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The earnings season will kick off this week and will be the main catalyst for the S&P 500, Nasdaq 100, and the Dow Jones indices as they will provide more information about the impact of Donald Trump's tariffs on corporate America. This article provides a preview and the top things to watch.

With the fourth year of the bull market kicking off, Yahoo Finance Markets and Data Editor Jared Blikre examines whether there's more room for markets (^DJI, ^GSPC, ^IXIC) to run. Catch more Stocks in Translation, with new episodes every Tuesday and Thursday.

The S&P 500 hit two new highs last week but ended with a sharp Friday selloff, reflecting rising volatility and shifting investor sentiment. Utilities outperformed as the only sector with weekly gains, while Consumer Discretionary and Small Cap Value stocks suffered the most pronounced declines.

China on Sunday defended its new export controls on rare earths as a “legitimate” measure under international law, pushing back against U.S. accusations of economic coercion after Washington announced sweeping retaliatory tariffs and export restrictions.

President Trump's threats to increase tariffs on China are sinking US stocks (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) lower ahead of Friday's market close, reminding investors of initial Liberation Day selloffs in April. ClearBridge Investments Head of Economic and Market Strategy Jeff Schulze highlights his dip-buying investment approach going into 2026, especially as the November 10 end date for the US-China tariff truce nears.

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Some of the world's biggest tech firms have soared in value over the last year. As AI evolves at pace, there are hopes that it will improve lives in ways that people could never have imagined a decade ago—in sectors as diverse as health care, employment and scientific discovery.

The last year has been good for automobile sales. Although looming tariffs and current tax credits tell the story of the past year, actual tariffs foretell lower sales in the coming year.

Former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers calls prediction markets a powerful tool for understanding public expectations. By letting people put money behind their opinions, platforms like Kalshi and Polymarket can reveal consensus beliefs about elections, policy changes, and global events.
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As two of the biggest states in the country, their economies ”may be canaries in the coal mine,” one economist notes.

AI infrastructure investment is increasingly fueled by circular financing among megacaps, raising concerns of unsustainable capital flows reminiscent of past bubbles. Vendor financing and high capital intensity echo warning signs from the dot-com and housing bubbles, with many AI buyers lacking sufficient cash flow.

AI infrastructure spending is surging, echoing the Dot Com bubble, with profitability and real-world demand yet to justify current valuations. Inflation risks are rising due to tariffs and retailer price hikes, but I see these as temporary, creating buying opportunities in rate-sensitive stocks. My buy list focuses on undervalued, non-AI dividend growth stocks and the TBG Dividend Focus ETF, emphasizing moderate yields and strong income growth.

By Kevin Flanagan, Head of Fixed Income Strategy Key Takeaways With the federal government shutdown delaying major economic data releases, investors are left navigating markets without key signals just as rate decisions remain in play.

Each week, Benzinga's Stock Whisper Index uses a combination of proprietary data and pattern recognition to showcase five stocks that are just under the surface and deserve attention.
Market conditions resemble past bubbles, but AI-driven disruption and secular growth trends present significant long-term opportunities for prudent investors. Despite stretched valuations, I remain bullish on AI beneficiaries, gold, and companies solving AI bottlenecks, while cautioning against chasing speculative gains.
Wall Street is looking at a volatile week ahead as US President Donald Trump's latest tariffs on China is expected to increase the uncertainties among investors. The ongoing government shutdown is already testing the nerves of the market, and adding geopolitical tensions to that will work as a perfect recipe for a storm.

It was a tough five days for Wall Street, as U.S. markets on Friday slumped to their worst week since late May. The decline was primarily driven by a sharp sell-off on Friday, triggered by the resurgence of trade war concerns.Listen on the go! A daily podcast of Wall Street Breakfast will be available by 8:00 a.m.

JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley report their quarterly reports the week of October 13. Whalen Global Advisors chairman Chris Whalen and CFRA Research director of equity research Ken Leon share what they expect to see the big banks report.

Friday's market slide—fueled by President Trump's new threat of “massive” tariffs on goods from China—rattled some investors who thought the 2025 market advance was immune to trade-war tensions