
Stocks rose on Thursday after strong quarterly results from two Big Tech players eased concerns that artificial intelligence progress would slow amid economic turmoil.
The climbed 83.60 points, or 0.21%, to close at 40,752.96. The gained 0.63% to end at 5,604.14, still slightly below its levels from before President Donald Trump's in early April. The increased 1.52%, to close at 17,710.74 and wipe out the decline it experienced since April 2.
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Investor fears that Trump's tariffs and a downturn in the U.S. economy would threaten the AI trade were assuaged after posted revenue in the first quarter, with Meta's Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg saying on an earnings call Wednesday that the business is "well positioned to navigate the macroeconomic uncertainty."
also reported in the fiscal third quarter. The company's executives said during an earnings call Wednesday that they expect capital expenditures to rise from here as they continue to expand data center capacity, remarking that "cloud and AI are the essential inputs for every business to expand output, reduce costs and accelerate growth."
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Those results sent Microsoft shares up 7.6%, while Meta shares advanced 4.2%. Information technology far outperformed the other 10 sectors in the S&P 500, up more than 2%.
"Few stocks are truly immune to Trump tariffs [and] trade war, but AI is a lot less impacted than investors currently believe," said Jed Ellerbroek, portfolio manager at Argent Capital Management. "We're early in a very steep growth curve right now, and that goes for AI infrastructure."
Softening economic data
Money Report
increased 241,000, topping the Dow Jones estimate of 225,000 and keeping Thursday's bullishness in check. That result stoked economic concerns after a disappointing gross domestic product report for the first quarter. The unemployment data also raises the stakes for April's nonfarm payrolls reading on Friday.
In the previous session on Wednesday, the S&P 500 and the 30-stock Dow posted gains in volatile trading, coming back from earlier losses. At the day's lows, the broad market index was down more than 2%, while the blue-chip Dow lost more than 780 points.
Traders were initially shaken by weak economic data , showing that GDP fell at an annualized pace of 0.3%. It marked the first quarter of negative growth since Q1 of 2022. Economists polled by Dow Jones had forecast a 0.4% gain.
Wednesday marked the final trading day in April, in which stocks were first whipsawed after Trump's "reciprocal" tariff announcement on April 2 and the subsequent suspension of the highest levies. At one point during the month, the S&P 500 briefly slipped into – falling more than 20% from its February record high – before recapturing some of its losses. The broad market index wound up ending Wednesday about 9% off its record close.
Still, the comeback couldn't save S&P 500 and the Dow from a losing April, as they slipped about 0.8% and 3.2%, respectively. The , however, advanced 0.9% in the period.
Stocks kick off May in the green
Stocks closed higher on Thursday, marking a positive first trading session for May.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 83.60 points, or 0.21%, to settle at 40,752.96. The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.63% and 1.52%, closing at 5,604.14 and 17,710.74, respectively.
— Sean Conlon
Kohl's fires CEO over personal relationship with a vendor
said on Thursday that the company fired CEO Ashley Buchanan following an investigation that found he advocated for deals with a vendor with whom he had a .
The company said Buchanan engaged in transactions with said person's company on "highly unusual terms."
— Brian Evans
Earnings from Apple, Amazon and more in focus after market close
Wall Street is closely watching and earnings due after Thursday's close, particularly after strong results from peer tech hyperscalers on Wednesday drove a tech comeback.
Apple's sales, earnings and product prices will be in focus , particularly given that U.S.-China trade tensions and tariff policies could hit the company particularly hard. Apple makes about three-quarters of its revenue from physical products that are mostly made in China, and the U.S. is its largest market.
Analysts are similarly looking to see if Amazon's retail business will see its margins and sales impacted by new tariff policies. They're also in the company's cloud computing business and investments in AI, particularly after Microsoft reported strong cloud growth and Alphabet's cloud revenue slightly disappointed estimates.
Other companies set to report after the close include , and .
— Pia Singh
Shares of Eli Lilly tumble 11% on Thursday
Shares of took a tumble on Thursday after the pharmaceutical giant due to charges related to a cancer treatment deal.
The stock was last down nearly 11%.
Eli Lilly now expects its adjusted fiscal 2025 earnings to come in between $20.78 and $22.28 per share. Previously, it had guided for between $22.50 to $24 per share.
Shares slid despite Eli Lilly posting a first-quarter earnings and revenue beat. The stock is now on pace to end the week 9% lower.
— Lisa Kailai Han
'The worst is probably behind us,' Sam Stovall says
CFRA Research's Sam Stovall thinks that the tide might be finally turning for the market.
"We retested the 5,500 level on the S&P 500," the firm's chief investment strategist told C온라인카지노사이트. "I think what it just says is that the worst is probably behind us, at least for this correction, and that we're going to climb our way back up to the February 19th high."
"Investors are rotating from first to worst, meaning that let's get out of those groups that held up the best during the decline like consumer staples, healthcare, utilities, and let's gravitate toward those groups that were beaten up the most, in particular communication services, consumer discretionary and technology, because they are the ones likely to benefit the most from the recovery," he also said.
The S&P 500 sat more than 8% below its 52-week high, as of afternoon trading Thursday. That's a stark turnaround in declines from early last month, when the broad market index , or a decline of more than 20% from its recent peak.
— Sean Conlon
Fear may bring about market outperformance, UBS says
The market may return better-than-average gains over the next several months, if history is a guide, according to UBS.
"We tend to see above-average returns when investors are pessimistic and fearful, as they are today," wrote Justin Waring, an investment strategist at UBS.
Waring noted that just 21.9% of investors expect the S&P 500 to be higher over the next six months, as estimated by the American Association of Individual Investors.
"In the past, when investors have been this pessimistic, markets have delivered a higher-than-average return over the following [six] months (8.7% vs. 5.8%) and the following 12 months (16.8% vs. 11.9%)," he continued.
— Sean Conlon
Trade deals 'likely to disappoint,' Piper Sandler says

