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Nasdaq Surges 1.91% to Close at Record 26,517.93 Before Holiday as Intel-Apple Deal Ignites Chip Rally

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The tech sector led record gains in the S&P 500 index. Pictured: a man with umbrella walks past the New York Stock Exchange.

The Nasdaq Composite surged 1.91% on Thursday, closing at a record 26,517.93, up 496.28 points, as a blockbuster semiconductor partnership announcement and easing Middle East tensions combined to power one of the tech-heavy index’s strongest single-day rallies in recent weeks heading into the three-day Juneteenth holiday weekend.

U.S. equities closed higher on Thursday, as tech strength and optimism over the U.S.-Iran deal offset concerns over a hawkish Federal Reserve. The S&P 500 advanced 1% and the Nasdaq 100 gained 1.9%, while the Dow rose by 72 points.

Intel’s Surprise Apple Partnership Drives the Rally

The single most significant catalyst behind Thursday’s tech-sector surge was a surprise announcement involving two of the most closely watched names in American semiconductor and consumer electronics manufacturing. Intel surged 10.6% after President Trump announced that the semiconductor giant would produce chips for Apple in the U.S.

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The announcement sent ripples across the entire chip sector, lifting a broad swath of semiconductor names that had struggled earlier in the month. The news lifted the broader chip sector, with Nvidia up 2.8% and Micron Technology climbing 8.5%.

AI powerhouse Nvidia continued its upward trajectory, gaining 1.77% to reach $225.01 on news of increased infrastructure spending. The stock’s continued strength reflected ongoing investor enthusiasm for companies positioned at the center of the artificial intelligence buildout, even amid broader market uncertainty tied to monetary policy.

Easing Middle East Tensions Add Further Support

Beyond the chip sector catalyst, broader market sentiment continued to benefit from the formal signing of an interim peace agreement between the United States and Iran, which has helped calm fears of sustained volatility in global energy markets. The interim peace agreement signed by the U.S. and Iran, which includes the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, raised hopes for an end to the conflict and eased concerns about volatile energy prices.

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That improved geopolitical outlook extended its benefits beyond the technology sector and into other parts of the market sensitive to energy costs and global stability. Airlines also saw strong gains, with American Airlines rising 3.3%.

The Hawkish Fed Backdrop That Preceded the Rally

Thursday’s gains came as markets continued working through the implications of a notably hawkish signal delivered by the Federal Reserve just one day earlier. The Federal Reserve kept rates steady, with half of officials signaling that at least one rate increase may be warranted this year.

That hawkish dot plot had triggered a sharp selloff in the prior session, making Thursday’s recovery all the more notable. Equity indexes rose and yields were flat Thursday ahead of the open as investors recovered some of the ground lost after the Federal Reserve, in Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair, indicated the possibility of a rate hike this year.

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average had lost more than 500 points Wednesday and the S&P 500 slumped 1.2% as hopes for a more dovish Fed were quickly dashed, with all 11 of its sectors closing in the red.

Volatility Eases Sharply

The combination of the Intel-Apple announcement and the formalized Iran peace deal appeared to substantially calm investor anxiety that had built up earlier in the week. The CBOE Volatility Index, often referred to as Wall Street’s fear gauge, fell sharply by 11.06% to 16.40, a notable decline that reflected renewed confidence among traders heading into the long holiday weekend.

Strength Extended Across Major Indexes

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Thursday’s rally was not confined to the Nasdaq alone, with virtually every major U.S. benchmark posting solid gains during the session. The S&P 500 closed up 1.08% at 7,500.58, while the Russell 2000 Index, which tracks smaller companies, gained 2.12%.

Dow Futures also trended higher throughout the session, rising 95.00, or 0.18%, to reach 52,039.00, signaling continued optimism among traders looking ahead to the next full trading session.

International Markets Largely Joined the Advance

The positive sentiment driving U.S. markets Thursday extended to several major international exchanges as well, though the response was not uniform across every region. Japan’s Nikkei 225 climbed 1.65%, Germany’s DAX rose 0.37%, and France’s CAC 40 gained 0.44%.

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Not every overseas market participated in the rally, however. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index declined 1.59%, and London’s FTSE 100 fell 1.04%, illustrating that the optimism driving U.S. trading was not universally shared across global markets, with some regions continuing to grapple with their own distinct sets of economic and geopolitical pressures.

