Stan Choe
US stocks are drifting in mixed trading Monday, a downshift following bursts higher for stocks in Asia earlier in the day and Wall Street’s own rally to close last week.
The S&P 500 rose 0.5 per cent and inched closer to its record set two weeks ago. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 13 points, or less than 0.1 per cent, and the Nasdaq composite was 1 per cent higher. The Australian sharemarket is set to advance, with futures pointing to a rise of 14 points, or 0.2 per cent, at the open. The ASX surged 1.9 per cent on Monday.
The relatively modest moves followed a 3.9 per cent burst higher for Japan’s Nikkei 225 to a record. Stocks rallied there following a landslide victory for the prime minister’s political party in a parliamentary election. The thought is that will give Sanae Takaichi more power to push through reforms that will boost the economy and market.
On Wall Street, the US stock market is coming off its best day since May to close last week, but several concerns still hang over the market. That includes criticism that stocks have simply become too expensive following their run to records.
Worries are also heavy about whether all the huge spending by Big Tech and other companies on AI can produce enough profit to make the investments worth it.
Slightly more stocks fell in the S&P 500 than rose, but some of the winners from that rush into AI helped prop up the market. Chip companies rose, for example, with Nvidia up 3.4 per cent and Broadcom up 4 per cent. They were two of the strongest forces pushing upward on the S&P 500.
Kroger climbed 6.3 per cent after the grocer named a former Walmart executive as its new chief executive officer.
Transocean reversed an early loss and rose 2.8 per cent after the offshore drilling company said it would buy Valaris in an all-stock deal valued at $US5.8 billion. Valaris leaped 29 per cent.
On the losing end was Hims & Hers, which sank 24.5 per cent after Novo Nordisk filed a lawsuit and alleged Hims & Hers is unlawfully selling versions of its weight-loss treatments. The suit follows a move by the U.S Food and Drug Administration to restrict access to the ingredients needed to copy popular weight-loss medications.
Hims & Hers said, “Big Phama is weaponizing the US judicial system to limit consumer choice” in a post on the X account for the company’s communications team.
Novo Nordisk’s stock that trades in the United States rose 3.3 per cent.
Workday fell 6.7 per cent after the AI platform said its CEO, Carl Eschenbach, is stepping down. Company Co-founder Aneel Bhusri is returning as chief executive.
In the bond market, Treasury yields held relatively steady ahead of several potentially market-moving reports coming later in the week. The US government will offer the latest monthly update on the health of the job market on Wednesday. Friday will bring the latest monthly reading of inflation at the consumer level.
Either report could sway expectations for what the Federal Reserve will do with interest rates. The Fed has put its cuts to interest rates on hold, but a weakening of the job market could push it to resume more quickly. Too-hot inflation, on the other hand, could keep it on hold for longer.
One of the reasons the US stock market remains close to records is the expectation that the Fed will continue cutting interest rates later this year. Lower rates can give the economy a boost, though they can also worsen inflation.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury eased to 4.21 per cent from 4.22 per cent late on Friday.
Other markets that had whipped through more violent moves over recent weeks were showing some more strength or stability.
Gold rose 2.3 per cent to climb back above $US5000 per ounce. It’s been swinging sharply after roughly doubling in price over 12 months and, it has bounced between $US4500 and nearly $US5600. Silver, whose price has been even wilder, jumped 7.6 per cent Monday.
Bitcoin dipped back toward $US70,000 after climbing above $US71,000 over the weekend. It had dropped close to $US60,000 last week, more than halfway below its record set in October.
In stock markets abroad, indexes jumped across Asia with Japan’s surge. South Korea’s Kospi leaped 4.1 per cent, while stocks rose 1.8 per cent in Hong Kong and 1.4 per cent in Shanghai.
The gains were more modest in Europe, where Germany’s DAX returned 1.1 per cent and France’s CAC 40 rose 0.5 per cent.
AP
The Market Recap newsletter is a wrap of the day’s trading. Get it each weekday afternoon.



