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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq lose steam ahead of Trump tariff deadline, jobs report

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq lose steam ahead of Trump tariff deadline, jobs report

Yahooa day ago
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) pared gains in afternoon trading after President Trump granted Mexico a 90-day tariff reprieve and strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings boosted faith in Big Tech's massive AI investments.
The Nasdaq climbed about 0.2%, while the S&P 500 was just below the flat line. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, sliding about 0.3%.
Meta stock shot up 11% late morning, as investors welcomed its earnings beat and stronger-than-expected guidance even as it ramps up its AI spending spree. Microsoft stock jumped as much as 8% before paring back gains after its impressive results, which pushed the tech giant's market capitalization above $4 trillion.
Markets are now looking to after-hours results from their "Magnificent Seven" peers, Apple (AAPL) and Amazon (AMZN), for reasons to keep the rally going.
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) released on Thursday morning showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
The release comes after the Fed held interest rates steady following its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, with two Fed governors dissenting.
Following the decision, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stressed "no decisions" had been made about a September rate cut, undercutting President Trump's claim he had heard a cut was coming at policymakers' next meeting. Bets on a September cut fell below 40% on Thursday, according to the CME Group, down from about 60% before the meeting.
Stocks pared gains after President Trump announced a 90-day tariff extension for Mexico on the eve of Trump's deadline on Friday, allowing more time for the two sides to negotiate.
The announcement follows a flurry of trade deals, including a pact with South Korea announced late Wednesday that sets a 15% tariff rate on its imports. US exports will face zero duties in return, and Seoul has agreed to make $350 billion in US investment and pledged to buy US energy products, Trump wrote in a social media post.
Trump talks with Canada, India, and Brazil in a stalemate as his tariff deadline looms
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Apple Q3 earnings to give Wall Street better view of tariff impact, AI top of mind
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Meme stocks are melting as investors look toward Big Tech
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Reddit stock jumps ahead of Q2 earnings
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
CoreWeave soars after Microsoft reports higher-than-expected capital expenditures
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
Microsoft tops $4 trillion
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
S&P 500, Nasdaq surge at the open
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
Microsoft set to join $4T market cap club, Meta stock surges in post-earnings rally
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Fed's preferred inflation gauge shows price increases accelerated in June amid tariff uncertainty
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
Roblox stock soars as daily active users surpass 100 million
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
What's in the US-EU trade deal depends on who is doing the talking
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
A quirk in the Fed's calendar puts extra pressure on the Sept. meeting
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Good morning. Here's what's happening today.
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Trending tickers: ARM, CVS and Confluent
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Carvana posts higher quarterly profit on record car sales
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
EBay stock rises as resilient consumers fuel strong sales forecast
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
AB InBev shares slide on concern over sales volumes
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Qualcomm on the move lower
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
This is remarkable on Meta
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Microsoft earnings call: A quick take
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
Trump talks with Canada, India, and Brazil in a stalemate as his tariff deadline looms
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Apple Q3 earnings to give Wall Street better view of tariff impact, AI top of mind
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Meme stocks are melting as investors look toward Big Tech
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Reddit stock jumps ahead of Q2 earnings
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
CoreWeave soars after Microsoft reports higher-than-expected capital expenditures
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
Microsoft tops $4 trillion
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
S&P 500, Nasdaq surge at the open
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
Microsoft set to join $4T market cap club, Meta stock surges in post-earnings rally
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Fed's preferred inflation gauge shows price increases accelerated in June amid tariff uncertainty
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
Roblox stock soars as daily active users surpass 100 million
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
What's in the US-EU trade deal depends on who is doing the talking
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
A quirk in the Fed's calendar puts extra pressure on the Sept. meeting
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Good morning. Here's what's happening today.
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Trending tickers: ARM, CVS and Confluent
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Carvana posts higher quarterly profit on record car sales
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
EBay stock rises as resilient consumers fuel strong sales forecast
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
AB InBev shares slide on concern over sales volumes
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Qualcomm on the move lower
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
This is remarkable on Meta
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Microsoft earnings call: A quick take
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
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Trump fires a senior official over jobs numbers
Trump fires a senior official over jobs numbers

