Briefing.com Summary:
*Micron delivered blowout fiscal Q3 results and guidance that have reignited the AI trade
*WTI crude prices are below $70.00/bbl and trading at their lowest level since start of the Iran war
*A battery of economic data contained solid overtones for the U.S. economy.
Micron (MU) is the center of attention this morning after it reported blowout fiscal Q3 results and guidance following yesterday's close. Market participants should be playfully referring to the company today as "Macron," because its results were huge, along with its big-picture implications for the AI trade in general and the memory stocks specifically.
Shares of MU are up 18% in pre-market action; SanDisk (SNDK) is up 16%; Western Digital (WDC) is up 13%; and Seagate Technology (STX) is up 12%. Suffice to say, Samsung and SK Hynix also scored big gains, and chip equipment makers are on course for some big gains of their own.
The enthusiasm for Micron's report is the foundation for the gains in the equity futures market, which, arguably, aren't as robust as one might have expected to see given the magnitude of Micron's beat that, frankly, validated the run the stock has had.
Currently, the Nasdaq 100 futures are up 682 points and are trading "only" 2.5% above fair value. The S&P 500 futures are up 57 points and are trading 1.0% above fair value, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average futures are up 133 points and are trading 0.5% above fair value.
The limiting factor for the Nasdaq 100 futures is that most of the "Magnificent 7" stocks are lower, with NVIDIA (NVDA) being a primary exception.
One thing apparent in Micron's report and its massive gross margins is that customers are having to pay up to get what Micron is able to supply. That is terrific for Micron, but it may be causing some consternation about profit margins for the hyperscalers and just about any company needing high-bandwidth memory and DRAM.
Right on cue, Apple (AAPL) is announcing price hikes this morning for several iPad and Mac models due to rising prices and demand for memory chips.
Accordingly, the fruits of Micron's labor are flowing to Micron and its peers and away from others for the time being. That is a holdback provision of sorts for the broader market, which is nonetheless going to push higher at the open on the back of semiconductor stocks; oil prices dropping below $70.00/bbl; invigorating capital return plans from the likes of Goldman Sachs (GS), JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Morgan Stanley (MS), and Wells Fargo (WFC) following the Fed's stress test results; and a battery of economic data that had solid overtones for the U.S. economy.