Stocks were mostly unchanged on Tuesday as traders looked ahead towards another key U.S. inflation reading following Monday's low trading volumes. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped slightly lower after falling as much as 320 points at session lows, while the S&P 500 Index and Nasdaq Composite advanced about 0.1% and 0.3% in afternoon trading.
Here's how the market settled on Tuesday:
S&P 500 Index
Dow Jones Industrial Average
Nasdaq Composite Index
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Market participants are trading cautiously ahead of March's consumer price index reading due out Wednesday morning, with economists polled by Dow Jones expecting inflation to rise by 0.3% month-to-month. This key report will impact the Federal Reserve's timeline for interest rate cuts this year, with more optimistic traders hoping the first of multiple potential cuts to start in June.
Tuesday's session follows the slowest trading day of the year so far on Monday, with New York Stock Exchange volumes fall to about 7.99 billions shares on the day due to widespread excitement about the solar eclipse throughout the United States.
Zoom Out:
Despite the broader tech sector declines in recent sessions, strategist at UBS believe the artificial intelligence market has room to grow, especially beyond GPU computing capabilities that have driven Nvidia
"In our view, the semiconductor and software industries offer the best opportunities for investors over the course of this year," UBS strategist said in a Tuesday note.
In the News:
Boeing
Google
Intel
"From our competitive pricing, our distinctive open integrated network on chip, we're using industry-standard Ethernet. We believe it's a strong offering," said Das Kamhout, vice president of Xeon software at Intel, on a call with reporters quoted by CNBC. Kamhout added that Intel expects the chip to be "highly competitive" with Nvidia's latest offerings.
For Wednesday:
All eyes will be on March's CPI report as well as the minutes for the Fed's March FOMC meeting on Wednesday for more clues on the central bank's next moves on rates. Delta Air Lines