Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq rise after Trump and Xi hold call on trade

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US stocks notched fresh highs on Friday amid a record-setting rally as the US and China advanced trade talks and the “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks continued to climb.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose 0.4% and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) jumped nearly 0.5%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) led gains, adding about 0.7%, as Apple (AAPL) stock rallied on optimism over its new iPhones hitting store shelves.

All three major indexes hit all-time highs for a second session in a row, ending the week on an upbeat note as the dust settled on the Federal Reserve’s return to interest rate cuts. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq cinched their third straight weekly gains, adding 1.2% and 2.2%, respectively. The Dow climbed 1%, marking its second consecutive weekly gain.

Save for Nvidia (NVDA), the Mag 7 tech stocks all posted gains for the five trading sessions through Friday, led by Tesla (TSLA). Tesla ended the week up nearly 8%, while Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) added around 6% and Apple jumped almost 5%.

Investors on Friday were focused on details from Trump’s conversation Chinese President Xi Jinping. The US president said in a post on Truth Social following the talks, “We made progress on many very important issues including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal.”

The details of the TikTok deal — which would allow the social media app owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance to continue US operations amid an impending ban — are not yet clear. The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the agreement would involve a consortium of investors including Oracle (ORCL), Silver Lake, and Andreessen Horowitz taking an 80% stake in the company.

Notably, a summary of Trump and Xi’s talk in Chinese state media did not provide a detailed update on a TikTok deal beyond saying that Xi supported a commercial solution to the problem and that he wanted a set of rules that would allow Chinese companies to invest in the US.

The writeup from China also said that the US should avoid new restrictive trade measures to avoid “undermining” recent trade talks.

Read more: The latest on Trump’s tariffs.

Elsewhere in markets, nuclear stocks including Oklo (OKLO) and NANO Nuclear (NNE) rallied amid optimism in the sector. Meanwhile, chipmaker Micron (MU) pulled back from a record high ahead of its quarterly report which lands Sept. 23. AI chipmaker Broadcom (AVGO) ended the week down 4% after a big upswing last week.

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  • Dow, Nasdaq, S&P 500 notch back-to-back records

    US stocks notched fresh highs on Friday after rallying to records in the prior trading session.

    The S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose nearly 0.5%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) led the upward move in stocks Friday, adding about 0.7%, as Apple (AAPL) stock jumped on optimism over its new iPhones hitting store shelves. The two gauges saw their third consecutive weekly gains.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) also climbed almost 0.4% and was up 1% for the five trading sessions through Friday, marking its second straight week of gains.

    Stocks’ upswing comes as the “Magnificent Seven” tech stocks — save for Nvidia (NVDA) — continued to climb and President Trump said his call with China’s Xi Jinping over trade and TikTok was “very productive.” The moves also come on the heels of the Federal Reserve’s return to interest rate cuts this Wednesday.

  • Apple rallies 3% as new iPhones go on sale

    Apple (AAPL) stock rallied 3% on Friday as the company’s new iPhone 17 Pro, Pro Max and iPhone Air all went on sale.

    Preliminary data from BofA and Chinese retail platform JD.com point to strong early demand.

    Apple has been a laggard among the “Magnificent Seven’ stocks as its AI initiatives have underwhelmed Wall Street.

    The stock is down more than 1% year to date. The stock last made an all-time high just above $259 in December.

  • Pattern Group stock opens at $13.50 in IPO debut

    Pattern Group (PTRN) made its public debut on the Nasdaq on Friday.

    Shares opened at $13.50 under the ticker PTRN, below the IPO price of $14. The company raised $300 million in its initial public offering.

    “We’ve been planning it for quite a while,” CEO Dave Wright told Yahoo Finance. While the company doesn’t need the capital, he said being on the public market will help the brand compete in the AI race.

    “We couldn’t compete with the Googles, the Amazons of the world on AI and tech talent, which is … what we’re built on,” Wright said.

    He aims to make Pattern, which helps vendors sell on third-party e-commerce marketplaces like Amazon and Walmart, the first Fortune 500 company based in Utah in nearly three decades.

    “We want to put Utah on that list and, … I think we’re on path to do it,” he said.

    Pattern joins a list of recent IPOs, including Stubhub (STUB) this week.

    Last week, companies including Black Rock Coffee Bar (BRCB), Legence (LGN), Figure Technology, and Klarna (KLAR) debuted on the public markets, and the crypto exchange Gemini (GEMI).

    Other IPOs earlier this year include Chime (CHYM), Circle (CRCL), Figma (FIG), eToro (ETOR), and Bullish (BLSH).

  • Micron falls from record ahead of earnings

    Memory chipmaker Micron (MU) saw its shares fall more than 3% Friday, sinking from a record close of $168.89 in the previous trading session as investors await the company’s quarterly earnings report Sept. 23.

    Despite the pullback Friday, Wall Street analysts are bullish on the stock.

