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Markets Snapshot
S&P 500 Futures 5,522.75 +0.21%
Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index 1,228.47 +0.38%
US 10-Year Treasury Yield 4.301% -0.014
Stoxx Europe 600 Index 520.8 +0.42%
Gold 3,300.69 -1.46%
Market data as of 06:24 am EST. View or Create your Watchlist
Market data may be delayed depending on provider agreements.

Five things you need to know

  • Alphabet shares rally 6% in early trading as the company's strength in search advertising helped profit beat estimates. AbbVie, Colgate-Palmolive and Schlumberger are slated to report later. Stocks and the dollar edge higher. 
  • Apple plans to build most of its iPhones for the US in India by the end of next year, accelerating a shift beyond China. The goal means Apple will need to roughly double its iPhone output in India, people familiar with the matter said.

  • China is considering suspending its 125% tariff on some US imports as the economic costs of the tit-for-tat trade war weigh heavily on certain industries. Separately, the Politburo also pledged to set up new monetary tools and policy financing instruments to boost technology, consumption and trade. 

  • Bank of America strategists say investors should sell into rallies in US stocks and the dollar, cautioning that the conditions for sustained gains are missing.

  • CEOs are warning that the price of everything from Kit Kats and diapers to cars will go up as they pass on tariff and commodity costs to shoppers. Procter & Gamble estimates that the levies could add between $1 billion and $1.5 billion to its annual costs. 

Corporate America's tariff shock

Wall Street is trying to figure out just how vulnerable the US stock market is to a trade war.

The track record of S&P 500 Index companies over the past two decades suggests their ability to withstand additional levies is fragile, at least by one measure. Nearly all of the margin growth eked out from corporate sales on the gauge since 2004 has come from the booming technology sector, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Removing the group, profitability barely rose.

The consequences for the US economy and corporate profits from the proposed tariffs is one of the top concerns that investors have been grappling with this month. The first-quarter earnings season so far has shown that companies themselves are unsure of the fallout, further adding to the angst.

“Not only is the S&P 500’s ability to absorb the tariff shock weaker than it appears, I would argue that because of tech, the index is also more vulnerable to tariffs,” said Paul Nolte, market strategist and senior wealth manager at Murphy & Sylvest Wealth Management. 

The unremarkable expansion of operating margins across the rest of the S&P 500 over the past two decades means, if tariffs turn into a major headwind, the majority of the remaining US companies in the index barely have any cushion left to absorb the impact and grow further. 

S&P 500 companies are estimated by BI to have an operating margin of 16.4% in 2025, which drops to 13.5% when excluding technology, though the estimates likely don’t yet reflect the full impact of the potential new trade regime. The tech sector by itself is estimated to generate a margin of 34.1% this year.

“There was a reason why the mega-cap tech stocks were dominating the rally in 2023 and 2024 — they were making huge profits, while almost everybody else was floundering,” said Matt Maley, chief strategist at Miller Tabak + Co. —Esha Dey

On the move

  • Intel shares fall 5.2% in premarket trading after giving an outlook that was weaker than expected. The chipmaker said it’s cutting workers to bring costs into line.
  • T-Mobile drops 1.1% on fewer new wireless phone subscribers than analysts expected. 
  • Skechers USA shares retreat 6.7%. The footwear company withdrew its full-year outlook, citing “macroeconomic uncertainty stemming from global trade policies.”
  • Gilead Sciences falls almost 4%. Revenue, particularly from key medicines for breast cancer and HIV, fell short of expectations. —Subrat Patnaik 
The Stock Movers Podcast: Five minutes on the day's stock market winners and losers. Click here to listen on apple podcasts

China’s gold fever

Gold’s record-setting rally is making ever-larger waves in China by stoking retail demand, fanning unprecedented trading volumes on the Shanghai exchange and drawing warnings from the authorities.

As prices gyrate, there have been signs of a ferocious spike in day-trading, and record moves in yuan-priced futures with traders navigating trade-war twists.

Flows into exchange-traded funds, meanwhile, have surged, retail activity has ballooned, and local premiums gapped out. Asia’s largest economy — and the main target of Trump’s ire — has plenty of clout as it’s the largest gold consumer, as well as being a leading producer.

“The bull market in gold will last for a long time because the Chinese want to hedge against geopolitical tensions,” said Samson Li, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Commodity Discovery Fund. Li noted that some forecasts suggested a rally to $5,000 an ounce. —Sybilla Gross and Yihui Xie

Word from Wall Street

“The worry I hear more often is actually not even tariffs, it is uncertainty.”
Kristalina Georgieva
IMF Managing Director 
Read the full story on this week's IMF and World Bank meetings

One number to start your day...

$8 billion
That's the boost in Alphabet profit due to an unrealized gain its SpaceX investment, said a person familiar with the matter.

What else we’re reading

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