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Apple Reclaims Title as World’s Most Valuable Company, Overtaking Nvidia for First Time Since April 2025

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Ismael Saibari

Apple briefly reclaimed its position as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company on Friday, edging past Nvidia in market capitalization for the first time in more than a year, as investors reassessed the pace and payoff of massive spending across the artificial intelligence infrastructure buildout.

Apple shares climbed to an all-time high of $334.99 in early trading Friday, lifting the company’s market value to approximately $4.88 trillion. Nvidia, meanwhile, saw its shares fall more than 3% in early trading, pulling its market capitalization down to roughly $4.84 trillion. The two companies traded the top spot back and forth throughout the session, with Nvidia’s value dipping as low as $4.84 trillion at one point while Apple hovered near $4.88 trillion, before the positions shifted again later in the day.

The milestone marks the first time Apple has surpassed Nvidia in market value since April 2025, ending a run of roughly 15 months during which Nvidia had held the title of the world’s most valuable company. Nvidia first claimed the top spot in June 2025, when it overtook Microsoft, and went on to become the first publicly traded company in history to reach a $5 trillion market capitalization in October of that year. Apple, notably, also crossed the $4 trillion market cap threshold for the first time that same month, driven by strong iPhone sales.

The reversal in fortunes between the two technology giants reflects a broader shift underway across markets this year. Apple shares have surged 22% in 2026, outperforming the broader market as investors have rewarded the company’s approach to artificial intelligence and its comparatively modest capital spending model, even as businesses across the technology sector commit unprecedented sums toward AI infrastructure buildout. Nvidia, by contrast, has gained just 7% so far this year and has largely sat on the sidelines as Wall Street’s attention has pivoted toward the memory chip and infrastructure stage of the data center buildout, a shift that has instead benefited memory stocks such as Micron Technology, which crossed $1 trillion in market value in May, and SanDisk.

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A significant driver behind Apple’s rally came Thursday evening, when HSBC upgraded the stock to a Buy rating from Hold, raising its price target to $366 from $260, a level Apple’s stock had not traded at since April. Analyst Erwan Cote-Colisson wrote in a note cited by multiple outlets that Apple has reached what the firm characterized as an operational turning point. He noted that Apple can largely avoid the debate swirling around excessive capital expenditure among AI infrastructure companies, since Apple invests only about 2.5% of its estimated 2026 sales in capital spending, compared with roughly 39% among major hyperscale cloud providers. Cote-Colisson added that Apple is well positioned to leverage its installed base of 2.5 billion active devices through its forthcoming revamped Apple Intelligence platform, including a new agentic version of Siri expected to launch later this year, which he said could drive additional device demand. “This AI boost comes at the right moment, when we think Apple has one of its most innovative product pipelines in place,” Cote-Colisson wrote.

HSBC’s bullish case also rested in part on Apple’s upcoming hardware roadmap, which the firm views as unusually strong. That pipeline includes the iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max expected this fall, an iPhone Air slated for April 2027, and what HSBC described as the most significant upcoming release: a book-style foldable phone. Apple also received government approval this week to roll out its Apple Intelligence features in China, another development that has contributed to recent investor optimism around the stock.

Not all of the news swirling around Apple this week has been strictly financial. A separate report from the Financial Times indicated that Apple has sent legal letters to roughly 40 former employees now working at OpenAI, expanding an ongoing trade-secrets investigation. That outreach follows a lawsuit Apple filed last week accusing OpenAI of recruiting key engineers in order to obtain confidential hardware and product-development information, a dispute that has added a legal dimension to the broader competitive tension between the two companies as both push further into AI-driven consumer hardware.

Nvidia’s pullback this week has coincided with a broader retreat across semiconductor stocks. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index has fallen nearly 19% from its all-time highs, and chip stocks were on pace for their worst weekly performance in more than a year as of Friday’s session, according to reporting from Quartz. Nvidia’s own market capitalization has shed roughly $900 billion since peaking at $5.7 trillion on May 14, even as Apple added more than $500 billion in value over the same stretch, climbing from approximately $4.35 trillion in mid-May. As recently as two months ago, Nvidia’s valuation exceeded Apple’s by roughly $1.35 trillion, underscoring how quickly sentiment has shifted between the two companies.

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Looking ahead, both companies have upcoming earnings reports that could further shape investor sentiment. Apple is scheduled to report fiscal third-quarter results on July 30, following a second-quarter period in which revenue rose 17% to $111.2 billion on the strength of a 22% jump in iPhone sales. Nvidia is expected to report its own second-quarter results in late August.

