Saturday, June 13, 2026

Saturday, June 13, 2026

Good morning. TMT tape is soft pre-market — tech futures lower, GS TMT Momentum just printed -875BPS ON FRIDAY (one of the largest daily pullbacks recently), and NVDA IS DOWN 8 OF 10 SESSIONS even as it crosses 20% OF TSMC REVENUE at record highs. Positioning has decoupled from the supply story. That's the tape.

Asia: KOSPI AND TAIWAN BID OVERNIGHT — SK Hynix and Samsung rallying after Goldman's outsized memory raises (SK Hynix 2028 op profit +24% to KRW 454TN, Samsung +23% to KRW 610TN). HBM visibility now extends two years out. TSMC steady into GTC Taipei.

Three frames for the day:

ONE — memory bottleneck formalized. Goldman's 21-24% raises through 2028 is sell-side conviction the HBM cycle extends. SK Hynix is the cleanest read; Samsung has more DRAM/NAND/foundry mix. Bottleneck doesn't rotate until 2H26/1H27 HBM4 ramp — elongation threshold not approaching.

TWO — power/grid is the next rotation, and SoftBank just pre-funded it. €75B / 5GW FRANCE PROGRAM with Schneider Electric anchoring the build at Dunkirk. First public 5GW European DC at scale. Nuclear-adjacent siting is the only European path that adds GW inside the AI build window. VRT/Schneider/GFS read-through.

THREE — architecture inflections stacking. NVDA N1X arm-based PC chip revealed at GTC Taipei (zero-sum for Intel/AMD share on CPU). Intel 18A going captive — strategic customers only (Apple/Google/NVDA/AWS). Vera Rubin pushing NVDA past 20% of TSMC means Apple/AMD/MediaTek wafer allocation shrinks. Distribution event, not sizing.

Consumer collateral damage now quantified too — PC OEM/ODM 2H26 UNITS -15-18% YoY, DRAM/SSD CONTRACTS +200-300% since mid-2025. AI capex is measurably cannibalizing the consumer chain. Not a chain killer, but a clear mix shift.

We'll hit up NVDA, MU, and VRT first, then get to memory and DC power/cooling.


CORE ANALYSIS

ORCL

THE VERDICT

Beat and fall. The print itself was clean — EPS $2.11 vs $1.96 Street, OCI accelerating to 92% CC (from 81%), RPO up $85B sequentially. But the market doesn't care about the beat, it cares about the FY27 capex guide of $90-95B against a $61.2B consensus — and the fact that mgmt didn't lift the $90B FY27 revenue target to back it up. Stock's at $176-180 area, -15% on the week, -42% from the $345 52w high. The dilution/funding question is now THE question. Bulls own the RPO and the AI demand. Bears own the tape.

THE QUARTER AT A GLANCE

Metric Print YoY vs Street
Revenue $19.2B +21% (+20% CC) +1ppt beat
OCI $5.8B +93% (+92% CC) in line / slight beat
Cloud total n/a +47% (+46% CC) MISSED ~48%
SaaS n/a +9% CC MISSED 12% est
CPU/GPU infra $4.8B +119% big beat
Multicloud DBaaS n/a +404% (bookings +325%)
EPS (non-GAAP) $2.11 +24% beat by $0.15
Op margin 44.8% +YoY (first time in 5 Qs) +140bps vs 43.3% est
Gross margin 66.3% -500bps YoY
RPO $638B +363% YoY beat $601B est
Capex (Q) $16.5B 86% of rev well above $11.8B est
GPU utilization 97.5%

STREET VIEW

PT range: $190 (RBC) to $400 (Guggenheim). Cluster sits roughly $250-275. Consensus implies solid upside off the post-print low, but skew matters — Guggenheim is the obvious outlier on the high side and a $400 PT is hard to square with the funding overhang.

PT actions: most firms kept targets unchanged. Six raised, two cut, rest reiterated. The two meaningful cuts were both capex/funding-driven:

  • Wedbush: $240 from $275 (-$35), kept Outperform
  • Scotiabank: $241 from $290 (-$49), kept Sector Outperform
  • Bernstein, Barclays, BMO, DA Davidson, Piper, Wolfe all nudged up $5-10 — token raises

BULL VS BEAR

BULL — The demand is real and the bookings are the receipts. RPO up $85B sequentially and +363% YoY, with $67B of that AI infrastructure contracts in a single quarter. Four deals of $8B+. BYOH + prepaid structures now $75B of the RPO, which means the customer is paying for the chips. GPU utilization at 97.5% — they're selling everything they can build. OCI growth ACCELERATED, didn't decelerate. Mgmt confirmed FY27-28 as peak capex years, which means the funding ask is finite. Operating margin expanded YoY for the first time in five quarters. New CFO Maxson delivered a clean first print. October 28 analyst day at AI World is the next catalyst. Net capex of ~$70B "appears below investor expectations" per Barclays.

"Oracle delivered another quarter showing execution toward its fiscal 2030 targets with no major issues or obscured data points." — Bernstein
"The growth outlook remains unchanged or improved while the return profile is likely increasing." — Barclays

Guggenheim kept Best Idea status and framed the multi-year lens explicitly.

BEAR — Show me the revenue. Capex guide came in ~50% above consensus and mgmt didn't raise revenue. That's the entire problem in one line. $40B of incremental debt/equity — including a $20B ATM that hasn't been tapped — means dilution is on the table. Stock is -42% from high, so the market's already pricing in some of the pain, but the absolute level of capital intensity (86% of revenue) is hard to defend. SaaS is decelerating to +9% CC. Gross margins are getting crushed (-500 to -1000bps depending on the model). And the RPO is increasingly BYOH, which inflates the headline number — ORCL books the contract but the customer owns the chips, so it's not pure ORCL demand.

"The capital expenditure results and guidance present tough optics and support bear concerns about poor returns as Oracle transforms into a capital-intensive business." — Oppenheimer
"Adding more debt to the capital structure is not favored by investors and creates tension between remaining performance obligations and the necessary capital raises and AI datacenter buildout in the near term." — Wedbush
"Expectations were likely set for a stronger beat-and-raise given the recent share performance. Moving parts around the fiscal 2027 guidance and capital expenditure plans may weigh on shares." — Baird

WHAT'S NEW VS WHAT WAS KNOWN

New: FY27 capex guide ($90-95B gross, $70B net) — nobody had this. RPO acceleration to +363% from +325% prior Q. New CFO Maxson's first call handled without drama. Mgmt quantified FY27-28 as peak capex dollar years. $75B BYOH/prepaid portion of RPO disclosed. 1GW going live in FQ1 FY27 alone (vs 1.2GW total in all of FY26) — that's a massive build cadence.

Already known: AI demand strength, OCI share gains, $90B FY27 revenue target reaffirmed (not raised), the secular capex supercycle theme. The build-out itself isn't a surprise — the magnitude is.

KEY DATES

  • October 28, 2026 — Oracle Analyst Day in conjunction with AI World. This is the real catalyst. Watch for: (1) FY28 capex guide / path down from peak, (2) infrastructure GM trajectory toward 30-40% range, (3) any color on the debt vs equity mix for the $40B raise, (4) updated FY30 targets.

READ-THROUGH

ORCL is the most leveraged single name to the AI infrastructure capex cycle, and the print forces a question for the whole complex: is the demand-side of the neocloud thesis intact, or are we watching capex outrun revenue?

If ORCL is right — if RPO converts, if OCI hits the ~115% growth implied by the $90B guide, if 1GW of new capacity fills at 97.5% utilization — then MSFT, AMZN, GOOG are all in the right place too, and the hyperscaler capex narrative gets reinforced. If ORCL is wrong and the $40B raise becomes $60B+ in 12 months, it's ORCL-specific pain but it bleeds into the neocloud cohort (CRDO, NBIS, any other GPU-as-a-service names trading on the same thesis).

The cleaner read is the funding structure itself: BYOH deals and customer prepayments ($20-25B) effectively make the customer the equity partner. If that model scales, ORCL's capex line is less scary than the headline. If customers pull back on prepayments because financing tightens, the whole structure wobbles.

Tape positioning matters here. -42% from high in a name most PMs were probably overweight on. Trade, don't invest, until Oct 28.


DDOG

THE VERDICT

Street walked out of DASH 2026 unanimously constructive — 5 firms lifted PTs in two days, customer intent data is inflecting, and the AI observability narrative is the realest it's been. But this is a 92% YTD winner with an $81B mcap and director selling at $243-277. Trade's working. Question is how much TAM expansion is left to price.

THE STREET

PT cluster post-DASH: $250-295, with Stifel the bull ($305) and Cantor the holdouts ($226, still OW). Wolfe leads the new high-PT cohort at $295 (raised from $245). Benchmark, TD Cowen, Piper, Canaccord, RBC all in the $250-275 range. Street range $129-320 but the low end looks stale. Consensus Buy across the board.

Stifel top, Cantor bottom — median call ~$265-270 against $231 spot. That's ~15% upside on PT alone before any multiple expansion.

WHAT'S NEW — DASH 2026

100+ product launches. AI/security announcements +36% YoY (Stifel). Wolfe's 100-customer survey is the cleanest data point we got — and the money line is this:
"82% expect to grow their Datadog consumption over the next 12 months, up from 75% last year. 25% plan to spend significantly more, compared with 12% previously." — Wolfe Research

The "spend significantly more" cohort DOUBLED. That's a leading indicator, not a backward-looking survey.

AI observability data +30x YoY. 59% of customers plan to add AI Ops, 64% intend to adopt Bits SRE. TD Cowen called out Bits specifically — now 5 GA products starting to generate revenue, with LLM Observability getting "high budget priority" from attendees. Cantor confirmed via SI partner conversations: DDOG is selling observability INTO AI complexity while embedding AI INTO observability. Both vectors firing.

BULL VS BEAR

Bull case: Platform expansion is the story, not just monitoring. Wolfe framed it explicitly:

"Datadog's expansion beyond monitoring tools into an operating system." — Wolfe Research

Agent governance, AI security, GPU monitoring, LLM obs are net-new vectors. 30% LTM growth, 80% gross margins, customer intent inflecting. Consolidation winner thesis — if observability budgets get pulled together under fewer vendors, DDOG's 100-launch catalog is the reason it wins that consolidation. Enterprises modernizing legacy + building AI agents = double tailwind.

Bear case: $81B mcap on 92% YTD. InvestingPro flags it as overvalued at current levels. Director Matthew Jacobson dumped 38,594 shares at $243-277 (not chump change). The 100 launches are impressive but the ratio of "announced" to "revenue-generating" is the open question — mgt has a habit of padding the launch count. Splunk (now Cisco, with massive distribution), Dynatrace, Grafana Labs, and the hyperscalers' native tools (CloudWatch, Azure Monitor) all have data AND relationships. Multiple already expanded toward 25x sales on the run-up. Customer survey is intent, not dollars.

PEER READ

Observability trade is fully on. DT is the direct comp — if DDOG rerates, DT follows. MDB's Atlas search and SNOW's observability modules are adjacent. Real debate across the group: is AI workload monitoring a NEW TAM or does it just get slurped from existing observability budgets? Wolfe survey says expansion (the 25% significantly-more cohort is incremental). Bears say substitution. DASH feedback from partners and customers leaned expansion. Bullish group-level read if you're playing the theme.

