A trader works on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., Nov. 10, 2025.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters
Stock futures are near the flatline on Monday night after a strong start to the trading week.
Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 8 points, or 0.02%. S&P futures and Nasdaq 100 futures were both down less than 0.1%.
Major U.S. indexes rallied across the board on Monday on hopes that the record-setting U.S. government shutdown could be nearing an end. The Nasdaq Composite had its best day since May 27, with a roughly 2.3% gain, as investors bought the dip in artificial intelligence names after last week’s sell-off.
The Senate is expected to begin voting Monday evening on the compromise federal funding deal, which would reopen the government into January and reverse some of the recent mass layoffs of federal workers. The negotiated deal does not include Democrats’ demand that any funding bill must include an extension of Affordable Care Act subsidies, and instead calls for a vote on the tax credits in December.
Investors during the previous session piled into several risk-on names, which had led the broader market lower last week as concerns grew about the strength of the AI trade and the health of the U.S. economy. Nvidia notably jumped 5.8% on Monday, contributing more than a quarter of the S&P 500′s total upside for the day. Google parent Alphabet gained 4% while Microsoft added 1.9% to end its eight-day losing streak.
“The end to the shutdown takes another risk off the table for markets and the economy, especially since we were edging up to a period where the shutdown would have lasting impact on the economy, by way of missed paychecks and lower consumption as a result, and even a pullback in travel,” said Sonu Varghese, global macro strategist at Carson Group. “The government re-opening will also be helpful because we’ll start getting macroeconomic data once again, and so the Fed will not go into their December meeting flying blind.”
Paramount Skydance and Rocket Lab are among the biggest movers in after-hours trading
Take a look at companies making moves after Monday’s close:
- Paramount Skydance shares rose more than 5% after the company said it is looking to slash an additional $1 billion in savings after first outlining $2 billion when it completed its merger in August. Paramount also announced a new round of layoffs and said it plans to increase prices for its flagship streaming service, Paramount+, in the first quarter of 2026.
- Shares of space company Rocket Lab jumped about 7% in extended trading. Rocket Lab reported a third-quarter loss of 3 cents per share, which was narrower than the 10 cents per share loss it posted a year ago. Analysts polled by LSEG were expecting a loss of 10 cents per share in the latest period. Rocket Lab’s quarterly revenue of $155 million also beat analysts’ expectation of $152 million, per LSEG.
- The RealReal’s shares jumped more than 18% after the online marketplace raised its full-year revenue guidance and reported third-quarter revenue that exceeded analysts’ expectations, per FactSet.
— Pia Singh
CoreWeave shares fall in extended trading as company faces data center supply issues
CoreWeave stock fell as much as 7% in after-hours trading Monday. The company’s CEO said on a conference call that CoreWeave remains supply-constrained with the availability of partly completed “powered-shell” data centers in which the cloud-based infrastructure company can set up its own equipment, he said.
CoreWeave now expects its full-year revenue to come in between $5.05 billion and $5.15 billion, lower than the $5.29 billion analysts polled by LSEG had expected. Still, the Nvidia-backed company posted better-than-expected revenue for the third quarter. Revenue in the quarter soared 134% from $583.9 million a year ago, according to a statement.
Read more on CoreWeave’s earnings results here.
CoreWeave stock performance over the past year.
— Pia Singh, Jordan Novet