📌 Top story — scroll down for more updates
AI Shopping Shift Hits Etsy, Shopify
5:50 pm — SHOP -4.09% today (+1.80% after hours), ETSY -5.77% today
★ SHOP is recommended in Stock Advisor (Team HG), in Hidden Gems, and in Rule Breakers as a Foundational Stock
★ ETSY is recommended in Rule Breakers
OpenAI is backing away from its Instant Checkout feature, once pitched as the future of AI commerce, after struggling to onboard merchants and support core retail functions. The pivot toward product discovery keeps retailers in control of transactions, a shift that could favor platform players like Shopify (SHOP +1.93%) while limiting disintermediation risk for marketplaces like Etsy (ETSY 2.65%).
- Platform power holds: Shopify’s infrastructure remains central if merchants keep checkout on their own rails, not inside ChatGPT.
- Marketplace moat tested: Etsy avoids immediate disruption from AI-native checkout, but long term, discovery moving upstream into AI could pressure traffic flows.

Today’s Change
(-2.65%) $-1.31
Current Price
$48.15
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$4.8B
Day’s Range
$47.63 – $51.09
52wk Range
$40.05 – $76.52
Volume
109K
Avg Vol
3.7M
Gross Margin
71.64%
Today’s Evening News: Google’s AI Ambitions Get Physical
5:20 pm
Alphabet (GOOG +0.14%) is deepening its robotics push, partnering with Agile Robots to pair Gemini artificial intelligence (AI) models with industrial robot hardware. The deal gives Google real-world deployment data — a key edge as it competes with Amazon (AMZN +2.02%) and Tesla (TSLA +0.69%) in bringing AI to manufacturing. With 20,000+ systems already deployed, Agile offers immediate scale, while Google continues stacking partnerships across robotics and infrastructure. Alphabet is a recommendation by teams Hidden Gems and Rule Breakers, and since its 2022 addition to the Rule Breakers scorecard, shares are up 165% — 92 percentage points ahead of the market.
- From code to concrete: “Is Google a company disrupting itself? Possibly,” wrote Team Rule Breakers analyst Jason Moser. Gemini models are moving beyond chat into physical tasks, with manufacturing as the first proving ground.
- Arms race expands: Alphabet-backed robotics funding and deals signal AI’s next frontier — real-world automation, not just software.
ServiceNow Slides 10% on AI Fears
4:41 pm — NOW -5.66% today
Shares of ServiceNow (NOW 1.60%) fell about 4% alongside software peers after Anthropic unveiled new “agent” capabilities for Claude that can operate apps, browse, and complete tasks. The move adds to concerns that AI agents could replace parts of enterprise software workflows. Despite little evidence of current disruption, ServiceNow is down sharply from its 2024 peak, and valuation remains elevated at about 63x GAAP earnings.
- From Assistants To Operators: AI is shifting from chat to action—potentially compressing demand for traditional SaaS tools over time.
- Narrative Vs. Numbers: Fundamentals remain intact, but sentiment and multiples are reacting faster than revenue.

Today’s Change
(-1.60%) $-1.68
Current Price
$102.97
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$109B
Day’s Range
$101.15 – $106.79
52wk Range
$98.00 – $211.48
Volume
644K
Avg Vol
18M
Gross Margin
77.53%
Closing Bell
4:02pm
Brent crude climbed back above $100 as Middle East tensions escalated and hopes for a diplomatic breakthrough dimmed, injecting fresh uncertainty into markets. Stocks stalled after Monday’s rally, with the Nasdaq slipping and the S&P 500 flat, as investors weighed conflicting signals on U.S.-Iran talks and the risk of broader regional involvement. Energy stocks led, while rising yields and a stronger dollar added pressure across sectors.
- Diplomacy or Detour? Conflicting reports on U.S.-Iran talks—and continued strikes—are muddying the outlook, keeping volatility elevated.
- Oil’s Domino Effect: Disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz are tightening supply expectations, lifting energy stocks while weighing on broader risk appetite.
Is Smart Money Moving Shift4 Today?
