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Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $7,452,943, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Brian M Venturo, Director, Chief Strategy Officer, on June 10, 2026, sold 76,924 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $7,452,943. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Venturo has control over a total of 362,471 Class A common shares of the company, with 174,605 shares held directly and 187,866 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000281/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $5,964,512, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Nitin Agrawal, Chief Financial Officer, on June 11, 2026, sold 63,891 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $5,964,512. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Agrawal has control over a total of 426,057 Class A common shares of the company, with 252,200 shares held directly and 173,857 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000280/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $30,425,973, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Michael N Intrator, 10% Owner, Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, on June 09, 2026, sold 307,692 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $30,425,973. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Intrator has control over a total of 3,676,815 Class A common shares of the company, with 3,676,815 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000279/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Wire

CoreWeave Prices $1.25 Billion, 2 Billion Euro Senior Notes

CoreWeave (CRWV) said Thursday it priced a private offering of $1.25 billion aggregate principal amount of 9.625% senior notes due 2032 and 2 billion euros ($2.31 billion) aggregate principal amount of 8.500% senior notes due 2032.The notes will mature on July 15, 2032, and the offering is expected to close on June 18.CoreWeave said it intends to use the proceeds from the offering for general corporate purposes.Price: $93.29, Change: $-2.32, Percent Change: -2.43%

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $19,807,534, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Brannin McBee, Chief Development Officer, on June 08, 2026, sold 194,500 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $19,807,534. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, McBee has control over a total of 312,352 Class A common shares of the company, with 258,852 shares held directly and 53,500 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000274/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Sectors

Sector Update: Tech Stocks Fall Tuesday Afternoon

Tech stocks were sharply lower Tuesday afternoon, with the State Street Technology Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLK) falling 3.5% and the State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF (XSD) dropping 6%.The Philadelphia Semiconductor index slumped 4.7%.In sector news, OpenAI has confidentially filed for a potential initial public offering in the US, joining a series of mega-cap listings that could mark the largest capital-raising cycle on record. Last week, AI chatbot Claude maker Anthropic confidentially filed to go public in the US. Elon Musk-led SpaceX is looking to raise a record-breaking $75 billion in its IPO, and could be valued at $1.75 trillion, Reuters reported earlier this month.In corporate news, Apple (AAPL) on Monday unveiled major software updates at its Worldwide Developers Conference, including Siri AI and the next generation of Apple Intelligence. Separately, Apple said Tuesday users in the EU will not have access to Siri AI on iOS 27 and iPadOS 27 when the software launches later this year because of requirements under the bloc's Digital Markets Act. Apple shares fell 3.8%.SailPoint (SAIL) on Tuesday issued a fiscal Q2 revenue outlook indicating a sequential growth slowdown, while the cybersecurity company left its full-year profit guidance unchanged. Its shares dropped 11%.CoreWeave (CRWV) will hold calls Tuesday with high-yield investors in Europe about potential dollar and euro bond sales, Bloomberg reported. CoreWeave shares dropped 5.4%.

$AAPL$CRWV$SAIL
Wire

Top Midday Stories: GSK to Acquire Nuvalent for $10.6 Billion in Cash; Apple Introduces Siri AI, But EU Launch to be Delayed

