US equity markets advanced, with the Dow and S&P500 snapping four session losing streaks ahead of the release of Dow component Nvidia Corp’s (up +2.85% in the regular session) third quarter result after the closing bell and tonight’s AEST delayed September jobs report - Dow edged +47-points or +0.10% higher. Boeing Co (down -2.07%) and Salesforce Inc (-2.41%) both fell over >2%.The broader S&P500 added +0.38%. Information Technology (+0.93%) and Communication Services (+0.72%) returned to the top of the primary sector leaderboard. Energy (down -1.30%) sat at the foot of the primary sector leaderboard.
US equity markets retreated as concerns about valuations for artificial intelligence (AI) stocks continued to weigh on sentiment and with investors eyeing Nvidia Corp’s (-2.81%) third quarter result after the closing bell of tonight’ AEST session - Dow rose -499-points or -1.07%, having been down almost -700-points at its worst levels of the session. E-commerce and cloud giant Amazon.com Inc lost -4.43%, while International Business Machines (IBM) Corp (-2.43%), Honeywell International (-2.36%) and UnitedHealth Group Inc (-2.17%) were among seven Dow components that fell over >2%.The broader S&P500 extended declines into a fourth consecutive session, falling -0.83% and paring an earlier drop of as much as -1.5%. Consumer Discretionary (down -2.50%) and Information Technology (-1.68%) led five of the eleven primary sectors lower. Energy (up +0.61%) and Health Care (+0.54%) sat atop the primary sector leaderboard. The index now sits over >3% from its October peak. James Hardie Industries Plc +6.83% after the building materials supplier released its fiscal second quarter result after the close of the previous session and said the performance of the recently acquired AZEK business has exceeded its expectations and it has topped a target for cost savings from the deal in the current fiscal year. Eli Lilly and Co rose +0.82% and hit a record intra-day high (US$1,040.72) dating back to 1952 when the pharmaceutical company offered its first public shares of stock.
US equity markets were mixed on Friday (14 November) but recovered from an early, steep sell-off to settled well of their worst levels of the session - Dow fell 310-points or -0.65%, having been down as much as -600-points or ~1.3% earlier in the session. UnitedHealth Group Inc (down -3.21%) was the worst performer in the 30-stock index. Nike Inc lost -2.82%, with Moody’s downgrading its ratings on debt issued by the footwear and athletic apparel company, pointing to elevated competition and cost pressures related to tariffs as factors behind its more cautious outlook. Walmart Inc dipped -0.06% after it announced Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Doug McMillon will retire on 31 January 2026, and be succeeded by Walmart U.S. CEO John Furner. Nvidia Corp (+1.77%) and Microsoft Corp (+1.37%) were the leading Dow components on Friday (14 November).
Benchmark US equity indices booked their worst single-session performance since 10 October, 2000 amid rising uncertainty about Federal Reserve interest rate cuts - Dow fell -798-points or -1.65% to 47,457.22 after settling above 48,000 for the first time a day earlier. Investment banks Goldman Sachs Group Inc (down -3.99%) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (-3.41%), Caterpillar Inc (-3.4%) and International Business Machines (IBM) Corp (-3.21%) all fell over >3%, as did Nvidia Corp (-3.58%), with the chipmaker slated to report its third quarter result on Wednesday next week (19 November). Infrastructure provider Cisco Systems Inc (up +4.62%) bucked the weaker trend posting better-than-expected earnings per share (EPS) and revenue of US$14.88B for its fiscal first quarter after the close of the previous session. Verizon Communications Inc +0.76% The Wall Street Journal reported that the company plans to eliminate about 15,000 jobs, mostly through layoffs. It would represent the largest cuts in the company's history, the newspaper added, noting the firm "also plans to transition about 200 stores into franchised operations, which will shift employees off its payroll.
