Perhaps strange in an election year, Treasury market volatility measures subsided to their lowest since before the Fed began its tightening campaign two years ago.
The latest U.S. economic readouts continued to show brisk business growth and labor market tightness and markets will now switch attention next Friday’s release of the Fed’s favored PCE inflation gauge.
Buoyant Wall St stocks clocked record closing highs again on Thursday, but Apple’s 4% slide dampened the mood as U.S. antitrust regulators moved in – sending a warning to a market so heavily concentrated in Big Tech megacaps.
Although its stock stabilised overnight, the U.S. Department of Justice and 15 states sued Apple in a government crackdown on Big Tech – alleging the iPhone maker monopolized the smartphone market, hurt smaller rivals and drove up prices.
Apple joins competitors sued by regulators, including Alphabet’s Google, Meta Platforms and Amazon.com across the administrations of both former president Donald Trump and President Joe Biden.
Elsewhere, overnight earnings were mixed.
FedEx shares surged 13% after the bell after the company narrowed its fiscal 2024 profit forecast and announced share buybacks that help offset less business from its largest customer, the U.S. Postal Service.
But Nike stock skidded 6% after it warned its revenue in the first half of fiscal 2025 would shrink by a low single-digit percentage as the world’s largest sportswear maker scales back on franchises to save costs.