Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq mixed with Fed rate cut seen as done deal

Sep 12, 2025
stock-market-today:-dow,-s&p-500,-nasdaq-mixed-with-fed-rate-cut-seen-as-done-deal

Updated 2 min read

US stocks were mixed on Friday as Wall Street took stock of the US economy from a lofty, record-setting perch ahead of the Federal Reserve’s highly anticipated decision on interest rates next week.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell 0.4%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) slipped below the flat line. Meanwhile, the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) climbed around 0.3% as Tesla (TSLA) stock was set for a seven-month high. All three major indexes rallied to records on Thursday, with the Dow closing above 46,000 for the first time.

Investors have taken in several weeks’ worth of economic data to gain clues on the Fed’s next move. Over the last week, jobs data has shown clear signals of labor market weakness, with just over 20,000 jobs added last month and weekly initial jobless claims surging to a near four-year high.

Meanwhile, inflation remains stubborn, with consumer prices rising last month amid more signs that President Trump’s tariffs are filtering their way into the economy.

The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey released Friday showed consumer sentiment slipped more than expected in September, while long-run inflation expectations jumped to 3.9%, as Americans worried over the effects of tariffs.

But investors are betting inflation is tame enough for the Fed to cut next week — and then some.

Traders are pricing in a more than 90% chance of a quarter-point cut when the Fed holds its September meeting, according to CME Group. Beyond that, around 75% are betting the central bank will cut the equivalent of three times before the end of the year.

Read more: The latest on Trump’s tariffs

The lead-up to the Fed’s September meeting in the next few days will likely be quieter. For now, the three major stock indexes are all headed for weekly gains of over 1%. The Dow was on track for its first win in three weeks after crossing 46,000 for the first time, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite are set for their best showing since early August.

LIVE 18 updates

  • Laura Bratton

    Nasdaq, S&P 500 set for biggest weekly gains since early August

    The Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) and S&P 500 (^GSPC) were set to see weekly gains of 1.9% and 1.6% on Friday, respectively — their best performance in five weeks.

    The Technology Sector (XLK) was also on track for its biggest gain in five weeks, set to add 3.1% for the week, just as Tesla (TSLA) stock eyed a seven-month high on Friday.

    For its part, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) was on track to add 1.1%, its best showing in three weeks. The index closed above 46,000 for the first time on Thursday but fell just below that level Friday.

  • Laura Bratton

    Vaccine stocks tumble on report that Trump plans to link child deaths to COVID shots

    Vaccine makers’ stocks tumbled on Friday after the Washington Post reported that Trump health officials are planning to link 25 child deaths to COVID-19 vaccines, alarming scientists.

    Moderna (MRNA) shares fell more than 7%, while Pfizer (PFE) sank more than 3%. BioNTech (BNTX) stock tumbled 10%.

    The health officials plan to include the claims in a presentation to a panel of advisers to the Centers for Disease Control as it considers new COVID vaccine recommendations, the Post reported. The outlet said the move alarmed scientists who say the vaccines have been studied extensively.

  • Laura Bratton

    Tesla stock set to notch 7-month high

    Tesla (TSLA) stock continued an upswing on Friday amid broader gains for technology stocks. Shares were up more than 5% in intraday trading and set for a roughly 11% weekly gain.

    The stock is set to notch a seven-month high. The last time shares closed above their current level was Feb. 4, when shares hit $392.

    That gain comes even as Tesla’s share of the EV market is sliding, per the latest figures from Cox Automotive’s Kelley Blue Book, and despite news of an engineer quitting as he pointed to CEO Elon Musk’s “seriously compromised” leadership.

    The engineer, Giorgio Balestrieri, wrote in a LinkedIn post Thursday: “This is not just about politics: it’s about lying to the public, manipulating public discourse, targeting minorities and supporting climate change deniers and political forces aligned with the oil and gas industry.”

    Meanwhile, Wall Street has applauded Tesla’s expanding energy business. Wolfe Research analyst Emmanuel Rosner and William Blair’s Jed Dorsheimer published bullish notes on Tesla’s energy storage segment after the company unveiled new battery storage systems earlier this week.

    Dorsheimer said the new products contributed to his “bullish thesis on the [Tesla’s] energy storage business.”

