📊 Market Overview
The S&P 500 rose 1.5%, the Nasdaq climbed 2.0%, and the Dow added 1.2%, with all three indexes closing at new all-time highs. Chip stocks powered the rally after AMD (Advanced Micro Devices) surged 17% on blowout quarterly earnings and Micron crossed a $700 billion market cap. Today, watch for the weekly jobless claims data and any developments in reported U.S.-Iran diplomatic talks that could further push oil prices lower.
📊 Market Snapshot
Chip stocks are dragging the entire market higher on massive AI demand, but even bullish analysts warn these sharp gains won’t last forever — stay excited, but stay disciplined.
📈 The Big Picture
Artificial intelligence is still the market’s favorite story. Companies making the chips that power AI — like AMD, Micron, and Arm Holdings — keep posting huge revenue growth, and investors are piling in. Analyst firm Bespoke Investment Group cautioned that these sharp gains in chip stocks may not continue indefinitely, a reminder that momentum can reverse quickly.
Meanwhile, oil prices dipped on reports of progress in U.S.-Iran talks that could reopen the Strait of Hormuz shipping lane. Lower oil prices ease inflation fears, which is good news for the Fed (the Federal Reserve, America’s central bank) and for your wallet. If you hold broad index funds like an S&P 500 ETF, yesterday’s rally lifted your portfolio — but the concentration in chip stocks means your gains are heavily tied to one sector.
📖 Term of the Day
Market Cap — the total value of all a company’s shares, calculated by multiplying the stock price by the number of shares outstanding. Think of it as the market’s price tag on an entire company. Why you care today: Micron just crossed a $700 billion market cap, showing how AI demand is inflating the value of chipmakers at a historic pace.
💼 Watchlist: 3 Stocks to Know Today
Datadog (DDOG) — “The Cloud Rocket”
Datadog reported Q1 revenue of $1.01 billion, beating estimates of $958 million, with 32% year-over-year growth. The stock jumped 28% in pre-market trading as its cloud-monitoring tools ride the wave of AI infrastructure spending.
SiTime (SITM) — “The Quiet Winner”
This precision-timing chipmaker posted Q1 revenue of $113.6 million — an 88% jump from last year — and analyst firm Stifel raised its price target from $600 to $800. The stock surged 33% pre-market as demand for its chips in data centers and AI systems accelerates.
Whirlpool (WHR) — “The Caution Sign”
Whirlpool reported a loss of $0.56 per share when analysts expected a profit of $0.62, and revenue fell 9.6% year-over-year. The appliance giant suspended its dividend to pay down debt and called current economic conditions a “rapid deterioration” — a warning sign for consumer spending.
💬 Esther’s Take