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Post-Bell | U.S. Stocks Slip; Broadcom Jumps on AI Outlook; Berkshire Resumes Buybacks; U.S. Mulls Global AI Chip Export Permits

Tiger Newspress08:00

01 Stock Market

As of Mar 6, the U.S. major indexes closed as follows:

The U.S. major indexes closed as follows: Dow Jones down 1.61% at 47954.74; S&P 500 down 0.56% at 6830.71; NASDAQ down 0.26% at 22748.99. The pullback reflected pressure in select megacaps and semiconductors, while several AI and software names posted gains amid ongoing rotation.

Unusual-move stocks showed diverging performance across AI, software, and consumer tech. AVGO up 4.80% at $332.77; MSFT up 1.35% at $410.68; AMZN up 0.98% at $218.94; NVDA up 0.16% at $183.34; AAPL down 0.85% at $260.29; AMD down 1.30% at $199.45; TSLA down 0.10% at $405.55; GOOG down 0.84% at $300.91; TTD up 18.36% at $29.79; COIN down 1.54% at $205.71; SOXL down 3.21% at $54.80; AGQ down 2.65% at $145.96.

Chinese and Asia-linked names were broadly weaker: BILI down 7.09% at $25.55; BABA down 2.19% at $130.35; HSAI down 6.35% at $23.75; TME down 4.74% at $13.47; TSM down 1.00% at $353.86; EWY down 6.42% at $125.74. Key ETFs also eased: SPY down 0.56% at $681.31; QQQ down 0.30% at $608.91; TQQQ down 0.92% at $49.80; while SQQQ rose 0.92% at $70.26.

02 Other Markets

U.S. 10-year Treasury yield rose by 0.00%, latest at 4.15.USD/CNH rose 0.00%, at 6.89; USD/HKD fell 0.0090%, at 7.82.U.S. Dollar Index fell 0.0131%, at 99.05.WTI crude futures fell 1.93%, at 79.45 USD/bbl; COMEX gold futures rose 0.47%, at 5102.70 USD/oz.

03 Top News

1. U.S. officials considered requiring permits for global AI chip exports, positioning Washington as gatekeeper. Draft rules would make companies seek Commerce Department approval to export accelerators from Nvidia and AMD, with stricter reviews for larger clusters. The framework could slow deployments or impose conditions such as disclosures and site visits, potentially affecting projects exceeding 200,000 GPUs.

2. Costco beat comparable sales estimates, highlighting resilient value-focused demand. The company reported same-store sales (ex-gas) up 6.7% and net income near $2.04 billion, supported by essentials and discretionary items. Management said potential tariff refunds would be used to lower prices and enhance value for members.

3. Gap guided annual adjusted profit largely below estimates as tariffs pressured margins. The retailer forecast EPS of $2.20–$2.35 versus an average estimate near $2.32, and cited about 200 bps gross-margin impact from import duties. Shares fell in recent trading as consumers reduced discretionary purchases and sought discounts.

4. Marvell forecast first-quarter revenue above expectations on AI-driven data center demand. Guidance was around $2.40 billion5%), surpassing consensus, with bookings described as strong. The company emphasized photonic fabrics following the $3.25 billion Celestial AI deal and noted accelerating year-over-year growth ahead.

5. Berkshire Hathaway resumed share repurchases, with CEO Greg Abel buying Class A shares. Buybacks restarted recently after a multi-quarter pause, supporting long-term value creation and potential cash deployment. Abel purchased 21 Class A shares for about $15 million and now holds 249 shares valued near $182 million.

6. Ciena delivered an earnings beat and raised full-year guidance, yet shares slipped on lofty expectations. Adjusted EPS reached $1.35 versus $1.17 consensus, with revenue at $1.43 billion up 33% year over year. Full-year revenue was lifted to $5.9–$6.3 billion, amid demand tied to AI-related networking.

7. Investor Leo Koguan bought about one million Nvidia shares, signaling confidence in AI’s trajectory. The purchase was estimated near $180 million, and he said he plans to invest more, calling AI foundational. Nvidia shares fluctuated as competition from custom silicon and TPUs drew investor attention.

8. The U.S. Labor Department reported weekly initial jobless claims of 213K, slightly better than expectations. The figure compared with an estimate of 215K, while the prior reading was revised to 213K. The data suggested ongoing labor-market resilience despite broader macro uncertainties.

9. Morgan Stanley planned to cut around 3% of its workforce to streamline costs. The reduction equals roughly 2,500 roles across core divisions, reflecting margin discipline. The action aligns with capital and cycle considerations as firms adjust investment priorities.

10. Broadcom reported strong results and signaled over $100 billion in AI chip sales next year. AI revenue more than doubled and management guided well above consensus, pointing to rapid share gains in custom silicon. Shares rose in recent trading as investors reacted to the AI growth trajectory.

Sources: Reuters, Dow Jones, Tiger Newspress, public market data

Disclaimer: This content is for reference only and does not constitute investment advice.

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  • RajTvm
    ·08:07
    Baba stock why going down 
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