By Mike Dolan
May 27 (Reuters) –
What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-at-Large, Finance and Markets
The chips are indeed blue. The market scramble for AI stocks seems to know no bounds. Memory chipmaker Micron Technology briefly entered the $1 trillion club โon Wall Street on Tuesday, while South Koreaโs SK Hynix crossed that threshold on Wednesday.
Both companiesโ shares are up about 10-fold over โthe past year amid frenzied demand for, and ongoing shortages of, memory chips.
Iโll get into that and more below.
But first, check out my latest column on why rising bond yields could โstart dragging on stocks soon.
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OUT OF THE BLUE CHIPS
Near-20% surges in both Micron and SK Hynixโs shares this week show the dash for chips is continuing unabated. With its latest milestone, SK Hynix joins fellow South Korean chip giant Samsung, which hit the $1 trillion mark earlier this month. Both companiesโ shares โwere lifted again on Wednesday after a landmark deal โ on worker bonuses for Samsung workers.
That deal averts a potentially damaging labor strike, and some memory-chip workers will be in line for bonuses of over $400,000. Samsung will set aside a sizeable chunk of its chip division profits to meet โ the payouts. South Koreaโs KOSPI index surged over 3% on Wednesday, led by Samsung and SK Hynix.
Back on Wall Street, the broader stock market optimism continued on Tuesday as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at record closing highs. Meantime, Goldman Sachs has upped its year-end forecast for the former to 8,000 from 7,600 – a โrise โof about 6% – on continued strength in corporate earnings.
U.S. stock futures climbed before the โbell on Wednesday, while European shares edged up after the โopen.
On the macro front, the Conference Boardโs index on U.S. consumer confidence eased this month by less than feared, marking a contrast with last weekโs University of Michigan survey.
There was little new in the Iran standoff, though hopes for a diplomatic breakthrough persisted, even as Tehran described recent U.S. strikes as a โgross violationโ of the two sides’ ceasefire. Oil prices fell by around 3% early on Wednesday, unwinding some of Tuesday’s 4% rise.
In Europe, rates markets were jarred after European Central Bank board member Isabel Schnabel indicated that the ECB should hike rates next month even if a U.S.-Iran peace plan โis agreed. Schnabel told Reuters that the size of the energy shock meant โlooking throughโ โit was not an option.