US stocks diverged on Tuesday after China upped the ante in its trade spat with the US, while investors digested the kickoff of third quarter earnings season from Wall Street’s banking giants.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose 0.5% after paring steep losses earlier in the session. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) also flipped into the green, rising 0.1%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) slipped 0.2%.
The mood is unsettled after stocks’ strong rebound on Monday, thanks to a fresh round of retaliation from Beijing to President Trump’s trade salvos. Its latest moves to target US shipping have undermined recently revived hopes that the US and China will avoid an all-out trade war.
China has placed sanctions on five US-linked units of South Korean shipbuilding firm Hanwha Ocean, effectively barring Chinese companies from doing business with them. Both countries also began charging special port fees on one another’s vessels on Tuesday in a bid for maritime dominance.
Also in focus is the third quarter earnings season, which kicked off in earnest on Tuesday morning with results from JPMorgan Chase (JPM), Citigroup (C), Goldman Sachs (GS), and Wells Fargo (WFC). Goldman and JPMorgan shares dipped even as their quarterly profits were boosted by a flurry of Wall Street dealmaking. Wells Fargo stock, meanwhile, jumped in early trading as the bank’s profit also surged.
With key data reports stalled by the government shutdown, investors and the Fed lack a clear view of the economy’s direction. The release of the September CPI consumer inflation report scheduled for Wednesday has been delayed to Oct. 24. Data on retail sales and producer prices are also expected to be pushed back.
The data blackout added weight to Chair Jerome Powell’s speech on Tuesday at the NABE annual meeting. In his remarks, the Fed chair stated that the central bank’s outlook for employment and inflation had not changed, implying that further Fed cuts are possible.
expected to provide insights into the Fed’s view of the economy and its thinking on monetary policy.
In the tech world, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) said it will provide Oracle’s (ORCL) cloud business with 50,000 AI chips. The move by Nvidia’s (NVDA) chipmaking rival is the latest in a recent slew of AI deals.
LIVE 22 updates
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Tariff tensions separate gold from crypto
Even as the White House calmed the rolling boil of China tensions down to a simmer on Monday, one asset remained scorching — gold (GC=F).
Yahoo Finance’s Hamza Shaban digs into what fueled this week’s rally in the precious metal:
Read more here in today’s takeaway from Morning Brief.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Source link