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Traders who shorted the S&P 500Octoberphobia,” a term that arose because of the market crashes in 1929 and 1987 that happened during the month.
The Nasdaq Composite
On Friday, Amazonrobust growth in its cloud-computing unit and as CEO Andy Jassy pointed to “strong demand in AI and core infrastructure.” The news pushed up other artificial intelligence-related stocks such as PalantirOracle
AI’s ascent in the market wasn’t a one-day event. In October, Nvidiareach a valuation of $5 trillion, with CEO Jensen Huang describing the technology as having formed a “virtuous cycle” in which usage growth will lead to an increase in investment, in turn improving AI, which will boost usage, which will… You get the idea.
Indeed, during their earnings disclosures last week, Big Tech companies announced dizzying increases in their capital expenditure, most of which will likely go toward AI infrastructure.
All that is to say that the enthusiasm over AI looks, for now, less like the immediate sugar rush of a candy bar (and the subsequent crash), and more like the sustained energy boost from a fiber-rich pumpkin.
What you need to know today
China’s factory activity slows down in October. The RatingDog China General Manufacturing PMI, compiled by S&P Global, came in at 50.6 for the month, dipping from the six-month high of 51.2 in September. Analysts polled by Reuters were expecting a reading of 50.9.
Baidu’s weekly robotaxi rides hit 250,000. That’s according to a spokesperson for Apollo Go, Baidu’s robotaxi unit, who said the firm surpassed that figure as of Oct. 31. It’s roughly the same number of weekly driverless rides as Waymo, according to report in late April.
Berkshire Hathaway operating profit rebounds. Year on year, that figure surged 34% to $13.485 billion in the third quarter. Warren Buffett’s conglomerate now holds $381.6 billion in cash, the highest on record — but it isn’t looking at stock buybacks yet.
U.S. markets ended Friday higher. On Sunday night stateside, futures tied to major U.S. indexes were little changed. Asia-Pacific markets rose Monday. Japan’s Nikkei 225Kospi
[PRO] Stocks enter November on a high. The S&P 500 is beginning November more than 16% up for the year. This week, investors should still keep an eye out for a Supreme Court case on Trump tariffs and earnings from firms like Advanced Micro Devices
And finally…
K-pop prospects brighten on China market hopes as Seoul and Beijing sign content exchange deal
South Korea’s national broadcaster KBS on Saturday entered into a media exchange and cooperation business agreement with China Media Group, which is directly controlled by the Chinese Communist Party. Shares of South Korean entertainment companies popped on the news.
The return of K-pop to China could mark a turning point in the industry. China imposed a “soft ban” on K-pop content in 2016 after South Korea deployed U.S.′ Terminal High Altitude Area Defense anti-ballistic missile system, also known as THAAD, on its soil.
— Lim Hui Jie
International: Top News And Analysis
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