Investors shouldn't get their hopes up regarding new trade agreements between the U.S. and other countries, according to Piper Sandler.
"We believe these 'deals' are likely to disappoint," Andy Laperriere, head of U.S. policy research at Piper, wrote on Thursday. "We doubt there are deals with many, if any, of our major trading partners in the coming weeks in which either Trump agrees to roll back his minimum and product tariffs or our trading partners agree to accept those tariffs."
Laperriere instead believes the much more likely outcome is one where the U.S. and respective countries issue press releases agreeing on topics for ongoing trade discussions.
"This keeps existing tariffs in place, additional product tariffs are still the base case, reciprocal tariffs remain on the table, and there is a good chance of a cycle of retaliation with at least some of our trading partners this summer," Laperriere said. "Uncertainty surrounding the outlook for tariffs will remain,"
— Sean Conlon
Nasdaq Composite comes back from its 'Liberation Day' losses
The is back to trading above its levels seen before President Donald Trump's early April tariff announcement, which had caused a steep market sell-off and a drop in momentum behind U.S. growth names.
The tech-heavy Nasdaq jumped about 2.2% on Thursday to around 17,825 in early afternoon trading, as strong quarterly results from and revived the AI trade.
The index had closed at 17,701.05 on April 2 before Trump's announcement hit, and ultimately plunged as low as 15,267.91 on April 8.
— Pia Singh
Stocks making the biggest moves midday
Check out some of the companies making headlines in midday trading:
- — Shares of the Facebook parent jumped about 4% after the company . Meta signaled ongoing advertising resilience and upped its capital expenditures range to reflect more data center infrastructure investments, even amid macroeconomic uncertainty. The company also issued in-line guidance for the current period.
- — The online home goods store gained nearly 2% after first-quarter results beat Wall Street's estimates on the top and bottom line. Wayfair notched an adjusted 10 cents per share on revenue of $2.73 billion, while analysts polled by LSEG forecast a loss of 22 cents per share on $2.71 billion of revenue. Wayfair also reported improvement in its gross profit and free cash flow metrics.
- — The dental products company added more than 2% after first-quarter earnings topped expectations. Align reported $2.13 in adjusted earnings per share, above the $1.99 per share projected by analysts, according to FactSet. The company also said the clear aligner products it sells in the U.S. are made in Mexico, not China, potentially limiting the impact of tariffs.
Read the full list .
— Brian Evans
Vaccine stocks lower on FDA plans to require placebo-controlled trials

