to invest $400 million through 2030 as part of its broader $600 billion commitment to U.S. manufacturing and innovation, aiming to boost domestic production of critical components and advanced materials.

Key initiatives include producing sensors and semiconductor components in the U.S., developing new chip technologies with partners such as GlobalFoundries, and supporting advanced features like Face ID and device sensors.

The expansion also supports job creation and workforce development, with Apple continuing to invest in training programs such as its Manufacturing Academy, as the company deepens its focus on strengthening domestic manufacturing capabilities.
Apple launches all-in-one “Apple Business” platform for companies

March 24, 2026 — Apple announced the launch of Apple Business, a new integrated platform designed to help companies manage devices, streamline operations, and reach customers, with global availability starting April 14.

The platform combines mobile device management, business email, calendar, and collaboration tools into a single interface, allowing organizations to configure devices, manage employees, and deploy apps efficiently. It also supports custom domain-based communication and integrates with identity providers for automated account setup.

Apple Business introduces new marketing capabilities, including the ability for businesses in the U.S. and Canada to place ads in Apple Maps, enhancing local customer discovery while maintaining Apple’s privacy-focused approach.

The service will be offered free of charge in over 200 countries, with optional paid features such as expanded iCloud storage and AppleCare+ for Business. Apple said the platform is aimed at simplifying IT management, particularly for small and medium-sized businesses, while improving productivity and customer engagement.
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NASDAQ:GOOG

Alphabet (GOOGL) Stock Edges Higher After Morgan Stanley Raises Price Target

Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) shares traded modestly higher on Tuesday after Morgan Stanley raised its price target on the Google parent company, reinforcing confidence in its long-term growth prospects driven by artificial intelligence and digital advertising.

The brokerage maintained its Overweight rating while increasing its price target to $415 from $375, signaling continued optimism about Alphabet's ability to capitalize on AI-driven opportunities across its search, cloud, and software businesses.

# Morgan Stanley Sees More Upside

The higher price target reflects growing confidence that Alphabet will continue benefiting from expanding AI adoption while maintaining its leadership in digital advertising.

Analysts also remain constructive on the company's cloud business, where ongoing investment in generative AI services is expected to support revenue growth and margin expansion over the coming years.

# AI Remains a Key Growth Driver

Alphabet has accelerated the rollout of AI-powered products across Google Search, Google Cloud, and Workspace, while continuing to invest heavily in infrastructure to support growing enterprise and consumer demand.

The company's strong balance sheet and leadership in AI innovation continue to position it as one of the largest beneficiaries of the industry's long-term growth.

# Why GOOGL Stock Was Little Changed

Despite the higher price target, Alphabet shares posted only modest gains, suggesting much of the positive outlook may already be reflected in the stock's valuation.

Still, Morgan Stanley's decision to reaffirm its Overweight rating while lifting its valuation target reinforces Wall Street's confidence in Alphabet's long-term earnings potential and competitive position within the AI ecosystem.
Alphabet Falls 5% Despite Citi Reiterating Positive Rating

Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOG) fell 5% even after Citigroup reiterated its Market Outperform rating, as investors reacted to broader concerns surrounding competition, valuation, and the evolving artificial intelligence landscape.

The decline came despite Citi maintaining a positive long-term view on the company. Alphabet remains one of the world's dominant digital advertising and cloud computing platforms, with growing exposure to artificial intelligence through products such as Gemini and its expanding AI infrastructure investments.

However, investor sentiment toward the stock has recently become more cautious as competition in AI-powered search intensifies. Market participants continue to evaluate how generative AI could reshape internet search and digital advertising, two of Alphabet's most important businesses.

Despite the sharp decline, analysts generally remain constructive on Alphabet's outlook. The company's leadership positions in search, cloud computing, digital advertising, and artificial intelligence continue to provide multiple growth drivers. Google Cloud has also emerged as a key beneficiary of growing enterprise AI adoption, helping diversify revenue beyond advertising.

Citigroup's reaffirmed Market Outperform rating suggests the firm believes the recent weakness does not alter Alphabet's long-term investment case. Nevertheless, the stock's decline highlights that investors remain sensitive to competitive developments and AI-related execution risks across the technology sector.
Alphabet Holds Steady as TD Cowen Raises Price Target to $475

Alphabet (GOOG) traded little changed despite receiving a bullish analyst update from TD Cowen, which raised its price target to $475 from $450 while maintaining a Buy rating.

The higher target reflects growing confidence in Alphabet's ability to capitalize on the artificial intelligence boom while maintaining the strength of its core Search and advertising businesses. Investors have become increasingly optimistic that Google's AI investments are beginning to translate into stronger product offerings, improved user engagement, and new monetization opportunities across Search, Cloud, YouTube, and Workspace.

The lack of a significant stock reaction suggests that investors had already been expecting positive analyst commentary following the company's recent execution and strong positioning within the AI ecosystem. Alphabet has been one of the major beneficiaries of increasing enterprise AI adoption, particularly through Google Cloud, which continues to gain traction among businesses deploying large-scale AI workloads.

Analysts remain focused on several key catalysts, including the pace of Google Cloud growth, AI-driven improvements in Search, expansion of advertising revenue, and the company's ability to convert its massive AI investments into sustainable earnings growth.

While the stock was flat on the day, the target increase reinforces the view that many Wall Street firms continue to see substantial upside potential in Alphabet. With the new $475 target standing well above the current share price, TD Cowen's update suggests confidence that Alphabet's combination of AI leadership, dominant digital advertising position, and growing cloud business can continue to drive long-term shareholder returns.
Alphabet Slips 1% as Broader Tech Weakness Overshadows Higher Price Target

Alphabet shares fell 1% on Friday, outperforming many large-cap technology peers but still ending lower as investors sold growth stocks following stronger-than-expected U.S. economic data and rising Treasury yields.

Despite the decline, Wall Street sentiment remained constructive. New Street Research raised its price target on Alphabet from $450 to $455 while maintaining a Buy rating, signaling continued confidence in the company's long-term growth prospects despite recent market volatility.

The target increase reflects optimism surrounding Alphabet's expanding artificial intelligence initiatives, strength in digital advertising, and growing cloud computing business. Investors have been closely watching how the company integrates AI across Google Search, YouTube, Google Cloud, and other products as competition intensifies throughout the technology sector.

