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269 stories mentioning AmazonUpdated just now

Traded amid mixed consumer stocks; its Whole Foods unit lost a US labor board appeal over a Philadelphia store unionization vote.

Wire

Figma Shareholder Findell Urges Governance Review Following Claude Design Launch

Figma (FIG) shareholder Findell Capital Management on Thursday urged management to take steps to maximize shareholder value, including a review of its relationship with Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic given the launch of Claude Design.In a letter sent to Figma's chief executive officer and board, Findell said Claude Design, which was released in April, directly competes with Figma.The shareholder raised concern that a few days before Claude Design was released, Anthropic Chief Product Officer Mike Krieger resigned from the Figma board. There remains two board members "who are material investors in Anthropic," according to Findell."We believe the Board should conduct an independent investigation to evaluate whether Anthropic benefitted from any improper use of Figma's confidential information," Findell said. "It may be appropriate to consider refreshing the membership of the Board in light of these potential conflicts."Findell also called on the management to simplify its offering and focus on its product suite on Design, Dev Mode, FigJam, and Make, as well as rationalize costs to bring these in line with peers.Figma and Anthropic didn't immediately respond to' request for comment.Shares of Figma were up more than 6% in Thursday trading.Price: $22.68, Change: $+1.34, Percent Change: +6.28%

$AMZN$FIG
Wire

Intuit Launches Conversational Analytics Agent, AI Segment Builder in Mailchimp

Intuit (INTU) said Thursday that it has launched Analytics AI, a conversational analytics agent in Mailchimp that connects data across campaigns, audiences, and revenue to produce insights.Mailchimp has also launched an AI Segment Builder, currently a beta feature that builds the segment for an ideal audience that marketers describe, using behavioral, demographic, and engagement data, the company said.Intuit's Mailchimp has also expanded integrations with Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic's Claude, Wix, and WooCommerce for ecommerce data and artificial intelligence-powered marketing capabilities, the company said.The Analytics AI feature is now available to all Mailchimp customers globally with paid plans, while AI Segment Builder is available to select customers in beta version with general availability coming soon, Intuit said.Price: $312.56, Change: $+4.83, Percent Change: +1.57%

$AMZN$INTU
Asia Markets

Fresh Military Strikes Between US, Iran Drag US Equity Futures Pre-Bell

US equity futures were edging lower pre-bell Thursday as fresh US and Iranian strikes once again threatened the fragile ceasefire between the two nations, reducing optimism surrounding a potential peace deal.Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were 0.3% lower, S&P 500 futures were down 0.1%, and Nasdaq futures were 0.2% lower.The US military said it had fired on Iranian drones over the Strait of Hormuz and attacked a military site in the port city of Bandar Abbas, which is the second time in three days it has struck targets in Iran for what it called self-defense. Iran said it responded by launching an attack on an American air base in the region.Traders observed the latest round of earnings, including those of several major Canadian banks. Royal Bank of Canada (RY) reported higher fiscal Q2 adjusted earnings and revenue, while Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD) posted increased fiscal Q2 adjusted earnings amid lower revenue.Oil prices were higher, with front-month global benchmark North Sea Brent crude up 2.2% at $94.26 per barrel and US West Texas Intermediate crude 2.4% higher at $90.73 per barrel.The April core personal consumption expenditures price index, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, released at 8:30 am ET, gained 0.2%, lower than the 0.3% increase in the prior month and the expected 0.3% gain in a survey compiled by Bloomberg.Initial jobless claims rose to 215,000 in the week ended May 23 from 210,000 level in the previous week, compared with expectations for a smaller increase to 211,000. Preliminary Q1 GDP growth was recorded at a 1.6% rise, compared with the advance estimate of a 2% increase.Durable goods new orders rose 7.9% in April after a 1.3% gain in the prior month, compared with expectations for a 4% increase.In other world markets, Japan's Nikkei closed 0.5% lower, Hong Kong's Hang Seng ended 1.3% lower, and China's Shanghai Composite finished 0.1% higher. Meanwhile, the UK's FTSE 100 was down 1%, and Germany's DAX index was 0.7% lower in Europe's early afternoon session.In equities, Dell Technologies (DELL) shares were up 4.6% after the company said its unit Dell Federal Systems won a blanket purchase agreement with an overall estimated value of $9.69 billion from the US Navy under the Department of Defense Enterprise Software Initiative. Snowflake (SNOW) stock was 37% higher after the cloud-based data platform lifted its fiscal 2027 product revenue outlook and agreed to a $6 billion infrastructure spending deal with Amazon's (AMZN) Amazon Web Services. Royal Bank of Canada shares were up 1.7% after the bank reported its fiscal Q2 financial results.On the losing side, HSBC (HSBC) stock was down 2.2% after a Bloomberg News report that UK's Cambridge University was withdrawing its investments from institutions providing financial support to fossil fuels, including the British bank. AstraZeneca (AZN) shares were 0.8% lower after the company said that the US Food and Drug Administration delayed the decision deadline for its new drug application regarding a combination breast cancer treatment.

