What to Watch Today
U.S. stock futures are rising, chasing another day of gains on Friday amid the best week for the market so far this year.
The S&P 500 is on track to snap a four-week losing streak as that index and the Nasdaq chase their seventh straight day of gains. All three of the major U.S. benchmarks are poised to notch their best week in percentage terms since late 2023, amid a sharp reversal in sentiment and marching recovery following a selloff that rocked global markets to start August.
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By
Jack Denton
U.S. stock futures chased another day of gains on Friday amid the best week for the market so far this year. Signs of a strong consumer in retail sales data and Walmart’s earnings have offset recession fears that rocked stocks earlier this month.
Futures for the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 45 points, or 0.1%, after the index rose 554 points on Thursday to finish at 40,563. S&P 500 futures gained 0.1% with contracts tracking the tech-heavy Nasdaq up 0.3%. The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note hovered below 3.91%.
The S&P 500 is on track to snap a four-week losing streak as that index and the Nasdaq chase their seventh straight day of gains. All three of the major U.S. benchmarks are poised to notch their best week in percentage terms since late 2023, amid a sharp reversal in sentiment and marching recovery following a selloff that rocked global markets to start August.
“Markets are basking in their own sun-kissed bullish August holiday mood now just 9 days after being in a deep freeze of pessimism,” wrote Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank. “It's been one of the more remarkable turnarounds in recent memory, not because it wasn't justified to some degree but because it has happened so quickly.”
While the last U.S. jobs report had investors fearing an unavoidable recession, this week ushered in an about-face. Strong U.S. retail sales data and standout earnings from Walmart on Thursday allayed concerns around the strength of the consumer and the economy more broadly. Better-than-expected weekly jobless claims only helped matters, with investor sentiment upbeat as economic worries fade and traders continue to see an interest-rate cut from the Federal Reserve as imminent next month.
“The consumer continues to propel the economy forward,” wrote Bill Adams, chief economist for Comerica Bank. “The solid growth of retail sales means the Fed is more likely to cut interest rates a quarter percent at the September decision than a half percent. The Fed will likely signal additional rate cuts are expected if inflation continues to moderate and the unemployment rate holds around four and a quarter percent.”
Stocks are heading into the end of the week on a hot streak with few major market catalysts looming to disrupt the mood, though investors will monitor a preliminary reading of consumer sentiment for August alongside data covering housing starts and building permits for last month.
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee will also deliver public remarks, which could add to the anticipation around Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s key speech at the Jackson Hole summit next week.
11 min ago
By
Sherry Qin, Dow Jones Newswires
Chinese shares ended mostly lower amid concerns about China's economy after a run of mixed data. Real-estate and consumer services stocks led the losses after July data showed that the economy is struggling to pick up momentum.
Home prices are falling at an accelerated rate despite recent easing measures. Poly Developments & Holdings dropped 0.4% and China Vanke was 1.6% lower. China Tourism Group Duty Free declined 0.6% and Songcheng Performance Development was down 1.7%.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index ended 0.1% higher 2879.43, the Shenzhen Composite Index shed 0.3% and the ChiNext Price Index was 0.1% lower.
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