US equity markets mixed as investors continued to monitor progress on resolving the US government shutdown - Dow rose +327-points or +0.68% to 48,254.82, the 30-stock index’s first close above >48,000 after setting a fresh record intra-day peak (48,431.57). Goldman Sachs Group Inc (+3.54%) and United Health Group Inc (+3.55%) both rallied ~3.5%. International Business Machines (IBM) Corp +0.40% after the company the company announced several quantum-computing "breakthroughs."The Republican-controlled US House of Representatives is set to vote on a bill that would end the federal government shutdown at about 11am AEDT. If approved, it will go before President Trump for his signature.
US equity markets rallied amid signs that a historic U.S. government shutdown could be nearing its end - Dow rose +382-points or +0.81% Nvidia Corp (up +5.79%) was the clear outperformer in the 30-stock index.Late Sunday (9 November), the Senate advanced a procedural measure to allow other votes today on an agreement to end the US government shutdown, now at 41-days. Eight Democrats joined Republicans to reach the 60-vote threshold to advance the measure.The broader S&P500 gained +104-points or +1.54%, logged its largest single-day point gain since 27 May, and its largest single-day percentage gain since 3 October.
US equity markets settled narrowly mixed on Friday (7 November), recovering from steeper declines earlier in the session to cap a volatile week - Dow added +75-points or +0.16%, recovering from an earlier slide of ~400-points or -0.9%. Coca-Cola Co (up +2.16%) and Sherwin-Williams Co (+1.95%) were the leading performers in the stock index.
Technology stocks led a rebound for US equity markets - Dow rose +226-points or +0.48% Amgen Inc (up +7.81%) was the leading performer in the 30-stock index after the pharmaceutical company posted a better-than-expected third quarter result and raised its full-year sales outlook after the close of the previous session Economic bellwether Caterpillar Inc gained +3.94%. Home Depot (down -2.41%) was the worst performing Dow component overnight.The US government shutdown reached 36-days, surpassing the previous record of 35-days that ran from 22 December 2018 to 25 January, 2019. Investors are also eying the US Supreme Court as it determines whether President Trump has the authority to impose tariffs without Congress's approval under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act.
A mixed start to November for US equity markets ahead of another busy week of quarterly earnings releases - Dow fell -226-points or -0.48%, with Merck & Co Inc (down -4.06%) the worst performer in the 30-stock index. 3M Co (down -2.59%), UnitedHealth Group Inc (-2.27%) and Chevron Corp (-2.33%) all declined over >2%. Microsoft Corp (down -0.15%) announced it has secured export licenses to ship Nvidia Corp (+2.23%) chips to the United Arab Emirates amid Gulf’s ambitions to become an AI leader. Amazon.com Inc rallied +4.03% to be the leading Dow component overnight, hitting a fresh record high (US$258.60) after signing a multi-year US$38B deal to supply cloud computing services to OpenAI, affording the ChatGPT maker access to Nvidia's graphics processors. Amazon soared +9.58% in the previous session after releasing stronger-than-expected third-quarter earnings after the close last Thursday’s (30 October), underpinned by a sharp acceleration in cloud revenue.
US equity markets advanced on Friday (31 October) after a choppy session to cap a solid week and month for the benchmark indices - Dow edged +41-points or +0.09% higher Apple Inc settled -0.38% lower at US$270.37, unwinding an gain that saw the mega-capitalisation technology stock touch a fresh record intraday high of US$277.32 after reporting better-than-expected third quarter earnings after the close of last Thursday’s (30 October) session and forecast holiday-quarter iPhone sales and overall revenue that surpassed Wall Street expectations thanks to strong demand for its iPhone 17 models. Nvidia Corp slipped -0.20% following news it is partnering with Samsung and other South Korean firms to deploy 250,000 of its chips across the Asian country.
