Microsoft and Meta Platforms lead Wall Street higher
[May 02, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Microsoft and Meta Platforms led Wall Street higher
Thursday after the Big Tech companies reported profits for the start of
the year that were even bigger than analysts expected.
The S&P 500 rose 0.6% for an eighth straight gain, its longest winning
streak since August. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 83 points,
or 0.2%, and the Nasdaq composite climbed 1.5%.
Microsoft rallied 7.6% after the software giant said strength in its
cloud computing and artificial intelligence businesses drove its overall
revenue up 13% from a year earlier.
Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, also topped
analysts’ targets for revenue and profit in the latest quarter. It said
AI tools helped boost its advertising revenue, and its stock climbed
4.2%.
They’re two of the most influential stocks within the S&P 500 and other
indexes because of their massive sizes, and they weren’t alone. CVS
Health, Carrier Global and a bevy of other companies also joined the
stream of better-than-expected profit reports that have helped steady
Wall Street over the last week. The S&P 500 is back to within 9% of its
record set earlier this year, after briefly dropping nearly 20% below
the mark.
Still, plenty of uncertainty remains about whether President Donald
Trump’s trade war will force the economy into a recession. Even though
companies have been reporting better profits for the first three months
of the year than analysts expected, many CEOs are remaining cautious
about the rest of the year.
General Motors cut its forecast for profit in 2025, for example. It said
it’s assuming it will feel a hit of $4 billion to $5 billion because of
tariffs, and it expects to offset at least 30% of it. GM’s stock slipped
0.4%.

McDonald’s fell 1.9% after reporting weaker revenue for the latest
quarter than analysts expected, even though its profit was slightly
above forecasts. An important measure of performance at its U.S.
restaurants had its worst decline since 2020, when COVID shuttered the
global economy, and McDonald’s CEO Chris Kempczinski said consumers “are
grappling with uncertainty.”
McDonald’s joined Chipotle and other restaurant chains that have seen
customers get more cautious amid all the unknowns about the economy and
inflation that’s still higher than many would like.
The uncertainty has already shown up in surveys of consumers, which say
pessimism is shooting higher about where the economy heading. On
Thursday, a couple reports about the economy came in mixed, following up
on several recent updates that suggested it’s weakening.

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Trader Vincent Napolitano works on the floor of the New York Stock
Exchange, Thursday, May 1, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)
 The first of the reports said more
U.S. workers filed for unemployment benefits last week than
economists had forecast, setting the stage for a more comprehensive
report on the job market arriving Friday.
But a later update said U.S. manufacturing activity was better last
month than economists had feared, though it still contracted again.
The fear on Wall Street is for a possible worst-case scenario called
“stagflation,” where the economy stagnates yet inflation remains
high. The Federal Reserve has no good tools to fix both such
problems at the same time. If the Fed were to try to help one
problem by adjusting interest rates, it would likely make the other
worse.
Some encouraging news on inflation arrived Wednesday, when a report
said that the measure of inflation the Fed likes to use slowed in
March.
In the bond market, Treasury yields swiveled following Thursday’s
economic reports. The yield on the 10-year Treasury initially fell
below 4.13% after the worse-than-expected update on joblessness. But
it later trimmed its losses following the better-than-expected
report on manufacturing and rallied to 4.21%. That’s up from 4.17%
late Wednesday.
Stocks were steadier and held onto their gains through the day after
opening higher. All told, the S&P 500 rose 35.08 points to 5,604.14.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 83.60 to 40,752.96, and the
Nasdaq composite gained 264.40 to 17,710.74.
In stock markets abroad, trading was closed in many countries for
May Day, or international Labor Day holidays.
Tokyo’s Nikkei 225 rose 1.1% after the Bank of Japan kept its
benchmark interest rate unchanged, as many investors expected.
Hopes that Trump may eventually roll back some of his tariffs after
reaching trade deals with other countries also helped to support
markets.
A social media blog by China’s state broadcaster claimed that the
Trump administration has been seeking contact with the world’s
second largest economy through multiple channels to start
negotiations over tariffs.
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AP Writers Yuri Kageyama, Matt Ott and Didi Tang contributed.
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