×

Morning Bid: This AI, it will make a profit, right?

By Thomson Reuters Jul 15, 2026 | 11:33 PM

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Stella Qiu

The monstrous rally in Asian chipmakers this year is hitting a rocky patch. The jitters are evident in the sheer volatility of markets such as ​South Korea’s KOSPI, where wild swings in chip giants Samsung Electronics and SK ‌Hynix have become a daily event.

The index slid 6% on Thursday, taking it down 27% from its June peak and adding to the pain for some leveraged retail funds. The tumble tends to vindicate investors’ doubts at a time when everyone is worried about the rising cost of AI capex — can this massive ‌spending ​actually turn a profit?

All eyes now turn to today’s second-quarter ⁠earnings from Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC), ⁠the world’s foundry king for the advanced chips that Nvidia sells to power the AI revolution.

Expectations are for a nearly 60% surge in net profit for the quarter, and even if the chip giant beats that it may not be enough. It ​will take a flawless report, coupled with more than rosy guidance, to avoid being punished. Just look at ASML’s results.

While the rotation from memory and hardware has left most Asian ⁠share markets in the red, European futures seem ⁠less troubled, heading for a flat open.

Wall Street futures were 0.1% higher, ​after a stronger session overnight thanks to cooler inflation and robust bank earnings. Results from Netflix, ​GE and a few banks, including U.S. Bancorp and State Street, are ‌due later.

U.S. retail sales for June are seen rising a modest 0.2%, after May’s 0.9% jump, but the control group is forecast at a solid 0.5%. Any weakness could support the dovish turn in Fed bond markets, offsetting concerns about demand.

Oh, and there’s still the matter ⁠of a war going on in the Middle East, with the U.S. military conducting another wave of strikes on Iran and Tehran saying it targeted a gathering of U.S. troops.

That’s why Brent ⁠is still up 18% in ‌the past two weeks to $85 a barrel, and why central banks ⁠everywhere remain wary, with South Korea raising rates for the first ​time in ‌3-1/2 years.

For now, bond investors are just relieved the benign ​CPI and PPI ⁠readings have seen pricing for a July hike from the Fed fade to just 10%, from more than 40% earlier this month.

Key developments that could influence markets on Thursday:

— TSMC earnings due at 0530 GMT

— UK monthly GDP, industrial output and trade balances for May

— Earnings from Netflix, GE Aerospace, Bancorp and State Street

— U.S. June retail sales, as well as weekly jobless ​claims

(Editing by Kate Mayberry)