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Pre-market future are on the wane at this hour, after closing mixed last week with the Nasdaq far outperforming the other major indexes. The Dow is -53 points, -0.11%, the S&P 500 is -7 points, -0.10%, the Nasdaq -37 points, -0.13% and the small-cap Russell 2000 is -10, -0.39%. Trading feels volatile ahead of the bell, however; it feels like these numbers might change before the end of this article is written.
We have no major economic reports hitting the tape today, but the week will have plenty of grist for the mill: Case-Shiller home prices and Consumer Confidence will be out tomorrow; Durable Goods, Housing Starts/Building Permits, U.S. Trade Balance, and Retail/Wholesale Inventories come out Wednesday; and Weekly Jobless Claims will join the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), Q1 GDP, the Chicago Business Barometer and U.S. Leading Economic Indicators (LEI) will all be released on Thursday.
Wednesday afternoon also brings us the interest rate decision from the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC). The decision itself won’t be meaningful — there is virtually zero chance the Fed makes a move from the 3.50-3.75% it had established at the end of 2025. But this will be the final Fed meeting with Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the helm; now that charges against him by the Trump administration have been dropped, the path for former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh to replace him looks clear.
Warsh himself has a history of being a contrarian among voting Fed members: when Ben Bernanke chaired the FOMC during the Obama years, Warsh was a staunch advocate for rolling back the Fed’s balance sheet and raising rates quickly following the mortgage crisis that resulted in a global financial meltdown. These days, Warsh is aligned strongly with President Trump in his willingness to cut interest rates from their current plateau.
It won’t be an easy task for Warsh, as the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and global tariff measures are putting upward pressure on inflation. Only a collapse of the labor market — currently flat but not in decline — would bring a traditional methodology toward lowering rates from here. Warsh is no stranger to being in the minority on the Fed, but in order to satisfy the president he will have his work cut out for him.
Q1 Earnings Results for Today: VZ, DPZ
VerizonVZ shares are up this morning after a 6-cent beat on its Q1 bottom line to $1.28 per share. Revenues came in a tad light, -1.7%, to $34.44 billion for the quarter, but subscriber growth was enough for investors to add to Verizon’s +13% stock gains year to date. For more on VZ’s earnings, click here.
Domino’s PizzaDPZ missed expectations on both top and bottom lines for its Q1 report ahead of the open, with earnings of $4.13 per share short of the projected $4.29, with revenues of $1.15 billion lower than estimates by -1.35%. Shares are down nearly another -7% in today’s pre-market, adding to the -11.75% losses for the stock year to date. For more on DPZ’s earnings, click here.
After today’s close, we’ll see new earnings results from NucorNUE and Bed Bath & Beyond BBBY. Wednesday afternoon is when a majority of the “Magnificent 7” companies report: Alphabet GOOGL, AmazonAMZN, Meta PlatformsMETA and Microsoft MSFT.
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VFC’s Outdoor segment shines, led by The North Face and Timberland. Product innovation and operational synergies position VFC to capitalize on consumers’ growing emphasis and functional performance.
Presence across diverse end markets, compelling product portfolio, strong foothold in the automotive and industrial sectors, benefits from CHIPS Act funding, robust cash flow and impressive shareholder return policy are positives.
AI-driven data center buildouts, expanding capacity and services, disciplined pricing and productivity, and stronger finances support Vertiv’s long-term growth at scale.
Broader authorizations, steady U.S. uptake, and expanding bladder evidence support scaling, while manufacturing progress adds additional platform optionality over time.
Central Garden & Pet advances digital, supply chain and product innovation while driving margin gains and M&A, backed by strong financials and a focused Cost and Simplicity program.
Given its innovation prowess and product depth, Viavi is well-positioned to leverage major secular growth trends in 5G, fiber and 3D sensing. Its cash position is also stable.
Baxter faces margin pressure in Pharma and IV therapies, ongoing pricing headwinds, regulatory and supply chain risks, plus intense competition limiting pricing power.
International Paper Company faces weak demand and cost pressures, with restructuring and input volatility likely to impact near-term earnings and margins.
Weak asset quality amid a tough macroeconomic backdrop will likely hurt Hilltop Holdings. Muted performance of its Mortgage Origination segment is another concern and adds to earnings volatility.
Pilgrim’s Pride faces import pressure and margin risk in Mexico, cautious consumer spending and heightened competitive intensity, posing risks to profitability and market positioning.
Advertising scale, broader entertainment formats, and technology-led product upgrades support revenue growth while disciplined margins and buybacks add cash durability.
Strength in the Energy Generation/Storage business, balance sheet strength, and focus on autonomous driving, robotics and artificial intelligence are set to drive Tesla.
Central Garden & Pet advances digital, supply chain and product innovation while driving margin gains and M&A, backed by strong financials and a focused Cost and Simplicity program.
Amgen’s key medicines like Evenity and Repatha as well as newer medicines like Tavneos and Tezspire are driving sales, more than offsetting declining revenues from oncology biosimilars and legacy established products such as Enbrel
Intel’s leading position in PC market, strength in servers, growing clout in software, IoT & ADAS domains and headway in process technology are positive indicators of future growth prospects.