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Stocks stumbled early, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq pulling back as a mix of tech‑specific concerns and higher oil prices weighed on sentiment.
A report highlighting softer‑than‑expected momentum at OpenAI spooked investors, while rising crude kept inflation worries simmering.
According to a Wall Street Journal report, OpenAI has recently fallen short of its own targets for revenue and new‑user growth.
The report also noted that CFO Sarah Friar raised concerns internally about whether the company could meet future computing contract obligations if top‑line growth doesn’t accelerate. That was enough to hit the tech complex hard.
Chip stocks and AI‑related names led the retreat. Nvidia dropped more than 3%, Broadcom slid over 4%, and AMD, Intel, and Oracle all fell roughly 4% as well.
The timing couldn’t be worse, with earnings season hitting full stride. Five of the Magnificent Seven are set to report this week, including Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft on Wednesday, followed by Apple on Thursday.
Today’s weakness followed a strong Monday, when both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at record highs.
Those gains already had cracks forming as peace talks between the U.S. and Iran appeared to stall.
Still, there was at least a flicker of optimism after the White House confirmed discussions around Iran’s proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz if the war ends and the U.S. lifts its blockade.
Even so, it was a rough session across the board. Every sector except oil finished lower, with red dominating the tape. Metals, Bitcoin, and even traditionally defensive value ETFs took a hit.
It’s a strange setup when stocks hover near record highs while bonds and oil are clearly signaling stress.
Bond yields pushed higher as rate‑cut expectations faded, with markets now pricing just a one‑in‑six chance of a single 25‑basis‑point cut.
The dollar chopped around but ended slightly higher. Gold took a beating, and Bitcoin followed suit, sliding toward $76,000 after topping nearly $89,000 just a day earlier.
With earnings, geopolitics, and rates all pulling in different directions, the big question is: which signal will markets ultimately decide to listen to?
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