Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq fall as oil prices rise on Iran peace talk doubts

US stocks fell on Thursday after Iran’s supreme leader issued a directive that the country’s near-weapons-grade uranium should not be sent abroad, raising doubts about the progress of peace talks between the US and Iran.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) both fell by 0.4% after a winning day on Wall Street, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) gave up 0.5% following earnings from Nvidia and an S-1 filing for the upcoming IPO of SpaceX on Wednesday afternoon.
Oil prices rose through the morning, with Brent crude oil (BZ=F) rising back over $108 and US WTI (CL=F) topping $100 again as the US and Iran remained deadlocked on a peace deal. President Trump suggested on Wednesday that a resolution with Iran could be around the corner and that he’s willing to wait “a couple days” while Iran reviews the US’ latest peace proposal. Though the comments from Iran’s supreme leader may throw any progress into question.
Meanwhile, investors continued to assess Nvidia’s (NVDA) earnings that landed after the bell on Wednesday, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines. The AI giant also issued an upbeat forecast for chip sales, but investors had hoped for an even stronger signal of demand.
Shortly after Nvidia results landed, SpaceX (SPAX.PVT) filed its S-1 registration statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission, providing a rare public view into the company’s financials.
Earnings season continues to wrap up this week. Walmart (WMT) reported above estimates on revenue and earnings per share on Thursday, while Ross Stores (ROST), Workday (WDAY), and Zoom Communications (ZM) will report after the closing bell.
On the economic data front, initial jobless claims rose to 209,000 in the week ended May 16, according to data released by the Department of Labor on Thursday, which was below expectations of 210,000 claims.
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Walmart Q1 earnings meet expectations as e-commerce sales surge
Walmart (WMT) stock fell 2% in premarket trading after reporting first quarter results that were in line with Wall Street’s expectations but a second quarter outlook that came in a bit light.
Yahoo Finance’s Brooke Dipalma reports on the quarter:
In the first quarter, the big box retailer posted same-store sales growth of 4.1% in the US, above the 3.85% growth Wall Street analysts expected, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates. Higher foot traffic, ticket sizes, and 26% growth in e-commerce sales drove results.
Revenue grew 7.3% to $177.8 billion, more than the $174.8 billion the Street anticipated. Walmart reported adjusted earnings of $0.66, in line with estimates. Both metrics were above the forecast Walmart shared in the prior quarter.
The company gained share across all categories again, including grocery, health and wellness, and merchandise and income cohorts, led by high-income shoppers.
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