الوسم: market

  • Stock market today: Live updates

    Stock market today: Live updates

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. 

    NYSE

    Stock futures were flat in overnight trading ahead of Tuesday’s high-stakes U.S. presidential election.

    Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 17 points. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq-100 futures inched lower by less than 0.1%.

    Palantir popped 13% in overnight trading on strong quarterly results and upbeat revenue guidance, while NXP Semiconductors fell on a soft outlook due to macro concerns.

    Stocks finished lower in Monday’s session as safe-haven U.S. Treasury yields declined. The Dow slumped more than 250 points, or 0.6%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell about 0.3% each.

    The latest poll from NBC News suggests the race is “neck and neck” between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. Close attention also remains on which party dominates Congress, given that a sweep by Republicans or Democrats could contribute to drastic spending changes or a big revamp of tax policy. Follow CNBC’s 2024 election live blog here.

    The results could have a significant effect on where stocks end the year, but investors may want to brace for some near-term choppiness. CNBC data going back to 1980 suggests the major averages gain between Election Day and the end of the year, but typically fall in the session and week after. Uncertainty over the results could lead to even more shakiness in the market.

    “The setup is still skewed to the positive and the bull cases is still intact, unless we get a new policy from a new political regime that looks like it’s going to be more austere,” Trivariate Research founder Adam Parker said Monday on CNBC’s “Closing Bell.”

    Beyond the election, investors await the Federal Reserve’s November rate decision due Thursday and fresh commentary from Chair Jerome Powell on the central bank’s policy moves going forward. Traders are pricing in 98% odds of a quarter-point cut following September’s half-point reduction, according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool.

    Earnings season continues Tuesday with results from Super Micro Computer and Yum Brands.

  • Stock market news for Nov. 4, 2024

    Stock market news for Nov. 4, 2024

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. 

    NYSE

    Stocks stumbled on Monday as investors geared up for the U.S. presidential election and a potential Federal Reserve rate cut later this week.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 257.59 points, or 0.61%, to close at 41,794.60. The S&P 500 dipped 0.28% to settle at 5,712.69, and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.33% to 18,179.98.

    Trading was choppy throughout the day. The Dow at one point fell more than 400 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq shuffled between gains and losses.

    Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

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    The Dow was down more than 400 points at its lows on Monday.

    Tuesday’s election results could play a pivotal role in where stocks finish off the year. The latest poll from NBC News shows a “deadlocked race” between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris.

    Lauren Goodwin, economist and chief market strategist at New York Life Investments, said investors appear to be trying to price in the relatively small changes in the perception of who is likely to win the election.

    “This election is too close to call. Neither I nor anyone else has any real edge on what’s likely to happen. So that makes the market’s moves kind of binary,” Goodwin said.

    Any market aftershocks may depend on which party takes control of Congress. Major legislative changes would be difficult to pass if control of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate is divided. A Republican or Democratic sweep, however, would likely be coupled with a White House victory for the same party, and could mean ambitious spending plans or a tax overhaul.

    A small rally for Nvidia helped stabilize the market for most of the day, but the stock closed well off its highs for the session. Shares finished up about 0.5% after S&P Dow Jones Indices announced late Friday that the chipmaker would replace rival Intel in the 30-stock Dow. The change, which takes effect at the end of the week, comes as Nvidia continues to rip higher while Intel languishes in the artificial intelligence race.

    Nvidia is up 174% year to date, while Intel has lost more than half its value in 2024.

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    NVDA vs INTC year to date

    Elsewhere, utility stocks weighed on the market after federal regulators rejected a Talen Energy request to increase nuclear power at a plant in Pennsylvania to provide more electricity for an Amazon data center. Stocks tied to fossil fuels and solar power both rose, however, and oil climbed 2%.

    Financials and health-care stocks were also weak areas of the market, as Goldman Sachs and UnitedHealth Group fell 1.5% and 1.7%, respectively, dragging down the Dow.

    Along with the election, Wall Street is also bracing for the latest rate decision from the Federal Reserve on Thursday. Traders are pricing in a 98% likelihood of a quarter-point rate cut at the conclusion of the central bank’s policy meeting, according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool. That would follow a half-percentage-point reduction by the central bank in September.

    The moves in stocks Monday came as safe-haven U.S. Treasurys rallied, suggesting that some investors may be reducing risk ahead of Election Day. The benchmark 10-year Treasury was trading at a yield of about 4.3% on Monday, down from roughly 4.36% on Friday. Yields on bonds move in the opposite direction from their price.

    — CNBC’s Sarah Min contributed reporting

  • Trump’s lead over Harris in betting market erodes as platforms tighten odds | US news

    Betting markets have narrowed significantly on the eve of Tuesday’s presidential election, eroding Donald Trump’s lead over Kamala Harris as Americans cast their vote.

    The former president and his allies have touted the betting market forecasts as more accurate than traditional polling in recent weeks, as the top platforms put him way ahead of Harris.

    As election day nears, however, Trump’s victory odds have faded, and Harris even retook the lead on one platform this weekend.

    Betting markets have surged in popularity during this election campaign, with prominent apps like Polymarket and Kalshi surging up the app stores.

    Many betting market forecasts for who was most likely to win the election also diverged from typical opinion polls. While the polls pointed to an incredibly close contest for the White House, a few weeks ago betting platforms put Trump clearly ahead.

    a graph showing election betting markets

    But Trump’s chances have apparently dwindled. Polymarket put them at 58% on Monday, down from 67% last week; Kalshi put them at 53%, down from 65%.

    Another platform priced Harris’s odds as greater than Trump’s for the first time in almost a month. The Democrat had a 53% chance of victory, according to PredictIt, which gave Trump a 51% chance.

    Bets in these markets are bids on political futures contracts. Buying a contract – like the prospect of a Harris, or Trump, presidency – drives the price of that contract, or the perceived probability of it happening, higher.

    Should you have turned to Polymarket on Monday, for example, and bet on Trump, you would receive $1 for every 58 cents you wagered if he wins the election. If you bet on Harris, on the same platform, on the same day, you would receive $1 for every 43 cents wagered if she wins.

    A striking poll in Iowa that unexpectedly put Harris ahead of Trump sent shock waves through America’s poll-watchers this weekend. Betting market experts say participants consider a range of factors when placing a wager, including the results of such surveys.

    Questions have been raised in recent weeks over activity in the betting markets. When it emerged that one man had wagered more than $30m on a Trump victory on Polymarket, both he and the platform stressed it was not an attempt to manipulate the market.

    “My intent is just making money,” the man, who called himself Théo, told the Wall Street Journal, claiming he had “absolutely no political agenda”.