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The Day Ahead: What Markets Are Watching Today After Fed Hold and Tech Rally

By:
James Hyerczyk
Published: May 8, 2025, 07:59 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • U.S. markets today climb as S&P 500 gains after Fed holds rates and Nvidia rallies on chip trade relief talk.
  • Fed flags inflation and job risks; Powell dismisses preemptive cuts, cites need for more data.
  • ConocoPhillips, Warner Bros., and Coinbase lead today's crowded earnings slate across key sectors.
The Day Ahead: What Markets Are Watching Today After Fed Hold and Tech Rally

Stocks Edge Higher as Fed Holds Rates and Tech Lifts Sentiment

Daily E-mini S&P 500 Index

U.S. equities are on track for a higher open Thursday, with traders digesting the Fed’s steady stance and focusing on a heavy dose of earnings and data. As of 07:00 GMT, S&P 500 futures are up 0.73%, Nasdaq-100 futures lead with a 1.00% gain, and Dow Jones futures rise 0.54%. Wednesday’s close saw the S&P 500 post its first gain in three sessions, boosted by a 3% rally in Nvidia (NVDA) after signs the Trump administration may ease chip trade restrictions.

Daily Applovin Corporation

Pre-market action is active: AppLovin (APP) jumped over 13% post-earnings after it topped EPS estimates and announced the sale of its mobile gaming unit. Arm Holdings (ARM) dropped 11% on weak guidance, while Skyworks Solutions (SWKS) fell 4% despite a beat. Bumble (BMBL) spiked 8% after surprising with a profit, and Zillow (ZG) declined 5% on soft housing commentary. Fortinet (FTNT) tumbled 11% after guidance missed expectations.

The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 4.25%–4.5%, acknowledging increased risks of both inflation and unemployment. Chair Jerome Powell pushed back on the idea of a preemptive cut, saying future moves depend on incoming data. Citi reports that positioning in U.S. equities remains flat, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq showing limited bullish momentum as short interest grows.

All Eyes on Jobless Claims, Productivity Data This Morning

Traders are watching for key macro updates this morning:

  • Weekly Jobless Claims (12:30 GMT)
  • Q1 Productivity (12:30 GMT)
  • March Wholesale Inventories (14:00 GMT)

These reports follow a Q1 GDP decline and could help define the market’s short-term direction, especially on labor and cost-efficiency signals.

Earnings Blitz Continues with Tech, Energy, and Media in Focus

Before the bell, watch for:

  • ConocoPhillips (COP) – EPS est. $2.05. Energy names could react to any margin pressure commentary.
  • Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) – EPS est. -$0.18. Streaming trends and debt load will be closely watched.
  • Other reports: Cheniere Energy (LNG), EPAM Systems (EPAM), Crocs (CROX), BigCommerce (BIGC).

After the close:

  • Paramount Global (PARA) – EPS est. $0.26. Investors want clarity on streaming strategy and ad sales.
  • Expedia Group (EXPE) – EPS est. $0.36. Summer travel guidance will be key.
  • Coinbase (COIN) – Traders are watching crypto volumes and the balance of trading vs. non-trading revenue.
    Also reporting: Pinterest (PINS), Affirm (AFRM), Cloudflare (NET), Texas Roadhouse (TXRH), HubSpot (HUBS).

Gold and Yields Stabilize Ahead of Data; Dollar Rangebound

Daily Gold (XAU/USD)

Gold is down 0.74% to $3,339, slipping below $3,351 resistance. If $3,228 breaks, next support is $3,164.
10-year Treasury yield is steady at 4.297%, above key MAs, reflecting caution before macro prints.
DXY remains trapped between 99.15 and 100.38. A break below 98.90 would turn momentum bearish.

S&P and Nasdaq Testing Resistance as Bulls Look for Follow-Through

The S&P 500 trades above its 50-day MA (5,596), with 5,724.75 resistance in sight. A close above targets 5,837.

Daily E-mini Nasdaq 100 Index Futures

Nasdaq-100 eyes resistance at 20,276.75 for breakout after holding 50-day moving average at 19545.00. Next target is 20,674.53 (200-day MA).
Dow futures test 50-day moving average at 41,354. Break above this indicator could open the path to 200-day moving average at 43032.

What Traders Need to Watch

Risk tone is constructive following the Fed pause and chip-sector relief, but markets remain data-sensitive. With equity positioning flat and Fed rhetoric noncommittal, today’s economic releases and earnings commentary will likely dictate direction. Early momentum favors bulls—follow-through depends on jobs and profit signals.

More Information in our Economic Calendar.

About the Author

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.

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