3:49 pm — FOUR +17.76%
By Buck Hartzell
Shift4 (FOUR 7.56%) is up 20% today as I type this. There is no news to report. I have a few thoughts on the stock movement.
- The stock is cheap. They spent $305 million on buybacks in Q4 25 @ an avg price of $70.12. It’s a LOT cheaper now, and they have $500 million remaining on their share repurchase plan.
- Shift4 is no longer a controlled company as the founder and now head of NASA, Jared Isaacman, has collapsed all his B and C class shares. This likely opens FOUR up to more institutional investors. Isaacman still owns 27% of the Class A shares.
We know this. Someone is buying shares today, and they are buying quite a lot.
Costco Energy Drink Sparks CELH Sell-Off
3:27 pm — CELH -8.36%, COST +0.91%
★ COST is recommended in Stock Advisor (Team HG)
★ CELH is recommended in Stock Advisor (Team HG)
By Sanmeet Deo
Team Rule Breakers
Costco (COST +0.09%) just jolted the beverage market, launching a 200mg-caffeine Kirkland Signature energy drink. Investors panicked, sending Celsius (CELH 2.93%) stock tumbling 9% on fears of lost market share and multiple compression. But let’s take a breath! While I haven’t taste-tested Costco’s brew yet, Celsius boasts a massive moat: deep domestic and international distribution, plus strong footholds in fitness centers and Amazon (AMZN +2.02%). This drop looks like a classic market overreaction. I still firmly believe in Celsius’s long-term growth story. Keep your eyes on the long game!
Stocks Go Blockchain at NYSE
2:30 pm — ICE -0.39%
The New York Stock Exchange, owned by Intercontinental Exchange (ICE +0.69%), is partnering with Securitize to build a blockchain-based platform for tokenized stocks and ETFs, according to a Wall Street Journal report Tuesday. The proposed system would enable 24/7 trading, instant settlement, and funding via stablecoins—bypassing traditional clearinghouses. The move follows Nasdaq’s (NDAQ 0.70%) own token push but takes a different route: issuing and settling securities directly on-chain. For investors, the key question is whether “native” tokenized shares can deliver full shareholder rights—unlike many current offshore offerings that behave more like derivatives.
- Wall Street’s next battleground: Nasdaq is moving too, signaling a race to redefine how stocks trade—and who controls the rails.
- Not all tokens are equal: Many existing “tokenized stocks” lack voting rights or dividends; NYSE is aiming to change that with compliant, on-chain issuance.

Intercontinental Exchange
Today’s Change
(0.69%) $1.07
Current Price
$156.89
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$88B
Day’s Range
$153.59 – $157.83
52wk Range
$143.17 – $189.35
Volume
154K
Avg Vol
3.8M
Gross Margin
68.46%
Dividend Yield
1.26%
Meta Centralizes AI Push Under CTO Bosworth
2:06 pm — META -1.55%
Meta Platforms (META +0.29%) is putting CTO Andrew Bosworth in charge of its “AI For Work” push, aiming to embed AI tools across its 78,000-person workforce, according to an internal memo viewed by The Wall Street Journal. The effort targets faster execution, fewer management layers, and more “AI-native” teams, as Meta competes with leaner AI start-ups. The move follows metaverse cutbacks and signals a broader shift toward AI infrastructure, internal agents, and large language model development to reshape how employees work day to day.
- From Layers to Leverage: Meta is redesigning teams to be flatter and more AI-assisted, with tools like internal agents handling tasks and even communicating across teams.
- Zuckerberg’s Signal: The CEO is reportedly building his own AI agent, underscoring how deeply automation is expected to permeate leadership and operations.
META performance
Today -1.55%
1 Year -3.90%
5 Years +110.12%
Hidden Gems Primary
Database Superscore
89
Microsoft President Warns on Data Center Trust
1:00 pm — MSFT -2.5%
Microsoft (MSFT 0.50%) President Brad Smith warned at the CERAWeek conference that winning over local communities is now “paramount” to scaling AI infrastructure. As Big Tech’s data centers drive up electricity demand and utility bills, towns in the Midwest and Northeast have begun canceling developments over pollution and water impact. This grassroots friction threatens the aggressive expansion plans of cloud giants, potentially bottlenecking the hardware growth required for generative AI. For investors, this shift elevates community relations from a PR exercise to a critical operational risk that could delay multi-billion dollar capital projects and impact long-term service delivery.
