Premarket Movers: Chip Stocks Surge, Oil Shares Slide as Geopolitical and Earnings News Hit Markets
Early trading on Wednesday painted a picture of a market parsing mixed signals, with geopolitical developments and a fresh batch of corporate earnings creating distinct winners and losers. The overarching theme appeared to be a reassessment of inflation pressures following a significant drop in oil prices, which rippled through commodity-related stocks and influenced broader sentiment.
Chip and Tech Stocks Shine on Strategic Announcements
Arm Holdings (ARM) led the charge among technology stocks, with its shares surging 13% premarket. The chip designer announced a major strategic milestone: the unveiling of its first in-house chip. The company provided an ambitious long-term revenue target, stating it expects to generate $15 billion by 2031. This forward-looking guidance resonated strongly with investors looking for tangible steps in Arm’s growth narrative beyond its licensing model.
In a separate but related move within the financial technology space, Robinhood (HOOD) jumped 4% after announcing a substantial $1.5 billion stock buyback plan. The repurchase program, set to unfold over three years beginning this quarter, is a significant capital return initiative aimed at bolstering shareholder value.
Earnings and Deals Drive Mixed Reactions
The quarterly earnings season continued to elicit varied responses. Braze (BRZE), a cloud-based software company, saw a nearly 22% rally despite a mixed report card. The company’s fourth-quarter revenue of $205.2 million comfortably beat the FactSet consensus estimate of $198.2 million, and its current-quarter revenue forecast also exceeded Street expectations. However, its adjusted earnings per share of 10 cents fell short of the 14-cent consensus, highlighting a market willing to prioritize strong top-line growth over near-term profitability in this sector.
Contrastingly, homebuilder KB Home (KBH) fell more than 2% after its fiscal first-quarter results missed on both top and bottom lines. Earnings of 52 cents per share were below the 55 cents anticipated by analysts polled by LSEG. Revenue of $1.08 billion also undershot the $1.10 billion estimate. Adding to the disappointment, the company’s forecasts for current-quarter housing revenue and deliveries were below StreetAccount estimates, suggesting persistent challenges in the housing market.
The pet e-commerce leader Chewy (CHWY) gained nearly 7% after reporting fourth-quarter results. While revenue was slightly under expectations, the company delivered adjusted EBITDA that beat the FactSet consensus, a metric closely watched for operational efficiency.
M&A Activity and Satellite Sector Buzz
Merger and acquisition activity provided a notable boost. Terns Pharmaceuticals (TERN) gained over 5% after Merck (MRK) agreed to acquire the biopharma company for $53 per share in cash, a deal valuing Terns at $6.7 billion. This represents a 6% premium to Terns’ closing price on Tuesday, with the transaction expected to close in the second quarter.
EchoStar (SATS) shares jumped nearly 7% following a report from The Information that SpaceX could file for an initial public offering as soon as this week. EchoStar holds approximately a 3% stake in the Elon Musk-led space company, making it a direct beneficiary of any potential IPO valuation event.
Commodity Complex: Oil Drop Triggers Sector Rotation
The most significant macro-driven moves came from the energy and mining sectors. Oil prices declined another 6% on continued developments in the U.S.-Iran conflict, reversing earlier war-driven gains. This sparked a broad sell-off in oil-focused equities. Diamondback Energy (FANG) and APA Corporation (APA) both fell more than 2%, while majors like ConocoPhillips (COP), Occidental Petroleum (OXY), and Exxon Mobil (XOM) declined more than 1.5%.
This decline in oil—a key inflation input—had a pronounced positive effect on assets perceived as inflation hedges. Gold prices rallied, leading to a 6% jump for Newmont (NEM), one of the world’s largest gold miners. Similarly, Freeport-McMoRan (FCX), a major copper producer, gained more than 3% as industrial metals broadly rallied on easing growth fears. Copper, a bellwether for global economic health, was up over 1.7%.
Fertilizer Maker in Spotlight as Geopolitical Narrative Shifts
CF Industries (CF) fell nearly 4% in a reversal of its recent war-driven trend. Reports signaling potential negotiations that could ease the U.S.-Iran conflict suggested an end to the commodity shortage that had propelled fertilizer prices—and CF’s stock—up over 27% since the conflict began, particularly after concerns about the Strait of Hormuz closure.
— CNBC’s Sarah Min, Michelle Fox and Fred Imbert contributed reporting.



