Dell CFO Yvonne McGill Resigns, Company Reaffirms Guidance

Dell Technologies (DELL.N) announced on Monday that Chief Financial Officer Yvonne McGill will step down on September 9 after nearly 30 years with the company.

McGill, who will remain as an adviser through October 31, is leaving on amicable terms. Dell clarified that her resignation was not due to disagreements regarding financial reporting, internal controls, or company policies.

David Kennedy, a 27-year Dell veteran and current SVP of Global Business Operations, Finance, will assume the role of interim CFO.

Following the news, Dell shares dipped 1.8% after hours, but the company reaffirmed its third-quarter and full-year forecasts, initially issued last month, signaling operational stability despite the leadership change.

Nebius Signs $17.4 Billion AI Infrastructure Deal With Microsoft

Nebius Group (NBIS.O) announced on Monday a five-year agreement with Microsoft (MSFT.O) to provide GPU infrastructure capacity, a deal valued at $17.4 billion that could expand to $19.4 billion if additional services are acquired. The news sent Nebius shares surging more than 47% in after-hours trading.

The partnership highlights the escalating demand for high-performance AI compute as tech giants race to secure infrastructure for training and running advanced models. Under the deal, Microsoft will gain access to Nebius’ dedicated GPU infrastructure from a new Vineland, New Jersey data center starting later this year.

Nebius specializes in offering AI cloud services powered by Nvidia GPUs, combining computing, storage, management tools, and in-house designed hardware to support AI developers. CEO Arkady Volozh said the deal is not only financially significant but also positions Nebius for accelerated AI cloud growth from 2026 onwards.

Microsoft already stands as the largest customer of CoreWeave (CRWV.O), another AI infrastructure provider. The Nebius agreement suggests the company is broadening its supply chain to mitigate risks as hyperscaler demand grows.

Amsterdam-based Nebius was formed after the split of Russian tech giant Yandex, and has been expanding rapidly into the U.S. and European AI infrastructure markets.

Nasdaq Moves to Enable Tokenized Securities Trading in Landmark Push

Nasdaq (NDAQ.O) has filed a proposal with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to allow trading of tokenized securities on its main exchange, marking what could be the first time blockchain-based settlement enters the U.S. national market system.

The exchange operator said the rule change would permit listed stocks and exchange-traded products to trade in either traditional digital form or tokenized form, provided tokenized securities retain the same rights and privileges as their conventional counterparts. If approved, Nasdaq expects the first token-settled trades by late 2026, contingent on the Depository Trust Company’s infrastructure being ready.

Investor interest in tokenization—turning assets like stocks, bonds, or real estate into blockchain-based tokens—is surging. Proponents argue it could improve liquidity, settlement speed, and efficiency. Tal Cohen, Nasdaq’s president, called tokenization an “extraordinary opportunity” to automate processes and accelerate trade settlements.

Nasdaq stressed that safeguards from the national market system must remain intact, countering concerns raised by the World Federation of Exchanges and the World Economic Forum, which have warned of liquidity gaps and systemic risks. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce has also noted that tokenized securities cannot circumvent existing laws.

The proposal comes as the SEC, under new chair Paul Atkins, signals a more crypto-friendly regulatory environment. The move would align Nasdaq with a global push, where some platforms already trade tokenized U.S. equities in Europe—though often without granting actual shareholder rights. Nasdaq said its framework would ensure full investor protections.

If successful, this would mark a major milestone in merging blockchain with traditional finance, offering Wall Street investors regulated access to tokenized securities for the first time.