US equity markets retreated a day after logging record intra-day highs for a third straight session, with investors continuing to assess earnings from mega-capitalisation technology names and yesterday’s (30 October) meeting between President Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping - Dow fell -110-points or -0.23%, sliding in the closing hour of trading . Boeing Co dropped -6.32% to be the worst performer in the 30-stock index a day after the aircraft manufacturer posted a weaker-than-expected third quarter profit and flagged a US$4.9B charge "associated with updated 777X certification timing." Microsoft Corp -2.92% despite posting better-than-expected third quarter EPS and revenue (US$77.7B versus consensus US$75.5B) after the close of the previous session, underpinned by Microsoft Cloud and AI strength. UnitedHealth Group Inc shed -2.96%, while Nvidia Corp lost -2%) a day after becoming the first company to close with a US$5 trillion market capitalisation
US equity markets rebounded, with the S&P500 and Nasdaq booking fresh record intra-day and closing highs - Dow flat at 46,601.78. Caterpillar Inc (up +3.17%) was the leading performer in the 30-stock index. Nvidia Corp rose +2.20% after Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Jensen Huang said that demand has risen in recent months, telling CNBC that “this year, particularly the last six months, demand of computing has gone up substantially.” Mr Huang also confirmed the company’s involvement in funding Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence (AI) startup, xAI, and said that he’s “super excited about the financing opportunity they’re doing.” Investment banks Goldman Sachs Group Inc (-1.66%) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (-1.19%) fell over >1%.
US equity markets retreated overnight as the US government shutdown entered its second week but not before the S&P500 and Nasdaq scaled fresh record intra-day highs - Dow eased -92-points or -0.20%, with Nike Inc (down -3.18%) the worst performer in the 30-stock index, while Salesforce Inc fell -2.46% after the company said it won’t pay a ransom demand from a hacker who claimed to have stolen a large amount of client data and threatened to publish it, according to an email seen by Bloomberg. International Business Machines (IBM) Corp rose +1.54% following news it was partnering with Anthropic to integrate the artificial intelligence (AI) firm's Claude large language model into its enterprise software. Amazon.com Inc added +0.4% as the e-commerce giant began its two-day Prime Big Deal Days.
US equity markets advanced, with the S&P500 and Nasdaq booking fresh record closing highs despite the U.S. government shutdown entering its sixth day, with the White House threatening mass federal worker layoffs. - Dow eased -63-points or -0.14% Verizon Communications Inc -5.11% after Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Hans Vestberg stepped down, replaced by independent lead director and former PayPal Inc CEO Dan Schulman. Sherwin-Williams Co (-2.80%). Microsoft Corp (up +2.17%) and Salesforce Inc (+2.25%) rose over >2%, while Boeing Co gained +1.59% after Bloomberg reported that the airplane maker plans to accelerate its production of jets in its 737 Max line. The company could reach a 42-jet output per month for its 737 Maxs as soon as October, the report said.
US equity indices advanced for a fifth consecutive session, with the three (3) leading indices booking a fresh round of record closing highs amid a global rally for semiconductor stocks after OpenAI announced South Korean firms SK Hynix (+9.86%) and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd (+3.49%) would partner with the ChatGPT maker on its Stargate AI infrastructure project - Dow added +79-points or +0.17% to 46,519.72, tallying its first five-day winning streak since 2 May and marking the 30-stock index’s second consecutive record closing high and 10th of the calendar year-to-date. Caterpillar Inc rose +2.003% to be the leading Dow component overnight. Nvidia Corp rose +0.88% to a fresh record closing high of US$188.89, hitting a record intra-day high (US$191.05) after the chipmaker’s market capitalisation hit US$4.5 trillion.
