Dear readers,
Yesterday we asked whether Thursday’s PCE report would give the market any reason to exhale — and noted that until that data arrives, large directional bets carry unusual risk. That question remains open. But while institutional investors sit on their hands waiting for the macro signal, Wednesday’s session is offering something arguably more useful: a set of corporate earnings and policy decisions that reveal which business models are actually working, and which valuations were built on assumptions that politics can erase overnight.
The Quiet Compounders: SoFi and Paychex Earn Their Valuations
The most instructive numbers of the week have nothing to do with semiconductors. SoFi Technologies now counts 14.7 million members — a gain of roughly one million since the end of 2025 and a 35 percent increase year-over-year. Loan originations jumped 68 percent in the most recent quarter compared to the same period last year. These are not projections or addressable-market estimates; they are customers and dollars.
Paychex delivered a similarly clean quarter for its fiscal fourth quarter of 2026. Revenue rose 12 percent to $1.61 billion, adjusted earnings per share climbed 11 percent to $1.32, and operating income expanded 40 percent. The company returned $2.2 billion to shareholders in the period. For a payroll and HR services firm, that combination of top-line growth, margin expansion, and capital return is about as good as it gets.
The common thread is structural: recurring revenue, sticky customer relationships, and no dependency on a single government contract or a commodity price cycle. In the current environment — where rate anxiety punishes long-duration growth stories and macro uncertainty clouds the outlook — that kind of predictability commands a premium that the market is only beginning to appreciate.
The Memory Chip Market: Profitable Chaos
The AI infrastructure buildout is generating enormous wealth for a narrow set of suppliers, and considerable volatility for everyone else. Micron Technology’s stock has surged roughly 269 percent this year, only to give back 13 percent on Tuesday before recovering about 3 percent in premarket trading on Wednesday. The options market is pricing in a swing of approximately 10 percent around tonight’s earnings release — a reflection of how much uncertainty surrounds even the best-positioned hardware names.
The supply picture is clarifying in ways that matter beyond the chip sector. SK Hynix, the dominant supplier of high-bandwidth memory to Nvidia, is pursuing a Nasdaq ADR listing to raise $29.4 billion for new fabrication capacity. Its HBM production is already sold out through 2026. The consequence of that concentration is now showing up in consumer electronics: as Samsung and SK Hynix redirect capacity toward high-margin AI chips, conventional DRAM supply has tightened enough that IDC is projecting price increases of 10 to 20 percent on PCs, tablets, and smartphones by year-end — the first sustained consumer-level memory inflation since the 1980s. The AI buildout is, in a very direct sense, being partially financed by the people buying laptops.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying SoFi Technologies?
Rheinmetall’s Reckoning
If the fintech numbers represent the week’s good news, Rheinmetall’s session represents its hard lesson. Shares of the Düsseldorf defense group fell 15 percent on Wednesday after Germany’s Defense Minister Boris Pistorius cancelled the F126 frigate program — a contract worth billions that had been treated as a cornerstone of the company’s backlog. The stated reasons were cost overruns, schedule delays, and legal exposure.
The drop is a pointed reminder that defense backlogs are not the same as defense revenue. A government contract that exists on paper is only as durable as the political will — and the budget discipline — behind it. European defense equities have attracted enormous capital over the past two years on the thesis that the continent’s rearmament is structural and irreversible. That thesis may still prove correct in aggregate. But the F126 cancellation demonstrates that individual programs can be unwound, and that the risk premium embedded in these stocks had, until today, been priced far too low. Investors who treated Rheinmetall’s order book as a bond-like stream of future cash flows are now recalibrating.
The Fed’s Stress Test: Good News With an Asterisk
After the U.S. market close this evening, the Federal Reserve will publish the results of its annual stress test covering 32 major banks. The hypothetical scenario is severe — a 58 percent decline in equity markets and a 39 percent drop in commercial real estate values. The banks, however, are approaching the release with equanimity, and for a specific structural reason: the Fed has frozen the so-called Stress Capital Buffers, the individual capital requirements that flow from test results, through 2027.
In practical terms, this means the results carry no immediate regulatory consequences. Banks including JPMorgan and Bank of America are expected to use the clarity as a green light for moderate dividend increases and share repurchase announcements in the coming weeks. For income-oriented investors, U.S. financials continue to offer a degree of stability that is genuinely scarce in the current environment — not because the macro backdrop is benign, but because the regulatory framework is, for now, deliberately accommodating.
What Comes Next
Two events will define the rest of the week. Micron’s earnings tonight will either validate the AI hardware cycle’s resilience or confirm that even the best-positioned suppliers cannot escape the volatility that comes with extreme concentration and sky-high expectations. Then on Thursday, the PCE inflation data will answer the question we posed on Monday: does the macro backdrop support the earnings story, or does it complicate it?
The answer to that second question determines a great deal — not just for the rate-sensitive software names we flagged earlier this week, but for the broader argument that corporate fundamentals can carry markets through a period of deliberate central bank silence. The fintechs and payroll processors are already making that case. The rest of the market is waiting for permission.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial
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