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Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq lose steam ahead of Trump tariff deadline, jobs report

Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq lose steam ahead of Trump tariff deadline, jobs report

Yahoo4 days ago
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) pared gains in afternoon trading after President Trump granted Mexico a 90-day tariff reprieve and strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings boosted faith in Big Tech's massive AI investments.
The Nasdaq climbed about 0.2%, while the S&P 500 was just below the flat line. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, sliding about 0.3%.
Meta stock shot up 11% late morning, as investors welcomed its earnings beat and stronger-than-expected guidance even as it ramps up its AI spending spree. Microsoft stock jumped as much as 8% before paring back gains after its impressive results, which pushed the tech giant's market capitalization above $4 trillion.
Markets are now looking to after-hours results from their "Magnificent Seven" peers, Apple (AAPL) and Amazon (AMZN), for reasons to keep the rally going.
Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge, the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) released on Thursday morning showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
The release comes after the Fed held interest rates steady following its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, with two Fed governors dissenting.
Following the decision, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stressed "no decisions" had been made about a September rate cut, undercutting President Trump's claim he had heard a cut was coming at policymakers' next meeting. Bets on a September cut fell below 40% on Thursday, according to the CME Group, down from about 60% before the meeting.
Stocks pared gains after President Trump announced a 90-day tariff extension for Mexico on the eve of Trump's deadline on Friday, allowing more time for the two sides to negotiate.
The announcement follows a flurry of trade deals, including a pact with South Korea announced late Wednesday that sets a 15% tariff rate on its imports. US exports will face zero duties in return, and Seoul has agreed to make $350 billion in US investment and pledged to buy US energy products, Trump wrote in a social media post.
Trump talks with Canada, India, and Brazil in a stalemate as his tariff deadline looms
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Apple Q3 earnings to give Wall Street better view of tariff impact, AI top of mind
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Meme stocks are melting as investors look toward Big Tech
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Reddit stock jumps ahead of Q2 earnings
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
CoreWeave soars after Microsoft reports higher-than-expected capital expenditures
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
Microsoft tops $4 trillion
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
S&P 500, Nasdaq surge at the open
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
Microsoft set to join $4T market cap club, Meta stock surges in post-earnings rally
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Fed's preferred inflation gauge shows price increases accelerated in June amid tariff uncertainty
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
Roblox stock soars as daily active users surpass 100 million
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
What's in the US-EU trade deal depends on who is doing the talking
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
A quirk in the Fed's calendar puts extra pressure on the Sept. meeting
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Good morning. Here's what's happening today.
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Trending tickers: ARM, CVS and Confluent
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Carvana posts higher quarterly profit on record car sales
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
EBay stock rises as resilient consumers fuel strong sales forecast
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
AB InBev shares slide on concern over sales volumes
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Qualcomm on the move lower
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
This is remarkable on Meta
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Microsoft earnings call: A quick take
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
Trump talks with Canada, India, and Brazil in a stalemate as his tariff deadline looms
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
President Trump's tariff agenda is nearing a moment of truth with an Aug. 1 deadline just hours away and set to establish a new baseline rate of 15% on most of the world.
Many final moves have come in a flurry (from a deal with South Korea to a delay with Mexico), but three key nations across three continents — Canada, India, and Brazil — have seen their talks go sideways for vastly different reasons.
Importers there are now likely to face higher rates at least for the time being, leaving relationships with the world's largest recipient of US goods (Canada), the world's fourth-largest economy (India), and the Western Hemisphere's second-most-populous nation (Brazil) all in flux.
Read more here.
Apple Q3 earnings to give Wall Street better view of tariff impact, AI top of mind
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Apple (AAPL) is scheduled to announce its third quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, as Wall Street looks for signs of movement on the company's AI plans and a view into how much tariff-related costs are eating into its margins, Yahoo Finance's Dan Howley reports.
