Trending Market News
Data center developer Related Digital is nearing completion of $16 billion in financing to build a massive Oracle data center in Michigan's Saline Township that will power applications for OpenAI. The deal, expected to close this month, reflects Big Tech's massive investments in AI infrastructure as companies race to develop advanced artificial intelligence capabilities.
- Blackstone's equity contribution is nearly $2 billion, about half the amount originally considered, while Bank of America leads $14 billion in debt financing now structured as a bond offering rather than a construction loan
- The project is part of the Stargate initiative announced in October by OpenAI, Oracle, and Related Digital to build a data center campus exceeding 1 gigawatt capacity
- The financing comes amid a broader trend of Big Tech companies investing billions into AI infrastructure to support development of technology capable of matching or surpassing human intelligence
Eli Lilly CEO Dave Ricks opposes the White House's effort to codify 'Most Favored Nations' drug pricing into law, despite Lilly being among over a dozen pharmaceutical companies that signed voluntary MFN deals with the Trump administration. Ricks warns that congressional involvement could harm America's drug industry and future medical research.
- Lilly signed an MFN agreement last year to charge U.S. prices similar to other wealthy nations, expecting it would prevent legislative action on drug pricing
- The White House is now pushing Congress to codify elements of the voluntary deals into law, with draft text not yet publicly released
- Ricks stated Lilly will use 'all the tools we have to combat bad policy,' expressing concern that the congressional process could threaten new medicine development and U.S. pharmaceutical research capabilities
SpaceX will host an analyst day on April 21st and has filed confidentially for an initial public offering that is expected to be the largest IPO on record. The company will also offer analysts a visit to its 'Macrohard' xAI datacenter in Memphis two days after the analyst day.
- SpaceX has filed confidentially for an IPO that sources indicate could be the largest IPO on record
- The analyst day is scheduled for April 21st, with a datacenter tour planned for April 23rd in Memphis, Tennessee
- The company will showcase its 'Macrohard' xAI datacenter facility as part of the analyst presentations
Franklin Templeton has agreed to acquire crypto investment firm 250 Digital, which will join its newly established Franklin Crypto unit to expand actively managed digital asset offerings for institutional clients. The deal, expected to close in Q2, will be paid partly using BENJI tokens representing its blockchain-based money market fund. This move reflects a broader institutional shift toward sophisticated active crypto strategies as passive products like bitcoin ETFs mature.
- The acquisition will be paid in part with BENJI tokens, digital securities representing Franklin's OnChain U.S. Government Money Fund, marking an innovative use of tokenized assets in M&A
- Franklin Templeton manages $1.8 billion in global digital assets and aims to join a small group of asset managers with dedicated institutional-grade crypto investment teams
- The deal comes as bitcoin has fallen 41% over six months and 21% year-to-date, though institutional appetite continues growing with steady bitcoin ETF inflows replacing retail momentum
Pfizer and BioNTech have halted a large U.S. clinical trial of their updated COVID-19 vaccine for adults aged 50-64 due to insufficient enrollment. The companies cited slow recruitment rather than safety concerns, with the trial falling short of its 25,000-30,000 participant target. The pause reflects challenges from stricter FDA trial requirements implemented in 2024 and declining COVID vaccine uptake in the United States.
- The FDA introduced stricter trial requirements in 2024, including large placebo-controlled trials for the 50-64 age group, and no COVID vaccines have been approved for that demographic since
- Pfizer stopped surveillance for COVID illness among study participants after April 3, with enrollment having closed on March 6 following review of epidemiological trends
- The decision reflects broader industry challenges with weak U.S. vaccine uptake and pushback from the current administration
The FDA approved Eli Lilly's once-daily GLP-1 weight loss pill called Foundayo, marking a major milestone as the company enters competition with Novo Nordisk's oral option. The pill will ship starting Monday through LillyDirect with pricing between $149-$349 for cash-paying customers and $25 for insured patients with coupons. While less effective than Lilly's injectable Zepbound, Foundayo offers convenience and easier global scalability.
- Foundayo showed 12.4% average weight loss compared to Zepbound's 20%+ results, but can be taken anytime without restrictions (unlike Novo's Wegovy pill which requires morning dosing on empty stomach)
- Analysts project Foundayo sales of $14.79 billion by 2030, compared to $24.68 billion for Zepbound and $44.87 billion for Mounjaro
- Lilly expects approval in 40+ countries within a year and has invested over $55 billion in manufacturing since 2020; Medicare patients will access the drug for $50/month starting this summer
Amazon's cloud computing facility in Bahrain suffered damage from an Iranian strike, according to the Financial Times. The attack follows Iran's Revolutionary Guards threatening U.S. tech companies in the Middle East in retaliation for attacks on Iran. This marks the second disruption to Amazon Web Services operations in Bahrain within a month due to the ongoing Middle East conflict.