A Narrow but Powerful Rally

Despite the strength of Thursday’s headline numbers, market analysts noted that the rally’s underlying composition was relatively concentrated rather than broad-based. The primary narrative driving the market on Thursday was the resilience of industrial manufacturing and AI-driven hardware, which managed to offset broader weakness in enterprise software and consumer retail. While the index reached new heights, the narrow breadth of the rally suggested selective investor sentiment as the market digested new economic data.

That narrow breadth was reflected in the mixed performance among individual technology and consumer names even as the overall index surged. Software giant Salesforce fell 1.64% to $168.45 during the session, demonstrating that not every corner of the technology sector shared in the day’s broader enthusiasm, even as semiconductor and AI infrastructure names led the charge higher.

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Markets Now Closed for the Juneteenth Holiday

With Thursday’s record-setting session now complete, U.S. markets will remain closed for the remainder of the week in observance of a federal holiday. The New York Stock Exchange and the Nasdaq will be closed for trading on June 19, 2026, in observance of the federal holiday of Juneteenth. Both major stock exchanges first closed for the holiday in 2022, after Juneteenth was designated as a federal holiday in 2021.

The stock and bond markets will reopen Monday, June 22, and it will be business as usual on Wall Street for a few days, with the next scheduled market closure coming Friday, July 3, in observance of Independence Day.

Heading into the long holiday weekend, Thursday’s powerful close leaves the Nasdaq at a fresh record high, with investors set to return Monday to assess whether the combination of strong AI and semiconductor momentum, improving geopolitical conditions in the Middle East, and lingering uncertainty over the Federal Reserve’s rate path can sustain the index’s recent upward trajectory. Given the narrow, hardware-and-chip-concentrated nature of Thursday’s advance, market watchers will be closely monitoring whether sectors like enterprise software and consumer retail — which lagged notably during the session — can join the rally once trading resumes next week, or whether Thursday’s gains prove to be a more selective, short-lived response to a single high-profile corporate announcement.

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Why is the US more exuberant than China?

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Why is the US more exuberant than China?

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U.S. IPO Weekly Recap: Another Biotech IPO Pops During The Short Holiday Week

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U.S. IPO Weekly Recap: Another Biotech IPO Pops During The Short Holiday Week

U.S. IPO Weekly Recap: Another Biotech IPO Pops During The Short Holiday Week

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Leader’s Premium: The math behind Jio Platforms’ price

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Leader's Premium: The math behind Jio Platforms' price
ET Intelligence Group: The initial public offering (IPO) of Jio Platforms, based on the data from the DRHP filing, is priced at a premium to listed peers given its market leadership and large scale of operations across telecom and digital services.

In addition, though small in terms of annual revenue and profits, Jio commands a significant valuation premium over its global peers, reflecting its differential offerings aided by a pureplay 4G and 5G network and proprietary digital platforms compared with global giants that are mature utility providers with legacy 2G and 3G infrastructure.

Jio Platforms plans to issue 270 million fresh equity shares, taking the total paid-up equity to 9.21 billion shares. At an anticipated market capitalisation of over ₹12-14 lakh crore, the company is estimated to raise up to ₹42,000 crore, or more than $4 billion, from the primary market.

This implies a price-earnings (P/E) multiple between 40 and 46, while its enterprise value (EV) will be 16-19 times of the operating profit before depreciation and amortisation (Ebitda). In comparison, Bharti Airtel trades at a P/E of 43.6 and an EV/Ebitda of 10.8.

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Leader’s Premium: The Math Behind Jio Platforms’ PriceAgencies

Top global telecom giants based on market capitalisation including T-Mobile, Verizon and AT&T trade at P/E multiples between 10 and 17 while their EV/EBITDA is between 7 and 11. In revenue terms, these companies are six-nine times bigger than Jio Platforms.


