Retail Traders Are Losing Their Minds Over a Memory Chip ETF—And It’s Breaking Records

Forget about chasing the next hot AI stock. Retail traders have found a new obsession, and it's way more boring-sounding than you'd think: memory chips. The Roundhill Memory ETF (ticker: DRAM) launched just over a month ago on April 2, and it's already become the hottest thematic fund launch since the pandemic. We're talking faster adoption than Bitcoin ETFs. Faster than Nvidia leveraged funds. Faster than basically anything retail has touched in years. Here's the wild part: in just 27 trading days, ...
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Two AI Stocks That Actually Flew Under the Radar (And Why You Should Care)

Look, AI stocks have been everywhere for the past few years—it's basically impossible to avoid them. But here's the thing: while everyone's obsessing over the usual suspects like Nvidia and Palantir, there are a couple of genuinely interesting plays that most investors haven't even heard of yet. Let me break down two stocks worth paying attention to this month. Aehr Test Systems: The Unsung Hero of the Chip Testing World Aehr Test Systems (NASDAQ: AEHR) is up a bonkers 379% year-to-date and ...
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AI Bots Are Bombing at Stock Picking—And That’s Actually Good News for You

Here's the plot twist nobody saw coming: Wall Street's fancy AI trading bots are tanking. Bloomberg just reported that these shiny new algorithms—the ones that supposedly never sleep, never get emotional, and can crunch millions of data points before breakfast—are actually getting their butts kicked by basic market benchmarks. Some are making straight-up irrational trades. Others are getting whipsawed by volatility like a rookie trader on their first day. It's almost embarrassing, really. But here's the thing: this doesn't mean AI is ...
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Qualcomm’s Mystery Chip Deal Just Made Wall Street Forget About Disappointing Earnings

Here's the thing about the stock market: sometimes a single sentence can erase an entire quarter of mediocrity. That's exactly what happened to Qualcomm on Thursday when the chipmaker casually dropped that it's making custom silicon for a "leading hyperscaler"—and investors collectively lost their minds. The stock jumped 20% intraday. Twenty percent. For a vague announcement about a mystery customer. If that doesn't tell you something about how desperate the market is for AI-related wins, I don't know what does. Let's break ...
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AI Agents Are Quietly Taking Over Finance—And Block Inc. Is Already Winning

Remember when AI was just a chatbot that could write your emails? Yeah, those days are over. Now we're talking about agentic AI—basically AI systems that can actually *do stuff* without you holding their hand. They can make decisions, execute workflows, and handle complex tasks with minimal human supervision. Think of them as the difference between having a really smart intern who needs constant direction versus one who just gets things done. And guess where this technology is making the biggest ...
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Qualcomm Just Dropped a Mystery Box, and Wall Street Lost Its Mind

Here's the thing about earnings season: sometimes the actual numbers don't matter nearly as much as the *vibes*. And Qualcomm just proved that point spectacularly. The chipmaker's stock rocketed 20% during Thursday's trading session—at one point hitting a 16% gain by midday—all because of three magic words: "custom silicon engagement." Translation: Qualcomm is making special chips for someone really important, and they're not telling us who. The company's CFO, Akash Palkhiwala, casually dropped this bomb on the earnings call: "We now expect ...
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When Good News Goes Bad: Why Okta’s Earnings Beat Didn’t Save Its Stock

Here's a plot twist nobody saw coming: Okta crushed its earnings, beat analyst expectations, and its stock tanked 13% anyway. Welcome to the stock market, where logic takes a coffee break. The identity management company delivered solid Q1 FY26 results—$688 million in revenue (up 12% YoY), beating estimates by $8 million. Earnings? $0.86 per share, crushing the $0.77 consensus. They even posted record operating profit of $184 million. By any reasonable measure, this was a win. So why did investors run for ...
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Big Tech’s AI Spending Spree: The Manhattan Project Called, It Wants Its Budget Back

Here's a fun fact that'll make your portfolio sweat: Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta are collectively spending more money on AI every single month than the entire Manhattan Project cost. Per month. That's not a typo—it's a feature, apparently. AI researcher Gary Marcus, who's been watching this spending bonanza with the expression of someone watching their friend order a third round of shots, decided to call it what it is: "the greatest capital misallocation in history." And honestly? He's got a ...
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