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(Bloomberg) — US equity futures rose as traders awaited a batch of economic data for clues on the interest-rate outlook and after Nvidia Corp.’s earnings reassured investors on the outlook for AI chip demand.
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Contracts on the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq 100 were up at least 0.6%. Nvidia advanced 3% in premarket trading after reporting a fourth-quarter earnings beat and giving a forecast that mostly met market expectations. Other members of the Magnificent Seven cohort were also higher, with Meta Platforms Inc., Tesla Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. rising more than 1%.
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Initial jobless claims and revised fourth-quarter gross domestic product numbers feature in a flurry of readings due later that investors will parse for any further evidence of slowing growth. Money markets have boosted Federal Reserve easing bets to fully price two quarter-point cuts this year compared to just one reduction two weeks ago.
Nvidia’s largely positive results come only a month after Chinese startup DeepSeek challenged US Big Tech’s artificial intelligence spending with its cheaper AI model. The picture for tech investors is made even more complex by US President Donald Trump’s administration pressuring allies to escalate curbs on China’s semiconductor industry.
“While we continue to highlight volatility in the near term amid macro uncertainty, US-China tensions, tariffs, and geopolitical developments, we believe the broader AI trend remains intact,” said Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management.
Investors are confronting a murky outlook for US trade tariffs, after Trump threatened to impose 25% levies on European Union imports. The region’s Stoxx 600 index fell 0.4%, off its lows for Thursday’s session, with the auto sector the biggest laggard.
Trump gave contradictory statements Wednesday on the implementation of tariffs, keeping investors guessing. A White House official said the European levies could affect all exports from the block, or only specific sectors. The US remains on track to put levies on Mexico and Canada, however it is unclear if they are going to be enacted in March.
“The market wants to see the implementation to price in the worst,” said Michael Nizard of Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management. “Up until now, it was negotiations and the market doesn’t want to correct more.”