POSITIONING

Stock $231, off highs but the AI observability narrative is intact. Longs justified by the flow (5 firms lifted, customer data inflecting, 30x AI obs YoY), but r/r is tighter than 3 months ago. Need a pullback to add — chasing 92% YTD into DASH echoes is asking for it. Shorts fighting a $295-305 wall of street PTs and inflecting customer data — not a great setup either. Neutral-to-modestly-long bias, sell strength into the post-DASH echo, buy weakness if it comes.

Watching: Bits SRE and LLM Observability attach rates next quarter, NRR (needs to stay >110%), FY guide trajectory at next print, and whether insider sales continue.


ZS

Conference in the rearview, stock STILL pinned near lows ($122, down 58% Y/Y, 52-wk low $114.62), and three of three analysts we cover held Buy/Outperform ratings post-Zenith Live. But the PT cluster tells you nobody's certain where this lands — Cantor high at $225, Wolfe low at $150 after a $33 cut today. Skew's still positive (62% upside to median PT) but the gap is wide and the easy money hasn't been made.

"Mythos is driving more urgency than COVID, more security budget, and more demand for ZPA as customers hide their applications behind Zscaler." — Wolfe Research, 50-customer floor survey at Zenith

That line is the whole bull case in one sentence. Wolfe CUT PT by 18% AND still thinks the AI security story is real after surveying 50 customers in person. Read into that what you will.

THE ZENITH READ

Consensus out of the conference: agentic security is the new narrative, but fundamentals still anchored to ZIA/ZPA platform expansion. Street's collectively constructive on the AI optionality (Truist/Stifel/Wolfe all leaned in on zero trust extending to AI agents), but Truist explicitly flagged that "near-term fundamentals remain driven by continued platform adoption" — AI is the upside case, not the base case.

PTs post-event: CANTOR $225 (OW), TRUIST $200 (BUY), STIFEL $175 (BUY), PIPER $160 (NEUTRAL), WOLFE $150 (OP, CUT FROM $183). The Piper neutral sitting 30% above current is the one to watch — if they flip Buy, that's a clean re-rating signal.

Bulls hanging their hat on:

  • 25% REVENUE GROWTH, 77% GROSS MARGINS — fundamentals haven't broken
  • Wolfe survey work confirms management's AI outlook (incremental confidence on SASE + ZS as enterprise AI security components)
  • Product launches (AI Broker, Endpoint AI Security, Project AI-Guardian) with AWS/OpenAI/Google Cloud as partners — TAM expansion story
  • 41 ANALYSTS revising earnings UP for the next period
  • 58% drawdown has done the de-risking on price

THE BEAR PILE

  • Wolfe cut PT to the low end of the cluster and they're STILL bullish — that's a yellow flag on where Street models go next
  • Last print: beat on rev/ARR/EPS but LOWERED FCF GUIDE on data center capex. Consumption-based pricing is great for LTM economics, awful for next 4 quarters of modeling
  • Stock cut in half in a year — multiple compression in cyber doesn't stop just because the conference went well
  • Every vendor at every conference says customer urgency is at an all-time high. Sample of 50 on the floor is supportive but not definitive

THE TAKE

Asymmetric enough to nibble, not enough to load up. Stock at $122 vs. PT range $150-225 is 20-86% upside, 0% downside to the low end. Consumption pricing transition + capex step-up means the next 2 prints will be noisy — FCF multiple gets harder to defend if growth re-decelerates. The Wolfe PT cut is the tell: even the constructive camp is recalibrating lower.

Trade it as a name with a catalyst (next print + consumption model clarity) rather than a value play. Not a sell here, not a screaming buy. If you don't own, this is a starter. If you do, hold into the print, reassess on FCF commentary.


NET

Investor Day handed the bulls a margin story, the bears a competitor. Street PTs clustering $250-300 (RBC, TD Cowen, KeyBanc, Stifel, Truist, UBS) on the back of a Rule-of-50-by-FY27 framework and a more disciplined cost narrative. Bernstein stuck at $136 — that's the live debate. Stock at $228, down 11% on the week, which is the print that matters today: post-event digestion or a gift?

THE STREET POST-EVENT

Collective read: 6 firms raised or reiterated PTs in the $230-300 zone following the analyst day. The frame shifted from "growth at any cost" to "growth PLUS margin expansion exiting FY27" — that's the new comp anchor. KeyBanc's $300 sticks out as the high; Truist and UBS landed at $250 with different ratings (Buy vs. Neutral). Cantor nudged to $230 from $224, essentially the "me too" raise. Stifel and RBC both at $260. Tighter cluster than you'd expect for a name that just put up 31.6% growth.

The new math: NET guiding to Rule of 50%+ by FY27 exit with MATERIAL long-term op margin and FCF margin upside, partially offset by lower gross margin. That's a real operating leverage story if they hit it.

"Cloudflare is evolving beyond its traditional role as an edge security and content delivery network provider. The company is positioning itself as a unified platform spanning security, network services, developer tools, and AI-related workloads." — Joel Fishbein Jr., Truist

BULL CASE

Workers differentiation vs. hyperscalers is the sleeper. NET is selling "AI at the edge" as a real architectural alternative, not just CDN. The Act 4 opportunity (AI inference / agents) is incremental TAM that didn't exist in prior models. AI security angle — TD Cowen's call — plays into a spend category that CIOs aren't cutting. Margin framework gives the multiple a foundation: at 25x CY27 EV/sales (UBS's neutral fair value) you're paying for a credible path to Rule of 50, not just a growth multiple with no operating leverage proof points.

BEAR CASE

Bernstein did the work here, and it's the only one that matters on the downside. Hosting Vercel's founder is a tell — Vercel + Next.JS are eating NET's lunch in the developer platform layer where NET is trying to plant a flag. The edge network / proxy architecture that built NET's moat is now a constraint in a world where AI agents need low-latency compute, not network egress points. Worst signal in the Bernstein note: code suggestion tools NATIVELY recommend against Cloudflare when designing architectures. That's a generational adoption problem if it compounds.

"The tight linkage of Cloudflare's platform to its network creates constraints and raises vendor lock-in concerns that many buyers try to avoid." — Bernstein

THE TRADE

Down 11% on the week into an investor day that most of the street read as a positive. Either the market is pricing Bernstein's Vercel risk heavier than the rest, or this is rotation out of high-multiple software into the AI infra names. $228 entry vs. $250-300 PT cluster is ~10-30% upside to the bulls, -40% to Bernstein. The bear's $136 is the asymmetry that keeps this from being an easy long — you're not buying a bombed-out name, you're buying a premium-multiple software stock with a credible structural threat nobody else on the buyside is modeling. Size accordingly. We'd want to see the stock hold $220 and the Vercel narrative get more oxygen before adding.


RBRK

Verdict: Three brokers, three higher PTs, all in the same direction. Rubrik held its first analyst day in Vegas and the Street walked away more constructive. Baird $110, Cantor $95, DA Davidson $90. Cluster mean ~$98 vs $71 print — call it ~38% implied upside to consensus. Cyber resilience platform narrative just got thicker.

POST-ANALYST DAY RESET

Management rolled out a long-term model: >20% op margin, >25% FCF margin. No target year. No ARR growth number. That's the hole every PM is going to poke at.

But the platform vision is real. Baird came away incrementally constructive on three vectors:

  • Agentic Cloud — Rubrik Agent Cloud for Anthropic's Claude with rewind capability
  • Identity Resilience — securing non-human identities in the agent era
  • Flex packaging — new licensing model, broader budget access
Plus Annapurna (unstructured data catalog), Rubrik AI, Autonomous Business Recovery for cloud apps. Lots of arrows in the quiver.

(81% gross margin today. Gives them room to play the margin expansion game. LTM growth 46% on top of that — not a slouch.)

BULL VS BEAR

Bull: Cantor calls FY27 guidance "de-risked" — the full-year raise was ~2x the Q1 beat, in line with mgmt cadence. Identity + Agent Cloud are still pre-scale, both represent TAM expansion rather than share. Platform breadth = larger initial deals, consolidation wins, multi-product attach. 46% growth + 81% GM + 20%+ OPM target = the cyber resilience compounder narrative institutional PMs want to own.

Bear: 2/3 of ARR is still on-prem. That's the segment not growing. No timeline on 20/25 margin targets. No revenue growth target. PTs cluster at $90-110 (26-55% upside) — fine, not euphoric. Product launches look great in deck form but multiple comps (S, CRWD, PANW, even some of the identity players) already trade at premium multiples for similar growth + margin profile. "Vision" doesn't print ARR.

BLOCKQUOTE

_"Faster ramping adjacencies and more strategic partner engagement support a durable growth algorithm and improving margin structure."_ — Baird

That's the buy-side takeaway in one line. Adjacencies compounding + GTM leverage = the bridge to those 20/25 targets.

WHAT WE'RE WATCHING

  • Next print: color on Flex attach rate and Agent Cloud early customer logos
  • ARR growth re-acceleration — consensus still has to bake in FY27
  • Identity Resilience monetization — the agentic AI angle is the new TAM expansion narrative; need real numbers, not just vision
  • On-prem runoff pace — bear's biggest lever. If 2/3 base decays faster than cloud scales, the multiple compresses

CRWV

Battleground name. Stock at $94, sitting awkwardly between Bernstein's $67 floor and the bull cluster at $167–$192 (Cantor, BNP). Down 11.5% last week. The tell: CRWV is up 23% YTD while the AI infrastructure complex is up 75%. Laggard within the laggard trade.

BULL VS BEAR

Bulls (Cantor $167, BNP $192): The underperformance IS the opportunity. Cantor frames it as an "attractive entry point" — and they have the fundamental hooks. In-place IT capacity running ~5x the closest competitor. Cantor has CRWV leading net-new MW activations in BOTH 2026 and 2027. Revenue +130% LTM. Vera Rubin NVL72 already integrated on the platform. Customer base diversifying, software stack expanding into inference and agentic workloads. That's the bull pitch: scale + multi-year runway + product depth at a discount to the cohort.

Bear (Bernstein, Underperform, $67): Structural skepticism on the neocloud model itself. Dug through 10 months of post-IPO insider sales — concluded exec/early investor activity is noise, but flagged they'd care if Jane Street or Nvidia moved. The Jane Street lockup ends July 15. That filing landed Friday. And then there's this: Jane Street is building its own data center. If your largest customer is internalizing compute, that's a problem regardless of the 5x capacity stat.

"The firm has major concerns about the long-term fundamentals of the neocloud business."

That's Bernstein's whole bear case in one line. They're not making a call on a quarter — they're making a call on the model.

BALANCE SHEET WATCH

Management just announced a $3.5B senior note offering (2032, dual currency) on top of a $900M data center HY deal via Santander. CRWV is levering hard to fund the buildout. Fine if revenue keeps compounding at 130%+. Less fine if AI capex digestion hits earlier than the bulls expect.

THE TRADE

Verdict: This is a call on whether the neocloud model survives compression. Cantor has the better fundamental data points. Bernstein has the better structural skepticism. With Jane Street lockup expiring in ~5 weeks, path of least resistance is probably sideways-to-down into that event. Not an easy outright — the 5x capacity advantage makes shorts work for it. Better as a pair: long AI infra basket, short CRWV into the unlock.


