Sandisk soars after news of Nasdaq 100 inclusion
What does delicious Asian food seasoning have to do with a potential bottleneck for AI chips?
Q1 earnings season is déjà vu all over again for a market that has swapped tariffs for war
In a world supported by digital ad dollars, Meta may soon be king. The Instagram owner’s net digital ad revenues are expected to hit $243.5 billion in 2026, surpassing Google’s projected $239.5 billion, according to new data from eMarketer.
The shift is happening as Big Tech companies, including Meta and Google, are increasing their spending on AI in hopes that AI will grow their top and bottom lines.
On the company’s last earnings call, Meta CFO Susan Li credited AI with driving performance gains, and said that growth will continue: “We expect the set of investments we’re making in 2026 will enable us to drive further gains as we continue to integrate AI across all layers of the marketing and customer engagement funnel.”
“In surpassing Google, Meta has essentially had many of its core strategies validated,” said Max Willens, principal analyst at eMarketer. “Meta has long understood that scale, network effects, and habits are more important than anything else in digital media. It has carefully built and defended the advantages it has in all three areas.”
Japanese food flavoring company Ajinomoto, which commercialized MSG, also makes a key component in AI chips. It’s having trouble scaling to meet demand.
Intel is up for its ninth straight session on Monday, continuing the romp that has made it the top performer in the S&P 500 this month, ganing roughly 46% in April so far.
The series of deals Intel has recently struck with Alphabet on a custom chip collaboration and with Elon Musk on his Terafab project seem to be helping reshape traders’ views on what was seen only a few months ago as an ailing American tech icon.
That turnaround in perception has been nothing short of historic.
Intel is now up almost 230% over the last year. You have to go back to 1987 to find a better 12-month run for the stock.
Still, the forward-looking market is giving Intel credit for a turnaround that really hasn’t happened yet on an operational level. Wall Street analysts expect another year-on-year sales decline when Intel reports results on April 23, while anticipating that Intel can cobble together adjusted earnings per share of a penny.
All the same, the market clearly sees a future that, at least for now, it likes.
Microsoft is feeling the heat from all corners of the tech world as it tries to infuse its productivity apps with useful AI tools.
OpenAI, Anthropic, and now open-source OpenClaw are enabling powerful agentic AI that can do work on your computer for you — including productivity functions like managing emails, spreadsheets, and slide decks.
This is obviously an area where Microsoft needs to compete, or it will be left in the dust by AI startups.
The Information reports that Microsoft is indeed realizing this, and is now trying to reboot its many Copilot tools to act more like the extremely popular DIY agentic AI tool OpenClaw.
OpenClaw is usually set up running on a dedicated personal computer, and given access to all of a user’s permissions and logins. The user issues orders to OpenClaw through messaging apps like Telegram or WhatsApp, and the agent goes off and completes tasks in the background, notifying you when they’re done. But many users have had security disasters with the setup, so Microsoft is looking to borrow the popular concept but implement the strict security controls needed for use in enterprise environments.
According to the report, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has made revamping 365 Copilot a top priority.
This is obviously an area where Microsoft needs to compete, or it will be left in the dust by AI startups.
The Information reports that Microsoft is indeed realizing this, and is now trying to reboot its many Copilot tools to act more like the extremely popular DIY agentic AI tool OpenClaw.
OpenClaw is usually set up running on a dedicated personal computer, and given access to all of a user’s permissions and logins. The user issues orders to OpenClaw through messaging apps like Telegram or WhatsApp, and the agent goes off and completes tasks in the background, notifying you when they’re done. But many users have had security disasters with the setup, so Microsoft is looking to borrow the popular concept but implement the strict security controls needed for use in enterprise environments.
According to the report, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella has made revamping 365 Copilot a top priority.
Just because software stocks are crushing semiconductors on Monday in a reversal of recent trends doesn’t mean the AI trade is taking a nosedive.
CoreWeave is on fire yet again, with strong follow-through after having reached deals to provide AI compute to Anthropic and Meta last week. Other data center companies like Nebius, IREN, Cipher Digital, and Applied Digital are also up big.
A scramble for compute is particularly great news for these providers of “surge capacity.”
Anthropic is producing AI tools and capabilities that people love. What people have been less than enamored with about Anthropic (especially as of late!) is access to compute, with myriad complaints of stealth token rationing.
OpenAI has reportedly argued that its immense cash burn to accumulate compute is therefore its competitive advantage over the Claude developer. Anthropic is now under pressure to spend a lot more on compute so that its customers are happy with the ability and availability of its offerings.
Similarly, a lot of networking/connectivity stocks that spiked on Friday, like Astera Labs and POET Technologies, are building on that momentum, with flash memory standout Sandisk up strongly as well.