The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite were down in late-morning trading Tuesday, as a recent surge in chip stocks lost momentum.In company news, GSK (GSK) said it signed a definitive agreement Tuesday to acquire Nuvalent (NUVL) for $10.6 billion in cash. The transaction includes a tender offer of $124 per share for all outstanding common stock, as GSK looks to expand its pipeline of lung cancer therapies, the company said. GSK shares were up 0.7% around midday, while those of Nuvalent were up 38.9%.Apple (AAPL) on Monday unveiled major software updates at its Worldwide Developers Conference, including Siri AI and the next generation of Apple Intelligence. Siri AI is deeply integrated across iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch and Vision Pro, the company said. The tech giant also introduced new parental controls and redesigned Screen Time, allowing parents to set age-appropriate protections, daily app time limits and communication safety features. Apple users in the European Union will not have Siri AI access on iOS 27 and iPadOS 27 when it launches due to requirements under the Digital Markets Act, the company said. Apple remains unable to reach an agreement with EU regulators on a framework that would let Siri AI launch on iPhone and iPad while adhering to privacy and security standards, it said. Apple shares were down 3.3%.Broadcom (AVGO) said Tuesday it is launching the AI XPV Platform alongside Apollo Global Management (APO) and Blackstone's (BX) Credit & Insurance Business to facilitate over 20 gigawatts in compute capacity for leading AI labs, including Anthropic and OpenAI, through 2028. The platform, which will use Broadcom's XPUs and networking solutions, launches Tuesday with an initial $35 billion tranche led by Apollo in partnership with Blackstone. Broadcom shares were down 4.0%, while Apollo and Blackstone shares were up 1.7% and 2.8%, respectively.CoreWeave (CRWV) will hold calls Tuesday with high-yield investors in Europe about potential dollar and euro bond sales, Bloomberg reported, citing a person familiar with the matter. The AI infrastructure provider has appointed JPMorgan Chase (JPM) to arrange the calls, the report said, citing the person. CoreWeave shares were down 4.7%.JPMorgan Chase plans to launch AI agents later this year that are capable of working autonomously for far longer than current versions, CNBC reported Tuesday, citing an interview with Chief Analytics Officer Derek Waldron. JPMorgan shares were down 0.6%.Price: $51.01, Change: $+0.37, Percent Change: +0.73%

$AAPL$APO$AVGO$BX$CRWV$GSK$JPM
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,730,905, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Brian M Venturo, Director, Chief Strategy Officer, on June 03, 2026, sold 15,385 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $1,730,905. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Venturo has control over a total of 187,866 Class A common shares of the company, with 187,866 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000266/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $13,052,191, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Brian M Venturo, Director, Chief Strategy Officer, on June 03, 2026, sold 116,013 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $13,052,191. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Venturo has control over a total of 174,605 Class A common shares of the company, with 174,605 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000265/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $37,654,872, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Michael N Intrator, 10% Owner, Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, on June 02, 2026, sold 307,692 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $37,654,872. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Intrator has control over a total of 3,876,815 Class A common shares of the company, with 3,876,815 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000264/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Research

BNP Paribas Initiates CoreWeave at Outperform With $192 Price Target

CoreWeave (CRWV) has an average rating of overweight and mean price target of $140.15, according to analysts polled by FactSet.(covers equity, commodity and economic research from major banks and research firms in North America, Asia and Europe. Research providers may contact us here: https://www..com/contact-us)

$CRWV
Wire

Market Chatter: CoreWeave-Linked Data Center Developer Seeks $850 Million Junk Bond Financing

CoreWeave (CRWV) is linked to a data center project in the Chicago area that developer Elk Grove Village Property plans to finance with an $850 million junk-bond sale, Bloomberg reported Monday, citing a person with direct knowledge of the matter.The "build-to-suit hyperscale data center" is fully leased to CoreWeave for 15 years, with renewal options, and represents about $2.2 billion in revenue under the lease, the report said, adding that Banco Santander (SAN) is managing the bond sale.CoreWeave, Elk Grove Village Property, and Banco Santander didn't immediately reply to' request for comments.Shares of CoreWeave were up more than 12% in Monday afternoon trading.(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: $122.89, Change: $+13.36, Percent Change: +12.20%

$CRWV$SAN
Asia Markets

Tentative US-Iran Ceasefire Extension Agreement Nudges US Equity Futures Higher Pre-Bell

