U.S. stock futures rise as Wall Street attempts to build momentum following positive sessions for Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500.
US stock futures are higher as Treasury yields back up slightly after reaching a 16-year high, with the Dow and S&P 500 both up and Nasdaq futures leading with over 0.7% as investors await results from Nvidia and a speech from Fed Chair Jay Powell.
Stock futures indicate a slight increase as investors await Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's speech at the central bank summit in Jackson Hole, Wyo, with stocks of Affirm, Marvell, Hawaiian Electric, AMC, and Intuit showing the most movement.
Stock futures are slightly higher as the S&P 500 comes off a winning week, with 3M, Jabil, XPeng, Alibaba, Nvidia, and more stocks moving the most today.
Stock futures are slightly higher as investors look ahead to economic data and the monthly jobs report, while tech companies Instacart, Klaviyo, and Arm file for IPOs, China Evergrande Group's shares plunge, and meme stock Bed Bath & Beyond continues to trade despite its bankruptcy filing.
U.S. stock futures edge lower as investors analyze weaker job opening data and anticipate additional labor market figures, while Nvidia shares reach a record high and Bitcoin surges after a court ruling on an exchange-traded fund.
Summary: European markets are poised for a positive start to the week, influenced by the positive trade in the Asia-Pacific region, while investors keep an eye on German trade balance data and a speech by Christine Lagarde, the President of the European Central Bank. Additionally, Fidelity's China fund is on track to outperform its peers for the second year in a row, Arm aims for a listing price between $47 and $51 per share in its IPO, and the US Department of Labor reports a rise in unemployment and lower-than-expected wage growth in August.
Asian stocks are expected to open lower as attention shifts to China's efforts to improve its economy and European shares provide a weak lead for investors, while crude oil futures remain near nine-month highs.
Stocks fall as higher oil prices and rising Treasury yields put pressure on the market, while Arm prepares for its IPO with a valuation of up to $52 billion and Saudi Arabia and Russia extend their oil production cuts, causing concerns about inflation and raising Treasury yields.
Equities are lower in premarket trading, oil prices pull back slightly, Arm Holdings' IPO is China-focused, Walt Disney faces a crisis with Charter Communications, retired Chinese Communist Party elders upbraid Xi Jinping, TD Cowen upgrades Constellation Brands, William Blair initiates coverage on Trade Desk, UBS lowers price target on Dexcom, HSBC initiates coverage on biopharmaceutical and healthcare companies, Loop Capital raises price target on TJX Companies, and Mizuho lowers price target on Dominion Energy.
Dow Jones futures, S&P 500 futures, and Nasdaq futures will open Sunday evening, with Apple and Oracle having significant news ahead and several stocks like Tesla, Roku, and Shopify being big Cathie Wood holdings near buy points; however, the stock market has had a tough week with major indexes falling below their 50-day lines and weak market breadth.
U.S. stock futures rise as investors await key inflation data, consumer prices in the spotlight, Alibaba's outgoing CEO steps down as cloud unit chief, China's renminbi bounces back, and Arm eyes IPO pricing at the top of its range.
Dow Jones futures rose alongside S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures, with Tesla receiving an upgrade and price target hike, and Apple, Oracle, and Adobe having major news ahead. The stock market rally is under pressure, but there could be a change soon.
Stocks are expected to open the week higher, with the S&P 500 up 0.5% in premarket trading, as investors look ahead to key U.S. economic data and show interest in companies such as Lennar, Arm, Tesla, and Oracle.
Retail investors should be cautious when buying shares of Arm Holdings' upcoming IPO, as recent data shows that individual investors tend to lose money on blockbuster IPOs, with the 10 biggest US IPOs in the past four years down an average of 47% from their first-day closing price.
European stock markets are expected to open higher on Tuesday as investors await economic data, including U.S. inflation figures and the European Central Bank's rate decision, while Arm IPO's price could potentially surpass $51 per share. Meanwhile, tech investor Paul Meeks plans to buy tech stocks once the market correction subsides, and Federal Reserve officials are reportedly feeling less urgency for another rate hike. HSBC has also named its "must see stocks" in the UK.
Stock futures point lower as Wall Street comes off two days of gains and investors prepare for the latest U.S. market news.
U.S. stock futures slip after Tesla's surge, Arm's IPO order book closes early, Apple expected to unveil new iPhone model, oil prices rise, and Disney and Charter reach deal to end blackout.
Stock futures slip as several stocks, including Apple, BP, NIO, and Rocket Pharmaceuticals, show significant movement.
Dow Jones futures rose slightly, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures, despite mixed performance in the stock market rally following the release of the CPI inflation report; Arm Holdings priced its IPO at $51 per share, giving it an initial valuation of over $54 billion; and attention turns to Adobe's earnings and the looming UAW strike for Ford, GM, and Stellantis.
Stock futures are pointing slightly higher after the S&P 500 closed up, with Ford, GM, Nvidia, HP Inc., and Semtech among the stocks moving the most.
Summary: Stock futures rise as Wall Street evaluates the effects of the auto workers' strike and reacts positively to favorable economic data from China.
Arm shares soared nearly 25% on its first day of trading on the Nasdaq, boosting U.S. stocks and sparking hope that the IPO market for tech companies is reviving. Additionally, positive economic data from China and a rebound in retail sales and industrial production contributed to market optimism.
Gas prices drive up US inflation rate, reaching 3.7% in August, while excluding volatile components shows a favorable trend in core inflation; Tesla rallies following an upgrade by Morgan Stanley, Qualcomm secures a deal with Apple, and ARM Holdings PLC debuts with the largest IPO of the year; United Auto Workers strike against Detroit automakers; upcoming Federal Open Market Committee meeting and corporate earnings reports are in focus for the week ahead.
U.S. futures inch higher ahead of the Federal Reserve meeting, Instacart prices its IPO at the top-end of the range, and the UAW warns of more U.S. plant closures if negotiations with automakers show no progress.
Instacart prices its IPO at $30 a share, potentially opening higher than expected.
US stock futures rise as investors await Fed decision on rates; US debt rises to $33 trillion as government shutdown looms; Federal Reserve expected to pause rate hikes; Impact of government shutdown, autoworkers strike, and rising oil prices on the economy; Biden reshapes the Federal Reserve.
Stock futures on the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100 climb slightly after a week of steep losses, as investors react to the Federal Reserve's statement on keeping interest rates higher for longer.
Stock futures rise slightly as certain stocks, including Ford, Activision, Alibaba, U.S. Steel, and Scholastic, show significant movement.
Stocks open lower as bond yields rise and concerns of a federal government shutdown loom; Costco reports earnings, Meta Platforms holds annual conference on AI and virtual realities, Hollywood writers union reaches preliminary agreement with studios, UAW makes progress with Ford, Amazon invests in Anthropic, Guggenheim upgrades Microsoft, Morgan Stanley reports strong demand for iPhone 15, Oracle gets price target cut, and Jefferies downgrades Foot Locker and Nike.
Stock futures inch down as Wall Street indices are expected to end September with losses, investors monitor budgetary stand-off in Washington, and Moody's warns of the negative impact of a potential government shutdown on the US rating; President Biden prepares to visit Michigan to support striking auto workers; Evergrande shares slip for the second consecutive day as the company's bond payment is missed; and oil prices decline on concerns over fuel demand amid central banks' commitment to combating inflation.
U.S. futures are trending higher after a dismal performance on stock indices, with oil futures also increasing and treasury yields hovering around 4.50%, while in Asia-Pacific markets, most indices ended higher due to positive economic data.
Stock futures open slightly higher as investors prepare to end a challenging September, with the S&P 500 set to finish the month down 4.6% and the Dow down 3%.
Stock futures rise as Wall Street waits for U.S. inflation data; Nike, Tesla, Ford, GM, Carnival, and more stocks are on the move.
US stock futures rose after a deal was reached to avoid a government shutdown, while Asian equities fluctuated due to concerns over global interest rates; investors found relief in China's manufacturing activity returning to expansion and South Korea's exports easing.
The major stock indexes are expected to open lower as the 10-year Treasury yield hits a 16-year high, with investors monitoring employment data for potential impact on interest rates; meanwhile, stock futures in Asia and Europe slumped as the Federal Reserve's message of higher interest rates reverberates worldwide.
U.S. stock futures turn lower as traders await job openings data, Sam Bankman-Fried's fraud trial begins, and shares of China Evergrande surge after trading resumes in Hong Kong.
U.S. stock futures are slightly lower as investors await key jobs data, Clorox's stock slides after releasing guidance for its fiscal first quarter, Hong Kong's private sector contracts for the third consecutive month, and federal student loan payments resume causing borrowers to cut their budgets.
U.S. stock futures slide in Asia as conflict in the Middle East boosts oil and Treasuries and the September U.S. jobs report raises the stakes for inflation figures later this week.
Investors are reducing their bets on a selloff in US stock futures, although it is uncertain if this marks the end of the downward trend.
U.S. stock futures rise as investors await the release of Fed minutes and consider hints from officials about potential interest rate hikes; ExxonMobil is expected to announce a $60 billion acquisition of Pioneer; Birkenstock prices its IPO at $46 per share.
US stocks are expected to open higher as investors await inflation data and Federal Reserve minutes to gain insight into interest rate thinking, with Dow Jones Industrial Average futures up 0.2% and S&P 500 futures rising 0.2%.
Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq futures rose slightly as the stock market rally recovered from morning lows, while the CPI inflation report and earnings reports from companies like Delta Air Lines are expected to impact market performance.
Dow Jones futures rose slightly while S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures fell; Treasury yields retreated and crude oil spiked as U.S. sanctions on Russian crude sales tightened; UnitedHealth, JPMorgan Chase, Wells Fargo, Citigroup, PNC Financial Services, and BlackRock reported their earnings; the stock market rally retreated after an inflation report and a poorly received Treasury auction; Apple and Microsoft stocks edged higher while Google and Meta Platforms fell; Dow Jones futures rose slightly; the 10-year Treasury bond yield fell; the stock market rally struggled at key levels; growth ETFs slumped; megacap stocks like Apple, Microsoft, Google, Meta, Nvidia, Amazon, and Tesla were down a fraction; investors should be cautious and ready to reduce or exit positions if necessary.