Cryptonews

U.S. stocks open higher as storage names rally and PayPal sinks

Source
CryptoNewsTrend
Published
U.S. stocks open higher as storage names rally and PayPal sinks

U.S. stocks opened higher in a modest risk-on move, led by AI‑linked storage names like Micron and Western Digital, even as PayPal dropped about 10% on weak profit guidance.

U.S. equities opened in the green, with the Dow up 0.45%, the S&P 500 up 0.57%, and the Nasdaq up 0.76%, reflecting a modest risk-on tone across blue chips, large-cap growth, and tech.

The move comes after a choppy few weeks in which investors have been trading off between hotter-than-expected inflation prints and strong earnings from mega-cap tech, leaving the major indexes near recent highs but with elevated single-stock dispersion.

Indexes tick up on risk-on open

Early breadth favored cyclical and tech-linked sectors, as storage, semiconductors, and some AI beneficiaries outperformed, while selected consumer and fintech names traded lower on stock-specific news.

Storage stocks extend AI-driven run

Storage concept stocks continued their recent outperformance, led by Micron Technology, which was up around 6% in early trading, alongside SanDisk, higher by roughly 3%, and Western Digital, up about 3.5%.

Earlier in April, memory and storage names saw similar surges—Micron climbing as much as 10% intraday, SanDisk nearly 10%, and Western Digital more than 8%—as markets increasingly treated them as AI infrastructure plays rather than purely cyclical PC components.

Analysts cited by TradingKey and other outlets argue that long-term demand from AI servers, hyperscale data centers, and high‑bandwidth memory is prompting investors to re-rate storage companies, with each positive earnings surprise or guidance update reinforcing that thesis.

PayPal dives 10% post-earnings

Against that backdrop, PayPal opened sharply lower, dropping around 10% after releasing quarterly results and guidance that underwhelmed the market.

Reuters reports that the company’s latest profit outlook for 2026 points to flat-to-low-single-digit adjusted earnings growth, well below Wall Street expectations of roughly 8%, while recent quarterly revenue and EPS also came in shy of consensus.

The stock has already been under pressure this year—hitting a 52‑week low near $39.95 in February and sitting roughly 49% below year-ago levels—amid skepticism over its ability to reaccelerate branded-checkout growth and fend off competition from Apple Pay and other digital wallets.

A recent crypto.news analysis noted that while PayPal has announced cost cuts, buybacks, and a new CEO, investors remain focused on top-line momentum; today’s 10% slide suggests those concerns are far from resolved.

U.S. stocks open higher as storage names rally and PayPal sinks