U.S. stock futures were higher on Wednesday, as the Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100 and S&P 500 indices rose, following Tuesday’s higher close.
On Tuesday, President Donald Trump stated that U.S. strikes in Iran would continue into the next week, warning of “very hard” hits as Strait of Hormuz tensions escalate. He declared that "Oil is flowing like never before" due to American military operations keeping the shipping lane open.
Investors await the June producer price index data scheduled to be released before the market opens.
Meanwhile, the 10-year Treasury bond yielded 4.60%, and the two-year bond was at 4.20%. The CME Group’s FedWatch tool’s projections show markets pricing an 85.6% likelihood of the Federal Reserve leaving the current interest rates unchanged during July’s meeting.
| Index | Performance (+/-) |
| Dow Jones | 0.13% |
| S&P 500 | 0.15% |
| Nasdaq 100 | 0.40% |
| Russell 2000 | 0.02% |
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) and Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (NASDAQ:QQQ), which track the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100, respectively, were higher in premarket on Wednesday. The SPY was up 0.25% at $753.68, while the QQQ advanced by 0.50% to $723.30.
Energy, information technology, and communication services stocks recorded the biggest gains on Tuesday, while health care and consumer staples stocks bucked the overall market trend to close the session lower, though most S&P 500 sectors ended positively.
| Index | Performance (+/-) | Value |
| Dow Jones | 0.018% | 52,508.27 |
| S&P 500 | 0.38% | 7,543.59 |
| Nasdaq Composite | 0.90% | 26,107.01 |
| Russell 2000 | 0.39% | 2,964.76 |
Wharton School Professor Emeritus Jeremy Siegel remains highly optimistic about the U.S. stock market and the broader economy, pointing to a “constructive” fundamental backdrop.
Despite geopolitical tensions, he emphasizes that the market continues to display remarkable resilience, with major averages sitting near all-time highs.
A primary driver of this optimism is an extraordinary 24% year-over-year corporate earnings growth rate, which Siegel notes is “primarily the result of widening margins fueled by AI investment and productivity gains.”
He describes the current environment as “one of the most unusual profit cycles investors have witnessed in decades,” where businesses generate massive profits without relying on explosive GDP growth.
On the economic front, Siegel sees few signs of trouble, pointing to a healthy 2% to 2.5% second-quarter GDP growth rate. He expects policy stability from the Federal Reserve, arguing that temporary technology input costs, rather than broad-based demand, are keeping core inflation sticky.
He notes that the “Federal Reserve has little reason to raise interest rates further.” Ultimately, Siegel believes steady growth, healthy liquidity, and booming earnings are “the ingredients that have historically supported higher equity prices.”
Here’s what investors will be keeping an eye on this Wednesday.
Crude Oil WTI futures were trading higher in the early New York session by 0.59% to hover around $79.81 per barrel.
Gold Spot US Dollar fell 0.65% to hover around $4,026.42 per ounce. The U.S. Dollar Index spot was 0.02% lower at the 100.9030 level.
Meanwhile, Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC) was trading 3.19% higher at $64,583.06 per coin over the last 24 hours.
Asian markets closed mostly higher on Wednesday, except China’s CSI 300 index. Australia’s ASX 200, India’s Nifty 50, South Korea’s Kospi, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng, and Japan’s Nikkei 225 indices rose. European markets were mostly lower in early trade.