- Bahrain's Interior Ministry confirmed civil defense teams extinguished a fire at a company facility following what authorities described as an Iranian attack, though specific details on casualties and damage extent were not immediately provided
- The strike came one day after Iran's Revolutionary Guards threatened U.S. companies including Microsoft, Google, and Apple operating in the Middle East
- AWS is Amazon's main profit driver and critical infrastructure for many major websites and government operations, making disruptions particularly significant
U.S. crude oil inventories increased by 5.5 million barrels to 461.6 million barrels in the week ending March 27, significantly exceeding analyst expectations of an 814,000-barrel rise, according to the Energy Information Administration. Gasoline and distillate stocks both declined during the same period. Oil futures extended losses following the report, with Brent trading at $101.85 and WTI at $99.32 per barrel.
- Crude stocks rose 5.5 million barrels versus expectations for only 814,000 barrels, with Cushing hub inventories up 520,000 barrels
- Gasoline inventories fell 0.6 million barrels to 240.9 million barrels, less than the expected 1.9 million-barrel draw
- Distillate stockpiles dropped 2.1 million barrels to 117.8 million barrels, exceeding the forecasted 0.6 million-barrel decline, while refinery utilization fell 0.8 percentage points
Toymaker Hasbro is investigating a cybersecurity incident after detecting unauthorized access to its network on March 28, 2025. The company has taken some systems offline and implemented temporary measures to continue order processing and product shipments while working with third-party cybersecurity professionals to address the breach.
- Unauthorized network access was identified on March 28, prompting an immediate investigation with external cybersecurity experts
- Hasbro took affected systems offline as a precautionary measure in response to the breach
- The company implemented temporary operational measures to maintain business continuity for order fulfillment and shipping
ADP reported that U.S. private sector employment increased by 62,000 jobs in March, exceeding the Dow Jones consensus estimate of 39,000. The gains were heavily concentrated in education and health services (58,000 jobs) and construction (30,000 jobs), while trade, transportation and utilities shed 58,000 positions.
- Small businesses (fewer than 50 employees) drove hiring with 85,000 jobs added, while medium and large firms reduced headcount by 20,000 and 4,000 respectively
- Wage growth remained at 4.5% for workers staying in their current positions, while job changers saw 6.6% wage increases, up 0.3 percentage points from February
- The report precedes Friday's BLS nonfarm payrolls release, which is forecast to show 59,000 jobs added after February's reported loss of 92,000
As Apple marks its 50th anniversary, the tech giant faces critical challenges including AI strategy uncertainty, succession planning for CEO Tim Cook, and geopolitical tensions with China. The company's stock is down nearly 7% in 2026, underperforming the S&P 500, while it has fallen to second place behind Nvidia in market valuation after years of dominance.
- Succession question looms as CEO Tim Cook, 65, reportedly tells peers he's tired, with hardware chief John Ternus emerging as a potential successor to lead through turbulent AI transformation
- China revenue fell 11% over two years to $64.4 billion, though latest quarter showed 38% rebound; Apple has paid over billions in tariffs and faces pressure to diversify manufacturing beyond China to India and Vietnam
- Apple lacks clear AI leadership compared to rivals spending heavily on infrastructure, with Siri lagging competitors; company announced partnership with Google to power AI features including forthcoming Siri upgrade
Keurig Dr Pepper has appointed Rafael Oliveira, current CEO of JDE Peet's, as chief executive of its coffee operating unit as part of its $18 billion all-cash acquisition of the Dutch coffee and tea company announced in August. The combined entity will be split into two publicly traded U.S. companies—one for coffee and one for beverages—with the separation expected by year-end.
- Oliveira will lead the future coffee company following the planned separation, replacing the original candidate Sudhanshu Priyadarshi who left to become Mattel's CFO in November
- The $18 billion acquisition aims to help Keurig compete with industry leader Nestle and address high commodity costs
- Tim Cofer, Keurig's current chief, will become CEO of the future beverage company after the split
Meg O'Neill began as BP's new CEO on April 1, pledging consistency and accelerated performance as the oil major refocuses on oil and gas after abandoning renewable energy investments. She is BP's fourth CEO since 2020, its first external hire in over a century, and the first woman to lead a top-five oil major.
- BP has suspended share buybacks to prioritize debt reduction, targeting net debt of $14-18 billion by 2027 from current $22 billion, while pledging to divest $20 billion in assets
- O'Neill joins amid pressure from activist investor Elliott Investment Management, which has criticized BP's operational underperformance and pushed for portfolio reshaping
- The company has cut billions from planned renewable initiatives and pivoted strategy firmly back to oil and gas under new leadership including Chairman Albert Manifold
Tesla's new car registrations in France more than tripled in March 2026, reaching 9,569 vehicles—a 203% year-over-year increase and near its all-time high from December 2023. The surge signals a European sales recovery for the EV maker after it lost nearly half its market value in 2024, driven by new cheaper versions of Model Y and Model 3 launched late last year.
