How Broadcom CEO Hock Tan won the market over during the earnings call
Nvidia falls on report of US government drafting regulations restricting AI chip exports
StubHub plunges on big earnings miss in a Taylor Swift-less Q4
Feeling the heat from Anthropic’s success with enterprise customers, OpenAI released a GPT-5.4, a new model that excels at “professional work.”
OpenAI says the new model has improved capabilities for “professional tasks involving spreadsheets, presentations, and documents. The result is a model that gets complex real work done accurately, effectively, and efficiently — delivering what you asked for with less back and forth.”
The company says the model has advanced computer-use skills, and supports up to 1 million tokens of context – a measure of the maximum amount information can be read and accessed when generating a response, allowing for more complex tasks.
The company says the model has advanced computer-use skills, and supports up to 1 million tokens of context – a measure of the maximum amount information can be read and accessed when generating a response, allowing for more complex tasks.
Marvell Technology’s robust outlook is carrying the day after the custom chip designer’s Q4 results came in only fractionally above estimates.
For the final quarter of its fiscal 2026, the custom chip designer reported:
Net revenue: $2.22 billion (estimate: $2.21 billion)
Adjusted net income per share: $0.80 (estimate: $0.79)
For Q1, management offered guidance for:
Net revenue: $2.4 billion, +/- 5% (estimate: $2.28 billion)
Adjusted net income per share: $0.79, +/- 5 cents (estimate: $0.75)
Shares are as much as 8% higher in post-market trading.
“Recall that during our CES fireside chat in January, management highlighted that short-term bookings were ‘on fire’ and that backlog and revenue visibility continue to expand. Since then, all four US cloud/hyperscalers have increased their capex growth expectations for the upcoming year, with aggregate capex now projected to reach $645B in 2026 (up 56% Y/Y),” wrote JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur ahead of this release. “This strong spending environment is further validated by strong beats and guidance raises across the AI semiconductor supply chain (e.g., Macom, Astera Labs, Nvidia), and we expect Marvell to benefit from similar trends.”
There’s been massive uncertainty about the status of Marvell’s relationships with its two biggest hyperscaler clients going forward, with some analysts and media reports indicating that the firm was going to lose some of this business and others (like Sur) saying these custom chip programs remain on track.
That, and more, will be in focus during the conference call.
“In addition to our strong results and outlook, our design wins in fiscal 2026 hit an all-time record, which we expect will continue to fuel our future growth,” said Chairman and CEO Matt Murphy in a press release. The reference to “design wins” in particular may alleviate some of traders’ concerns about customer migration.
US crude oil climbed by more than 8.5% in afternoon trading, pushing the price of benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude above $81 at points, a level it hasn’t seen since the summer of 2024.
The price spike is hammering energy sensitive shares like airlines and consumer staples, and driving outperformance among oil and gas companies. Energy is already the S&P 500's top performing sector by far in 2026.
In a March 5 note, analysts from S&P Global Energy CERA wrote:
"The scale and duration of a price spike will depend on how much oil is kept off the market -- and for how long -- due to danger in the strait, higher shipping insurance rates or damaged Gulf infrastructure.”
US prices at the pump are already surging, rising an average of 27 cents to $3.25 per gallon, a 9% rise in just a single week, according to new data collected by AAA.
In a March 5 note, analysts from S&P Global Energy CERA wrote:
"The scale and duration of a price spike will depend on how much oil is kept off the market -- and for how long -- due to danger in the strait, higher shipping insurance rates or damaged Gulf infrastructure.”
US prices at the pump are already surging, rising an average of 27 cents to $3.25 per gallon, a 9% rise in just a single week, according to new data collected by AAA.
What a difference a week and a war makes.
The average price per gallon for gasoline in the US shot up 27 cents from last week to $3.25, a 9% increase, according to new data from AAA, as escalating tensions in the Middle East push oil prices higher.
Higher fuel costs are rippling through markets: the Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund is down 2%, and bargain retailers like Dollar General and Walmart are also trading lower.
