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Carl Quintanilla and Leslie Picker broke down the tech trade, as chips stocks continued to drop lower in another volatile session. Kate Rooney reported on the U.S. government looking to rein in AI, turning its attention to OpenAI after taking down Anthropic’s Fable release. Also in the mix; Pippa Stevens broke down the drop in energy prices with WTI crude dipping below $69.
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CNBC reports that OpenAI has not begun "testing- waters" meetings with investors ahead of a potential IPO, despite growing speculation around the company's next move. Then a look at the next major catalyst for SpaceX since going public two weeks ago. And the CEO of AI infrastructure company and Nvidia partner Coherent, on the AI infrastructure buildout and the demand driving the next wave of investment.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Michael Santoli explored tech sector weakness: Nasdaq on track for a five-day losing streak as investors dump some of the "Magnificent 7" stocks; Apple coming off its worst day in more than a year after announcing price hikes; Micron gives up some of Thursday's big gains after Samsung and SK Hynix tumbled in South Korean trading. The anchors reacted to a published report which says OpenAI is leaning toward delaying its IPO until 2027. The CEO of Onsemi joined the program to discuss the chipmaker's $7 billion all-stock deal to buy Synaptics, On's "Physical AI" strategy — and why its shares tumbled on news of the acquisition. Also in focus: SpaceX's two weeks as a public company, the S&P Equal-Weight index outperforming the S&P 500, Oil prices erase Thursday's gains, Apollo co-founder Leon Black arrives on Capitol Hill to testify about his ties to notorious sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
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The third hour of CNBC’s "Squawk on the Street" with Carl Quintanilla and Sara Eisen is broadcast each weekday from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, with the up-to-the-minute news investors need to know and interviews with the most influential CEOs and greatest market minds.
Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
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Energy Secretary Chris Wright joins Squawk on the Street to discuss the future of nuclear power in the U.S., the administration’s approach to Iran sanctions, and the outlook for domestic energy production. Plus, Apple’s latest price increases put the spotlight on rising memory costs as AI demand sends memory-chip stocks soaring.
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Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Michael Santoli led off the show with tech and the AI Trade: Shares of Micron soared after the memory chip maker posted a blowout quarter. Apple announced it is hiking prices on MacBooks and iPads due to the memory chip crunch. Shares of the iPhone maker fell sharply, helping to drag the Nasdaq into negative territory in Thursday's trading and erasing the optimism sparked by Micron. Core PCE — the Fed's preferred inflation gauge — rose in May to year-on-year levels not seen since 2023. Also in focus: Qualcomm surges, oil prices fall to fresh pre-Iran war lows, a JPMorgan Chase executive seen a potential successor to CEO Jamie Dimon is leaving the bank, Anthropic vs. Alibaba, all things SpaceX.
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Semis in focus as Broadcom unveils a new custom chip with OpenAI, Micron awaits earnings after the bell, and Cerebras shares slump on the company's first report as a public company. Cerebras' CEO joined the team with his first take on the stock move. Plus: a live look at the world's largest gas turbine engine factory - and what it means for stocks like GE Vernova - along with reaction from the head of one of the nation's biggest homebuilders to the President's surprise pivot on a key housing affordability bill.
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Breaking this hour: Sen. Elizabeth Warren reacts to President Trump’s decision to cancel the planned signing of a bipartisan housing bill. Plus, why she says data centers are hurting local communities. Then, Broadcom CEO Hock Tan and OpenAI President Greg Brockman discuss a new AI processor “Jalapeño,” and just how much demand they are seeing for compute. And Cerebras board member and one of the earliest investors, Foundation Capital’s Steve Vassallo, joins the show to break down the company’s first results as a public company.
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Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Leslie Picker explored what's ahead for the tech sector in wake of Tuesday's sell-off — and ahead of Micron's earnings due out after Wednesday's close of trading. The anchors also discussed OpenAl and Broadcom unveiling their new custom AI chip, called "Jalapeño." Brian Sullivan joined the anchors at Post 9 to discuss WTI crude falling below $70/barrel for the first time since the early stages of the Iran war. Seema Mody delivered a live report from inside GE Vernova's turbine factory — as the company looks to meet hyperscalers' demand for AI power. Also in focus: Cerebras tumbles on its first earnings report since going public, Alphabet to replace Verizon in the Dow, FedEx earnings reaction, what Treasury Secretary Bessent told CNBC about economic growth.
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A volatile session as tech stocks take a broad leg lower - Carl Quintanilla and Sara Eisen discussed the key names to watch (from SpaceX to Amazon), and broke down what could come next with the CEO of one AI name that just partnered with Nvidia on drug discovery. Plus: a deep-dive on Amazon's new advertising push with OpenAI, a look ahead to Cerebras earnings after the bell, and an exclusive with Meta's Head of Wearables as the company releases a slew of new AI glasses.
