The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) on Monday rose +0.10%, the Dow Jones Industrials Index ($DOWI) (DIA) fell -0.52%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) rose +0.37%. December E-mini S&P futures (ESZ25) rose +0.09%, and December E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQZ25) rose +0.35%.
US stocks on Monday saw support from AI optimism after OpenAI bought $38 billion of AI computing power from Amazon. In M&A deals, Kimberly-Clark announced a $40 billion acquisition of Tylenol-maker Kenvue for stock and cash. Also, Eaton agreed to buy Boyd's thermal business for $9.5 billion, a data-center-related acquisition.
Stocks also saw support from dovish comments from Fed Governors Miran and Cook, although Chicago Fed President Goolsbee's comments were slightly hawkish.
Stocks were undercut by a +2.5 bp rise in the 10-year T-note yield.
Fed Governor Stephen Miran said Monday, "The Fed is too restrictive, neutral is quite a ways below where current policy is." He added, "Given my rather more sanguine outlook on inflation than some of the other members of the committee, I don't see a reason for keeping policy as restrictive." Mr. Miran recently took a leave of absence from the White House Council of Economic Advisers to take a temporary job as a Governor at the Fed.
Also on the dovish side, Fed Governor Lisa Cook said the risk of further labor-market weakness is greater than the risk of increased inflation. However, she did not commit to supporting an interest rate cut at the next FOMC meeting in December, and said the course of monetary policy is not on a pre-determined course.
In a slightly hawkish statement, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said he is more worried about inflation than the job market, but said he is not decided on policy going into the December FOMC meeting. He said he believes interest rates can still come down a "fair amount," but "it would probably be most judicious to have the rates come down with inflation."
The markets are discounting a 66% chance of another -25 bp rate cut at the next FOMC meeting on December 9-10.
On a weak note for stocks, the Oct ISM manufacturing index fell by -0.4 points to 48.7, weaker than expectations for a +0.4 point rise to 49.5. The ISM manufacturing index has been below the expansion-contraction level of 50.0 since March 2025. On a more favorable note, the Oct ISM prices paid index fell -3.9 points to 58.0, weaker than expectations of +0.6 to 62.5.
As a supportive factor for stocks, the final-October S&P US manufacturing PMI was revised slightly higher by +0.3 points to 52.5, stronger than market expectations for an unrevised 52.2.
The markets are looking ahead to oral arguments at the Supreme Court this Wednesday about whether President Trump's reciprocal tariffs are legal. Oral arguments may provide hints about how the Supreme Court might rule. The Supreme Court is expected to issue its ruling by late this year or early in 2026. Lower courts have already ruled that Mr. Trump's reciprocal tariffs are illegal, finding they are based on a specious claim of emergency authority under the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act. If the US Supreme Court upholds those rulings and strikes down the tariffs, then the US government may have to refund the reciprocal and fentanyl-linked tariffs already collected, totaling more than $80 billion, and Mr. Trump's power to impose tariffs may be limited to well-founded sections of US trade law, such as sections 232, 301, and 201.
Q3 corporate earnings season continues at a strong clip this week, with 136 of the S&P 500 companies reporting earnings this week. According to Bloomberg Intelligence, 80% of the S&P 500 companies that have reported so far have beaten forecasts, on course for the best quarter since 2021. However, Q3 profits are expected to have risen by +7.2% y/y, the smallest increase in two years. Also, Q3 sales growth is projected to slow to +5.9% y/y from +6.4% in Q2.
The US government shutdown continues into its sixth week, weighing on market sentiment and the US economy. The government shutdown is delaying a host of government reports and is having an adverse effect on the US economy.
Overseas stock markets closed higher on Monday. The Euro Stoxx 50 rose +0.30%. China's Shanghai Composite on Monday closed up +0.55%. Japan's Nikkei Stock 225 closed up +2.12%.
Interest Rates
December 10-year T-notes (ZNZ5) on Monday rose by +0.5 tick. The 10-year T-note yield rose +2.3 bp to 4.101%. T-note prices saw some support from Monday's weaker-than-expected US ISM manufacturing report. T-note prices also saw support from Monday's -0.7 bp decline in the 10-year breakeven inflation expectations rate to 2.309%.