Shares of vaccine manufacturers are under pressure Thursday after suggest new vaccines will need to undergo clinical trials with placebo controls before receiving Food and Drug Administration approval. This could impact the ability to roll out updated vaccine boosters for Covid-19, the reports said.
In a placebo-controlled study, patients need to be enrolled without knowing whether they will receive the drug being tested. This process is typical for new drugs, but has not been part of the process for seasonal updates to vaccines like the flu shot.
Leerink analysts led by David Risinger said "it difficult to fathom how it would be ethical to require placebo-controlled trials and how subjects would be motivated to enroll in a trial in which they are at risk of receiving placebo."
and shares were each down more than 2%. , and shares were all nearly 3% lower. Moderna shares tumbled 5%.
— Christina Cheddar Berk
'Charts are building a bullish case for more upside in the coming weeks,' Piper Sandler says
As the S&P 500 is on pace for its eighth consecutive day of gains, the market could be in store for more gains ahead, according to Piper Sandler.
"Beneath the headline turbulence, the Technicals reveal an increasingly constructive narrative. This bull market off the '22 lows likely isn't finished—it's just evolving," Craig Johnson, the firm's chief market technician, wrote in a Thursday note. "With the SPX rebounding off long-term support (4,835) and market internals in recovery mode, investors have an opportunity to capitalize on recent oversold extremes."
"As the headlines stir skepticism, the charts are building a bullish case for more upside in the coming weeks," Johnson added.
— Sean Conlon
7 stocks in the S&P 500 trade at new 52-week highs

Seven stocks in the traded at new 52-week highs on Thursday.
Of these names, five reached new all-time highs. This included the following:
- trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in May 2002
- trading at all-time high levels since its IPO in April 1997
- trading at all-time highs back to its IPO in 1983
- trading at all-time highs back to its Alcoa spinoff in November 2016
- trading at all-time high levels back to its IPO in January 1998
Just two stocks were trading at new 52-week lows on Thursday: Church & Dwight and Becton Dickinson.
— Christopher Hayes, Lisa Kailai Han
Tariff uncertainty has brought about 'one of the sharpest relative declines in sentiment vs growth indicators," JPMorgan says
Uncertainty surrounding rising trade tensions from President Donald Trump's tariffs has spurred a massive divergence between sentiment and growth, according to JPMorgan.
"Trade policy uncertainty has sparked one of the sharpest relative declines in sentiment vs growth indicators (i.e., sentiment has fallen but growth remains resilient for now)," analyst Arun Jain wrote in a note Thursday. "This has been the sixth largest divergence in 40 years based on our business cycle indicators (US QMI)."
To be sure, Jain noted that it's uncertain as to whether the drop in sentiment is an "overreaction" or that growth drivers are "being overstated by tariff related front-loading," seeing that the business cycle damage is still "unclear."
"History suggests such divergences often inflate defensive positioning further over the subsequent quarter with Quality / Low Vol outperforming," the analyst also said.
— Sean Conlon
Tesla shares rise after EV maker denies report about looking to replace Elon Musk

Shares of rose more than 2% in morning trading Thursday on the heels of the electric vehicle maker that the company's board was searching for a replacement for CEO Elon Musk.
"Earlier today, there was a media report erroneously claiming that the Tesla Board had contacted recruitment firms to initiate a CEO search at the company," Tesla chair Robyn Denholm wrote in a . "This is absolutely false (and this was communicated to the media before the report was published)."
Tesla shares previously fell 3% in overnight trading on Robinhood following the report.
— Amala Balakrishner, Sean Conlon
ISM manufacturing reading beats forecasts despite tariffs
Despite the looming threat of tariffs, factory activity in April was actually better than expected, according to an Institute for Supply Management report Thursday.
The , considered a key measure of broader economic health, edged lower to 48.7% on the month, down 0.3 percentage point from March but better than the 47.8% Dow Jones consensus forecast.
Any reading below 50% represents contraction for the sector, but historically a sustained level above 42.3% is considered consistent with economic expansion.
The survey showed declining readings for production, new export orders, imports and inventories. Employment nudged up 1 percentage point to 46.5% while prices also rose, but just slightly to 69.8%. Commentary in the report focused on negative impact from tariffs, with respondents indicating higher prices and profitability constraints.
— Jeff Cox
CVS shares rise after company beats earnings, hikes guidance

Shares of rose more than 8% in morning trading on Thursday after the company's beat analyst estimates.
The company also raised its earnings forecast for the full year, expecting adjusted earnings of $6 to $6.20 per share. That's up from its prior guidance of between $5.75 and $6 per share.
Thursday's move higher comes as the stock has already seen monster gains in 2025, with its year-to-date rise now sitting at more than 60%. The S&P 500, by contrast, has fallen more than 4% in the same period.
— Annika Kim Constantino, Sean Conlon
Stocks open higher
Stocks traded up Thursday morning.
The S&P 500 jumped 1% just after the opening bell, while the Nasdaq Composite gained 2%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 210 points, or 0.5%.
— Sean Conlon
McDonald's says 'negative comparable guest counts' responsible for sales slump