- The Utility Bill Battleground: Localized opposition is intensifying as residents realize that massive server farms often lead to higher residential power costs and strained regional grids.
- A New Geographic Strategy: Microsoft and peers may be forced to abandon traditional tech hubs for more welcoming jurisdictions, increasing the logistical complexity and cost of “edge” computing.

Today’s Lunchtime News
1:05 pm — AMZN -1.1%
Software stocks dropped sharply Tuesday after a report that Amazon‘s (AMZN +2.02%) AWS division is developing AI agents to automate sales, cybersecurity, and server networking functions — work currently handled by thousands of human technical specialists and the software tools they rely on. An ETF tracking software stocks fell as much as 4.4% today, its biggest single-day drop in a month.
- Who got hit: UiPath (PATH 1.58%) and HubSpot (HUBS +0.06%) fell more than 9%, while Atlassian (TEAM 2.51%) dropped as much as 9.5%. Salesforce (CRM 0.74%) also declined. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV 0.52%) is now on pace for its worst quarter since 2008, down 23% since the end of 2025.
- Bigger picture: Software stocks have been under sustained pressure all year as AI tools from start-ups including Anthropic raise questions about whether businesses will need as much traditional software as they once did. The Amazon report landed as a particularly direct threat — not from a start-up but from one of the industry’s biggest infrastructure providers moving aggressively into territory software vendors have long owned.

Anthropic Fights Billion-Dollar AI Ban
12:35 pm
Anthropic heads to federal court Tuesday seeking an injunction to halt a Pentagon “supply chain risk” designation and a directive from President Trump banning federal use of its Claude AI. The startup, which signed a $200 million defense contract last July, warns it faces “reputational and economic” ruin if the blacklist continues. The outcome carries heavy implications for partners like Amazon (AMZN +2.02%) and Microsoft (MSFT 0.50%), which host Anthropic’s models. Meanwhile, Palantir Technologies (PLTR +0.10%) continues to utilize Claude for military operations despite the designation, highlighting the reliance of current defense infrastructure on the embattled AI lab during the ongoing conflict with Iran.
- Collateral Damage for Contractors: If the injunction fails, defense titans must certify they have purged Claude from their workflows, potentially delaying critical AI-driven military upgrades.
- Ethics vs. Access: The legal friction stems from Anthropic’s refusal to allow Claude’s use for autonomous weaponry, a stance the Pentagon claims led to the national security “risk” label.
Apple to Launch Maps Ads in U.S. This Summer
12:10 pm — AAPL +0.8%
Apple (AAPL +0.39%) is officially invading Alphabet’s (GOOG +0.14%) territory, announcing that paid ads will hit Apple Maps in the U.S. and Canada this summer. The move weaponizes a pre-installed app on hundreds of millions of iPhones to capture local advertising revenue. While Apple insists its privacy-first model remains intact—keeping personal data on-device and unlinked to Apple accounts—the strategy signals a pivot as traditional services revenue faces regulatory headwinds in Europe. This expansion puts Apple in direct competition with Meta Platforms (META +0.29%) for localized marketing budgets just as artificial intelligence begins to reshape the search landscape.
- High-Margin Diversification: As Google’s multi-billion dollar search-default payments face legal threats, Apple is building an internal advertising engine to insulate its Services bottom line.
- Bait-and-Switch Ecosystem: By making previously paid business management tools free next month, Apple is aggressively onboarding the same commercial entities it intends to pitch for paid map placements.
