If you thought Wednesday's post-Fed rally meant smooth sailing ahead, Thursday morning had other ideas. U.S. stock futures slipped across the board, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 leading the decline as investors digested the Federal Reserve's latest policy moves and a flurry of corporate earnings reports.
The Fed did exactly what everyone expected on Wednesday—cutting rates by 25 basis points to bring the target range down to 3.5%-3.75%. That's the third consecutive reduction, and on paper, it looked textbook. But dig a little deeper and things get interesting. The rate cut exposed widening disagreements within the central bank about where monetary policy should head next, suggesting the easy consensus might be fracturing.
Perhaps more notably, the Fed announced it's restarting its Treasury bill purchasing program to the tune of roughly $40 billion per month. Call it quantitative easing lite, or don't call it QE at all if you prefer the Fed's terminology. Either way, it's bond buying, and it's happening again.
As for the bond market itself, the 10-year Treasury yield stood at 4.14% Thursday morning, while the two-year yield came in at 3.53%. And if you're wondering what the market thinks happens next with rates, the CME Group's FedWatch tool shows traders assigning an 80.1% probability that the Fed holds rates steady at the current level going forward.
| Futures | Change (+/-) |
| Dow Jones | -0.16% |
| S&P 500 | -0.53% |
| Nasdaq 100 | -0.72% |
| Russell 2000 | -0.01% |
The market tracking ETFs reflected the morning's cautious mood. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) declined 0.52% to $683.99 in premarket trading, while the Invesco QQQ Trust ETF (QQQ), which follows the Nasdaq 100, dropped 0.72% to $623.08.
The Earnings Parade Continues
Oracle's Rocky Quarter
Let's start with the bad news. Oracle Corp. (ORCL) shares crashed 11.01% Thursday after the software giant reported mixed second-quarter results for fiscal 2026 following Wednesday's close. Mixed is being generous here—investors clearly didn't like what they saw.
The stock maintains weak price trends across short, medium, and long-term time frames, and its value ranking doesn't inspire confidence either. For investors hunting for momentum or value plays, Oracle isn't flashing the right signals right now.
Broadcom's Big Moment
Broadcom Inc. (AVGO) fell 1.98% ahead of its earnings report scheduled for after Thursday's closing bell. Wall Street analysts are expecting earnings of $1.86 per share on revenue of $17.15 billion for the latest quarter, and given Broadcom's position in the AI chip ecosystem, this report carries weight.
Unlike Oracle, Broadcom's technical picture looks considerably healthier. The stock shows stronger price trends across short, medium, and long-term periods, paired with solid quality rankings. That doesn't guarantee a post-earnings pop, but it suggests the stock was heading into its report from a position of strength.
Costco's Turn in the Spotlight
Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST) edged up 0.18% Thursday morning as the retail giant prepares to report earnings after the bell. Analysts are looking for earnings of $5.39 per share on revenue of $6.11 billion.
Costco's stock shows weaker price trends over various time frames, though it does sport a strong growth ranking. The warehouse retailer has proven remarkably resilient through economic cycles, but the market will be watching closely to see how consumer spending patterns are holding up.
Adobe Beats But Slips Anyway
Adobe Inc. (ADBE) dropped 0.62% despite actually delivering better-than-expected fourth-quarter earnings. Sometimes beating estimates isn't enough, apparently. The software maker did offer encouraging forward guidance, projecting fiscal 2026 GAAP EPS of $17.90 to $18.10, well above the $16.56 analyst consensus.
Adobe's technical picture shows strength over the short term but weakness in medium and long-term trends, with a moderate quality score. The disconnect between solid fundamentals and stock price movement highlights how jumpy markets have become around earnings season.
Planet Labs Soars
In the day's standout performance, Planet Labs PBC (PL) shares rocketed 16.42% higher after the satellite imaging company reported third-quarter revenue of $81.25 million, crushing analyst estimates of $71.99 million. That's the kind of beat that gets investors excited.
The stock maintains stronger price trends across multiple time frames, though its growth ranking remains poor. Still, when you beat revenue expectations by that margin, technical rankings take a back seat to fundamental momentum.
