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S&P 500 rebounds from recent rout as dip buyers emerge By Investing.com


Investing.com– The S&P500 climbed Thursday, underpinned by dip-buying in beaten up tech stocks and growing hopes the Federal Reserve may deliver multiple rate cuts this year.   

At 13:41 ET (17:41 GMT), the rose 413 points, or 1%, while the climbed 0.7%, and added 0.6%. 

IBM , ServiceNow lead tech stocks higher 

International Business Machines (NYSE:) rose rose more than 5% after big blue talked growing demand for its AI offering and lifted its annual cash flow guidance.

“Management highlighted that the GenAI book of business has grown to over $2B since watsonx launched a year ago, ahead of expectations in our view,” RBC said in a recent note.

ServiceNow Inc (NYSE:) jumped 15% after the software marker reported quarterly results late-Wednesday that topped Wall Street and lifted its annual guidance. 

The strong results in the quarter for Service now “look sustainable given the prioritization of back-office solutions in 2024 IT budgets and growing adoption of non-Technology workflow solutions,” Oppenheimer said in note. 

Tesla (NASDAQ:), meanwhile, climbed more than 3% after posting its biggest one-day slump since in nearly four year after its recent weak quarterly results.

Q2 GDP data shows strength, prices fall 

U.S. grew 2.8% in the second quarter, versus forecasts of a 2% growth, and an improvement from the 1.4% growth sen in the first three months of the year.

However, the , an inflation guage, in the release saw a fall to 2.3%, from 3.1% in the first quarter

Further signs of slowing inflation have underpinned growing hopes that the Federal Reserve could cut rates more than once this year starting in September.  

A separate report showed durable goods orders fell 6.6% in June, compared with expectations for a 0.3% rise.

American Airlines, Ford, Hasbro continue earnings wave  

American Airlines (NASDAQ:) rose more than 4% even as the carrier cut its annual profit forecast, pressured by weaker pricing power amid uneven demand trends and overcapacity in certain markets.

Hasbro (NASDAQ:) rose 3% after the toy maker posted a smaller-than-expected drop in second-quarter as steady digital gaming demand offset a slump in toy sales, while cost-control strategies helped it beat profit expectations.

Ford (NYSE:) slumped over 17% after clocking disappointing earnings, as automobile sales slowed sharply amid decreased consumer spending. 

Lineage climbs on US trading debut

Lineage Inc (NASDAQ:) climbed more than 3% on its Nasdaq debut to $80.81 in recent trading after opening at $82.20.

The cold storage company priced its initial public offering at $78 per share.

(Peter Nurse, Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.)



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