Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures stall as Fed takes front seat from Mideast fears

Jun 18, 2025
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US stock futures stalled on Wednesday, with the prospect of the US joining Israel-Iran hostilities keeping investors on edge as they braced for the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision later in the day.

Futures on the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F) fluctuated along the flat line, while S&P 500 futures (ES=F) drifted 0.1% higher. Contracts on the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) rose a modest 0.2% following a losing day for the major gauges.

Markets are on alert for any sign that the US has joined the Middle East conflict, which has swung stocks around since it broke out last week. President Trump said, “Our patience is wearing thin,” and met with his national security team on Tuesday, raising speculation that the US could join Israel’s offensive. Iran has warned it will respond firmly if the US crosses a red line into involvement and has reportedly readied missiles for strikes on US bases in the region if it does.

Oil prices ticked higher, recovering ground after falling 1% earlier Wednesday morning. Brent futures (BZ=F), the international benchmark, rose to above $76 a barrel while West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) crude traded just above $75.

Read more: The latest on Trump’s tariffs

Against that background, attention is turning to the Fed’s policy decision due at 2 p.m. ET, when the central bank is expected to hold interest rates steady. The focus is on the “dot plot” to shed light on whether two rate cuts are still on the table this year. Investors will watch Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference for insight into pressures on the economy amid Trump’s tariffs and trade push.

Meanwhile, a weekly reading on jobless claims will provide clues to the health of the labor market.

LIVE 7 updates

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    The GENIUS Act still needs to move through the House and President Trump before it’s signed into law, but the bill’s passage in the Senate was heralded as a win for the crypto industry, which has been pushing for clearer and more positive regulation.

    “I feel really good about [this bill],” Dante Disparte, chief strategy officer and head of global policy and operations at Circle, told Yahoo Finance’s David Hollerith and Jennifer Schonberger.

    Circle stock debuted on the public markets on June 5 in an explosive IPO. Since its debut, Circle stock is up more than 380%.

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  • Hasbro stock falls after toymaker cut 3% of workforce

    Toymaker Hasbro (HAS) announced Tuesday it cut 3% of its global workforce, or about 150 employees, as part of a larger cost-cutting effort. The stock fell 3% in premarket trade on Wednesday.

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    “Ultimately, tariffs translate into higher consumer prices, potential job losses as we adjust to absorb increased costs, and reduced profits for our shareholders,” Hasbro’s CEO Chris Cocks said during an earnings call in April, per Reuters.

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  • Jenny McCall

    Trending tickers: AMD, Tesla and Micron

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    Tesla (TSLA) stock was up before the bell today. A Bloomberg report on Wednesday said that Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup xAI was burning through $1B a month as costs of building its AI models increased.

    Micron (MU) shares rose 1% today in premarket trading, following Wells Fargo analysts maintaining a Buy rating for the tech stock and a price target of $130.00.

  • Investors still aren’t buying this stock rally

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    Good morning. Here’s what’s happening today.

  • Nintendo stock hits record as sales of Switch 2 boom amid tariff risks

    Shares of Nintendo (NTDOY, 7974.T) continued to climb, with President Trump’s trade policy shift providing an added tailwind to the success of its Switch 2 games console update.

    The stock jumped in Tokyo, while the US-listed stock popped before the bell on Wednesday.

    Bloomberg reports:

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  • Oil gains maintained with potential US involvement in Israel-Iran conflict in focus

    Oil is holding gains after spiking to a five-month high on Tuesday. Concerns over the US joining the ongoing conflict between Israel and Iran continue to bolster the value of the commodity.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Brent (BZ=F) traded above $76 a barrel after closing 4.4% higher in the previous session, while West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) was near $75. President Donald Trump met with his national security team on Tuesday, after demanding Iran’s “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER” and warning of a possible strike against the country’s leader — Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — in a social media post.

    Iran’s crude-exporting infrastructure has been spared so far, and most of the fallout has been confined to shipping. The Middle East produces around a third of the world’s oil and a wider conflict could drive prices even higher.

    The biggest concern for the oil market centers on the Strait of Hormuz, although there are no signs that Iran is seeking to disrupt shipping through the narrow waterway. About a fifth of the world’s daily crude output passes through the strait at the entrance to the Persian Gulf.

    Read more here.


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