Alphabet has faced concerns that generative AI could disrupt traditional search advertising, but the company has continued to demonstrate strong user engagement and has been aggressively rolling out AI-powered features across its ecosystem. At the same time, Google Cloud remains one of the fastest-growing segments of the business, benefiting from increasing enterprise demand for AI infrastructure and cloud services.

Friday's decline appeared largely driven by macroeconomic factors rather than company-specific developments. Following the release of strong U.S. employment data, investors reduced exposure to technology stocks as expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts moved further into the future. Higher interest rates tend to pressure growth-stock valuations, particularly across the technology sector.

The fact that Alphabet fell only modestly while the Nasdaq dropped more than 4% may indicate that investors continue to view the company as one of the highest-quality names in the technology sector. The latest target increase from New Street Research further suggests that analysts remain confident in Alphabet's ability to capitalize on the AI revolution while maintaining its dominant position in digital advertising and cloud computing.

With a $455 price target compared with a recent share price around $369, Wall Street continues to see meaningful upside potential, even as short-term market volatility remains elevated.
Alphabet Plans Massive $80 Billion Equity Raise to Accelerate AI Infrastructure Expansion

Alphabet announced plans to raise approximately $80 billion through a combination of public stock offerings, preferred securities, and an at-the-market share sale program as the company ramps up investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure to meet surging demand.

The financing package includes $30 billion of underwritten offerings, a new $40 billion at-the-market stock sale program, and a $10 billion private placement investment from Berkshire Hathaway. Berkshire will purchase $5 billion of Alphabet Class A shares and $5 billion of Class C shares, expanding a position it has been building since late 2025.

The announcement underscores the scale of the AI investment race. Alphabet said customer demand for its AI products and services is exceeding available capacity, prompting the company to aggressively expand its compute infrastructure. Management previously guided for $180 billion to $190 billion in capital expenditures during 2026 and expects spending to rise significantly again in 2027.

The company enters this expansion phase with strong business momentum. First-quarter 2026 revenue climbed 22% year-over-year to $110 billion, while Google Cloud revenue surged 63%. Cloud backlog nearly doubled sequentially to more than $460 billion, highlighting robust enterprise demand for AI-related services. Alphabet also reported 350 million paid subscriptions across its ecosystem and said its AI models now process 19 billion tokens per minute, six times higher than a year ago.

Alphabet emphasized that the equity raise is part of a balanced funding strategy that also includes strong cash generation and debt financing. Over the past 12 months, the company generated $174 billion in operating cash flow and has raised more than $85 billion in debt across global markets.

The announcement highlights how major technology companies continue to commit unprecedented amounts of capital to AI infrastructure, with Alphabet positioning itself to capture growing demand across search, cloud computing, subscriptions, and developer platforms.
Alphabet Hits Intraday Record as Cloud Growth Stuns Wall Street

Alphabet shares hit intraday record highs on April 30 after Q1 2026 revenue came in at $109.9 billion, up 22% year-over-year, beating the $107.2 billion consensus and marking the company's 11th consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. (CNBC)

The standout was Google Cloud. Cloud revenues surged 63% to $20 billion, crushing the $18.05 billion estimate, with backlog nearly doubling quarter-on-quarter to over $460 billion. Search revenue rose 19% to $60.4 billion as queries hit an all-time high. Gemini Enterprise paid users grew 40% quarter-on-quarter, and total paid subscriptions reached 350 million. (The Motley Fool)

Operating margin expanded two percentage points to 36.1%, putting Alphabet in a rare position of accelerating growth and expanding margins simultaneously. The company raised its 2026 capex guidance to $180 to $190 billion, but unlike Meta, markets are rewarding the spend given the Cloud results that accompanied it. (The Motley Fool, CNBC)

Goldman Sachs reiterated a Buy with a $400 price target. (Investing*com)
Alphabet Reports 22% Revenue Growth in Q1 2026, Driven by AI and Cloud

Alphabet posted first-quarter revenues of $109.9 billion, up 22% year over year, marking its 11th consecutive quarter of double-digit growth. Google Cloud was the standout performer, with revenues surging 63% to $20 billion, while its backlog nearly doubled quarter over quarter to over $460 billion.

Google Search grew 19% and total paid subscriptions reached 350 million across YouTube and Google One. Net income rose 81% with earnings per share of $5.11, and operating margin expanded to 36.1%. The company also raised its quarterly dividend by 5% to $0.22 per share.

CEO Sundar Pichai highlighted that Gemini API usage has reached 16 billion tokens per minute, up 60% from last quarter, while Waymo surpassed 500,000 fully autonomous rides per week.

Source: Alphabet Inc. Press Release, April 29, 2026
Intel and Google Expand Partnership to Advance AI Infrastructure

Intel and Google announced a multiyear collaboration to enhance next-generation AI and cloud infrastructure.

The partnership will deepen the use of Intel Xeon processors across Google Cloud while expanding co-development of custom infrastructure processing units (IPUs), designed to improve efficiency, performance, and scalability in AI systems.

The companies emphasized the growing importance of CPUs alongside accelerators in managing complex AI workloads, with IPUs helping offload networking, storage, and security tasks to optimize overall system performance.

The collaboration aims to build more efficient, flexible, and scalable infrastructure to support rising global demand for AI-driven applications and services.
Business Wire

5 Cash-Rich Fortresses with War Chests That Could Withstand the Market Chaos

Uncover the 5 cash-rich fortresses built to survive market turbulence and geopolitical tensions with strong war chests.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)
Google announced the completion of its acquisition of Wiz, a New York–based cloud and AI security platform, which will now operate as part of Google Cloud while maintaining its brand and cross-cloud capabilities.

The acquisition aims to strengthen Google Cloud’s security offerings by combining Wiz’s cloud security platform with Google’s AI-powered threat detection and infrastructure capabilities. The integrated platform will help organizations detect, prevent, and respond to cyber threats across multiple cloud environments, including Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud, and Oracle Cloud.

Google said the move is designed to support the growing demand for multicloud security as businesses and governments migrate critical workloads to cloud and AI systems, while also improving cybersecurity automation and protection against emerging AI-driven threats.
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US Funds

Nasdaq Slides as Chip Sell-Off Accelerates, Dragging Semiconductor ETFs and AI Leaders Lower

The Nasdaq came under heavy selling pressure on Thursday after a relatively resilient start to the session, with semiconductor stocks leading a broad technology retreat. While the Dow Jones remained in positive territory, the Nasdaq fell more than 1.4% as investors aggressively sold chipmakers following their exceptional first-half rally.

