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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks rise as 'Magnificent Seven' earnings land; gold nears record

ReutersJan 30, 2025 3:31 PM
  • Wall Street stocks rally after Meta, Tesla earnings
  • Microsoft tumbles after downbeat cloud outlook
  • Dollar dips, gold nears record as traders rush to borrow metal
  • Fed keeps US rates steady, ECB cuts rates
  • ECB cuts rates, euro steady

By Amanda Cooper

- Wall Street shares rallied on Thursday, as investors cheered earnings from Meta META.O, but shunned Microsoft MSFT.O, while the dollar dipped, further boosting gold prices.

The Federal Reserve held rates steady on Wednesday, in line with expectations, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell saying there would be no rush to cut them again, leaving the dollar to drift on Thursday.

Gold often benefits from a weaker dollar and neared record-highs as U.S. stock markets opened.

The first earnings from the group of so-called "Magnificent Seven" megacap tech stocks met with a mixed reaction from investors, many of whom are now scrutinising these companies' AI spending plans in light of the emergence of low-cost Chinese startup DeepSeek that upended equity markets this week.

"The market has been priced for perfect results from big tech, they have also been used to big tech massively outperforming expectations in recent years," Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, said.

Microsoft beat quarterly revenue estimates, but a downbeat outlook for its cloud computing business pushed its shares down 6%, while Meta forecast first-quarter revenue below market estimates, but pledged to cut costs, lifting its shares by 2%.

Tesla's TSLA.O fourth-quarter profit margin missed expectations, yet its shares rose 4.3%.

Apple AAPL.O reports results later on Thursday.

"Microsoft, Tesla, and Meta are all making massive AI investments, but investors are now demanding real results," Jacob Falconcrone, Saxo chief investment strategist for Europe, said.

Data earlier in the morning showed U.S. economic growth slowed in the fourth quarter, but remained robust enough for investors to expect the Fed to lower rates only gradually this year.

Gross domestic product increased at a 2.3% annualised rate last quarter, below estimates in a Reuters poll for a rise of 2.6%, after accelerating at a 3.1% pace in the July-September quarter, the Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic Analysis said in its advance GDP estimate on Thursday.

President Donald Trump's policies remain a risk for the Fed's policy outlook, and Saturday is likely to see new tariffs slapped on Canada, Mexico and possibly China.

The European Central Bank cut interest rates as expected on Thursday and reiterated that euro zone inflation is increasingly under control despite concerns about global trade.

On European markets, the STOXX 600 index .STOXX hit a new record high, rising 0.7%, in a heavy earnings day that included results from Deutsche Bank DBKGn.DE, energy producer Shell SHEL.L and retailer H&M HMb.ST.

The euro EUR=EBS was flat on the day at $1.042, while sterling GBP=D3 was up 0.1% at $1.2459.

The yen, however, strengthened about 0.8% to 154.03 per dollar JPY=EBS with Bank of Japan Deputy Governor Ryozo Himino saying in a speech that the central bank will continue to raise interest rates if the economy and prices move in line with its forecasts.

In commodities, gold XAU= rose 1% to $2,785 an ounce, taking advantage of the drop in the dollar.

Gold prices have risen sharply this week, partly driven by nervousness over Trump's tariff plans and the possibility - albeit distant - of him imposing duties on precious metals imports.

Even though Trump has not mentioned bullion shipments in his tariff plans, traders are racing to borrow gold from central banks, which store the metal in London, following a surge in deliveries to the United States, two sources familiar with the matter said.

"Despite the fact that tariffs on gold in the States are extremely unlikely given that it is a reserve asset, risk managers are taking no chances and moving metal into the States," said StoneX analyst Rhona O'Connell.

Oil prices reversed earlier losses, rising around 0.4% on the day, leaving U.S. crude futures at $72.92 a barrel and Brent crude at $76.85. O/R

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