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Anthropic, one of the biggest and most influential tech companies in the world, is launching a new model: Claude Opus 4.6.

Wedbush's Dan Ives reveals why he's still bullish on AI despite tech being the worst-performing sector this year, which names he's buying, and why Microsoft could be a generational opportunity. 00:00 Introduction 00:19 AI trade under pressure 01:30 Staying bullish on AI 02:41 Key risks to the rally 03:44 Software stocks selloff 05:16 Buying opportunity or pause 06:04 Big Tech and capex fears 07:02 Best Mag Seven dip 07:40 Navigating tech volatility 08:46 Nasdaq upside outlook 09:16 Rapid fire picks Subscribe | http://t.st/TheStreetTV Earn.

Bullish sentiment decreased 4.7 percentage points to 39.7%. Neutral sentiment increased 6.5 percentage points to 31.3%.

Ahead of the government's delayed January jobs report, a mix of other federal and private data points to a rough start to the new year.

Stock benchmarks now all drag lower after the past few sessions of divergence. With recent Tech sector outflows, risk assets are taking a hit.

“For me, inflation has been too high for too long,” Bostic said.

Anthropic introduces its new Claude Opus 4.6 model as a way to conduct research and build spreadsheets.

Telecom Services, Consumer Non-cyclicals, and Financials sectors each earn an Attractive-or-better rating for 1Q26, signaling strong fundamentals and favorable valuations. My ratings prioritize both business fundamentals and valuation, rewarding funds with quality holdings and low total annual costs.

Under questioning from Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent would not rule out the potential for a DOJ investigation into Federal Reserve Chair nominee Kevin Warsh over interest rates.

A major rotation is happening under the surface. The real winners may surprise almost everyone.

Technology startup Anthropic on Thursday launched what it called an improved artificial intelligence model, days after its product advances helped kick-start a selloff of traditional software stocks.

U.S. government debt was getting a bid on apparent safe-haven demand Thursday, driven by fresh concerns about the labor market.

Liquidity is draining from markets, with Bitcoin down ~45% since October and further declines likely as liquidity pressures persist. The Treasury's higher TGA targets and ongoing debt issuance are drawing liquidity from reserves, which now hover at "ample" but low levels.

Major employers including UPS and Amazon announced significant job cuts in January, with transportation and tech sectors leading the nationwide layoffs surge.

Investors who want to buy bonds have an embarrassment of options.

In midday trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged nearly 400 points, or 0.8%, to 49,113.

Analysts favor many sector names for rapid sales growth and big gains for the stocks over the next year.

"Disruption" is the new word the AI trade needs to get used to, according to @CharlesSchwab's Liz Ann Sonders. She explains how the weakness in labor ties into the "cultivating" phase of tech.

Recent violent corrections in silver, gold, and Bitcoin signal a risk-off environment and potential contagion to equities. Despite near-term volatility, I view this as a healthy pullback and am accumulating high-quality stocks for the intermediate and long term.

Data from November 2025 was also revised lower amid a softening in labor market conditions at the end of the year