    JPMorgan analyst Harlan Sur reiterated his Overweight rating on Micron shares Friday, noting “AI demand growth” and “rising hyperscaler capex budgets.”

    Micron’s memory chips are used in Nvidia’s (NVDA) GPUs (graphics processing units) for AI, and “hyperscale” AI data center operators such as Meta (META), Oracle (ORCL) and Alphabet (GOOGL, GOOG) have been continuously upping their capital expenditures to increase their computing capacity as they rush to meet AI demand.

    TD Cowen analyst Krish Sankar said his own note, “We think MU stock will continue its outperformance in the short term as checks continue to support that momentum.”

    Overall, analysts tracked by Bloomberg expect the chipmaker to report earnings per share of $2.83 and revenue of $11.1 billion for the fourth quarter of its 2025 fiscal year.

  • Miran wanted a bigger Fed rate cut because ‘I don’t see any material inflation from tariffs’

    Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:

    Read more about Miran’s latest commentary here.

  • CoreWeave jumps after Loop Capital initiates coverage with Buy rating

    CoreWeave (CRWV) shares jumped nearly 4% Friday after Loop Capital initiated coverage of the stock with a Buy rating.

    “There remains a material underappreciation for how committed the Hyperscalers and major AI Labs/frontier model builders remain to pushing the innovation envelope forward,” wrote analyst Ananda Baruah.

    The term “hyperscalers” refers to the group of AI cloud providers such as Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL). Those companies build or lease data centers, filling them with powerful AI servers that include Nvidia’s (NVDA) chips, and AI software firms rent “space” or computing capacity in those data centers to run their apps.

    CoreWeave also operates AI data centers filled with Nvidia’s GPUs (graphics processing units). Because the “hyperscalers” have rushed to add more data center capacity to meet AI demand, they’ve rented space in CoreWeave’s data centers while they’re in the process of building more of their own. In the most recent quarter, Microsoft accounted for 71% of CoreWeave’s revenue.

    Baruah sees CoreWeave shares rising to $165, whereas the stock was trading below $125 Friday midday. Still, some analysts are skeptical of CoreWeave’s business model, given its mounting debt borrowed at high interest rates.

  • US stocks little changed after Presidents Trump and Xi wrap up call

    The major US stock indexes were little changed after Presidents Trump and Xi wrapped up a multi-hour phone call.

    After briefly pulling back from earlier gains, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) hovered above the flat line, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) climbed 0.15%, and the Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) moved up 0.3%.

    Trump said in a post on Truth Social that the two world leaders made progress discussing issues including trade, the approval of a TikTok deal, and Russia’s war on Ukraine. Trump called the discussion “very productive” and said he’s planning a trip to China early next year. He also said he will meet Xi at the APEC Summit in South Korea.

  • Trump says TikTok deal approved

    Following Trump’s call with Chinese President Xi Jinping Friday, the US president posted on Truth Social:

    “We made progress on many very important issues including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal.”

    “The call was a very good one, we will be speaking again by phone, appreciate the TikTok approval, and both look forward to meeting at APEC!”

    The details of the TikTok deal are not yet clear. The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the deal would involve a consortium of investors including Oracle (ORCL), Silver Lake, and Andreessen Horowitz taking an 80% stake in the company. TikTok’s existing US users would reportedly be asked to move to a new app the company is testing, and Oracle would handle the user data on its servers in Texas.

  • NANO Nuclear spikes nearly 15% as it gets set to sell Odin line

    NANO Nuclear Energy (NNE) shares jumped nearly 15% on Friday, extending a recent upswing.

    The gain came after the nuclear energy tech company unveiled a proposed $6.2 million sale of its ODIN microreactor design to UK-based Cambridge Atom Works.

    After a review of its product portfolio, Nano decided that a sale of its low-pressure-cooled Odin design would enable the company to move ahead more smoothly with its lineup of gas-cooled reactors, its chairman Jay Yu said in a statement on Wednesday.

    He added it would potentially allow Nano to recoup its investment in Odin and to focus on developing other reactor technology.

    Last year, Hunterbrook published a report calling into question the company’s business model and products, casting doubt on its valuation and ability to deliver nuclear microreactors to market on its promised timeline.

    Nano’s stock is one of the most shorted stocks in the US, according to S&P Global data, with nearly 24% of shares outstanding on loan.

    Last week, the company was awarded a US Air Force contract.

  • Oracle nudges higher amid US-China TikTok talks

    Oracle (ORCL) nudged 1.6% higher early Friday, as US President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping held a call in which they were expected to complete a TikTok deal that could involve the software giant.

    The gain putting the stock up 3% over the past five trading sessions and 28% for the month.

    Oracle is reportedly part of a consortium of investors set to assume an 80% stake in TikTok under the preliminary framework for the deal, which as hammered out in trade talks between US and Chinese officials in Madrid earlier this week. The framework would allow TikTok, which is owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance, to continue operating in the US amid an impending ban.

