In this episode of Motley Fool Money, Motley Fool contributors Tyler Crowe, Matt Frankel, and Jon Quast discuss:
Alphabet has turned the tables on AI, using it to its advantage in search revenue. Nvidia sees a $1 trillion opportunity in AI spending through 2027.
Andy Jassy thinks Amazon's two most important industries are still underpenetrated. The company has built a moat that should allow it to benefit from the expansion of these markets.
Eli Lilly secures FDA approval for Foundayo, an oral GLP-1 therapy targeting obesity with significant advantages in convenience, pricing, and accessibility. Foundayo differentiates itself through flexible dosing, minimal administration restrictions, and a seamless patient experience, including an Amazon partnership for direct distribution. LLY's pricing strategy undercuts injectable competitors, aiming for broader market penetration with insured patients paying as little as $25/month and self-pay at $149/month.
Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN | AMZN Price Prediction) and Walmart (NYSE:WMT) reported earnings revealing two companies of nearly identical scale but radically different profit architectures.
Retail investors talked up five hot stocks this week (April 6 to April 10) on X and Reddit's r/WallStreetBets, driven by retail hype, Iran war, earnings, AI buzz, and corporate news flow.
Weekly Market HighlightsU.S. equities showed positive breadth for the week with 6,011 advancers versus 3,383 decliners, and an average return of 3.63% outpacin
The war in Iran has weighed on investors' minds, so the ceasefire was welcome news. All three major indexes climbed more than 2.5% in the trading session following Trump's announcement.
In a letter to shareholder, Amazon CEO Jassy delivered its most bullish outlook in years, highlighting a booming AI chip business and greater clarity on its $200 billion capex plan. AMZN's AI chip business, driven by Trainium, is at a $20+ billion run-rate, but all chips are consumed internally within AWS. Despite AWS margin improvements, AMZN's consolidated free-cash-flow margin (1.6%) remains far below Broadcom's (AVGO) 42%, limiting direct shareholder benefit.
Amazon (AMZN) stock has led the rebound in the broader market, spiking nearly 15% so far this month.