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| Dow | 47886.27 | +3.58 | (0.01%) |
| Nasdaq | 23482.78 | +28.65 | (0.12%) |
| SP 500 | 6855.86 | +6.15 | (0.09%) |
| 10-yr Note | |||
| NYSE | Adv 1470 | Dec 1244 | Vol 382.0 mln |
| Nasdaq | Adv 2806 | Dec 1787 | Vol 4.90 bln |
| Strong: Information Technology, Energy, Real Estate, Financials, Industrials, Communication Services |
| Weak: Health Care, Consumer Staples, Materials, Consumer Discretionary |
--Back-and-forth action ahead of next week's FOMC decision --Mixed action across mega-cap names
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[BRIEFING.COM] The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (+0.12%) is in front of the major averages with about two hours to go on Thursday, up about 29 points.
Gold futures settled $10.50 higher (+0.3%) at $4,243.00/oz, supported by rising expectations of a Fed rate cut after softer U.S. employment data. A weaker dollar and persistent macro uncertainty added to safe-haven demand, keeping gold firmly bid.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Dollar Index is up less than +0.1% to $98.94.
[BRIEFING.COM] The Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.08%) is now modestly higher, up about 40 points, after spending a brief period this afternoon in the red.
A look inside the DJIA shows that UnitedHealth (UNH 333.37, -6.34, -1.87%), Amazon (AMZN 228.15, -4.23, -1.82%), and 3M (MMM 170.45, -2.64, -1.53%) are underperforming.
Meanwhile, Salesforce (CRM 248.68, +9.96, +4.17%) is firmly atop the standings.
The DJIA is now +0.43% higher week-to-date.
[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 (+0.1%), Nasdaq Composite (+0.1%), and DJIA (flat) have spent the entirety of the session in a tight range near their unchanged levels.
Today's action reflects the lack of directional catalysts that has led to some back-and-forth movement across stocks as the market awaits next week's FOMC decision.
Breadth figures are tight, and sector strength is a nearly even split, with six S&P 500 sectors currently holding gains.
Additionally, gains and losses are relatively narrow across most sectors.
The consumer discretionary sector (-0.9%) is a laggard as Amazon (AMZN 227.60, -4.78, -2.06%) slips below its 50-day moving average.
Mega-cap stocks are mixed today, which certainly helps keep things subdued at the index level. Meta Platforms (META 665.12, +25.52, +3.99%) is the standout, rising after Bloomberg reported this morning that the company is considering slashing its budget for its contentious metaverse group by up to 30% to focus on higher ROI AI prospects.
The Vanguard Mega Cap Growth ETF is flat for the day as several notable moves seemingly cancel themselves out.
NVIDIA (NVDA 183.69, +4.10, +2.28%) is one of the market's leaders that trades higher, helping the top-weighted information technology sector (+0.4%) shake off some early weakness.
Despite NVIDIA's gain, chipmakers are generally weaker today, sending the PHLX Semiconductor Index 0.5% lower. Intel (INTC 41.16, -2.60, -5.93%) is the weakest performer in the sector, facing some profit-taking after an outsized gain in Tuesday's session.
The market also had mixed reactions to the latest batch of earnings reports. Dollar General (DG 122.98, +13.09, +11.91%) and Salesforce (CRM 246.35, +7.63, +3.20%) trade higher after topping expectations and delivering upbeat guidance, while Snowflake (SNOW 235.37, -29.63, -11.18%) and Kroger (KR 63.18, -3.02, -4.57%) slip after issuing lighter guidance.
With no clear leadership and sector moves largely offsetting each other, the major averages remain locked in a narrow range as participants look for the next catalyst to break the stalemate.
Reviewing today's data:
[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 (flat), Nasdaq Composite (+0.1%), and DJIA (-0.1%) remain flattish amid a backdrop of mixed sector strength.
Though the day is relatively devoid of directional drivers, Meta Platforms (META 667.42, +27.82, +4.35%) continues to be a standout after a Bloomberg report that the company is considering slashing its metaverse unit budget by up to 30%, easing long-standing investor skepticism over the profit potential of Reality Labs initiatives. Over the first nine months of 2025, the segment posted an operating loss of $13.2 billion, widening from $12.8 billion a year earlier, primarily driven by ballooning R&D expenses on hardware like Quest headsets, immersive VR/AR development, and content creation amid tepid consumer adoption and high manufacturing costs
The potential budget cuts signal a strategic pivot, freeing up billions to reinvest in higher-ROI AI projects that are proving more effective at driving revenue and profits.
[BRIEFING.COM] The major averages remain little changed from their opening values at midday.
Most sectors hold modest gains and losses against a backdrop of nearly evenly split sector strength, though the consumer staples sector (-1.2%) is emerging as a laggard.
A majority of its components trade lower, with Kroger (KR 62.13, -4.07, -6.15%) now the worst-performing S&P 500 name after beating EPS expectations but issuing just in-line guidance for FY26.
Ironically, the sector is also home to today's best-performing S&P 500 name, Dollar General (DG 122.21, +12.32, +11.21%). The company posted a strong Q3 beat-and-raise, with net sales up 4.6% to $10.6 billion and same-store sales growth of 2.5% driven by traffic, aligning with robust results from discount peers Dollar Tree (DLTR 116.69, +3.77, +3.34%) and Five Below (FIVE 163.24, +0.10, +0.06%) amid consumers prioritizing value in a pressured environment.