More evidence of consumers clamping down on spending even as fast food chains remain aggressive in their efforts to lure customers in with deals and value meals.
McDonald's reported a 3.6% drop in first quarter sales at U.S. restaurants during the latest quarter. That was the biggest same-store sales contraction at its domestic restaurants since the peak pandemic quarter ended in June 2020. It was also twice the drop Wall Street analysts had expected.
The fast food giant blamed "negative comparable guest counts" for the poor sales. That tone was a strikingly stark contrast to the "slightly positive" traffic that McDonald's saw at its U.S. restaurants in the fourth quarter of last year – even when the restaurant chain battled an E. coli outbreak across 14 states last October.
Those struggling sales led to the company's third revenue miss in four quarters as first quarter revenues of $5.96 billion missed Wall Street expectations of $6.09 billion.
— Robert Hum
Weekly jobless claims surge to 241,000, more than expected
Initial unemployment claims last week in a potential trouble sign for the wobbling U.S. economy.
First-time filings for unemployment insurance totaled a seasonally adjusted 241,000 for the week ending April 26, up 18,000 from the prior period and higher than the Dow Jones estimate for 225,000, the Thursday. This was the highest total since Feb. 22.
Continuing claims, which run a week behind and provide a broader view of layoff trends, rose to 1.92 million, up 83,000 to the highest level since Nov. 13, 2021.
— Jeff Cox
Truist upgrades ServiceNow, says stock can rally more than 25%

Truist expects a recovery rally ahead for .
Analyst Joel Fishbein upgraded the software stock to buy from hold and hiked his price target by $250 to $1,200. With that lift, Fishbein expects shares to surge 25.7% over Wednesday's close.
Shares popped more than 2% before the bell on Thursday following the upgrade. That's a bright spot for the stock, which has slid nearly 10% in 2025.
"We believe that NOW is a rare compounder that will be able to leverage their platform architecture to power durable growth via both upsell and cross-sell of products into the largest companies in the world," Fishbein wrote to clients in a Thursday note. "We see this year's pullback as an opportunity to put new money to work in shares."
Fishbein added that ServiceNow should be able to keep consolidating its information technology stack. On top of that, he said the company should be able to use both artificial intelligence and uncertainty in the macroeconomy to improve its positioning against other vendors.
— Alex Harring
Stocks making the biggest moves before the bell: Microsoft, CVS Health and more
These are the stocks moving the most in premarket trading:
- — The tech giant jumped nearly 9% after driven by its Azure cloud business.
- — The pharmacy retailer climbed 8% after reporting of $2.25 per share, which exceeded the $1.70 per share analysts polled by LSEG had expected.
- — Shares popped 6% after the social media company reported of $6.43 on revenue of $42.31 billion. This beat analysts' expectations of $5.28 per share on $41.40 billion in revenue, according to LSEG.
Read the full list of stocks moving .
— Lisa Kailai Han
McDonald's shares fall after company misses on revenue as U.S. same-store sales decline

Shares of were under pressure on Thursday morning after first-quarter revenue came in below expectations.
The fast food chain reported $2.67 in adjusted earnings per share on $5.96 billion of revenue. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were looking for $2.66 per share on $6.09 billion of revenue.
U.S. year over year, the biggest decline since the second-quarter of 2020.
The stock was last down about 1%. The company will hold a conference call at 8:30 a.m. ET.
— Jesse Pound, Amelia Lucas
General Motors cuts full-year outlook, expects a tariffs hit of at least $4 billion
slashed its guidance for the full year on Thursday after the company said earlier in the week that it was amid uncertainty surrounding President Donald Trump's auto tariffs.
The Detroit automaker now expects adjusted earnings before interest and taxes for the year to come in between $10 billion and $12.5 billion, it disclosed in a . That's down from its prior guidance of $13.7 billion to $15.7 billion.
Additionally, it expects its net income attributable to stockholders to be between $8.2 billion and $10.1 billion, down from the $11.2 billion to $12.5 billion that it previously called for.
GM's updated outlook includes an estimated tariff-related impact of between $4 billion and $5 billion, the company said. This comes after Trump's went into effect April 3.
— Sean Conlon
Planned layoffs eased in April as DOGE cuts plunged

