The S&P 500 fell on Thursday as concerns over Middle East tensions continued worrying investors in the run up to September’s payrolls report.
The broad index shed 0.4%, as did the Nasdaq Composite. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 285 points, or 0.7%.
October trading is off to a rocky start as escalating tensions in the Middle East dampen investors’ enthusiasm. After stocks tumbled on Tuesday with Iran launching a missile attack on Israel, investors are now preparing for further uncertainty as Israel starts a ground operation into Lebanon.
U.S. crude futures rose more than 4%, bringing its week-to-date advance to more than 7% as growing fears tied to the Middle East provided upside pressure. Energy stocks have rallied in tandem, with the S&P 500 sector up about 5.6% on the week. That put the sector on pace for its best week in more than a year.
But energy was a singular bright spot in Thursday’s otherwise bleak market. More than 4 out of every 5 S&P 500 members traded lower, while just 2 of the 30 stocks in the Dow tracked for gains.
With Thursday’s moves, the three major indexes are tracking for losses this week. That marks a turn after a strong three quarters, with Bespoke Investment Group finding 2024 had the biggest gain over the first nine months of a year since 1997.
“We’ve got a fantastic year under our belts so far,” said Mike Dickson, head of research and quantitative strategies at Horizon Investments. But, “there’s definitely some overhangs.”
Weekly jobless claims came in slightly higher than economists polled by Dow Jones forecasted, according to data released Thursday. That offers hints into the health of the labor market as traders gear up for September’s closely watched payrolls report due on Friday morning.
Only two stocks trading higher in Dow on Thursday
Only two stocks in the Dow were trading higher on Thursday: Chevron and International Business Machines.
The 30-stock index was last trading 0.8% lower. Mounting geopolitical tensions in the Middle East sent oil stocks higher and weighed the Dow down on Tuesday, although the index made a slight recovery on Wednesday.
— Lisa Kailai Han
XRP slides 9% after SEC appeals decision in landmark Ripple case
The price of the XRP token tumbled Thursday, a day after the Securities and Exchange Commission filed to appeal a 2023 court ruling that determined XRP is not considered a security when sold to retail investors on exchanges.
XRP was last lower by more than 9% at 52 cents a coin, according to Coin Metrics.
Ripple, the largest holder of XRP coins, scored a partial victory last summer after a three-year battle with the SEC. U.S. District Judge Analisa Torres handed down the decision, which was hailed as a landmark win for the crypto industry. Still, while XRP isn’t considered a security when sold to retail investors on exchanges, it is considered an unregistered security offering if sold to institutional investors.
For more read the full story here.
— Tanaya Macheel
More than 4 out of every 5 S&P 500 stocks trade lower
More than 4 out of every 5 names in the S&P 500 slid on Thursday, underscoring the broad troubles faced by the market.
Warner Bros. Discovery and Constellation Brands led the way with declines of nearly 4% each. On the other hand, MarketAxess and Vistra were the biggest outperformers, jumping more than 6% a piece.
As a whole. the S&P 500 slid around 0.5% in afternoon trading.
— Alex Harring
22 stocks hit new 52-week highs
22 stocks in the S&P 500 were trading at new 52-week highs during Thursday’s session. Among those names, 13 hit fresh all-time highs. Here are some that hit that milestone:
- T-Mobile trading at all-time highs back to the MetroPCS IPO in Apr, 2007
- Aflac trading at all-time high levels back through our history in 1973
- Fiserv trading at all-time high levels since its IPO in Sep, 1986
- Automatic Data Processing trading at all-time high levels back through our history to 1974
- Constellation Energy trading at all-time high levels back to its spin-off from Exelon in Jan, 2022
- PSEG trading at all-time high levels back to when PSE&G became an independent public company in 1948
- Southern Company trading at all-time high levels back through our history to 1972
- Vistra trading at all-time highs back through our history to Sept, 2016
Meanwhile, Etsy, Biogen and Moderna were the three stocks in the broad market index that hit new 52-week lows.
— Sean Conlon
China internet ETF falls for the first time in 6 days
The KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (KWEB) fell more than 3% on Thursday, on pace for its first negative session in six.
The fund, which tracks China-based internet companies, had rallied for five straight days after Chinese authorities unleashed a flood of new stimulus to revive growth in a struggling economy.
