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Pre-market futures are widely mixed at this hour, following a one-day purge yesterday from all-time highs the day before. Without making too much of this near-term jostling, we can acknowledge that, without fresh narratives with which to update investors this morning, this looks a bit like profit-taking, at least on the tech-heavy Nasdaq.
BroadcomAVGO reported fiscal Q2 earnings yesterday after the closing bell, and despite topping Zacks consensus estimates on both earnings ($2.44 per share versus $2.40 estimated) and revenues (+0.68% to $22.19 billion), shares are down -15% ahead of today’s open. Revenues grew +48% year over year on AI chip demand, but muted guidance left investors wanting, at least compared to other AI tech plays. Also, shares of AVGO had risen +39% year to date, so selling the news appears to be at least part of the narrative here, as well.
Cybersecurity major CrowdStrikeCRWD also reported earnings yesterday afternoon, demonstrating strong growth in demand but showing signs of tapering off slightly when comparing guidance to the quarterly numbers. All this is by way of explaining why the Nasdaq has sold off -300 points this morning, while the Dow looks to benefit from this equity rotation. The blue-chip index is up +500 points at this hour, following a -600-point selloff yesterday.
Jobless Claims Reach +225K 1st Time in 4 Months
Meanwhile, Thursday morning Weekly Jobless Claims are showing the highest bump in Initial Jobless Claims since the first week of February: +225K. This is still historically consistent with a good labor market, but notably above the sub-200K levels we’d seen only six weeks ago or so. This morning’s tally is roughly +10K higher than expectations, and an increase from the downwardly revised +212K new claims from the previous week.
Continuing Claims, published a week in arrears from initial claims, remained at its sub-1.8 million trough where it has been since mid-April at 1.78 million. This is down from the narrowly adjusted 1.785 million the previous week. Again, nothing to worry about from an historical perspective; unless/until this metric creeps back up toward 2 million — which we last saw in November of 2021, post-Covid — we can assume no meaningful headwinds to near-term labor numbers.
Q1 Productivity Drops to +0.3% on Final Print
The final look at Q1 Productivity ratcheted down by half a percentage point this morning to +0.3%, the lowest output for U.S. Productivity since -0.9% was reported in Q1 of last year. Sequentially, we’re currently seeing a slowdown from +1.6% in Q4 of 2025 and +5.2% in Q3 of last year (which was a 5-year high), and hope for a rebound in Q2.
Unit Labor Costs is the other side of this report, and here the downward revision is more welcome news for those concerned with inflation making its presence felt: +1.8% is down half a point from the +2.3% previously posted and the final +2.1% from Q4’25. We expect developments in data center buildouts for AI, the Chips Act construction continuing and other areas of productivity to right this ship to a certain extent in the coming quarters; time will tell.
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Citizens Financial’s focus on BSO plans, strategic and efficiency initiatives, and inorganic growth moves aid its financials. A solid liquidity position enables sustainable capital distributions.
Improved premium income and underwriting margin, growth in average invested assets, non-competitive market, robust cash flow, capital deployment measures drive growth for Globe Life.
Carpenter Technology will gain from strong demand in its markets, cost-cutting initiatives and efforts to preserve liquidity. Acquisitions and investing in additive manufacturing will also aid growth.
Automation, launch of new products and services, development of proprietary software and expanding global client base will support Interactive Brokers’ recurring commissions and interest income.
Liberty Global is benefiting from a profitability turnaround, improving broadband momentum, strategic value-unlock initiatives and strong liquidity, positioning the company for sustained growth.
Diversified services, rising infrastructure and an outsourcing mix, improving transaction activity, embedded development value and disciplined capital returns support the ongoing CBRE Group’s results.
Competitive office markets, development and lease-up execution, asset sale dilution and elevated leverage can limit near-term upside for cash flows in the case of Highwoods Properties.
Lamb Weston faces a tough backdrop with weak restaurant traffic, pricing pressure, and soft margins as cost headwinds and customer support measures weigh on near-term profitability.
Titanium Technologies faces headwinds from falling prices and near-term operational disruptions. APM ails from weak demand. The company's high debt level is a concern.
Persistently mounting expenses due to investments in franchises are likely to hurt Blackstone’s bottom-line growth. The sustainability of the company's capital distribution actions is less.
Tariffs and promotions limit margin recovery, digital remains unsettled, and Greater China, sportswear and Converse resets extend NIKE’s revenue volatility in the near term.
Integer Holdings’ operation in a highly regulated healthcare industry and a stiff competitive space is a major headwind. Other issues like dependence on third-party suppliers and customers persist.
Foodservice and international growth, disciplined pricing and brand-led innovation support earnings, while portfolio actions and productivity enhance resilience over time.
Broadcom is a leading player in the semiconductor market based on its expanding product portfolio, multiple target markets, accretive acquisitions and strong cash flow.
Alibaba benefits from its dominant e-commerce ecosystem, expanding cloud and AI businesses, improving international operations, and strong financial flexibility that supports long-term growth.
Align Technology’s robust product line, balanced growth across all channels and consistent focus on international markets to drive growth bolster our confidence in the stock.
AbbVie’s Skyrizi and Rinvoq, are performing extremely well, bolstered by approval in new indications, which should support top-line growth in the next few years.