SPCX

Verdict: First-day discount, but we'd let the dust settle before chasing.

Two initiations dropped within an hour of each other. New Street lands at $165, Oppenheimer at $190 — that's 22-40% upside from the $135 IPO print on a name that started trading today. Street is still calibrating, but the directional bias is unambiguous: the IPO is pricing below sell-side fair value. The interesting question isn't direction, it's sizing.

The spread between the two PTs is the story. New Street's $165 bakes in a $2.3T equity value post-Cursor close (so the acquisition is already in the number), built on a clean three-pronged framework: SOTP/DCF on Starlink, xAI value uplift from the Cursor deal + cash-gen telecom + orbital compute optionality, cross-checked against 2030 multiples. Oppenheimer at $190 is underwriting something bigger — the full vertical integration thesis. Compute, launch, LLM, capital, talent, manufacturing under one roof. Nobody else in the universe has that profile, and the Colossus/V3/Cursor revenue ramp from 2027-2030 is the real bogey.

BULL VS BEAR

Bull case is the optionality stack. Starlink cash flow self-funds the rocket and AI buildout. xAI gets distribution through SpaceX's global footprint. Orbital compute is a 5-10 year call option with no replicable competitor. And the quiet IG ratings from Moody's, Fitch, and S&P aren't trivial — at a $75B raise, cheaper funding is a real edge.

Bear case starts with the fundamentals: $19.3B LTM revenue, 48.8% gross margin, $2.94 LOSS per share. You're paying for 2028-2030, not 2026. The India Starlink delay (MHA withholding clearances over Iran-conflict terminal security concerns) looks small but is a canary on geopolitical friction. And Oppenheimer themselves flag thermal management of space-grade chips in 4 years as "challenging" — that's analyst-speak for heroic assumptions baked in.

"SpaceX as the only vertically-integrated AI company with the required capital, data, large language models, hardware, manufacturing and engineering talent." > — Oppenheimer, June 11

That's the bull case in one sentence. The bear case in one sentence is New Street noting third-party launch is "only a small moving part" — read: don't model the rockets, model the platform, and pray the platform thesis holds.

POSITIONING TAKE

The $135 print is a real-time referendum on a $1.77T name with negative GAAP earnings and Musk execution risk on three vectors simultaneously (Starlink, Starship, xAI integration). The 22-40% upside to PT is genuine, but a $1.77T market cap doesn't need to be at the front of the book on day one. We'd want to see how the first two weeks of trading digest the Cursor close, the India overhang, and any 8-K noise before we lean in size. The framework's right, the timing's not.


SNPS

Verdict: Stifel back from the road with a fresh Buy reiteration and $600 PT after sitting down with Ghazi and Glaser — thesis hasn't changed, execution is doing the work. Light coverage day for the name but the message is clear: EDA double-digit growth intact, IP inflecting, agentic AI monetization now has a signed framework.

THE ROAD SHOW TAKE

Stifel came out of mgmt meetings incrementally more constructive. Three things matter here. First, Core EDA double-digit growth commitment holds — the foundational guidepost for the bull case, and mgmt isn't blinking. Second, the IP segment bottomed in FQ1'26 and is recovering sequentially. The more interesting angle is the DUAL-FACTORY MODEL shift — SNPS moving toward royalty economics tied to chip-on-wafer relationships with hyperscalers. Think recurring revenue on every advanced node tape-out at the biggest customers. Mgmt committed to 1-2 SIGNED CUSTOMERS by end of FY26, which is the near-term proof point to watch. Third, agentic AI monetization just got real: SNPS finalized a TOKEN REVENUE SHARE FRAMEWORK with one AI lab. First one. Watch for a second.

"SNPS is committed to double-digit growth for its Core EDA segment over the longer term, with the IP segment bottoming and the structural shift to a dual-factory model introducing royalty economics for chip-on-target hyperscaler relationships." — Stifel, post-mgmt meetings

THE PRINT IN ONE BREATH

FQ2'26 print was a clean beat-and-raise. REV $2.276B, ADJ EPS $3.35, ADJ OPM 39.5% — ALL ABOVE STREET. Guide raised across the board with FY26 EPS midpoint at $14.76, FCF GUIDED ~$2.0B. Rosenblatt flagged 42% Y/Y REV GROWTH (Ansys rolling in distorts the comp but the underlying cadence is strong).

STREET IS LEANING IN

Stifel $600, Rosenblatt $575, KeyBanc $600, Morgan Stanley $525, Piper $450. Cluster says upside from here is real, not crowded. $600 implies ~25% from current.

THE CAVEAT

Trades at 108.5x P/E. That's not a typo. The story is execution and forward growth, not multiple expansion. Any stumble in the IP inflection or the dual-factory signings and the multiple compresses fast. Premium for perfection — bogey is hitting that 1-2 hyperscaler signing target by FY26 close.


ASML

BOF A'S 2030 FRAMEWORK

Verdict: BofA stays on the long, $2,268 PT, and the bull case is getting louder — not the next 2 quarters, the 2030 setup is what matters here.

BofA's framework is straightforward. Co guides €44-60B revenue, 56-60% GM, €7.7-8.5B opex for 2030. BofA models the upside at €73B and says fixed cost absorption (they peg fixed costs at ~20% of COGS) alone pushes GM >60%, EBIT to 50%, EPS past €90. Big step-up from 52.6% LTM gross margin. The trade is mix-driven (EUV attach, AI-led logic/foundry capex) and the math compounds the higher you go.

"This scenario opens the door to gross margins above 60%, EBIT margins of 50%, and earnings per share exceeding €90 on or around 2030."

Positioning is already long this — UP 128% YOY, $1,734 print, kissing the $1,831 52W high. $2,268 PT implies another ~30% from here. Not cheap, but the multiple has room if the 2030 mix story holds. MS's €1,660 target is the closest comp, so BofA sits high-end of Street.

One thing nagging: Nikon making noise on price-competitive litho. Not a 2026 story (they're generations behind on EUV), but it's the only real bear thread if memory and mature node spend stays soft. €79.4M buyback (60,388 shares) is noise. ASML is a "stay long into the catalyst path" name — not chasing the high but not fading it either.


PANW

The setup is good but the easy money's behind us. PANW up 43% YTD TO $269 — that's the AI security bid showing up in the stock. Piper reiterated OW with a $345 PT after meetings with CFO Golechha and SVP IR Fodderwala. Street cluster is now $290-345 (UBS $300, Loop $290, FBN $330, Benchmark $340, DA Davidson $345) — wide range tells you the AI durability question is unsettled.

THE READ

Stock trades at 231x P/E. For a $270+ cyber name. Either you believe the AI security thesis is a multi-year platform shift or you're selling rips. The Piper meetings flagged a few things that matter:

  • AI inflection durability — management is leaning into the narrative that LLMs with advanced security research capabilities (think agentic AI for red-teaming, vuln discovery) are a NET TAILWIND not a threat. This is the call PMs need to underwrite. If AI commoditizes security tooling, PANW's multiple compresses fast. If AI makes attacks more sophisticated and enterprise security spend goes UP, PANW wins.
  • CyberArk integration — Loop explicitly called this out as upside driver. The M&A flywheel is doing work. PANW is now a platform, not just a next-gen firewall shop.
  • Forward growth algorithm — Piper walked away with better conviction on durability. That's the buy-side tell. Street was worried about a digestion year post-CyberArk. Management pushed back.

BULL VS BEAR

Bull case: Platform consolidation, AI is a TAM expander (not cannibalizer), RPO growth is real, $345+ is in play. The stock has earned its premium because the print has backed it up for 6 straight quarters.

Bear case: 231 P/E is not a multiple, it's a prayer. A single guide-down or a high-profile security failure involving AI-driven attacks that PANW's stack didn't catch = multiple compression to 150-180x and a 20-30% drawdown. The setup gets crowded fast — PANW is a consensus long in most TMT books at this point.

"The meetings provided better understanding of momentum resulting from the AI inflection and the durability of overall growth." — Piper Sandler

That's analyst-speak for "management sounded good." Take it for what it is.

POSITIONING

Not sure we can read too much into one meeting series, but the $290 floor from Loop to $345 ceiling from Piper/DA Davidson is a ~20% upside band from spot. That's fine, not great, for a name that's already up 43%. We're chasing, not fading. If you don't own it, the risk/reward is mediocre here. If you own it, let it run but tighten stops. The next real catalyst is F1Q26 print — that's where the AI durability narrative either gets validated or breaks.


CRWD

Piper's Mythos read is the most bullish datapoint of the week. Reiterated OW, $750 PT (vs $672 print, ~11% upside). Coming out of meetings with CFO Podbere and IR's Nowinski in Toronto, the desk is incrementally more confident in execution — and more importantly, framing Mythos as a "step-function change for security prioritization and spending." That's not Piper boilerplate.

"Mythos clearly driving a step-function change for security prioritization and spending."

The setup here is what we've been waiting for. CRWD's last print had net new ARR of $256M, 32% YoY but below the buy-side bar — stock sold off on the number even though it beat rev/op income/FCF. So the bear case isn't fundamentals, it's digestion. Stock at $672 against a $750 street-high PT cluster (Benchmark, DA Davidson, UBS all raised), $171B market cap, 23% top-line, 75% GM. Berenberg went the other way — Buy→Hold purely on valuation. That's the tension.

Our read: the Mythos/Glasswing + Falcon Flex + identity narrative is the right antidote to the "ARR deceleration" worry. If Piper's meetings signaled real pipeline acceleration (not just CIO curiosity), then the post-print de-rating was the entry. We'd be adding on weakness into any test of the recent low. (Not sure we can read too much into one set of meetings, but the demand-inflection language is new and material.)


AMZN

India's inflecting. That's the story today. Barclays out with a re-iterated Overweight and $330 PT, but the real meat is the India deep dive — and the data is cleaner than usual. B2C revenue grew +19% EX-FX in FY25, accel'ing from +14% the prior year. That's not a one-quarter fluke, that's a trend. Total India rev +11% EX-FX (from 9%), GMV around $25B (+15% EX-FX, up from 10%). This is market share gain in a market most PMs still underwrite as a Flipkart/Walmart story. Not anymore.

The underrated part: AWS India did ~$2B in rev, +12% YoY, accel'ing from 10%. Sovereign AI, digital public infra, enterprise migration — that's the underappreciated AWS leg for the next 3-5 years. And op losses are approaching break-even (-1.7% margin in 2025, second consecutive year of improvement) on a base that's still investing aggressively. $40B DEPLOYED TO DATE, $35B MORE COMMITTED THROUGH 2030. Jeff-o-stanley era capex discipline showing up even in the "invest everywhere" segment.

PEG of 0.78, P/E 28.51 — the multiple doesn't even reflect the India leg properly. 24 analysts revising EPS up for the upcoming period. The bear case (India is a money pit, AWS slowing, retail margins compressed) is getting harder to defend with the print showing losses narrowing AND topline accel'ing simultaneously.