Howley writes:
Read more about the tech giant's upcoming quarterly results here.
Meme stocks are melting as investors look toward Big Tech
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Meme stock FOMO is taking a breather, Yahoo Finance's Francisco Velasquez reports.
Velasquez writes:
Read the full story here.
Reddit stock jumps ahead of Q2 earnings
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
Reddit shares jumped nearly 5% Thursday morning ahead of the social media's second quarter earnings report after the bell.
Reddit's results after the bell Thursday come as Wall Street scrutinizes how changes to Google Search's algorithm could affect the social media platform's daily active users, which fell below expectations in the US in the past two quarters.
Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect Reddit to report adjusted earnings per share of $0.72, up from last year's loss per share of $0.06. They project the company's second quarter revenue to hit $425 million, up 50% from the prior year, according to Bloomberg data.
Analysts expect global daily active users to climb 20% from the prior year to roughly 110 million for the period and US users to rise more than 9% to 50.5 million.
Read more about Reddit's upcoming report here.
CoreWeave soars after Microsoft reports higher-than-expected capital expenditures
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
CoreWeave (CRWV) shares surged more than 12% Thursday on the heels of strong earnings reports from two of its customers, Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META).
Microsoft is CoreWeave's largest customer, accounting for 72% of its revenue in the burgeoning cloud provider's most recent quarterly earnings report. Microsoft spent $88.2 billion in its fiscal year 2025, ahead of the $80 billion it previously forecast. That figure represented a 58% increase in the tech giant's spending from the prior year.
Microsoft said its spending will grow at a slower pace in its 2026 fiscal year. During the first quarter, it expects to spend $30 billion, a 50% increase from the prior year.
"We will continue to invest against the expansive opportunity ahead across both capital expenditures and operating expenses given our leadership position in commercial cloud, strong demand signals for our cloud and AI offerings, and significant contracted backlog," Microsoft CFO Amy Hood said in an earnings call with analysts.
Microsoft tops $4 trillion
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
Microsoft's (MSFT) market capitalization officially hit the $4 trillion mark Thursday, making it the second company behind Nvidia (NVDA) to achieve the feat.
Shares of Microsoft climbed as much as 8% Thursday morning before paring gains, up roughly 5% shortly after the market opened.
Microsoft, Apple (AAPL), and Nvidia have traded places as the world's most valuable companies. Nvidia still retains the top spot after a stunning comeback from a rocky first half of the year, with its market cap sitting around $4.4 trillion as of Thursday. Apple's was just over $3 trillion in morning trading.
S&P 500, Nasdaq surge at the open
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) surged on Thursday, on track for fresh record highs after strong Meta (META) and Microsoft (MSFT) earnings fueled a spike in tech stocks.
The Nasdaq climbed roughly 1.3%, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lagged, up less than 0.1%.
Microsoft set to join $4T market cap club, Meta stock surges in post-earnings rally
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) stocks ripped higher in premarket trading as investors continued to bid up shares following the tech giants' earnings reports.
Combined, the two stocks have added about half a trillion dollars in market value since Wednesday's close.
If gains hold, Microsoft is set to join Nvidia (NVDA) in the $4 trillion market capitalization club when the market opens. Its market cap as of Wednesday stood at $3.81 trillion, and the stock has gained nearly 9% in premarket trading.
Meta stock surged 11% ahead of the opening bell. Both Meta and Microsoft reported strong revenue growth that outweighed investors' concerns about spending on artificial intelligence.
'The stock moves make sense — the results are that good,' D.A. Davidson head of technology research Gil Luria told Yahoo Finance following Meta's and Microsoft's earnings. 'Meta is gaining significant share in the digital advertising market, … and therefore investors have patience for the capex guidance they're providing.'
Fed's preferred inflation gauge shows price increases accelerated in June amid tariff uncertainty
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
The latest reading of the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge showed price increases accelerated in June as inflation remained above the Fed's 2% target.
Yahoo Finance's Josh Schafer reports:
Read more here.
Roblox stock soars as daily active users surpass 100 million
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
Roblox's (RBLX) stock rocketed 20% higher in premarket trading after reporting record daily users and raising its third quarter forecast for bookings.
Daily active users rose 41% in the second quarter to cross 111 million, the company reported on Thursday.
Roblox also raised its forecast for annual bookings in the third quarter to $1.59 billion to $1.64 billion. Bookings for the second quarter came in at $1.44 billion, beating market estimates of $1.24 billion.
Reuters reports that the company has been investing in search and discovery features that allow greater visibility for viral games like "Grow a Garden." Roblox also aims to diversify its revenue beyond gaming by turning the platform into a hub for socializing, commerce, and advertising.
The platform saw a boost in engagement during the quarter, with engaged hours up 58% to 27.4 billion.