T-note prices on Monday saw bearish carry-over from last week, when Fed Chair Powell cautioned against fully expecting another Fed rate cut at its next meeting on December 9-10. Also, several other Fed officials late last week expressed caution about further Fed rate cuts. However, Fed Governors Miran and Cook issued dovish comments on Monday.
T-note prices have underlying support from the ongoing US government shutdown, which could lead to additional job losses, reduced consumer spending, and a weakened US economy, potentially allowing the Fed to continue cutting interest rates.
European government bond yields rose on Monday. The 10-year German bund yield rose 3.4 bp to 2.667%. The 10-year UK gilt yield rose +2.5 bp to 4.435%.
Swaps are discounting a 5% chance for a -25 bp rate cut by the ECB at its next policy meeting on December 18.
US Stock Movers
The Magnificent Seven stocks ended the day mixed, with Meta (META) as the largest loser, down -1.6%.
Amazon (AMZN) rallied +4.0% after news that it signed a $38 billion deal to provide Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud AI capacity to OpenAI.
Nvidia (NVDA) rose +2.2% after Loop Capital Markets raised its price target on Nvidia to a Street-high, with an implied market-cap target of more than $8.5 billion, up from its current market cap of just over $5 trillion.
Alphabet (GOOG) rose +0.9% after a Bloomberg report that the company plans to raise $15 billion from a dollar bond sale in as many as eight tranches with maturities ranging from 3 to 50 years.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Monday fell -0.52% due to negative breadth, with 22 losers versus only 8 gainers. The largest losers in the Dow were Merck (MRK) with a -4.1% loss, and NIKE (NKE) with a -3.0% loss. 3M (MMM), Chevron (CVX), and UnitedHealth Group (UNH) showed losses of more than -2%.
Crypto stocks traded lower due to the -2.6% sell-off in Bitcoin (^BTCUSD). Coinbase (COIN) fell -3.9%, Mara Holdings (MARA) fell -2.5%, and Strategy (MSTR) fell -1.8%. Riot Platforms (RIOT) bucked the trend and closed the day up +4.8%.
IREN LTD (IREN) rallied more than +11% after news that Microsoft (MSFT) signed a deal with the data-center company to buy AI cloud capacity worth nearly $10 billion.
Kenvue (KVUE) rallied +12% after Kimberly-Clark (KMB) agreed to buy the Tylenol maker and consumer-health company for nearly $50 billion in stock and cash. However, investors did not view the news as positive for Kimberly-Clark, which plunged by more than -14% on the acquisition news.
Cisco Systems (CSCO) rose +1.8% after an upgrade from UBS to buy from neutral.
Eaton (ETN) rallied +1.3% after agreeing to buy the Boyd Thermal business of Boyd Corp from Goldman Sachs for $9.5 billion in a data-center play.
Earnings Reports(11/4/2025)
Expeditors International (EXPD), Marathon Petroleum Corp (MPC), Pfizer Inc (PFE), Zoetis Inc (ZTS), Shopify Inc (SHOP), Uber Technologies Inc (UBER), Ball Corp (BALL), Thomson Reuters Corp (TRI), Apollo Global Management Inc (APO), Exelon Corp (EXC), Archer-Daniels-Midland Co (ADM), Martin Marietta Materials Inc (MLM), Eaton Corp PLC (ETN), Leidos Holdings Inc (LDOS), Waters Corp (WAT), Stanley Black & Decker Inc (SWK), Global Payments Inc (GPN), Gartner Inc (IT), CDW Corp/DE (CDW), Henry Schein Inc (HSIC), Broadridge Financial Solutions (BR), Molson Coors Beverage Co (TAP), Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NCLH), Marriott International Inc/MD (MAR), Yum! Brands Inc (YUM), Advanced Micro Devices Inc (AMD), Mosaic Co/The (MOS), American International Group I (AIG), Arista Networks Inc (ANET), Corteva Inc (CTVA), Match Group Inc (MTCH), International Flavors & Fragra (IFF), Live Nation Entertainment Inc (LYV), Assurant Inc (AIZ), AES Corp/The (AES), Eversource Energy (ES), Super Micro Computer Inc (SMCI), Jack Henry & Associates Inc (JKHY), Aflac Inc (AFL), Amgen Inc (AMGN), Axon Enterprise Inc (AXON), Skyworks Solutions Inc (SWKS).
On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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