Wall Street extends rebound
US stock indices pushed higher for a fourth straight session yesterday. The NASDAQ and Russell 2000 led the other indices higher, with both adding 0.8% on the day. The Dow and S&P 500 both finished 0.7% higher. US equities are closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday, although there’s a shorter-than-usual session for stock index futures. Sentiment improved this week on the increased probability of a rate cut from the Federal Reserve next month.

Source: TN Trader
The CME FedWatch Tool, which uses real money flows to calculate the implied chances of rate changes, now gives an 85% chance of a 25-basis-point reduction in December, up from just 30% last week. The biggest part of the shift came after a speech last Friday from New York Fed CEO John Williams.
Mr Williams, a senior member of the Federal Reserve, appeared to open the door once again for another rate cut next month. His comments were a contrast to recent speeches from other Fed members, which were distinctly hawkish in nature. This seems odd.
Yet analysts are convinced that he wouldn’t have been so explicitly dovish without getting the thumbs up from Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Ironically, at the end of last month, Mr Powell used his post-FOMC press conference to dampen December rate cut expectations. This sudden shift in outlook would suggest that the Fed is now prioritising concerns about the labour market over sticky inflation data.
This week, Fed members Christopher Waller and Mary Daly followed John Williams in supporting the idea of an additional rate cut before year-end. This helped to bolster US equities going into the long holiday weekend.
Despite this week’s recovery, November hasn’t been good for equities, with market darling Nvidia leading the decline. Despite a stellar set of third-quarter earnings, the chip designer at the vanguard of the Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) trade fell from a record closing high of $210 at the end of last month to break briefly below $170 on Tuesday. That’s a high-low decline of 19%.
The selloff was triggered by some high-profile selling. But there are also concerns that Nvidia finally has some serious competition. Meta Platforms, an Nvidia customer, is talking to Alphabet’s Google about using its proprietary tensor processing units in Meta’s data centres. This looks like quite a specific deal, but it has certainly opened a breach in Nvidia’s near-monopoly.
The share price has just experienced its worst run since late January, when Chinese startup DeepSeek launched a free AI assistant produced at a fraction of the cost of its US competition. When investors woke up to the implications of this, they sent Nvidia’s share price down 36% over the next six weeks. Could we be seeing something similar now unfolding?


















