A decline in bond yields paired with anticipation for the release of Nvidia’s quarterly results, fuelled Wall Street to close in positive territory overnight. The Nasdaq extended its rally into a third straight session, adding 1.6%, while the Dow Jones rose 0.5%, and the S&P500 gained 1.1%.
After the closing bell Nvidia, the chip making stock leading the AI hype in 2023, reported quarterly earnings including record revenue up 88% in Q2 from Q1 to US$13.51bn, and record data centre revenue up 141% on Q1 to US$10.32bn. Net income popped from US$656m in the three months ended July 31st, 2022, to US$6.188bn in the three months ended July 30th, 2023.
The benchmark ten-year treasury yield that hit its highest level since 2007 on Monday, dipped more than 11 basis points overnight to 4.21% which increased investor appetite for equities.
Inflationary pressures and expected cooling consumer demand are weighing on apparel giants like Nike as the sports brand fell for a 10th straight session on Wednesday, while Footlocker tumbled 28% after reporting a decline in sales and lowering its forecast for the second time this year.
Over in Europe markets closed marginally higher across the region on Wednesday led by a jump in utilities stocks adding 1.1%. Germany’s PMI figures were released overnight showing a steep downturn in manufacturing output alongside a plunge in business activity. The STOXX600 rose 0.4%, Germany’s DAX added 0.15%, the French CAC lifted 0.08%, and in the UK, the FTSE100 rose 0.68%.
Locally yesterday, the ASX closed 0.38% higher as strong gains for consumer staples, materials and consumer discretionary stocks offset the tech sector’s near 5.3% decline. The reason for the tech sector slide was on the back of WiseTech Global tumbling 20% on weaker-than-expected guidance for FY24 and a return to acquisition growth strategy which will squeeze profit margins.
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