Key Highlights
- Snowflake’s stock exploded 35% higher in premarket hours following exceptional first-quarter financial results
- Enterprise software companies including Oracle and ServiceNow climbed alongside Snowflake’s momentum
- Semiconductor stocks such as Intel and AMD experienced selloffs, with Middle East tensions triggering profit-taking
- Unusual Machines, a drone manufacturer, spiked 33% on news of potential Trump administration funding
- Bitcoin tumbled to $72,643, marking its weakest position in more than six weeks and pulling down cryptocurrency-related equities
The cloud data platform company Snowflake posted exceptional first-quarter results Thursday, creating positive momentum throughout the software industry. In contrast, semiconductor equities experienced a pullback while cryptocurrency markets slumped to multi-week lows.
Snowflake Powers Software Sector Rally
Snowflake’s fiscal Q1 earnings significantly exceeded analyst projections. The company’s shares rocketed 35% higher during premarket activity.
The impressive performance created a halo effect across the software landscape. Oracle shares climbed 2.6% while ServiceNow advanced 5.5%. MongoDB surged 11% in anticipation of its own quarterly report scheduled for Thursday evening.
Wedbush’s Dan Ives maintained his Outperform recommendation on Snowflake while increasing his target price to $280 from $270. His rationale centered on growing conviction in the firm’s AI strategy, maintaining its position on the IVES AI 30 List.
The software sector didn’t experience universal gains. Salesforce declined approximately 2% after providing second-quarter revenue guidance that missed analyst expectations, though the company reported earnings per share that jumped 50% year-over-year. Management did elevate its full-year revenue outlook to between $45.9 billion and $46.2 billion.
Microsoft ticked up 1.1%. Morgan Stanley highlighted how the tech giant is building out AI data center infrastructure in advance of immediate revenue generation, positioning itself for substantial future income growth. The firm’s data center capacity could expand from approximately 5 gigawatts in fiscal 2024 to roughly 20 gigawatts by fiscal 2028.
Semiconductor Sector Experiences Pullback
Following a robust rally, chip manufacturers surrendered some recent gains Thursday. Market participants attributed the weakness to escalating tensions between the United States and Iran, prompting profit-taking.
Advanced Micro Devices decreased 1.4% while Intel dropped 2.9%. Micron Technology slipped 1.2%, mere days after achieving a $1 trillion market capitalization milestone.
Marvell Technology declined 3% despite posting revenue that surpassed forecasts and meeting earnings expectations. The market reaction suggested investors anticipated stronger performance, with shares reversing early session gains.
Bucking the trend was Nebius, a cloud computing enterprise that advanced 11% following disclosure that Leopold Aschenbrenner’s Situational Awareness fund had acquired a position in the company.
Unusual Machines, a drone manufacturer, jumped 33% after the Wall Street Journal disclosed that the Trump administration is exploring funding arrangements with multiple drone companies. This initiative aims to bolster domestic drone manufacturing capabilities while reducing expenses.
Cryptocurrency Markets Tumble to Multi-Week Lows
Bitcoin plunged as much as 3.3% to reach $72,643 during Thursday trading, representing its weakest performance since April 13. The decline stemmed from geopolitical uncertainties surrounding Middle East developments and capital withdrawals from U.S. Bitcoin ETFs.
Cryptocurrency-related stocks moved lower in tandem with digital asset prices. Futu Holdings decreased 4.3% following its earnings announcement, compounding pressure on the sector.
U.S. equity index futures drifted lower Thursday morning as market participants assessed fresh economic indicators and monitored evolving Middle East tensions.