CNN

time16 minutes ago

  • CNN

Trump fires a senior official over jobs numbers

Donald Trump Job market EconomyFacebookTweetLink Follow President Donald Trump has fired Dr. Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, whom he accused, without evidence, of manipulating the monthly jobs reports for 'political purposes.' The BLS' monthly labor report Friday showed that the US economy added only 73,000 jobs in July, far below expectations. It also sharply revised down the employment growth that had been previously reported in May and June – by a combined 258,000 jobs. After the revisions, the jobs report showed the weakest pace of hiring for any three-month period since the pandemic recession in 2020. 'In my opinion, today's Jobs Numbers were RIGGED in order to make the Republicans, and ME, look bad,' Trump said in a Truth Social post. Although the May and June jobs numbers were worse than initially believed, revisions are normal in this process. The BLS' initial monthly jobs estimates are often based on incomplete data, so they are revised twice after the initial report — followed by an annual revision every February. Additionally, BLS economists use a formula to smooth out jobs numbers for seasonal variations and that can exacerbate revisions when they fall outside economists' expectations. Trump on Friday incorrectly called the revisions a 'mistake.' 'McEntarfer said there were only 73,000 Jobs added (a shock!) but, more importantly, that a major mistake was made by them, 258,000 Jobs downward, in the prior two months,' Trump said on Truth Social. 'Similar things happened in the first part of the year, always to the negative. The Economy is BOOMING under 'TRUMP.'' Trump said McEntarfer 'faked' the jobs numbers before the election to try to boost former Vice President Kamala Harris' chances in the 2024 presidential election. 'We're doing so well. I believe the numbers were phony, just like they were before the election, and there were other times. So, you know what I did? I fired her, and you know what? I did the right thing,' Trump told reporters Friday on the South Lawn. McEntarfer was confirmed by the Senate 86-8 in January 2024 for a term of four years. CNN has reached out to McEntarfer for comment. Until Trump replaces McEntarfer, Deputy Commissioner William Wiatrowski will serve as Acting Commissioner, the administration said. Trump has previously criticized the BLS for its jobs data and revisions, and he told reporters Friday evening he's 'always had a problem with these numbers.' In 2016, during his first presidential campaign, Trump claimed that the unemployment rate was significantly higher than the BLS let on. In 2024, he accused former President Joe Biden's administration of orchestrating a cover-up, after the BLS reported that it had overcounted jobs by 818,000 over the previous 12 months. 'I was thinking about it this morning, before the numbers that came out. I said, 'Who is the person that does these numbers?' And then they gave me stats about before the election,' Trump said Friday. 'We need people that we can trust,' he added. But Trump and his administration have also praised the BLS data when it has been favorable to them. During Trump's first term, former White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer said in March 2017 that the jobs data was no longer 'phony' after the BLS issued a strong jobs report. And a month ago, current White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt posted on social media that the economy had beat expectations for jobs in four straight BLS labor reports. The BLS is nonpartisan, and businesses and government officials rely on the accuracy of its data to make determinations about investment, hiring, spending and all sorts of key decisions. 'It's outrageous for anyone in government to question the integrity of the BLS,' said Jason Furman, a Harvard professor and former Obama economic adviser. 'Accurate statistics are essential to the economy.' Furman doubted that replacing McEntarfer would compromise the BLS, but he said even the possibility or appearance of that notion 'would be bad.' 'Countries that have tried to fake those statistics have often ended up with economic crises as a result,' Furman said. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, said the BLS' data is at the 'highest standard,' and 'as accurate as it can be.' 'Anything that undermines that or even the perception of that high standard is deeply worrisome,' Zandi said. 'I've never seen anything even close to this.' At Moody's, Zandi said he has hired a number of former BLS economists whom he called 'fantastic.' 'They do great work,' Zandi said. 'They are critical to a well-functioning economy.' Democratic Virginia Senator Mark Warner accused Trump of working the referees. 'Firing the ump doesn't change the score,' Warner said in a statement. 'Americans deserve to know the truth about the state of the Trump economy.' But Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer said in a post on social media that she supports replacing McEntarfer. 'A recent string of major revisions have come to light and raised concerns about decisions being made by the Biden-appointed Labor Commissioner,' Chavez-DeRemer said on X. 'I support the President's decision to replace Biden's Commissioner and ensure the American People can trust the important and influential data coming from BLS.' The BLS jobs survey is widely considered by economists to be robust. It samples more than 100,000 businesses and government agencies each month, representing roughly 629,000 individual worksites. But, as part of larger cost-cutting taking place around practically every part of Trump's government, the BLS is laying off staff — and, as a result, reducing the scope of its work. For example, the BLS posted a notice in June stating it stopped collecting data for its Consumer Price Index in three cities (Lincoln, Nebraska; Buffalo, New York; and Provo, Utah) and increased 'imputations' for certain items (a statistical technique that, when boiled down to very rough terms, essentially means more educated guesses). That worried Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell. In testimony before Congress in June, Powell said he believed the BLS data to be accurate, but he was upset about what could become a trend. 'I wouldn't say that I'm concerned about the data today, although there has been a very mild degradation of the scope of the surveys,' Powell said at the time, in response to a question about survey data quality. 'But I would say the direction of travel is something I'm concerned about.' This story has been updated with additional developments and context.

