Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq move higher with Apple earnings in the wings


US stocks gained steam on Thursday afternoon as investors digested megacap tech earnings and waited for Apple (AAPL) results for more clues on prospects for Big Tech.

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.5%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose nearly 0.4%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was up nearly 0.3%.

Right ahead of the closing bell, President Donald Trump once again teased looming 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada. The US dollar (DX=F) index spiked on the news, reversing earlier losses to close near flat.

After the Federal Reserve stood pat on interest rates as expected, investors have turned to parsing earnings reports — and in particular, the first wave of results from the “Magnificent Seven” companies that have driven broader stock market gains.

Tesla’s (TSLA) stock ticked higher despite an earnings miss as investors took on trust its vow to return to growth in 2025. Meanwhile, Meta’s (META) quarterly earnings beat helped lift its shares, but Microsoft stock slumped, down 6%, after its cloud revenue fell short.

Faith in Big Tech was put to the test after DeepSeek’s cheaper AI model rattled assumptions about the likelihood of a payoff, the focus was on the rationale for their massive AI investments.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis’s advance estimate of fourth-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) showed the US economy grew at an annualized pace of 2.3%, below the 2.6% expected by economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

Meanwhile, American Airlines (AAL) CEO Robert Isom expressed condolences following the collision between an American passenger jet and a US army helicopter on Wednesday night.

“We’re absolutely heartbroken for the family and loved ones of the passengers and crew members and also for those that were on the military aircraft,” Isom said.

After the bell, Apple (AAPL) reported its fiscal first quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines but falling short on iPhone revenue. Shares were down about 1% following the report.

LIVE COVERAGE IS OVER 21 updates

  • Apple earnings top Wall Street forecasts while iPhone, China sales fall short

    Yahoo Finance’s Dan Howley reports:

    Apple (AAPL) reported its fiscal first quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines but falling short on iPhone revenue. Sales out of the company’s Greater China region were also lower than Wall Street anticipated in the quarter.

    For the quarter, Apple reported earnings per share of $2.40 on revenue of $124.3 billion. Analysts were looking for EPS of $2.35 and revenue of $124.1 billion, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates.

    Apple’s iPhone segment brought in $69.1 billion versus expectations of $71 billion, down slightly from the $69.7 billion the company reported for the segment in the last year. The company’s Services business generated $26.3 billion in revenue, in line with Wall Street’s expectations. Greater China sales topped out at $18.5 billion. Wall Street was expecting $21.5 billion.

    China has been a persistent area of trouble for Apple over the last two years. Sales in the region declined 8% in 2024, falling to $66.9 billion, and 2% in 2023. At the time, Apple blamed weakness in the renminbi versus the dollar and lower iPhone and iPad sales.

    Read more here.

  • A wild final 30 minutes for markets

    Stocks hit their lows of the day with about 20 minutes left in the trading session after President Trump once again teased 25% tariffs on Mexico and Canada. The US dollar index spiked on the news, reversing earlier losses, and stocks hit their lows of the day.

    However, as the intraday chart below shows, that selling action was short-lived.

  • What to watch in Apple earnings

    Yahoo Finance’s Dan Howley reports:

    Apple (AAPL) is set to announce its first quarter earnings after the bell on Thursday amid concerns that iPhone sales aren’t getting the kind of boost from its Apple Intelligence platform that investors initially hoped.

    Both Jefferies and Loop Capital downgraded Apple’s stock last week, with Jefferies analyst Edison Lee saying he expects Apple to report lower-than-anticipated results for the December quarter and miss on expectations for the second quarter.

    Oppenheimer also downgraded shares on Wednesday, citing slower iPhone growth pressured by competition in China and a lack of AI innovation to catalyze a new upgrade cycle.

    According to estimates by IDC and Canalys, overall iPhone market share fell 1% year over year in Q4 to 23% despite the broader market for smartphone shipments increasing by 3%. Apple kicked off its big AI push in October, releasing the first raft of…



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