Snowflake delivered a blowout first quarter, and the ripple effects were felt across the software sector Thursday morning. Meanwhile, chip stocks cooled off and Bitcoin hit a six-week low.
Snowflake’s fiscal first-quarter profit came in well above Wall Street estimates. That sent its shares up 35% in premarket trading.
Snowflake Inc., SNOW
The strong result lifted other software names. Oracle added 2.6% and ServiceNow rose 5.5%. MongoDB jumped 11% ahead of its own first-quarter earnings, due after Thursday’s close.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives kept his Outperform rating on Snowflake and raised his price target to $280 from $270. He cited increased confidence in the company’s AI strategy and kept it on the IVES AI 30 List.
Not every software name benefited. Salesforce fell around 2% after its second-quarter revenue forecast came in below expectations, despite reporting a 50% year-over-year increase in earnings per share. The company did raise its full-year revenue forecast to a range of $45.9 billion to $46.2 billion.
Microsoft edged up 1.1%. Morgan Stanley noted the company is deploying AI data center capacity ahead of near-term monetization, suggesting future revenue could grow sharply. Microsoft’s data center footprint could grow from around 5 gigawatts in fiscal 2024 to roughly 20 gigawatts by fiscal 2028.
After a strong run, chip stocks gave back some gains Thursday. Traders pointed to rising U.S.-Iran tensions as a reason to take profits.
Advanced Micro Devices slipped 1.4% and Intel fell 2.9%. Micron Technology declined 1.2%, just two days after hitting a $1 trillion market valuation.
Marvell Technology dropped 3% even after its revenue beat expectations and earnings came in line with estimates. Investors appeared to have expected more, and the stock erased early gains.
One exception was Nebius, a cloud-computing company. It gained 11% after investor Leopold Aschenbrenner’s Situational Awareness fund disclosed a stake in the company.
Drone company Unusual Machines surged 33% after the Wall Street Journal reported the Trump administration is considering funding agreements with several drone companies. The move is part of a push to expand domestic drone production and cut costs.
Bitcoin dropped as much as 3.3% to $72,643 during Thursday’s session, its weakest level since April 13. The slide was tied to geopolitical jitters over the Middle East and outflows from U.S. Bitcoin ETFs.
Crypto-linked stocks ticked lower in step with the price drop. Futu Holdings fell 4.3% after reporting earnings, adding to pressure on that group.
U.S. stock futures edged lower Thursday morning as investors tracked fresh macroeconomic data and ongoing developments in the Middle East.
The post Today’s Market Movers: Snowflake Steals the Show While Intel and Salesforce Struggle appeared first on CoinCentral.


