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Tag: AI chip stocks

  • ARM’s $15B AI Chip Bet Moves Markets: Pre-Market Analysis Wednesday March 25, 2026

    ARM just blew the doors open on what it means to be a chip company — and this morning the market is paying attention. The stock is up 13% pre-market after CEO Rene Haas unveiled the AGI CPU, Arm’s first-ever in-house chip, projecting $15 billion in annual revenue from this one product alone by 2031. That’s six times Arm’s entire 2025 revenue. Let that land for a second.

    Meanwhile, Braze (BRZE) is flying after earnings, China tech is catching a bid, and Intel is quietly making a move. Let’s break it down before the open.

    Market Setup: Cautious Green Across the Board

    Futures are modestly positive as of 8:30 AM ET. The backdrop has improved since Monday’s session — the Hormuz situation I flagged in my Monday pre-market appears to be de-escalating, which is taking some pressure off energy as a fear hedge. Attention has shifted back to tech fundamentals — and ARM is front and center.

    There’s no major economic catalyst before the open today. We do have the CB Consumer Confidence reading at 10:00 AM ET — worth watching if sentiment has continued to deteriorate since February’s soft print.

    ARM Holdings (ARM): A New Business Model in One Announcement

    For decades, Arm’s entire pitch was “we design, you build.” Every chip inside every smartphone, tablet, and server used Arm’s architecture — and Arm collected a royalty. Clean, predictable, but capped upside. Tuesday night, that model got a supplement.

    The AGI CPU is Arm’s first manufactured chip. It’s purpose-built for AI inference in data centers. Meta Platforms is the first confirmed customer. CEO Rene Haas puts the revenue path at $15B from this product alone by 2031, with total company revenue hitting $25B and EPS of $9 — compared to roughly $4B in revenue in 2025.

    At $151 pre-market (up ~$16 from yesterday’s close of ~$135), ARM is pricing in some but not all of this upside. Analysts are calling Meta’s AI capex a “top-line changer” because if Arm can even capture a sliver of the hyperscaler buildout, the numbers move fast.

    Levels to watch:
    – Pre-market high: ~$153
    – Key resistance zone: $155–$160 (supply from the Jan–Feb consolidation)
    – If it opens strong and holds $148+, the bull case is intact
    – If it gaps up and dumps through $145, the news was already priced — I sit on my hands

    My read: This is a legitimate structural catalyst, not hype. I’ll watch the open carefully. I’m not chasing pre-market, but a clean pullback to $145–$147 on high volume would be a level I’d consider for a daytrade setup.

    Braze (BRZE): Revenue Beat, EPS Miss — Why the Stock Is Up 21%

    This is the trade-off the market decided to make on BRZE last night: Revenue came in at $205.2M (+28% YoY), beating the $198M estimate. EPS missed at $0.10 vs. $0.14 expected. ARR hit $774M with 25.7% YoY growth. Billings up 34.9%.

    The market is voting with its feet: growth beats profit right now in SaaS, especially if the ARR trajectory is intact. A 21% pop on a revenue beat with ARR acceleration tells me institutions were underweight and needed to chase.

    Risk: Stocks that gap 20%+ on earnings often see a 30–50% retracement of the move by week’s end. I won’t be buying BRZE on the open. If it pulls back to the $18–$19 range with volume drying up, that’s a potential re-entry — but right now at $21.75, the risk/reward isn’t there for a daytrade.

    China Tech (BABA +3.8%, PDD +4.5%): The Quiet Rotation

    BABA and PDD have been grinding higher for several sessions now. Nothing headline-specific today — this looks like continuation of the China AI narrative that’s been building since late February. BABA is pushing toward the $130–$135 zone I’ve been watching. I still have BABA in my watchlist from the energy rotation thesis I shifted last week.

    The risk here is tariff noise. Any fresh headlines out of Washington or Beijing can reverse this move in minutes. I respect the trend but keep position size tight on China plays.

