Dow jumps on earnings
US equities had another strong session on Wednesday. The Dow closed 1.1% higher to close at its best level since the end of last year. The S&P 500 extended its record-setting streak, adding 0.8% to close at a fresh all-time high, its twelfth so far this year.
Source: TN Trader
The NASDAQ rose 0.8%, to hit another record close, while the small-cap Russell 2000 outperformed, jumping 1.5%, although it is still around 8% below its own record high from November last year.
The news of the trade agreement between the US and Japan boosted investor risk appetite. This has raised hopes that more major deals will be announced, with the European Union foremost, before the Trump administration’s tariff deadline, which is coming up a week on Friday.
Tech giants Alphabet and Tesla reported second-quarter earnings after the US close. Alphabet delivered earnings and revenue that beat expectations. In addition, it raised its spending plans to build out infrastructure to account for increased demand for its Cloud products and services. The news sent Alphabet shares up 2% overnight. This was viewed as a promising start for tech stocks, particularly the market-leading ‘Magnificent Seven’.
Unfortunately, it wasn’t all good news for tech. Tesla fell sharply after it reported its second straight quarter with declining revenues and auto sales. After President Trump's decision to cancel EV incentives, the electric vehicle giant’s stock dropped 6% after hours, reflecting investor concerns about falling volumes along with policy headwinds.
IBM also contributed to the mixed tone, as its share price fell 5% despite beating on earnings and raising full-year guidance. Revenue and gross margin came in below the consensus forecast, and the share price drop helped to push Dow futures into negative territory in early trade this morning.
Aside from the Dow, the US stock index futures markets are pointed to a flat open. Despite the tariff deadline being little more than a week away, traders were focusing on another headline issue: President Trump’s ongoing attacks on the Federal Reserve Chair, Jerome Powell.
These have an added piquancy today as President Trump is due to visit the Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC. This marks the first presidential trip to the central bank in nearly two decades.
It comes as the Trump administration has focused on Mr Powell, not just for his stubbornness in refusing to cut interest rates (blaming uncertainty over the possible inflationary effect of trade tariffs), but also for a large cost overrun on renovations to the central bank building. There is some speculation that Mr Trump may use these as a wedge to get rid of the Fed Chair before his term expires in May next year.