Get UpdatesMarch 18, 2026

Markets Edge Up as Uber Surges on Nvidia Robotaxi Deal and Oil Hovers Above $100

U.S. equities closed modestly higher on March 17 as Uber and Nvidia unveiled a 28-city autonomous vehicle expansion, Qualcomm announced a $20 billion buyback, and surging oil prices tied to the Iran conflict kept investors cautious.

Nvidia and Uber Announce Plan to Deploy 100,000 L4 Robotaxis Across 28 Cities by 2028

Nvidia and Uber revealed an expanded autonomous vehicle partnership at Nvidia's GTC 2026 conference, outlining plans to launch a fleet of 100,000 Level 4 software-driven robotaxis across 28 cities worldwide by 2028. The rollout is set to begin in Los Angeles and San Francisco in the first half of 2027, leveraging Nvidia's DRIVE Hyperion autonomous vehicle platform and the Alpamayo AI model—designed specifically to handle complex edge-case driving scenarios that have historically limited autonomous vehicle performance.

The announcement sent Uber shares surging 5.6% to close at $78.83, a multi-year high. Deutsche Bank reiterated its Buy rating on Uber, citing the expanded Nvidia partnership as evidence that Uber's asset-light marketplace model—aggregating third-party autonomous fleets rather than building its own—is gaining industry validation. The deal also builds on a separately announced Amazon logistics partnership, reinforcing Uber's platform-over-fleet strategy.

Nvidia, which supplies AI computing infrastructure for several robotaxi programs globally, positioned the Uber deal as a major step toward mainstream autonomous mobility. The Level 4 designation means vehicles will operate without any human backup driver within approved geofenced zones—a meaningful commercial milestone for the autonomous vehicle industry.

Nvidia DRIVE Hyperion-powered robotaxi, the platform at the center of the Uber-Nvidia partnership
Nvidia DRIVE Hyperion-powered robotaxi, the platform at the center of the Uber-Nvidia partnership
nvidianews.nvidia.com·investor.uber.com·247wallst.com·investing.com

Qualcomm Announces $20 Billion Stock Buyback and 3.4% Dividend Increase

Qualcomm's board of directors approved a new $20 billion stock repurchase program with no expiration date, supplementing approximately $2.1 billion remaining under its prior buyback authorization from November 2024. The company simultaneously raised its quarterly cash dividend from $0.89 to $0.92 per share—a 3.4% increase—effective for payments after March 26, 2026, bringing the annualized payout to $3.68 per share.

The announcement came as Qualcomm's stock had declined roughly 22% year-to-date, reflecting broader pressure in the semiconductor sector. The capital return program is intended to reinforce shareholder value while the company continues diversifying revenue beyond smartphone chips into automotive, PC, and industrial markets. Qualcomm shares rose approximately 1.7% on the day.

The scale of the buyback underscores management's confidence in the company's long-term cash generation. Qualcomm generated $11.2 billion in free cash flow in fiscal 2025, providing substantial capacity to execute both the repurchase program and continued investment in next-generation chip architectures.

Qualcomm headquarters in San Diego, California
Qualcomm headquarters in San Diego, California
investor.qualcomm.com·bloomberg.com·finance.yahoo.com·marketscreener.com

Brent Crude Holds Above $100 as Iran Conflict Strains Strait of Hormuz and Squeezes Consumer Budgets

Brent crude maintained a price above $100 per barrel on March 17, sitting at approximately $102 as of mid-afternoon, up more than 40% since the outbreak of the Iran conflict on February 28. Prices spiked to nearly $120 in the days immediately following the start of hostilities before retreating to the current range, which analysts attribute to partial demand destruction and strategic petroleum reserve releases coordinated by several nations.

The prolonged disruption to the Strait of Hormuz—through which roughly 20% of global oil supply transits—has rippled through U.S. consumer prices. The national average gasoline price reached $3.79 per gallon, up approximately 30% from a month ago, while U.S. diesel prices topped $5 per gallon for the first time since 2022. Economists noted the surge is widening the economic divide, acting as a disproportionate tax on lower-income households that spend a larger share of income on fuel and goods transported by diesel trucks.

Despite the oil market headwinds, U.S. equities held up relatively well: the S&P 500 added 0.25% to close at 6,716.09, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.47% to finish at 22,479.53. The S&P 500's consumer discretionary sector led gains, rising approximately 1%, as travel and leisure names including Expedia, Booking Holdings, Delta, and American Airlines posted strong moves on robust demand outlooks.

An oil pump jack in operation; Brent crude held above $100 per barrel amid Strait of Hormuz disruptions tied to the Iran conflict
An oil pump jack in operation; Brent crude held above $100 per barrel amid Strait of Hormuz disruptions tied to the Iran conflict
cnbc.com·nbcnews.com·aljazeera.com·npr.org

HSBC Downgrades Eli Lilly to Reduce, Cuts Price Target to $850 on Overstated Obesity Drug Market

HSBC analyst Rajesh Kumar downgraded Eli Lilly to 'Reduce' from 'Hold' and slashed the price target from $1,070 to $850, arguing that consensus total addressable market (TAM) estimates for obesity drugs—widely pegged at over $150 billion by the early 2030s—are too optimistic. HSBC's own model projects the obesity drug market reaching between $80 billion and $120 billion by 2032, based on more conservative patient uptake assumptions and anticipated pricing competition as multiple GLP-1 therapies enter the market.

The downgrade cited three specific concerns: an overstated global TAM, potential early disappointment in demand for Lilly's upcoming oral weight-loss pill Orforglipron expected to launch in the second quarter of 2026, and price cuts in 2026 that HSBC argued reflect competitive pressure rather than Lilly's pricing power. The note described the stock as priced to perfection given the gap between current market expectations and HSBC's more cautious projections.

Eli Lilly shares closed at $930.72, down 5.9%—the stock's sharpest single-day decline in several months. The move contrasted sharply with the broader Wall Street consensus: the average analyst price target for LLY remains around $1,216 per share, reflecting a wide divergence in views about the obesity drug market's ultimate size and Lilly's ability to capture it.

Eli Lilly headquarters; shares fell nearly 6% following an HSBC downgrade questioning obesity drug market projections
Eli Lilly headquarters; shares fell nearly 6% following an HSBC downgrade questioning obesity drug market projections
cnbc.com·thestreet.com·gurufocus.com·uk.finance.yahoo.com

What You Can Do

Read Qualcomm's Official Press Release

Access the full investor relations announcement detailing the $20B repurchase authorization and updated dividend rate.

investor.qualcomm.com

Explore the Nvidia-Uber Robotaxi Announcements

Read official press releases from both Nvidia and Uber detailing the technical architecture and 28-city rollout timeline.

nvidianews.nvidia.com·investor.uber.com

Track Oil Market and Iran Conflict Developments

Follow the latest reporting on Strait of Hormuz disruptions and their impact on global oil supply and consumer fuel prices.

aljazeera.com·cnbc.com

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.