US equity markets advanced, with the Dow and S&P500 posting record highs despite the federal government shutting down for the first time in six-years - Dow edged +88-points or +0.19% higher to book a second consecutive record closing high of 46,441.10. Nike Inc gained +6.41% after the athletic retail giant posted better-than-expected headline numbers for the fiscal first quarter after the close of the previous session. Nvidia Corp (+0.35%) hit a fresh record high that lifted the chipmaker’s market capitalisation above >US$4.5 trillion
US equity markets retreated, with the S&P500 and Nasdaq declining for a third consecutive session - Dow fell -174-points or -0.38%, with Amgen Inc (-2.88%), Nike Inc (-2.78%) and Merck & Co Inc (-2.6%) all falling over >2.5%.International Business Machines (IBM) Corp gained +5.20% to be the leading performer in the 30-stock index after financial partner HSBC Holdings Plc said it had a "positive trial" using quantum computers from "Big Blue" for algorithmic bond trading.The broader S&P500 lost -0.50%, booking its largest three-day decline (-1.33%) since August. Health Care (down -1.67%) and Consumer Discretionary (-1.47%) led nine of the eleven primary sectors lower. Energy (up +0.87%) sat atop the primary sector leaderboard for a second straight session Intel Corp rallied +8.87% to be the leading S&P500 and Nasdaq performer overnight following a Wall Street Journal reports that the company has approached Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company about investments in manufacturing or partnerships. The latest report comes a day after Bloomberg reported that the chipmaker is seeking an investment from Apple Inc (up +1.81%).
US equity markets retreated from record highs, snapping a three-session streak that saw the three main indices post record intra-day and closing highs - Dow slipped -89-points or -0.19% to 46,292.78 after logging a fresh record intra-day high (46,447.13) shortly after the opening bell. Amazon.com Inc (down -3.04%) was the worst performer in the 30-stock index. The company squaring off against the Federal Trade Commission in court after the agency filed a lawsuit during the Biden administration alleging the company made it too onerous for customers to cancel their Prime memberships.
The benchmark US equity indices booked another round of fresh record intra-day and closing highs to open the week - Dow edged +66-points or +0.14% to 46,381.54. Apple Inc rallied +4.31% to be the leading performer in the 30-stock index following reports of strong demand for the iPhone 17 in its first weekend of sales, aided by consumers seeking to replace aging devices. The stock is closing in on a fresh record closing high (after touching their highest intra-day level since December 2024 overnight at US$256.64) and market capitalisation of US$4 trillion. ‘Magnificent Seven’ mega-capitalisation technology peer Nvidia Corp rallied +3.93% to a record closing high of US$183.61 after the company said it’s going to invest US$100B in OpenAI - the maker of ChatGPT - for the buildout of data centres based around the company’s artificial intelligence (AI) chips. The partnership "enables OpenAI to build and deploy at least 10 gigawatts of AI data centres with NVIDIA systems representing millions of GPUs [graphics processing unit] for OpenAI's next-generation AI infrastructure." Nvidia added it "intends to invest up to US$100B in OpenAI progressively as each gigawatt is deployed." However, Amazon.com Inc fell -1.66% as investors assessed the potential fallout from President Trump's shock decision late on Friday (19 September) to raise the H-1B visa application fee to US$100,000. Amazon employs ~14K staff on such visas.
Both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit fresh record intra-day and closing highs ahead of the Federal Reserve’s latest two-day monetary policy meeting kicking off that is expected to see the central bank cut benchmark interest rates for the first time this year - Dow edged +49-points or +0.11% higher, with so-called ‘Magnificent Seven’ mega-capitalisation technology names Amazon.com Inc (up +1.44%), Apple Inc (+1.12%) and Microsoft Corp (+1.07%) rising over >1% along with Caterpillar Inc (+1.02%) and International Business Machines (IBM) Corp (+1.10%). Merck & Co Inc (-1.20%) and McDonald's Corp (-1.09%) fell over >1% to be the worst performing Dow components overnight. Nvidia Corp dipped -0.04%, paring an earlier decline of almost -1.9% after China’s State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) announced that following a preliminary investigation the chip giant was found to be in breach of antitrust rules in relation to its acquisition of Israel-based networking-technology group Mellanox. Separately, Nvidia is reportedly among investors in artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure company Firmus Technologies, which is targeting a listing on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) next year.