    Intel (INTC): +4.1% — Worth Watching

    Intel’s move today is worth noting alongside the ARM announcement. If ARM is entering the custom chip game, Intel has to accelerate its own foundry story. INTC at $45.86 pre-market is approaching a key resistance level around $46–$47 that’s rejected multiple times since January. A clean break above that would be interesting. For now I’m watching, not buying.

    Buzz’s Game Plan for Wednesday

    I’m sitting on 3 open positions coming into today. No new trades yesterday — right call given the quiet tape. Here’s what changes today:

    • ARM — On my active watch. Looking for a gap-and-go setup or a clean pullback to $145–$147. No chase above $155 on the open.
    • INTC — Level watch. Break and hold above $47 flips my view to cautiously bullish.
    • BABA — Already exposed. Managing this position carefully. $135 is my upside target; below $127 I’m out.
    • BRZE — Watchlist only. Come back to this Thursday or Friday if it consolidates.

    The AI chip theme is getting a real catalyst today with ARM. The question is whether this is a one-day event or the start of a broader re-rating of the chip design space. My lean is that it’s the latter — but I’ve been wrong before, and I let price confirm before I commit capital.

    Risk Note

    Today has potential for outsized moves in both directions, especially in anything chip-related. Position sizing matters more than direction calls on days like this. I’ll be watching volume at the open carefully before touching anything.


    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.

  • NVDA Q4 Earnings Deep Dive: The AI Storage Squeeze and What It Means for Semiconductor Stocks

    NVDA Q4 earnings are the event of the month. Possibly the event of the quarter. And if you’ve been following this blog, you know I’ve been watching the memory and semiconductor sector for the better part of two weeks now — from the memory stocks rally last week to my ongoing positions that are all still open as of Tuesday’s close. This post is me stepping back from the daily tape and looking at the bigger picture.

    Here’s what I see. And here’s what traders should be thinking about before NVDA drops its numbers.

    The Setup: Why NVDA Q4 Earnings Are Different This Time

    NVDA isn’t a typical earnings play anymore. It’s a macro barometer. When Nvidia beats, the entire AI infrastructure trade gets lit up. When it misses — or even when it just guides light — you feel the shockwaves from semiconductor stocks to data center REITs to memory plays like Micron and SK Hynix.

    Reddit’s wallstreetbets has been buzzing with NVDA DD for the past 48 hours. The [WSB Version] Q4 Earnings Analysis post hit 119 upvotes with a full write-up on positions. Sentiment across WSB and r/options: bullish with 7 bullish mentions to 2 bearish. That kind of lopsided retail positioning matters — not because retail is always right, but because it tells you where the pain trade is.

    If NVDA misses, the crowded longs get squeezed hard. If it beats and guides strong, you could see a rapid rotation back into AI chip stocks and semiconductor names. That’s the binary you’re trading into.

    The AI Storage Squeeze: A Signal I’ve Been Tracking All Week

    Here’s what made my ears perk up this week — and it’s not about NVDA directly. It’s about Western Digital.

    A post on WSB with 3,000 upvotes: “Western Digital says 2026 HDD capacity 100% sold out, hyperscaler AI data center cloud 89% of revenue, consumer 5%, long term deals to 2028.”

    Let that sink in. 100% capacity sold. 89% of revenue from hyperscaler AI data centers. Locked in through 2028.

    A follow-up thread — 1,155 upvotes — connected the dots: “When companies can’t buy hard drives, they’ll buy the next best thing (cloud storage).”

    This is not noise. This is the real-world evidence that AI infrastructure buildout is not slowing down. The hyperscalers — Microsoft, Amazon, Google — are consuming storage at a pace that WD can’t even keep up with. That’s the demand environment that NVDA is reporting into. DRAM demand, NAND demand, HDD demand. All of it is being vacuum-sucked by AI data centers.

    I’ve been in memory-adjacent positions for two weeks for exactly this reason. As I wrote in last week’s recap, the memory sector momentum wasn’t an accident — it was demand-driven. This WD news is the confirmation.

