DeepMarket: US Stocks Daily

2026-05-22:NVDA's $80B Buyback Signals Peak Hardware Growth, While SpaceX's Fast-Track IPO Threatens to Drain $80B in Passive Liquidity

6 min · 22 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 2026-05-22:NVDA's $80B Buyback Signals Peak Hardware Growth, While SpaceX's Fast-Track IPO Threatens to Drain $80B in Passive Liquidity

Descripción

Nvidia just posted an $81.6 billion revenue quarter, so why did the market focus on an $80 billion buyback instead of the AI boom? And why could SpaceX’s planned $1.75 trillion IPO quietly force nearly $23.7 billion of passive buying while draining liquidity from today’s tech giants? In this episode, DeepMarket follows the less obvious trail: Walmart’s shrinking basket sizes, Kevin Warsh’s hawkish Fed regime, sticky 3.8% inflation, and a bond chart that refuses to confirm the obvious macro fear. The biggest reveal may be that the market is not reacting to one headline, but to a subtle shift in liquidity, maturity, and consumer stress. Full report: https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-05-22

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61 episodios

Portada del episodio 2026-06-29:Memory is the New SaaS: $100B in "Take-or-Pay" Contracts Re-Rates AI Infrastructure While Passive Rebalancing Distorts the Tape

2026-06-29:Memory is the New SaaS: $100B in "Take-or-Pay" Contracts Re-Rates AI Infrastructure While Passive Rebalancing Distorts the Tape

A 24% Comcast surge, a $100 billion Micron contract book, and a market rally that may be more short-covering than conviction. This episode asks whether memory chips are quietly becoming the new enterprise software, backed by take-or-pay AI infrastructure deals that could change how Wall Street values the entire sector. But there’s a catch: the charts are not fully buying the story yet. Nvidia’s Indonesia AI buildout points to sovereign demand beyond U.S. hyperscalers, while Apple faces a margin squeeze from rising DRAM and NAND costs. Beneath it all sits a strange tape: fragile geopolitical relief, overheated tech ETF premiums, and a $334 billion Russell rebalancing hangover. The market looks calmer, but the mechanics underneath are anything but simple. https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-06-29

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio 2026-06-26:The AI Capex Cannibalization: Micron’s 85% Margins Just Triggered Apple’s Worst Day Since 2025

2026-06-26:The AI Capex Cannibalization: Micron’s 85% Margins Just Triggered Apple’s Worst Day Since 2025

The AI trade just revealed its sharper edge. Micron’s nearly 85% gross margin looks like a triumph for memory chips, but it may also be the bill landing on Apple’s desk. Why did Apple suffer its worst single-day drop since April 2025 just as AI infrastructure names surged? Why is Microsoft under pressure, even as Michael Burry quietly reaches out to 2028 with long-dated calls? And why are banks, of all places, suddenly looking like a rotation refuge after the Fed’s stress test? In this episode, we unpack the strange new market math: AI winners, consumer-tech squeeze, storage scarcity, and the technical levels that suggest this may not be a simple selloff. Full report: https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-06-26

26 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio 2026-06-25:The HBM Supply Squeeze is Overpowering a Hawkish Fed, But AI's 'Napster Moment' Threatens the Software Stack

2026-06-25:The HBM Supply Squeeze is Overpowering a Hawkish Fed, But AI's 'Napster Moment' Threatens the Software Stack

A memory-chip company just guided to fifty billion dollars in quarterly revenue and software-like margins, while the Fed may still be preparing to tighten the screws. Beneath the calm index tape, a stranger story is unfolding: Micron looks like the king of scarce AI hardware, Qualcomm flashes a surprisingly bearish technical setup, and Alibaba faces allegations that could turn model distillation into a national-security market event. Meanwhile, Hertz is wrestling with collapsing used EV values, and homebuilders are squeezing higher even as housing data weakens. Is this an AI infrastructure boom, a software moat crisis, or both at once? The market is giving clues, but not all in the same direction. Full report: https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-06-25

25 de jun de 20266 min
Portada del episodio 2026-06-24:The Commoditization of Compute: What SpaceX’s $6.3B Landlord Deal and Cerebras’ Margin Collapse Tell Us About the AI Bubble

2026-06-24:The Commoditization of Compute: What SpaceX’s $6.3B Landlord Deal and Cerebras’ Margin Collapse Tell Us About the AI Bubble

A $6.3 billion SpaceX compute deal sounds like the next great AI infrastructure story, until the chart quietly disagrees. Cerebras nearly doubled revenue, yet its margin guide forced Wall Street to ask the uncomfortable question nobody wanted to say out loud: what if AI hardware is becoming a low-margin landlord business? In this episode, we unpack why the Nasdaq's two percent slide may be less about panic and more about repricing, how leveraged semiconductor products overseas helped shake Micron, why Qualcomm's smart Modular move still faces a bearish tape, and how one DeepMind defection may have rattled Alphabet's AI premium. The twist is subtle but powerful: AI may still be real, while the old valuation story breaks. Read the full report: https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-06-24

24 de jun de 20266 min
Portada del episodio 2026-06-23:AI Capex Capitulation: How SpaceX's Sovereign-Sized Debt Binge Broke the Asian Hardware Trade

2026-06-23:AI Capex Capitulation: How SpaceX's Sovereign-Sized Debt Binge Broke the Asian Hardware Trade

A two trillion dollar space giant raises twenty billion in debt, and suddenly the AI boom has a very different soundtrack. In this episode, DeepMarket follows the thread from SpaceX’s sixteen percent slide to a nearly ten percent KOSPI collapse, from Micron’s sold-out HBM story to Apollo’s five percent redemption gate. Is this the first real crack in the AI capex machine, or just a painful reset in a market that ran too far, too fast? The twist: not every signal is bearish. SpaceX looks oversold, Micron still has momentum, and KKR refuses to fit the contagion script. But with the ten-year yield pinned near four point four eight percent, the cost of capital is quietly rewriting the rules. Full report: https://deepmarket.report/en/report/us_stocks/2026-06-23

23 de jun de 20265 min