Dow Jones feed highlights market, earnings and Fed-related business headlines

- Dow Jones’ business-news feed surfaced multiple fresh U.S.-relevant market stories within the past hour, including a piece on “The Most Brutal Car Market Is Spreading to the Rest of the World” and a report that Elon Musk lost his case against OpenAI after jury deliberation.
- Other prominently listed items include coverage of home prices and rates, with Kathie Lee Gifford seeking $100 million for her Connecticut waterfront home and Home Depot earnings due as mortgage rates hit a year-plus high.
- The feed also flagged a bond-market warning for the Federal Reserve to act on inflation and potential rate hikes, underscoring how investors are still focused on policy direction and borrowing costs.
- Because the search results provided only the Dow Jones landing page, not individual article URLs, this item is a headline-level roundup of the latest surfaced business stories rather than a fully sourced article list.
Sources & Citations
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No verified U.S. business news articles could be confirmed from the provided search results
• The only search result provided was the SEC.gov homepage, which is not a news article and does not meet the requirement for a written business or financial news story. • Because no article URLs, headlines, or publication timestamps were available in the search results, I could not verify any stock, earnings, merger, economic, or Fed-related developments.
Read original · sec.govChina's economy shows signs of strain in April as industrial output and retail sales miss forecasts
• China’s economy slowed in April, with industrial output, retail sales and fixed-asset investment all missing expectations as global energy-market volatility added pressure. • Retail sales rose just 0.2% year on year, down from 1.7% in March, while industrial output increased 4.1%, below the 5.63% forecast cited by economists.
Read original · scmp.comAsian stocks fall as chip shares slide after Trump-Xi trade talks
• Asian equities fell on Friday after a U.S. trade official said chip export controls were not discussed in detail during Thursday’s U.S.-China talks, pressuring semiconductor shares across the region. • South Korea’s KOSPI led losses, dropping 6.3%, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 fell 2.1%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 1.6% and mainland China’s CSI 300 eased 0.8%.
Read original · lgt.com
LGTAsian stocks rise as AI rally lifts Wall Street gauges and Treasury yields climb
• Asian stocks rose on Friday, with gains in Japan, South Korea and Australia pushing the MSCI Asia Pacific Index higher after Wall Street gauges hit records. • The move was driven by the AI trade, strong corporate earnings and resilient U.S. consumer data, while Nvidia's six-day rally brought its market value closer to $6 trillion.
Read original · moneycontrol.comAsia Overtakes Silicon Valley in Global AI Business Boom Driving Tech Stock Surge
• Asia has emerged as the new center of the global AI boom, surpassing Silicon Valley, fueled by surging demand for AI chips that propelled Asian tech stocks higher. • The AI-driven rally boosted South Korea's Kospi to a fresh record close of 7,981.41, up 1.8%, supported by technology shares amid robust corporate results in Japan.
Read original · idnfinancials.com
IDN FinancialsTrump-Xi Summit Kicks Off in Beijing as Asian Stocks Show Mixed Performance
• U.S. President Donald Trump met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Thursday to discuss U.S.-China relations, Taiwan, and economic cooperation, with no major breakthroughs expected by analysts. • Asian markets were mixed: Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 1% to 62,654.05 after hitting an intraday record above 63,700; South Korea's Kospi rose 1.8% to a record 7,981.41 driven by AI tech stocks; Shanghai Composite dropped 1.5% to 4,177.92 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng flatlined at 26,389.04.
Read original · wsls.comCitigroup Plans 10% Headcount Increase in Asia-Pacific Prime Brokerage Business
• Citigroup announced plans to expand its Asia-Pacific prime brokerage division by approximately 10% this year to attract more hedge fund clients amid growing regional activity. • The hiring push targets capturing increased hedge fund business in APAC, a key growth area for the U.S. bank's securities services.
Read original · aastocks.com
AAStocksWall Street Mixed After Disappointing Wholesale Inflation Report and Tech Recovery
• Wall Street traded mixed on Wednesday morning, with the S&P 500 down 0.1%, Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping 235 points or 0.5% at 9:35 a.m. ET, and Nasdaq up 0.2% amid a technology sector rebound. • Tech stocks like Micron Technology surged 4.3% and Nvidia rose 2.4%, the top gainer on the S&P 500, following a pause in AI-driven momentum; Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was invited by President Trump to discuss AI chip shipments to China.
Read original · 2news.com
2 NewsSantander US Q1 2026 Survey Reveals Record Consumer Financial Optimism
• A Santander US survey for Q1 2026 found nearly 8 in 10 Americans (78%) believe they are on the right track toward financial prosperity, marking a significant improvement in sentiment. • The share of respondents feeling financially insecure dropped to a survey low, indicating resilient consumer confidence amid economic pressures.
Read original · lasvegassun.comMiddle East Conflict Drives Higher Oil Prices Impacting US Economic Growth
• The ongoing conflict in the Middle East has driven up oil prices, expected to slow US economic growth compared to a no-conflict baseline scenario, according to Deloitte analysis. • Despite pressures from elevated energy costs, US firms are unlikely to materially reduce investment plans due to resilient growth in AI and technology sectors.
Read original · deloitte.comAsian Stocks Mixed as Hot US Inflation and Shaky Iran Ceasefire Weigh on Sentiment
• Asian markets opened lower but mostly recovered on May 13, with MSCI Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rebounding to a 0.3% gain after an initial 1% drop, driven by AI optimism offsetting US inflation and stalled US-Iran talks. • Japan's Nikkei 225 rose 0.8% to around 62,774, South Korea's Kospi surged 2.6% to a record 7,708-7,844 after falling 3.2% on Samsung Electronics' failed union pay deal, while Australia's S&P/ASX 200 slipped 0.3% to 8,645.
Read original · globalbankingandfinance.com