How Wednesday Actually Went
Before Thursday's retreat, Wednesday delivered broad-based gains across most sectors. Industrials, materials, and consumer discretionary stocks led the charge, with most S&P 500 sectors finishing in positive territory. Utilities were the odd sector out, closing lower while everything else rallied.
| Index | Performance (+/-) | Value |
| Nasdaq Composite | 0.33% | 23,654.16 |
| S&P 500 | 0.67% | 6,886.68 |
| Dow Jones | 1.05% | 48,057.75 |
| Russell 2000 | 1.32% | 2,559.61 |
The Great Fed Debate
Expert reactions to the Federal Reserve's rate cut and resumed Treasury purchasing split sharply along predictable fault lines. You had the doomsayers on one side and the optimists on the other, with very little middle ground.
Michael Burry, never one for subtle takes, criticized the Treasury bill purchasing plan as evidence of fundamental weakness masquerading as monetary policy prudence. "I would add that if the US Banking system can't function without $3+ trillion in reserves/life support from the Fed, that is not a sign of strength but a sign of fragility," he stated.
Burry didn't stop there, warning of a potential endgame scenario: "The practical limit of this might be full nationalization of the US bond market—the Fed owns all $40 trillion US debt. So party on, I guess." Subtle as a sledgehammer, that one.
Economist Peter Schiff joined the criticism, labeling the strategy "QE5" and arguing that "QE by any other name is still inflation." Schiff predicted the policy would eventually backfire, cautioning that "It won't be long before the Fed expands and extends QE5 to longer-dated maturities," while asking rhetorically, "Got gold?"
On the flip side, Wall Street analysts painted a rosier picture. Jeffrey Roach of LPL Financial declared that "Goldilocks is here," citing favorable economic projections. The Goldilocks scenario—growth that's neither too hot nor too cold—has become the base case for many on Wall Street.
Gina Bolvin of Bolvin Wealth Management suggested the Fed is aiming for a soft landing without "oversteering," though Bill Adams of Comerica Bank noted the Fed is navigating a "data vacuum." In other words, the Fed is making policy decisions without perfect information, which has been true since the beginning of central banking but feels particularly acute right now.
What's Coming Down the Pike
Thursday brings a fresh batch of economic data for markets to digest. The initial jobless claims figures for the week ending December 6 hit the tape at 8:30 a.m. ET, alongside the September U.S. trade deficit data. Jobless claims have been remarkably stable lately, so any significant deviation would catch attention.
Friday gets more interesting on the Fed speaker front. Philadelphia Fed President Anna Paulson speaks at 8:00 a.m. ET, followed by Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack at 8:30 a.m. ET. Given the apparent divisions within the Fed revealed by Wednesday's policy statement, these speeches could provide valuable insight into the internal debate. September's wholesale inventories data arrives at 10:00 a.m. ET for anyone tracking supply chain dynamics.
Commodities, Crypto, and Global Markets
Crude oil futures traded 1.51% lower in early New York trading, hovering around $57.59 per barrel. Gold spot prices dipped 0.21% to approximately $4,219.72 per ounce, well off its recent record high of $4,381.60. The U.S. Dollar Index spot price edged down 0.08% to the 99.1410 level.
Bitcoin (BTC) dropped 2.77% to $90,325.90, continuing its recent volatility as the cryptocurrency markets digest the Fed's latest policy moves.
Asian markets closed mostly lower Thursday, with notable exceptions. India's NIFTY 50 and Australia's ASX 200 indices managed gains, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng, China's CSI 300, South Korea's Kospi, and Japan's Nikkei 225 all declined. European markets opened higher in early trading, suggesting at least some regional divergence in how investors are interpreting the global economic picture.
The takeaway from all this? Markets are in that tricky spot where good news on inflation has to be balanced against concerns about economic momentum, where rate cuts are supposed to be supportive but raise questions about what the Fed sees coming, and where strong earnings can still lead to stock declines if expectations were too high. In other words, it's a perfectly normal day in modern markets—which is to say, nothing feels particularly normal at all.