According to Bloomberg, the Trump administration will propose regulations that would require American approval for AI chip shipments worldwide, expanding existing export controls that currently apply to roughly 40 countries.
Nvidia and AMD both dropped on the news that the government would essentially act as a “gatekeeper for the AI industry,” though approval processes will vary and ramp up in complexity with the size of the order, and would only require the involvement of the host country’s government “for truly massive deployments,” according to Bloomberg’s sources. Bloomberg added that exports for the largest projects would only be approved for US allies that make stringent security commitments and “matching” investments in American AI, though the draft rule does not specify what that investment ratio would be.
Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported the US is also considering putting a cap on the number of AI chips that Chinese firms can purchase, though Nvidia CFO Colette Kress mentioned on the company’s Q4 earnings call it does not yet know whether it will be able to ship any AI chips to China regardless of US regulations.
Earlier this week, Bloomberg reported the US is also considering putting a cap on the number of AI chips that Chinese firms can purchase, though Nvidia CFO Colette Kress mentioned on the company’s Q4 earnings call it does not yet know whether it will be able to ship any AI chips to China regardless of US regulations.
Coming into this week, there had been some very well-defined and well-subscribed trades:
Memory stocks > everything, especially software.
Rest of the world’s stocks > US stocks.
Within the US market, the many > the few (as in, S&P 500 equal weight over S&P 500).
War is far from kind. In fact, for markets, it is seemingly a catalyst for mean reversion: all of these aforementioned trades are reversing this week.
There’s some fundamental backing, or at least an excuse, behind all of these unwinding:
Europe, for instance, is much more adversely impacted by oil price shocks than the US;
That’s also true for South Korea (whose market is dominated by a pair of memory chip stocks);
Oil price spikes are generally negative for economic activity; tech companies (particularly the heavyweights) have tended to enjoy acyclical growth.
“Who knew that a war against Iran would cause a mean reversion trade here in the US?” wrote analysts at Bespoke Investment Group on Wednesday. “So far this week, the best-performing stocks have been ones hit hardest this year through February, and vice versa.”
For markets, the risk was that war would drive a pickup in correlations within US stocks and between different asset classes. On Tuesday, the price action was validating and accentuating these concerns. Since then, broadly speaking, it hasn’t.
The S&P 500’s energy stocks (Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund) are some of the few bright spots in the blue-chip index Thursday, after continued US and Israeli bombing, and renewed Iranian attacks on energy infrastructure throughout the Middle East diminished hopes that the Islamic Republic’s military action to disrupt the flow of oil and gas out of the Gulf would quickly peter out.
“There are no signs that either the US and Israeli attacks or the Iranian retaliatory missile and drone strikes are slowing down,” Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at Global Risk Management, told reporters for Platt’s Commodity News early Thursday.
US gas drillers such as APA Corporation, Devon Energy, and Coterra Energy are seeing sizable gains as Qatar Energy’s ongoing shutdown of liquefied natural gas production has sent global gas prices soaring. Qatar Energy fully shut down gas liquefaction on Wednesday. It is unclear when it will resume liquefaction, but once it does, it will take a month for Qatar’s LNG production to hit peak capacity again.
US crude oil prices are also on the rise, with NYMEX continuous futures on West Texas Intermediate — the US oil benchmark — up to over $78 shortly after 10 a.m. ET. That’s the highest since the start of the war and the highest price for US crude since early 2025.
Indeed, oil market participants are currently putting almost as big a premium for a barrel of Brent crude delivered as soon as possible relative to future delivery as they did during the energy shock that followed Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
The surge in energy prices in recent months — amid US interventions first in Venezuela and now Iran — has turned energy stocks into the biggest winner of the year among the S&P 500’s 11 so-called industry “sectors.”
The rise in crude bodes poorly for US gasoline prices, but it’s a boon to US refiners and marketers: Valero and Phillips 66 are posting solid gains on the day.
Airlines, sensitive to short-term swings in fuel prices, also fell. Budget airlines including Allegiant and Frontier were down more than 6%. Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines were all down more than 5%.