Read more here.
What's in the US-EU trade deal depends on who is doing the talking
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
President Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shook hands Sunday over a trade agreement. The White House did a victory lap, but days later, there are still plenty of disagreements about exactly what is in the pact.
Yahoo Finance's Ben Werschkul reports:
Read more here.
A quirk in the Fed's calendar puts extra pressure on the Sept. meeting
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Yahoo Finance's Hamza Shaban takes a look at the Federal Reserve's next move in today's Morning Brief:
Read more here on how a long wait could result in a different outlook.
Good morning. Here's what's happening today.
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Economic data: Challenger jobs cuts (July); Personal income & spending (June); Core PCE price index; Employment cost index (second quarter); Initial jobless claims (week ending July 26)
Earnings: Apple (AAPL), Amazon (AMZN), Bristol Myers Squibb (BMY), Cigna (CI), Coinbase (COIN), CVS Health (CVS), Mastercard (MA), Norwegian Cruise Line (NCLH), Reddit (RDDT), Roblox (RBLX), Roku (ROKU), Strategy (MSTR)
Here are some of the biggest stories you may have missed overnight and early this morning:
Trump knocks Canada as countries rush to strike trade deals
Trump tariffs face another legal test on eve of deadline
Apple faces 2 major threats ahead of earnings
What's in the US-EU trade deal? It depends on who's talking.
Fed calendar quirk raises the stakes for its Sept. meeting
Meta stock surges after earnings beat, guidance surprise
Microsoft on track for $4 trillion market cap after earnings beat
Arm stock falls as chip ambitions shake investor confidence
Trending tickers: ARM, CVS and Confluent
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Here are some top stocks trending on Yahoo Finance in premarket trading:
Arm (ARM) stock fell 6% on Thursday before the bell following the announcement of the chip tech provider's plan to invest in its own chip development, which would bite into future profits, disappointed investors.
CVS (CVS) stock jumped 7% in premarket on Thursday after the company beat Wall Street estimates for second-quarter profit.
Confluent Inc (CFLT) stock rose over 20% premarket following the company's positive earnings report. The data streaming platform reported a 21% growth in subscription revenue and a 28% growth in Confluent Cloud revenue for Q2 2025.
Carvana posts higher quarterly profit on record car sales
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
Shares in Carvana (CVNA) surged over 15% in premarket trading after the online used-car seller defied expectations with strong second quarter results and outlook.
Bloomberg reports:
Read more here.
EBay stock rises as resilient consumers fuel strong sales forecast
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
EBay (EBAY) stock jumped on Thursday before the bell after the e-commerce company forecasted sales that topped analysts' estimates, suggesting optimism for continued consumer resilience at a time of shifting US tariff proposals.
Bloomberg News reports:
Read more here.
AB InBev shares slide on concern over sales volumes
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Beer giant Anheuser-Busch InBev (BUD) stock slumped more than 9% before the bell on Thursday after reporting that its second quarter sales volumes fell more than expected due to weak demand in Brazil and China, adding to investor worries over industry growth and hitting its shares.
Reuters reports:
Read more here.
Qualcomm on the move lower
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
Qualcomm's (QCOM) not playing in the big-cap tech stock euphoria this morning led by Microsoft (MSFT) and Meta (META) post earnings. Its shares are down 6% premarket.
The company's earnings late Wednesday were fine. But the Street is calling out a few things that are giving the bears the win, for now.
This note from HSBC's Ryan Mellor this morning captures it all nicely:
This is remarkable on Meta
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Meta's (META) stock is rocking higher in premarket, to the tune of 12% after a monster quarter.
Got to love the market ignoring the capex stuff in its earnings release below, and focusing in on Meta's revenue trends (strong).
"We currently expect 2025 capital expenditures, including principal payments on finance leases, to be in the range of $66-72 billion, narrowed from our prior outlook of $64-72 billion and up approximately $30 billion year-over-year at the mid-point. While the infrastructure planning process remains highly dynamic, we currently expect another year of similarly significant capital expenditures dollar growth in 2026 as we continue aggressively pursuing opportunities to bring additional capacity online to meet the needs of our artificial intelligence efforts and business operations," Meta said.
Bottom line: bull market ... carry on!
Microsoft earnings call: A quick take
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
A bit of a sleepy earnings call from Microsoft (MSFT) after the close, filled with the typical Satya Nadella tech jargon.
Bottom line is this: Azure sales crushed, and there was zero signs of peaking AI demand. That should be good enough for the bulls.
"We expect stock to trade up given continued large Azure growth beats and a positive AI trajectory even with continued capacity constraints. We think this also bodes well for other AI infrastructure names in our coverage (Oracle (ORCL), Coreweave (CRWV)," Citi analyst Tyler Radke said.
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SiMa.ai Secures USD 85 Mn to Advance Physical AI Platform
SiMa.ai Secures USD 85 Mn to Advance Physical AI Platform

