U.S. stocks drifted to a mixed close following President Donald Trump’s latest tariff escalation and after the Federal Reserve hinted interest rates may not change for a while. The S&P
U.S. stock markets were mixed on Tuesday as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell indicated no immediate plans to reduce interest rates.
The S&P 500 ended higher on Thursday, lifted by gains in Nvidia, Apple and Tesla, after U.S. President Donald Trump unveiled a roadmap for charging reciprocal tariffs on U.S. trading partners.
Investors will be closely watching Nvidia earnings in the week ahead for hints about the state of the AI trade as the market's largest tech stocks have mainly struggled to start 2025.
US equity indexes traded mixed after midday Monday amid a decline in technology and as investors awaited Nvidia's (NVDA) earnings and the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation data. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.
S&P 500 E-Mini futures (ESH25) are up +0.53%, andMarch Nasdaq 100 E-Mini futures (NQH25) are up +0.42% this morning, pointing to a partial rebound from Friday’s selloff on Wall Street. This week, investors look ahead to an earnings report from semiconductor stalwart Nvidia,
US stock futures (ES=F, NQ=F, YM=F) move into the green Monday morning ahead of the release of January's Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index — the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge — this Friday,
(Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures rose on Monday, as risk-taking recovered following a sharp selloff on Wall Street in the previous week, while investors awaited pivotal results from chip giant Nvidia and a key inflation report.
It is a sea of red in Asia as investors grapple with risk posed by the U.S. intensifying its technology war with China in areas as varied as artificial intelligence, quantum computing and aerospace. The U.
Last, but not least. The final member of the so-called Magnificent Seven tech stocks to report in this earnings season is Nvidia, which will update investors late Wednesday. Those results, from the semiconductor company at the center of the artificial-intelligence boom,
But the same hand that gives can also take away. Last week, Nvidia submitted another regulatory filing that showed it had completely exited its stake in Soundhound AI. Just as investors viewed Nvidia's initial position in Soundhound as a vote of confidence, they saw the sale of all its shares as a vote of no confidence.
Wall Street experienced mixed trading, as technology stocks dragged while investors awaited Nvidia's results for AI demand insights. Concerns about AI infrastructure oversupply from Microsoft's lease reductions,