Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends the Saudi-U.S. Investment Forum, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, May 13, 2025.
Hamad I Mohammed | Reuters
This is CNBC’s Morning Squawk newsletter. Subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox.
Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day:
1. +$1 trillion
The richest man in the world is about to get a lot richer.
Tesla shareholders approved CEO Elon Musk’s nearly $1 trillion pay plan yesterday, with 75% voting in support of the proposal despite opposition from top proxy advisors. The pay package will grant Musk 12 tranches of shares if the company reaches certain milestones over the next decade. It also gives the CEO more voting power over Tesla, increasing his ownership from 13% to 25%.
One of those milestones is the delivery of 1 million Optimus humanoid robots, which Musk on Thursday said “will eliminate poverty” and be “bigger than cell phones, bigger than anything.” The robots are currently not available on the market, and Musk didn’t give a timeline for their development.
2. AI angst
Traders works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
NYSE
Stocks resumed their sell-off yesterday as traders continued to weigh fears about the elevated valuations of artificial intelligence stocks. Shares of Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices and Microsoft all closed lower, putting the three major averages on track for a losing week.
Here’s what to know:
After Wednesday’s positive session, traders appeared to refocus on their concerns surrounding tech sector valuations and the role of AI stocks in a highly concentrated market.
A murky employment picture has also pressured stocks this week. The Bureau of Labor Statistics will not release its nonfarm payrolls report today due to the government shutdown, but data from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas yesterday showed that layoffs surged in October.
Job cuts totaled 153,074 last month, according to the report, a 183% surge from September and 175% increase from a year ago.
If the BLS had released its jobs report today, economists surveyed by Dow Jones expected to see a decline of 60,000 jobs in October and an increase in the unemployment rate to 4.5%.
Novo Nordisk CEO Maziar Mike Doustdar shakes hands with U.S. President Donald Trump during an event to announce a deal with Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk to reduce the prices of GLP-1 weight‑loss drugs during an event in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., November 6, 2025.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters
President Donald Trump announced deals with Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk yesterday to drastically cut the prices of some of the pharma giants’ obesity drugs. The agreements also mean that Medicare will cover GLP-1 drugs for obesity for the first time, starting mid-2026.
The monthly out-of-pocket price of the popular drugs could range from $50 to $350 under the deal, depending on patients’ dosage and insurance. The list prices of obesity medications reach as much as $1,350 a month before insurance.
David Sacks, U.S. President Donald Trump’s AI and Crypto Czar, speaks to press outside of the White House on March 07, 2025 in Washington, DC. Sacks spoke about the executive order on Crypto and U.S. Digital Asset Stockpile.
Kayla Bartkowski | Getty Images
David Sacks, Trump’s AI and crypto advisor, said yesterday there will be “no federal bailout for AI.” His comments followed those of OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar, who earlier this week said the company was seeking a government “backstop” or “guarantee” to help fund its investments.
But Friar walked back her comments yesterday: “I used the word ‘backstop’ and it muddied the point,” Friar said in a LinkedIn post. “I was making the point that American strength in technology will come from building real industrial capacity which requires the private sector and government playing their part.”
Meanwhile, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said the AI startup expects to bring in more than $20 billion in annualized revenue this year “and grow to hundreds of billions by 2030.” The company has recently signed infrastructure deals worth more than $1.4 trillion, but investors are still unsure where it will get the money to pay for the commitments.
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5. Cleanup on aisle T
A shopper looks down an aisle in a Target store in Upper Saint Clair, Pa., on Friday, July 7, 2023.
Gene J. Puskar | AP
Shoppers aren’t happy with Target’s in-store experience. The company’s stores used to be the model for big-box retailers, but Target has been plagued by customer complaints about messy aisles, long lines and locked-up products.
Unlike its competitors, Target uses its stores as fulfillment centers for e-commerce orders. But under its new approach, the retailer will begin limiting which of its stores pick, pack and ship online purchases. Target executives are hoping the move will free up employees to focus more on the in-store experience.
The Daily Dividend
Here’s what you might have missed this week:
— CNBC’s Lora Kolodny, Pia Singh, Sean Conlon, Liz Napolitano, Annika Kim Constantino, Ashley Capoot and Melissa Repko contributed to this report. Melodie Warner edited this edition.
Palantir co-founder and CEO Alex Karp attends meetings at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on Oct. 18, 2023.
Jonathan Ernst | Reuters
With Palantir’s stock plummeting more than 11% this week despite a better-than-expected earnings report, CEO Alex Karp took aim at investors betting against the software company.
Karp, who co-founded Palantir in 2003, went after short sellers in two separate interviews on CNBC this week. After “Big Short” investor Michael Burry revealed bets against Palantir and Nvidia, Karp on Tuesday accused short sellers of “market manipulation.”
He repeated that message on Friday in an interview with CNBC’s Sara Eisen, again knocking Burry’s wager against the stock.
“To get out of his position, he had to screw the whole economy by besmirching the best financials ever … that are helping the average person as investors [and] on the battlefield,” Karp said.
Even with Palantir’s slide this week, the stock is up 135% in 2025 and has multiplied 25-fold in the past three years, an extended rally that’s lifted the company’s market cap to over $420 billion. While revenue and profit are growing rapidly, the multiples have shot up much faster, and the stock now trades for about 220 times forward earnings, a ratio that rivals Tesla’s.
Nvidia and Meta, by contrast, have forward price-to-earnings ratios of about 33 and 22, respectively.
In August, Citron Research’s Andrew Left, a noted short seller, called Palantir “detached from fundamentals and analysis” and said shares should be priced at $40. It closed on Friday at $177.93 after late-day gains pushed the stock into the green.
Palantir, which builds analytics tools for large companies and government agencies, reported earnings and revenue on Monday that topped analysts’ estimates and issued a forecast that was also ahead of Wall Street projections.
But the stock fell about 8% after the report and then slid almost 7% on Thursday. Karp told Eisen that the recent boom in Palantir’s share price isn’t just for Wall Street.
“We’re delivering venture results for retail investors,” he said.
While Palantir has in the past faced a fairly heft dose of short interest, there are currently relatively few investors placing big bets against it. The short interest ratio, or the percentage of outstanding shares being sold short, peaked at over 9% in September and is now at a little over 2%, which is about as low as its been since the company went public in 2020.
Still, calling out the doubters is a common occurrence for Karp, who has previously said on CNBC that people should “exit” if they “don’t like the price.”
In May, after the stock plummeted following earnings, Karp said ,”You don’t have to buy our shares.”
“We’re happy,” he said. “We’re going to partner with the world’s best people and we’re going to dominate. You can be along for the ride or you don’t have to be.”
The company has also faced backlash over its work with government agencies like U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and Karp has admitted that his strong pro-Israel stance led some people to leave the company.
The boisterous CEO has been particularly vocal this week. On Monday’s earnings call, he questioned how happy the people are who didn’t invest in the company, and told them to “get some popcorn.”
And on CNBC he aimed much of his ire at Burry after the investor revealed his short positions in Palantir and Nvidia.
“The two companies he’s shorting are the ones making all the money, which is super weird,” Karp told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Tuesday. “The idea that chips and ontology is what you want to short is bats— crazy.”
In this Club Check-in, CNBC’s Paulina Likos and Zev Fima break down big tech’s massive artificial intelligence spending spree — debating whether these billion-dollar bets will drive long-term cost savings or weigh on near-term returns.
Mega-cap tech companies are shelling out billions of dollars to build out AI infrastructure. The big question we’re asking is whether all this heavy spending will eventually pay off in efficiency or if Wall Street is right to worry about how much they’re burning through in the short term.
Concerns about AI-stock valuations seeped into the market this week and slammed stocks.
Many major tech companies —including the three biggest clouds, Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet‘s Google — raised capital expenditure guidance this earnings season, sparking both investor optimism and concern.
Zev Fima, portfolio analyst for the Club, argued the spending is justified: “Too much focus on the short-term is what leads to falling behind in the long term.” CNBC reporter Paulina Likos pushed back, noting that “investors haven’t seen efficiency gains show up in returns yet.”
Watch the video above to see where the debate played out on whether AI investments are real productivity drivers or just expensive promises until proven otherwise.
(See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer’s Charitable Trust, the portfolio used by the CNBC Investing Club.)
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Affirm CEO Max Levchin said Friday that while the buy now, pay later firm isn’t seeing credit stress among federally employed borrowers due to the government shutdown, there are signs of a change in shopping habits.
“We are seeing a very subtle loss of interest in shopping just for that group, and a couple of basis points,” Levchin told CNBC’s “Squawk on the Street.”
At least 670,000 federal employees have been furloughed in the shutdown, and about 730,000 are working without pay, the Bipartisan Policy Center said this week.
Levchin said he’s closely watching employment data for signs of major disruptions, but the company is “capable” of adjusting credit standards when needed.
“Right now, things are just fine,” he said. “We’re not seeing any major disturbances at all.”
The federal funding lapse, which began Oct. 1, is the longest in U.S. history and has halted work across agencies with an impact beyond those who are government employees. The SNAP food benefit program, which serves 42 million Americans, has also been cut off.
Read more CNBC tech news
The comments from Levchin followed a fiscal first-quarter earnings report that blew past Wall Street’s estimates. Affirm posted earnings of 23 cents per share on $933 million in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG expected earnings of 11 cents per share on $883 million in sales.
Revenues climbed 34% from a year ago, while gross merchandise volumes jumped 42% to $10.8 billion from $7.6 billion a year ago. That surpassed Wall Street’s $10.38 billion estimate.
The fintech company, which went public in 2021, also lifted its full-year outlook, saying it now expects gross merchandise volume to hit $47.5 billion, versus prior guidance of $46 billion.
Affirm also said it renewed its partnership with Amazon through 2031. The company has also inked deals with the likes of Shopify and Apple in a competitive e-commerce landscape.
Levchin said categories such as ticketing and travel have seen an uptick in interest, and consumer shopping remains strong. Active consumers grew to 24.1 million from 19.5 million a year ago.
“We’re every single day out there preaching the gospel of buy now, pay later being the better way to buy, and consumers are obviously responding,” he said.