[Market Summary]
New York indices showed resilience on the first trading day following U.S. airstrikes on Iran. While the morning saw a broad 1% drop due to geopolitical instability, the market staged a late-day recovery as analysts suggested the economic shock might be contained.
Dow Jones: 48,904.78 (-73.14 pts, -0.15%)
Nasdaq: 22,748.86 (+80.65 pts, +0.36%)
S&P 500: 6,881.62 (+2.74 pts, +0.04%)
Geopolitical Context: Iran has retaliated against neighboring countries, leading to a regional escalation. However, these neighbors are reportedly shifting support toward the U.S. due to mounting civilian casualties. Meanwhile, oil prices have gone vertical: Brent Crude jumped 7.42% and WTI surged 5.90% following Iran's threat to block the Strait of Hormuz.
[Featured Stocks: The War & Tech Dynamics]
■ AI & Semiconductors: Nvidia’s New Move
Nvidia (NVDA): Preparing to launch new processors for "Inference" computing (AI's response-generation phase) at the GTC Conference on March 16. Sources suggest these will integrate chips designed by the startup Groq.
ASML (ASML): Expanding into advanced packaging equipment to broaden its reach beyond lithography.
Coherent (COHR) & Lumentum (LITE): Both stocks surged after securing $2 billion investments and multi-billion dollar purchase commitments from Nvidia for next-gen optical interconnects.
■ The "War Trade": Defense, Energy & Tankers
Defense: Lockheed Martin (LMT) and Northrop Grumman (NOC) rose as the Trump administration signaled goals of regime change and nuclear neutralization in Iran.
Energy: ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX) rallied as Brent Crude hit a 52-week high of $78/barrel.
Tankers: Frontline (FRO) and DHT Holdings (DHT) spiked on expectations of soaring freight rates due to Middle East conflict.
Cybersecurity: Palo Alto Networks (PANW) and CrowdStrike (CRWD) climbed as CISA warned of imminent Iranian cyberattacks on critical infrastructure.
■ Travel & Banks: The Casualties
Airlines/Travel: Over 3,200 flights were canceled or diverted as Middle East airspace closed. American (AAL), United (UAL), and booking sites like Expedia (EXPE) faced heavy pressure from rising fuel costs.
Banks: JP Morgan (JPM) and Goldman Sachs (GS) slipped as war jitters weighed on global financial sentiment.
[Corporate Deep Dives]
■ Novo Nordisk (NVO): The Goldman Sledgehammer
Downgrade: Goldman Sachs downgraded NVO from 'Buy' to 'Neutral', slashing the price target from 400 DKK ($63) to 260 DKK ($41).
The Reason: The REDEFINE-4 trial for CagriSema showed inferiority to Eli Lilly's Tirzepatide. Goldman cut peak sales estimates for CagriSema by 65% (from $11.8B to $5.2B).
■ Palantir Technologies (PLTR): S&P 500 Star
Gains: Became the top gainer in the S&P 500.
Growth: Q4 government revenue reached 41% of total sales, skyrocketing 66% YoY to $570M. The current conflict is expected to further boost defense spending.
■ Block (XYZ)
Restructuring: Announced a massive 40% workforce cut to pivot toward AI-integrated internal structures.
Analyst Reaction: Cantor Fitzgerald raised its target to $78 (Overweight), while Truist remained cautious with a $72 (Hold) rating.
■ AES (AES): Going Private
The Deal: AES announced it will be acquired for $33.4 billion ($15/share cash) by a consortium including EQT and BlackRock (GIP).
Market Reaction: The stock plummeted as the $15 buyout price was significantly lower than investors expected.
[After-Hours Watch]
■ Target (TGT)
Sentiment: Fell 0.86% after-hours. Bank of America issued a 'Sell' rating, citing inflation pressure and limited recovery signs in discretionary spending.
■ The China Chip Cap (NVDA / AMD)
News: Reports suggest the Trump administration is discussing a cap on Nvidia H200 and AMD MI325 shipments to China—limited to 75,000 units per customer.
Impact: This is less than half of what giants like Alibaba and ByteDance requested. While total China shipments could still reach 1M units, the individual customer cap threatens the biggest players.
Price Action: NVDA (-0.18%), AMD (-0.26%) in late trading.