The weakness was widespread across the semiconductor industry. Micron Technology (MU) dropped more than 7%, while SanDisk (SNDK) plunged over 15%, extending a sharp pullback that began after both companies posted massive year-to-date gains. Other major chip names, including Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Broadcom (AVGO) and Western Digital (WDC) also traded lower as investors continued rotating out of AI infrastructure stocks.

The sell-off was equally visible in sector exchange-traded funds. The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) fell roughly 7%, while the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) lost nearly 6%, highlighting broad-based weakness rather than company-specific concerns. The decline suggests investors are taking profits across the semiconductor sector after one of its strongest first-half performances on record.

Analysts point to a combination of factors behind the retreat, including profit-taking after extraordinary gains, concerns that AI-related chip valuations had become stretched, and signs that investors are rotating toward other parts of the technology sector. Recent reports suggesting cloud providers could optimize AI infrastructure spending have also fueled concerns that the pace of semiconductor demand growth may moderate, even as the long-term AI investment theme remains intact.

Despite Thursday’s sharp decline, many Wall Street analysts continue to view the move as a healthy correction rather than a change in the industry’s long-term outlook, arguing that AI-driven demand for advanced chips and memory products remains robust over the coming years.
State Street Investment Management launched the State Street IG Public & Private ABS ETF (PRAB), an actively managed exchange-traded fund designed to give investors broader exposure to investment-grade asset-backed securities across both public and private markets.

The fund invests in securities such as collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) and residential and commercial mortgage-backed securities, aiming to provide diversified income opportunities and potentially higher yields compared with corporate bonds of similar risk.

State Street said the ETF responds to growing investor demand for access to the global asset-backed finance market, which exceeds $20 trillion but remains underrepresented in traditional bond portfolios.
Business Wire
State Street Investment Management has expanded its MyIncome ETF lineup with the launch of five actively managed high yield corporate bond target maturity ETFs, adding to what it calls the industry’s first actively managed corporate target maturity ETF suite.

The new funds — My2027 (MYHA), My2028 (MYHB), My2029 (MYHC), My2030 (MYHD) and My2031 (MYHE) High Yield Corporate Bond ETFs — provide exposure to high yield bonds with matching maturity years from 2027 through 2031. The ETFs are designed to help investors build bond ladders that manage interest rate risk while offering predictable income and liquidity.

Managed by the firm’s fixed income team, the funds aim to maximize yield while preserving capital and managing liquidity, sector and issuer concentration risks. Each ETF is structured to distribute remaining principal and liquidate around December 15 of its respective maturity year. As of January 31, 2026, assets under management in the MyIncome suite totaled $298 million.

Source:Business Wire

Sector Momentum Favors Defense; QQQ Yet To Break; Split NDX Breadth

The stock market is clearly in defensive mode but QQQ is still holding up, and its long-term breadth still hasn't turned bearish. Arthur Hill's analysis identifies the key levels to watch.

(articles.stockcharts.com)
State Street Investment Management has launched the **State Street Prime Money Market ETF (MMK)**, an actively managed ETF designed to provide flexible, transparent, and cost-effective cash management.

The ETF aims to maximize current income while preserving capital and liquidity, investing in short-term, high-quality debt instruments such as U.S. government securities, certificates of deposit, commercial paper, asset-backed securities, mortgage-related securities, and repurchase agreements.

With an expense ratio of **18 basis points**, MMK is among the lowest-cost active prime money market ETFs in the U.S. As of December 31, 2025, State Street’s cash team managed approximately **$599.55 billion** in assets.

Source: Business Wire.

VantagePoint A.I. Asset of the Week iShares Silver Trust ($SLV) - VantagePoint $SLV

This week's ai asset spotlight is the iShares Silver Trust ($SLV) On December 3, 2025, we put $SLV front and center as our Asset of the Week and made one thing crystal clear: silver was no

(vantagepointsoftware.com)
I collected my first dividend from the FDVV ETF this week. It was not much—just $12—but it felt good to see the portfolio start to generate cash. Over time, I expect these payments to grow.

I am also spending time researching QQQI. It is a relatively new ETF and clearly carries more risk, especially since it focuses on large technology companies that may be somewhat overvalued right now. Still, I plan to allocate a small portion of my portfolio to it. The annual yield of around 13% is attractive, and I believe the tech and AI rally is likely to continue for at least another couple of years. If that plays out, QQQI could contribute meaningfully to overall returns.
Blackrock multi asset income monthly commentary ...

(blackrock.com)
State Street launches lowest-cost leveraged loan ETF in the U.S.

State Street Investment Management introduced the State Street SPDR S&P Leveraged Loan ETF (LVLN), giving investors broad, index-based exposure to the expanding leveraged loan market. With a 0.40 percent gross expense ratio, LVLN is now the lowest-cost leveraged loan ETF available in the U.S., according to Bloomberg data as of November 18, 2025.

The fund tracks the S&P USD Select Leveraged Loan Index, which includes U.S. dollar–denominated loans of at least 500 million dollars and applies issuer, facility and industry caps for diversified coverage. State Street says demand for leveraged loans continues to grow as investors seek income and low correlation to Treasuries and investment-grade corporate bonds.

The launch expands State Street’s fixed-income ETF lineup to include both active and index strategies targeting the rapidly growing loan segment.
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NASDAQ:META

Meta Beats Q1 Estimates, But Surging AI Capex Spooks Investors

Meta Platforms delivered a strong Q1 2026, yet shares slid after hours as Wall Street fixated on a massive spending hike.

Revenue climbed 33% year-over-year to $56.31 billion — the fastest growth since 2021 — beating estimates of $55.45 billion. Adjusted EPS came in at $7.31, topping the $6.79 consensus. Ad impressions jumped 19% year-over-year, while average price per ad rose 12%.

The trouble? AI spending. Meta raised its full-year 2026 capex guidance to $125–$145 billion, up from $115–$135 billion, citing higher component pricing and additional data center costs — and that single line item drove a ~6% after-hours decline.

META shares were trading at $613.00 in pre-market, down 8.39%.

