Avsnitt
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On this episode of Stock Movers, we take a look at some of the week's biggest gainers and decliners:
- Shares of Genuine Parts (GPC) are up about 7% while shares of O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY) are down about 2% after Bloomberg said Genuine has attracted a cash bid for its auto parts unit from O'Reilly.
-Apple (AAPL) stock rose more than 4% to end the week, outperforming a sharply weaker technology sector. The technology giant is in negotiations to buy chips from two Chinese semiconductor makers on a Pentagon blacklist to help reduce the impact of a global memory shortage that’s forced the company to raise prices across its product line.
- Shares of semiconductor companies are down to close the week, after the Information reported that Anthropic started early-stage work on its own AI chip and held talks with Samsung Electronics as a potential manufacturing partner. The report cited three people familiar with the matter. Among notable movers: Micron -3.1%, Sandisk -9%, Western Digital -4.9%, Seagate -5.3%, Intel -2.9%, Nvidia -0.6%, AMD -3.9%, Broadcom -0.5%
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On this episode of Stock Movers:
Listen for comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the US market close as heard on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Romaine Bostick, Bailey Lipshultz, Norah Mulinda and Tim Stenovec
- Rivian Automotive (RIVN) shares climb 8.5% on Thursday after the electric vehicle maker reported second-quarter deliveries and lifted its full-year sales outlook. The company now expects to deliver between 65,000 and 70,000 vehicles this year, it said in a statement Thursday. That range exceeds the roughly 63,000 deliveries expected by Wall Street analysts. Rivian said it saw strong quarter-over-quarter growth for its commercial van and R1 EVs as it began sales of the new R2 electric SUV.
-Apple (AAPL) stock rose more than 4% on Thursday, outperforming a sharply weaker technology sector. The technology giant is in negotiations to buy chips from two Chinese semiconductor makers on a Pentagon blacklist to help reduce the impact of a global memory shortage that’s forced the company to raise prices across its product line.
-Shares of semiconductor companies are down on Thursday, after the Information reported that Anthropic started early-stage work on its own AI chip and held talks with Samsung Electronics as a potential manufacturing partner. The report cited three people familiar with the matter. Among notable movers: Micron -3.1%, Sandisk -9%, Western Digital -4.9%, Seagate -5.3%, Intel -2.9%, Nvidia -0.6%, AMD -3.9%, Broadcom -0.5%
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Shares of semiconductor companies are down on Thursday, after the Information reported that Anthropic started early-stage work on its own AI chip and held talks with Samsung Electronics as a potential manufacturing partner. The report cited three people familiar with the matter. Among notable movers: Micron -3.1%, Sandisk -9%, Western Digital -4.9%, Seagate -5.3%, Intel -2.9%, Nvidia -0.6%, AMD -3.9%, Broadcom -0.5%
-Tesla shares decline as much as 8.3% Thursday — the most intraday since last July — after the electric vehicle company’s second-quarter delivery beat failed to impress investors.
- Medical and pharmaceutical stocks gained as investors were looking to rotate into defensive sectors. Moderna (MRNA) rose 8.5% and was the top performer in the S&P 500. Universal Health Services and HCA Healthcare also were among the top S&P 500 stocks in the trading session.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Shares of Nike (NKE) are edging higher following the US market open. The company's executives gave a cautious outlook and warned about elevated consumer anxiety on Tuesday, adding to investor concerns about the sportswear company’s painfully slow turnaround. Nike expects a slowdown in the coming quarter compared to the current period, citing the timing of wholesale shipments in North America among other factors.
- Shares of Coherent (COHR) are falling on Wall Street, following its semiconductor peers lower amid investor concerns over the staying power of chip demand given price increases seen across Apple and Xbox products. A potential delay to OpenAI’s IPO, as reported by the New York Times, also dampened risk sentiment.
