US Stocks Poised For Tentative Start As Geopolitical Tensions, Nvidia Earnings Keep Investors Cautious: Tech Bull Expects AI Bellwether To Deliver 'Drop The Mic Performance'

U.S. equity markets have had a mixed week so far, with the Dow Jones facing pressure even as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq witnessed sideway movements.

FuturesChange (+/-)
Nasdaq 1000.11%
S&P 5000.12%
Dow Jones0.19%
R2K-0.09%

Cues From Last Session:

Markets had a second consecutive mixed session, with the Dow Jones closing lower by 0.3% while the S&P 500 edged up. The Nasdaq gained over 1% in the run-up to Nvidia's earnings.

Crude oil prices continued to gain as Russia-Ukraine tensions escalated.

This geopolitical anxiety rubbed off on treasury yields as well, which edged up.

On the economic data front, housing starts in the U.S. declined by 3.1% to 1.311 million in October versus a revised 1.353 million in the previous month. U.S. building permits declined by 0.6% to an annual rate of 1.416 million in October.

Most sectors on the S&P 500 closed on a positive note, with energy, communication services, and consumer discretionary stocks recording the biggest gains on Monday.

However, industrial stocks bucked the overall market trend, closing the session lower.

Insights From Analysts:

Wedbush's Dan Ives expressed upbeat sentiment about Nvidia's earnings, saying that the AI giant could deliver earnings beat and raise guidance as well.

"We expect a drop the mic performance from Nvidia tomorrow night as Godfather of AI Jensen & Co. are the only game in town with $1 trillion of AI Cap-Ex on the way with Nvidia’s GPUs the new oil and gold in this world."

While there is optimism among analysts about Nvidia and other AI stocks, the European Central Bank expressed caution about the possibility of an "AI bubble."

“This concentration among a few large firms raises concerns over the possibility of an AI-related asset price bubble,” the ECB said in its latest Financial Stability Review, underscoring the increasing dependence of the equity markets on select companies.

This could also be a cause of concern for equity markets beyond the U.S., noted the ECB.

"Also, in a context of deeply integrated global equity markets, it points to the risk of adverse global spillovers, should earnings expectations for these firms be disappointed."

Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, on the other hand, remained optimistic about equity markets.

"Stocks historically do better in years 1 and 2 of a President who was re-elected vs a new President in office."

"We are in the third year of this bull market and it is worth noting these years can be on the weaker side of things. Good news is if the bull continues (as we expect) years 4-6 are all quite strong," he added.

See Also: How To Trade Futures

Upcoming Economic Data

Wednesday's economic calendar is fairly light.

  • Fed Gov. Lisa Cooks will speak at 11 a.m. ET.
  • Fed Gov. Michelle Bowman will speak at 12:15 p.m. ET.

Stocks In Focus:

Commodities, Bonds And Global Equity Markets:

Crude oil futures surged in the early New York session, rising by 0.53% to hover around $69.61 per barrel.

The 10-year Treasury note yield increased to 4.426%.

Major Asian markets ended mixed on Wednesday, while European markets witnessed sideways movement in early trading.

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