U.S. equities opened Thursday with modest gains as traders leaned into better-than-expected corporate earnings while discounting renewed uncertainty around U.S.-China trade talks. The S&P 500 rose 0.5%, extending its winning streak to a third session. The Nasdaq outperformed with a 1% rise, while the Dow Jones was flat, weighed down by a sharp 7% drop in IBM.
Corporate results continued to support the broader market. Texas Instruments jumped 8.5% after delivering a solid earnings beat and upbeat guidance, sparking strength in the semiconductor space. ServiceNow and Hasbro also posted strong rallies, up 7.9% and 7.6% respectively, after exceeding expectations.
On the downside, Chipotle sank 3.5% following its first same-store sales decline since 2020, citing consumer spending pressure. PepsiCo and Procter & Gamble both edged lower after trimming forward guidance, with tariffs and cost concerns weighing on their outlooks. Comcast slid more than 3% as subscriber losses overshadowed its earnings beat.
Initial jobless claims edged higher to 222,000, signaling a still-resilient labor market. The four-week average dipped slightly, reinforcing steady employment conditions even as some states saw localized layoffs in manufacturing and construction.
Durable goods orders spiked 9.2% in March, but nearly all gains came from transportation—up 27%. Excluding transportation, orders were flat, suggesting broader industrial demand is muted. Housing remained soft as well, with March existing-home sales falling to their lowest since 2009 and price gains narrowing to just 2.7% year-over-year.
Trade developments injected some caution. China’s Commerce Ministry stated no talks were currently underway with the U.S. and dismissed reports of progress, calling instead for tariff rollbacks. This clashed with recent U.S. commentary, including President Trump’s softer tone and Treasury Secretary Bessent’s optimism over a potential “big deal.”
Despite these tensions, markets remained focused on fundamentals, with earnings continuing to steer investor sentiment more than geopolitical headlines.
The outlook remains cautiously constructive. Strong earnings in key tech and industrial names are offsetting sector-specific concerns and trade noise. Traders should remain selective, favoring companies with pricing power and clear demand visibility.
Next catalysts include GDP and inflation prints, which will further clarify the Fed’s path and broader macro tone. For now, earnings are doing the heavy lifting.
More Information in our Economic Calendar.
James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.