And since gasoline prices will mechanically work as a tax on consumption, it’s unsurprising to see that Thursday’s biggest losers early were consumer staples stocks, with that sector (Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR Fund) down more than 2%.
Walmart and Dollar General — whose less affluent customers can be especially sensitive to higher gasoline prices — was leading the charge lower there.
Shares of ticket marketplace StubHub are down 16% in premarket trading following weaker-than-expected earnings results.
StubHub posted a loss of $1.56 per share, significantly worse than the $0.01 loss per share analysts polled by FactSet had expected. It booked $449.2 million in revenue, below the $485 million consensus and down about 16% from a year earlier.
Gross merch sales reached $2.3 billion in Q4, which StubHub pointed out would represent 6% year-over-year growth excluding the impact of Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour. The figure was also below expectations.
Looking ahead, StubHub expects full-year earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization of between $400 million and $420 million. Analysts had expected $704.4 million.
Legal changes also threaten to squeeze StubHub in the year ahead. Earlier this month, lawmakers in both New York and California — two of the world’s largest live music markets — introduced legislation that would cap concert ticket resale prices to the ticket’s original face value.
JPMorgan analyst Doug Anmuth downgraded StubHub to “neutral” from “overweight” in the wake of these results, while slashing his price target to $10 from $22.
The company “needs to work through its lock-up expiration beginning this Monday, March 9, overcome ongoing regulatory concerns, and gain credibility with the Street,” he wrote.
Bitcoin miner turned data center play IREN is down early after announcing an amended share sale agreement that would allow it to sell as much as $6 billion worth of ordinary shares.
(Such share sales can generate a negative market reaction because, if consummated, they dilute existing shareholders.)
The company said in its statement that it had already sold some $1 billion in ordinary shares under a previous share sale agreement from August.
IREN said it would use the cash from the potential sale of new shares “to contribute to funding our growth initiatives (including, but not limited to, hardware purchases and acquisition and development of data center sites and facilities), and for working capital and general corporate purposes.”
The company said in its statement that it had already sold some $1 billion in ordinary shares under a previous share sale agreement from August.
IREN said it would use the cash from the potential sale of new shares “to contribute to funding our growth initiatives (including, but not limited to, hardware purchases and acquisition and development of data center sites and facilities), and for working capital and general corporate purposes.”
The future of connectivity is not now, and that’s great news for Credo Technology Group.
During Broadcom’s Q1 earnings call, CEO Hock Tan said that its custom chip clients would be staying with direct attach copper cables to connect components inside racks through 2028 rather than utilizing optical solutions.
Having many major chip buyers stay copper-centric is a positive for Credo, whose active electrical cables increase the transmission capabilities of these copper cables. Tan’s remarks are seemingly pushing back the timetable for when more cutting-edge technologies (that include lasers!) will be in ascendance. Shares of Credo are up nearly 10% as of 8:05 am ET.
This comes just days after Nvidia invested $2 billion each in a pair of advanced optics companies, Lumentum and Coherent. Both of those stocks, which had surged on the vote of confidence from the world’s largest publicly traded company, are 4% and 5% lower, respectively, in premarket trading on Thursday.
Selling H200s to China is proving more difficult than Nvidia had anticipated.
The Financial Times reports that the chip designer has asked TSMC to stop output of the H200 processors and instead produce Vera Rubin offerings, its upcoming flagship edition, citing two people familiar with the matter.
There’s likely a lot more conviction that megacap tech companies outside of China will appreciate any supply boost for these next-generation processors than the US-China trade and regulatory morass that’s complicated H200 sales will suddenly be swept away.
Nvidia had H200s in inventory and, per the FT, also already produced 250,000 of these chips — so the sales opportunity is still there, but just diminished for now.