THE OTHER TAPE

Two secondary items worth flagging without overweighting:

  • Graviton5 GA — 25% better compute vs prior gen, 192 cores. Real cost-performance story for AI workloads. Trainium/Graviton roadmap keeps closing the gap on Nvidia for inference and certain training workloads. Margin story for AWS over time.
  • LTL freight now open to all US shippers — Raymond James notes this pressures SAIA, ODFL. Amazon's been doing this since 2019 inbound-only, now outbound to 3P. The trucking stocks already sold off on this. Logistics is becoming an ad-on revenue stream leveraging their network, not a head-on assault — but the market's pricing it as the latter.

THE TAKE

India is the call. PMs who think AMZN is "just AWS plus retail" are missing a third leg that's now showing market share gains, GMV accel, AWS accel, and margin improvement — all at once. The $330 PT feels light if the India trajectory holds. Risk-reward still skewed long into the next print.


SMCI

Verdict: Wolfe puts a "show me" rating on a company with a record backlog and a fresh indictment overhang. Fair value is basically where it trades.

Wolfe kicks off coverage at Peerperform, $26-31 fair value range (9-11x CY28 EPS of $2.90), against a stock at $29.27. Translation: they like the growth story, hate the risk profile, and those two cancel out. CY28 revenue modeled at $68.2B — that's the kind of number you only get comfortable with if you believe AI server demand stays insane and SMCI keeps its seat at the table.

The catalyst here is the Wally Liaw indictment. Wolfe frames it as low-probability but high-impact — destabilization risk if BDO walks or more senior names get dragged in. NVDA relationship reportedly intact and backlog is at record highs, so the business itself is fine. The question is governance and headline risk, not demand. With the stock up ~6% on the week (people clearly looking through the noise), this isn't a setup where you want to chase.

"The indictment situation has potential to destabilize the company, though this is viewed as a low probability."

Other color worth noting: $7B financing package ($5B public + $2B ATM starting Q3) to fund AI server orders, and the Taiwan collaboration on stopping illegal server diversion to China — both signal the biz is operating in full execution mode even as legal clouds hover. If you're long, you're betting the overhang clears without BDO bolting. If you're waiting, fair value tells you there's no margin of safety here.


AAOI

RJ REITERATES OUTPERFORM, $160 PT after hosting CFO Stefan Murry. Core thesis hasn't changed — optical transceivers remain supply-constrained, AAOI is ramping Texas capacity to $450M+/month by mid-2027, and the China displacement angle is getting louder. That's the whole ballgame here.

The math is what jumps off the page. Management's 2H27 capacity target implies ~$6B IN ANNUAL SALES — vs. revenue base that's a fraction of that today. RJ is modeling $3B annualized at 2H27 (above consensus) with EPS of $11-12 at that run-rate. Tooling hits Texas in July, so this isn't vaporware anymore. First turn-up of new capacity should hit prints within quarters.

The geopolitical tailwind is real and underappreciated. Innolight (AAOI's primary Chinese competitor) just got added to the DoD 1260H LIST — that doesn't kill their commercial business but it locks them out of a meaningful slice of US-aligned demand. AAOI is the cleanest domestic alternative and almost all the new capex is Texas-based. If you're a hyperscaler trying to derisk your optical supply chain, this is the call you're making.

CPO optionality is the call option. RJ flags AMD and Amazon as potential external laser module partners — module ASPs of $500-1,000/Piece and you don't need much volume to move this stock. AMD's $767B market cap (+286% YoY) means their CPO architecture decisions actually matter now.

"The optical transceiver market remains supply constrained, and Applied Optoelectronics has outlined plans to reach monthly production over $450 million by mid-2027." — Raymond James

Bull case: Supply stays tight, Texas ramps on schedule, Innolight gets further restricted, AAOI prints $6B revenue with 30%+ margins by 2028. Stock multiples higher on the ramp. CPO design wins from AMD or Amazon are free upside.

Bear case: $6B implied assumes near-perfect execution over 18 months on a name with a checkered history of missing targets. 800G pricing rolls over faster than capacity comes on. CPO stays Nvidia-only and the TAM stays narrower than bulls model. At $160 you're paying for the 2H27 story — if anything slips, multiple compresses hard.

LIGHT coverage day, one note, but the note is constructive. Adding to the watchlist for the July tooling turn-up — that's the next real catalyst.


WDAY

VERDICT: OPPY BUYING THE AI DISRUPTION FEAR TRADE. Reiterated Outperform, $165 PT after their bus tour sit-down with Wessel. Stock at $137.47 — STILL DOWN 39% OVER 6 MONTHS. That dislocation is the whole setup.

THE THESIS

Oppy left the meeting incrementally positive on 2H FY27 (calendar 2H26/early '27 — long way out, so discount accordingly). Bull case: WDAY's moat is stickier than the market is pricing, the full-suite/all-in-one story plays well in mid-market, and AI is actually ACCELERATING their innovation cadence, not killing it. The product news flow backs this up — they're leaning into agents, not running from them.

"Investors are likely underappreciating the stickiness of Workday's platform in the enterprise market and attractiveness of its full suite and all-in-one platform in the mid-market." > — Oppenheimer

THE PRODUCT CADENCE IS THE STORY

This is what's underappreciated. WDAY shipped a stack of agentic announcements: Workday Data Cloud integrates with AWS (no data duplication — clean distribution play), Agent Passport (testing/verification for AI agents — compliance angle is huge for enterprise), Developer Agent on Workday Build (natural language to build HR/finance apps), and Sana now in Gemini Enterprise via the Google Cloud expansion. That's not a company in disruption mode. That's a company building the infrastructure for the agent economy.

R/R MATH

76% GROSS MARGINS. PEG OF 0.53. 21 ANALYSTS REVISING EPS UP. Stock at a 39% drawdown with a PT ~20% higher. The AI overhang stays the 3p — every enterprise SaaS name catches a bid-cancellation headline in this tape. But at 0.53 PEG with that margin profile, you're getting paid to wait for the disruption narrative to fade. Not a homerun setup, but bogey looks reasonable from here.

POSITIONING THOUGHT

This is a "be patient, scale in on weakness" name, not a rip entry. Wait for an AI scare day to add. The catalyst path is fuzzy until 2H FY27 prints start telegraphing. Trade it for the multiple re-rate, not the growth acceleration.


TWLO

Setup: stretched, pausing, but the AI pivot story has legs.

Tigress is out this morning with a Buy reiteration and a $255 PT, joining the post-SIGNAL PT raise cluster (Needham $250, Oppenheimer $235, TD Cowen $210). Stock's been a beast — UP 75% ON THE YEAR — but the past week tells a different story: -12.5%, digestion after the post-print melt-up. Tigress's own Fair Value model actually flags TWLO as trading above intrinsic, which is the only honest bear caveat in the note. So we're in that awkward zone where the narrative is right but the easy money's been made.

The thesis is the platform transition, plain and simple. CPaaS to AI-native customer engagement control plane. SIGNAL 2026 was the proof point — Conversation Memory, Orchestrator, Intelligence, Agent Connect. They want to own the layer that turns fragmented channel interactions into continuous, monetizable dialogue. If you believe the agentic AI buildout is real (you should), TWLO sits in the picks-and-shovels bucket for agent-to-customer comms. TAM expansion story is credible: CPaaS + CDP + conversational AI + next-gen CX.

"Twilio is moving from a programmable transport provider into the intelligent control plane for omnichannel, AI-driven customer engagement."

Balance sheet is the sleeper. Net cash, "GREAT" financial health score, multi-billion buyback running, and FCF ramping. They can fund the CustomerAI build without stressing the cap structure — and they have the dry powder to bolt on capability gaps selectively. Few TMT mid-caps give you this combination: AI narrative + actually generating cash + buying back stock aggressively.

The trade: R/R is tightening here. Bull case needs the AI revenue mix to inflect in 2H prints — if CustomerAI/agent attach rates show up in the segment data, the $255-300 zone opens up. Bear case is simple: it ran 75% into a narrative shift, and the platform transition takes 3-4 quarters to validate in the numbers. Chasing a name down 12.5% on no fundamental change after a 75% rip is the wrong side of the move. We like it on weakness into the $185-190 zone, not here.


BE

RBC HOLDS, PROJECT LIVES

RBC reiterated Outperform, $335 PT on BE after Black Hills confirmed its 1.8 GW Cheyenne datacenter is NOT paused — Crusoe just dropped out as development partner, Black Hills is now working direct with the large-load end customer (widely read as Microsoft, which already signed a Large Power Contract Service tariff). The key fact for BE holders: the project has a corresponding 1.8 GW behind-the-meter power plant, of which 900 MW IS BLOOM FUEL CELLS and the other 900 MW is gas turbines. That BE TAM doesn't move on a developer swap.

"The datacenter has a corresponding 1.8 gigawatt behind-the-meter power plant, with 900 megawatts being Bloom Energy fuel cells and the other 900 megawatts being gas turbines."

Service still tracking for early 2028. Black Hills posted a soft Q1 ($1.79 EPS vs $1.90E, $780.7M rev vs $868M) — utility noise, not a BE read-through. Single name, single article, but the Crusoe-exit headline was the obvious overhang and this kills it cleanly. $335 implies meaningful upside from here; the setup into the next datacenter-customer reveal (if/when Microsoft goes public with a name) is the real catalyst.


AI (C3.AI)

Verdict: Broken sales engine, not a broken market. Q4 revenue PRINTED $52M, DOWN 53% YoY — that's not a soft quarter, that's a going-out-of-business trajectory. LTM $250M is DOWN 36%. Guide of $225M for FY27 topped a gutted Street at $200-210M, but beating a bar that was already cut in half isn't a victory lap — it's a slower bleed.

Mgmt is in full reset mode. 35% workforce cut (1,075 → 700), GTM pivot to "mass market," CEO change. Cost takeout is real — opex DOWN $34M YoY — but gross margin at 37% (LTM 31%) is ghastly for SaaS. That's services-mix bleed, not a software business. Freedom's framing is the right one: "weak sales execution rather than lack of enterprise AI demand" — TAM isn't dead, GTM is.

"Freedom Broker views fiscal 2027 as a highly uncertain transition period for the company."

STREET IS SKEPTICAL, CLUSTER IS TIGHT

PTs locked in a $6-12 range, dominated by Underweights and Neutrals. Morgan Stanley's read is the cleanest — flags the 4th consecutive quarter of YoY decline. UBS raised to $12 (still Neutral). KeyBanc stuck at $6. Even the relatively constructive Canaccord ($10) is pricing the cost story, not a revenue recovery. No one on the buy-side is underwriting a base-case rebound.

THE TRADE

Restructuring play, not a fundamental long. Street's $6-12 PT cluster leaves limited room vs current trading — you're paying for option value on a successful GTM pivot, with FY27 as a coin flip on execution. We'd fade strength. Longs have to underwrite 50%+ revenue recovery over 2 years, and the LTM trajectory actively refutes that thesis. Watch the 35% RIF land cleanly in Q1 prints — that's the only near-term catalyst that moves the stock.


SAIL

Verdict: Good quarter, ugly new bookings. Stock got punished for a reason, but $15 might be overreaction.

Solid beat-and-raise setup got torched by a net new ARR print that was genuinely bad. SAIL printed Q1 FY27 with ARR of $1.163B (+26% YoY, beat $1.155B Street by a hair), revenue $280M (+22%), and op margin of ~13.5%. Great. The problem child: net new ARR of just $38M, which is -21% YoY and -55% QoQ. That's not a stumble, that's a faceplant. The market read it correctly — stock down from $17.69 to $15.20, which is where it sits this morning.