Gap Beats Rivals to AI Sales
11:10 am — GAP +2.2%
Gap (GAP 2.35%) is pioneering “agentic commerce” through an exclusive partnership with Google (GOOG +0.14%), allowing customers to purchase apparel directly within the Gemini AI interface. This integration enables shoppers to discover and buy items — like wedding attire or interview outfits — using conversational AI without being redirected to Gap’s website. By providing curated data directly to Gemini, Gap maintains control over product accuracy and customer information. While early iterations lack loyalty point integration, the move positions Gap ahead of specialty retail peers, leveraging Google Pay to capture the growing segment of users migrating from traditional search to AI-driven discovery.
- Winning the Protocol War: Gap is utilizing the “Universal Commerce Protocol,” which offers retailers superior control over the brand experience compared to the discovery-focused models currently tested by OpenAI.
- Precision Fit Technology: Alongside the Gemini launch, the retailer is deploying “Bold Metrics,” an AI-powered proprietary sizing tool designed to slash return rates by pinpointing the perfect fit for online shoppers.
United Swaps Coach for Costly Suites
11:45 am — UAL +0.3%
United Airlines (UAL 0.65%) is aggressively shrinking its economy section to make room for high-margin premium cabins, unveiling new layouts for its Airbus A321neo and A321XLR fleets. The carrier’s new “Coastliner” configuration features 20 lie-flat Polaris suites on narrowbody jets, targeting transcontinental travelers willing to pay over $5,000 per seat. This shift mirrors a broader industry trend seen at Delta Air Lines (DAL +1.98%) and JetBlue (JBLU +11.93%), as premium revenue growth consistently outpaces standard coach sales. Despite Boeing (BA +1.51%) delivery delays, United is even upscaling its smallest regional jets, proving that in the current high-fuel environment, every inch of cabin real estate must be monetized.
- The Margin Multiplier: By removing standard seats to install snack bars and lie-flat beds, United is betting that the massive price gap — often ten times the cost of coach — will more than offset reduced passenger density.
- Supply Chain Stranglehold: Intense demand for these luxury installations has created a massive bottleneck for seat manufacturers, with some premium cabin upgrades now directly delaying the delivery of new aircraft.

Top of the Morning
9:50 am — SFD +4.6% in pre-market trading
By Bill Barker
Smithfield Foods (SFD +2.08%) shares are up over 7% in pre-market trading this morning after the pork giant delivered a fourth-quarter double beat, reporting $0.83 in adjusted earnings per share on $4.23 billion in revenue. The solid report serves as another partial macroeconomic bellwether, highlighting the resilience of a “cautious consumer” who is aggressively trading down from expensive restaurant dining to premium at-home meals.
Furthermore, as retail beef prices remain near record highs due to tight cattle herds, shoppers are actively substituting pricey beef with more affordable pork products. Smithfield capitalized heavily on this trade-down effect, with its flagship Packaged Meats segment crossing the $1 billion operating profit mark for the fourth consecutive year.

8:30 am — TSLA -0.46% in pre-market trading
By Morning Show host Emily Flippen, CFA
Team Rule Breakers
Shares of Tesla (TSLA +0.69%) have been under a bit of pressure in the past few days, in part because HSBC analyst Michael Tyndall recently cut his price target for shares to $119 and maintained a “reduce” rating for investors. It’s the lowest price target for this otherwise outperforming business among major banks, and the argument is something bears will already be familiar with: demand for newer, low-priced models will not offset weakening global demand for electric vehicles, especially when competition is intensifying globally.
While this is certainly one fair and well-reasoned perspective, it’s also fair to say that Tesla shareholders, and other major investors, have never really viewed the business as a car company.

Today’s Change
(0.69%) $2.64
Current Price
$385.67
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.4T
Day’s Range
$385.01 – $396.23
52wk Range
$214.25 – $498.83
Volume
3.5M
Avg Vol
61M
Gross Margin
18.03%
Can Zoox Catch Up to Waymo?
