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S&P 500 and Nasdaq close at record levels, Nvidia valued at $4 trillion

The S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Nvidia all closed at record highs Thursday. Nvidia's value was also above $4 trillion, while the Brazilian Real recovered some of its losses after U.S. president Donald Trump announced a 50% tariff against the country's products.

Delta Air Lines' shares also soared 12%, after the company forecasted profits for both the third quarter and full year above analyst estimates. United Airlines ended the day 14.3% higher and Hertz Global was up 11.8%.

Shares

Nvidia

ended up 0.75% at $164.10, giving the chipmaker a market value of $4.004 trillion, thanks to surging demand for artificial-intelligence. This move cemented its status as one of Wall Street’s most popular stocks.

Trump announced that a 50% tariff on copper would begin August 1.

The Brazilian real recovered from some of the losses it suffered following the news about tariffs. The currency's volatility gauges reached their highest level since late April on Wednesday. Last time, the dollar fell 0.8% against real. Brazilian stocks fell 0.5%.

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva vowed retaliation against unilateral tariff hikes.

Some traders have said that if Trump continues to impose tariffs on Brazil, U.S. coffee and orange juice prices could increase dramatically.

Market reactions to Trump's tariffs have been milder than they were in April. This could be due to the expectation that Washington and its trading partners will reach an agreement.

Investors are preparing for the second quarter earnings and looking for any signs of Trump's Trade War, which began on April 2.

Bruce Zaro of Granite Wealth Management, Plymouth, Massachusetts said that the market appeared to be in a hold pattern before reports from S&P500 companies.

JPMorgan Chase will release its results on Tuesday, which is essentially the start of the reporting period.

He said that there was a lot of skepticism among the analysts who follow the S&P 500. They've all been reducing their estimations based on tariffs and the uncertainty surrounding that.

"But, we believe, after all, that those tech companies and growth companies will come up with fantastic earnings." I believe the market is still in a period of waiting.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 192.34, or 0.4%, to 44.650.64. The S&P 500 increased 17.20, or 0.2%, to 6,280.46. And the Nasdaq Composite added 19.33, or 0.09% to 20,630.67.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 1.92 points or 0.21% to 926.22. The pan-European STOXX 600 rose by 0.54%.

Bitcoin

Rallyes

Another record high. The largest cryptocurrency in the world was up by 2.56% at $113,609.36.

Investors digested the upbeat quarterly results of TSMC, which showed strong interest in AI applications, fueled by the demand for products from the world's biggest contract chipmaker.

The dollar index (which measures the greenback in relation to a basket currency) rose by 0.23%, reaching 97.61.

Benchmark 10-year U.S.

Treasury yields

Investors focused on the impact of tariffs and U.S. jobless claims data.

The yield on U.S. benchmark 10-year notes last rose 0.4 basis points for the day to 4.346%.

Investors weighed the potential impact of Trump's tariffs. Brent crude futures ended at $68.64 per barrel, down by $1.55 or 2.21%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate finished at $66.57 per barrel, down $1.81 or 2.65%.

Spot gold increased 0.3% to $3323.39 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)