US stocks hit one-month high as Microsoft and Meta shine
The ongoing tech earnings represent a ‘critical inflection point’ for the market, portfolio manager says
01 May 2025 - 21:25
byLisa Pauline Mattackal and Purvi Agarwal
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Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York City, US. Picture: REUTERS/BRENDAN McDERMID
Bengaluru — Wall Street’s main indices jumped to about one-month highs on Thursday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq leading gains, as strong quarterly results from heavyweights Microsoft and Meta pointed to a resilient outlook for the technology sector.
Microsoft surged 9% to its highest level since late January, driven by an upbeat quarterly growth forecast for its cloud-computing business Azure. The jump helped the stock surpass Apple to became the world’s most valuable company.
Meta Platforms gained 5.6% after posting higher-than-expected revenue on the back of a strong advertising performance.
The ongoing tech earnings represent a “critical inflection point” for the market, said Joe Tigay, portfolio manager of Rational Equity Armor Fund.
“Microsoft, Amazon, and their peers aren’t just reporting numbers, they’re revealing whether businesses are doubling down on cloud and IT or pulling back amid trade wars and economic uncertainty.”
The fallout from erratic shifts in US trade policy has been the dominant theme this earnings season, with many companies slashing or withdrawing their profit outlooks. Still, S&P 500 first-quarter earnings are seen growing 12.9% on an annual basis, per LSEG data.
Results from megacaps Amazon.com and Apple are due after markets close. Amazon shares were up 2.9%.
Apple shares were little changed, lagging the rest of the “Magnificent Seven” stocks after a federal judge ruled the iPhone maker had violated a US court order to reform its App Store.
The S&P 500 and Dow were at nearly one-month highs, while the Nasdaq jumped to its highest since March 28. The S&P 500 is headed for an eight-session winning streak, its best since August, if gains hold.
At 11.44am ET (5.44pm), the Dow Jones industrial average rose 333.61 points, or 0.82%, to 41,001.86, the S&P 500 gained 71.53 points, or 1.28%, to 5,640.59 and the Nasdaq composite gained 398.64 points, or 2.28%, to 17,844.98.
Other technology megacaps also rose, with Nvidia up 4.8%. That lifted the information technology and communication services sectors 3.3% and 2.1%, respectively, to more than one-month highs.
The day’s economic data releases were mixed.
Weekly jobless claims, coming in before Friday’s crucial nonfarm payrolls data, show layoffs increased more than expected last week, potentially hinting at a pickup in job cuts after tariffs.
ISM PMI data shows US manufacturing contracted further in April, though slightly less than expected by economists polled by Reuters.
That followed Wednesday’s data showing the US economy contracted for the first time in three years in the most recent quarter.
Among other earnings, Eli Lilly lost 10.7% after its quarterly results, pressuring the healthcare sector, while McDonald’s dipped 0.7% after posting a surprise drop in first-quarter global sales.
Mobile chip designer Qualcomm fell 8.3% after it forecast a hit to revenue from the trade war.
General Motors gained 0.9% after offering a new forecast for 2025 core profit.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
US stocks hit one-month high as Microsoft and Meta shine
The ongoing tech earnings represent a ‘critical inflection point’ for the market, portfolio manager says
Bengaluru — Wall Street’s main indices jumped to about one-month highs on Thursday, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq leading gains, as strong quarterly results from heavyweights Microsoft and Meta pointed to a resilient outlook for the technology sector.
Microsoft surged 9% to its highest level since late January, driven by an upbeat quarterly growth forecast for its cloud-computing business Azure. The jump helped the stock surpass Apple to became the world’s most valuable company.
Meta Platforms gained 5.6% after posting higher-than-expected revenue on the back of a strong advertising performance.
The ongoing tech earnings represent a “critical inflection point” for the market, said Joe Tigay, portfolio manager of Rational Equity Armor Fund.
“Microsoft, Amazon, and their peers aren’t just reporting numbers, they’re revealing whether businesses are doubling down on cloud and IT or pulling back amid trade wars and economic uncertainty.”
The fallout from erratic shifts in US trade policy has been the dominant theme this earnings season, with many companies slashing or withdrawing their profit outlooks. Still, S&P 500 first-quarter earnings are seen growing 12.9% on an annual basis, per LSEG data.
Results from megacaps Amazon.com and Apple are due after markets close. Amazon shares were up 2.9%.
Apple shares were little changed, lagging the rest of the “Magnificent Seven” stocks after a federal judge ruled the iPhone maker had violated a US court order to reform its App Store.
The S&P 500 and Dow were at nearly one-month highs, while the Nasdaq jumped to its highest since March 28. The S&P 500 is headed for an eight-session winning streak, its best since August, if gains hold.
At 11.44am ET (5.44pm), the Dow Jones industrial average rose 333.61 points, or 0.82%, to 41,001.86, the S&P 500 gained 71.53 points, or 1.28%, to 5,640.59 and the Nasdaq composite gained 398.64 points, or 2.28%, to 17,844.98.
Other technology megacaps also rose, with Nvidia up 4.8%. That lifted the information technology and communication services sectors 3.3% and 2.1%, respectively, to more than one-month highs.
The day’s economic data releases were mixed.
Weekly jobless claims, coming in before Friday’s crucial nonfarm payrolls data, show layoffs increased more than expected last week, potentially hinting at a pickup in job cuts after tariffs.
ISM PMI data shows US manufacturing contracted further in April, though slightly less than expected by economists polled by Reuters.
That followed Wednesday’s data showing the US economy contracted for the first time in three years in the most recent quarter.
Among other earnings, Eli Lilly lost 10.7% after its quarterly results, pressuring the healthcare sector, while McDonald’s dipped 0.7% after posting a surprise drop in first-quarter global sales.
Mobile chip designer Qualcomm fell 8.3% after it forecast a hit to revenue from the trade war.
General Motors gained 0.9% after offering a new forecast for 2025 core profit.
Reuters
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