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S&P 500, Nasdaq clinch records for third time this week as optimism sweeps Wall Street
- Stocks closed at fresh records on Thursday after the release of June’s jobs report, which showed that unemployment eased to 4.1%.
- The S&P 500 (^GSPC) moved up about 0.8%, while the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) advanced 1%, pushing both to record highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) gained nearly 0.8%, or roughly 300 points.
- According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics report released on Thursday morning, the US economy added 147,000 nonfarm payrolls in June, more than the 106,000 expected by economists.
- However, analysts pointed out that much of the job growth lies in the public sector. Still, Wall Street expects the latest jobs print will be unlikely to sway the Fed to cut rates in July. Expectations have now shifted overwhelmingly to a decrease in September.
- Brian Rose, senior US economist at UBS Global Wealth Management, noted “the weakness in private payrolls, the participation rate, earnings, and sentiment surveys suggest that labor demand is deteriorating.”
- “We therefore maintain our base case scenario of 100bps in rate cuts starting in September,” he wrote in a client note.
- The stock market closed early on Thursday in observance of the Fourth of July holiday. The major averages will reopen on Monday.
- Bitcoin (BTC-USD) rose to hover above $109,000 per token on Thursday, increasing optimism among bulls that the token may be showing signs of a breakout.
- The world’s largest cryptocurrency has been trading range-bound over the past two months.
- Thursday’s move was encouraging to bulls, after bitcoin touched an all-time high just beneath $112,000 in May. Year-to-date the token is up roughly 16%.
- Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:
- Read more here.
- Microsoft (MSFT) and Nvidia (NVDA) could both hit $4 trillion in market value this summer, Wedbush analyst Dan Ives believes.
- Potentially, the “Magnificent Seven” members could reach $5 trillion in over the next 18 months, Ives told clients in a note on Thursday.
- “We believe tech stocks will have a very strong second half of the year,” he said. “Our bullish view is that investors are still underestimating the tidal wave of growth on the horizon from the $2 trillion of spending over the next 3 years coming from enterprise and government spending around AI technology and use cases.”
- Microsoft and Nvidia recently notched record highs after a rocky first half of the year for stocks more broadly.
- Other market watchers are more skeptical about the AI boom.
- Legendary short seller Jim Chanos told Bloomberg that the “ecosystem around the AI boom” is similar to the dot-com bubble.
- “But it is a riskier revenue stream because if people pull back, they can pull back CapEx very easily. Projects can get put on hold … and that immediately shows up in disappointing revenues and earnings forecast, if it happens,” Chanos said, per the report.
- “We’re not there yet, but that’s one of the risks out there that I think a lot of people are underestimating,” he added.
- Nvidia (NVDA) reached $3.92 trillion in market cap during intraday trading on Thursday, setting it on track to become the world’s most valuable company in history.
- Shares in the the AI chipmaker were up over 2% at one point in the morning, trading at $160.98 apiece.
- The current record market cap was set by Apple (AAPL), which notched a $3.915 trillion closing value in December. The iPhone maker’s value has dropped since then, as it struggled to catch up to its Big Tech peers on AI and contended with President Trump’s threat to hit its overseas-made products with tariffs.
- Meanwhile, Nvidia’s stock has seen a stunning comeback since May: Its most recent quarterly earnings report showed the chipmaker continuing to thrive, despite US restrictions on Chinese use of its chips. The stock has continued to notch fresh record highs since late June.
- The payrolls report showed more jobs were added in June — a sign that the US labor market was more resilient than anticipated in the final month of the second quarter.
- But Indeed senior economist Cory Stahle said the report was “not stormproof” and “might not be as solid as it seems on the surface.”
- The job gains were again concentrated in just a few industries, Stahle noted in an analysis out Thursday. Healthcare and social assistance, and state and local government employers accounted for 94% of the total.
- “The headline job gains and surprising dip in unemployment are undoubtedly good news, but for job seekers outside of healthcare & social assistance, local government, and public education, the gains will likely ring hollow,” Stahle wrote.
- Outside of those industries, employment growth has been “anemic at best”, he added, noting the duration of unemployment for the typical unemployed worker seeking a job continues to creep up.
- “There are real weaknesses in the market — including concentrated job gains, slowing wage growth, and falling participation — that have persisted for months, and there are scant signs of those concerns fading anytime soon,” he wrote.
- Gasoline prices hovered at their lowest level since 2021 heading into the July Fourth holiday, Yahoo Finance’s Ines Ferré reports.
- Read more here.
- Meta (META) shares climbed 1.2%, leading the “Magnificent Seven” stocks higher alongside Amazon (AMZN).
- The gain came after the Facebook parent’s stock was upgraded to Hold from an Underperform rating by Needham analyst Laura Martin.
- Martin cited strength in Meta’s labor productivity, measured by free cash flow per full-time employee.
- “Our upgrade to Hold is driven by our latest labor productivity research that shows that META has had among the strongest labor productivity metrics for the past 4 years,” she wrote.
- In its fiscal year 2024, Meta had a free cash flow of over $730,000 for every full-time employee. That was followed by Apple’s $663,457, while the average for big-cap companies covered by Martin was nearly $302,000.
