| | | | | | | | Data is provided by |  | *Stock data as of market close, cryptocurrency data as of 4:00pm ET. Here's what these numbers mean. | - Stocks: Investors are banking on the summit between President Trump and President Xi yielding a longer trade truce. That optimism, combined with a hot AI trade, propelled the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to new record closes once again, while the Dow topped 50,000 for the first time since February.
- Crypto: Bitcoin jumped after the CLEAR Act cleared the Senate banking committee, paving the way for a showdown between crypto enthusiasts and financial sector stalwarts.
- Economy: US retail sales rose 0.5% in April, down from a 1.6% increase in March, as consumers kept spending in the face of rising gasoline prices.
| |
|
Earlier this week, options traders started making bullish bets on Cisco meme-mania-style, anticipating a strong earnings report on the heels of its AI-fueled comeback strategy. It turns out the retail crowd’s instincts were on the money: Cisco popped 13.41% today after the company reported a stellar Q1: - The company beat top and bottom line expectations.
- AI infrastructure and hyperscaler orders surged past projections, helping raise full-year order forecasts from $5 billion to $9 billion.
- Management emphasized that the forecast hike was due to booming hyperscaler demand that shows no signs of stopping.
Zoom out: The dot-com-era darling became the world’s most valuable company in 2000 by selling internet routers and switches. Shares plunged after the bubble burst, but like many old tech giants looking to learn new tricks, it’s following the AI zeitgeist by becoming a—you guessed it—datacenter infrastructure provider. The stock finally caught up to its millenium-era high in December, and has jumped 49.98% in 2026. The AI race is a marathon Cisco isn’t the only legacy tech company that’s getting an AI-era makeover. Intel also surpassed its pre-crash dot-com high last month as it embraced the cash cow that is AI chips. Then there’s Corning, which has revived itself as an AI infrastructure darling. For those of you who were around for the dot-com crash, the resurgence of these three names may remind you of a film you’ve seen before—and don’t want to watch again. After all, there are plenty of parallels between today’s market and the dot-com boom: New technology is promising to be transformational for the economy, tech companies are leading the broader market’s bull market, and valuations have reached eye-popping levels. Yet most analysts aren’t warning of a crash, at least not yet: “We view the AI cycle as durable for the foreseeable future and expect sustained strong orders and accelerating revenue to drive further stock appreciation,” wrote Bank of America research analyst Tal Liani in a note today.—LB | | |
|
|
Sponsored By State Street Investment Management DIA offers cost-efficient, liquid exposure to 30 US blue-chip stocks. It is the only ETF tracking the Dow, the oldest and most widely quoted indicator of US stock market activity. The mega-caps that comprise the Dow offer revenue exposure to 177 countries and 152 different industries.1 DIA has been helping investors reach their goals by providing broad exposure to a global market and 30 of the world’s most recognizable companies. Find out how DIA can help you achieve yours. Getting there starts here. 1 Factset, as of December 31, 2025 based on revenue streams from portfolio holdings. | |
🟢 What’s up - Nvidia advanced 4.39% as the US approved sales of its H200 AI chips to a handful of Chinese firms.
- YETI Holdings gained 6.13% on an earnings beat fueled by strong US demand for drinkware and coolers.
- StubHub climbed 13.7% after topping Wall Street expectations on both revenue and profitability while reaffirming full-year guidance.
- BNPL company Klarna jumped 20.19% after swinging to a quarterly profit on 44% revenue growth tied to expansion into larger-ticket purchases.
- POET Technologies surged 43.15% after unveiling an optical networking deal worth up to $500 million.
- Ford rose 6.63% as Morgan Stanley highlighted the automaker’s battery technology and energy storage business as a potential long-term advantage.
- Cerebras Systems soared 68.15% in its Nasdaq debut as investors bet on its AI chips competing with Nvidia.