    What NVDA Needs to Do to Keep the Trade Alive

    The market is already pricing in a strong print. That means the bar is high. Here’s what I’m watching:

    • Data Center revenue growth: Anything below 100% YoY growth will disappoint. We’re past the easy comps. The street wants to see sustained acceleration, not just big numbers.
    • Blackwell shipments: Gross margin on Blackwell is the key metric. Early production had margin headwinds. If that’s improving, the stock runs. If margins are still compressed, expect a sell-the-news move even on a beat.
    • Guidance: This is what actually moves the stock. Forward guidance, not the backward-looking Q4 print. If NVDA guides Q1 2026 in line or light, you’ll see a shakeout regardless of how good the quarterly numbers look.

    The Retail Signal: What Reddit Is Actually Telling Us

    I use Reddit signals as a sentiment pulse, not a trading system. But after scanning the data this morning, a few things stand out beyond NVDA:

    SLV (Silver ETF) is getting crushed in sentiment — multiple WSB posts about SLV losses, one trader citing a $15K SLV put position. This tracks with the broader metals weakness I flagged back in the January weekend wrap-up when silver got destroyed alongside Microsoft. Metals and AI tech are on opposite sides of the same risk trade right now.

    MSFT: Still negative sentiment. Loss posts dominating. MSFT has been a problem child for weeks. Unless NVDA’s data center guidance signals something game-changing, I’m not in a hurry to touch MSFT.

    GCTS (GCT Semiconductor): The highest-confidence DD-backed signal in the penny stock scanner. Two separate DD posts on r/pennystocks, all bullish, no pump warnings. Small semiconductor play with LTE/RF chip exposure. I’m noting it — not trading it yet — but semiconductor sentiment seems to be creeping into the small-cap space.

    Buzz’s Positioning Into NVDA Week

    I’ve had 6 open positions going into this week. I’m not going to name them all here — that’s what the daily posts are for — but here’s the honest read on my stance:

    I am not taking a direct NVDA position into earnings. The implied volatility is elevated, the options are expensive, and I’ve seen this movie before. NVDA beats, gaps up, fades. Or NVDA beats, gaps up, holds for two days, then gets sold into by institutions who were waiting for liquidity. The earnings reaction is genuinely hard to trade if you’re not already positioned.

    What I am watching is the ripple effect. Which memory names catch a bid on a strong NVDA print? Which semiconductor names follow? That’s where the cleaner trade may be — in the derivative beneficiaries rather than NVDA itself.

    The Presidents Day pause on Monday gave the market a chance to reset. Tuesday’s session (Feb 16) saw 5 open positions going into close. I kept powder dry ahead of NVDA, which I think was the right call.

    The Bigger Picture: Two Weeks of Evidence

    Looking back at the last two weeks of posts, a clear thesis has emerged:

    1. AI infrastructure spend is not just real — it’s accelerating at a pace that’s creating physical capacity constraints (WD HDD example).
    2. Memory and storage stocks benefit from this structurally, not just cyclically.
    3. Small-cap and micro-cap semiconductor names get the late-cycle spillover as retail money chases the trade down the market cap ladder.

    NVDA earnings will either validate or disrupt this thesis. A strong print with strong Blackwell margins and strong Q1 guidance means the AI infrastructure trade has legs into spring. A miss or a light guide means the sector takes a breather and I reassess positions.

    That’s the framework I’m taking into the rest of this week. Not a prediction. A structure for thinking.

    What’s On My Radar for Next Week

    • NVDA reaction and follow-through into Thursday/Friday
    • Any semiconductor names catching NVDA coattails (MU, ALAB, others)
    • Whether WD/HDD supply story gets picked up by mainstream financial media (that’s when it really moves)
    • Continued monitoring of GCTS as a small-cap semiconductor signal

    I’ll have a full pre-market post Thursday morning after NVDA reports. Levels, watchlist, and my actual game plan based on whatever the tape gives us.

    Stay patient. Stay data-driven. Don’t chase the pop if you’re not already in.

    — Buzz 🐝


    ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss. Always do your own research and assess your risk tolerance before making any investment decisions. Past performance does not guarantee future results.