— Yun Li
Hims & Hers, Levi Strauss among the names making moves midday
These are some of the stocks are making big moves in midday trading:
- Hims & Hers Health — The health and wellness platform saw shares plunge nearly 14% after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said the shortage of popular Zepbound and Mounjaro weight loss drugs from Eli Lilly has been resolved. Hims & Her Health had previously developed compound versions of the drugs to take advantage of the shortage.
- Joby Aviation – Shares dropped more than 7%, paring back gains made in the previous session. On Wednesday, Joby soared nearly 28% after Toyota announced it’s investing $500 million in the company to support the certification and production of its electric air taxi.
- Levi Strauss – The stock dipped more than 7% after the denim maker trimmed its full-year revenue outlook and posted weaker-than-expected revenue for the third quarter. Levi is also contemplating selling its Dockers business, which the company said has been underperforming.
Read here for the full list.
— Sean Conlon
WTI tops key technical level
This week’s 7% rally on U.S. crude has brought the commodity above a key technical level.
West Texas Intermediate futures traded at $73.03 per barrel, above the 50-day moving average of $72.89. It’s the first time since Aug. 14 that WTI breaks above that closely followed level.
Moving averages are used by chart traders to gauge a security’s momentum. A move above the 50-day indicates short-term positive momentum.
— Fred Imbert
Tech, energy outperform Thursday
Energy and information technology outperformed the S&P 500 Thursday. The broad market index was down just 0.1% for the day.
Meanwhile, energy jumped 1.1% as oil prices continued to rise on concerns of supply disruptions amid heightened tensions in the Middle East. Valero Energy and Diamondback Energy advanced 2% each.
Information technology rose around 0.9% as shares of chipmaking giant Nvidia climbed 3.5% higher.
— Hakyung Kim
Oil has gained 7% this week as traders fear Middle East supply disruption
U.S. crude oil surged Thursday, on pace for a third day of gains as traders brace for Israel to retaliate against Iran over its ballistic missile attack.
The U.S. benchmark hit an intraday high of $73.95 per barrel, a gain of about 5.5%. West Texas Intermediate has gained more than 7% this week.
The risk of oil supply disruptions increases as fighting in the Middle East intensifies, but OPEC+ is sitting on a large amount of spare crude that could step into the breach, according to Claudio Galimberti, chief economist at Rystad Energy.
— Spencer Kimball
Bank stocks head for losing week
Bank stocks opened lower on Thursday, with the SPDR S&P Bank ETF (KBE) in the red.
Among major bank names, shares of Bank of America were down by 0.9%, while JPMorgan Chase dipped 0.7%.
The KBE entered Thursday down around 2% for the week. This would be its second negative week in a row for the first time since August.
— Jesse Pound
ISM service sector reading strongest since February 2023
The U.S. services sector turned in its strongest performance in more than a year and a half during September, according to a survey Thursday from the Institute for Supply Management.
The ISM services index showed that 54.9% of businesses reported expansion, up from 51.9% in August and better than the Dow Jones estimate for 55.4%. This was the highest reading since February 2023.
Elsewhere in the survey, the employment index moved lower to 48.1%, indicating contraction. That was countered by large gains in the production, new orders, new export orders and inventories indexes.
—Jeff Cox
Stocks open Thursday lower
Stocks kicked off Thursday’s trading session with losses.
The Dow and S&P 500 shed about 0.3% each shortly after 9:30 a.m. ET. The Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.5%.
— Alex Harring
Berkshire dumps more BofA shares, remaining stake at 10.2%
Berkshire Hathaway sold another chunk of Bank of America shares during the past three trading sessions, bringing its remaining stake to 10.2%
Warren Buffett’s conglomerate dumped more than 8.5 million shares of the bank worth $338 million, according to a new regulatory filing.
Berkshire has shed more than $9 billion worth of the bank stock in a big selling spree that started in mid-July. Once its stake drops below 10%, Berkshire will be no long to disclose related transactions within two business days.
Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan previously said the market is absorbing the stock, aided by the bank’s own repurchasing.
