Stock market today: Live updates

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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.

NYSE

Stock futures were little changed Tuesday night after the S&P 500 pulled back from record levels.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average edged up 15 points, or 0.03%. S&P futures were 0.04% higher, while Nasdaq 100 futures rose 0.07%.

In after-hours trading, shares of Micron Technology gained more than 2% on the back of better-than-expected earnings and a strong forecast. The artificial intelligence boom fueled a 46% increase in Micron revenue.

The leading memory chipmaker’s results following a trading session that was dominated by heightened fears about the circular nature of the AI industry in the wake the Nvidia-OpenAI partnership. Shares of leading AI players Nvidia and Oracle tumbled on Tuesday.

The S&P 500 on Tuesday snapped its three-day win streak and closed in the red after it had reached a new all-time intraday high earlier in the session and posted a record close the previous day. Influencing the broader market’s losses was a 2.8% loss in Nvidia shares just one day after the company announced a massive investment in OpenAI, which prompted questions about whether there is enough energy to power data center plans and if Nvidia’s partnerships are akin to the risky practice of vendor financing.

Traders could also be profit-taking amid elevated market valuations, which Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged at a Tuesday press conference.

Wells Fargo chief equity strategist Ohsung Kwon remains bullish on the AI trade, anticipating that spending will continue to be robust. “I think this is a AI-led bull market, and I think this is likely to continue,” he said Tuesday on CNBC’s “Power Lunch.”

“First of all, it’s not a bubble,” Kwon continued. “The entire outperformance of the Nasdaq since the end of tech bubble has been driven by better fundamentals in the Nasdaq versus the S&P 500, and I think that’s likely to continue. Second, we still think we are in the early innings of the AI investment cycle. … I think the way this plays out is, as long as the equity market continues to reward companies’ capex outlook and the growth outlook, this is likely to continue.”


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