Separately, PJM warned after the close on Friday that the US grid operator is looking to add 15 gigawatts of new power supply due to expected increases in demand tied to AI through Q1 2027. It’s seemingly clearer that there’s strong visibility into increased appetite for compute, power, and the other materials needed to facilitate the boom.
As such, AI energy plays like Vistra, Bloom Energy, Oklo, and Plug Power are also enjoying a solid start to the week.
Private credit exposure will be in focus, but banks haven’t been trading in lockstep with BDCs.
Call it a dead-cat bounce — or for the more optimistically inclined, beaten-down growth stocks finally offering some value:
The iShares Expanded Tech Software ETF is catching a bid on Monday morning, up nearly 3% as of 10 a.m. ET, while the VanEck Semiconductor ETF is trading roughly flat.
As a compromise, you could say that software’s trading like nobody owns it and investors have decided to maybe not short it so much.
The likes of Workday, ServiceNow, AppLovin, CrowdStrike, Atlassian, Palantir, and Circle are posting massive gains to kick off the week.
In the five sessions ended Friday, the semis ETF outperformed its software counterpart by a whopping 18.4 percentage points, the most on record.
For what it’s worth, the chart also shows that semis vs. software has had some very significant, tradable reversals despite how poorly the latter has performed this year. In fact, software’s best-ever five-session stretch relative to semis came in early March, when traders were digesting the US-Israeli attacks against Iran.
These two major parts of the tech sector have never traded more out of step with one another than they have been lately.
It’s been a rough run for what Wall Street calls secular growth stocks: companies that can boost sales because of long-term shifts in their sector, almost regardless of broader economic conditions.
Software stocks, longtime secular growth poster children, have recently been creamed by worries their days are numbered due to AI. Despite weathering the market shocks from the war with Iran relatively well, software remains down sharply, with the iShares Expanded Tech Software ETF down roughly 30% for the year.
But software hasn’t been the only problem.
“Even excluding Software, many secular growth stocks have recently
underperformed and trade at discounted valuation multiples relative to the
past decade,” Goldman Sachs analysts wrote in a note published Friday.
That could be an opportunity, they suggested.
“The median non-software stock in our ‘Rule of 10’ secular growth screen trades at a P/E of 29x, a 53% premium to the median S&P 500 stock that is close to the bottom of the range during the past 10 years. Consensus 2027 sales growth for the median company in the screen is 3x the growth rate for the median S&P 500 company. PEG ratios are also similar to levels reached during recent troughs.”
The company noted that power infrastructure is a particularly interesting place to prospect for non-software-related growth at something of a discount.
It also provided a helpful list of non-software growth stocks based on its screen for companies that have notched 10% sales growth in 2024 and 2025 and are expected to do the same through 2028.
It includes familiar AI-related names like Broadcom, Advanced Micro Devices, Vertiv Holdings, Arista Networks, and Nvidia, as well as a couple outliers such as DoorDash and Axon.
We’ve thrown in the dates of their upcoming earnings reports, which will be interesting to keep an eye on over the next few weeks.
Tesla competitor Slate Auto said it closed a $650 million Series C funding round led by TWG Global, giving it the “operating capital to reach the next stage of development.” Slate’s new CEO, Peter Faricy, says it has more than 160,000 reservations, up from 150,000 in December, and is “on time and on budget” to deliver its first mid-$20,000 electric trucks to customers by the end of 2026.
Roblox on Monday announced its first accounts created specifically for young children and teens, furthering its efforts to increase child safety on the platform.
In June, Roblox Kids (for ages 5 to 8) and Roblox Select (for ages 9 to 15) will roll out, following the company’s global launch of mandatory age checks in January.
The new account types will feature different default settings — chats will automatically be set to “off” on Kids accounts — and limit access to games of certain ratings depending on age.
Child safety lawsuits and social media bans are piling up for Roblox, whose shares have dropped more than 30% year to date. In February, Los Angeles County sued the platform, alleging it created a “largely unsupervised online world” in which “child predators can readily locate, contact, and interact with minors.”
The new account types will feature different default settings — chats will automatically be set to “off” on Kids accounts — and limit access to games of certain ratings depending on age.
Child safety lawsuits and social media bans are piling up for Roblox, whose shares have dropped more than 30% year to date. In February, Los Angeles County sued the platform, alleging it created a “largely unsupervised online world” in which “child predators can readily locate, contact, and interact with minors.”
Oil prices topped $100 a barrel once again and stocks fell in early trading after President Trump announced the US will blockade the Strait of Hormuz starting Monday.
