Stock Market Update

Last Updated: 04-Dec-25 14:00 ET | Archive

Get frequent stock market updates that focus on broad U.S. and international markets approximately every half-hour starting at 6 a.m. ET with foreign market and U.S. futures summaries and market briefs. Get up to speed on premarket activity such as stock specific news headlines, ratings changes, earnings, economic events, and futures as well as overnight developments from Asian and European equity and foreign exchange market activity. After the open, not only will our market briefing keep you updated on market action, data, and events, but we’ll also keep you abreast of sector and industry performance as well as market sentiment and flow. Shortly after the close, our final stock market update provides a concise review of the day’s market action and events and highlights key items that may have an impact on the stock market on the following trading day.


Market Snapshot
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

Industry Watch
Strong: Information Technology, Energy, Real Estate, Financials, Industrials, Communication Services
Weak: Health Care, Consumer Staples, Materials, Consumer Discretionary

Moving the Market

--Back-and-forth action ahead of next week's FOMC decision

--Mixed action across mega-cap names

 



Gold Edges Higher on Softer Jobs Data, Rate-Cut Bets Despite Steady Dollar
04-Dec-25 14:00 ET
Dow +3.58 at 47886.27, Nasdaq +28.65 at 23482.78, S&P +6.15 at 6855.86

[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.


Dow Edges Higher as Salesforce Leads Gains; UNH, Amazon, 3M Lag, Index Up 0.4% for the Week
04-Dec-25 13:30 ET
Dow +40.28 at 47922.97, Nasdaq +27.00 at 23481.13, S&P +7.36 at 6857.07

[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.


Muted action keeps major averages flattish
04-Dec-25 13:00 ET
Dow -2.76 at 47879.93, Nasdaq +29.99 at 23484.12, S&P +6.10 at 6855.81

[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:

  • Weekly Continuing Claims 1.939 mln; Prior was revised to 1.943 mln from 1.960 mln, Weekly Initial Claims 191K (Briefing.com consensus 220K); Prior was revised to 218K from 216K
    • The key takeaway from the report is initial claims dropped to their lowest level in nearly two years, which is an encouraging sign about the health of a labor market at a time when visibility remains reduced due to some missing Employment Situation reports from the BLS.
  • October Trade Balance DELAYED (Briefing.com consensus -$61.3 bln); Prior -$59.6 bln
  • September Factory Orders 0.2%; Prior was revised to 1.3% from 1.4%
    • The key takeaway from the report is that orders increased again in September despite a big jump in August with new orders for nondefense capital goods excluding aircraft, which is a proxy for business spending, jumping 0.9% for the second month in a row.

Meta surges on potential metaverse budget cuts
04-Dec-25 12:35 ET
Dow -48.32 at 47834.37, Nasdaq +9.22 at 23463.35, S&P +0.45 at 6850.16

[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.


Mixed reactions to this morning's earnings reports
04-Dec-25 12:00 ET
Dow -11.84 at 47870.85, Nasdaq +50.07 at 23504.20, S&P +8.22 at 6857.93

[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.

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