Markets Daily
Market Snapshot S&P 500 Futures 5,657.5 +1.26% Nasdaq 100 Futures 20,007.25 +1.77% US 10-Year Treasury Yield 4.143% -0.019 Bitcoin 96,196.56
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Markets Snapshot
S&P 500 Futures 5,657.5 +1.26%
Nasdaq 100 Futures 20,007.25 +1.77%
US 10-Year Treasury Yield 4.143% -0.019
Bitcoin 96,196.56 +1.71%
Stoxx Europe 600 Index 527.67 +0.04%
Market data as of 06:23 am EST. View or Create your Watchlist
Market data may be delayed depending on provider agreements.

Five things you need to know

  • Microsoft and Meta are on a tear in early trading on results that eased concern the trade war is hurting business. Microsoft was up 7.8% on better-than-expected quarterly sales and profit growth. Meta climbed 6.2% after a revenue beat and prediction for additional spending.
  • The strong tech earnings are setting the stage for US stocks to rally, with S&P 500 futures up more than 1%. Markets also got a boost from signs that President Donald Trump may be close to announcing the first round of trade deals
  • The Bank of Japan pushed back the timing for when it expects to reach its inflation target and halved its economic growth projection in a sign of heightened caution. The yen slid as much as 1.2%.
  • The US has received privileged access to new investment projects in Ukraine’s natural resources — a deal seen as critical to fostering Trump’s goodwill as his administration pushes to end the war.
  • Mastercard, Estee Lauder, Eli Lilly, Moderna and McDonald's are among the firms reporting before the opening bell. Apple, Amazon.com, Amgen, Airbnb and Reddit put out their results later in the afternoon.

On the new episode of Trumponomics: What does India stand to gain from the US trade war with China? Listen on Apple, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

Tandem moves

Global trade worries are spurring lockstep moves in US equities, a headache for stock pickers trying to beat an already unpredictable market.

Nearly three weeks into earnings season, a gauge of realized correlations between stocks in the S&P 500 Index stood at 0.6 as of April 30, more than twice its average at this point in quarterly reporting periods going back to 2011, data compiled by Bloomberg show. A correlation of 1 implies two assets are moving perfectly in tandem.

Earnings season is a time when stocks are more likely to go their own way, as investors react to disparate results and company outlooks. But worries over the looming effects of tariffs — which can hit companies’ bottom lines in addition to the global economy — have dampened those individual moves.

That creates a problem for active fund managers, who try to beat the market by finding companies trading at discounts to their peers. Nearly 38% of large-cap stock managers are outperforming their benchmarks in the month through April 28, compared to 54% over the first three months of the year, Morningstar Direct data showed.

“Elevated correlation has persisted, driven by the outsized influence of macro forces — including tariff headlines, central bank guidance, and key data points,” said Chris Murphy, co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna International Group. “Markets remain tightly tethered to macro signaling, limiting the usual dispersion we’d expect from earnings beats and misses.”

Active fund managers have famously underperformed their benchmarks throughout the years, while trillions of dollars poured into passive investments such as index funds. A majority of stock pickers last beat the S&P 500 in 2022, following a 13-year drought.

We’re just past the halfway point in the number of S&P 500 companies that have reported, with results from about 200 due in coming weeks. — Natalia Kniazhevich

On the move

  • Watch software, cloud and AI infrastructure stocks after the strong showing by Meta and Microsoft: Amazon (+3.8%), Oracle (+3.2%), Datadog (+4.3%) and ServiceNow (+1.9%). Arista Networks (+8.2%), Vertiv Holdings (+3.2%), Dell Technologies (+2.5%), Applied Digital (+2.9%), Celestica (+4.4%) and Broadcom (+3%).

  • Qualcomm drops 5.7% in premarket trading after the biggest maker of chips that run smartphones issued a tepid revenue forecast.

  • Robinhood Markets rises 3.1% as investors flocked to the retail brokerage to trade the wild market swings. —Subrat Patnaik 

The Stock Movers Podcast: Five minutes on the day's stock market winners and losers. Click here to listen on apple podcasts

Apple’s earnings day

Apple shares have clawed back a good portion of the ground they lost in the historic tariff-induced selloff experienced last month, but that doesn’t mean investors are in the clear.

The company’s results, due after the market close on Thursday, come at a period of extreme uncertainty for the iPhone maker. While tariff exemptions for smartphones and other electronics have so far allowed Apple to avoid the worst-case scenario, the situation remains in flux, clouding the company’s prospects.

“Exemptions gave Apple some breathing room, but it remains in the hot seat, and there’s still so much that’s so hard to predict,” said Kevin Cook, senior strategist at Zacks Investment Research. —Ryan Vlastelica

AI doubts

Nvidia just got a rare sell rating, with Seaport Global Securities warning that the benefit of artificial intelligence has been “priced in for now.”

The chipmaker’s largest customers “are all looking to design their own chips,” according to analyst Jay Goldberg, who said AI budgets are likely to slow in 2026. —Ryan Vlastelica

Word from Wall Street

“The risk is not that the US falls behind overnight. It won’t necessarily show up in next quarter’s earnings. Rather, it is that capital gradually begins to price the US like any other market.”
John Zito
Co-president of Apollo Global Management Inc.’s asset-management arm.
Zito warns the US is risking erosion of its dominance in capital markets

One number to start your day...

30%
That's how much Tesla's share price has dropped this year. Read more about the company's chair denying a report the board looked into replacing CEO Elon Musk.

What else we’re reading

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