A billion here, a trillion there, pretty soon it's going to start adding up to real money.
The tech market's take on an age-old Washington saying about the nature of political spending lays bare the sheer size of the market and its influence over all things in the global financial markets these days.
Advanced Micro Devices, the AI chip maker and early Nvidia challenger, will likely add $100 billion in equity value at the start of trading Wednesday, having topped Wall Street's earnings forecasts last night and issued a robust outlook tied to massive growth in its data center business.
Samsung Electronics, meanwhile, topped the $1 trillion threshold, in terms of market value, in overnight trading as the chip maker continues to ride that AI investment wave. The group is now worth more than Berkshire Hathaway, and is just a few ticks shy of topping Walmart.
Tech stocks, of course, drove the wider market to record highs on Tuesday, with Google parent Alphabet set to overtake Nvidia as the world's most valuable company over the coming days and both titans closing in on a $5 trillion market capitalization.
Those two companies, by themselves, would top the value of Shanghai Composite -- the world's biggest stock market outside the U.S.
The tech complex, including both the Magnificent Seven cohort of megacap stocks and the sundry chipmaking giants that orbit around them, are completely dominating market sentiment at present -- powering record gains for the Nasdaq on Wednesday and driving more than two-thirds of the post Iran war growth for the S&P 500.
"Before the Age of AI, economists were taught that there are only three factors of production: Land, Labor, and Capital," said stock market veteran Ed Yardeni. "Now, economists should recognize that there is a fourth factor of production: Data."
And there's a lot more than a trillion dollar's worth of that.
-- Martin Baccardax
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AMD's Rising Outlook Boosted by Flood of AI Spending
The expected flood of spending on artificial intelligence has lifted the outlook for Advanced Micro Devices, a competitor in the AI chip world to Nvidia. CEO Lisa Su said they have increasing confidence in their ability to deliver tens of billions of dollars of annual data center revenue in 2027.
-- Second-quarter revenue is projected to be $11.2 billion at the midpoint
of a range. On a conference call, management said server growth is
expected to meaningfully accelerate, and data center is now the primary
driver of revenue and earnings growth.
-- First-quarter sales in AMD's all-important data-center segment rose 57%,
to $5.8 billion. Overall first-quarter revenue rose 38% to $10.25 billion,
and results beat expectations. Su said they expect to exceed the long
term growth target of greater than 80% in the coming years.
-- Expectations for the chip maker have soared in recent years. When
OpenAI's ChapGPT lit the AI prairie fire in 2022, the standard kit for AI
computing was Nvidia chips and software -- its data center sales have
risen from $15 billion a year to $194 billion last year.
-- Nvidia gear remains the most prized, but companies have been looking to
diversify their supply chains. AMD is the only other major GPU maker in
the world, so it was natural for some of these Nvidia customers to turn
to AMD, despite Nvidia starting this race with a 15-year lead in AI
computing.
What's Next: AMD will start shipping on contracts with Meta Platforms and OpenAI in the second half of 2026. Su also spoke of the rise of CPUs in AI data centers, saying the total addressable market for the products would grow faster than expected -- by 35% a year to $120 billion by 2030.
-- Adam Levine and Liz Moyer
U.S. and Iran Near Peace Agreement, According to Report
The Trump administration believes it is nearing an agreement with Tehran on a preliminary deal to end the conflict, according to a report. It is preparing a memo with a framework for more detailed negotiations, Axios reported, citing U.S. officials. Oil prices fell first thing Wednesday.
-- After the U.S. Navy began escorting commercial vessels through the Strait
of Hormuz, President Donald Trump hit pause on the operation, having
cited progress in a deal with Iran. That was before the latest reports.
-- Trump said amid deal progress, the sides mutually agreed that while the
Navy's blockade of Iran's ports continues, "Project Freedom (The Movement
of Ships through the Strait of Hormuz) will be paused for a short period
of time" to see whether an agreement can be finalized and signed," he
said.
-- Crude prices cooled off Tuesday after surging on Monday as Iran fired
cruise missiles at American warships and sent drones toward civilian
ships.
-- Danish containership operator A.P. Moller-Maersk's Alliance Fairfax
vehicle carrier crossed the Strait of Hormuz with help from the U.S.
military. Only six ships crossed on Monday, and only one on Tuesday, down
from about 130 a day before the war, according to S&P Global Market
Intelligence.
What's Next: Kpler senior analyst Naveen Das told The Wall Street Journal that there still isn't the appetite in the shipping industry "to take the risk to go back in," adding that if a ship took that risk and got hit, the reputational fallout would be "huge."
-- Anita Hamilton, Janet H. Cho, and Liz Moyer
AI Models Face U.S. Review Before Release. What It Means.
The government has pledged to preview new artificial intelligence models from major tech companies before they are released. The work is being done through the Commerce Department's Center for AI Standards and Innovation, which has agreements with Alphabet, Microsoft, and xAI, now a part of SpaceX.
-- It's to help ensure safety and security. A prior collaboration included
OpenAI and Anthropic related to an action plan released by the Trump
administration in July 2025, aiming to accelerate innovation, promote
data center building, and uphold free speech in frontier [AI] models.
-- The reviews can't force changes. And the government should probably be
doing something to understand AI development. Anthropic was designated a
supply chain risk by the Defense Department in late February, effectively
barring it from doing government business and preventing defense
contractors from using Anthropic technology.
-- After the designation, Dean Ball, a former advisor to President Trump,
said the move made the administration the strictest de facto regulator of
AI technology on the planet. Anthropic has since announced Mythos, a tool
that can discover vulnerabilities in computer code. It chose not to
release Mythos widely.
-- Ball argued for a bipartisan approach to AI regulation, citing Mythos,
and saying in a New York Times guest essay Monday that "at a minimum,
Congress should mandate audits of AI developers' safety claims and
processes, requiring that they be conducted by independent expert bodies
overseen by the government."
What's Next: If regulation isn't done right, smaller players could lose out to larger companies that can afford to work with the government, stifling the innovation the Trump administration hopes to achieve. And if Democrats retake Congress this fall, regulation could become a bigger issue.
-- Al Root
SEC Proposes Allowing Companies to Ditch Quarterly Reports
President Trump and SEC Chair Paul Atkins have touted the benefits of less frequent financial reporting, saying it would save money, shift management to a longer term focus, and possibly encourage more companies to go public. That time is here, with a proposal to allow companies to report semiannually, instead.
-- It's unclear how many companies would eventually make the change, but
some investor groups are uneasy about the idea. Companies that report
semiannually would stop filing three 10-Q forms and an annual report and
instead file one new 10-S form and the annual report, the proposal says.
-- The SEC decades ago allowed companies to report twice a year but began to
require quarterly reports in 1970. The Investment Company Institute,
whose members include mutual funds, said any changes should balance
reducing unnecessary compliance burdens and preserving quality
disclosures.
-- Likewise, the Managed Funds Association, a trade group for hedge funds
and other asset managers says it shares the goal of reducing burdens on
public companies, but any changes "must balance that objective with the
needs of investors."
-- While Atkins says more companies might consider public listings, skeptics
of that view said the decline in initial public offerings in recent
decades has been driven mostly by the rise of large venture-capital firms
that can satisfy companies' funding needs.
What's Next: The SEC said it would officially publish the proposal in the Federal Register in the next few days, after which the public can comment on the rule for 60 days. Then the SEC will consider the comments and publish a final rule.
-- Joe Light and Janet H. Cho
Sandisk Joins $200 Billion Club Amid AI Boom
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May 06, 2026 06:43 ET (10:43 GMT)
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