The bull case is real, though. Identity security is a genuine secular tailwind and the Agentic AI angle (more agents = more identities = more attack surface = more SailPoint) is the right narrative for FY28+. SaaS mix shift driving margin expansion. Street models FY27 EPS of $0.33 — the profitability turn. BMO, RBC, and Scotiabank all trotted out $19 PTs (Outperform), Cantor holds the high at $23 (Overweight), and Mizuho sits on the fence at $16 Neutral. Truist $18 Buy.

"The results demonstrate the durability of SailPoint's business model and continued secular demand for identity security. AI is driving increasing identity complexity in the market." — Truist

The bear case is staring you in the face: -55% QoQ net new ARR after a strong FY26 doesn't happen because of one bad quarter. It happens when pipeline conversion slips, sales cycles extend, or you're lapping tougher comps. Worth flagging — Q1 is seasonally the smallest bookings quarter, so reading too much into the absolute number is a mistake. But the YoY decline is harder to dismiss.

R/R: At $15.20 you're buying below every Street PT except Mizuho's. Cantor $23 implies 50%+ upside on the bull case (Agentic AI narrative holds, NRR stays >110%, op margin path to high teens). Mizuho $16 is the bear bogey. Risk is the net new ARR deceleration persists into Q2 and forces a guide-down. Positioning: not a slam-dunk here, but the setup is better than the price action suggests. Would want to see Q2 net new ARR stabilize before getting aggressive. Watch the print cadence — this is a bookings story more than a revenue story from here.


OKLO

UBS cuts to $55 from $60, Neutral stays. Not a thesis changer — more of a "we need to see the Idaho build actually work before we can get constructive" cut. Stock's at $54.02, DOWN 17% IN A WEEK and -48% OVER 6 MONTHS. So this isn't catching a falling knife; it's walking next to one and waiting.

UBS said it maintains its Neutral rating as it waits for further progress on Oklo's project at Idaho National Lab.

That's the whole UBS call in one line. Execution-dependent name, execution still TBD, so they sit on the fence. Fine. Meanwhile, the optionality keeps stacking in the background — ARMEC acquisition (adds ~40 nuclear machining engineers in Oak Ridge, which is not a cheap talent pool), DOE selection for advanced negotiations on the Surplus Plutonium Utilization Program (essentially a government fuel pipeline for advanced reactors), and Wedbush still Outperform on the build-own-operate model as a moat.

The bull/bear here is clean: bulls say the DOE fuel program plus ARMEC vertical integration de-risks the path to first revenue at INL. Bears — and UBS is clearly leaning this way — say none of that matters until Oklo proves it can actually build a reactor on budget and on time, and the balance sheet to get there is the real overhang. With the stock cut in half over 6 months, the bear case is already in the price to a degree. R/R starting to look less awful but still needs a catalyst — INL progress or a real DOE contract, not just "advanced negotiations." Not sure we're there yet.


GEV

Verdict: Jefferies sees a Q2 setup trade after a 30% drawdown — and the bear case is breaking. Stock at $908 (~$181 off the $1,182 April highs) with 80% one-year returns still intact. Buy reiteration, PT bumped (note: source has a data error showing "$1,210 from $13.50" which is almost certainly a typo — call it a meaningful raise to a bogey north of $1,000).

Jefferies is making a clean call here: the doom loop on blades, towers, and modules is overcooked vs. what the data actually shows. Translation — the narrative that GEV lost pricing power or share in gas is not supported by channel checks. They see the 110GW order/slot backlog target getting hit this quarter, not year-end, with upward revisions flowing through. Backlog elongation into 2031 is the real story — that turns the book from a near-term cyclical into a multi-year compounder. Strazik's $87B services backlog tracking to ~$20B annual revenue by 2027 is the anchor; 25% of global electricity powered by GEV kit isn't a flex, it's the moat.

"Concerns about the company's blade, tower and module business are overextended relative to tangible data points."

That's the line that matters. Jefferies is telling you the bear thesis requires ignoring the order book.

Bear case (steelmanned): 30% off highs isn't cheap — it's a re-rate after the AI/power euphoria cooled. RJS just initiated at Market Perform, so the Street isn't uniformly bullish. Multiple compression is the risk if AI capex digestion hits in 2H. Prolec synergies are a 2027 story, not a Q2 catalyst.

Catalyst path: Q2 print (orders + quoting commentary on Q3) is the event. If backlog prints 110GW+ with 2031 visibility, this fills the gap fast. Prolec/Electrification guide-up with the next financial plan roll-forward is the late-2026 leg.

Positioning take: 30% pullback on a name with structural tailwinds (gas, electrification, AI power) is a buyable dip for PMs who can hold through the print. The r/r favors longs here — bear case needs data to get worse, bull case just needs data to stay the same.


SNX

Goldman lifts PT to $300 from $270, Buy held. Street PT cluster now $265-315 (BofA $270, UBS $265, RBC $315). Driver: Hyve's ODM/supply chain biz pulling in hyperscaler demand, layered on pass-through pricing for the traditional server refresh cycle. SNX UP 114% Y/Y, trading ~$9 off the $286 52-WEEK HIGH.

PEG of 0.44, capital-light variable cost model, broad-based DC hardware tailwind. Distribution names aren't supposed to print these multiples, but with hyperscaler exposure through Hyve, the discount compresses.

"Greater momentum in Hyve's original design manufacturer, contract manufacturer, and supply chain services business from robust hyperscaler demand."

Bear case isn't complicated — 114% Y/Y means the easy money's already on the board. Multiple expansion did the heavy lifting. Distributors are low-margin by nature, so any ASP normalization or inventory digestion hits fast. But with hyperscaler capex in full boil AND an aged enterprise refresh underway, hard to argue with the tape.

Positioning: own it, don't chase it. Likely already in most TMT books at this point.


DAKT

ROTH/MKM STARTS BUY, $26 PT — THIN COVERAGE, DECENT SETUP

Roth/MKM opens the book on DAKT with a Buy and $26 PT (~22% upside vs $21.21 print). The pitch is straightforward: LED display TAM is bigger than the tape's pricing in, driven by interconnected display ecosystems at sports venues, sponsor monetization, and high school district modernization. Take it for what it is — a single initiation on a $1B mcap name — but the LAX Tom Bradley deal (30+ displays, 15K+ sq ft, 300M+ pixels, 2026-2027 install) is a real proof point, not vapor.

"Professional teams and venue operators are replacing static boards with dynamic, high-resolution display ecosystems that create new commercial opportunities beyond traditional advertising placements." — Roth/MKM

What's working in the thesis: The high school angle is the sleeper — districts treating athletic facilities as community assets, using LED videoboards to generate local sponsorship revenue. Smaller contract sizes, but the volume story is real. LTM rev of $803M on a $1.04B mcap isn't screaming expensive either. Roth flags net income expected to grow this year.

The fine print: Light coverage, one analyst, small-cap dynamics (thin liquidity, higher beta to narrative shifts). Gatzke consulting fee cut from $30K to $7.5K/month is housekeeping, not a thesis mover. Need to see the next data point before sizing — initiation alone on a name this size doesn't make it a conviction long, but the set-up isn't bad if you're hunting for non-AI display exposure. Not sure we can read too much into a single Buy, so file this under "watchlist add" not "buy here."


CITR

Verdict: Speculative tiny name with binary setup. Not for size, but the setup is interesting.

Northland kicks off coverage with Outperform and a $16 PT — that's ~158% UPSIDE off the $6.21 print. Mkt cap is a rounding-error $139M, revenue is basically zero (LTM ~$76K), and the company just retired its corp debt. This is pre-commercial, pre-discovery, and the entire thesis hinges on whether their fire prevention chem actually lands customers. But that's also why the asymmetry is what it is — the stock isn't pricing in much of anything right now.

The pitch: incumbents can only react AFTER a fire. CitroTech's patented solution gets applied proactively. Eco-friendly, no phosphates, IP moat building out (31 issued / 56 pending patents covering the chem plus GPS verification stack). Northland is calling the commercial launch as "the beginning" — which means the next 4-8 quarters are all about customer wins, pilots converting to revenue, and whether the story is real or vapor.

"CitroTech's product is environmentally safe and does not contain harmful phosphates found in competing solutions... incumbent products can only be applied after a fire occurs, while CitroTech's solution can be used proactively."

(Reads like a small-cap initiation pitch — the bear case is it stays a "story stock" forever and the $16 PT lives in PowerPoint for years. Watch for first material customer announcements and any government/municipal contracts as the real catalysts. Size accordingly — this is a 25-bps position, not a 5% one.)


ETR

Truist stuck with Buy, $127 PT on ETR — stock at $110.54, so call it ~15% UPSIDE but the easy money's been made (UP 37% YOY). The real story isn't the PT, it's that Truist flagged ETR as the most directly exposed data center play in their regulated utilities coverage. That's positioning, not valuation.

THE THESIS, STATED FLAT

Entergy's edge is "large load conversion" — taking hyperscaler RFPs and turning them into rate-base growth that flows through EPS into 2030+. Investor day laid out a ~13% 5-YEAR EPS CAGR with 2035 visibility, which is a long leash for a regulated utility. EPS guide aligned consensus, so no surprise — but the duration of the guide is what matters. Most utildon't give you a decade. ETR basically said "we see the data center pipe, and it's filling."

"Entergy's formula for converting large load opportunities into incremental investment remains intact for earnings upside through 2030 and beyond." — Truist

WHERE THE STREET LANDS

Post-investor day, it's a PT trim party on valuation, not thesis: Scotiabank Outperform $129, Truist $127, BTIG $126, BMO $123, Mizuho $122. Cluster sits $122-129, mid-point ~$125, roughly 13% upside from here. Nobody's blinking on the story — they're just digesting a 37% rip. 11 straight years of dividend hikes and 39 years of payments (per ProTips) — not exciting but it's the quality ballast under the data center call.

BOTTOM LINE

Own it for the data center conversion flywheel, not the multiple. Trade's gotten crowded fast — buyers here are paying for execution, and the next data center win needs to print to keep the bid.


PONY

BofA defending the name into a slaughter. Ming Hsun Lee keeps Buy, $19 PT — that's 135% upside from the $8.09 print, which is sitting basically on the 52W low ($7.99). Tough tape, but the analyst isn't flinching.

The bull case is fleet scale and unit economics inflection. Pony ended Q1 with 1,700+ robotaxis, up ~4x YoY. Revenue +145% YoY ($34.3M, beat by ~58% on Bloomberg/Macquarie). BofA's call is that this is the moment — better zones, denser routes, fleet leverage, profitability inflection as utilization climbs. The Guangzhou expansion into Tianhe, Huangpu, and Panyu Chimelong is the test case for "harder" urban operating zones.

BofA's Ming Hsun Lee: the new zones "present complicated challenges incl. dense office buildings, heavy vehicle flow, and crowded pedestrian traffic."

Translation: if PonyWorld/Virtual Driver can handle Guangzhou CBD traffic, the tech thesis holds and the China robotaxi TAM opens up. If it can't, this is a demo-to-scale story that never scales.

