News Bulletin
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
Evening Edition
Economic Numbers:
|
Time |
Event |
Actual |
Forecast |
Previous |
|
Wednesday, May 20, 2026 |
||||
|
7:00 |
MBA 30-Year Mortgage Rate |
6.56% |
|
6.46% |
|
7:00 |
MBA Mortgage Applications (WoW) |
-2.30% |
|
1.70% |
|
7:00 |
Mortgage Market Index |
283.50 |
|
290.10 |
|
7:00 |
Mortgage Refinance Index |
920.20 |
|
921.10 |
|
10:30 |
Crude Oil Inventories |
-7.863M |
-2.500M |
-4.306M |
|
10:30 |
Cushing Crude Oil Inventories |
-1.604M |
|
-1.702M |
Indices
|
|
CLOSE |
50 DMA |
200 DMA |
|
DJIA |
50,009.35 |
48,111.84 |
47,543.76 |
|
NASDAQ |
26,270.36 |
23,774.21 |
23,034.14 |
|
S&P 500 |
7,432.93 |
6,954.37 |
6,797.70 |
Earnings Calendar:
(EPS: Earning Per Share / Rev: Revenue / Mkt Cap: market Capital/ BMO: Before Market Opening /AMC:
After Market Close)
|
COMPANY |
EPS Act |
EPS
Fore |
Rev
Act |
Rev
Fore |
Mkt Cap |
Time |
|
Nvidia NVDA:US |
|
1.77 |
|
78.4B |
$5.49T |
PM |
|
Analog Devices ADI:US |
3.09 |
2.85 |
3.62B |
3.49B |
$191.73B |
AM |
|
TJX Companies TJX:US |
1.19 |
1.01 |
14.3B |
13.95B |
$182.06B |
AM |
|
Lowe's Companies LOW:US |
3.03 |
2.97 |
23.08B |
22.93B |
$124.3B |
AM |
|
Intuit INTU:US |
12.8 |
12.57 |
8.6B |
8.53B |
$108.04B |
PM |
|
Target TGT:US |
1.71 |
1.35 |
25.44B |
24.31B |
$55.85B |
AM |
|
Nordson NDSN:US |
|
2.81 |
|
727.25M |
$15.77B |
PM |
|
Hasbro HAS:US |
1.47 |
1 |
1B |
906.37M |
$12.42B |
AM |
|
Masimo MASI:US |
|
1.43 |
|
398.65M |
$9.46B |
AM |
|
Enersys ENS:US |
|
2.92 |
|
976.73M |
$8.78B |
PM |
|
Chart Industries GTLS:US |
|
2.47 |
|
1.12B |
$8.76B |
AM |
|
Aimco AIV:US |
|
|
|
|
$8.39B |
PM |
|
VF VFC:US |
0.06 |
-0.01 |
2.17B |
2.13B |
$6.51B |
AM |
|
Urban Outfitters URBN:US |
1.3 |
1.24 |
1.48B |
1.45B |
$6.39B |
PM |
|
HUB HUBG:US |
|
0.39 |
|
885.76M |
$2.53B |
PM |
|
Dorian LPG:US |
1.89 |
1.48 |
153.5M |
129.74M |
$1.94B |
AM |
|
Veris Residential CLI:US |
|
|
|
67.94M |
$1.76B |
PM |
Market News:
U.S. stocks jumped on Wednesday to end
higher, as investors geared up for a major test of the artificial intelligence
trade in the form of quarterly results from industry leader Nvidia
after the closing bell.
A sell-off in bonds also stabilized,
sending U.S. Treasury yields lower and taking some pressure off equities. Also
boosting sentiment was President Donald Trump’s comment that the U.S. was in
"final stages" of peace talks with Iran, according to a White House
pool report.
The benchmark S&P 500 index advanced
1.1% to close at 7,432.24 points, the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite added 1.6% to
settle at 26,270.36 points, and the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average
climbed 1.3% to conclude at 50,009.35 points.
Nvidia’s report ’means everything for this market’
Since the explosion of AI technology in
late 2022, Nvidia has become the premier manufacturer
of high-end, powerful graphics processing units (GPUs) that powers AI and has
come to dominate the AI hardware market. Nvidia’s
market capitalization has exploded in the last three years to over $5 trillion,
and its quarterly reports have become market-moving events that are closely
scrutinized for a read on the AI space.