Zuckerberg's AI investments have yet to produce new revenue streams but have strengthened the core advertising business. For now, markets want proof the bet will pay off (CNBC).
Meta Posts 33% Revenue Growth in Q1 2026, Hits $56.3 Billion

Meta Platforms reported first-quarter revenues of $56.3 billion, up 33% year over year, with operating income rising 30% to $22.9 billion at a 41% margin. Net income surged 61% to $26.8 billion, though results were boosted by an $8 billion one-time tax benefit. Daily active users across Meta's family of apps averaged 3.56 billion in March, up 4% from a year ago. Ad impressions grew 19% and average ad prices rose 12%. Capital expenditures reached $19.8 billion for the quarter, with full-year capex guidance raised to $125-145 billion, reflecting higher component costs and expanded data center investment. For Q2, Meta guided revenues of $58-61 billion.

Source: Meta Platforms, Inc. Press Release, April 29, 2026
Meta has signed a major agreement with Amazon Web Services to deploy AWS Graviton processors at scale, supporting its next-generation AI infrastructure. The rollout will begin with tens of millions of Graviton cores, with capacity expected to expand as demand grows.

The partnership reflects increasing demand for CPU-intensive workloads driven by “agentic AI,” including real-time reasoning, code generation, and multi-step task orchestration. While GPUs remain key for training models, Graviton chips are positioned to handle large-scale operational AI processes more efficiently.

The deal strengthens Meta’s long-standing relationship with AWS and supports its broader AI strategy, leveraging Amazon’s cloud infrastructure and services to manage billions of AI-driven interactions.
Business Wire

Get Smart: Is It Too Late to Invest in US Stocks?

It’s never about getting the perfect price. It’s about getting the business right — and staying invested long enough for it to matter.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)
Meta Platforms, Inc. and CBRE Group, Inc. announced the launch of “LevelUp,” a multi-year workforce development program aimed at training thousands of technicians to support data center construction across the United States.

Under the initiative, CBRE will establish training centers nationwide, beginning in summer 2026, to prepare workers in installing fiber-optic cables, network infrastructure, and other mission-critical equipment. Graduates will have opportunities to work on Meta’s data center projects through its contractor network.

The program targets the growing shortage of skilled fiber technicians, while creating new career pathways for high school graduates and individuals seeking to enter the skilled trades. It is designed to provide broadly applicable technical skills relevant across the data center and construction industries.

Meta highlighted that the initiative supports its expanding infrastructure footprint, with 27 data centers currently operational or under construction in the U.S., and reinforces its broader investment in workforce development tied to AI-driven infrastructure growth.
Business Wire
Meta Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ: META) announced that the company's first quarter 2026 financial results will be released after market close on Wednesday, April 29th, 2026.
Corning and Meta Platforms announced the start of construction on a major optical cable manufacturing expansion in North Carolina to support growing demand for AI data center infrastructure.

The project is part of a multiyear agreement valued at up to $6 billion, under which Corning will supply advanced optical fiber and connectivity solutions for Meta’s data centers. Meta will serve as the anchor customer for the new facility, which is expected to strengthen domestic manufacturing capabilities and supply chains.

The expansion is also set to boost employment in the region, potentially increasing Corning’s workforce in North Carolina by up to 20%. Both companies highlighted the importance of high-performance connectivity in scaling AI infrastructure and maintaining U.S. leadership in advanced technologies.

The initiative underscores accelerating investment in data center capacity as demand for AI computing continues to grow.
Business Wire

Meta announces 4 new AI chips, raising competitive stakes with Nvidia, AMD

Meta has debuted four new AI chips. increasing competition with Nvidia and AMD.

(finance.yahoo.com)

Is Meta Still a Buy at Current Valuation?

Explore whether Meta still represents a buy at current valuation after significant investment in artificial intelligence.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)

Tech stocks today: Nvidia stock rises as guidance signals AI boom alive and well

All eyes are on Nvidia's fourth quarter results, due after the closing bell on Wednesday, as AI concerns continue to grip markets.

(finance.yahoo.com)
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NASDAQ

Nasdaq Slides as Chip Sell-Off Accelerates, Dragging Semiconductor ETFs and AI Leaders Lower

The Nasdaq came under heavy selling pressure on Thursday after a relatively resilient start to the session, with semiconductor stocks leading a broad technology retreat. While the Dow Jones remained in positive territory, the Nasdaq fell more than 1.4% as investors aggressively sold chipmakers following their exceptional first-half rally.

The weakness was widespread across the semiconductor industry. Micron Technology (MU) dropped more than 7%, while SanDisk (SNDK) plunged over 15%, extending a sharp pullback that began after both companies posted massive year-to-date gains. Other major chip names, including Nvidia (NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Broadcom (AVGO) and Western Digital (WDC) also traded lower as investors continued rotating out of AI infrastructure stocks.

The sell-off was equally visible in sector exchange-traded funds. The iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) fell roughly 7%, while the VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) lost nearly 6%, highlighting broad-based weakness rather than company-specific concerns. The decline suggests investors are taking profits across the semiconductor sector after one of its strongest first-half performances on record.

Analysts point to a combination of factors behind the retreat, including profit-taking after extraordinary gains, concerns that AI-related chip valuations had become stretched, and signs that investors are rotating toward other parts of the technology sector. Recent reports suggesting cloud providers could optimize AI infrastructure spending have also fueled concerns that the pace of semiconductor demand growth may moderate, even as the long-term AI investment theme remains intact.

Despite Thursday’s sharp decline, many Wall Street analysts continue to view the move as a healthy correction rather than a change in the industry’s long-term outlook, arguing that AI-driven demand for advanced chips and memory products remains robust over the coming years.
U.S. Markets Rise Despite Sharp Slowdown in Job Growth as Unemployment Falls

U.S. stocks finished higher on Thursday as investors balanced a much weaker-than-expected June jobs report against an unexpected decline in the unemployment rate, with optimism over the economy's resilience outweighing concerns about slowing hiring.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.77%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.54% and the Nasdaq added 0.39%.

The June employment report showed the U.S. economy added just 57,000 nonfarm payrolls, well below economists' expectations of 114,000 and sharply lower than May's revised 129,000. The data pointed to a significant slowdown in hiring and reinforced signs that the labor market is gradually cooling.

However, the unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.2% from 4.3%, while initial jobless claims declined to 215,000 from 216,000 and came in below the 219,000 consensus forecast. The lower unemployment rate and continued strength in weekly jobless claims suggested the labor market remains relatively resilient despite slower job creation.

The mixed employment data leaves the Federal Reserve facing a delicate balancing act. Slower payroll growth supports the case for future interest rate cuts, while the lower unemployment rate reduces the urgency for policymakers to ease monetary policy immediately.

Markets also continued to digest recent comments from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, who reiterated this week that inflation remains above the Fed's 2% target and emphasized that future policy decisions will remain data dependent.

Investors will now turn their attention to upcoming inflation reports and additional labor market data for further clues on when the Federal Reserve may begin lowering interest rates.
U.S. Stocks Trade Mixed as Weak Jobs Data Pressures Tech While Dow Holds Gains

U.S. stocks traded mixed on Wednesday as investors weighed weaker-than-expected private employment data against growing expectations that the Federal Reserve could begin cutting interest rates later this year.

At the time of writing, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 80 points, or 0.15%, to 52,399.58. The S&P 500 slipped 0.05% to 7,495.76, while the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.29% to 26,138.87 as technology stocks underperformed.

# Weak ADP Jobs Report Signals Cooling Labor Market

Investor attention centered on the June ADP employment report, which showed U.S. private employers added 98,000 jobs, below economists' expectations of 118,000 and down from May's revised 122,000.

The softer-than-expected reading suggests the labor market is gradually cooling, reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve could gain greater confidence to lower interest rates if broader economic data continue to weaken.

Markets are now turning their focus to Friday's official nonfarm payrolls report, which is expected to provide a clearer picture of labor market conditions.

# Technology Stocks Pause After Strong Rally

The Nasdaq lagged the broader market as investors took profits in technology shares following recent record highs.

Despite the modest pullback, AI-related companies and semiconductor stocks have remained among the market's strongest performers in recent weeks, supported by continued earnings optimism and robust investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure.

# Investors Await More Economic Data

In addition to labor market data, investors continue monitoring inflation trends and upcoming Federal Reserve communications for clues on the timing of potential policy easing.

While weaker employment data could support the case for lower interest rates, market participants remain cautious ahead of additional economic releases that could influence the Fed's outlook.

With Wall Street near record levels, investors are balancing optimism over potential monetary policy easing against signs of slowing economic momentum, leaving the major indexes little changed during Wednesday's session.
U.S. Stocks Rise as Nasdaq Outperforms on Strength in Technology Shares

U.S. stocks traded higher on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq leading the major indexes as investors continued to favor technology stocks while digesting a fresh round of economic data and easing geopolitical tensions.

At the time of writing, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.10% to 26,104.74, outperforming the broader market. The S&P 500 rose 0.53% to 7,480.15, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 107.69 points, or 0.21%, to 52,290.43.

# Technology Stocks Continue to Lead

The Nasdaq extended its gains as investors continued buying semiconductor and artificial intelligence-related stocks. Positive analyst actions across several chipmakers and sustained optimism over AI infrastructure spending helped lift the technology sector.

The rally in growth stocks came despite mixed economic data, highlighting investors' willingness to focus on long-term earnings opportunities within the AI ecosystem.

# Investors Digest Mixed Economic Data

Markets also reacted to a series of economic releases showing the U.S. labor market remains resilient.

The JOLTS report showed job openings exceeded expectations in May, while consumer confidence improved modestly in June. Meanwhile, the Chicago PMI slowed from the previous month but remained in expansion territory, suggesting manufacturing activity continues to grow at a more moderate pace.

# Risk Appetite Remains Strong

Investor sentiment has also been supported by easing geopolitical tensions following the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, reducing concerns over a broader regional conflict and encouraging a shift toward risk assets.

With economic data pointing to a resilient U.S. economy and AI-related stocks continuing to attract strong investor interest, Wall Street remained on track for another positive session, led once again by the technology sector.
US Stocks Climb as Easing U.S.-Iran Tensions Boost Risk Appetite

U.S. stocks traded higher on Monday as investors welcomed signs of easing geopolitical tensions after the United States and Iran agreed to halt military attacks and resume diplomatic talks, improving overall market sentiment. The prospect of reduced conflict in the Middle East helped fuel a broad risk-on move across Wall Street while easing concerns over potential disruptions to global energy supplies.

At the time of writing, the S&P 500 was up 0.53% to 7,393.33, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 317.74 points, or 0.61%, to 52,193.85. The Nasdaq Composite outperformed with a 0.86% advance to 25,515.96, led by renewed buying in technology and growth stocks.

Technology shares led the market higher as investors returned to growth stocks following last week's volatility. Meanwhile, market participants continue to monitor upcoming U.S. economic data and Federal Reserve commentary for further clues on the outlook for interest rates.

For now, improving geopolitical sentiment and a stronger appetite for risk are providing the main tailwinds for U.S. equities, with all three major indexes trading comfortably in positive territory as the session continues.
U.S. stocks traded little changed on Friday as investors weighed encouraging consumer sentiment data against persistent inflation concerns and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's policy outlook.

The S&P 500, Dow Jones Industrial Average, and Nasdaq all hovered near the flatline after the University of Michigan's June survey showed consumer sentiment and future expectations improved more than anticipated. One-year inflation expectations also eased to 4.6% from 4.8%, offering a modest sign that consumers expect price pressures to moderate.

However, gains remained limited after this week's inflation data showed Core PCE holding at 3.4% year-over-year, well above the Federal Reserve's 2% target. The persistent inflation backdrop has reinforced expectations that the Fed will maintain a cautious stance on interest rates.

Technology stocks remained mixed following this week's sharp semiconductor rally, while investors continued to monitor incoming economic data for further clues on the outlook for inflation, monetary policy, and corporate earnings.
U.S. stocks traded mixed on Thursday as investors digested a fresh batch of economic data that reinforced the resilience of the U.S. economy while keeping expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts in check. The Dow Jones Industrial Average edged higher 0.1%, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.1% and the Nasdaq fell 0.6%.

Economic reports painted a mixed but generally constructive picture. First-quarter GDP was revised sharply higher to an annualized 2.1%, beating expectations and signaling stronger economic momentum than previously estimated. Initial jobless claims also surprised to the downside, falling to 215,000, indicating the labor market remains healthy. Meanwhile, durable goods orders declined 4.5% in May, though the drop was slightly smaller than the expected 5.0% decline after April's strong surge.

Technology stocks remained under pressure following this week's semiconductor-led selloff, weighing on the Nasdaq despite Micron's blockbuster quarterly results and stronger-than-expected guidance released after Wednesday's close. Investors continue to balance optimism surrounding AI-driven growth against concerns that resilient economic data could keep interest rates elevated for longer.

