The “kidulting” economy is still booming, as more grown-ups yearn for playtime
One of Opendoor’s top shareholders, Access Industries, sold nearly $100 million in stock on Tuesday
Disney+ has gone from one of the cheapest to one of the most expensive streaming services
One down, a minimum of 19,999 to go.
In a Wednesday morning post on X featuring some of the most royalty-free music you’ve ever heard, Lucid announced it’s delivered its first Gravity SUV earmarked for service as an Uber robotaxi next year. Shares of the company climbed 3%.
The vehicle is now with autonomous driving company Nuro, which will add software and test the SUV for road readiness.
The 20,000-vehicle agreement over six years is a hefty order for Lucid, which expects to build between 18,000 and 20,000 vehicles this year.
Lucid stock could also be seeing a boost from a price target hike by Cantor Fitzgerald on Wednesday, to $26 from $20. (Remember, though, that before a 1-for-10 reverse stock split at the beginning of this month, Cantor’s target had been the equivalent of $30.)
Lucid shares have now risen more than 40% from their all-time closing low of a split-adjusted $16.16 on September 4.
Meta’s Instagram now has 3 billion monthly active users, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg, up a billion from the last time it reported that number in 2022. Since then, the company has stopped regularly breaking out user numbers for its individual properties, as overall growth slowed.
Why start reporting again? Three billion is certainly a big milestone! But it’s also notable that Instagram is facing some pretty steep competition from TikTok in the US, ahead of a US consortium acquiring the Chinese social media company’s domestic operations.
Since Disney+ launched in 2019, its price has gone up 172%. A combined Disney+ and Hulu app paves the way for future price increases.
Canopy Growth rallied on Wednesday after its CEO, Luc Mongeau, disclosed an unplanned stock purchase on Tuesday.
Mongeau, who joined Canopy from Mars in January, bought 27,469 shares at CA$1.84. The buy is worth about US$36,259.
It has been a tumultuous time for cannabis stocks, as the market in Canada (where Canopy is located) stagnates and cannabis reform in the US has yet to move forward.
Robinhood Markets briefly touched a new all-time intraday high in early trading after the newly minted — and now top-performing — member of the the S&P 500 received some favorable write-ups from Wall Street analysts.
(Robinhood Markets Inc. is the parent company of Sherwood Media, an independently operated media company subject to certain legal and regulatory restrictions. I own stock as part of my compensation.)
Piper Sandler analysts highlighted momentum in the company’s prediction markets business thanks to the rollout of contracts on college and profession football, noting that the event contracts business was running at a $200 million annualized rate so far in September. They raised their price target on the shares to $140 from $120.
“Prediction Markets (aka event contracts) present significant upside opportunity for Robinhood,” Piper Sandler’s Patrick Moley wrote.
Elsewhere, Citi analysts raised their Q3 and full-year 2025 estimates and upped their price target on the shares to $135, but kept a “neutral” rating on the stock.
“While HOOD continues to see solid momentum across the platform, we believe the stock is pricing in much of the growth potential in our view. Given current valuations and where we are in the retail cycle (closer to the highs than the lows from an activity perspective from our viewpoint), we prefer to wait for a more reasonable entry point at present.”
The stock has clearly had a heck of a run.
Through yesterday’s close, Robinhood was up nearly 240% in 2025. Since it was added to the S&P 500 on Monday, it’s now the top performer among the blue chips, trouncing previous leaders Seagate Technology Holdings and Palantir.
Bitcoin has seemed stalled around $112,000, but is finally breaking past the $113,000 mark on Wednesday as whales have led a rush to sell. The token’s price is still down nearly 2% over the past week.
David Siemer, CEO of Wave Digital Assets, told Sherwood News that the wave of liquidations is due to a combination of factors hitting at once, including the fact that crypto markets have become heavily leveraged after bitcoin’s run past $120,000.
“Once bitcoin slipped through key price levels, stop-losses and liquidations snowballed against relatively thin liquidity, which amplified the move,” he said, adding that at the same time, stronger-than-expected US inflation data lifted the dollar and dampened risk appetite, giving traders another reason to unwind positions.
“Short-term holders were quick to sell into the weakness, further accelerating the downside,” he said.
Meanwhile, bitcoin ETFs continue to bleed, with outflows reaching $466.7 million since Monday, SoSoValue data shows. Reflecting the risk-off sentiment, gold ETFs, in contrast, experienced their largest inflow since January 2021 on Friday as gold itself hits all-time highs.
Why buy when you can rent for cheaper? That’s the thinking behind a new report from The Information that says as part of its blockbuster $100 billion investment, Nvidia is in discussions with OpenAI to lease GPUs to the company as it races to build massive data centers as part of its Stargate plan.
According to The Information, leasing GPUs from Nvidia would effectively lower the cost by 10% to 15% and protect OpenAI from owning technology infrastructure that could soon become obsolete.
While OpenAI is pulling in serious revenue, it expects to burn through $115 billion by 2029, The Information reports. Leasing the costly GPUs the company needs would reduce the amount of money it would have to raise.
While OpenAI is pulling in serious revenue, it expects to burn through $115 billion by 2029, The Information reports. Leasing the costly GPUs the company needs would reduce the amount of money it would have to raise.
UniQure rose more than 150% in early trading Wednesday after it released trial results that showed its experimental gene therapy for Huntington’s disease slowed its progression by 75% after three years.
The treatment, AMT-130, is a one-time treatment for Huntington’s, a genetic brain disease that degrades cognitive function and muscle control. There is currently no cure for the disease.
UniQure said it plans to submit the treatment for approval to the Food and Drug Administration in the first quarter of 2026, meaning it could become available to patients later that year. The company currently makes nearly all of its revenue from gene therapies that treat hemophilia.