Jio Platforms’ revenue from operations increased by 16% annually to ₹1.5 lakh crore between FY24 and FY26 while net profit grew by 18.4% to ₹30,049 crore. The Ebitda margin remained in a tight range of 50-52% during the period. For Bharti Airtel, revenue grew by 19% annually to ₹2.1 lakh crore while net profit increased four times to ₹33,823 crore. Bharti’s operating margin improved to 57% in FY26 from 52% in FY24.
Bharti’s net debt relative to Ebitda was 1.4 times while its return on capital employed was 19%. This compares with 0.4 times and 10.8% for Jio Platforms in that order.On the operating front, Jio Platforms had a larger scale with 524.4 million customers at the end of FY26 compared with 482.4 million for Bharti’s Indian business. In addition, Jio handled data traffic of 241.4 billion gigabytes (GB), more than two times when compared with 101.3 billion GB for the latter. However, Bharti’s average revenue per user (ARPU) at ₹257 was higher than ₹214 for Jio Platforms.

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The crypto-treasury dream unravels after a 90% stock plunge

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The crypto-treasury dream unravels after a 90% stock plunge
The business model of launching a public company to buy crypto is falling apart. As a result, those in the queue to do so through blank-check companies are facing pressure from investors against a market backdrop that is fiercely unfriendly.

Take ReserveOne Inc., a cryptocurrency asset manager that had prominent associates, including private equity magnate and former US Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross.

ReserveOne had agreed to combine with M3-Brigade Acquisition V Corp., a special-purpose acquisition company, or SPAC, whose sole purpose is to find another entity to buy, taking it public in the process. Ross did not back the deal financially, but after it closed, he was slated to join ReserveOne’s board. Other promoters of the effort are a who’s who of big names in finance and crypto.However, the $1 billion transaction collapsed after at least two large investors in ReserveOne demanded the sale be terminated, according to people familiar with the matter.

Those investors believed ReserveOne’s shares would inevitably trade at a discount to its net asset value if they listed because of how far Bitcoin and other tokens have fallen since the tie-up was announced nearly a year ago, said the people, who were not authorized to discuss details publicly. Combined with fees that would’ve been owed to bankers and sponsors for completing the deal, it simply wasn’t worth it, the people said.

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Ultimately the two firms agreed to bid each other farewell, according to a June 12 filing.
A spokesperson for M3 declined to comment. ReserveOne didn’t respond to requests for comment.The scuttled ReserveOne-M3 transaction is emblematic of problems with trying to introduce a digital-asset treasury company, or DAT, through a SPAC these days. Others with similar plans have either failed or flopped, reflecting the market’s deterioration.

marketBloomberg

For instance, Avalanche Treasury Corp., which combined with a SPAC called Mountain Lake Acquisition Corp. on June 11, has been mercilessly pummeled since its debut.

Avalanche Treasury shares have tumbled almost 90% since shareholders approved the combination, with the price dropping to around 85 cents on Thursday. A spokesperson for Avalanche Treasury directed Bloomberg to a press release about its Nasdaq debut, but declined further comment.

The DAT trade effectively stopped working when it became dilutive for companies to raise money through equity markets to buy crypto, said Jan-Philip Grabs, a partner at the digital-asset advisory firm Areta. DATs have sometimes characterized their long-term plans as being not just crypto accumulators, but companies that facilitate payments or perform other, more important work.

“We expect this bear market to be a decisive filter for the category: some of these companies will use it to build a genuine operating model and make accretive acquisitions, while others will remain capital-markets vehicles with no underlying business and struggle to survive as token prices stay depressed,” he said.

DAT Plunge

Michael Saylor engineered the idea of DATs in 2020, turning his software company MicroStrategy into one focused on buying Bitcoin instead. The market took off: shares of the company, now called Strategy Inc., hit a high above $500 by 2024. A number of companies including Metaplanet, BitMine, Twenty One Capital and SharpLink followed in its footsteps that year or the next.

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Strategy’s stock closed at $112.53. Bitcoin itself is down roughly half since hitting a high last October, which has left some firms that sought to replicate Saylor’s idea out of luck.

Those still waiting in the wings include BSTR Holdings Inc., whose initials stand for Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company. A blank-check entity sponsored by an affiliate of Cantor Fitzgerald agreed to combine with BSTR in a deal with as much as $1.5 billion in equity financing last July, but its fate is now in question.

The Cantor-linked SPAC has scheduled a vote on June 26 about whether to proceed with the merger, according to a recent filing. Its board is unanimously in favor of the deal going through and recommends a “yes” vote, but it’s not clear that will happen.

