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listeners, it's Saturday, May 23rd. 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. Markets spent this week chasing the next big thing from AI to outer space and quantum computing. Investors poured money into futuristic bets while brushing aside lingering concerns about the economy. A new $2 billion federal investment in quantum computing helped fuel rallies in companies tied to the emerging technology. Nvidia beat Wall street expectations for the 14th straight quarter, according to data from FactSet. And SpaceX prepared to launch what could be the biggest IPO in history that lifted space related stocks across the market Here on Earth, warning signs about the US Consumer continued to pile up. Retail giants including Walmart, Target and Home Depot all pointed to increasingly budget conscious shoppers this week, while high gas prices and lingering uncertainty around the conflict in the Middle east continued to weigh on consumer sentiment. Still, investors saw more to be excited about than scared of The Dow gained 2.1% and ended the week at a new record high, while the Nasdaq rose about half a percent. The S&P 500 increased 0.9%, notching its eighth straight week of gains, the longest weekly winning streak since 2023. For months, Wall street has been obsessing over AI's biggest private companies from the sidelines, but this week it finally got a meaningful glimpse behind the curtain. Three of Silicon Valley's hottest startups moved closer to going public, setting the stage for what could become the biggest IPO boom since the dot com era. Elon Musk's SpaceX filed paperwork for a blockbuster stock offering that could raise as much as $80 billion and potentially make Musk the world's first trillionaire. Meanwhile, OpenAI, which was recently valued at more than $850 billion, is preparing to file for its own IPO soon. And rival Anthropic surprised investors by forecasting its first ever quarterly operating profit, a rare feat in the cash burning AI industry. While investors wait for those monster debuts, many are looking for other ways to cash in on the frenzy. European satellite stocks surged this week after SpaceX's filing ignited excitement across the industry. France's Utilsat jumped nearly 35%, while German satellite developer OHB climbed more than 20. Investors obsession with finding the next big market winner may be creating a problem for the company sitting on top of the mountain. Shares in Nvidia, currently the most valuable company in the world with a valuation of more than $5 trillion, fell more than 4% over the week, despite the chip giant reporting another blockbuster quarter. CEO Jensen Huang told investors that demand for AI chips has gone quote parabolic as companies race to build AI agents and massive data centers. The company posted more than $81 billion in quarterly revenue, up 85% from a year ago, while profits more than tripled. But investors appear more interested in finding the next Nvidia than rewarding the current one. Take intel, for example. The once struggling chip maker has suddenly become one of Wall Street's hottest AI comeback bets. Shares in the company surged 10% this week and are now up more than 220% this year as investors bet Intel's processors could play a larger role in the next phase of the AI buildout. The fatigue isn't limited to Nvidia, analysts say. Wall street has developed a kind of apathy toward the biggest AI winners to date, with investors increasingly rotating into underdogs they believe have more room to run. According to Goldman Sachs, the AI chip trade has become so dominant that semiconductor companies now make up nearly 20% of the S&P 500, the highest concentration on record. And AI isn't just reshaping stock indexes. It's starting to reshape how investors make money. For decades, investors could count on tech companies, eventually rewarding shareholders through dividends and massive stock buyback programs. But the AI boom is changing that equation. Dividend investing has lagged the broader market this year as excitement around artificial intelligence pushes companies to reinvest profits into data centers, CH chips and computing power instead of returning that cash to shareholders. And because Big Tech has accounted for such a large share of recent market gains, those decisions carry extra weight. Even stock buybacks, one of Wall Street's favorite drivers of share prices in recent years, are starting to slow. Excluding Nvidia buybacks among the so called Magnificent Seven fell more than 70% from a year ago in the latest quarter as companies redirected cash toward the increasingly expensive AI arms race. Analysts say the trend reflects a growing reality inside Big Tech. The need to spend on AI infrastructure is crowding out other priorities, including keeping shareholders sweet with buybacks and dividends. And now you know what's news in markets this week you can 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 Alexis Moore with supervising producer Melanie Roy. I'm Imani Moiz. Have a great weekend and catch you next Saturday.
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Host: Imani Moiz, The Wall Street Journal
Date: May 23, 2026
This week’s episode of What’s News in Markets takes listeners through the seismic shifts and standout stories in the world of stocks and finance. From blockbuster IPO announcements and quantum computing rallies to surprising investor fatigue with chip giants like Nvidia and the decline of dividend investing, host Imani Moiz breaks down how futuristic bets are captivating Wall Street—sometimes at the expense of traditional investment strategies.
For detailed coverage and more stock stories from the week, see the WSJ live markets feed.