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Hugh Son, CNBC banking reporter, says Wall Street strength and solid credit quality should drive strong big bank earnings, with investment banking rebounding and credit risk still contained.

Nancy Tengler, CIO and CEO of Laffer Tengler Investments, names Oracle as her top Q4 pick, citing strong leadership, cloud and AI momentum, and long-term growth despite short-term margin worries.

Longview Economics says investors should tread carefully with stocks as something was broken with Friday's selloff last week.

OpenAI strikes another chip deal, gold prices keep surging, third-quarter earnings expectations are running high, and more news to start your day.

The most oversold stocks in the communication services sector presents an opportunity to buy into undervalued companies.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

US stocks face a pivotal day as bank earnings, Powell's outlook, and renewed trade tensions shape the short-term forecast for the S&P500 and broader indices.

Piper Sandler chief investment strategist, Michael Kantrowitz, joins Market Domination host Josh Lipton to discuss the stock market (^DJI, ^GSPC, ^IXIC) rebound after Friday's sell-off, and why President Trump likely won't interfere with market momentum. To watch more expert insights and analysis on the latest market action, check out more Market Domination here: https://finance.yahoo.com/videos/series/market-domination/ #youtube #stocks #investing About Yahoo Finance: Yahoo Finance provides free stock ticker data, up-to-date news, portfolio management resources, comprehensive market data, advanced tools, and more information to help you manage your financial life.

Listen on the go! A daily podcast of Wall Street Breakfast will be available by 8:00 a.m.

The bankruptcies of automotive-related companies First Brands and Tricolor, along with potential losses at banks and investment funds, are raising new concerns about hidden risks in parts of the credit market — prompting investors to take a closer look at risky debt.

Wall Street's main indexes were set to open lower on Tuesday as renewed concerns over a U.S.-China trade conflict dampened sentiment, while investors parsed results from big U.S. banks, which kicked off the third-quarter reporting season.

Amid the AI frenzy are some early signs of the technology's positive impact on productivity, raising profound implications for growth, inflation, labor markets, and asset prices. Recent U.S. data show broadly healthy real growth alongside subdued overall job creation—an unusual combination that points to productivity doing more of the heavy lifting.

U.S. stock futures were modestly lower across the board early in Europe following Monday's bounce.

Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo are due to report this morning

Across the Stoxx 600, analysts expect earnings and revenue to both decline on an annual basis, with earnings seen falling 0.2%, according to LSEG I/B/E/S data. If that projection is accurate, Q3 would mark the first period of earnings decline since the first quarter of 2024.

US stocks pulled back as the Trump administration issued fresh tariff threats on China and federal layoffs began. As government data is delayed, other sources suggest that US inflation remains above target, but is not accelerating.

Broadcom and OpenAI announce partnership. China clamps down on U.S. subsidiaries of Hanwha Ocean.

HSBC expected the dollar to bottom out early next year, adding that previous episodes of Fed rate cutting while the U.S. avoided recession point to a weaker USD.

French government bond yields will likely be higher for a long period of time, and investors need to get used to the situation, Columbia Threadneedle Investments said.

European stocks are expected to open lower on Tuesday, reversing largely positive sentiment at the start of the week.