Updated 2 min read
US stocks tipped mostly into the green on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points in its final poicy decision of the year.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) added 0.7%, and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose 0.3%, reversing direction after the two gauges opened the trading session lower. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) hovered above the flatline.
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates by a quarter percentage point on Wednesday for the third time this year. But the central bank signaled a slower pace of easing ahead, projecting one more cut for 2026.
The central bank voted in a split decision to trim its benchmark interest rate to a range of 3.5% to 3.75%.
The decision drew dissents on both sides. Kansas City Fed president Jeff Schmid and Chicago Fed president Austan Goolsbee disagreed with the decision, preferring to hold rates steady. On the other side, Fed governor Stephen Miran pushed to cut rates by a half a percentage point.
In recent days FOMC members have remained split, with some officials arguing that easier policy is needed to support a cooling labor market and others warning that further easing could risk reigniting inflation. Traders will be watching Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference at 2:30 p.m. ET for clues on how the committee is thinking about the path forward.
In corporates, GameStop (GME) stock fell after missing quarterly revenue estimates on Tuesday. US manufacturer GE Vernova (GEV) shares rose 14% after doubling its dividend.
The tech trade will get a key test Wednesday with an earnings report from Oracle (ORCL), as Wall Street increasingly looks to the cloud firm as one of the proxies for the AI trade. Broadcom (AVGO), Costco (COST), and Lululemon (LULU) are set for earnings reports on Thursday.
LIVE 17 updates
-
Stocks rally modestly in reaction to Fed rate cut
US stocks jumped following the Fed’s policy decision.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose 0.7%, or over 300 points, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) added 0.3%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was trading flat.
“I think it’s a bit of a relief … given that it could have been even more hawkish,” JPMorgan global market strategist Stephanie Aliaga told Yahoo Finance following the release. “Markets are also taking this with a grain of salt, knowing that next year we’re going to get a lot of changes when it comes to the Fed.”
Treasury yields moved slightly lower. The 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX) declined by 2 basis points to 4.16%. The 30-year yield (^TYX) also declined 2 basis points to 4.78%.
-
Federal Reserve lowers interest rates by 25 basis points
The Federal Reserve voted in favor of lowering the federal funds rate by 25 basis points on Wednesday, its third cut of the year.
The move announced at the conclusion of the Federal Open Market Committee’s last policy meeting of the year was highly anticipated by the market. Investors will pay close attention to Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference, which starts at 2:30 p.m. ET, for commentary that may indicate the path officials may take at their January meeting, given the central bank’s tasks of keeping inflation under control, while at the same time responding to a weakening labor market.
-
Copper rebounds as low inventories place upward pressure on metal
Copper prices rebounded on Wednesday, inching closer to their December record as tight inventories continue to put pressure on the commodity.
Copper on the London Metals Exchange closed a $11,556 per metric ton, a stone’s throw away from its record $11,771 notched earlier this week.
The industrial metal is up roughly 30% year-to-date.
“Ongoing supply disruptions and the repositioning of copper to the U.S. ahead of potential policy changes are impacting an already tight copper market,” Steve Schoffstall, Director of ETF Product Management at Sprott Asset Management, told Yahoo Finance.
“The premium paid for the metal in the U.S. is impacting already low global inventories and is placing upward pressure on global copper prices,” he added.
-
BofA top metals strategist: Gold is ‘overbought but underinvested’ with more room to grow
Bank of America’s top metals strategist, Michael Widmer, said Wednesday that gold (GC=F) is “overbought but underinvested,” with runway to grow.
Over the past year, gold prices have gained more than 60% in a hectic run-up, and the precious metal has been overbought as investors piled into a bandwagon trade. But, Widmer said, “Gold bull markets don’t normally come to an end because they’re overbought.”
Instead, “the gold markets normally come to an end because the underlying conditions that triggered a bull market have subsided, but we don’t see that.”
Higher debt loads constraining US monetary policy, central banks continuing to rotate out of treasuries, and a continued under-allocation in institutional portfolios all point to demand that’s likely to remain solid even if the market sees a small pullback to curb some of the frenzied 2025 buying, according to BofA.
If gold demand continues to grow at a pace roughly in line with the average demand rate since 2001, at around 14%, Widmer said, the precious metal is likely to crack $5,000 per ounce in 2026.
His team sees plenty of potential for such movement. Globally, gold holdings account for around 4% of the total equity and fixed income markets, with room for that allocation to grow, especially as institutional investors who may not have fully jumped in yet continue to add gold as a portfolio diversifier — hence, “overbought, but underinvested.”
And in another sign of steady demand, Widmer said, central banks hold more gold than US Treasurys for the first time since at least the 1990s.
-
Federal Reserve: Expect a ‘hawkish cut’ today as officials look to slow down on interest rate cuts next year
Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:
-
Oracle steady ahead of earnings
Oracle (ORCL) shares dipped fractionally ahead of the growing AI cloud player’s earnings report after the bell on Wednesday.
The company is expected to report earnings per share of $1.64 for its fiscal second quarter, according to consensus estimates of analysts tracked by Bloomberg, up from $1.47 the previous year. Oracle is projected to report revenue of $16.21 billion for the period, up 15% from the year-ago quarter.