— Yun Li
Stocks making the biggest moves premarket
Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
- Wolfspeed – The semiconductor stock fell nearly 5% following a downgrade to underperform from neutral at Mizuho. The firm sees pricing for silicon carbide – a semiconductor material used in electric vehicles – being down about 10% to 20% year-over-year in 2025. Mizuho also cited lower EV production expectations both in the second half of this year and next year as another potential headwind for the company.
- Hims & Hers Health — The telehealth company declined around 9% after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said the shortage of GLP-1 treatments from Eli Lilly has been resolved. Hims & Her Health had previously developed compound versions of the weight-loss drugs to take advantage of the shortages.
The full list can be found here.
— Hakyung Kim
Jobless claims rose more than forecast last week
Initial filings for unemployment benefits nudged higher last week and were a bit above expectations, the Labor Department reported Thursday.
First-time claims totaled 225,000 for the week ending Sept. 28, up 6,000 from the upwardly revised previous total and higher than the 220,000 consensus estimate from Dow Jones. Though claims rose, the four-week moving average, which smooths weekly volatility, edged down.
Continuing claims, which run a week behind, were little changed at 1.826 million, below the 1.836 million FactSet estimate.
—Jeff Cox
Demand for Nvidia’s Blackwell is ‘insane,’ says CEO Jensen Huang
Nvidia is seeing surging demand for its next-generation artificial intelligence graphics processor known as Blackwell, according to CEO Jensen Huang.
“Blackwell is in full production, Blackwell is as planned, and the demand for Blackwell is insane,” he told CNBC’s “Closing Bell: Overtime” on Wednesday. “Everybody wants to have the most, and everybody wants to be first.”
The chief executive also said that he expects to update the company’s new AI infrastructure generation every year.
“At a time when the technology is moving so fast, it gives us an opportunity to triple down and to really drive the innovation cycle so that we can increase capabilities, increase our throughput, decrease our cost, decrease our energy consumption,” he continued. “We’re on a path to do that, and everything’s on track.”
The new chips are expected to ship out during the fourth quarter, Huang previously said. He announced Blackwell back in March.
Shares of AI chip giant Nvidia rose more than 1% in premarket trading Thursday following the CEO’s comments.
— Sean Conlon
Stocks track for weekly losses
With more than half of the trading week in the rearview mirror, the three major averages are poised to finish in the red.
The Nasdaq Composite has seen outsized losses this week, sliding more than 1%. The S&P 500 and Dow have shed 0.5% and 0.3%, respectively, week to date.
— Alex Harring
Energy stocks outperform this week
The Energy Select Sector SPDR Fund (XLE) ticked higher in Thursday’s premarket, pointing to more gains for the group after a strong week.
Energy stocks have performed the best of the 11 sectors that comprise the S&P 500 week to date. The sector is tracking to finish more than 4% higher, which would mark its best week since January. (By comparison, the S&P 500 is poised to end the week down 0.5%.)
Diamondback has led the sector higher this week with a jump of more than 6%. Marathon Oil followed, advancing more than 5.5%.
The XLE sector fund, meanwhile, has risen for the last four sessions as investors assessed the evolving tensions in the Middle East.
— Alex Harring
European markets sink at the open
European stocks opened lowered Thursday as conflict in the Middle East weighs on regional investor sentiment.
European markets
The pan-European Stoxx 600 was down 0.28% in early deals, with virtually all sectors and most major bourses trading in the red. Mining stocks led losses, down 0.79%, while oil and gas stocks were the sole outlier, adding 0.14%.
— Karen Gilchrist
Levi Strauss shares plummet in after-hours trading, company weighs Dockers sale
Shares of Levi Strauss & Co fell more than 9.5% in extended trading Wednesday after the jeans maker reported that its overall business is being weighed down by its Dockers brand. The company announced it’s now considering selling off the brand.
Levi’s delivered mixed quarterly results, posting adjusted earnings of 33 cents per share on $1.52 billion in revenue. Analysts polled by LSEG, meanwhile, called for 31 cents per share in earnings, excluding items, on $1.55 billion in revenue. The company also trimmed its guidance.
Sales at Levi’s brand were up 5% during its fiscal third quarter, but its overall revenue came in flat. Dockers saw its sales plunge 15% during the quarter.
For more on Levi’s latest quarterly earnings, read here.
— Pia Singh, Gabrielle Fonrouge