WALL STREET UPDATE
US stocks rebounded Friday on optimism over a shutdown deal, while the Nasdaq logged its worst week since April amid growing concerns about AI spending and leverage risks.
United States (US) stocks rebounded from early losses on Friday to close mostly higher, buoyed by hopes that lawmakers are making progress toward ending the government shutdown.
For the week, however, the Nasdaq 100 fell 3.09% – its worst weekly performance since April – as artificial intelligence (AI) names remained under pressure. The S&P 500 declined 1.63%, while the Dow Jones shed 575 points or 1.21%.
The US government shutdown, now in its 40th day, appears to be nearing an end after the Senate advanced the bipartisan continuing resolution (CR) in a late Sunday procedural vote, crossing the 60-vote threshold with 12 Democratic supporters (more than the needed 10).
This clears the way for final passage likely Monday morning (10 November), reopening the government by midday if President Trump signs promptly. The deal funds through 30 January and includes three full-year appropriations bills – Veterans Affairs, Agriculture and legislative branch – and guarantees a December Senate vote on Affordable Care Act (ACA) tax credit extensions, addressing progressive concerns without an immediate extension.
The breakthrough on the shutdown – combined with President Trump’s renewed pledge to deliver at least $2000 in tariff-funded dividend cheques to most Americans (excluding high earners) – has lifted Nasdaq 100 futures 0.60% to 25,316 in early Asian trading. While the reopening restores critical services and eases economic uncertainty, the rebate plan remains contingent on congressional approval and sufficient tariff revenue, leaving its timing and feasibility in question.
While some of the headwinds that weighed on markets last week have eased, this is unlikely to relieve investor concerns about AI spending versus payback, which intensified last week.
The backlash grew louder after OpenAI’s chief financial officer (CFO) suggested the US government should subsidise the company’s borrowing because AI is ‘strategic’. This unease is compounded by a funding mix increasingly financed through debt and off-balance-sheet structures rather than free cash flow. In short, the AI narrative remains strong over the medium term, but the widening gap between high capital expenditure (capex) and near-term revenue – coupled with heavy reliance on leverage – is prompting the market to rein in short-term expectations.
This week, third-quarter (Q3) earnings taper, with reports due from CoreWeave, Cisco, Disney and Quantum Computing. With roughly 88% of S&P 500 companies having reported, about 80% have beaten Q3 earnings estimates (versus 73% over the last four quarters) by an average of 9%, while 74% have beaten revenue estimates (versus 64%) by an average of 2.8%.
The US interest rate market starts this week pricing in 18 basis points (bp) of cuts for the December Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting and about 85 bp of cumulative Federal Reserve (Fed) easing through to December 2026.
Within the rally from the April 16,542 low, the gains from the September 22,977 low are viewed as an extending Wave V. Under our preferred Elliott Wave framework, once a five-wave advance is complete, the expectation is for a correction to commence.
After last week’s break and close below daily trendline support from the April lows (around 25,250), we are now watching for a sustained break of horizontal support at 25,000. Which the Nasdaq fell below and then closed above on Friday – to increase confidence that last week’s 26,182 high is a medium-term top and that a deeper pullback is underway.
The initial downside target on a confirmed pullback is the 24,200 – 23,950 band (coming from the 10 October low and 13 August record high), with downside risks to 22,500.
While the Nasdaq 100 holds above short-term support at 25,000, allow for the uptrend in the Nasdaq to continue towards the next upside target of 27,000.
Within the rally from the April 4835 low, the gains from the 2 September 6360 low are viewed as an extending Wave V. Under our preferred Elliott Wave framework, once a five-wave advance is complete, the expectation is for a correction to commence.
After last week’s break and close below daily trendline support from the April lows (around 6760), we are now watching for a sustained break of horizontal support at 6650 to increase confidence that last week’s 6920 high is a medium-term top and that a deeper pullback is underway.
The initial downside target on a confirmed pullback is the 6360 – 6340 support band (coming from the 2 September and 20 August lows), with downside risks to 6200.
While the S&P 500 holds above short-term support at 6550, allow for the uptrend in the S&P 500 to continue towards the next upside target of 7000.
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