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Pre-market futures are up again at this hour, adding to a big day Wednesday that saw the Nasdaq up over +500 points and the Dow +600. While the ceasefire in the Middle East tentatively holds for now, Q1 earnings results are setting records, riding the AI trade to new heights. The Dow is presently +127 points, the S&P 500 is +11, the Nasdaq +23 and the small-cap Russell 2000 is +4 points.
The war in Iran has begun to wear on investors’ patience, and they have begun to tune out the day-to-day, which remains precarious. For instance, today Iran continues to review the latest 14-point plan submitted by the U.S. According to President Trump, we “might have a deal” or “we might start bombing.” As always, keep abreast of developments here, especially considering spot oil prices: both WTI and Brent are back under $100/bbl at this hour.
Jobless Claims Remain in “No Hire/No Fire” Range
Weekly Jobless Claims continue their most consistently healthy figures this morning, with Initial Jobless Claims flowing up to +200K (from a slightly upwardly revised +190K for the previous week), but still below the projected +206K for the week. These are levels last seen in the latter half of 2022, when they were drawing comparisons to the late 1960s.
Continuing Claims, reported a week in arrears from new claims, fell to a new near-term low +1.766 million, below the downwardly revised +1.776 million the prior week. We’ve not seen results like these on longer-term unemployment claims since early 2024. For around six months in 2025, we were between +1.90 and +1.975 million long-term claims.
This suggests, perhaps, that the U.S. labor market is in fine shape. However, from the monthly reports we can see we are closer to flat on overall jobs growth, with large tranches of layoffs from some of the biggest companies in America every quarter. Perhaps newly pink-slipped individuals are calling it a career and retiring, perhaps they’re finding ways outside of declaring unemployment (driving for Uber or DoorDash, for instance), but whatever it is, drawing from jobless claims is apparently not the go-to move in aggregate at this time.
Q1 Productivity Slips in Latest Print
Also reported ahead of today’s opening bell is Q1 Productivity — the “secret sauce” of the U.S. economy. Today’s headline of +0.8% is 20 basis points (bps) below expectations, and the lowest print since Q1 of the previous year, which came in at -0.9%. Q4 has been revised lower to +1.6%.
Unit Labor Costs were also down for the quarter: +2.3% (from +2.5% anticipated). This is the lowest we’ve seen since Q3 of 2025, and alleviates some of the pressure from lower productivity: if we’re not producing as many goods, at least we’re paying less for them.
Earnings Results at a Glance: MCD, TRIP & More
We’re past the heaviest section of Q1 earnings season, with six of the “Mag 7” already having reported (NVIDIA is still two weeks from now), but some key results have hit the tape this morning:
McDonald’sMCD outpaced estimates for Q1, with earnings of $2.83 per share beating the Zacks consensus by +3.28%, on revenues in the quarter of $6.52 billion, +0.49% from estimates. Yet the “challenging environment” the company sees is dragging stocks from their early-morning gains; shares are down -7% year to date. For more on MCD’s earnings, click here.
TripAdvisor TRIP missed estimates on both top and bottom lines this morning, posting a loss of -$0.11 per share for Q1, below the Zacks consensus of -$0.03, with $382.4 million beneath projections by -0.79%. Shares remain flat at this hour, as well, though we see the stock has already sold off -23% year to date. For more on TRIP’s earnings, click here.
Planet FitnessPLNT outperformed relatively strongly in its Q1 report, with earnings of +$0.74 per share a +17.6% beat over expectations on $337.24 million in revenues, which topped estimates by +12.8%. However, lowered guidance is sending shares down again, -22% at this hour, adding to the stock’s -40% downturn since the start of the year. For more on PLNT’s earnings, click here.
Fashionable handbag (Coach and Kate Spade) holding company TapestryTPR posted strong figures in its fiscal Q3 this morning: earnings of $1.66 per share outpaced the $1.33 in the Zacks consensus by +26.7%. Revenues of $1.92 billion were +8.5% ahead of estimates. But the pending tariff hit sent guidance lower, so shares are -4.6% at this hour ahead of the open — though still up double digits year to date. For more on TPR’s earnings, click here. Questions or comments about this article and/or author" Click here>>
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Atlassian is poised to benefit from the rising demand for remote working tools amid hybrid working trend. Improvement in product quality, product launches, transparent pricing and online sales strategy are positives.
Helen of Troy drives growth through Leadership Brands, global expansion, and its bold “Elevate for Growth” strategy. Efficiency, innovation, and agility fuel its path forward.
UMB Financial benefits from revenue strength aided by rising loan and deposit balances along with diversified fee income. Also, steady capital distributions are backed by a decent liquidity position.
AI-driven data center buildouts, expanding capacity and services, disciplined pricing and productivity, and stronger finances support Vertiv’s long-term growth at scale.
Employer partnerships, ETS growth, scalable digital models and cost discipline support margins, while improving enrollment trends reinforce long-term earnings visibility.
Renovation disruption and seasonal volatility pressure results, while episodic costs, elevated leverage, and intense competition limit margin recovery and flexibility.
Ashland’s profitability is weighed down by weak demand and pricing pressure. Ongoing global tariff and logistics disruptions lead to a downward revision in its sales and earnings outlook.
Rising expenses due to higher net incurred claims and benefits and amortization of deferred acquisition costs are concerns. High debt level also bothers the company.
Higher input and freight costs, a still-challenging automotive market and elevated debt levels are concerns. The steel industry is still reeling under sustained overcapacity.
Battery weakness, inflationary cost pressures, competitive insourcing, leverage and customer concentration could limit upside near term if markets soften further.
Exposure to political instability, risk of restrictions on currency conversion, high debt and rising expenses are some of the headwinds faced by the company.
Apple Intelligence integration, record Services, expanding enterprise tools, and payments reach support Apple’s recurring revenue, backed by ongoing shareholder capital returns.
American Eagle is well placed on cost-reduction efforts and brand progress. In the second half, the company expects to cycle tariffs and advertising investments.
Robust loan growth and stabilizing funding costs will keep aiding Bank of America’s NII growth. Opening of new financial centers, along with digital upgrades, will aid cross-selling opportunities.
Strength in the Energy Generation/Storage business, balance sheet strength, and focus on autonomous driving, robotics and artificial intelligence are set to drive Tesla.
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.