Dow JonesNasdaq CompositeS&P 500$AMZN$AZN$DELL$HSBC$RY$SNOW$TD
Snowflake Raises Full-Year Product Revenue Outlook; Announces $6 Billion Spending Deal With Amazon
US Markets

Snowflake Raises Full-Year Product Revenue Outlook; Announces $6 Billion Spending Deal With Amazon

Snowflake (SNOW) shares jumped early Thursday after the cloud-based data platform raised its full-year product revenue outlook on the back of better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter results, while the company agreed to a $6 billion infrastructure spending deal with Amazon's (AMZN) cloud platform.Product revenue, which accounts for the majority of the firm's total revenue, is now anticipated to come in at $5.84 billion for fiscal 2027, representing annual growth of 31%, Snowflake said late Wednesday. The company previously projected the key metric to be at $5.66 billion, while the current consensus on FactSet is for $5.78 billion.The stock surged 36% in the most recent premarket activity."Our forecast is based on existing consumption patterns," Chief Financial Officer Brian Robins said during an earnings call, according to a FactSet transcript. "Given the strength we've observed in both our core data platform business and (artificial intelligence) business, we are raising our guidance for the year."In a separate statement, Snowflake said it's expanding its collaboration with Amazon Web Services with a $6 billion commitment over five years for Graviton compute and AI workloads on Amazon's cloud, citing rising demand for data and AI services."AWS has committed to an expanded go-to-market investment and collaboration," Robins said on the call. "This agreement marks an important milestone in our ongoing partnership with AWS, and its impact is fully incorporated into our outlook."For the three months through April, Snowflake's adjusted earnings increased to $0.39 a share from $0.24 the year before, topping the Street's view for $0.32. Revenue climbed 33% to $1.39 billion, ahead of the average analyst estimate of $1.33 billion. Product revenue grew 34% to $1.33 billion, surpassing the market's forecast of $1.27 billion.The net revenue retention rate was 126%, while remaining performance obligations, or RPO, gained 38% year over year to $9.21 billion, according to the company."AI continues to be a powerful tailwind for Snowflake, and (the first quarter) marks a clear inflection point in that journey," Chief Executive Sridhar Ramaswamy said in a statement. "We are seeing strong momentum from both AI-driven acceleration of our core platform and growing adoption of our first-party AI products."The company expects product revenue of up to $1.42 billion for the current quarter, representing annual growth of about 30%. The Street is looking for $1.4 billion."(Snowflake's) deep infrastructure capabilities represent a strong moat that we believe positions (Snowflake) to capitalize on the AI revolution transforming the enterprise landscape front and center," Wedbush Securities said in an emailed client note. The brokerage raised its price target on the firm's stock to $280 from $270 and maintained its outperform rating.

$AMZN$SNOW
Wire

Update: European Commission to Establish EU-Level Selection Procedure for Mobile Satellite Spectrum

(Updates with European Commission's press release in the headline and in the first and second paragraphs.)The European Commission said Wednesday it has adopted a proposal to establish an EU-level selection procedure for the assignment of mobile satellite spectrum to providers authorized to use the 2 GHz frequency band beyond 2027.The proposal will divide two-thirds of the spectrum between EU and non-EU operators for commercial use, while the remaining one-third will be dedicated to governmental use, such as security and military, which will be provided by an EU operator, the commission said.A Reuters report said Amazon's (AMZN) low-earth-orbit satellite business and SpaceX's Starlink can now bid for mobile satellite spectrum under the European Commission's proposal.Amazon and SpaceX did not immediately respond to' request for comment.Price: $270.02, Change: $+4.73, Percent Change: +1.78%

