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S&P 500, Dow and airline stocks soar on Delta's forecast

S&P 500, Dow Jones and Dow Jones Industrial Average all edged higher on Thursday as President Donald Trump's tariffs were brushed aside. Meanwhile, airline stocks soared thanks to Delta's optimistic forecast.

Delta Air Lines' stock jumped by 12.5% following the company's announcement that it would exceed Wall Street expectations for its third-quarter earnings and annual profits.

Peers United Airlines grew 13.4% while American Airlines grew 12.5%.

The Dow Transportation Index, which is widely regarded as an economic barometer has risen 3%.

"The good news from Delta Air Lines shows a bit more consumer strength than you might expect," said Chris Zaccarelli. Chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management.

At 11:48 am. The Dow rose 0.54% and the S&P 500 gained 0.25%, just 0.7% short of the record high set on December 4.

The Nasdaq, a tech-heavy stock, was flat. It was pressured by Meta's near 1% decline and Nvidia's retreat after it had jumped to $4 trillion in valuation a day before.

The markets are waiting and watching. Zaccarelli said that they are waiting to see how earnings will look when the season begins next week.

The S&P 500 index was up in nine of its 11 major sectors, with only technology and communications services dragging it down.

Tesla, the electric vehicle manufacturer, however, rose 2.6% amid discussions about its next annual

Shareholder Meeting

In November,

Trump announced Wednesday that a new tariff of 50% on copper would begin on August 1. He also threatened to impose a tariff of 50% on Brazilian exports to the United States. He also sent tariff notices out to seven minor trading partners.

Investors are closely watching the trade negotiations as they progress.

Inutes

The Federal Reserve meeting in June revealed that the majority of officials expect rate cuts to be necessary later this year. They also believe the inflationary effect of Trump's tariffs on imports will likely only be "temporary" or "modest."

According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, a rate cut in July is out of the question, but the odds for a move in September have increased to 64%.

St. Louis Fed president Alberto Musalem stated that it may be late this year or even 2026 before the true impact on inflation of increasing import tariffs is realized. This is why Fed officials are being cautious about rate cuts.

The robust Labor Market Report last week sent Wall Street's major indices to new record highs. This is a sign of a recovery from the sharp sell-off in April following the "Liberation Day", tariff announcements.

A poll showed that the initial jobless claims were 227,000. This was below the consensus of 235,000.

WK Kellogg, among other stocks rose 30.6%. It was on course for its largest single-day movement following reports that Italian confectioner Ferrero is nearing an agreement to buy the cereal manufacturer.

On the NYSE, advancing issues outnumbered declining ones by a ratio of 1.89 to 1 and by a ratio of 1.24 to 1 on the Nasdaq.

The S&P 500 recorded 22 new 52 week highs and 4 new lows. Meanwhile, the Nasdaq Composite registered 67 new highs while 23 new lows. (Reporting and editing by Maju Samuel in Bengaluru, Pranav Kashyap in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)