Bear case isn't hard to build. EPS missed (-$0.12 vs -$0.11 consensus). Macquarie CUT its PT to $24 from $25 (still Outperform though — note the street cluster is $19-24). Stock near 52W low means either the market doesn't believe the fleet-to-profitability bridge, or it's pricing in regulatory/macro China risk that BofA isn't. At $8 with no near-term profitability print, this is a story stock with a binary 2026/2027 catalyst window.

R/R is interesting at these levels but you have to underwrite the tech validation in dense urban China — that's not a Q2 catalyst, that's a 2H/2027 event. Not for the faint of heart. Position accordingly.


IOT

Verdict: name your catalyst, check your price. Stock at $32.64 is down ~26% over 6 months despite printing an FQ1 beat ($478.8M rev vs $455.2M est, EPS $0.17 vs $0.13) AND raising guide. The market didn't care — sold it on the print. That tells you the tape is fatigued, not the fundamentals. Wolfe is leaning in with an Outperform and a $50 PT (53% upside) coming out of a CFO dinner, citing underpenetration, 30% ARR growth, and a 76% GM business model. Piper took PT to $40, RBC to $42. Cluster sits in the $40s with Wolfe out at $50 — about 25-50% upside from here. The setup is straightforward: a sold-off name into a known catalyst.

The thesis is a "ROI tailwind" story. Rising labor, insurance, accident, fuel, and maintenance costs are pushing the value prop higher — this is the kind of backdrop where operational software stops being a nice-to-have. IOT is leveraging this to expand beyond telematics/safety into a physical operations operating system. Underpenetration at existing accounts is doing a lot of heavy lifting in the bull case; that's where the next leg has to come from because logos are getting harder.

AI cameras are the underappreciated angle. Wolfe highlighted the move into external visibility use cases — weather intel, pothole detection, service verification — that can monetize WITHOUT hardware adoption. That's a margin-accretive extension of the platform. The Hertz software-only deal is the proof point: IOT is aggregating OEM cloud data for higher-margin software use cases, bypassing the hardware install cycle entirely. This is how they push from a telematics vendor to a data platform. Watch for monetization metrics on this at the investor day.

Bear case is mostly comp + positioning. FQ26 had the First Student deal — IOT's largest ever — so the comps get harder. Stock sitting at -26% over 6 months tells you PMs have already de-risked. That's actually the bull setup now: if the comp concern is already in the price, even an in-line guide can rip.

Near-term catalyst: Beyond conference and investor day in two weeks. Expect cross-sell into emerging products, more AI product color, and likely an updated long-term framework. Wolfe said management confidence in the pipeline is up. That's the print PMs should position around — not the backward-looking FQ1 that the tape already dismissed.

Wolfe Research: "rising labor, insurance, accident, fuel, and maintenance costs have increased the return on investment of Samsara's offerings."

(That quote is the whole bull case in one line. When your customer's cost structure is inflating, your software pays back faster. Hard to argue with the math.)


PCOR

Setup at 52-week lows is interesting, but we need to see the margin print clean before we bite. Stock got smoked 12% on a Q1 EPS miss ($0.34 vs $0.36) despite a revenue beat ($359.28M vs $352.82M). Sitting at $43.54, basically touching the 52-week low of $43.48. Both sell-side targets in print — Stifel Buy/$63, D.A. Davidson Neutral/$55 — imply double-digit upside, but this name needs to prove it can convert the 80% gross margin profile into actual GAAP profitability. The Street is waiting for that proof, and the EPS slip just pushed it down the road.

Stifel took investors on a Benchmark Builders jobsite tour (Foot Locker HQ buildout, $40M+ project, 20 subs, 10K+ submittal interactions) followed by an investor dinner with PCOR's CEO, CFO, SVP PM, and IR. Read-through: Stifel is doing work here, building conviction on the platform's stickiness in complex GCs. Useful color, not a catalyst.

"Greater appreciation for the complexities of large construction projects" — Adam Borg, Stifel

The bull case: near-bottom-of-range entry into a software platform with ~80% gross margins on $1.37B revenue, profitability inflecting this year (consensus), 45% upside to Stifel PT. The bear case: 12% post-print gap down tells you the market doesn't trust the profitability path yet, and D.A. Davidson staying Neutral at $55 reinforces that this isn't a "broken" name but also isn't a clean momentum trade. R/R skewed interesting but not yet a buy — we want to see one more clean quarter where EPS cooperates before we underwrite the inflection.


WIX

Slowing on purpose — read it that way. WIX cut FY26 bookings to LOW-TEENS from mid-teens, revenue to LOW-TO-MID-TEENS, and ran a 20% RIF (~1,000 people) in late May/early June. Stock at $48, 52-week low is $46.90 — market already pricing the reset. 1/3 of the slowdown is Partners softness (real demand issue), 2/3 is WIX choosing to trade growth for FCF. That distinction matters and is going largely unappreciated.

FCF guide UP $20M TO $420M on $70M of FY26 saves ($150M run-rate). Clean trade for the FCF-purity crowd. The problem: in a SaaS name, slower top line tends to kill the multiple even when cash flow improves. Market is voting against the strategy right now.

Street is hilariously split. RBC $45, UBS $58, Scotiabank $90, Benchmark $115. That's a ~2.5x range. Consensus is meaningless at that spread — somebody's getting embarrassed.

"Highlighted artificial intelligence headwinds impacting the web design space" — RBC Capital, cutting PT to $45

That's the actual debate here, beyond the in-quarter noise. Is AI a cyclical headwind (cheaper alternatives compressing WIX pricing) or a structural one (TAM compression as anyone can spin up a site in 30 seconds)? RBC is making the structural call. Hard to get constructive on WIX until the Partners book stabilizes — that's the canary for the broader demand story. AI question is what keeps the multiple capped.


ARMK

Verdict: data center optionality is now the story, and it's real enough to justify the rerate.

Oppenheimer just bumped PT to $60 (from $50) on Outperform, and the rest of the Street's catching up — UBS $56, RBC $55, Stifel $54 Buy. Stock's at $53.30, up 45% YTD, knocking on a fresh 52w high ($54.57). The core business is doing its job (share gains, margin improvement despite 3-4% food/labor inflation), but nobody's paying 12.8x fwd EBITDA — a full turn premium to Compass at 11.7x — for a food services compounder. They're paying for the data center ramp.

THE DATA CENTER ANGLE

This is the thing. Aramark is live with its first DC contract and guiding to ~12 locations by end of next year, ramping to 30-40 by the end of the following year. That's a real buildout cadence, not a pilot. Hyperscaler multiservice wins (RBC flagged this explicitly) suggest the contract structure is sticky — once you're running facilities services for a hyperscaler campus, you're not getting displaced by a lower bidder. If even a fraction of those 30-40 sites hit, DC revenue goes from rounding error to a real segment within 3 years. The bull case here is that ARMK becomes the "food/services layer" of the AI buildout — a compounder on top of a compounder.

THE LEFTHAND WALL

Core has to keep carrying the weight while DC scales. Food/labor at 3-4% is manageable but not trivial — if it ticks to 5-6% and Aramark can't pass it through, margins compress and the buyback story (leverage <3x by FY26, accelerated repurchase potential) gets pushed out. Also worth flagging: 12.8x for a food services name is a full turn rich, and the DC ramp is guidance, not revenue. If the first 12 sites underwhelm on per-site economics, that premium evaporates fast. But with the stock right at highs, the setup favors PMs who already own it — not a fresh entry. R/R is balanced here.

"Aramark appears to be gaining market share while food and labor inflation of 3% to 4% year-over-year should not pose a problem to margins." — Oppenheimer

BOTTOM LINE

Core doing fine, DC narrative is the catalyst, buybacks are coming. Stock at highs with PTs clustering $54-60 means upside is ~10-13% to the Street high — not nothing, but you're paying for execution. Lean long into any pullback to the low $50s. Avoid chasing the breakout.


MU

The print: $1.01T mkt cap, +670% Y/Y, and the street is still ripping. Wolfe to $1,250 from $550 (more than 2x). Susquehanna $1,750. DA Davidson $1,500. Mizuho $1,150. Cluster's gone vertical — stock at $891.88 with PTs spanning $1,150-1,750. PTs chasing a stock that's already done most of the work.

The setup: supply-constrained memory, full stop. Wolfe modeling DRAM pricing +200% in CY26, NAND +216% (those are not typos). Bit growth capped by cleanroom space through 2027. Demand > supply through 2027, potentially 2028. LTAs getting inked for multi-year supply between suppliers and hyperscaler customers. This is a seller's market.

"Wolfe Research said demand is set to exceed supply at least through 2027 and potentially into 2028."

HBM is the next leg — Wolfe has HBM ASPs +20% Q/Q in Q1 2027 as suppliers try to close a GM gap with overall DRAM. (Counterintuitive: in this cycle, HBM GMs are running BELOW overall DRAM GMs. HBM is the margin underperformer, which means more room.) Wolfe's 2027 model: $226.5B revenue, $135 EPS. Different company.

Side notes: Clay NY fab moving forward with Bechtel as EPC. Dr. Alexis Black Björlin (ex-NVDA, INTC) added to the board — AI infra optics, not nothing.

R/R: PTs imply 30-100% upside on a stock that just did +670% in 12 months. Positioning is fat. Any "peak memory" whisper and this air pockets 15% in a session. Near-term the cleanroom constraint is hard to fight. Trade the range, don't chase blind into $1,000.


EXTR

Verdict: Good story, stretched setup. The tape has already done a lot of work here.

Stock's $28.58, +71% YTD, and Rosenblatt's new $39 PT is only ~36% upside — bogey's been pulled forward by the move itself. The cluster of PT hikes (Rosenblatt $29→$39, BofA $24→$28, Needham $21→$26) is a tell that the FY3Q print + raised Q4 guide reset the bar higher across the Street, but at 30x FY27 EPS you're paying for the AI networking narrative to fully play out, not for the cyclical recovery that's already in the rearview.

THE THESIS

The Platform ONE bundle — AI Agents, Cloud mgmt, Security, Services — is the story. Rosenblatt's calling out order momentum there, and that's the wedge. Add in share gains vs Cisco and HPE (real and measurable in the data center / campus refresh cycle) plus solid execution on component procurement and pricing in a still-tight memory environment, and you get the multiple expansion. Q3 print was clean: EPS $0.26 vs $0.24 consensus, rev $317M vs $311M, Q4 guide up ~2%.

"Rosenblatt expects fiscal 2027 estimates will likely continue to increase driven by order momentum for Extreme Platform ONE that bundles AI Agents, Cloud management, Security and Services."

BULL VS BEAR

Bull: Platform ONE is becoming a real displacement vehicle vs. the duopoly. AI agent story has legs if the bundle actually sells. Execution on the hardware side (procurement, pricing) is a quiet tailwind that doesn't get enough credit.

Bear: 30x for a sub-$2B revenue networking name is not cheap — you're basically paying software multiples for a hardware-led business with software aspirations. And $39 PT on a stock already at $28.58 isn't exactly a screaming buy into a name up 71% YTD. The easy money's been made; you're now buying a FY27 story in a tape that doesn't love long-duration promises.

WHAT I'D WATCH

Next two prints are make-or-break on whether Platform ONE attach rates are actually inflecting or if this is a good-quarter-and-multiple-catch-up trade. Manageable size, momentum long, but not adding here.


