Stocks were slightly lower in late trading Thursday after a closely watched inflation report revived concerns about the impact that tariffs are having on the economy.
The S&P 500 (SPX) and Nasdaq Composite (IXIC) were fractionally lower recently, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) slipped 0.1% Stocks were coming off a winning session on Wednesday, when the benchmark S&P 500 closed at a record high for the second straight day, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq finished at a record for the fourth time in the last five sessions. The Dow entered today’s session just 0.2% away from its first new high since December.
Stocks got a boost earlier this week from consumer price data that showed inflation held steady in July, news that reinforced market expectations that the Federal Reserve will be in a position to cut interest rates at its next policy meeting in September. This morning, however, the Producer Price Index report showed that wholesale inflation in July was considerably hotter than economists had expected. The latest inflation news tempered, at least temporarily, the hopes for rate cuts, as the Fed would be reticent to adjust policy if inflation pressures are building.
Shares of the world’s largest technology companies, which have an outsized influence on the broader market, were mostly higher in recent trading. Amazon (AMZN) shares were up 3%, while Nvidia (NVDA), Microsoft (MSFT), Alphabet (GOOG), Meta Platforms (META) and Broadcom (AVGO) also inched higher. Tesla (TSLA) shares fell 1%, while and Apple (AAPL) ticked lower.
Among the big movers today, Deere (DE) shares dropped 6.5% after the farm machinery maker released its quarterly results, while Coach parent Tapestry (TPR) tumbled 15%, pacing S&P 500 decliners, after a disappointing earnings report.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury, which affects borrowing costs on a wide array of consumer and business loans, was at 4.29% recently, up from 4.20% before the inflation numbers were released. The yield fell as low as 4.18% last week, its lowest level since early May, as market expectations for interest rate cuts by the Fed increased after a weak July jobs report.
Bitcoin was trading at $118,200, after surging to a record high overnight of $124,500, surpassing the previous high of $123,200 set about a month ago. Shares of major bitcoin buyer Strategy (MSTR) were down more than 4% in recent trading and were among the big decliners in the Nasdaq 100.
The U.S. dollar index, which measures the performance of the dollar against a basket of foreign currencies, was up 0.4% at 98.21, after hitting its lowest level in nearly three weeks yesterday.
West Texas Intermediate futures, the U.S. crude oil benchmark, rose 2.3% to $64.05 per barrel, rebounding after a two-week slump that had taken prices to their lowest levels since early June. Gold futures were down 0.7% at $3,385 an ounce.
There Are Warning Signs in the Retail Sector
1 hr 5 min ago
Retail spending was solid in July, according to new data. But will it be enough to quell concerns about tariffs and inflation?
Retail sales, exclusive of car and gas spending, rose 1.5% from June to July, reversing a 0.3% decrease from May to June, the National Retail Federation said this week ahead of government retail data due Friday. Retail spending is a closely watched measure of consumer financial health; economists expect Friday’s report to show July sales up 0.5% from June, according to a Wall Street Journal survey.
Sales for the month rose 5.9% year-over-year, but the trade group said it was difficult to determine what drove up spending. Retail sales were relatively weak in June, NRF said, while back-to-school spending and a longer Prime Day may have inflated July’s numbers, Bank of America said.
David Paul Morris / Bloomberg / Getty Images
Executives at a range of companies have hinted at cautious consumers during the second-quarter earnings season. Wall Street analysts have suggested that shoppers have continued to spend, but sought opportunities to trade down to cheaper versions of desired items.
“It is possible some of the increase in spending was due to retailers passing through current or prospective tariff increases onto customers,” Bank of America wrote in an analysis of credit and debit card spending in July that pointed toward a smaller increase in the number of card transactions per household than in dollars spent.
Annual inflation in July was on par with the 2.7% rate reported in June, coming in just below what economists expected. Economists generally believe tariffs will lead to price increases, and potentially, spikes in inflation, though some think that companies have yet to pass along as much of the effect of tariffs to consumers as they may in the second half of the year.
