IBM had its worst trading day since the dot-com bubble burst
AMD soars after striking AI chip deal with Meta valued at over $100 billion
Hinge Health’s CEO is sizing up a giant market opportunity for digital healthcare
Sandisk’s online event marking the one-year anniversary since being spun off from Western Digital seems to be something of a damp squib.
You have to announce something big to live up to the hype. This is nothing.
— JP Gola (@jpgola) February 24, 2026
The shares, already down a fair bit following the Citron Research short announcement, fell further after the company announced an upgrade to its consumer solid state memory drives, alongside a YouTube based presentation aimed at highlighting all the hep things one might do with, well, access to additional digital storage.
The stock — which is still up more than 150% in 2026 — was down more than 7% shortly after the company’s post at 2 pm ET. That was in stark contrast to the bump software stocks were riding following Anthropic’s product announcement earlier Tuesday.
Chinese drone maker DJI has filed a lawsuit against the FCC challenging the December 2025 decision that effectively banned all foreign drones and components from the US market. DJI and all other foreign drone makers were added to the FCC’s “covered list” of equipment and services that the agency says “pose an unacceptable risk to the national security of the United States”.
In a lawsuit filed with the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, DJI argues that the company is “severely harmed” by the ruling, and seeks review of the decision:
“The FCC exceeded its statutory authority, failed to observe statutorily required procedures, and violated the Fifth Amendment when it purported to add DJI’s products to the Covered List.”
In a statement to Sherwood, a DJI spokesperson said:
The FCC can add products to the Covered List only when they present a national security threat, yet it has never identified any threat associated with DJI or its products. Despite repeated efforts to engage with the government, DJI has never been given the chance to provide information to address or refute any concerns. These procedural and substantive deficiencies violate the Constitution and federal law.
The FCC decision has cleared the way for the nascent US drone industry just as the US military urgently races to catch up in the race to acquire drones.
Archer Aviation alleged that Vertical’s Valo aircraft “mimics” its own Midnight aircraft.
Just a day after OpenAI rolled out its agentic platform for enterprise, Anthropic has announced its own. Built from existing pieces of Anthropic tech that have already been previewed, the new platform essentially ties together plug-ins that can be tailored by enterprise customers into Claude Cowork.
Companies can customize their version of the tool to use their branding, communication style, and private data to speed up a long list of common tasks like performing financial analyses, human resources tasks, design, and engineering workflows. New connectors tie Claude Cowork into third-party platforms like Salesforce’s Slack, Google’s apps, LegalZoom, and DocuSign, among others.
The announcement gave a lift to some beaten-down software companies.
While OpenAI was releasing consumer apps like Sora, Anthropic was busy improving Claude’s ability to make spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations — the boring but essential tools of the workplace.
The two competing solutions will be battling it out in the enterprise marketplace as both Anthropic and OpenAI seek to grow revenue streams to power their ambitious AI infrastructure projects.
Companies can customize their version of the tool to use their branding, communication style, and private data to speed up a long list of common tasks like performing financial analyses, human resources tasks, design, and engineering workflows. New connectors tie Claude Cowork into third-party platforms like Salesforce’s Slack, Google’s apps, LegalZoom, and DocuSign, among others.
The announcement gave a lift to some beaten-down software companies.
While OpenAI was releasing consumer apps like Sora, Anthropic was busy improving Claude’s ability to make spreadsheets and PowerPoint presentations — the boring but essential tools of the workplace.
The two competing solutions will be battling it out in the enterprise marketplace as both Anthropic and OpenAI seek to grow revenue streams to power their ambitious AI infrastructure projects.
Sandisk’s roughly 1,200% run-up over the last year — it was spun off from Western Digital exactly a year ago — took a breather early Tuesday, after well-known stuff-stirrer Citron Research, short seller Andrew Left’s firm, announced it was short the stock.
In a post on X, Citron suggested that while Sandisk has benefited from the parabolic price increase for memory chips, it’s only a matter of time before giant contract chip manufacturers like Samsung Electronics and TSMC turn on the taps:
“The market is pricing SanDisk like it’s $NVDA. There’s one problem: NVIDIA has a moat. SanDisk sells a commodity. We’ve seen this movie before 2008, 2012, 2018. It’s never different this time. Memory is a cycle, and cycles peak.”
That’s true historically speaking, but Wall Street seems to see the memory price spike continuing for at least a couple more years. Analysts have ratcheted up their earnings expectations over the next few years, in line with the guidance Sandisk issued in its latest earnings report. And shorting a stock with this much momentum — it’s up more than 150% this year alone! — is treacherous indeed.
“The market is pricing SanDisk like it’s $NVDA. There’s one problem: NVIDIA has a moat. SanDisk sells a commodity. We’ve seen this movie before 2008, 2012, 2018. It’s never different this time. Memory is a cycle, and cycles peak.”
That’s true historically speaking, but Wall Street seems to see the memory price spike continuing for at least a couple more years. Analysts have ratcheted up their earnings expectations over the next few years, in line with the guidance Sandisk issued in its latest earnings report. And shorting a stock with this much momentum — it’s up more than 150% this year alone! — is treacherous indeed.
Anthropic’s latest announcement seems to be giving a lift to software companies the market was previously viewing as the walking disrupted.
Today, Alphabet subsidiary Waymo announced it’s now welcoming public riders to its driverless car service in four additional US cities: Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, and Orlando.
The company said the service will be available first to “select riders” who’ve downloaded the app in those cities, and it will invite new riders on a rolling basis before opening the service to everyone “later this year.”
The latest announcement brings Waymo’s total service area to 10 cities, mostly located in California and across the Sun Belt, and doubles its footprint from a few months ago.
The latest announcement brings Waymo’s total service area to 10 cities, mostly located in California and across the Sun Belt, and doubles its footprint from a few months ago.
Last year Apple said it would invest $600 billion to expand in the US over four years, in an effort to reduce its reliance on overseas suppliers and avoid tariffs.
We’re now getting more detail on what that involves. According to a new announcement from Apple, it includes expanding AI server production and moving future production of suddenly trendy Mac Minis to Houston.
It also involves the purchase of “well over 100 million” chips from TSMC’s Arizona facility this year, “a significant increase from 2025.”
“We’re buying as much of the output of this fab as we can,” Apple’s global head of procurement, David Tom, told The Wall Street Journal.
Apple has long been one of TSMC’s largest customers, even as the iPhone maker shifted to designing its own processors in-house — chips that TSMC overwhelmingly manufactures. Apple’s demand is helping fund TSMC’s massive multibillion-dollar chip plant expansion in Arizona.
Shares of TSMC were up 3% and near record highs in early trading Tuesday, as the Apple announcement underlines huge demand for TSMC’s AI chips
It also involves the purchase of “well over 100 million” chips from TSMC’s Arizona facility this year, “a significant increase from 2025.”
“We’re buying as much of the output of this fab as we can,” Apple’s global head of procurement, David Tom, told The Wall Street Journal.
Apple has long been one of TSMC’s largest customers, even as the iPhone maker shifted to designing its own processors in-house — chips that TSMC overwhelmingly manufactures. Apple’s demand is helping fund TSMC’s massive multibillion-dollar chip plant expansion in Arizona.
Shares of TSMC were up 3% and near record highs in early trading Tuesday, as the Apple announcement underlines huge demand for TSMC’s AI chips
The company declined to give full-year 2026 guidance until a call slated for the end of March.
Cipher Mining cut its premarket losses on Tuesday after missing revenue and earnings estimates for the last quarter of 2025. The stock had fallen as much as 4.7% ahead of the open before paring its losses in morning trading.
For Q4, the company reported:
Revenue of $60 million (estimate: $84.4 million).
Adjusted earnings per share of -$0.14 (estimate: -$0.06).
After the close on Monday, crypto miner Canaan announced that it had purchased Cipher Mining’s stake in a mining joint venture for $39.75 million, deepening Cipher’s pivot away from bitcoin mining toward data centers. Indeed, CIFR acknowledged in the Q4 and year-end report that its “identity has evolved to focus on enabling next-generation compute at industrial scale.”
The Canaan acquisition news came on the heels of former bitcoin miner Bitdeer announcing that it had sold all of its bitcoin holdings to fund its pivot to AI.
Advanced Micro Devices is spiking in premarket trading on Tuesday after the company booked another major customer for its GPUs.
The chip designer struck a deal with Meta to deploy 6 gigawatts’ worth of AI infrastructure (that is, multiple generations of AMD AI chips). Per The Wall Street Journal, AMD has said that each gigawatt is equivalent to “several tens of billions of dollars” of sales, making the value of this pact in excess of $100 billion.
In exchange, Meta will receive warrants to buy as many as 160 million shares — roughly 10% of AMD’s current total shares outstanding — for a penny each as certain milestones are hit pertaining to the amount of gigawatts shipped, AMD’s share price, and “Meta achieving key technical and commercial milestones.” For all the tranches to vest, AMD stock would need to trade at $600.
The GPUs-for-warrants framework is similar to the deal that AMD brokered with OpenAI last year.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has a voracious appetite for AI compute. Just last week, Meta unveiled a “multi-year, multi-generational strategic partnership” with Nvidia that “will enable the large-scale deployment of NVIDIA CPUs and millions of NVIDIA Blackwell and Rubin GPUs, as well as the integration of NVIDIA Spectrum-X Ethernet switches for Meta’s Facebook Open Switching System platform.”
Nvidia, the leader in AI GPUs, slumped as news of this pact hit the wires.
It’s Blue Monday... or it certainly was for IBM yesterday, as the stock suffered its biggest one-day drop since 2000, when the technology company’s shares tanked amid the wider bursting of the dot-com bubble.
Big Blue wound up in the big red, shedding more than 13% by yesterday’s close, fueled by an Anthropic blog post detailing Claude Code’s ability to automate modernization of Common Business-Oriented Language (COBOL) code.
COBOL’s ubiquity and antiquity, as the language will celebrate its 67th birthday in September, makes it a pretty big deal — and a pretty big pain — not least for IBM, which is behind most of the mainframe computers that run the language, per Bloomberg.
IBM hit back with its own blog post yesterday outlining that the value its core mainframe computer business delivers isn’t dependent on a single language like COBOL or Java, but on the platform itself. The company also highlighted Watsonx, its own AI tool suite, which has COBOL modernization capabilities.
COBOL’s ubiquity and antiquity, as the language will celebrate its 67th birthday in September, makes it a pretty big deal — and a pretty big pain — not least for IBM, which is behind most of the mainframe computers that run the language, per Bloomberg.
IBM hit back with its own blog post yesterday outlining that the value its core mainframe computer business delivers isn’t dependent on a single language like COBOL or Java, but on the platform itself. The company also highlighted Watsonx, its own AI tool suite, which has COBOL modernization capabilities.
Hims & Hers said that it is under investigation by the Securities and Exchange Commission, adding another legal challenge for the telehealth company.
The SEC requested that it preserve records related to its compounded GLP-1 treatments, Hims disclosed in a regulatory filing on Monday. The news came after the company reported earnings results and gave soft full-year guidance.
Shares extended losses to down more than 8% in postmarket trading after the 10-K, which detailed this probe, was released.
Hims is already facing a patent infringement lawsuit from Novo Nordisk and a potential probe from the Department of Justice. Both arose after Hims released (and then discontinued) a copy of Novo’s Wegovy pill.
Hims is already facing a patent infringement lawsuit from Novo Nordisk and a potential probe from the Department of Justice. Both arose after Hims released (and then discontinued) a copy of Novo’s Wegovy pill.
The report comes as the company has faced mounting legal troubles related to its short-lived Wegovy pill copy.