Entrepreneur

time8 minutes ago

  • Entrepreneur

SiMa.ai Secures USD 85 Mn to Advance Physical AI Platform

Funding led by Maverick Capital with StepStone Group joining will drive global expansion and innovation for edge-based AI applications You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. has secured USD 85 million in a funding round led by Maverick Capital, with StepStone Group joining as a new investor. The round was oversubscribed and included participation from existing backers. With this latest infusion, the company's total funding has reached USD 355 million. The capital will be used to expand global presence and to accelerate the growth of its Physical AI platform. Plans include increasing investment in software innovation, enhancing go-to-market activities, strengthening customer support, and advancing its automotive development plans. "This new funding further validates our leadership in the Physical AI space and the growing demand for solutions that deliver top-tier performance per watt with exceptional ease of use," said Krishna Rangasayee, Founder and CEO of "With the support of both new and existing investors, we are moving quickly to extend our lead and meet demand across robotics, automotive, industrial automation, aerospace and defense, smart vision, and healthcare." Founded in 2018 by Rangasayee, is headquartered in San Jose, California. The company specialises in Physical AI computing, creating platforms that enable intelligent applications to operate efficiently at the edge. Its flagship Modalix platform offers high performance while maintaining strong energy efficiency, designed to make advanced AI capabilities accessible in industries such as robotics, automotive, aerospace, and industrial automation. offers a full-stack Physical AI solution through its ONE platform. This integrates purpose-built silicon with a software-first approach to simplify deployment and maximise performance. The platform includes Modalix, a second-generation multimodal MLSoC now available to customers, and Palette, a software suite that features both a software development kit and Edgematic, a no-code visual development tool. The system supports major machine learning frameworks, including vision models, transformers, and generative AI, within a single architecture. Andrew Homan, Managing Partner at Maverick Capital, said, " is redefining possibilities at the edge by combining advanced silicon with a software-centric approach to Physical AI. Their ability to deliver powerful, low-energy solutions with simple deployment positions them to lead in a rapidly growing market." John Avirett, Partner at StepStone Group, added, "As generative AI changes the data center, we see significant opportunity in AI at the edge. integrated solution, technical expertise, and customer adoption make it a leader in this space." With AI applications increasingly moving to the edge, aims to address the need for high performance, energy efficiency, and ease of use in real-world environments.

Stablecoins – The Internet's Upgrade To Money?
Stablecoins – The Internet's Upgrade To Money?

Forbes

time9 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Stablecoins – The Internet's Upgrade To Money?

