S&P 500 breaks 7,000
US stock indices ended mixed yesterday. The Dow dropped 0.8%, weighed down by some hefty falls across health insurance giants, many of which are major constituents of the old school, price weighted index.
The selloff came after the Trump administration said it would cut back spending on a government-funded scheme for older US citizens. Meanwhile, the NASDAQ added 0.9% as investors positioned themselves ahead of key ‘Mag Seven’ earnings from Microsoft, Tesla and Meta after tonight’s close.
Semiconductor stocks fared well, and many were firmer again this morning, with Micron Technology yet again a standout performer. The S&P 500 added 0.4% yesterday, which was good enough to take it to an all-time closing high. In terms of sectors within the index, IT was a standout, adding 1.4%, while Healthcare was the loser of the day, falling 1.7%.
US stock index futures began on Wednesday in bullish form. Wall Street loves a milestone, so there will be caps in the air if the S&P can maintain the 7,000 level it passed this morning once the US exchanges open later today. The Dow is just 2% below its own mega-milestone of 50,000.

Source: TN Trader
Texas Instruments surged nearly 8% after hours, rallying on stronger-than-expected analogue chip demand despite missing revenue and earnings estimates. The move reinforced the market’s willingness to reward forward-looking guidance even in the face of headline misses, particularly within semiconductor and AI-linked themes.
This encouraged investors and traders to throw caution to the wind as they position themselves ahead of the conclusion of the Federal Reserve’s two-day FOMC meeting later this evening. No one expects a rate change tonight. But all will pay close attention to Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s subsequent press conference.
Mr Powell’s term as Chair ends this May, and many are wondering if he will address concerns about President Trump’s constant interference with the Fed, and the latter’s vitriolic attacks on him personally in his comments.
In addition, there is always hope that these occasions help offer some insight into the FOMC’s thinking over the timing and size of future rate cuts. President Trump is expected to announce his pick to replace Mr Powell, with the odds now favouring Rick Reider, CIO at BlackRock.
If so, there will be more cap flinging on Wall Street as Mr Reider is most certainly ‘one of their own’. A ‘Markets Guy’ rather than a fusty economics theorist.



















