There's a ton for traders to consider this morning on Wall Street
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) futures are trading above fair value this morning, as stocks try to end the busy four-day trading week on a positive note. Either way, it's setting up to be another action-packed day on Wall Street, with traders digesting renewed negotiations around the government shutdown, a leading Wall Street Journal story suggesting the Fed could stop shrinking its balance sheet sooner than expected, as well as today's corporate earnings releases -- headlined by Dow component Intel (INTC). As for now, the Dow, S&P 500 Index (SPX), and Nasdaq-100 Index (NDX) would need a solid outing to end the week in the black.
Continue reading for more on today's market, including:
2 chip stocks that rose on sector tailwinds. Signal says to buy this travel stock. How options traders reacted to Canada Goose's sell-off. Plus, Starbucks up after earnings; Mastercard outbids Visa; and analyst sets a high bar for Amazon earnings.
Stocks in Asia rallied to end the week, with the tech sector leading the charge. Tencent rallied more than 4% in Hong Kong, boosted by the long-awaited approval of two mobile games by Chinese regulators, while chip stocks extended their gains to a second straight day in Seoul. By the close, Hong Kong's Hang Seng was up 1.7%, South Korea's Kospi rose 1.5%, Japan's Nikkei added just under 1%, and China's Shanghai Composite lagged the pack with a 0.4% gain amid lingering trade uncertainty.
European markets are also pointed higher at midday, despite a nearly three-year low in Germany's Ifo business sentiment index. Instead, traders are cheering continued strength in semiconductor stocks, which have effectively shrugged off an earnings disappointment from U.S. counterpart Intel. Additionally, Renault is up 4.6% in Paris, after Japan's trade minister said the exit of former CEO Carlos Ghosn should not affect the automaker's Nissan alliance. At last check, the German DAX is up 1.6% and the French CAC 40 has climbed 1%. Meanwhile, London's FTSE 100 is up just 0.1%, with British stocks fighting an uphill battle after a Vodafone earnings miss.