US stocks go nowhere amid big rotation out of gold and into fake meat
The calmest session for the S&P 500 in over a month.
A sense of calm returned to US stocks on Tuesday and was only briefly interrupted by a warning from US President Donald Trump that he may not meet with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping later this month after all.
The S&P 500 traded in its narrowest range in over a month to finish roughly flat, as did the Nasdaq 100. The Russell 2000, meanwhile, slumped about 0.5% on the session.
Consumer discretionary was the best-performing S&P sector ETF, while utilities was at the bottom of the leaderboard.
Stocks that moved higher:
Electric vehicle sales and elevated profits revved up GM in the third quarter, sending shares surging to an all-time high and giving the stock its best day since March 2020.
Beyond Meat had another insane day, soaring as its meme stock rally continued
Warner Bros. moved higher after it said it’s had multiple takeover offers and also announced a price hike for HBO Max.
Amazon, with AWS back to business as usual following Monday’s massive outage, rose on news that it aims to automate 75% of its operations and avoid hiring 600,000+ people
Jet engine maker GE Aerospace lifted after its Q3 results came in better than expected across the top and bottom lines, thanks in part to continued strong air travel demand.
Stocks that moved lower:
As gold loses its shine, so did the shares of SPDR Gold Shares ETF, and miners such as Newmont Corp., Agnico Eagle, Wheaton Precious Metals, and Anglogold Ashanti.
But those stocks could also be the victim of the general reversal of high-volatility momentum trades, which saw members of Goldman Sachs’ baskets of “high beta momentum longs” and “non-profitable tech” stocks tumble, including D-Wave Quantum, Planet Labs, and Navitas Semiconductor.
Philip Morris sank on signs of cracks in its Zyn biz, despite an otherwise cheery earnings report.
Google tumbled after OpenAI announced it will release a Chrome-competitor browser, “ChatGPT Atlas.”