
Bank Shares Slide, CoreWeave Slumps, Sunrun Falls
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On the episode of Stock Movers:
- Big bank stocks, including shares of Bank of America (BAC) slid after some analysts warned of downside risks. HSBC is turning cautious on three of the biggest US bank stocks following a record rally that’s brought the group within shouting distance of an all-time high. “Downside risks associated with still-elevated macro uncertainty, potentially slowing economic growth and more interest rate cuts through 2025 and 2026 are generally not factored into the stock prices,” analyst Saul Martinez wrote in a note downgrading JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp. At the same time, “the repricing of fixed-rate assets, benign credit quality, improving investment banking activity, and a favorable regulatory backdrop are well priced in.”
- CoreWeave (CRW) shares fell with the most recent news being that it's dropping $9 billion on the data-center operator Core Scientific Inc. in an effort to gain more direct control over the physical assets powering the artificial-intelligence boom. In buying Core Scientific in an all-stock deal, CoreWeave will inherit more than a gigawatt of data-center capacity across the US — much of which is already contracted out to serve its clients in training, deploying and using AI models. CoreWeave said Monday that controlling more of its supply chain will eliminate lease expenses, reduce costs including those associated with financing projects and “future-proof” its revenue growth.
- Solar stocks, including Sunrun (RUN) fell after President Donald Trump called for new rules that would limit access to tax incentives for renewable energy projects that had already been pared back by a $3.4 trillion budget bill. Sunrun, the biggest US residential solar company, slid as much as 13%. Solar equipment provider Nextracker dropped as much 5.6%. First Solar, a domestic solar manufacturer, fell as much as 5.3%. On Monday evening, Trump issued an executive order directing the US Treasury Department to more strictly define when a project has started construction, including restricting the use of efforts to lock in tax credits unless a substantial portion has been built.
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