- Shares of Madison Square Garden Sports and Entertainment (MSGS & MSGE) are moving lower ahead of the long July 4th weekend. All eyes will be on the "World's Most Famous Arena" with America’s equivalent of a royal couple slated for Friday. Pop star Taylor Swift and three-time Super Bowl Champion Travis Kelce set to exchange vows at a celebrity-studded event on July 3 at MSG with about 1,000 guests, according to people familiar with the matter. The security deployment for the two-day event is on par with a regular-season sporting event, and comes during a long weekend that already carries heightened precautions for the Fourth of July and the country’s 250th anniversary.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Shares of Palantir (PLTR) are moving higher after DA Davidson & Co raised its recommendation to buy from neutral as it sees the technology company having a competitive advantage to artificial intelligence companies that have been at odds with the US government. Analyst Gil Luria notes that Anthropic’s recent confrontations with the US government could pose disruption risks to its enterprise customers.
- Shares of Tesla (TSLA) declined at the US market open despite posting vehicles sales that beat Wall Street’s modest expectations by a wide margin, gaining in a slower-growing global market for plug-in cars. The company delivered 480,126 vehicles worldwide in the second quarter. The figure announced in a statement Thursday exceeded the average estimate compiled by Bloomberg of 396,466 vehicles. Deliveries rose 25% from a year earlier, when Tesla faced widespread consumer backlash against Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk’s polarizing work for the Trump administration.
- Shares of Meta (META) declined in the Thursday session following their biggest single day jump since January. The company is developing plans for a cloud infrastructure business that will sell access to AI computing power and models, setting up a new vector of competition with industry leaders like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud. Meta, which has been rushing to secure expensive data centers and other infrastructure to fuel its own artificial intelligence ambitions, is forming a business to generate revenue from excess computing power sold to outside customers, according to people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named as the details aren’t public.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- SoftBank (SFTBY) shares are responding to news that it is starting a new U.S. venture to rent out the computing power needed to build and run artificial-intelligence models, aiming to capitalize on strong American demand for AI computing resources.
- Shares of Alphabet/Google (GOOG) are responding to the company losing its long-running fight against a €4.1 billion ($4.7 billion) European Union antitrust fine after the bloc’s top judges said regulators were right to punish the US giant for abusing Android’s market power.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Meta Platforms (META) shares are up after Bloomberg News reported that the Facebook parent is developing plans for a cloud-infrastructure business to sell its excess AI compute.
- Alphabet (GOOG) has had a remarkable 12 months by just about any measure you can imagine. The stock price has more than doubled, raising its market capitalization by more than $2 trillion as investors see increasing strength in its artificial intelligence capabilities. At $4.3 trillion, Alphabet is now the second-most valuable company in the world, up from fifth at this time last year. And in a sign of how significant Google’s parent has become to the overall economy, the shares were added to the Dow Jones Industrial Average this week.
- American Eagle Outfitters (AEO) is well positioned to reach consensus for sales of $6.2 billion by 2028, driven by broad-based growth at Aerie, continued momentum at Offline and a recovery in on-trend denim and bottoms at the namesake brand.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- PPHE Hotel Group concludes its strategic review and formal sale process without receiving any deliverable proposals for a potential sale of the company, according to a statement.
- Carrefour shares rise as much as 4.6%, the most in just under a year, after UBS upgrades the French grocer to buy from neutral, calling the stock “too cheap to ignore.”
- Sodexo rises as much as 8.3%, the most since April 2023, after the French food services company reported third-quarter results ahead of expectations and raised its organic revenue forecast for the full year.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- AI demand and EU support can turn Europe's semiconductor niches into growth assets, but only if customers commit to buy at scale. Without big buyers, advanced chip and packaging plants risk becoming subsidized capacity without enough orders. Soitec falls as much as 6.2%
- Bayer got upgraded to buy from hold at Deutsche Bank. Bayer rises as much as 5.9%.
- Sodexo rises as much as 8.3%, the most since April 2023, after the French food services company reported third-quarter results ahead of expectations and raised its organic revenue forecast for the full year.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- South Korean stocks slumped as Meta Platforms Inc.’s plan to sell computing power raised questions over excess in AI capacity, driving a selloff in chipmakers. The Kospi Index was down about 4% as of 12:25 p.m. local time, with Samsung and SK Hynix losing more than 5% each.
- Korean financial stocks gain Thursday as investors seen rotating from tech stocks and boosted by rate hikes expectations. KB Financial jumps as much as 9% on Korea Exchange
- Options appear expensive on companies including Meituan and Tencent, while contracts on Bank of China and China Life screen cheap. Meituan rises as much as 7.5%See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Meta (META) shares rallied after a Bloomberg News report that the Facebook parent is developing plans for a cloud-infrastructure business to sell its excess AI compute.
