The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) on Wednesday closed up by +0.38%, the Dow Jones Industrials Index ($DOWI) (DIA) closed up by +0.10%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) closed up by +0.56%. December E-mini S&P futures (ESZ25) rose +0.39%, and December E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQZ25) rose +0.58%.
US stock indexes settled higher on Wednesday as they recovered some of this week’s sharp losses. Nvidia rose more than +2% ahead of its earnings results after Wednesday’s close. Nvidia’s earnings are seen as a bellwether for whether lofty valuations for tech stocks and massive capital spending in artificial intelligence remain justified.
Alphabet rose +3% to lead megacap tech stocks higher after Google debuted an updated version of its artificial intelligence model, Gemini, that executives said represents a “massive jump” in reasoning and coding ability. Also, strength in chip makers supported gains in the broader market.
Limiting gains in the overall market was weakness in energy producers, as WTI crude oil prices are down by more than 2%.
Stock indexes fell from their best levels on Wednesday as Fed rate-cut expectations faded after the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) canceled publication of the Oct employment report, which removes key data before next month’s FOMC meeting and lowers the chances of a Fed rate cut. The November employment report, which will include the October figures, will be published on December 16, after the December 9-10 FOMC meeting. The chance for a Fed rate cut at next month’s FOMC meeting fell to 30% on Wednesday from 70% last week.
The minutes of the October 28-29 FOMC meeting were hawkish as “many” officials said it would likely be appropriate to keep interest rate steady for the remainder of 2025.
US MBA mortgage applications fell -5.2% in the week ended November 14, with the purchase mortgage sub-index down -2.3% and the refinancing sub-index down -7.3%. The average 30-year fixed rate mortgage rose +3 bp to 6.37% from 6.34% in the prior week.
The US Aug trade deficit shrank to -$59.6 billion from -$78.2 billion in July, narrower than expectations of -$60.4 billion.

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