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SharkNinja hit an all-time high this week, as its killer growth streak continues
Amazon shares marked their ninth straight day of losses — the company’s longest losing streak since 2006.
The milestone follows a fourth-quarter earnings miss, downbeat guidance, and a plan to spend a whopping $200 billion on capital expenditure this year.
Amazon is hoping that by spending big on AI infrastructure now, it will reap rewards from the technology later. Investors aren’t so sure.
Interestingly enough, the current situation sounds quite similar to the one Amazon was in two decades ago. Back then, Amazon endured a similar stretch as it was upping spending on tech and an online toy store — moves that would eat into its profits.
At the time, an asset manager told Bloomberg, “They want to capture as many eyeballs as they can on the Internet and be the go-to place on the Internet, but that’s costing them earnings, at least right now.”
Sound familiar? In case you’re wondering, Amazon stock has risen 14,849% since that quote.
EV maker Rivian is on track to log its best trading day on record Friday, as investors pour in following its fourth-quarter earnings report and 2026 guidance and analysts issue bullish appraisals of the shares.
Rivian shares are up more than 30% on Friday afternoon, easily surpassing its previous best trading day, which came in January 2025.
“We continue to remain confident in the long-term vision that RIVN is amid a massive transformation,” Wedbush Securities’ Dan Ives wrote in a fresh note on Friday. The firm maintained its $25 price target and “outperform” outlook and said that the launch of Rivian’s upcoming lower-cost SUV, the R2, is “crucial.”
Rivian received upgrades from Deutsche Bank (to “buy” from “hold”) and UBS (to “neutral” from “sell”) following its results.
On its Thursday earnings call, Rivian said it expects its delivery volume of its existing vehicle lineup to land “roughly in line with... 2025 total volumes.” Given the automaker’s full-year delivery guidance, that statement implies 2026 R2 deliveries to land between 20,000 and 25,000 units.
Self-driving features also appear to be boosting investor optimism. On Thursday’s earnings call, CEO RJ Scaringe said the company would enable “point-to-point” driving in its vehicles later this year. In a podcast interview released Thursday, Scaringe predicted that by 2030, it will be “inconceivable to buy a car and not expect it to drive itself.” Rivian is targeting “a little sooner than that,” he added.
Rivian shares are also likely benefiting from something of a snapback: before the release of its Q4 results, Rivian shares had been hammered recently, down 38% since their recent high in December.
“We continue to remain confident in the long-term vision that RIVN is amid a massive transformation,” Wedbush Securities’ Dan Ives wrote in a fresh note on Friday. The firm maintained its $25 price target and “outperform” outlook and said that the launch of Rivian’s upcoming lower-cost SUV, the R2, is “crucial.”
Rivian received upgrades from Deutsche Bank (to “buy” from “hold”) and UBS (to “neutral” from “sell”) following its results.
On its Thursday earnings call, Rivian said it expects its delivery volume of its existing vehicle lineup to land “roughly in line with... 2025 total volumes.” Given the automaker’s full-year delivery guidance, that statement implies 2026 R2 deliveries to land between 20,000 and 25,000 units.
Self-driving features also appear to be boosting investor optimism. On Thursday’s earnings call, CEO RJ Scaringe said the company would enable “point-to-point” driving in its vehicles later this year. In a podcast interview released Thursday, Scaringe predicted that by 2030, it will be “inconceivable to buy a car and not expect it to drive itself.” Rivian is targeting “a little sooner than that,” he added.
Rivian shares are also likely benefiting from something of a snapback: before the release of its Q4 results, Rivian shares had been hammered recently, down 38% since their recent high in December.
Anthropic is moving to put the pieces in place for a successful IPO this year.
Today, the company announced that Chris Liddel would join its board of directors.
Liddel is an seasoned executive who previously served as CFO for Microsoft, GM, and International Paper.
Liddel also comes with experience in government, having served as the deputy White House chief of staff during the first Trump administration.