    Oracle’s involvement in the deal is seen as a positive because it would likely allow the cloud provider to keep its partnership with TikTok, storing the social media app’s American user data on its servers. Morningstar analyst Luke Yang estimates that business from TikTok accounted for 5% of the revenue seen by Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), its cloud business, in its 2025 fiscal year.

    ” TikTok has always been a major customer of OCI,” Yang told Yahoo Finance.

    Oracle stock has been on an upswing since its latest quarterly results, when the company projected its cloud revenue would reach $144 billion by its 2030 fiscal year — likely driven by a $300 billion deal with OpenAI.

    Wall Street cheered the results, but concerns have emerged over Oracle’s reliance on OpenAI and the ChatGPT maker’s ability to fund its deal with the software giant.

  • Stocks open higher with Trump-Xi call underway

    US stocks edged higher on Friday at the open, eyeing fresh records.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose more than 0.2%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) climbed 0.3%. The gains kept an advance on Thursday’s all-time highs in play.

    The moves come as a highly anticipated call between President Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping is underway, with the fate of TikTok and potentially the trade relationship between the world’s two largest economies in the balance, Yahoo Finance’s Ben Werschkul reports. The call began at 8 am E.T. on Friday.

  • Intel stock downgraded by Citi after rallying on $5 billion Nvidia stake

    Citi (C) analyst Christopher Danely downgraded Intel (INTC) shares to Sell from Hold on Friday, following a rally in the stock.

    Shares in the chipmaker surged Thursday on news of a partnership with AI bellwether Nvidia (NVDA). But Danley believes the pact, which sees Nvidia taking a $5 billion stake in Intel, isn’t as helpful to Intel as it seems.

    The deal also involves Nvidia using Intel’s CPUs — central processing units, or traditional computer chips that are the “brain” of a computer — in its AI server systems. For its part, Intel will use Nvidia’s AI tech in its CPUs for personal computers.

    But Danely said his team of analysts “doubt this makes Intel CPUs more competitive” in the PC space.

    This, he explained, is because integrating another company’s graphics — in this case, Nvidia’s GPU “chiplets” — wouldn’t make a CPU more competitive. That’s because the chip itself is the main performance driver for a personal computer.

    As for Intel’s deal to supply CPUs for Nvidia’s AI server systems for data centers, Danely sees the market opportunity s “small,” at roughly $1 billion to $2 billion.

    On Thursday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told journalists that he sees that very same market opportunity being $30 billion.

    Danely also said:”We downgrade Intel from Neutral to Sell given our belief the stock is pricing in success in its leading-edge foundry business, which we believe has minimal chance to succeed.”

    The partnership announcement critically failed to mention Intel’s contract manufacturing (foundry) business, which has been driving losses at the company as it conducts mass layoffs and pauses factory plans.

    Intel shares fell fractionally in premarket trading Friday.

  • Housing stocks shine as Fed restarts rate cuts

    Housing stocks were always likely to benefit from the Fed’s return to easing, and they have perked up in recent weeks as the universally expected interest rate cut got priced in.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Amex’s Platinum overhaul intensifies the credit card perk wars

    What does it mean that only a fraction of the country’s population — its wealthiest consumers — are propping up spending growth, while the vast majority of people are barely shelling out enough to keep pace with inflation?

    Yahoo Finance’s Hamza Shaban gets to grips with that disparity in today’s Morning Brief:

    Read more here.

  • Good morning. Here’s what’s happening today.

  • Q3 earnings outlook lifts hopes for stocks’ rally in face of tariffs

    US stocks are trading at record levels with earnings season right around the corner — and rising expectations for Corporate America’s profit growth are a sign that the rally can keep going, despite tariff risks.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • FedEx stock pops as cost-cutting helps drive surprise earnings beat

    Shares of FedEx (FDX) rose over 5% in premarket after the delivery giant’s quarterly profit and sales topped Wall Street estimates.

    Analysts had predicted a hit to profit after the Trump administration put an end to “de minimis” exemptions for shipments worth under $800, so they were no longer delivered duty-free.

    Reuters reports:

    Read more here.

  • Premarket trending tickers: Intel, Synopsys, and Lennar

    Here’s a look at some of the top stocks trending in premarket trading:

    Intel (INTC) stock fell 2% in premarket trading on Friday following the news that Nvidia (NVDA) will take a $5 billion stake in the company. Intel rallied on Thursday after Nvidia made the announcement and closing 22% up.

    Synopsys, Inc. (SNPS) stock fell 1% before the bell on Friday after rising 12% on Thursday following the Intel, Nvidia news.

    Lennar (LEN) stock fell 2% in premarket trading on Friday after reporting a 46% drop in third-quarter profit and forecasting fourth-quarter home deliveries below Wall Street estimates. High inflation and affordability pressures have hindered US homebuilders.

  • Gold has third day of losses following fall in demand after Fed rate cut

    Gold (GC=F) fell for a third consecutive day as the impact of the Fed’s rate cut was felt in markets for the haven asset.

    Read more here.