Imagine if PayPal, Swift, and your banking app went on a wellness weekend in Silicon Valley and returned Monday as leaner, faster versions of themselves. That's the premise behind stablecoins - crypto's sensible sibling. They are digital tokens pegged to real-world currencies, such as the US dollar. One stablecoin, one dollar, it's as simple as that. Or at least that is the idea. Backed 1:1 by short-dated US Treasuries or bank deposits, stablecoins like USDC (Circle) and USDT (Tether) now represent a parallel financial infrastructure: programmable, blockchain-native money that moves 24/7, costs pennies (sometimes fractions of pennies) to transmit, and settles in seconds across borders. Unlike their volatile crypto cousins, stablecoins don't swing with Elon's tweets. They are built for stability and, increasingly, for scale. In short, stablecoins might just be the internet's long-overdue upgrade to money. The Market Defined - a $3 Trillion Disruption in Motion If traditional FX is a battered old dial-up modem, stablecoins are fibre-optic. The current foreign exchange system is built upon decades-old 'correspondent banking' rails. That means sending USD to Nairobi from Berlin still involves a long conga line of intermediaries, opaque fees, and 2–5 business days of holding your breath. Now imagine a contractor in Lagos receiving USD in minutes, not days, with 90% lower fees. That's the promise - and increasingly, the reality - of stablecoin payments. According to Visa and Artemis, over $35 trillion in stablecoins were transferred in the last 12 months, more than Visa and Mastercard combined. Adoption spans over 190 countries, with more than 30 million active wallets and $214 billion in supply. And yet, this is still small fry compared to the $1.1 trillion traded daily in traditional FX markets. The runway is long. The Emerging Stablecoin Stack At the heart of this emerging ecosystem are three core players: Stablecoins are now less about crypto speculation and more about enabling global payments, liquidity management, and even treasury operations. (Yes, SpaceX reportedly uses stablecoins to manage treasury exposure in places like Argentina and Nigeria.) Why Now? Three tailwinds are converging: As Jeremy Allaire of Circle put it: 'This is one of the biggest TAMs (Total Addressable Markets) of all industries out there.' Stablecoin Benefits - Not Just a Cheaper Payment Let's be clear: stablecoins aren't just shaving a few basis points off remittance fees. They're overhauling the plumbing of money movement, and if carried out properly, should ensure: Even governments are starting to warm up. The US Secretary of the Treasury recently noted stablecoins could 'reinforce the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency'. Now there's a geopolitical incentive too. The Use Cases - From Contractors to Capital Markets Today, stablecoins are fuelling cross-border B2B and remittances (especially in high-friction corridors like LatAm, Africa, Southeast Asia), Vendor payments and global payroll (freelancers, contractors, AI microtasks), DeFi and tokenised assets, Treasury operations and liquidity management, retail and micropayments (Stripe now lets you 'Pay with Crypto,' settling in fiat), etc. Platforms like Koywe and BVNK are abstracting away the blockchain complexity, offering embedded wallets and FX capabilities to fintechs, banks, and corporates alike. The Programmable Edge - Money with a Brain Stablecoins aren't just faster dollars. They're programmable money. Developers can build logic into transactions, such as pay-on-delivery, split payments, escrow with triggers, etc. Imagine Stripe automatically issuing a virtual card with preset limits for a one-time transaction. Or a DAO releasing funds when a smart contract verifies an invoice, this is where stablecoins become 'room-temperature superconductors for financial services,' to borrow Stripe's analogy. Fiat vs. Stablecoin - The Convergence is Underway Here's the kicker – the more people spend stablecoins, the less they need to convert back to fiat. This threatens the incumbents, not because stablecoins are replacing dollars or banks, but because they may become the rails on which banks ride. Think of stablecoins as TCP/IP for money, invisible but essential. Fiat isn't disappearing. But control over the user interface, the relationship, the rail – that's the next frontier. But… There are still Challenges Of course, no revolution is without its wrinkles. The regulation is still evolving. US and EU frameworks are being formed, but cross-border clarity remains a work in progress. Redemption risk: Some 'stable' coins aren't so stable (read: algorithmic failures). The user experience is improving. Right now, wallets, gas fees, cross-chain issues are still too clunky for grandma. There's friction with the Central Bank. Will CBDC (Central Bank Digital Currency) replace stablecoins? Maybe. But don't expect it to be programmable, anonymous, or innovation friendly. CBDC is great tools for surveillance, monetary policy, and state control but it won't be winning developer hearts any time soon. The Road Ahead – What Matters and Who Wins? Here's what we're betting on: The winners will straddle both worlds. Not crypto-native or TradFi alone, but companies that can operate across both and move fast. Banks and fintechs will converge. Banks are already exploring the issuance of stablecoins and fintechs are acquiring bank charters. Platforms matter. Ethereum and Solana are dominating, but keep an eye on Bitcoin Lightning, Stellar, and Tron in emerging markets. Yield matters. Those who capture the interest from reserves will be the ones to define business models. Ultimately, stablecoins aren't a threat to the financial system. They represent an evolution - an upgrade. The question isn't if they'll go mainstream, but how fast, who wins, and what rails the money flows on. If you're still thinking of stablecoins as a crypto gimmick, you're already late for the next phase of finance.

I tested Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. iPhone 16 Pro Max in a 200-photo shootout — which camera phone wins?
I tested Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. iPhone 16 Pro Max in a 200-photo shootout — which camera phone wins?

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

I tested Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 vs. iPhone 16 Pro Max in a 200-photo shootout — which camera phone wins?

