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“Our coding teams are realizing productivity gains of 30% or more using agentic AI.” Mark Murphy, CFO Micron
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
Futures got off to a positive start this morning ahead of a busy morning for economic data. Initial and continuing jobless claims came in better than expected, while the Philly Fed report for December came in weaker than forecasts. The number of the morning was CPI, and while there were no m/m readings since October data was not compiled, the y/y reading came in much weaker than expected at 2.7% versus forecasts for 3.1%. Core CPI was weaker at 2.6% versus forecasts for an increase of 3.0%.
In response to the report, futures have added on to their gains with the S&P 500 now indicated to open 0.5% higher while the Nasdaq is up 0.8%. Treasury yields are down about 3 bps across the curve, and crude oil is marginally higher. Gold is down about half of one percent, while Bitcoin is up 2.5%.
Asian stocks were biased to the downside with the Nikkei falling over 1% for the third time this week. South Korea fell 1.5%, but Hong Kong and China were both up marginally. In Europe, investors are more optimistic as the STOXX 600 trades up 0.3%. It’s been a busy morning for central bank announcements as the ECB left rates unchanged, and the BoE cut rates by 25 bps in a 5-4 decision.
There’s obviously been tons of hype related to AI, and the increases in productivity that it promises. That’s why stocks like Nvidia (NVDA) and many of the hyperscalers have done so well. Moving forward, investors will increasingly demand to see concrete examples across the economy of productivity boosts from companies using AI. Last night’s earnings call from Micron (MU) provided one of those examples when the company’s CFO noted that its programming teams have seen a 30% boost to productivity from using AI.
That’s good to see, but it’s not why MU’s stock is trading up nearly 14% in the pre-market. Last night, the company reported one of the more impressive triple plays we’ve ever seen. While EPS beat expectations by over 20% and revenues were 5% ahead of forecasts, the jaw-dropping aspect of the report was the guidance, as the company sees next quarter’s revenues exceeding consensus forecasts by at least 25%, and they raised EPS guidance by at least 75%. MU’s stock was up 40% in the three months leading up to the report, so investors were expecting a strong report, but the results were still impressive.
MU’s double-digit percentage pre-market gain has investors breathing a sigh of relief, but you can’t fault anyone for being a little cynical after seeing how some other AI-related stocks recently performed in reaction to what, at face value, looked like impressive reports.
It started with Oracle (ORCL) in September. After reporting earnings after the close on 9/9, the stock traded up an astonishing 36%. Since then, all those gains and more have evaporated as the stock has been essentially cut in half.
On 11/19, Nvidia (NVDA) reported an earnings triple play, and the following morning, the stock gapped up over 5% and took the rest of the market along for the ride with it. Quickly after the market opened, though, shares nosedived nearly 8% intraday to finish the session down over 3%. Since then, the stock is down another 5%.
Then, last week, Broadcom (AVGO) reported another triple play, but that wasn’t enough to provide any positive traction in the stock. On 12/12, AVGO gapped down over 5% and is down close to another 15% since that opening trade.
All this is a long way of saying, yeah, it’s great to see MU rallying in reaction to earnings, but unless the stock can hold onto those gains through at least one full session of trading, you can understand if an investor wants to be at least a little skeptical. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Fool me three times, I’m the fool. Fool me four times, it’s a trend!