Cautious consumer spending has come up on a number of retailers’ recent conference calls, including the outdoor gear company Yeti Holdings (YETI), the athletic apparel brand Under Armour (UA) and burger chains Jack in the Box (JACK) and McDonald’s (MCD). Lower-priced store-brand products have seen more take-up lately, some grocers and food companies have said.
The Cases For—And Against—More S&P 500 Gains
1 hr 36 min ago
Like banging the top of an old TV set could clear up static, Trump’s Liberation Day might’ve been the hard reset needed to pave the way for stocks to keep rising. But with the U.S. indexes already around highs, some watchers think the possibility of a correction is impossible to ignore.
That’s the case Jim Thorne, chief market strategist at Canadian investment firm Wellington-Altus, made in what he called the “new American framework” in a report published Tuesday. The S&P 500 could reach 7,500 by the spring of next year, Thorne wrote, implying upside of about 15% from recent levels.
As tariff policy evolved after Liberation Day, strategists who’d pulled back S&P 500 targets turned optimistic again. The rally, however, has some observers wary: Fundstrat’s head of technical strategy Mark Newton on Tuesday wrote that the S&P 500 could experience resistance after joining the Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), an ETF tracking the Nasdaq 100 index, at all-time highs.
Market breadth, a technical indicator used to measure market momentum, has declined since mid-July, and defensive sectors, like staples, have been advancing. The latter, Newton said, is what technical analysts tend to see before a correction.
But the U.S., Thorne argues, is “at the crossroads of fiscal transformation, technological upheaval, and a reawakening of pragmatic innovation.” That, he says, means “the chorus of Wall Street elites and bond vigilantes—those ‘reasonable’ guardians of orthodoxy—suddenly find their well-worn complaints losing traction. The unreasonable innovators, meanwhile, are busy rewriting the rules. The upshot—smart investors don’t complain, they just adapt and ignore the noise.”
An example, Thorne writes: the crypto space, which is evolving quickly, aided by regulatory clarity that is helping demand for bitcoin but also other digital assets. Wall Street and the broader financial system is getting revamped, he said; indeed, fintech platforms have started to roll out tokenized stocks, while retailers like Walmart (WMT) and Amazon (AMZN) are reportedly exploring their own stablecoins, the crypto industry’s answer to payments.
Thorne advised investors to ignore “fear-driven narratives” and position for growth with more exposure to sectors and companies in artificial intelligence, blockchain, tokenization, industrials, as well as digital asset infrastructure and financials.
PPI Revives Concerns About Impact of Tariffs on Inflation
3 hr 20 min ago
Data on wholesale inflation is reigniting worries that price pressures from tariffs are imminent— and investors took notice.
The Producer Price Index rose 0.9% in July, well above the 0.2% increase economists expected on average.
Core PPI, which excludes foods, energy, and trade services, rose by 0.6% over the month, the largest monthly increase in the metric since March 2022.
According to last week’s report on consumer prices, businesses have broadly held off on passing increased tariff costs onto consumers. But Thursday’s data on wholesale inflation may indicate a change is coming.
“Tariff-exposed goods are rising at a rapid clip, indicating that the willingness and ability of businesses to absorb tariff costs may be beginning to wane,” said Matthew Martin, senior economist at Oxford Economics.
The PPI data could affect the Federal Reserve’s plans for cutting interest rates.
Before the inflation print was released Thursday morning, traders were pricing in nearly a 100% chance that the Fed would cut rates at its next meeting in September, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool. CME forecasts rate movements based on fed funds futures trading data.
After the report was released, they pulled back from that certainty. As of noon ET on Thursday, traders thought there was more than a 9% chance that the Fed officials would hold their rates steady, as they have all year. Market participants now only expect two quarter-point cuts before the end of the year, compared with the three that were being priced in yesterday.
Tom Williams / CQ-Roll Call / Getty Images
Fed officials are less sure that a rate cut is the right move, and this data could give them leeway to continue their “wait-and-see” approach.