Overall, markets remained cautious as stronger economic fundamentals were offset by continued weakness in the technology sector and uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's next policy move.:::
U.S. stocks moved modestly higher on Wednesday as investors weighed mixed economic data and easing geopolitical concerns. The S&P 500 gained 0.2%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3%, and the Nasdaq advanced 0.1%.

Market sentiment was supported by signs that tensions in the Middle East may be stabilizing, helping to reduce uncertainty across global markets. Lower oil prices also provided relief for investors concerned about inflationary pressures and the potential impact of higher energy costs on economic growth.

Economic data released during the session painted a mixed picture. U.S. business activity remained resilient, with both manufacturing and services PMIs exceeding expectations earlier this week, reinforcing confidence in the broader economy. However, the housing market showed signs of weakness, as May new home sales fell 7.3% month-over-month to an annualized pace of 580,000, well below market forecasts.

The combination of steady economic growth and softer housing activity has left investors balancing optimism about corporate earnings against uncertainty surrounding future Federal Reserve policy. Markets continue to monitor incoming economic data for clues on the timing of potential interest-rate cuts.

Despite recent volatility in technology and semiconductor shares, the broader market remained supported by resilient economic fundamentals and improving risk sentiment, allowing major indexes to post modest gains.
Tech Stocks Lead Premarket Selloff as Weak South Korean Data Rattles Global Markets

U.S. stock futures moved sharply lower in premarket trading, signaling a weaker start to the trading session as technology stocks faced renewed selling pressure. Nasdaq futures led the decline, falling 2.5%, while S&P 500 futures dropped 1.3% and Dow futures lost 0.5%.

The weakness appears concentrated in the technology sector, with investors reacting to concerns about slowing demand across parts of the global semiconductor supply chain. Recent reports showing softer-than-expected South Korean technology exports and semiconductor shipments have raised questions about the pace of growth in the AI and electronics markets, prompting profit-taking in many technology and chip-related stocks.

South Korea is widely viewed as a key barometer for global technology demand because of its large semiconductor and electronics industries. As a result, weaker technology trade data from the country often influences sentiment toward U.S. chipmakers and AI-related companies.

The decline comes after a strong rally in technology stocks this year, leaving the sector vulnerable to any signs of slowing growth or softer demand expectations. Semiconductor shares, which have been among the market's biggest winners, are likely to remain in focus as investors reassess earnings expectations and capital spending trends.

Despite the premarket weakness, broader economic fundamentals remain relatively stable, with recent U.S. labor market and consumer data continuing to point to a resilient economy. However, today's futures action suggests investors are taking a more cautious stance toward high-growth technology names following the latest signals from Asia's semiconductor supply chain.
U.S. Stocks Mixed as Dow Advances While Technology Shares Retreat

U.S. equities finished mixed, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average rising 184 points (+0.36%) to 51,749, while the S&P 500 slipped 0.28% and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.96% as investors rotated out of high-growth technology stocks.

Technology shares weighed on the broader market despite continued optimism surrounding artificial intelligence spending. Profit-taking in several large-cap growth names pressured the Nasdaq after a strong rally earlier in the year. Concerns about elevated valuations and the Federal Reserve's higher-for-longer interest rate outlook also contributed to weakness in the technology sector.

The Dow outperformed thanks to strength in industrial, financial, and defensive stocks. Investors appeared to favor companies with more stable earnings profiles as Treasury yields remained elevated following last week's Federal Reserve meeting.

Recent economic data continue to point to a resilient U.S. economy. Retail sales have remained solid, jobless claims stayed near historically low levels, and manufacturing indicators showed signs of improvement. While the data support the economic growth outlook, they have also reduced expectations for near-term interest rate cuts.

Markets are additionally monitoring geopolitical developments, including ongoing diplomatic discussions between the United States and Iran in Switzerland. Hopes for de-escalation have helped ease concerns about energy supply disruptions, contributing to lower oil prices and reducing inflation fears.

The combination of stable economic growth, moderating energy prices, and a cautious Federal Reserve has created a mixed environment for investors. While cyclical and value-oriented sectors benefited from the backdrop, high-growth technology stocks faced renewed pressure.

Looking ahead, investors will continue watching inflation data, Federal Reserve commentary, and developments in global geopolitical hotspots for further clues on the direction of interest rates and equity markets. For now, market leadership appears to be broadening beyond technology as investors seek opportunities across a wider range of sectors.
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NASDAQ:MSFT

Microsoft Receives Fresh Wall Street Support as Analysts Reaffirm Bullish Ratings

Microsoft (MSFT) received another vote of confidence from Wall Street as both Cantor Fitzgerald and TD Cowen reiterated positive ratings on the stock, maintaining Overweight and Buy recommendations, respectively.

The analyst updates come despite Microsoft's shares trading roughly 15% below their highs reached last year. With price targets of $502 and $540, both firms continue to see substantial upside from the current share price near $427, reflecting confidence in the company's long-term growth trajectory.

Analysts remain particularly optimistic about Microsoft's leadership in artificial intelligence, cloud computing, and enterprise software. The company continues to benefit from strong demand for Azure cloud services, expanding adoption of AI-powered Copilot products, and its strategic partnership with OpenAI.

While some technology stocks have recently faced profit-taking pressure, Microsoft's diversified business model and strong cash generation continue to make it one of Wall Street's favorite large-cap technology names. The reaffirmed ratings suggest analysts believe the recent pullback from previous highs has not altered the company's long-term investment case.

With AI investment continuing to accelerate across industries, analysts expect Microsoft to remain one of the primary beneficiaries of the ongoing digital transformation and artificial intelligence spending cycle. The latest rating reiterations reinforce the view that Wall Street remains highly confident in Microsoft's ability to deliver sustained earnings growth in the years ahead.
Microsoft Reports 17% Revenue Growth in Fiscal Q2 2026, Cloud Tops $50 Billion

Microsoft posted revenues of $81.3 billion for its fiscal second quarter ended December 31, 2025, up 17% year over year. Operating income rose 21% to $38.3 billion, while GAAP net income jumped 60% to $38.5 billion, partly reflecting gains from its OpenAI investment. On a non-GAAP basis, net income grew 23% to $30.9 billion. Diluted EPS came in at $5.16 on a GAAP basis. Microsoft Cloud revenue crossed $50 billion for the quarter, underscoring strong demand across the company's portfolio. CEO Satya Nadella noted that Microsoft's AI business has already grown larger than some of its most established franchises.