Ties to the Trump world could be helpful for Anthropic as it pushes to enter the public market. It’s reportedly not on the greatest terms with the current administration, as the startup has pushed back on using its Claude AI for surveillance applications.
Liddel is an seasoned executive who previously served as CFO for Microsoft, GM, and International Paper.
Liddel also comes with experience in government, having served as the deputy White House chief of staff during the first Trump administration.
Ties to the Trump world could be helpful for Anthropic as it pushes to enter the public market. It’s reportedly not on the greatest terms with the current administration, as the startup has pushed back on using its Claude AI for surveillance applications.
Strive has already been probed over the timing of its GLP-1 compounding. Now, Arizona regulators are looking into complaints about ketamine misuse and improper distribution of prescription drugs.
Shares of Advance Auto Parts are up more than 8% in early trading on Friday, following the release of the company’s fourth-quarter results.
Advance Auto posted adjusted earnings of $0.86 per share in Q4, more than twice the $0.41 per share expected by analysts polled by FactSet. Same-store sales grew 1.1%, below the 2.2% consensus.
The retailer closed 522 stores in its fiscal year 2025 as part of an overhaul it first announced in 2024. It plans to open between 40 and 45 stores this year.
Looking ahead, Advance Auto said it expects comparable-store sales to grow between 1% and 2% in 2026. Wall Street expected 2.13%.
Meta is reviving its highly controversial facial recognition efforts, with plans to incorporate the tech into its smart glasses as soon as this year, The New York Times reports.
In 2021, around the time Facebook rebranded as Meta, the company shut down the facial recognition software it had used to tag people in photos, saying it needed to “find the right balance.”
Now, according to an internal memo reviewed by the Times, Meta seems to feel that it’s at least found the right moment, noting that the fraught and crowded political climate could allow the feature to attract less scrutiny.
“We will launch during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us would have their resources focused on other concerns,” the document reads.
The tech, called “Name Tag” internally, would let smart glass wearers identify and surface information about people they see with the glasses by using Meta’s artificial intelligence assistant.
Now, according to an internal memo reviewed by the Times, Meta seems to feel that it’s at least found the right moment, noting that the fraught and crowded political climate could allow the feature to attract less scrutiny.
“We will launch during a dynamic political environment where many civil society groups that we would expect to attack us would have their resources focused on other concerns,” the document reads.
The tech, called “Name Tag” internally, would let smart glass wearers identify and surface information about people they see with the glasses by using Meta’s artificial intelligence assistant.
Wall Street has fresh conviction that Applied Materials is a winner as the AI boom forces an expansion of chipmaking capacity.
The semicap company reported a top- and bottom-line beat, along with Q2 guidance that exceeded estimates, after the close on Thursday, sending shares sharply higher. Applied Materials is trading up double digits as of 8 a.m. ET.
“This is finally the narrative-changing quarter that we have been waiting for,” wrote Needham & Co. analyst Charles Shi, who boosted his price target to $440 from $390. “With AMAT shaking off the bad China narrative and returning to a strong AI-driven beat-and-raise cycle, we expect AMAT valuation gap vs. peers will narrow as AMAT should re-rate higher.”
The numbers speak for themselves, but the words on the conference call didn’t hurt either.
“Management’s decidedly more constructive tone on the call (relative to a more muted/conservative tone on the last call) we think was underpinned by a sharp acceleration in customer orders and activity levels in the quarter,” wrote JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur, who lifted his price target to $400 from $260.
He spotlighted the strong outlook for its advanced packaging business given “AMAT’s #1 position in HBM where spending is inflecting higher as the absorption of previously shipped equipment concludes and additional capacity/capability is required amid burgeoning demand growth and customers’ rapid technology transitions (HBM3e > HBM4 > HBM4e and beyond).”
