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Dow futures surge on Thursday: 5 things to know before market opens

Wall Street heads for a cautious open as earnings season gathers pace, Fed minutes loom and optimism over US-Iran diplomacy.

Wall Street heads into Thursday’s open with momentum still intact, but the next leg of the rally looks harder to earn.

Investors have spent the past week looking through geopolitical risk and focusing instead on the possibility that the worst of the conflict may be over.

S&P 500 futures rose 0.19%, while Nasdaq 100 futures outperformed with a 0.41% gain.

Meanwhile, futures linked to the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed by 46 points, marking an increase of nearly 0.1%.

5 things to know before Wall Street opens

1. The rally is being held up by diplomacy hopes

The recent advance in equities has been driven in large part by optimism that tensions in the Middle East may ease rather than escalate.

Hopes that Washington could reach a deal with Iran, combined with signs that regional ceasefire discussions remain alive, have encouraged investors to stay with equities instead of rushing back into defensive trades.

That helps explain why the S&P 500 has managed an unusually long winning run. Markets are effectively pricing in the idea that policy threats can be softened, reversed or negotiated away.

2. Earnings now have to justify the optimism

Diplomacy may have steadied the mood, but earnings will determine whether the rally can keep going.

Before the bell, investors will hear from Travelers, Charles Schwab and PepsiCo, while Netflix reports after the close.

Together, those names offer a useful cross-section of the market, spanning insurance, financial services, consumer staples and technology-driven media.

So far, earnings season has broadly supported the bullish case.

Most of the banks that have reported have beaten expectations and said their customers remain financially healthy.

3. The next test is whether the rally broadens

The market has been supported by diplomacy hopes and a solid start to earnings season, but the more important question now is whether the advance spreads beyond banks and a handful of technology names.

If more sectors begin to participate, investors will have greater confidence that the rally is being driven by improving fundamentals rather than a narrow burst of optimism.

That is why traders will pay such close attention to management commentary through the day.

Strong results matter, but guidance on demand, pricing and margins matters more when stocks are trading near record levels.

4. Stock moves show risk appetite is selective, not broad-based

The premarket tape suggests investors are still willing to embrace risk, but only where the story is strong enough.

Voyager Technologies rose 7.9% after NASA selected the company for the seventh private astronaut mission to the International Space Station, giving traders a clear catalyst tied to growth and visibility.

By contrast, Allbirds fell 34.2% after an extraordinary surge in the previous session, when the stock jumped on artificial intelligence enthusiasm.

That reversal is a reminder that this is not a market rewarding every risk asset equally.

5. The market remains vulnerable to abrupt reversals

For all the optimism, the setup is still fragile.

The investors are betting that the war has not yet reached peak escalation and that geopolitical risks are falling, while also trying to capture as much of the earnings story as they can.

That combination can work well when headlines are supportive.

But it can also unravel quickly if either pillar weakens.

The post Dow futures surge on Thursday: 5 things to know before market opens appeared first on Invezz

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