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Weekly Stock Market News Today

Markets remain driven by AI infrastructure spending, electricity demand, and concentrated leadership across tech, utilities, and industrial stocks.

Total public Debt

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L2 Weekly Stock Market News Analysis

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May 10th, 2026

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TLDR:

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Markets continue being driven by AI infrastructure spending, rising electricity demand, and increasingly concentrated leadership beneath the surface of the broader rally.
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This earnings season reinforced that AI is no longer only benefiting semiconductor and software companies. Increasingly, some of the strongest growth is showing up across the physical infrastructure required to support the AI buildout — including power systems, cooling, networking, storage, grid expansion, and industrial construction. Companies like Vertiv, Eaton, Quanta Services, EMCOR, Lumentum, Constellation Energy, and Western Digital all reported accelerating demand tied directly to AI infrastructure expansion.
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That demand is also beginning to expose physical constraints. U.S. data centers could face a potential 55 gigawatt power shortfall through 2028 as AI deployment accelerates faster than grid expansion and generation capacity. That continues driving investor focus toward utilities, nuclear power, electrical equipment, and transmission infrastructure.
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The nuclear supply chain is increasingly reflecting that trend as well. Cameco (CCJ), Centrus Energy (LEU), and Bloom Energy (BE) all highlighted rising demand tied to electricity reliability and AI-related power infrastructure, including Oracle’s agreement to purchase up to 2.8 gigawatts of Bloom fuel-cell power for AI-focused data centers.
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At the same time, market leadership remains heavily concentrated in AI-related names. Technology (XLK +6.39%) led sector performance last week, while much of the broader market traded sideways to lower beneath the surface.
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Looking ahead, CPI, PPI, retail sales, and industrial production will be the key macro releases this week as investors watch whether rising energy costs are beginning to feed back into inflation. Key earnings include Cisco (CSCO), Applied Materials (AMAT), and Constellation Energy (CEG), which should provide additional insight into AI infrastructure spending and electricity demand tied to data center expansion.

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AI Spending Is Starting to Reshape the Economy Around It

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The AI trade is no longer confined to semiconductors and cloud companies. The scale of spending is now large enough to influence financing markets, industrial demand, power infrastructure, and even sector leadership across the broader economy.
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Hyperscaler capital expenditures are now projected to approach roughly $800B in 2026, with spending continuing to rise into 2027 as companies race to secure compute capacity, energy access, and data center expansion. The market is beginning to treat AI less like a software cycle and more like a multi-year industrial buildout.
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That shift is becoming visible across earnings and capital flows.
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Infrastructure-linked companies continue seeing accelerating demand tied to electrical systems, cooling, transmission equipment, and power management. Eaton, Vertiv, Quanta Services, Emcor, and Constellation Energy have all benefited from growing investor focus on the physical constraints tied to AI deployment rather than the applications alone.
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At the same time, financing conditions are becoming increasingly important.
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AI companies are increasingly relying on more borrowing and outside financing to fund the massive cost of building data centers, buying chips, and expanding power capacity. As spending rises, investors are paying closer attention to which companies can afford these projects without putting too much pressure on their balance sheets.
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That dynamic is beginning to create a split inside the AI trade itself.
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Companies showing clear infrastructure demand, backlog growth, or visible monetization continue outperforming, while areas viewed as crowded, overfinanced, or dependent on continued multiple expansion are seeing more volatility beneath the surface.
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The result is a market increasingly rotating away from “AI concept” exposure and toward the companies supplying the power, networking, cooling, electrical equipment, and industrial capacity required to support the buildout itself.

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AI Is Becoming an Infrastructure Cycle

