
S&P flat as investors focus on trade developments
The S&P 500 was flat in choppy trading on Wednesday after the week's strong start on the back of encouraging inflation data and the U.S.-China tariff truce, as investors turned their attention to global trade developments.
Eight of the 11 major S&P sectors were trading lower, although a 0.5% advance in information technology helped stave off larger losses.
Most megacap and growth stocks ticked up, with Nvidia leading the charge with a 2.1% jump. Advanced Micro Devices gained 5.4% after the chip designer approved a new $6 billion share buy-back program.
As President Donald Trump secured $600 billion in commitments from Saudi Arabia during his tour of the Gulf states, a number of U.S. technology firms announced artificial-intelligence-related deals in the Middle East on Tuesday.
At 10:00 a.m. the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 29.97 points, or 0.07%, to 42,170.40, the S&P 500 gained 1.61 points, or 0.03%, to 5,888.16, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 50.26 points, or 0.26%, to 19,060.35.
U.S. stocks have been buoyed since the weekend, when the United States and China hit pause on their fierce tariff dispute, signaling a joint effort to stave off a global economic downturn.
S&P 500, Nasdaq rise on trade optimism after soft inflation data
The U.S. will temporarily lower the extra tariffs it imposed on Chinese imports to 30% from 145% for three months, while Chinese duties on U.S. imports will fall to 10% from 125% in the same period.
'While there are undoubtedly still uncertainties and details to iron out with the trade negotiation with China, the easing of tensions is apparently enough for the markets,' said Rick Gardner, chief investment officer at RGA Investments, in e-mailed comments.
'(Markets) are typically forward-looking and are pricing in an environment where the U.S. and China are able to trade with each other,' he said.
Including the day's gains so far, the S&P 500 has swung back into positive territory for the year, a milestone not seen since late February. However, the benchmark index is more than 4% off the record peaks it hit earlier this year.
A 90-day tariff pause announced on April 9 for countries other than China, along with solid earnings reports and a limited U.S.-UK trade agreement last week, helped the benchmark indexes claw back.
Tuesday's data showed U.S. consumer prices rebounded moderately in April, with headline inflation rising 0.2%, compared with economists' estimate of a 0.3% increase and versus a 0.1% drop in March.
U.S. Federal Reserve Vice Chair Philip Jefferson said recent inflation data indicated progress toward the central bank's 2% target, yet the outlook remained uncertain as potential new import taxes could elevate prices.
As earnings season draws to a close, results from retail giant Walmart will be on the radar later in the week.
American Eagle Outfitters dropped 5.9% after the apparel company withdrew its annual forecasts, citing economic tariff-fueled uncertainty.
Declining issues outnumbered advancers by a 1.68-to-1 ratio on the NYSE, and by a 1.5-to-1 ratio on the Nasdaq.
The S&P 500 posted two new 52-week highs and six new lows, while the Nasdaq Composite recorded 40 new highs and 48 new lows.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Express Tribune
13 hours ago
- Express Tribune
EPA proposes higher biofuel blending
Listen to article President Donald Trump's administration on Friday proposed to increase the amount of biofuels that oil refiners must blend into the nation's fuel mix over the next two years, driven by a surge in biomass-based diesel mandates. After months of lobbying on the issue, the biofuels industry welcomed the move, which also included measures to discourage biofuel imports. The US Environmental Protection Agency proposed total biofuel blending volumes at 24.02 billion gallons in 2026 and 24.46 billion gallons in 2027, up from 22.33 billion gallons in 2025. Under the Renewable Fuel Standard, refiners are required to blend large volumes of biofuels into the US fuel supply or purchase credits, called RINs, from those that do. Small refiners can apply for an exemption to the requirements if they can prove the obligations would cause undue harm. The proposal is driven in part by an increase in biomass-based diesel requirements. EPA set a quota of 7.12 billion biomass-based diesel RINs for 2026 — a measurement of the number of tradable credits generated by blending the fuel. It said it projected that mandate would lead to the blending of 5.61 billion gallons. The EPA expressed the biomass-based diesel requirement in billion RINs in accordance with the agency's proposal to reduce the number of RINs that could be generated from imported biofuels. After accounting for the reduction for imported biofuels, the EPA said it projected the number of RINs generated for biomass-based diesel would be 1.27 per gallon in 2026 and 1.28 RINs per gallon in 2027. Previously, the EPA projected the average gallon of biomass-based diesel generated 1.6 RINs.


Express Tribune
13 hours ago
- Express Tribune
Boeing resumes China deliveries
Listen to article Boeing delivered a new 787-9 aircraft to China's Juneyao Airlines on Saturday, Chinese media outlet Yicai reported, as trade tensions between Beijing and Washington ease. The delivery comes two days after a Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner with 242 people on board crashed in a fireball shortly after takeoff in western India. The US aerospace giant had suspended new aircraft deliveries to China in April as President Donald Trump's tariff war escalated between the world's two largest economies. Boeing said at the end of May that deliveries would resume this month after the tariffs were temporarily scaled back for 90 days. China and the US concluded two days of negotiations in London on Tuesday to resolve key trade issues in the two superpowers' bruising tariff war, where negotiators from Washington and Beijing agreed on a framework covering tariff rates.


Business Recorder
14 hours ago
- Business Recorder
Copper, other metals drop
LONDON: Prices of copper and other industrial metals fell on Friday, weighed down by a stronger dollar as investors sold risky assets after Israel attacked Iran. Benchmark three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange shed 1.3% to $9,573 a metric ton in official open-outcry trading, the weakest since June 3. The dollar index climbed and world stock markets tumbled after Israel launched a large-scale military strike on Iran. A firmer dollar makes commodities priced in the US currency more expensive for buyers using other currencies. 'The market is de-risking on copper and aluminium,' said Alastair Munro, senior base metals strategist at broker Marex. 'The key now will be whether the risk managers in the USA start to knock on the money managers' door saying you've got to reduce risk ahead of the weekend.' US Comex copper futures dropped 2.1% to $4.74 a lb, bringing the premium of Comex over LME copper to $875 a ton. Munro said much of the selling was by Commodity Trade Advisor (CTA) investment funds, which are largely driven by computer programs, while Chinese participants emerged at the lows to do some buying. In China, the most-traded aluminium contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) gained for the third straight day, up 0.4% at 20,425 yuan per metric ton, outperforming other SHFE metals. 'Aluminium, compared with the other metals, has been performing rather strongly recently as demand from the domestic market has been robust, while SHFE stocks have been declining,' a Hangzhou-based analyst from a futures company said. Aluminium stocks in SHFE warehouses fell to 110,001 tons in the week ended June 13, the lowest since February 2024, having tumbled by 54% since late March. Among other metals, LME aluminium gave up 1.2% in official activity to $2,486.50 a ton, zinc fell 1.8% to $2,594, lead slipped 0.6% to $1,984 and tin dropped 0.8% to $32,400, while nickel rose 0.2% to $15,170.