- AOL owner Bending Spoons (BSP) shares rose 14% above their initial public offering price after the company and some of its backers raised $1.68 billion. The trading gives Bending Spoons a market value of over $20 billion. That compares with a valuation of about $14.5 billion in 2025, after a funding round comprised of $270 million in primary capital and $440 million in secondary capital and a $2.8 billion debt package, according to PitchBook data. Bending Spoons was formed in 2013 and derived its name from a scene in the 1990s science-fiction film The Matrix. The company brings a private equity-style playbook to distressed software apps, buying largely subscription-based services, trimming their staff and handing operations to coders. In addition to Vimeo, which it bought in 2025, it acquired AOL, file-sharing service WeTransfer, note-taking app Evernote and Remini, a popular photo app that uses artificial intelligence.
- Nike (NKE) shares closed higher, erasing an earlier drop that was spurred by the sneaker company reducing its revenue outlook for the next two quarters. Some Wall Street analysts are defending the stock despite the weaker outlook, with BTIG calling sentiment “overly depressed.” Shares are down 33% this year, on pace for their worst annual decline since 1997.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers: Listen for comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the US market close as heard on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Bailey Lipschultz, Katie Greifeld, Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec
-Meta (META) shares soar on news the company is developing plans for a cloud infrastructure business that will sell access to AI computing power and models, setting up a new vector of competition with industry leaders like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud. Coreweave (CRWV) shares tumbled on Meta's cloud infrastructure business.
-Bending Spoons (BSP) shares surged on their first day of trading after the company and some of its backers raised $1.68 billion. The Milan, Italy-based company, which acquires struggling software businesses, finished Wednesday at $40.50 each, above the IPO price of $29 per share.
-Caterpillar (CAT) shares fell the most since April 2025 after Michael Burry, made famous in The Big Short for his bets against the US housing market ahead of the 2008 crisis, said he shorted the industrial heavyweight for the first time.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- AOL owner Bending Spoons (BSP) shares rose 14% above their initial public offering price after the company and some of its backers raised $1.68 billion. The trading gives Bending Spoons a market value of over $20 billion. That compares with a valuation of about $14.5 billion in 2025, after a funding round comprised of $270 million in primary capital and $440 million in secondary capital and a $2.8 billion debt package, according to PitchBook data.
- Nike (NKE) executives gave a cautious outlook and warned about elevated consumer anxiety, adding to investor concerns about the sportswear company’s painfully slow turnaround. Nike expects a slowdown in the coming quarter compared to the current period, citing the timing of wholesale shipments in North America among other factors. Shares fell immediately after the earnings release, before eventually trading higher.
- Meta (META) is developing plans for a cloud infrastructure business that will sell access to AI computing power and models, setting up a new vector of competition with industry leaders like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud. Shares rallied on the Bloomberg News report.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Shares of Klarna (KLAR) rise after a Swedish Patent and Market court ordered Alphabet Inc.'s Google was ordered to pay almost $2 billion to Klarna Group Plc's Pricerunner unit in a dispute over the search-engine giant's abuse of power in the market for comparison shopping services.
- Shares of Meta (META) soared after Bloomberg News reported that the Facebook parent is developing plans for a cloud-infrastructure business to sell access to AI computing power and models, competing with industry leaders like Amazon Web Services and Google Cloud.
- Shares of Alcoa (AA) traded at the lowest level since mid-December after announcing plans to buy South32 aluminum assets in a cash and stock transaction for an upfront consideration of approximately $4.1 billion. The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2027, subject to the approval of South32’s shareholders, the receipt of required regulatory approvals, and the satisfaction of certain other customary closing conditions.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Shares of Salesforce (CRM) moved higher alongside fellow software companies ServiceNow (NOW) and Check Point Software Technologies (CHKP) after Guggenheim upgraded the trio from buy to neutral, saying fears that artificial intelligence poses a mortal threat to the sector are overdone. Software stocks have been broadly pressured this year, with investors fretting that offerings from AI-native companies like Anthropic PBC or OpenAI will ravage the sector’s long-term prospects. All three stocks have been among the hardest hit from the AI-induced selloff, with declines ranging from a drop of nearly 30% at Check Point to a decline of more than 40% for Salesforce, which fell for 14 straight days last month in its longest losing streak on record.