“This emboldens those who are less dovish on the Fed that a September cut is not a done deal,” wrote BMO senior economist Jennifer Lee
Advance Auto Parts Cuts Outlook, Shares Drop
4 hr 37 min ago
Advance Auto Parts (AAP) shares shifted into reverse Thursday after the auto parts retailer lowered its profit guidance as it took on a new $1 billion loan.
The company now sees full-year adjusted earnings per share (EPS) in the range of $1.20 to $2.20, compared to its previous outlook of $1.50 to $2.50.
Advance Auto Parts announced in a regulatory filing that it had “entered into a new five year senior secured first lien asset based revolving credit facility” that provides for an extension of credit of up to $1 billion. It noted it “has a first lien on substantially all the accounts receivable, inventory, certain deposit accounts and certain related assets of the borrower and guarantors,” and replaces a previous facility.
The news offset better-than-expected second-quarter results. The company posted adjusted EPS of $0.69, while analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha were looking for $0.55. Even though revenue fell nearly 8% year-over-year to $2.01 billion, that also topped forecasts.
Comparable store sales gained 0.1%, which CEO Shane O’Kelly credited to growth in Advance Auto Part’s Pro business, and added that “we are encouraged by the early signs of stabilization in our DIY business.”
Advance Auto Parts shares were down 12% in recent trading.
Tapestry Stock Tumbles as Coach Parent Cuts Outlook
5 hr 16 min ago
Tapestry (TPR) shares plunged Thursday after the owner of fashion brands gave a weaker-than-expected outlook as it warned it would take a significant hit from new tariffs.
The parent of the Coach, Kate Spade, and Stuart Weitzman brands expects fiscal 2026 earnings per share of $5.30 to $5.45, which includes the “negative impact of incremental tariffs and duties of over $0.60.” The midpoint of the range was below the $5.42 consensus projection of analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha.
The company added that gains in operating margin would be “offset by a negative tariff and duty impact of approximately 230 basis points,” or $160 million.
The news came as Tapestry reported it set a fourth-quarter revenue record of $1.72 billion, and posted adjusted EPS of $1.04. Both exceeded estimates.
Adek Berry / AFP / Getty Images
The gains were driven by sales of Coach, which jumped 14% year-over-year to $1.43 billion. Kate Spade sales dropped 13% to $252.6 million, and sales at Stuart Weitzman fell 10% to $45.5 million.
Tapestry shares were down 13% recently, after closing at an all-time high yesterday. Even with today’s selloff, the stock is up about 50% year-to-date.
Deere Lowers Outlook on ‘Challenging’ Economic Environment
6 hr 20 min ago
Shares of Deere & Co. (DE) slumped in early trading Thursday after the big farming and construction machinery maker lowered its full-year outlook, saying “customers remain cautious.”
Deere now sees fiscal 2025 net income in the range of $4.75 billion to $5.25 billion. Previously, its outlook was for $4.75 billion to $5.50 billion.
CEO John May said its customers are facing “challenging times.” He added that the “positive outcomes we’re enabling reinforce our confidence in Deere’s future despite near-term uncertainty.”
The forecast offset better-than-expected fiscal third-quarter results. Deere posted earnings per share of $4.75 on revenue that fell 9% year-over-year to $12.02 billion but also exceeded consensus estimates of analysts surveyed by Visible Alpha.
Sales at the Production & Precision Agriculture unit sank 16% to $4.27 billion. They were down 5% to $3.06 billion at the Construction & Forestry division, and they slid 1% to $3.03 billion at the Small Agriculture & Turf segment.
Deere shares were down more than 6% in recent trading. Entering today’s session, the stock was up 21% so far in 2025.
Major Index Futures Little Changed
8 hr 10 min ago
Futures tied to the three major U.S. stock indexes were fractionally higher this morning.
Dow Jones Industrial Average futures
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S&P 500 futures
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Nasdaq 100 futures
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