Source: Microsoft Corp. Earnings Release, January 28, 2026
Microsoft Corp. on Tuesday announced that its board of directors declared a quarterly dividend of $0.91 per share. The dividend is payable June 11, 2026, to shareholders of record on May 21, 2026.

Tech stocks today: Nvidia stock rises as guidance signals AI boom alive and well

All eyes are on Nvidia's fourth quarter results, due after the closing bell on Wednesday, as AI concerns continue to grip markets.

(finance.yahoo.com)
CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) and Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) have expanded their strategic alliance to make the CrowdStrike Falcon platform available on Microsoft Marketplace, allowing customers to purchase it using their existing Microsoft Azure Consumption Commitment funds.

The move enables organizations to apply pre-committed Azure cloud spending toward Falcon’s AI-native cybersecurity platform, simplifying procurement, consolidating billing, and accelerating deployment across endpoints, cloud workloads, identity, AI, and data environments.

By aligning security purchases with cloud budgets, the partnership reduces procurement friction and helps customers optimize cloud spend while strengthening security posture. Industry analysts note that transacting Falcon through Azure Marketplace can accelerate deal velocity and streamline the path from agreement to deployment.

The Falcon platform is immediately available via Microsoft Marketplace with full Azure Consumption Commitment eligibility.

Source: Business Wire

Azure vs AWS vs Google Cloud: Who Wins the AI Race in 2026?

Uncover insights on Azure vs AWS vs Google Cloud: Who Wins the AI Race in 2026? Discover the leaders in AI technology.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)

AI Boom or Bust? Here are 4 Telltale Signs

Is it AI Boom or Bust? Uncover the 4 telltale signs that differentiate real AI success from mere marketing speak.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)

Microsoft Q2 2026: Steady operational performance amid high AI investment

Microsoft declined by 10.0% following the release of its Q2 2026 results, as Azure’s growth rate did not align with market expectations.

(fifthperson.com)
Microsoft reported strong second-quarter fiscal 2026 results, driven by accelerating demand for Cloud and AI services across its portfolio. Revenue rose 17% year over year to $81.3 billion, while operating income increased 21% to $38.3 billion, reflecting solid operating leverage. On a GAAP basis, net income surged 60% to $38.5 billion, supported in part by investment-related impacts, while non-GAAP net income climbed 23% to $30.9 billion. Diluted EPS reached $5.16 on a GAAP basis and $4.14 on a non-GAAP basis, both showing robust year-over-year growth.

Cloud performance remained the core growth engine. Microsoft Cloud revenue surpassed $50 billion for the quarter, rising 26% year over year, underscoring strong enterprise and consumer adoption. The Intelligent Cloud segment posted revenue of $32.9 billion, up 29%, with Azure and other cloud services growing 39%, highlighting continued momentum in AI-driven workloads. Productivity and Business Processes revenue increased 16% to $34.1 billion, led by double-digit growth in Microsoft 365 Commercial and Consumer cloud offerings, LinkedIn, and Dynamics 365. More Personal Computing revenue declined slightly to $14.3 billion, reflecting softer Xbox content and services, partially offset by steady Windows OEM and growth in search and news advertising.

CEO Satya Nadella said Microsoft is still in the early stages of AI diffusion, noting that the company has already built an AI business larger than some of its traditional franchises. CFO Amy Hood highlighted that the company exceeded expectations across revenue, operating income, and earnings per share, while returning $12.7 billion to shareholders through dividends and share repurchases during the quarter. Microsoft indicated that forward-looking guidance will be provided during its earnings conference call, as it continues to invest heavily across its AI stack to drive long-term growth.

More Than Just Chips: Why the AI Revolution Needs These 5 Companies

AI is not only about NVIDIA. We are more interested in who is baking the five-layer cake of artificial intelligence.

(thesmartinvestor.com.sg)
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NASDAQ:RIVN

Tesla Shares Slide Despite Delivery Beat as Rivian Rally Shifts EV Investor Focus

Tesla shares fell around 8% on Thursday even after the electric vehicle giant reported a much stronger-than-expected second-quarter delivery performance, while Rivian gained about 8% following its own delivery update and increased full-year guidance.

Tesla delivered 480,126 vehicles during the second quarter, up 25% year over year and well above Wall Street expectations of roughly 405,000 vehicles. The results marked the company’s strongest second quarter on record and its first annual delivery growth after two years of declining sales. The company also reduced inventory by delivering more vehicles than it produced, another positive signal for investors.

Despite those impressive figures, investors appeared to lock in profits after Tesla’s recent rally. Market participants also focused on the sustainability of the delivery rebound, with some questioning whether aggressive incentives and inventory drawdowns could pressure margins in upcoming earnings. The reaction reflected a classic “sell the news” move rather than disappointment with the headline delivery numbers.

Meanwhile, Rivian provided another positive surprise. The EV maker delivered 12,194 vehicles in the second quarter, beating both its own guidance and analyst expectations. More importantly, management raised its 2026 delivery forecast to 65,000–70,000 vehicles, citing strong demand for its R1 lineup and the early success of its new R2 SUV.

Rivian’s stronger outlook may also have contributed to Tesla’s weakness by reinforcing the view that competition in the U.S. EV market is intensifying. While Tesla remains the industry’s dominant player by volume, Rivian’s improving execution and confidence in future demand shifted some investor attention toward the smaller automaker’s growth story.

Investors will now turn their focus to upcoming quarterly earnings, where both companies will need to demonstrate that stronger deliveries can translate into healthy margins and sustained profitability.
Rivian (RIVN) Stock Surges After Raising 2026 Delivery Outlook

Rivian Automotive (NASDAQ: RIVN) shares jumped approximately 11% on Thursday after the electric vehicle maker reported stronger-than-expected second-quarter delivery results and raised its full-year 2026 delivery guidance.

The company delivered 12,194 vehicles during the second quarter, exceeding its previous guidance range of 9,000 to 11,000 vehicles. Rivian also produced 12,613 vehicles at its Normal, Illinois manufacturing facility during the quarter.

The stronger performance was driven by robust quarter-over-quarter growth in both its commercial Electric Delivery Vans (EDVs) and R1 consumer vehicles, along with the initial rollout of R2 deliveries.

Reflecting the stronger momentum, Rivian increased its full-year 2026 delivery outlook to 65,000–70,000 vehicles from its previous forecast of 62,000–67,000 vehicles, signaling greater confidence in production and customer demand during the second half of the year.