- Shares of General Mills (GIS) posted their largest intraday gain since March 2020 after posting fourth-quarter profit that beat Wall Street expectations, lifted by higher prices. The Minneapolis-based company reported adjusted earnings per share of 95 cents, topping the average of analyst estimates. The Cheerios cereal maker also posted revenue above analysts’ expectations. General Mills had been working to win over shoppers with lower prices at a time when many are feeling pinched. Last quarter, the company faced sales declines after slashing prices across much of its portfolio, but said it has since stopped lowering prices. The company is also contending with consumers increasingly opting for less-processed options over many packaged foods. General Mills said it planned to seek $3 billion in cost savings by fiscal year 2030.
- Shares of Nike (NKE) slumped Wednesday after executives gave a cautious outlook and warned about elevated consumer anxiety, adding to investor concerns about the sportswear company’s painfully slow turnaround. Nike expects a slowdown in the coming quarter compared to the current period, citing the timing of wholesale shipments in North America among other factors. Chief Executive Officer Elliott Hill has led Nike for almost two years and progress toward recapturing growth has dragged on, sparking frustration. Management faces ever-growing pressure to produce results, with the company’s stock down 36% this year through Tuesday’s close, putting the shares on track for a fifth consecutive annual decline.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Meta (META) share are moving on news it is developing plans for a cloud infrastructure business to sell access to AI computing power and models, competing with industry leaders like Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.
- General Mills (GIS) shares are moving after it posted fourth-quarter profit that beat Wall Street expectations, lifted by higher prices.
- Alcoa (AA) shares are moving on news it agreed to buy South32 Ltd.’s bauxite, alumina and aluminum assets in a deal worth as much as $5.6 billion. The acquisition significantly expands Alcoa’s integrated aluminum business, strengthening its position as one of the world’s largest producers by adding assets across the entire value chain.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
- Nike (NKE) shares are dropping after the sneaker company said on its conference call revenue expectations for the next two quarters are now seen down low-to-mid single digits from down low single digits earlier. The company also said its 4Q results were “in line” with its expectations, but that the operating environment is “increasingly challenging,” and with sell-through also remaining “challenged.”
- Microsoft (MSFT) is ticking higher as it's set to announce more job cuts next week, citing a report from Business Insider.
- Bloom Energy (BE) are rising after the announcement the company expanded its partnership with Brookfield from $5 billion to $25 billion to help grow the fuel cell partnership globally.
- Intuitive Machines (LUNR) shares are higher on news NASA selected Astrobotic, Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines for four moon missions in late 2028 as part of the Moon Base Program.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
Galderma shares slumped the most in more than a year after the US Food and Drug Administration turned down the Swiss dermatology firm’s rival Botox treatment Relfydess. Associated British Foods reported lower sales at its Primark budget fashion chain and a profit-hit at its sugar unit due to the war in Iran, as the conglomerate prepares to separate its clothing and food divisions. CMC Markets shares soared 22% to a fresh record after the UK financial derivatives dealer raised its guidance for 2027 net operating income citing strong momentum.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
Schneider Electric has announced a $3.1 billion all-cash deal to acquire Cognite Holding, expanding its industrial data and AI software business. Analysts say the acquisition multiple seems high, but flag that it only represents a bolt-on deal considering Schneider’s market capitalization of about €165 billion. Associated British Foods reported lower sales at its Primark budget fashion chain and a profit-hit at its sugar unit due to the war in Iran, as the conglomerate prepares to separate its clothing and food divisions. JD Sports struggles with a tough consumer environment, amidst growing pressure in the sportswear market.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Today's biggest winners and losers in the stock market.
On this episode of Stock Movers:
In Taiwan the capex beneficiary story remained healthy. Gains were seen for a number of firms including a jump of as much as 5.2% for TSMC. In China there have been some non tech movers including insurance firms. China Life fell as much as 4.7%. The Kospi Index fell, as the National Pension Service is set to resume re-balancing its domestic stock holdings after a temporary suspension. SK Hynix dropped as much as 5.2%See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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