We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode What’s News in Markets: Netflix’s Blockbuster Quarter, Oracle Gains, GE Aerospace Jumps

What’s News in Markets: Netflix’s Blockbuster Quarter, Oracle Gains, GE Aerospace Jumps

2025/1/25
logo of podcast WSJ Your Money Briefing

WSJ Your Money Briefing

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
F
Francesca Fontana
一名在《华尔街_journal》工作的记者和作家,专注于金融市场新闻和女性在工作场所的主题。
Topics
Francesca Fontana: 我报道了本周最大的股票波动以及推动这些波动的新闻。首先,特朗普总统重申了他削减公司税和法规的计划,同时也在一定程度上减轻了投资者对关税的担忧。这提振了股市,标准普尔500指数周四创下2025年的首个收盘纪录高点。 其次,Netflix公布了第四季度的创纪录用户增长,并宣布提高月费价格。标准套餐(含广告)每月费用将从6.99美元上涨1美元至7.99美元;标准套餐(无广告)将上涨2.5美元至17.99美元;高级套餐将上涨2美元至24.99美元。这一消息推动Netflix股价周三上涨9.7%,本周涨幅接近14%。 此外,美国政府宣布甲骨文公司将参与一项耗资1000亿美元的人工智能基础设施项目“星门计划”。该项目总投资额可能高达5000亿美元,参与者还包括软银、OpenAI和阿布扎比的MGX等公司。尽管许多细节尚未公布,但这一消息推动甲骨文公司股价周二上涨6.8%,本周涨幅达14%。 最后,GE航空航天公司公布了强劲的业绩,第四季度订单增长46%,超出华尔街预期。由于波音和空客的飞机生产延误、供应链短缺以及新型发动机型号的耐用性问题,航空公司对发动机和其他零部件的需求旺盛。尽管供应问题仍在困扰航空业,但该公司首席执行官表示,其主要供应商的情况正在改善。GE航空航天公司的股价周四上涨6.6%,本周涨幅超过7.5%。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

Trading as Schwab is now powered by Ameritrade, bringing you an expanding library of education with even more ways to sharpen your trading skills. Access new online courses, insightful webcasts, articles, engaging videos, and more, all curated just for traders. Plus, guided learning paths with content designed to fit your unique interests. No sifting to find exactly what you need so you can spend your time learning to trade brilliantly.

Learn more at schwab.com slash trading.

Hey, listeners. It's Saturday, January 25th. I'm Francesca Fontana 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. Welcome back, everybody. We had a short trading week this week with Monday off for MLK Day, which was also the day of the inauguration. And President Trump's first week back in the White House has been a pretty good one for the stock market.

Trump has reiterated plans to cut corporate taxes and regulations since being sworn in, while also somewhat easing investors' worries about tariffs. He told Fox News he would, quote, rather not have to use his tariff plan against China.

Plus, this week traders got to see a strong start to earnings season. More on that in a second. All in all, the S&P 500 notched its first record close of 2025 on Thursday, and all three indexes ended higher for the second week in a row. The Dow rose 2.2%, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq each added 1.7%.

First up, let's talk about the streaming giant Netflix. Netflix is ramping up U.S. prices in order to cash in on its surging demand. On Tuesday, the company posted record subscriber gains in the fourth quarter and said that the price tag on its monthly subscriptions will be going up.

So let's talk numbers. The standard with ads option will cost $7.99 a month, up $1 from $6.99. The standard plan without ads will go up by $2.50 to $17.99. And the premium tier is going up by $2 to $24.99.

And viewers really flocked to Netflix during this quarter, whether to watch the second season of Squid Game or the action thriller Carry On, neither of which I've seen, or the November heavyweight boxing match between Jake Paul and Mike Tyson that streamed live and I now remember I caught like two seconds of.

They were all huge hits for Netflix. So, as you may expect, Netflix shares jumped 9.7% on Wednesday and ended the week with a gain of nearly 14%. As Trump's first week back in office got underway, we also got some big news that moved AI stocks. So let's focus on Oracle.

On Tuesday, the new administration said that Oracle would be part of Stargate, a $100 billion artificial intelligence infrastructure project, along with the Japanese conglomerate SoftBank, OpenAI, and Abu Dhabi's MGX. It's a lot of spending, up to $500 billion over the next four years, and not a whole lot of details.

Key elements of the plans have yet to be disclosed, though we did find out that Microsoft and chip makers ARM and NVIDIA were also named Stargate "technology partners."

But still, there were many basic questions left unanswered in the announcement, like how much are individual companies each investing, or how will they get a return on their investment, etc., etc. But it seemed like investors cared about the gist, the bottom line, of big tech investing in AI in the U.S. And it seemed like that was good enough for them. Oracle led a tech rally on Tuesday, with the stock gaining 6.8% during the session and 14% on the week.

Last but not least, let's talk about GE Aerospace. Some context. GE Aerospace is the jet engine maker that became a standalone company back in April after GE's power business was spun off. It was the big General Electric breakup.

And it was GE Aerospace's latest results that really flew past Wall Street's estimates. Chief Executive Larry Kolb said that the company ended 2024 with robust demand for its services and products, with fourth quarter orders up 46 percent. And he predicts more growth in 2025.

Airlines have been desperate for engines and other parts due to aircraft production delays at Boeing and Airbus, which we've talked about on this podcast before, as well as supply chain shortages and the durability problems that are ailing newer engine models. And while supply issues continue to cause problems for the aerospace industry, the CEO also said that the company is seeing improvements among its key suppliers.

GE Aerospace shares jumped 6.6% on Thursday, retreating a bit the next day, and ended the week up more than 7.5%.

And now you know what's news in markets this week. You can read about more stocks that moved on the week's news in The Score, my column in the Wall Street Journalist Exchange section. Today's show was produced by Anthony Bansi with supervising producer Talia Arbel. I'm Francesca Fontana. Have a great weekend and see you next Saturday.

ADP imagines a world of work where smart machines become too smart. Copier, I need 15 copies of this. Printing. By the way, irregardless, not a word, Janet. Yeah, I know. Page six should be regardless of or irrespective of. Just print them, please. If it were a word, Janet, it would mean without irregard, which is... Copier! Switch to silent mode. Let's put a pin in it. Anything can change the world of work. From HR to payroll, ADP helps businesses take on the next anything.