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postUS stock futures stalled on Friday as investors braced for key inflation and growth data, while keeping a watchful eye out for US-Iran tensions, private credit jitters, and a potential Supreme Court tariff decision.
Contracts on the tech-exposed Nasdaq 100 (NQ=F) and the S&P 500 (ES=F) moved down roughly 0.2%. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures (YM=F) also moved down 0.2%, coming off the end of a three-day winning streak on Thursday.
The market is waiting for readings on December PCE inflation and fourth quarter US economic growth to help adjust expectations for interest-rate cuts this year. Annual core PCE, which strips out food and energy and is the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge of inflation, is expected to heat up to 3%.
Also due later, the preliminary GDP report is expected to show that growth cooled in the quarter amid disruptions from the federal shutdown, but still stayed solid at 3%.
At the same time, Wall Street is on alert for stress in the private credit sector, after Blue Owl’s (OBDC, OWL) halt to withdrawals. Fears are the move is a “canary in the coal mine” financial crisis-style moment amid concerns about the sector’s holdings of software stocks threatened by AI. Blue Owl shares continued to fall in premarket after it sold $1.4 billion in private loans, including to the lender’s own insurer.
US-Iran tensions are also in focus, after President Trump said he will decide within 10 days on military strikes unless a nuclear deal is struck. Oil prices retreated, seen as due to relief that a full-on conflict seems off the cards.
Investors are also keyed into whether the Supreme Court will strike down Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs on Friday, as a decision is possible. A host of outcomes remains possible, with perhaps the only certainty for investors being that markets will react, regardless of how the decision goes.
Looking at the week so far, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) is up 0.4%. The Nasdaq (^IXIC) is on track to break a five-week losing streak with a 0.6% gain, while the Dow (^DJI) is down about 0.2% over the same stretch.
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US GDP growth disappoints, Trump blames government shutdown
The US economy grew at a slower pace than expected in the fourth quarter of 2025.
New data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis on Friday showed the economy grew at an annualized rate of 1.4% in the final three months of 2025. Economists had expected GDP to grow at an annualized rate of 2.9% in the fourth quarter.
In a post on Truth Social ahead of the report, President Trump said the government shutdown that lasted 43 days back in the fall cost the US economy “at least two points in GDP.” The president also again called for lower interest rates.
In its release, the BEA said, “Compared to the third quarter, the deceleration in real GDP in the fourth quarter reflected downturns in government spending and exports and a deceleration in consumer spending that were partly offset by an acceleration in investment.”
Underlying spending trends, however, remained solid, with real final sales to private domestic purchasers — the sum of consumer spending and gross private fixed investment — increasing 2.4 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with an increase of 2.9 percent in the third quarter.
Friday’s report had been set for release on Jan. 29, but data collection was delayed by the shutdown that covered all of October and parts of November.
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Chemours stock falls after reporting $47M loss in Q4 earnings
Chemours Co. (CC) stock slumped 9% before the bell on Friday after reporting a loss of $47 million in its fourth quarter earnings.
The AP reports:
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Grail stock sinks after cancer trial results fail to impress investors
Grail (GRAL) stock sank over 40% before the bell on Friday after the healthcare company’s cancer trial results failed to impress investors.
Barron’s reports:
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Premarket trending tickers: Chemours, Live Nation, and AppLovin
Chemours (CC) fell 9% during premarket trading on Friday after reporting a loss in its fourth quarter earnings and a dip in revenue. This was driven by a drop in its titanium technologies and advanced performance materials businesses.
Live Nation (LYV) stock rose more than 3% before the bell on Friday after the ticket provider posted an 11% increase in fourth-quarter revenue to $6.31 billion, driven by a 12% gain in concert sales.
AppLovin’s (APP) stock jumped 5% during premarket hours on Friday after the release of its fourth quarter earnings and the company’s plan to launch a social networking platform.
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Nvidia is moving in on Intel and AMD’s home turf
Beyond the splashy AI chip news, there’s something else worth a deeper look in the stepped-up data center partnership agreed by Nvidia (NVDA) and Meta (META) this week.
The agreement will also see Meta roll out Nvidia Grace CPU-only servers in its data centers, the first large-scale deployment of the chips. It’s part of Nvidia’s CPU play — and that could ring alarm bells for Intel (INTC) and AMD (AMD).
Yahoo Finance’s Daniel Howley writes:
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Opendoor stock rallies on 46% jump in home acquisition volume
Opendoor’s (OPEN) stock jumped 14% in premarket trading on Friday after the company reported that home purchases rose 46% quarter over quarter. Revenue reached $736 million, surpassing Wall Street estimates of $576.94 million.
The digital real estate company posted a fourth quarter loss of $1.26 per share, missing analysts’ estimates.
Investing.com reports:
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OpenAI and Nvidia in final negotiations for $30B investment
Reuters reports:
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