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Nvidia jumps after entering laptop market with new PC “superchip”

Nvidia shares are rising after the company announced its push into the PC processor market, unveiling the company’s highly anticipated RTX Spark “superchip,” a new processor designed to bring advanced AI capabilities directly to Windows laptops.

There is no question this reinvention of the computer is as big of a deal as the reinvention of the phone into what we now know as the smartphone, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said at the Computex trade show in Taipei.

Nvidia said the company is reimagining the PC “for the first time in 40 years” and the new platform is built for agentic AI, allowing AI models and assistants to run locally on laptops rather than relying entirely on cloud computing. Microsoft simultaneously unveiled its Surface Laptop Ultra powered by RTX Spark, while Dell, HP, and Lenovo are expected to launch systems based on the chip later this year.

RTX Spark combines an Arm-based CPU, Nvidias Blackwell graphics architecture, and dedicated AI hardware into a single chip designed for AI-heavy workloads.

This move put the company into more direct competition with Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, and Apple in the personal computing industry. Shares of Intel, Qualcomm, and AMD are all sinking right now after the Nvidia announcement. The move also positions the RTX Spark on a collision course with the M5 from Apple, which is also trading lower. Meanwhile, Arm Holdings, on whose architecture RTX Spark is built, surging in premarket trading along with Microsoft and HP Enterprise.

For investors, the announcement serves as another reminder that the AI trade is increasingly expanding beyond data centers and into consumer hardware.

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SpaceX gets a wave of bullish ratings from Wall Street analysts

SpaceX received more than a dozen positive analyst calls on Tuesday — including from major Wall Street banks — as they initiate coverage on Elon Musk’s space and AI company.

SpaceX went public on June 12 at a $2.2 trillion valuation, the largest debut in history. While the company hasn’t yet posted a profit, it seems to have convinced Wall Street that it will get there and grow its valuation on the way.

Of the at least 17 analysts that gave a rating on Tuesday, all but one gave it a “buy” or “outperform” rating. MoffettNathanson was "neutral."

The ratings come as SpaceX joined the Nasdaq 100 index, a benchmark tech-heavy basket of companies that underpins millions of portfolios. The inclusion adds built-in demand for the stock from index funds and ETFs.

Still, SpaceX fell more than 5% on Tuesday amid a broader sell-off, and is currently effectively flat from its opening price of $150 a share.

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Nike sinks to lowest level since 2014 after warning of “challenged” sales environment in Q4 report

Did Nike do it?

Investors had a mixed reaction after the global sports apparel company reported its fourth quarter earnings on Tuesday after the bell. Shares initially rose 5% as Nike beat out Wall Street expectations amid a hefty tariff refund bonus. However, the stock then sank to its lowest level since August 2014 in postmarket trading.

Here are the Q4 numbers:

  • Revenue of $11.0 billion (estimate: $10.8 billion).

  • Adjusted earnings per share of $0.20 (estimate: $0.12).

Ahead of this report, Nike warned that results would be flattered by a one-time tariff refund (now estimated at roughly $0.52 per share for the bottom line). That gave the company an extra cushion in snapping its streak of seven quarters of year-over-year profit declines.

Over the past year, the company had been punished by tariffs on imported goods, stagnant consumer spending, and increasing competition from other footwear brands like New Balance, Adidas, and Hoka.

Outgoing CFO Matthew Friend deemed it an “increasingly challenging operating environment, where sell-through remains challenged.”

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