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November 04, 2025

Stocks sell off as tech falls and investors question frothy valuations

The S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, and Russell 2000 sank as stocks got speed checked amid various factors, including a selloff in Palantir despite an objectively stellar quarter for the software giant, vague warnings from the CEOs of Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley about a broader pullback, and a filing showing that Michael Burry of “The Big Short” fame has bet that Nvidia and Palantir will tumble. Tech was the worst-performing sector ETF.

Stocks that moved higher:

  • iHeartMedia surged on reports that Netflix wants its video podcasts in an attempt to compete with YouTube in the streaming wars.
  • Apple is designing a new sub-$1,000 Mac laptop to challenge Google Chromebooks.

Stocks that moved lower:

  • The negative reaction to Palantir’s positive earnings spread to smaller, volatile segments of the market also beloved by the retail community like fuel cell company Bloom Energy; no-revenues nuclear company Oklo; neoclouds Nebius and CoreWeave; quantum stocks like D-Wave Quantum, Rigetti, IonQ, and Quantum Computing; and other story stocks like SoundHound AI, Rocket Lab, and Opendoor Technologies.
  • Uber fell after reporting solid earnings but mixed guidance, with its Q4 adjusted EBITDA outlook falling short of estimates. In their earnings call today, the company said markets where it has autonomous vehicles are outperforming markets without them.
  • Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, American Airlines, and Southwest Airlines sank after Transportation Secretary Duffy said parts of US airspace could close if the government shutdown continues.
  • Spotify dipped as investors digested the streaming giant’s Q3 earnings, in which the company reported that it added more than 70 million monthly active users, posted revenues that were up 7% from last year, and improved profitability.
  • Hims & Hers dropped after reporting third-quarter earnings results yesterday that missed Wall Street estimates but revenue that blew expectations out of the water.
  • Pfizer ticked lower after reporting an earnings beat as the company is embroiled in the middle of a bid-off for obesity biotech Metsera.
  • Starbucks dipped following news it is selling control of its China business for $4 billion.

In crypto news, Bitcoin hit its lowest price since June and meme coins like Shiba inu, cats in a dogs world, pepe, popcat, Pnut, Bonk, dogecoin, dogwifhat, Floki, and Moo Deng faced a steep meltdown amid a broad market decline.

Nintendo’s Switch 2 sales are outpacing the original Switch by ~2x

Nintendo reported its second-quarter earnings today.

Read more.

Thieves are targeting “Pokémon” cards in robberies since they’ve skyrocketed in value

Gotta steal ’em all.

Read more.

POST-MARKET
MOVE

Charles Liang CEO of Super Micro (Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) 

Super Micro tumbles after reporting disappointing results, boosts full-year sales outlook

Super Micro Computer just released results for its fiscal Q1, the three months ended September 30, and they’re a top- and bottom-line miss — but with very strong sales guidance for the current quarter and a boost to the full-year outlook.

Shares are sinking in after-hours trading.

Read more.

  • Amazon, which is developing AI shopping agents, doesn’t want Perplexity’s AI shopping agents on its site
    AI shopping agent for me and not for thee!
  • Anthropic projections for 2028: Up to $70 billion in revenue, could be profitable by 2027
    The startup’s success in selling its Claude API service to enterprise customers is fueling its acceleration.
  • Norway’s wealth fund, Tesla’s sixth-largest institutional investor, votes against Musk’s pay package
    Norges Bank Investment Management said it voted against the $1 trillion pay package, making it the first major investor to disclose its decision.
  • Getty Images suffers partial defeat in UK lawsuit against Stability AI
    The decision was narrow and raised calls for updated copyright laws in the UK. 
  • Fermi secures preliminary approval for a low-emissions natural gas plant to meet AI power demands
    Power is the bottleneck, and Fermi’s getting closer to relieving some of it.
 

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