BSTR is led by Adam Back, co-founder and chief executive officer of Bitcoin infrastructure firm Blockstream Corp. The British cryptographer was recently in the news after the New York Times portrayed him as Satoshi Nakamoto, a pseudonym used by the inventor of Bitcoin, a claim he denies.

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Investment firm Meteora Capital was involved in both the BSTR and ReserveOne deals through a strategy known as private investment in public equity, or PIPE, according to the people. That means it put up capital to participate after privately negotiating terms with sponsors.

But because PIPE investors have less sway in the outcome than sponsors, who are the key decision makers, Meteora also decided to build up positions in the two related SPACs in the public market, they said. Meteora had been pushing for the deals not to close given the fundamentals, said the people.

458445484Bloomberg

Representatives for Meteora and Cantor Fitzgerald declined to comment. BSTR didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Other crypto treasury firms that were pursuing SPAC deals remain in limbo as the financials for doing so have turned upside down. DATs that already trade publicly shed some $62 billion in market value between Bitcoin’s peak in October and early June, Bloomberg previously reported, citing Artemis data.

“Only real operating companies in the digital-asset industry will succeed long-term,” said Alexander Blume, CEO of crypto asset manager Two Prime. “DATs aiming to just follow the Saylor playbook will have a hard time going forward.”

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Costly Bet

Up until fairly recently, crypto accumulation seemed like a winning bet.

Public companies that did everything from operate hotels to facilitate sports gambling decided to pursue the DAT idea instead. Others that launched as private crypto buyers agreed to be absorbed by SPACs, ultimately creating hundreds of publicly traded DATs.

The frenzy created lots of wealth for founders, investors and sponsors, sometimes at the expense of retail investors who have cumulatively lost tens of billions of dollars investing in the idea.

Though pursuing a SPAC-quisition has become unpopular, canceling a planned deal can also be costly, as The Ether Machine Inc. and Dynamix Corp. learned.

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In April, the two agreed scrap a $1.5 billion pact that would have created an Ether-focused accumulator. That meant Dynamix was entitled to $50 million because of a termination agreement, according to a filing.

“Current market conditions make it impractical to move forward with the transaction,” Andrew Keys, co-founder of The Ether Machine, told investors in an email obtained by Bloomberg.

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Politics And The Markets 06/20/26

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

This is the forum for daily political discussion on Seeking Alpha. A new version is published every market day.

Please don’t leave political comments on other articles or posts on the site.

The comments below are not regulated with the same rigor as the rest of the site, and this is an ‘enter at your own risk’ area as discussion can get very heated. If you can’t stand the heat… you know what they say…

More on Today’s Markets:

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Regardless of which side of the political divide you find yourself, please be courteous and don’t direct abuse at other users.

For any issue with regards to comments please email us at : moderation@seekingalpha.com.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Traders boost US rate-hike bets on hawkish Fed

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Traders boost US rate-hike bets on hawkish Fed
Traders added to wagers for Federal Reserve interest-rate hikes, fully pricing a quarter-point increase by September after a spike in oil prices revived inflation concerns.

Swaps tied to policy-meeting dates imply 25 basis points of hikes, up from 23 basis points on Thursday and eight basis points earlier in the week. The move came during thin trading volumes with US markets closed for a public holiday.

Investors are pricing in tighter policy from the Fed after new Chair Kevin Warsh said the central bank won’t tolerate high inflation at his first meeting this week, sending yields higher on Wednesday. Oil has climbed by around 4% from a three-month low on Thursday as doubts linger around the recently signed peace deal between the US and Iran.

“We’re now at a point where it wouldn’t take much to tip the balance in favor of a hike,” said Matthew Ryan, head of market strategy at Ebury, pointing to the rhetoric at this week’s Fed decision. “Multiple references to the Fed missing its inflation target for five years running, all support the narrative that higher rates may not be too far away.”

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Investors hadn’t expected Warsh to strike such a hawkish tone. US President Donald Trump elevated him to the central bank post after repeatedly lashing out at his predecessor, Jerome Powell, for not slashing borrowing costs enough.


Meanwhile, Brent crude steadied after topping $80 a barrel earlier in the session. Israel and Hezbollah reportedly agreed to a ceasefire starting Friday.