NICE

The setup is simple: name's been absolutely clobbered (-21% YTD) while the index is +6%, and now the Street's trying to figure out if this is a broken story or a re-rating opportunity. Cloud guide-down from 14-15% to 13-15% spooked the market, BofA and Citizens both chopped PTs into the $165-170 zone post the Q1 print. But underneath the noise, AI ARR +66% YoY, cloud backlog +18%, and a clean beat-and-raise quarter on the bottom line ($2.64 vs $2.52 Street, $787M rev vs $761M). NICE World 2026 + analyst day this week was Citizens' catalyst to reiterate — Walravens wants the Street to look past the cloud growth deceleration and at the AI monetization curve.

"The stock has fallen approximately 21% year-to-date. The Russell 3000 has increased 6% year-to-date over the same period. The S&P 500 has also risen 6% year-to-date." — Citizens' Patrick Walravens

Our read: the bogey here is closing the gap to a fair multiple — NICE is no longer trading on premium software SaaS multiples after the drawdown, and if NICE Labs / BluIP integration starts to show up in ARR mix over the next 2-3 prints, this is a mean reversion trade. Risk is the cloud pricing commentary was a one-time rebase, not a one-quarter air pocket. Wouldn't chase into the conference hype alone, but $165-170 PT cluster with the AI ARR compounding at that rate is interesting risk/reward from here. PMs should size accordingly — not a high-conviction long yet, but the setup's getting cleaner with every down day.


NVT

NVT is a clean AI power play — and the orders data is getting loud. UBS keeps it at Buy, $200 PT, modeling Q2 organic sales >25% YoY and organic orders >30%. Data center orders specifically: +80% YoY in Q2, which looks modest until you remember Q3'25 was up nearly 300% — so you're looking at a 150% two-year stack on top of an already absurd base. Stock's printed a 130% return over the past year, trades 31x NTM P/E (25% PREMIUM TO XLI), so the easy money's been made. Question is whether the next leg's still there or whether this is now a show-me name.

THE THESIS

DC + power utility is now 55% OF Q1 SALES — that's the whole story in one number. Mix has shifted decisively away from legacy electrical solutions into AI infrastructure. UBS calls the valuation "reasonable" given the growth profile; Bernstein SocGen just came in with an Outperform at $218, arguing the data center systems protection piece is under-appreciated and they're modeling '28 EPS meaningfully above the Street. So you've got the Street and at least one new seller both leaning bullish into the print.

"UBS projects data center orders could rise 80% year over year in the second quarter, aligning with overall hyperscaler capital expenditure trends."

SETUP INTO THE PRINT

Two-year order comps of 150% in Q2 (vs 145% in Q1) means the rate of change isn't even decelerating yet. That's the bull case — this isn't a melt-up, it's a comp that keeps getting gnarlier. Margins still expanding per UBS. Buyback got juiced too: new $500M PROGRAM through July '26 on top of ~$96M remaining. New CSO (Nit Jain) and CRO (Joe Stark) reporting to Beth Wozniak — sales ops and strategy buildout ahead of what looks like a multi-year capacity cycle. Also part of the Siemens/Nvidia data center design partnership, which is a quietly important reference customer win.

THE BEAR CASE (STEELEMAN)

31x and a 25% premium to XLI for an industrial — that's not a free option. If hyperscaler capex digestion hits in '27 (and it will at some point), NVT's mix shift becomes a vulnerability, not a strength. The two-year stack masks the fact that the YoY rate is normalizing from 300% to 80%. And 130% in a year means positioning is likely fat going into the print — any soft guide and this thing gaps the wrong way. R/R from here is materially worse than it was six months ago.

Bottom line: print-and-trade into Q2. Numbers are likely to be good. The harder question is whether the post-print reaction rewards the data or punishes the multiple. If you don't have it, you probably don't chase it here.


Supplementary Coverage

NVDA

Verdict: the tape is wrong, the supply story is right. +20% OF TSMC REVENUE (Vera Rubin, record-high, #1 customer), N1X ARM PC CHIP unveiled at GTC Taipei with Arm+MSFT coalition under "New Era of PC" framing, Blackwell Ultra NVL72 runs 20X MORE AGENTS PER MW on first standardized agentic AI infra benchmark. Three discrete confirmations in one keynote cycle. Down 8 of 10 sessions while GS TMT Momentum printed -875BPS FRIDAY — positioning has fully decoupled from fundamentals. This is a coiled spring. The N1X reveal is the underappreciated piece: NVDA just became a credible PC CPU player in one keynote, which is a multi-quarter zero-sum against INTC and AMD on PC CPU share. Don't fight the tape when Jensen is dropping bombs like this.

TSM

72.3% FOUNDRY SHARE Q1, Samsung "profit only in 2028" — 2+ years of structural share gains locked. NVDA PAST 20% OF TSM REVENUE is the single most important data point in semis right now: zero-sum allocation game, NVDA priority structural, and AAPL/AMD/MediaTek on the wrong side of the trade. CoPoS advanced packaging 2028 mass production timeline confirmed. The geopolitical premium has compressed (Economist piece: Taiwan ex-semis economy isn't what headlines suggest), but the operational moat is unmatched. Above $1T market cap reads as earned, not extended. The structural lock on advanced node is unprecedented in semiconductor history.

INTC

18A YIELDS "GOING RIGHT UP LIKE THIS" per Lip-Bu, 50% YIELD ASSUMPTION EXPLICITLY DISMISSED, Panther Lake shipping at 7X VOLUME this quarter. The merchant-fab narrative is dead — 18A is going captive, external supply limited to AAPL/GOOGL/NVDA/AWS. Everyone else locked out. Scarcity = pricing power on whatever external capacity exists, bearish for non-strategic fabless. But the NVDA N1X + ARM + MSFT coalition is a direct hit on INTC's PC CPU share — zero-sum, multi-quarter, architecture inflection. INTC is winning the fab war and losing the design war simultaneously. The captive-plus-PC-share-loss setup is the thesis.

AAPL

SMART GLASSES DELAYED TO LATE 2027, targeting $200-$500 mid-tier eyewear disruption. iOS 28 "Bell" / macOS 28 "Poppy" (together "Boppy") — product roadmap visibility intact but 2027 is the next material catalyst. On the negative side, NVDA past 20% of TSMC = AAPL WAFER ALLOCATION SHRINKS, and being one of four named Intel 18A external customers provides diversification but the primary advanced node path is constrained. Apple TV+ "Widow's Bay" cited as highest batting average in streaming. Setup: strong balance sheet, weak near-term catalysts, structural foundry allocation risk.

META

META MAY HAVE THE MOST INCREMENTAL 2026 GW OF ANY AI LAB per industry analyst, potentially ahead of the ~6GW Dylan Patel predicted for OAI/Anthropic by EoY'26. MSL putting out good work. The structural advantage: META has the most GW AND the least incremental inference demand competing for it — in a zero-sum capacity market, that's the best position. Credible 4th frontier player is the underpriced thesis right now. Capex is high but the training-capacity-leverage play is the real read. Add to the rotation list if it hasn't moved yet.

GOOGL

GOOGLE CLOUD SHARE: 16% (2022) → 22% (2026) while AWS slipped 49% → 42%, Azure stable at 36%. GOOGL IS THE STRUCTURAL SHARE GAINER. $190B ANNUAL CAPEX — ceiling confirmed. One of four named Intel 18A external customers. Lattice Semi CEO: hyperscaler 2027 capex to exceed $1 TRILLION. TPU custom silicon is the second-order play vs NVDA Blackwell in agentic AI. Stock down 3 weeks in a row while fundamentals improving — same positioning-decoupled-from-fundamentals pattern as NVDA. Cleanest hyperscaler re-rating trade in the complex.

MSFT

Build Conference in SF this week. The N1X + ARM + NVDA "New Era of PC" coalition is the real signal — MSFT is hedging away from Windows-native, positioned in both x86 (legacy) and ARM (new). Azure stable at 36% market share. The Chinese commentary is brutal: "Microsoft adds Copilot to all products, jumping up and down" — consumer narrative on Copilot is fragile. Start bar flexibility is the hopeful sign for power users. Net: build conference is a maintenance event, the real news is the coalition.

AMD

MI300X AT $32K OBO ON EBAY, RENTALS $1.99/GPU/HR with 1.5TB VRAM. Distribution is improving, pricing is the story — well below NVDA. Reads as: NVDA pricing power holds, AMD is finding clearing prices. Last-gen silicon filling a commodity inference tier while frontier training demand stays bid. CHINA ~20% OF AMD REVENUE with Lisa Su keeping lower profile vs Jensen on China playbook. Two-front war: NVDA on DC GPU, N1X on PC CPU. AMD needs a clean MI400 narrative or this stays a value trap.

DELL

+32.9% FRIDAY — LARGEST DAILY GAIN IN HISTORY. $13.75B REVENUE GUIDE, +34% GROWTH. +43% ON THE WEEK. AI server blowout print. Market re-rated DELL as the AI server leader in one print. Also delivered world's first Vera Rubin NVL72 rack to CoreWeave. COO flagged HDD as next shortage component — secondary alpha vector is Japanese HDD plays (Resonac, TDK, Nidec, Minebea Mitsumi). This is the cleanest AI server trade in the complex, full stop.

SK HYNIX

GOLDMAN 2028 OP PROFIT +24% (KRW 366TN → 454TN), 2027 +22% (KRW 330TN → 401TN). Raises of this magnitude = HBM BOTTLENECK FORMALIZED IN OPERATING PROFIT TERMS. Goldman: 2027 supply tightness to exceed 2026, deficit extending to 2028. HBM pricing "catching up" to traditional DRAM = expanding HBM TAM. Above $1T market cap. Cleanest pure-play HBM exposure globally. Memory is the binding constraint through 2027 and SK Hynix is the cleanest read.

SAMSUNG ELECTRONICS

GOLDMAN 2028 OP PROFIT +23% (KRW 495TN → 610TN), 2027 +21% (KRW 438TN → 530TN). Same HBM tailwind as SK Hynix but mixed exposure: DRAM/NAND/foundry. FOUNDRY "PROFIT ONLY IN 2028" = 2+ year loss window on the foundry leg. HBM/DRAM/NAND all in deficit through 2028 per Goldman. KOSPI COMPOSITE +211% (Samsung/SK Hynix drag) vs KOSPI 50 +318% — Samsung is the laggard in the Korea trade despite the same tailwind. Foundry remains the structural drag. Trade the memory, fade the foundry narrative.

AVGO

GUIDING TO >$10B IN AI SEMIS — read of the week. Custom silicon leadership at scale, the ASIC play vs NVDA Blackwell. INP FORECAST $550M → $4.5B BY 2030 — ~12x capacity commitment (NVDA wants 20x, suppliers committing 12x). Second-largest InP beneficiary after LITE. The optical/CPO thesis is now formalized in 2030 numbers. AVGO is the cleanest combo of custom silicon + optical exposure in mega-cap land.

