Wall Street extends recovery
US stock indices pushed higher for a third straight session on Tuesday. The small cap, domestically focused Russell 2000 led the charge, ending up 2.1%. The old school Dow played catch-up, adding 1.4%, while the S&P 500 and NASDAQ tacked on 0.9% and 0.7% respectively.

Source: TN Trader
Alphabet, parent company of Google and YouTube, saw its stock hit a fresh all-time high yesterday, having jumped over 10% since the end of last week. The move comes as users rave about its Gemini 3 AI model, which is seen as far superior to OpenAI’s ChatGPT, let alone other various AI offerings from the likes of Anthropic.
On top of this, there have been reports that Meta Platforms, one of Nvidia’s main customers, is considering using Google’s in-house chips, known as tensor processing units, in its data centres. This gave investors yet another reason to sell Nvidia.
Stock in the chip designer slumped around 7% at one stage yesterday, before recovering somewhat. That move lower saw Nvidia briefly drop below $170, to hit its lowest level since mid-September. That represented a drop of 19% in its share value from its all-time closing high of $210 at the end of last month.
Meanwhile, Advanced Micro Devices, viewed as Nvidia’s main competitor in chip design, fell 6% as investors shifted their attention to the possible deal between Google and Meta.
US stock index futures were firmer across the board this morning, even as Nvidia ceded more ground. Investors responded to more dovish comments from Federal Reserve members. Christopher Waller and Mary Daly followed John Williams in supporting the idea of an additional rate cut before year-end. This saw the probability of a 25-basis point cut on 10th December rise to 85%, according to the CME’s FedWatch Tool, up from 30% this time last week.
Sticking with the US central bank, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, suggested that President Trump may announce his preferred candidate as the new Chair of the Fed within the next four weeks.
The current chair, Jerome Powell, is set to end his second term in May. Recent speculation over his likely replacement has centred on National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett. Mr Hassett is viewed as a dove and therefore likely to support the further easing of monetary policy.



















