Business
NVIDIA Stock Drops 3% Amid Geopolitical Pressures and Export Regulation Concerns
NVIDIA Corporation shares fell sharply on March 6, 2026, closing down 5.52 points, or 3.01%, at $177.82 as investors grappled with fresh reports of potential U.S. export restrictions on AI chips and broader market volatility tied to rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East.

AFP
The Santa Clara, California-based chipmaker opened at $179.84 and traded in a range of $176.82 to $182.76 during the session. Volume surged to approximately 189 million shares, well above the average, reflecting intense trading interest amid the pullback. The previous close stood at $183.34, capping a brief two-day advance that had lifted the stock modestly earlier in the week.
The decline mirrored weakness across tech-heavy indexes, with the Nasdaq Composite also posting losses as energy prices climbed on renewed Middle East conflict risks. NVIDIA’s outsized influence on market sentiment—stemming from its dominance in AI accelerators—amplified the move, contributing to broader sector caution.
Analysts attributed much of the pressure to Bloomberg reports that the U.S. Commerce Department has drafted regulations requiring export permits for advanced AI chips to nearly every country worldwide. Such measures could complicate NVIDIA’s global supply strategy, particularly as the company has already navigated tight restrictions on shipments to China. NVIDIA CFO Colette Kress recently confirmed no Data Center revenue from China in recent guidance, underscoring ongoing challenges in that key market.
Adding to the narrative, Financial Times reporting indicated NVIDIA has halted production of its H200 chips tailored for China, redirecting capacity toward next-generation Vera Rubin hardware. The shift highlights the company’s pivot away from compliance-limited products in favor of cutting-edge platforms expected to drive future growth.
Despite the day’s retreat, NVIDIA’s fundamentals remain robust. The company reported record fiscal fourth-quarter results on February 25, 2026, with revenue of $68.1 billion, up 73% year-over-year and 20% sequentially. Data Center revenue—the AI engine—hit $62.3 billion, surging 75% from the prior year. For full fiscal 2026, revenue reached $215.9 billion, a 65% increase.
Guidance for the first quarter of fiscal 2027 calls for approximately $78 billion in revenue, plus or minus 2%, excluding any contribution from China. The outlook reflects continued explosive demand for Blackwell architecture GPUs and accelerating adoption of AI across enterprises, cloud providers, and sovereign AI initiatives.
Wall Street maintains a strongly bullish stance. Consensus ratings hover at “Buy,” with an average 12-month price target around $265, implying roughly 49% upside from the March 6 close. Some analysts, including those at JPMorgan, Raymond James, and Citigroup, recently lifted targets toward $265-$300 following the earnings beat and optimistic commentary on Blackwell ramp-up and Rubin roadmap.
Morgan Stanley reinstated NVIDIA as its top semiconductor pick, citing an “surprisingly good entry point” after the stock’s modest 2026 underperformance relative to explosive business growth. Bernstein, Baird, Bank of America, and Rosenblatt also pushed targets higher, some to $300, betting on sustained AI tailwinds.
CEO Jensen Huang’s recent comments added intrigue. He described a $30 billion investment in OpenAI as potentially NVIDIA’s “last” major equity commitment in the startup, ahead of its anticipated IPO. The remark tempered speculation about further large-scale strategic bets but underscored confidence in organic growth drivers.
Upcoming catalysts loom large. NVIDIA’s GTC conference, scheduled for March 16-19, 2026, features a keynote from Huang and promises updates on Blackwell Ultra ramp, Rubin launch timing in 2026, Rubin CPX late in the year, Rubin Ultra in 2027, and Feynman in 2028. The event typically showcases breakthroughs in robotics, AI agents, and accelerated computing, often sparking rallies.
Competitive dynamics drew attention as well. Broadcom issued bullish AI chip sales forecasts, positioning itself as a challenger in custom accelerators and networking. Yet NVIDIA’s ecosystem moat—spanning CUDA software, full-stack offerings, and market share leadership—continues to insulate it, with analysts viewing competition as healthy validation of the AI opportunity rather than an immediate threat.
The stock’s technical picture shows consolidation after peaking at a 52-week high of $212.19 in late October 2025. The 52-week low remains $86.62 from April 2025. Year-to-date in calendar 2026, shares are down modestly despite underlying strength, trading at a forward P/E around 36 based on consensus estimates.
Market capitalization hovers near $4.4 trillion, cementing NVIDIA’s status as one of the world’s most valuable companies. Its low debt-to-equity ratio of 0.05, quick ratio above 3, and return on equity near 97% highlight financial resilience.
A modest quarterly dividend of $0.01 per share was declared, payable April 1, 2026, to shareholders of record March 11, with an ex-date of March 11. While the yield is negligible at 0.02%, it signals confidence in cash flow generation.
Longer-term, the AI market’s projected expansion beyond $2 trillion by the early 2030s positions NVIDIA favorably. Enterprise deployments, inference workloads, sovereign AI projects, and emerging applications in robotics and physical AI fuel optimism.
Near-term risks include regulatory tightening, supply chain constraints in photonics and advanced packaging, and macroeconomic sensitivity to energy costs and interest rates. Yet most observers view recent dips as healthy corrections within a secular uptrend.
As trading wrapped March 6, attention shifted toward next week’s economic data, Fed commentary, and any fresh geopolitical developments. For NVIDIA, the path ahead hinges on execution against ambitious roadmaps and sustained AI spending momentum.
Investors in Seoul and global markets watched closely, recognizing NVIDIA’s role as a bellwether for technology’s transformative potential amid an uncertain macro backdrop.
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Palantir Technologies Stock Climbs 3% to $157 Amid Geopolitical Tensions and Strong AI Demand
Shares of Palantir Technologies Inc. rose nearly 3% on Friday, closing at $157.16 on the Nasdaq, as investors weighed the company’s explosive growth in artificial intelligence platforms against heightened geopolitical risks driving demand for its defense-focused software.

The Denver-based data analytics and AI firm saw its stock surge 2.94% from Thursday’s close of $152.67, with trading volume reaching over 74 million shares — well above its average. In after-hours trading, the shares eased slightly to around $156.60.
The advance capped a strong week for Palantir, with the stock up about 15% amid escalating tensions in the Middle East, including conflicts involving Iran, which analysts say could boost prospects for defense and intelligence contracts. The shares have rebounded sharply from earlier March lows near $133, though they remain below late-2025 peaks above $220.
Palantir, co-founded by Peter Thiel and known for its Gotham and Foundry platforms, has positioned itself as a leader in AI-driven data integration for both government and commercial clients. Its Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP) has fueled rapid adoption, particularly in the U.S., where commercial revenue exploded in late 2025.
The rally follows Palantir’s blockbuster fourth-quarter 2025 earnings released in early February. Revenue jumped 70% year-over-year to $1.41 billion, with U.S. revenue surging 93% to $1.076 billion. U.S. commercial revenue grew an astonishing 137% year-over-year, while government revenue increased 66%.
Management issued aggressive guidance for 2026, projecting full-year revenue between $7.182 billion and $7.198 billion — implying roughly 61% growth from 2025’s estimated $4.48 billion. U.S. commercial revenue is expected to exceed $3.144 billion, representing at least 115% growth. Adjusted operating income is forecasted near $4.1 billion, with adjusted free cash flow between $3.9 billion and $4.1 billion.
Chief Executive Alex Karp hailed the results as evidence of Palantir’s unique focus on scaling AI operational leverage, describing the company as an “n of 1” in pursuing “commodity cognition” through advanced models.
Recent developments have reinforced optimism. Palantir secured a five-year blanket purchasing agreement with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security valued at up to $1 billion to deploy AI tools across agencies for case management, threat identification and logistics. The company also expanded partnerships, including with Rackspace Technology to deploy Foundry and AIP in regulated industries, and won its largest-ever U.K. defense contract.
Geopolitical factors appear to be amplifying demand. Analysts point to rising needs for AI in battlefield intelligence and national security amid global conflicts. A potential 10-year, $10 billion U.S. Army framework agreement continues to generate buzz, contributing to a record contract backlog.
Analysts remain largely bullish despite the stock’s lofty valuation — trading at around 241 times trailing earnings and 115 times forward estimates. The consensus 12-month price target stands at approximately $193 to $198, suggesting 23% to 26% upside from current levels, based on input from 28 analysts. Ratings lean toward “Moderate Buy,” with highs reaching $260 from Citi and recent upgrades including Rosenblatt’s $200 target.
Some forecasts are more ambitious. Veteran analysts highlight Palantir’s mission-critical role in defense AI, with one predicting the stock could reach $200 amid geopolitical tailwinds. Others caution that sustained execution will be key in a competitive landscape featuring players like Snowflake and Oracle.
Palantir’s commercial momentum has shifted perceptions. Once heavily reliant on government contracts, the U.S. commercial segment now drives outsized growth through AIP deployments in Fortune 500 companies. The company’s Rule of 40 score — combining revenue growth and profit margin — hit 127% recently, a rare feat at scale.
