Equity markets traded mostly lower Wednesday as investors began the second half of the calendar year. Technology names drove the weakness, particularly semiconductor companies following their recent strength.
Micron declined over 3% during premarket hours. Intel, Nvidia, and Marvell experienced similar declines.
Micron Technology, Inc., MU
Advanced Micro Devices slipped 1.5% following the previous session’s impressive 7.7% surge that pushed shares to an all-time closing high. The chipmaker’s valuation had climbed to $947 billion during Tuesday’s session.
The semiconductor weakness emerged as market participants locked in profits from recent rallies while monitoring remarks from recently confirmed Fed Chair Kevin Warsh at an international central banking conference.
Nike dropped 3% following the release of its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings after Tuesday’s closing bell. While the athletic apparel giant exceeded analyst estimates for both earnings and sales, the bar was set relatively low.
The company posted earnings of 72 cents per share. However, this figure incorporated a 52-cent boost related to anticipated tariff refunds, making the underlying performance more difficult to assess.
Sales declined 1% from the prior-year period to $11 billion. The Greater China segment outperformed expectations yet still contracted 12% versus the comparable quarter.
Management projected first-quarter revenue to decline in the low-to-mid single-digit range. CEO Elliott Hill emphasized the company’s commitment to executing its transformation strategy.
While semiconductors weakened, enterprise software names posted gains. ServiceNow advanced approximately 5%, Salesforce increased 3.4%, and Oracle moved 1.7% higher. This rotation between tech subsectors has occurred repeatedly throughout the year.
Bloom Energy surged 8% after revealing an expansion of its strategic alliance with Brookfield Asset Management. The capital commitment for artificial intelligence data center power infrastructure expanded from $5 billion to $25 billion, backed by Brookfield’s $100 billion AI Infrastructure Fund.
Alcoa declined more than 4% after unveiling plans to purchase aluminum production, bauxite mining, and alumina refining assets from Australia-based South32 for $4.1 billion. South32 shares rallied 9.7% in Australian trading.
Kroger retreated 3% following the announcement of a $1.65 billion agreement to acquire regional grocery operator Giant Eagle. The transaction includes 197 retail locations and 11 pharmacy operations throughout the Midwest region.
Agricultural sciences firm FMC climbed 6.4% after Belgium-based Tessenderlo disclosed plans for a $400 million minority stake investment.
Papa John’s fell 4% after appointing Chris Collins as interim chief financial officer, replacing Ravi Thanawala, who is departing for a CFO position at another publicly traded company.
Investors are also monitoring indirect negotiations between Washington and Tehran currently underway through intermediaries in Doha.
The post Wednesday’s Stock Market Winners and Losers: Semiconductor Retreat, Nike (NKE) Dips, Energy Play Soars appeared first on Blockonomi.


