Stock Market Today: Stocks mixed as Fed rate cut bets fade; Amazon leaps

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Check back for updates throughout the trading dayU.S stocks were mixed in Wednesday trading, following on from the first monthly decline for the S&P 500 since last autumn, as investors braced for a hawkish statement from the Federal Reserve amid yet another repricing of interest rate forecasts for the world's biggest economy.Updated at 9:36 AM EDTSoft start to MayThe S&P 500 was marked 5 points lower, or 0.1%, in the opening minutes of trading while the Dow rose 116 points thanks in part to the early 2.8% gain for Amazon. The Nasdaq, meanwhile, slipped 18 points, or 0.11%.S&P 500 Opening Bell Heatmap (May 01, 2024)$SPY -0.14% ?$QQQ -0.44% ?$DJI +0.11% ?$IWM +0.23% ? pic.twitter.com/8glyWwHuRd— Wall St Engine (@wallstengine) May 1, 2024

Updated at 9:18 AM EDTCVS ill-healthCVS Health  (CVS)  shares are slumping in early trading, and likely to extend their 2024 decline to around 25%, after the group slashed its full-year profit forecast on the back of soaring medical costs and added margin pressures from changes to the Medicare Advantage rebate program.CVS were last marked 13.5% lower in pre-market and set to open at around $58.45 eachRelated: CVS tumbles as Aetna faces soaring medical costs and Medicare Advantage hitUpdated at 8:54 AM EDTAMD slideAdvanced Micro Devices shares were last marked 5.7% lower in premarket trading, and set to open at the lowest levels since early January, after the chipmaker forecast muted near-terms sales for its AI-related chips.AI demand has exceeded anyone's expectations in 2024. So you've heard it from the memory guys. You've heard it from the foundry guys," said CEO Lisa Su. "We're all ramping capacity as we go through the year. And as it relates to visibility, we do have good visibility into what's happening."Related: Analysts revise AMD price targets as stock hit by muted AI sales forecastUpdated at 8:34 AM EDTStrong Jobs gain from ADPADP National Employment report showed a better-than-expected private sector hiring tally of 192,000 for the month of April, perhaps setting up for an upside surprise in Friday's non-farm payroll report. “Hiring was broad-based in April,” said chief economist Nela Richardson. “Only the information sector (telecommunications, media, and information technology) showed weakness, posting job losses and the smallest pace of pay gains since August 2021.” Economists are looking for a headline gain of around 250,000 from the Labor Department on Friday, with unemployment holding at 3.8% and average hourly earnings rising 0.3% on the month.ADP payrolls came in at 192K vs 208K previousChange by industry pic.twitter.com/ZQEMiqWMph— Tracy (??? ) (@chigrl) May 1, 2024

Stock Market TodayStocks tumbled across the board on April 30, dragging the S&P 500 80.5 points, or 1.57%, lower on the session for its biggest single-day decline since late January as investors parsed data showing a big jump in first quarter employment costs and navigated declines in each of the so-called Magnificent 7 megacap tech stocks.Treasury yields, meanwhile, powered higher, lifting benchmark 2-year notes firmly north of 5% following the employment-cost index data, which further pared bets that the Fed would cut rates between now and the end of the year.Investors will be laser-focused on Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's messaging when he speaks to the media later today in Washington, where he is likely to reiterate the central bank's "higher for longer" stance on interest rates. Related: Fed faces fine-line walk between inflation hawk and slow-growth realistNo change in the Fed's benchmark lending rate, which currently sits between 5.25% and 5.5%, is expected from the Fed's two-day policy meeting, and markets are now pricing in only one rate reduction between now and the end of the year.Wall Street also faces another busy session of earnings and data releases as well, with updates from Pfizer  (PFE) , Mastercard  (MA) , CVS Health  (CVS)  and Estee Lauder  (EL)  slated prior to the opening bell.CVS Health slumped 12.2% after it slashed its full-year revenue forecast following weaker-than-expected earnings tied to soaring costs in its health insurance division.

Markets will be laser-focused on Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's statement to the media at 2:30 pm Eastern time.

The Labor Department's March Job Openings and Labor Turnover report, better-known as Jolts, is also slated for later in the morning, just after ADP's National Employment report at 8:15 a.m. Eastern time.Futures contracts tied to the S&P 500, which ended April with a 4.16% decline, are priced for a 17 point opening bell decline while those linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average suggest a 75 point pullback.The tech-focused Nasdaq, which slumped 2.2% on Tuesday to extend its April decline to 4.41%, is called 90 points lower.Starbucks  (SBUX)  shares are a notable early mover, plunging more than 13% after the world's biggest coffee chain slashed its full-year-sales forecast following softer first-quarter sales in both the U.S. and China.Advanced Micro Devices  (AMD)  was also deep in the red, falling 6% after topping Wall Street's first-quarter earnings estimates but estimating full-year chip sales of around $4 billion, a modest $500 million increase from its prior forecast.On the upside, Amazon  (AMZN)  shares rose 2% after the tech and online-retail giant posted stronger-than-expected first-quarter earnings, including more than $25 billion in revenue from Amazon Web Services. The gains were tempered, however, by a muted near-term sales forecast and a warning that capital spending would increase throughout the year.More Wall Street Analysts:Analyst unveils new Nike price target ahead of big summer for sportsAnalysts weigh in on Google-parent Alphabet’s stock after cloud eventAnalysts revamp Disney stock price target after proxy fightIn overseas markets, Europe's Stoxx 600 was marked 0.77% lower in midday Frankfurt trading. Britain's FTSE 100 edged 0.08% higher thanks in part to a weaker pound, which slipped to 1.2482 against the U.S. dollar.Overnight in Asia, Japan's Nikkei 225 closed 0.34% lower in Tokyo, while the regionwide MSCI ex-Japan index was marked 0.29% into the final hours of trading.Related: Veteran fund manager picks favorite stocks for 2024

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