Here are the most important news items that investors need to start their trading day:
1. Retreating
The S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped on Monday, pulling back from the record highs they each notched on Friday. The S&P closed 0.38% lower, while the Dow fell 0.16%. The Nasdaq Composite also lost ground on Monday, declining 0.13%. It’s an early data point for investors as they watch to see if the AI- and Nvidia-fueled rally of last week can hold. Follow for live market updates.
2. Retail roundup
A shopping cart sits in front of a Lowe’s store on November 21, 2023 in Pacoima, California.
Justin Sullivan | Getty Images
Retail earnings keep rolling on, with a pair of new reports out Tuesday. Home improvement giant Lowe’s and embattled department store retailer Macy’s each reported fourth-quarter results before market open. Lowe’s topped analysts’ estimates, but saw customers tackle fewer home projects during the quarter. Macy’s reported another quarter of falling sales while unveiling a strategy for growth that includes closing 150 stores. Later this week, investors will get quarterly reports from TJX, Best Buy and Birkenstock.
3. Taking a crack at Kroger-Albertsons
Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images
4. ‘Let them compete’
Jamie Dimon, President & CEO,Chairman & CEO JPMorgan Chase, speaking on Tech Zone Daily’s Squawk Box at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 17th, 2024.
Adam Galici | Tech Zone Daily
Elsewhere in M&A, JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon is all for competition, saying he’s not worried about a possible tie-up between Capitol One and Discovery. That merger, announced earlier this month at a value of $35.3 billion, would create the nation’s largest credit card lender — a title currently held by JPMorgan. “My view is, let them compete,” Dimon told Tech Zone Daily’s Leslie Picker. “Let them try, and if we think it’s unfair, we’ll complain about that.” Dimon also touched on the macroeconomy, noting he sees risks to a soft landing, and on artificial intelligence, saying, “This is not hype. This is real.”
5. Bitcoin’s back
Bitcoin is back on a tear. The world’s largest cryptocurrency by market cap surpassed $56,000 overnight, now up 10% in two days, and notched a two-year high. The rally boosted the broader crypto market as well, with Ethereum reaching a recent high of above $3,200. It comes a little more than a month after the SEC approved a long-awaited bitcoin ETF — and roughly two months before a bitcoin “halving event,” in which the payment for mining bitcoin gets cut in half, slowing the rate at which tokens are created.
— Tech Zone Daily’s Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Melissa Repko, Hugh Son, Jeff Cox, Jesse Pound and Dylan Butts contributed to this report.
— Follow broader market action like a pro on Tech Zone Daily Pro.