- March registrations of 9,569 vehicles were just below Tesla's all-time French record of 9,572 set in December 2023
- First-quarter 2026 registrations in France jumped 108% to 13,945 cars, accelerating from February's recovery
- The rebound follows Tesla's introduction of cheaper Model Y and Model 3 versions in the U.S. and Europe in late 2025
Australia's competition regulator granted interim approval for Qantas and American Airlines to continue their trans-Pacific partnership covering routes between Australia, New Zealand and North America. The carriers applied in November 2025 to extend their joint business agreement for five years, allowing coordination on fares, schedules, and inventory. A final determination is expected in June.
- The partnership covers trans-Pacific routes linking Australia and New Zealand with the U.S., Canada, and Mexico
- Under the agreement, the airlines coordinate on fares, schedules, inventory and related arrangements, with authorization sought for a five-year period
- The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) expects to issue a final determination in June after reviewing the application submitted November 24, 2025
Apple celebrates its 50th anniversary on Wednesday, having grown from a garage startup in 1976 to a tech giant with expected annual revenue of $465 billion. While the company has shaped the tech industry through innovations like the iPhone and integrated hardware-software ecosystems, it now faces pressure to compete in artificial intelligence, where rivals like Alphabet and Microsoft have taken early leads.
- Apple's stock is the second-worst performer among the 'Magnificent Seven' tech companies since ChatGPT's November 2022 launch, with analysts citing delays in AI features like a revamped Siri.
- The company expects $465 billion in revenue for fiscal year ending September 2026, driven by strong iPhone 17 demand and the $599 MacBook Neo, its cheapest laptop ever.
- Apple's services business (App Store, Apple Music, streaming) has become a major growth driver, providing steady subscription income from its expanding device base, though sparking disputes with companies like Epic Games over in-app payment control.
Anthropic accidentally leaked part of the internal source code for its coding assistant Claude Code due to a release packaging error caused by human error. The company confirmed no sensitive customer data or credentials were exposed, but the leak could provide competitors and developers insight into how the viral coding tool was built. This marks Anthropic's second major data incident in under a week.
- Claude Code has achieved significant commercial success with run-rate revenue exceeding $2.5 billion as of February 2026
- A post linking to Anthropic's leaked code accumulated over 21 million views, amplifying exposure of the internal source code
- This is Anthropic's second data blunder in less than a week, following the recent discovery of descriptions of upcoming AI models and other documents in a publicly accessible data cache
A federal judge ruled that Elon Musk must face a class action lawsuit over his delayed disclosure of a Twitter stake in 2022. Investors claim Musk violated SEC rules by waiting 11 days past the required deadline to disclose his 5% stake, allowing him to save over $200 million while causing losses to shareholders who sold at lower prices. The class action status exposes Musk to potentially greater damages than individual lawsuits would.
- Investors led by Oklahoma Firefighters Pension claim Musk saved more than $200 million by delaying disclosure while they sold Twitter shares at artificially low prices
- Judge Andrew Carter rejected Musk's argument that investors could not prove reliance on his fraud, citing the presumption that misrepresentations affected Twitter's stock price
- The case is separate from other Musk legal battles, including an SEC lawsuit over the same disclosure issue where settlement talks are reportedly underway
Nike reported third-quarter revenue of $11.28 billion, beating Wall Street estimates that predicted a 0.3% decline. The sportswear giant's performance was driven by turnaround efforts under CEO Elliott Hill, including tighter discount controls and new product launches, despite challenging consumer conditions and weak demand in China.
- Revenue remained flat year-over-year at $11.28 billion versus analyst expectations of $11.24 billion, representing a modest beat against predicted decline
- CEO Elliott Hill, appointed in October 2024, is leading a reset after years of heavy discounting, excess inventory, and uneven demand in key markets
- Nike continues facing headwinds from stagnant labor markets, rising credit card debt, and intensified competition in China from local rivals like Anta and Li Ning
Amazon settled charges with the National Labor Relations Board over allegations it retaliated against striking workers by illegally docking unpaid time off (UPT). The settlement will restore UPT to over 100 employees and requires Amazon to post notices at all 1,300 U.S. facilities informing workers of their right to organize, though Amazon denies any wrongdoing.
- Amazon illegally deducted unpaid time off from employees who participated in strikes, pushing some workers' UPT balances into negative territory and risking termination
- More than 100 employees will have their UPT restored, and Amazon agreed not to terminate or discriminate against workers who exceeded UPT limits due to strike participation
- The Teamsters union, which organized a December 2024 strike at seven Amazon delivery hubs and claims to represent nearly 10,000 Amazon workers, filed the charges leading to this settlement