The pace of announced layoffs fell in April as Elon Musk's efforts to pare down the federal workforce tailed off, according to a report Thursday from outplacement form Challenger, Gray & Christmas.
Planned job cuts totaled 105,441 for the month, down 62% from April though still the highest total for the month since 2020. Government job cuts specifically those related to Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency totaled just 2,731, bringing the annual tally to 281,452 after totaling 216,215 in March.
Technology led announced reductions in April. The year-to-date level for all sectors is at 602,493, the highest since 2020 and an 87% increase from the same period a year ago.
— Jeff Cox
Tariffs 'overshadow' self-help work at UPS, HSBC says
HSBC moved to the sidelines on , with analyst Parash Jain saying that President Donald Trump's tariffs "overshadow" the delivery company's self-help initiatives.
Jain downgraded the stock to hold from buy and slashed his price target by $35 to $105. Still, Jain's new target implies 10.2% in upside over Wednesday's close.
"We believe tariff uncertainties will remain an overhang on UPS' short-term demand outlook and share price," Jain told clients.
Jain's call comes after UPS this week said it would That workforce reduction comes as the delivery giant contends with macroeconomic challenges and an expected decline in volumes from , its largest customer.
UPS beat FactSet consensus expectations on both lines for the first quarter when reporting on Tuesday. But the company did not provide updates on its full-year outlook, citing uncertainty around the macro backdrop.
— Alex Harring
Japanese and Australian markets rise following choppy trade on Wall Street; most Asian markets closed for holiday
Japanese and Australian markets rose Thursday after swings on Wall Street overnight, as data pointing to a contraction in the U.S. economy in the first quarter heightened investors' fears of a looming recession.
Several Asia-Pacific markets, including South Korea, Hong Kong, China and India were closed for the Labor Day holiday.
Japan's benchmark climbed 1.13% to end the day at 36,452.30 while the broader Topix index edged 0.46% higher to 2,679.44. Earlier in the day, the Bank of Japan .
Yields on 10-year Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs) fell by 5.4 basis points to 1.259% following the central bank's decision. Meanwhile, yields on 20-year JGBs dropped marginally by 1.5 basis points to 2.184%.
The Japanese yen depreciated 1.06% to 144.58 per dollar.
Over in Australia, the benchmark ended the day 0.24% higher at 8,145.60. The movement comes ahead of Australia's elections on Saturday and marks the index's fifth consecutive session in positive territory.
— Amala Balakrishner
Tesla shares fall on report that company’s board opened search for CEO to replace Elon Musk

Shares of fell more than 3% in overnight trading on Robinhood following a that its board has initiated a search for a new chief executive to succeed Elon Musk.
The move comes as the electric vehicle giant's sales and profits have been declining rapidly.
Read the full story, .
— Amala Balakrishner
Stocks, dollar more likely to gain in Trump's next 100 days, Capital Economics says
President Trump's next 100 days in office are likelier to prove more favorable to U.S. stocks as the administration turns its attention to fiscal policy, Capital Economics' chief markets economist John Higgins wrote Tuesday.
Chaotic policy is the obvious answer to why stocks and the dollar did so poorly in Trump's first three months, but lofty valuations and Chin'a emerging threat to U.S. "dominance of AI" are others, Higgins wrote.
"How things pan out over the next hundred days in the U.S. and elsewhere will partly hinge on whether U.S. markets (Treasuries in particular) and Corporate America continue to act as effective guardrails against Trump's policies, as they appear to have done since April 2," the economist added. "If that is the case, it's conceivable that U.S. equities and even the dollar will recover ground as his administration's focus shifts from tariffs and trade to fiscal policy."
Successfully addressing government spending, however, depends on agreement on a fiscal package "fairly soon, given the risk of a debt ceiling crisis this summer."
— Scott Schnipper
Stocks making the biggest moves after hours
Check out some of the companies making headlines in extended trading:
- — Stock in the technology behemoth climbed more than 6% on the heels of third-quarter results on the top and bottom lines. Microsoft earned $3.46 per share on revenue of $70.07 billion, while analysts polled by LSEG were looking for a profit of $3.22 per share and $68.42 billion in revenue.
- — Shares of the Facebook parent advanced more than 5%. Meta beat analysts' first-quarter estimates when it reported earnings of $6.43 per share and revenue of $42.31 billion. Analysts surveyed by LSEG were expecting a profit of $5.28 per share on revenue of $41.40 billion. Meta also upped its full-year capital expenditures to $64 billion from $72 billion in order to continue investing in data centers to power artificial intelligence. Shares of gained more than 2% on the heels of Meta's spending plans.
- — Stock in the e-commerce company gained more than 2% following news that Amazon plans to in building out its last-mile delivery network in small towns.
Read the full list .
— Brian Evans
Stock futures rise
U.S. stock futures were higher on Wednesday, as investors parsed fresh corporate earnings from technology firms like Meta Platforms and Microsoft.
Futures tied to the S&P 500 added 0.5%, while Nasdaq 100 futures climbed 0.8%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures advanced 67 points, or 0.1%.
— Brian Evans