Step 1: join a free Nvidia program. Step 2: watch stock go up. Step 3: watch stock go down.
Shares of General Motors rose more than 2% in premarket trading Wednesday following an upgrade of the stock by UBS from “neutral” to “buy.” The firm also hiked its price target for GM by 45% to $81.
Also likely elevating GM was a Reuters report that the Trump administration is exploring taking a 10% stake in Lithium Americas, the automaker’s partner in a yet to open Thacker Pass lithium mine. Shares of Lithium Americas surged 68% in the premarket.
GM, which invested $625 million into the lithium mine last year, holds a 38% stake in the joint venture. The mine is expected to become the Western Hemisphere’s primary lithium source in 2028, when it’s slated to open, producing enough of the metal to make 800,000 electric vehicle batteries.
Prior to its plans for Lithium Americas, the Trump administration last month said it would take a 10% stake in Intel. In July, it announced a 15% stake in rare earths miner MP Materials.
Access Industries is rushing for the exits in Opendoor Technologies.
The investment firm run by Len Blavatnik, one of Opendoor’s earliest and biggest shareholders, sold 13.66 million shares of the online real estate company on Tuesday, per a filing, generating roughly $97 million.
With this divestment, it’s dumped nearly $300 million worth of Opendoor stock, or almost 36 million shares, this month through its AI LiquidRE arm. Access Industries had prior sales on Monday and September 12.
Shares of Opendoor are down more than 30% over the past week, but are up big in premarket trading on Wednesday.
Pueo Keffer, one of the Opendoor directors who recently stepped down amid the company’s leadership changes, is a senior managing director at Access Industries. However, he tweeted that he’s still adding to his personal holdings of the stock.
Bought another 1500 shares today for the PA and have never sold my personal position. Appreciate you coming back!!! Let's go fam 🫶
— Pueo Keffer (@pueokeffer) September 23, 2025
Alibaba jumped over 9% in early trading on Wednesday after the company announced greater investment in AI, a partnership with Nvidia, and a new model.
At Alibaba’s annual flagship technology conference, CEO Eddie Wu said the company plans to expand its AI investment over the next three years beyond the $53 billion announced in February, though a specific uplift wasn’t revealed.
The firm also unveiled the latest version of its “largest and most capable” AI model series, the Qwen3-Max — as other Chinese tech giants like Baidu, Tencent, and ByteDance are doubling down on homegrown solutions to compete with OpenAI and Anthropic amid a wider Chinese push to reduce dependence on Western AI hardware and models.
According to Reuters, Alibaba said that its new model “outperformed rival products including Anthropic’s Claude and DeepSeek-V3.1 in certain metrics,” citing third-party benchmarks like Tau2-Bench.
Adding to the hype was Alibaba’s new partnership with Nvidia: the company said it will integrate the chip giant’s AI development tools into Alibaba Cloud to support “physical AI,” which includes real-word products like robots and driverless cars — just a day after Nvidia announced a $100 billion deal with OpenAI.
Alibaba also announced plans to open its first data centers in Brazil, France, and the Netherlands, while adding new sites in Mexico, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, and Dubai in 2026. Last month, the company struck a deal with Unicom — China’s second-largest mobile service provider — to deploy its in-house AI accelerators.
With this morning’s rise, Alibaba’s shares are at their highest level since 2021, up over 110% year to date.
Two of the sites will be in Texas, one in New Mexico, one in Ohio, and one in the Midwest.
Stocks fell on Tuesday as the market’s tech titans took a breather after a hot run. The S&P 500 fell 0.6%, the Nasdaq 100 lagged with a 0.7% decline, and the Russell 2000 outperformed, albeit with a 0.2% drop.
The Magnificent 7 had their worst day in over a month, down 1.5%, with every constituent falling.
Consumer discretionary and tech were the two worst-performing S&P sector ETFs, while energy fared the best.
Bright spots on the day were Halliburton and Paramount Skydance, which rose 7.5% and about 6%, respectively. Generac and Vistra were among the biggest decliners, falling more than 10% and 6%, respectively. Elsewhere…
Nvidia fell 2.8% even as Wedbush Securities analysts called its recent $100 billion deal with OpenAI a “watershed moment” for the AI revolution. Separately, Bank of America analysts said the chip designer is poised to generate hundreds of billions in free cash flow.
Shares of Opendoor sank more than 15% after its third-biggest shareholder, Access Industries, sold 11.36 million shares of the online real estate company through its AI LiquidRE arm.
Firefly Aerospace also dove more than 15% after the Texas-based space launch startup missed Wall Street’s estimates for the company’s first quarterly report since its August IPO.
Plug Power had a wild ride, up double digits in premarket trading before ending down 4.6%, snapping a nine-day winning streak that was close to becoming the longest on record for the hydrogen fuel cell company.
Boeing ticked up another 2% after announcing on Monday that Uzbekistan Airways will order up to 22 of its 787 Dreamliner jets.
Satellite stocks like AST SpaceMobile, Planet Labs, and Rocket Lab climbed on elevated activity, especially in the options market.
IonQ jumped more than 4% after the company announced “a significant technological advancement in its pursuit of scalable quantum networks.”
Shares of Sinclair Inc. rose more than 3% after the self-proclaimed “largest ABC affiliate group” said it will continue to keep “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” off its ABC stations.
Palantir rose 1.8% after Bank of America analysts hiked their price target on the stock to $215 — the highest among the published price targets tracked by FactSet.
Kenvue, the company behind Tylenol, gained 1.6% as doctors pushed back against President Trump’s claims about a link between the drug and autism, per Reuters.