CNBC Daily Open: A Trump post drowns out positive developments for markets

CNBC Daily Open: A Trump post drowns out positive developments for markets


U.S. President Donald Trump gestures during a meeting with President of Argentina Javier Milei in the Cabinet Room at the White House on Oct. 14, 2025 in Washington, DC.

Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images

U.S. stocks had a rocky day of trading, swinging from highs to lows like the quality of Game of Thrones across its eight seasons.

At its lowest during the session, the S&P 500 fell as much as 1.5%, but recovered and traded positively for most of the day after U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer hinted that China’s next trade move could influence how President Donald Trump’s tariffs are implemented.

The optimism in markets fizzled, however, when Trump said he was considering “terminating business with China having to do with Cooking Oil” and other forms of punitive measures, citing Beijing’s halt of U.S. soybean purchases since May. Investors seemed to take that threat seriously, sending the S&P 500 down 0.2% for the day.

Developments elsewhere, however, were more encouraging. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested that the central bank might stop tightening monetary policy concerning its bond holdings. Meanwhile, major banks — bellwethers for economic activity — such as JPMorgan Chase, Citi and Goldman Sachs, beat earnings expectations, suggesting that the economy’s fundamentals remain intact.

And while Oracle’s pivot to AMD’s artificial intelligence chips — a move away from Nvidia graphics processing units — may not thrill Jensen Huang, it reduces concentration risk and strengthens the case for investors banking on AI to continue the market rally.

Still, Trump’s rhetoric overshadowed everything else. The question, then, is whether his trade brinkmanship will derail the AI-fueled market — or if the Magnificent Seven kingdom will stand.

What you need to know today

Trump threatens China with cooking oil embargo. That’s in response to Beijing halting its purchases of U.S. soybeans since May. Whether 100% tariffs on China come into effect depends on how the country reacts, U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer said Tuesday.

Prices in China fall more than expected in September. The consumer price index declined 0.3% from a year earlier, steeper than the 0.2% drop forecast by economists. However, core CPI rose 1% year on year, the highest since February 2024, according to Wind Information.

ChatGPT will soon allow ‘erotica’ for adults. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced the major policy shift Tuesday, saying that it’s part of the company’s “treat adult users like adults” principle. The company previously prohibited most adult content on its chatbot.

U.S. stocks were mixed. On Tuesday, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite fell but recovered from session lows. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, however, closed in the green. Asia-Pacific markets traded higher Wednesday. South Korea’s Kospi index jumped more than 2.5%.

[PRO] An attractive European fixed income play. This niche area has “real value,” according to BlackRock’s James Turner, co-head of global fixed income in EMEA. In addition, it offers protection against the risk of interest rate fluctuations.

And finally…

NEW YORK, NY – FEBRUARY 09: Chinese Consul General in New York Huang Ping (C) and his wife Zhang Aiping participate in a closing bell ceremony to celebrate the Chinese New Year, the Year of the Dragon, on February 8, 2024 in New York City.

China News Service | Getty Images

Chinese firms pull back from listing in the U.S. as Hong Kong IPOs see a surge

Chinese initial public offerings in the U.S. have slumped 4% year on year in terms of deal value so far this year, raising just $875.7 million from 23 deals. Meanwhile, Chinese IPOs in Hong Kong this year have surged 164% year on year, raising $18.4 billion from 56 listings, Dealogic data showed.

One major snarl for Chinese companies interested in U.S. listings is Beijing’s tight control of the IPO process. A growing number of U.S.-listed Chinese companies are also looking at Hong Kong amid rising delisting risks in the U.S., a trend that’s giving an extra boost to the city’s sizzling market.

Anniek Bao



Source

Nuclear stocks surge after U.S. Army launches program to deploy small reactors
World

Nuclear stocks surge after U.S. Army launches program to deploy small reactors

Nuclear stocks rallied Wednesday after the U.S. Army launched a program to deploy small reactors. Shares of NuScale, a small reactor developer, soared 17%. Oklo and Nano Nuclear were up nearly 7% and 4%, resepectively. The uranium company Centrus was up 13%. The U.S. Army on Tuesday launched a program to build micro nuclear reactors […]

Read More
Apple announces new MacBook Pro, iPad Pro and Vision Pro with updated chip
World

Apple announces new MacBook Pro, iPad Pro and Vision Pro with updated chip

The upgraded Apple Vision Pro features the powerful M5 chip, the comfortable Dual Knit Band, innovative features with visionOS 26, and all-new spatial apps and Apple Immersive content. Courtesy: Apple Inc. Apple announced new MacBook Pro, iPad Pro and Vision Pro models on Wednesday with an updated M5 chip that allows them to run faster […]

Read More
Treasury Secretary Bessent says a stock market decline won’t deter the U.S. from taking strong action against China
World

Treasury Secretary Bessent says a stock market decline won’t deter the U.S. from taking strong action against China

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent insisted Wednesday that the U.S. won’t change its trade negotiating stance on China due to stock market volatility. “We won’t negotiate because the stock market is going down” or shy away from taking strong measures against Beijing for that reason, Bessent said in an exclusive interview at CNBC’s Invest in America […]

Read More