The loose sequencing on how we got here, based on myriad reports on the topic:
Nvidia has wanted to sell AI chips to China;
Back in December, US President Donald Trump said this would be allowed for the H200, a generation that was much more powerful than China produced domestically, but not cutting-edge tech (as well as chips with similar specs from other producers);
Leading Chinese tech companies wanted to buy a lot of these chips;
Nvidia called on TSMC to increase production of these chips in expectation of realizing a sales opportunity as high as $54 billion for 2026;
China would prefer its companies to purchase from domestic producers to reduce their dependence on US technology;
The US wants to limit the total number of these newly permitted AI chips that can get into China as well as how many each buyer can purchase;
Nvidia, which had planned to have its first shipments of H200s there by the Lunar New Year, still hasn’t sold any of these chips to China.
The twists and turns here, and conflicting media coverage, has been maddening to try and keep track of. I cannot imagine the level of frustration for an executive attempting to navigate their operations through this haze.
Maybe the real H200 sales were the friends we never made along the way.
The Trade Desk rose double digits in premarket trading on Thursday, up more than 16.5% at 5 a.m. ET, after The Information reported that OpenAI has held early partnership talks with the company to help the ChatGPT maker sell ads going forward.
Per the report, OpenAI will initially use external partners to sell ads and scale up its business, having launched ads on ChatGPT just last month. The Trade Desk, which offers an automated platform for advertisers to place ads on a large scale, will apparently be one of those partners. Will Doherty, The Trade Desk’s senior VP of inventory development, oversees partnerships with the platforms and companies where businesses place ads, and is involved in the OpenAI talks, per one of The Information’s sources.
Sam Altman’s company is reportedly planning to bring ad tech functions in-house eventually, including automating sales and offering performance information to advertisers.
Per The Information, OpenAI has projected that the new emphasis on ads could help double revenues from its consumer business to $17 billion, as it looks for different ways to monetize its platform’s ~910 million users. With that in mind, OpenAI has already explored partnerships with retailers like Target, which offers ad services, and has also recently announced a technology partnership with ad tech veteran Criteo.
The partnership arrives as a huge boon for TTD, after revenue growth slowed in the last fiscal year, with shares down more than 30% so far in 2026 before today’s early jump.
Per the report, OpenAI will initially use external partners to sell ads and scale up its business, having launched ads on ChatGPT just last month. The Trade Desk, which offers an automated platform for advertisers to place ads on a large scale, will apparently be one of those partners. Will Doherty, The Trade Desk’s senior VP of inventory development, oversees partnerships with the platforms and companies where businesses place ads, and is involved in the OpenAI talks, per one of The Information’s sources.
Sam Altman’s company is reportedly planning to bring ad tech functions in-house eventually, including automating sales and offering performance information to advertisers.
Per The Information, OpenAI has projected that the new emphasis on ads could help double revenues from its consumer business to $17 billion, as it looks for different ways to monetize its platform’s ~910 million users. With that in mind, OpenAI has already explored partnerships with retailers like Target, which offers ad services, and has also recently announced a technology partnership with ad tech veteran Criteo.
The partnership arrives as a huge boon for TTD, after revenue growth slowed in the last fiscal year, with shares down more than 30% so far in 2026 before today’s early jump.
If American Eagle has seen farther, it is by standing on the shoulders of Sydney Sweeney.
The jeans seller posted adjusted earnings of $0.84 per share, ahead of the $0.71 expected by analysts polled by FactSet. It booked $1.76 billion in fourth-quarter revenue, versus the $1.74 billion consensus.
Shares initially climbed more than 5% after-hours before paring gains to about 2%.
“Compelling new product collections, supported by fresh marketing campaigns, led to higher demand trends in the quarter,” said CEO Jay Schottenstein.
American Eagle said it’s expecting same-store sales to grow by high single digits in the first quarter.
Marketing controversy has proved to be a powerful mover of denim for AE. In its third-quarter earnings call in December, AE said its partnership with Sydney Sweeney — together with a Travis Kelce partnership — had garnered more than 44 billion impressions. The retailer hit meme stock status last July when it initially launched its “Sydney Sweeney has great jeans” campaign.
As of Wednesday’s close, American Eagle shares had climbed 120% since the Sweeney ad first landed.