Market Coverage - Thursday May 26 Yahoo Finance
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U.S. stocks rose Thursday morning as markets remain on track to snap a 7-week losing streak.

The S&P 500 climbed as much as 1.3% in early trading, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained over 400 points, or 1.2%. The Nasdaq Composite rose 1.3% higher as the index attempts to claw its way out of bear market territory.

A rebound in retail earnings spurred markets early in the session, with Macy's (M) rising as much as 12% in early trading after the retail giant raised its profit outlook in an upside surprise to investors weighing a slew of downward forecast revisions from peers.

Shares of discount retailers Dollar Tree (DLTR) and Dollar General (DG) were also up more than 13% after both companies raised forecasts on Thursday.

The moves build on a brief reprieve for equities, which closed higher Wednesday amid a streak of day-to day gyrations. In the first 99 trading days of the year as of Wednesday's close, the S&P 500 was down 17.3%, marking its fourth worst start to a year in history, per data from Compound Capital Advisors.

Investors also digested a bevy of economic releases Thursday morning, including a revised estimate on U.S. GDP that showed economic activity fell at a 1.5% annualized rate in the first three months of 2022, upwardly revised from an initial estimate of 1.4%. Bloomberg economists had anticipated the second reading to come in at 1.3%. Meanwhile, applications for unemployment insurance ticked back down in the latest weekly data to 210,000 in the week ended May 21.

Chip designer Nvidia Corp. (NVDA) joined the growing list of companies reporting weaker second-quarter forecasts and alluding to economic constraints ahead. The company's stock fell in extended trading Wednesday after Nvidia warned current-quarter revenue was likely to come in $500 million lower due to headwinds from Russia’s war in Ukraine and COVID lockdowns in China. Nvidia shares pared these losses early Thursday, rising 0.6% about a half hour into the trading session.

Software company Snowflake (SNOW) also cut its forecast late Wednesday, and shares of the company were down as much as 10% in early trading on Thursday.

Recent trading sessions have seen sharp drawdowns in some big-name stocks after earnings reports that affirmed investor worries about the impact of inflation on corporate margins. Earlier this week social media giant Snap Inc. (SNAP) tumbled 43% in its biggest-one day drop on record, spurring a sell-off of other digital ad-dependent stocks that dragged the Nasdaq down to its lowest close since November 2020.

Last week, the downswing occurred in retail after Walmart and Target (TGT) set off the recent trend of dramatic pullbacks in individual names following weaker earnings forecasts. According to data from FactSet, S&P 500 companies reporting results for the first quarter have seen the largest negative price reaction to positive earnings per share surprises since 2011.

“Whether it’s today or tomorrow, it does feel like we’re starting to digest what is a seemingly large amount of bad news,” Acorns Chief Investment Officer Seth Wunder told Yahoo Finance Live on Wednesday. “The key thing is to get data that eases some of the pressure off of the Federal Reserve.”

The pickup in disappointing guidance has kept Wall Street on edge for signs the central bank’s interest rate hiking plans will be effective in bringing prices back down to healthier levels. Minutes released Wednesday from the Fed’s May policy-setting meeting indicated the majority of officials were strongly committed to rate hikes of 50 basis points at each of the next two meetings in June and July. So far this year, policymakers bumped short-term borrowing costs by 50 basis points earlier this month and 25 basis points in April.

“Though market participants have feared this stance, it should be noted that the Fed has in excess of $100 billion is securities maturing on its balance sheet coming up, so the resulting asset purchases can help negate growth concerns this summer,” Comerica Wealth Management Chief Investment Officer John Lynch said in an emailed note. “It’s actually a perfect time for the Fed to raise aggressively and send a message to markets that they’re serious about inflation without sending growth into a tailspin.”

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