Fed Rate Cut Unleashes Market Euphoria

US stocks notched fresh highs on Friday amid a record-setting rally as the US and China advanced trade talks and the "Magnificent Seven" tech stocks continued to climb.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose 0.4% and the S&P 500 (^GSPC) jumped nearly 0.5%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) led gains, adding about 0.7%, as Apple (AAPL) stock rallied on optimism over its new iPhones hitting store shelves.
All three major indexes hit all-time highs for a second session in a row, ending the week on an upbeat note as the dust settled on the Federal Reserve's return to interest rate cuts. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq cinched their third straight weekly gains, adding 1.2% and 2.2%, respectively. The Dow climbed 1%, marking its second consecutive weekly gain.
Save for Nvidia (NVDA), the Mag 7 tech stocks all posted gains for the five trading sessions through Friday, led by Tesla (TSLA). Tesla ended the week up nearly 8%, while Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) added around 6% and Apple jumped almost 5%.
Investors on Friday were focused on details from Trump's conversation Chinese President Xi Jinping. The US president said in a post on Truth Social following the talks, "We made progress on many very important issues including Trade, Fentanyl, the need to bring the War between Russia and Ukraine to an end, and the approval of the TikTok Deal."
The details of the TikTok deal — which would allow the social media app owned by Chinese tech giant ByteDance to continue US operations amid an impending ban — are not yet clear. The Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday that the agreement would involve a consortium of investors including Oracle (ORCL), Silver Lake, and Andreessen Horowitz taking an 80% stake in the company.
Notably, a summary of Trump and Xi's talk in Chinese state media did not provide a detailed update on a TikTok deal beyond saying that Xi supported a commercial solution to the problem and that he wanted a set of rules that would allow Chinese companies to invest in the US.
The writeup from China also said that the US should avoid new restrictive trade measures to avoid "undermining" recent trade talks.
Elsewhere in markets, nuclear stocks including Oklo (OKLO) and NANO Nuclear (NNE) rallied amid optimism in the sector. Meanwhile, chipmaker Micron (MU) pulled back from a record high ahead of its quarterly report which lands Sept. 23. AI chipmaker Broadcom (AVGO) ended the week down 4% after a big upswing last week.
Pia Singh and Alex Harring of CNBC also report Dow, S&P 500 close at fresh records, log big gains for the week after Fed rate cut:
Stocks rose on Friday, with major U.S. indexes notching weekly gains, as the Federal Reserve’s decision to cut interest rates set in investors’ minds.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 172.85 points, or 0.37%, to close at 46,315.27, reaching a fresh record high. The S&P 500 settled up 0.49% at 6,664.36, while the Nasdaq Composite advanced 0.72% to finish at 22,631.48.
The small-cap Russell 2000 dipped 0.7%, taking back some gains this week after the index touched a fresh record high earlier in the session.
Apple led the way higher, rising 3.2%, as the company’s latest iPhone went on sale around the world. Tesla shares were also up more than 2.2%.
Wall Street is on pace to post strong weekly gains. The S&P 500 and Dow are up 1.2% and 1%, respectively, while the Nasdaq is up 2.2%. The Russell 2000 gained 2.2%, notched its seventh weekly advance.
Stocks got a boost this week after the Fed lowered its benchmark overnight lending rate by a quarter percentage point, its first rate reduction since December. The move was widely expected by markets, but stocks had a volatile session on the back of the decision after Fed Chair Jerome Powell in his press conference characterized the decision as a “risk management cut.”
″While September has historically delivered pullbacks, this year’s market has defied that pattern — climbing 35% since March with strong technical and fundamental tailwinds,” said Mark Hackett, chief market strategist at Nationwide. “Still, with the S&P 500 trading at 22x forward earnings and volatility suppressed, a period of consolidation or choppiness would be a normal and healthy development.”
Uranium fund surpasses 2007 highAn ETF tracking uranium hit new all-time highs in Friday’s session, rallying past the previous record set more than a decade and a half ago.
The VanEck Uranium and Nuclear ETF (NLR) surpassed its prior record notched in October 2017 in Friday’s session. The fund climbed more than 5% in afternoon trading.
It was another strong week in the US stock market.
Last week, I didn't post a market comment, it was all about Oracle which posted its biggest one day return in decades even after missing on the top and bottom line (all about great guidance but the stock is off its 52-week high).
That made Larry Ellison briefly the world's richest man but $34 billion was wiped from his net worth this week as ‘AI bubble’ fears grow.
Who knows, if a final deal is ironed out on TikTok, he might be in the running again.
This week, it was all about the Fed and the much anticipated rate cut.
Jerome Powell signalled two more rate cuts are in the offing this year, a dovish instead of a hawkish cut, so algos went wild on risk assets.
And where do algos go when there's a green light for risk assets? Where else? Quantum computing, AI related stocks like Oklo Inc which ripped up 64% just this week:



If things are feel bubbly, well, it's because FOMO has kicked in and portfolio managers are chasing hot stocks and mega cap stocks like Alphabet (Google) higher as it makes a new 52-week high:

And it's not just Alphabet making a new 52-week high, Abbvie, Ally Financial, American Express, Bank of America, Barrick, Brookfield Corp, Cameco, Corning, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Kratos, Morgan Stanley, Rambus, The Carlyle Group, and plenty of other companies have shares making a new high (see full list here).
In other words, it's not just Mag-7 or Mag-10 driving this market higher, it's coming from all sectors.
In fact, year-to-date all sectors except Healthcare are up and I see that one coming back to end the year on a positive note:

And in Healthcare there are nice bargains like Novo Nordisk and others which are trading at decent multiples.
We shall see how the last quarter plays out, will inflation rebound hampering the Fed or will markets keep melting up and FOMO really kick in during Christmas?
I don't know, the trader in me thinks we need a nice pullback, it's healthy but this market just wants to rip higher.
Below, CNBC's Jim Cramer talks about the day's market performance as stocks wrap up a positive week.
Also, Warren Pies, 3Fourteen Research co-founder, joins CNBC's 'Closing Bell' to discuss market outlooks.
Third, David Tepper, Appaloosa Management founder and president and Carolina Panthers owner, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the latest market trends, the Fed's interest rate decision, President Trump's tariff agenda, state of the economy, rate path outlook, his AI portfolio, and more.
Fourth, Tom Lee, Fundstrat head of research, joins CNBC's 'Power Lunch' to discuss market outlooks, how much the Fed matters to equity markets, and much more.
Fifth, DoubleLine CEO-CIO Jeffrey Gundlach joins CNBC’s Closing Bell to share his perspective on the Fed’s “risk management” approach, highlighting the divided views within the FOMC and the implications of recent labor-market revisions. He underscores the risk of overeasing and stresses the importance of monitoring unemployment trends over job creation figures, given shifting demographics and labor force dynamics.
Sixth, CNBC’s Steve Liesman and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari join 'Squawk Box' to discuss the Fed's interest rate decision, state of the economy, the Fed's inflation fight, impact of tariffs, and more.
Seventh, Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers says this is an unprecedented time for the Federal Reserve. He says it's become more politicized. “The biggest risk in this situation is being that we lose contact with our 2% inflation target and become a country with an inflation psychology,” said Summers.
Lastly, AZ-VC Managing Partner Jack Selby warns that the current AI euphoria could be “the biggest bubble in private tech investing." He speaks on Bloomberg's Insight With Haslinda Amin.
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