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Irina Ciochiu on Passenger Rights, Aviation, and Building FlightHelp

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Irina Ciochiu on Passenger Rights, Aviation, and Building FlightHelp

Irina Ciochiu is a Romanian entrepreneur and legal professional best known as the Founder and CEO of FlightHelp, a company focused on passenger rights and flight compensation across Europe.

With a legal background from the University of Craiova, she has built her career at the intersection of aviation, regulation, and consumer advocacy.

Ciochiu entered the passenger rights industry after recognising a major gap between legal protections and the average traveller’s ability to use them. While regulations such as EU261 provide strong protections for passengers affected by delays, cancellations, and overbookings, many people still struggle to understand the claims process or challenge airline decisions effectively.

Through FlightHelp, she has worked to simplify that process by creating systems that help passengers navigate complex airline regulations and compensation procedures. Her work focuses on combining legal understanding with operational efficiency, particularly in cases where airlines cite extraordinary circumstances or provide limited information about the real cause of disruptions.

Over the years, Ciochiu has expanded her work across several European markets, including Romania, the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, and Germany. She is recognised for her practical, results-driven approach and her focus on turning complex legal frameworks into accessible solutions for everyday travellers.

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Today, Irina Ciochiu continues to advocate for greater transparency, accountability, and passenger awareness within the European aviation industry.

Q&A with Irina Ciochiu

Q: What first led you towards the aviation and passenger rights industry?

Irina Ciochiu:
My background is in law, and during my studies at the University of Craiova I became very interested in how regulations work in practice. I noticed that many industries had strong legal protections on paper, but ordinary people often struggled to use them effectively. Aviation stood out because passengers were frequently left confused after delays or cancellations, even when regulations like EU261 existed to protect them.

That gap between the law and the real-world experience is what pushed me towards this industry.

Q: Was there a specific moment when you realised this could become a business opportunity?

Irina Ciochiu:
Yes. I realised that most passengers simply did not know what they were entitled to or how to challenge airline decisions. Many accepted a rejection immediately, especially when airlines mentioned extraordinary circumstances.

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At the same time, airlines rarely provide the actual operational reason for a disruption in writing. That creates a situation where passengers are trying to navigate a highly technical process without access to the necessary information.

I saw an opportunity to build systems that could simplify that process and provide proper support.

Q: What were the early challenges of building FlightHelp?

Irina Ciochiu:
The aviation industry is extremely complex. You are dealing with multiple countries, different regulations, airline procedures, and operational issues all at once.

One of the biggest challenges was navigating regulatory complexity across multiple jurisdictions while still building something scalable. Early operational problems actually helped improve our systems because they forced us to refine processes very quickly.

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Those experiences made the business much more resilient over time.

Q: What do you think passengers misunderstand most about EU261?

Irina Ciochiu:
A lot of passengers believe that if an airline rejects a claim, that is the end of the process. That is often not true.

Even when airlines cite extraordinary circumstances, passengers may still qualify for compensation depending on the actual details behind the disruption. The problem is that most travellers do not have access to that information or know how to assess it properly.

That is why professional support can be very important during the claims process.

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Q: How does FlightHelp approach these situations differently?

Irina Ciochiu:
We focus on simplifying the process for passengers. Most people do not want to spend hours studying regulations or dealing with complicated airline communication.

Our role is to help bridge that gap. We combine legal understanding with operational systems designed to review claims properly and guide passengers through the process.

The goal is not just filing claims. It is helping people understand their rights and their options.

Q: Your work spans several European markets. Has that shaped your perspective on the industry?

Irina Ciochiu:
Definitely. Working across countries like Romania, the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, and Germany shows you how different passenger experiences can be, even under the same regulations.

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It also highlights how important consistency and transparency are. Travellers should not need legal expertise just to understand whether they may qualify for compensation after a disrupted flight.

The more accessible these systems become, the better the experience is for passengers overall.

Q: What is your leadership style like?

Irina Ciochiu:
I am very structured and focused on execution. I like breaking large problems into smaller, measurable steps.

I also believe strongly in iteration. Every challenge, good result, or failure gives feedback that helps improve the system.

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In industries like aviation, where things constantly change, adaptability is extremely important.

Q: What keeps you motivated in this industry?

Irina Ciochiu:
I think it comes back to solving real-world problems. Passenger rights are important, but they only matter if people can actually access them.

That is what motivates me. Building systems that make complicated processes easier for ordinary travellers and helping people feel less powerless during stressful situations.

