Dow Jones futures rose modestly overnight, along with S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures. Apple flashed a big signal on earnings while Atlassian and Deckers made big, divergent moves.The stock market rally advanced Thursday though the indexes pared gains near the close on fresh Trump tariff threats.
The Dow Jones sold off Monday as Nvidia stock plunged on an artificial intelligence threat from China known as DeepSeek.
On Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) remained steady, hovering around 44,700, shedding around 130 points but holding steady through the midweek market session. The major equity index is currently near its all-time highs above 45,000, but stock traders still have a bit of work to do to push bids back into those record peaks.
The tech-led rout that gripped US equity markets on Monday left one corner of the market relatively unscathed: the Dow Jones Industrial Average.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq saw a positive start to the day with AI-related shares recovering from previous losses. Corporate earnings further stirred market volatility. The Dow Jones also experienced a slight upward move,
Stock futures are mixed Thursday morning as investors react to a barrage of earnings reports from major companies and important economic indicators.
The Dow Jones tumbled during the overnight session before Monday’s opening bell. Trade war fears are back on the table after Trump gets into a political scuffle with Colombia. Fresh rate cut hopes are bolstering equities from early week lows.
S&P 500 futures are falling 1.6%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures are dropping 0.9%. Nasdaq 100 futures are plunging 2.6%. On Friday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 141 points, or 0.32%, to 44,
Thursday's coverage included more tech earnings, focus on Trump's latest on potential tariffs and more analysis around Monday's DeepSeek Dive.
Wall Street’s superstars tumbled Monday as a competitor from China threatens to upend the artificial-intelligence frenzy they’ve been feasting on.
S&P 500 futures rise as Meta and Tesla gain, but Microsoft and Caterpillar drag the Dow. US stock market reacts to earnings, GDP data, and Fed outlook.
Historically, the Dow has performed better compared to the broader market. According to S&P Global, in the past 30 years up until June 2021, the Dow index returned approximately 11.16% compared to the market’s return of 10.6%. This growth is mainly due to the Dow’s stable, industry-leading companies that offer reliable dividends and returns.