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Wall St. mixed as markets assess commodity sales and earnings

S&P 500 and Nasdaq sawsawed back and forth between gains and losses Monday as the markets took in a sharp drop in precious metals. This was at the beginning of a busy week that would include corporate earnings and important?economic? data.

Silver and gold both fell by up to 10%, before recovering some of their losses. The CME Group increased margin requirements after a historic drop on Friday. U.S. listed gold and silver miner companies pared losses to trade higher.

Jim Baird is the chief investment officer at Plante Moran Financial Advisors.

Last week, the metals market plunged after U.S. president Donald Trump named Kevin Warsh to be the next Federal Reserve Chair?to succeed Jerome Powell. This was a decision that investors saw as hawkish.

The time was 09:46 am ET. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 0.48% at?49129.46 ET. The S&P500 gained 0.14%, reaching 6,948.69. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.07% at 23,447.57.

The VIX volatility index rose to 17.45 after a choppy week last week, which was triggered by mixed megacap earnings and increased policy uncertainty resulting from Warsh’s nomination.

Energy company shares fell after Trump announced that Iran was "seriously" talking with Washington. This signaled a de-escalation of tensions and eased supply disruption concerns.

Exxon Mobil fell by 1.6% and Chevron by 1.6%. The S&P Energy Index dropped the most at 1.8%.

Bloomberg News reported that the Trump administration had launched a $12 Billion stockpile of minerals to counter China.

Nvidia, Tesla and other tech mega-caps all fell. Nvidia was down over 2%. Meta lost 1.1%.

Microsoft shares recovered on Friday from their worst weekly performance since March 2020 after cloud revenue disappointed. This shows that investors are becoming more sensitive to capital spending plans, and Big Tech is under pressure to justify its record-breaking expenditures with meaningful returns.

Baird stated that "you're seeing investors be more selective...and you're starting to see companies start warning a bit on earnings or where investors may be reassessing expectations for growth."

Disney's stock fell 6%, despite its first-quarter earnings exceeding Wall Street expectations.

The markets are headed into another busy week of tech earnings. 128 companies from the S&P 500 will be reporting, including Alphabet and AMD.

This week, the focus will be on the?JOLTS, ADP nonfarm payrolls and hiring, as well as PMI figures.

The U.S. is now in a?short shutdown' on Saturday, after Congress failed approve a deal that would have funded a large number of government operations.

The House of Representatives?took up a bill to lift a partially shutdown. A final vote is expected on Tuesday.

While geopolitical tensions caused some selloffs, the S&P index posted gains for January. It was the first time the S&P had crossed 7,000 points. The index reached record levels in January, thanks to resilient earnings and a continued appetite for AI-driven expansion.

(source: Reuters)