Latest News

US stock futures stable after recent rally; focus on large corporate earnings

U.S. index futures hovered around record highs Tuesday. After a rally the previous session, investors focused their attention on the major corporate earnings as well as the much-anticipated Federal Reserve decision that is expected later this week.

The third quarter earnings season is about to get busy for market participants. At least 172 companies from the S&P500 are scheduled to report results.

Popular names like UnitedHealth, UPS Royal Caribbean, D.R. Horton, JetBlue, PayPal and others are expected to report prior to the bell.

Later in the week, Microsoft, Alphabet Apple, Amazon, and Meta will all be expected to announce earnings.

The bull market rally on Wall Street, which celebrated its third anniversary this month, has been bolstered by artificial intelligence. Traders will be looking at how companies are monetizing technology to ensure that spending continues to increase.

Fed officials will discuss interest rates later today and the plans to end "quantitative tightening", which Jerome Powell hinted earlier. The central bank will announce its decision on Wednesday.

The U.S. Government has been closed for almost a month. This delays important economic data, and forces traders to rely solely on corporate and private announcements.

Various sources claim that Amazon and Paramount are the two latest companies to announce layoffs. Separately the Conference Board consumer confidence report and surveys from the Richmond Federal Reserve and Texas Federal Reserve are due to be released Tuesday.

The majority of major brokerages expect that the U.S. Central Bank will lower borrowing rates by 50 basis points before the end of the year.

At 5:44 am. At 5:44 a.m. ET, Dow E Minis dropped 10 points or 0.02%. S&P 500 E Minis dropped 3 points or 0.04%. Nasdaq E Minis rose 6.75 or 0.03%.

Rambus, a semiconductor licensee that missed quarterly profit targets, was among the top movers.

NextEra Energy gained 2,6% after it reached an agreement with Google to produce nuclear energy.

Qorvo's shares jumped by 10.2% following a report that rival Skyworks Solutions held discussions in recent months about buying the smartphone chipmaker.

Investors believe that U.S. president Donald Trump will reach a long-awaited deal with China on his Asia tour.

Trump just signed an agreement with Japan for the mining and processing of rare earths and critical minerals. U.S. listed shares of rare-earth miners like Trilogy Metals, NioCorp Developments, and NioCorp Developments fell 1% and 2.6% respectively. They looked set to continue Monday's losses after a U.S. China truce that halted tariffs and export restrictions on minerals.

The recent rally in gold and silver was largely due to optimism about trade deals. Gold Fields, Harmony Gold and other precious metals miners listed in the United States were affected by the declines. Both lost over 4%. (Reporting and editing by Pooja Deai in Bengaluru, Johann M Cherian)

(source: Reuters)