Wall Street slams into reverse gear
US stock indices staged a dramatic turnaround on Thursday. All the majors were up initially, following the release of a stunning set of quarterly results from Nvidia after Wednesday’s close. The chip designer, and the most valuable corporation in the world by market capitalisation, rallied 6% on the news.
Investors rushed to reestablish long side exposure following a 14% selloff earlier this month. The company also gave a stronger-than-anticipated forecast for the fourth quarter, and CEO Jensen Huang said that demand for the firm’s Blackwell chips was “Off the charts”. Mr Huang also addressed concerns over the outlook for the Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) trade when he said that chip demand was coming from many different areas and not just the hyperscalers.
All this helped to lift the S&P 500 by 2%, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ gained around 2.5%, or about 600 points, by early afternoon. Then came the slump, which saw the S&P end the session down 1.6%, and the NASDAQ off 2.2%. While tech names were at the forefront of the drop, the selling was widespread with the Dow and Russell 2000 off 0.8% and 1.8% respectively.

Source: TN Trader
Nvidia gave back all its overnight gains, and more, to end down 3.2%. It had lost close to 3% in early trade this morning, smashing through support at $180. Having closed on their lows last night, all the US majors attempted to rally in Asian Pacific trade. But they were unable to hold on to initial gains and were mostly lower again in mid-morning in Europe.
It’s been difficult to pinpoint one single catalyst for the plunge. But it’s fair to say that the ‘Magnificent Seven’ constituents, which account for around 35% of the S&P 500’s value by market capitalisation, are, by many measures, fully valued and have been for some time.
Recent events, such as news that legendary figures such as Peter Thiel and Michael Burry have cut their exposure (Mr Thiel) or actively instigated short positions (Mr Burry) on Nvidia, have helped dampen speculative fever around the chip designer and the AGI trade more generally. Add in the growing likelihood that there will be no December rate cut from the Federal Reserve due to concerns that inflation may push higher from current levels.
Then consider the uncertainty over the legality of President Trump’s tariffs (the Supreme Court are expected to announce their judgment next month) and suddenly investors feel nothing but headwinds swamping prior tailwinds.
It almost seems irrelevant that yesterday saw the first official Non-Farm Payroll update in close to seven weeks. The September report (delayed due to the US government shutdown) came in above the 50,000 expected, at 119,000, although there was a modest downward revision to the August release.
There were some mixed messages as the Unemployment Rate ticked up. But overall, the takeaway is that the labour market may not be weakening by as much as previously thought. So, this still supports the views of FOMC members who are arguing against another rate reduction next month.
US stock indices are perilously positioned as the weekend approaches. And bear in mind that it’s US Thanksgiving next Thursday, which effectively takes out Friday as a full trading day as well. Suddenly, there’s some fear out there. But is it enough to lead to a full-scale rout, or will investors once again look for an opportunity to ‘buy the dip’?


