$AMZN
Insider Trading

Amazon Insider Sold Shares Worth $4,117,252, According to a Recent SEC Filing

David Zapolsky, Senior Vice President, on May 21, 2026, sold 15,450 shares in Amazon (AMZN) for $4,117,252. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Zapolsky has control over a total of 41,190 common shares of the company, with 41,190 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000155797926000006/xslF345X05/wk-form4_1779834363.xml

$AMZN
Insider Trading

Amazon Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,671,439, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Douglas J Herrington, Chief Executive Officer Worldwide Amazon Stores, on May 21, 2026, sold 6,370 shares in Amazon (AMZN) for $1,671,439. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Herrington has control over a total of 493,134 common shares of the company, with 486,527 shares held directly and 6,607 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000101872426000020/xslF345X05/wk-form4_1779834787.xml

$AMZN
Insider Trading

Amazon Insider Sold Shares Worth $5,268,342, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Andrew R Jassy, Director, President and Chief Executive Officer, on May 21, 2026, sold 20,000 shares in Amazon (AMZN) for $5,268,342. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Jassy has control over a total of 2,281,190 common shares of the company, with 2,205,766 shares held directly and 75,424 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000137454526000008/xslF345X05/wk-form4_1779835625.xml

$AMZN
Wire

Snowflake Well-Positioned to Benefit From Rising AI Demand, Wedbush Says

Snowflake (SNOW) is a "strong" second-derivative player in the artificial intelligence revolution and is "well-positioned" to benefit from rising enterprise demand for AI applications as more workloads move to the cloud over the next 12 to 18 months, Wedbush Securities said in a company report Monday.The brokerage said it expects "another robust quarter" of growth when Snowflake reports fiscal Q1 results after the bell on May 27, as Wall Street's revenue estimate of $1.32 billion appears "conservative."Wedbush analysts cited continued strength in Snowflake's core data warehousing business and growing enterprise demand for secure, governed and auditable data infrastructure to support AI workloads.The brokerage also highlighted Snowflake's $9.77 billion remaining performance obligations backlog and its expanding customer base of more than 13,000 clients as indicators of future growth.Snowflake's "model-agnostic" platform allows enterprises to work with AI models from companies such as Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic and Microsoft-backed (MSFT) OpenAI without re-architecting data pipelines, reinforcing its role as a "trusted" layer between enterprise data and AI systems, the brokerage said.Wedbush maintained an outperform rating on Snowflake, with a price target of $270.Shares of Snowflake were up 3.9% in Tuesday trading.Price: $178.97, Change: $+6.77, Percent Change: +3.93%

$AMZN$MSFT$SNOW
Update: Rising US Borrowing Costs Won't Slow Massive AI Data-Center Buildout as Potential Profit Outweighs Spending
US Markets

Update: Rising US Borrowing Costs Won't Slow Massive AI Data-Center Buildout as Potential Profit Outweighs Spending