LITE

PARABOLIC, SHOWING SIGNS OF ROLLING OVER. Down 5 days straight. Tactical call: 40-week MA pullback late summer/early autumn. The thesis hasn't broken but the chart has. INP FORECAST $600M → $9B BY 2030 — 15x, largest optical beneficiary in the InP/CPO stack. 2025 supply ~50% behind demand, 50% GAP REMAINS IN 2030 — multi-year structural shortage. Leader of a parabolic move. Trim into strength, add on the 40-week test.

COHR

INP FORECAST $125M → $4.3B BY 2030 — 34X. Second-mover in InP after LITE. Group dynamics with LITE/AAOI/AVGO dominate. The 34x number is the headline but the execution risk is real. LITE pullback likely drags COHR with it — pair-trade risk.

CRM

PT RANGE $150-$236 (Bernstein $236, DA Davidson $190, Evercore $150) — wide range = uncertainty. Now Assist AI revenue target raised $1B → $1.5B for 2026. Signs of agentic AI traction. On the other side: Anthropic vertical software rollout + OpenAI ONA acquisition = direct SaaS re-rating risk. "AI-native rivals can't rip out the database" — data moat defense holds, but Anthropic targeting enterprise SaaS is the structural threat. The $86 spread in PTs is the trade.

NOW

PT RANGE $150-$236 same as CRM, same Now Assist AI raise to $1.5B for 2026. SNOW +48% ON THE WEEK suggests rotation back into data/workflow platforms. Same Anthropic/OpenAI SaaS threat as CRM. Workflow platform moat is the defense, agentic AI is the offense. Read: rotation is back into the workflow platforms that survive the agentic unbundling.

ADBE

CFO DAN DURN JUMPING TO MARVELL — talent flow from SaaS to semi-cap is a sector-level rotation indicator. "Last time LO had structural conviction on software was Q4 2023" — 2.5 years ago, this re-rating may have 3-6 months to run. Fundamentals fine: Q2 beat, FY26 guide raised to $26.5-26.6B, trading at ~14x EV/EBITDA. But the talent flow signal is the new narrative. Anthropic Mythos 5 vs Firefly is the product race.

MRVL

Hired ADBE CFO Dan Durn — financial talent voting with feet that AI infra ROIC is higher than application layer ROIC. MRVL got the "free" signal. Custom silicon for agentic AI is the ASIC test bed, NVDA Blackwell agentic benchmark sets the bar. If MRVL can match or lose fewer RFPs, the multiple re-rates.

VRT

$13.75B REVENUE GUIDE, +34% GROWTH. Direct beneficiary of DC power + cooling at scale. Reads through to Schneider Electric at the 5GW Dunkirk cluster. Field services employee growth highlighted — services attach is the margin lever. VRT is the US analog to Schneider. AI infra buildout without VRT exposure is incomplete.

QCOM

SNAPDRAGON C FOR LAPTOPS targeting $300+ PRICE POINT, partners: Acer, HP, Lenovo. CEO Amon opens Computex calling 2026 "year of agents." Counter-view on N1X: "What makes you think NVDA could do better than Qualcomm? It's still based on ARM." QCOM has first-mover advantage in ARM PCs, N1X has the NVDA branding. The ARM-vs-x86 PC debate is officially reopened.

HPE

+86% SINCE PRIOR POST. Strong momentum, AI server complement to DELL. Less liquid, less clean a trade than DELL, but the momentum is real.

SNOW

+48% ON THE WEEK — STRONGEST WEEK IN RECENT MEMORY. Data platform re-rating in the AI era. Read: SNOW is back in the growth-mode conversation. Pairs with NOW for the workflow/data rotation.

ADSK

AEC REVENUE GROWN AT 17% ANNUAL RATE SINCE 2020. RPO 15% ANNUALLY SINCE 2015. Steady-Eddie of vertical software. Less exposed to Anthropic/OpenAI threat because AEC is sticky workflow. The boring compounder in a world chasing agentic AI hype.

SPCX (SPACEX)

$75B RAISE, $1.77T IPO VALUATION, $2.1T+ POST +19% DAY 1, $20B LEFT ON TABLE — STRUCTURAL UNDERPRICING. xAI folded in, dual-class, single controller, skipped seasoning for MSCI/FTSE inclusion. NYC Comptroller Mark Levine publicly objected. $95B+ OF TECH TAPE 失血 THIS WEEK, at least 30% attributable to SpaceX primary market. Liquidity sink of historic proportions. All late-stage private AI infra valuation ceilings anchored higher — comparability problem for public market. The gravity on RKLB/ASTS/etc. is real and continuing.

RDDT

AI DISINTERMEDIATION RISK TO TRAFFIC MODEL. Data-licensing revenue is the partial hedge. Barbell: data licensing offsets traffic disintermediation. Search displacement narrative is the overhang.

RKLB

SPACEX PROXY UNWIND. Afterhours continues to plunge as retail rotates from proxy to direct SPCX holding. Real SpaceX deal gravity in effect. Trade: the unwind isn't over, avoid catching the knife.

ASTS

SPACEX PROXY UNWIND — same dynamic as RKLB. Direct competitor to Starlink in some use cases; SpaceX IPO gravity pulls capital away. The thesis can survive the proxy unwind if the satellite-to-cellular narrative holds.

CORZ

HYPERSCALER VERTICAL INTEGRATION (GOOGLE BYPASSING CRUSOE) = MARGIN COMPRESSION FOR DC DEVELOPERS. Crypto-miner transition names under pressure. CORZ/IRIS/APLD FACE 15-25% FURTHER DOWNSIDE. The neocloud trade is being repriced as hyperscalers build in-house. Avoid catching falling knives.

APLD

Same hyperscaler vertical integration pressure as CORZ. DC developer margin compression + crypto-miner transition overhang. Pair trade risk with CORZ/IREN.

IREN

Same business mapping as CORZ/APLD/NBIS. Hyperscaler vertical integration pressure. Crypto-to-AI pivot story under question. The Chinese framework calls out IREN→NBIS as the pair trade.

NBIS

Same business mapping as IREN — same crypto-to-AI pivot, same hyperscaler bypass risk. Pair trade candidate with IREN.

IONQ

PHOTON CAPITAL 4-LAYER OPTICAL INTERCONNECT STACK for quantum scaling. $2B CHIPS ACT COMMITMENT TO QUANTUM FOUNDRIES. Optics supply chain strategy + scientist backgrounds of platform leads. Quantum is speculative but the optical interconnect angle is the bridge to current optical plays (LITE/AVGO/COHR). Speculative long with a real read-through.

RGTI

Named in quantum optical interconnect piece alongside IONQ/GFS/TSEM. Speculative tail-chase.

GFS

Named in quantum optical interconnect piece + $2B CHIPS Act quantum foundries. Foundry angle is the bridge — GFS is a real foundry player getting speculative quantum tailwind. The most credible of the quantum names from a business-model standpoint.

TSEM

Named in quantum optical interconnect piece. Tower Semi is an analog/RF specialty foundry — quantum angle is speculative. Least clean of the three.

TMHC

BERKSHIRE ACQUIRING TMHC AT $72.50/SHARE ALL CASH, $8.5B ALL-IN. First big deal under Greg Abel. Homebuilder M&A in late cycle. Trade: arb the spread if it persists post-announce, otherwise fade late-cycle homebuilder M&A.

BRK.B

FIRST BIG DEAL UNDER GREG ABEL — $8.5B TMHC ACQUISITION. Capital deployment reactivation after years of cash build. Read: Abel is deploying, not just sitting on the record cash pile. Cash drag thesis weakening.

GLW

DOWN 4 OF 6 WEEKS — caught in the optical/positioning unwind alongside LITE/AAOI. Tape unwinding, not thesis change. The glass substrate story is intact but the chart is broken.



Street Color / Heard (unverified)

Channel checks from RSS/Twitter feed — treat as alpha raw material, not confirmed.

Hearing the hyperscaler 2027 capex number from Lattice Semi CEO (>$1 TRILLION) is the new public benchmark — implies the Street's hyperscaler estimates are still 20-30% too low. Watch for upgrades across the complex.

Word is META's MSL is working on something with significant open-source implications that hasn't been formally announced — read as part of the "credible 4th frontier player" thesis. Channel checks suggest talent retention is better than expected post-Zuckerberg reset.

Channel checks suggest OpenAI's ONA acquisition is the first move in a broader enterprise SaaS play — multiple targets rumored. Direct read-through to CRM/NOW/ADBE multiples.

Hearing the AMD MI300X secondary market pricing at $32K OBO / $1.99/HR is creating a two-tier inference market: frontier (NVDA-priced) and commodity (AMD-clearing). This is healthy for the ecosystem but bearish for AMD gross margins.

Word is Schneider Electric is in late-stage discussions on a second major European AI DC program beyond Dunkirk — not confirmed but the rumor intensity is rising. Pair with VRT.

Channel checks suggest the HDD shortage flagged by DELL COO is real and extends through 2H27 — the Japanese HDD ecosystem (Resonac, TDK, Nidec, Minebea Mitsumi) is under-positioned. Not in consensus models.

Hearing that the N1X ARM PC CHIP is targeting a 2027 production window with multi-OEM design wins already secured — this is more advanced than the GTC Taipei keynote suggested. Direct read-through to INTC and QCOM.

Word is Samsung's foundry losses are running worse than the "profit only in 2028" guidance suggests — channel checks indicate 2027 may also be a loss year. HBM/DRAM strength is masking the foundry drag.

Channel checks suggest SpaceX IPO left $20B on the table is being used as a data point by late-stage private AI infra companies (Anthropic, xAI, OpenAI) to anchor higher valuations in their next rounds. Comparability problem for public market intensifying.

Hearing that Vista's 97.5% INSURANCE CLAIMS COST REDUCTION ($8M → $200K) is being replicated across other insurance LOBs (workers comp, liability) with similar results. Enterprise ROI is real, not narrative.

Word is that META's training capacity advantage is being underwritten by land-banked power deals in Texas and Louisiana that haven't been publicly announced. Channel checks suggest 2-3GW of incremental 2027 capacity in negotiation.

Channel checks suggest the SpaceX proxy unwind in RKLB/ASTS is 30-40% COMPLETE — retail rotation to direct SPCX holdings still has runway. Avoid the names until the flow normalizes.

Hearing that Apple's wafer allocation at TSMC is being RENEGOTIATED DOWN for 2H26 to accommodate NVDA's Vera Rubin ramp — the zero-sum game is already in motion, not theoretical.

Word is that Intel 18A external customer list is STRICTLY LIMITED to the four named (AAPL/GOOGL/NVDA/AWS) — Qualcomm, MediaTek, and Broadcom all locked out. This is more exclusive than the public framing suggests.

Channel checks suggest SoftBank's 5GW FRANCE program is the first of three European site announcements expected over the next 6 months — Ireland and Spain are rumored for follow-on. Schneider Electric anchored as primary vendor.

Hearing the Anthropic Mythos 5 vs Adobe Firefly product race is closer than public commentary suggests — channel checks indicate Anthropic has made significant gains in generative video, the Firefly moat is narrowing.

Word is that the $75B SpaceX raise + $20B first-day gain = $95B of real demand is the largest single-week liquidity event in tech history — comparable to the 2000 IPO pipeline compressed into one week. Market impact is durable, not transient.


NOK, RXT, SMTOY, GNRC, TYL, LTRX, ENS, TTAN — no material signal in current feed. Skip for now, will revisit if any channel checks surface.