September S&P 500 E-Mini futures (ESU25) are down -0.27%, and September Nasdaq 100 E-Mini futures (NQU25) are down -0.47% this morning as investors trimmed risk ahead of the release of the Federal Reserve’s first-line inflation gauge, which could offer more insight into the interest-rate outlook.
Some negative corporate news is weighing on stock index futures, with Marvell Technology (MRVL) tumbling over -14% in pre-market trading after the chip designer posted in-line Q2 results and provided tepid Q3 revenue guidance. Also, Dell Technologies (DELL) slumped more than -6% in pre-market trading after reporting a slowdown in AI server orders in Q2 and a weaker-than-expected operating margin in its infrastructure unit.
Higher bond yields today are also weighing on stock index futures.
In yesterday’s trading session, Wall Street’s major indices closed higher, with the S&P 500 notching a new all-time high. Snowflake (SNOW) jumped over +20% after the provider of cloud-based data-warehouse software posted upbeat Q2 results and raised its full-year product revenue guidance. Also, chip stocks gained ground, with Micron Technology (MU) and Marvell Technology (MRVL) rising more than +3%. In addition, Pure Storage (PSTG) soared over +32% after the company reported stronger-than-expected Q2 results and boosted its annual guidance. On the bearish side, Hormel Foods (HRL) plunged more than -13% and was the top percentage loser on the S&P 500 after the company posted weaker-than-expected FQ3 adjusted EPS and gave disappointing FQ4 guidance.
The U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis said on Thursday that Q2 GDP growth was revised higher to +3.3% (q/q annualized) from the initial estimate of +3.0%, stronger than expectations of +3.1%. Also, the number of Americans filing for initial jobless claims in the past week fell -5K to 229K, compared with the 231K expected. In addition, U.S. pending home sales fell -0.4% m/m in July, in line with expectations.
“Slowing job growth indicates the economy will not keep up with the above-trend growth from the previous quarter. Economic growth will likely flatline in the third quarter. Softer growth in the third quarter will add fuel to those calling for rate cuts,” said Jeff Roach at LPL Financial.