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How is Wall Street valuing software companies in the age of artificial intelligence? Twilio CEO Khozema Shipchandler discusses the changing software landscape, AI adoption, and how his company is positioning itself for the next wave of growth. Plus, Meta’s former head of news warns about the growing challenge of ensuring AI-generated information is accurate. And Apollo in focus as investors submit redemption requests from one of its private credit vehicles, raising fresh questions about liquidity and the risks facing the industry.
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Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Sara Eisen covered all of the bases on the tech-fueled global market sell-off: South Korea's Kospi tumbled ten percent from a record closing high — as chipmakers Samsung and SK Hynix fell by double digits and weighed on shares of their U.S. counterparts; AI spending fears impact "Magnificent 7" stocks; SpaceX shares briefly fell below Friday's post-IPO opening price of $150. Also in focus: Oil prices fall to fresh March lows as U.S.-Iran talks continue, Apollo's private credit fund caps redemptions, Oracle job cuts update.
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As Wall Street remembers former Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan, Squawk on the Street examines the parallels—and key differences—between today’s market enthusiasm and the era that gave rise to Greenspan’s famous "irrational exuberance" warning. Plus, SpaceX shares pull back again, but one analyst is becoming even more bullish, raising his price target despite the selloff. And Apollo President Jim Zelter joins the show to discuss the massive financing needs behind the AI boom and where private capital sees the biggest opportunities in the next phase of artificial intelligence growth.
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Carl Quintanilla and Sara Eisen kicked off the hour with fresh news out of SpaceX before turning to a sell-off in Alphabet shares with veteran tech investor Dan Niles. Plus: energy prices also falling as the U.S.-Iran deal talks make progress... What could come next - with one former diplomat that played a key role in Obama's Iran nuclear deal.
Elsewhere this hour: a read on airline stocks - and whether higher airfares are here to stay; plus: one former Fed member's remembrance of his time working alongside Alan Greenspan - and what he thinks Greenspan would have thought about current market exuberance.
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Carl Quintanilla, David Faber and Sara Eisen led off the show with market reaction to positive comments by Vice President Vance about the U.S.-Iran negotiations. AI in the spotlight: Chevron announced it signed a 20-year agreement with Microsoft to provide power for the tech giant's massive West Texas data center project. The anchors remembered the influential former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, who died Monday at the age of 100. Also in focus: President Trump's comments on Anthropic and national security, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella's message for companies leading the AI boom, SpaceX shares on track for a three-day losing streak, AbbVie agrees to buy immunology drugmaker Apogee Therapeutics for $10.9 billion in cash.
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The Club says this tech giant could benefit from rising memory prices. Become an Investing Club member to go behind the scenes with Jim Cramer and Jeff Marks every day as they talk candidly about the market’s biggest headlines, analyst calls and holdings in the Charitable Trust – and see up close how they decide when, and if, to take action on stocks. Sign up here: cnbc.com/morningtake
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Michael Santoli and Sara Eisen kicked off the hour with the state of stocks following Fed Chairman Warsh's hawkish press conference - and more on the key tech stories of the day, from Apple's price hike warning to a new partnership sending Intel shares surging. Plus: oil prices falling as the U.S. and Iran sign a preliminary cease-fire deal, hear one energy market veteran break down the move and what could come next... along with more on how the Knick's win could be a big opportunity for MSG shareholders as the team's blockbuster celebration parade shuts down lower Manhattan.
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David Faber and Sara Eisen broke down the days biggest movers - from a new Apple partnership sending Intel shares surging to another day of losses for SpaceX. Plus: hear a deep-dive on what Fed Chairman Warsh's inflation battle could mean for investors still expecting rate cuts, and more on Accenture's results with the company's CEO - as those shares plunge double-digits and even hit stocks of competitors like IBM. Elsewhere in the hour, the team also discussed the economic impact of the Knick's championship run as their celebration parade kicked off in downtown Manhattan.
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Jim Cramer and David Faber kicked off the show with a look at shares of Intel surging after President Trump said the company will partner with Apple on U.S. chip design. The anchors also shifted to a WSJ report that Apple must raise prices on its products to offset the surging costs of memory chips. Also in the mix; the desk discussed Warsh’s debut as Fed Chairman, a day after the committee held rates steady.
Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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The third hour of CNBC’s "Squawk on the Street" with Carl Quintanilla and Sara Eisen is broadcast each weekday from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, with the up-to-the-minute news investors need to know and interviews with the most influential CEOs and greatest market minds.
Squawk on the Street Disclaimer
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
- Visa fler