What’s down |
|
|
Sometimes cars backfire. Sometimes business strategies do, too. Honda just reported its first annual loss since it went public in 1957. The problem was the Japanese carmaker’s decision to invest heavily in its electric vehicle lineup after the Biden administration implemented stringent emission standards. Honda even pledged to stop manufacturing gas-powered cars by 2040. But sales stumbled after President Trump cancelled the $7,500 tax credit for EVs in the US, and 25% import tariffs against Japanese automakers only made the pain worse. Honda’s management team decided the time has come to pivot away from EVs, but they’ll pay a serious price: The company will write down ¥1.57 trillion, or $9.9 billion, to restructure its EV business. That expensive about-face forced Honda to report a net loss of ¥423.9 billion ($2.7 billion) for its fiscal year ending in March. Honda shareholders were willing to look past the company’s first loss in nearly 70 years—shares rose 5.36% today—considering the company warned them about this months ago. In fact, they applauded Honda’s promise to unveil 15 new hybrid cars by the end of 2030, as well as its forecast of a ¥500 billion profit this year, and a rapidly growing motorcycle business. It helps that Honda is far from alone: Ford had to write down $19.5 billion last year due to EV expenses, and GM wrote down $7.6 billion. The EV downturn is a tough break for carmakers across the market, but the cruel irony is that surging gas prices have car buyers turning to the EV market in droves these days.—MR |
|
|
The future of cancer treatment looks very different from the past—and Wall Street is already placing bets on potential winners. There’s a pharmaceutical revolution underway as companies make strides in cancer treatments, and Revolution Medicines is at the center of it. The biotech company is focused on therapies for pancreatic cancer (one of the deadliest cancers), and investors cheered after the company reported that its daraxonrasib pill nearly doubled survival rates compared with chemotherapy in a late-stage trial. The drug works by targeting RAS mutations, which appear in roughly 90% of pancreatic tumors. But RAS mutations also drive cancers in the lung and colorectal areas, and RevMed is already generating promising early data there too, opening the door to a much larger opportunity. Shares have surged 87.66% YTD. There’s also Natera, which doesn’t treat cancer, but keeps it at bay: The company builds personalized blood tests that look for cancer recurrence, and it has a near-monopoly over the minimal residual disease (MRD) testing market. Shares have soared 292% over the past three years. A long road ahead For companies like these, the path forward is often murky. Natera still has significant room to grow, with Leerink Partners estimating MRD testing could become a $20 billion market in the US alone. But maintaining its rapid growth will likely be a long and expensive process. That’s why the pharma industry often follows a familiar pattern: Small biotech firms specialize in innovation and develop breakthrough drugs, then large pharmaceutical giants with the manufacturing, regulatory, and distribution scale needed to commercialize treatments acquire their smaller peers. This cycle is accelerating as Big Pharma companies feel the pressure of major patent expirations, which could lead to a loss of $300 billion in annual drug sales by the early 2030s. But as shares of biotech companies like Revolution Medicines and Natera surge, they are becoming too expensive to acquire. Revolution Medicines reportedly explored talks with Merck and AbbVie earlier this year at roughly a $30 billion valuation, but after the stock’s recent rally, a takeover would now likely cost more than $40 billion. That’s led some on Wall Street to think that Revolution Medicines will remain independent, and are betting that the biotech company will grow into a leader in the cancer treatment space. It would be a long, bumpy road to get there, but the long-term returns could prove healthy.—SY | | |
|
|
Sponsored By State Street Investment Management Planning for your financial future? The right foundation makes all the difference. Help build your portfolio with DIA and get exposure to 30 of the world’s most recognizable companies in a single trade. Discover DIA—the only ETF to track the Dow. | |
Economic reports: It’s all about the production side of the US economy tomorrow, with highlights including the May Empire State manufacturing index and the April industrial production and capacity utilization report. Earnings announcements: Nothing worth mentioning, if we’re being honest. Everything else: We’ll say farewell to a legend, as Jerome Powell concludes his term as Fed Chair. |
|
|
Space is the place—to invest. Space ETFs are a hot commodity these days, but only one of them owns SpaceX.
Want to know your chances of winning money on Polymarket? Spoiler alert: They aren’t good.
A first-edition 1999 Charizard card worth a little over $68,000 provides the perfect metaphor for GameStop’s deteriorating business.
The more money you make, the less risk you should take.
The largest mid-cycle earnings acceleration in history has arrived. Profits across Wall Street are skyrocketing, but one pro says investors are getting too excited. Liquidity leader: Ranked among top 20 most liquid US-listed ETFs,2 DIA gives investors the ability to get in and out of the market easily in any market condition. Learn more.*
2 Liquidity leader. Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P., as of December 31, 2025. Based on the 180-day average notional dollar trading volume, DIA ranked within the top 20 most liquid out of 4,798 US-listed ETFs. The performance data quoted represents past performance. Past performance does not guarantee future results. *A message from our sponsor. |
|
|
Share the Brew, watch your referral count climb, and unlock brag-worthy swag. Your friends get smarter. You get rewarded. Win-win. Your referral count: 5 Click to Share Or copy & paste your referral link to others: brewmarkets.com/r/?kid=9ec4d467 |
|
|
✢ A Note From State Street Investment Management Before investing, consider the funds’ investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. To obtain a prospectus or summary prospectus which contains this and other information, call 1-866-787-2257 or visit statestreet.com/im. Read it carefully. Investing involves risk. ALPS Distributors, Inc. (fund distributor); State Street Global Advisors Funds Distributors, LLC (marketing agent). State Street Global Advisors (SSGA) is now State Street Investment Management. Please click here for more information. |
|
|
ADVERTISE // CAREERS // SHOP // FAQ Update your email preferences or unsubscribe . View our privacy policy . Copyright © 2026 Morning Brew Inc. All rights reserved. 22 W 19th St, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10011 |
|