US stocks closed mixed on Tuesday (July 22nd), as the S&P 500 hit a new record, rising nearly 0.1%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 170 points, and the Nasdaq 100 fell 0.5% ahead of key earnings reports from Alphabet and Tesla. Chip stocks weighed on the Nasdaq, with Nvidia down 2.4% and Broadcom down 3.3% following reports that SoftBank and OpenAI's massive AI project was stalled. Shares of Lockheed Martin (-10.8%) and Philip Morris (-8.2%) fell sharply after disappointing results. General Motors (-8%) also warned of a deeper impact on profits related to tariffs after a 32%...
European stocks extended morning gains and closed sharply higher on Thursday, trimming the losses from the prior two sessions with support from a batch of earnings, while markets continued to gauge the impact that the new Republican-led US government may have on the global corporate sector. The Stoxx 50 added 1.9% to close at 4,830, and the Stoxx 600 rose 1.1% to close at 507. ASML, the Stoxx 50's heaviest company, soared 7% after the company forecasted sales to grow by 8% to 14% over the coming five years. Also, Siemens added 4.9% after posting a higher-than-expected profit although it...
Stocks struggled to make headway, following a furious post-election rally that spurred calls for a breather amid signs of buyer fatigue. Equities wavered near all-time highs, with the S&P 500 remaining close to technically overbought levels. That's after a surge that drove the benchmark gauge up 25% this year. Several measures highlight strong trader optimism, including the latest figures from the American Association of Individual Investors, which showed a spike in bullish sentiment last week. In the run-up to Jerome Powell's speech on Thursday, traders...
The Hang Seng plunged 388 points, or 2.0%, to close at 19,436 on Thursday, marking its fifth session of declines and hitting a seven-week low amid sharp declines across all sectors. It was the first time the Hang Seng remained fully open despite the bad weather, with many participants reluctant to enter any trades. Traders shrugged off China's latest efforts to reverse a property slump through tax incentives on home and land transactions. Concerns about Sino-U.S. tensions also grew as China tightened its grip on rare earth exports. The technology index slumped about 3%, taking its losses...
The Nikkei 225 index fell 0.48% to close at 38,536, while the broader Topix index fell 0.27% to 2,701 on Thursday, reversing gains from earlier in the session, weighed down by losses in the technology sector following similar moves on Wall Street overnight. Investors also continued to assess the potential impact of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump's policies on the Japanese economy, particularly on export-driven industries. Meanwhile, traders kept a close eye on a sharply weaker yen, which could provide support for local equities in the near term. Technology stocks led the losses, with...
The Nikkei 225 index rose 0.8% to surpass 39,000, while the broader Topix index gained 1% to 2,735 on Thursday, with Japanese stocks recouping some of the losses seen earlier in the week as the yen depreciated to a 3-1/2-month low. A weaker yen supported the profit outlook for Japan's export-driven industries and boosted carry trades, where investors borrow in yen to invest in higher-yielding assets. Attention now turns to the release of third-quarter GDP data on Friday, which could provide further insight into Japan's economic outlook. Financial stocks led the day's rally, with...