(Updates with comments from Morgan Stanley starting in 13th paragraph.)Rising interest rates won't stop companies such as Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google, Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT) from spending enormous amounts of money to build artificial intelligence data centers because the potential profit far outweighs slightly higher borrowing costs, according to industry analysts.The yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries rose to 4.58% on Thursday from 3.96% on Feb. 26 as investors worry that rising inflation could prevent the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates. Earlier this week, the rate reached its highest level since January 2025. That affects borrowing costs for AI hyperscalers that are on track to spend $800 billion in capital expenditures this year and an additional $1 trillion next year.Rates will rise and inflation will remain a concern as the war in Iran will keep oil above $80 a barrel until February, Peter Tchir, head of macro strategies at Academy Securities, said in an interview with. Still, the expected revenue gain from AI products and services is at this point outweighing concerns that rising rates will dampen the data-center buildout, benefiting companies in and adjacent to the AI space including real estate investment trusts, he said."Right now, the profitability of these data centers and AI, and the perceived profitability, just means that they're not really going to be constrained by 50 or 100 basis points in yield," Tchir said. "These are fairly large bets that this is going to work, and it's going to work in a huge scale, in which case borrowing at 5%, 7% or 9% will turn out kind of trivial."It costs $45 billion to $50 billion to build out 1 gigawatt of data-center capacity, said Mandeep Singh, global head of technology research at Bloomberg Intelligence. SpaceX revealed in its initial public offering prospectus this week that it's renting one of its data centers to Anthropic for $1.25 billion a month, or about $15 billion a year."If it costs $50 billion to build an AI data center, and you're able to generate up to $15 billion in revenue in year one, then it takes three and a half years to get your investment back, and then obviously you'll make returns from year four onward," Singh said in an interview.Analysts agreed that benchmark borrowing costs will continue to rise this year."The bond market is a little bit freaked out, we're seeing inflation and risk in the current environment putting a lot of pressure on longer duration Treasury yields to get to very high levels," Elizabeth Templeton, senior product manager for fixed-income indexes at Morningstar, said in an interview. "Seeing the 30-year yield at 5.1% this week, the highest since 2007, is certainly an indication that there's some worry in the markets right now around inflation. That could certainly continue to impact the 10-year the rest of this year."Smaller AI companies including CoreWeave (CRWV) and Nebius (NBIS) could be affected more by the rise in borrowing costs than hyperscalers Amazon, Google and Microsoft, Bloomberg's Singh said. Those companies and others have already sold $300 billion in debt to fund their AI investments this year, according to Bloomberg News. CoreWeave and Nebius didn't respond to a request for comment.Still, the scale of AI borrowing is so large that it can't be ignored, said Kevin McPartland, an analyst at Crisil Coalition Greenwich. Debt deals that are already underway shouldn't be affected, he said."It doesn't take much of a move when you're talking about billions of dollars of financing to really change the economics," he said. "The devil's advocate would be: These are literally the largest companies in the world that have an incredible amount of free cash flow, and so these are not two- or three-year plans, these are five- and 10-year plans, in which case I'm sure they've modeled out the risk of everything, from interest rates to other geopolitical issues," McPartland said."If you're committed for 10 years to spending tens or hundreds of billions, of course you don't want the cost of financing to go up, but maybe the answer is some short-term slowdowns, but no long-term change in strategic planning."Investors should stay exposed to AI but be more selective, Morgan Stanley analysts said Friday in a note to clients.Increased borrowing costs have led to an uptick in rotation across equities, exposing some weakness in AI-aligned companies, the analysts said. Still, AI earnings were "resilient," volatility is contained, and valuations support staying exposed to the sector. the note said."The recent adjustment does not look like a classic risk-off episode or a wholesale defensive rotation," Morgan Stanley said. "It is better characterized as a selective unwind of crowded AI-led momentum exposure, with higher yields providing an additional tailwind to value."The two main data center REITs -- Equinix (EQIX) and Digital Realty Trust (DLR) -- have been refinancing debt and financing their development at roughly the current level of interest rates for the last couple of years, Jeffrey Langbaum, senior REIT analyst for Bloomberg Intelligence, told.That's dented their earnings growth but hasn't deterred them because the returns they generate from the developments outpace the debt costs, he said. Equinix and Digital Realty didn't respond to requests for comment."The returns they are getting on their developments are well in excess of the costs of capital," he said. "My thesis is that even if overall demand shrinks, they should still be able to get their share because they're keeping the size of their development business at a manageable level and not getting out over their skis and trying to expand too far too fast."Equinix sales in the second quarter that ends on June 30 are pegged at $2.58 billion and adjusted funds from operations are estimated at $11.24 a share, according to estimates compiled by FactSet. If realized, that would be up from $2.26 billion and $9.91 a share, respectively, in Q2 2025.Digital Realty Trust revenue in the second quarter is projected by analysts in a FactSet survey at $1.65 billion, while adjusted funds from operations are seen at $1.80 a share. Sales in Q2 last year were reported at $1.49 billion and AFFO was $1.68 per share.Data-center REITs are seeing a tailwind from momentum behind artificial intelligence expansion, Wells Fargo Investment Institute analysts John Sheehan and Amanda Martinez said in a note to clients earlier this month.REITs have a diverse range of offerings including colocation, which allows for multiple users, from hyperscalers to smaller companies, at a single location and interconnection, which means lower-latency connections and better tenant retention, as "particularly notable features" of some data-center buildouts, the analysts said."We are favorable on the data-center REITs subsector as we believe it possesses durable growth prospects, attractive margins, and solid pricing power," Sheehan and Martinez said in their note. "We also view the sub-sector as an attractive route for gaining exposure to the AI theme within the real estate sector, particularly as AI use cases continue to expand and support sustained demand and pricing power."Academy's Tchir said he expects the 10-year Treasury yield to rise to 5% in the next few months, and that investors are rewarding AI capital spending."We're almost in what I call free money stage, where if you announce $10 billion to spend, your stock goes up $20 billion, so why wouldn't you announce spending?" he said. "We are so underinvested in data centers and AI that even if your project turns out not to be as good as you thought, it's still going to do well, because someone needs that compute right now, and for the foreseeable future."Matthew Leising and Tim WeatherheadPrice: $383.20, Change: $-4.46, Percent Change: -1.15%