Other sell-side shops that took a more more optimistic view and upped their price targets include:
Keybanc, up to $450 from $380;
Barclays, up to $450 from $360;
Wells Fargo, up to $435 from $350;
Citi, up to $420 from $400;
Morgan Stanley, up to $420 from $364;
And Mizuho, up to $410 from $370.
“This is finally the narrative-changing quarter that we have been waiting for,” wrote Needham & Co. analyst Charles Shi, who boosted his price target to $440 from $390. “With AMAT shaking off the bad China narrative and returning to a strong AI-driven beat-and-raise cycle, we expect AMAT valuation gap vs. peers will narrow as AMAT should re-rate higher.”
The numbers speak for themselves, but the words on the conference call didn’t hurt either.
“Management’s decidedly more constructive tone on the call (relative to a more muted/conservative tone on the last call) we think was underpinned by a sharp acceleration in customer orders and activity levels in the quarter,” wrote JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur, who lifted his price target to $400 from $260.
He spotlighted the strong outlook for its advanced packaging business given “AMAT’s #1 position in HBM where spending is inflecting higher as the absorption of previously shipped equipment concludes and additional capacity/capability is required amid burgeoning demand growth and customers’ rapid technology transitions (HBM3e > HBM4 > HBM4e and beyond).”
Other sell-side shops that took a more more optimistic view and upped their price targets include:
Keybanc, up to $450 from $380;
Barclays, up to $450 from $360;
Wells Fargo, up to $435 from $350;
Citi, up to $420 from $400;
Morgan Stanley, up to $420 from $364;
And Mizuho, up to $410 from $370.
After the close on Thursday, Plug Power revealed that it received sufficient shareholder support to increase its share count.
This approval paves the way for the hydrogen fuel cell company to raise more money via share offerings, something it’s announced 20 times since its IPO, according to data from Bloomberg.
Management had urged shareholders to vote in favor of this proposal. It’s a sign of how important retail investors are to Plug that CEO Andy Marsh even hosted an AMA on Reddit to build support among the community.
— Plug Power Inc. (@PlugPowerInc) February 12, 2026
If this measure had failed to get a “yes” vote from the majority of shareholders, Plug warned that it would have been forced to proceed with a reverse stock split (which would have raised the per-share price) in order to issue more shares.
“Without additional authorized shares, the Company will not be able to: meet its contractual obligations to increase authorized shares of common stock by February 28, 2026; raise capital necessary for operations and growth; and execute on its business plans and strategy,” the company said in a November filing.
Plug is aiming to capitalize on the data center-driven bid for power by offering auxiliary solutions.
Shares of social media platform Pinterest are down about 20% in premarket trading on Friday, following fourth-quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday that fell short of expectations.
While revenue grew 14% to $1.32 billion in Q4, broadly in line with forecasts of $1.33 billion, the company reported earnings per share of $0.67, below the $0.69 projected. Pinterest forecast sales in Q1 2026 to fall between $951 million and $971 million, missing average analyst estimates of $980 million.
DraftKings plunged after the sports betting company gave downbeat guidance for the current year.
Shares were down 15% in recent after-hours trading.
It forecast:
Revenue between $6.5 billion and $6.9 billion, compared with analysts’ estimates of $7.29 billion, according to FactSet.
Adjusted EBITDA of $700 million to $900 million, compared with estimates of $981 million.
For the fourth quarter, DraftKings posted:
Revenue of $1.99 billion, in line with Wall Street’s $1.99 billion expectation
Earnings per share of $0.25, compared with a consensus estimate of $0.09.
It forecast:
Revenue between $6.5 billion and $6.9 billion, compared with analysts’ estimates of $7.29 billion, according to FactSet.
Adjusted EBITDA of $700 million to $900 million, compared with estimates of $981 million.
For the fourth quarter, DraftKings posted:
Revenue of $1.99 billion, in line with Wall Street’s $1.99 billion expectation
Earnings per share of $0.25, compared with a consensus estimate of $0.09.