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Investors wait for Nvidia to recover the dollar before stocks rise

Investors wait for Nvidia to recover the dollar before stocks rise

The major stock indexes rose on Wednesday as upcoming results by artificial intelligence leader Nvidia offset concerns about the Federal Reserve’s independence. Meanwhile, the dollar recovered after its previous session's decline.

After Donald Trump said that he would dismiss Lisa Cook, Lisa Cook's lawyer said she would sue him. Investors were concerned by Trump's remarks about the independence and stability of the U.S. Central Bank.

The yield curve steepened and interest-rate sensitive yields on two-year bonds fell to a nearly four-month-low as traders assessed the possibility that Trump could make more dovish Fed appointments.

The dollar was up 0.36% last session at 147.93 Japanese Yuen while the euro fell 0.48% to $1.1586.

The three main U.S. indexes are slightly higher. Nvidia's report on the second quarter, which is due to be released after the closing bell was seen as a test for the AI optimism, which has driven markets in the last couple of years.

"Trump's been on the Fed’s back from Day One and this (Cook's firing) is a continuation to that strategy." Jake Dollarhide is CEO of Longbow Asset Management, Tulsa.

Investors wonder if Nvidia will be able to continue to meet Wall Street's expectations. "My expectation today is that it will."

Investors have noted that technology shares, including some AI leaders, are tumbling this month.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 93.12 or 0.20% to 45,509.88. The S&P 500 rose 10.61 points or 0.16% to 6,476.31 while the Nasdaq Composite gained 33.25 points or 0.15% to 21,580.05.

Investors are closely monitoring the political risks in France. European stocks have recovered slightly from their previous day's drop. French assets were sold off on Tuesday due to concerns about the possible collapse of Prime Minister Francoise Bayrou's French government next month.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 0.49 points or 0.05% to 953.21.

The STOXX 600 pan-European index rose by 0.09%.

Market watchers have interpreted Fed chair Jerome Powell's remarks at the annual Jackson Hole Symposium last week as an indication that interest rate cuts may be coming. Fed funds futures are pricing 88% odds that a rate cut will occur in September according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

The outlook for U.S. rates will still depend on the strength of the labor market and inflation trends.

The yield on two-year U.S. Treasury bonds, which moves typically in line with interest rate expectations and was at 3.654% last, it was down about two basis points for the day. The benchmark 10-year yield increased to 4.289%, up from 4.256%.

The yield curve between 2-year and 10-year bonds was at its steepest point since April 22, when it reached 63.3 basis points.

U.S. crude climbed 0.79%, to $63.74 per barrel. Brent rose 0.62% to $67.64 a barrel.

(source: Reuters)