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This earnings season reinforced that some of the strongest growth tied to AI is no longer coming only from software and semiconductor companies. Increasingly, companies tied to power infrastructure, cooling systems, networking equipment, storage, and data center construction are reporting accelerating demand as the physical buildout behind AI continues expanding.
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Vertiv, which builds cooling and power systems used inside AI data centers, reported 30% revenue growth and a 64% increase in adjusted operating profit as demand for higher-density AI infrastructure accelerated. The company also raised guidance and pointed to growing demand from hyperscalers trying to deploy AI capacity faster.
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Eaton, which supplies electrical equipment like switchgear, transformers, and power management systems, reported record backlog growth and continued expansion tied to data center and grid demand. Its Electrical Americas orders rose sharply as utilities and AI developers continued upgrading power infrastructure.
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Quanta Services, one of the country’s largest transmission and grid contractors, reported record backlog of $48.5B as utilities and power providers continue expanding transmission networks and electrical capacity to handle rising energy demand.
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EMCOR, which handles electrical and mechanical construction projects for data centers and mission-critical facilities, raised guidance after nearly 20% revenue growth and record project obligations. Management highlighted continued strength in network infrastructure and large-scale construction demand.
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The networking side of AI infrastructure is also accelerating.
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Lumentum, which supplies optical networking components and photonics systems that move data between AI servers and data centers, reported 90% revenue growth YoY and significant margin expansion. Management pointed specifically to rising demand tied to cloud computing, optical networking, and AI infrastructure buildouts.
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The impact is now spreading into utilities and power generation as well.
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Constellation Energy highlighted growing electricity demand tied to data centers and AI facilities, while Vistra announced additional long-term power agreements connected to rising data center demand and noted strong load growth across its markets.
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Even storage companies are benefiting. Western Digital reported 45% revenue growth and expanding margins as AI workloads continue generating enormous amounts of data that must be stored long-term. Management said nearly every major AI workload is increasing demand for persistent storage infrastructure.
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The broader point is that the AI trade is evolving beyond software and semiconductors into a much larger physical infrastructure buildout.

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  • More electricity — AI data centers require enormous amounts of power to train and run large models.
  • More cooling — high-performance AI servers generate extreme heat and need advanced cooling systems.
  • Larger transmission networks — utilities must expand grid infrastructure to deliver power to new AI facilities.
  • Optical networking equipment — AI workloads require ultra-fast data transfer between servers and data centers.
  • Data storage — AI models generate massive amounts of data that must be stored and accessed efficiently.
  • Industrial construction — companies are rapidly building new data centers and expanding existing facilities.
  • Power management systems — AI infrastructure needs advanced electrical equipment to distribute and stabilize power usage.

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Strong Earnings Are Becoming Increasingly Concentrated

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The broader earnings season has been exceptionally strong, with S&P 500 earnings growth now tracking above 27% YoY and roughly 84% of companies beating EPS expectations.
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But a growing share of those upward earnings revisions continues coming from companies tied directly to AI infrastructure spending.
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AI infrastructure-related companies — including semiconductors, data centers, networking, and power infrastructure — have seen 2026 earnings estimates revised higher by roughly 55% since late 2024. Meanwhile, earnings estimates for the S&P 500 excluding those AI infrastructure names have actually moved slightly lower over that same period.
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The same trend is showing up in earnings growth itself. The Magnificent Seven are now expected to post roughly 61% earnings growth this quarter versus about 16% for the rest of the index.
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That helps explain why leadership continues clustering around:
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  • semiconductors
  • hyperscalers
  • networking
  • power infrastructure
  • utilities
  • data center construction
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rather than the broader market.
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The important distinction is that this is no longer just speculative enthusiasm around AI. Many of these companies are now reporting real revenue growth, expanding margins, rising backlog, and improving cash flow tied directly to the ongoing AI infrastructure buildout.
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Image Below: That demand is also beginning to expose a growing constraint: power availability. Morgan Stanley estimates U.S. data centers could face a potential 55 gigawatt power shortfall through 2028 as AI deployment accelerates faster than grid expansion and generation capacity. The chart highlights why investors have increasingly rotated toward utilities, natural gas infrastructure, nuclear power, electrical equipment, and grid expansion names like VST, CEG, ETN, and PWR as the market focuses on the physical limits behind the AI buildout.

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AI Electricity Demand Is Now Showing Up Across Nuclear Earnings

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The connection between AI infrastructure and nuclear power is no longer just a long-term theme — companies across the nuclear supply chain are now beginning to reference rising electricity demand and domestic fuel expansion directly in earnings results.
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Cameco (CCJ), one of the world’s largest uranium producers, reported strong uranium earnings growth and highlighted increasing global demand for secure and reliable nuclear fuel supply as electricity demand rises and countries continue prioritizing long-term energy security. The company also pointed to growing interest in Westinghouse reactor technology as utilities and governments expand nuclear development plans.
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Centrus Energy (LEU), which focuses on uranium enrichment and HALEU fuel production for next-generation reactors, raised full-year revenue guidance while accelerating expansion projects in Tennessee and Ohio. Management highlighted efforts to rapidly scale domestic enrichment capacity, including new partnerships with Fluor and Palantir, as the U.S. pushes to rebuild nuclear fuel infrastructure.
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Bloom Energy (BE), which provides on-site fuel cell power systems for data centers and large industrial facilities, reported 130% revenue growth and raised full-year guidance as demand accelerated for reliable electricity outside the traditional grid. The company has increasingly benefited from AI-driven power demand, including Oracle’s agreement to purchase up to 2.8 gigawatts of Bloom fuel-cell power for AI-focused data centers — one of the clearest signs yet that hyperscalers are directly securing dedicated power infrastructure to support the next phase of AI expansion. Management described Bloom as becoming a “go-to choice” for digital power infrastructure as electricity demand tied to AI continues rising.
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The broader takeaway is that the AI buildout is increasingly flowing beyond chips and software into the energy systems required to support it. That continues driving investor focus toward uranium, enrichment, reactor infrastructure, and alternative power generation across names like:

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  • CCJ
  • LEU
  • BE
  • CEG
  • BWXT
  • DNN
  • NXE
  • GEV

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Last's Weeks Sector Winners & Losers

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Sector performance shifted noticeably this week as technology continued pulling ahead while energy sharply reversed lower following the prior week’s geopolitical-driven rally.
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Technology (XLK +6.39%) was the clear leader, supported by strong AI infrastructure earnings, continued hyperscaler spending, and momentum across semiconductors, networking, and power infrastructure names.
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Consumer Discretionary (XLY +1.29%) and Communication Services (XLC +0.75%) also finished modestly higher as investors continued favoring large-cap growth and internet platforms tied to AI monetization.
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Most other sectors finished negative for the week.
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Energy (XLE -6.20%) saw the sharpest decline as oil prices pulled back following recent spikes, while Utilities (XLU -3.69%) also weakened after a strong prior run tied to AI power demand and defensive positioning.
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Other laggards included:
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  • Financials (XLF -1.11%)
  • Health Care (XLV -0.87%)
  • Consumer Staples (XLP -0.39%)
  • Industrials (XLI -0.33%)
  • Materials (XLB -0.14%)
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Overall, the market remained heavily concentrated in technology and AI-related leadership, while much of the broader market traded sideways to lower beneath the surface.

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Upcoming Events This Week

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Markets will remain focused on Middle East tensions after the fragile U.S.–Iran ceasefire faced repeated threats last week, keeping energy prices and inflation concerns elevated.
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The biggest economic focus this week will be inflation data. CPI, PPI, retail sales, and industrial production will help investors gauge whether rising energy costs are beginning to feed into broader prices and consumer demand. Headline CPI is expected to rise to 3.4% YoY, the highest since April 2024.
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Fed policy will also remain in focus as investors monitor speeches from Fed officials and the Senate moves forward on Kevin Warsh’s nomination as the next Federal Reserve Chair ahead of Jerome Powell’s term expiration on May 15.
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Key earnings this week include:
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  • Cisco (CSCO)
  • Applied Materials (AMAT)
  • Constellation Energy (CEG)
  • Tencent
  • Alibaba
  • Siemens Energy
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These results should provide additional insight into AI infrastructure spending, global industrial demand, and electricity demand tied to data center expansion.

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Company News

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LevelFields AI Stock Alerts Last Week

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Antelope Enterprise Holdings (AEHL) +135% — Bitcoin Gains + Share Buyback Trigger Massive Rally

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AEHL surged roughly 135% in one day after announcing $190,000 in realized gains from its Bitcoin-focused “Genius Plan” strategy alongside a new $95,000 share repurchase program.
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The company said the gains validated its “Sustainable Capital Recycling Framework,” where realized digital asset profits are partially redirected into share buybacks. Management also noted plans to allocate 90% of future financing proceeds toward expanding the strategy following the effectiveness of its $200M shelf registration.
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The move fueled a sharp speculative repricing as investors reacted to the combination of crypto exposure, aggressive capital allocation, and buyback authorization.

Innodata (INOD) +86% — AI Enterprise Demand Drives Massive Earnings Repricing

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INOD surged roughly 86% in one day following a major earnings beat as revenue jumped 54% YoY to $90.1M while net income nearly doubled to $14.9M. The company also generated over $37M in operating cash flow during the quarter, highlighting how quickly profitability is scaling alongside demand for AI-related services.
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The broader driver is that companies across industries are increasingly looking to integrate AI into customer service, internal workflows, data management, and enterprise software systems. Innodata helps enterprises build and train AI systems, including chatbot infrastructure, data pipelines, and AI-enabled automation tools that allow companies to deploy large language models into real-world business operations.
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As more firms move from simply experimenting with AI to actually implementing it across their businesses, investors are increasingly viewing companies like INOD as direct beneficiaries of enterprise AI adoption rather than just the broader AI hype cycle.

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How to use LevelFields for Options Trading

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What's LevelFields' Premium Membership Provide?

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This is not financial advice. All information represent opinions only for informational purposes. Given the vast number of stocks we cover in these reports, assume staff covering stocks have positions in stocks discussed.
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Have feedback or a request for specific data? Drop us a note at support@levelfields.ai

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