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Nasdaq and S&P finish lower as tech stock fall

Falling crude prices boosted airline and travel stocks, and the Dow closed higher.

As more tankers are expected to leave the Strait of Hormuz, oil prices have?fallen?to the lowest level since the beginning of the Iran War. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that Iran told Washington there were no tolls being collected. S&P 500 passenger airline index rose 5.2%, while Expedia Group and Booking Holdings also saw gains. The tech stocks fell, causing the focus to shift towards Micron Technology's earnings after the bell. The stock is up more than 200% since?2026, but it closed Wednesday's trading down 0.3%. The stock soared in extended trading when quarterly revenue and forecasts for the fourth quarter exceeded Wall Street expectations. Cerebras Systems fell?19.6% when the chip designer predicted that full-year profits would fall below first-quarter figures. This was in its first report following going public. OpenAI's announcement of its "own inference chip" called Jalapeno also weighed on the stock.

The Nasdaq 100 has lost more than $1 trillion in value this week due to fears about debt-backed hyperscaler spending and a Federal Reserve that is more hawkish.

Michael Monaghan is Founder ETFs' portfolio manager and partner. He said that the Middle East discussion was wrapping up. Energy prices were dropping. "But, you continue to have the AI CapEx Buildout where, for whatever reason, people prefer the recipients of spending and punish those who are doing it." Six out of 11 major S&P sectors rose, with industrials rising by the most (1.2%). Consumer discretionary stocks rose by 0.8% to help offset the largest losses in energy and tech stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 182.06 points or 0.35% to 51,848.90. The S&P 500 dropped 7.24 points or 0.10% to 7,358.22. And the Nasdaq Composite fell?110.40, or 0.4%, to 25,476.64. Homebuilders surged after Trump cancelled a scheduled signing of bipartisan legislation designed to speed up the availability of affordable housing. Hovnanian Enterprises jumped 11.3%. PulteGroup soared 7.2%, and Toll Brothers rose by 6.7%. Hertz, among other movers in the market, fell 40.7%. The car rental firm announced that it expected second-quarter adjusted core earning near the lower end its forecast range and proposed an offering of $100 million common stock.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch, traders are increasing their bets on a second rate increase by the Fed before the end of the month. The market had previously?expected' a 25-basis point rise.

The Personal Consumption Expenditures Index, which is the Fed's preferred measure of inflation, may provide a hint on Thursday as to the direction the monetary policies will take. On the NYSE, declining issues outnumbered advancing ones by a ratio of 1.03 to 1, with 205 new highs compared to 226 new lows. On the Nasdaq 2,323 stocks rose, while 2,499 fell. Declining issues outnumbered advancers by 1.08 to 1 ratio. S&P 500 recorded 25 new 52-week lows, while Nasdaq Composite registered 206 new highs. The volume on U.S. stock exchanges was 25,84 billion shares compared to the average of 22.92 billion shares for the entire session in the past 20 trading days. Abigail Summerville reported from New York and Twesha Dhikshit and Joel Jose were in Bengaluru. David Gregorio edited the story.

(source: Reuters)