Stock futures are little changed as investors look to end month on an upbeat note: Live updates

Stock futures are little changed as investors look to end month on an upbeat note: Live updates


Specialist traders work inside a booth on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange on Sept. 10, 2025.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Stock futures are little changed as investors look to close out an unusually strong September by building on Monday’s momentum, despite the threat of a potential U.S. government shutdown this week.

Futures tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 18 points, or 0.04%. S&P futures slipped less than 0.1%, while Nasdaq 100 futures fell 0.08%.

Stocks closed higher across the board on Monday as the names tied to the artificial intelligence trade regained ground from last week. Stocks had faltered last week amid growing concerns about the circular nature of AI deals and the obstacles could stand in the way, such as rising debt or constrained energy supplies. Still, other investors remain confident that strong earnings from the “Magnificent Seven” and other key chipmakers will continue to power the market higher.

At the same time, the threat of a federal government shutdown looms with an Oct. 1 funding deadline approaching. Although shutdowns aren’t usually market-moving events, this time could be different as investors are already wary about a slowing labor market, the risk of stagflation and elevated stock valuations. A shutdown could also prompt rating agencies to rethink the condition of U.S. credit, which was downgraded in May by Moody’s.

After a meeting between President Donald Trump and top Democrats and Republicans, Vice President JD Vance said Monday evening: “I think we’re headed to a shutdown because the Democrats won’t do the right thing.”

The Labor Department also announced earlier Monday that the September nonfarm payrolls report scheduled to release Friday will not come out if the U.S. government suspends operations. The report is one of several upcoming key data releases that will provide crucial information about the direction of the economy ahead of the Federal Reserve’s upcoming October policy meeting. Exacerbating concerns over the shutdown was President Donald Trump’s threat over the weekend that a shutdown could result in mass firings of federal workers.

Jack Janasiewicz, lead portfolio strategist and portfolio manager at Natixis Investment Managers, said that a government shutdown could lead to some “tangential effects” in near-term market sentiment and volatility.

“With investors keenly aware of the risks to a softening labor market and simultaneously laser focused on the signs of tariff pass-through to inflation, any delay in the collection of economic data resulting from the shutdown could lead to increased uncertainty. And with that increased uncertainty we often see a pick-up in financial market volatility,” Janasiewicz said.

“Could such uncertainty be large enough to dent the economic backdrop and along with it risk assets? Probably not a lasting impact but the longer the uncertainty drags out, the greater the risk,” he said.

Major U.S. stock indexes continue to hover near record-highs. The S&P 500 has increased more than 3% this month, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average has gained 1.7%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has outperformed the other two benchmark indexes with a roughly 5.3% gain in September.

Tuesday will also bring the end of the third quarter. The broad-based index is up 7.4% quarter to date, while the Nasdaq is set to notch a nearly 11% quarterly gain. The Dow is up 1.7% over the three-month period, which would mark its fifth positive quarter in a row.



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