    Rosner wrote in a note Thursday that Tesla’s Energy revenues could potentially reach $28 billion and that the business’s rapid growth is “critical for TSLA to avoid meaningful cash burn.”

  • Laura Bratton

    Warner Bros. Discovery stock jumps amid report that Paramount is eyeing bid

    Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) shares surged 9% Friday after a report from The Wall Street Journal said that Paramount Skydance (PSKY) is preparing a majority cash bid for the media company.

    The bid would be for the whole company, including its cable networks and movie studio, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

    The news comes after Warner Bros. Discovery said earlier this year that it will separate into two publicly traded companies by mid-2026, splitting up its streaming and studio assets from its global television networks business. Paramount’s move is an attempt to pre-empt a bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery’s streaming and studio business, the Journal reported.

    Paramount Skydance shares climbed more than 2% following the news. Paramount and Skydance Media formally completed a merger in August.

  • Laura Bratton

    Consumer sentiment slips as Americans worry over Trump’s tariffs

    Consumer sentiment slipped more than expected in September as Americans worried over the effects of Trump’s tariffs.

    University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey released Friday showed the headline consumer sentiment index came in at 55.4 for the month, a lower reading than the 58 projected by economists polled by Bloomberg and down from 58.2 in August.

    The director of the University of Michigan’s consumer surveys, Joanne Hsu, said about 60% of Americans polled provided “unprompted comments about tariffs during interviews, little changed from last month.”

    “Consumers continue to note multiple vulnerabilities in the economy, with rising risks to business conditions, labor markets, and inflation,” she said.

    Meanwhile, Americans’ long-term inflation expectations for the next five to 10 years rose to 3.9% in September, ahead of the 3.4% projected by economists polled by Bloomberg and the long-term inflation expectations of 3.5% in August. Hsu noted that the reading is still “considerably lower” than the 4.4% in April.

    Year-ahead inflation expectations were steady from the previous month and in line with economists’ estimates at 4.8%.

    The report comes a day after August’s CPI report showed inflation ticking up in that month, revealing the sting of Trump’s tariffs on consumer prices. Still, a recent slew of jobs data showing a weakening US labor market is expected to dominate the Fed’s decision to cut rates in September, though questions remain about how steep the cut will be and how many additional cuts lie ahead.

    Read more here.

    Correction: This post was updated to reflect that the consumer survey showed preliminary results for September, not August.

  • Morgan Stanley forecasts a faster pace of rate cuts through January

    Investors are convinced there’s an interest-rate cut coming in September. The debate now is how big wiill it be, and what happens after that?

    Morgan Stanley has put down its marker, saying Friday that it expects the Federal Reserve to lower rates four times in a row: at its three remaining meetings this year, then in January. All will be quarter-point moves, the brokerage said, even as some traders start leaning toward a jumbo cut to kick off.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • Laura Bratton

    Stocks waver at the open, but set for weekly gains

    US stocks were muted on Friday at the open as Wall Street looked ahead to the Federal Reserve’s highly anticipated decision on interest rates next week.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell more than 0.1%, while the S&P 500 (^GSPC) sank below the flat line. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) edged up 0.1%. The gauges meandered after rallying to records on Thursday, which saw the Dow close above 46,000 for the first time.

    The major stock indexes are all headed for weekly gains of over 1.4%, with the Dow set for its first win in three weeks.

    Now, investors are looking to the University of Michigan’s survey of consumer sentiment for September — due at 10 a.m. ET — for insight into Americans’ inflation expectations.

  • Winklevoss-led Gemini IPO priced at $28 per share

    Gemini Space Station, a crypto exchange founded by Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, is set to go public on Friday to cap a week of IPO activity.

    The company priced its initial public offering at $28 per share on the Nasdaq late on Thursday, putting Gemini’s valuation at $3.3 billion. According to Reuters, the IPO was 20 times oversubscribed, indicating strong demand for crypto companies. The stock will begin trading under the ticker GEMI.

    Meanwhile, shares of blockchain platform Figure Technology Solutions (FIGR) are set to begin their second day of trading by taking a leg lower. The stock, which opened at $25 per share on Thursday, spiked as much as 48% in initial trading and closed the day 24% higher at $31 per share.

    Figure raised $787.5 million in its IPO, valuing the company at $5.3 billion. In an interview with Yahoo Finance’s Brian Sozzi, Figure co-founder Mike Cagney explained why there’s market excitement around crypto and how it’s disrupting financial markets.