$AMZN$CRWV$DLR$EQIX$GOOG$GOOGL$MSFT$NBIS
Rising US Borrowing Costs Won't Slow Massive AI Data-Center Buildout as Potential Profit Outweighs Spending
US Markets

Rising US Borrowing Costs Won't Slow Massive AI Data-Center Buildout as Potential Profit Outweighs Spending

Rising interest rates won't stop companies such as Alphabet's (GOOG, GOOGL) Google, Amazon (AMZN) and Microsoft (MSFT) from spending enormous amounts of money to build artificial intelligence data centers because the potential profit far outweighs slightly higher borrowing costs, according to industry analysts.The yield on benchmark 10-year US Treasuries rose to 4.58% on Thursday from 3.96% on Feb. 26 as investors worry that rising inflation could prevent the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates. Earlier this week, the rate reached its highest level since January 2025. That affects borrowing costs for AI hyperscalers that are on track to spend $800 billion in capital expenditures this year and an additional $1 trillion next year.Rates will rise and inflation will remain a concern as the war in Iran will keep oil above $80 a barrel until February, Peter Tchir, head of macro strategies at Academy Securities, said in an interview with. Still, the expected revenue gain from AI products and services is at this point outweighing concerns that rising rates will dampen the data-center buildout, benefiting companies in and adjacent to the AI space including real estate investment trusts, he said."Right now, the profitability of these data centers and AI, and the perceived profitability, just means that they're not really going to be constrained by 50 or 100 basis points in yield," Tchir said. "These are fairly large bets that this is going to work, and it's going to work in a huge scale, in which case borrowing at 5%, 7% or 9% will turn out kind of trivial."It costs $45 billion to $50 billion to build out 1 gigawatt of data-center capacity, said Mandeep Singh, global head of technology research at Bloomberg Intelligence. SpaceX revealed in its initial public offering prospectus this week that it's renting one of its data centers to Anthropic for $1.25 billion a month, or about $15 billion a year."If it costs $50 billion to build an AI data center, and you're able to generate up to $15 billion in revenue in year one, then it takes three and a half years to get your investment back, and then obviously you'll make returns from year four onward," Singh said in an interview.Analysts agreed that benchmark borrowing costs will continue to rise this year."The bond market is a little bit freaked out, we're seeing inflation and risk in the current environment putting a lot of pressure on longer duration Treasury yields to get to very high levels," Elizabeth Templeton, senior product manager for fixed-income indexes at Morningstar, said in an interview. "Seeing the 30-year yield at 5.1% this week, the highest since 2007, is certainly an indication that there's some worry in the markets right now around inflation. That could certainly continue to impact the 10-year the rest of this year."Smaller AI companies including CoreWeave (CRWV) and Nebius (NBIS) could be affected more by the rise in borrowing costs than hyperscalers Amazon, Google and Microsoft, Bloomberg's Singh said. Those companies and others have already sold $300 billion in debt to fund their AI investments this year, according to Bloomberg News. CoreWeave and Nebius didn't respond to a request for comment.Still, the scale of AI borrowing is so large that it can't be ignored, said Kevin McPartland, an analyst at Crisil Coalition Greenwich. Debt deals that are already underway shouldn't be affected, he said."It doesn't take much of a move when you're talking about billions of dollars of financing to really change the economics," he said. "The devil's advocate would be: These are literally the largest companies in the world that have an incredible amount of free cash flow, and so these are not two- or three-year plans, these are five- and 10-year plans, in which case I'm sure they've modeled out the risk of everything, from interest rates to other geopolitical issues," McPartland said."If you're committed for 10 years to spending tens or hundreds of billions, of course you don't want the cost of financing to go up, but maybe the answer is some short-term slowdowns, but no long-term change in strategic planning."The two main data center REITs -- Equinix (EQIX) and Digital Realty Trust (DLR) -- have been refinancing debt and financing their development at roughly the current level of interest rates for the last couple of years, Jeffrey Langbaum, senior REIT analyst for Bloomberg Intelligence, told.That's dented their earnings growth but hasn't deterred them because the returns they generate from the developments outpace the debt costs, he said. Equinix and Digital Realty didn't respond to requests for comment."The returns they are getting on their developments are well in excess of the costs of capital," he said. "My thesis is that even if overall demand shrinks, they should still be able to get their share because they're keeping the size of their development business at a manageable level and not getting out over their skis and trying to expand too far too fast."Equinix sales in the second quarter that ends on June 30 are pegged at $2.58 billion and adjusted funds from operations are estimated at $11.24 a share, according to estimates compiled by FactSet. If realized, that would be up from $2.26 billion and $9.91 a share, respectively, in Q2 2025.Digital Realty Trust revenue in the second quarter is projected by analysts in a FactSet survey at $1.65 billion, while adjusted funds from operations are seen at $1.80 a share. Sales in Q2 last year were reported at $1.49 billion and AFFO was $1.68 per share.Data-center REITs are seeing a tailwind from momentum behind artificial intelligence expansion, Wells Fargo Investment Institute analysts John Sheehan and Amanda Martinez said in a note to clients earlier this month.REITs have a diverse range of offerings including colocation, which allows for multiple users, from hyperscalers to smaller companies, at a single location and interconnection, which means lower-latency connections and better tenant retention, as "particularly notable features" of some data-center buildouts, the analysts said."We are favorable on the data-center REITs subsector as we believe it possesses durable growth prospects, attractive margins, and solid pricing power," Sheehan and Martinez said in their note. "We also view the sub-sector as an attractive route for gaining exposure to the AI theme within the real estate sector, particularly as AI use cases continue to expand and support sustained demand and pricing power."Academy's Tchir said he expects the 10-year Treasury yield to rise to 5% in the next few months, and that investors are rewarding AI capital spending."We're almost in what I call free money stage, where if you announce $10 billion to spend, your stock goes up $20 billion, so why wouldn't you announce spending?" he said. "We are so underinvested in data centers and AI that even if your project turns out not to be as good as you thought, it's still going to do well, because someone needs that compute right now, and for the foreseeable future."Matthew Leising and Tim WeatherheadPrice: $386.34, Change: $-1.32, Percent Change: -0.34%

$AMZN$CRWV$DLR$EQIX$GOOG$GOOGL$MSFT$NBIS
Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Rise Late Afternoon

Tech stocks were higher late Thursday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) increasing 0.6% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) adding 1.9%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index was up 0.9%.In corporate news, Meta Platforms (META) reached an agreement with the Breathitt County School District to settle a lawsuit alleging that addiction to top social media platforms has upended learning and forced public schools to spend large amounts of resources fighting a mental health crisis, Bloomberg reported. A Meta spokesperson toldvia email that the company has resolved this case amicably. Meta shares rose 0.3%.Nvidia (NVDA) reported fiscal Q1 revenue above Wall Street's estimates as data center sales outperformed expectations amid an AI boom. Its shares still declined 1.5%.Intuit's (INTU) stock plunged 20%. The financial technology platform late Wednesday reported better-than-expected fiscal third-quarter results and disclosed plans to reduce its workforce by about 17%.SpaceX (SPCX) filed an S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday for an initial public offering. Separately, SpaceX entered into cloud-computing agreements to provide Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic access to its server infrastructure, SpaceX said in a regulatory filing. Amazon shares rose 1.5%.

$AMZN$INTU$META$NVDA
Wire

Market Chatter: OpenAI Generates $5.7 Billion Q1 Revenue, $1 Billion More Than Anthropic

Microsoft-backed (MSFT) OpenAI generated revenue of about $5.7 billion in Q1, almost $1 billion more than its rival, Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic during the same period, The Information reported Thursday, citing two people with knowledge of the financials.OpenAI and Anthropic didn't immediately reply to requests for comment from.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)Price: $419.04, Change: $-2.02, Percent Change: -0.48%

$AMZN$MSFT
Wire

Market Chatter: Amazon-Backed Anthropic Faces Risks of Being Replaced as Pentagon Tests Rival AI Models

Amazon (AMZN)-backed Anthropic faces risks of being replaced as the Pentagon started testing rival artificial intelligence models in March to find alternatives to Claude, Bloomberg reported Thursday, citing a defense official.The tests began days after the US Defense Secretary designated Anthropic a supply-chain risk due to the company's insistence on safeguards for its technology, according to the report.The rival AI models are being assessed in a digital platform separate from Maven Smart System, the official told the media outlet.The Pentagon seeks to provide military operators access to multiple AI models, the official reportedly said.Anthropic did not immediately respond to a request for comment from.(Market Chatter news is derived from conversations with market professionals globally. This information is believed to be from reliable sources but may include rumor and speculation. Accuracy is not guaranteed.)Price: $268.78, Change: $+3.77, Percent Change: +1.42%

$AMZN
Wire

OpenAI Generates $5.7 Billion in Q1 Revenue, $1 Billion More Than Anthropic, The Information Reports

OpenAI Generates $5.7 Billion in Q1 Revenue, $1 Billion More Than Anthropic, The Information Reports

$AMZN$MSFT
Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Advance Thursday Afternoon

Tech stocks were higher Thursday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) increasing 0.3% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) adding 1.9%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index was up 0.4%.In corporate news, IBM (IBM), GlobalFoundries (GFS) and D-Wave Quantum (QBTS) said they are set to receive billions of dollars in US government backing as part of an effort by the Trump administration to solidify the nation's lead in quantum computing. IBM shares jumped past 8%, GlobalFoundries surged 13%, and D-Wave soared 28%.Nvidia (NVDA) reported fiscal Q1 revenue above Wall Street's estimates as data center sales outperformed expectations amid an AI boom. Its shares still declined 1.6%.SpaceX (SPCX) filed an S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday for an initial public offering. Separately, SpaceX entered into cloud-computing agreements to provide Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic access to its server infrastructure, SpaceX said in a regulatory filing. Amazon shares rose 1.6%.

$AMZN$GFS$IBM$NVDA$QBTS
Wire

Netskope Integrates With Claude's Compliance API

Netskope (NTSK) said Thursday it has integrated with Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic's Claude's Compliance application programming interface, API, enabling organizations to connect Claude Enterprise directly into the AI security features of Netskope One platform.By surfacing Claude activity within the Netskope One Platform, the company said organizations can govern Claude using the same risk frameworks, data loss prevention profiles, and compliance controls they already operate, without additional overhead.Netskope said all customers will have a private preview of the integration in June.Shares of Netskope were down 1.4% in Thursday trading.Price: $11.59, Change: $-0.16, Percent Change: -1.36%

$AMZN$NTSK
Wire

Top Midday Stories: Supreme Leader Says Enriched Uranium Must Stay in Iran; Nvidia Q1 Earnings, Q2 Guidance Top Estimates, But Shares Fall

