US stock futures rise after two weeks of bruising losses

Published on 2024-04-24 Updated on 2024-11-04

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U.S. stock index futures rose in evening deals on Sunday, as Wall Street attempted a recovery after clocking two straight weeks of steep losses on a technology rout and waning expectations of interest rate cuts.

Sentiment remained fragile with the first-quarter earnings season set to pick up this week, especially with reports from Wall Street’s biggest tech stocks due through the week.

The collapse of the industry caused by the decline of chip manufacturing stocks has led to a sharp drop in the Wall Street index in the past two weeks. However, this has also brought some opportunities to buy on dips in the industry. Just like investors can monitor the stocks of the industry in advance, once the opportunity arises, they can use the multi-asset trading broker BiyaPay to directly deposit U into US dollars, without the need for offshore accounts to invest directly on the platform. Of course, they can also bind the offshore account of Jiaxin Wealth Management in BiyaPay, withdraw US dollars to Jiaxin for investment, and withdraw on the same day without affecting the market.

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S&P 500 Futures rose 0.3% to 5,107.75 points, while Nasdaq 100 Futures rose 0.4% to 17,254.50 points by 19:19 ET (23:19 GMT). Dow Jones Futures rose 0.2% to 38,295.0 points.

Tech earnings eyed as Wall St nurses steep losses

Focus now turns to upcoming quarterly earnings from some of Wall Street’s biggest tech titans, due later in the week.

Four of the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks are set to report earnings this week, with Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) on Tuesday, Facebook owner Meta Platforms Inc (NASDAQ:META) on Wednesday, followed by Microsoft Corporation (NASDAQ:MSFT) and Google owner Alphabet Inc (NASDAQ:GOOGL) on Thursday.

The tech sector was nursing steep losses over the past week, especially as middling earnings from chipmaking bellwethers ASML (AS:ASML) Holding (NASDAQ:ASML) and TSMC (NYSE:TSM) spurred concerns that artificial intelligence will only provide a limited boost to the sector.

NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ:NVDA) in particular was the worst-hit among its peers, plummeting 10% on Friday to a near two-monht low.

This spurred a decline in U.S. stock benchmarks. The S&P 500 fell 0.9% on Friday to 4,967.23 points, while the NASDAQ Composite slid 2.1% to 15,282.01 points. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.6% to 37,986.40 points, buoyed by buying in non-tech sectors such as financials, discretionaries and industrial stocks. American Express (NYSE:AXP) was a top boost to the Dow on strong first-quarter earnings.

The S&P 500 and the Nasdaq slid 3.5% and 6.1%, respectively, over the past week. The Dow was flat.

PMIs, PCE inflation awaited as rate cut bets wane

Markets were also awaiting a string of readings this week for more cues on the U.S. economy, especially amid waning expectations for a June rate cut by the Federal Reserve.

Purchasing managers index data for April is due later in the week, and will provide more cues on U.S. business activity.

More closely watched will be PCE price index data- the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge- which is due later in the week. The reading is also expected to show that inflation remained sticky in March.

Source: Investment Network
Editor: BiyaPay Finance