WSJ Your Money Briefing - What’s News in Markets: AI Tales, Oracle Woes, Wendy’s Sizzles
Episode Date: June 27, 2026Why are Micron and Cerebras telling two different AI stories? And why is Oracle one of the worst stocks this week? Plus, who’s behind Wendy’s big rally? Host Jack Pitcher discusses the biggest sto...ck moves of the week and the news that drove them. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, listeners, your money briefing is still on a break, but we'll be back with more personal finance information for you in the future.
Until then, here's the news moving the markets this week.
Hey, listeners, it's Saturday, June 27th.
I'm Jack Pitcher for the Wall Street Journal, and this is What's News in Markets, our look at the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them.
Let's get to it.
A nasty tech sell-off dragged down the S&Sysm,
and NASDAQ
this week, with chipmakers leading the slide.
Both indexes logged five straight days of declines.
Doubts over whether the AI boom
can sustain its red-hot momentum weighed on investors.
It also undermined the broader market
because a handful of tech giants
have buoyed much of this year's gains.
Global indexes closely tied to AI
also got clobbered this week.
Overall, the NASDAQ ended 4.6% lower,
its biggest weekly loss in over a year.
while the S&P 500 lost 2%.
The Dow, which is less exposed to tech stocks, eeked out a 0.6% gain to close out the week.
Elsewhere, oil prices dropped 8.7% this week to end under $70 a barrel for the first time since the Iran war started.
That decline helped boost consumer spirits a bit in June, its prices at the pump moderated.
Here's a tale of 2 AI earnings reports.
On Tuesday after the market close, Sarah Brass system,
shrunk its quarterly loss and almost doubled revenue
in its first earnings release as a public company
since raising $5.6 billion in its May IPO.
But, and this is key,
the chip company projected narrower profit margins,
prompting a scare.
Its shares fell almost 20% on Wednesday.
That same day after the close,
Memory Chipmaker Micron reported a more than four-fold increase
in its revenue for the latest quarter
and topped analyst expectations
and every metric that investors scrutinize.
Micron's operating income in the current quarter
is now estimated to surpass the highest full-year revenue
it is ever reported,
and that's thanks to the ongoing memory shortage
plaguing the AI industry.
Micron shares jumped nearly 16% on Thursday,
while other memory makers saw similar gains in their shares.
By week's end, Micron stock finished little changed,
while Cerebra shares close 23% lower.
One of the biggest AI losers this week was Oracle.
In its latest annual report released this week,
the tech firm reported its headcount shrink by 21,000 jobs,
or about 13% from its prior fiscal year.
The cuts come as it continues to build out its artificial intelligence infrastructure.
The Wall Street Journal previously reported that the cloud computing and database company
began reducing its workforce in March.
Oracle also logged $1.84 billion in severance and other costs under a restructuring plan still in process that could mean further workforce cuts down the road.
In the filing, the tech company also hinted it risks inherent in an AI-heavy strategy, including the failure to recoup its investments.
While last year, Oracle sprung up as an AI darling following deals worth hundreds of billions of dollars, it isn't immune to the overall jitters that investors are feeling lately about their
AI bets. This week is Exhibit 1. Oracle ended the week down 19% making it one of the worst
performers in the S&P 500. And Wendy's shares had a wild ride on the Memstock roller coaster this
week. Stock jumped on Wednesday after droves of retail traders poured into the struggling
fast food chain using the same playbook they used for GameStop in AMC. Wendy's Bulls defended the
restaurant operator on Reddit to spur on a rally. Quote, Our World
will not be shaken. Wendy will prosper, one user wrote. We need to save Wendy's before it's
too late, another user posted on Reddit's Wall Street Betts forum to other individual investors.
But on Thursday, the rally sputtered, with the stock falling 6.7%, while more than 100 million shares
changed hands. For reference, the stock's daily volume even exceeded that of Micron after its
blockbuster earnings. By Friday, Wendy's stock was still a winner, gaining 15%
for the week.
And now you know what's news in markets this week.
You can read about more stocks that moved on the week's news
and our live markets coverage on WSJ.com.
Today's show was produced by Anthony Bansy
with supervising producer Jana Heron.
I'm Jack Pitcher.
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