Market strategists have framed Friday’s shift as part of a broader rotation within the AI trade, as investors move away from rewarding companies purely for the scale of their AI infrastructure spending and instead favor companies demonstrating a clearer path toward turning AI investment into actual profit. Apple’s relatively conservative capital spending approach, paired with substantial free cash flow generation, has positioned the company favorably in that emerging narrative, even as questions remain about how quickly its AI-driven product features will translate into a meaningful upgrade cycle across its massive installed device base.

With Apple’s valuation now approaching the $5 trillion threshold Nvidia first crossed last year, the rivalry between the two companies for the title of world’s most valuable business appears likely to remain closely contested in the weeks ahead, particularly as both companies prepare to report earnings that could reshape investor expectations heading into the back half of the year.

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Business

Judge delays ruling on Paramount Warner Bros. merger until July 22

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Los Angeles County orders economic study on Paramount, Warner Bros. merger

A judge on Friday declined to issue a ruling from the bench regarding California’s request for a temporary restraining order freezing Paramount’s planned takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) 

Paramount CEO David Ellison is seeking to acquire WBD in a $111 billion deal that was expected to close during the third quarter of this year, but California Attorney General Rob Bonta is leading a group of 12 state attorneys general who filed a lawsuit challenging the merger. The lawsuit claims the megadeal would “lead to higher prices, lower quality, and less content for film and television, harming movie theaters, basic cable distributors, and ultimately, audiences on every sofa and movie theater seat in the U.S.” 

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The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District for the Northern District of California, claims that the merger violates Section 7 of the Clayton Act, which holds that mergers that may substantially lessen competition or tend to create a monopoly are illegal. 

PARAMOUNT ADVISERS PUSH FOR CALIFORNIA EXIT AS STATE SUES TO BLOCK WARNER BROS DISCOVERY MERGER: REPORT

Paramount Warner Bros.

California Attorney General Rob Bonta believes Paramount’s planned takeover of Warner Bros. Discovery is “an illegal merger.”  (AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images / Getty Images)

A TRO hearing on Friday got deep into antitrust law, with Paramount arguing the merger would actually increase competition while the state insists that combining two major Hollywood studios would hurt the industry while giving too much power to the company. 

District Judge Araceli Martínez-Olguín promised to issue a ruling by July 22. 

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Paramount is seeking to move forward as soon as possible to avoid exorbitant ticking fees, a term for charges that accrue as the merger is delayed. Reporters were prohibited from taking photos or video of the hearing.

WARNER BROS DISCOVERY SHAREHOLDERS APPROVE PARAMOUNT SKYDANCE DEAL

California Attorney General Rob Bonta

California Attorney General Rob Bonta. (Sarah Reingewirtz/MediaNews Group/Los Angeles Daily News via Getty Images / Getty Images)

The Justice Department (DOJ) announced last week it has closed its antitrust investigation into Paramount Skydance’s proposed acquisition of WBD, concluding the transaction is not likely to harm competition or American consumers.

The Antitrust Division said its eight-month review examined more than two million documents and found the deal could strengthen competition across the media and entertainment industry, including in streaming video, traditional television and theatrical film distribution. However, state attorneys general retain independent authority under antitrust laws. 

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Ellison, the son of billionaire Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, took control of Paramount last year when Skydance Media and Paramount Global completed an $8 billion merger. Adding WBD to his portfolio would make the younger Ellison one of Hollywood’s most powerful people.

CALIFORNIA AG BLASTS PARAMOUNT-WBD MERGER AS ‘ILLEGAL,’ SAYS THREAT TO LEAVE STATE IS ‘BLACKMAIL’ EFFORT

New Paramount CEO David Ellison

Paramount CEO David Ellison. (Charly Triballeau/AFP via Getty Images / Getty Images)

Paramount fired back Monday shortly after the complaint was filed, saying the lawsuit “reflects a fundamentally flawed application of the antitrust laws and is wrong on both the facts and the law.”

“We will vigorously defend the transaction and demonstrate that this challenge is inconsistent with sound competition policy and the competitive realities of the media marketplace. Delaying this transaction will only harm entertainment workers who have already suffered over recent years as technology has disrupted their livelihood and cost California tens of thousands of entertainment jobs,” a Paramount spokesperson said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

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“The combination of Paramount and WBD will create a stronger, well-capitalized, creative-first media company that is better positioned to compete with companies like Netflix that have come to dominate the industry for audiences, premium content, and creative talent,” the spokesperson continued. “Put simply, any attempt to block this transaction undermines the very principles antitrust law is designed to promote: more competition, more choice for consumers, and more opportunities for creators and workers.”

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Sandvik AB (publ) (SDVKY) Q2 2026 Earnings Call Transcript

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OneWater Marine Inc. (ONEW) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript