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Wall St reaches new highs thanks to tech earnings and US-China trade optimism

Wall Street's major indexes closed at record highs on Monday for the second consecutive day as investors were optimistic about the prospects of a U.S. China trade deal. They also looked forward to an exciting week that will include high-profile earnings from the technology sector and the widely anticipated U.S. rate cut.

U.S. president Donald Trump and his Chinese equivalent Xi Jinping will meet on Thursday in order to decide on a plan that could pause the tougher U.S. duties and China's export restrictions on rare earths. This would ease market jitters about a possible trade war, and send Wall Street's VIX "fear gauge", to a month-low.

During his weekend TV appearances Scott Bessent, U.S. Treasury secretary, spoke about the agreements reached after two days of talks on trade in Malaysia. These included China purchasing U.S. soya beans and rare-earths.

Scott Wren of the Wells Fargo Investment Institute, St. Louis Missouri, commented that Bessent's remarks, along with the upcoming summit, boosted expectations for a easing of U.S. China tensions.

The earnings of five of the "Magnificent Seven", namely Microsoft, Apple Alphabet Amazon and Meta, will be released later this week. This will test the durability of the rally in the stock market, which is largely based on the optimism surrounding growth and capital expenditures relating to artificial intelligence.

Wren said that "the market expects to see confirmation of all the AI CapEx, revenues and profits coming from AI," with five out of seven Mag Seven reports reporting this week.

Preliminary data shows that the S&P 500 rose 82.92, or 1.2%, to 6,874.61 while the Nasdaq Composite grew 431.22 or 1.86% to 23,636.09. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 333.87, or 0.71% to 47,540.99.

Communication services, consumer discretionary, and technology are all major S&P 500 sectors that have seen a sharp rise. Materials and consumer staples were the laggards.

The Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index has reached a new record high. Qualcomm's shares soared after the company announced two AI chips that will be available in data centers next year. Nvidia, the leader in AI chips, also rose.

On the same day, shares of Chinese companies listed in the U.S., including Alibaba Group Holdings, JD.com Holdings, PDD Holdings, and Baidu, also rose.

FED RATE FULLY PRICED IN

The Federal Reserve's rate-cutting plans are all but set after last week's lower inflation figures. Investors will be watching Jerome Powell for any clues about a December cut as the U.S. shutdown delays key data releases.

Keurig Dr Pepper shares rose after raising $7 billion in order to finance the purchase of Dutch coffee giant JDE Peet’s. Lululemon's shares rose after it announced a partnership to launch a clothing collection with the National Football League.

Janus Henderson's shares rose after the company confirmed that it had received an acquisition offer from Trian and General Catalyst.

After President Javier Milei won the election, shares of Argentine firms listed in the U.S. soared. Reporting by Sinead carew in New York and Pranav Kashyap in Bengaluru. Editing by Pooja desai, Devika syamnath, and Richard Chang.

(source: Reuters)