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Alphabet lifts the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Nasdaq to record closings

S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow Jones closed at record highs on Thursday. Alphabet's strong results fueled optimism for other artificial intelligence heavyweights. Tesla fell after disappointing results.

Alphabet's stock rose 1% after the search giant announced its results, which boosted investor confidence that their heavy investment to dominate AI technology was paying off.

Microsoft, Nvidia, and Amazon all saw their shares rise by 1% or higher.

Wall Street also saw gains due to the U.S. Japan trade agreement and recent progress in negotiations with the European Union.

Sam Stovall is the chief investment strategist of CFRA Research. He said that investors are optimistic about the trade negotiations, the economy, inflation trends, and the Q2 earnings report, which was better than expected.

Tesla fell 8.2%, after Elon Musk warned that the U.S. Government would cut support for electric car makers. Stocks have fallen by around 25% in 2025.

UnitedHealth's stock fell by 4.8% following the insurer's announcement that it would cooperate with a Department of Justice investigation into its Medicare practices. This followed reports of criminal and civil investigations.

IBM's stock dropped by almost 8% as its disappointing second-quarter sales in its software division weighed on investors.

Honeywell's stock fell 6.2%, despite exceeding Wall Street expectations and raising their annual outlook.

The S&P500 climbed 0.07%, ending the session at 6,363.35 point. The Nasdaq rose 0.18% to 21,057.96, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.70% to 42,693.91.

The volume on the U.S. exchanges is relatively high, with 19,9 billion shares trading, compared to a 17 billion share average over the last 20 sessions.

Consumer discretionary led the declines, with a drop of 1.23%. Materials followed, with a loss of 0.75%.

American Airlines' stock dropped nearly 10% following the carrier's forecast of a large third-quarter loss. The airline was hurt by weak domestic travel demand.

The biggest uncertainty in the airline industry has been created by President Donald Trump's trade war with other countries.

The markets were also watching Trump's planned Thursday visit to the Federal Reserve headquarters, after months of Trump criticizing Fed chair Jerome Powell over interest rates he views as being too high.

According to CME's FedWatch, with the Fed widely anticipated to keep rates unchanged at its meeting next week, traders expect a 60% probability of a rate cut in September.

The U.S. Labor Department reported that jobless claims fell last week to 217,000, well below the estimates. This indicates continued resilience on the job market.

The U.S. economy gained momentum in July. However, companies raised prices for goods and services. This fueled economists' expectations of higher inflation in the months to come, driven primarily by increasing import tariffs.

The S&P 500 saw a ratio of 1.3 to one between declining stocks and rising ones.

The S&P 500 recorded 46 new highs, and 6 new lowers. The Nasdaq registered 81 highs, and 44 lows.

(source: Reuters)