Challenges persist. High valuation leaves little room for error, and controversies around surveillance tech and public-sector contracts continue in some markets. Insider selling has occurred periodically, though it has not derailed the broader uptrend.
Investors await the next earnings update, expected in May 2026, for confirmation of guidance delivery and further AIP traction. Management has emphasized disciplined scaling and profitability as hallmarks of its strategy.
As Palantir navigates an environment of accelerating AI adoption and defense modernization, its stock performance will likely depend on converting massive backlog into recurring revenue while managing expectations in a volatile market. The recent surge suggests investors are betting on continued outperformance in both commercial and government segments through 2026.
Business
Global Stock Markets End Volatile Week Lower as Geopolitical Tensions, Surging Oil and Weak Jobs Data
Major stock indexes around the world closed mostly lower on Friday, capping a turbulent week dominated by the ongoing U.S.-Iran conflict, spiking oil prices and disappointing U.S. employment figures that raised concerns about economic slowdown and persistent inflation.

AFP
The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 453.19 points, or 0.95%, to settle at 47,501.55. The broader S&P 500 declined 90.69 points, or 1.33%, to 6,740.02, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite dropped 361.31 points, or 1.59%, to 22,387.68. All three major U.S. benchmarks posted weekly losses, with the Dow down nearly 3%, the S&P 500 off about 2% and the Nasdaq slipping 1.2%.
The sell-off reflected broader unease over the Middle East war entering its second week. Oil prices surged, with Brent crude topping $90 a barrel at points amid supply disruptions, including halted exports from key producers and blocked transport routes. Higher energy costs fueled fears of renewed inflationary pressures, prompting traders to pare expectations for central bank rate cuts.
In Asia, Japan’s Nikkei 225 rose 0.62% to close around 55,620, benefiting from a weaker yen and some resilience in export-oriented sectors. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index advanced 1.72% to 25,757.29, supported by mainland Chinese stimulus hopes despite ongoing property sector challenges. Chinese markets showed mixed performance amid Beijing’s reaffirmed 2026 CPI target of around 2%, viewed by economists as a ceiling rather than a firm goal.
European shares were mixed earlier in the week but ended the period with gains in some sessions as investors rotated toward value and defensive names. The pan-European STOXX 600 index recovered partially from earlier losses tied to energy price volatility.
The week’s volatility stemmed from several converging factors. Geopolitical risks escalated following U.S.-Israel actions against Iran, disrupting global energy flows and sending crude higher. Analysts warned that prolonged conflict could spike euro zone inflation and curb growth, with ECB Chief Economist Philip Lane noting potential substantial impacts.
U.S. economic data added to the caution. February’s jobs report disappointed, showing weaker-than-expected hiring and contributing to fears of labor market softening. Combined with firmer producer price index readings earlier in the year, the data reduced bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts. Markets now price in no cuts until potentially June or later, with probabilities for easing in 2026 scaled back.
Inflation remains a key concern globally. J.P. Morgan Global Research forecasts core CPI stable at 2.8% worldwide in 2026, with 3.2% in the U.S., 2.4% in the U.K. and 1.9% in the euro area. Regional cross-currents, including energy-driven pressures, complicate the picture. The Fed is expected to hold steady amid elevated price risks, while the ECB appears paused and the Bank of England tilts dovish.
Despite the headwinds, some positive undertones persist. Corporate earnings have shown resilience, particularly in AI-related sectors, though rotation away from mega-cap tech toward industrials, materials and energy occurred amid defensive positioning. International equities outperformed U.S. large-caps in recent periods, with developed markets outside the U.S. posting stronger returns.
J.P. Morgan Global Research maintains a positive stance on equities for 2026, forecasting double-digit gains in both developed and emerging markets, driven by robust earnings, lower rates over time and AI capital expenditure broadening.
Cryptocurrencies provided a bright spot amid the equity weakness, with bitcoin rallying significantly in some sessions, boosting related stocks like Coinbase and MicroStrategy.
Looking ahead, investors face a data-heavy calendar, including upcoming U.S. and China inflation releases, U.K. GDP and further trade figures. Central bank commentary will remain in focus as policymakers navigate the balance between growth support and inflation control.
The recent market swings underscore the challenges of operating in an environment marked by geopolitical uncertainty and macroeconomic cross-currents. While long-term outlooks remain constructive on fundamentals like corporate balance sheets and technological innovation, near-term sentiment hinges on de-escalation in conflicts and clearer signals from energy markets.
As trading resumes next week, attention will turn to whether stabilization in oil and any diplomatic progress can ease pressures, or if sustained higher costs force further reassessment of monetary policy paths.
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