The stock market experienced a tumultuous week, capped by a significant sell-off on Friday that erased earlier record highs. This dramatic reversal was influenced by several key factors, including disappointing earnings from major tech companies and the implications of a strong jobs report on Federal Reserve interest rate policy.
Earnings Disappointments Rock Chip Stocks:
The week began with optimism, but cracks appeared as several prominent tech companies failed to meet sky-high earnings expectations. Palo Alto Networks saw its shares drop 5.6% on Wednesday, despite a better-than-expected earnings report, as management reiterated its long-term outlook rather than raising it. Similarly, CrowdStrike experienced a significant decline after its earnings release, falling over 10% during Thursday's session before closing down less than 4%. While both companies showed positive impacts from AI, the market reacted to unmet lofty expectations.
The most significant blow came from Broadcom, whose stock plummeted 12.6% after reporting lower-than-expected revenue, even with strong AI-related business segments. The stock ended the week down 13.7%, making it the week's worst performer among the analyzed stocks. Intel, a newer addition to the portfolio, also faced heavy selling, losing 13.5% for the week, despite its strong CPU business positioning for the agentic AI era.
Nvidia's Influence and Broader Market Dynamics:
Nvidia, a dominant force in the chip market, saw a more modest decline of 2.9% for the week. The company's CEO, Jensen Huang, announced entry into the personal computer market with Arm Holdings' architecture chips. This news boosted Arm shares by 15.7% on Monday, though Arm ultimately closed the week down 3%. Amidst the broader tech sell-off, Marvell Technology emerged as a standout winner, surging over 28% after Jensen Huang predicted it could be the "next trillion-dollar company." However, the rapid rally in Marvell also raised concerns about its sustainability.
IPO Deluge and Investor Dilution Fears:
Another major market driver was the anticipated surge of Initial Public Offerings (IPOs) and secondary stock sales. SpaceX announced plans to sell 555.6 million shares at $135 each, aiming to raise approximately $75 billion at a $1.8 trillion valuation. Anthropic, a major player in large language models, also confidentially filed for an IPO, potentially creating a historic sale in the AI sector. These offerings, along with Alphabet's planned $85 billion stock sale to fund its AI buildout, raised concerns about potential stock supply overwhelming demand. Investors are wary of dilution, and the massive influx of new shares could exert downward pressure on market prices.
Meta Platforms also saw a significant drop, losing over 6% for the week amid reports of potential large-scale stock offerings to fund its AI initiatives. Analysts warned that an excess of new stock supply is one of the most potent threats to a bull market, potentially leading to price declines as supply outstrips investor demand.
Economic Data's Impact:
The strong jobs report released on Friday dashed hopes for an imminent Federal Reserve interest rate cut, sending the 10-year bond yield soaring above 4.5%. This economic data point played a crucial role in Friday's sharp market downturn, with the S&P 500 plunging 2.6% and the Nasdaq falling 4.2%. The S&P 500's nine-week winning streak was consequently snapped.