Q: What do you think the future of passenger rights looks like in Europe?

Irina Ciochiu:
I think awareness will continue to grow. More passengers are starting to understand that they have rights and that airline decisions are not always final.

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At the same time, the aviation industry will continue evolving, which means regulations and operational processes will also change. Transparency and accountability will become even more important.

My focus is continuing to improve systems that help passengers navigate that environment more effectively.

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SpaceX’s Strength in Space, Connectivity Supports Initial Credit Ratings, Firms Say

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SpaceX’s Strength in Space, Connectivity Supports Initial Credit Ratings, Firms Say

The three major credit ratings companies pointed to SpaceX’s SPCX -3.56%decrease; down pointing triangle competitive edge in its space and connectivity businesses in their initial ratings after the company made its stock market debut last week.

S&P Global Ratings, Moody’s Ratings and Fitch Ratings also noted risks tied to SpaceX’s capital needs and nascent artificial intelligence business in their initial ratings, which they disclosed on Thursday.

Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Investors see Micron earnings as pulse check of AI rally momentum

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Wall Street Week Ahead: Investors see Micron earnings as pulse check of AI rally momentum
Investors are seeking signs that the U.S. stock market rally fueled by artificial intelligence has more life left in it, and the upcoming Micron Technology earnings will check the pulse of chip demand to see if it is still accelerating. Despite a sharp mid-week selloff, major U.S. stock indexes are hovering near all-time highs, supported by robust corporate earnings driven by an ‌AI investment boom and ⁠relief from ⁠the Iran war. Micron’s shares are up 298% this year, and the memory chip maker’s quarterly report on Wednesday, June 24, will help investors gauge whether the surge in spending on data centers and the resulting profits generated across the semiconductor sector can continue to surprise to the upside.

“There’s been a lot of momentum here recently,” said Andy Pratt, director of investment strategy at Burney Company. “This AI trend is something that’s continued, and honestly, what we see with this revenue surprise signal that we monitor is there’s still a lot of juice.” Apple has agreed to partner with Intel to design and manufacture chips in the U.S., which could significantly boost the chipmaker’s turnaround efforts. That helped to lift ⁠the S&P 500 nearly ‌1% so far this week, on pace for a second weekly gain. Meanwhile, the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index hit a record high and was last up 7% for the week.

LOOKING FOR REINFORCEMENTS

The stakes are high. Micron’s earnings come at ⁠a time when valuations are elevated and investors are questioning whether the rally is overextended. Any indication of underlying demand and continued AI-related spending strength could give investors confidence to keep stoking the rally. Micron’s earnings are “setting up as a classic positive feedback loop,” said Steve Kolano, chief investment officer at Integrated Partners. “That really seems to be kind of the only game in town. … If you look at the book to bill of semiconductor companies right now and the backlog, the demand is just through the roof in relation to chip capacity.” Big Tech has signaled that AI spending is not slowing, set to rise past $700 billion this year from $400 billion in 2025.
MACRO BACKDROP STILL LOOMS Although the AI narrative has dominated markets, underlying macroeconomic concerns remain. ‌The Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure is due next week. So, too, is a final reading on first-quarter GDP. Both reports will provide checks on the health of the U.S. consumer and economic growth. Second-quarter earnings growth for the S&P 500 is estimated at 22.9%, down from 29.3% in ⁠the first quarter, according to data provided by Tajinder Dhillon, head of earnings research at LSEG. Drew Matus, chief market strategist at MetLife Investment Management, said strong equity markets have been one of the main supports for consumers, and anything that challenges the AI trade or the continued rise in stocks is being closely watched.

“It has not just been market effects but macroeconomic effects at this point,” he said. “We’re definitely worried about the wealth effect going away and what that might mean.” For now, the consensus is that the AI trade remains intact, with little sign of slowing. Newly public SpaceX has reinforced that momentum, and Nasdaq’s inclusion of more AI and chip infrastructure names like Astera Labs and CoreWeave will force index funds to buy in.

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“The way I would view this is,” said Burney’s Pratt, “you could continue betting on these companies kind of until proven otherwise.”

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BWG: Deep Discount But Potentially Better Alternatives

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BDC Weekly Review: Earnings Are Fine

BWG: Deep Discount But Potentially Better Alternatives

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