US stocks suffer as speculative stock sell-off and financials weigh on markets
The S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, and Russell 2000 all finished in the red.
Bitcoin, banks, and speculative pockets of the market beloved by retail traders (from quantum computing to nuclear energy) were bludgeoned on Thursday.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 closed 0.4% and 0.6% lower, respectively, while the Russell 2000 fell about 2%.
Stocks that moved higher:
Salesforce rose after forecasting revenue north of $60 billion by 2030, with double-digit sales growth expected to return.
Oracle jumped as executives said the company anticipates 35% gross margins on large AI infrastructure projects and expects to see $166 billion in cloud infrastructure revenue by FY 2030.
Stocks that moved lower:
TSMC rose in premarket trading after the Taiwanese chipmaker posted another record quarterly profit and raised its outlook for the rest of the year, but fell on market open and finished lower.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise sank on disappointing revenue, profit, and free cash flow guidance for fiscal 2026. While HPE did announce a 10% increase in the dividend for the fiscal year, the good news couldn’t lift shares out of the red.
American Battery Technology Co. lost power after revealing the US Department of Energy has terminated its $57.7 million grant supporting the construction of a lithium hydroxide facility.
United Airlines and rivals like JetBlue, American Airlines, and Frontier Airlines were battered after an analyst criticized the industry’s capacity growth.