Meanwhile, the tech firm’s closely watched AI segment, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), is expected to report a 68% climb in revenue to nearly $4.1 billion.
Oracle shares have plunged from their September highs just as its competitors have seen their stocks climb. The AI player is at the center of the AI bubble debate as investors worry over the increasing use of debt to fund tech firms’ capital spending and the entanglement of companies participating in the AI boom through multibillion-dollar circular financing arrangements.
-
Trump set to hold final interviews with Fed chair finalists
Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:
-
Intel falls as chipmaker set to acquire AI chip startup, faces suit over tech used in Russian weapons
Intel (INTC) shares fell more than 3% as the chipmaker — along with Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and Texas Instruments (TXN) — was accused of failing to keep its tech out of Russian-made weapons, Bloomberg reported.
The accusations were outlined in five lawsuits filed in the Circuit Court for the State of Texas on behalf of Ukrainian civilians. The suits cited five attacks between 2023 and 2025 that resulted in dozens of casualties, according to Bloomberg.
Texas Instruments was roughly flat, while AMD shares dipped fractionally.
Intel’s drop also follows news that the chipmaker — which is in the midst of another turnaround effort under its new CEO Lip-Bu Tan — has taken a key step to acquire an AI chip startup called SambaNova Systems, which is chaired by Tan.
Former executives of Intel told Yahoo Finance last year that previous acquisitions by the storied company haven’t gone well, as internal politics and bureaucracy prevented the chipmaker from seeing the benefit of tech from acquired firms like Habana Labs.
On the flip side, investors have responded well to Intel’s efforts to shed assets. For example, the stock jumped when the chipmaker sold a majority stake in its Altera chip business.
-
Stocks nudge lower at the open
US stocks tilted lower at the market open on Wednesday ahead of the Federal Reserve’s final monetary policy decision on interest rates this afternoon.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) hovered below the flat line. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) dropped 0.3%.
Investors are also looking to a key earnings report from Oracle (ORCL) after the bell that will give Wall Street more insight into the state of the AI bubble.
-
Wells Fargo sees S&P 500 clocking double-digit gain in 2026 as AI boosts profits, tax refunds lift spending
-
Chewy stock fluctuates after reporting an earnings beat in a pressured environment
Chewy (CHWY) stock fell as much as 7% before bouncing back in premarket trading after the online pet retailer reported a double beat on earnings and revenue. The stock was up 4% at last check.
Adjusted earnings per share were $0.32 in the third quarter, compared to analyst estimates for $0.30, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence. Net sales rose 8.3% year over year to $3.12 billion, compared to estimates of $3.01 billion.
“Chewy continues to outperform the pet category and expand market share, with profits once again growing faster than sales,” CEO Sumit Singh said in the release.
Gross margins were another metric in focus for investors this quarter. Gross margins of 29.8% beat expectations but still dipped from 30.4% in Q2.
“As of late, the view has been that CHWY’s gross margin has limited upside going forward,” UBS’s research team led by Michael Lasser wrote in a note ahead of earnings. “While the scaling of its sponsored ad initiative has been a meaningful gross margin driver of the past several quarters, we think this trend needs to continue for the company to see the same magnitude of GM gains. But until then, bears may point to an increasingly competitive market, pressure from tariffs, and greater promotional activity in the back half of the year to support a capped margin upside.”
-
Good morning. Here’s what’s happening today.
-
Cracker Barrel falls after lowering revenue forecast as traffic falls after logo blowup
Cracker Barrel (CBRL) stock fell 8% before the bell on Wednesday after posting lower-than-expected sales in its fiscal first quarter and trimming its revenue forecast for the year.
The Associated Press reports:
-
There’s no guarantee the Fed’s rate cuts will lower the rates that matter
A few common trends exist now, post-pandemic, such as a resilient American consumer. However, one of the most puzzling inconsistencies is the reaction of bond markets, which are rattled by uncertainty.
Yahoo Finance’s Hamza Shaban looks at why the bond market and the Federal Reserve rate cuts might be out of alignment.
-
GameStop stock falls after company reports revenue decline
GameStop (GME) stock pulled back 6% in premarket trading after the company posted third quarter revenue that fell short of estimates.
In the third quarter, revenue fell to $821 million for the period, compared to $860.3 million in Q3 last year. Wall Street analysts were expecting sales of $987 million, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence.
The company reported diluted profits of $0.24 per share, compared to estimates of $0.20.
GameStop, which became synonymous with the meme stock trade in 2021, has followed the playbook set by Michael Saylor’s Strategy to accumulate bitcoin for a corporate treasury.
GameStop’s bitcoin holdings were valued at $519.4 million at the close of the quarter, compared to $528.6 million at the end of the second quarter.
Reuters reports:
-
GE Vernova jumps on double dividend, citing AI as key driver
GE Vernova (GEV) stock rose 6% before the bell on Wednesday after doubling its dividend.
The US manufacturer showered shareholders with rewards in the latest sign that demand for new natural gas-fired power will remain robust for years to come.
Bloomberg News reports:
-
Silver blows past $60, setting new record
Bloomberg reports: