US stock index futures drift lower
US stock indices eked out modest gains on Thursday. The S&P 500 added 0.3% and broke and closed above 6,500 for the first time. The NASDAQ added as Nvidia made back most of its post-earnings losses, which helped to lift other chipmakers. The Dow edged up 0.2% to close at a fresh all-time high, while the small-cap, domestically focused Russell 2000 finished 0.2% higher.
Source: TN Trader
In early trade this morning, US stock index futures drifted lower. The moves came as investors digested a round of corporate earnings after last night’s close. Ulta Beauty advanced 3%, while Autodesk jumped more than 10% on strong forward guidance. In contrast, Dell Technologies fell 5% after issuing a softer outlook for the current quarter.
Nvidia’s latest earnings report, released after Wednesday’s close, continued to influence sentiment. While overall earnings and revenues came in above expectations, its data centre sales and forward guidance left some investors cautious, leading to a pullback in the stock.
Despite this, the chipmaker’s results failed to dent confidence in the ongoing AI trade. Having fallen 3% soon after its earnings release, Nvidia closed the session down less than 1%. This helped to lift other chipmakers, which had initially sold off in sympathy. This is the last trading session of August, and it has proved to be a solid month for all the US majors.
The Dow, S&P, NASDAQ, and Russell are on track to post gains of 3.4%, 2.6%, and 2.8%, respectively. Meanwhile, the Russell 2000 managed to outperform all its peers with an August gain of 7.6%. This came as investors diversified their exposure into overlooked value stocks, which trade at much lower multiples than the market-leading tech giants.
US markets are closed on Monday for ‘Labor Day’. This marks the unofficial end of the summer as traders and investors return to their desks. The big question now is whether the rally has legs as the Fed teases with a likely interest rate cut next month (its first since last December) while President Trump ramps up the political and personal pressure on Fed members. But ahead of that, today sees the release of the Fed’s preferred inflation measure, Core PCE.