10:20 am — AMZN -1.1%
Amazon (AMZN +2.02%) is accelerating its autonomous ambitions as its Zoox unit prepares to launch robotaxis in Austin and Miami later this year. Currently operating in Las Vegas and San Francisco, Zoox has served 350,000 riders but has yet to transition to a paid commercial model. CEO Aicha Evans confirmed the company is ready to begin charging fares pending NHTSA approval for a 2,500-vehicle fleet. While trailing Alphabet (GOOG +0.14%) unit Waymo — which logs 400,000 paid trips weekly — Zoox is scaling up through a strategic partnership with Uber (UBER +1.06%) to integrate its toaster-shaped, pedal-less vehicles into the ride-hailing app by summer.
- Targeting High-Traffic Revenue: The spring expansion in Las Vegas specifically targets major venues like the Sphere and Harry Reid International Airport, move-ins designed to prove commercial viability in dense tourist corridors.
- The Scale Scramble: With 100 custom robotaxis hitting public roads soon, Amazon is betting on a “stubborn” long-term hardware play rather than just retrofitting existing cars, a capital-intensive strategy that creates a high barrier to entry for competitors.

Opening Bell
9:35 am
U.S. equities retreated Tuesday, paring nearly half of Monday’s 800-point surge as the Dow fell 385 points. While the S&P 500 and Nasdaq both dropped 0.7%, investor optimism over an “imminent” peace deal was checked by Iranian state media denying any direct negotiations with Washington. The confusion sent Brent crude back above $101 per barrel, erasing the “war premium” discount seen yesterday. Strategists warn that until the Strait of Hormuz is reliably reopened, the market remains a “coiled spring” vulnerable to headlines, with energy price volatility continuing to threaten corporate margins and the broader disinflationary trend.
FedEx Launches Same-Day Delivery to Rival Amazon
8:15 am — FDX -0.15% in pre-market trading
FedEx (FDX 0.61%) has officially launched FedEx SameDay Local, a new high-speed shipping program in partnership with AI-logistics firm OneRail. The move is a direct counter to Amazon‘s (AMZN +2.02%) recent rollout of one-to-three-hour delivery windows and mirrors similar “Express” pushes from Walmart (WMT +0.82%) and Target (TGT +0.30%). By leveraging OneRail’s network of over 10,000 drivers and AI-driven “intelligent orchestration,” FedEx can now offer retailers precise two-hour and end-of-day delivery windows. This “white-label” approach allows brands to utilize their own store networks as fulfillment hubs while maintaining control over customer data–a key selling point for retailers wary of Amazon’s ecosystem.
- Asset-Light Agility: Unlike its retired “SameDay City” service, which relied on internal couriers, this new model uses OneRail’s gig and professional delivery network to scale quickly without adding massive fixed overhead to FedEx’s “Network 2.0” consolidation.
- The Competitive Moat: By offering a competitive rate card and real-time GPS tracking, FedEx is positioning itself as the primary logistics partner for high-value, time-sensitive verticals like healthcare, electronics, and specialized retail.

Today’s Change
(-0.61%) $-2.20
Current Price
$357.76
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$86B
Day’s Range
$352.78 – $362.05
52wk Range
$194.29 – $392.86
Volume
95K
Avg Vol
2M
Gross Margin
22.04%
Dividend Yield
1.61%
This Morning’s Breakfast News
7:30 am — GILD -0.15% in pre-market trading
Gilead Sciences (GILD +0.03%) was little changed ahead of the opening bell after news broke of a $2.18 billion deal to buy Ouro Medicines, in a bid to secure assets to bolster its growing inflammation portfolio.
- “This acquisition underscores our commitment to advancing transformative therapies”: Chief medical officer Dietmar Berger talked up the deal, with Ouro’s key drug gamgertamig already in the FDA fast-track process. The company is also in talks with Galapagos (GLPG +2.82%) for a potential research collaboration with Ouro’s assets.
- “Gilead is looking like a reasonably priced healthcare stock with room for plenty of further growth”: Discussing the company last month, Fool contributing analyst Dan Caplinger said it “has had a great start to 2026,” with “product sales projected to approach or exceed the $30 billion this year.”
S&P 500 Breaks Below Its 200-Day Moving Average
7:25am
By Andy Cross
Motley Fool CIO
Don’t count me as a stock-charter but I think this helps set context for the markets. The S&P 500 [yesterday] crossed below its 200-day moving average, which over time doesn’t happen that often.
