Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq futures rise after record-setting day on Wall Street

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US stock futures rose after stocks hit fresh records with Wall Street fixated on the promise of AI even as the government shutdown drags on.

Futures attached to the Dow Jones Industrial Average (YM=F), the benchmark S&P 500 (ES=F), and the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) all made gains of 0.2%.

Stocks on Thursday rose as the shutdown continued for a second day. Investors’ hopes in AI soared as OpenAI’s valuation climbed to $500 billion, making the company the most valuable startup in the world. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC), the S&P 500 (^GSPC), and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) all hit new records.

Wall Street would ordinarily be on edge for Friday’s release of the September jobs report. However, the government shutdown is all but certain to delay the release of the data, leaving Wall Street in the dark. The next jobs report was especially anticipated as Federal Reserve policymakers have stressed job market weakness as a major factor in their decision on interest rates at their next meeting.

Meanwhile, the end of the government shutdown remains elusive. Democrats continue to push for the continuation of healthcare subsidies as a condition of funding the government, while Republicans refuse to negotiate on the issue until the government is back up and running. The Senate was out of session on Thursday in observance of Yom Kippur and is set to reconvene on Friday. At the same time, President Trump has continued to ramp up his threats to fire federal workers and defund projects in Democratic-leaning states.

LIVE 2 updates

  • Oil price heading towards weekly loss

    Bloomberg reports:

    Oil was on track for the biggest weekly decline since late June, ahead of an OPEC+ meeting that’s expected to result in the return of more idled barrels, exacerbating concerns around oversupply.

    Brent (BZ=F) traded near $65 a barrel, down around 8% for the week, while West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) was below $61. The alliance is scheduled to meet online on Sunday to make a decision on output for November, and could discuss fast-tracking supply hikes as the group seeks to reclaim market share.

    There are already early signs that global oversupply may be emerging in the Middle East, and the International Energy Agency expects the glut to swell to a record next year — in part due to the return of OPEC+ production. Some Wall Street banks predict Brent will slide into the $50s-a-barrel range.

    Read more here.

  • Alibaba captures AI hope during mammoth bounce back

    Alibaba (BABA) continues to attract attention from hedge funds and retail investors with hope that the companies $250 billion hot streak is set to continue.

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.