    Buy now, pay later firm Klarna (KLAR), which debuted on the public markets on Wednesday, was up 2.5% in premarket trading on Friday after a down day on Thursday. The stock closed its first day of trading 16% higher and its IPO raised $1.37 billion.

  • RH stock falls after furniture company highlights dire tariff situation

    Luxury furniture maker RH (RH) cut its annual outlook on Thursday, warning of the toll tariffs are having on the industry. The stock fell 9% in premarket trading.

    “There’s going to be gross margin headwinds from tariffs coming,” CEO Gary Friedman said on the earnings call. “You just can’t raise prices fast enough, and there’s only so much room our manufacturing partners have [to absorb costs].”

    Friedman said that tariff uncertainty led the company to delay a new brand extension and its Fall Interiors Sourcebook.

    As a result, RH said it expects a $30 million hit to profits in the second half of the year. The company also lowered its full-year revenue growth outlook to 9% to 11% from 10% to 13% previously.

    Earnings per share of $2.62 missed Wall Street estimates of $3.25 per share. Revenue also missed: $899 million compared to $905 million estimated.

    Year to date, RH stock has faced significant pressure and is down 42%.

  • Jobs now matter more than inflation — even as tariff pressures build

    Despite notable tariff-fed jumps in prices, the Fed is preparing to cut rates next week. Jerome Powell has signaled it. Markets are pricing it in. And the reason isn’t inflation. It’s jobs, Yahoo Finance’s Allie Canal says in today’s Morning Brief.

    Allie reports:

    Read more here.

  • Wall Street expects rally in riskiest stocks to last 12 months

    From Bloomberg:

    Russell 2000 futures (RTY=F) were down slightly in premarket trading, but the index is up nearly 20% in the past six months.

    Read more here.

  • Jenny McCall

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

  • Jenny McCall

    Premarket trending tickers: SMCI, Microsoft, and RH

    Here’s a look at some of the top stocks trending in premarket trading:

    Super Micro Computer Inc. (SMCI) stock rose 5% before the bell on Friday. The company announced on Thursday that it had begun delivering high-volume Nvidia HGX B300 systems and Nvidia GB300 NVL72 in volume to customers worldwide.

    Microsoft (MSFT) stock rose 1% in premarket trading following the news that it had signed a non-binding deal with OpenAI (OPAI.PVT) for new relationship terms that would allow OpenAI to proceed to restructure itself into a for-profit company.

    RH (RH) shares fell 10% before the bell after the luxury furniture retailer met Wall Street revenue expectations for its second-quarter results. But next quarter’s revenue guidance was less impressive, coming in 2% below analysts estimates.

  • Brian Sozzi

    Opendoor has another Wall Street believer

    Opendoor (OPEN) shares continue to be in focus after the online real-estate platform somehow nabbed a top executive from Shopify (SHOP) — Kaz Nejatian — to become its new CEO this week.

    That has caught the eye of JP Morgan analyst Dae Lee, who is overweight rated on the stock.

    Lee says:

    I recently caught up with my long-time contact Eric Jackson over at EMJ Capital on Opendoor. He got the stock pushed into meme stock land by becoming very vocal on X about how the company is being severely undervalued.

    Worth a watch below.

  • Brian Sozzi

    Eyes on Comcast after Paramount-Warner Bros. deal chatter

    Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) stock is up another 4% in premarket after its 29% surge on Thursday, following news that Paramount Skydance (PSKY) is preparing a bid for the company.

    I wouldn’t rule out a potential bidding war for Warner Bros. Discovery. Good point this morning on this from MoffettNathanson analyst Robert Fishman:

  • Adobe stock pops after strong outlook suggests AI payoff

    Shares in Adobe (ADBE) stepped higher in premarket after the Photoshop maker gave an upbeat revenue forecast for the quarter through November.

    The outlook suggested that Adobe is starting to see a payoff from adding AI features to its software tools.

    Bloomberg reported:

    Read more here.

  • Gold on track for fourth week of consecutive gains

    Gold (GC=F) tracked its trajectory for four weeks of consistent gains as rate-cut bet fervour spread from investors to institutions, with bullion-backed ETFs moving heavily toward the haven asset.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • OpenAI move to for-profit will retain $100 billion for non-profit business arm

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.


Leave a comment