Are US tariffs starting to bite? Trump, in denial over rising prices, targets Fed chief Powell
Are US tariffs starting to bite? Trump, in denial over rising prices, targets Fed chief Powell

Yahoo

time16 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Are US tariffs starting to bite? Trump, in denial over rising prices, targets Fed chief Powell

Memo from the White House: inflation is 'right on track', it declared this week, citing the latest official data. Price growth is now 'very low', according to Donald Trump. The actual statistics paint a markedly different picture. Just six months after he regained power, in part by promising to rapidly reduce prices, Trump has presided over the chaotic rollout of tariffs on an array of overseas products that many have argued risk having the exact opposite effect. After a lull, the consumer price index (CPI) is back on the rise. In June, everything from fruit and washing machines to dresses and toys became more expensive. Businesses in the US and around the world have struggled to keep up with the Trump administration's erratic rollout of its aggressive trade strategy: the daily White House soap opera of warnings, threats, confusion, deadlines, delays and drama. Related: Can Trump fire Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell? Putting to one side the steady stream of twists, cliffhangers and all-caps declarations, each episode has pushed US tariffs higher. The overall average effective tariff rate is now set to hit 20.6%, according to the non-partisan The Budget Lab at Yale, its highest level since 1910. Eventually, someone has to foot the bill. Interactive By Trump's telling, the countries he targets will be forced to pay up. But in reality, tariffs are paid by the importer – US-based companies, in this case – and often passed on. Tariffs are a burden. One way or another, the impact typically is felt along each link of the supply chain, from the initial manufacturer to the customer who buys the finished product. 'All through that chain, people will be trying not to be the ones who pick up the cost,' noted Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, at a recent press conference. 'But ultimately, the cost of the tariff has to be paid and some of it will fall on the end consumer,' added Powell. 'We know that. That's what businesses say. That's what the data says from past evidence. So we know that's coming.' The effect is not immediate, though. It might take Trump a matter of minutes to announce a tariff on Truth Social, but the full effects can take months to work their way through the economy. Interactive And so Powell, and the Fed, has waited. For seven months now, at four consecutive meetings, the US central bank's policymakers have sat on their hands and kept interest rates on hold. After dramatically raising rates to combat inflation, they want to see how prices respond to Trump's tariffs before cutting them back. It's early days. Prices are still rising, and by more than the Fed's target of 2% each year. Officials want to know if Trump's plan will make them rise faster. The evidence has so far been mixed. While consumer price growth accelerated slightly between May and June, the annual rate of wholesale price growth slipped. The Fed's latest 'beige book', a semi-quarterly report of anecdotal economic insights from across the US, also released this week, described a relatively calm business landscape, despite persisting uncertainty. Assuming Trump's announced tariffs are enforced, they will dent US economic growth by 0.1 percentage point this year and 0.3 percentage points next, according to modeling by Oxford Economics. 'The drag on the economy is predominantly tied to core inflation, which will temporarily be 0.2bps [basis points] higher than in the current baseline,' said its chief US economist, Ryan Sweet. 'Though the boost to consumer prices is modest, it still reduces growth in real disposable income and, by extension, consumer spending.' Inside the Fed's headquarters in Washington DC, Powell and his officials are patiently monitoring the data while deciding their next steps. But less than a mile away, one man is not prepared to wait. In a series of increasingly bitter attacks, Trump has publicly lambasted Powell for being 'too late' to cut rates, and claimed the Fed's inaction is costing the US economy. He has called on Powell (whom he first tapped to be Fed chair in 2017) to quit, and unnerved Wall Street by raising the prospect of firing him. Bharat Ramamurti, former deputy director of the national economic council under Joe Biden, said: 'If you replace Jay Powell with someone who is clearly doing whatever Donald Trump wants them to do, expectations about what inflation is going to do in the long run are going to spike and that's going to create a real problem for the Fed in the long term.' The supreme court signaled it views the Fed chair as legally shielded from presidential removal, describing the central bank as a 'uniquely structured, quasi-private entity' in a May ruling about two of Trump's other firings. Trump is 'highly unlikely' to fire Powell, he has asserted, before floating one reason he might have to go: a $2.5bn renovation of the Fed's buildings. 'I mean, it's possible there's fraud involved,' the president claimed. Powell has reportedly asked the central bank's inspector general to review the project. Powell is due to finish his term in May, and has stressed he will remain in post until then. Advocates of the Fed's independence insist the more important question is not whether the president can remove him before then, but if he should. 'Once you no longer have the check of the central bank, which can raise interest rates as needed to curb inflation, you really start to raise the specter of runaway costs, runaway inflation, and it makes the US economy less attractive for investors domestically and abroad,' said Ramamurti. Inflation is 'right on track', according to his administration. Economists are already concerned it is tilting off course – and Trump won't rule out taking action that critics warn would shunt it off the rails altogether.

Trump steps up attacks on Fed's independence amid interest rates row
Trump steps up attacks on Fed's independence amid interest rates row

Yahoo

time17 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump steps up attacks on Fed's independence amid interest rates row

Donald Trump called on top Federal Reserve officials to seize control from its chair, Jerome Powell, if he fails to cut interest rates, stepping up his extraordinary attacks on the central bank's independence. The US president called Powell 'a stubborn MORON' in a series of critical social media posts on Friday, days after the Fed held rates steady for the fifth consecutive time. It comes as Trump faces heightened questions over the impact of his aggressive economic policy, and the White House presses forward with plans for a fresh wave of tariffs next week. Hours before the federal government released data which underlined a significant deterioration in the jobs market, Trump again broke with precedent to pin blame on the Fed – and urge it to change course. 'Jerome 'Too Late' Powell, a stubborn MORON, must substantially lower interest rates, NOW,' Trump wrote on Truth Social, his social network. 'IF HE CONTINUES TO REFUSE, THE BOARD SHOULD ASSUME CONTROL, AND DO WHAT EVERYONE KNOWS HAS TO BE DONE!' Related: Divided Fed leaves interest rates unchanged despite Trump pressure The Fed chair does not unilaterally set interest rates, which are decided by its rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee. Presidents typically respect its independence, leaving the central bank to make an objective decision – without political interference – about the best policy on interest rates for the US economy. 'Too Little, Too Late. Jerome 'Too Late' Powell is a disaster,' Trump wrote, minutes after Friday's lackluster jobs report. 'DROP THE RATE! The good news is that Tariffs are bringing Billions of Dollars into the USA!' Powell has repeatedly argued that the best approach for the Fed right now is to wait and see the impact of Trump's aggressive tariff strategy before cutting rates. But Trump has increasingly used the Powell, whom he appointed during his first term, as something of a piñata – repeatedly accusing him of damaging the US economy. Two members of the Fed's rate-setting committee dissented from its other policymakers' call to hold rates steady this week, and – to the president's delight – published their reasons on Friday. 'STRONG DISSENTS ON FED BOARD,' Trump wrote, claiming: 'IT WILL ONLY GET STRONGER!' By Friday evening, however, Trump's tone appeared to have changed as he told Newsmax during an interview that Powell will 'most likely' stay in his position. Trump said he would remove Powell 'in a heartbeat' and said the Fed's interest rate was too high but added that others have said Powell's removal would 'disturb the market'. 'He gets out in seven or eight months and I'll put somebody else in,' Trump said. On Friday afternoon, another member of the committee abruptly resigned. Adriana D Kugler, whose term was set to expire in January, announced she would step down next week. She did not provide a reason for the move, and will return to Georgetown University as a professor in the fall. 'I am especially honored to have served during a critical time in achieving our dual mandate of bringing down prices and keeping a strong and resilient labor market,' Kugler said in a statement. Her resignation creates a vacancy for the White House to fill. Reuters contributed reporting Sign in to access your portfolio

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