AT&T topped forecasts for first-quarter wireless subscriber gains and stuck to its 2026 guidance Wednesday. This comes as MarketBeat reports since Monday pointed to reductions in stakes by Meritage Portfolio Management, TD Waterhouse Canada, and Zurcher Kantonalbank.
SoFi Technologies Inc. shares slipped Tuesday afternoon, losing ground after a recent bounce as investors eyed next week’s Q1 results and sifted through fresh data on institutional positions alongside cautious analyst notes. A new Form 13F filing showed Asset Management One Co. bumped its SoFi stake up by 6.8% during the fourth quarter, according to a Tuesday report.
Opendoor Technologies Inc. climbed roughly 5.6% Tuesday afternoon, outperforming most housing stocks after upbeat U.S. pending home sales figures. Traders also have their eyes on the company’s upcoming Q1 results slated for May 7. Shares were recently at $5.65, off session highs of $5.99.
Microsoft slipped roughly 1.3% to $417.23 Monday, with its April 29 earnings report on deck and investors divided over the company’s AI strategy—some betting on a bounce, others bracing for further declines. The shares are still off about 23% from their October 2025 high.
Intel was down 3.5% at $66.08 as of 11:20 a.m. EDT Monday, coming off Friday’s pop to $69.55—the highest intraday mark in over two decades. The drop lands just ahead of the chipmaker’s earnings set for April 23.
Hims & Hers Health jumped another 8.9% by 10:25 a.m. EDT on Monday, pushing its winning streak further. Omnicell and Privia Health only managed gains of less than 1%. Telehealth stocks like Hims & Hers remain in focus after Yahoo Finance highlighted the company’s 48.3% surge over the past week ahead of its earnings release set for May 11.
Shares of Interactive Brokers Group climbed 2.95% Friday, landing at $81.71 ahead of Tuesday’s first-quarter earnings report. The online broker has investors eyeing fresh numbers for trading activity and interest income after its recent run-up.
On Friday, VICI Properties Inc. shares jumped 2.15% to finish at $29.01, ahead of the broader U.S. market. The New York-based casino REIT now carries a market cap near $34.8 billion, with investors stepping in ahead of an earnings update expected in late April.
Shares of Grab Holdings Limited climbed 4.7% to close at $4.21 on Friday on Nasdaq, nudging the Singapore ride-hailing and delivery company into the spotlight ahead of its upcoming earnings. Roughly 72.8 million shares changed hands as the stock swung from $4.04 to $4.27 over the course of the session.
SoFi Technologies picked up another 2.1% on Friday, finishing at $19.43 after hitting a session high of $20.13. Investors kept piling in ahead of the fintech lender’s upcoming first-quarter results. More than 73 million shares changed hands.
Intel Corporation shot up to $70.32 Friday—its highest intraday mark since the dot-com peak—before settling at $68.50. Investors have latched onto momentum around the chipmaker’s AI and manufacturing turnaround. The spike put Intel just shy of its August 2000 all-time high, according to Bloomberg. “Near term catalysts” are in play, noted Gabelli Funds analyst Ryuta Makino. Ben Reitzes at Melius Research said the market is “validating” Intel’s foundry value “daily.”
Alphabet hovered near $337 Friday, with investors eyeing the Google parent’s upcoming earnings on April 29. The Class A stock edged up roughly 0.4% by late morning in New York.
U.S. stocks pressed upward Wednesday, the S&P 500 setting a fresh intraday high—the first since the U.S.-Iran conflict erupted—while the Nasdaq advanced nearly 1% by midafternoon. The Dow trailed behind, but sentiment held up, fueled by robust bank earnings and renewed optimism for possible Washington-Tehran talks.
UPDATE April 15, 2026, 22:50 - Morgan Stanley reported a record-breaking first quarter, notching roughly $20.6 billion in revenue and earnings per share at $3.43—well above forecasts—driven by a surge in trading and solid performance from wealth management. The stock climbed after the results landed; equities trading set a fresh high, and investment banking saw a bounce, with dealmaking picking up pace. Market volatility, stoked in part by geopolitical strife, has fed into Wall Street’s trading windfall, though execs pointed out macro risks haven’t gone away.
Morgan Stanley topped forecasts for the first quarter, with equities trading hitting new highs and dealmaking showing more muscle—driving revenue to a fresh record. Shares traded up roughly 1.2%, at $183.34 as of 8:31 a.m. EDT. The bank posted profit of $3.43 per share on revenue of $20.6 billion, compared to last year’s $2.60 a share on $17.7 billion.
July 9, 2026, 2:19 PM EDT. The Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) is up nearly 55% over two years after inflation, topping global peers and more than doubling the U.S. S&P 500's gains. The surge puts this run in line with past booms, like the 1990s dot-com rally. Corporate Canada posted strong results even as the economy faced trade worries, a deep housing slump, and weaker immigration. Banks, insurers, pipelines, gold, oil, and utilities led growth, sectors often missed in tech-dominated headlines. Toronto-Dominion Bank jumped over 120% as it rebounded from a money-laundering scandal, helped by buybacks and a new strategy. BlackBerry shifted to software for cars and secure communications, sending its shares up nearly fivefold. TSX performance holds up despite economic headwinds.