Stocks rose on Monday as Wall Street tried to regain its footing after a week in which the artificial intelligence trade lost some steam. The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded 70 points higher, or 0.2%. The S&P 500 climbed 0.4%, and the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.6%. AI-related stock Nvidia rose after skepticism around the AI trade put pressure on the broader stock market last week. Some traders even questioned whether there was enough energy to power an infrastructure plan between Nvidia and OpenAI. Nvidia was last up more than 2%. Meanwhile, shares of Electronic Arts jumped more...
Japanese equities opened lower as investors steered clear of chip and tech shares following declines in Nvidia and Dell Technologies on the U.S. stock market over the weekend. The Topix Index was virtually unchanged at 3,074.18 as of 9:35 a.m. Tokyo time, while the Nikkei declined 1.1% to 42,258.84. Out of 1,680 stocks in the index, 1,023 rose and 573 fell, while 84 were unchanged. Selling pressure increased for electronics, machinery and precision equipment shares, while non-ferrous metal stocks took a hit. Domestic demand sectors like pharmaceuticals and...
Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed Monday as investors assess China's RatingDog manufacturing data for August. The metric - which was previously known as the Caixin Purchasing Managers' Index - came in at 50.5, compared to a contraction of 49.5 the month before. Data released Sunday showed that the country's manufacturing PMI data came in at 49.4 in August, compared to 49.3 the month before. Investors are also assessing the developments in India and China relations, after leaders from both countries agreed that they are development partners, not rivals during a two-day meeting of the...
US stocks fell in the afternoon trading as investors took profits following a strong week that saw the S&P 500 reach record highs, amid signs that inflationary pressures remain persistent in the US economy. The S&P 500 lost 0.8%, the Nasdaq 100 declined 1.4%, and the Dow slipped 0.4%. Technology shares leading the retreat, with Nvidia dropping 3.8% as cautious guidance on China sales weighed on sentiment, while Dell slumped 8.6% after disappointing forecasts. Inflation remained in focus as the Fed's preferred gauge, the core PCE index, rose 2.9% year-on-year in July, the highest...
US stocks pulled back on Friday as the latest economic data continued to reflect stubborn inflationary pressures in the US economy, clouding the Fed's rate outlook. The S&P 500 and the Dow dropped 0.2% from record highs yesterday, while pressure for the heavyweight tech sector drove the Nasdaq down by 0.5%. Personal income and spending accelerated from the previous month to reflect a robust economy at the turn of the quarter, when President Trump toned down tariff threats. In the meantime, core PCE prices, the Fed's preferred gauge for underlying inflation, accelerated to 2.9%...
The Hang Seng Index rose 79 points, or 0.3%, to close at 25,078 on Friday (August 29th), snapping a three-day decline driven by gains in consumer and technology stocks. The index gained 1.2% in August, its fourth consecutive monthly gain, driven by momentum in Chinese stocks, which are nearing a decade-high thanks to strong institutional inflows, attractive valuations, and pro-growth policies, particularly around AI innovation and technological self-sufficiency. The market pared earlier gains as US index futures fell sharply ahead of the PCE inflation data, the Fed's preferred benchmark,...