- Martin said she remained at a Hold rather than a Buy rating partly due to the “uncertain” return on Meta’s growing capital expenditures, which have been driven by its investments in AI. Martin said “the larger the spending, the more likely there is waste, in our view.”
- US stocks rose on Thursday morning after a stronger-than-expected June jobs report that showed unemployment ticking down to 4.1%.
- The S&P 500 (^GSPC) moved up about 0.4%, while the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) advanced 0.6%, after both indices closed at fresh record highs on Wednesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) gained 0.3%.
- Tech led the gains in stocks Thursday, with Meta (META) and Amazon (AMZN) leading the “Magnificent Seven” Big Tech stocks higher. Meta was up over 2% after an analyst at investing firm Needham upgraded the stock to Hold from Underperform, citing its “strong” labor productivity.
- A stronger-than-expected June jobs report has traders scaling back bets on when the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next.
- Following the report, increasing bets on a July interest rate cut from the Fed reversed. Markets are now pricing in just a 5% chance the central bank lowers rates at its July meeting, down from the 24% odds seen a day prior, per the CME FedWatch Tool.
- Traders also grew more skeptical of a September move from the Fed. Markets are now pricing in a 78% chance the Fed cuts by the end of its meeting that m, down from a 94% chance seen a day prior.
- The June jobs report showed the US labor market remained more resilient than anticipated in the final month of the second quarter.
- The US economy added 147,000 nonfarm payrolls in June, more than the 106,000 expected by economists. The unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.1%. Economists had expected the unemployment rate to move higher, to 4.3%.
- In May, the US economy added 144,000 jobs while the unemployment held flat at 4.2%. Those figures were revised higher on Friday from a previously reported 139,000 job additions in May.
- Read more here.
- Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
- Datadog, Inc. (DDOG) stock jumped 11% before the bell on Thursday after it was announced it would be joining the S&P 500. Datadog, which makes monitoring and analytic programs, will join the S&P 500 on July 9, replacing Juniper Networks, which was acquired by Hewlett Packard Enterprise.
- Robinhood (HOOD) stock fell over 1% in premarket trading following OpenAI’s statement that Robinhood’s sale of “OpenAI tokens” will not give everyday consumers equity — or stock — in OpenAI, the company said in a post from its official newsroom account on X.
- Tripadvisor (TRIP) stock rose 6% before the bell following a report that activist investor Starboard Value has taken a stake of more than 9% in the travel review group.
- UK stocks and bonds bounced back from Wednesday’s sharp selloff as Keir Starmer said Rachel Reeves will retain her role as finance minister for many years to come.
- The British prime minister was attempting to calm speculation about a possible exit of the chancellor of the Exchequer, after he failed to back a tearful Reeves in parliament on Wednesday.
- The yield on 30-year UK bonds dropped 10 basis points to 5.32%, coming back from a 19 basis point jump on Wednesday. The FTSE 250, which lists UK-focused stocks, moved up 0.5%.
- US Treasurys were also coming back after getting caught up in the UK gilt turmoil. The benchmark 10-year yield (^TNX) edged down roughly 2 basis points to 4.27% early on Thursday morning, while the 30-year yield (^TYX) slipped to around 4.79%.
- Bloomberg reports:
- Read more here.
- US stock markets will close early on Thursday, July 3, and trading will end at 1 p.m. ET. They will stay shuttered on July 4 for the Independence Day holiday.
- The stock market will reopen on Monday, July 7, at 9:30 a.m. ET.
- After that, the remaining holidays in 2025 observed by the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq are:
- Read more here about the 10 stock market holidays in 2025.
- Software companies Synopsys (SNPS) and Cadence (CDNS) rose in premarket trading by over 5% after the US removed export restrictions on chip design software shipments to China, easing trade tensions between the two countries. China recently made concessions over its rare earth export controls.
- Synopsys, Cadence and Siemens said they will now restore access for their Chinese customers. These firms develop important electronic design automation tools used in chipmaking.
- The US also lifted licensing rules for ethane producers. Earlier restrictions were part of Trump’s response to China blocking rare earth exports, which had disrupted supply chains for cars, aerospace and defence industries.
- Reuters reports:
- Read more here.
- Oil prices slipped after posting their strongest gain in nearly two weeks, as investors monitored ongoing US trade negotiations and an upcoming OPEC+ meeting this weekend.
- Bloomberg reports:
- Brent (BZ=F) traded near $69 a barrel after surging by 3% on Wednesday, with West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) above $67. President Donald Trump said he had struck a trade deal with Vietnam, which would be just the third announced following agreements with the UK and China, before a July 9 deadline to reach accords.
- Crude has been buffeted in recent weeks, surging and collapsing along with perceived geopolitical risk in the Middle East, although volatility and volumes have fallen in recent days before Friday’s US holiday. Focus is returning to trade talks, and the associated tariffs that threaten oil demand, as well as to Sunday’s OPEC+ meeting, where the group is widely expected to agree on another bumper increase in supply quotas.
- “While trade optimism provided a boost to oil prices, the sustainability of this move will likely be short-lived,” said Warren Patterson, head of commodities strategy for ING Groep NV. “OPEC+ is set to decide on August output levels this weekend, and so the market will probably be cautious about carrying too much risk into the US long weekend.”
- Read more here.