This chart from Y-charts shows the simple 200-day moving average over the last decade. Most of the time we’re comfortably above the average. Occasionally we dip below, and sometimes for painful stretches like in 2022. But often the markets catch up.
It’s impossible to know if this is a dip or a drag, but for diversified portfolios of 25, 50 stocks, like we guide at Stock Advisor, time is always on our side.
ICYMI: Monday’s Scoreboard
6:15 am — MA unchanged in pre-market trading
Mastercard (MA +0.77%) was the subject of the latest Scoreboard video.
Tesla Ends 14-Month Europe Sales Slump
6:00 am — TSLA -0.41% in pre-market trading
Tesla (TSLA +0.69%) recorded its first increase in European monthly sales in over a year, with new-car registrations growing almost 12%, providing a positive sign it’s able to compete with Chinese EV alternatives.
- Last recorded growth in Europe was in December 2024: The data, released by the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association, comes off the back of data last week showing Tesla’s retail sales in China jumped over 42% year over year. Tesla is recommended by both Team Hidden Gems and Team Rule Breakers, with the stock beating the S&P 500 by 112% since the Hidden Gems rec in April 2024.
- European EV market subset grew almost 16% last month: Battery electric vehicles (cars powered exclusively by batteries) experienced high demand. Tesla can take confidence from the overall trend in the EV space, with registrations of plug-in-hybrid models growing by 33%. However, competitor BYD (BYDDY 0.07%) saw registrations almost triple in February.
AWS Bahrain Disrupted Again by Drone Activity
5:30 am — AMZN -0.26% in pre-market trading
Amazon‘s (AMZN +2.02%) AWS confirmed Tuesday morning that its Bahrain region has been “disrupted” due to ongoing drone activity, marking the second time this month that military conflict has taken the facility offline. While Amazon declined to confirm a direct hit, the disruption follows a devastating early March strike that caused structural and water damage to data centers in the UAE and Bahrain. AWS is now taking the unprecedented step of urging all customers with workloads in the Middle East to migrate to alternate global regions, as “prolonged” recovery efforts are hampered by an unpredictable operating environment. This kinetic targeting of the “cloud” represents a major escalation in the U.S.-Iran conflict, as Tehran-aligned groups have explicitly labeled these facilities as “legitimate targets” for their role in hosting intelligence and defense workloads.
- Fragile Redundancy: The current disruption proves that “Multi-AZ” (Availability Zone) strategies are insufficient against regional warfare; when a drone strike takes out power or connectivity for an entire cluster, even the most resilient cloud architectures can fail.
- The “Sovereign Cloud” Risk: This conflict is cooling the “Big Tech” investment boom in the Gulf; giants like Microsoft (MSFT 0.50%) and Alphabet (GOOG +0.14%) are now facing questions about the physical safety of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure located within the combat zone.
Before the Opening Bell
5:00 am
Stock futures are catching their breath Tuesday morning following a historic 1,100-point “Trump Rally” that pulled the Dow Jones Industrial Average off its 2026 lows. Sentiment remains cautiously optimistic after President Trump postponed planned strikes on Iranian energy infrastructure for five days, citing “productive conversations” aimed at reopening the Strait of Hormuz. While the S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures are trading near flat, investors are pivoting to macro data. The S&P Global US Manufacturing PMI (due at 9:45 AM ET) is expected to show a slight expansion to 51.6, though any signs of “war-driven” input price spikes could reignite inflation fears ahead of the Federal Reserve’s next move.
- Earnings Tail-End: Customer engagement platform Braze (BRZE +20.87%) is the focus after today’s close; analysts expect an EPS of $0.14 on $198 million in revenue. Investors will be looking for updates on their “OfferFit” AI integration as a proxy for enterprise software spending resilience.
- Geopolitical Skepticism: While U.S. markets rallied on the “peace pause,” Iranian state media has denied direct talks, leading some analysts to warn that the “five-day window” may be a tactical maneuver rather than a definitive resolution.