After US-Iran peace talks in Pakistan failed to reach a deal over the weekend, Trump said Sunday morning in a Truth Social post that the Navy would block “any and all Ships trying to enter, or leave, the Strait of Hormuz.” US Central Command later confirmed the blockade would begin at 10 a.m. ET Monday, adding that vessels transiting the strait to and from non-Iranian ports would not be impeded.
Futures on international benchmark Brent crude rose nearly 8% to $103 per barrel, while US West Texas Intermediate crude also gained ~8% to $104 per barrel as of 5:30 a.m. Asia markets traded lower, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 and South Korea’s KOSPI falling 0.7% and 0.9%, respectively. Europe’s STOXX 600 was also modestly in the red, while S&P 500 futures were off 0.5%.
The early morning action is reminiscent of the early days of the war, with energy stocks catching a bid as oil prices jumped. Oil and gas producers including Occidental Petroleum, Devon Energy, Diamondback Energy, ConocoPhillips, APA Corporation, Coterra Energy, and EOG Resources all rose in premarket trading, alongside oil majors Exxon and Chevron, as well as refiners Marathon Petroleum, Valero, and Phillips 66.
Oil field services company Halliburton and natural gas producer EQT Corp. also gained, along with chemical makers Dow, Inc. and LyondellBasell, fertilizer company CF Industries, and natural gas exporter Cheniere Energy.
Airline and cruise stocks moved in the opposite direction, giving back last week’s ceasefire-driven gains as the anticipation of higher fuel costs once again weighed on both sectors. Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines were all down 2% to 3% in premarket trading, along with Royal Caribbean, Carnival, and Norwegian.
Sandisk jumped sharply on Monday, following an announcement that Nasdaq would add the chipmaker to its benchmark, tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 index.
Come April 20, Sandisk will replace Atlassian in the index, which underpins millions of portfolios, the exchange announced Monday morning.
The stock was up 11% in afternoon trading, amid a broader rise in the Nasdaq and blue-chip stocks.
Sandisk is up more than 1,800% since August as soaring chip prices turned the long-forgotten company into one of the hottest AI trades.
Come April 20, Sandisk will replace Atlassian in the index, which underpins millions of portfolios, the exchange announced Monday morning.
The stock was up 11% in afternoon trading, amid a broader rise in the Nasdaq and blue-chip stocks.
Sandisk is up more than 1,800% since August as soaring chip prices turned the long-forgotten company into one of the hottest AI trades.
“Fortnite” maker Epic Games, struggling through an engagement downturn that led the company to lay off 1,000 employees last month, is leaning into its Disney partnership to turn things around.
Per a report by Bloomberg, the company is set to launch a new extraction shooter (in the vein of Nexon’s hit “Arc Raiders”) featuring Disney characters in November.
The game will be the first to come out of Epic and Disney’s partnership, which began with a $1.5 billion investment from the entertainment juggernaut in early 2024. If the November launch date sticks, the game will also land at the same time as Take-Two’s massive “Grand Theft Auto 6.” According to Disney, new CEO Josh D’Amaro has been a longtime champion of the Epic partnership, and the exec is said to have made tech-based interactivity a priority for the company.
In recent weeks, rumors that some senior executives at Disney are pushing for Disney to eventually acquire Epic have made headlines, first reported by tech journalist Alex Heath on entertainment podcast “The Town.”
The game will be the first to come out of Epic and Disney’s partnership, which began with a $1.5 billion investment from the entertainment juggernaut in early 2024. If the November launch date sticks, the game will also land at the same time as Take-Two’s massive “Grand Theft Auto 6.” According to Disney, new CEO Josh D’Amaro has been a longtime champion of the Epic partnership, and the exec is said to have made tech-based interactivity a priority for the company.
In recent weeks, rumors that some senior executives at Disney are pushing for Disney to eventually acquire Epic have made headlines, first reported by tech journalist Alex Heath on entertainment podcast “The Town.”
All eyes on are SpaceX as it prepares for a blockbuster IPO as soon as this summer, and everyone is eager to get a look at the company’s official numbers for the first time.
The Information is reporting that last year, SpaceX posted $18.5 billion in revenue with a $5 billion loss.
According to the report, the numbers reflect the combined finances of SpaceX and xAI, which it acquired in February.
After acquiring xAI, SpaceX’s successful space launch and satellite business may have been dragged down by xAI’s massive data center spending. Earlier this year, Bloomberg reported that xAI had burned through $8 billion in the first nine months of 2025.
According to the report, the numbers reflect the combined finances of SpaceX and xAI, which it acquired in February.
After acquiring xAI, SpaceX’s successful space launch and satellite business may have been dragged down by xAI’s massive data center spending. Earlier this year, Bloomberg reported that xAI had burned through $8 billion in the first nine months of 2025.