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. Comparing the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7 against the iPhone 16 Pro Max puts Samsung's most expensive phone versus Apple's most expensive iPhone. And there is a huge quantity of differences. Although the iPhone 16 Pro Max is deservedly thought of as one of the best phones around, the Galaxy Z Fold 7, with its folding design and even higher price tag, is on a different level. But users expect these phones to still cover the essentials, including taking great photos. To see how these two phones compare, I took them both out for a long snapping session. And below you can see my results, which will demonstrate that the major differences between these phones doesn't stop at just their shape or software. Main We begin with this parish boundary marker as the subject for our phones' main cameras. The Galaxy Z Fold 7's take on the scene has more color, while the iPhone's shot has more natural tones, in line with how I saw the scene on the day. Ultrawide A short distance away, looking up at a church through the phones' ultrawide cameras, we can see the iPhone's image is way brighter than the Samsung's, aside from the clouds, which are similarly bright and colored. This makes sense considering the size and resolution of the iPhone's 48MP ultrawide camera, while the Galaxy Z Fold 7 uses a smaller 12MP one. Macro The Galaxy Z Fold 7's weaker ultrawide camera also impacts its macro photography abilities. Its image of a yellow flower is much darker than the iPhone's, even if it's still detailed. Perhaps the lower light level will be preferable to some users, but it's not to my liking at least. 3x Zoom Moving now to the telephoto cameras, we begin with the optical zoom level of the Galaxy Z Fold 7's telephoto camera. To hit this zoom, the iPhone 16 Pro Max has to use a cropped main camera image. You can tell from the softness of the iPhone image that it's not using a proper zoom lens, along with its weirdly dull coloration of this sign. The Samsung shot isn't particularly interesting, but it's definitely the better-looking one of the two with more contrast. 5x zoom Upping the magnification puts us into the native territory of the iPhone's telephoto camera. And its increased sharpness over the Z Fold's image is plain to see. The Galaxy Z Fold 7's flatter colors make for an interesting visual difference, too. Selfie Using the front-facing cameras on these two phones (the outer one in the Z Fold 7's case), we can see how the phones depicts a person and applies a portrait effect. The iPhone has given me exaggerated highlights in my hair and the brightest parts of my skin, and a warmer overall tone compared to the Z Fold 7, which has gone for a more natural coloration. The portrait effect in both photos is well applied, but interestingly the Samsung's blur is noticeably gentler. Low light A Lego minifigure keyring posed on a dark shelf shows us how these phones deal with night mode/low light photography. The iPhone has turned in the brighter image, which isn't surprising given it took a seven-second exposure to the Galaxy's three-second one. But as a result, lighter parts of the shot look over sharpened with exaggerated highlights. As a result, I think I like the Z Fold 7's photo in this particular example. Colors Looking across a park, we have a variety of colors for the two phones to depict. The brighter iPhone image brings elements like the purple flowers, the green lawn and the blue shopfronts in the distance to the fore, while the Z Fold 7 is using a flatter color tuning. It's especially noticeable in the sky, which comes across as a plain grey from the Galaxy Z Fold 7 but a more lively blue on the iPhone. The iPhone's pic is a brighter but a bit overexposed, while the Z Fold 7's shot is darker and a bit more evenly exposed. So it comes down to your preference. HDR Putting the color difference aside, this coffee cup gives us a good demo of the two phones' ability to handle extreme light and dark in the same shot. The Galaxy Z Fold 7 gives us a shot that is not that different from the iPhone in terms of highlights, but there is a little more to see in the darker areas of the iPhone image, like the texture of the ceramics, or the chocolate powder spilling over the edge of the cup. Max resolution Lastly, I took a shot with the phones' main cameras again, but set to their maximum resolutions - 48MP in the iPhone's case, and 200MP for the Galaxy. The iPhone image of this street scene is brighter, which helps make the dark-colored elements like the road, the trees or the buildings pop out more. But the Samsung, thanks to having over four times the pixels, gives you more detail when you zoom in, such as the clock near the center of the image. It's hard to make out in the small previous window above, but having more pixels to play with can be helpful for editing or reframing a shot after you've taken it. Verdict Personally, I think the iPhone 16 Pro Max comes out on top in this comparison. But much of what determines the winner of this comparison for anyone examining these images is going to be personal taste, due to the different ways these phones process images. Apple's focus on brightness and more intense colors is often a smart route to take, but Samsung's generally less exaggerated take on scenes can be the better one a lot of the time. There's not a huge amount splitting these phones apart in terms of image quality really. The iPhone is therefore the better value of the two, if you can call a $1,200 phone a "value" device. The Z Fold 7 still capturees excellent photos a lot of the time though, which some buyers may find tempts them to go for a foldable rather than a regular flagship. More from Tom's Guide I tested this MagSafe wallet for a month and now I can't live without it — especially at 44% off right now Google Pixel 10 Pro Fold — what we know so far How to speed up your iPhone by clearing its cache

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