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Global market update and executive summary of tech industry news headlines, brought to you Hunter Muller and the editorial team at HMG Strategy.
Nasdaq Suffers as Tech Stocks Dip; S&P 500 Stays Close to Record Highs
Itโs been another bumpy week for some investors, but the overall markets and the underlying numbers generally look healthy.

โShares of Intel retreated more than 10% following a weaker-than-expected sales report. The semiconductor company blamed an industry-wide chip shortage for its revenue miss,โ write Tanaya Macheel and Hannah Miao of CNBC. โSocial media stocks also dropped after Snap said its advertising business declined due to Appleโs privacy changes. Snap shares sunk more than 20%. Facebook and Twitter pulled back 4% and 2%, respectively.โ
To some extent, itโs natural for the market to experience ups and downs in the fourth quarter. But investors remain optimistic and seem largely unfazed by the bumpy ride.
โDespite these blips in the tech sector, overall earnings season has been terrific so far, boosting the broader market back to an all-time high following a two-month lull,โ Macheel and Miao write. โSo far for the third quarter earnings season, 84% of companies are reporting EPS above estimates, according to Refinitiv. Profits are on pace in the quarter to increase 33.7%, according to Refinitiv.โ

Facebook Plans to Rebrand Itself, According to Sources
The past several weeks have been hard on Facebook. Now, the worldโs most famous social network is apparently planning a significant rebrand. The rebrand will include a new name, according to reports.
โThe coming name change, which CEO Mark Zuckerberg plans to talk about at the companyโs annual Connect conference on October 28th, but could unveil sooner, is meant to signal the tech giantโs ambition to be known for more than social media and all the ills that entail,โ writes Alex Heath in The Verge. โThe rebrand would likely position the blue Facebook app as one of many products under a parent company overseeing groups like Instagram, WhatsApp, Oculus, and more.
New Android Phones Feature In-House Chip
Google is hoping its newer phones will give it a major boost in its long-running competition with Apple.

โAt a virtual press conference on Tuesday, the company showed off the new 6.4-inch Pixel 6 and 6.7-inch Pixel 6 Pro, which run on Android 12, Google’s most significant software update in years,โ writes Samantha Murphy Kelly of CNN Business.
โBut the real game changer is Google’s new in-house Tensor processor, which marks a move away from the third-party chips that are commonly used in rival Android devices. The company said Tensor makes the Pixel 6 phones run 80% faster than the Pixel 5, allowing on-device artificial intelligence for features such as more accurate speech recognition and image processing. It also gives the phones more processing power for games and apps.

PayPal Offers to Acquire Pinterest; Deal Valued at $45 Billion
PayPal has set its sights on a major social commerce site. If the acquisition goes through, it would become one the largest of its kind in recent history.
โThe Silicon Valley digital payments giant has offered to buy Pinterest, the digital pinboard company that enables e-commerce within its app, in a deal valued at about $45 billion, according to people with knowledge of the discussions,โ write Lauren Hirschย andย Erin Griffith of The New York Times. โIf completed, the deal would be the largest in the consumer internet industry over the past decade, topping Microsoftโs $26 billion purchase of LinkedIn in 2016 andย Salesforceโs $27.7 billion acquisition of Slackย last year, according to the data service firm Dealogic. It would also be among the largest deals for PayPal, which was spun off from eBay in 2015.โ