The raised guidance marks an important milestone for Rivian as the company works to scale production while expanding its product lineup. Investors have been closely watching the launch of the lower-priced R2 platform, which is expected to broaden Rivian's addressable market and support future growth.

# Why RIVN Stock Rose

Several developments fueled Thursday's rally:

* Second-quarter deliveries of 12,194 vehicles exceeded the company's guidance of 9,000–11,000.
* Production reached 12,613 vehicles during the quarter.
* Strong growth in EDV and R1 deliveries, along with the introduction of R2 deliveries, boosted quarterly performance.
* Rivian raised its full-year 2026 delivery guidance to 65,000–70,000 vehicles from 62,000–67,000.

The better-than-expected delivery performance and higher full-year outlook significantly improved investor sentiment, sending Rivian shares approximately 11% higher during Thursday's trading session.
Volkswagen Group and Rivian announced that their joint venture, RV Tech, has successfully completed winter testing of its software-defined vehicle (SDV) architecture.

The tests, conducted in the United States and Sweden, validated the performance of integrated hardware and software systems under extreme cold-weather conditions, including functions such as all-wheel drive, traction control, and over-the-air updates.

The successful testing marks a key milestone in developing next-generation vehicles, with the SDV platform expected to be deployed in electric models across Western markets. The architecture will support advanced features such as automated driving and continuously updated infotainment systems.

Volkswagen also plans to strengthen its internal software expertise through training programs linked to the joint venture, aiming to accelerate integration of SDV technologies across its brands.
Uber and Rivian announced a strategic partnership to deploy up to 50,000 fully autonomous robotaxis over the coming years.

Under the agreement, Uber will invest up to $1.25 billion in Rivian through 2031, with an initial $300 million commitment. The first phase includes the deployment of 10,000 autonomous Rivian R2 vehicles, with initial commercial launches planned in San Francisco and Miami in 2028, expanding to 25 cities across the U.S., Canada, and Europe by 2031.

The robotaxis will operate exclusively on the Uber platform, leveraging Rivian’s vertically integrated approach to vehicle design, software, and AI-powered autonomy systems. The partnership aims to accelerate the development of Level 4 autonomous driving technology and scale a fully driverless ride-hailing network globally.
Rivian Automotive reported its latest production and delivery update, showing results in line with its own expectations.

During the most recent quarter, Rivian produced 10,974 vehicles at its Normal, Illinois manufacturing facility and delivered 9,745 vehicles. On a full-year basis, total production reached 42,284 vehicles, while deliveries totaled 42,247 vehicles, reflecting a close alignment between output and customer deliveries.

The company confirmed that both quarterly and annual figures met internal targets, signaling operational consistency as Rivian continues to scale manufacturing and deliveries. Rivian also announced that it will release its fourth-quarter and full-year financial results in a dedicated earnings update, accompanied by a management webcast to discuss performance and outlook.
Rivian Automotive reported third-quarter 2025 production and delivery results, announcing it built 10,720 vehicles at its Normal, Illinois facility and delivered 13,201 vehicles during the period. Deliveries came in line with company expectations, prompting Rivian to narrow its full-year 2025 guidance to between 41,500 and 43,500 vehicles.

The company also confirmed it will release Q3 2025 financial results on November 4, after market close, followed by an investor webcast at 5:00 p.m. ET.

Rivian said the latest figures reflect steady progress as it scales production and delivery operations in the electric vehicle market.

Rivian is suing Ohio for a direct sales ban, and it lists Tesla as getting favoritism

Rivian is suing the State of Ohio's Bureau of Motor Vehicles because it will not allow the automaker to sell vehicles directly to customers.

(teslarati.com)
Rivian Reports Q2 2025 Deliveries, Confirms Volkswagen’s $1 Billion Investment, Sets Earnings Date

Rivian produced 5,979 vehicles and delivered 10,661 in Q2 2025, aligning with its full-year delivery target of 40,000 to 46,000 units. Production was intentionally limited to prepare for upcoming 2026 models. On June 30, Rivian secured a $1 billion equity investment from Volkswagen Group at $19.42 per share, a 33% premium to its 30-day average, as part of their $5.8 billion joint venture. Rivian will release Q2 financial results on August 5, 2025, after market close, followed by a 5:00 p.m. ET webcast.
Rivian Replaces 2026 Debt with $1.25 Billion in 10% Senior Secured Green Notes Due 2031

Rivian Automotive, Inc. announced it has completed a major refinancing transaction through the issuance of $1.25 billion in 10.000% Senior Secured Green Notes due 2031. The new notes, issued by wholly owned subsidiaries of Rivian, replace and fully redeem the company's previously outstanding $1.25 billion floating rate senior secured notes due 2026.

The 2031 Green Notes will bear interest semi-annually and mature on January 15, 2031. Redemption terms include a call option at par with an early redemption premium if exercised before January 15, 2030. Rivian may also redeem up to 40% of the notes at 110% of par using proceeds from qualifying equity offerings through January 2028. A change of control provision entitles noteholders to repayment at 101% of face value.

The notes are secured on a first-lien basis by substantially all assets of Rivian’s issuing subsidiaries, excluding certain collateral prioritized under Rivian’s asset-based lending (ABL) facility. Once funded, the company’s pending DOE loan facility will also be part of the security structure.

Net proceeds from the transaction, along with cash on hand, were used to redeem the 2026 Notes and cover associated fees and expenses. The indenture governing the new debt includes customary covenants and event-of-default clauses.

The successful refinancing further solidifies Rivian’s capital structure and extends its debt maturity profile while advancing its ESG-aligned financing strategy.
Rivian Automotive announced a proposed private offering of $1.25 billion in senior secured green notes due 2031. The proceeds, along with existing cash, will be used to fully redeem its $1.25 billion floating rate senior secured notes due 2026 and to cover associated fees and expenses.

The new notes will be guaranteed by Rivian subsidiaries that support its asset-based revolving credit facility (ABL Facility). These notes will be secured by substantially all assets of the co-issuers and guarantors—excluding ABL Priority Collateral such as inventory and receivables, which secure the ABL Facility on a first-priority basis.

This offering is being made only to qualified institutional buyers under Rule 144A and to non-U.S. persons under Regulation S. The notes are not registered under the Securities Act and cannot be sold in the U.S. without proper exemption.

Rivian emphasized this is not a public offer and included typical forward-looking statement disclaimers.
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