US equity futures edged higher pre-bell Friday as traders monitored developments on the peace negotiations between US and Iran, with the two countries reportedly agreeing on a memorandum of understanding to extend the ceasefire by 60 days.Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were 0.3% higher, S&P 500 futures were up 0.1%, and Nasdaq futures were flat.The memorandum still has to be approved by President Donald Trump, and Iran has not yet given a response to the latest version. Vice President JD Vance said the talks are making progress but still ongoing, while Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed that the negotiation teams have been "going back and forth."Iran reportedly fired missiles at unidentified targets on Thursday while the Pentagon said Iran had launched a ballistic missile towards Kuwait and deployed attack drones in the Strait of Hormuz.Traders also digested the latest round of earnings, with Costco Wholesale (COST) posting higher fiscal Q3 earnings and revenue late Thursday.Oil prices were lower, with front-month global benchmark North Sea Brent crude down 1.7% at $91.14 per barrel and US West Texas Intermediate crude 1.5% lower at $87.58 per barrel.The US advance international trade in goods deficit narrowed to $82.40 billion in April from $85.27 billion in March, according to data released by the US Census Bureau.The Chicago purchasing managers index for May, due at 9:45 am ET, is seen coming in at 50.3, up from its prior value of 49.2.Federal Reserve Vice Chair Michelle Bowman, Philadelphia Fed President Anna Paulson, and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly are slated to speak on Friday.In other world markets, Japan's Nikkei closed 2.5% higher, Hong Kong's Hang Seng ended 0.7% higher, and China's Shanghai Composite finished 0.7% lower. Meanwhile, the UK's FTSE 100 was up 0.2%, and Germany's DAX index was flat in Europe's early afternoon session.In equities, Dell Technologies (DELL) shares were up 33% after the company reported higher fiscal Q1 non-GAAP net income and revenue that surpassed analysts' consensus. IBM (IBM) stock was 4.4% higher after the company said in a filing that it plans to invest more than $10 billion over the next five years to support quantum computing development. CoreWeave (CRWV) shares rose 1.4% after the company said it launched new agentic artificial intelligence capabilities designed to connect AI model training and inference in a continuous feedback loop to improve performance over time.On the losing side, Autodesk (ADSK) shares were down 6.6% after multiple analyst price target cuts, including those by RBC and BMO Capital. JD.com (JD) stock was 1.1% lower after the European Commission said it launched an in-depth investigation over the company's proposed acquisition of Ceconomy due to concerns that foreign subsidies may have distorted the deal process.

Dow JonesNasdaq CompositeS&P 500$ADSK$COST$CRWV$DELL$IBM$JD
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $106,346,361, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Jack D Cogen, Director, on May 26, 2026, sold 986,540 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $106,346,361. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Cogen has control over a total of 14,343,056 Class A common shares of the company, with 261,140 shares held directly and 14,081,916 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000253/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,245,045, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Karen Boone, Director, on May 26, 2026, sold 11,580 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $1,245,045. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Boone has control over a total of 7,300 Class A common shares of the company, with 7,300 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000252/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $32,843,315, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Michael N Intrator, 10% Owner, Director, Chief Executive Officer and President, on May 26, 2026, sold 307,693 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $32,843,315. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Intrator has control over a total of 4,076,815 Class A common shares of the company, with 4,076,815 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000254/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $1,421,586, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Chen Goldberg, Executive Vice President, Product & Engineering, on May 20, 2026, sold 14,168 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $1,421,586. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Goldberg has control over a total of 64,909 Class A common shares of the company, with 64,909 shares held directly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000241/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
Insider Trading

CoreWeave Insider Sold Shares Worth $8,363,967, According to a Recent SEC Filing

Brian M Venturo, Director, Chief Strategy Officer, on May 20, 2026, sold 82,811 shares in CoreWeave (CRWV) for $8,363,967. Following the Form 4 filing with the SEC, Venturo has control over a total of 416,945 Class A common shares of the company, with 229,079 shares held directly and 187,866 controlled indirectly.SEC Filing:https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1769628/000176962826000246/xslF345X05/form4.xml

$CRWV
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

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