All three major US stock indexes were down and oil prices were up after Iran's supreme leader issued a directive ordering that Iran's near-weapons-grade uranium must stay in the country, Reuters reported, citing two senior Iranian sources.In company news, Nvidia (NVDA) reported fiscal Q1 adjusted earnings late Wednesday of $1.87 per diluted share, up from $0.78 a year earlier and above the FactSet consensus analyst estimate of $1.75. Fiscal Q1 revenue was $81.6 billion, up from $44.1 billion a year ago and above the FactSet consensus of $78.9 billion. For fiscal Q2, the company said it expects revenue of $91 billion, plus or minus 2%, above the FactSet consensus of $87.23 billion. The company also said it authorized an additional $80 billion share repurchase plan, and it raised its quarterly dividend to $0.25 per share from $0.01. Nvidia shares were down 1.8% around midday.Walmart (WMT) reported fiscal Q1 adjusted earnings Thursday of $0.66 per diluted share, up from $0.61 a year earlier and equal to the FactSet consensus. Fiscal Q1 revenue was $177.75 billion, up from $165.61 billion a year ago and above the FactSet consensus of $174.84 billion. For fiscal Q2, the company said it expects adjusted EPS of $0.72 to $0.74, below the FactSet consensus of $0.75. Fiscal Q2 net sales are expected to increase by 4% to 5%, the company said. Walmart shares were down 7.4%.IBM (IBM), GlobalFoundries (GFS) and D-Wave Quantum (QBTS) said they are set to receive billions of dollars in US government backing as part of an effort by the Trump administration to solidify the nation's lead in quantum computing. IBM said it signed an LOI with the Commerce Department to launch Anderon, the US' first pure-play quantum chip foundry backed by $1 billion in CHIPS and Science Act funding. GlobalFoundries said it plans to build a domestic quantum manufacturing ecosystem with $375 million in proposed funding, while D-Wave said it secured a proposed $100 million award under the CHIPS and Science Act. Shares of IBM, GlobalFoundries and D-Wave were up 7.3%, 11.0% and 25.2%, respectively.SpaceX (SPCX) filed an S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission late Wednesday for an initial public offering. Separately, SpaceX entered into cloud-computing agreements to provide Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic access to its server infrastructure, SpaceX said in a regulatory filing. Amazon shares were down 0.1%.Stellantis (STLA) said Thursday it's launching a 60-billion-euro ($69.7 billion), five-year plan to accelerate growth and increase profits. The plan, called FaSTLAne 2030, seeks to debut more than 60 new vehicles and 50 "significant refreshes" by 2030, the company said. Stellantis shares were down 2.3%.Intuit (INTU) reported fiscal Q3 adjusted earnings late Wednesday of $12.80 per diluted share, up from $11.65 a year earlier and above the FactSet consensus of $12.57. Fiscal Q3 revenue was $8.56 billion, up from $7.75 billion a year ago and above the FactSet consensus of $8.54 billion. For fiscal Q4, the company said it expects adjusted EPS of $3.56 to $3.62 on revenue growth of 11% to 12%. Analysts polled by FactSet expect adjusted EPS of $3.14. For fiscal 2026, Intuit said it expects adjusted EPS of $23.80 to $23.85, up from its previous guidance of $22.98 to $23.18 and above the FactSet consensus of $23.22. Fiscal 2026 revenue is expected to be between $21.34 billion and $21.37 billion, above the FactSet consensus of $21.24 billion. The company said it expects to incur $300 million to 340 million in restructuring charges from its plan to cut its full-time workforce by 17%, primarily in fiscal Q4. Intuit shares were down 19.7%.Anthropic is in talks to rent servers powered by artificial intelligence server chips designed by Microsoft (MSFT), The Information reported Thursday, citing two people who spoke to executives involved in the discussion. Microsoft shares were down 0.3%.Price: $218.96, Change: $-4.51, Percent Change: -2.02%

$AMZN$GFS$IBM$INTU$MSFT$NVDA$QBTS$SPCX$STLA$WMT
Wire

Anthropic, Blackstone-Backed Firm Acquires Fractional AI

The AI enterprise services firm backed by Blackstone (BX), Amazon-backed (AMZN) Anthropic, Hellman & Friedman and others said Thursday it has acquired Fractional AI, a San Francisco-based AI services company.Financial details of the acquisition were not provided.Fractional AI's team and capabilities will be the founding operational centerpiece of the new and still unnamed company, according to a statement.Price: $263.26, Change: $-1.75, Percent Change: -0.66%

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Insider Trading

Amazon Insider Sold Shares Worth $3,013,973, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Matthew S Garman, CEO, Amazon Web Services, on May 15, 2026, sold 11,475 shares in Amazon (AMZN) for $3,013,973. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Garman has control over a total of 12,318 common shares of the company, with 11,430 shares held directly and 888 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1018724/000202481326000006/xslF345X05/wk-form4_1779225197.xml

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