Wall Street at fresh record highs
US stock indices closed at fresh record levels yesterday, driven by strong gains across the ‘Magnificent Seven’ constituents. Nvidia was the standout performer. Yesterday it rallied 5% and has built on those gains overnight. Buyers rushed in after the AI chip designer announced that it would be building seven supercomputers for the US Department of Energy. The stock has jumped around 18% since this time last week, and it is fast approaching a market capitalisation of $5 trillion as it trades at new all-time highs.

Source: TN Trader
Meanwhile, Apple became only the third company in history, after Nvidia and Microsoft, to surpass the $4 trillion valuation mark. Microsoft is up 28% so far this year, with much of those gains linked to its 27% holding in OpenAI, the privately-owned company at the vanguard of artificial general intelligence (AGI), and owner of ChatGPT.
Alphabet, Meta Platforms and Microsoft are set to report earnings after tonight’s close. This is at 20:00 GMT due to clock changes over the weekend. Other ‘Mag 7’ constituents, Apple and Amazon, report on Thursday.
These corporations are at the vanguard of developments in AGI and have made highly significant investments in its future. Investors will be expecting to hear how those investments are working out, even though there’s been relatively little to show for all the spending and promises to date.
It’s no secret that the ‘Mag 7’ stocks make up over 36% of the S&P 500 by market capitalisation. So, current valuations look stretched, although many would say they are justified. Despite this, some analysts caution that any disappointing earnings updates from the tech giants could weigh heavily on sentiment.
Investors also must consider the Federal Reserve’s rate announcement later this evening. The market expects a quarter-point rate cut, which will take the Fed Funds rate down to a range of 3.75-4.00%, its lowest level in three years. But the focus will be on Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s subsequent press conference.
Investors will want to hear what he says about the likelihood of further monetary easing, for this year, but also around when the Fed’s balance sheet reduction programme (QT) will end. It will be interesting to hear what Mr Powell thinks about the labour market, given the dearth of economic data this month due to the ongoing government shutdown.



















