Loading summary
A
I'm Steve Booth, CEO of Baird, an independent wealth asset management and global capital markets firm. At Baird, our 5,000 plus employees are united by an unwavering commitment to excellence and a genuine passion for helping our clients and each other succeed. As a privately held, truly employee owned company, we treasure our independence since we can focus on delivering results to clients and taking care of our people throughout the cycles in our served markets. Learn more@rwbaer.com WSJ
B
hey listeners, it's Saturday, May 30th. I'm Imani Moiz for the Wall Street Journal and this is what's News in Markets. Our look at the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them. Let's dive in Stocks continued their historic march higher as Wall Street's appetite for AI showed few signs of slowing. All three major indexes ended the week at record highs, and the S and P has now risen nine consecutive weeks, the longest winning streak since 2023. Investors are paying historically high prices relative to corporate earnings, a dynamic not seen since the dot com boom. The last time investors were willing to pay these kinds of prices was around the market peak in 2000. So far, investors are still buying the tech heavy NASDAQ led the way, right, rising just under 2.4% for the week. The S&P 500 grew 1.4% and the Dow increased 0.9%. The AI boom minted two new trillion dollar companies this week. Shares in memory chip makers Micron and SK Hynix surged nearly 30% and 20% respectively, to cross a trillion dollar valuation mark. They're the latest additions after Samsung joined one of the stock market's most exclusive clubs earlier this month. For years, memory chips were seen as a commodity business, the tech equivalent of selling gasoline. But investors are now treating chips as one of the most precious resources in the AI economy. In fact, the combined value of Samsung, SK Hynix and Micron now exceeds the market value of the world's three largest oil companies. Every AI model needs enormous amounts of memory to store and move data, creating a global shortage of semiconductors. According to data provider Orn, spot prices for a common AI memory chip, known as DDR5, have more than doubled since November. Stock prices have mirrored those gains. Micron shares have tripled since the end of March, helping it become the fastest company to ever go from a $500 billion valuation to a trillion dollar. As memory chips become the hottest commodity, oil stocks are getting the cold shoulder. Energy was the worst performing sector in the S&P 500 this week as crude prices saw their biggest monthly decline since the onset of the pandemic. Reports that Washington and Tehran may be inching toward a possible agreement that would reopen the Strait of Hormuz have traders unwinding bets that the conflict could lead to a prolonged supply shock. Investors have gotten used to whipsawing headlines as tensions in the Middle east drag on. But but they still have some impact. The S and P energy index fell more than 5% over the week as Brent crude slid 11% to $92.05 a barrel. But don't cry for oil investors just yet. The conflict in the Middle east and energy stocks soaring earlier this year and the S and P energy index remains up more than 25% year to date. Ford was one of the week's biggest winners as investors enthusiasm for a new subsidiary continued to rev up. Shares in the automaker continued to climb nearly 17% this week following the company's announcement of an energy storage division called Ford Energy earlier this month. After pulling back from the electric vehicle market, Ford is repurposing batteries originally intended for EVs into stationary energy storage systems for AI data centers, power utilities and industrial customers. One Morgan Stanley analyst recently estimated that the business could eventually be worth $10 billion on its own. Investors see the move as a way for Ford to cash in on the AI frenzy. And that's right at a moment when the auto industry is slogging through an EV slowdown and broader downturn. Automakers are increasingly warning that new car sales could shrink this year. Roughly 1 million potential buyers have left the new car market since the start of the decade, and executives don't expect them back anytime soon as consumers grapple with high interest rates, stubborn inflation and elevated gas prices. Ford is up almost 27% for the year, while rival General Motors has risen by less than 4%. And now you know what's news in markets this week. You could read about more stocks that moved on the week's news in our live markets coverage on WSJ.com today's show was produced by Anthony Banzi with supervising producer Katie Ferguson. I'm Imani Moiz. Have a great weekend and catch you next Saturday.
A
In moments of seismic change through crisis and transformation, it is our real world experience that delivers FTI consulting experts with impact.
Date: May 30, 2026
Host: Imani Moiz
Summary Prepared By: Podcast Summarizer
This episode of What’s News in Markets provides a concise yet comprehensive wrap-up of the week’s most significant movements in the financial markets. Host Imani Moiz highlights how Wall Street's record-breaking rally, a historic run for memory chipmakers amid the AI wave, slumping oil stocks, and Ford’s pivot to energy storage define the week’s big winners and losers. The show captures the intersection of technological innovation, geopolitical developments, and changing consumer trends driving market action.
“The S&P has now risen nine consecutive weeks, the longest winning streak since 2023... Investors are paying historically high prices relative to corporate earnings, a dynamic not seen since the dot-com boom.”
— Imani Moiz, 00:44
“For years, memory chips were seen as a commodity business, the tech equivalent of selling gasoline. But investors are now treating chips as one of the most precious resources in the AI economy.”
— Imani Moiz, 02:11
“Energy was the worst performing sector... as crude prices saw their biggest monthly decline since the onset of the pandemic.”
— Imani Moiz, 03:10
“After pulling back from the electric vehicle market, Ford is repurposing batteries originally intended for EVs into stationary energy storage systems for AI data centers, power utilities and industrial customers.”
— Imani Moiz, 04:18
On investor risk appetite:
“The last time investors were willing to pay these kinds of prices was around the market peak in 2000.”
— Imani Moiz, 00:56
On memory chips’ new status:
“Every AI model needs enormous amounts of memory to store and move data, creating a global shortage of semiconductors.”
— Imani Moiz, 02:23
On Ford’s transformation:
“Investors see the move as a way for Ford to cash in on the AI frenzy. And that’s right at a moment when the auto industry is slogging through an EV slowdown and broader downturn.”
— Imani Moiz, 04:37
This week’s What’s News in Markets episode captures a pivotal moment for global markets: as AI continues to transform technology and valuations, traditional commodities like oil falter, and old-guard companies like Ford reinvent themselves to ride the AI wave. The episode’s crisp, data-driven narrative contextualizes headlines within broader economic shifts—delivering actionable insights for both investors and anyone tracking business innovation.