Many big-name tech companies have
outlined plans to spend heavily on building the infrastructure needed to power
AI systems, meaning that expectations for Nvidia’s
returns are, as usual, sky-high. Shares of the company finished 1.3% higher.
NVDA’s earnings report also comes as a
time when sentiment has been battered on Wall Street due to a lack of any
breakthroughs in the Middle East conflict and a global bond sell-off.
The bond rout was sparked by rapidly
rising expectations for interest rate hikes from central banks around the world
to combat the emerging inflationary shock from surging oil prices. Against such
a backdrop, Nvidia’s performance could potentially be
a positive catalyst for stocks.
"Nvidia
is the most important AI stock, and since so much of the stock market’s gains
over the past few years have been driven by the incredible capabilities of AI,
the outcome of Wednesday’s earnings report means everything for this
market," James Demmert, chief investment officer
at Main Street Research, said.
"The stock market is near record
highs and is now grappling with the sudden and unexpected rise in bond yields,
which is essentially a tax on the stock market. This is why Nvidia’s
earnings come at just the right time, when the market needs some reassurance
that the promise of AI can overpower the headwind of rising bond yields," Demmert added.
A furious rally in the AI trade has
indeed played a driving role in helping Wall Street return to record levels,
despite the protracted U.S.-Iran war. Meanwhile, speaking of bonds, U.S.
Treasury yields slipped on Wednesday as the sell-off eased. Notably, the U.S.
30-year yield, seen as a gauge of how traders view the economic outlook, on
Tuesday soared to levels not hit since the global financial crisis almost two
decades ago.
The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield was
last down 9 basis points to 4.581%, while the 30-year yield was down 7 basis
points to 5.113%.
Fed minutes show policymakers see rate
hikes likely
Bond market traders and watchers of
monetary policy also received the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s April
meeting on Wednesday. They showed that a majority of Federal Open Market
Committee participants believed that interest rate hikes "would likely
become appropriate" if inflation were to persist above the central bank’s
2% target.
Inflation data recently has shown a
clear impact of spiking oil prices on both consumer and producer prices. Growth
in the annual headline U.S. consumer price index last month hit its highest
level since May 2023, while the annual headline producer price index logged its
biggest increase since December 2022.
Against this backdrop, and amid the
rising expectations of tighter monetary policy across the globe, the
discussions of possible rate hikes in the Fed minutes were not much a surprise.
The minutes also come at a time when the
Fed is in transition mode. Jerome Powell’s term as Fed chair ended last Friday,
and his successor, Trump’s pick Kevin Warsh, is
expected to be sworn in soon.
Warsh will be taking over at a time when Trump has
publicly badgered the central bank to lower interest rates, but such a scenario
looks extremely unlikely currently with the Middle East conflict showing no
signs of ending.
Trump says in ’final stages’ of talks
with Iran
Turning to the Middle East, Bloomberg
News on Wednesday reported that Trump said the U.S. was in the "final
stages" of negotiations with Iran, citing a White House pool report. Oil
prices sharply extended losses after the news.
Bloomberg said the pool report quoted
Trump’s earlier remarks to reporters at Joint Base Andrews. "We’ll see
what happens" with Iran, Trump added.
Hopes have remained that Washington and
Tehran may be able to forge a deal to end their more than two-month war.
Trump told lawmakers on Tuesday evening
that the Iran war could end "very quickly." He said earlier this week
that he had postponed planned fresh attacks on Iran at the request of three
Gulf countries.
Vice President JD Vance also struck an
optimistic tone in separate comments, stating that Tehran wanted to make a
deal.
Target sees cost challenges, Lowe’s
reaffirms guidance
Turning to Wednesday’s active stocks,
Target ended 3.8% lower, despite the big-box retailer topping quarterly top-
and bottom-line estimates and raising its full-year net sales growth outlook.
The company warned of more cost challenges in the first half of this year and
harder Y/Y comparisons in the current quarter.
Lowe’s erased losses to close 1.2%
higher. The home-improvement retailer joined larger rival Home Depot in
reiterating its fiscal full-year guidance amid record low U.S. consumer
sentiment and a pullback in spending on big home projects.
Elsewhere, Analog
Devices slipped 3.9% after the group said it would acquire Empower
Semiconductor for about $1.5 billion in cash, in a bid to grow its AI-focused
power management operations.
For internal use only