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Your Evening Briefing

October 14, 2025

Stocks lose steam after trade tensions reignite

US stocks spent most of the session bouncing back from steep early losses before careening back into the red late in the day after President Donald Trump posted that the he was considering "terminating business with China having to do with Cooking Oil, and other elements of Trade, as retribution" for "purposefully not buying our Soybeans."

Tech was the worst-performing sector ETF, dragging down the Nasdaq-100. The Russell 2000 still managed to notch a new record close as small caps climbed higher.

Earnings season kicked off with big banks reporting generally positive results, with Wells Fargo and Citi rising. Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan fell, despite Q3 revenue and earnings beats.

Stocks that moved higher:

  • Advanced Micro Devices jumped after Oracle said it will deploy 50,000 AMD AI chips in its data centers starting in the second half of 2026.
  • US airlines took off with JetBlue, Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and Southwest Airlines trading higher as oil prices sank amid trade tensions between the US and China.
  • Gaming platform Roblox rose following a price target hike from Jefferies to $130 from $126.
  • Tiny chip firm Navitas Semiconductor spiked after management unveiled products “purpose-built for Nvidia’s 800 VDC AI factory architecture, delivering breakthrough efficiency, power density, and performance.”
  • Small stocks in the critical and rare earth minerals sector continued to rip, as MP Materials, United States Antimony Corp., Critical Metals, and American Battery Technology Co. climbed higher.

Stocks that moved lower:

  • Data center stocks got knocked back due to exposure to risks of the China-US trade war. For instance, while most of the switches and routers Arista Networks sells are made in Malaysia, Vietnam, and Mexico, it also gets some products directly from China. The company is also reliant on supplies of some critical metals, exports of which China is clamping down on. Hard disk data storage makers Seagate Technology Holdings and Western Digital — also exposed to Asian supply chains — and server maker Dell fell.
  • Alibaba slipped following reports that its cloud unit will cut prices of select Elastic Compute Service products by up to 10.2% in overseas markets.
  • Japanese public company Metaplanet is the latest bitcoin treasury whose enterprise value has dropped below its bitcoin holdings.
  • Grindr fell after confirming that it’s in talks to go private for no less than $15 a share.

Gold and silver are the new meme stocks

Momentum. Flows. Options activity. Intense retail enthusiasm. It’s all there.

Read more.

The average price of a new vehicle in the US passed $50,000 for the first time ever in September

New vehicle prices climbed to more than $50,000 across the auto industry in September, according to Cox Automotive data.

Read more.

Amazon Prime now has 200 million shoppers in the US, up 6% from last year, according to new data from Consumer Intelligence Research Partners. Read more.

  • Sam Altman says OpenAI fixed ChatGPT’s serious mental health issues in just a month, others aren’t so sure
    Altman apologized to users for changes implemented to protect users suffering mental health crises, and promised to “treat adults like adults,” including allowing erotica. 
  • Smartphone upgrades grew for Apple and Samsung last quarter
    Q3 data captured about half a month of new iPhone sales.
  • Salesforce: AI customer service saves us $100 million per year
    Salesforce CEO Mark Benioff said the company saves $100 million per year by using AI for customer service, and 12,000 customers use its “Agentforce” AI tool. 
  • OpenAI to offer Walmart products for sale through ChatGPT
    OpenAI announced similar partnerships with Etsy and Shopify last month.
  • Investors in “waiting mode” as ethereum drops below $4,000, ETFs see $428.5 million in outflows
    Looking on-chain, stablecoin activity on ethereum crossed an all-time high of 1 million unique weekly stablecoin senders.
  • Meta says Instagram teen accounts will default to a PG-13 content limit
    Parents will have the ability to adjust controls, and Meta plans to use “age prediction technology” to catch kids lying about their age.  
 

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